F5SPPHP r --P ..- u THE PITTSBUEG- DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JANTJAET 13, 1889. i r GALWAT AND BEYOND Editor L. Wakeman Tells of Ireland's Most Ancient City. BICH ARCHITECTURAL TREASURES And Quaint Old Structures That Tell of the Glories of the Fast. A STOEI OP EXALTED HEKOISH rCOKKZBrOKDEKCZ OF THK DISPATCH.l ALVAY, Iee- LA5D, December 31. There is not probably in all Ireland another so picturesque and in teresting a city as old Galway. Its picturesquenesi is found largely in its location; bnt also to a great extent in the antiquity and quaintncss of its structures, its many and winsome crannies, corners, nooks and lanes, and the rich arches, gables and heraldic devices of its moldy buildings. But its deepest interest to the appreciative observer lies in the dis tinct and colorful character of its people and those of its environs, classes among whom are so peculiar that novelist or painter could here find as rare studies for pen or pencil as could be anywhere discov ered within the most unique communities of Europe. It is a wild, drear land and coast where the ancient seaport lifts its gray walls against perspectives of desolate, rock-covered reaches, the weird, lone metropolis of the "West But there is a dreamful vista across the majestic bay, where ships no more will come and only the fisher's sail is seen, stretching westward from the huts of iCladdagh, far and far to the thunderous sea. To the north creep blanched, walled roads, rising in graceful curves, terrace-like lengths, or in sharp, zig-zag lines, pushing on and over and again up the Conemara heights to the frowning headlands of wild Cloghmore. To the south lies a circling Bhore traced by brown and snowy lines where the fretful tides have left their spume and drift. Behind this the blue hills of Clare invite to mystic regions beyond, and rise in graceful undulations toward the west, until, as far as the sight can penetrate, the dim outlines of grewsome Black Head pierce the horizon; and here are ever tre mendous ELESirXTAI. STBT7GGI.ES between sea and land. Perhaps SO miles away, at the mouth of Galway Bay, be tween Black Head and Cloghmore, stand the Arran Islands, where live, or exist, 3.000 wretched beincs whose hearts have so grown to these hags'-teeth of the sea that they cannot be wheedled away, but stay and starve and die. North, south, west, and here at the east in Galway town, arc the strangest, ruggedest, most starved, yet brave and cheery, souls that live; and between wild seaport and wilder sea naught can be seen indicating the activities of men, save the ragged fisher's sail, an infrequent gov ernment mail and coast service boat, and now and then a rude curragh gliding over the waters, just as it did a thousand years ago; while the wheeling gulls whirl, whistle and gurgle as if in surprise at the desolate loneliness, where should ride the traffic giving merchant navies of the world. Unquestionably Galway is one of the most ancient of if ish cities. It was tne "il lustrious city of Kaganta" of Ptolemy's second century Geographia. Its records are as dim as its olden structural glories are ruinous and defaced. But during the first 1,500 years of the Christian era its trade with Mediterranean ports was constant and important. To such a degree was this true that its rare old legends are as full of the half-Latin taint and the half-Moorish weird ness as Yalladolid and Barcelona are to-day rich with the arabo-niorescos and " arabesques which were indelibly wrought upon them during the same period. The traces of these former far-away in fluences linger in old Galway as surely upon architecture as upon people, evidences of the latter forming one of the most curious and entertaining studies in Ireland. Here are the narrow, winding streets across which lovers, friends and gossips could ex change greetings and garrulousness, and almost clasp hands, from upper windows in the olden days, as now. In this dark nook are broken "wall lowering upon delicate balcony, minareted roof leaning upon six teenth century shoulders, Normandy gables protruding over window-work of flowing tracery, and arabesque devices cut upon Elizabethan sternness cf castellated chimney. QUACTT ATICHrTECTtmE. A wild conglomorate in architecture seems to have taken possession of the spot, as though the fancilul Moorish thought, the early German point and peak, and the rugged Anglo-Norman severity had, in some ethical-architectural conflict, waged war for leaving their impress upon posterity's sight and mind. In this narrow way are arch gigantic, corbel Huge ana gargoyiea, ana balconied latticework as light and graceful as though the foam of the sea, or a mass of spectral ferns, had been flung into tremen dous walls by fairy architects of a night. In that deep court are mullioned windows, sculptured gateways, bastioned angles, iron wicket work, and early Moorish tilings that awaken historic memories of Southern Eu rope for a thousand years that are gone. Ton will find a startling similarity to the an cient architectural fancies prevalent in the ' older cities of Spain, also traceable in many of the cities of the Biviera, of memorializ ing family history, accentuating personal distinction, pronouncing family peculiarity belief, or distinguishing trait, or heralding title or degree, in sculptural device, over doors, on lintels, beneath balconies, within or upon arches, and in all manner of un reasonable and unexpected places. No city in the United Kingdom is so rich in display of "coat-armor." It is found upon the most ancient structures; is still profuse upon those of a later period; ana even in the most modern buildings for there are few structures of importance in the old city of the present or past century architecture and this manner of decoration have a warm and glowing likeness to that of the past. Jl. strange old stbcctube. Perhaps the best illustrationmay be found in a strange old structure standing on one of the principal thoroughfares of Gaiway. This is "Lynch's Castle, famous in romancer's talesbut very plain and uely to an eye al ready accustomed to the extraordinary and profuse architectural remains of surpassing beauty throughout Ireland. Its form is that of a huge sauare keep or castle of retreat, such as are found standine in lonely grandeur and de cay throughout Ireland and with surprising f re fluency along the Bride and Blackwater of the bouth. Rude windows and arched gateways have been cut here and there, evidently as civilization gradually assured their propriety. Around and over 13 of these have been chiseled some of the richest, quaintest and most gro tesque devices of this class to be found in Europe. Members of the proud family who erected and occupied this cas tle had for their armorial bear ings, or crest, the elaborately-carved figure of a lynx, which is yet to be seen over the gate ways of their various habitations. One family chose a most hideous cross-bones and skull in black marble for its crest. Their ancient i bomo is still found in Lombard street, which is called "Dead Man's Lane," aad beneath this Singular piece of heraldic device is warred the doleful motto. "Remember Death Vanitl of VanitL and All is But Vanitl." The huge old Lynch a Castle recalls a curious history and story. At the beginnine of the thirteenth century the Anglo-Norman De Burgbos and followers settled in and about Galway. These in time became known as "The Tribes of Thir teen," from which fact Galwav has taken the .sobriquet of the City of the Tribes. An old (quatrain preserves their names: "Athy, Blake. Bodkin, Browne, Deane, D'Arcy, Lynch, Joyes, Klrwans. Martin, Morris Skerret, French." AX IBISH BBUTUS. These grew to be rulers of mercantile and civic affairs. Through intermarriage with the Spanish-Celtic residents, and almost complete isolation from people of England, Scotland and Ireland, save those of the "savage West," they finally became more completely Irish in feeling and character than the Irish them selves. Out of these who once nourished in Lynch's Castle, many of whom figured as old time Gal ay officials and dignitaries, came a veritable Irish Junius Brutus, one James Lynch Fitzstephen, who was a portreeve, provst, mayor, warden, or sovereign of Gal way In 1493. He traded largely with Spain, and entrusted his son, Walter Lynch, with an important sum of money with which to pro ceed there and purchase, and return' with a cargo of wine. The son squandered the money, but obtained credit and the company of the Spanish merchant's nephew in retnming to receive payment at Galway. Young Lynch conceived the idea of hiding his profligacy from his friends by mur dering the agent and bribing his crew into silence, which he did. He returned, was re ceived with honor, prospered, was betrothed to a titled and beautiful lady, but. on confession of the conspiracy by one of tho sailors who was with him, he was apprehended, given sum mary trial by his own father, condemned, and despite the fury of the populace, which had been aroused by specious pleadings on tne part of his mother's powerful friends, as heroically executed at his own father's hands. The half forgotten record of the event relates: 'Tbey (the mother's friends who attempted to pre vent the execution) flew to arms, and a pro digious concourse soon assembled to support them, whose outcries of mercy for the culprit would have shaken any nerves less firm than those of the Mayor of Galway. He exhorted them to vield submission to the laws of their countryfbut finding all his efforts fruitlpss to accomplish the ends of justice at the accus tomed place, and by the usual hands, be, by a desperate victory over parental fecling.rcsolved himself to pay the sacrifice which ho had vowed to par on its altar. Still retaining a hold of his unfortunate son, he mounted with him by a winding stair within the building, that leu to an arched windowover looking the street, which he saw filled with the maddened populace. Here he secured the end of the rope which bad been previously fixed around the neck of his son to an Iron staple which projected from the wall, and, after taking from him a last embrace, be launched him into eternity. The intrepid magistrate expected instant death from the populace: but the peo ple seemed so overawed or confounded by the magnanimous act, that they retired slowly and peaceably to their several dwellings." AS CifHONOBED HERO. To my mmd this act of exalted heroism, standing alone in the annals of sacred or pro fane history as a sacrifice made, not only with out the prospect of any form of reward, but with the certainty of instant and horrible death, and wholly without the not altogether unselfish motive "of Brutus, or the certain ex pectation of divine personal approval inspiring Abraham, is a surnassinc tribute to abstract justice incomparable in its nature, and incom parably incomparable in a time and age when justice was too often subserved to the piques and prejudices of power. But because this man, who so loved his country that the preservation ol its laws, through the most awful conceivable struggle of the human heart, was infinitely more sacred a thing than human ties of inex pressibly solemn tenderness, was an Irishman, and did not have a Latin name, a Greek name, or a Hebrew name, to jingle in pedantic prat tle, the act, fact and man are lost from among the transcendent deeds, examples and person alties of men. It is a curious commentary npon the vaporous applicability of human thought to serviceable incidents, that this act of moral grandeur alone gave an irradicable appellation to that most abhorrent misuse of punishment in the name of justice, and a characteristically if not exclusively American institution of horror and crime, our notorious lynch law. But Galway is more noted for its fish-wives than its heroes or history. There are perhaps 300 in the old seaport city. They are nor, as has been generally supposed, wives of the equally celebrated fishermen of the Claddagh; but tbey sell the fish these men bring back from the coves and the sea. They have no other means of livelihood, and wish none. If any are mothers, you cannot dicover that fact. If any are wives, no one knows it. If any ever loved, or If any ever knew as we know, the home, neither can be ascertained. What they grow nut of into their state and honor in what isliterallytheircalling.no human can know. Here they are from generation to generation, just as you and I sec the.m to-day, a wild, tender, savage, merry, lawless, honest mob, dressed, or half -dressed, as females, grotesquely indifferent from women, radiantly indifferent to either man or woman, incomparably brave and more enduring than any men. As I know to my own despair, before amity was estab lished between us, there are not other such outrageous and indescribable blackguards on earth; and yet I defy sny honest analyst to find an atom of viciousness beneath their soul blasting speech. A PICTURESQUE SPOT. Tho Claddagh fishermen came in with the early tide with their "catches" of herring, hake, cod and conger eels. Then the ancient and picturesque fish-market, with gables lean ing over it, wicket-windows peenng into it, and shadowy arches leading out of it, and with the Claddagh sails and spars like a wind-whipped autumn-forest almost hiding the bine of the sea, is alive with startling colors, forms and sound. The dexterity with which the fish are bandied and cleaned by these fish-wives, the shrill, wild callirg from one to another, the wordy wars between them and fishermen about weight, quality and luck, and between them early bujers as to price, the bedlamite ballads that are hurled upon the air as the gleaming knives flash and the scales fly like driven sleet, I ana tne torrents oi nerce. tnougn secretly merry, billingsgate and abuse, with passes of fish-knives as if for murder, cloutings from conger eels, rushings and drubbings bestowed upon innocent strangers or meddlesome in truders, are something marvelous, indis cribablc, awful, and utterly beyond compre hension until seen and experienced. Most of the larger flsh are shipped to Dublin; and curiously enough a graduate of the band, one Molly Noon, a personage of stupendous influ ence and girth, practically controls the busi ness: but the herring are hawked about Gal way by the fish-wives in a way to startle one new to their strange ways. With their "herring skib," or basket, upon their bare heads, with their bare, brown, flat breasts naked to the waist, barefooted in winter and summer, with legs bare to the knees, divested of their cloaks and onlv covered with petticoats of "tuck flanneV'with anything at all convenient pro tecting the shoulders and arms, theymove with incredible rapidity from point to point; all their merriment gone;" with an anxious, terrified look in their faces; and as they glide and dart and sweep along, their unearthly cries of "Fresh Herringsl" transformed into "Fros Ern-n-ngs!" "Fros Ern-n-ngsH meet, cross, echo and re-echo, until it seems that, from the Ballynabinch Mountains of Conemara to the purple hills of Clare, a thousand monster calli opes have been brought together for contest, such wild, fierce choristers are they. A BARE OLD TOWN. But at other times how charmingly they fit into the picturesque scenes of the rare old town. Wander in the night and yon will come upon them in groups wrapped in their black braidcens, silent as hooded monks at prayer. In this tap-room and that, they give you goodly companv. Buy for them their porter and stout, and listen. You will bear the strancest words and think the strangest thoughts that ever came to man. Tramp in and ont of nooks and underneath arches in the grav of morninzs. You will stumble on a dozen of them squatted and crouched upon the stone ways, with heads together, their faces invisi ble, and the smoke of their pipes curling out of their braideen hoods, for all the world like a diminutive bunch of tepees. They are un accountable to law, yet no law could harm them. Tbey believe all things their prey, yet they are scrupulously honest. They know no such thing as we count for morality, yet their virtue is immaculate. No such drinkers of spirits live, yet there Is not a drunkard among them. No door in Gal way is closed npon them, yet they do not trans gress the nicest laws of hospitality among townspeople, while utterly without awe of thing or being upon or above the earth, not even royalty itself; for was it not my good friend, venerable Nell Morris herself, who as Victoria's son, the Duke of Edinburgh, was parading the streets of Galway in 18S5, on the occasion of a little lofty distribution of cbanty to famine sufferers of that year gave the illus trious ninny a glorious bug. and then shaking him out of his paralysis with her two great hands, with an inimitable wink and leer, roared at him: "Yer welcome to ould Galway, me buckl Arrab, an' how's yer motherT" Edgar L. 'Wakzman. Breaking tho News, Z-'x3k. & twsvir Mrs. Croshey My dear, I want to ask yon what yon think of Jack "Whadley. He has been paying Lulu marked attention, latelyl Papa I think he must have turned over a new leaf. It's the first thing he ever paid in his life! Puck. 's-v"$mf HE PUT HIM IN A BOX. The Father of His Country Hidden From the Gaze of the Multitude. HOW THINGS MIGHT HAVE BEEN If Garfield Had Heeded the Advice of His Secretary. THE S0BRWS OF HOLD-OTEE CLEEKS tCOBBSSrOOTEJCCE Or THE DISPATCn.J ASHINGTON, January 12. The Architect of tho Capitol has put George Washington in a pen. Not literally, bnt figuratively, as it were. He has built a wooden enclosure around and over the gigantic, semi-nude) sitting- postured statue of the Father of his Country, that for so many years past has stood, or rather sat in tho 'Eastern front of the j"ff f&m grounds facing the Capitol.. This statne, which perhaps has been more criticised than all the other works of art in the city, was designed and executed by the American sculptor, Horatio Greenough, at Florence, and was finished in 1843, after many years' labor. Congress gave the order for the work, mainly through the influence of the novelist, James FenimOre Cooper; and while not entering very closely into the consideration of models, specifications, or plans, the members of that body naturally expected that the forthcoming work would represent the eminent subject in the garb and pose of modern life some what as they had been accustomed to regard him in the life and times of which he had been so potent and prominent a factor. AS AKTISTIC SURPRISE. Imagine then, the surprise, to put it mildly, of the worthy Solons, and indeed of the whole country, when, upon the reception of the statue, it proved to be, not a repre sentation of the great soldier in the costume of the Virginia gentleman of the eighteenth century, but a work of heroic size, almost naked, and designed after the antique statue of Jupiter Tonans. Think of it, oh, my masters! The man who apart from the great work of his life, for which all Americans hold him in grate ful remembrancoj was individually, and personally, the most dignified and un approachable of men, doomed to sit there in the broad glare of day, through this eminently practical and utili tarian .age, clad in nothing but a Itoman sword, a blanket thrown across the knees and a pair of sandals! Viewed as a work of art, it is said by those who profess to knowabont such things, to be our grandest possession, as it is the most criticised. This may be true if vifi could, somehow, come to think of the great man as a cotemporary of Julius Cassar; but as things co. it somehow doesn't seem to fit, and the public at large will not be sorry for the boarding np. Aside from its failure to find a place in the esteem of the populace, it has long been a kind of white elephant on the hands of the local authorities. The trouble has been to find a place for its location. When ordered, it was expect ed that it would be put in the rotunda of the Capitol, but lo, it was found too pon derous to go in at the door. A hole was made through the wall, and the mighty structure was taken in through that. Then it was found that tho great weight of the granite pedestal, 12 feet high, surmounted by the heavy statne, was about to cause the floor to give way, and so it was taken down from there. Finally it was lo cated in its present position. Here some vaudal relic hunter climbed np the pedestal and carried away in triumph, one of the great toes. A local artist "sculpted" out another toe, but in splicing it on, he discovered that the weather was beginning to play sad havoc with the work itself. The freezing and thawing of winter, it was believed, were particularly damaging hence the boarding-up. XS INTERESTED SPECTATOR. There is one man in this city to whom the quadrennial season of bustle, preparation and expectation, intervening between No vember and March, may be supposed to have a peculiar interest, and especially may we suppose this interest to attach to what ever pertains to the important office of Pri vate Secretary to the President. His name is George TJ. Kose, and he now holds a position in one ot the depart ments. We may suppose that he feels an interest in whatever pertains to the office of Private Secretary, because he came near once filling the place himself. It was under President Garfield, and the circumstances were these: For many years, he had acted as Secretary to the Ohio states man, probably during almost the whole of the latter's Congressional career. He was with him at Mentor, during the campaign of 1880, and after the election, everybody expected, as a matter of course, that he would go with his chief to the White House. Perhaps the appointment was even given out to the press. 'However that may have been, there is no doubt that np to a certain time the two parties most nearly interested fully expected that the place would be his. But mark the curious thing that now oc curred. , Of course, dnring the winter of 1880-81, it was the proper thing for the Eepublican statesmen to journey to the home of the President-elect, just as they are now en gaged in making pilgrimages to the politi cal Mecca further West, In the confer ence between these visiting statesmen and the coming President the faithful Secretary gathered enough of what was to be the pol icy of the incoming administration in cer tain directions to give him the gravest alarm. BEARD IT AFAR OFF. It is bootless now to inquire who origin ated or who was most to blame for the quar rel that a few months later convulsed the Republican party, and especially as both the leaders thereof have gone to other scenes; but certain it is that Garfield's sec retary saw and heard enough in the Mentor conferences to give him forebodings of trouble. And he warned his principal there is just where he made his mistake. What the Congressman might have tolerated from the secretary and friend of many years, the President-elect could not brook. It was the end. It was not many days be fore Rose received notice of his appointment to a place in Washington, and also ah inti mation from Garfield that perhaps he had best accept it. He went. J. Stanly Brown became pri vate secretary, and later a son-in-law in the family. And all for a few words honestly spoken, I repeat, it is useless now to inquire who was to blame for the origin or prosecution of th trouble in which, a few monthslater, Garfield and Conkling stood arrayed against each other; but if Kose was right in his fore bodings, and did say to the former: "Mr. President, you cannot do so and so without destroying'the Eepublican party," then it becomes an interesting study to consider what might have been the aspect of affairs during the past eight years, if that word of caution had been heeded. In all human probability Mr. Garfield would, just now, be in the closing months of his second term, preparatory to dropping bis mantle npon the shoulders of whom? The fate of individuals, of parties and of ft J- larV't nations has turned upon fewer words than these. THE CLERK'S HARD LOT. To the great army of Government clerks, who compose so large and important a factor in Washington life, the quadrennial recur rence of the Presidental election, with its attendant excitement and anxiety, is not always and altogether a season of tranquil and placid enjoyment. Life in the departments has not been alto gether normal for ths past five months. Dnring the three mouths next before the election, the days of the "hold-over" Ee publican were not happy ones. His daily lot was cast in an atmosphere that was not calculated to stiffen his politi cal backbone. He was surrounded by as sociates who could speak out, while he, per force, must keep silent; and who were not backward in showing the exultation of an ticipated success. His peace of mind was not augmented by repeated notices, received through the mail, that an "Advisory Com mittee" was located at No. F street, and that all contributions would be "duly ac knowledged. That innocent looking little card, was cal culated to give the average Eepublican employe, some mighty solemn thoughts. And then when in the early days of Novem ber, the "boys" went off home to vote, an nouncing as a parting shot,that they should expect no quarter if they lost, nor should give any if they won, the mental barometer of the poor "hold-over" was still further de pressed. They are now feeling better. The anxious seat, however, is just as full as ever. The "boys" as they came straggling back from the scene of the late conflict, moved promptly to the front, and occupied the place so lately vacated by the brethren of the other side. The question now agitating their minds is to know the full extent of the civil and political rights pertaining to an honest, fair minded servant of Uncle Sam, and just where the incoming administration is going to draw the line separating these from this domain of "offensive partisanship" arJ "pernicious activity." But the man occupying the very front seat of the mourners' bench is he, who four years ago, was a Blaine shonter from the head of the creek. And who when he found that he had lost, straightway became a Democrat of the strictest sort. And during the past four years, has shown all the zeal of the new convert; even to tho extent of going home to take the stump; to engineer conventions; to pull wires. Verily, now are the days of the "flopper" laden with tribulation, and at night Bleep departeth from his eyelids. For he saith to himself : Surely will I be set to pressing brick soon after the begin ning of the third month. His lines have not fallen in pleasant ' places for many days past. His associates of four years ago have kept aloof from him, and his new friends have despised while they have tolerated him. A rECrLIAR PERSONAGE. But the man above all others in the de partment service who will be found worthy of early attention by the new administra tion will be tho individual known as the "hold over assistant chief." This is a title unknown to the law, bnt the assistant chief is a very potent factor in department life. He comes more in con tact with, and can do more to make the clerk's daily life pleasantor otherwise, than all the other officers, from the chief of di vision up. The new chiefs and heads of bureaus have naturally had to rely to great extent upon some one of the old employes, and the result is that in many cases the place of assistant is to-day filled by the same man who filled it four years ago. Most of these men have acquitted them selves in their difficult position like the honorable gentlemen that they are with equal and impartial justice to all, and with an eye single to -the prompt and efficient dispatch of the public business. A few of them, however, have developed into the veriest martinets and petty eight-by-ten tyrants. Whether they hoped by this means to in gratiate themselves with those higher; or were only puffed up by a little brief author ity, or were only actuated by pure mean ness, it is not material to inquire. But if they expect the men who for four vears have kent silent because thev dared not speak, will continue that silence, they may find themselves mistaken. Men who have been treated for years as if they were devoid ot an honor who nave been herded together and watched as though they were convicts who have had the time counted against them every day to the fraction ot a minute who have been re quired to transact the business of this great Government almost in a whisper who must not wash their hands between 9 and i with out leave first had and obtained who have been the subjects of the harassing "error slip" system, until men who should have worked together in harmony have grown to almost hate each other men who have been watched and dogged and spied upon, even to those occasions in daily life where de cency draws the veil, until the higher Dem ocratic officials were forced to interfere may for the sake of bread for wife and chil dren, bear much and long, but the "Hold Over, four-years-ago-Eepublican, Assistant Chief, who finds herein a shoe to fit, may rest assured thathe will not be forgotten. Solomon Grundy. Beautiful Engraving Free. "Will They Consent?" is a magnifi cent engraving, 19x24 inches. It is an exact copy of an original painting by Kwall, which was sold for 55,000. This elegant engraving represents a young lady standing in a beantiful room, sur rounded by all that is luxurious, near a half-open door, while the young man, her lover, is seen in an adjoining room asking the consent of her parents for their daughter in marriage. It must be seen to be appre ciated. This costly engraving will be given awav free, to every person purchasing a small box of Wax Starch. This starch is something entirely new.and is without a doubt the greatest starch in vention of the nineteenth century (at least everybody says so that has used it). It supersedes everything heretofore used or known to science in the laundry art. Un like any other starch, as it is made with pure white wax. It is the first and only starch in the world that makes ironing easy and restores old summer dresses and skirts to their natural whiteness, and im parts to linen a beautiful and lasting finish as when new. Try it and be convinced of the whole truth. Ask for Wax Starch and obtain this engraving free. The Wax Starch Co., Keokuk, Iowa. Fashionable Clothing. My autumn and winter stock of fine woolen fabrics for gentlemen's garments is now complete, comprising the finest and neatest material for dress wear; Scotch and English business suiting, stylish and dur able; elegant and handsome overcoating; latest designs in trousery. Artistic, stylish and neat fitting, the great features. Walter Anderson, Merchant Tailor, Cor. Wood street and Sixth avenue, Sn and 701 Liberty. A New Ycnr. Housekeepers, turn over a new leaf and use the best flour in the market Eosalia manufactured exclusively by Whitmyre & Co., Thirty-eighth street and Allegheny Valley Railroad. It Heads the List. Marvin's new milk bread rivals the best and sweetest home made article. Your grocer will get it for yon if he does not already keep it. Tussu Dabbs, the photographer, took several views of the wrecked buildings almost im mediately after their fall. Cash paid for old gold and silver at Hauch's, No. 295 Fifth are. - wpsu WES OF THE SOUTH. Bessie Bramhle Inveighs Vehemently aid Forcibly Against the SOUTH CAROLINA MARRIAGE LAWS Indulging in Philosophic Laziness in a Southern Eden. PEESIDENT HARRISON AND THE SOUTH COBErSPOJTDEKCX Or TIM DISPATCH. IKEN, S. C, Jan uary 7. To us of the North, who are accustomed to having winter lingering in the lap of spring away along in May, it seems odd to be told that January is the principle winter month in the Sonth, and this, too, in view of the signs of spring every where apparent with flowers blooming in 'he open gardens, and the thermometer np in the air. But as winter here is mainly distingnished by rain, we have had two days of what seemed to be a second edition of the deluge. The heavens opened np the clouds and wept upon the sad and dolorous world with snch torrents and water falls as suggested the looking out for an ark and a modern Noah. But if we had to have an ark, with our new-fashioned ideas, we should want the animals to have a boat of their own, while that in which we embarked should be run by electricity with all the at tachments for comfort as comprehended m the nineteenth century. But two davs rain in a week shows that South Carolina is behind Pennsylvania iu the way of a rainy season, when "in our Northern idyllic Octo ber, we had 27 days' rain in the lovely month, when yellow and red shonld have flamed in gold and sunshine. But supposing now that the floods should be let loose, the skies should drip as to-day, until Niagara should seem a gentle water fallthat the world should be treated to another deluge when should we look for a Noah? Would we turn onr eyes to Ben Harrison, the commander of Republican hosts, the chief representative of over 60,000,000 of people the great god of hope to the officeseekers? AN UNPLEASANT INSINUATION. Not here in the South certainly. Brother Ben has put his foot into it with his bugle call speech. His address to the Grand Army to" stand shoulder to shoulder, as they "did during the war to preserve a free and honest ballot, is rather a reflection on Southern methods, or at least is so con strued; and they do not hesitate here among the chivalry to tell him to look at home to consider his own back vard to meditate upon Dudley's "blocks of five" to consider Pennsylvania, said by one of her native sons to be "the most contemptibly corrunt, the most diabolically vile, the most notoriously dirty piece of territory, politi cally speaking, on the face of the earth" to look at New York, where bribery and corruption find a native home, and so on. As everybody knows, it does not do for peo ple who live in glass houses to throw stones. If Brother Harrison's words were aimed at the repression of the Eepublican vote of the South, they will only serve to incense a people against him who were ready and anxious for conciliation and amity. The South, as we are told by an intelli gent man, is anxious to let war issues die out wishful for fraternal feeling desirous of cultivating amicable relations with their brethren at the North, but when that means subordination to negro rnle and domination, the bugle call of Harrison will wake up not amicable, but rather belligerent emotions it will not pour oil upon tronbled waters, bnt rather wake them to storm and tempest it will not subserve to amity and love, but will rather keep ablaze the fires of hate and sectional feeling. If Harrison made the speech as recorded he did a foolish thing for one who should aim not to be a sectional patriot, but a representative of the whole country. The South should be allowed to manage its own affairs to exercise home rule and to hold local option just as we do in the North. Even if as asserted the negro vote is re pressed to the advantage of the Democratic party, what Northern man is justified in calling attention to the mote in his brother's eye while he considers not the beam in his own eye. If the South represses the vote of ignorance, the North represses the vote of intelligence. BESSIE IS REPRESSED. We can speak strongly on this matter because we aro one of the repressed. We claim to be able to vote with as much re gard for the good of the country, with as much interest in the welfare of virtue and the promotion of morality, with as much in telligence as regards politics and the rights of humanity as anv man we know, and yet our rights are trampled npon, our vote is suppressed, our voice is silenced by force, so we cannot see that onr brethren in the North have good cause to put on airs of superior virtue, or are justified in showing any pious rage over the enormity of the South suppressing the ignorant vote of the colored population. One of the most striking things abont this sunny Southern town is the great number of young and strong-looking negroes who stand about the groceries and npon the corners of the streets. How this was before the war we ot course do not know, but it is certain they would be much better off if indus triously employed. Satan, we presume, is just as busy down here finding mischief for idle hands to do as on Fifth avenue at home. When we asked how it came that these big strapping fellows could sit around in the sun and indulge themselves in loaf ing, we were told their wives and mothers tooK in wasnmg woricea out as cooks and chambermaids and nurses and their hus bands spent the money. This is their de lightful privilege under the laws of South Carolina. In the last 40 years most of the Northern States have so amended their laws as grant to married women the right to hold prop erty and to have some control of their own earnings; but South Carolina, it appears, has stood by the old common law in all its enormity of tyranny and slavery from the day of its first settlement at Charleston in 1670 until now. A form of slavery. Although the Huguenots, the Quakers, the Scotch and Irish Presbyterians and Methodists came to this sunny Sonth to en joy civil and religious liberty, it never seems to have occurred to them that the old common law of marriage was for wives an even worse form of oppression than that from which they had fled. By this old English law, under which no wife in South Carolina can hold property or claim her own earnings, possess her own cjothes or devise by will a cent to anyone, wives are held legally in a state ot servitude not less abject than that from which negro suffrage emancipated the male slaves. It speaks loudly for the chivalry of the South that women in the main arc so kindly treated and warmly appreciated that they have not found cause or courage to clamor for a change. Still chains are chains, though made of gold, or wreathed with flowers. There is no good reason why the sisters of South Carolina should not be in possession of the same privileges which we of Pennsylvania enjoy, and the more which we propose to hold in the hereafter. As an added cruelty to the marriage law as it exists here, is the fact that tbey have no law of divorce no such thing as divorce be ing allowed. So when a woman here marries and makes havoc of her dreams of happi ness, she has no hope of freedom or release save by death. Of course this is the door mat theory in practice, and it falls in with the creed of the Roman and Ritualistic churches, but con template the tragedies implied under such civil and ecclesiastical laws. It makes the blood run cold to think of the cruelties that can be perpetrated nnder such a system of laws, and to contemplate the martyrdom comprehended in such a creed. Men in the South, as in the North, are better than their laws would imolv. but that does not make them any the less responsible for the evils1 mat may be practiced nnder them by brntai and unscrupulous men. When a woman in South Carolina marries sbaurrenders every dollar of her property, 4fery idea of con trolling her own money, every right save that of food and clothes, and these are to be regnlated by her lord and master. no recourse to law. If he should prove to be a cruel tyrant she has no recourse in a law of divorce. When we think of such a condition of things we wonder what has become of the revolutionary blood of their patriotic sires; what has become of the spirit of resistance to tyranny that animated her heroes of '76; what has become of the fiery heroism that made the name of South Carolina famous throughout the world. It is only to be un derstood by the thought that women have always excelled in the line of martyrdom, and have had the doctrine of submission so sedulously ground into them by the Church that they look to heaven only for re lief or release instead of to any ex ercise oi their own powers or efforts. Bnt the women of this State will some day wake up, and then Wade Hampton and Butler and the rest of them will sing a dif ferent song in the Senate. To hold their own in the race problem, an educational test is the project most favored by Southern politicians, but if they would double the white vote ot intelligence tbey would reach the solution much more readily and reason ably. To those of the North this beautiful State is but little known little as its beautiful climate its great resources, its genial and hospitable people. Judging by the rant, and roar, and fire-breathing speeches of some Southern politicians it might be sup posed that its people were almost ready for another war. Bnt no such feeling is mani fested. Warm hearts, hospitable welcome and kindly attention have been our experience. The people of the town, both white and colored, are polite and pleasant with strangers. There are a number of Northern people who have settled here for the advantages of the climate. One young man came here from the Northwest tor his health. He recovered and went home again, but soon found that only in the South could he live, so he came back here and went into the dairy business. He purchased the finest cattle, secured the best machinery and the latest methods, and now makes as fine bntter as was ever seen, which is retailed every pound of it, at 40 cents a pound, and the supply is less than the demand. Many people from the North have their cottages for the winter, and almost every honse is a boarding house. It is a beautiful little town and in the lutnre, when all of the parks recently laid out are grown, it will be one of the most charming winter resorts on the continent. GO NORTH IN 'WINTER. Another reason given us this morning by an intelligent young colored man for the numbers ot idle men constantly standing about the corners is that they go North in the summer and earn a lot of moner. and then come down home to spend the winter in elegant leisure and in dazzling the eyes oi meir neignuors. xiiis is not as uau as the previous reason, bnt it shows'that they are improvident and are not laying up for a rainy day, or providing for a luxurious old age. It is quite evident, however, that they are literally and lessurely obeying the scriptural injunction to take no thonght for to-morrow, or, as the revised version has it. "Be not anxious for your life, what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink, nor yet lor your body what ye shall put on." They behold the birds of heaven which sow not, nor reap, nor gather into barns, and they con sider the lilies of the field, which toil not and neither do they spin. They are not anxious for the morrow, but stand around in the sun or sit npon a fence and let to-morrow take care Of itself. No where is this philosophy more in practice than in this sunny Southland, where it is restful to see how easily the people here take life and how free they are from the restless rush and constant toil and struggle of life at the North. Nervous prostration here finds enre not so much from climatic balm perhaps, as from the absence of distracting care, tne contem plation of calmness and the indulgence of philosophic laziness a-sitting in the snn under a tree in the middle of January. Bessie Bramble. "One of the Finest" at Harris' this week is an old and standard favorite, but this season has been made more attractive than ever, having the great North river scene il lustrated by an immense reservoir of water in which boys are seen swimming, steamers, etc., sailing to and fro. E GENUN ALL FIESH O-OOIDS NO SHOP-WORN GOODS AMONG THESE Sale "to Com Tuence on TUESDAY MORNING AT 10 O'CLOCK. Our buyers have ransacked the eastern markets and have succeeded, beyond our expectations, in procuring, for SPOT CASH, many large lots of desirable goods, which we are offering to our patrons at UNHEARD-OF LOW COME QUICKLY if you want first choice, as the goods, although bought in large quantities, cannot possibly last long. iRieiAJDx :r,:ela:di :r,:e.ajdi COJ&FJttEll CO!&PJk.ttE2. C03C-AJE?,EI 386 dozen Finest Linen Hemstitched Handkerchiefs, worth from 20oto 25c each; our price 10c. 169 dozen Misses' 4-Butfon Embroidered Kid Gloves, selling elsewhere at $1; our price 45c. 108 dozen Ladies' Natural Wool Vests, worth 88c; our sale price 44c. 64 dozen Ladies' Fine White Merino Vests, silk stitched and pearl buttons, worth 65c; our price 42c. 36 dozen Ladies' Fine All-wool Ribbed Vests, selling elsewhere at $1; going this time at 62c. ; 84 dozen. Ladies' Black Hose, imported, regular made, 13c a pair. 219 dozen Fine 2-Thread Balbriggan Hose, French toes, would be cheap at 20c; our price 12c. NOW, 64 Ladies' Very Fine Seal Plush Sacques, equal in appearance to Seal Skin, advertised by competitors at $25; our price $15 75. 30 finest Lister's Seal Plush Jackets, 32 inches long, sizes 34, 36, worth $23; our price $12 98. If you can match these bargainsanywhere in the United States we should like to know where. MIND, THESE ARE ALL FRESH GOODS. As these goods are bought exclusively for our retail customers, we will not sell to merchants at above prices. ROSEN BAUM & CO. 5 1 0, 5 1 27 5 1 4 A MUSICAL MYSTERY. A Toung Lady Controlled hy the Spirit of a Dead Italian Musician. SHE SINGS Ifl F1YE LANGUAGES Rendering a Chinese Song With a Chop stick Accompaniment. 0NEATA, HUE IXDIAN BPIE1T 10TEE fCOBEXSrONDZJlCX Or TOT DISPAICJI.1 Eochesteb, N. T., January 11. ISS LULU BILL INGS, the only daugh ter of Elon G. Billings, who was for over 25 years connected with the Erie Eailway ticket of fice in this city, is creat ing no end of excite ment here by her won derful spiritual manifestations and powers. Miss Billings is atall, slim brunette, about 29 years of age, with a rather pretty face and quiet, attractive ways. She is not a person who would be supposed to be in league with spirits, but it seems that she is endowed with a supernatural musical power. For several years Miss Lulu has been able to sing while in a trance state, but it seems that her parents have been so averse to hav ing the public know the facts, that they have successfully concealed them, and, until recently, bnt very few have ever listened to the fair musician during one of her spirit performances. The young lady will take her seat at the piano, and after a few nervous movements of her head passes into an unconscious or "trance state," during which she plays and sings with the greatest ease and skill the most beantiful and difficult songs. The strange feature of all is that she sings in five different languages, all of which are un known to her, as she can only speak and understand her native English tongue. CONTROLLED BY SPIRITS. She has no knowledge of music whatever, except what her mother has taught her on the piano, and even then her skill as a pianist is by no means above the average of that of many girls of 18 years of age, yet her playing while in the trance state is beautiful in the extreme. She also plays, while under control of the spirits, the guitar, flute, violin, cornet and harp like a .master, although she has never received a moment's instrnction on any of them. She says she is controlled and directed by an Italian musician who has been dead for several centuries, and whom she says was a noted scholar named Ingrelio. Under his direction, while in the trance state, she im provises rare harmonies, strains of soft, ma jestic sweetness andchords of solemn, touch ing pathos. Her playing while not in the trance is of a very common order, and the style is entirely different. She has a sweet soprano voice of considerable range, but when she is in the trance it is intensified to double its natural power. A Dispatch representative called at the home xf the Billingses, in the handsome Howe flats on North Fitzhugb street, and met Mrs. Billings and her daughter. When asked to play and sing she smilingly con sented. Seating herself at the piano, she passed her hands rapidly before her face several times, and be gan playing a very pretty air and a sweet voice sang a Spanish love song in the Hispanian tongue. She played a most difficult accompaniment, consisting of runs and trills that blended beautifully with her voice, Dnring the rendition of the piece her eyes were tightly closed and she held 1TOTICB I OTJR LARGE LINE OF MISSES AND CHILDREN'S FINE CLOAKS Now Being Sold at a C3-KEA.T SAOBIPICE! Garments in This Lot Marked OxLe-H:al TLez? 03?gdjn.a,X Cost; N. B. BEST MAKES. NO HOLIDAY GOODa -A G-- CJVCIPIBIEILiIi & sonars. TIO JPZENTV SLAUGHT Market st. and her head on one said. She stamped her feet ' several times as if at the direction of her ' 'J master, and played accordingly. sang- several languages. When the last note had died awaysha stopped playing, and in a strange tongns addressed her director, and then played a pretty French song with excellent effect. This was followed by an Italian song, and Lulu Billings. she concluded by singing a Chinese song and playing a chop-stick accompaniment, after which she shook her head several times and arose from the piano. She seems to undergo no nnusual phvsl- cal or mental strain while in the trance. She says she experiences the most delightful sensations, but is oblivious to all around her, and can see nothing but her director, who stands in front of her and guides her by voice and gesture. She cannot recall her visions after returning to herself, and says she has no control over her hands while playing. Miss Billings has been handed a, harp while in a trance, and has played beautifully upon it. The same may be said of the other instrument mentioned which she has played. Mrs. Billings told the reporter that about nine years ago was the first that the family knew" that Luln was controlled by spirits. One night they were calling npon some neighbors who were spiritualists, when Luln went into the sitting room and began play ing upon the piano. The room was entirely dark." They heard her playing familiar songs, bnt after a time the music became of such an order and so strange that they went into the room and lighted the gas. Sha says Lulu sat there playing like mad, her hair streaming over her face. She ran to the piano and shook her, when Lulu gave a scream and fell to the floor in a fainting condition. AN INDIAN SPIRrr LOVER. Mrs. Billings says that when Emma Ab bott was playing here, she sat by her win dow in the Powers' Hotel, across the street, and listened in amazement to Lulu, who was playing and singing. She made inquiries regarding her and in company with Mrs. Omar Gage, the clerk's wife, who was a friend of the Billingses, called to see her and hear her sin?. She did so and Miss Abbott pronounced the performance wonder ful and her voice superb. Mr. Billings says that Lulu is guarded by the spirit of an Indian named Oneata, who gives her strength and calls her his "little squaw Lulette." She says her daughter sings in Spanish, French, 'Italian, German, Chinese and in the ancient Hindoo dialect, the latter fact she having learned from Bow ley, the celebrated medium of Cleveland, O. Mr. Billings does not believe in spiritual ism despite his daughter's manifestation. Personally Miss Billings is an attractive young lady of retiring disposition and has a large circle of acquaintances who marvel at her wonderful power. She has had offers from well-known managers, at a large salary, to go on the stage and show the pub lic her "spirit power," but modestly de clines all offers and says that she "does not care to parade herself 'in public." Professional Matinee nt Ilarrls' Theater. All the actors and actresses in the city in vited to the Thursday matinee. AVENUE TIO. jalZ-Tuysn PRICE 27 Fifth ave. - SALE .:. LtoMtftttflM KJMJNmBigmBtgUjBUgjnm&