! r 'tSkk rlWMSjStfSTSrvs, t4, U R 'J WR.WP!5WBWHHIrWl T " r"i;-v - r'n-j?.'j!fTOi??prf;t' wm$ t EVENING LEDGER-rniLADELrHIA. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 3917 r ,5wf notorial section "' - THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY o A PENNSYLVANIA ??vW 'iJWKiCj'Q nnsyvanas Most Zealous W&:$3 otto -:t:rtf!,jTr-''jL -,.?i i? nnrt it t '.-i v Ntj'W (IiiinkI.i I'.ii; & 4 nr i'uihic i.ctigrr t omp.ui l jVhen Governor Penny packer's Father Died the Family Moved Hack to Phocnixvillc, but a Few Years Later Samuel Returned to the City to Earn His Livelihood and to Con tribute to the Family Income CHAPTER II (Continued) A FEW months Inter, on the thirtenth of Fcbrunry, 1850, my father died from nn attack of erysipelas and typhoid fever. He was attended by Doctors Tyson and Urincklc. There weic poems writ ten and editorial regrets. Doctor Clark picnehed a sermon in the Baptist Church, called The Tabernacle, on Chestnut sticct west of Eighteenth, and Doctor Koach another in St. George'. Methodist Episcopal Church upon the untoward event. Doctor Hartshornu delivered n memorial addiess to the classes, in which he said: "To this school especially he Rave all his great mental energies with the pride of n founder, which in a certain sense, as it now stands, he was; it seems to us now like an edifice whose foicmost column has fallen down or a tree whose topmost bough is broken off." Hack to Phocnixville There were sales of his interest in the college, which soon after ward became blended with the Jefferson Medical College; of his house in Phoenixville to John Vnnderslice for one-half of its value, ' of the house on Chestnut street and of my mother's faim in Chester County, nnd when they were all over she had just $7000 upon which to depend. She had four children, of whom I was the oldest, and my brother James hnd been bom only in December. She had char acter, met the situation with courage and fortitude, took her family to the home of her father at Mont Clare and there kept house for him. The house, capacious and impressive, built of stone, plastered outside, with n porch in fiont, approached by a flight of marble steps and another in the rear, with massive doors and high ceilings, a large and unusual parlor, paitly separated by Doric columns, and a wide hall tunning from porch to porch, stood on a crest sloping toward the Schuylkill. It had, however, a basement kitchen and dining room, and peihaps fiom this cause my mother became a prcv. to rheumatism, suffering with it for thirty years. With the death of my father came to me an abrupt change not only in the manner of life, but in those influences which affect the cm rents of thought Up to that time my life had been that of a Pcnnypackor, and the career which had been proposed for me and accepted with no sense of uncertainty was that I should pursue a couwe at college and then lead law. The Whitaker point of view was thoroughly practical. My grandfather had large means, but to provide giatilication for idle and unproductive people was no part of his philosophy. In truth, even thus enrly in life, I felt a great sense of responsibility and the need which had come to mo to bo up and doing. My mother came to me with her confidences and to a great extent began to lean upon me. She continued to do so through the whole of her long life and we weic not theieafter for any length of time separated. Tem porarily, I went to the public school in Phocniwillc on the south side of the creek in a yellow building at the coiner, of Church and Gay streets, the teacher being Joseph Addison Thomson, one of a local family all of whom possess more than oidinary intelligence, lloth boys and girls attended the school. We sang geography. We had spelling bees and spelled each other down. One of the duties of eery teacher at that day was to write a headline on each page of each schojar's copybook, which ho or she endeavored to imitate for the acquisition of good chirography. I remember on one occasion writing in my book as a ventuie of my own the line: "An Austrian army awfully anayed" and being surprised to find that the next copy given me by Thomson was the following line: "Boldly by battery besieged Belgrade." About this period an unusual and interesting series of events occurred at Mont Clare. To undci stand them there need be added nothing more to the description of the house than to say that from the center of the hall a narrow entry led to the op of the stairway and E'ne rustic Governor to the kitchen. In this entiy, near the ceiling and fai out of reach, hung the doorbell from the front door. On the other side of the entry a crooked stairway, used by the servants, ran to the thiul story. The occupants of the house were my grandfather, who wns often away upon business; my grandmother, my two aunts, Klmi betli and Geitrude, then unman led; my mother and her children, my Aunt Small, whose illness pt evented her fiom leaving the third floor; Patrick Orr, a stableman; Panny, a very black girl of about twelve years of age, whotn Aunt Sally daily and diligently tried to wash white and comb straight, and two girls in the ' itchen. Across the road which r.v. by to Norristown lived "Auntie Jacobs," a nice old Quaker lady, with her two old bachelor sons, John and Ben jamin. Prior to the Revolution the Jacobs family had been one of the most influential families of the province, having their part in every important movement, but the lapse of time hnd lessened the nervous force nnd energy. John nnd Benjamin lived on the ancestral acres, cleanly and upright, full of anti-slavery traditions, a little given to science and chess, a little prone to adopt all of the advanced notions that came floating along, and without much of the vigor which leads to achievement. At Rochester, in New York, spirits had disclosed themselves to some women by lapping in mysterious ways and moving tables and chairs. Why they should so behave no one could explain, though the subject was talked about all o er the -' iir.-t;7 ,Jfe5A,VSi - V55 SKSyBKSKMKr " &m suS&IiS' ' 3MW -4 & s -SSsSSw.' tk3$5h&- ' " . CEsKhHSffiy -mtkHESR-r--- fewmts.. j$h ' K'B I VKsm?"'"- igi ol the old 0 ' I 'I'hiw. i'ortify, rw Jcl ,J; c . tu iCi'u re , JCJU ' ' ""' Z&tivlit'C ' year nf ue, .. J"; ' of tir ,- I'm-iiiamt MR - c 'Ihwt'htcr uf jlil '1eJ) SitnuJL( Mm. fte)v fiJ t'cltct D'c-t cft (l; V,MV,lr; ". tyfo jl.fan jxtif bCet1ifoi.c i yean nf age, -.U uf-the' mlier forty & . : act!: S i r t arc j'Mifi w n)e fiat.rfs ,, IIOI.Y W'EW.OCK, this titty, ht) vie. Givrn ur , nni ...iS'ii, m i'iii.i.i(.i..j. hk- Z o , .'".' - M . ' Yvt "T ClflUVl' iiw tliw.nml it;ti n.i.,n..l bii.I t i-tiv. Cl ft 5 Vi Si ,1 tV ''v Clt ;i-riC 'in tlnr i;y . m ? Vt,: w. XR. ii .v ll . y'i, cU;,. -m Otter ij" thr Xun'l fiwilm in tiif Stale " Prmaykania. y W.tlun3rriltcn,hcx.rtii'-diHc M.kmi.ir.iiU.it oftlm Nuptnl Cimtnxl, ji1 cutif. llut n i liJx Ituwuir Igi1 imprilimwt. . 4 -".,' . SjC. -j ,e i 41" tW-. . fcvAAWw li Mn.tMV,wM..-.- .. . . .wHtwm.w.muig, i im ' f ar k 4f w i - wimnmi-i w .... .-i-." - - V ArfMW,Vrllfcr tt)t ILUtMkWltM IMM t !- W-- rfc jW 21 ?'?i,'?".''?'0,'?,i '?'?"?'? -"'? ?" ? - '? '" " i- M, k Ik lr J ' 8v-e",o, The "Kight-Square hchool house, one laudin.irks Plioeniwille countr.v. John and Benjamin Jacobs came acioss the load to Mt with my aunts about a tound table with the hands of nil four on the toji of it, in an offoit to get it to nunc, and listening for the laps which ought natuially in sequence to follow. After a few weeks of unresponsive endcaor the tiling started with a vengeance in Mich a way as not only to discommode the family and make them uneasy, but to distui b the noighboihood. The happenings always occurred at night. The bells lung long and loudly when there were no visitors, lappings were heaid all over the house and there were tappings on the window panes, both up and down stairs. Blows weie struck upon the doors, as though with a club. Oftentimes the souinls seemed to be made in tlje ety presence of those who wetc watching. On one occasion Pat stood with a club at the back door, with the door ajar, when a loud thump happened at his side. "Bejabeis, Io got ye now!" said Pat as he threw the door wide open. Daikness theie and nothing moie! On another occasion l'anny and I had our heads out of a thiul-story window, on the watch, when a loud noise in another part of the house startled all in it and called us theie. One evening a member of the family coming up the stairs stumbled over a huge gilt minor of gieat weight which had hung for ycais in a room in the third story. Another night the wife of my Uncle William P. ( Whitaker. then on a Kit to the household, going up the bioad stairway in the dark was confionted by some obscutc (iguic and tainted. Naturally, the members of the family thought that some body in the neighborhood played these pranks, and their suspicion fell upon a woman who occasionally came to the house and knew its airaiigeineiit. Kveij elfoit was made to catch this person in the act. Flour was sprinkled over the poiches so that ttaces of the foot steps would be left. John and Benjamin Jacobs hid behind the shrub bery on the lawn and waited for hours, Relays weic stationed at the upper windows. It was labor in vain. The manifestations continued at intervals for perhaps three months and then ceased temporarily. After about tlnce months they began again, to be followed by a period of quiet and by a third recuriencc, altogether covering moie than a jeai's time. Outside of the house and near to it stood a frame structure used for the purpose of storing wood and as a leceptacle for cast-off material. On a dark night a member of the family going to this house found a lot of wood gathered together with paper and diy chips underneath, and the black girl, Fanny, with a box of matches in the very act of setting it on lire. The seciet was out and she told her story. She had rung the door bell by running up the naiiow back staiiw.iy and pulling out a p. -" w JaH' III tEh -! Mim a lie ni.irii.me license of Joseph N hilaker nnd Grace Adams rie of the most interesting documents now in existence, ivue it was signed b Nicholas Collin, the last Swedish minister of Old Swedes Church. The date is April 28, 1811. I lie spelling, as frequently happened in those dajs, is incor- I'.'it. .Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker in middle life arc shown below it. -i. brass stair iod which enabled her to reach the bell. She had various devices to pioducc the rappings. She had a supply of tinder under the carpet of the stairway ready to bet the mansion on lire if successful with the outer stiucture. She was hurried away in order to have her escape the severe thrashing which grand father would study hae given her had he been at home, and th house thereafter had no more communications from the spirit. She was such a dull, thick-witted, stupid little creature that a con sensus of opinion, based upon knowledge of her and recollection of occuiiences which apparently she could not possibly have pro duced, attiibutcd outside assistance to her. One morning my Uncle Joseph, a bachelor, masterful, brusque geneious and lich, upon whom had devohed much of the direction of our future, came to mo and said: "Sam, you aie now old enough to get to work; what do you want to do?" I knew well enough what 1 wanted to do, but it seemed to b bejond the taiige of possibility and of what was within that rang had not the slightest idea, and so I rather feebly answered: "1 should like to do as you do." "Humph," he said. "My fortune is made and yours is yet to be found." (-iTINli:t MONDAY) RAIN BOW'S END By REX BEACH ' J5' Author of "The Spoilers," "The !!? Barrier," "Heart of the Sunset" A novel of love, hidden treasure and rebellion in beautiful, mys terious Cuba during the exciting days of the revolt against Spain. Cop right l'HT. CHAPTER XVII- Harper .1 Urns -Continued THi: clt. jf ,latniiiMri was "jucitli il " So ran the boastful bando of the can ' tain general. And this was no enuncia tion, as any one could seo fiom the num ber of bcKguia thcio. Of all his militaiy operations, this "pacification" of the west era towns and provinces was th most conspicuously successful and the one which gave Valerlano Weyler tho keen est satisfaction; for nowhere did rebellion lift Us head, except, perhaps, among the ranks of those disaffected men who hid In tho hills, with nothing above them but tho open sky. As for tho population at large, It was cured of treason; It no longer resisted, even weakly, tho law of Spain. The leason was that it lay dImr. Wey ltr's euro was simple, efficacious It con Isted of extermination, swift and pitiless. Modern Barbarity Poorty had been common In Matan ras, even before the war, but now thero were so many beggars In the city that nobody undertook to count them. When the refugees began to pour In by tho thousands, and when it became apparent that tho Government intended to let them ttarve, tho better citizens undeitook an tffort at relict; but times wero hard, food was hcarce and pi ices high. Moreover, it soon transpired that the military frowned upon everything liko organized charity, and in consequence tho new comers were, perforce, abandoned to their own devices. These country people weio dumb and terrified at tho mlsfoi tunes Which had overtaken them; they wan dered tho streets in nlmless bewilderment, fearful of what blow might next befall. They wero not used to begging, and there fore t,hcy did not often implore alms; but all flay long they asked for work, for bread, thatrthelr littlo ones might live. Work, however, was een scaicer than food, and tho timo soon came when they 1 crouched upon cuibs and dooi steps, hope less, beaten, silently lepio.ichful of thoso more fortunato than fhey. Their eyes Brew big and hollow; their outsti etched hands grew gaunt and skinny. The sound of weeping women and f letting babies became a common thing to hear. 'J Systematic Starvation In the suburbs, Just within the ling of guardian forts, un "area of cultivation" aH get aside, and here the prisoners put up huts of yagua comfoi tless bark shel ters, which wero well enough, peihaps. n fair weather, but sadly InclfcctUo against wind nnd rain. Hei e, housed with hunger und crowded together In lade- swjbjible squalor, they dwelt, seeking 7ri)mfitv I.. ,.... IM1.1ln.Ui ""WH fl Mini L'UIIWIUII HlCWtlCUlin pfd wey nau no laim ljniiuunviiu, cjutiniaiP4y'iiatever 01 cuimvmu & this giound apportioned to their use, it uiii.iined untitled whllo they grow lain rilei day by day. Outside tho lines thero weio am, potatoes, odlblo loots and such for the Hpani.uris' woik of desola tion had not been quite complete, and no hand ran 10b tho Cuban soli of all its ill lies; but thu p.icitlcos wero not allowed to leave tho city. l'ish were plentiful In the haibol, too. hut to catch them was foi bidden. Scuttles weie on guard with icady rifles and ha led machetes; eeiy morning tliiougli tho filthy reconcentiado quarter gueirlllas drove pack mules bearing tho multllated bodies of those who had daied duilng the night to seek food surreptitiously. Some times they dragged theso ghastly lemlnd eis at tho ends of lopes; this. Indeed, was n fanilte way with them. Hogs and cats became choice in tides of diet, until they dlsappeaied. The Oov eminent did supply ono quality of food, however; at lntcivals it distributed jucca loots, llut theso wero stairhy nnd al most indigestible. Kiom citing them tho chlldicn giew pinched In ljnib and face, while their abdomens bloated liugelv. Matairas becnnio peopled with a i.ico or grotesquely misshapen little folks, gnomes with young bodies, but with faces old and sick. "Pacified Mutanzas" Of course, disease became epidemic, for In tho leaky hovels, dlrt-llooied and desti tute, of any convenience, theio could bo no effort of sanitation. Conditions be came unspeakable. Tho chlldien dlnl first, then tho aged and Intlrm, Deaths in tho street weie not uncommon; neatly every morning bodies were found beneath tho porlalcs. Staivlng cieatures cicpt to tho maiket In tho hope of begging u stray bit of food, and somu of them died theie, between the empty stalls. The death-wagons, heavy with their tl illy fi eight, tumbled ceaselessly thiough tho streets, adding to tho giant piles of un bulled corpses outside tho city. Tphoid. smallpox, el!ow feer. tuned unchecked. The hospitals weie crowded, and even in them tho commonest neces sities wero lacking. It Is belleed that men hao returned from the giuve, but no one, either Spaniard or Cuban, had over been known to leturn fiom ono ot these pest-houses, and, in consequence, those who were stricken piefened to ie main and to die among their dear ones. Yes, Muntaiuwn was iwieifled. Woyler's boast was true. Nowhere in tho entire piuvlilco was a Held In cultivation; no. where) outsido tho gutilsoned towns, wus a house left standing. Nor was tho city of Matanzas tho only concentration camp; therfi were others dotted througn eanu Clare, ilabunk. nnd Pinar del Wo. In them half a million persons cried for food, Titily no lebellioiis land was eui mini completely padded than tills, no people's s-phlts oer nunc nnnpletely crushed Voices no lunger pi cached 11 slstance; the piaed to 'Our I.atl nt Pitj" foi a meiel fill conclusion of this inlseiv. Hands weie upiiilsed, but nnh to Imploie. In leaky huts fiom .luc.uo to Cnpe Sm An tonio the dead la stietihed thleklj. ICosa's Shelter Into .Mutiiii.is, dt of bcggaiy and death, came, Ilos.i Vnion.i and her two uogio companions, looking for icllef. They made tho Journey without mishap, for the weie too destitute to warrant plundeilng, and ltov.i'n disguise eomeiiled what I'hauns lfinalued of her. Uut unci they had cuteied the city, wh.it an awak ening! What sniveling, what poveitN, whit lags the saw' The tin ro of them giew weak with illsina at the houoi of it all: but theie w.is no ietie.it, Asonslo built a makeshift shelter eloso under I.a Outline fiom It tho iiilns of the Qulnta de INtebaii weie visible ami theio they settled down to live Tliev had hoped to lose thunselxes among tho other piihoneis, and ill this they weio successful, for none of their inlseiubln nelghbois weio in any condition to notleti them, and them was nothing sulllclcntly conspicuous about two tatteied blacks and their liunclih.K ki-d daughter to diaw at tention fiom the soldlcis. Asenslo foiuged -zealously, and at (list ho managed somehow to seeuie enough food for his littlo fiimilv. Ho ile eloped a ical talent for dlseoseilng vegetables and fiults. IIo stole, ho begged, and lie found food whtto theie was none. Ono day tho soldleis se-(d him and put him to woik on tho foitltlcations along with a gang of other men who npeuted stiong enough to Maud haul labor. Asenslo wan not paid for this, but ho was allowed ono meal a day, and he succeeded III bilng ing home each night a sliaie of his allot ment. Existence It is suipilslng how littlo noinihlinieiit will sustain life, llosa and hei two fi lends had Jong felt tho pinch of hunger, but now they plumbed new depths of ptivatlou, for theio weie dajs when Asenslo and his fellow-conscilpts ie celved nothfng at all. After a time Hvangellna began making baskets and weaving palm-ltjuf hats, which sho sold at six cents e.tch. Bho taught Kosa tho craft, ami thoy woiked fiom dawn until dark, sttlvlng with .nimble, tlielcss lingers to supplement Asenslo's rations und post, pone staivatlon. llut it was a hopeless task. Other nhnblo fingers worked us tirelessly us theliH, and the. demu'nd for httt was limited;. Their hut overlooked the road to San Scwiiim. that via doloio-a on which eon ilinined pilmneih weie maiehcd out to et-i titiim, and In time the women leainul to lecogulre the peciillai bl.iilng notis ol a ceitaln i unlet, which Hignitled that another "Cuban cock was about t" now " When In the damp uf dewy innin ings the;, lieanl that bugle the nased their weaving long enough to cinss them Mhi's mid whisper a pi.ijer for the souls of those who weio on their way to die Hut this was the only icspite they in lowed themselves, Itnsa meditated much upon the contrast bitween her piesent and her fnimer con dition. Matatras was the city of her bhth, mid time was when (die had tiod its slieets in aiiugiiuec and pride, when she had possessed fi lends bv the seme among its lesldeuts. llut of alt these theie was not one to whom she dined appeal in this, her hour of need. These weie liuisli times; Spanish hatied of the i evo lutionists was bittei, and of the Cuban KVinpathlZeis none weio left Mm cover, llsteban's denoum eincnt as a tiattor bad cstiangcd all who lem.ilned lojal to the clown, and so far lis Ilos.i hei self wiih (ouceiiieil, sho knew that it would not nutter to them that sho bad cleaved to him nieielv from slsteilv devotion: by that ait she had undo hei self u common eiieinv and they would suncelv sympa thize with hei plight. Tho gill had ltMiritd onl too well what splilt was nbioad. I tut even had she felt assuied of meeting smithy, her pildo was pme Castlllill, and It would never down. She, a Vaioua, whose name was one to iimjuio with, whosu lluengo was nt the highest! She to beg.' Tho thing was qillto liuposslble. One numb, so taken, would have choked her. llosa piefened to suffer lnoudly and await the hour when hungci or dlscaso would at IiihI blot out her memoiies of huppy das and end this nlghtinaie mlseiy. The .Memory of Colonel Cobo Then, too, she dieadcd liny ilsk of dis covery by old Muilo de Ciistuuo, who was a haul, vindictive num. Ills paitlug winds hud shown her thut ho would never foi give the slight she hud put upon Mini; and sho did not wish to put his till eats to the test. Onco llosa saw him, on her wuy to. buy a few centuvo.. worth of sweet potutoes; he wus huddled In his victoiiu, a lingo bludder of flesh, and ho lodo the stteets deuf to the plaints of starving childteu, blind to the misery of beseeching mothers, Itosa sliiunk Into 'i in: .iok mis i m .KIIINMi; OltlMI.I.V, imirr iiiniliiiitiU kiiimn u 1111. (I'll 1. 1 I.I. V . Iui fiillrn III line ulth lllls V V VIUIN V. mil- of III.' irpllillix ul IIIIN I.sTI.IIVV V VKONV, it Mi-itlth.1 slivi inilii-r inn) Mticttr iiliiuler uf ( lilm. Den I.sIpImih IihiI litiHrilril h usl liirtlllie In pri'i Inns htiini'-, iilil s,unl-li iiilns iiml iiiinlirn iurrin in u M'l ri't IllllllllIT III till lllittlllll Ul K HI'lt II lls NSki-lllI III lilll lllllli; fllU t U sritjisiliiii, ii fiilllifiil slue, Hih iiiiU ullii r person in sliure IIm scirrl. Itmi I.mIi'Iiiiii miirrlitl ii xdiinil tlini, nnil Hie IMINNV siti:t., tli- suiiesMfiil ttfiniHii, Imil I mil' Ills wife 111 lilt- liiipi's nl I nlit-rlt Ir.u the fnrlimi'. Illll ulirn SeliHstlini Inrni'il iipnn his master ami l.llli ! lilm, rtiiiiilnK iiiM until h Inillei tlirmiicli his lilm U Itr.ll li lillil lilm Inu, tile mm lilliiitlulis uf Isnliel seiileil tile set rel uf the, treasure's lililitn; ilme fureter. litter l-aliel. her tuliiil turneil us h resiill ul liroeiliiiK uer the treasure, ttas ttllleil lit rnllltii; Intn Hie ttell. t this lime the Cntialis tere rising In retult hkhIiisI spaiu, Jiihnnle, Mini ri'iireseiiteil a Nett 1 url. Ilrm In Cubit. Inn! returned In Sett nrl. tempururll hefure Isflliel's ileatli. l,s,IVN, Itusa'p lirutlier, ttHs it reltel spt uml tlie tttn uriiliaus ttere t uuiiielleil lit llee Intn Hie t llilerness. , 'I lie uMalneil refuije In til lull i.r I.V VSIillt.lNV. Sebastian's ililllKlller. I'VM HO I in (. Ilun l.stehun's iilil lunnitver. Is uutv In tuliililett euntriil uf the pruiiiTU Hlul bails seteral parties In a tain atteliipl tu ilu anii.v IHl the tttn .Miline peuple win. sllll slaml In hl pnlli. I.sitlimi falls tu return friim it ralil, ami Itnsa Is tmnpelleil tu mi Hie urn eulru II. ,n tiiinp at Vlalitiias tu keep from stitrtliiK. Metliltlllle, O'ltelllt has iiimle n tain ellurl In irrl lo the rehel lines. 111. first trip tu t llhit fitlleil, ami nutt lie has J.ilneil u Junln iimler tiitnnianil uf Mtijur l!n , With It tin are l.l.sl.u; IIIIVMII, a t unniimptlir nettspuper urrespiiuileiit, ami MlltIM V NS, n rlih .tulllix tlullimi III .miii illl.t vtllll Hie rebels, tihn niHile III,. Junta pu-sllile. 'I he epeilllluu litliils safelt un it set linleil pari uf Hie u linn shore, mill O'Kelllt, ttltb Ml" I : s it If. hemls it siniill patr.t i.irr.tliiB news In l.eliirul luiinei uf Hie Junlu'x afe arrltal. VI ( uliltas O'ISelll.t is mel b Jt'llsOS, al, merliau taptulii ul urllllert, tbit tries In ublalli .Inblinle as a reiruil. O'ltelil.t si es ( uhilii I I upe, tt hn tells lilm uf the fate that has befallen Lslehiiu ami llosti. mini's meniorv haunted her. iisleep and Implldt tu it It in i:aii(,ellna's discretion, awake; of him sho was most desperately she knew that Asenslo was nut the sort lift iilil. When fnl the III st tlino sho saw of lellnvv to be II listed with it seeic'l of lilm ildliig ut the bend of Ills cutthiniits t,ient magnitude- lie was boastful, talk- sho wus like to swoon In her tl.uks, and alive, evltuble, he was Just the sort to for a whole tiny tbeieufler she inweted tiring destruction iip.ni all of tlirin. Rosa In tho hut, trembling at every sound. had millielont intdligeuce to reitll.n thut in these d.iik lioiiiH sho tecnlled the even If she tound her fathei's i Idles they Hloiles of the old Vaiona treisure, and would only constitute another ninl a lIstobail'K Interesting theory of Us wheie- gie.iler menace In the lives of nil of them, aboiils, but she could not hi lug bet self ,N'evi ttheless, she wished to set lur mind to put much talth in either. At tho tlmo ut lest once and foi all. Taking Uvange- of her hi other's lecltal sho had been Una with lire, sho climbed Ii ('limine one swuved by his conviction, but now on eoolor thought a ihucn eplanallons of Dona Isabel's possession of tint doubloon iilTored theiutelves, no one of which seemed less piobublo thnn 1'ntoban'H. of couise. It wus lmmly possible that them was indeed a treusine, and even that Kstcbun's suinilse had been collect. Hut It was littlo mom than a remote possibil ity. Distance lends a losy color of real ity to our most absuid Imaginings, but, liko the liiizn that tints a fursiff land scape. It dissolves upon iipptoach. Now that llosa wus here, hi sight of the mined qulnta Itself, her hopes und half beliefs faded. At the Old Home Sho wanted, oh, so desperatel, to be lieve In It, but tho grinding mlseiy of her situation made It haul to do so, day ill seat eh of kioIh und vegetables. .Memories It tinned out to bo a sad cxpeilcnco fur both women. The negriss wept Unix lly at the destruction wrought b I'anchn Cuftn, uml Itnsa wus overcome Ij painful memories. Kiltie thut was fumlllur re mained; evidence of Cueto's iill-dcv mir ing greed siKtke from the sprouting fur pool of scum was in the bottom. After a long sctutiny thu girl utosc, convinced at last of her brother's delusion, und vuguel ashamed of her own credulity. This was about the last repository that such a man as m Kstcban, her father, would have been likely to select; for, after all, .the most vuluablo part of lite fortune hud consisted of the deeds of tltte to tho plantations. No, If ever there had been a treasure, it was hidden elsewhere; all of value that this well contained 'for Itnsa was her memory of a, happiness de parted. 'f such memories, the well, the whole pluis', wus brimful. Here, as i hlld, sho had romped with Ksteban. Here, hk h girl, sho had dreamed her thst dreams, und here O'ltcllly. her smil ing knight, had found her. Yonder was the very spot where he ha4L held her in his aims and begged her to i wait the day of his retuin. Well, she had waited Hut was that Kosa Vuroiid who had piomised so'fiecly and so confidently thia pitiful llosa whose bones protrudod through her rags' It could not be. Hup. plness, contentment, hope these vyer fictions; onlj misery, despair und pain weie Kid Hut it bad leen a glorlou1 ilieuni. at any rate a dieam which Hot, vowisl to cherUh alwas. Hvuiigelina found the girl sitting til. the sun. her thin face rudlant, her great ccs wet but smiling. "Come, little dovo," said the n egress, "there Is nothing here to eat; -o muct get luck to our weaving," CHAPTER XVIII IT WAS part of (he strategy practiced! & by the Cuban leaders to divide their "ftj ' . -sal foi ccs Into separate coiutmm for the purvttSJ pose of raiding the smaller Spanish gar-'-JM I isons and harassing, the troops sent WJ,t their relief, reassembling these uanu onlj when and wheie some tolling blow uun to lo stiuck. Not only had the '-. military value of this practice been amply jrf demonstrated, but It hud been proved tl Wonders like that rume truo only In a dooiwuy and dtew her tuttered shawl fttjry talcs, sho told herself; and certainly closer over her face for fear Don Mario h)i0 jwj no cause to consider herself u might recognize In this misshapen body favorite of fortune, und In these pinched, dlkcoloied features More than once she wns tempted to con- tho beauteous blossom ho had craved. . Me j Kvangotlna und Asenslo, bt she tilled up with rubbled. , Nor did Bho forget Colonel Cobo. .Tlie thought .better of jr.. Although she put ercd, when she Deered.lntQ it., QtAf&foysW)? 1 1 iovh hn men had ilnir. from tin iiukfM i.. i .. i.. !, u 'ik.1 , W ' ttees they hud felled and plied in onlerly hUuectos werj compelled to live off iheJ neaps, iruui llie sioue.s and Illollur ul tho liousH itself. Teats blinded llosa. After a timo sho left the black woman mourning among tho ruins und stolu uwfty to the sunken gulden. Here tho liialks of vandalism weic less noticeable. Nevertheless, few signs of beultty re. muliied. Neglected vines dtooped spit It lesaly from tho ledges, nuch fruit trees us had been spared wero sickly and un- .tended; time und the eloiuentu hud all but passed before Iille Brttucr kIm4 completed tho disheartening work, oppoitunlty of tHsting the, 'ett:W wnt.- ..... . ... a -- ,1-J' ..JX.LZ t.-. ino cii , rcnmineii, niinougn ji nau fin lis inn imyorwr ww, been plankea over, but it wan partially colonel,. Jjr (He; countiy. . j(l vvnen uiteiuy na urancn eniisiea in .; the Army of the Orient they were &e?j signed tu the command of Colonel MigtMl Iopez, und it was under his leadefspte. lliui llioy llinur tnrit itiav i.tuuitit with the peculiar methods of Cuban' W fure. . , " ' -y Active service for ine,iwo-.Awet' I.Ariiti ul nrtitt Liarev ittvAlrl, .-.. -- -..--., -. ,-r.,,.T us lUwa dlwovr ,nilerr 'tii ,Vt,y M ?W'V' 'M .. "a "SI i -si $i a. r !' .i k. . V . yv l '.v'ti&tAiw ., .. .. . r j-Sri. Si'5i-J1(, , f .'. U&&&&S 3fcrift- HsSSTiAVM