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BEGGAR KINGB. Levy Tribute Upon Rich and Poor and Are Obeyed with Alacrity. V If you want o grow rich in China become the head of a guild of beg gars, thieves or lepers, says the Lon don Express. Nankin,Pekin ar.d Tien tsin are the headquarters of the most powerful of these guilds, and their rulers are wealthy and respected. The "king" of a clan of Chinese vagabonds of these clashes derives his income from a tribute rendered him by his wretched subjects, and also levies n sort of blackmail on traders and mer chants by undertaking to keep their shops, stores and house 3 free from the particular pests which he controls. From these two sources he realizes a large income and is enabled to live in a large houses and keep up great style in his mode of life. Each clan has a particular district of the city given tivor to its operation, beyond which its members are forbidden to stray. Hor rible self-multilations are practiced by the beggars of China in order thai their deform.ties may excite conipas sion and lead to profit. If you see a blind man soliciting alms in a Chinese street it is ten to one that he has him self destroyed his sight. On certain days the beggars go about in gangs of from fifty to 150. On these occasions shopkeepers are only too glad to com ply with the "king's" demands for blackmail in order that his subjects may be kept out of their shops. A king of Chinese thieves knows every- j thing that goes on in his district. He knows who committed eertain thefts i and where the stolen property is. He, like his brother of the beggars, has a double source of income. A large per centage of the profits made by his sub jects is claimed by him and woe betide them if they attempt to cheat the au tocrat. And if a foreigner is robbed ke generally can, by paying the "king" a certain sum, recover his property. Property stolen from Chinamen Is never brought back. Every Chinese city has a leper house outside its gates j and most of them have two or more, i As iii the eases of the beggars and thieves, there Is an executive head called the "king" ot' the lepers, w*io j controls all lepers and makes rules and compacts, which must be observed. | These unfortunates are numerous I throughout the empire. When in the first stage of the disease they are j brought to the leper houses. Good care is taken of them as long .as their relatives can meet the demands of the ! "king." But no matter how wealthy their families may be the "king" evi dently drains them of every penny, find both the leper and his relatives often have to turn beggars. The poorer lepers are assigned to miserable, un ci oan huts, providing poor shelter | against bad weather. LIVE IN BLISS. Mstresses and Maids in Perfect Accord ! lu Ouecnaland. Queensland has the distinction of j being the only spot on earth where mistresses and maids never quarrel, and the domestic life there is de scribed by Mrs. Douglas Campbell of England, who has just returned from a visit to that country, as an ideal one. In that country, she says, the do mestic servant betters herself in every way. She has higher wages, more leisure, more liberty and she is cared for better than in any other country. The mistress assists her to establish a home of her own, and her success is all the easier because she can afford to dress herself becomingly. No Queensland mistress ever refuses her maid permission to attend balls or to go to concerts or theaters, and very often the mistress does the work in or der that her servant may have a share in the good things of this life. Wom en who are wtiling to go into the bush and work on a station are treated with even more consideration. There is scarcely any difference between her and the family in which she lives. She has a horse to ride, drives with the family to church, is asked out and taught music. Mrs. Campbell adds that Queensland is no place for lazy or pretentious girls. They must be prepared to use their brains and think for themselves, then success is certain. "In England," she concludes, "the ser vant is part of a system, in Australia she is a member of tho household, and the mistress holds herself responsible for her comfort and happiness." At tlic end of the year IRqR there were 1,562 savings banks in Prussia, with 8,040599 depositors. f HJORTH HJORYESEN'S AMEITUI.I t i A BY HUGH W. BEAL. J The Pine Mountain Side, a mile long, carries logs from the summit to Heaver Hasin, a small, deep pond, 30 miles above Blomfield. The slide is a little over three feet wide. Where its steep trough is straight the sides are about two feet high. They rise to four feet on two curves, where the ilying logs rise as L'hey "thrush around" and a new direc tion. Logs usually run the Pine Foun tain Side in from 70 to 80 seconds. Their friction on its smooth and close-jointed bottom is lessened by a stream of water about one inch deep at the head. Tliis is conducted to the slide from a large spring high on the mountain. Because ol leakage this rivulet is not more than a quarter of an inch deep at the lower end. Through and over this shallow stream the logs fly with spurts of spray. The little current does noth ng to propel them, only serving to save the bottom of the slide. During the highest third of its length the trough, here straight and very steep, crosses two tremendous gorges >n trestlework. Touching the face >f the mountain, it runs close to the ground on a gradually lessening slope. Then, turning to the left, it renews the quickness of its fall while being carried along the wall of a precipice by iron supports clamped to the rock. Again touching solid ground, it passes a promontory, runs 300 yards j straight, and again turns to the left. I Thence it runs straight out on a | tfestlework and shoots its logs into jHi aver Basin front a height of 30 | fo It. Here is an amazing spectacle when th 9 logs follow one another quickly. Sc me far outjunip the rest, some tu :n over and over as they fall, a jt'eiv "skitter" on the water as do flat fctanes thrown swiftly near the surface. Many, after disappearing, spring out to nearly their whole length, and slap loudly down. On the shore near the mouth of the slide there is a log shanty where five raftsmen live, and near the head of the elide is another shanty occu pied by the gang employed in canting logs into tho entrance of the chute. The foreman of the gang was big Peter Hicks. Sober, Feter was a peaceable, generous man, with no worse fault than a turn for rough joking. Drunk, Peter seemed to de light in bullying and cruelty. Now whiskey was easily obtained from the owner of an illicit still in a gloomy ravine halfway up the moun tain. Hence Hicks frequently began the morning witli a dram. Among the men placed under Hicks by the general overseer was one Hjorth Hjoryesen, a Norwegian not 20 years of age. He was too reserved and laconic to be popular, but he was respected for his frugality and strength. As his mind was sternly bent on im proving his English and gaining enough money to buy a farm, the fair haired blue-eyed youth spent none of his time or means in dissipation. When the day's work was done ho devoted his himself to his English reader and grammar, never disturbed by the talk in the shanty, but some times interrupted by a vision of his old mother and Ingeborg and Hans and the baby. Hjorth never lay down to sleep without reckoning the day's wages in with his little savings, and thinking how all thoso yellow heads at home were so much nearer the wide farm in the west that he meant some day to own. Big Peter Hicks, drinking when ever he had a chance, felt rebuked by the severe sobriety of this youth. On first arriving, Hjorth had silently re fused several invitations to drink. He had not even returned thanks. Being taunted with this apparent rude ness, he had gravely explained that ho did not believe any man should give thanks for the offer of poison. From that hour Hicks resolved to drive Hjorth out of the gang. With this object, the foreman "piled" work on the lad. Hjorth, in the pride of ills strength, regarded this as a compliment to his powers, and encountered every task with good humor. Then Hicks imposed on Hjorth the duty of inspecting the slides. It needed petty repairs two or three times a week, and all these were not likely to be noticed on one inspection trip. In finding something overlooked by tho lad, Hicks expected to get an excuse for discharging him. Nearly all day logs were running in the slide. Then nobody could walk in it. But it had to be inspected while moving logs gave indications of loose ends or holts. Therefore a line of planks was laid outside on the ends of the crosspieces that supported tho bottom of squared timbers. No man of weak nerve could walk along those single planks across several deep chasms. The triweekly inspection usually be gan about two hours before time to stop work. During the last hour no logs were launched. This enabled Hjorth to walk back inside the trough and drive loose bolts, or make any other necessary repairs. One Thursday evening in November Hicks and four of his gang left the camp cabin, and were absent all night. The next morning only four men, one of whom was Hjorth Hjoryesen, presented themselves to launch trees. The general overseer thereupon gave the Norwegian the office form erly possessed by Hicks. At noon the missing men appeared, bearing unmistakable signs of hav ing spent the night in carousing. Hicks was enraged when told that the foreigner was now the leader of the gang, and that he himself could either leave or go to work as a com mon laborer. As lie had flung away all his wages, he could not afford to leave. So he suppressed his rage and went to work. Big Peter felt his degradation keen ly, and with his boon companions re garded Hjorth as a usurper. Toward evening of the following day, Saturday, the men expected that their new foreman would appoint one of them to inspect the slide, and thus avoid the disagreeable duty himself; but he told them to quit work at the usual time, and then started upon his tour of inspection. After Hjorth had disappeared, Hicks and four of his companions, leaving the other men still at work, walked away southward, plunged down into a thick growth of saplings, and disappeared. They were absent for more than an hour. When, flushed and boisterous, they returned from the illicit still, the sun was disappearing and all the other lumbermen had left the scene. Sitting down on a largo log that was awaiting its turn to be launched, they fell into talk about Hjoryesen, and vilified him without stint. Re membering that the object of their wrath was still below them, some one proposed to frighten him by launch ing the log down the slide. They rose, seized the untrimmed log upon which they had been sitting, and brought it round to tho slide. Then they lowered it, large end first, until no more than four feet pro jected above. Still they held on, half afraid to let it go. Was Hjorth in the slide? If so, the log would but give him a fright, pro vided ho were far enough away to get out on hearing it coming at him. "Wait, there he comes now!" Hicks exclaimed. Picking up a bough about seven feet long, he laid it horizontally across the end of the slide in such a manner that it caught on a projecting knot of the log and held it in place. Through the gloom of early evening Hjoryesen could bo discerned about a hundred yards below. When he stepped from tho slide, he found the men grouped in his way. Hardly noticing them, Hjorth at tempted to pass. But Ilicks placed his burly hand upon the youth's shoulder, and thrusting a bottle under bi3 nose, said: "Have a drink?" Hjoryesen gazed calmy into the eyes of his enemy. Then he shook off the offending hand. Hicks, drunk enough to be wicked, seized the lad by the collar and tried to force the bottle into his mouth. Hjorth sent it spinning into the air. Big Peter tried to grapple the Nor wegian, and received a stinging blow in the face that sent him tumbling dangerously near a steep embank ment. Then the other four rushed at Hjoryesen. He knocked one down and struggled furiously with the other three, but was soon overpowered by the united attack and borne to the ground. A rope was passed round him and his arms tied in front of his body. Hjorth made no outcry. "I'll fix you, you young panther!" said Hicks, wiping the blood from his face. They seized the prostrate youth and carried him to the edge of the precipice. "No, den't throw him over! Send him down tiie slide!" shouted Hicks. "Hooray!" cried another. They threw Hjorth backward on the log already in the slide. A second rope was passed round his waist and knotted to the log. "Now will you drink?" said Hicks. "Never!" said the boy, white with rage. "You'd sooner ha?e a ride over the slide, would you?" "Murder me! You've got the power J to do that! But drink with you I will not!" said Hjorth, Ln his own tongue. I Hicks had meant to frighten, not to kill the young foreman. I'll pry your teeth open!" ho cried, and strode furiously back for a stick. The words wv*re hardly out of Hicks' mouth when his leg struck the retaining branch. Tbs log was off with Hjorth in an instant. Ilicks shrieked with horror and flung himself to the ground. The others ; tared at where the log had in three seconds disappeared. Far down the chute they heard it roaring away into silence. Hicks rose. All looked at him in terror. "We'll hang for this!" he cried. With one impulse they took to their heels to find a hiding-place. As the log shot away it swayed, jumped back to its first position, and foil over a little to that side. It ran on the short ends of the branches. The men had not trimmed them away, as they would have done had tho log been put on the slide in tho usual course of work. Back and forth it hopped on the points. The air shrieked in Hjorth's ears and the slide roared under the en ormous and rough log. It shook tho boy to this side and that, torturing I him at every change. He had given I himself up for lost, but terror did not paralyze his scnscß. I u Another it anient," he thought, "the log may turn right over, and tear me and strew me In shreds along this trough." But he set his teeth hard to bear the pain, and uttered never a cry. At ten seconds on its course, the log had reached an equilibrium. Hjorth lay as if half-turned on his right side. "I shall be smashed at the turn," he thought. Even then the log half-canted over and tossed him as far on his side as he had been on his right. It was now flying round the first curve out if its equilibrium, as a sleigh swiftly turning a corner rises on the inner runner. Against the longer side of the curv ing trough it slashed, then raced on almost free of the bottom. It was pressed against the side timbers, and carried Hjorth on the other side. The knot on the rope round the young man was thrust against the timber. Its particles began to be planed off as those of a candle might be if held against a revolving grind stone. Farther back, where the side of the log touched the slide, bark flew away in strips that dropped behind anu were whirled along for some yards in the vortex of air following the rushing timber. The air through which Hjorth was forced came against his almost sense less body with such solidity as to push him farther into the rope. His chest was so wedged into it that the constriction almost stopped his breath ing. So great was his agony that he must have died had it endured long. Again the log righted for a straight run of then seconds, then canted and rose to hurry round the final curve. Once more the knot was ground against the side timbers. The strands had been almost worn' away when the log lay down for the straight stretch to the water. Still the rope held Hjorth although the thrust of the air against him was so strong that the knot must have fallen apart had the run been twenty seconds longer. Then the log shot straight out over Beaver Basin, lljorth's legs flew up like rags tied to a descending arrow, and the log, plunging at an angle into the pond, went out of sight. Neither Hjorth nor the rope that had bound his body rose with the timber when it jumped half out and splashed heavily down. The remaining strands had parted under the strain of the plunge. The log rose, and little waves went away trembling with reflections of the last rose color after sundown. Their circle had widened far before Hjorth's head appeared. Too much racked and exhausted to struggle, he rose as a corpse rises. But the icy water had restored him to full consciousness, and he tried to strike out "dog fashion" with his bound hands. But the effort was agony. He understood that some of his ribs must have been broken, and with an agonizing breath lie sank again. Even in that extremity the youth's firm Northman soul forbade him to yield and die. A twist of his legs brought him upward. He let his feet sink, became motionless, laid his head back, and so rose till his nose and lips were above the surface. Although ears, cheeks and forehead were sub merged, ho could yet catch breath. But the pain of his gasp for air was unendurable. He convulsively moved bis bound hands. That slight distrub ance sank bim once more. Still Hjorth kent his senses. Tread ing water with his feet, he thrust his head well above the pond. Then he heard a voice cry out near by: "There's his head! Pass me that pike-pole." "Where?" cried another man. "There! Here, don't you see? Ah, he's gwne down! No—l've got him!" As Hjorth went under he felt tile sharp hook of the pike-pole catch in his coat. Then he was lifted, groaning, into the boat of the men who had thefir cabin near the mouth of the slide. Hearing the roar and splash of a log j at so unusual an hour, they had run i out of their shanty. On seeing Hjorth's | head appear on the rose-tinted water, ■' tlioy had hurried to his aid. Before morning, after stripping him I in their shanty and wrapping him in j hot blankets, they had taken him to the doctor at Blomfleld. There his young ribs quickly knit, but his nerves were shaken and he could not go back to work on the slide. He ili'ew his little earnings from the bank and went to Dakota. There he has prospered so well that all the j yellow-headed Hjoryesens are with ; him. He refused to lay an information against Hicks. "What good would it do?" Hjorth asked. "Let him go. If I put him in jail, he'll take to the bottle worse than J ever when he conies out." When the news 1 hat Hjorth refused i to prosecute was brought to hirn, Big j Peter hastened to the man he had 1 wronged, cried like a child, and swore he would never taste liquor again. He kept that pledge, and is now an ' industrious, respectable citizen of j Blomfleld from whom I had most of j the particulars of this narrative.— Youth's Companion. PontmlritroKA Shut ITp Shop. The poStoffice. department at Wash ington has been trying since June 30 to secure an official report from Post mistress Robey of the Jayenn postoffl fice. in Marion county, West Virginia. Nothing could he heard from there, so an inspector was sent out. He found the postoffice closed and learned that the- postmistress had moved away several months ago leaving the build ing. The property was removed to Fairmont and the office at Jayenn tem porarily discontinued.—Washington Star. CURIOUS FACTS. j Iron visiting cards are popular In ; Germany. The name is printed in sll j Ver. and forty of the sheets only meas j lire one-tenth of an inch in thickness. | It is said that the peasants of Syria | are the most conservative people iu the i world, shunning every innovation. i Their way of tilling the soil is the | same as that in use of 3000 years ago. | A Worcester (Mass.) man lias invent ! cd a typewriter for writing music. He j claims it will be of as much service in , putting musical scores on paper as the ordlnaary typewriter is iu proiluciug manuscript. The death of Levi McLaughlin, a citizen of Wichita, Kau., has brought to light a story of his remarkable I fondness for children. He had twelve j of his own, of whom eleven are now living, but at. different times lie adopt- I ed a round dozen more, including five orphans o? one family. A curiov.i industry in some of the provinces in China is the manufacture of mock money for offering 1o the dead. The pieces are only half the size of the real coins, but the dead are supposed not 1o know the difference. The dummy coins are made out of tin. hammered to the thinness of paper, and stamped out to the size required. Barring the microscopic forms ot! j life, the fly is the most prolific of all the lower animals. During the sum mer at least twelve generations of flies I are produced, and each female lays an i average of 120 eggs at a sitting. Nor j does she die, like many insects, as a I result of her labors. She recuperates, | and after a short time repeats the office for which she seems principally ! to have been created. Juiik-Slip Turtles. "Can you tell me where there Is a , junk shop?" asked a .voting woman of a patrolman in the East Fifth Street Precinct a few days ago. She was accompanied by half-a-dozen other young women and an elderly woman, j "You see," she added, as she noticed the puzzled look on the policeman's face, "we arc out on a junk-strop par ty. It's such fun to rummage around among the curious old things one finds in those places, and then one finds the oddest tilings to carry off home, and some real useful articles, too, especial ly iu old brass." It appears that girls got together a few friends and go hunting for queer treasures in the curious little holes of junk-shops about the city.—New York Commercial Ad vertiser. The Kurily pf Detective Stories. I heard one of Boston's literati and a poet cf world-wide reputation say the other night she would give any thing to have a good detective story to read; that: she was tired of all mod ern historical novels and pined for an old-fashioned sleuth romance that would afford that delightful contradic tion of keeping her so wide awake that she should finally fail asleep reading it. But, alas! tiie days of Gnboriau and Conan Doyle are over, and a spu rious sort of mental excitement is pro duced by the romance now iu vogue. By and by, however, the whirling of fiction will bring back the detective story pure and simple, but we must wait for the present vein to exhaust itself before it van appear..—Boston Herald. How the Art I t Wan Called. Wlien Henry S. Watson, tiie illustra tor, landed at Naples, he did not knew much about European travel. He had to make same sketches iu the villages about Naples, and his experiences have filled him with wonder enough for a lifetime. His deft pencils helped him a bit. At one little village inn lie trh d to get it through the landlord's head that he was to be called curly in the morning. lie couldn't make himself understood. At last he drew a picture of himself lying in bod, the sun peep ing through the window, the clock at the hour of 0 and the chambermaid knocking at the door. Then if. was quite plain, and they woke bin: < : he tick.— Philadelphia Post. Street Wear and Tear. Did you ever stop to think of the daily wear and tear on the P143 miles of streets in the city of New York? I Your shoe 1 Ills make you realize that some quantity of leather is left on the streets at very step, and if you own horses or wagons, or if you think of their jourueyn, you know that iron shoes and tires are being worn out on the pavements and are in turn wearing the pavements. With each individual person, horse or wagon this may be iwiiiiitesmal in one lay. but in the aggregate it means a great deal. —New York Herald. Not Up to DntP. "Oh. (he disgrace of it all," wept flic unhappy wife of the defaulting bank employe. "Alas! Alas!" moaned her friends, not knowing what else to say. "Oh, the disgrace!" continued the sorrowing woman. "To think that Henry only got away with $80(70, when everybody else is taking all the way from a hundred thousand to a million." Now, when it was too late, she real ized her mistake in marrying an old fashioned man.—Baltimore American. A Southern Fifth Story. A nine and a half pound black bass was taken captive in a seine in the Dismal Swamp on the border of Vir ginia and North Carolina. The it so was twenty-live and a half inches in length from tip of lower Jaw to tail, end nineteen inches in circumference. Stained Knives. To clean knives that have fruit or vinegar stains on them, rub them, after washing, with a freshly cut raw potato. Dry and polish on a knife board in the ordinary way. Lemon Juice and whiting, mixed to a soft paste and well rubbed in will remove stains from ivory or bone handles. Rinse in hot water afterward and dry thoroughly. A Novelty For llic Table. If yoti are looking for a wedding present, why not buy one of the latest novelties in tableware—a silver-ban- died poultry scissors. With which the wings of game or poultry can be cat off. Tliis is a welcome addition to a carver's set, and will prove a very, acceptable gift, for a housekeeper. This novelty is particularly useful iu carv ing ducks. < Treatment For a Transom. Where a doorway has an objection able transom an easy and effective solution of the problem is to till ir hi with two narrow bric-a-brac shelves, one above the other, with back 'and plate strips, so plates may lie used as a background. When decorated with a vase or two, some plates, candle sticks, etc., the jarring note is changed to harmony. A ready-made plate rack would answer admirably if the reg.i lr.tiou size will lit your space. Fashions In Table Linen. Of course one can put any amount of money in table linen, and dinum* . cloths are to lie had with lace or m drawn-work insertions to oc laid over ** color; with exquisite embroidered monograms; with elaborate wovt 11 pat terns, or as plain and shiny as satin. One's taste and purse must govern the selection, but in a general way, for ordinary dinner parlies, it is safer 10 buy the best quality of linen with lit tle or no decoration. One tires of even the prettiest patterns, and styles change so rapidly that a handsome and expensive cloth will look out of date in a short time if its figures are at nil conspicuous, while plain double damask is always in good taste. The same thing in effect might be said of centre-pieces; they would bet ter be intrinsically beautiful than or nate. Lately embroidered pieces have given place to lace, in either a so'id square or circle, or a deep border on a linen foundation. These may or may not be laid over color, according to Individual preference and taste, .lust now, however, there seems to be a fancy for having the table in while." the flowers and possibly the candles alone being colored.-—Harper's Bazar. FJJJT RECIPES: | Lumberman's Toast—Cut five slices cf stale bread and lay on a liat dish, then cover with good molasses; when the bread has absorbed it turn the slices over and treat in a similar man ner; fry brown iu butter and serve hot. Mince-Meat Balls—Chop any left* ever moats, and to two cups of the chopped meat add one tart apple; chop again and then add one salt spoon I'm of salt, half as much pepper, one cap fine bread crumbs, two eggs well beat en. The whole to be well mixed and formed into balls. Fry in hot lard. Baked Lemon Pudding—Mix the fol lowing ingredients well together: Six ounces of bread crumbs, a quarter of a pound of moist sugar, one ounce and a half of putter, three eggs, well beat en, and the juice and zest of two lem ons. Put the mixture into a uiohl. bake in a moderate oven and serve with a custard sauce. Green Peppers—A tempting dish co be served with steak, may be prepar ed in this way: Cut three peppers cross wise into thin even slices, rejecting the seeds. Stew in water until tender. Drain and cook in a little hot butter, sprinkling them lightly with salt. When done arrange on a hot platter and place the nicely broiled steak over them. Buttermilk Biscuit—Sift together one pint flour, one teaspoon baking pow der and a pinch of salt. Rub into the flour one heaping teaspoon lard and butter mixed. Add one-half teaspoon r soda to a large cup of buttermilk xtt sour milk; stir till it foams. Add to the flour to make a soft dough, lioll one-half inch thick, cut and bake >ll a quick oven. J Creamed Potatoes—Put one cupf d of milk in a frying pan; when scalding stir in one heaping tablespoonful of butter, mixed with an equal quantity of flour. Stir until smooth and thick, add pepper and salt to taste, one ten spoonful of minced parsley and two eupfuls of cold boiled potatoes, sliced. Shake over the lire until the potatoes are thoroughly heated. Turkey Souffle—Melt two tablospooii fuls of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour; when smooth, pour 111. by de grees, one pint of hot, rich milk and stir until smooth; add one pint of fine ly chopped turkey, season to taste and cook gently for five minutes; sib' in the beaten yolks of three eggs, remove from the Are and cool. Beat the whites of the eggs until they can be cut with a knife, fold lightly Into thft meat, turn into a buttered dish, and bake in a hot oven for tweuty minutes.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers