- t I THIRD PART. H ? conservative cuba; "i People Who Cling to the Laws and uusiuuis ui meir rureiainers. - A COSMOPOLITAN POPULATION. . The Oriental and Semi-Barbaric Marble Homes of Havana. HAP-HAZAED HOUSEKEEPING IN CUBA rcOEEISPOXDEXCB OT TEI SISFATCB.1 HAVANA, Cu ba, April 5. Any thing more uncom mon than the man ners and customs of the Cubans cannot be conceived. They are a people who never change. As their seasons are merged into one continual summer, so their ideas seem to run in a channel J to -which there is J Banana Tree, no outlet or devia tion. The laws of their forefathers have be come their laws, as they will become the laws of their children and children's chil dren. It thus transpires that an old world changelessness hangs over the rude walls and crumbling buildings of their ancient city. It is dirty, picturesque, oriental, semi-barbaric To clean or renovate would be considered a folly; to rebuild or remodel, a desecration. A number of "years ago the walls of a large publio structure, from sheer age, fell in. This structure occupied one of the most desirable blocks in the town, but it remains to-day, the same ruin it was when its tottering foundation succumbed to the ravage of time, and gave way. A cen- s' -B.Ca - WiSr& Sax anese Residences tury hence it will no doubt hide itself in creeping foliage, but it will still be theheap of stones and mortar it is at present writing. a mixed rorui.AiioN. A motley throng it is that threads its way through the narrow broken streets of the Cuban city. Spaniards, v;uDans,uninamen, Turks, Frenchmen and negroes constitute the permanent population, and,as they min gle indiscriminately together, it becomes the task of an expert to distinguish the one from the other. Only two-fifths of the pop ulation is black, but tbc fact that the negro predominates suggests itself even to the casual observer. There is a saying to the effect that "where the banana grows, men don't grow, unless they are black." This saying is forcibly recalled to the mind when one compares the Emall,dwarfish, stooped-shouldered, sunken cheeked Cuban to the huge, stalwart, splen didly developed African who is universally healthy and strong, and who basks in the scorchiner rays ot the tropical sun as a duck skims majestically over the cool surface of a placid lake. He seems born to mingle with palm, plantain and cane. Slavery has been done away with in Cuba. The negro toils with other laborers now. He is paid as are the white men who work by his side. He sends his children to sbhool, and has his sons taught a trade. He is no longer despised and beaten, but he is still regarded as little better than an ani mal, and in many instances treated in finitely worse. HAPPY AS THE DAT IS IXNG. Nevertheless he is very happy. He sings, and his song has all the religious lugubri ous characteristics of his race, but it is pa thetic and sweet, and oftimes weird and mystic It would be grotesque were it not -so melancholy. A battered guitar or banjo, or drum is his favorite accompaniment. As it is second nature for him to sing, so it is his natural bent to jlance This he does to perfection. There may be only a rnde grace to his movements, but there is an intense, not to say poetic, feeling in them. Nothing perhaps more clearly indicates the character of the Cubans than their dwelling places. These structures rather grew out ol the climate than the ingenuity of the builders. Certain it is, no architect woula care to incur the responsibility of them. They are usually one or two stoiies high, and are of an oriental pattern. Out side they resemble a huge square box, painted white, blue or yellow, across the front of which is erected a portico, sup ported by tall columns, and surmounted at the top by an iron railing, forming a sort of balcony, inasmuch as the upper doors open upon it. All the windows of the Cu ban house extend from floor to ceiling, and consist of bars of iron painted some bright color in lieu of glass, which would exclude the air and retain the heat.and is neverused. EESEMBLE JAILS. "When I awakened on the morning of my first night in Havana, I thought I was in jail and found myself actually speculating in vague way as to how I had got in, and what had been the nature of my offense. Of course I was not long in discovering my mistake, bdt it took me a good time to recon cile myself to the custom. As a rule all the floors of the dwelling houses are marble or brick, and the patio or square courtyard is indespensable No abode is found without it. Bound this square, "which stands in the center of the building, and has no roof other than the blue sky, are arranged the rooms of the fam ily. Through the front door, a wide lofty opening, heavily barred when closed, the carriage and horses of the occupants come and go. So does the milkman, who drives in his cow and milks her in full view of the drawing or bedroom as the case may be Milk cannot be kept from turning sour more than an hour, hence it is very scarce and expensive, and instead of being carted round in a wagon, is conveyed by its natural con ductor, the cow herself. It costsjnearly 40 cents a quart in American money and $1 in Spanish paper, but it is exceedingly good and free from the influence of the pump. "When the family carriage is not in use, it is rolled back out of the way under the front staircase A TEOPICAE DINING BOOM. The patio is always filled with palms, un der which is spread the breakfast tabic On either side of the wide hall are the marble paved living rooms, large, high, square and utterly devoid of ornamentation. No car pets or rugs cover the floors. No curtains grace the windows or hangings the doors. Stuffed furniture is replaced by cane, wil low and wood. In the center of each apart ment is placed two rows of chairs, facing each other back against the wall is an other. The Cuban never changes his ideas, or his furniture, and never will. As it stood a century ago it stands still and, will con tinue to Stand fhronirlinnt another decade. i mere are no chlmnevs charcoal is nsed mm y W 3L. fH HF & .jjfc Jlljiiiltoii A ife .arrntf -'--" aAh&a&Hr i" ittf iftfifflftni llTii "fV "' for cooking purposes. The stove consists of a flat slab of stone, in which are several squares hollowed out to contain the fuel. A grate is placed in the bottom of each. -A visit to the culinary department of the hotel n.titr.1. affV-Uirnt1 AfHuT. IS not likely inspire you wit the cleanliness - . . r 1 vntilrA iy rrtn? v, , nennlf. should be so careless, but it seems as natural for them to be dirty as it is for a New England housewife to be clean, TOO MANT SEBVANTS. The reason of this is in a measure ex plained bv the fact that each establishment contains a dozen or more black servants, whose manifest duty it is to attend to each nd everv department of the household. Servants thus left to their own devices can not but prove worthless. These ot Cuba sweep and clean and scrub when they have a mind to, and leave their work undone when they feel so inclined, Their mistress never interferes with them. To do so would require "exertion, and activity of any kind is foreign to ladies of this clime. It is not expected ot the Cubana to move a muscle unless she feels so disposed. She breakfasts at noon, has her hair properly rolled in curl papers, sleeps, fans herself and dines. It is only doing her justice to say that she per forms three tasks with great credit Long practice makes perfect, and one may become an adept at doing nothing very gracefully. The mid day meal in Cuba corresponds to thedijeunerin France It consists first of Spanisn olives and pineapples or oranges, after which is served in courses eggs, fish, steak, chops, potatoes, bacalao (rice), jelly and coffee Claret is the prevailing drink with meals. The coflee is strong and bears the aroma of the essence of the Arabian berry. Everyone smokes, from the ebony faced darkey, who puffs a long, black cigar, to the dreamy-eyed Cubana, who delicately inhales her scented cigarette The weed may be indulged in anywhere hotels, par lors, railway or street cars not excepted. THE SPANISH BULE is a subject of great weight in Cuba. Very little is said about it, but a great deal is felt. The Cubans are not permitted to make heir own laws or choose their own representatives or take anyypart at all in the government of the island. They must bow to Spain, the mother country, accept her de crees, obey her laws, submit to her pllfer ings (and she keeps the country in a state ot bankrupted), rob their stores to enrich her treasury, in one, piay to tne very letter tne part of the conquered to the conqueror. A Spaniard is a man of Spanish blood born in Spain. A Cuban is the son of this man born in Cuba. Very nearly related, of the same blood in fact, but cordially hating each other for all that The Spaniard is haughty, proud, egotistical, obstinate; the Cuban is weak, vain, frivolous, intriguing, but he has been courageous in the defence of his island in the past, and the land is still dear to him. He suffered himself to appear submissive to the despised Spanish yoke, but rebellion is ever uprising in his heart I think he will eventually make another fight for "CubaXibre," but" there is no donbt but that he will be many centuries olderbefore he rids himself entirely of the fetters which bind him to Spain. Lillian Spenceb. THE GREAT AFEICAN F0EEST. Enormous Extent of the Timber Region of the Dark Continent. N ew York Sun. 1 The great forest through which Stanley recently passed, which he estimated to cover 216,000 square miles, is onlv a small part of the great African forest which extends al most unhrokenly from the west coast in the Gaboon and Ogowe regions, with a width of several hundred miles, to the great lakes. This belt of timber, trending away to tbe heart of the continent in a direction a little south of east, is, perhaps, the great est forest region in the world. A part of it strikes south of the Congo at the great northern bend of that river, and the country embraced within the big curve is covered with a compact forest the towering and wide-spreading trees shutting out a large part ot the sunlight In these forests, completely shut out from the rest of the world, live hundreds of thousands of people who are almost un known to the tribes living in the savanna regions outside Scattered through the big woods within the Congo bend are little communities of Batwa dwarfs, of whose ex istence the traveller has no inkling until he suddenly comes upon them. Here also, along the Sankuru river, are the tree habi tations described by Dr. Wolf, where the natives live in huts built among the branches to escape the river floods. It was in great clearing made in these forests that Kuud and Tappenbeck discovered some of the most notable villages yet found in Afri ca;, where well-built huts with gable roofs, line both sides of a neatly kept street that stretches away for eight or nine miles. These villages are even more interesting than the street towns in the more sparsely timbered regions south of them, which were regarded as very wonderful when they were first dis covered by Wissmann. It was his account of these villages that led Bishop Taylor to choose this part of Africa as the goal he wished to reach. A TERT DIRTY WORLD. Bullions of Atoms of Dnst in a Cubic Inch of Air. London Gloue.3 Mr. John Aitken is a very ineeniouB gentleman, but some of his discoveries have a tendency to make one feel creepy. He has invented an instrument by means of which he is able to make a number of calculations of tbe most uncomfortable kind. With the aid of this apparatus he is able to count ex actly tbe particles of dnst in a sunbean. In a cubic inch of space near the ceiling of a room he found there 88,310,000 atoms of dust, and in the same space of a BnnsenJ flame 48M,uuu,utw. saucn discoveries make us dread tbe air we breathe Not long ago Mr. Aitken proved that in tbc atmosphere of a room when the gases are lit in tbe evening there are as many par ticles in each cnbic inch as there are inhab itants in Great Britain, and that in three incbes from the gases of a Bunsen 'flame the particles of dust are as numerous as the number of'people in the world. It would require more courage than is averagely pos sessed to state the quantity of dust we in hale with every breath. Antomatlc. Bartender. New York Herald.: In the prohibition States they now use an automatic bartender, with 6, 10 and 25 cent slot which set out the chosen liquor in response to the dronned-in coin. Thev are owned and shipped "loaded" by parties out-J Ua 4f.n Bint. Tk. .rA.t H.T..A1. .... I. . 1 DlUV.llCUl4.be. .A.UC HVlBk nuiliU U1U uajj- pen'to them is a month's imprisonment, which does not in the .least harm the ma chine or its liquor. JL Cuban Peasant's Hut THE PITTSBURG WHERE TIME IS MADE. interesting Facts Ahout the Nature of the Work Done at TEE ALLEGHENY 0BSEEVAT0EY. How the Astronomers Are Enabled, by "Watching the Stars, TO DETERMINE THE CORRECT TIME tWMTTEN FOB, TBI PISrATCH.1 N the top of one of the many hills that surround the Twin Cities is located an institution probably best known to the in habitants of Pitts burg and Allegheny bv its giving name to the hill on which it stands. The institu tion referred to is the Allegheny Observa tory, and although known all over the scientific world for the discoveries made by it, the average citizen's notion of the work done there is rather vague Some have an idea that every favorable day a man looks at the sun through a teles cope and a piece of smoked glass and is thus in some way enabled to set his watch and give the correct time to the public Others imagine that they who spend their time within its mysterious walls sleep all day and pass the night reveling in star clusters, comets, nebula; and other wonder ful things, which entirely remove them from ordinary mortals. An astronomer's life is not so fanciful as this, however. Iu order to better acquaint the people of Pittsburg and Allegheny t with the instru ments and work of an institution better known to the scientists of Europe than the Iron City, of which we are so proud, this article has been written. FKOJI SMALL BEGINNINGS. An institution for astronomical investiga tion was first talked of in the early part of 1859. The idea met with great favor, for subscriptions began to be paid in, and in 1860 the "Allegheny Astronomical Society" ordered of Henry Fitz a refracting telescope to be of 13 inches aperture, and about the beginning of the year 1862 the telescope was in place and in actnal use. The Civil "War stopped further progress, and after its close the corporation transferred their interest to the Western "University of Pennsylvania, on the condition that they should support the institution and endow a chair of Astron omy. The observatory building was then very small compared with its present size. In shape it may be likened to a large letter L, placed backward, with the longer line run ning north and south, and the shorter ex tending west from the southern end of it Beginning at the north, we have the divi sions of the building in succession as fol lows: Boiling shed, covering the siderostat, "dark room," bedroom and machine shop, drawing-room, assistant's room, director's room (at the angle), "computing room" or main offlce.dome and transit room. Origin ally there was nothing but the dome and the computing room. Subsequently the "time service" was established and the transit room containing the transit instrument and two clocks was added. Since then various additions have been made, the latest being the dark room, with the siderostat just north of it, used for the study of heat radi ation, particularly from the moon's surface, and for sundry other purposes. THE IXSTBUMENTS USED. The equipment of the observatory may be described under four heads: " The instruments used in the time service the transit, chronograph and time pieces. The large and small telescopes. Galvanometer, spectro-bolometerand other apparatus for special research. The library. The time service is the most important wore oi tne oDservatorv, ana does tne gener al publio the most good. Electrical signals are continually sent out to the railroads from Philadelphia to Chicago, by which their clocks are kept going exactly right, and to the cities of Pittsburg and Allegheny, for which the observatory receives compensa tion, which serves to meet the running ex penses of the institution. The instruments used in the-time service may be divided into two classes: First, the instruments actually used to keep time and distribute it, consist ing of two chronometers, a sidereal clock, a mean time clock, which gives the electrical signals; with another mean time clock to be used in case of accident to the standard mean time clock, and the necessary electric al apparatus to distribute the electrical signals; second, the instruments used to de termine how much the clocks are in error. 27te Allegheny Observatory. GETTING THE COBBECT TIME. In the transit room of the observatory is seen a telescope of four inches aperture, mounted en a heavy horizontal axis, the ends of which rest on massive stone piers. This telescope can move in but one direc tion, viz., about this horizontal axis point ing east and west, and thus it describes a circle.'in rotating, which, being .prolonged to the heavens, is the celestial meridian. Across this celestial meridian every star passes at a certain time each day, and, the time of transit, as this passage is called, being given by the American Nautical Al manac for several hundred stars, all the observer needs to do is to observe the time and thus tell whether his clock is in error or not The process may be briefly described. The telescope being set to the proper declination, the observer takes his position and watches in the telescope for the star's passage. In the field of.view are seven fine vertical lines, across which the star passes, under his finger is an electric key, which he presses as the star crosses each wire. Each time the key is pressed a mark is made on a sheet of paper in the chronograph in another room, and as the clock also makes a mark each second on the sheet, the time of transit can be gotten from a direct exami nation of the sheet It is needless to re mark that, although the astronomical clocks keep wonderfully accurate time, they vary a fraction of a second a day, and observa tions are made on almost every fair night to determine their error. The "Howard mean time clock" in the transit room is arranged to fend out the electric signals. Whenever the time is wanted a sounder is put in the circuit pass ing through the observatory, which is made to beat each second. Ten seconds at the end of each minute are omitted and a whole minute at the end of each hour, so the min ute and second beats-may be identified. THE GBEAT TELESCOPE. The large telescope of the observatory is 13 inches in aperture and about 15 feet focal length. It wasmade by Henry Fitz and afterward remodeled and greatly im proved by Alvan Clark, the maker of the 36-inch glass for the Lick Observatory. More recently it has been overhauled by Mr. J.A- Brashear, our own telescope palter; amvisnowaverygooa instrument, PITTSBTTKa, SUNDAY, though but little used on account of the small working force at the observatory. The telescope is provided with circles and a driving clock to enable it to follow the mo tion of a star. It is unfortunate that the in stitution does not receive the support neces sary to keep a force to make use of the ex cellent equipment it possesses. In the "dark room" (so called because all outside illumination may be excluded from it) is a great deal of apparatus which is en tirely unique and used for "the special re searches Prof. Langley and his assistants havelieen engaged in for a long time The work for which the Allegheny Observatory is famous all over the scientific world is an investigation of the moon's heat This problem had almost baffled investigators for a long time. Poets have always sung" about "the cold moon," and though she cer tainly sent us light it was very difficult to get indications of heat. "Large burning mirrors and lenses were employed to con centrate the heat, and delicate thermometers were used, but only very small indications of heat were gotten until Prof. Langley turned his attention to the problem. Find ing that the glass lenses used to concentrate the moon's radiation absorbed a very large part of the heat, he introduced rock-salt lenses and prisms into the apparatus. Eock salt is very difficult to get in large homo- geneous pieces, and is very inconvenient to handle, but it was the only substance suit able, and so had to, be used. THE, BOLOMETEB. Next it was necessary to geat a more del icate apparatus for measuring slight changes of temperature, so Prof. Langley invented the "bolometer," or "heat meas urer," a very small and simple instrument, which has nevertheless accomplished won ders. It consists of tnbe, at the back of which are a great number of strips of plat inum wire, through which a current of elec tricity is make to travel. It is a law that if the temperature of an electric conductor is raised, its resistance to the passage of the current is increased, and so for every vari ation in the temperature of the platinum strips, on which the moon's radiation is al lowed to fall, there is a corresponding vari ation in the strength of the electric current, and it then only remains to measure the strength of the current This is accom plishedby a very delicate instrument called the galvanometer, the instrument used here for these measures being one of the best in tbe world. The whole apparatus is so deli cate that a person's hand, held at some dis tance from the bolometer, will give a large indication of heat Investigations of this sort upon the moon, and, for comparison, upon terrestrial bodies, such as vessels filled with warm water, ice, etc., have been made for several years past, and the results are to be published in full in the fourth volume of the publications of the United States Acad emy of Sciences. The practical good to be derived from these studies is abetter knowl edge of the laws of radiation and absorption by our atmosphere, and are of great import ance to the science of meteorology. LIGHT AND COLOB. Last year an elaborate investigation was made of the relative illuminating and heat ing effects of light of different colors, and the results published in pamphlet form. In vestigations were also made as to the time it took lor an observer to notice the appear ance of a faint light and indicate the fact by pressing an electrio key. Eor a very faint light the time required was half a second, and for a moderately bright light about a quarter of a second. The library of the observatory occupies parts of several rooms, and is constantly growing by the addition of current publica tions. Complete files, extending oyer many years, are kept of the publications of ob servatories and of scientific magazines, and are very valuable. The Observatory stands in a field of about ten acres, part of which will soon be used for, the new buildings of the Western Uni versity, and the scientific sanctity of the place will some day be disturbed by tbe baseball and other sports of the -students of that worthy institution of learning, but it is to be hoped that it will bear the innovation with philosophic resignation, and will not have its sphere of usefulness in any way di minished 13. V. L. , A COAL LAND CROESUS. Peculiar Chnrncterlstica of an Immensely Elch Penntjlvanlan. Philadelphia Inqulrer. Nobody knows exactly how much Eckley Brinton Coxe is worth. The family of which he is now the recognized head owns many thousands of acres of coal lands in Luzerne and Carbon counties. Erom these they receive enormous sums in royalties, the firm of which the ex-Senator is the head being one of its principal lessees. Despite his enormous wealth, Mr. Coxa's habits are sim ple. At his home in Drifton, he wears the plainest clothing and rides oftenest on a mountain buckboard. In the. summer time he throws off coat and vest and gives his suspenders a long rest, substituting a plain leather belt therefor. He wears colored shirts with a collar attached, but scorns the use of a necktie. Gloves he couldn't be in duced to wear. He climbs to the top of his highest break ers and descends to the lowest depths of his numerous mines, coming out as black and dusky as any laborer in his employ. All this is fun for him, in his capacity of min ing engineer. When he wants some real, light amusement he generally goes to his library and revels in the poetical creations of tbe higher mathematicians. At the age of 19 he made a translation of the great German Wiesbach's mathematics, which is still used as a text book in the English and American polytechnical schools. He is a graduate ot a half dozen colleges and uni versities, and converses fluently in English, German, Erench and Italian. A SWEET SNUFF-TAKER. A Xovely Woman Who Tnkcs Vile Tobacco in Her Delicate Nostrils. New York gun. A young and well-dressed woman, who was a passenger on a Brooklyn Bridge train yesterday morning, was seen to take a pack age of snuff from her pocket and dispose of a good-sized pinch. She did it daintily, but made no attempt to conceal it, and returned the horrified stare of her fellow "passengers- with tbe calmest and most innocent face imaginable. She was not particularly pretty, but she looked intelligent and well bred." It is not sounus6al to see very old men indulge in this obsolete custom nowadays, but such a signt as this was rare indeed. She was not a foreigner, either, as was clear when she spoke to a child who accompanied her. -. Bard to Suit. Pinny Poole (chalking his cue) Did yer get that place in the downtown store, Ally? Ally Bounder Naw. Pinny Poole What's the matter? Didn't yer have references? Ally Bounder I had nine of 'em from places I've worked at in the last two years, V the 6ld bloke-w'asn't satisfied. He' wouldn't be satisfied with nothin', he .wouldn't. Bust 'em, Pinny. Puck,1 - 'Jf 5 mstkTCK APRIL 2J, 1889. EAST AND WEST. A' Tale of a Century Ago. WBITTEN FOB THE DISPATCH STZ "E"D"WAJRX EVERETT HALE, SYNOPSIBIQF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Tbe story opens In old Salem 100 years ago with an account of a slelgbrlde party and datace to which the heroine, Sarah Parrls, is es corted by Harry Curwen, who was somewhat 'of a spoiled darling. Sarah, who Is an orphan living with her uncle and aunt, determines to join a party of settlers going to Ohio. When the news becomes known Harry Curwen offers his heart and hand to Sarah, but is told that he must first show that he has been of some ser- 'vice to his country. Harry Cnrwen, after some difficulty, secures an interview with General Washington, and is accepted as a volunteer on General Knox's staff. He is sent West on business, and without knowing it passes the party with whtoh bis sweetheart was traveling. The latter is thrown into the river from a cap sized boat, and swims ashore at an Indlam camp. CHAPTER VI. And now we must turn to Mr. Harry Curwen. In the enterprise in which he found himself, pushing down the Mbnon gahela first, and then the Ohio, he had no formal commission in the United States army. He had distinctly told Washington and Knox that he was not seeking an ap pointment, and though he was entrusted with responsibilities really important, he was acting with the freedom of ft volunteer. He held a commission in Massachusetts as a lieutenant in the militia, and had higher rank as an aide to the local brigadier who directed the musters' and enrollments in the militia organization. Knox had entrusted to him this business of the pack-saddles, and had given to him des patches for General Harmar; and it re mained for the young man to make or find for himself his position when he should have reported to that officer, and had seen for himself what was known as "The Legion of the West." Knox had placed under his command a dozen or more recruits for the Second Begiment, whom he wanted to hurry forward'. And at Carlisle, in Pennsylvania, the young man had fallen in with an Aus trian gentleman, the Count Zapoly, who was going'West with a romantic idea of seeing the wilderness and joining in war at the same time if he might be so happy. The 'country, for ten years, was receiving such people from Europe stimulated by the attractive stories of Lafayette, Bochambeau, St Simon and the rest of the officers of the auxiliary contingent of the Bevolution. This particular count had thrown up his own commission in the Erench army, in disgust at some of the reforms, so called, just introduced by the ministry. Eor Harry Curwen, he was an amusing, not to say an agreeable companion. He was not above "a certain condescension" in addressing people who had not seen Europe; few natives of that continent were or are. But he was a gentleman, he was curious and intelligent, and could talk of something beside the rations and the oars. "I shall not be difficult, my friend," he said to Curwen-on, the first day. "Give me, all the days, an omlet and a little of soup, and I shall be very content" Harry was obliged to tell him that he had named the two articles of food whieh could not be -prepared in America. As for the men the crew, as Harry was always calling them, in his Salem way they were but a poor set. The Government paid but little, the probable service was hard. In these days we should have called the recruiting officer an agent of the Society for Discharged Convicts, so many gentry of doubtful reputation had he enlisted. Uncle Sam could not be a chooser. He had to take what he conld get. And Harry found himself in company with a motley set of soldiers, so called, from every country and every State, who had enlisted, some for a love of adventure, some to get away from their wives, some to escape the sheriff, and others from no motive at all which could be denned. At this moment they had not even been formed into an awkward squad. Among them was a tall, delicate looking young Virginian, to whom Harry took a fancy from the first moment when he met the sergeant who had this party in charge. He made a chance to speak to the boy, who was shy and lonely, and drew from him without difficulty his whole story. 'He' had come from a lonely home near Eort Cumber land. Years ago, when he was not more than 12 years old, in a raid of Indians across the mountains, they had carried off his sister. The boy, boylike, had even then tracked the party of marauders in the child ish hope of rescuing her. And now that he had shot up to the height which gave him the right to go about among men, he had en listed in the army in the hope, of finding her. It was clear enough to Harry, who was endowed with the preternatural wisdom of three and twenty, that the boy had no other requisite for a soldier's life than the five feet nine inches without which he could not have passed the recruiting sergeant unless, indeed, indom itable will were to be counted as a requisite. Of that the good lad had abundance. He was simple in manners very shy, as has been said and avoided as a woman might do the rough play and jokes of the reckless men arouud him. Indeed, in the lonely log cabin life of a single family, he had not learned all the English which came into the pojyglut language of the boat, and one of the many trials which the sensitive fellow had to meet from hour to hour came from his own utter inability to understand the chaff which was thrown at him, the requests which were addressed to him, or even the commands of his superiors. The bbat in which this voyage was made differed entirely from the arks of the set tlers. General Harmar, or some other offi cer in high command, had said that a barge for the use of Eort Harmar or Fort Wash ington would be needed, and six or eight good shipbuilders had been enlisted, nom inally, as "artificers," but with the under standing that they might ask for their dis charge whenever they chose, after they ar rived at the forts. These men were quite the superiors of the rest in bearing and in education. But as navigators, they had to do an extra turn of duty as the vovage went on, because half the men hardly knew the difference between one end of an par and the other. In truth the barge, so called, was much too large for any such service as was proposed at the torts. She was rather a "galley," as the language of the time had it. As the men always slept on shore, she was not an uncomfortable vessel for the enterprise they had in hand. Amidships, as the builders chose to say, a considerable space was taken (for the stores of the party, and for the all important pack saddles. Eore and aft of mis space were seats lor rowers, wno, wnu very heavy oars or sweeps, could hasten the vessel whenever the flow of the current was not considered sufficient for the purpose It was not long before the boat builders, who were all from New England ports,, and rowed a boat as well as they built itr had trained the 6oldiers, as they were called by courtesy; to handle the heavy sweeps. Harry Curwen saw that the boy Clenden in was not strong enough for this work, and managed, on one excuse or another, to call him off. Eventually he attached him to his I person, and the boy discharged the thousand ". duties of an officer's servant Curwen made a log like that which would have been used in one of the Salem Easf India voyages,and he made a pretense of keeping a journal lot the rapidity with which the boat sailed, us ing this log as the basis of his observations. This he had put into Phil Clendenin's charge, and the easy work of throwing the log, and making the notes of the rapidity of their voyage, relieved the boy from further duty. It was clear enough, whenever they stopped at night, that he was grateful for the "Yankee's" oversight, and was eager to repay it, with a sort of gentleness or good breeding which had interested Harry Irom the first. Harry always would find that his bed was made ready, that the stumps were carefully cut out or the crooked snags dragged out which would else have broken his back in his night's turnings,or branches) would have been brought by Clendenin's care, with which the bed should be made. As they sat at the fire one night, Curwen pressed the boy for old stories of frontier life In a more confiding mood than usual, the young Virginian cave some idea of the way in which he was brought up, and he told a story of what happened in his very earliest recollections One cold night they were all awakened by the barking of the dogs outside their little cabin. "I was 5 years old," said Clendenin. "I should never have thought of it again but for what followed. My father got up in his shirt, pushed open the door to see why the dogs barked, and in an instant fell back on the ground. A bullet had struck him in the breast the moment the door was opened. My W AN EABLX OHIO" mother, who was close behind, rnshedot the door and bolted it, and was only just in time I can tell you, Mr. Curwen, the bolts are strong in those cabins, and. if the cabin will stand.the door will stand. This was just what the door had been built for. "The redskins did not mean to be kept out by bolts, and, little boy as I was, I knew what they were doing when they began to hack at the door with their tomahawks. It is queer, sirfbut the thing I remember is a great bit of wood breaking out and hitting me on the head, and seeing the axe come through. Then the hole grew bigger and bigger, and more axes came through; then my. mother told me to get under the bed, which I did not do. But she stood in the corner, with father's axe, waiting till the first Indian stuck his arms through the hole, and then his head. The minute his head came in she hit him hard' with the back of the axe twice, and I can see the blood run down on the floor now, Mr. Curwen. He had got so far in that he hung, sir, in the hole, and she was soall-fired wild that she pulled him in. We had not had a chance to cry out before another of the critters poked his head in in the same way. She waited a minute longer this time, till half his body was in, and she hit him in just the same way, on the back of the head. Then there came a third, and then there came a fourth, and my mother dragged them all back and laid them out in the corner. Then the critters, outside began to guess what had happened, and no more came in at the door. They were gone so long that she nailed her bread board oyer the hole; but then she heard a noise on top of the cabin. My mother knew what it was, bnt she did not dare go near the chimney for fear of the door, so she threw her kife to me, and told me to cut open the feather bedand throw the feathers into the fire. I do not think I was in the least frightened; I was wide awake, you may be sure, and threw the feathers into the fire. And I was just in time; two of them came pitching down the great wooden chimney smothered by the smoke, and fell into the open coals. By this time my father had come to, and got on his feet. He found his gun, which she had not had time to handle, he blew out the brains of one of them, and she finished the other with the axe. My father said afterward that another man tried to get in, but he got as good as he sent, and went away howling. They tell this story all np and down the valley now, and one of these copperhead redskin blackguards said afterward, when he came into .Cumberland to trade, "Things was bad; the white squaws fought worse than the long knives." Curwen did not wonder that a boy who could tell such stories as this bad in his blood the elements of a scout or Indian hunter, and after he had heard this story be did not so much wonder that he did not succeed in impressing upon Glendenin the sentiments of humanity with regard to the redskins, which he" had brought with him from his Eastern home Which such help as the long oars and stout arms of the recruits gave, with the oc casional good luck oi heavy rains swelling the current of the river, the boat made as fast progress as anyone ought to have ex pected. Master Harry Curwen, who was eager to show the woman he loved that he had found a place in the world and was re spected by other people, thought that the boat did not go fast enough. Arid particu larly, when, by the vagaries of the current, he found himself sailing directly east when his heart was rushing west, he" quarrelled with fortune as young men will. But, what with an occasional extra glass of grog, which he took. the responsibility of serving out to the crew, and what with making the days as long as he and the sergeant dared, the boat made the shortest trip, as it proved, which had yet been made, and arrived safely at Eort Harmar. AVhen the last day came, the young man dressed himself in his uni form as on officer of the Massachusetts militia, assumed such military aspect as he could, and reported to General Harmar. To say the truth, he was a little disap- Eointed when he cameto see the fort. He ad seen Eort Pitt as he passed it, but had supposed that that was an exception to what he was to find westward. The word fort gave him associations of what he had read of Marlborough's campaigns and df Fred erick, and he was a Utile disappointed when he found that the deiences most to be relied upon were the stout wooden posts, "which, were erected "just like a pale lence," as he wrote home to one of his Salem friends; only JL iflfInfM.&L-$L 'l2ffii - with the pales ten feet high and the logs of which they were made a foot or 'two in diameter. Within, however, was a parade properly enough arranged, and, as it hap pened, a company of men were at dress parade when tne boat arrived. They, were also duly challenged by the sentry, and other military forms were gone through, as if they had been an invading army and the garrison a garrison of some thousands of men. The boy liked Harmar, who was quick and to the point, received him as a gentleman, and at once put him in the care of an officer, who found him a room in the barracks and did his best to make him feel at home. With the military business that passed between the lad and the old soldier we need not now interfere. The matter most op his heart is on ours. And we may say at once that so soon as in decency he could, he asked for a boat and was carried a little way np the Muskingum river to the landing on the opposite shore of the colony, which already had been named Marietta. The streets of the little village had been laid out by the surveyors, and there was every aspect of quite a considerable be ginning on the matter which they1 had in hand a beginning, but everywhere a be ginning. Nothing was finished; the roads were not finished, the fences were not finished, the houses were not finished. He had the "Campus Martins" pointed out to him, and with a grim smile, by the old 'Yankee who'led him up from the landing to the villaee When he was fairly on the -first street Eirst street it was already called it was easy to find General Pntnam, who was directing the whole as an old baton might direct his vassals. General Putnam knew the lad; they had met more than once at the May meetings of the Essex militia and at fall parades, and he was delighted to give his hand to the son f an old companion in arms. But when, as soon as he thought it would do, Curwen broached the subject next his heart,he had the most unsatisfactory answer. The Titcombs had not come, General Put nam did not even know that they were com ing. He had to switch off into a long side inquiry as to what Titcombs they could pos siby be, or was the young man sure that they were not Whitcombs? There were some Newbury people in the colony, but they were out with the survey ors on that particular morning. Gen- INDIAN CAMP PIBE. eral Putnam could not think who there was who could know anything about the Whit combs, as he insisted upon calling the party from the very first In short, Harry Curwen had rushed his boat with unwonted speed, had finished his business in half an tour, instead of giving it a day or two, had dressed himself in his best and come over at once to visit Sarah Parris, and it was as if he had come out in a dream on the top of a mountain when he had been expected to be in the cabin of a yacht there was no Sarah Parris here;, there were no Titcombs here; nobody knew that they were coming, and nobody believed that they would come. CHAPTER VIL SABAH PABBI3 TO nUIDAH 'WHITMAN. "I was the wettest girl you ever did see! Tifdeed, I did not know anyone could be so wet And, as we dragged ourselves along the beach and over the trunks of fallen trees, it seemed to me as though I should have done better if I were drowned. But poor little Mary was crying bitterly, and it seemed to do me good to have to keep her alive. And in a minute more I saw smoke, and I took it for granted that all was well. I never once thought that the Indians could make such good fires as the white people, though for a day or two we had been on the lookout for Shawnees." In truth, the one terror of the expedition, especially of the women of the expedition, had been that they might fall into the hands of some roving Shawnees, who would prefer tbe present plunder of such a party to any advantage, real or potential, which might belong to such treaty obligations as bound them to the Great Father at New York. The Great Father, as he then existed, was hardly three years old, and any prospect of his strength or power to redress injury did not mnch effect the average Shawnee con science. Bnt, as it happened in this case, an Sarah soon found, there was no occasion for alarm. The men of the party were away hunting, and the dirty, smoke-begrimed squaws and children who met them seemed at first as much afraid as she was. She had,native pluck enough to make the best of the situation. She dragged the cry ing child across the beach up to the fire and said to her, "You will soon be dry," as if she had built the fire herself; and then, with a cheerful smile, offered her hand frankly to the only woman of the party who rose from the ground to meet her. "She remembered at the moment that the Shaw nee squaw would not be likely to speak English, and was wondering for a moment what she should say; when the other, good naturedly enoughj but without smiling", gave a hand to the child, lifted her where she could rest upon the cottonwood log against which the fire was burning, and said, "Wet wet cold, wet Warm more by-by, bv-by warm more; cold, weU-cold, wet." Sarah was amused and surprised that the responsibility of the conversation was thus taken from her. She assented to these sim ple propositions, chiefly by repeating the words of the other, in different inflections and varied order, somewhat as she would do in saying a lesson in a Erench primer; and she adapted herself to the occasion by taking off some of her outer clothing and of that of the little girl, and proceedinsr to wring the water out from them as well as might be. In this act, sufficiently necessary, the other joined her, Sarah laughing already, and her hostess qniet and grave. "But, really, my dear Aunt," Sarah wrote to Mrs. Whitman, "from that time she and I were very good friends. I remem ber thinking that if they were going to roast me alive, it wonld be good to get dry and warm as it began. But the young woman was so good-natured in her deeds, though she was so glum iu her looks, that I was not afraid two minutes after it began." The other women looked on, quiet as three or four sphinxes might have been. But, gradually, as the three worked over petti coats and shawls and stockings, and brought them into tolerable condition, hag number one, hag number two, and hag number three took more and more interest in the process, and at last little Mary Titcomb found that she had conquered ber terrors, and was not above wondering what would come out of the broken iron pot, which formed a sort of centre piece in .the fire, and from, which clouds of steam came up iu puffs as' the women kept the fire up with driftwood, j , As the loos twilight advanced, one sad WL ATTPb W - V ; ELGES 17 TO 20. -f . ' 3 another dive into the pot, made by hag num- ber two with a long fork of cherry wood; seemed to-show that affaira were advancing" toward a solution of the girl's wonder. -Sarah made one or two efforts at conversar , tion with the younger girl, who had givear to them such welcome as they had. But any reader of these lines who, after the full ' Erench course of the "New Padua Female) Seminary," has found out.say in Normandy, how little the average French peasant un derstands of the French language, will read- . ily believe that the two young women did ' not obtain much mutual information.,.' .Whether the Shawnee women had any boat . or canoe by which oaran ana ner companion could cross to the western shore, she could, not find out Where they were going them telves she could not find out nor why they were there together on the island, with- ' no "men folks" visible. Sarah had never- r , heard that invaluable counsel, "The dumb man's borders still increase." But she was forced to fall back on the great truth hiddea in it, whether she would or no. She and ;' alary, however, naa all tne more conversa tion because the communion with the In dian girl was so unsatisfactory. Mary con suited her as to the propriety of their eat--ing, or perhaps drinking, the provision in. the pot "My dear child," said Sarah, ','ii they ask us, we had certainly better take what they will give, 'asking no questions for con science's sake" I am snre that dear Dr. Bentley would tell us that this was good sense and good Scripture. I am not so doubtful about eating, for I had but littlet dinner, as I am about what we shall eat with. But we are as well off as Adam and. Eve were" And this matter was soon tested. Has; number two announced by sundry "ughs," and more definitely by lifting the pot from, the coals, that she was satisfied with her studies of the contents. Hags number one and number three then rose from the sand where they had been crouching, and, at a call from them', three or four children ap peared, who had kept away before The three hags' and the interpreter produced such articles of table furniture as were as hand or were thought necessary. These were, first a long bit of bark which was laid on the sand of the upper part of the beach, and supported with stones that ic might not roll. To Sarah's surprise and re lief two or three little bowls of cracked earthen ware, two or three half gourds and three small wooden trenchers appeared. A trencher was given to Mary and a half gourd to Sarah, who kept it from rolling by sticks and little shells from the ground. The old pot was then set on the stones just above it A rude earthen pot appeared in the hands of hag number one, and this was set upon the bark. Then ha number two, with a long gourd from which one large slice had been cut, so that it made an excellent dipper, ladeled out the contents of the iron pot into the earthen one She uttered several grunts, probably of approval, though of this let no one speak certainly. Certain discussion in the Shawnee tongue followed, of which there is no record in any earthly archives. But it was clear enough that none of the party were dissatisfied. Sarah suspected already, what proved to be true, that the basis oi their meal would be boiled hominy. So soon as the mixture had a little cooled, hag number two practically an nounced that condition of things to the others by plunging deep with a large shovel made from an elk horn into the mass at the bottom and bringing up two or three loads of the more solid substances. As Sarah had guessed, tbe principal material waa pounded corn, and the boiling had made a tolerable hominy. But this was interspersed-with the joints of two or three squirrels which, had been added. As soon as hag number two had discovered that all wascoolenough,sheladeledoutfrom, pot No. 2 a mass of the whole compound,')1 and distributed it in the several gourds andL platters. Then, and not till then, did hagr number three prouuee; several-wooueaano.' hornr spoons of various shapes ana sizes and distribute them. Mary was beside herself " with eagerness to begin, and was relieved from a certain fear which she had had thatj she could not take the hominy in her fingers. There was no semblance on the' part of any one of waiting for a proper moment to begin. As soon as the hag filled a eourd its possessor for the moment begarr.' to empty it Poor little Mary followed an, m example so excellent she Durnea ner1 mouth a little at first, bat this experiment' ' gave her caution. "Is there no salt, dear auntie," she said after a minnte. "None, I'm afraid, this side the Kentucky licks," ' said Sarah, laughing. "We must thank God for hominy and eat it without soltr" "But here are big pepper-corns, auntie, if they only tastedjlike pepper." No, they only simulated pepper in shape They were dried berries, which had been puffed out by the hot water. In truth, they had i lost most of any flavor which they had had ,-3 in ineurying. The quirrels had been cut or torn to pieces! before they were put in the pot, and Mary had no difficulty in managing them with, her fingers, expressing to her so-called aunt her wonder as to what hermotherwould say if she saw such defiance of the decorous nW TinTiit ftf T!pt ennntv. Tfr Kppmpri . !$ however, that something more was expected at the feast than these elements provided. This something more appeared, after the various joints of the squirrels had beea selected by one and another of the party, when two of the hags, diving again in the first pot with a fork made of wood, brought out a fish which Sarah recognized as & small catfish, such as she had herself more than once cooked since they had been on the river. In a moment more another was brought forth from the same depths. There was little talk of the methods of carving. So soon as the fish were cool enough to eat a smart blow from a little hatchet divided "al each of them into two pieces, and the four J halves thus created were torn to pieces) by iJB the ready angers or tne aarsier-coioreu mem ber of the company. In the distribution, however, arah Parris and her younger 9 friend were not neglected, and large flake3 ' Ul tUG 11311 WCfC U3S111CU W bllCUl. Before the feast was all over, even the long summer twilight was over also, and it ing fire gave. Very little was said as it f went on. Whether what was said was ap probation of the cooks or severe criticism, oaraa coma not guess, so jjossiuuicss was the tone of the speakers. But when all was over, the various dishes and eourds were taken by one and another to the river and roughly washed, and then piled all together, upon driftwood, well up from the beach. "B The English-speakinc woman, if so she may be called, who had a vocabulary or perhaps 20 words ot English, then resumed her care of the two waifs who had been Ann. mnSin 4f.n all... Qh. noAlAnM lfn UUUt, UpVU HUG OUUlt.. MUK HVU.WUVU I'ltllJ H and led Sarah to a sort of fent, roughly, V tnnfTft nftvan TinflHiTn mhv atrfllrhw? nnnn IX branches of cottonwood, which our friends had not seen before, hidden as it was by a growth of willow trees. Two such tents bad been stretched together there, and, un der the shelter of that to which they were' led, Mary-and Sarah lay down not unwill;! ingly, finding that they were in the hands: of so good a friend. The friend discovered another buffalo robe, sadly worn and not of , the sweetest smell, wnicn sue inrew over, them after they lay down, still in the same nnsympathetic manner which she had shown before. "If she had been going to cat our throats," wrote Sarah to her aunt,' after wards, "she could not have been more meU; nneholv abont it Bnt for me. I wa?, so- tired that I thanked her heartily, hoping she understood a word I said, and before. you could say 'Jack lioDinson Z war asleep and so was Mary." CHAPTER VHX AT MABrETTA. The two girls slept the sleep of the right?; eons, with the advantage which the righU eons do not always have, that one of. them was but 20 years old and the -other was hardly 13. It was with a' struggle .thai Sarah roBsed'henelf. to WBKWwmeesJ lath 1 KM