j - C1 '"' 5 20 TO JOIN TTO OCEANS. The Superiority of the Kicaraguan Koute for a Canal to UNITE THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC The Difficulties Which Would Hare to ho Overcome. A PEETII GOOD CODKTEI TO LITE IS rOOSSErOSO3CCZF THE DISPATCH. CORINTO, Ni caragua, March SO. The many accounts which have appeared in American news papers regarding the proposed Nic aragua inter oceanio canal have been deficient in Old Sentry Box at tort "" -,-. San Juan. respects. They have been tor the most part mere collections of financial and engineering statistics. They have furnished no idea of the wonderful resources of this country and the manifest destiny of its progressive population toward consolidation with the vast United Bepub lic which will one day extend from the sixth parallel of north latitude to the sixtieth. On the San Juan JUver. They have given no idea of the scenery, climate and social conditions prevailing along the line of the proposed canal. This port of Corinto, the old Bealejo, is out of the line surveyed for the canal pro posed to be constructed by the company which has been seeking a charter from the United States Government, But it is worthy of note that it was the contemplated terminus of the first practical and practica ble waterway between the oceans proposed by modern science alter the Spaniards had relinquished their hold on Central America. Louis Xapoleon III, while a prisoner at Ham, occupied himself worthily with this great encineenng jjroblem. He suggested that the San Juan river should be used for the passage trom the Atlantic to Lake Nica ragua, thence by the Kio Tipitapa to Lake Manaeun, whence a canal was to be cut to the Pacific at Kealejo. CHASGES lif THE SAN JUAN. It was a longer route than that now ap proved, but it had many advantages which were more apparent in those days than at present, by reason of the numerous physi cal changes which the country has under gone in the past 40 years. These changes have particularly affected the Eio Tipitapa and the San Juan rivers. In ISIS the mouth Omciepec-iladercis Lake Nicaragua. of the San Juan afforded a commodious anchorage for ships of war; now it is entire ly silted up. The Eio Tipitapa is now an insignificant streamlet, ana in the dry sea son the bed is bare over two-thirds of its ex tent. But the harbor of Bealejo or Corinto remains one of the best and safest on the Pacific coast of Central America, and in finitely superior to Brito in every respect. The present harbor of Brito will have to undergo many changes before it can be made fit for the purposes of modern com merce and navigation by vessels of deep draught. Corinto or Bealejo is guarded from the revolving storms and heavy swells of the Eastern Pacific by the Island of Cardon. Brito is ereatlv exposed and the available anchorage is very small, with aj depth of water ranging Irom 18 to JO leet. It uconteaded, however, that in the event of crowding, vessels could be temporarily accommodated at the Port of San Juan Del Snr, 15 miles to the south. The latter port I UNDBRCLIFF PLACE. The finest location for building site in the county. LOOK: A.T THE PRICE. $100 and upwards, $10 Cash. Balance one per cent per week. That is $1 per week on the balance, WITHOUT TAXES, WITHOUT INTEREST. Tills is an opportunity you cannot afford to neglect. Everything arranged for conveniences'. Xatural Gas. Good Water; Natural Drainage. Kallroad station on the premises. Ten minutes walk to street car line. School house on the plot. r ONLY 15 MINUTES FROM CENTER OP CITY. Over 50 houses will be erected this year. ' CAWLEY PITTSBURGH COMPANY, Limited, Agents, 140 Fifth Avenue. was the distributing station for the old Nicaragua transit to Virgin Bay on Lake Nicaragua. No very difficult engineering problem is presented in the short cut across country be tween Brito and the lake. The taking out of the curves on the Eio Grande will be a trifling affair compared with the operations on the eastern section in the valley of the San Juan. v A. BITTED ETVAXET. Eivas, the ancient capital of Nicaragua, is quite close to the point at which the pro posed canal will enter the lake on the west ern side, and 'the inhabitants are confident of successfully disputing the commercial and political supremacy which Granada, Leon and Managua have asserted. Ever since the memorable days of Walker and his filibusters there has been a bitter rivalry between these cities for the honor of being the capital of Nicaragua. The canal may settle the question in an unexpected way. Few Americans have any conception'of the magnificence of Lake Nicaragua. It Fort San Carlos, Bead of the San Juan. suffers little by comparison with the great fresh water lakes of the St Lawrence. It is truly an inland sea, with the remarkable peculiarity that, while its waters are fresh, sharks and other marine fish are abundant in it Storms arise with great suddenness and frequency, and the surf is occasionally quite heavy, but there is nothing to imperil the safety of an ocean steamer. Some dredg ing will have, to be done where the canal enters on the west, and a much more con siderable amount on the San Carlos flats at the eastern end. But the transit across the lake is all plain sailing. The volcanic island of Omatepec-Medera, so called from the huge twin cones which dispute the title, is a magnificent object on the western side. The domes rise to a height of more than 5,000 feet, directly from the lake, belted with clouds, and frowning with grim grandeur. There is no other object of in terest on the eastward passage except Bolen tiniane Island, about midway between the eastern and western outlets of the canal on the lake. FORT SAN CARLOS. The difficulties of the enterprise commence when the eastern outlet is reached at Fort San Carlos. In the times of the Spanish oc cupation this was a place of some impor tance. The fortifications are dismantled, i ljgPra )f-"i-?a Greytoum Harbor. and the guns which commanded the head of the San Juan are rusting iu the abundant mud. At this point those desiring to explore the San Juan' river proceed to engage a large native canoe or bongo. These craft are mostly hollowed out of a single tree,and are of considerable size, drawing three feet of water and average.fi ve tons in burden. The after portion has a roofed cabin to screen passengers from the alternations of burning sun and drenching rain. The half naked native boatmen disdain any such protection, and at night coil up on th,e benches sleeping the slumbers of the just, undisturbed alike by the perennial thunder storms, the mosquitoes or the malarious dews of the river. Apropos of malaria, it is worth while to note that though the climate of Nicaragua is healthier than that of the Panama Isthmus, it is only relatively so. Especially is this trneofthe valley of the San Juan. Eiehty per cent of the English expedition which attempted the conquest of the country in 1760 perished from disease on the San Juan river. Of the 200 men who accompanied Lord Nelson only ten returned alive. It is idle, there fore, to disguise the fact that the mortality among the canal laborers is likely to be quite heavy, unless far more stringent sani tary precautions are adopted than in the management of the Panama enterprise. Europeans and Americans can live ib Nicaragua, as in other tropical countries, and enjoy good health, but they must ob serve the simple conditions which common sense would dictate, namely abstemiousness both in food and drink; avoidance of ex citement; cleanliness; the use of suitable CARROLL, i. la's T'S. 552B5 UailTEID. THE clothing, and the choosing of such spots for residence as are located above the mias matic level. A DANGEROUS DISEASE. The most dangerous affection in Nicara gua is the calentura, a sort of congestive chill, commonly brought on by exposure in damp clothing, or by the direct absorption of malaria poison when the system is in an exhausted condition. The habits -and oc cupation of canal diggers are necessarily such as to predispose directly to fevers of this order. Gambling, drunkenness and riotous living will fill graves in Nicaragua quite as quickly as in Panama, but scores of American families have lived in Nica raeuan towns for years' past without a solitary case of sickness. It is to be 'noted that the central and western sections are much cooler and healthier than the eastern coast. From Fort San Carlos, at the head of the San Juan river, on the lake, to the harbor of Greytown, at its mouth, is about90 miles, more or less, following the windings of the river. The canal will probably shorten the distance from 96 miles to 88, taking into ac count the cutting off of curves and rapids, and the construction of a short route at the river mouth, below the junction of the Colo rado. The San Juan flows with a deep, regular current for 24 miles, till the Toro Eapids are reached, when the banks rise hieh, and garlands of tropical creepers descend to the water's edge, giving the scenery a character istic aspect All the glorious translucency and gorgeous atmospheric effeots of tropical sunsets are developed in Niaaragua to an extent entirely beyond the power of word painting to describe. A SERIES OP RAPIDS. The Toro Eapids are the first of a system extending down the river for about 15 miles, but none of them are really formidable ob stacles to navigation by small boats, except the Machuca. All the rapids, however, will have to be passed by an artificial excavation with locks, the river being dammed up. Two miles below the Toro Eapids lie those of the Castillo, so-called from the old fort or castle which commands them. This fort is one of the most interesting historical objects in "HS" V - .. j k&r Bongo and Jfative Eut, Nicaragua. It stands on the summit of a hill with steep sides toward the river, and has an admirable location for military pur poses. Everything now is in a state of innocuous desuetude, and the luxuriant growth of creepers has softened the asperi ties of the battlements in the manner whioh artists love to look upon, while ultilitari jins regard the change as evidence of a "utility that has been survived. ' Built by the Spaniards in 1747 the fort was captured by the English expedition under Colonel Poison and Captain, after ward Lord, Nelson, in 1780. It has since remained, with a brief interruption in 1818, in the hands of the Nicaraguan Govern ment Nelson was strongly iu iavor of the seizure and occupation of the entire San Juau Valley, pointing out that it would "cut Spanish America in two." Doubtless the hero of Trafalgar had also a prescience of the value of the position, in the contin gency of a canal being constructed. One of the most interesting relics at the old cas tle is a stone sentry box, its floor indented by the feet and muskets of the sentries who tenanted it a century ago. From the old castle to the Machuca Eapids, a distance of 13 miles, there is noth ing worthy of note except the Island of Bar tola, on which the ill-fated victims of Nel son's expedition were buried. The Machuca A. Nicaragua Village. Eapids derive their name lrom Captain Diego Machuca, who explored the river in 1529. It is in this portion of the stream that the engineering difficulties will be greatest. For nearly nine miles the current rushes with great violence over a rocky bed. The steamer Orus, sent out by the Ameri can Atlantic ana Pacific Ship Canal Com pany, some 30 years ago, ascended the river to this point, but was completely wrecked on the rapids. SOME OP THE DIFFICULTIES. The mouth of the San Carlos river, a trib utary of the San Juan, is reached 13 miles below, the navigation being now easy. Next comes the mouth of the Serapiqui, near nz IflESr irff-irvfca-s i --zr3--" r S.f EESi ' r - ,' ' - " j V3.V '"v '' ,'- J. - ' ' .h. ' : ' , 140 Fifth Avenue, tftfnhiiror. .-.-. PITTSBURG DISPATCH, which an English expedition gained an in glorious and barren victory over the Nicara guan forces in 1848. Nine miles further down the mouth of the Colorado is reached, and from this paint to Greytown harbor; a distance of 14 miles, the San Juan flows over its own delta. The bed is necessarily shallow, and, as Greytown harbor is already filled up, the only solution of the difficulty is the excavation of a direct water way to the sea, through, which the entire current of the San Juan can be diverted, the side channels and the tributary streams being dammed up. It will be seen from this outline of the problem that the three main difficulties of the enterprise, and therefore its most costly features, are the passage of the rapids, the dredging, etc., at the terminal points Brito and Greytown and the cost of in ternal transit during construction. This last will necessarily be considerable. It may be added that, while Nicaragua has many sections of rare productiveness, pro visions are scarce and dear, while property is insecure and native labor unreliable. A t the same time, it is impossible for an im partial observer who has gone over the Panama and Nicaragua route to escape the conclusion that, had the Panama Canal funds already fruitlessly expended been placed at the disposal of an honest,-intelli-gentand earnest corporation in Nicaragua, a canal connecting the two oceans, between Brito and Greytown, would long since have been completed. Bolivar. TEEI STEANGE STATEMENTS Blade Unintentionally by the Omission of Marks of Punctuation. The following specimens of curious punc tuation are given by the iVtnters' Register: A man who was suddenly taken sick "hastened home while every means for his recovery were resorted to. In spite of all his efforts, he died in the triumphs of the Christian religion." "A man was killed by a railroad car running into Boston, sup posed to be deaf." A man writes: "We have decided to erect a. schoolhouse large enough to accommodate 500 scholare five stories high." On a certain railway the following luminous direction was printed: "Hereafter, when trains in the1 opposite direction are approaching each other on separate lines, conductors and engineers will be requested to bring their trains to a dead halt before the point of meeting, and be careful not to proceed till each train has passed the other." A steamboat captain ad vertising an excursion, says: "Tickets, 25 cents; children half-price to be had at the office." , A hotel was thus advertised: "This hotel will be kept by the widow of the former landlord, Mr. Brown, who died last summer on a new and improved plan." "Wanted, a saddle-horse for a lady weighing about 950 pounds." An Iowa editor says: "We have received a basket of fine grapes from our friend W., for which he will please accept our compliments, some of which are nearly two inches in diameter." "Board may be had at No. 4 Pearl street for two gentlemen with gas." Over a bridge at Athens, Ga., is the fol lowing: "Any person driving over this bridge in a pace faster than a walk, shall, if a while man, be fined S5, and if a negro re ceive 25 lashes, half the penalty to be be stowed on the informer." A newspaper contained this: "We have two school rooms sufficiently large enough to accommodate 300 pupils one above another." AVnstca Well Populated. In an article in the Forum this month Senator Stewart calls attention to the possi bility of placing a population of 200,000,000 in the Great American desert Those look like pretty large figures for the remains of what was a few decades ago regarded as an uninhabitable region. But they seem to be accepted by scientific authorities. Beautiful Engraving Free, "Will They Consent?" is a magnifi cent engraving, 19x24 inches. It is an exact copy of an original painting by Kwall, which was sold for $5,000. This elegant engraving represents a young lady standing in a beautiful room, sur rounded by all that is luxurious, near a half-open door, while the young man, her lover, is seen in an adjoining room asking the consent'of her parents for their daughter in marriage. . It must be seen to be appre ciated. This costly engraving will be eiven away free, to every, person purchasing a small box of Wax Starch. This tarch is something entirely new.and is without a doubt .the greatest starch in vention of the nineteenth century (at least everybody says so that has used it). It supersedes everything heretofore used or known to science in the laundry art. Un like any other starch, as it is made with pure white wax. It is the first and only starch in the world that makes ironing easy and restores old summer dresses and skirts to their natural whiteness, and im parts to linen a beautiful and lasting finish as when new. Try it and be convinced of the whole truth. Ask for Wax Starch and obtain this engraving free. The Wax Starch Co.-, Keokuk, Iowa. iZ EZi s5 fSSg? Jt I ;!54 zl : ij lj!- kU? v frCrf I, ti . . 7 7Q J to . M ,jj ' V- ' : 7 3 m 3J, ft Y- ' ' ' 1 - ". N ' -. J' Ji u . &s "y ITe - ' ! jC:- j? - . jo, e m ivm , '4 .' s- So . ,i3 'HSU f. ' 3S - (S ' " I ' S '" Js V "A j ; js 2 ts 's f us . Sj , - " ; J7 ' ' I " ; - r I "n W ', Jr 1 I IS "nf ' sjf 1 '6 & -J-9 gJ ! SS t j 13 -7 p V 'i J 'S 1- 5 S z S ? i 5 - 3o 5 "j -ir 5 K t.9 ry H no l pt 'fo fy oo j r ; oi tl In t. M A yaitcM S. i 1 1 J 5 I H . -r -..-. "''" A H-i-i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ith i rnTrm i rrrTh ' i ; j ; I 1 8 - ' V n iv in 73 m HI ' "J " u " ? ,fJ ,ss "' ai ' "' ' "' '" "3 "'f' "fa3 '" JW I I M I M JJJ M M...H.....i.-Hl. L. ',.- i i I i i i i n i i ri i i I i i psi 'i5?i i i i ri i i i i iTi pi a i j tit in m m ' iA" W fZit.tbTtag, fji in m . uifi m jjjLs iy ?ikk mw&sv)Uitn . Twfc i 1 1 r i ! 1 1 m f 1 1 r rr r 1 1 Mi , i ir ' 'v1 12 . . . r1i 'II t'i'fTl 1 1 It ft I W1''t:'n:TTrfl:Jft!ffiW r Ti'Mll .MM J, I I MN-I-J-1-I-1-1-H LlrH-l-frW--aj Lj., ta. .Ljia!- i - ?T.,jjr,,, v .n , " ' rs rr r - I' r SUNDAY, APRIL 7, THE SOUTHERN LAND. Bessie Bramble Discusses a Number of Interesting Topics. SWELL EQUESTRIANS IN AIKEN. Totes Are Totes, Whether in the North or in the South. T3ALJII SPKIKG IN SOUTH CAE0LINA ICOBBESPOXDENCE OP THE DISPATCH, 1 Aiken, S. O., April 2. March has gone out, and the season at this "city in the sand" is fairly at its height. The hotel is jammed, and crammed, and slopping over into adjacent houses. The Vanderbilfc Twombleys have arrived in a special car. and have taken up 'their quarters in a cottage. As followers in their wake are a number of the "four hundred." so now. with daily desertions from Florida, Aiken has a sort of boom. On itsspacious avenues the millionaires and their wives and families disport themselves in swell drags with gorgeous footmen and white-gloved drivers, Many of them are invalids, who, not finding the air of Florida conducive to strength of lung and enlivenment of spirits have come to try the warm, dry air of Aiken, which has been so elaborately written up and belauded by we may say Interested parties. Many are children who are gotten up in picturesque costumes to display the vanity and silliness of mothers, and who, under supervision of much be- frilled and white-capped nurses, play all day in the sand in garments that represent enongn money to build a cabin in the pines. Along the avenues are hundreds of horse men and horsewomen on horses of such grace of form, and gait, and swiftness, as are seldom, if ever, seen on the up-hills and down-dales and rough roads around Pitts burg. , BOR1T IN THE SADDLE. To Northern visitors this horseback rid ing has a wonderful charm. Every girl is dying to get at it immediately. The South ern people are fine riders, and it is not sur prising they should be when they begin to do it while mere babies. Little bits of girls and boys rldehere with an abandon and grace that strike the observer as wonderful. On every side are to be seen children flying along in mad cap gallops with curls floating in such a manner as almost makes the hair rise, until the everyday recurrence of races, and paper hunts, and flying cavalcades of youthful riders make it plain that ridinsr is a common accomplishment and that tear of horses is an unknown quantity. We may mention that there are many beautiful, well-trained horses here that at the close of the season are sold oheap, and that many Northern visitors buy the favorites they have learned to love and take them to their homes up beyond Bixie's line. Another notable feature on our streetsjs that every woman seems to be able to drive. Dog carts are great favorites, es are also Surreys and open carriages Aiken has only one close carriage of all sorts, in which women hold the reins. Men are growing less essential everywhere, but no where do they seem' more at a discount than here, where women from the oldest to the youngest drive, and go around as independ ent ol the' "strong hand" as though it did not exist But no old-fashioned Southern woman goes about unattended. Although slavery has gone out, the colored servancis always on hand to carry parcels, take or ders, open gates, accompany as grooms, and keep within hail for all sorts of service. COLORED HELP IN DEMAND. 4 "(The Southern woman or man wants per sonal service la uressiag, aou going aooui, and in all manner of ways where a North ern man and woman wait on themselves. We have heard a skye-blue-blooded South ern woman shriek herself hoarse for a serv ant to close a window when two steps would have enabled her to do it herself without noise or any vast exertion. Colored people are so plentiful, and labor is so cheap, that servants are to be had In -galore at wages that surprise Northern people who are ac customed to high rates at home for domestic service. Six dollars a month is about the average for a first-class girl and $10 a month for a man. A superlative cook is rewarded with the munificent sum of $10 a month. These are "found in rations of hog and hominy," as the saying goes, and go home as regularly at night to sleep in their cabins as do factory operatives or glass house workers. These cabins are in the main small, one room affairs, rouehly constructed of boards or logs and bnilt on a foundation of four logs or stumps. Windows are not common. A door and a fireplace being as a usual thing the only openings. In these small houses are reared families that are astound ing to Northern people. Fifteen and 18 children are told of. while some boast of 20 and 25. As might be supposed, there are in many cases puny, feeble specimens of humanity that are as little cared for in 1889. raining in many cases as the Hottentots or Zulus. One mother, who makes money in winter by her deft rubbing and manipu lating of invalids, said she had 15 children, but every one of them -was "aihn' all the time in some way or another." JUST LIKE THE NORTH. We asked a fairly intelligent colored man as to the fraudulent voting business, and he said that the workers on large estates and in the factories and other employments where large numbers found work had to vote the Democratic ticket or else they lost their places Moreover, when discharged they could not get work elsewhere, as to be em ployed they have to have a ticket from the last place ther worked, showing the reasons for their discharee and their claims for places. This explanation reminded us of the establishments in the North where the employes have to vote for their employers' interests or get "fired," and of the labor cards without the possession of which a man is a "scab," and can get no work in a union establishment So it will be seen that the South is not so far behind the North after all in methods of coercion, and devices and designs for keep ing the South politically solid. A man must have a living for himself and family, and the glittering generality of voting as he pleases, stands but small snow as compared with steady employment at assured wages, and voting as his employer desires. The eight box system is another device for mak ing null and void the votes of those in a position to disregard "the bosses" and vote the Republican ticket, hut like many plans for evil, it works to ultimate good since it furnishes an incentive for the independent negro to learn to read and write 83 soon as possible. After all, however, it is to be said tnatthe whites and blacks here, having always been accustomed to each other, and brought up together are naturally disposed to dwell together in amity and kindly relationship. To stir up strife and promote race antagon isms cannot fail to do harm for both. They should be left free to solve their own problem. 'A WASTE OP SYMPATHT. It would be amusing, if it were not so silly, to note the vast interest the sympa thetic affection, the molly-coddling of yie darkies by Northern. visitors. While they show not an atom of interest in the well being of the poor white schools, universi ties, money and missionaries without stint are here for the blackB, but nothing for the, whites. A black skin appeals to thesym-' atbies and the purse of the Northern rethren, while the "poor white trash" are as deeply despised by them as by the blacks. This matter of color is queer. There are thousands of good conscientious women toil ing and working and begging for the copper-colored Indians, for the black Africans, tor the yellow Asiatics, and yet the poor whites in our midst the white trash of the' South, the poor whites of the slums of all creat cities are almost if not entirelv. neglected. Women work and beg for funds to establish schools for foreigners, while the poor benighted of their dwn race are given the go-by or ignored. A convention of the Southern Episcopal brethren is to be held in Aiken some time this month. The great question before the house will be the proposed admission of col ored preachers as delegates on terms of equal rights and representation of the blacks with the whites. Some of the wise men have been trying to stave off this ques tion for a few years longer. Their argument is that only a few of the original, pro slavery, fire-eating Confederacy clergymen are yet on top, and that the matter can be held in abeyance until these rank rebels, as we might call them, die off, then the nnion of the black and white brethren in one re ligious body can be established without a split or secession or hard feeling or any thing unbecoming in the ministers of the gospel of peace. But some hot heads are anxious to precipitate and participate in a fight and they want the dark brothers of the cloth kept out at all hazards. A com mittee appointed to prepare a report and a minute upon this matter have agreed to recommend the admission of the colored brethren. A FIRE-BRAND. This, it is thought, vsill fire the souk 'of some of the brethren and upset all the smoothly-laid plans of the compromisers and those who believe in making the best of things and of submitting gracefully to the inevitable. Some of the colored minis ters rather object to the union, because they submit that the whites will rule, while others favor it because their equal status will then be defined, and their brains will B have an opportunity to display their power. One by one the roses fall, saith the poet, and one by one the barriers of prejudice and casta yield to the spirit of the age, says the tongue of progress. What is needed in South Carolina, said recently one of its State journalists, are im migration and capital from the North. Not benighted foreigners, but straight-out, native Americans of push and enterprise, who will lend their aid in developing the great re sources of the State and furnish the fund3 for the enhancement of its prosperity and for showing forth its immense possibilities. This is a frank admission, but it means, as a man bluntly put it, that Northern capital and men are wanted, if they will keep out of politics and keep their heads shut But such provisos present d 1 . " - no attraction to Northern men. Neverthe less it may be said that the most successful farmers and business men in this vicinity arejrom the North, or from Germany. A large farmer here named Powell is from Michigan, and he is kind and thoughtful enongn to know that the working of the cotton gin Eli Whitney's great invention would be of interest to Northern people so be holds over a large amount of cotton until the winter visitors are here, and then advertises the working of the cotton gin on a certain day-for their amusement and in struction. Last Saturday was a. 'gala day for the visitors to go to Powell's farm. Here were to be seen acres of peach trees in beau tiful pink bloom, and pears in snowy white blossoms. In the barn, worked by steam power, was the gin, clearing the cotton ot seeds and packing the snowy product into marketable bales. Mr. Powell gave each visitor liberal samples ot the cotton, and enough to plant any number of acres. This was a profitable and instructive goal for a beautiful drive through the nine woods and the budding luxuriance of the southern forests. Spring here has come. Long presaged by the robins, the blue-birds, the red-ueadtd woodpeckers, she has made her appearance with bursting budx and blooming flowers. The oaks look odd. Their somber autumn leaves still remain unblown away, while the pushing leaves of the new season give lovely olive tints to set off the somber browns. In the gardens the Marechal Neils show beautiful buds with the sweet sus picion of brilliant bloom. The Banicsia is ready for the opening with a million buds. The Iris in royal purple tints the hyacinths in richest bloom, the orange blossoms and "bridal wreath" are all out in loveliest pro fusion. "Sweet April time O cruel April time," as shown with us, is in the South the loveliest of months the charm of all the year. And as seeing it here and now, it is evident that the poets have been main ly inhabitants of the region where May catches the fancy and inspires the pen. April at the North is a fickIe,sobbing,blow ing month suggestive of nothing so much as house cleaning and dampness and snows and blows and chills at the South it is "Spring in all its splendor of birds and blossoms and flowers and leaves and grasses." Spring with its breath of open ing roses, the balm of flowery May, the ser enity and sweetness ot golden June. Bessie Bramble. TEET COMFORTABLE GABHENTS. Ah Sin's Clothing an Improvement on What Americana Wear. ' Chicago Herald. "A Chinaman is not pretty to look at, and his clothes do not fit him like the traditional 'paper on the wall,' but I think his attire the moat comfortable in the world," said a man yesterday morning. "To begin with," he resumed, "the Chinaman wears a soft, low-crowned, broad-brim felt hat, which is easier on the head than a stiff derby or silk hat and a greater protection to the eyes. Then his neck is dressed more comfortably than ours, too. He wears but a single band around the neck, or two at the most Have you ever counted up what we wear? Nol Well, just figure it out now. The under shirt band is one, a possible chest protector is two, a shirt band is three, a collar is four, a necktie is five, a vest collar is six, a coat collar is seven, an overcoat collar is eight, and a neck scarf sometimes mokes the total nine nine bands around the neck. What a chance for respiration! Yes, the China man's rig is more comfortable." Crime In Hieh Places. New York San. "It is a curious coincidence." said a de tective the other night, "that nearly all tenement-house murders occnr on the top floor. In 15 years' experience in this city I think I can count on my fingers all murders in tenement-houses that did not sustain my statement The most fruitful cause of crim e is poverty, and the poorest people live in the cheapest rents, which are, of course, the top floors of the big tenements." Striking a Trade. Bowery Tooth Artist Anything I con do for you, my friend? Mr. Stubbles I dunno. What d'yer ask fer that air inilkin' stool 7 Judge. lsa.,S CHOICE LOTS $100 You cannot fail to buy when you consider the price and terms, ROCK BOTTOM PRICES, Only One Way-to Go, Upward! The money you now spend foolishly -will buy you a site for a home. BUYALfflTM!? SAVE MONEY SURE TO INCREASE IN VALUE. Compare the following points as to distances: UNDERCLIFF STATION, ONLY SIX MILES From Allegheny City, on Pittsburg Western Bailroad. Wilkinsburg, 7 miles. Emuvorth, 7 miles. City Farm, 7 miles, Crafton, 7 miles. Verona, 10 miles. Homestead, 7 miles, ONLY ONE HALF THE DISTANCE TO A-LLISOlsr PARK. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. Call or send for i plans to CAWLEY CARROLL, LIMITED, With Wittmer Brick Co., 12 Federal street, Allegheny. 1 . A . 1 T TTT TT onarpsDurg iigenr. it., w. Jdiezup, yus Main streisc Pittsburg Agents: PITTSBURGH CO., T.imjjjC AET K0TES A3D COMMENTS. A rather strong and broadly handled por trait beirinc the signature "& Kilpatrick" is noted at Gillespie's. A portrait In oil of Mr. Jos. Eichbaum. by his nephew, Mr. Geo. C Eichbaum, of St Louis, is shown at Boyd's. Several very fine photogravures of works by V. A. Frotais and Edward Detallle are to bo seen in Gillespie's window. Since taking possession of his new studio on Fourth avenue, Mr. A. F. Kins has been en gaged on a number of small landscape studies. Mr. King is of the opinion that a large room is more conducive to freedom of thought as well as action, than is a cramped and crowded S Barter, tne walls of which are oppressively lose to each other. v Ax exhibition of the works of Bayre, the sculptor, wut be held about the middle of the present month at the American Art Galleries in New York. Money is being collected in France for the purpose of erecting a monu ment to bis memory in Paris, and a supple mentary subscription will be openid outhls side of tbe water to elve his American ad mirers a chance to contribute. Visitors to the Bleiman collection of paint ings noticed, even in the earlier part of the week, that many blank spaces began to appear on the walls of the gallery. These vacancies were caused by many of the pictures which were sold being removed, and their number in dicates that purchases were pretty freely made. If expensive paintings continue to be disnosad of here with the freedom which they have of late, it will soon prove unfounded the impression which has heretofore obtained that this community is unappreciative In art mat ters. It is perfectly safe to assert that our citizens have spent more money on works of art dnrincthe past six months than they have ever done before in double that time. IN Boyd's window may be seen a landscape of a very pleasing and original character, clev erly handled In the straightforward and unpre tentious style of execution which is-becoming familiar to us as the work of Mr. E. A. Poole. This picture differs in some particulars;' from tbe one last exhibited by that artist and It is, perhaps, less strong in color, but in other respects It presents tbe samo features which won for his previous work such ready favor and a quick buyer. As an artist who paints nature carefully and conscientious ly, and who. If he follows any school or style of painting, endeavors to adopt Its merits while avoiding; Its errors, Mr. Poole deserves to have his work meet with approval. MS.D.B, Walrxet shows a very artistically composed and cleverly handled picture in Mayers' window. The subject Is a scene of home life where an itinerant vender has stopped with his dog cart before the door of a low, picturesque-looking house. Behind the building the branches of a tree aro seen bending gracefully over the roof and standing In relief against the sky, while over the whole falls tbe clear light of the sun, which is near the meridian. This is one of the small canvases which Mr. Walkley is fond of turning out but it Is quite a strong and original work and will maintain its interest with many more pretentious pictures. As has been the case with the greater number of works exhibited by this artist since he has made his home in Fittsbnrg. it is one of his Holland studies, and is quite different both in character and spirit from the scenes to which we are accustomed. QUEEB THINGS IU C0TT02T BALES. Qlatcbes, False Teetb,DrIe-a-Brnc andLIv Ins; Animals Found There. Providence Journal. At the Wampanoag mill the other day the workmen in the picker room stopped a package of matches just as the bundle was disappearing into the picker. It had come out of a cotton bale the men had just opened. Had they gone into- the machine there would have been a lively blaze. Speaking of this incident, a man who has tended a picker for several years said that the things which come out of a cotton bale and evidently grow on bushes would aston ish one. One dav he heard something grind inside the picker, and stopping the machine found a silver spoon. Lizards and small snakes were common. , A set of false teeth, small coins, knives, tobacco and occasionally articles of more value have been found. These things un doubtedly get inside the bales accidentally, but there are other things which evidently get inside in accordance with a fixed pur pose, and by a strange coincidence they are found to weigh more than cotton, and not to be worth as much per pound on the market Sand, scrap iron and dirt are often found wrapped inside a cotton bale for ballast FEED GEAKrS FEEJJCH. A Translation That Is Still a Tradition ot West Point. Providence Journal. A physician of this city, who was at West Point in 1867 when Colonel Fred Grant, who has been named by President Harrison for Minister to Austria-Hungary was passing an examination for promotion, tells, a story of the young man's linguistic abilities which ought not to be told at the Court of Vienna. Major McMulIane, the instructor in French, gave Grant a French passage to translate at sight, the passage being entitled "Leopold, Due d'Autriche." The young man was to begin it and give an easy translation to the end of the pas sage. He read the French with a fair ac cent and then began the English. He halted over the title but an instant and then read off "Leopold, the duck and the ostrich." The anecdote is one of the tradi tions of West Point to this day. a a. .m. . -jSfcXjp'f .?