JO THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY AUGUST 20 , 1886.-TWELVli3 PAGES. LABOR'S LATE UPHEAVAL , The Second Chapter of Andrew Carnegie's Article on the May Strikes- SOME GAINS AND LOSSES. Tlio Itrlubt and Dark Hide of Profit , awl Co-operation Sun Mini ; Out or Aniii-ulilslii , tir.ti ruo.M LAST srMivv'i m-r..l : The literature called forth by the ie- cenl excitement is propoiidoratiiigly lavorablo to co-operation , or profit-shar ing , as the only true remedy for all dls- ptili.i between labor and capital. My April arlirlc lias been criticised because it relegated that to the future ; but the advocates of this plan should weigh well the fact that the majority of enterprises are not profitable ; that most men who embark in business fail ; indeed , it is Htated that only live In every hundred miccccd , and that , with the exception of a few wealthy and partially retired man ufacturers , and a very few wealthy cor porations , men engaged in business affairs are in the midst of an anxiousand unceasing struggle to keep their heads above water. How lo pay maturing obli gations , how to obtain cash lor the pay ment of their men , how to procure orders or how to sell product , and , in not a few instances , how to induce their creditors to 1)0 ) forbearing , are the problems which tax the minds of business men during the dark hours of night when their employes arc asleep. 1 attach less and less value to the teaching of those doctrinaires who sit in their coxy studies and spin theories concerning the relations between capital and labor , and set before us divers high ideals. The banquet to which they invite the workingman when they propose in dustrial co-operation is not yet quite pre pared , and would prove lo mosl of those who aeeepled the invitation a Harmecido feast. Taken as a whole , tlio condition of labor to-day would not bo benefited , but positively injured , by co-operation. Let mo point out , however , to the ad vocates of profit-sharing that ample opportunity already exists for workingmen - men lo become part owners in almost any department of industrialism , without changing present relations. The great railway corporations , in all cases , as well as the greal manufacturing companies generally , are stock concerns , with shares of fifty or a hundred dollars each , which are bought and sold daily in the market. Not an employe of any of these but can buy any number of shares , and thus par ticipate in the dividends and in the inan- ngement. That capital is a unit is a pop ular error. On the contrary , it is made up of hundreds and thousands of small component parts , owned for the most part by people of limited means. The Pennsylvania railway proper , for in stance , which embraces only the ! ! 30 miles of line between I'ittsburg and Phil adelphia , is to-day owned by 10 JHOshare- liohlers. in lots of from one hfty-dollar .share upward. The New York Central railway , of ! ! > ( ) miles , between New York and Hullalo , belongs not to one , or two , several but to 10-l shareholders or capitalists , , - 18 holders , of whom about one-third are "Women and executors of estates. The onliro railway system of America will .show n similar wide distribution of ownership among the people. There are but three railway corporations in winch the great capitalists hold a considerable jnterest , and the interest in two of these is held by various members of a family , iind in no case does it amount to the con trol ot the whole. In ono of these very cases , the Now York Central , as we nave Keen , there are more than ten thousand owners. Steel-rail mills , with only one excep tion , show a like stale of affaire. Ono of them belongs lo lilo shareholders , of whom 7 are employes , U3 are estates and f > 7 are women. Another of these concerns is owned by ! ! 02 stockholders , of whom 101 are women , 29 are estates , represent ing an ntiAiiown number of individuals , anil 'JOaro employes of the company. A large proportion of tlie remaining own ers _ are small holders of comparatively limited means , who have , from time to time , invested their savings where they liad confidence both as to certainty of income and safety of principal. The Mcrrinmc Manufacturing company ( cot ton ) , of Lowell , is owned by B.ftOO share holders , of whom -i'J per cenl , are holders ot ono share , 21 per cent of two , and 10 percent of three shares. Twenty-seven per cent are holders of over three shares , mid not less than yi3 per contof the whole Block is held by trustees , guardians and executors of obarituble , religious , educa tional and linancial institutions , I have obtained similar statements from other concerns which need not bo published. They prove without exception that from one-fourth to one-third of the number of shareholders in corporations are women and executors of estates. The number of shareholders I have given are those of record , each holding a separate certificate. Hut it is obvious , In the case of executors , that this one certificate may represent n dov-on owners. Many certifi cates issued In the name of a linn repre sent several persons , while shares hold by a corporation may represent hundreds ; but If we assume Hint every cortilicato of stock issued by the Ponnsyhania Rail road company represents only two own ers , which is absurdly under the truth , it follows that , should oyory employe of that great company quarrel with it , the contest would be not against a few , but against n much larger body than they themselves constitute. It is within tlio mark to say that every striking employe would oppose his personal Interest against that of three or four other mem bers of the community. The total num ber of men employed by the Pennsylva nia Railroad company is 18,1)11 ) not us many as there arosharoholdursof record. And what i.s true of I lie Pennsylvania Hallway company is true of tlio railway system as a whole , and , in a greater or less degree , of mining and manufactur ing corporations generally. When one , therefore , denounces great corporations' for unfair treatment of their men , hj is not denouncing the act of some monster capitalist , but that of hundreds and thousands of small holders , scarcely one of whom would bu a parly to unialr or illiberal treatment of the workingman ; the majority of them. Indeed , would bo found on his side , and , as wo have seen , many of the owners themselves would bo worklngmon. Labor has only to bring its just grievances to the attention ot owners to secure fair and liberal treat ment. The "great capitalist" is almost a myth , and exists In any considerable number or degree only in the heated im- nginaUoii of tlio uninformed. Aggregate capital In railway corporations consists of many more individuals than it em ploys. ollowing the labor disturbances there mo the mad work of a handful of for- ign anarchists in Chicago and Mil waukee , who thought they saw in the ex citement n lilting opportunity to execute their revolutionary plans , Although labor is not justly chargeable with their doings , nevertheless the cause of labor was tem porarily discredited in public opinion by these outbreaks , The promptitude with which ono labor organization after an other not only disclaimed all sympathy with riot ami disorder , but volunteered to enroll itself Into armed force for tin maintenance of order , should not be over looked by the student of labor problem * desirous of looking justly at the qnesti < i from the laborer's point of view. It I another convincing proof , if further proo were necessary , that whenever the peaei of this country is seriously tlircatenni the masses of men , not only in the pro fesslons and in thi ) edneated classes , bu down to and through the verv lowes ranks of industrious workers , are deter mined to maintain it. A survey of lln lield , now that peace is restored , give the result- follows : 1. The "dead line'1 has been delinltel ; lived between the forceof disorder an ! an lire hy and those of order. Homb throwing means swift death lo tin thrower. Rioters assembling in number and marching lo pillaire will be remorse los.-ly shot down ; not by the order of ! government aiiovi ; the people , not bi overwhelming .standing armies , not b.i troops brought from a distance , but bj ' .ho masses ot peaceable and orderly cill stuns of nil classes in their own commit nily , from the capitalist ( { own to and in eluding the steady workingman. whosi combined inlluenee constilutes that irre SBtiblo force , under democratic instuu lions , known as public sentiment , Tim sentiment has not only supported tin ollicials who shot down ( li.sturbers of tin peace , but has extolled them in proportion tion to the pronii > tiludc.of their action , U. Another proof of the indestrueli bilhy of human .society , and of its deter niination and power to protect itself fron every danger as it arises and to keo | marching forward to higher states of de velopment , has been given in Judge Mai lory's words : "Every pei > on who conn Mils , hires , procures , or incites others t < the commission of any unlawful or crim inal act , is equally guilty with those win actually perpetrate ibo act , though suel pel Mm may not have been present at tin time of the commission of the oll'ensc.1 The diU'erenee between liberty am license of speech ia now clearly defined u great uain. ! l. It has likewise been clearly showi that public sentiment sympathi/.es will Ihe ellbrls of labor to obtain from capita a fuller recognition of its position am ch'iins ' than has hitherto been accorded And in this expression , "a fuller recogni tion , " I include not only pecuniary com pensation , but what 1 conceive to be ever more important to-day a greater consideration oration of the workingman as a man am ! a brother. I trn. > l the time has gone b when corporations can hope to work men fifteen or sixteen hours a day. And the time approaches , I hope , when itwili he impossible in Ibis cruntry to worli men twelve hours a day continuoml.y. I. While public sentiment has rightl.y and unmistakably condemned violence- - oven in the form for which there is the most excuse , I would have the public give duo consideration to the torribh temptation to which the workingman on a strike is sometimes .subjected. To c.X' poet that one dependent upon his dail.v wage for the necessaries ot life will stantl by peaceably and see a new man emPloyed - Ployed in his stead is to expect much , Plus poor man may have a wile and chil dren dependent upon his labor. Whether medicine for a sick child , or even nour ishing food for a delicate wife , is procur able , depends upon his steady employ ment , fn all but a very few department.- : of labor it is unnecessary , and , I think , improper , to subject men to .such an ordeal. In the case of railways and a few other employments it is , of course , essential for the public wants thai no interruption occur , and in such case sub stitutes must be employed ; but tlio em ployer of labor will Iind it much more lo Ins interest , wherever possible , to allow his works to remain idle and await the result of a dispute , than to nniploy the i-liiss of men that can be induced to take the place of oilier men wiio have stopped worlc. Neither the best men as men , nor the best , men as workers , are thus to bo obtained. There i.s an unwritten law iimong tlio best workmen : "Thou shall not take thy neighbor's job. " No wise Jinployer will lightly lose his old om- idoycs. Length of service counts for much in many ways. Calling upon itrango men should be the last resort 5. The results of the recent disturb- uiccs have given indubitable proof that : rades-unions must , in their very nature , jucoine moro conservative than the mass ) f the men they represent. If they fail : o evolve the conservative element , they jo to pieces through their own extrava gance. 1 know of three instances in ivhicli threatened strikes were recently ivortod by the decision of the master workman of the Knights of Labor , sup ported by the best workmen , against the wishes of the less intelligent memborsof .hat organization , R 'presentalive insti- utions eventually bring to the front the ddest and most prudent men , and will > o found as beneficial in tlio industr.al as : hey have proved themselves to bu in the political world. Leaders of thostampof Mr. Powdorly , Mr. Arthur , of the Hroth- irhood of locomotive Engineers , and Messrs. AVihlo and Martin , of the Amal gamated Iron and Steel association , will ; idn and retain power ; while such as the radical and impulsive Mr , Irons , if nt irst clothed with power , will soon lose it. Tims , as Iho result of the recent revolt , iveseo advantages gained by both capital mil labor. Capital is moro secure bo- : auso of what has been demonstrated , mil labor will hereafter bo moro respect- idly treated and its claims moro caro- 'ullv considered , in deference to an uvakoned public opinion in favor of the aborer. Labor won while it was reason- iblo in its demands and Kept tlio peace ; t lost when it asked what public scnti- uent pronounced unreasonable , and es- > ocially when it broke the peace. The disturbance is over and peace ipain reigns ; but lot no ono bo unduly thinned at frequent disputes between iapitat and labor. Kept within legal units , they are encouraging symptoms , or they betoken the desire of the work- lignum to better his condition , and upon lus desire hang all hopes of advance- nont of the masses. It is the stagnant > eel of contentment , not the running troam of ambilion , that broods disease n the body social and political. The vorkingmon of this country can no moro 10 induced to sanction riol ami disorder ban can any other class of the commit- illy. Isolated cases of violence * under Irons : provocation may break out upon ho surface , but the body underneath is ound to the core , and resolute for the mdnteminco of order. For the first time within my knowledge he loading organs of public opinion in v.ngland have shown a more correct up- irooiallon of the forces at work in the epublio than some of our own despond * ml writers. The London Daily News laid truly that "tho territorial democracy if America can be trusted to deal with ueh outbreaks. " and the Dally Tela- jnipli spoke as follows : 'There is no need for any fear to bo mtortamod lost the law-broak'ers of Chi- ago should got the better of the police , ma , if it bo necessary to Invoke their ild , of the eitly.ons of that astonishing roiing city. Frankly speaking , Micfi joters would have a better chance of in- imidaling Hirmingham than ot over- iwing Chicago. St. Louis or New York , n dealing with the insurants of this ( lass the record of the great republic Is 'ingidarlv ' clear. " Not only the democracy , but the Indus- nous workingmen , of which the domoc- ' ! lP/i , 3SlvnrpQly composed , have amply iilti led the Haltering predictions of our -nghsh friends , and may safely bo rusted in the future to stand firmly for ho mtunlonaucu of peace , A vein of free gold , six foot wide , has > cen struck m the Huby mine , on the iast side of tlio Magdalena ridge in ocorro county , N. M. , which lias caused > rush ot prospectors to that section , and luims have boon taken up for miles round the mine lu every direction. TFRRIR1F F\PFU1F\TF A iLUullJLL LAI LlllLiiLL Upper Five : The Story of tv Slecpiug-Cn Conductor. AN UNCOMMITTED CRIME llniniirsc Impels n Flight An-osi Hi Horiler A StnrtlliiK lint Gratify Ins ' 1 ci'iiuiKUloli. Why I loft the Pullman car service- says a writer in the San Francisco Chrou icie at 11 o'clock nt night tit a wr.te lank in Middle Aruonn will also oxplah why , although I am not yet ; ! . " > years old my nervous system is shatteredmy healtl wrecked , and even my mind so all'cctci thai now and Ihcn my ideas got uiicoup led in a curious way and go riinnln ; wild all over the division and break inu sidings where they have no business t ( be. The doctor says I must have had i bad I : 11 some time and perhaps takei too much bromide of potassium since but I know belter , it is all on account o "upper live. " 1 was a conductor on tin Southern Pacific system at the lime i happenedand my run was from Tucson A. T. , to Los Anjioles. Old tourists wil rememl or my car. It was the ( irenad.i Mosl men say the business I.s a dog's life but I own I rather liked it. A sleeping ear i.s a proscenium box in the theater 01 lito. Single acts of everybody's lillli drama- ; are continually played before one. I'e Mile become naturally unro for veil ai.d communicative on a train , You got down beneath Ihe surface Iheir peculiarities are laid bare , ll.eli oddilus stand out liKe lumps , you sec Iheir hopiM , disappointments , prejudices , likes and dislikes , and feel before UK end ( if thedh ( don a.s it you had known them for years , This was particularly trio : of a car load wo carried out of Tuc son one certain day in August. I re member we had a bridal party on board , two 01 * tine ) ( frummor.s , a couple ol stockmen f i oni "tho Nation , " and what 1 especially iMtiolloet a portly old gen tleman named. Hliss and a widow mimed Paxton , who was tiaveling with her in valid daughter , a young lady of about'JO , .Mr. Hliss was not in good health him self and was full of querulous complain ing. Ho had a dusty voice , little eyes , with large pads of fat under them ; and 1 can sec him , sitting exactly in the mid dle of his seat , growling and gasping , with his collar unbuttoned iu front anil the two ends sticking up like horns on each side of his face. Airs , and Miss Paxton were , on the contrary. a--eom- plished travelers and made the best of everything. ' 1 he mother was a pleasant , grave , old-fashioned la ly , and the daiighler a sweet faced , hollow-eyed , pa tient little feather of a girl , who could not have weighed above e ghty or eighty- live pounds at the most , The wontl.er was scjrchlng. The des ert of wh to sand was simply a relict t ir thai threw the sun back into iho lower air until , when it stirred , it was like a breath from a furnace. Everybody was tatto'd witlt the line bi"k ! : cinders , and hoarse with the dust. The bride was a night to behold and the cattle-men swore like piiaies in the smoking room. 15li.s cursed the nuiiiiigenumt of the roadroot , tree and branch , an 1 grimy perspira tion poured oil him. Toward night the he.it was still excessive , and I believe it was about ! ) o'clock when the porter be gan to make up the berths. The Paxtons had'soetion 5. There is a dilVereiieo of opinion among travelers as to the com forts of lower and upper berths in sum mer , and a good many hold that the uppers - pors are the be.-t , as being iua-est the ventilating windows. This wai tlio view the ladies took of it , and when the berths were made up I lifted the invalid girl in my arms into upper live. I re member hearing her say good night to her mother ami telling her sl.e would sleep woll. About half an 1 our Inter old Hliss came tottorintr and swaying into the smoking- room , where 1 was count ng my tickets. He was furious. His berth"was lower 7 , next to the PaxU in , and lie wanted to know why the upper berth had boon let down. "There is nobody in it , " he sputtered , "and it is all foolislme.-s to make it up. It just makes mine as hot as si bake oven. " I explained to him that the ruin * re quired alt disengaged berths to be made up to a.'commodaie posible local travel. "Hut nobody's going to gel on in this dorort , " he insisted testily. "Why can't you push that one up ? " " 1 can't do it. " I replied n litt 1-j net tled , "unless you pay lor it. " He abused the road , my.self and every body else incoherently for a while , but Iho upshot of the mailer was lie paid for Iho upper berth , and asked in a surly voice that it bo put up at once. Hy that time 1 was pretty mad , and , hurrying backinti the car , I parted liic curtains , unhooked the two wires that hold the upror beith down , seix.od it by the edge , and with one violent push swung it up" in place. I heard the spring locks click , throw the curtains together and returned to the smoking-room. Meantime Hlis-s and one of Iho cattlemen had got into ; i 1 olitical discussion , and it was near 11 o'clock before the old follow became too indignant over some statement as to the civil service to continue the argument and wont staggering and pulling out. Ho returned almost immediately. "Conductor , " ho wheezed with a sort of forced calmness , "i thought I bought that upper berth In my sections" "So you did , " I replied. "And you told mo you put it up ? " "Yes , sir. " "You did no snob thing ! " ho exclaimed , suddenly bursting into n rii'jje ' , "tho in- forna. tiling has boon down all night , and is down now , and my berth steaming llkn a sweat box I ( .Jive mo my money back ! " "Yo i locked into the wrong b'orth. " 1 replied. "I put that upper back my.self and nobody's touched it since. " "I looked into suction seven , " ho said , furiously " 1 dm't believe you over touched it. " "I just want toshow youth ityou don't know what you're talking about , " 1 an swered , loading the way back into the ear. "Hero is your section. See. " At this I throw back the curtiins and stopped dumbfounded. The upper berth was down and what was more , the wires diil i.ot appear to have boon touched. B'iss started to say something in reply , when I felt of a sudden as though a bullet had gone through my heart. A horrible thought had Hashed across my mind , too quickly to be shaped in words , The blood caino throbbing through my nock in slow , bursting wares , an I moro like a machine than a man , I stretched opt my arm and opened the curtains of section live. The upper berth was shut , I had made a mistake Iu a hideous , moving tomb , swung like Mahomet's collln between heaven and earth , 1 had buried the girl nllvel Fora moment it scorned as though the arteries of my throat would burst ; my heart beat with quick , sharp pangs ; my skin had all the icy contraction of a sudduii plunge Into cold water , It was then that asortnf secondary intelligence scorned to work within mo , and while my senses reeled with fear and horror , impelled me to push up the berth in the old man's sec tion and get awtvy. I scarcely knew what I was doing , but Hliss noticed nothing and grumblingly crawled into the berth while I hurried out to the platform. Why did I not open upper iivo ? He- cause 1 roaH/ed insluutlv that the victim was Jong before ( load. In a stooping car spaoo is economized to the inmost extent. Iho swinging berth fits into space like a ball in a socket. Tin electricity of tin mattress and the slight figure of the gir alone made it possible for me to close i with her inside , l gave ono haggard lool : it my watch. Ai | hour and a ba'f Inu elapsed. . She must have died in the lirs three or four minutes. I stood on the stop * and tried ( o think- but 1 could not'control ' my mind , h swift defile it pictured lo me the- discov ery , the blacKened corpse tumbling fron tin- blankets , the still' lingers elutchint at nothingness , the mother's shriek , tin consternation of the passengers , the ex cited theories , the quick corn-option ol the truth , the search , the denunciation the awful machinery of the courts , tin prison ! Hy si violent elVort I surveyed tin situation trom several standpoints. Thej all led to one conclusion Ilight. There was but one time when I could havi taken the beuelit of the accident thai was at once , when 1 made the discovery anil I reali/.cd the Impossibility of ex plaining my hesitation These thing- passed through my mind like Hashes ol lightning. There was not an instant It : lose. Mrs. Paxtt.n . might at any moment awake and call her daiighler. .Ju.-t then the engine slowed up a Irillo. I saw indistinctly - distinctly in the gloom that the ground was level , swung oil'and watched tlicdim o.illine of the train , carrying its burden of sleeping life and silent "death , grow taint and lainler mid disappear into the night. ' The place where 1 jumped was near a wider tank. I presently made It out and walked wide around it to avoid a possible watchman. 1 knew the lay of the land in a general way and that I could not be far from the little town of Mohawk Sum mit. To gel out of the country the quick est way povsiblo was my dominant thought , and old Mexico suggested itself tit once , 1 realixed that I must avoid the railroad with its accompanying telegraph lines , and I started , as nearly as i could judge , southeast. As I walked along 1 cut the gilt buttons olV my coat and vest and throw them away. 1 did the same with my cap and tore the gold braid fio.il around the brim. 1 MiaU not jro into the details of that night , nor the many days and nights that followed it. i was lull of wild regrets at the course I had taken and saw a million d ( feets in my plan. With agony I real- i/ed that my Ilight destroyed the theory of innocence. J could see'a do/.en way's thai I mighl have remained upon Ihe car now lhal it was tou hile. My journey south was through innumerable hard ships , and ever-present and sickening apprehension ( f pur.-ud. In tin ? camps where hunger drove me it seemed to me that everybody looked strangely at mo. If a man turned his head my heart bounded with panic. Twice I was lost on the arid , sago-grown plains , and once I waniiered without water and burning with fever for two days. I had $1)4 ) in my pocket when I jumped from the train , bill when I finally made my way to Uiiaymas 1 had less than ,10 cents. There 1 was forced lo come into town and go to work. Tan and tatters had pretty thoroughly disguised me , but I was still haunted by the fear of arrest Jt was u long tune before I could look at ajiowxpapor' nil , and when 1 linallv plucked up courage to open one , it was with the gingerly enutiui of a person who lilts a garment expecting to Iind a snake underneath. 1 had a terror of see ing the details of , a tragedy in print , and 1 believe , much as it might have aided my escapo.I would npt have bad the moral courage to read a pajje.rcontaining them. After a good , many months a great longing seized mo to sec my own country again. The adobe houses and the foreign chatter to which J eoidd never train my ' tongue wore on mo like a nightmare. 'I vai miserably poor , but managed to make my Way to Pasodel Xorto. On Ihe other .side of the Kio Grande is El Paso , the American town , and , although I never ventured o\0rthe ; sight of visitors of my own nationality delighted , oxcitcd and frightened.'mo'by turns. 1 hunt : about the place' , living from hand to month , until one day a gr < at event hap pened. At Ihe end of the main streel is Ihe principal curiosity of the town Ihe old cathedral , it is a venerable pile , built time out of mind , and falling into delib erate and respectable rum. The. white stucco that once covered the walls has pooled oil'in places and given itan air of picturesque dilapidation , and inside are curious elliuics of saints aed the crucified Christ. In a word , it is the objective point of all tourists and visitors. 1 was in this pi ice one afternoon in August , half dozing on one of the old carved benches , when a party of ladies and gen tlemen came in. Hack of mo was the holy-water urn , and they were inspecting it when I looked up. At the sight of one of the indies I felt as though 1 hail received a galvanic shock. I tried to rise , but could not. I shut my eyes and opened them again to Iind her still there. It was no hallucination , no apparition , it was Miss Paxton. "Why , mamma , " I heard her say"tho gentleman is u iwell , I believe. " "Yon are Miss Paxton , " I gasped. "Yes , sir , " she replied , with a lilllo start. "Who was on the Southern Pacific train going to Los Angeles a year ago ? " "Yes , sir. " Then she suddonlv turned and said in a loiv voieu : "Why , I believe it's the conductor who ran away AVitli the company's ' money thatnight ! " "Who rail away with the company's money ! " It was a construction of my Ilight 1 had never thought of. 1 con trolled my impulse to shout out , and Miiil : "Were you nol in upper five Hint night ? " "Lot mo see , " she replied. " 1 think I was. _ Yes , I remember , I was in it for a whilo. and then the jolting made inn sick and I crawled down with mamma , " I rushed out of the cathedral like a mad man , I seemed to walk on air. My past life appeared as vague and unreal to mo as the fabric of a dream , I laughed and cried and went along tlio streels talking to myself. That night I slept on the other side of fie river. Perhaps the reaction - action was lee much for me. for 1 have not been very well since , and those Ills of nervousness have pulled me down to what you see mo to-day. It scorns as if there were chords twanging and quiver ing through m now unit then , and that is when my id la * < 't ' side-traeked and wild trains go sidling over my mental railroad. Hut may bm that's the bromide. A Tunnel from $ wilcu | to Denmark London Standard : Aloxandrode Hothe. : in engineer who ha $ been working at Panama under MI < ln Losseps , has pre sented to the governments of Denmark iind Sweden a prbjert for a submarine ) railroad tunnel under the sound between Copenhagen and1 MiUmo. The tunnel is to have a tolal lonfirth of t we Ivo kilo meters , three betwcqn Aniegar and the small island SalU'ohnon ' , iii.dcr the Strait Drogden , and nina between Sul- tlioliiian and Sweden , , The ground to bo worked much resembles that in the channel between 'Knglunil and Franco , ind is .said to olTer no difliculty to the xxcciition of the work. The cost of con struction is calculated to amount to ap.OOO.OOOf , or i'l.SOO.OCO. The Swedish government takes a great inter- jstin the plan , while the Danish at pros- Jill is keeping somewhat back. Mr. do liotho entertains sanguine hopes of a successful result of the negotiations. The iiiniuil would bo of the greatest import- nice for the future commercial cornice- ; ion between Sweden-Norway , and later > n of Russia and the whole continent , as loaded railroad wagons could then run from the north of Norway , Sweden , or I'indland , down to the south of Italy . protracted constipation : auses inflammation of tlio bowels , as u remedy and regulator , use Dr. J II. Mc Lean's Liver and Kidney Halm. A ROVER OF THE SEAS The Adventurous Salem Sailors of th Early Days , CAPTAIN CLEVELAND'S CRUISE * Stlrrlnj : Mfe ( m tin- Trackless 51ah anil In 1'lrntp forts of Lands Suppressing n Mutiny. 1IP. . Wfttjrntnn //iirprrVi M < iinztnr. ( The best type of the adventurou Salem sailors will always be Caplan Hit-hard J. Cleveland. The first instal mi-lit of his own reminiscences wa given ii : the North American Review foi OetoVor. 1827 , and his "Voyages am Commercial Enterprises' ' were hrst pub lisbed collectively HI 1812 , and afterwan reprinted in 1850. There lies before mi a farther collection of manuscript ex tracts from his diaries ami letters , ant tlie same Defoe-like quality rims throtigl them all. Ho was my father's owi cousin , and 1 remember him Well In m.j childhood , whi'ii ho had reached tin haven of the custom house , aller occupy' ' ing for a time the temporary retreat , foi which every sailor sighs , of a small farm in the country , lie was then a serein old man , with a round apple shaped head , a complexion indelibly sunburnt , ami a freshness of look which bore testimony - mony to the abstemiousness of his life ; tor he asserts that he had never tasted spirituous liquors , or , indeed , anything ! stronger than tea and eoli'eo , nor had lib over used tobacco. In his mouth a single i-lovo-nlnk was forever carried. I remember him as habitually .silent , yield ing admirably to the superior colloquial powers of a very lively wife , yet easily Imvd into the most delightful yarns when she happened to be absent. Then he became our Ulysses and Hohinson Crusoo in one. The whole globe had been his home. It could be said of him , as Thoreau says of the sailor brother in a country farm house , that he knew only how far it was to the nearest port , no more distances , aH the rest being only seas and distant capes. I le had grown to be a perfect practical philosopher ; Kpictctus or Seneca could have taught him no farther lessons as to acquiescence in the inevitable ; and yet there was an unquenehod fire in his quiet eyes that showed him still to have the qualities of his youth. It was easy to fancy him issuing from his sheltered nook to "point the gnus upon the chase , Or old the deadly cutlass bhiiie. " as in those adventurous eaily days. One iif Cleveland's best feats "was the performance of a voyage , then unex ampled , from Macao to the northwest coast of America and hack , for the pm - pose of furs a voyage made the more re markable by the fact that it was achieved in a cutter { .loop of fifty tons , with a crew of tlic worst description , without any printed chart of the coast , and in the teeth of the monsoon. It was essential to his success to reach his destination be fore the arrival ot certain ships that had been despatched from Hoston around Capo horn ; and his plan was to procure a vch.se ! small enough to keep near the coast , sometimes taking advantage of a favorable current , and making i\ port , although an unknown one , every night. In his letters to his father , he trankly says that his plan is pro nounced impracticable by all experienced ship masters at the port , but since no body has ever tried it , how can it be asserted to be impracticable ? They all predicted that ho might sail a month without making any progress , and would then return , it at all , with sails and rig ging lorn to pieces. "I was , " ho coolly says , "not pleased with such gloomy prospects , but concluded that if 1 was to meet ruin , it might as well bo by being lorn lo pieces on the China coast as to arrive on the coast of America after the object of my voyage had been secured by other vessels. " So he sailed January ! )0 ) , 17t ! ! ) , with twenty-live on board two Americans , the rest Irish.Swodcs.Fronch , and ehiclly English , the last mostly de serters from men-of-war and - - Hotanv Hay ships "a list of as accomplished villian's as ever disgroced a country. " The work was so hard that the precious crew soon mutinied , and refused one morning o weigh anchor. Jn preparation for this he had stored all provisions near the cabin , and he coolly informed them that they could not eat until they worked ; and so mounted guard for twenty-four hours , with two or thico men. including the black cook. His muskets wore Hint- locks , and revolvers were not yet intro- ilueed ; bill he had two four-pound cannon loaded with grape. It then occurred to Idiii that if ho offered to set them on shore , they would soon have enough of it. They caught at the proposal ; but the Chinese would not keen or feed them on land , nor the captain take them on hoard next day ; pointing a cannon ho bade Ihoni keep ofl' . He then went to the shore iu an armed boat,1 and offered : o take them on board ono by one. Sev- . ral came eagerly ; but when it turned ml that the boatswain and one other ingleader were not to be taken back on my terms , these two desperadoes pre sented their knives at the breasts of the > lhors ami swore that they should not itir. Some yielded ; others wore sul- only indiHerent ; one lay intoxicated on .ho beach. It was like one of tin ; mull- leering scenes in S ovenson's "Treasure Island. " At 'a < t all but six werobroutiht > ii b jard and thenceforth behaved will laving pr.bat > ly coincided by this Cine vith their young captain , who qu etly vrites to his father , ' 'No grosser miscai- mhition of character was over nnido than jyth'so men in supposing that they joiild accomplish their object by threats > r intimidation. " Tiny icept on their formidable vpvngo , iften finding themselves after a toilsome lay , si t back leagues on tholr way ; grax- ng o i rooks , caught in whirlpools , hreatenod by pirates. The diminished srow proved an advantage , as they had 0 bo puton allowance of provisions at my rate. In ilurty days they sighted the lorth end of F > ruosa , and had performed hat part of the trip deemed i in practicable hen they crossed the North Pacific amid ionstant storms , and anchored in Nor- oik Sound on March 80 , 17i ! ! ) , after a oyujro of two months , and in advance if almost all competing vessels. Even hose which had arrived from Hoslon vere at disadvantage , being much larger , mil unable to penetrate the innumarablo iays and inlets on the northwest coast. 'lilting up a screen of hides around the leek , and never Jutting moro than one mtiv.i on deck at one time , Cleveland 'oncealcd ' the sm II ness of his crew , mil eluded attack , though the Indian lanoes wore often larger than his little csscl. On ono occasion his cutter ran ina rock , and Jay there twenty-four 1 ours , at such an ancle that no one could land on deck , the Indians fortunately tot discovering his plight. At lust Iho 'csscl lloatcd with returning tide , and iftor two months' trallie they reached 'Idnn. September 15 , by way of the iandwich islands , laden with a cargo vorlh .f(10f ( O'J , the sea-otter skin that had icon bought at the rate of eight fur a nuskct selling for $8J ( apiece. His do- criers had reached \Vampoa before him , mil all Cleveland's friends hail believed heir assertion that lie was dead. The youthfiilness of these men gave a laver to im p dse and adventure to the ouerost mercantile enterprises. They undo up their plans for some voyage ound the globe as blithely as if it were a achling trip. It suemud like commerce m u lark , and yet there was always n loon eye to business. Cleveland and his riond Hhaler whoso Sketches of Algiers lus still a place in the literature ot tra vel- having come together from the Isl of Franco to Copenhagen , formed tli project of n voyage round Cape lion They bought at Hamburg an America brig of 17,1 ton * , the Leila Hyrd. tosse up a coin to decide which should go r. . captain and which as supercargo , invite a delightful voting Polish nobleman , th Count tie Houlssillon , to ucconipan them , and sailed isovenibcr 8 , 1801 , for two years' vojage , the oldest of the thro not being yet thirty years old. In t lies days , when every little remote port < the globe has been visited and ( { escribe in full , its manners sketched , its chat : nels hud down in a chart , and its commercial morcial resources fully known , it is po < sible to appreciate the uncertain an vatriii1 delights of such an expedilior Every entry into a now harbor mlgh imply a fortune or a prison , for Spal : had not yet lost its control of the region they wore to visit , but claimed the righ to monopolize the commerce of all. ro each port there was some pom nous ollicial to bo managed o bribed , and in general , whe.ro air injustice bad been done , the pluck am ready wit of the young Americans ear ried the day. Moro than once , aller bein ; actually imprisoned and ordered out o the port , they quietly refused to weisrl anchor until their wrongs had been re dressed and an apology made. On om occasion , after going on shore with s boats crew to rescue > ome of their owi men who had been improperly detained they carried oil'Iho Spanish guard also and then sailed within musket-shot of i tort garrisoned by a hundred men , com pollinir their prisoners lo stand eon.spieu oiisly by the bulwarks , in order to wan olT the the lire from Iho buttery. Never theless they were under lire for half an hour. One shot struck them just , ubovi the water-line , and several cut the sails and rigging. The Spaniards had cighl nine-pound guns , the Americans had only three-pounders , but when the laltei got within range , the Spanish .soldier.- lied , and in ton miunlos the light wat done. This was at San Diego , California , and wo have the testimony of Mr. Hieli aril 11. Dana that it was still vividly re. meinbc red upon that coast thirty year. ' later. When the Lclia Hyrd was safe the prisoners were sent on shore , and tin Americans had soon after a several days visit from the "jolly padres , " as Clove laud calls them , of the old Spanish mis sions , wlio took uproarious satisfaction in the whole a Hair , and agreed that tin Spanish commandant , Don Manuel Hod riguc/ , ought to bo sent back to the mother counlrv as a poltroon. THE PRISONS OF NAPLES. \Vlioro tlio Contiiuloii of iMor ; l and 1'liy.siuul V lee Kprnnds Uapiilly. London News : Castol Capuana is a large , square place , some 1,500 square feel in extent. The once handsome cdi > lice is now spoiled by time , neglect and constant trallie. Three grand staircases lead out of the. central court , one in front as you enter the great door and one on each band. The one on the left was for merly decorated with frescoes , far from de.spieable works , of the sixteenth cen tury ; one represented our Savior ntumb- ling on his way to Calvary ; another the escape of St. Peter from prison ; and an other was a picture of the Virgin. They have been totally spoiled by bad restoration anil suose- qtient neglect. On this staircase are the grated doors leading to the in famous prisons nark , damn ' , airless , putrid ; paved with stones likc'thobtrcct.s , and many of them subterranean ; the piisons against which ponalists , philoso- idiors , Italians and ioreigners have so long inveighed , and which now , thanks to the ceaseless exertions of the Deputy Farini , are to be abolished. This stair case leads to the grand criminal poiirt , and tliii others to various other courts , among which the large saloon of the grand civil court deserves to bo men tioned as ono of the most spacious halls in Naples. It as well as the others was decorated with frescoes in 1770 , but all are now failed. In the. prisons there is one part called San La//.aro , which is devoted to Hie do- tcntion ot cidofs of the camorra. The name of camorrisla is never denied by a prisoner , who generally declares himself such when arrested. Hut a man will never falsely proclaim himself a camor- rista , for he would not dare to enter among the true members , us they would make him pay dearly for his presump tion. The camorrista chiefs under deten tion often amount to ono hundred , and from fifteen to twenty inhabit one room. Their appearance is audacious and ani mated , they speak with assurance , and IOOK you straight in the face. They show a certain superiority to external condi tions , and give evidence of possessing finalities that might bo turned to good. Very dill'erent is the aspect of the pris oners in the common prisons , where you find hundreds of persons abject , .lown-heartcd , vile , with .stupid or i'oro- 3imi5 physiognomies , the true product of misery. In these prisons the contagion of moral and physical vice spreads rapidly. When Fr. Cnrci once obtained permission , o visit these prisoners ho found Ihem lalf naked , and iu thochnmbor there wore : lurty of Iho most abject In nstiitoofnbso- nte nudity. He remonstrated with the iiilhorities , who in consequence provided ifteen pairs of trousers and lifteon jack- its for the thirty men , and the Jesuits is-ero obliged to supply the rest That itato of things was afterward altered , jut still the Castol Capuana retained too nany traces of what had once ruled here. It is a traditionally corrupt pri son , in which dirt and infamy seem to > o/.e Ironi the very walls ; whoru the well lisposod , having once goi so low as to iccomo an inmate , grows vicious and ho vicious grows worse. Among the ! ommon criminals nro mixed the ewer grades of camorristi , who rob and ! l-iiso their companions , and spread their nllii'Mice within and without the walls. Close by are the other prisons of Sun 'rancisco , Santa Maria , and Agnono , mil the low district of Porta Capuaaa , orming a very nucleus of crime. The irisoners often manage to correspond vith the people in tlio blreets , and by ibis neans with oaah other. A eorrospond- inl of Iho Piccolo relates thai about a ear ago ho was an ollicor of the guard n Castol CaniMiina. The orders wore nest severe , for every evening there was langer of evasion or of communication vith tliii external world on Iho part of ho prisoners. A'ory often groups of naletaetors and bad womuii , the Inhab- ( ants of the low quarters ot Nantes , voiild absemblo outside the walls , and be sentinels were obliged to dsivo them i way. From within issued hongs of latrcd and revenge , and signal erics that vero hoard and understood by those uitside , in spile of Iho vigilance of the entries. During the cholern epidemic if 1BS1 the prisoner ; ] of Castel Capuami xicanio infected ; there was a species of ebullion , and the prisoners thrust their lands through the bars of their windows , iiid biiiought tlio people to release them rom certain conlagion r.nd death. In abolishing Iho prisons in Castel 'apuana Iho government Is taking a ; roat stop towards improving that quar- or of the town , for a prison BOP ins mys- erloubly to allracl malcfaclors to its loighborhood. The courts of justice , too , fill gain in quint and decency , and no ongcr bo disturbed by the ones of prison- rs penetrating their precincts. There rill no longer bo a sense of the possibility if rebellion close by that has so often lindorml the serene course of Justice , 'he whole palace , which still retains races of its former rustic grace , will also lunelit by the change , ana might bo re- tared to something of its former dignity nd beauty. The abolition of the prisons fill bo a real gain to the city , and it is to 10 hoped , will bu followed by that of the llier prisons iu the neighborhood , and ho erection of now and model ones far- tier away from the centre. SULLIVAN'S CHEAT AUO , The Portraits of Mon Whom Ha Has Met , A Terrible \Vnrnlnft lo Wonld-l-o I'Mghtrra V } ho Aspire lo Knock. Out the Cbaiuplon , The great John L. Sullivan love * pem-o as the small boy loves pie , and he will to out of his way to secure quietness ami rest. Hut when he is aroused he is n bad man to fool with. Mi' . Sullivan is usually very much aroused when ho is engaged in one of his buttles , and a stable tilled with mules Is nothing compared to his powerful right arm at such a time. Ono of the champion's most cherished possessions i.s n largo album , which is completely filled with pictures. Tln-v are not , as the sentimental reader who does not know John L. very well might imagine , the photographs of former sweethearts , On the contrary , the book contains the pictures of foolhardy men who have stood up before the champion for ono.or more rounds and have had their original features quickly trans formed by a blow from Air. SuKivan'e list. list.When When .lohn L was traveling with ths minstrel combination hist season he en countered a would-be champion at almost every small town which the show visited. The local pugilist was Invariably anxious lo increase his reputation by standing before fore Sullivan for a few rounds , and ho was always accommodated. It is the pic tures of these deluded mortals that Mr. Sullivan gloats over , and exhibits to his admiring friends as proof of his wonder ful prowess. A typical picture is that of a big black smith iu Scranton , Pa. Several years of pounding on an anvil had given linn mus cle like the Atlantic cable , and in local circles he wus looked upon as a marvel. Ho appeared before the champion one night , reeking confident and full of light , ! in just sixteen seconds Mr. Sullivan had ; struck him fourteen times on the noses i ami when he revived , which was some ' time next day that feature of his phys iognomy looked as it a 1,000-pounu safe j had fallen upon it from the top of a ton- ' story building. The blacksmith returned to his anvil. Ho is not so pretty as lie wus , but be knows more now. i _ Then there was the strong boy of Adrian , Midi. , who told all his friends that Sullivan was a much over-rated imgilist. So contidcnl was Iho slronir boy of his ability to down the champion that ho purchased half the scats in the house and presented them lo his friends with an invitation to come around and see him knock out the big man. The result broke on" the. engagnmont between the strong boy and hi.i bust girl. She said she never could marry a man who carried ono eye up in the middle of his forehead and allowed the other to hang around his left ear. He tried to explain that .Mr. Sullivan had hit him un awares , but his be.stgirl said that she wit nessed the light and that the champion had merely played with him. During the champion V triumphal tour bo encountered Iho wicked barber at Coshen , Ind. The tonsorial artist stood six feet high and had the reputation of being able to knock down , a cow by n tap with his lint. His friends were so confi dent they advised Sullivan to buy a cof fin before he was killed , as he could prob ably make bolter terms with the undertaker - . taker by a personal visit. In the first round the champion only pluvcd with the barber , and the hopes of the hitter's friends went up like the price of ice in summer. Hut in the second round Sullivan led out and hit the barber a blow on the jaw that almost sent the tonsorial ai list's mouth around to the back of his neck , lie never got over it. lie is able to converse now only by means of a slate , and the moat popular mau among the barber's customers is John L. Sullivan. Then there was the giant farmer of Co lumbus , O. Ho did all the work com monly performed by horses on u farm , and weighed'00 po.mds. Ho went nt the champion with a rush , but was quickly scut to grass by a rattling tor nado of blows. The giant's face now re sembles a nutmeg grater. Jt is covered with lumpssome of them as big as an egg , and ho has permanently retired from the prize ring. Sullivan has become tired of knocking out local lighters , and on his next tour ho will exhibit his album as a warning to iinibiliotis small fry. How tlio McAlcai H and Americana Twice Averted Trouble. , Chicago Herald : "Speaking of the Cutting case , and the row down on tlio Mexican border , " said a man from Las ' Tegas , New Mexico , who i.s at McCoy's , 'it is the silliest tiling in the world to ' nlk about war over such a cause. The don of the United Slates anil Mexico go ng lo war ever a fellow like Culling ! Jo you remember the case of Juan Jorlmas m lbr > ( ) y Cortinas was a Mexican ( audit tind a robber. Ho Isold nominally i commission as colonel in Ihe Mexican irmy , but he was actually at the head of ! 00 guerillas or cutthroats. He came iver into Texas in lt'5'i ' and stole cattle , nurdorcd 'Los Gringos' wherever 1m ionhl find them , and devastated his whole ine of march. Was that made a causu f war ? No. Governor Klpford , of I'oxas , raised a regiment of rangers , vent after Cortinas , and as by that limit ho thing had got internationally warm , 'reidciil Pierce sent Colonel K. K. Lee , if the second cavalry , with n few com. mnics , to see fair play ; but the duty of Iriving Cortinas across the border was eft to the rangers. They did it. The wo governnie'nts never got into even a orious correspondnncu about it. Cortinas vas an outlaw , and ho only had to bo united down by the police. Ho was Irivon away lo bo encountered again on years later. The same means were aken to drive him oil' , and , If 1 remember right , a company of Texans then got lold of him. 1 need f.ay . no more , 'orlinas did not bother anybody any linger , and the Mexican government it- oil was full of applause. Do you re- iiomber what was known as thu Salt 'onil war , only ton years ago , in 187 ( ) it Ihe little town of Yslotta , on the lilo iranile , now a .station on the Southurn 'acilic ' road , a number of Mexicans wore rrcilod for cattle stealing and put in ill. In a week or HO , and while the rand jury was investigating all peace- bly an armed body of Mexicans crossed lie river , assaulted the jail , released the risonors , wounded the American shorift ml one of his deputiesand , after raiding lie town and stealing all they could.took lie released prisoners and the plunder ver lo the Mexican side. Hubbard , now ihiislor to Japan , was then governor of 'cxas , and ho made a furious protest to ocrotary Fish , but it never amounted to nylliing. There was a long diplomatic orrespondciico which tired everybody tit , and by the time it was ended the order was again quiet. Honoo I say u iierc local border troubo can over bo magnified into a auso lor war. Texas , the onntry.dircctly aUbcted , can take care f herself. Precedent gives her the right D organize her rangers , and the treaty f Guaduliipo Hidalgo only requires that lie United States government shall sen dr play. That has boon the mode of roceduro for thirty years and is not kely to bo changed now. Governor re-land Is entirely right in his uasump- ion of the right to lake care of ihu roubles himself. There Is no need to jake. an int/crualioual uoullict out of it. '