- THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH PAGES' 9 TO . 1 '" SECOND PART. NYE BOOMS! G. NEW. He Writes an Open Letter to the Erince of Wales and SPEAKS OP JOHN'S GOOD POIHTS. - Handy at Poler or Politics and a Genial Night Companion. i. FEAGKAKT BAKCH IS INDIANA rvnUTTEN TOE TBI PIsrA'rCB.1 HE past week we have been gaily ricocheting to and fro over the State of Indiana. In diana is keenly alive to the great possibili ties in store for our common country. In diana .believes that good men should be at the helm and she also has in mind several of those who would he willing to attend to the helm business if urged to do so. Kokomo is the Hoosier headquarters for natural gas. Those who desire to observe this phenomenon should not forget to visit Kokomo. But if they want to see natural gas in all its glory and with lasting quali ties, they should goto to dear old smokeless Pittsburg. Twenty-one years ago an oil company bored down 900 feet or so in search of oil in what is now called the gas belt. Afrthat depth the drill broke oft, and as no one in the neighborhood was strong enouglfin the front teeth to pull it out, it has remained there ever since. The provi dential feature about it is that had the drill gone a few feet farther, gas in great quantities would have been turned loose and no one would have known what to do with It Now it is regarded as a blessing, leat that time it might have scared the people out of the county. AN INVENTIVE CENTOS. Gas was discovered by a dentist at Find lay. 0., first, I believe. He had a cistern, through the water ot which he noticedlittle Jfalural Gas Well Pride of Kokomo. bubbles percolating from time to time. This gas had a slight odor resembling the tomb of the Capulets. The doctor placed a large in verted sheet iron funnel over the cistern and to the apei he attached a pipe leading to his kitchen stove. By changing the grate a little, he was enabled to utilize this gas for cooking and heating purposes for many years before any great notice was taken of it. Being of an inventive turn of mind, he arranged a scheme by which be was enabled to light the fire in the morning without get ting out of bed. When a great man comes to Kokomo, in stead of calling out the band, they take him to the biggest gas well and touch it oft for him. So far it has worked very well, except in the case of the Honorable Daniel W. "Voorhus, who was think ing over the late war at the time the well was blown up, and he was so startled that he ran all the way to Indianapolis, it is said, surrendering to every one he met on .the way. He was heard to say as he poulticed his immortal soul with a flagon of Matt Henning's Cele brated Anodyne for Han and Beast, that he would rather fill a drunkard's grave any day than to be scared to death in a foreign strand. AK OPEN LETTEB TO NEW. "Referring to politics in Indiana, I have taken the precaution to furnish the follow ing letter of introduction to Colonel John C. "Sew, so that he will hardly have a chance to feel lonely while in London: "Kokomus, Iso., March 20, 1839. "Mr. A. E. Guelph, Boom 18, Marlborough House: "Dear Pbince This will introduce to your notice my friend, Colonel John C. New, who goes among you in a kindly spirit, representing our Government in a commercial wav. Show him thn town and introduce him to your mother. Should the ? yueeu ever piav oia sieage at eventide sue will find Colonel Kew an excellent partner, yet always keenly alive to the importance of turning a jack at the proper time. "Colonel "New is a scholarly man, yet with al, simple and unassuming in his manners. He is the most democratic Republican I ever knew. I would like to impress on vou also the importance of cultivating friendly diplomatic relations with him. He is the editor of the Indianapolis Journal, a paper whose friendship means a great deal to a rising young prince. Do not offend Colonel "New, tor he can injnre you very much if he should take a notion, especially in Indiana. Some day you are liable to be a king, in stead of the red-faced nine spot that you are at this time. "When that ""day comes, Bert, you don't want the Indianapolis Journal down on you. As King of Great Britain and Mortgagee of Ireland you should have the press on your side ere you begin to reign. If I were in your place I would, on presentation of this letter at the hands of Colonel N ew, immediately open up friendly diplomatic relations with America by sub scribing for the Journal for a year, includ ing the Sunday edition. This will do you no harm, but, on the other hand, it will show that you take an interest in us. If I could see you for a few hours I could give you some points on the policy for you to pursue on assuming the portfolio of king, which would make your reign perfectly solid with the people and give you a steady job as long as you live. PAT IN POKES AND POLITICS. "Colonel Hew can tell you a good many things about it and how to work vour home conventions and primaries in the interest of harmony. He is the greatest man for har monv you ever saw. If he cannot be har monious he asks to be excused from the game. Many years ago he playea a very good conservative game of poker, but when he became a newspaper man, he came out and took higher ground. You might pos sibly again awaken his interest in the game. I could not promise. "Colonel New was the gentleman who, many years ago, when the country was also new and iniested with bears, and rattle snakes were so plentiful that a sober man took his life in his hand, as you might say, sat up quite late in the evening playing draw poker with two of his friends and a stranger who was short oue eye. The party played a pretty stiff game up to 13 o'clock, it is stated, and the gentleman with one eye had all the stakes. At this moment Colonel "New arose, and, putting a littlfe machine -oil on the mechanism of a large, eight pound revolver which he had in his over mmvl m 4 coat, laid the toy on the table near him. Ihen tearing the wrapper from a fresh pack of cards, he said briefly, but with great warmth: 'Gentlemen, we will now proceed with a new pack. I do not wish to charge any gentleman with cheating, or to call any names, and I will not do so, but, said he, taking a pecan from his pocket and crack ing it with the butt of his revolver, 'if any gentleman should again undertake to stock the cards or monkey with the tardy, but """ai growin oi siraigms ana nusues, we will shoot out his other eye.' HANDT IN EMERGENCIES. "So yon will see that the Colonel is a cool man at a trying-time, and though preferring generally to endure a great wrong rather than to io one, he would not hesitate in case of a difference between rival powers or hot words over the relative values of crowned heads, to climb over the table and make you show your hand or go home with an italicised nose upon you. "I say all this for your sake, Mr. Guelph, for yon don't know what morning you may be called suddenly by the first assistant custodian of the reigning tools and told to jerk the scepter over a great nation. Keep friendly with the American people and do the square thing by the press. "When you are called upon to assume the throne, I honestly think it would do you no harm to run a double column ad in the the leading papers for a year or two, until you felt se cure as king, then you could gradually or der out these ads and call attention to your reign by means of announcements on the fences. "With these remarks I will close, thank ing you in advance for any courtesy shown to Colonel New. and hoping to hear from you at your earliest convenience." The letter, of which the above is a copy, has been forwarded to the New Consul Gen eral at London, and I sincerely hope may be of use in opening up more friendly rela tions with a country which certainly has had the laugh on us ever since Lord Sack ville "West was made to contribute himself to our campaign fund. INDIANA A SCENTEB. Indiana, among other distinct features, is the proud possessor of the only successful skunk ranch in the world, of which we know, at least If there are any other skunk ranches now on a paving basis I have not yet visited them. The domestication of this little rhododendron has so far been left to Mr. Joseph Lininger, near Huntington. He has a ranch there of this kind, and goes into society very little indeed I am told. Few go to see him, and his groceries are handed over the fence to him by means of a fishing pole. Skunks are most prized for their far and also their oil. The oil is not used on salad, as many suppose, "but as a remedy for croup. Skunk s oil is worth 10 cents an ounce, and the contest between a tablespoonful of it and a case of croup is said to be entirely one-sided. Mr. Lininger began with 14 of these animals. He now has several hun dred of them, and can buy any of the ad joining farms at his own price. Last summer he used to go to church at Huntington every Sunday morning, but this year the church is paying him $5 a week to pray in secret The stunk is said to possess strong affec tion for the human beinj,, but in most in stances it is not returned. The skunk re sembles the elephant in one respect, viz., because he cannot climb a tree. Mr. Lininger says this little animal does not require much food, and even that little is of the plainest kind. And yet he is an offal eater after all. A NEW r ANGLED PET. The sac which supplies the little helio trope with his all ' pervading scentiments may be easily removed, says Mr. Lininger, and then the animal is as harmless, and even more devoted than the common house cat Possibly that may lead to the general adoption of this animal as a house pet some day, and along withthe stiagless bulldog our houses will be filled with delight. Then the Pittsburg landlord who cannot let us have a house if we are injudicious enough to be parents and publicly' admit it can let his high stoop brown stone front to a poodle dog infirmary or a skunk aquarium, and thank heaven that he is not encouraging American children in our great industrial center. Here in Indiana there lives at Fairmont an honest and deserving green grocer and tradesman, whose name I did notlucceed in getting. He deserves to do well. He does not prevaricate. He does not try to mis represent Banged along the front of the store he exhibits vegetables of all kinds, fruit in season, butter and eggs. All look sweet and clean. Everything is neatly ar ranged. Hung over these articles are the price marks. Coming alone the egg coun ter you discover a shingle on which is painted with shoe blacking: "Eggs, 8 cts; good, IS cts." Noticing the large number of 8-cent eees sold during the day. we have cancelled our lecture date here and will go away on the afternoon train. ' Bill Nye. AHC1EN!T EGYPTIAN EACES. Prof. VIrchow Dispell a. Generally BelleTed Illation In Regard to These People. Prof. Virchow has recently given us in the proceedings of th Boyal Geographical Society an important memoir on the ancient races of Egypt His inquiries are of great value, as they serve to show in what appears to be a conclusive manner something con cerning the racial characters of the people who constructed the marvelous civilization of the ancient empire. He has overthrown the old view that the Egyptians in tha time of Menes were identical in race with the people of the present day. It was long sup posed by those who followed Lepsius that the southern part of the Egyptian folk, a people who evidently had a large share in the development of that civilization, were negroes of the ordinary African type. Virchow has show this not to be the case. The Nubians or Berbers are by the char acter ot their skin, the nature of their hair and the form of the skull akin to the north ern people of the Bedouin, race, and not to the Southern Africans. The Interesting part ofVirchrow's work relates to thechauge of color which comes over the Northern peo ple from a long residence -fh Southern climate. He asserts that Greeks whose grandparents were born in the North acquire the same general look as the people in the biblical land of Kush. The Egyptians of to-day appear to be closely related to the natives of Morocco and the Canary isles. Peculiarities of Wall Street. Joe Howard In if. Y. Press. Wall street is fall of pools, and the pools are full of fools, and the fools are full of law, and the law is full of cricks and cracks known only to the wary intelligence of expert students, to whom neavy retainers must be paid and liberal fees conveyed from time to time, if their services .are to be brought into play for either one side or the other. zmmwn AN IMMORAL. STAGE. Three Noted Divines Talk on the In fluence of the Theater. TALSIAQE SCOKES THE SHOW BILLS Dr. Cuyler Thinks the Drama's Fascina tion is Unwholesome. HOWARD OfiOSBY. ATTACKS THE BALLET rwEixrEN ros ran dispatch. 2 You ask me about theaters. Ihave been many times in theaters during the last ten years, but only to preach and lecture. I never was more than three times in a thea ter to witness a play, and that was when aboutl9 years of age. I am told the thea ter is mightily improved, and that now it is a very useful institution. I will not in this article make wholesale attack upon trage dians and comedians. 'There are 100 questions in regard to the theater that might bcasked, which I shall not answer now, the most of them having been an swered at some other time. Ton say that Henry Irving and Edwin Booth and Joseph Jefferson are great actors and honorable men. I believe it The question that I want to discuss is: "Are the theaters advancing in high moral tone?" There are three or four reasons for answering this question in the negative. And the first is the combined and universal testimony of all the secular newspapers of the land that are worth anything. 'There is not any secular newspaper of any power in the United States which has not within the past few years, both in the editorial and reportorial column, reprehended the styles of spectacular most frequent It is con trary to the financial interests of the secular newspapers to criticise the playhouse, be cause from it comes the largest patronage, larger than that from any other source, thousands and tens of thousands of dollars a year. When, therefore, the secular news papers of the land, contrary to their finan cial interests, severely criticise the play house for imbecile and impure drama, their testimony is to me conclusive. in the negative. On the negative side of this question I roll up all the respectable printing presses of America Another reason for answering this question in the negative is the de praved advertisements on the board fences and in the show windows from ocean to ocean. I take it lor granted that those ad vertisements are honest, and that night by night are depicted scenes there advertised!. Are those the scenes to which parents take their sons and daughters, and young men their affianced? Would -you allow in your parlor such brazen indecency enacted as is produced every night in some of the thea ters of America unless their advertisements are a libel? If the pictures are genuine the scenes are damnable. That which is wrong in a parlor is wrong on a stage. It ought to require just as much completeness of apparel to be honorable in one place as to be honorable in another. If fathers and mothers accustom their sons and daughters to such lack of robe, and then in after time the plow-share of libertinism and profligacy should fro through their own household, -they will get what they deserve. It seems as if, having obtained a surplus of sanctity during the Lenten services, right after Easter, all through the United States, the streets become a picture gallery which rival 8 the museums of Pompeii, which are kept under lock and key. Where are the mayors of the cities and the judges of the courts and the police, that they allow such things? I declare what every man and woman knows to be true. When our cities are blotched with these depraved advertise ments, is there not some reason why we should think that the theaters of this coun try are not very rapidly advancing toward millennial excellence? T. DeWitt Talmage. PERILS OF TEE PLAYHOUSE. Rev. Or, Cnjler Points Oat the Dangers of the Modern Theater. I have often been asked, "Would it be right for me to go to the theater? If not, then why not?" , Those who propound these questions are not of the dissipated and dis solute class, but clean young men and maidens too clean to be smirched by need less exposure to impure influences. That such questions are raised constantly is not surprising, for the. playhouse is increasing persistently in its demands on popular at-, tention and patronage. It fills a constantly enlarging place in the daily journals. Thea ters multiply more rapidly than churches, in some of our great cities. Theater-going increases more than church-going. The dead-walls are covered with pictorial repre sentations'of scenes and actors in full dress (or of no dress at all); and many of these axe of such disgusting indecency that they deserve suppression by the public authori ties. If the pictures be so shameless, what must the originals be? We do not affirm that every popular play is immoral, or that every performer is im pure, or that every theater-goer is on the scent for sensual excitements. But the stage is to be estimated as a totality, and the whole trend of the average American stage is hostile to heart purity. The excep tions do not alter the rule. Nor have honest attempts to bring the stage up to a high standard of moral purity been successful. AN UNSUCCESSFUL EXPEBIMENT. The experiment pnee made in Boston of so managing a theater as to exclude every indelicacy from the stage, and every notori ously improper person from the audience, ended in pecuniary failure. The Puritanic playhouse soon went into bankruptcy. The chief object of the manager is to make money, and if he can spice his evening's en tertainment with a plot that turns on a se duction, or a scene of sexual passion, or with a sagacious exposure of physical beauty, the temptation is too strong to be often resisted. You must take the average stage as it is, and not as you would like to have it It is an institution which, if you patronize, you become morally responsible for, as much as if you were to patronize a public library, or a public drinking saloon. As an institu tionHt habitually unsexes woman by parad ing her before a mixed audience in man's attire. Too often it exposes her in such a pitiable scantiness of any attire at all. that if you saw your own sister in snch a plight, you would turn away your eyes in horror. Yet you propose to pay your money (through the box office) to somebody else's sisters and daughters to violate womanly delicacy lor your entertainment. "It the daughter of Berodius" dances to please you, then you are responsible for the dance, both in its in fluence on the dancer and your own moral sense. There is no evading, before God, of your accountability for the theater if you habitually support jt A DANOEBOUS FASCINATION. Another peril of the theater arises from the fascination which it too often engenders. Like wine-drinking, it becomes an appetite. To gratify this growing passion for the play house, tens of thousands of young people squander their money and their time. Other and purer recreations become tame and in sipid. Wholesome pleasures cease to please, just as a brandy drinker ceases to be satis- 4mA wltl. nlr! wfttjki- Tt la nnf M.pa4tl.M .but stimulation, .and a very dangerous sort PITTSBT3RG, StJNDAT, APETJG T, 1889. . of stimulation, too, that you will be after, when vou become enslaved by the fascina tion of the stagey. My young friends, be assured that no sagacious employer ever chooses a clerk or accountant, or any other employe, the sooner because he is a theater-goer. No sensible man is apt to select the companion of his heart and home because she is a frequenter of a playhouse. No good woman wants her sons and daughters there. No pastor ex pects' that his youthful church members can go into that impure atmosphere without a terrible damage to their piety. I don't believe that the theater has ever up held manj souls toward heaven. I know that it has sent thousands to perdi tion. Now that I have, in a kind and can did plainness of speech, pointed out some of the inevitable perils of the playhouse, do vou feel like taking the risk? Theo. L. COTLEB. ATTACKING THE BALLET. Br. Howard Crosby Says VVomen Matt be Banished From the Stage. The difficulty thai occurs in treating of the theater arises1 from the confounding of the theoretical theater, and the actual the ater. We can readily imagine a chaste and in structive play, performed by actors of high moral character, but in fact we do not find this article. We find almost every play an attack on purity, suggestive of lascivious thought or exhibiting breaches of the mari tal relation. And we find the mass of actors and actresses to be of bad repute in this very department of sin. The few who are not are so few as to make the fact only more con spicuous. The pictures that are placed around the streets inviting the people to the theater are disgusting in their licentious semi-nudity The ballet is a disgraceful adjunct to the theater, tending to the same fostering of impurity. In short the stage of to-day is a nursery of lewdness, and the idea of moral or intellectual improvement from it is a burlesque. Prominent actors muu ..j.tBv.j, .rcu wjr ,uic UUU ouu -, mitted into .the theater-going society, are iouna living in open aauitery, ana tne tne ater people think nothing of these fearful sins. This feature of the theater is not ex ceptional. vIt is the feature of the theater everywhere to-day. Impurity is its.stamp. The olass of low houses and low characters that always cluster around a theater is a clear sign of its immoral atmosphere. A LAMENTABLE PAILUBE. The attempts to purify the theater have been lamentable failures, and the reason is that the theater must depend for its support on the patronage of the multitude, and their demand is for pabulum to the evil passions. The managers' must .yield to this demand. If the object was to do good (the object which an institution of morals would have) then this necessity would be done away, but the object is not to do good, but to make money by delighting the people. The only time the stage was pure was in Athens before Aristophanes disgraced it For half a century iEschylus, Sophocles and Euripides wrote for a pure stage, not to make money, but to educate the people. In that pure period no woman was allowed to act But when the stage became lascivi ous, then women appeared upon it, and every form 91 lewdness was propagated by this teacher of morals. The very first action toward a pure theater must be the banishment of women from the stage, and that would drive nine-tenths of the tbeater-goers from the theater, and to render the business unprofitable, pecuni arily. The theater, in my estimation, is an in curable ulcer. Howabd Cbosbt. WELL DISCIPLINED INSECTS. Ingenuity nn& G'eneraHhlp Displayed In Wars Among Ants. Ants are well-disciplined insects. Like the bees, to which they are allied, theyare industrious, but, unlike the bees, they di vide more methodically and equally the work to be done. In the case of bees some act as sentinels, some attend on the queen, others collect honey, and so on, but whether each bee is kept to the same duty through out life, or whether they are promoted from one post to another, naturalists have not yet been able to -Jell us. With ants, how ever, the workersre specially divided into several classes. The civil portion and the military sections each do their work with rfut interfering with each other in the least The militaryvants are again subdivided into officers and' rank and file, and when they march out the officers place themselves at the side of the column and not in the" ranks. In this way the officers are able to stop stragglers, and by means of commu nication one with the other to know the commands ofthe general officer all through the line. Tropical ants are even superior to Amer ican ants in their modeof warfare, and have reached a point of military perfection that is absolutely startling. Hen are obliged to depend upon varieties oi uniform to distin guish their officers, but the ants have a much more natural method of recognition. The higher the rank in the army the big ger the head of the ant the heads of some of the highest officers being bigger than the whole body of a private. It is, however, only the femaleswho do the fighting for the ants are a natidU of Amazons, and the males are of no more account in the com munity than the bridegroom at a wedding. War among ants are chiefly conducted for the pujpose of capturing slaves, and the ingenuny and generalship displayed in slave-stealing forays are truly remarkable. SWINDLING GUEEN FARMERS. A Sharp Trick Tbat is BcIng'PJayed In Backs County. PbllaaelpMa Eccord.l- Many.uususpecting farmers in Bucks and Huntingdon counties have been swindled out of hundreds of dollars recently by a clever scheme, worked by a gang of gentle manly appearing sharpers. One of the gang drives up to a farmer's house and re quests permission to store in the barn a number of pitchforks of an inferior quali ty. Permission being granted, the farmer is told tbat the forks comprise the last of a large consignment, and will be sold at very low figures in order to close a transaction. A tempting offer is then made of 60 per cent commission to the farmer upon any sales made while tie forks are temporarily in his charge, and a long agreement, most of whichis in fine print, and alleged to be only a stipulation as to commission, is in most cases then signed by the tempted tiller of the soil, who neglects to read "the paper carefully, and learns, when too late, that he has contracted to buy the worthless forks at an exorbitant figure, She Breamed It. Chicago Ledger. , He (about to ask for a kiss) I have an important question to ask you. She (playfully) I know what it is, Charlie. You want me to be your wife; I dreamed it Well, take me. He (rather taken aback) You dreamed it? She Yes. I dreamed, it last night, and I answered you as I am answering you now, and you took me in your arms and kissed me. What could Charlie do? A Mark of Intelligence. Boston Courier. 3 Jones You said that dog of yours was a good one, Smith. Smith I did. J He isn't then. He snarls at me every time I approach your door. S I said he was a remarkably intelligent uog. ? EURAL LIFE ffl CUBA. The Colored Popn.ation Slowly but Barely Gaining Supremacy IN THE PEAKL OP THE ANTILLES, Dirt and Laziness Weakening the Power of the Cuban Whites. THE TOMB OP COLUMBUS AT HAVANA rCO&BESrONSEXCE Of THX DISPATCH. AVANA, Cuba, March 6. Of Cuban rural life, little has been written. The traveler thinks he knows how itought to be, and never loses his amusement because it is not. You have heard of the wealth of the Cuban planners. Yott have seen them in New and noticed the size York and Paris, of the diamonds suspended from the ears of their wives. The reeeut dispute over the property and the will of the lale Mr. Terry, has revived social interest in the subject, and the wealth and profits of the sugar planters have been the theme of much conversation. But the first and instantan eous impression one receives from a visit to the agricultural districts, is that farming in Cuba does not pay. At least, if there is any money in it, none is ever expended In keeping up appearances, or providing the comforts and luxuries one expects to see. The rule of life is to accept what nature has provided, with no endeavor to improve or adapt it to the wants of men. The fruits ofthe garden are eaten raw, and everything that adds an atom to the cares or toils of life is dispensed with. There is not a sus picion of home or a symptom of comfort on' Cuban plantations. The farm house, with its palm leaf roof and earthen floor, is not so good or so comfortable as the dugout, which preceded the shanty and the tent upon the plains of Kansas, but it has been occupied Eavana Harbor. by generations past as it will be by genera tions to come, without a murmur or a sug gestion that existence could' be improved. It is like the towel at the country hotel, of which the traveler complained. Five hundred people had used it before him, and he was the first to complain. IDLENESS AND POVEETT. I never saw a building in process'of erec tion at any ef these places, or undergoing repairs. A tew shovels of earth are added to the roof in the rainy season, but the rapidly accumulating filth on the walls afford sufficient shelter in their direction. These houses were made .and finished cen turies ago, when the capacity of the soil the richest in all the world was first dis covered, and it has never occurred to those who have succeeded to the inheritance that they might be replaced o improved. They answer aJ well now as they did then; for the Cuban's wants are few. He is rich with a .pair bf linen trousers and a speckled shirt; rich in the sun-scorched filth that abides with him forever. But he seems happy enough. He has all he wants, all he thinks he needs,and upon his floor of earth the pigs and poultry share his food and his slumbers. This drowsiness, idleness, poverty and content has pervaded the air and possessed the people since the Spanish finished slay ing the natives, and brought negroes from Africa for the work the sun's glare and their own indolence forbade them to do. The condition is permanent changelessuess. A Cuban Bip Van Winkle would have no difficulty in recognizing the place if he should sleep, no matter how -many years. He would see the same- half naked negro slumbering peacefully in a sun that will roast beef; the same dirty Senora in the same filthy calico gown, and the same heel trodden slippers upon her stockingless feet, leaning listlessly against the same mud walls; the same, old man in the same speckled shirt, worn outside the same pan taloons, howling in a hoarse, discordant voice the virtues of the wares he is vending; the same pigs wallowing with the same naked children, and the same drowsy, per spiring crowd of loafers hanging around the corner "bodega," orgroceryin the eternal noon, ABSENTEE LANDLORDS. This is the Cuba the stranger finds in the "place ofthe beautiful thatched cottage with far reaching eaves, surrounded by brilliant plants, filled with gorgeous birds, and spicy fragrance, which has had its place in the pictured geographies ot his childhood, and the dreams that haunted sleep when he was planning his tour. He is charmed with no lovely landscapes, and his senses have been regaled with no pungent perfumes, which the poets say can be caught far out at sea. He finds there are more flowers on any woodland hill in New York than in the "Paradise of the Tropics," and more com fort in the poorest farm-house of New En gland than on the best and richest of the plantations of the "Pearl of the Antilles." Every energy the climate leaves in man or beast is concentrated and absorbed in the production of as many pounds of sugar as possible to the acre, a production which has paid to the owner who lives in Havana, Paris or New York, a profit greater than soil has ever yielded elsewhere, but at the loss of the manhood, the morals, the health. I and the happiness of those who labor here. When Hpain releases ner despotic hold upon Cuba, the negro population, as is the case in Hayti, will reach out for genuine freedom and become the owners and the rulers of the island. The manliest destiny of Cuba is to be governed by those who labor the rule civilization has followed everywhere. The Spaniard now only holds tne place Dy tne vigorous use ot an army that costs Cuba 525,000,000 a year, and by the terrors Morro Castle inspires. The Cuban is in a state of perpetual revolt in his mind; and occasionally the eternal fire of patriotism burns so fiercely that he yells "Cuba Libre!" and breaks out in insurrec tion, bpt he has not the fiber of which he roes are made, and will never resist to suc cess. THE TOMB OF COLUMBUS. -Havana claims to hold in her keeping the dust of the man who had the daring to cross an unknown sea with 70 sailors thaf believed they were in danger of getting.too near the edge of things and sliding" off. Although. he discovered a world, Colnmbus died in poverty and disgrace, as did all the Spanish explorers. Another man stole the glory and gave his name to the hemisphere; but two of the islands Columbus found are dis-k pnting the honor of possessing his bones. Historians think that' San Domingo has the best title to the honor, but in the chief cathedral of Havana, in the walls that sur; rounded the altar, and just above the Bish- fT M llhsl fa a laa.AnlAraJ ntnvhlA atak Jupou whicirir written in gilt characters' and amyy.-.- 1L'($ jJ pretentious Latin the announcement that the precious dust is in the vault below. In another part of the city, near the boat landing and the palace of the Captain General, is a miniature chapel, not more than 12 or IS feet square, which is said to be the spot where mass was first offered by Columbus after the discovery ot Cuba. The place is inclosed in a high iron railing, and the gate, which swings under & marble bust ofthe explorer, is never opened but once a year, and then on the anniversary, when mass is celebrated by the Archbishop with great eeremony. Cuba has a splendid system of railroads 1,200 miles of track, penetrating nearly all the fertile valleys and giving the sugar planters easy and cheap transportation to the sea but of wagon roads she has none. Boad-making is a lost art among the Span iards. There isn't a highway in all Cuba outside the cities that will permit the pass age bf anything wider than a mule. She has the finest harbors in the world, yet at the great port of 'Havana, the center and focus of West India navigation, there is not a quay or a dock or a pier at which a ves sel can land. All the steamers are anchored in the harbor .and every pound of freight as well as every passenger is sent aboard and ashore in small boats. i FAMOUS MOEEO CASTLE. At the entrance of the Havana harbor, guarding a narrow gateway not more than 200 yards across, stands a" massive rock, rising perpendicularly 165 feet' from the sea, against which the waters of the gulf cast their incessant spray. Upon this rock stands the famous Morro Castle, the scene of horrors as barbarous as those ofthe in quisition, and if rumor may be accepted as truth its dungeons to-day cover acts as cruel as those of Caligula. This castle is not so ancient as one of a similar name and character that guards the entrance to the harbor of Santiago de Cuba, on the south side of the island, from which Cortez sailed when he went to conquer Mexico. The Havana castle was originally built in the sixteenth century, but the En glish blew it up 100 yean ago, and made its re-erection necessary. But it is even grander and gloomier than the original struct ure, the deep crevices in the rock which were widened out by the explosions being utilized for dungeons from whch it is said no one who enters ever escapes. The castle is full of political prisoners, Cuban "patriots" as they are called, who have taken part in revolutions or have been heard to breath treasonable sentiments against the Spanish power. How nany men are confined in those damp walls no one can discover. It is tradition that those are there whose existence has even been for gotten, for the records of the prison are as mysterious as the hook of Fate. The Span ish officials claim that such records exist, 1 but l could nnd no one who ever seen them, or would venture to say where they are. Some say the books are kept in Spain, and that when a prisoner is sent to Morro Castle a record of nis crime, conviction and sen tence is forwarded to the Minister of Justice at Madrid, whose silence is "accepted as assent, and whose edict alone can open the prison doors. ' A LIVING TOMB. There are people in Havana who claim to have had friends sent to Morro Castle for al leged conspiracy or kindred crimes,of whom 'no trace has ever been discovered, either here or in Spain, and they cannot say whether the victim of Spanish tyranny are still in the dungeons, or have been released by the hand of death. All agree, however, that when one enters the castle under a military guard for whatever crime, he leaves all hope behind. Men have been re leased in rare cases, but they tell of their experience in whispers only to their nearest friends, One man who was imprisoned for treasonable talk, was a foreigner, and the oonsul of his government interceding se cured an order for his release. The com mandant and his lieutenants afterward made oathtbat the order was executed, that the man was released and was last.seen bar gaining with, a boatman to carry him across the bay to the city, but his friends never saw him again. They firmly believe he was shot before the pardon reached the castle, and that the affidavits of the officers were the rankest perjury. A long corres pondence was conducted oyer the case, but it was finally dismissed. "Visitors are shown the parade grounds where military executions take place, but no one dares -guess the number of bodies that have been taken ' from the turf and The Plaza at JfigM. cast over the castle walls into the sea. The commandant and the soldiers on guard ap pear to know nothing about the number of prisoners in their custody, or the disposition that is made of them, and have only one and an uniform answer to all inquiries on the subject. "How many men are in these dungeon?" was asked of the escort who accompanied our party. , "Dios Sabel" (God knows) was the reply. "What becomes of them?" "Dios Sabe!" "Are they ever released, or do they die here?" 'Dios Sabe!" "What becomes of their bodies in case they are shot or die?" NOTHING BUT SOLDIERS. "Dios Sabel" and this monotonous but significant echo to all questions was prob ably the solemn truth, for the officers and soldiers doinc guard dnty are often changed, and their, experience and observation of Spanish military discipline encourages them to be extremely silent about what they do know. Heaven alone holds the full knowledge of the iniquities tbat have taken Slace in Morro Castle, of the fate of the undreds of unfortunates who encountered A law directed only through the agents of a military despotism. There are more soldiers than anything else in Cuba. You cannot walk a block without meeting a man in uniform, and the crows at the cafes, and the theaters are sprinkled profusely with the curious but cool blue iinen suits the soldiers , wear. They swarm in all the pnblic places and although they receive very little pay, and often none, the most of them appear to have enough mdney to buy the' cooling drinks which taste so well in this climate. Every stranger is regarded with the utmost suspicion until his character and the object of his visit are made known. No vessel is to land a passenger until the purser pro duces a passport for every man on board, and the passport must bear the indorsement ot the Spanisli Consul at the port from which the vessel sailed. These documents are taken in charge by the police authori ties, and when one wants to leave the island he must go to the Superintendent, re cover his passport and secure a release be fore he can purchase a ticket from any of the steamboat companies. . 'Beveblt Cbtjmp. Unison Not Their Residence. Yonkers Gazette. Oircnit Eider (to wayside boy) Ah, my little man, does peace reign with you at home? Boy It often rains pieces of furniture, yes, sir. C. E. Indeedl I infer, then, that your parents do not live in unison? Boy iTo, sir. They lire in Skinner's Holler. ...4 EAST, AND WEST. , A A Tale of a Century Ago. WEHTES "TOE THE DISPATCH , ' ' BY "EITVAJaX EVEBETT XTftTiTI. CHAPTEE L SALEM OIBL3 X CBXTUET AGO. "Good-by," said Jane, ai she opened the front door. "Good-by," said Sarah, as she stood in the hall. VShall I see you to-morrow?" "Why, yes," said Jane, "I shall see yott to-morrow at Ipswich, if not before.", "Ipswich?" said Sarah, "what is Ips wich?" "I mean sleigh ride, you goose. You do not mean that you are so interested in your Cowperand your Adam Smith and your Mother stuff, that you have forgotten the Blelgh ride? Be sure yott wear your best bib and tucker. Good-by." "Good-by," said Sarah, and Jane closed the door and went on her way. Sarah re turned into the house. No. she bad sot forgotten the sleigh ride, for the simple reason that she had never heard of it. And now it seemed that all the girls in Salem knew that there was to be a sleigh ride, and she did not know. That was not very satisfactory to a girl who had a right to consider herself one of the best loved and most esteemed of the Salem girls the general favorite, who had no enemy. At the very bottom of her. heart, of course, Sarah Parris knew why she had not heard of the sleigh ride. She knew perfectly well, at the very bottom of her heart, that the young men had had a talk after the party at the Norrises, and had agreed that, if the sleighing lasted, there should be a ride to Ipswich and a dance there. This she knew "of native impulse, elemental force;" she constructed It from the law of the instrument, the moment she knew that there was to be a sleigh ride. In the same way she also knew, at the very bottom qf her heart, that Harry Curwen had saicfto the other young men, "in his off hand, dictatorial way, "I shall ask Sarah Paris, and you can ask whom you like." A SALEM DIALOGUE A Then she knew that Harry Curwen had gone to Boston the next morning with his father, and that he had taken it for granted that she would go with him, and so had not so much as taken the pains to write her a note to tell her to hold herself engaged to him. And so it was that she had the mor tification of being the only girl in Salem who was worth asking, who had not been asked to the sleighing party. All this, I say, she knew from native im- E' ulse; but it was not very satisfactory to ave to construct for herself the picture ot what was going on in the town. Least of all was it satisfactory that the news should have been given her by Jane Endicott. Sarah did not ask herself in what way she would have liked to have the news "come, but she did know that it could not have come to tier in a more disagreeable way. And at the very bottom of her heart she had a provoked feeling that it was not the first time that Harry Curwen had treated her in this off-hand and take-for-granted way. Here was nice, sweet, pretty Sarah Parris left in the lurch and yet not left in the V lurch. She must have all her things ready for a long sleigh ride, and yet she must pretend that she did not know that there was any sleigh ride. She must meet her aunt and her cousins and talk of the party or not talk ofthe party, as she thought best, while she knew at the bottom of her heart that as surely as 3 o'clock came around the next day Harry Curwen would arrive, with his elegant horses and beautiful sleigh, and would take it for granted that she would be capped and coated and ready to go with him, Now, it is perfectly true that, in a regu lation story, Sarah Parris would have ad ministered to the young man a proper re buke. She would not have made ready to go, she would not have been ready to go, and when he came with his span of horses and his sleigh, he would have been told to go about his business, and would have lost the party to Ipswich. But that was not what Sarah Parris determined, and this was not what Sarah Parris did. When, on the afternoon of Thursday, he did come around, just before 3, Sarah ran down the steps to meet him, exactly as if he had written'the note to her. She had her hands in her muff, she had her pretty fur hood upon her head, she had her heavy shawls and the rest of her wraps, and her pretty little feet were in the carpet moccasins, which were also even pretty, because every thing she had was pretty. And -Harry Curwen lifted her into the sleigh with the expression, to which she was not unaccus tomed, ot perfect satisfaction with her ap pearance. They bade good-by to the party on the steps and drove away, " They were among the first at the place of rendezvous, but the last were not two minutes behind them, and then with great shouting, cheer ing and calling back and forth, the long procession took up the line of march, if march it may be called, and swept out over the Danvers road toward Ipswich. So soon as the long line was well under way, Harry Curwen, having "made sure for the tenth time that the bearskin was well tucked in on the weather side of the lay, said to her with real feeling: "Sarah, you are good not to scold me; if ever a fellow deserved to be scolded, it is I; bnt really, my dear Sarah, it was not till I gave Brewer the order for the horses to-day that I remembered that I had not told you about the party. And I drove up to the house mortified well, mortified is no word ashamed and frightened. You know very well that there are 20 other men in this i party who would have been glad enough to j&uucJt iuu uiu, aau uow suouiu j. &aow uiafc' you had not engaged yourself to one of them?" Sarah would not laugh, as perhapshe had hoped she would; she said to him very seri ously that he would have been served quite rightly if he had not found her ready, and Lthat the thought of leaving him ia the , . . i v - lurch, as ha deserTO" had passed tirougi her mind. . , "To tell vou the truth," said she, "if X could have mortified ycru withoutmortifyinz myself I should have dona "so, and", would, have dona so- gladly. Bat. in the. first; place I wanted to dance-,'!, wanted to see the girla and wanted, to- be ire Ipswich. X did. not choose to give trp therparty because- my man. at the stable was. lata m sending; around my horses. That was the way in which, i finally put it in my mind. But. you have no right to expose me or any other girl to such mortification. Yon hive, been carelesc enough before, and somehow, in some wavy we will see that you ara rightly punished. Yon must not expect to find ma with, my muff on my hands-whenever you. choose-to whistle." Theyounz fellew deserved a great deal, worse scolding than this. And to-tell the truth, bit by bit, hehad his share thatnfghfc of scoldings much, worse than, this- Buttha foundation was thus laid fbc the whole evening; in which, he was. taught a. hundred times that h was on his good behavior, that he must repent and reform. Tha truth was that he was the spoiled child, cf Salem, everybody knew him. an4 everybody liked him; and he went and cam, as a sort of Alcibiades, doing: very much, aahe chose, and supposing that his omissions would be atoned on the ground of his general. publXo. spirit and infallible good nature. Among other good things which-he had picked out for his own had been the com panionship of Sarah Parris on any such, oc casion as this sleighing party. She was tha favorite of everybody, and well deserved to be. She was pretfjv graceful, good-natured and sufficiently well-informed In the sim ple society of Salem at that time she kos a leader as he was a leader. If Sarah. Parris and Harry Curweu determined .that thus and so should be done, in the range of things which came into the life ofthe young people of Salem, that thing was- done. This was as sure as: the rising of the sun. Naturally he conferred with her and she. with him; naturally she called him Hairy and he called her Sarah; naturally he waited for her whea the dance was over, at HUNDRED TEAKS AGO. Mrs. Pickering's or Col. Lee's, and walked home with her. He would do so without asking leave beforehand, or with asking leave, as might happen. Indeed, this illus tration was the only one he used, in tha lame attempt he made to excuse himself to Sarah as they rode together. "Why, of course you were to go with me, from the first moment we talked it orer at Madanx Endicott's. I should as soon ask Parson Bentley to come and preach next Sunday. I no more thought of asking yon to coma with me than I thought of asking you to walk home with me from my mother's." The young people of 100 years ago cer tainly knew how to enjoy themselves. Hera were more than 50 gay couples, each lad and each maid dressed and well dressed for win ter; here were more than 0 gay horses, or spans of horses, wio enjoyed tha frolic as much as those who drove them. Here was an innocent earth white with "inno nocent snow," and oyer it a heaven of un spotted and unclouded blue. The country rolls a little, just enough to vary frost. There was forest enough, and not too much, enough for the cheerful suggestion of life and strength and shelter which invariably belongs to the grave, good-natured, hospit able evergreen, while through open fields and with long afternoon shadows the merry party could scamper on. Sometimes they shouted to each other. Sometimes one sleigh party struck up a song, and the neighbors before and behind, took it up, and in a long trailing fugue it rao on the voices of half a mile of singers. More often, what Lady Delocour called propinquity did its perfect work, and the two partners said aloud to each other what they need not whisper, and talked of one or another trifle or of one another of the eternities. More easily than they could have talked were they looking into each other's faces, or were there any possibility of another listener. And so, in an hour and a half of the liveliest life which can be conceived, the gay young party, driving always north in the bright afternoon, came to the hill on which Ipswich stands, and almost for the first time the drivers drew rein a little as the horses walked up to 'Squire Beers tavern. The sun jras just setting in the unclouded west, and as one after another of the ladies was'almost lifted from the sleigh by her cavalier, the party grouped together to watch the daily wonder as the red boll sunk down behind the hills. For a moment only, and then they all rushed into the open halls of the great tavern, and welcomed the preparations which had been made for them. No one had forgotten to send word to Mr. Beers. Belles might have been forgotten, but not the entertainment for the evening. A messenger had informed him the day be- . fore that a party of the gayest and bright est and best of Salem would be there, and half Ipswich had been at work to make tha proper preparation. There was a fire of oak in every fireplace of every room. In the hall there stood great pitchers of flip, which only needed to be heated; and in the great fireplace of the corner room, which was a sort of room of entrance, were a dozen pokers at white heat, waiting to be used at the moment of arrival. As one girl after another was led in by her attendant, he took her to one or another of the tables on which' these great pitchers of sweetened cider, per haps with a little spirit, stood, and one or another laughing attendant brought the heated poker and plunged it in. No girl thought that she did anything wrong as she sipped from the hot cup which her attend- v ant poured out for her. There would ba some joking about a little ashes, more or less, which stuck, perhaps, to her red nose v or lingered on her lip; but it was a generation before the time whin anyone would have said to herthat she wm violating any law, human or divin. ashe py the ready Mldesa of tka tayera, awy ,. ,,., wucre inev wereii - 3 i 1 I k ...4ufcaa2.s