r s J TSiB-V'J'i r .n SECOND PART. ''.ujwkifc.. !&- i ve. ?r- .3- 1 ," j wy- ?JJ..-f,5! E PITTSBURG Dl ffiTC I ' PAGES 9 TO IB. fA 1 ; -. A FLOBIDA CRACIKR. Graphic Description of Those lazy Lotus Eaters of the South, THE POOR WHITES OF FLOEIDA. Aa Enprogrcssive, but Very Hospitable Class of People. rfiOYIKG THAT THE EAETH IS FIAT rcoKsxsroxD&rcs or via msr atch.i SOUTH FLOBI DA, February 25. The "Cracker" is the lowest grade of the poor whites of Florida. The de rivation of the word seems to be un known, but a Crack er he is, a Cracker Crschtr Cabin. he always has been, and a Cracker he will be until Gabriel blows his horn. From its association the term means laziness, ignor ance and immorality. What the moon shiner is to Kentucky, the murderous political "bulldozer" to Mississippi, the Cracker is lo Florida. This native loves no one outside of Crackerdom, but his greatest hatred is toward the African. The enmity existing between the negro and these "poor white trash" of the South is so intense and so inborn that it is often the cause of many bitter fends, even mani festing itself in the prattling children. The little woolly-headed African playing in the land hears the taunting "nigger," and with a contempt that is almost loathsome, quickly hurls a handfur of sand, along with the scathing missile "You yaller-faced Crack er!" UNPEOGRESSIYE NATIVES. To the discredit of this benighted class of the Caucasian, candor compels the admis sion that the Southern negro is infinitely A CRACKER his superior in principle, education and public spirit. No association can change a Cracker, his clanish views preventing any possibility of a reformation, while the negro, with his love of imitation, models after the best class of whites, and, although he often appears in many laughable lights, is gradu ally making impvroements overthe "old plantation darkey." The Cracker, on the contrary, continues the same sluggish, selfish individual, op posed to the world's new opinions and pro gressions, blind and obstinate in the belief that the ways of his ancesters are better than the "new fangled Yankee idees," and '89 finds him less progressive than half a century since. We find him to-day so inert, ambition and self-respect, such zero quali ties in his composition, that he is satisfied with mere existence. It seems impossible to make any improvement in his character and life, and if Dicken's Bumble were to speak, he would substitute "crackers" for Cracker SchooUiouse. "paupers," and say, "What have Crackers to do with soul or spirit, cither. It's quite enough we let 'em have live bodies." Yet with all his shortcomings the Cracker has his virtues, and unquestioning hospital ity is a shining part of his simple life, for whoever heard of a Cracker turning a stranger away from his door. While his wife, his nine or a dozen lean, lank, cadav erous looking children Tind numerous dogs stand in the background, he gives you the best his home aftords, which is generally corn bread, bacon 'and black coffee. Then, if you talk "no vhiskv" (?) scathe the "radicals" and praise Florida swamp land, entertainment is insured lor the season. A CRACKER HOME. The home of the Florida native is built of logs, the cracks stopped with mortar. There are generally two rooms, with perhaps a porch in front, that is used as a storage place for the farm implements, guns, etc.' The sallow, careworn looking women do most of the field or garden work, but they do it with the same spirit of meekness and willingness of the Indian squaw, and more affection and kindliness of teeling exists in their homes than in many brownstone fronts. Among these liege lords are many bloodthirsty desperadoes, but the devoted women see all the good that learns forth, and on the principle that "all men have their faults, and stealing is Bill's," resent like a hunted tigress any insult toward husband or lover. "When ignorance is bliss, 'tis Tolly to be wise," isxemplified in Crackerdom, when -yt- Corner Grocery in Crackerdom. one sees the characteristic Florida family lumbering along. Behold an oxcart, drawn by two or four lean, hungry, weary-looking oxen, the cart laden with women and chil dren, the products of the little sand patch, a few jugs, .and perhaps, if luck has been an attending anpol. a liri nlliir-itnr mnxr r.nm. J5'? the outfit All except the women and s exenangeo at top nearest town XOr the Cracker1 TiArtnr nrtA ftmhrntin-. whisky and tobacoo. No millionaire in his J llllliiiib 9 coupe. driven by silky-coated horses, sees more joy in a drive than do our natives on this momentous drive to "town." But the brightest, fairest day in all the yeaV to the Cracker element is the red letter circus day. This to the simple-minded Cracker is the luxurious treat jf the year. How he enjoys the jokes of the old clown, and how his" heart swells with pride and glory when the elephants eats peatnuts out of his "very own hand," and who is more honored in all the land of Crackerdom than the successful rider of the trick mule. The pink lemonade and the indigestible ginger bread, the games of chance and the side show, with "the only captured mermaid," all apDeal to his soul. It is only until very recently that .many of these natives beheld the first locomotive, and then traveled 60 in an oxcart to see this Yankee innova tion. What this Florida native must think of the magical changes in the way of prog ress coming over the State would be inter esting to know, bnt when the revolution is wrought bv "radirals and Yankees" the opinion would be far from flattering. IGNORANCE AND 'WEALTH. Few of these people can read or write, and with the Bible and newspaper minus Quan tities in every home, morality and civil lib erty must beunknown terms. In many in stances the Cracker is wealthy. Towns spring up, and his land becomes valuable, but the old way is good enough for him, and he cares little for the luxury that wealth might bring him. In politics the Cracker is always a Democrat; why he docs not know, unless it is that ail the negroes are Republicans, and he "just ain't gwine to vote with them." Occasionally) in driving through the rural districts, one sees a palmetto-thatched build ing, politely called a sjhoolhouse. Here at rare intervals a teacher has charge, and woe to him if he teaches anything that won't reconcile itself to the minds of the patrons. One pedagogue, during this season, Colum bus like, ventured to prove to the tow-headed pupils that the "earth is round like a ball and turns on its axis," but in so do ing aroused the ire of a fond parent who found it easier to convince that if such were the case, "the water would all run out" and soon demolished the teacher's theory.by a childlike experiment placing a bucket of water on a stump, with.the generous re minder "that if that ere water was all spilled in the morning, the chiller might go on to school," but the bucket kept its gravity and the Cracker philosopher, with TEAM. the consciousness! of a conquerer, said: "Just ain't gwine to have no such Yankee stuff put into my chillers' heads," and the terra cotta, tan-colored urchins are taken from school influences lo grow up ignorant and superstitious, like their fathers before them, and with the proud idea that. "Daddy is heaps sharper as the master." There is a field for the missionary and the book agent and to their tender mercies we consign the natives of Crackerland. M. M. WOMEN WHO WANT DITOECES. Peculiar Cases Which Come to the Attention ofa Lawyer. "It is nonsense to talk as if lawyers had any sympathy with lax divorce laws," remarked a Pittsburg attorney. "I don't believe that a man of any standing in the profession anywhere, even in Chicago, likes to take up a divorce case. It's a disagreeable business at best, and respectable lawyers try to dis suade their clients from divorce proceedings .escept as a dernier resort. "It's queer, though, what ideas people have on the subject. A woman, in a fit of pique against her husband, which will pro bably last but a few days at best, comes to ae and asks me if she can procure a di vorce. When I have questioned her and analyzed her complaints I frequently find them or the most trivial.character. In such a case I usually give a liberal amount of advice, but of quite different character from what the applicant expects. Nine times out of ten the woman takes the same view of the matter as I do, after I have argued with her, and promises to go back to her husband, at the same time requesting me never to mention the fact that she has talked about getting a divorce. Why.there isone wo m an I could nam e who has been here seven or eight times.resolved on getting a divorce. She is still living with her husband I happen to know both of them well and I believe their married life is on the whole about as pleasant as that of most people." "Is uniformity' of divorce laws desir able?" "Certainly it is a good law, which should be the same in its application in every State, would ie a blessing to the country. It may come in time, but not soon, I fear." TOBIES A TEMPTATION. Why Tobacco Smokers Are Unnsnally Num erous In Pittsburg. "I believe that there are more men who'use tobacco in Pittsburg than in almost any other city," remarked a Penn avenue tobacconist a few days ago. "How do you account for it," he was asked. "The Pittsburg toby, so abundant and so cheap, is chiefly responsible, I believe. There are few cities in tho country per haps none, except Wheeling where the toby, or more properly, the stogy, is so pop ular. In the East and in the West smok ing material in this form is almost un known, and about the cheapest smoke one can get is a 5-cent cigar, often so vile that a habitual toby-smoker would throw it away in disgust. Where one can get four satis factory smokes for a nickel there is little inducement to economize on tobacco, and the consequence is that men and boys al most all learn to smoke. I believe that nearly four-fifths of the men in Pittsburg use tobacco in some iorin, most of them smoking it. "Tobacco chewers are not as numerous here as elsewhere and pipe smokers are fewer still. The toby has brought about this state of things. Its consumption is steadily increasing. Why, there are men in this city, who are worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, who habitually use tobies, not from motives of economy, but simply because they like them. It's one of Pittsburg's peculiar characteristics." Tho Birth ofa Blizzard. Detroit Free Press. 3 A man in Western Dakota saw a blizzard bom. It started on the top of a large hill and was a ball of white fog no larger than his hat when he first saw it. He should have carried it home and locked 'it up, but he did not think of it until too late. SLUMS AND SALONS. Fashionable Society Inquiring Into and Taking Interest in THEWORKOFTHESALVATIONAMY Mrs. Booth and Her Methods Discussed by GailHamilton, A CALL TO THE BJCH TO HELP THE POOR JWBITTXN FOE THB DISPATCH. HEBE are a good many of us who fight shy of the Salvation Army, and who, from inherited texn Dcrameni and disability or fixed habits and tastes, always must. The drum and the fife, the poke bonnets and parad'ng women rather repel than attract us, and we can but look askance at a worship which seems to invoke anything but a quiet spirit. Yet there is another side to it, and when, with winning face and persuasive voice, Mrs. Ballington Booth presents that other side in the rectory parlors of therEpiscopal churches and in the fashionable parlors of the Fifth avenue, it is not diflicult to hear through all the blare of bugle and beat of drum the still small voice of human re sponsibility, human conscience, human reason the voice of God in the soul of man. With all the good which the Episcopal Church has wrought, with all her dignity of attitude and the decorum other cere monial, she adds never more worthily to her dignity and decorum than in lending an ear to this woman of the slums, whose professed mission is that of Apostle to the Lowliest. I cannot think that Dr. Bainsford's parlors were ever devoted to a more sacred festival; I cannotthink that the honored name of Courtlandt or De Peyster ever gathered or gave a purer radiance than when they lent the shield of ecclesiasticism and the coun tenance of fashion to a movement for the uplifting of a lower stratum of humanity. MRS. BOOTH'S "WORK. It was not indorsing the Salvation Army, but it was giving the Salvation Army an opportunity to present its argument and show itself worthy of being indorsed. The professed work of the Salvation Army is in a field so remote, so low, so impossible to most of us, yet so threatening to all, that it is of the first imDortance not to discourage any who are willing to enter it, and to en courage and sustain and strengthen espe cially those who are already in and are eager to continue and to work. The introduction of the Salvation Army into ranks of fashion maybe only a fashion able caprice. The output from that army ofa young and pretty woman into the haunts of the Four Hundred may be because she was young and pretty; but can youth and beauty be better employed than in bridging the awful chasm between society and the slums? If the power outside our selves has so made ourselves that truth is more winning from curved and rosy lips than from hard and harsh or even from un couth and ugly ones, why not avail our selves of it and bid truth win, even thus, her votaries? If society will take up Mrs. Ballington Booth because of her simple charm, let us look scrutinizingly at what Mrs. Ballington Booth is trying to do before we utterly frown down this social whim. What says the young woman in the poke bonnet. For one thing, that she is going to put the Salvation Army on a different footing from that which it has hitherto held as needs must, if she isthe gentle lady her bearing indicates; ancnm the other hand she does propose to continue some of the methods which have made it to society not only ob jectionable but impossible. Yet on these points she is not stubborn, but argumenta tive. She speaks from observation and ex perience. She admits that the Army is theatrical, but pleads that they must be theatric! to secure their followers. It is the old ai-jument of the fishers of the mere; the harmless and the conclusive Pauline argument to become all thinss to all men in order that some men may be won. LIYEBY OF RELIGION. She looks at her poke bonnet not as a thing of beauty but of service. She would like to throw it awav, but it is useful. This is the argument for beneficent uniform, time out of mind. We know of old what protec tion is afforded by the nun's costume both in the Catholic and the Protestant Churches. It cannot be gainsaid, and it is the tribute of the greedy, selfish, war-loving element of humanity to the power ot love. The Salva tion Army may plead the same right to its protecting red and blue as have the Sisters of Charity to their protecting black and white. They have the same right as have the other guilds of the Church Beneficent and also always militant to whatever pe culiarity ot form or fashion best beseems their judgment and their mission, their safety and their success. It the poke fitly frames in the yonthful face and raven curls who has not seen the nun's fresh color, the Quaker's placid brow, shining more brilliantly from the quaint purity of the sectarian garb than it could have done under never so much ingenuity of the French milliner's skill? And alas! the gentle young hand touches a deeper chord, and I think- touches it truly. Mrs. Booth lived amid the hopeless, dreadful misery of the world. She grew up where she held in sight a community, not so much brutalized as stupefied 'with wretchedness. It is he decline of common sense that while religion is the root of the work there must be a great deal beside re ligion to make tho work profitable. First, it is necessary to get the attention of these almost but never quite dehumanized human creatures. Mrs. Booth tells us that she has entered rooms where women were living who never so much as lifted head at her entrance, or made any sign of recognition of her pres ence. Many and many a time has she rolled up her sleeves, tied a shawl around her head, taken mop or broom in hand, and as the ladies of society visit each other with cards and carriage, broom and mop have been her visiting cards and her medium of intercourse in her calls upon her and our wretched fellow citizens. AWAKENING SLUMBERING SOULS. Oftenhasshe gone thus her dreadful round simply helping these dumb creatures in their hopelessness; helping to scrub floors and scrub babies without speaking one word of religion. But she has thus secured her second position which is of equally vital im portance to the first; viz., the friendliness of her beneficiaries. Thus they have been drawn toward her and have felt once more the touch and throb and thrill of human life. Is it not possible that the cornet and drum may have something to sav for themselves? If fate has gone so hard, if living souls have grown so benumbed with beastly toil that common curiosity is dead within them, may not Mrs. Booth be right in affirming that far off church bells will ring in vain for them? It must be something near and clear and loud, which they will hear. Only that which shocks the ear attuned to melody can strike the ear deadened by doom to all but love. Not deadened to love, for through all the misery and the squalor the mother love delves on and.on, as Mrs. Booth incident ally testifies, simply to provide food for the children for whom she can provide little else. v Mrs. Booth and her miseries would better PTTTSBTJiRQ, SUNDAY be a fashionable fad in Fifth avenue draw ing rooms than not to be in them at all. There is a vital connection between the pur lieus of wretchedness and the palaces of luxury. It was just this vitality of con nection which, in regular evolution, curst into the blood-red blossom of revolution in the mad days of Louis the XVI. It would be a sore disgrace to tho nineteenth century if it should fatuously copy the eighteenth; if it could find no more excellent way to cope with its evils than by "uprisings" in this great and just Republic. PREVENTING REVOLUTIONS. I do not think that such an "uprising" will ever come, but it will be forestalled less because Mrs. Davis prophesies it to tho the silks and velvets of Delmonico, or be cause Miss Van Etten's blood is stirred to demand legislation ar.d organization to fight capital than because Mrs. Booth goqs down' into the pit with her dressed pinned un from assail, washes the filthy baby with warm water, binds up softly, coaxingly, the burned and suffering boy, thns emphasizing the sympathy in her soothing tones and friend"ly words, and bringing back the dazed, despairing mother into the circle of human identity. If Fifth avenue and the rectories will do something besides make a fad of Mrs. Boothwill stay her hands as Hur and Aaron staved the hands of Moses, will fol low her with money and time.and organiza tion into her haunts of poverty, will hero her to send the mother and children, when ever it is possible, out into the cheap coun tryside where fresh air costs nothing and fresh water costs nothing, where rent is low and work is greatly in -demand; will help her tj support the poor mother there, will eke out the labor of her feeble hands with their own generous surplus till she shall have grown strong to support her children or even until her children have grown strong to support her1 why, it will not be inexpensive, but it will be less expensive than a "revolt," less expensive than an "uprising." The country villages will noi permit city paupers to be thrust upon them any more than "this upright and industrious" Be public will permit itself to be suffocated under the failures of the old world. But an intelligent organization not to "fight capi tal," but to Christianize and utilize capital in the equal interests of rich and poor, with its arms reaching out into the country vil lages white with harvests waiting for reap ers might relieve the strain of muscle and nerve in the too few village laborers and equally relieve suffering labor, over-swollen with its own ever-increasing supply in the city. OUR BROTHER'S KEEPER. Strike after strike comes and goes and fails or succeeds. But the suffering out of Light, who'can tell? The anxiety, the un certainty, the sad certainty, the apprehen sion, besides the actual privation in inno cent homes is it not the moral duty of the rich to prevent this? The laws of business are, on business lines, inflexible. But moral laws, did man but know it, are equally inflexible. It is idle for labor to run counter to the natural laws of supply and demand. Men and women must do the work that the world wants done. If they persist in rushing at work already overdone, or in doing work shabbily and weakly, they must suffer. But it is equally idle for the rich to run counter to the natural laws of human brotherhood. If they persist in looking at the mental powers which enable them to make money as given merely for their own pleasure and behoof; if they coldly refuse to be a brother's keeper and lend a brother's band, none the less, sooner or later, the voice of that brother's blood cryeth from the ground, and tho law an swers the cry with blood and tears whether we call it God or Bevolution, or the plague that follows filth, or the Rebellion that throws off slavery. Blow, bugles, blow I Set the wild echoes flying, and let every echo bear to heaven our swift acknowledgment that we are our brothers' keepers; that it is the business of the strong to help" the weak into the path of self-help; to prevent the ignorant lrom becoming the prey of his own ignorance. If strikes must be, let it be the strong and the weak striking hands together through the medium of those who understand both, and can wisely apply the gcod will of the one to the great need of the other. Blow, bugles, blow, if your blast can pierce the darkness of death I Nuisance the Salvation Army may be, beneath the windows of Filth avenue, bufnot so great a nnisance as the reeking cellars out of sight, where vice and wretchedness brood and breed. If the -Salvation Army can purify those purlieus, blow, bugles, blow, though every ear of Fifth avenue be deaf ened with their din. Gail Hamilton. CRANKS WHO BDI BOOKS. What a Purveyor In Reading Matter Says About Peculiar Cuatomors. "I suppose we have about as many cranky and peculiar customers as other merchants, if not more," said a Pittsburg bookseller the other day. "As a rule we deal with an intelligent class, but intelligent 'people are just as apt to be eccentric as any. "For example, there is a man looking over a lot of new books at the other end of the store. You might wonder why some of the clerks do not go and wait on him. Well, they don't because they have orders to let him alone. He is a good customer and his ways are well known. If I should go to him and try to sell him something he would become indignant and intimate that he knows what he wants and will buy it if he finds it. He may stand there for an hour and finally select a book, bring it to me and ask me to wrap it up; whereas, if I inter fered, most likely I would lose the sale. "Other customers come in day after day and stand and read some of the books, be coming absorbed in them. One man comes three or four times a week, never buying anything until Saturday his payday I sup pose when he almost invariably purchases and takes away something. "Sometimes wc are a good deal amused by ladies who want novels they don't know or care what, so long as they are good stories. Often we are obliged to 'make the selections ourselves, and then, if the buyer doesn't like the story, we are sure to hear from it when she returns. I try to avoid re commmending books as much as possible I never urge people to buy, if they have any taste or intelligence. Once in a while we see a customer who judges of the value of a book by its size. If she purchases a 25 cent novel she wants the very biggest one she can get for that price. Quantity and not quality is her guiding principle. "Do people ever steal .books from your store?" "Very rarely indeed. The people who buy books are seldom thieves. If a suspi cious looking person enters we keep an eye on him, but wc allow most people who come here to do about as they like. It pays bet ter in the end." A POLICEMAN'S PLAINT. Ho Objects to Being Mado a Bugaboo to Frighten Children. "Half the children on my beat are afraid of me," remarked a police officer to a Dis patch reporter. "Why should they be?" "They shouldn't be that's the case ex actly but they are. It all arises from the foolish practice some mothers have of say ing to their children when they are unruly or get into mischief, 'You'll have to look out or the policeman will catch you.' Now I'm fond of children I have a family of my own and I'd rather tbelittle ones, no matter whom, they belong to, would like me than fear me. But it's almost impossi ble for an officer in his uniform to get on friendly terms with a child, simply be cause the youngsters are made to think that the officers do nothing but arrest people and lock them up. For my parti object to having children taught to look upon me as a aonster. , Itjsa't right,'?, - i: MAEOBT 3, 1889. SWEET WILLIAM NYE - Discourses on the Peculiar Things He . Meets on His Travels. ATTACKING HIS SATANIC MAJESTY. The Pierce Siege Conducted by Hotel Chambermaids. A DEMAND FOE TOWELS OR A FUNERAL twnrrrEH tor the dispatch-. SI pen these lines, the plaintiff wail of a brass band c o me s stealing through my case ment I trust that the intelligentcom positor will not strive to set me right on that word. I refer to the wail ot a plaintiff when he has tried to en force the payment of A. bill, and finds that the lawyer has had it, but cannot really refund it without per sonal inconvenience to himself. This music, to which I at first so feelingly alluded, comes from the volunteer band of a salvation army. They are playing be neath my casement for my benefit. They desire to snatch me as a brand from the burning, but I am in Michigan, and I would rather be a brand at this season of the year than to be outside, making a large mouse-colored ass of myself. So I istep to the window and say that while thanking one and all for the honor thus paid to me, a comparatively unknown man, I am entirely unprepared to say any thing at all suitable for ' the occasion, and being a poor extemporaneous speaker, seek ing modestly oplug along the best I can and support my family, I will once more thank one and all for this flattering recep tion, and say good bye. AN UNPROFITABLE CAMPAIGN. The leader is a large, red-nosed man, who weeps easily and pulls out the tremlo on his voice at all times. He wears a street car conductor's cap, with a red band around it, which matches his nose, and as the night is intensely cold, he wears a pair of ear muffs which were formerly used by the baby ele phant, perhaps. Near him.with a bleak waste ot purple beak, knocking a poor and defenseless tambourine silly, wearing a green veil tied under her lower jaw, in or der to protect her ears, and a pair of her favorite husband's socks over her shoes to keep out the bitter cold from her massive feet, stands a woman with straws in the fringe of her shawl and a vacant look in her hard, cold eye. I was just going to say she ought to be at home with her family, but all at once it occurred to me that it would be a great blow to the family. So perhaps it is better as it is. The plan of salvation as outlined by the Salvation Army is too vituperative to be successful. Life is, of course, a warfare, and nearly all of us have to fight more or less, with the exception of the regular army, but the war made on Satan by the Salvation Army is too acrimonious, it seems to me. It makes a good deal of noise and requires a good deal of foraging, but is really harder on the surrounding country than it is on the enemy. What is the use of bombarding Satan all wintar here in Michigan when the chances are that he is down at Hot Springs? Why make a personal attack up John G. Lucifer with a disagreeable brassband.Tiere in the Northwest, when he is in fact down at Washington, where he can hear good music? As I listen again at the window, I hear the voice of the Lieutenant Colonel of the Salvation Army. He is -urging his little band of Don Quixotes to charge on the Satanic windmill. He is speaking extem poraneously and the woman in the large woolen socks is trying to look pleasant. This frightens a loaded team, and a cord a half of dry maple wood expends itself along the main street with great fury. OPEN TO INSPECTION. The leader goes on again to state that we are journeying through an unfriendly world. That a. man may lose his money or his clothing or his wife and still recover. But when he loses his soul his name is Dennis. "Oh, then, let us fight for those souls, such as they are. Bet us challenge old Satan and give him only time to train The Salvation Army. down. Let us fight him without gloves. Let us knock his head off. Oh, I have never saw a better time than now while he is thinking about something else. Let us sock it to him now. Let us mutilate his disagreeable features and send him back to hades looking like a man in the almanac who explains the Zodiac and who allows his works to show for themselves." The band then strikes up a selection or fragment of campaign song that sounds so sacrilegiousjthat it honestly makes the chills and hot flashes chase each other the entire length of my being. It is like hearing the Bazzle Dazzle song over your mother's grave. The band is composed of six pieces, the bass drum leading. It is supported by a colored man, who has joined the band be cause he is passionately fond of music, can weara cap with braid around it and enjoy a season of much needed rest. Coming in at intervals, there is a croupy bass horn that has lost its horn voice by'sleeping in barns throughout the State. There are four other pieces of music, but their relations with each other are strained. The players pause ever and anon to polish their red sweep of nose with the corners of their shawls or to agitate their cbillblains against a brick building, and so it often fails out that they do lose various notes, for which their auditors thank them and anon snow ball them as they are in the act of journey ing through an unfriendly world. I have often wondered wha$ sort of lite these warriors against Satan lead. What is their home life ? While they are battling against the powers of evil and advertising themselves a good deal more than they are morality and religion, what is their record as they journey through said unfriendly world? , A. CHILD OP DESf INT. -In the extreme left wing of this detach ment, in front of the hotel, there is a woman wearing a gray shawl and a pair of red yarn mittens. She is carrying a little child in her arms and a small satchel by means of a strap over her shoulder. Perhaps I ought to say that, each one carries his own bag gsge,, ButTwouldJike to know'the future Ml -1 t i , - II" x . fifl I of that little child if I could; roosting about over the country, fighting a straw Satan with a miscellaneous brass band, with no home to remember, nothing but the clash of arms and the bray ot the trumpet, together with that of the gentleman who does the speaking for th'e party. But I will change the subject. I had a very trying experience last week. It was painful, but not fatal. I had been traveling all the night before, and fatigue and brain fag were fighting for my very ex istence. I got a room when I arrived, and retired to seek much needed rest. I had just retired, in fact, having carefully locked the door and left the key in the lock, that the curious could not look in through the key hole and see me as I lay there asleep and make a 55,000 painting bf me. Just then there was a slight rattle at the door, such as you hear when a chambermaid attacks it with a pass ke and comes into the loom to swecn holes in the carpet and fill yonr lungs full of debris. I smiled to myself, for my own key was.in the door, and I said softly as I bathed my blushing features in the pillow: "Aha! Aha! ye can not enter now." But she continued to rattle away with her1 key, and I soon saw, with horror, that my own was beginning to lose its grip, and finally it fell to the floor with a loud report, having been pushed out of the lock from the other side. lean hardly describe "the horror of my situation. I thought of handing my hand kerchiefs and perfumery over the transom to her, and begging her, if she had a mother or any other relatives in whom she had any confidence whatever, togo away. I thought of going to the door and telling her that we IDONTBlOWOufl THEGAS f William and the Ban Chambermaid. had better go through life as nearly as pos sible by separate routes, and that I needed rest really more than I did society, but I did not dare to get out of bed for fear the door would open, and I was wise, for it did now burst open as I had feared, and a tall girl in the prime of life, with flashing eye and distended nostril, came into the room. A TERRIBLE MOMENT. With a wild shriek, I covered m head with the bed clothes, shuddering till my teeth, which were in a tumbler of water near by, chattered together. "Go away, you hateful thing," I said, "and never, never come back again any more." "But I want to change them sheets," she said. "Go away," I said, again. "Even your voice is hateful in my sight. Take my beau tiful Beth Thomas silver watch, if you will, but, oh! go away, and heaven will reward you even better than that" She then slunk from the room, but it was a long time before I could go to sleep. Even then my dreams were troubled and my mind filled with apprehension. I thought I was being pursued by a red-eyed, unicorn with a navy blue stomach and a Chinese lantern tied to his tail. I tried to shake him off, but I could notrHe led me down into the infernal' regionsjf and insisted on showing me the iron bridge and the high school, and spoke of the great progress of the place, and said that they were likely to get a new and competing road in there this summer; and he snowed me the library an'd walked me out to the fair grounds and down on the lake shore, so that I could take a sulphur bath, and spoke of the desirability of the climate for people with bronchial affections, and wanted me to speak of it in my letters to the press, and said he would pay me well for it Just then I heard a knock on my door. I was so glad to have anybody knock, instead of picking the lock, that I asked, "Who's there ? " A rich, manly voice replied, "Me." . I was glad to hearthewelcome voice of one of my own sex, and so I undid the door for the gentleman with great "alacrity. Just as I was bounding lightly back toward my couch with a merry laugh, the party strolled into the middle of the room bearing a small but rare collection of clammy, mucilagin ous towels. She was a heavy-set chamber maid, with terror cotter hair and a bass voice. UNCOMPLAINING WILLIE. I do not complain. I do not murmur. I do not repine. But I say that a chamber maid ought not to do that way. A cham bermaid who has a bass voice ought to seek out some other calling. Mayor Weston, now of Grand Bapids, be fore he became wealthy,' was a newspaper man in Denver, and used to stop at the old Planter's Hotel. He had a mining deal to write up for the paper, and connected with the deal was a Georgetown superintendent whom we will address as Julius H. Cawyo. Mr. Cawyo was to furnish the particulars to Mr. Weston, but early in the day he be gan to meet old acquaintances and to cement their friendship by means ofa powerful so lution known as embalming fluid. So, at 11 o'clock, Mr. Weston put Julius H. Cawyo to rest on hisown little bed at the Planter's and went out to prosecute his researches in relation to the Hold-up Min ing and Improvement Company. The old Planter's Hotel was not' exactly like the Hoffman House or the Gilsey House. You could tell the difference almost as soon as you sat down at the table. If you spoke to the waiter about the tenacity of the steak or the longevity of the butter, he would give you a tart reply and you would have to get along with that for dessert. One man mur mured about the stoak and said it was too touch, so therefore he would not eat it "You won't eat it?" calmly replied the loose-jointed waiter. "You say you won't eat it?" "I say so because I can't cut it No man can cut that steak. You can't cut it with acids. So I won't eat it" "Well, you will eat it," said the waiter, reaching around as if in the act of adjusting his bustle. "You will eat it or I'll wear it out on youl" He ate it. CREATING A NEWS ITEM. But, among other things, there was a big alarm bell in the tower" of the Planters', which was wont to ring for fires, funerals and other entertainments. The rope hung in the hall, and when the help of the popu lace was required in order to suppress a fire or riot, the first man to the bellrope saluted the snowy summits of the Bocky Mountains with this wild alarm. While Mr. Weston was getting his infor mation on the streets, the great bell awoke the echoes in tie fastnesses of the canons 20 miles away, and the excited populace swarmed to the Planters' to learn what great calamity had befallen the new city. Mr. Weston got there at Jastjand.out of breath, rushed up to his room. In the hall he found Julius H. Cawyo ringing the belL His suspenders were draped and soapsuds were dripping from his chin and the tip of his Venetian red nose. "What has happened?" panted Weston. "What are you ringing the bell for, Ju lius?" ' "Well, what do you s'pose I'm ringing -the bell for? I am ringing for a clean towel or a funeral. If I get the towel there will be no funeral, but if I fail, youfjust wait here a minute and I'll give you the U.OU lion ui UIO UWiPfTO AVt VUUr VSljLUk AUU VJ fHNSt - Bm, NTE. "I i ii -rDrouomi L-.IL- IIIV-Vi lJij A Legend of WBITTEN FOB -BT- aiAXTRICZE CHAPTEB X. A PLACE POS AIT ARTIST'S PICTURES. Early in the present century, on a bright morning soon after the beginning of March, a small schooner sailed up the Bay of St Louis and cast anchor off what was then lo cally known as Magnolia Point There had been a thin, gray fojf on the air, but the sun had flung this asidei leaving the water and the sky blue and dreamily brilliant to the far horizon of the Gulf. On the west shore of the bay, not far from where the little vessel lay, stood a mansion recently built by Gaspard Boehon and now occupied by him and his niece with a numerous household of servants. One or two other plantation houses, but less preten tious in every way, were visible here and there, even as far as to the mouth of the Jordan river. The scene was one to please the eye of poet or artist, and there was an artist on board the schooner, a young man of leisure whose love of the picturesque and the strange coupled with that passion for ad venture which was more prevalent then than now, had led him to explore this nook ot the South where, since the days of Bien ville, had lingered a trace of that wild life which made the gulf coast for so long a time a region of romance and mystery. Looking from the water to the land the shores,- which were mostly high white bluffs, were fringed with a broken and bil lowy line of woods made up of all the semi tropical trees, notably pines, live oaks, cedars and magnolias. A somber duskiness, as of slumber and deep rest, pervaded the vistas running back under moss-bung boughs into the flowery and fragrant wilder ness. Down to the verge of the white and steeply sloping bluff-lines the undergrowth, ' ; VICTOR MADE HIM KNOWN" AS M'SIEB GAECIN. set in scattering clusters and wisps, came in green-leaved and flowering luxury, and on the air was a fresh and grateful fragrance It was a place of birds. Overhead flew clamorous water fowl; along the sandy beaches and in the rippling shallows the plovers and sandpipes were feeding and the tall herons here and there stood stately and motionless in the marsh grass that fringed the outreaching points of the low salt meadow. The schooner had come round from the Bigolets through Lake Borgne, past the chandeliers, having set out from a landing on thePonchartrain near New Orleans. All the way the sailors had been charming to the artist to whom all this wild region was as new as it was sunny, luxuriant and stim ulating to his imagination. He had re mained on deck all night, waking and sleeping by turns, the sound of the slumber ous waves in his ears and the shifting scenes of shore and sea delighting his half-closed eyes or passing into his dreams. In those day's a trace of the buccaneer was scarcely erased from the southern seas, the deeds of Lafayette were still fresh in the memory of living men, while the craft of the sly smuggler was no uncommon appari tion cruising about through the intricate channels and passes of the Gulf coast There were no railroads connecting the re gion with the great commercial centers of America, wherefore so place on earth was more isolated or more a law unto itself than was the Bay St Louis country. Most of the white people were Creoles of French or Spanish descent, but there were a few Anglo-Americans of that restless, ad venturous class whose mark had been left in every quarter of the globe, and here and there was a planter from Georgia or the Carolinas who had come with his family and his slaves to find the lux ury of loneliness in the woods. Naturally a place so out of the world and in which life was so free and. so easy to live attracted a number of outcasts of one kind and an other who sought here a hiding place from punishment or a refuge from persecution. Society had no clearly defined basis, of course, but regulated itself in a degree with gun, sword and pistol whenever regulating seemed necessary; still there was a good measure of peace, and certainly necessities and even the physical comforts of life were within easy reach on every hand. The forests abounded in game, the waters swarmed with fish and oysters, tropical fruits grew to perfection and the soil, though light and poor, produced bountifully under the stimulus of the warm, generous climate. Wendell Orton, the. artist and dreamer, reached this secluded nook just at the open ing of the fairest season of the year, and as he looked forth from the deck of his little schooner over the shining water to the rich, dark masses of woods, to the flowering thickets, to the mansion in its embowering grove and to the scattering cabins of the slaves, the sense of a new existence and a new world took possession of him. He was a tall, strong young man whose naturally fair face was bronzed with expos ure, and whose yellow hair hung in curls on his shoulders, as was the fashion with artists of the time. He was a figure to remember as he stood among the Creole sailors, almost a head taller than the tallest of them, a man to fix himself in one's mind, if for nothing more than the expression of superb, over flowing vitality in his finely-cut face and muscular frame. "Which is the place you spoke of, Vic tor?" he inquired, turning to a small, dark fellow. "You don't mean the brick house yonder, do you?" "Mo Dieu, no," said the Creole, with a shrug and grimace; "you cannot see from here. It is back in the woods on the Bayou Galere, just a little way." "And the brick house, whose mansion is it?" continued Orton, pointing. t "That? Ob. that's the Kochon place. M'sieu, where the beautiful Ma'm'zelle lives. " "v7hen you see Her" he winked and. m ttvS Bay St. Louis. a'JdLbl DISPATCH TBC03JCESOI'. M ' -'-;U. f made a wry face, "you will get yonr eye . put out." "Is she the wonderful lilyjou spoke of, the girl for whom so many men have bees willing to risk their lives in deadly eon. bat?" questioned the artist, as if some inter esting thought had returned to him sud denly. "Is that house your Chateau d Boehon?" The Creole drew up his shoulders ana spread out his hands half "comieally. Hi pipe was gripped between his yellow teeth, and he spoke with his lips only as he said: "Certainly. M'sieu, certainly that la where the Lilv lives the Lily of Boehon and I tell you she is as beautiful as the Virgin as beautiful as " "I'll judge of that myself, Victor, If I get the opportunity," Orton interrupted, "but tell me, what flag is that fluttering among the trees?" "That's the lily banner, the old man'. whim. He keeps it there, old Gaspard Bo ehon does. I suppose he likes it That's his boat lying in along shore there." From the yellow flag that played like a, flame against the dark background of mag nolia foliage, Orton's eyes fell to the trim little sloop-rigged craft that rocked at her anchoring place near a small wharf. The boat was white with a yellow stern-board upon which was a blue lily. The young man saw at once that it was a fast little ves sel built by a cunning hand. "That boat, she can fly like a bird," Victor remarked, in his soft patois, "and the beautiful M'm'zelle, how she does love to sail when the breeze is stiff I Mo'sieu, Boehon he likes it too, when the wind blows big guns and the sea is on heavy. Dieu, but he's a bad one, that Mo'sieu Gaspard Boehon." "Chiefly in what is he bad?" inquired Orton, rather absently, his mind busied with the picture of the girl in the boat as suggested by Victor's words. "Oh, they say, I don't know if it's true though, that he made his money by the devil's own means, by all manner of vil lainies: but then one is not fool enough to tell old Gaspard that, if one values one's life." Victor winked and smiled dryly as he said this, then after a momentVpause, ha continued, "You going to get acquainted with him, Mo'sieu Orton. You think he'd be very good acquaintance, eh?" "Probablyj'.wby not?" "Certainly, why not? I say that too," but there was an undermeaning to Victor's flexibility. The shrug of his shoulders' and the expressfon of his eyes were full of reservations and conditions.. "You are a gentleman and he's a gentleman," he went on, "and I suppose you'll like each other, certainly. That's all right, you know, Mo'sien, certainly; but the Ha'm'zelle,' you'd better be careful about" The young man turned suddenly upon the Creole at this point and almost scowled at him. Something in the fellow's voice, soft and musical as it was, grated harshly on. Orton's ear, probably because it broke in' upon the beautiful vision he had been im agining. It was his habit to turn all his thoughts into pictures, and he had bees sketching in his mind a most enchanting bit of life and color. "Yes, Mo'sieu," insisted Victor, "you'll have to let the beautiful Ma'm'zelle quite alone. I tell you, for the qld man won't bear anybody looking soft looks at her." "Nonsense," exclaimed Orton, "you are talkine perfect nonsense." Then feeling the impropriety of the discussion he changed the subject of conversation, by ordering his breaktast to be fetched up, that he might sit in the open air. He had chartered the little schooner Zozo, with her crew, and since setting sail for Bay St. Louis had heard a great deal of the his tory, or at least the so-called history, of Gaspard Boehon, the rich and eccentric owner of Chateau de Boehon, as the sailors had named the mansion. There was enough of mystery in the story -to stimulate curios ity, and at the same time the Creole narra tors had not failed to dash into it a great, deal of glow and color which added a pe culiar charm for a temperament like Or ton's. Now, as he ate. his fish and biscuit,' and sipped the excellent black coffee pre- pared for him, his imagination made the most of the picturesque mansion, the breezy' ' grove and the legend-like stories he had' been hearing. Already he was planning , the details of a picture he would make, of which the central figures were to be Gas-' pard Boehon, the rough and blood-thirsty retired pirate (or fugitive from the ven geance of outraged society on account of other criminal pursuits) and his lovdy niece, the lily so extravagantly praised by. the Creole sailors. He was in love with his art, and therefore was not nursing any' youthful fancy, or hope, ot any tender ad-' venture with the maiden, or of any chival- rous bout with her doughty uncle who guarded her with such fierce jealousy and prowess. Sketches, sketches, something new and striking for his pencil, something upon which he could wreck hislo ve of color, nothing else interested him deeply. Victor, a typical Creole coaster, knew everybody from the Bigolets to Biloxi, and with the love of romance common to his race had absorbed, so to speak, all the-' legends, stories, anecdotes and folk-lore gen-" erally enrrent in the region. Heknewweil how to embellish these and there was no tak ing dearer to him than to have a pine of- Cnbau tobacco, a bottle of claret and a good; listener wniie ne pnea ms-gitt ol storytell ing. In Orton he had found a charmiag- subject for his experiments in romance aad V he had filled the youDg man's imaginatiqat a. - with nil manner of wild snrl TifotTiyaAT glimpses ofa new and very strange lift, - r "I should like to make sail when the U4e) is on the turn," Victor said, as the artist iH ended his simple; repast, "and if Mo'siea$f wants to go ashore I'll take a best aad rew&i him to the house on the bayou. There's t great time and it's a good pull aroaad tfeet"! point ana up. gwg "All right, Victor feteh. up- my if'',;! responded Ottos, .riiiDg, "Ae qnkr.er,t4ZI oeuer ior mi, rer jlhh ouihj to gttiiMl .-. . V l-v-; s SjC-:-i