Bemorraie chp Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 24. 1899. DAYBREAK. A wind came up out of the sea, And said : “Oh, mists, make room for me!” It hailed the ships, and cried : .*‘Sail on, Ye mariners, the night is gone.” And hurried landward far away, Crying : “Awake! It is the day!” It said unto the forest : “Shout! Hang all your leafy banners out!” 1t touched the wood-bird’s folded wing, And said : “0, bird, awake and sing! And o'er the farms: “O chanticleer ! Your clarion blow ; the day is near!” It whispered to the fields of corn: “Bow down, and hail the coming morn.” It shouted through the belfry tower: “Awake, O bell ; proclaim the hour! It crossed the chnrchyard with a sigh, And said : “Not yet! in quiet lie.” Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. MR. GROBY'S SLIPPERY GIFT, Two men could hardly have been more unlike than Jim and Joe Mordaunt, and when it is considered that they were broth- ers brought up under the same conditions and trained by the same hand, the dissim- ilarity seems nothing less than remarkable. Jim was the older, and a better, steadier- going hand Stuart Mordaunt did not own upon the place, while a lazier, more unre- liable scamp than Joe could not have been found within a radius of fifty miles. The former was the leader in all good works, while the latter was at the head of every bit of deviltry that harassed the plantation. Every one recognized the dif- ference between these two, and they them- selves did not ignore it. “Jim, he’s de ’ligious pa’t o’ de fam- bly,’’ Joe used to say,’”’ an’ I’s most o’ de res’ 0’ it.”? He looked upon his brother with a sort of patronizing condescension, as if his own wickedness in some manner dignified him ; but nevertheless, the two were bound together by a rough but strong affection. The wicked one had almost whipped a fellow-servant to death for say- ing that his brother couldn’t out-pray the preacher. They were both field hands, and while Jim went his way and did his work rejoicing, Joe was the bane of the overseer’s life. He would seize every possible chance of shirking, and it was his standing boast that he worked less and ate more than any other man on the place. It was especially irritating to his master, because he was a fine-appearing fellow, with arms like steel bars, and the strength of a giant. It was this strength and a cer- tain reckless spirit about him that kept the overseer from laying the lash to his back. It was better to let Joe shirk than to make him desperate, thought Mr. Groby. In his employer’s dilemma, however, he sug- gested starvation as a very salutary meas- ure, but was met with such an angry re- sponse that he immediately apologized. Stuart Mordaunt, while rejecting his em- ployee’s methods, yet looked to him to work an amendment in Joe's career. ‘“‘For,”’ said be, ‘‘that rascal will corrupt the whole plantation. Joe literally carries out the idea that he doesn’t have to work, and is there a servant on the place who will work if he thinks he doesn’t have to?” “Yes, one—Joe’s brother Jim,”’ said the overseer, grinning. ‘‘He’s what a nigger ought to be—as steady and as tireless as an ox." “It’s a wonder that brother of his hasn’t corrupted him.”’ “Jim ain’t got sense enough to be cor- rupted as long as he gets his feed.” “Maybe he’s got too much sense,’’ re- turned the master coldly. ‘‘But do you think that Joe really has notions?” “Notions of freedom? No. He's like a balky horse. He'll stand in his tracks un- til you beat the life out of him, but he isn’t the kind torunaway. It would take too much exertion.” “I wish to Heaven he would run off !’’ said Mordaunt impatiently. “It would save me a deal of trouble. I don’t want to deal harshly with him, but neither do I want the whole plantation stirred up.”’ “Why don’t you sell him ?” *_% * Stuart Mordaunt’s eyes flashed up at the overseer as he said: ‘I haven’t got down to selling my niggers down the river et.” “Needn’t sell him down the river. him—"’ “I’m no nigger-trader,”’ the gentleman broke in. ‘Listen to me,” said Mr. Groby insinu- atingly. ‘‘My wile wants a good servant up at our house, and I'd be willing to take Joe oft of your hands. I think I could manage him.”” He looked for the moment as if he might manage the slave to the poor fellow’s sorrow. “But would you keep him right about here so that I could look after him if he got into trouble ?’’ “Certainly,” said Mr. Groby, jingling the coins in his pocket. “Then I’ll give him to you,’’ said Mor- daunt coldly. “I don’t ask that ; I “I do not sell, I believe I told you. I’ll give him to you.” The overseer laughed quietly when his employer was gone. ‘‘Oh, yes,” he said to himself. ‘I think I can manage Joe when he’s mine.’ “I don’t believe I ought to have done that,”’ mused the master as he went his way. Joe did not know what happened until the papers transferring him were made out and Groby came and read them to him. “You see, Joe,” he said, you're mine. I've wanted you for a long time. I’ve al- ways thought that if you belonged to me I could make a good hand out of you. You see, Joe, I’ve got no sentiments. Of course you don’t know what sentiments are, hut you’ll understand later. I feel like I can increase your worth tothe world,”” and Mr. Groby rubbed his hands and smiled. w Sell 2” The black man said nothing, but at night, humble and pleading, he went to see his old master. When Stuart Mordaunt saw him coming he did not feel altogether easy in his mind, but he tried to comfort himself by affecting to believe that Joe would be pleased. “Well, Joe,’’ he said, ‘‘I suppose you’ll be glad to get away from the field ?’’ “Glad to git away—oh, mistah!”’ He suddenly knelt and threw his arms about his master’s knees. ‘‘Oh, Mas’ Stua’t,”’ he cried, ‘‘don’ gi’ me to dat Mistah Gro- by ; don’ doit! I want to wo'k fu’ you all de days o’ my life. Don’ gi’ me to dat man !”’ “Why, Joe, you never have been anxious before to work for me.”’ ‘Mas’ Stua’t, I knows I ain’t been doin’ right. I ain’t been wo’kin,” but I will wok. I'll dig my fingahs to de bone; but don’ gi’ me to dat man.”’ “But, Joe, you don’t understand. You’ll have a good home, easier work, and more time to yourself—almost the same as if you were up to the big house. * This was every field-hand’s ambition, and Stuart Mordaunt thought that his ar- gument would silence the refractory serv- ant, but Joe was not to be silenced. He raised his head and his black face was twitching with emotion. “I'd ravver be yo’ fiel-han’ dan dat man Groby’s mas- tah.” Mordaunt was touched, but his deter- mination was not altered. ‘‘But he’ll be good to you, don’t yon know that ?’’ “Good to me, good to me! Mas’ Stua’t, you don’t know dat man !”’ The master turned away. He had a cer- tain discipline to keep on his place, and he knew it. ‘‘Perhaps I don’t know him,” he said, ‘but what I don’t see with my own eyes I can’t spy out with the eyes of my servants. Joe, you may go. I have given my word, and I could not go back even if I would. Be a good boy and you’ll get along all right. Come to see me often.” The black man seized his master’s hand and pressed it. Great fellow as he was, when he left he was sobbing like a child. He was to stay in the quarters that night and the next morning leave the fields and enter the service of Mss. Groby. * It was a sad time for him. As he sat by the hearth, his face bowed in his hands, Jim reached over and slapped him on the the head. It was as near to an expression of affection and sympathy as he could come. But his brother looked up with the tears shining in his eyes, and Jim, taking his pipe from his mouth, passed it over in silence, and they sat brooding until Mely took a piece of ‘‘middlin’ ’’ off the coal for brother Joe. When she had gone to bed the two men talked long, but it was not until she was snoring contentedly and the dogs were howling in the yard and the moon had gone down behind the trees that Mr. Groby’s acquisition slipped out of the cabin and away to the woods, bearing with him his brother’s blessing and breakfast. It was near eleven o’clock the next morn- ing when the overseer came to the big house, fuming and waving his papers in his hands. He was looking for his slave. But the big house did not know where he was any more than did the quarters, and he went away disappointed and furious. Joe had rebelled. He had called the dark night to his aid and it had swallowed him up. > Against Mordaunt’s remonstrances, the new-made master insisted upon putting the hounds on the negro’s track; but they came back baffled. Joe knew Mr. Groby’s methods and had prepared for them. “It was a slippery gift you gave me, Mr. Mordaunt,’’ said the overseer on the third day after Joe’s escape. ‘‘Even a slippery gift shouldn’t get out of rough hands, Groby,’ answered Mor- daunt, “and from what I hear your bands are rough enough.” “And they’d be rougher now if I had that black whelp here.”’ “I’m glad Joe's gone,”” mused Stuart Mordaunt as he looked at the overseer’s re- treating ficure. ‘He was lazy and devil- ish, but Groby—"’ *, It was just after that that the plantation exhorter reported the backsliding of Jim. His first fall from grace consisted in his going to a dance. This was bad enough, but what was worse, although the festivi- ties closed at midnight, Jim—and his wife Mely told it, too—did not reach his cabin until nearly daylight. Of course she was uneasy about it. That was quite natural. There were so many dashing girls on the plantations, within a radius of ten or twelve miles, that no woman’s husband was safe. So she went to the minister about it, as women will about their trou- bles, and the minister went to his master. “Let him alone,” said Stuart Mordaunt. ‘‘His brother’s absence has upset him, but Jim’ll come round all right.” ‘‘But, mastah,’’ said old Parker, push- ing back his bone-bowed spectacles, ‘‘dat uz mighty late fu’ Jim to be gittin' in— nigh daylight—ez stiddy a man ez he is. Don’t you reckon dey’s a ’ooman in it?” * “Look here, Parker,”’ said his master ; “‘aren’t you ashamed of yourself? Have you ever known Jim to go with any other woman than Mely? If you preachers weren’t such rascals yourselves and mar- ried less frequently you wouldn’t be so ready to suspect other men.’’ ‘Ahem I’? coughed Parker. “Well, Mas’ Stua’t, ef you gwineter question in- ter de p’ogatives o’ de ministery, I’d bet- tah be gwine,case you on dang’ous groun’,’” and he went his way. But even an indulgent master’s patience must wear out when a usually goed serv- ant lapses into unusually bad habits. Jim was often absent from the plantation now and things began to disappear ; chickens, ducks, geese, and even Jim’s own family bacon, and now and then a shoat of the master’s found its way off the place. * The thefts could be traced to but one source. Mely didn’t mind the shoats, nor the ducks nor the geese nor the chickens— they were her master’s, and he could afford to lose them—but that her husband should steal hers and the children’s food—it was unspeakable. She caught him red-handed once, stealing away with a side of bacon, and she up-braided him loud and long. ‘Oh, you low-down scoun’el’’ she screamed, ‘‘stealin’ de braid outen you’ chilluns moufs fu’ seme othah ’ooman !”’ Jim, a man of few words, stood silent and abashed, and his very silence drove her to desperation. She went to her master, and the next day the culprit was called Ry im,’’ said Mordaunt ; ‘I want to be as easy with you as I can. You've always been a good servant, and I believe that it’s your brother’s doings that have got you off the handle. But I've borne with you week after week, and I can’t stand it any longer. So mark my words : if I bear another com- plaint I’ll have you skinned ; do you hear me?’ Ves, sub.” That night Jim stole a ham from the kitchen before Doshy’s very eyes. When they told the master in the morning he was furious. Heordered the thief brought before him, and two whippers with stout corded lashes in their hands stood over the black man’s neck. ‘“What’s the matter with you, anyhow ?”’ roared Mordaunt. ‘‘Are you bound to defy me ?’’ Jim did not answer. “Who is this woman you're stealing for 2? “Ain’t stealin’ fu’ no ’ooman.”’ “Don’t lie to me. Will you tell ?”’ Silence. “Do you hear me? Lay it on him! I’ll see whether he’ll talk !”’ * Peo 5 The lashes rose in the air and whizzed down. They rose again, but stopped poised as a gaunt figure coming from no- where, it seemed, stalked up and pushed the whippers aside. “Give it to me,’’ said Joe, taking off his coat. ‘‘I told him jes’ how it would be, an’ I was comin’ in to gi’ myse’f up any- how. He done it all to keep me fom sta’vin’ ; but I’s done hidin’ now. I’ll be dat Groby’s slave ravver dan let him tek my blows.”” He ceased speaking and slip- ped out of his ragged shirt. ‘‘Tain’t no use Jim,’”’ he added, you’s done all you could.” “Dah, now, Joe,” said his brother in disgust, ‘‘you’s done come yeah an’ sp’iled evathing; you mnevah did know yo’ place.”’ “Whup away,’’ said Joe. But the master’s hand went up. “Joe!” he cried. ‘Jim, you—you’ve been taking that food to him! Why didn’t you tell me?” He kicked each one of the whippers solemnly, then he kicked Joe. ‘‘Get out of this,”’ he said. ‘You'll be nobody’s but mine I'll buy you from Groby, you low-down, no-account scoun- drel,”” Then he turned and looked down on Jim. “Oh, you fool nigger—God bless you.” When Mr. Groby heard of Joe’s return he hastened up to the big house. He was elated. ‘‘Ha,”’ he said, ‘‘my man has returned.” Stuart Mordaunt looked unpleasant, then he said : “Your man, Mr. Groby, as you call him, has returned. He is here. But, sir, your man has been redeemed by his brother's suffering, and I intend—I intend to buy Joe back. Please name your price.’? And Mr. Groby saw the look in the gen- tleman’s eye and made it low.—Paul Law- rence Dunbar in Saturday Evening Post. Prepared in Time. It is None Too Soon to Get Ready for Thanksgiving Day. By ‘‘taking time by the forelock™ one may accomplish a great deal without be- coming tired out, as is so often the case in preparing for any special holiday or en- tertainment. The tablecloths and napery should now be overhauled and freshly laundered if neccessary. If they have been out of use since last year’s holidays they will look all the better for a day’s bleach- ing and fresh ironing. Then the silver will be so tarnished that a good cleaning is an absolute necessity. For this purpose there is nothing better or Jess expensive than the following mixture, that can easily be made at home: Put cne pound of whiting (that may be pur- phased at a paint shop for six cents a pound) into a kitchen bowl. Pour over it one quart of boiling water and stand it away until cool. Add to it one tablespoon- ful of ammonia, two tablespoonsfuls of olive oil and one tablespoonful of turpen- tine. Stir before using, and apply it with a soft cloth and polish with a soft chamois. In putting the silver away, place a piece of camphor in each package to prevent tarnishing. Next make out a list of the expected guests, and follow this with the menu. Carefully plan each dish and arrange a scheme for the marketing. Now with the menu in hand, and the number of guests well in your mind, take out the necessary china and glassware and see that each and every piece is carefully washed, not ne- glecting to look carefully at the lids of the dishes. When this has all been attended to, pre- pare such dishes as may be safely kept for a time before using. A very delicious pepper hash may be made by cutting a hard head of cabbage on the slaw cutter, and placing it in a bowl. Cut up fine, six peppers, using three of the red and three of the green ones. Add these to the cabbage and sprinkle over them a scant handful of salt. Stand away for half an hour, which may be occupied by bun- dle of celery. When this is done, pour off the water that has been drawn from the cahbage and add the celery toit. Sprinkle over the celery and cabbage two table- spoonful of granulated sugar, one table- spoonful of mustard seed, two tablespoon- fuls of celery seed; mix all the ingredients well together and put them into a stone jar. Cover liberally with pure cider vine- gar and stand away for a day or two, when it may be used. This may be made now and kept over until Thanksgiving day. A pound cake may also be made now, instead of waiting until the holiday draws nearer. Necessity of Ventilation. Pure Air is Valuable. Though it Costs Nothing. The young should be trained in the im- portance of ventilation, for this is one of the most neglected requisites of good health. It is estimated that 3,000 cubic feet of pure air per hour is the need of each individual. In the best hospitals 6,000 cubic feet is not considered too much. By weight one-fifth of this is oxygen, the life giving element. The same air rebreathed four times will no longer sustain life. The oxygen has been mostly absorbed, while waste matter and carbonic acid gas, a a deadly poison, have taken its place. Were our rooms airtight we couldn’t survive. The atmosphere penetrates every crevice around doors and windows, thanks to the law of equilibrium, and we are sav- ed from death. But whenever we find members of a family sallow, nerveless, hol- low eyed, liable to take cold easily and readily, subject to various disorders, we may be certain of one or two things, either the diet is faulty or they do not properly ventilate their dwellings. A celebrated French physician, finding himself much depleted by hard work, did a strange thing—for a Frenchman. He dressed in flannel from head to foot, put on a cardigan jacket, opened hoth his win- dows in winter time, placed a screen be- fore each and slept there, undismayed by the coolness of the atmosphere. By habit- uating oneself to sleeping with open win- dows and having the head protected from drafts the tendency to take cold will be eventually overcome—that is, with a prop- er amount and kind of food. One must not think that this subject of fresh airis too much insisted upon. If cannot be. Nothingamong cultivated peo- ple is so continuously disregarded. To enter some elegant parlors is to breathe the air of a charnel house. Theatres and places of public resort are in this respect filthy beyond description. After sitting for two hours in a room moderately well filled with people one is nerveless, dispirit- ed, subject to headache and liable to take cold. The department of public health should strictly watch all places in which audiences assemble, as often they hecome places of contagion.—-St. Louis Republic. Another Matter, ‘You told me your heart was mine,” said Blower. “I know,’”’ replied his heiress wife, “but I said nothing about my pocket- book.”’ In the Philippines. Extracts from Letters by Lieutenant Walter B. Mc- Caskey, of Lancaster, and Well Known at State College, Where He Graduated in 1896, and Where He was Employed Last Year. The following extracts from letters of Lieutenant Walter B. McCaskey, who join- ed the 21st regiment in the Philippines some months ago, give an account of the trip across the Pacific on an army trans- port, and something of life in the Philip- pines. He is familiar with the sea, having crossed the Atlantic several times, but this is his first voyage on the Pacific ocean. Lieut. McCaskey is one of the five lieu- tenants apportioned to Pennsylvania in the increase of the regular army. He stood at the head of the list from this state and was second on the list of the hundred or more from the whole country, in the examina- tion to which they were subjected before receiving their commission. Everywhere he has made a record atthe top, in the gymnasium, foot ball, military tactics, sea- manship, and school and college work gen- erally; and we have no doubt that he will prove a ‘duty man’’ as efficient in the army as he has been elsewhere. He was the second lieutenant of Captain Whitson’s company in the Fourth Pennsylvania vol- unteers, and saw active service with this company in the Porto Rican campaign. He graduated at State College in the class of 1896 and after receiving his appointment last spring was married to Miss Edna Mec- Clellan, of Beech Creek, who is also well known in this county. SAN FRANCISCO, June 23.-—On beard United States transport ‘‘Sheridan.” Breakfast at 7 o’clock and next meal near- ly 12 hours later; hungry. Have a com- pany of recruits, 107 men of the 18th in- fantry, for the trip across the Pacific. Af- ter waiting quite a while, we got off ona tug boat to the transport dock about 2 o'clock. Another delay there, but finally we got aboard ship. Two troops of the 4th cavalry first, my company next. They are located on the fourth deck down, all the way aft, on the port side. The bunks are in tiers three high. The framework of the bunks is iron pipe, and the bunk itself is a canvas bottom lashed to the iron pipe which forms the sides. The ship is iron throughout, even the deck below. Electric lighting through- out, with hot and cold water spigots con- veniently placed for washing purposes. The mess seems to be a general one for the men. Was put on guard as soon as I ar- rived, as junior officer; am off duty mow until 2 a. m. Was short only one oiler on the stuff I had to turn over to the officer who relieved me. June 25.—The order of duty aboard ship is as follows : 1st call for reveille 5:40 a. m., breakfast 6:30, sick-call 7:15, inspec- tion 10:00, dinner 12:00; 1st call for guard mount 7:50 a. m., assembly gnard mount 8:00, adjutant’s call 8:10, sick call 4:00 p. m., supper 5:00 p. m., inspection 6:30, call to quarters 8:45, taps 9:00 p. m. The Sheridan is a good ship, well adapted for the carrying of troops. We have a run of about 2,400 miles to Honolulu, about one- third way to Manila. The weather has been favorable, and we are making good time on the voyage. HoNoLuLyu, July 2.—Came ashore at 1 o'clock. Enclosed is a program of the funeral procession of one of the royal fam- ily, one of Queen Lil’s family, which I saw. The funeral car was drawn by na- tives, three or four hundred of them, and just before and behind it they carried odd- looking things made of feathers. There were native women in the procession of all shapes and sizes—Kanakas they are called; also many Japanese women and Chinese. They dress the children very gaudily here. The Japanese women have shoes with blocks of wood for soles. They wear a sort of robe with a belt around it, and a big rag in the belt in the middle of the back. It looks like a bustle, but worn outside and up too high. July 3.—Went ashore at 11 o’clock. Got a carriage and rode to Punch Bowl, the crater of an extinet volcano. You can see the outlines of the rim very plainly. The view of the town from there is fine and, with the sea for a background, it makes a beautiful picture. Then we went to Wa- kipi, the place where they bathe in the ocean. Had a fine bath. They ride in on the surf on boards and in canoes. Just get in front of a wave, with a good start, and it carries you in all the way to the beach. The canoes have outriggers on them, with a log attached, parallel to the canoe, which helps to keep them straight. Two Kana- kas and Dougherty and I had a canoe. One of the natives steered. Yesterday two coal barges were towed alongside and this morn- ing a load of Kanakas came off to carry coal aboard the ship. It sounded odd to hear about 100 of them talking and chat- tering at once in their unknown language. It would do you good to see how our men enjoy their swimming here. When ashore we went to a precipice at the end of the valley, where 100 years ago there was a big fight among the natives. The victorious party drove their enemies up this valley, and, as there was no escape, it is said,drove them right over this precipice. July 4.—I went ashore with my mail, and saw the Fourth of July parade. Some of the Sixth United States artillery, some of the Hawaiian National Guard. All drills have been suspended to-day. An Argentine Republic training ship came in- to the harbor this morning. At noon the union salute of forty-five guns was fired in front of the castle. July 6.—When the pilot left us outside of Honolulu harbor this morning, he teok our letters to mail. We were a little late getting off as we had to wait for a Seattle steamer just coming into the harbor. When we passed the Argentine Republic training ship their band played, and they dipped the flag to us. An old chum of the school- ship Saratoga, where we had many a good time together, told me how he had been caught coming back from shore the other night. He swam off to the ship, climbed up the anchor chain, and caught hold of a rope he had left hanging over the side, so that he could get aboard by it when he re- turned. But some one had cast the line adrift inboard, and when he caught hold of it, it ran out, and he dropped into the wa- ter about 25 feet with a great splash. When the sentry above heard it, he yelled, ‘‘Man overboard.”” The mate came running to the for’e’s’le. In the meantime he had climbed up again, and some one handed him a rope, by which he got up, but the mate caught him. July 7.—We have been running steadily all day, with a good breeze from hortheast, the northeast trade wind. Turned out this morning about 6:15. Went on deck, and through the ‘‘setting-up exercise’’ for in- fantry. Take exercise in the mornings regularly, so as to be in good shape when we get to Manila. July 8.—Rained hard early this morn- ing. After coffee, turned out, went on deck and exercised, winding up with a few back handsprings. After a bath and shave, read ‘Firing Regulations for Small Arms’’ till breakfast time. morning. July 9.—Running along steadily all day, distance 300 miles. It is now 3:30 p. m., here and 10:10 p. m. with you. To-mor- row, after we pass the 180th meridian we skip one day. To-morrow will be July 10th, and the day after to-morrow, July 12th. July 12.—As you see, we have skipped one day, and now instead of its being 3 a. m., to-morrow morning with you, itis 3 a. m., this morning. We passed the 180th meridian about noon. About 4 o’clock this afternoon, there was a waterspout formed off our starboard side. It looked like a big spout from a low cloud down to the water, had a whirling motion and where it joined the surface of the sea, scattered the water all about. It came within perhaps a quarter of a mile of us, and then broke. Before that, however our course had been changed so as to avoid it, for it would have done some damage had it struck us. I wish you could have seen it. They are rare in these waters. Think of this: To-day is yesterday; and yesterday the next day was day after to-morrow. Solve that conundrum. July 13.—The biggest run so far, 323 miles. Go on guard to-morrow as senior officer. We are nine days from Manila. July 14—This morning, went on guard about 9 o’clock. July 15.—It began to rain shortly before midnight, and early this morning came down in sheets. Several of the officers took advantage of it to get a wash in fresh water. They just got out and took the rain water as it washed along the clean decks. July 16.—This morning at 10 o’clock, temperature of water was 83 degrees and air the same. We are to pass close to an active volcano to-morrow night, and hope it is in operation. Is stands out of the water about 1,000 feet. July 18.—Turned out at 3:30 this morn- ing for the volcano. Could see the red glow at the top, and also the smoke with the aid of glasses. Watched it for an hour. About 6 o’clock could see it plainly, and the great cloud of smoke from the crater. The ship is pitching some, as the wind has raised quite a good swell. July 23.—Sighted Luzon last night about 9 o'clock. Same routine every AT MANILA. July 25.—We reached bere all O. K., and dropped anchor 12:10 p. m. yesterday. Very hot. Sat around all afternoon yes- terday and tried to keep cool. Several boat loads of soldiers have already gone ashore. Good sized steam tow boats come out to the side of the ship, then the sol- diers go down the gangway ladder and go aboard, and when one is sufficiently load- ed she steams ashore, and comes back for another load. There iz some talk of the recruits of the 18th and 23rd infantry stay- ing aboard the Sheridan, which is to take them to Ioilo and Cebu, in which case some of the officers now aboard will go with them. This seems to be a big city. Roofs painted white, and town looks well from where we anchored in the bay. The bay is large, and when the wind blows it gets quite rough. We are right off the mouth of the Pasig river, about a mile from shore. There is a light-house where the river runs into the bay. Bacoor bay is off to the southwest, and Cavite still farther south- west. We passed the island of Corregidor on our right as we came into the hay yes- terday. Got a paper this morning telling of the resignation of Secretary Alger and the raising of more troops. Will send it to you. It isa curio. July 26.—I was relieved from duty on the Sheridan this morning at 9 o’clock,and came ashore, being ordered to report to the 21st regiment. Brewer and I go to same regiment. Am writing this in his tent by candle light. ALVA, July 27.—Have just come over here in a pouring rain. Got well soaked. Had a good visit with Ed. over at his camp, and expected to go to Morong, where my company is, to-morrow. Received orders this morning to report here for temporary duty to Company M. Manila is a queer, old looking place. Old walls overgrown with moss. Chinese houses, and Chinamen that carry stuff on their shoulders. They are 1eally beasts of burden. The native women. Filipinos, don’t wear much cloth- ing. Barefooted, and partly bare-legged, nothing on the head, neck or shoulders. Some of them fair looking, a few fairly pretty, but the most of them ugly enough. Lots of children too, not burdened with much clothing. These Chinese carriers wear nothing except a pair of pantaloons, rolled up as high as possible. Some of them wear great straw hats that look like inverted basins. Almost everybody that can do so rides in small, two-wheeled hacks with one little horse. There are four- wheeled hacks also, drawn by two horses, and carts with ‘‘water buffaloes’’ attached. These are big, gray animals, shaped much like oxen, with large, flat horns extending in a curve (horizontally) over their backs. Two of these buffalo teams, and six Chinese coolies, are attached to each company of soldiers. They do the heavy hauling, wa- ter carrying, wood chopping, ete., for the company, and act as litter-bearers when a fight is in progress. July 28.—After breakfast, I went on guard as officer of the day. Went out to see where the different posts were, and got back about 9 o’clock. The whole country is swampy. It is cut up into rectangular areas by little embankments to hold wa- ter, where the rice grows. These areas are called ‘‘rice paddies,’’ and as they make up the most of the landscape, it is nearly all swamp. Just below the advanced post is a well called the ‘‘Sacred Well,” at which the Chinamen from this company get water, and carry it to the company. They have a piece of bamboo about six feet long; this they carry across their shoulders, with a bucket of water hanging on each end. They drag wood back to camp, by bamboo. Boring or cutting a hole in the larger ends of the bamboo, and putting a short, light piece through these holes in two bamboo poles, they can drag two of them, about 30 feet, long, back to camp. They go out for wood and water always under an armed guard. Iam ordered to go into town to-morrow and draw clothing for this battalion. They will} furnish me with a horse to ride. This will give me a chance to get more shoes. Wading aroun d through these rice swamps require some changes of shoes to keep dry. CALAMEA, Aug. 5.— We dropped anchor off Pasig, town, last night about 8:30, and lay there until 5:30 this morning. Then reached the lake about 6 a. m., making Calamba about 10:30. Had a very inter- esting ride up the river Pasig, which has a swift current of 7 or 8 miles per hour. A passenger offered me a box of sardines and a roll last night, which I accepted, as I could not buy anything where we stopped; then did not eat anything until supper to- night, which, you bet, I enjoyed. Lieut. Meade is in command of this company. There has been some firing this afternoon at long range. In case of an attack I'm to have the left platoon, on the river bank in trenches. Undergrowth dense. No tents. Camped in ditch, with shelter of bamboo mat. "Aug. 6.—Slept with clothes on last night in a little ‘‘lean-to,”” floor about 6:8, dis- tance between roof and floor 2 feet on one side 1} feet on the other. When it rains, drop a bamboo mat down in front. It is down in the ditch with the others, and nothing shows above the level of the ground. The platoon of which I have charge is out about 100 rods to the north- west, in a trench just this side of the river. The insurgents are some little distance back on the other side of the river. The ground between is densely covered with sugar cane, banana trees, underbrush, ete. There is a bridge westward of this camp, which is barricaded, and an outpost is sta- tioned there. The river runs through quite a gorge. The other day this company drove the insurgents across the river. Meade tells me they charged for several hundred yards, half each time, and the other half firing volleys, and got up this far. There has been firing during the day and night at intervals. Heard a bugle of the insurgents a while ago. The mosquitoes and bugs are fierce here. They make a noise like flies or bees. It rained last night. Used poncho for a cover. The Pasig river is very swift all the way up, about 14 miles. We passed many of the natives’ canoes and cascoes going up and down. They don’t wear many clothes. One fellow that I saw was about naked. Some of them wear great straw hats, like a low, broad-based cone. They look odd. The women wash clothes along the river bank, beat them with clubs, and throw them on a flat stone. Bathe themselves too on the street corners, pouring water over each other, with only a loose garment like a sheet tied around them under the arms, and reaching down to the knees. HEARD FIRST BULLETS. Aug. 9.—Yesterday at noon I heard the first bullets whiz by. The insurgents be- gan to fire on the lookout from a clump of trees, seven hundred yards off. We gave them several volleys and silenced them. Days long and hot, nights ditto, flies in daytime, mosquitoes at night, plenty of them. There is an itch here thatis very common, called ‘‘adobe itch.” I don’t want it. Aug. 10.-—Had just gone to sleep last night when they began to fire. Got out to the trench, and was there till things quiet- ed down. We wear a kindof headgear of mosquito netting, furnished by the quar- termaster’s department. Aug. 11.—Insurgents came in pretty close last night. Some shots close enough. They kept quiet until near morning, evi- dently do this to annoy our men and make them lose their sleep. Aug. 22.—Chills and fever, and stomach has not been working right for some days. Rather weak, but getting better. Kept on duty all the time. Heavy rains and awful hot at times. Frequent firing, Aug. 28.—There goes the band. They practice every morning except Sunday, an agreeable diversion. Now they are play- ing ‘‘The Palms’’—good trombone solo. They have quarters in what was formerly the priest's house, adjoining the church. There are several hells in the church tower, one of which, deep toned, sounds well when they ring it slowly. Aug. 29.—Everything quiet. The sky was very beautiful before sunrise,all shades of crimson. For breakfast, pancakes, coffee and bacon. You would laugh tosee the pigs out here, the queerest looking things. The full grown hogs have long straight tails that they wag like a horse, and little pigs are innumerable. Dogs are numer- ous, too, but poor specimens of their kind. Aug. 30.—Was in church and on the bell tower yesterday. The place looks like a jail outside, stone with iron roof, windows barred, gallery at one end, pulpit about the middle, altar at the other end, a few benches in the middle, none anywhere else, floor of large square bricks a very small melodeon in gallery and a large music rack, nothing else. The bell tower, separate from the church, has three small bells and one large one. Aug. 31.—Passed a mud hole this morn- ing where water buffaloes wallow. It is liquid mud, but they enjoy rolling around in it, as do the hogs, of course. Also look- ed through an old ruined sugar mill. Quiet here now. Fever lately; getting used to the climate. Sept. 4—Got order relieving me tem- porarily from this company. Sent to Co. I. Was ordered out on outpost to prevent the insurgents from firing on outpost of Co. D. Had but little fever yesterday; sweat it out the night before, perhaps. Sept. 16.—Everything quiet. and aiming drill for recruits. again these days. Lively work here aft times. The tall rice gives them a chance to get in closer without being seen. Our sentries and outposts and everybody else must be keenly alive when on duty to pre- vent surprise. Corporal Harris just got a fellow with a bolo in his hand, who had sneaked on him through the rice, and was about to drive the knife into his back. Pointing Feel good A Girl Full of Needles. Eighty-seven ordinary sewing needles have been removed from the body of Han- nah Reardon by Dr. Swithin Chandler. The girl is employed asa housemaid by Mrs. M. Mather, of Wilmington, Del., and her case is attracting the attention of the local physicians, all of whom are tak- ing a deep interest in the case. The girl is about 19 years of age and weighs only eighty pounds. She is four feet three inches tall, and it is believed that the needles, which she swallowed when a child retarded her growth. She came from Ire- land about two months ago. Dr. Chand- ler says that hefore coming to this country, owing to her delicate health, the young lady had not done much work, and he thinks that bending and stooping while at work caused the needles to work to the surface of the body. Since the discovery of the strange condition Hannah has not been able to retain solid food on her stomach. The needles are, however, supposed to have been in her body for years. Ep1Tor SEES WONDERS.—Editor W. V. Barry of Lexington, Tenn., in exploring Mammoth Cave, contracted a severe case of Piles. His quick cure throngh using Buck- len's Arnica Salve convinced him it is an- other world’s wonder. Cures Piles, Injuries Inflammation, and all Bodily Eruptions. Only 25¢ at F. Potts Green. ——To avoid a task and to fear it is to make it our master. To set about it cheer- fully at once is to becom e its master. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. 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