Mkm JRTCW 'W THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. THIRD PART. PAGES 17 TO 20 i .rr SIAM AM) ITS PEOPLE. The Venice of the Orient and Its Miles of Floating Houses. BAKGKOK AXD ITS WATERWAYS. A Country here AU thB "ontfea Wear Short Hair and ILL THE BABIES SMOKE CIGARETTES fCOEKESPOXBEKCE OT THE DISPATCH. J BANGKOK, Siam, February 5. Siam is one of the out-of-the-way countries of the world. None of the great steamship lines of the Pacific or of the Indian ocean' stop at it Few globe trotters visit it and it is about 1,500 mile out of the regu lar line of travel around the world. ' The great Siamese peninsnla juts down -from the east coast of Siamese Slave. China. It contains half a dozen different countries, the chief of which are Burmah, Siam and the French States of China. Siam itself is at the lower end of the peninsula and it bounds the greater part of that mighty body of water known as the Gulf of Siam. It is 1,300 miles long, and at its widest part it is 450 miles wide. It is almost as flat as your hand, though it has here and there a few mountain chains. It has many big rivers and the country is as much cut uo with canals as is Holland. During the rainy season it becomes a mighty lake, and the people move here 'and there from one city to another in boats. The greatest river is the Menam, which the Siamese know by the same name as the Indian knew the Mississippi. It is "the father of waters" and it forms the great highway of the king dom. This river flows into the Gulf of Siam at its head and it is about 40 miles from Siamese Women. its mouth. tht I sit here on its banks .and write this letter in this floating city of Bangkok. Imagine a city as large as Chicago, of which ninety-nine hundredths of the people live on the water. There are 15 miles of floating houses on the two sides of this river, and these, w ith the Kine's palaces and a few foreign buildings on the land, make- up the capital ot the Siamese people. There are 6,000,000 and more of these Siamese, and their country covers a terri tory of about twice the size of Colorado, four times the size of New York, and it is about five times as big as Ohio. It is a tropical country, and the click of my type writer falls upon my ears mixed with the songs of the thousands of birds which sing in the branches of the trees outside the oriental hojel. The doors and the windows are all open, and the lightest of white duck linen is oppressive as clothing. It is Febru ary, but I long to go as naked as the Siam ese themselves, and it makes me perspire to think of American overcoats and of the clothing which you people wear as I write. "It is too hot to go out in the middle of the day, and we have all the surroundings of the tropics. The cocoanut and the palm tree line the banks of this Menam river, and the boats flit in and out of jungles which remind one of the swamps of Florida, save that you may see the monkeys upon the trees, and the plumage of the birds is more splendid. A Basiling Watery Hlshwny. I wish I could give you a picture of onr ride up the Menam to Bangkok. The sides of the river are lined with these small float ing houses. They are anchored to piles and they lie half hidden by the great palm J trees on tbe banks. Here and there a canal juts off into the jungle and the houses on it makes this a floating street. These houses are made of bamboo with their sides and their roofs thatched with palm leaves. They are sometimes on piles high above the water, but more often they rest on its sur face. They are tied to poles driven into the bed of the river and they rise and fall with the tide. Their average height is not more than ten feet and each looks like two large dog kennels fastened together ana covered with palm leaves. Here and there is an opening in the1 palm trees and you get a glimpse of the country; it is flat as the waters of the river.and where it is plowed it looks as black as your hat. The only beasts upon it are ugly water buf faloes. There are no fences, no barns, and only these thatched houses on piles. The river is winding. It is perhaps a quarter of a mile wide and every turn brings new surprises. As-we near Bangkok the waters are alive with craft of all kinds. Little, naked, brown, shock-headed young sters paddle long canoes not over two feet wide and so sharp that the least balance would unseat the rower. There are haf naked women with ereat hats of straw. which look like inverted workbaskets, sit-' ting bare-ieggea ana Dare-breasted in boats which they paddle along, and boats of all siees are worked by all ages and sexes, from babies of six to wrinkled old men and short, gray-daired women of 60. As you enter Bangkok the crowd increases. Instead of one line of floating houses along the banks there are three and sometimes four. The whole river is alive andyou turn your eyrs this way and that, meeting a maze of new objects at every turn. The Belles of Slam. The women are very thinly clad, and hide none of the outlines of beauty. There is beauty, too, in the outlines of these plump, straight, lithe-limbed Siamese maidens. A part of their education is bending the joints back and forth to make them supple and they are as straight as so manv pine trees, and they move with the grace orthelndia rubber man in the circus. Their step is a light one, for they walk without shoes and all native Siam goes -bare-looted. Thcv are all short-haired, and gitbese Siamese girls, haye heads which .r, vw w cuuiuieu wiiu tt jjcijictuau vunr l-!f.S3y" -....". . iM MIT h - 1 1-.i"-..f - m . lick and their short wirey hair, black and oily, stands vd like a shoebrush all over their heads. Here one turns her face. She has a dark brown com plexion. Her forehead is square, her cheek bones are high, her nose is half flat and it turns slightly upward over a pair of ripe, luscious black lips. She opens her mouth and the black of her lips is equaled only by the jet of her teeth. The sight is disgust ing. This maiden, like all the men, women and children in Bangkok,is a chewer of the, betel nut, which turns the teeth black, puffs out the lips and makes them crack. The betel nut is a native of Siam, and immense quantities of them are exDorted to India and other countries where the chewing of it prevails. It has a green skin and is of the size of a black walnut It is sold in pieces the size of- a hickory nut and it is of a soft spongy nature, having a bitter astringent taste. Tne Siamese mix it with lime colored red, and a bit of tobacco. The red lime is wraDDed ud in ereen leaves, and everyone in the country has a betel box near him. He chews and spits and spits and chews all day long and it is said that this habit costs the people fully as much as tneir looa. it nas much tne same enect as tobacco in that it takes away hunger and produces a stimulating and soothing sensa tion. It is used everywhere and the bride groom gives a present of betel nuts to his oriae. Jjabies are given it sometimesoeiore they are weaned, and I saw a young Siamese boy yesterday, of 10, as naked as was Adam before the fall, squirting betel juice be tween his teeth and aiming at a mark. It is a vile, filthy habit, and it turns the Siamese from a moderately handsome na tion into a most ugly one. Floating- Emporiums. The Siamese girls have beautiful eyes and the plump, olive cheeks of maidens ot 15 would be very attractive were it not for the beteL Their eyes are black, lustrous and full of soul. They area friendly set, too, and they do not shrug their rosy uncovered shoulders and attempt to pull down their ballet girl costume in the presence of the men. Many of them are peddlers in this city of Canas, and they sit in these long, narrow canoe-like boats and paddle along their wares from house to bouse. They seem to be the managers of the stores and these river shops of Bangkok are out on the water, and the maiden storekeeper squats down on the floor with her goods all around her and with her betel box and tobacco be side her. Her husband'is usually lying In a back room or loafing. Her stock is very small, and there is nothing for the foreigner to buy. The wants of the people are few. Siamese washing takes neither soap nor starch, and vegetables and rice constitute the most of the food of the people. "When they want a dainty they take a little raw, rotten fish and mix it with their curry and the majority of them do not know what meat is. An Aqnatlc Race. The Siamese wash their clothes and their bodies at the same time, and this river He nam is always "full of bathers. The girls step down into the water with this yard wide strip around their waists and roll about like mermaids. Tne men bathe in the same way,and they delight in taking a vessel and fillinc it with water and standing or sitting on the wharves of their honses and raising it high above their heads and letting the cool stream pour over their warm persons. After they have had a bath they stand a minute to let themselves dry, then slipping another cloth loosely about the waist, over their wet garment, they let the other fall to the floor, wring it out and dry it for second wearing. In the evening you see this bath ing going on everywhere, and the play ground ot the children of Bangkok is in the river. A Sinmeic Home. These floating homes are more like cot tages or huts than houses, the average size of them is three rooms, and you could set one roof all down within a good sized American parlor. First there is an outer ledge covered with a roof and open to the river. Inside there is a kitchen and bed room. They have no windows, and in Bangkok I don't suppose there are a hun dred panes of window glass. The climate is so warm that the people want every breath of air they can get, and when you pack the survivors'of two or three generations of one family into one of these huts you have no need of either windows or doors. There are no chairs in these floating houses. The people sleep upon mats, or straw, or skins, and their pillows are stuffed with cotton, or are mere pieces of wood. The beds of the ordinary famtly are filled with bugs aod of all the numerous species of the reptile crea tion, Siam seems to have its share. There are ants, mosquitoes and lizards, everywhere, and the bodies of these naked children are rubbed with a yellow powder which keeps the mosquitoes away. A Siamese kitchen has no chimney and the people never need a base burner. The cooking is all done over coals in. a box filled with earth or ashes, and the chief culinary articles are a rice pot, a kettle and a frying pan. Many of the eatables are bought cooked, and the rice is first boiled and then set to steam in an earthen pot. Bice forms' the bread of the country, and the Siamese knows noth ing of the alter jovs of the underdone Amer ican pie or the oily Boston baked beans. These Siamese girls never learn how to make cake or pudding; they have no roasts and no soups. They squat on the floor, around a little table not more than a foot high, when they eat and each puts her own hands into the common dish and picks out the morsel which pleases here. In eating rice they put the whole hand into the steam ing kettle, and rolling the mass into a hard ball between their fingers, they crowd it into their betel-stained mouths. The men, as lords of the family, get the first bite and the women take what is left. There is how ever, no fixed dinner hour, and gastronomy has a long ways to go before it will become a science in Siam. A Nation of Smoker. Everyone in Siam smokes men, women and children. The people have no pockets and their favorite nlace for carrying cigars and cigarettes is behind the ear, just as our American clerks carry their pens and pen cils. I saw a naked boy of 4 yesterday standing in a crowd smoking a cigarette. He was nuffin? awav Itrslilv at the -rl in his mouth, and he had two others yet un litone behind each ear. He apparently enjoved his tobacco and smoked and spit iwv A Man of Siam, and spit and smoked as thongh it was an every day matter, as I doubt not- it was. His brown-skinned father in a waist cloth stood beside him and when he started away he picked up the still smoking, youngster and set him astride of his hip and thus walked off. Babies are always carried on the hip here and not upon the back as in China, Korea and Japan. This carrying is done by the men as well as the women and only the fewest of the men do any work. Owned br tho King. The King of Siam is supposed to own the people and each 'man in the realm has to serve for three, six or nine months as a ser vant of the Government. At a certain.time of the year the entire population is marked off to particular noblemen or Government masters. These masters, whenever the Gov ernment demands anything of them can compel the men marked off to serve. All kinds of work are demande'd and the various marks put upon the men indicate their trades or profession. Some men are required to give all their time to the Government, and in this case they get nominal salaries. Those who give half their time work for the King15 days and then have 15 days off The three months subjects get no pay and during the time they are in Bangkok they have to find themselves in food and lodging. This work practically enslaves the whole popu lation of males, and slavery is common in Siam. Criminals convicted often become slaves, and they are sometimes marked or branded on the forehead. I have seen many men in chains during my stay here, and just outside the walls of the palace thorn DM nf laoef fA ennrA f .Mat. V.lrtnt. reyed, good-looking, lusty fellows who have great iron collars about their necks ana chains about their legs and arms, who were making basket work, and who offered to sell me their wares as I passed. The debtor who does not pay in Siam must become the slave of his creditor, who charges him from 15 to 30 per cent a year, puts him in chains and takes his work as the interest on the debt. There are hundreds of such slaves in Bangkok, and many of the men become slaves by gambling away their living. Thoroughbred Gamblers. There are gambling houses everywhere, and men and women, old and young, are addicted to gambling. One of the great games seems to be fantan, and there are big sheds scattered along the main streets of the city in which these half-naked, brown skinned, blood-spitting Siamese collect in groups about mats, where Chinamen act as the bankers and conduct this game. Little shells are used instead of cash, and the game is substantially the same as the fantan of China. Gambling also goes on upon the river and it takes place among the ladies of the harem, 1 am told, in the very palace itself. The nation all told seems addicted to vice rather than to virtue, and it is nearer akin to pure heathenism than any other I have yet seen. Still it claims to be progress ive, ana its .rung has made some steps to the front The whole, however, compares more to the colored Bepublic of Hayti or to the blacks of San Domingo than to any other civilization. The people are devoted to Buddhism and the priests are numbered by thousands. I will visit the palace and the gorgeous temples to-morrow, and in my next letter can give you a taste of high life and culture as gathered under the very feet of the sacred white elephants and 'in the shadows of the harem itself. PBAKK G. CARPENIEE. HAY FEYEE. Something of Interest to Those Who Are Troubled With This Disease. Youth's Companion. "What are the causes, nature, prevention and cure of hay fever? What places are exempt from it? What are the latest opin ions of the medical profession respecting this disease?5' The most recent opinion is that it is a neurosis, or an affection of the nerves-, a pe culiar susceptibility of certain nerves, ter minating in the mucous membrane, to irri tation from the pollen of various plants. It is only about 70 years since it was first described under the name of summer ca tarrh. It prevails much more extensively in some countries than in others, being twice as common in England as elsewhere, and much less common at the South and in Canada than in our Northern States. It is a rare disease west of the Mississippi. Its seat is in the mucous membrane of the nostrils, eyes, pharynx, larynx and bron chial tubes. It sometimes assumes an asth matic form, and hence has been called hay asthma. The susceptibility to it is often inherited. Although it is caused by-pollen, yet the inhabitants of rural districts are less liable to it than visitors from the city. In this respect it is like other diseases. Yellow fever, for instance, is most likely to attack those who come from abroad into the in fected locality. It is called hay fever, bnt the pollen of many different plants may give rise to it It prevails from May to August. All patients are not susceptible to the pollen of the same plant That of the grasses is per haps the most potent. June is most prolific of pollen-grains." Eight hundred a day have been collected on a glass less than half an inch square. Bains often wash the at mosphere nearly clear of them. To be sure of escaping the annual attack, one must remove to a region a,t a distance from the offending vegetation, say to the White Mountains in New Hampshire, Mt Mansfield in Vermont, the Adirondacks in NewYork,to extended grazing regions, to the seaside "here the prevailing wind is from the ocean, or to densely inhabited cities, with few parks and open spaces. Respirators are a help. The general system needs to be fortified, say by shower-baths and tonic medicines, and the local irritation should be allayed under the advice of a physician. Each at tack increases the susceptibility, and fre quently recurring attacks may lead to deaf nesses the Eustachian tube generally Shares in the irritation. BELATI0I" OP KIC0TI2VE TO YEETIG0. The Results of Various Investigations Laid Before the French Academy. H ew York Tribune. J N , M. Decaisne has laid before the French Academy of Medicine the results of various investigations relating to the vertigo pecu liar to smokers. From this it appears that the numerous experiments made in this line have proved that nicotine contracts the muscular coat of the vessels, and that verti go is due to the exaggerated contraction of the arteries of the brain the patient ex periences, a'feeling of emptiness in the head, so much so that he seems as- if -about to faint, everything turning around and his ideas becoming confused. M. Decaisne has further ascertained that these phenomena are chiefly found in smok ers above 50 years of age,, and especially in those habitually accustomed to smoking be fore meals: he has also known several nf these persons to be treated for cerebral con- gestion, ana even ior aisease ot the heart, with the result, as might be supposed, of in creasing the symptoms, the proper treat ment consisting in absolute abstention from the weed, and some slight laxative with bitters. Always-Safe and Sure. It Is safe to take Brandreth's Fills at any time, bat to get tbe best results they should bo taken on an empty stomach before going to bed. For constipation or dyspepsia, one or two taken every night will in a short time per form an absolute cure. It Is well to take a purcattve at least once or twice a month as a preventive of disease. Brandreth's Pills are entirely vegetable, and tbe safest and most effective purgative ever Introduced to tbe pub lic They have been used in this country for over 0 years. FITTSBTJRG, SUNDAY, APML 1889. AMANOFMANYWILES The Florida Land Agent and His Pecnliar Characteristics. YELLOW TEVER B0T AlPINCIDENT ToaEealdenceintiie.Iapd of Flowers and f Alligators. SELLING SEAL ESTATE BY THE GALLON tCOBBESFOXDKNCE OTTIIB BISri.TCB.1 SOUTH FLOB JDA, April i. In Florida, from the North to the South, and from the At lantic to the Gulf, the broad, bland smile of a well known character meets every tourist. He is the real es tate agent of the A JTative. I talyof America! "Thehumble well-wisher of the stranger and a martyr to the cause of the much abused "land of alligators, sand and tin cans." In the church, the hotel, on steamboat or train, he makes life interesting to the traveler. In glibness of tongue this irrepressible rivals the Pennsylvania book ageni. In almost every instance, this de fender the State's a native of Yankee dom, and when Yankee meets Yankee it is worse than Greek meeting Greek. The regular "down Easter" who can see nothing from a pumpkin to a pine tree outside of Yankee dom, without exclaiming, ""Maine kin beat it every time," meets his counterpart in the Florida agent, aihe fights the battle, "or anges versus nutmegs." BEAL ESTATE BT THE GAIXON. This friend of the Flower Land deals in futures, and faith and hope in the specu lator are his guarding spirits. As "doctors seldom take their own medicine, and divines do not always practice what they preach," so the agent is shy of meddling with the A TEOTICAIi land of oranges and balmy sunshine on his own account He is, in the main, a hard working, faithful fellow; but, ofmrse, frequently obliged to get into scrapes, as in the.caseof the agent who sold a "beautiful fragrant elysium, with a lake Jront, and as a bonus, climate thrown in during the dry season; but when the buyer attempted location, nothing but the climate re mained; so with the heroic spirit of a Trogan our vanquished victor threw the deed to the largest frog in the swamp with the generous reminder, "Possession is nine points in law," and as he waded away from the watery vastness of tbe stretching marsh, tbe realization of the "chestnut," "land bought and sold by the gallon," settled upon him. The land agent is a man of varied moods and tenses and quickly accommodates him self to his victim. One person finds in him a disciple of the teaching, "be 'umble Uriah, and you'll git on." To, another he has all the wild-eyed enthusiasm of a Col onel Sellers. He is a "defender of the faith." Every objection filed is met with and fought with outright The objections, sand, moccasins and malaria, fade away like dew before a Florida sunshine when A Land Agent Meditating this modern Demostehnes takes up the de fense. In war and in peace, the Yankee real estate agent is equal to every emer gency, and it does not require a Methuselah to note that the energy and versatility that are so invaluable in soldiers, and so char acteristic of the American, are the gifts genius, wit and power otthe agent, MERELY A VISITATION. IT truth is stranger than fiction, then might every modern Annanias in this pro fession wish he had been born a G. Wash ington. What bad effects has yellow fever left on speculation, Mr. Land Agent? This bitter question is put to him every day dur ing this season, but the Spartan will die game rather than show the white feather, and as to Yellow Jack answers, like Mr. Squeers, "It's a wisitation, sir, is the lot o' mortality. The world, sir, is chock full of wisitations," and goes on to prove, with soulful arguments, that now is the time to invest; to-morrow the opportunity will be forever lost The agent rubs his Aladdin's lamp, produces his usual accessory, a little 'paper town," and before the speculator, spectral scenes rise up. The desolate pine barrens become the seat of a magical city. In the rank jungles of the hammocks, magnolia ave nues, orange boulevards, architectural cot tages, etc, etc, spring up before his imagi nation. j.c is toia hat a brave, bold Northerner, eager for adventure, wagered he would make a tour of theState, eat, drink and be merry with every agent he met, and return sound in mind and bodv, as well as free of the re sponsibility of Flor- a Paper City. ida real estate. Result before he had half finished the journey, physician consulted, diagnosis case, brain fever. In his delirium, mutterings of Florida IPiflit u 111 -a 3S ' "agHgM ' lWr"tTs"feBBgeas"B"a"B"s"sstBM land of sunshine homes for the homeless, health, wealth, happiness, etc., etc. Cause, a la Chinese, "Too muchea talkee, allee samee kind." Wisdom and experience teach that the man who wants to enjoy a tour of the sunny peninsula must label himself "sold" to agent No. 1; a combat with this -"Florida Bhark" - would re quire a resurrection of Heracles, for like 'the- nine-headed hydra, as often as one is slain, two rise in his stead. The same "cuteness" or originality which char acterizes the Yankee all over the world, in spiring iim to meet the latest wants in patent medicine, "probihition editions" with the sold rye" where the pages ought to be enables him also to put his knowl edge of Florida into a flowery poem that is "easy to take." The real estate agent is like an encyclo pedia on an electric current. He is bur dened with a knowledge of "smallpox in California," destructive blizzards of the Talked to t)eath Agent and Victim. great Northwest, and pictures graphically the horrors of Northern bank capital sup porting the great trust company of cash iers in Canada. Florida, too, is a land of royalty, if we may judge from the titled inhabitants. General, captain, colonel, etc, are common appella tions all through tbe South, but here we find kings and queens plentiful from the king of the crackers, cattle king, orange king, etc, etc., to THE KING OP LAND AGENTS. Whether th'is royal agent of Florida pos sesses the combined strength, courage, phil- FLOBIDA HOME. osophy, versatility and persuasiveness of all the "mighty host" remains to be proven, but with 7.000.000 aires of land nirhfs llt I theking of Florida land agents will need me sireiigm oi oia Alias, ana it will re quire more strategy than the mvthological giant possessed if he shifts this little world of real estate on to the shoulders of a mod ern Hercules. Afler all, there is a peculiarity about Florida. Its witching, stimulating climate acts like an elixir, and silver promises to blend with golden realities, and the land agent is the maeician who has forced this beautiful, trackless, tropical wilderness into the ranks of a vigorous, public-spirited, enterprising country. There is a fascination in the romantic legends of this elysian land. So the agent who has discovered the original Garden of Eden, in Florida, finds many ready to believe in him, and when he pro duces the petrified core of the apple, and the identical fig tree from which Eve made her trousseau, until the world disproves his assertions he will continue to sell town lots in tbe original Paradise, and, when the prospective city appears, nojdoubt do honor to the apple core by departing from all formulas and erecting a monument to Evel The Fountain of Youth is a real Florida chestnut, and about as profitable in Dixie as the wooden nutmeg in Yankeedom. Old de Leon's failure to find the spring has proved a benefactor to the school of land agents, for each one has accepted the privi lege of locating the Perpetual Spring, and the Yankee medicine man is securing nectarine trusts and bottling these health giving and rejuvenating waters for the ben efit of humanity, and youth, health and happiness are within reach of all those who will put trust and faith in the self-sacrificing reformers of the Land of Flowers, sunshine, oranges and wealth. M. M. A LANGDID LIFE. The Tropics Compel Forclsners to Slake Life Tery Easy. Europeans in the tropics do nothing for themselves which they are not compelled to do, and at last almost lose the power of ex erting themselves at all. A writer thus describes life atone of the large hotels of Calcutta: "Every guest must have a man of his own to perform the most trifling service; then two men have to be engaged to work the bedroom punkah, one by day, the other by night In the wide passage of the hotel, you find some of these men sitting or lying asleep till they are wanted. "A sportsman hardly goes out without five attendants one to carry his gun until it is wanted, another the ammunition, and a third the dead game. Number four would be responsible for refreshments, while the fifth man would lead a pbny to carry the sportsman from cover to cover. "It is impossible to conceive a more un healthy life .than -that of many European ladies in India, who lie on their couches all day and do absolutely nothing but think how hot it is and how ill they are." . The Burglar's Sllstnke. Chicago Tribune. Masked Burglar (surprising railroad of ficial alone in office) I'll trouble you, my friend, to open that 'ere safe and hand me out the stuff that's inside. Official (trembling) Don't point that revolver at me, please don'tl I'll do it Here it is. Burglar (pocketing the spoil) Thank you, my friend. Now I'll trouble you to give me a pass to Omaha, properly signed, and with the place for the name left blank. Official (coldly) I can't give you a pass, sir. Burglar I must have" it. my friend, v . Official (impatiently) You are not en titled to a pass, I tell you. Burglar (cocking revolver) Come, be quickl Official (in a violent rage) You infernal scoundrel, take thatl (knocks burglar down, ties his hands and feet, and telephones for police.) .... CRAMS AT HOTELS. Sketches of Eccentric Characters Whtf Have Been Patrons OP SOME P1TTSBUBG HOSTELEIES. Grumbling Guests, Satisfied Boarders, and Strangers Who Betray ASTONISHING LACK OP INP0EMAT10N rwElTTKN FOB THI MSrATCp.J One of the peculiar features of America, which has been commented upon by Max O'Keli and dther foreigners, is its hotel population. I do not mean travelers and transient guests, but another class whose only home is within a hotel. .. Whoe'er has travel'd life's dull round", Where'er his stages may have been, May sigh to think he still has found His warmest welcome at an inn. So says Shenstone, and "the average man who is blest with a happy home will be in clined to agree with him. ,But there are hundreds who think otherwise; men and women, both married and single, possessed of abundant means, who prefer hotel life to the petty annoyances of housekeeping. There is" scarcely a city or village in the country which does not number among its population many persons who reside at hotels from choice. Indeed, it would seem as if no one could adopt that mode of living from necessity, or from motives of economy, as the rates, even of the cheaper hostelries,are considerably in excess of the cost of housekeeping. One can readily understand why bachelors and single ladies prefer to pay liberally for their board, rather than provide their own food and lodging, but why married people, and even families, should follow their ex ample is not so apparent But every per son who can will follow his or her inclina tions, and it is a fact beyond dispute that the number inclined hotel-ward is already large and steadily increasing. The HOTEL POPULATION OP PITTSBUEG, if reckoned up, would probably run into the thousands, and it embraces wealthy business men, clerks, and even laborers. Only men of good income can afford to live at first-class hotels, but there are second, third, fourth and even fifth rate establish ments, so that a person can board at a hotel for almost any price, from 550 a week down to $5, andeven less. Talking with an old hotel clerk of this city, the other day, I picked up some information that rather surprised me. "Why," he said, "I know men that pay. $150 a month for board and only $15 or $16 for office rent There are others, who have neither offices nor business, but ample in comes, who live in single rooms in small hotels and are astonishingly economical. Every hotel almost has its set of old board ers who have been regular fixtures for 10, 15 or 20 years, and some very peculiar people there are among them, too. One man I could' mentiop, only it wouldn't do,. nas occupied tne same suit oi rooms ior a dozen years, and has never permitted the walls to be repapered, or the woodwork painted, or. new carpets putdown in all that time. The only fixing or cleaning he will permit is sweeping, and that has to be done carelully or he, raises a row. It would go hard with a servant who so much as moved a book or paper from its place while dusting.' ;PHe- has-a-big closet in one of his room which is filled from top to bottom with an accumulation of old clothes, old papers, account books, newspapers, hats, cast off shoes and other stuff that has been there for years. The closet has never been cleaned out since he began piling stuff in there. All the material in it must be well nigh worthless, ye he values it. as highlv as if it were worth its weight in gold. , "We have another guest who has sat at the same table with other boarders for five years, and never yet addressed a word to them. He's quite sociable with strangers, but he never opens his mouth to the hotel people unless to give an order to some of the servants. SEVEBAL LITTLE ECCENTEICITIES. "Another old boarder wasn't suited with his room after the house had been renovated a year ago, and so he got it frescoed, papered and fixed up to suit his own taste. As he was a good customer the landlord allowed him to have his own way. I suppose he went to an expense of several hundred dol lars in fitting up the room, getting new carpets, new curtains, and some new furni ture. Why he did it I can't imagine; must be 'twas a whim, for he never spends any time in his room except at night,and as long as I've been here I've never known him to invite anybody into it "Another old fellow is .known to the hotel employes as 'The Kicker.' Nothing ever suits him; at least he was never heard to express satisfaction at anything done for him. He has a new complaint to make to the landlord every day, and has been in formed more than a thousand times that he might leave if not suited, vet he couldn't be hired to move. He enjoys his fussing, and as we've got used to it. verj; little at tention is paid to any of his grumbling. Boarders in general don't require half as much waiting on as transients, but there are some I have known that I wouldn't have about a hotel at any price, if I was manag ing it ''Drummers are our most appreciative and agreeable patrons. They , always make themselves at home, get acquainted without an effort and treat the hotel folks like old friends after they've been here a day. " The man who travels least is likely to be most exacting and cause most bother. A hotel is the best place in the world in which to study human nature. If a man is cranky in any way his peculiarities are pretty sure to crop out here. If he is inexperienced and comes from a back town, we know it, no matter how much style he may try to put on. STEANOE INFOBMATION "WANTED; "Not long ago a well dressed man who was stopping here asked me where the post office was. I gave the directions as well as I could,, after which he thanked me and re marked that he wanted to mail a letter. I didnt inform him that there was a letter box right here in the office, forldidn't want him to think I was aware of the fact that he was a 'hayseed' from 'way back. "Another,man who asked me whether I knew a certain person was completely mys tified when I began looking over the city directory to find the name he mentioned. Evidently he had never seen such a publi cation before, " 'What?' said he, 'do you have a book that tells where everybody lives?' " 'It is supposed to contain the name of every resident of Pittsburg and Allegheny,' I replied. " 'Might convenient scheme for you,' he rejoined, and from further remarks I in ferred that he was under the impresssion that the book had been compiled and printed solely for the use of our hotel. "Then we have to give people advice as to what merchants, tailors, etc.',to patronize. We are supposed also to know which thea ter is giving the best show and to be able to tell our guests at which of the churches they are iiKeiy to near tne hnest sermon. A hotel clerk needs to be a walking encyclopedia of general information, and he must be if he "is successful in his business." Bakt. The newest rehabilitation is tha victory of the White Bose through its latest cham pion, Atkinson. - Bu AN EDEN IN One Sea-Washed "Spot Where Flowers Bloom and Birds Sing Through the Livelong Year. . rwBTrrzx tos tux dispItch.i Safely in harbour Is tbe King's ship; in the deep nook, where once ' Thou call'dst me up at midnight to fetch dew From the still-vex'd Bermoothes, there she's hid. Shakespeare? Tempest, Act 2., Scene IT. When tbe last piece of Baggage had been stowed in the hold of the steamship Oronoco sounds of a kissing kind were heard on her not overly clean decks, and then the ship's bell warned the farewell and ta-ta delega tion to seek the seclusion that an oderifer ous North river pier grants on a premature spring day. The., commotion was caused by a large delegation of New York males and females who had been scared away from Florida by Yellow Jack germs, and "were seeking a sun bath and swellish pleasures at a resort but recently boomed in press and pamphlet at the metropolis. The lines were cast off, the engines lazily labored with shaft and screw and gradually pushed the narrow iron wave-jumper upon the bosom of New York bay destination, Bermuda; latitude, un known to nearly all on board; longitude, ditto; distance, mere conjecture; course, by the compass; direction and force of wind, immaterial; object, pleasure and the sweets of .fashionable hotel life in a sub-tropical isle; prospect, delightful; spirits, buoyant; barometer, falling. As the Oronoco slowly swung out of her slip a goodly company gathered on the sea ward end of Pier 47 and bade the voyagers a handkerchief bon voyage. The floral of ferings to the tourists who seemed to belong to the gold-belted band of MacAllisterites please pronounce MacOllester were pro fuse; but alas! the posies were destined to waste their sweetness on plebeian nostrils. Variegated silk and linen fluttered in a re sponsive farewell, and the ship slowly moved upon the garbage-tainted waters of the bay, whose effluvia may yet cage Bar tholdi's bronze giantess to drop her, illy lighted torch and hold her nostrils. Mean while The merry March wind piped a lively lay That rattled the ratlines and chains; And the steamship bounded on over the Bay, And soon reached the watery plains. The First Dinner Bell. It was breezy, but there was no dust; hence it was refreshing. Before the Hook was reached many aristocratically-delicate and plebeian stomachs craved sustenance, and when the steward's bell finally piped all hands to the saloon there was a struggle for choice seats at the high-racked, crib-like board. Many had picked out places, having liberally tipped the autocrat of the dining hall for the privilege of placing their cards in choice locations, thereby securing seats at the first table. Thus the dear chappies and tightly-laced ladies managed to be first in the full-stomached sacrifice that was to be offered up to Old Nep. They started, at the thick soup and finally landed fh the ices. They chatted about the delights and pleasures Of the sea, and wondered where the ship was going. They held the .board until some of their companions suddenly wearied of the feast and the gossip and silently stole away, with whitened lip, unsteady tread and a ship dinner that had asserted itself. Then eti quette was cast aside, and it was a go-as-you-please skirmish for state rooms, where contribution boxes had been pla&ed to re ceive the offering which would soon be offered up to .the gulls, those tireless winged beggars of the sea, and the big and little fishes down below. The patient plebeians who went aboard unencumbered by steamer chairs, floral monuments, babies, old ladies, sisters, sweethearts or aunts the real men who were out for all there was in it, who neither feared mal de mer,nor the blank stare of the uppish portion of tbe company made themselves solid with Mle Steward from the start by meekly giving way to the hun gry selects and waiting for the second table. Meanwhile Tbe first-seated ate and inhaled the ship's odor, While grabbing for dishes that slid to the floor; Then they staggered away in most horrid dis order, And, few, very few, ot them ate any more! ' Hott Some Ships Save Money. The voyage from Sandy Hook to the coral reefs of Bermuda is undoubtedly the rough est on the Atlantic It is the dreadful Channel trip long drawn out The course lies southeast by east, and when the breeze blows from almost any quarter the vessel pitches, rolls to the 25 angle and ships big season her weather side with suddenness and frequency. The Oronoco had a nor- wesfer all the way down. The wind did not shift a point from start to finish, and while it helped her along, the pace was a killing one. Out of the 110 souls aboard, about 20 to 25 kept some of the provisions from spoiling. The ship is a staucoh one, and, as the Captain smilingly remarked, "An easy roller." To .the landsman the rolling was rather tiresome. And thus it came to pass that the first hungry ones fed were knocked out in the opening round. The return trip was made on the Trini dad, a sister ship, a few feet longer than the Oronoco. The course lay northwest by west, and the gale came howling from the northeast Out of a passenger list of 130, about 25 weathered the storm after the first dinner. For 48 hours all were forced be low by the heavy seas and the lurching, rolling, seasickening motion. The condi tion of the company was truly pitiful, par ticularly that of the female portion and the few children aboard. All who contemplate a trip to Bermuda next winter should" be prepared for a tough tussle with the sea. Only one lady was able to appear at table during the major portion of the trip down, and three or four one the daughter of a New York pilot, who was used to the sea ate sparingly at every meal on the return voyage until the west ern side of the Gulf Stream was reached, the wind ceased to blow, and the sea set tled down a bit. The remainder of the trip was pleasant, and the ghastly sick soon got their land legs and control of their sorely-trird stomachs. . So you see how a- ship in the Bermuda trade saves money in the food line. They cross the Gulf Stream diagonally at its supposably widest part It takes' from 12 to 11 houra to pass over this mysterious river of the ocean on this route. No matter how calm it may be on either side, you will get a shaking up here. Old sailors backed up this statement, and it is made on their authority. When the writer crossed it was nasty weather, and it was undoubtedly. In tbe year 1609 a fleet sent ont by the Virginia Company, Sir George Sommers being Admiral. was encountered by storms, and the Admiral's ship was driven to tha Bermudas. "Sir Georie Sommers, sitting at the stearne, seeing the ship desperate of rellefe, looking every minute when tbe ship would ilnke, bee espied land, which, ac cording to his, and Captain Newport's opinion, they Jndged it should be that dreadrall roast of the Bermudes, which llandts: were of all Nations. said and supposed to bee lnchanted and Inhabited with witches and devllls. which srew br reason ot cnccasiomea monstrous innnaer, Bionue, ana tempest nerre unto those llands, also for that the who ue co coast is so wonderons dangerous, of Kockcs, weanaDDroach them, but with nnsneske- that few can a can apt able hazard or ship wrack. "Stov,s Annali. vat. The heart of Sir ueorge Sommers is burled In beautiful public garden, fall of troptesl growths, at St. George's, j&,'a.IJwjLv, i V- lit-?' --W-riliff Hfe vf f "iif Ats-B m- I IH.IMIII mjj JBg.TW-TTS - L -----g-'.'-JSSSSSSSSS--SSSfWSS THE OCEAN. rougher in the stream than outside of it, for We rocked and we rolled on tha top of the" wave While sailing o'er the river of the ocean; Many pale-faced creatures longed for tha grave. While well ones .cursed the beastly motion! Now would I eive a thousand furlongs of sea for, an acre of barren ground; long heath, brown furze, anything: The wills above be donel but I would fain dlo a dry death. t Shakespeare, The Tempest. A Feep at Paradise. Eaelt on . June morning it was March in America, but the dudines aboard declared it was June, and as this term saves a description of the weather it is utilized here the Oronoco dropped anchor in Five Fathom Hole, just off England's big dry dock, and the snug harbor occupied by sev eral of H. M.'s warships. "VYhen the sua rose over oleander and cedar-clad hills it shed a light that enabled the early risers on, board to catch a first glimpse of the Ber mudas. Spread before their delighted gaze was a panorama of hill and ocean. Snow-white-villas of quaint but unimposing design ex-' posed side and roof from behind a screen of blooming foliage. Far a3 the eye could reach these pretty houses, perched on hill side and nestling in flowery, palm-decked dells, held up their snowy roofs for the first kiss of the summer-like sun, while a flower scented zephyr helped the god of day to sip the dew that shone like diamonds on the tiles and hung pearl-like on the cool-looking, deep-green leafy veils that half hid them Ironi view. Through long lines of tropical growth a cream-like roadway wound round hill and disappeared down valley.likeawhite serpent, with skin immaculate, hunting a bower of roses in which to lazily coil and sleep oS a feast spread by the god of warm wind and life-giving ray frostless ever, failing never! Down deep through the clear salted wa ters they gazed into fantastic beds of coral and forests of sea fans through which the beautiful angel fish, the striped hamlet, the monster rock fish, the frisky red snap per and the playfnl porgie gamboled, un mindful of the presence of astonished stran gers on the sky-bine and wonderfully opaque waters above them. The delightful feast spread by Nature on the earth above and in the waters" beneath soothed the nausea-ridden victims of the Gulf Stream, and all miseries were forgot ten in the pretty marine picture, which held all spellbound, until The smoke from a lighter darkened sunbeam, And the bustle for landing began: While the yell of the porter disturbed a.day . dream. And they turned to face custom and medical man! , Where It Tires Some to Rest. Thanks to the free trade proclivities of Mother England, her customs officers chalked the stateroom baggage politely and without ruffling a nightshirt Unbroken boxes of Yankee cigars were quickly vised, the owners merrily tripped down the ship ladder, and all were soon steaming ' through tortuous coral canals,, amid pictur esque miniatnre headlands, through white breasted islets into Hamilton harbor. No clatter of- wheel, screech of locomotive, tinkle of horse car bell, shout of runner or hand of hackman was heard or seen. It was Sabbath repose of the high est order, in spite of the fact that the three lone barbers on the island lathered and shayed.and the genial mixers of brandy splits dished out hot doses to all comers. The shop keeper toiled not, and the fizz of the soda fountain jarred not on the Wis- hartian ear. li. is O. folk would find a barren vineyard in Bermuda. It was a 'i peace that caused boisterous talkers to lower their tones, and exorcised loud laughers as' to cause them to suppress their guffaws into satisfied smiles. Out on the white roads' I M...V amu uuuci hue uuuujug uieauuexs itwas the peace of Paradise. Only the whistle of the red bird and the chirrupof the spar- row broke the rural silence of that sweet' summer-like Sabbath morn in climate favored Bermuda. In the coral caves on her shores the waves rolled in rythmic numbers, and in receding left behind no debris of the sea to hide the scale lines of their mighty song. Such is Bermuda on Sunday bevond tha narrow confines of hotel and rambling vil lage. It is a peace that to the busy man of business seems oppressive. It makes him tired to rest But those who seek refuge from the whirl of living, who have gone wrong in nerve center and tissue, who chase the god of sleep in wakeful dreams only to see the vision-veil lifted and the shadows grow brighter instead of darker, Bermuda is a sea-girt heaven. Frost is un known. Her pure coral-washing waves and picturesque bays breed no malaria. Her thermometer in winter ranges from 65 to 75. During the writer's stay it did not fluctuate five points, never dropping below 65 or jumping over the 70 line. No Irogs croak in her handsome, sweet-smellinsr man grove marshes, no snakes crawl through her coral caverns. Nothing in earth or air with poisoned sting or venomous tooth and tongue scares loungers in field or on shore. They say that centipedes have been imported from the West Indies, and are sometimes' found on the southern coast. A few mos quitoes buzz in summer time.and the frisky flea makes it interesting for those who linger about the docks in hot weather. These are trifles, however, as one apparently must hunt for before finding them in springtime. ' Certain Tis a brieht little isle laved by bluestof waves, That are warmed in the wash of the stream of the sea; That roll over reefs into quaint coral caves, And shako their white manes on a flowery lea! A Fevr-Pecullar Features. Beemxtda onions and potatoes'are house- , hold words in northeastern America. The first crop of potatoes has nearly been de- J VUU1CU. CbllU, uc BKUUUHUp IS COaUHg OU fl jiiucjv liiw. .no viuuua uuve uceu retaxuet. by a wet winter, but a few boxes have been shipped to New York. The potatoes and onions look just like the Yankee article, ex cept the tops are greener and more showy. An onion and a murphy are the same the world over, barring flavor and strength. The Bermuda lily is now in full bloom. Acres of this waxy white beauty; scent the air and nod in fields hedged by oleanders. A held of lilies nestling .in a secluded but fertile little valley is a feast for eye and nostril, and a money-making concern lor the owner. Scientists say Bermuda is a heaved-up' coral reef. As Science says this, it would! be useless to go behind the returns. ' TWmmlsv'ji hills are nnita loftv. and mncbJ cutting has been resorted to in building herj beautilul roads. While wanting one morn-i ins the sound of a saw discordantly marred the whistling of the red bird. Tuming!,as Dcnu in me roaa jl caoio upuu a uus,y; native lazily pulling a saw of the cross-cut" pattern through a hillside. He said he was' making a road. In other words he was sawing a pathway throngh a miniatuiS mountain. The stone offered no more re-1 sistance to his rude implement than wouldi a piece of ice. After sawing out a hugaj block he commenced cutting it into Smaller; squares. These will be exposed to the airj and hardened, when they will be used forTB uauuiux fiuiiwKs. uiuc jiaza sua sto cm cutters would hunger in Bermuda. This stone is porous, of, a creaza-whito