V isg "- ",i ? Ji ?f i. V - "f - .y1 THE P3TTSBUHG DISPATCH. STTNDAT, MAT 5, - 1889.- 15 t? t - CLARA BELLE'S CHAT. Kate Field Well Advertised and Burr Mcintosh a Male Beauty. KEW YORK'S LATEST CELEBRITIES. Borne Stunnin? Street Costumes Koted on the Fashionable Avenue. HYING STEEET MODELS ON PABADE C6BBESrO"DKfCE OF THE DISFATCH.l Nnv York. May 4. The ladies of in tensely fashionable interest have been for the week concerned in the Centennial do incs, and so publicly that their deeds are already in print Let me, therelore, consid er instead several ladies who are profession ally famous, being careful to choose those whose actions are not apt to be mere exploits of self-advertising. For example, how does Miss Kate Field live, move and hart her being? She makes her home in the Victoria Hotel. Her room is a parallelogram in chape, about treble its width in length. The folding bed, with its mirror panels, is stuck about with photographs, prints and cards. Bits of things decorate and c,rovrd her man tel and piano shelves. Her little eastlake groans with books, some of them written by the owner, most of them by personal friends, and nearly all breathing with marginal notes. In a. sunny window hangs a pet ca nary. A bnrnished kettle swinging in a blackened crane stands near a little tete-a-tete table spread for tea, with always a bas ket of oranges in the midst of the service, just for color. Only one other writing table in all New Tork is more hopelessly littered with letters and papers and that is Colonel Ingersoll's. Ijike the big. busy lawyer's, the letters lie open, and a hand high, with almost illegi ble memoranda penned or pinned in the corners. A VISITOR HAS TO "WONDER whether tbey are all actual. Just room enough for the lady's writing pad and el bows is forced, and when the space narrows, as it does all the time, she scolds and paws, shoves the mass back and up and the long holdered, bristling pen is sent flying across the paper. She writes away until she gets a pain in her back, an ache in her arm, or a cramp in her hand, and then climbs into her steamer chair an old weather-beaten, storm-stained, snn-blistered piece of bam boo, brought from Japan by a friend ten years ago, and which Bhe has lived in and loved, and which followed her the whole length of the Pacific coast from the peninsula of Alaska to that of Lower Cali fornia. The chair i almost human in its adjustability, to (juste its mistress, and, like her, has a variety of ups and downs. The right arm forms a shelf, on which she thumb-screws a pad, and, with an ink jng near by, she lies back and writes as vigor ously as thongh influenced by some delic iousiy revivifying tonic At her work now adays Miss Field wears a bright red satin dress, reformed after her own ideas and tonched up with frills and shells of soft lace. She has tiny feet, which she puts in the daintiest of slippers and the finest of spun silk hosiery, and which she has most coquettish way of crossing and uncrossing while she reclines, working all the time, in her cane-bottom, slumber-robed steamer chair. ' BUBB M'lXTOSH A BEAUTS'. Into the politer circle of Bohemia has come Miss Hhrriette Marshall. To properly know her we must arst Know miss iutty Cheatham, now of the Daly Theater Com oany, and formerly a burlesquer. Kitty :rcs with her mother in Gramercy Park", and manages weekly to electrify her neigh bors by the frequency andln"formality of her parlor assemblages. A Nashville girl by birth and edncation, she has all the charm of beauty and manner characteristic of that section, and more than the average degree of audacious talent At her after noons Mrs. Cheatham does the honors, and the men who call to see her and her girl friends, and hear her daughter sing, would make an ultra McAllister-registered, Mur ray Hill hostess very contemplative. These guests come from all points of the compass, and they stay, too certain of meeting some pretty Southern girls. At the last of these informals there were Colonel Jack Garnett, a kinsman of Sir Garnett "Wolseley; Mr. William Burr Mcintosh, the gifted magi cian and mind reader, fair as a daisv. and the newest of our mascnline professional beauties. Miss Sadie Fall, granddaughter of President Polk; Charles Dngan, the vel vet voiced blonde vocalist, and, above all, the famous Tennesseean, Miss Harriette Marshall, who is as nearly like a wax doll as a woman can be and still be winning. Her beauty is as delicate as a pink tulip. She has hair like corn tassels, and little brown eyes of great brilliancy. Bat she is more than beautiful. She has good com mon sense, a manner that is sincere as well &3 sweet, a fair knowledge of French and considerable ability as a musician. The im pression made on the Ministers of the Chi nese and Corean Legation a couple of sea sons ago will be recalled at the mere men. tion by "Washington people. These high dignitaries had never encountered anything like her. She was a revelation to them, and their devotion would have made a princess vain. It was made manifest in flowers of such abundance and magnificence a? only an orientalist would design. As an actual fact, the bouquets were several times so large that a double compliment was paid in sending an attendant to follow the little belle about with them. She was in demand by hostesses, and in filling her engagements appeared as an aid in two or three different houses the same day. In making these trips &uc ua uic uccuuui w me am oassaaors carriages and the first to greet her on enter ing the house of her friend was the young Chinese servant with an armfnl of flowers. Miss Marshall sails for Europe next Satur day. Of course, she is very venturesome, as shown by what I have told of her. She is likely to fetch up on the stage. A SEW CELEBBITX who gets a living thereby is Princess Martha Xngalitcbcff, who nas been reading a series of papers on the home life of Russia in par lors of Kew York. She seized upon the ephemeral Russian rage in whimsical society very adroitly. She is not unlike Christine Uilsson in face, figure and finan cial disasters. In 1886 Prince Engalitcheff, of the Russian Royal Guard, died leaving his lovely wife, a son of 18, and an estate of magnificent value. This was entrusted so bhe narrates to an agent who plunged into French lotteries and German stocks. The rockets of his canary-colored imagination went up, and staid up. In a month the widow found herself high and dry on an eminence of emptiness. Nothing was left but a couple ot castles between Moscow and the Baltic and as she couldn't eat either estates and didn't care to dispose of them 'she collected a bundle of letters and came to America to read. Xow that is a story to appeal to our mod ish leaders, eh? Herbirith and pride pre vented a public appearance, dou't you see? but she could condescend to read for an entertaining hostess at $100 per evening, or secure by courtesy a parlor and sell invita tions at $1 each, the lists ofher patrons or patronesses being levied upon. The results lave been financially good, and by degrees the Russian lady is weighting her purse and receiving flattering attentions in the shape .of entertainments; learning from American ladies the very things she had come to teach them about as to her own country. Person ally she is a beautiful creature, with a splendid presence, the carriage ot a real nrinces. sepia brown hair. Green crar eves. full round face, and what the novelists call patrician hands, which she knows well how to manage, which are never jewelled, always restfnl-and expressive, and which seem to putife, soul and re into any piano they Ltouchr .Mentally she k -gifted, bat like ail the Russians, she has a voice as rasping; to the ear as a saw in the hands of a filer. STTJNNIKO COSTUMES. Last Sunday was an absolutely perfect day. "White, cottony clouds floated tran quilly over a sky of purest blue, and the whole city was in a broad smile under the flashing yellow of the April sun. That sun meant much to New York. It meant a great day for the people. Fifth avenue never looked more gorgeous when the churches let ont their crowds at 12:30. "What a pageant it was. to be sure, and nothing to pay for it Girls all over the sidewalk, marching and counter-marching, and caught on each tack by men of every degree of elegance. There was one costume, a startler, on a slender girl, a girl whom the French would call "mince." It was of a, green as tender as young grass. It w composed of rich and soft silk, and the un derskirt was vertically and broadly striped in a rougher but not less elegant material. The girl had a poise of chin and a stateli nesa in her walk which proclaimed her of the most serene order of thoroughbreds. There is no mistaking these girls who "icnow it all." The shyness of the doubter is not in them, and is fupplanted by a con sciousness of indisputable supremity, the graceful serenity of beipg correct Another one of these was in the ecstatic stylishness of Parisian mourning, and supplied an ar tistic realization of .fright caught in the passionate embrace of Day. Upon another young woman there was a costume in tint and softness as delicate as a dove's breast and the girl's pink face suggesting rose leaves on cream, beamed divinely from under a crown of golden hair, and a love of a bonnet madeot gray gauze almost as filmy as a cobweb. Two girls who are not English hut would like to be, wore golden brown gowns with lace collars turned over to their shoulders. Flat-heeled shoes, canary-colored 'sailor hats, worn on the back of the head, and tightly-rolled green umbrellas used as walking sticks, were peculiarities that these two promenad ers seemed satisfied Vith. At 1:30 the swells began to surge homeward. At 2 the avenue was practically deserted. At i it was swarming with the canaille. This ele ment was certainly more crudely ornamental than those that had gone, yet the same sun gladdened the scene, and seemed as well pleased to shine upon the woolen gowns from Grand street as it had been when the air bloomed with the finest importations from Paris. LIVING STEEET MODELS. Two young women attracted more atten tion on Fourteenth street yesterday after noon than is usually given to anybody in that brilliant and crowded thoroughfare. Their actions were not responsible for this interest. Neither was their beauty, for one of the pair was decidedly plain as to her face, and the other would not have won a prize even at the most lenient of beauty shows. The attraction was entirely dne to their perfect forms and the startling manner in which they were clothed. They were what is known in common parlance "of medium height" Their shoulders were not too wide nor too slender. Their waists tapered exquisitely to a point that might have been encompassed bv two masouhne hands, and their rounded hips were marvels of natural perfection. Old men and young men stopped and looked after them. Fash ionably dressed ladies forsook the attrac tions of the show windows to gaze after them, and their march from Sixth avenue to Broadway was a triumph ot feminine art Theircloaklessgownsfitted likegilding on a picture frame. They did not have a wrinkle. A contortionist's tights could not have been smoother. The sleeves from the elbow to the shoulder were made of velvet and were puffed out in accordeon creases to twice the size of the natural arm. Both suits were made in the same style, differing only in the material and shade ot color. While I was standing in the door of a well-known modiste's establishment on Fifth avenue an hour later, I saw them pass again and called attention to their presence. 'They created a furore on Fourteenth street."! observed. "No wonder," replied the dressmaker. "Tnat is what they were intended to do. Those suits did not cost them accent They are being paid for to-day. I mean simply this: One of them is an artist's model. The other is employed to show off the cloaks in a Sixth avenue house. Those dresses were made for them in the latest Parisian style simply to show off their forms and attract public attention to their designers." "But how can any person know where they are made?" "Easy enough. They go into the store a dozen times during the afternoon and the proprietor takes care to have it known where the gownscame from. Then some times they come in other stores, and in the presence of customers and under pretense of giving an order, let it be known where they bought their suits. They were here yester day. It's a good scheme, but it's costly, and I think that I for one can get along withont adopting circus methods to advertise my business." Claea Belle. TO BE TE1ED THOUGH ABSENT. A Court Olortlal Llkelr to be Held on a Missing Paymaster. Washington, May 4. The Navy De partment has not yet been formally advised that Passed Assistant Paymaster Smith has been found, bnt an order was issued this morning relieving him from duty on the Essex, and ordering him to settle accounts. It has been found that the extent of his drafts on the Government was that of $1,200, which he drew upon going ashore, and a few'small checks given to officers and men, aggregating about $200. His accounts are believed to be all right Nevertheless, it appears that the officer had placed himself in an unfortunate position, and if precedents are followed, it is believed at the Department that a court martial is inevitable. A Hospitable Firm. During the Centennial observances in 3Sew York last week one of the most elab orately and tastefully decorated buildings on Broadway was that of S. Stein & Co., a firm well known to Pittsburgers. These hospitable gentlemen had seats arranged inside their immense building and comfort ably accommodated over seven hundred of their friends and customers, who viewed the entire parade from their windows, Messrs. Stein & Co. also provided an elegant luncheon for their guests, not forgetting a plentiful supply of the best wines and cigars. Bent Telret Carpets as Cheap m Ingrains. The special offering of 10,000 yards best velvet carpets at 51 per yard (sold at ?1 60 everywhere) will continue during the com ing week. Borders to match all patterns. Edward Groetzihoeb, 627 and 629 Penn avenue. Special Bargains. 300 pieces of clress ginghams, fast colors, at 8Jicents, 12 yards for $ Vt at H. J. Lynch's, 438 and 440 Market street WFSu Spring Overcoats. Fine stock ready-made overcoats at Pit cairn's, 434 "Wood street vreu Botal awnings, extra heavy, at Mamaux & Son's, 637 and 539 Penn avenue. Ten per cent discount on beaded wraps for three days only. Closing sale at Bos'en baum & Co.'s. TAKE your baby to Pearson if you want a nice cab. photo, of it There is none can equal him handling the babies. Elegast cabinet photos, any style, $1 50 per doz. Panel picture with each doz. cabi nets. Lies' Popular Gallebt, 10 and 12 Sixth st suMwy Stevtasx & Co. give, IS cabinet photos fhi a riAxna: ttriAC arm drills? DO lTdr1 mt Allegheny. Dabbs will soon hve new specimeas ex exhiMtioaJfcat will be very" attractive; h THE WOMEN OF CUBA Artistically and Plainly Pen Pictured by Lillian Spencer. NOT SUCH BEAUTIES, AFTER ALL. Her Childhood and Girlhood Brief, Then Marriage and Decay. LITTLE EOHANOB IN HUE LIFE tCOKEEBPONPrKCI 07 THX DISPATCH. Havana, April 28. The Cnbana is a petite, round, compactly built woman, and she goes about the house in flimsy, tawdry, ill-made gowns and old, worn-out satin slip pers .run down at the heels. If the thick, coarse,black mass which crowns her shapely head with disorder, rather than glory, is brushed once a week, it is receiving more at tention than is usual with, the lady of the tropics, whose time is, for the most part, spent in a rocking chair, and whose whole mind is concentrated on the best means to keep cool and get through the tedious hours of the long, hot day with as little exertion and ennui as possible. The women of a country are always ob jects of great interest and curiosity to strangers. Those of Cuba have a reputation for being beautiful. It is even said that no other civilized country produces so many generally comely. In one way this is true, in another it is not, for the average Cuban beauty, outside of Cnba, would be con sidered anything but beautiful. As the background is skillfully contrived to bring out the picture, so the tropical clime seems to have been especially designed to show to the best possible advantage the tropical beauty. She appears to have been created to lay in a rocking-chair and wield a fan lazily to and fro, with a graceful charm positively bewitching. Her thin, gauzy garments reveal to the best possible ad vantage her exquisitely moulded form, her loose, tangled black hair, the oriental splendorof her big, dark, almond-shaped eyes, which blaze, and sparkle, and glow, and soften, nnd send forth wonderful lights and never, never fade, until the very end. Her face is oval, if not rounded by a super abundance of flesh; her mouth small, full, red; her teeth little and white and very even. AIT AWFUL MAKE-UP. Her hands and feet are tiny and well shaped, but in her zeal to whiten her skin that it may afford a proper contrast to the negress or mulatto who attends her, she daubs it over with a quantity of rice pow der, until the effect in many cases is posi tively ghastly. She has another weakness which is very apparent and that is jewels of all kinds and descriptions. "With these she literally bedecks herself, winding long chains about her neck and arms, sticking brooches and pins and pearls in the meshes of her long hair, and filling her slender fingers with rings which weigh them down, and her ears with big stones which almost hide them from view. The graceful man tilla of Spain is in universal use. It is lastened also by jewels and held in place by a comb placed high on the top of the head. The Cnbana, in her rocking chair and k-se flowing, flimsy gown, wonld be considered nothing more or less than a shiftless sloven in an American Northern home, where thrift and energy and neatness prevail. But in Cuba, beneath the silvery branches of the spreading palm.where clustering orange trees glisten in the sunlight, and where the orioles flit like flashes of gold among the olive trees, there she finds her natural sur roundings, and makes perfect a tropical picture, which would be incomplete without her. There is this to be said of the Cuban lady, however. While she unmistakably takes her ease, she has in some instances a rather hard time of it To begin with, when other children are playing with their dolls, and still living in the innocent belief that the rood fairv Morgana is the best and wfewt lairy in the world, the Cnbana is a fully de- vciuucu nuuiuu. ucr suuri, ueeung cnuu- hood has almost faded from her memory, and she is brought to the sad realization of the fact that her girlhood will likewise pass her by. She is only 12 or 13, bnt she al ready knows this to be true. Her mother talks very plainly to her on the subject. In the end she is convinced that she must make hay while the sun shines, and that HER OKLT COURSE IS MARRIAGE. She is told she will grow to be old and plain very soon, but if she is provided with a good husband, it won't make any differ ence. As far as she is concerned at least So she lays aside her dolls, packs away her fairy books and bnries her childhood in the old chest of drawers which is stowed away out oi signi ana rememorance. remaps she might assert herself, if she had more a mind ot her own, or had her education been different But a girl in Cnba is only taught to em broider, to commit to memory her catechism, and be as well behaved and polite as the good sisters who have had her in charge. Having been impressed with the necessity of keeping silent "when in the presence of her elders, she would not dare speak much less give expression to an opinion. The same with her chances of observation, where is she to find them, when she is never under any circumstances permitted to leave the house, unless attended by several servants, and then veiled as in a carriage? Thus it is, La Senorita is timid, shy and apprehen sive, with no reliance or confidence, either in herself or in those by whom she is sur rounded. To doubt oneself is to doubt others too. La Senorita doubts most people. Hen, the sisters have taught her to distrust and avoid as she would the evil one, but a hus band seems to be the onlv way out of the oimcuuy, auu wuuu us bub ureaus mm ana wishes he were anything but what he is, she has come to believe that her mother is right when she says he will be a safeguard and protector. The poor child does long for a protector. The world is such a wicked place! She lives in a continual dread of it nothing could be worse. She doesn't mind being married very much, because she hasn't the slightest, idea what being married means. Any suitor her far-seeing papa and prudent mamma select satisfies her. A "dot" is not absolutely necessary in Cnba, as in France, but very few parents are found willing to give their children away without it HER TJNBOMANTIC COURTSHIP. La Senorita once engaged, is never per mitted to be alone with her prospective hus band. He must come every day and say sweet nothings after -the most approved fashion or lovers at large, but he must sav them in the presence of one or more mem bers of the family, who, onco the ceremony is over, look upon him as their lawful prey, taking up their abode in his house if it is large enough, and asking of him all, if not more, tfian -they wonld feel themselves called upon to expect from a son of their own. The mode of courtship above alluded to has alwavs been in vogue in Cuba, but the average young man does not take to the custom any more kindly than yon or I would under the same circumstances. He longs to clasp the little white hand of his inamorata in his ownand no one can blame him when they take into consideration that human nature is the same everywhere. Finally the marriage takes place, and he can hold the little white hand all day long if he has a mind to, which he hasn't, for once a husband, the average Cuban ceases to be a lover so do plenty of other men in plenty of other countries, 'but not quite so speedily-or effectually as the Cuban. La Senorita is very pretty in the early years of her wifehood, but children bless the union, and at 25 sht is faded, and -never even in the beginning is able to con trol or influence her Better half. The mother of a family at 18, she has so many cares and so little character mat sne nas perhaps -neither time nor penetration sufficient to ,note his shortcomings. She is gentle, sab- sim; hutniai, ana iooks up to neriera and master as to a superior being. She1 thinks what he thinks, says what he says and does his bidding without ques tion. She is undoubtedly oppressed, but she does not know it Of the rights of women she has no more idea than a kitten. If she were told she might go to the polls and take a vote, she would ask which pole you meant, the North Pole or the one in the South and if a vote were another name for a boat to get there. If she were put on a stand to lecture on the emancipation of women, she would say that she never before knew that they were slaves. Undoubtedly the life of the Cubana is entirely engrossed with husband and home, and this redounds to her credit She visits a little and gossips a good deal, but she never walks. It would not be in keeping with the strict code of Cuban eti quette to do so, and no one conforms more strictly to the rigid laws of society than sne. - HAPPY AFTEE A PASHIOK. At best hers must be a monotonous kind of existence. Bnt it is a happy one after a fashion! She neither thinks nor aspires, consequently, she is never cast down or dis appointed. Her one ambition is to enjoy, herself, and this is easily attained in a land where ease and pleasure prevail. She is perfectlv satisfied and sufficient unto her self. She has no flights of imagination and no falls of fancy. She is of the earth earthy! Her poetry lies in the graceful and languid repose which characterizes her. She is coquette without coquetryl I have seen big red roses that remind one of the Cuban roses, so fragrant, so alluring to the senses, that one feels instinctively like crushing out their sweetness in a long soul-stirring inhalation and then thrusting them aside and passing on. This translated into prosaic English means, I fear, that a little of the Cubana goes a long way! "Well, be this as it may, she has one great comfort, of which no one can deprive her. She will always be permitted to live ont the years of her hie in the calm enjoyment of the rock ing chair, and set forth on her journey to the other world absolved of her sins by the church and imposingly buried by her happy-go-lucky husband. A Cuban may neglect, ill-treat, betray his wife while she lives, but he will not fail to provide a liberal number of paid mourners to properly bewail -her when she dies, any more than he, will neglect to crown his devo tion by erecting a monument far beyond his means to mark her beloved and revered memory. It must be great consolation to the Cuban woman to know this! Lillian Spencer. jfig SWEDISH RAILWAYS. Some Interesting Facia About the Railroads o'f That Country. Engineering. Sweden has 6,000 miles of railway, grouped in three categories of 2,000 miles each. On the first a speed of 30 miles an hour is allowed, the cost of the line being 8,000 a mile, the rails weighing 64 pounds a yard. On the second the speed is confined to 20 miles an hour, the construction of the line being lighter, so that its cost has only been 4,000 a mile, while the road is laid with 60-pound rails. The third description of railway is exceedingly light, although of standard gauge; trains are run on it at 12 miles an hour, the rails being of 35 pounds weight, and the total cost only 2,000 a mile. Although Sweden is three times as large as England, while its population is not lasger than that of London, yet so econom ically are the railways worked that they realize 3 per eent on the outlay upon them. The designers of them have gone on the principle that the cost of a line is dependent on the speed to be run upon it and that with moderate speed a very light line is J perfectly safe. Proof of the opposite lart, namely, that heavy fast traffic cannot be run with safety over light rails, is found in the much smaller number of accidents in England than on the continent. UNLOCK! SDRAT. How the Once .Principal City of .India Has Buffered From Great Disasters. Three thousand houses were destroyed by the recent fire at Surat The damage sus tained is estimated at Bs.600.000, and 25,000 of the people are now homeless. The water supply was deficient, and the engines were defective, while the firemen, it appears, "bolted." Twenty-eight thousand rupees has been subscribed for the temporary relief of the sufferers. Surat was once the princi pal commercial city of India, but its pros perity has within the last 60 years been greatly on the wane, owing in great measure to the severity of the disasterr, both of fire and flood, to which it has been subjected. In April, 1837, 10.000 houses were burned down, and later in the same year the people suffered additional loss by the flooding of the Taptee, three-fourths of the city having, it is said, been annihilated. In 1884 the place again suffered greatly from floods. In 1881 the annual valne of its seaborne com merce was 1,043,222, while in 1884 this had fallen away to 463,236. In 1811 the popu lation numbered 260,000, and in 1881 only 109,844 In the present case the fire was greatly assisted by the custom of flooring the dwelling houses with dried grass, the houses themselves being constructed almost entirely of wood. Cnpld n's n Financier. Punxsutswney Splrlt.1 "What is love?" howls an enamored poetess. Judging from several years' care ful observation, we should say that love is that shrewd business sense which impels a w6man to adore a man in proportion to the size of his bank account, and causes the dude to fall prostrate at the feet of an heiress. With nn Ere to Symmetry. Boston Herald. 3 Mrs. D. Lane (calling) Is your servant girl a good laundress? Mrs. P. Kay Well, 'so, she doesn't wash and iron very well. But, oh, she hangs her clothes out so artistically! She Used Technical Terms. Boston Herald. J Umpire (to his wife) Ibelieve I should like some griddle cakes for supper to-night, my dear. N Umpire's wife (from the kitchen, sot long after) Batter upl Wo $10 Bonnets for Her. Clothier and furnisher.: Husband You want a bonnet and I want a pair of trousers, and I have only got $10. Wife (sobbing) You dont't suppose I can get a bonnet tor $10, do yon? From Their Standpoint. Vt. Devon Wilbyshire What's all this dayvllsh fuss about, deah boy? Mr. Savenache Hawthorne I believer these American fellahs are canonizing some old fossil that invented a pie or something. Judge. Black goods for summer wear elegant jmportea rooe patterns entirely new ae signs, exclusive styles, u1 ,l''.v' si. ih m2g? f jr-ukire. .4 '.c i- "-' t jts. -' M " . "- " r II THE HIE WOODS. A Lost Tourist's Experience In .the Wilds of Southern Florida. ' A PEEP AT CRACKER HOME LIFE. One Heck of the Wood8 Where the Girls Can Hoe Their Own. Bow. HOW THEI MANAGE TO ENJOY LIFE IWJtlT'l'jar FOR TOT PISPATCH.3 He was a long, lean, lank man, with cow hide boots and a general air ot indolence. A dejected-looking straw hat shaded his sallow and pinched features; a brownish shirt, over the shoulders of which apiece of string did duty as a trouser supporter, was noticeable because of its rustiness; faded jean pants covered his nether extremities. It was in the southern part of De Soto county, one of the most southerly inhabi table sections of Florida; the sun was set ting and the aforesaid queer looking fellow lazily plied his hoe in the sandy loam as the writer, who had lost himself in the pine woods,, sought for information as to the exact spot he occupied on the earth just then. "Can you tell me the road to the nearest village?" was the query that commenced the conversation. The disheveled man ceased his work for a moment, looked at the questioner, pondered a second and answered with great deliber ation: "The road to Arcadia, eh?" Emphatic demonstrations of assent on the part of the stranger, and gradual absorption of the idea by the one first addressed. "Wal (meditatively), it's about two looks ahead, I reckon." "Two looks? Is that one, two or three miles?" "Just about," said the countryman, gravely. "About one mile or two miles or three miles?" (with an effort). "It's one o' them three," and the indefinite gentleman proceeded to hoe in the most self-satisfied mannerlmaginable. "How long do you suppose it would take a person to walk there?" asked the desperate stranger calmly. "Eight smart o' walkin'," explained the informant with a brow indicating deep thought, and then added: "Are yelost?" "Well, not exactly lost, but I can't find the way; the road's disappeared." "Ye'd best stop over," suggested the cracker (for he was a Florida native.) ''I don't go much to town myself. Once a month does me, and then I gits bacon, and grits, ana cottee ana all tne stutt i. need." BETWEEN- TWO FIRES. The prospect was not inviting either way. To continue the journey meant probably a night in the woods or a reposeful sleep with the moccasin snakes and other crfeen'nl com panions to be found in the "hummocks" of Florida. To stay over was almost as bad. The hospitable native was the proud pos sessor ot a hut in a little clearing. It was a log hut with interstices between the logs that the builder had never found time to fill. A tumble-down clay chimney held its tot tering frame against the wall of the shanty, and threatened at every moment to topple over. A thin curl of smoke circling bver the roof lead the hungry traveler to believe preparations for supper were under way. "Have you accommodations?" ventured the man in distress. "We'll manage," was the reassuring re ply, and he lead the way to his domicile. The steps were small boards laid on inse cure blocks; a porch stretched its 5 by 8 dimensions before the front door, and a sparsely furnished interior presented itself to view. It was bare of carpet, matting and almost furniture, the unpainted pine not being even protected with a coat of paint With all due respect for the lady of tne mansion, sne was not a Dene, una wore an ornamented yellow sacque with glittering steel buttons; but the glory of the sacque was gone. Sundry grease spots loomed up prominently on it, as well as on the calico skirt that had in some mysterious manner become unfastened at one side, and looked the pennant of a vessel in distress. She had the appearance of being worried, and was engaged, when first seen, in rubbing her face with a small niece of dampenedVcloth. It is painful to remark that her dirt colored hair hung in luxuriant "tats" about her brow, while her hands were not clean, and a particular per son would have shuddered to see her man' ipulate the crooking utensils. ENGLISH AS SHE IS SPOKEN. "Would you like to squent your thirst with a glass of water?" asked this cracker, who certainly possessed the redeeming quality of hospitality. Having "squented" his thirst the stranger went into the kitchen and had an opportu nity of seeing with what a limited supply of household goods a native Floridan can do. A rickety stove held tremblingly together in one corner; an unplaned pine table, con sisting of two hoards, occupied the central position, while a chair and a three-legged stool were the articles ranged along the wall. Everything was extremely simple and when the meal was served no unneces sary turbelows and flubdubs introduced by artificial custom, were to be seem An iron fork and knife were laid at each plate and the banquet soon began. "Have some tea?" kindly inquired the host He was unaware that he was perpe trating a humorisra. The tea was pale, very pale; in fact if it had not been called tea no one would have suspected the fact, but the man and woman drank the decoction with evident delicht, and appeared, by the de pressed enthusiasm, to consider it an ambro sial liquid. Besides tea there was bacon and hominy, called in this section grits. The light sapper was soon dispatched, and in its course the host told some of his life history. He had been living there 20 years. The hut was built soon after he settled on the spot, and it has not been disturbed since. A chair and three-legged stool were all the articles of the kind he had in the world (one of us sat on a box), and his clearing provided him with food. He raised most of his vegetables, and for the other things he worked an occasional day at a more pros perous neighbors. Thus he and his wife lived year in and yar out. He gracefully admitted neither could read nor write. Both "dipped" snuff, both looked very unhealthy, and both were, as to their persons, dread fully unclean. The next mornintr. after a mVht snent on a heap of corn husks on the floor, the road to civilization was found and the good peo ple who knew no better,nor wanted to know any better, were bade good-by. v SOME FLOEIDA HTTSXLEBS, But not all the natives ot Florida are like these people. There are some bright, intelligent fellows, who have received the advantage of a limited education, who are anxious to push ahead, and who are doing it, too. For instance, there's Major . . He has an enormous nose of a bright car mine tint that swaggers down street with the Major in the most effusively jocular w.ay imaginable. This nose has the appear ance of being able to whip any two poli ticians in the county, and as it bounds along it seems to exult in its blushes, and laughs and leers and asks: "Ain't I a corker?" Well, the Major and his nose are well known characters in a certain place, and nothing pleases them better than to get into earnest discussions in which the law is laid down in the most convincing way in the world. The explanation of the politics of any nation is mere child's play for the Ma jor, who is thoroughly well posted on mat ters artistic and scientific, no matter how abstruse. The needs of each State In the Union are like an unsealed book to the Ma jor, while the markets and yellow fever are subjects of inexhaustible possibilities. "Aren't you afraid of yellow fever. Ma jor?" r I, ."Nonsense!, vNowr why should I be afraid "of yeUowfever?'', If handled iartliae and strict quarantine regulations are made than is no danger. , "Are not sporadic cases liable to occur In any sectionjof the State?" '"'So it is said, bnt as for me I don't in the least fear this spasmodic yellow fever. "Another thing," continues the Major with gratitude unexpressed but evident, "that will benefit us is the decline ot coffee. Yes, sah, coffee is going down, and it will be of great benefit to this State, for, you know, Floridians are the greatest consulters of coffee in the Union." The .Major and his nose then beamed approvingly on his auditor and departed, remarking that he wished it would rain soon, so the water wonld "percalate" his potatoes and thereby rapidly mature them, THE tyVY OAZELLE3. But the most interesting thing in South Florida is the young lady native. She is not always pretty, but she invariably is blessed with bounding health and isn't ashamed of it. Her waist is something like 38 inches, and as for tight laces she doesn't know them. She does any and all kind of work chiefly farm laboring. She can handle a plow, ride a harrow, manipu late a horse rake, and make her self generally useful. The fact that the women of some European countries per form, what is in America considered man's labor, is well known. It is not generally understood, however, that in soae of the southern portions of Florida there are farms, orange irroves and sucrar planta tions worked entirely by female labor. The gins are usually the daughters of tne farm ers themselves and are utilized for this work because there is nothing else for them to do. The domestic duties are extremely light; the sewing is limited, for the dresses are not many, and to keep the fair creatures employed their considerate fathers put them at plowing and "sich." However, this is not so formidable as it sounds. After the land is once broken up the plowing is very light, for the furrow is not much more than three inches deep and the soil is sandy and easily separated. PLOEIDA ETJK. These young women have not on the whole, such an unlovely existence, They have parties, dances and various entertain ments, and the fact of their turning the fur row does not prevent the swains from pay ing gallant attention to them.. Candy putt ings and "fish-frys" are two popular forms of entertainment Instead of the idiotic small talk and senseless drivel to be heard in more refined and pretentious circles in the North, the bouncing damsels gravely discuss the crops, and "Say, Liza Jane, how's your corn?" is not an Infrequent in troduction to a delightful tete-a-tete between young man and maiden. These young women dress in calico, 'wear brogans in summer, boots in winter, and a smile all the year around. They are not a bit bashful, and thaw out, after an introduction to a total stranger, quite rapidly; "Yes, I do the hoin' and Mary does the plowin'," explained one confiding female. ''That's list because we've got in the way. I 'low I kin do the hoin' better and Mary, she 'lows she kin plow besK Yes, the crops is splendid. We'll have no end o' grey, big watermelons and ef the cows don't steal 'em out we'll have a nice lot" When it comes to horseback riding you buuuiu see mem. J.uer pruuuuiy uuvc ucver seen a female saddle in their lives, but when thev plump on a man's saddle, throw one limb (the right) over the high pommel, the leit in the strap above tho stirrup, ana go careering through the thin pine woods, nothing can shake them off. L HE 0NLI BHATED STRANGEBS. A Traveling Man Has n Roach Experience In a Country Barber tihop, Chicago Herald, j These commercial travelers sometimes encounter ludicrous experiences while go ing through the country. One of them, who was in the habit ot shaving himself while on the road, forgot his razor when he went on his last trip, and he was conse quently obliged to patronize the gay and festive tonsorial parlors in the small towns of Michigan. Everything went smoothly until he struck Boots, a small town which is not on any map. This Boots, by the way, is an Indian name, its' origin being Che roots, the title of an Indian tribe which used to hang out in the vicinity. The name had been abbreviated and modernized into the plebeian name it now hold Boots. The drummer in search of a shave strolled into a shop in this amateur town one morn ing. A small boy appeared to be the only attendant on deck. The traveling man took a seat in the chair, the boy lathered him thoroughly, after which he made just one Eass at his countenance. That was enough, owever. "I guess you have not 'shaved many people, have you?" asked the drum mer, in an innocent and artless way, and with a winning smile, the boy answered: "No, de boss only lets me shave strangers." The drummer took the razor, stood in front of the glass,, shaved himself and gave the boy a dime. Then he walked out, remark ing: "I'm not sorry I spoke." Troth Crnabed to Earth. Ilme.l Mistress Has any one called, James? Servant One lady, mnm. Mistress Did she ask for me? Servant She mentioned yer name and de scribed ye as about 40. I said it wasn't you, mum. Mistress Quite right Here's a quarter, James. Servant Thank ye, mum. I said ye was oyer 60, mum. Mistress James! Take a month's notice! A BOON t0 Housewlm. Ha firmer and working man who Iuts been ont in the mud aU day can wash, their boots deanbefars raterinstaobouso.Thejwfllbe Soft, Polished AUU Wrjf U UTC&BUUWJUl M Blacking Xfakes hoaaelceepffig easier. Saves Sweeping and Scrubbing. Its boots win wear a great deal longer, will not gst stiff and hard in snow water or rain, and wffl bo WATERPROOF. ladies, bj It. and insist that ronrhssband and eons use it Ones a week for Gents' Shoes and once a month for Ladies. Uneqoaledass Harness DresslnBsndPreserrer Sold by Shoe Stores, Grocers, Druggists, 4c. WOLFF & RANDOLPH. Philadelphia xwfso. DESKS, A SPECIALTY. The Most Complete Stock in the city. BED BOCK PRICES. We also manufacture this wonderful combination Easy dialr. STEVENS CHAIR CO. So. 3 81XTH ST, ujaiwu .PITTSBUBG, PA J IrVolff'sAO Jf ft H&nSxLifn "HFBfflni A REMARKABLE STATEMENT. Mrs. Dunlap's Strange Story Snatched From a Fate Worse Than Death by Dr. Smith, the Mag netics Physi ' oian, AT" 502 PENN AVENUE. Mrs. Robert Dnnlap, who resides at Mount Pleasant, Fa,, has been a gTeat snffercr for the past sfx years. Upward ot six years ago she began to suffer from" constipation, which was accompanied by pain in the small of the back, which extended to the head and eyes. She complained of a pain in the eyeballs which was aggravated by moving the eyes. When ever she was obliged to be on her feet for any length of time she was tormented with a drag ging sensation through her hips and most dis tressing pain la the lower part of the bowels. Sfx months from the beginning of her suffer ings she began to be annoyed with piles. At each movement of the bowels pile tumors came down which had to be replaced. As the months and years went by her sufferings increased un til" Ufa became a burden to her. She had ex hausted the skill of several physicians and had become thoroughly discouraged. She suffered severely from hemorrhage of the bowels, which was almost a dally occurrence. Mrs. Dunlap be came extremely nervous, and the dread and fear of the suffering that she knew she must pass through daily constantly haunted her. Added to the terrible suffering produced by the piles was Ithe torture caused by displace ment of the womb, which doubly increased her agony; she had great pain on top, throneh the fore part of the head, attended by a bearing down sensation, with pain through the limbs and bacx, accompanied by a general lassitude or weakness. About six weeks ago she saw a notice fn one of the daily papers of the re markable cures that are being made by Dr. Smith, the magnetic physician at 02 Penn ave nue, and decided to consnlt him. She did so and becan treatment at once, and to-dav Mrs. L Dnnlap Is enjoying good bealtb. She was en tirely cured oi pues ana oi xemaie weaKneas in fonr weeks. Dr. Smith cures. all forms of female com plaints without the use of Instruments or ex posure of the person; be also enres ruptures or hernia, piles, fistula or fissure without the nse of the knife, detention from business or pain to tho patient. All chronic diseases are cured by Dr. Smith. Rheumatism, neuralgia, fits, stam mering, dropsy, nervous debility, no mat ter from what cause, kidney troubles, scrofula, skin diseases, blindness, deafness, constipation, dyspepsia, paralysis, varicose ul cers and veins, weakness and irritation of tho nerves of the brain, sleeplessness, heart dis ease, diseases of the blood of every description, and all kinds of tumors. He cures cancer in less time and with less pain than by any other methra. Ot. Smith also performs all surgical operations. He is located at 502 Penn avenue, and may be consulted free of charge from 9 A. Jf. to 7 p. ir. He will cure you after all other means fail. NEW PUBLICATIONS. h HAVE YOU READ THE THRILLrNaNAR. RAT1VE JUST PUBLISHED!1 "A WOMAN OF S0REK," By ANTHONY GOULD. For sale by all the principal newsdealers, or forwarded upon receipt ot the price, Fifty Cents, by thes AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, my5-78 New" York Crrr. BEFORE Fnrnitnre, Carpets KEECH "Would be pleased, to have you call and examine his matchless stock and prices. If yon contemplate furnishing your parlors, we can sell you an American or English Wilton, Moquette or Brussels Carpet. If you desire to have a dew Parlor Snit, we can furnish you one covered in Velours, Tapes tries, Brocatelles, Satin Damasks, Plain, Embossed, Crushed and Silk Plushes, etc. If you intend to furnish your Bedroom, we can sell you a Moquette Car pet in the inost delicate shadings. If you wish a new Bedroom Suit, we can furnish you one in Mahogany, Oak, etc. Should yon desire to purchase any new Carpets for your Dining Booms, we can give you a genuine English Body Brussels, In subdued coloring, so suitable for this room, In Dining Boom Furniture, we show a grand selec tion of Sideboards, Extension Tables, Chairs, etc., in all styles of wood and at surprisingly low figures. OUR STOCK of REMGERATORS Is now ready for your inspection and selection in our Housefurnishing Goods Department. There are all kinds, styles and sizes, from the cheapest to the finest. If you dou't object to saving a few dollars, and desire a Be frigerator that will give you complete satisfaction, we should like to have your custom. Ice Cream Freezers and Water Coolers, as well as all other kinds of Housefurnishing Goods, at matchlessly low prices. Onr Variety of Baby Carriages; Should be seen by every mother who is at all interested in these articles. We show none of the poorly made, trashy goods with which the market (and Pittsburg in particular) is flooded, but sell the best and most dependable makes at prices that everybody can well afford to pay. A single call andT brief inspection of our assortment will easily substantiate our claims. Coras in as early as possible, as the handsomest styles are always the first ones to go. ' DryGoods! Ladies' Springraps! Clothing! These departments now present a Don't fail to see them, if you desire good GOODS SOLD FOR GASH ZKirEIEO 923 and :N"eaa? ZET-f-n.-tla. 'HTOea Batarday Xlgbta tfJl 10 ?ZJiir r JB - NEW ADTEJET1SKMZXTS. 'A. ' & m OS. WOODS, SPECIALIST IN THE CURE OF RUPTURE AND CHRONIC DISEASES. This eminent specialist has been located per manently in Pittsburg at Hotel Albemarle, Penn avenue and Sixth street going on two vears. The doctor treats chronic diseases and de formities only, and uniform success result! from his superior skill and improved methods. RIIPTIIRP EERNIA or BREACH, for II Uf I Ullt, many years regarded incur able (and many still believe it cannot be cured, by means of a painless treatment is cured com Sletely in from 30 to 80 days under guarantee, ases that have existed more than SO years have been cured in sfx weeks, without .deten tion from business or pleasure. U C A RT LUNG, LIVER. STOMACH or nCHftl, BOWEL DISEASES, by new method and without nauseous drugs. F1VQPPPQIA with Its terrors, is a thins U I OI Ul Oin, of tba past. Lour expe rience has demonstrated that this disease can be cured entirely when science and common sense principles are applied. BLOOD AND SKIN ESS tluns. Pimples, Blotches, Bone Pains, Ulcera tions of Tongue, Throat and Month, Old Sores, Weak Back and Glandular Swellings, are eradicated for life and no traces remain. Ca tarrh, no matter of how long standing or how many doctors have failed to cure, is curable by the new scientific methods discovered by Dr. Woods. Relief speedy and cure rapid and sure. AdTicefree to all who call. Examinations: are also free to those who wish treatment. Nervous diseases, diseases of the blood, skin, bver, stomach, etc-, which require medicins only are treated successfully by correspondence. Send 4 cents in stamps for question list. All communications are sacredly confidential. Medicines furnished without extra charge, saving much exnense to sufferers and insuring their being genuine and properly prepared. DR. R. A. WOODS HOTEL ALBEMARLE, PENN AVENUE AND SIXTH STREET PITTSBURG, PA. Office hours, 10 to 12 A.X..2 to 5 p. If.. 7 to a F. u. myl-4L TTAMBURg-AMEKICAN PACKET CO. The new twin-screw express steamer ADOOSTA-VIOfoKIA Of 10,000 tons and 12,500 horsepower. wUl leTO New York lor SOUTHAMPTON AND HAAIBUB3, ilsy 23 and June 20. Apply to C. B. KICHAKD A CO.. General Pauenper Agent. 61 Broadway, New York. MAX SUHAMBEKO. fe27 27-SU S27 Smlthneld it.. PlttsUrg, Pa. OPIUM sel4-tua-sa Marnnlns and Whlikr HaMta leaalT eared. Treatment Bent an trial free. ConCdrntlaJJr address H. I n rejiji im. oca ad Mjaytpa, ue 3; YOU BUY i most brilliant arraytof attractions. qualities for little money. OR ON Penri aYelpI S-bxeel3 o'atoak. or'DFwsiJ GREDlH :i is&im Bfc..'Wr V t