THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH PtT THIRD PART. PIGES 17 TO 20. - PITTSBURG, SXJNDiCT, lLY i889. S . $BEf SPANISH HAIff. a - 'BeTerly Crnmp Writes About the Site of the FaWed Eldorado AMOKG THE WIKDWARD ISLABDS. ilate of Pitch Which Supplies the "fforia 4 With Asphaltum. "iIH OEIGIX OP THE ELDORADO MITH rcosBisrosMSCE or thb pispatch.'I POST OP SPAIN, TBDa dad, March 30. Trinidad is the largest of the "Windward Islands as large Us all the rest of them to getherand is real ly a fragment of the continent, broken off by some terrestrial convul sion and gradually separated by the erosion of the water from the Orinoco river, whose delta reaches for a distance of 600 miles. The island was chris tened by Columbus, -who reached its shores in 1198, after being buffeted by winds and wares and detained by calms for several months, and being reduced to the utmost extremity. There was only one small cask of fresh water on the ship, and the sailors had been on half rations for some time. The heat of the "doldrums," as a belt of wind less area along the equator is called, where the vessel had been lying becalmed, had opened the scams and it was leaking so badly that two-thirds of the men were kept continually at the pumps. It was the morn ing of Trinity Sunday when the land was first seen, and the pious old discoverer knelt upon the sand and consecrated it with prayer to the Trinity, to whom he attributed his salvation. Here Columbus and his ship mates found much needed rest, and were able to repair their craft, using the natural pitch of the island to calk the seams. TRINIDAD'S HABBOB. As Trinidad is approached the clear, Bright blue of the water of the sea is ob scured by the Sediment from the Orinoco, and it becomes the color of chocolate. Pass- The Bigh Woodt. iagthrough a narrow channel, called the Dragon's Month, the steamer enters the beautiful Gulf of Paria, the great embroch ore of the Orinoco, itself a mighty harbor, SO miles long by 40 miles wide, completely land-locked, and shallow enough for a ship to anchor anywhere. On one side are the low plains of Trinidad, covered with glisten ing cane, while on the other rise the monstrous mountains of Cumana, rugged, mysterious and impenetrable, clothed lrom top to bottom with immense trees and crowned with wreaths of vapor. Here is the end of the great chain of the Andes, the spinal column of the Southern continent, which, when they reach the south end of the Isthmus of Darien, turn to the eastward and follow the line of coast so closely that the passing ships can often see the snow banks near their -tsunimits when far out at sea. The island of Trinidad has a population very nearly the same as that of Martinique, although it has an area many times as great. The principal city, called Port of Spam, with about 20,000 inhabitants, has a poor harbor, or rather, no harbor at all, for ships have to anchor fully a mile from the shore, and the freight that reaches and leaves the port has to be transported to and from the ships in lighters. It is a nasty place, full of vultures, which sit like evil spirits upon the housetops and feed upon the refuse that is cast into the streets, but it is said that they are the most valuable and industrious of all the inhabitants, and without them, lacking any system of sewer age, the city would suffer from a perpetual plague. The ground as well as the air is full of loathsome creatures, vermin of all kinds, tarantulas, scorpions, centipedes, deadly serpents, lizards, vampires and chigoes, or "jigger," as they are called, little worms that harbor in the cracks of the tile floors and bore into the feet of whom ever walks about barefooted, producing painful and often dangerous ulcers. Like most of the cities in South America, Port of Spain has straight, level streets, badlv paved, with lines of low houses without architectural pretensions, evil smells, . swarms of dogs, chickens, goats and naked children. One is struck at once with the number of people who seem to have nothing to do, and is not surprised when told that there are at least 5,000 beings in the city without visible means of support. They are loo lazy to work, but all seem to be eat ing something, generally fruit, which is as cheap and plenty as dirt, and when they are not eating, like the burglar who "is not burgling, they lie basking in the sun." A LAEG OP PITCH. The most interesting place in Trinidad is the famous pitch lake lrom which comes the world's supply of asphaltum. It covers 99 acres, and contains millions of tons of pitch, which never grows less in amount, for that taken out during the day is renewed by nature every night In the neighborhood of this Strcian pool the air is heavy with the most sickening odors, and the surrounding country is covered with its overflow, so that the earth is as hard as the pavements of Washington; but neither the steam and fumes that asise from the pitch roasting -in the sun, nor the asphaltum in the soil, seem to injure vegetation, for flowers and fruits actually grow in the midst of them, and jnneapples are there brought to the greatest perfection. The lake is a floating massiof Ifphaltum, seamed by narrow channels f clear water, with a. iev straggling islands covered with thin, low shrubs. At the cen tcr, the fountain of all the foulness, the pitch is at boiling heat, and covered with yellow and white sulphurous foam, upon which are floating innumerable bubbles filled with loathsome gas. Thet old proverb that one may not touch pitch without being defiled does not hold good here, for this substance will not stick to the .hands, and you can take tip a chunk and mold it like clay with out soiling your fingers. The supply for shipment is chopped lrom the surface, where it has been hardened and dried by the evap oration ot the moisture, but like the ice on the ionds of the trozen zones, the quantity 'cut away during the day is til ways repljcrd during the night, for some action ot nat-ure keeps forcing the nasty snbstance out of the earth. The pitch lake is a Mystery which scien- ,.UU hare. duenssed .fcr star vean. Kit m Walter Ealeigh wrote the first account of it in 1595, when he landed there on his voyage in search of the Eldorado and the land of the Amazons. Humboldt gave a good deal or study to the phenomenon, and declared that the pitch lake is "a constantly aggre gating mass formed from the cosmical gaseous fluid," which seems to settle it r '""I mie away is a mud volcano on the Mountain of San Fernando, called "Salse" a circular pile of mud some two or three acres in extent, bottomless and hot, and evi dently occupying some old crater. The mud is icaned ud in piles like monstrous ant hills, at the top of which are holes through which the moist stuff oozes, and sometimes flames are said to appear. The contents of this basin are really imnure asphaltum, for the odor is about the same as that abont the Pitch Lake and the component parts are similar, but the greater quantity of earth in the mixture makes it worthless "for economi cal purposes. AJT AaiEBICAlT PEOTECTOKAXE. Citizens of the United States have under taken the development ot the Orinoco coun try. The Orinoco river is the third in size in the world, and is navigable for thousands of miles. Steamers can go within a short distance of Bogota in Colombia, and much of the trade of Colombia will someday seekthis channel. It is not generally known that the Amazon ana the urinoco rise at the same source, and that were the bars, other impediments removed, a light draught boat could enter the mouth of one and sail out of the mouth of the other. Various schemes hare been proposed for dredging tne cnannei, ana it win some day be done, thus opening the greatestline of Ircsh water navigation in the world. There are now two steamboat companies engaeed upon the Or inoco and its branches, both owned and opera ted by citizens ot the United States, and it is understood that Venezuela is willing to concede to our Government the exclusive right of navigation and the absolute control of the Orinoco system, its motive bemt? to indnce immigration to that valley, which has been hitherto retarded by the frequent revolutions. It is not encouraging to farm ers to have their crops seized by the army; and if the United States will extend protec torate over the territory it is thought that immigrants will go in. A very large area ol the Orinoco country has been conceded to colonization companies" whose headquarters are in New York, but so far they hare done nothing in the way of settling lands. One company has an entire State, of an area equal to Ohio, in which there are now very1 few settlers and a small number of semi civilized Indians, raising cattle on the llano or ranges. The country has never been thoroughly explored, and nobody knows exactly what cab be fonnd or raised there; but the most astonishing stories have been told of it ever since the days of discovery. The Govern-' ment of Venezuela has recently sent an ex ploring steamer up the various branches of the river, but it was not able to go far be cause of the snags and other impediments in the channel. THE FABLED ELDOBADO. There lies the Eldorado of which the world dreamed for 200 years; that is the country on which more ambition rested than any man has known. It was discovered by the Adelantado Gonzalez de Casada, a treacherous knight who was sent out by Pi zarroonan exploring expedition after the conquest of Peru. He went with Pizarro'S brother, butwith a handful of men deserted him, stole his food and took canoes down the river; while young Pizarro narrowly es caped death from starvation. To escape the consequences of his desertion, when he re turned to Spain in a vessel of his own con struction, Casada told the most fabu lous stories of the land he had seen, and for this reason was welcomed as a hero instead of being hung as a knave. One An tonio Galvano wrote a book describing Casada's adventures, and that rolnma caused more heart burning and brain fever in .Europe than all the doctors of medicine or geographv could cure. In this book" i&sada described the city of ldorado h claimed to have found in the midst of a lake, whose meanest house surpassed in grandeur the Inca palaces and temples Pizarro overthrew. "All the vessels in this house and kitchen," wrote the merciless liar, "are of gold and silver Studded with diamonds and precious stones. In this house are statues Of solid gold as large us. giants, and other fieures in proportion, of the beasts, birds, fishes, trees and herbs of his kingdom; yea and robes and budgets and chests and CboJi'e and Katlve. troughs of solid gold. There is a garden of pleasure in the Island where they are wont to recreate themselves, in which are also figures of gold and silver of an invention and magnificence the like of which was never seen. And the king of this country, yea, and all his court wear apparel of the most famous texture, so that it doth appear like garments sprinkled with gold and sil ver dust, from his sandals to his crown.1' FOLLOWERS OP A PHANTOM. The story this man told was read and be lieved in all the courts of Europe, and the golden lie cost millions of lives of the bravest men of two centuries, who followed the phantom into the green gulfs of the Orinoco and the Amazon never to emergo again. They thought Pizarro and Cortes would be begjrars compared with him who found the Eldorado, and they Btaked their lives and their wealth bn the chance. It was no myth to those who had seen the treasures Cortes brought from Mexico and Pizarro from Pern; and the absence of exaggerations in the descriptions of what were found in these countries justi fied a belief in many a romance that was told. The man Casada brought lumps of virgin gold picked up in Guiana to prove his words, and even the fable of the Ama zons was not consiaerea extravagant by ex plorers who had seen Indian women fighting by their husbands' sides. The free Norse rovers, with their golden curls, ot all the seaward folc were the first to cross the bosom of the Atlantic, and there are legends in the North country that Eric the Bed and his men saw America before Columbus did. But they made no note of their explorations, and it was left for the latter to make the official announce ment ot the birth of a new world, and his successors to carry into It a carnival of blood as cruel as that of Caligula. Cblum- ous piccea tne iock oi tne Western treasure honse and all Spain rushed there to plun der. Then when Spain Was secure in her authority over the heathen,. Sir Francis Drake, Sir Walter Baicigh, Sir Htimphrey Gilbert John Hawkins, and other old sea dogs robbed the Spaniards or their ill-gbttcn booty, and conquered them whenever the two nations met Beverly Catnip. A Constant Suitor. Bivtnnah ltews.1 There is a certain young man in Americus who can give the average lover points on the business of courting. He visits his inamorata every night, remainintr from inst after supper to late bedtime, nhd on Sun-J uojock. iiunuciji vniu uer uciore DreaK fast. and remains all day, nor does he tear himself awar until abbut mldbicht The young lady's friends think lis "staying" powers are simply wederfI, and tt he will wis her ii it is 'within &6tmm ef :.z DIPBJBEBLV Its Prevalence at Present Itfortly Bso to BIrect Personal Contagion. Youth's Companion.! Within the- last few months the medical profession in Boston have been giving earnest and extended' consideration to this modern disease, which has so rapidly come to be one of New England's three great scourges the other two being consumption and pneumonia' "We present, in .brief, some of the more important facts elicited by1 the discussion. First Contrary to previous belief, there seems to be no special relation between its prevalence aud bad drainage or other un sanitary conditions. The best districts in Boston have suffered as much as the worst in some cases even "more so. It is the same elesewhere, as careful investigations attest Second Its prevalence must at present be regarded as due to direct personal conta eion. It is greatest rn the school months, with a marked falling off in July and Au gust Patients are often allowed to go about lreely during convalescence, while sot yet fully free from the disease. Dr. Folsom says: "It is not uncommon for me to see patients in the out-department, who come with diphtheria, sitting'sido by side With patients- affected with other dis eases, thus exposing many -persons to the danger of infection during the time they remain id the waiting-room of the hospi tal." Some of these persons have ridden to the hospital in crowded ears. But mild cases are the chief source of the trouble. Dr.- Prince says: "It is my constant experience to meet 'with case after case of undoubted diphtheria, where there are patches of membrane in the throat, and yet the symptoms are so mild that the child is allowed to mingle with the rest of the family and go abdut the streets. I think there is no question- that stich cases are the most proline source of the contagion." Farther, among the cases that often fail to b& recognized are those ot nasal diphthe ria. The membrane is out of sight, and for a time, at least, the' disease is easily mis taken for a cold. It should be remembered that this, and all the lighter forms of diphtheria, may give rise, to the most malignant-ThirdA case of malignant- diphtheria is, not seldom, mistaken lor one of mem branous croup, commonly regarded as non contagious It is, therefore, neither re ported nor duly" guarded against Fourth It is necessary"fhat diphtheria should be taken charge of as" a- contagious' disease by the Board of Health, with full i powers and all adequate provisions, and, further, that measures should be taken for ; the better understanding of the disease' by Fifth Diphtheria is a most debilitating disease. On of its chief dangers if death by heart-failure, and that, too, when' the patient seems to be in a state ot convales cence. From the first everything shonld be done to keep up the strength by food and stimulants. SIM1-LICITT IN SfllE. Tts Test Br Watch doienporarylJleratare i to be Jirdffer". Charles Dudley Warner In the Atlmtld 3 ' "We may test eotemporary literature by its conformitv to the canon of simplicity; that' is, if it has1 not that, we may conclude that it lacks one essential lasting quality. It' may please; it may be ingenious, brilliant,. e"venr It may be the fashion of the day, a"fld a fashion that will hold its powers of pleas ing for half a'century, but it will be a fash ion. Msnnerismi efleqarse, will not deceive us, norxiravagaoces. eccentricities, affecta tions, nor the stratum after effect br th I use of coined or far-fetched words and prod- there is such a thing as style; good and bad; and the style should be the writer's own and characteristic of him as his speech is. But the moment I admire a style for its own sake, a style that attracts' my attentidn constantly that I say, How godd that isl T begin to be suspicious. If it is" too godd, too pronouncedly good, I fear I shall not like- ft so well on second reading; If it comes to stand between me and the thought, or the personalitv behind the thought, I grew more and more suspicious. Is the book a window, through which I am td see life? Then I cannot have the" glass too clear. Is' it to affect me like a strain of music? Then I am still more disturbed by auy-affectationsi Is it to jjroduee the effect of a picture? Then I know I want the simplest harmony oT color". And I have learned that the most effective word-painting, as it is called, is the" sim plest This is trde if it is a question only' oi present enjoyment, uut we may off sure that any piece of literature" which at tracts only Ay a" trick pf style, however it may blaze up for a day and startle the the world with a flash, lacks' the element of endurance. "We do nof need much experience to tell us the difference between a lamp and a Roman candle. Even in our day Wet hare' seen many reputations' flare- up, 'illuminate the Sky and fned go dtit irl utteV darkness. "When We take a proper historical perspec tive we see that it is'the- universal, the sim ple that lasts. THE CONQUEST OP THE SHOKEE. An Incident Which Thirty Yean A so Would' Have LookeA Like Burlesque. The following little incident is worth not ing as arising out of a great change" in ni tibnal custom, says' the London Gtofo. Scene A railwiv carriage, occupied by an enormous man smoking a cigar, with which he makes the atmosphere resemble the Strand in a- November fog, and a thin,, nervous person, with a bag Of sandwiehes. Says the latter, "I beg'ydtiftfardon, sir, but will it irfcommode you if I venture to eat?" The former, with a gracious wave of the cloud-giving weed, "Not at all!" Twenty or 30 years ago this would have looked like burlesque1. Then the smoker had only a bare toleration afforded him. He was not allowed to indulge his favorite propen sity even on the platform of a railway sta tion, but was warned off by placards,, which may still be seen at some stations. The ac commodation proviaea iot him was poor and scanty and woe betide him if he ventured to take any liberties in prohibited places. Now he has1 things all his own way. To his su preme" will and pleasure the misguided per sons who Io not smoke must conform, and wherever friends meet arrangements are made iof his convenience, while even those strong-nlil5ded ladies who asserttheir rights to attend public dinners' and other functions heroically endure rather than protest against the once tletested fames. This is nice .for (he smoker, who would jro to few dinners if flu. prived of what Prince Bismarck has called the delicious seventh course. i PECPMAB SDI01DE. SfaO vrW So fond ot tier XApdoc T&at She Wonfd ftot trie' wii&out it. Another of fhose s&ange cases of snicide which are peculiar to Paris has taken place. A dressmaker wh6 had "been disappointed in love resolved to make away with herself; but she on several occasions told her friends that she did not like to die, as she was too fondofherlapdog a liftle black spaniel called Mimi. At last she-folly made up her mind to diS with her d6jj, which she filing lrom licr window; three stories high, and then jumped out after i. The ill-rated dressmaker was picked up in a dying con dition aad 'conveyed to a hosnital. wlrm. shoexpiea. The dgha4io beslt tsd Ft" """""""s"r"f"y"s"s'l"l"si NO, TIME BOB PIETY. Religion in Cuba a Here Matter of Worldly Kscefesity and WOfcSIIB A PLIASAHT BASTIME. The Serentk Day of the Week Generally Utilized by Pleasure Seekers, A TOUCHING PICIUEB OF A PESITEHI tCOnBZSTOXDZXCX tss TBXsrsrATca.J HlVAKA, May 3; "When pne visits a church one should at least assume a gravity of demeanor, whether one feels disposed to do so or not On most occasions it comes very easy forme to be serious, I can sit through a burlesqne or fares', which has been pla carded "uproarously funny," and never so ranch as incline to ward a laugh, I can see the circus clown try to turn himself inside out. I can watch the end minstrel man crack his head with his tambourine ancient up the wildest capers, lean folio the side-splitting antics of Har lequin and Pantaloon night after night without even changing countenance or feel ing the slightest desire to indulge in the feeblest hal ha! All this I take it upon my self to-say I can do, and yet when chance took me into some Cuban churches recently A laughing fiend of evil import seemed to take" possession of me, giving me absolutely no control over ray risible faculties and sending me off into almost convulsive merriment- I hope I shall not be- too severely criti cized on. this account I could not help laughing! The step from the sublime to the ridiculous is such a short one. As for the apparent lack of veneration in my con duct, that amounted to nothing at all. No ono has any veneration in Cnba! They wouldn't know what it was if they were to stumble across it A fig for such rubbish, they would say, arid snap their" fiugers and laugh'too1: I doubt if they would even rec ognize it, were they to be brought face to faee with it, in its' highest form. The church in Cnba is'an-institntion which has for its figarc-head Power, in lieu of Be- A Cuban Priest, ligion-. Established by law, iddorsed by ptWrftrfeHrWeanfi oi tne oia churca or name in itsdarKest days, and more" to be feared than thtrnrf tlon's" rulei1 himself. And why not? If" His JTaiesfv" holds the reiens which eovern this' wo.-Id, doer not "the church," dn hef parf, hold" the key which opens' the gate's of tne wotw w-conie? A BED-HOT SHEOL. "to be King or Governor General may b rery fine thing as far as it goes, buC woe- to Hing or potentate, however mighty, who fails to accord the -all powerful supremacy to the church. He cannot marry without her sanction", can6t prove his legitimacy, dare liot die! To do so means- enternal damnation, and uhending torture, in cavern ous regions not noted for salubrity of climate,- The hades of the church of Cuba is a strictly business ba fee-oven countryy with a crematory at every street crossing. I know this from the horrible pictures which line the walls of the sactuaries. If red-hot heat was ever put on canvas with startling fidelity it is,done so here. That it doesn't creep outrorer the frames and scorch them, is a" miracle. That there Is a rnin if rt"? paint left in all the- world would snrprfsfr anyone who examined the quantity piled on eachk and every flamejof each and every picture of one and ail the temples- of wor- ship of the island. My own opinion Is that the lurid heat of the1 "hades" was" originally suggested by the lurid heit of the elimafev But this ii entrr-uous and riot at all authentic. I irw quirtd Of the priestwho escorted me through ' ' r " ' t A tiaban Church. one of theso edifices why it was such un sightly pietures were retained by the brotherhood. He assured me' that severe measures tfere necessary "to keep in check the evil impulse of the tropical tempera ment, atfd that they We're' hung with a view of warning thewieked arid vividly portray ing to them the peril their sins incurred." As far as I myself was concerned the cari catures exercised the direct opposite effect They were So ridiculously conceived and bunglingly painted that they set me first smihrig and afterward laughing most im moderately. The "Sphinx" itself would have roared at some of the subjects. But the priest didn't se'e the" jfike at alL Undoubt edly he lacked humor t He gave me ari "all-heretics-are-doomed" look when I took leave of him and scarcely returned my bow. Almost jvery picture- in the different churches represents a hell in which, amidst tongues of flame, writheand wriggle quanti ties of people. And such people! "A motley throng" Shakespeare ifcottld say. Young, old, black white yellow, little, big1, fat, lean, lame, blind, all Hinds and colors. iTO MUCH PIETIf, In one of the smaller Cuban churches I was enabled to witness a, celebration of some kind- It began by the crowding in of a throng of people. When I say people I mean women, chlldron va r,i,,,. White men, they tell me, rarely attend divine service, except on the eve of their weaaing. xno church exacts this dulrot teem, otherwise she i, uuiHHixi uuc u.innot ncriorni the .uiK.usc i.-cicuuiijr. as no chairs or pews are provided everybody kneels "on the hard marble floor. Someof the la'el noticed were attended by servants, who ear ned Stools, fast the niiitll. Vl J "7'"el' gPeeMe irksome, Mt A let S,'!??1 WWwlMg overa eai seiwBk- .. ... . t ,., "t . -v.-j . ", . ,. v . -, i- ,a4 iare .i,f,. I WSt 'A -TiKZ line awkurdl-ir to tWr-.fect af the woiHts of the service- which required a change of posture, and then tumbling aelter-sKeiter down agafnr may net look very funny when written, bnt T dnn't belive- anv on&eoultf witness the-spectacle and suppress a smile. j.ne perjormance which loiiowea was equally ludicrous. Scarcely had the ser vice drawn to a" close when a long line of worshipers began" creeping' frdm the statue of St tuke to that of Su John, and from St John to St. Joseph and St Peter, and so on through the whole category of saints and martyrs, "I am ashamed, of my reli gion since Ieame to this country,"' said a Catholic gentleman of ITew Tork to me quite unexpectedly one day. "I am ashamed of it for von." I replied, which I was the truth. -the Cuban shepherd is a medium-sized, uort, stout, thick-set, red-faced man, who wears a wfde-brimmetf hat, rolled up on the Sides like a scroll, and a seedy, black robe, bound round the waist by a girdle. "With an assurance that his situation is perma nent, he indulges In the utmost ease. No fasts or vigils for him. On the contrary, he provides himself with plenty to eat and drink, and arranges things that he shall have as little as possible to do. He lives In a tumble-down lodge near his church, but his church does pot concern him very much, "What does concern him at this juncture is the pleasure which awaits him once he is free to join his companions. the Seventh day a holiday. The church in Cuba imposes no Sunday. After service the faithful flock to the bull fight, cockfight, or bal masque. They fill the cafes, gaming rooms, circuses, theater, plaza. Good Priday is the only day ill the year which is really observed. Fronx the day before until the day following not a car- The Calhcdrat of .Havana. riage or car and scarcely a person passes through the street The whole population are hard at work pounding and hammering with all their mieht It-doesn't signify what kind of utensils are used for the pur pose. Just so you hammer", and hammer loud, you are doing the piopet thing. This is supposed to be the expression of your grief. It is certain! v a nnittv YnrMlnn add that's the most that can be said Idt it ,Toward evening, or shortly after nightfall, comes a procession, which inline United States would secure each and every partici pant a night in the lockup if not six months at Claremont It can only be expressed in one word, and that is sacrilege! Prccedlhsr the cortege is a bov Mmlno . L box which contains big stones. These he rattles as vigorously as his muscles will per mit Pilate follOWS with n mrV fonttim- "n L his bat and a sword dangling at his side. a.e is impersonated by the biggest blackest, ugliest negro that can be found. Judas comes next, with a fiendish sneer on his painted face ard a box containing the 30 pieces of silver rattling from the top of a red and yellow painted barber pole. This personage is remarkabjff for his walk, the stride being' somewhat after the style of Lawrence Barrett's, when he stmts down to the footlights prior to demolishing his army of SO-cenls-a-mght-supers. A man who bears the cross and nails, pall bearers who carry the bier containing the covered fitrure' to renresent Christ, a street uuuu, a .mo u. usia n.uiiuy aim cnant- f "ngnhe'sM't'CTtfai tbe-4ea4heggs of the : faithful mingling with throngs of the rab- . TklM1 IT IlntfA srnw . 111-. J .. -tL i bleand armies of beggars and thieves close Hi pageant. A person may live In Cuba pretty much as he likes, but he must die as the TithvIt I decrees, or hot die at all, unless he chooses kj uie ii kb a neatnen, wnicn ne never does. A corpse is only kept a few hours. Many arepuf into the tomb still warm. The hearsa which bears the dead to their, last resting place is enough to cause the occn- Eant to rise up and decry it It is a ideous, rickety, wornout old catafalque, which lumbers jdltiugly along and creaks aud groans like some monstrous animal to whom movement of any kind was obnoxlons. Paid mourners attend the funeral it Is their1 business to weep, bnt theyddir-. They smoke instead, and this seems to give as much satisfaction. If they like they can earn a couple of dollars extra byrefutning to the church and saying some prayers for the departed soul. This is an excellent way of turning au honest penny and many mourners avail themselves of itv A TOUCHING PICTTJEE. Some of the large churches of Havana are very beautiful. I saw a splendidly im imposing sight in one of them a picture of my memory even yet It was late in the afternoon and the blue haze which precedes nightfall, had crept through the painted dome of one of the smaller chapels and fallen upon the life-sized carved wonr! I figure of the Christ nailed to a rough cross wmca stooa upon an altar and reached almost to the ceiling. Upon the head was pressed the crown ot thorns and through the poor bleeding hands the cruel spikes. been through the hazy blue gray mist the" figure had the appearance of being in a cloud. On the marble floor, where ayel lowfay of sunlight Still lingered, knelt a huge, stalwart negro", black, as a piece of ebon vr and naked but for the piece of linen which girded his massive loins His muscu las arms hung listlessly to bis sides, his wooly head was upturned in rapt adoration Of the suffering Savior, whose bruised bodv stood out dark and awful against the cloudy mist The startling reality of the cross; the life-like appearance of the form, had fascin ated, appalled, half terrorized the ignorant negro,, whose great searching eyes started from their sockets, and whose thick lips quivered and trembled as though he were really kneeling on that sknll-sbaped hill called Calvary, watching the sufferings of the Martyr who died that we mieht live! IILLIAS SPEKCEE. He Hirnck It it I,i. SV m, x Exultant Artist I was determined it .the Aeademv'aerfad aaviniatsra ii vear. wat uaey sfietiMi Mae it oa te uaer-rHc ;. i f ', m g - -- - - J - I METAMORPHOSIS; Being an Account of a Strange Experiment in Phenology, Recently Conducted- by a Physician. "Written for The. DiSPAica by &TDNET IUSXLA. (Honry Harland.) 1 CHAPTER 1Y. 2"ert morning', at about 11 o'clock, my good sister Josephine came to me and said, "She (s awake now, and wishes to see you." , "I am ai her service," I retained. ""v7ill she join me here?'' "She is eager to hare yoa operate. She asked me where yon would do so. I told I supposed there in her bed1. Then she said she would: not waste timer by getting up, and wished me to iul yoa that she is waiting to have it done." "Very well. I will go to her directly. If she is in a favorable condition of mind and bodyperhaps it would be as well not to delay. But first, tell me. You hare held some conversation with her?" "Yes, a little." "And what impression do you form of her character?"" "She is very, very pretty she is ered beautiful."' I laughed. ""What has that to do with her character?" "I Infer her character as much from her face as from her speech and actions." "Oh, I see. And your inference is?" "That naturally she is a young' woman of good and generous instincts, but of an im pulsive and passionate temperament" "ITes. Well?" "Prom what .she says, and her manner of saying it, I imagine that her Impulses or her passions have betrayed her into the commission- of some perhaps crime." '"Vyell? Goon." "And I think that now, when it is too late for retrieval, her better nature has as serted itself has reasserted itself and she is consumed by remorse and horror." "My good Josephine, you are the shrewdest, the wisest, the most penetrating of women j Your diagnosis coincides in all particulars with mine. She has, as you say, committed some bad action, but she is not intrinsically bad herself. She would not suffer so in realizing her guilt, were there not powerful elements of good within her." "At any rate, brother, whatever she may be. whatever she mar have done, there is something about her thaUaronses sympathy I ana attracts lining, xiitue as J. nave seen of her, I already feel myself drawn toward her; and my heart aches for her." "That is because yours is the (tenderest heart in the world. Well, we shall hare plenty of leisure in which to cultivate her acquaintance, alter it is over. She will re maid here with us not less than a year. And now, will voa go with me to her room?" "Would she not prefer to see you alone?" "Why should she? Come, let as go." Wd found her sitting up in bed, waiting for us. By daylight she seemed to me even more beautiful than she had seemed by gas light The opulence of her hair, the deli cacy of her skin, the translucence of her eyes, the fine and yet noble modeling of her .feat areslhS eweMofl of desfmrfhes-Hhat noble modeling Of her I Llf !.'- " I brooded over" her whole countenance it was the sort ot beauty you see ln-xitian s paint ings, only lessor the earth, earthy,' the sort of beauty you see In Bapnael's, only more human. Having wished her good morning, I pro ceeded at once to my business as a physi cian; took her pulse and her temperature, and asked her how she had slept. "Perfectly," was ber answer. "I have not had such a night's sleep for I know not how Iongj I must have lain in absolute unconsciousness for fully nine hours; and what was most grateful, I did not dream." "It is the composing draught, or rather the sleeping potion, that I prevailed on you to drink, which you mnst thank," I ex plained, "I am delighted to learn that it did its work so well. t And are yon still in the same mind in which I left yen? Ydd have not reconsidered your determination?" "Indeed I have not. My determination is stronger than ever. When I awoke this morning and recalled bur conversation I could not help fearing that if had never really taken place. It seemed too wonder ful to be true. I feared that I had dreamed it Bht this kind lady, .your sister, has as sured me that my fear is groundless; and now I can only say again how deep my grat itude is, and how impatient I am to have you begin." 'Ttf aaV "My beginning must be in the nature of an interrogatory," i. rejoined, -j. must re quest of you certain information." "Whatever questions yon may desire to ask I will answer." "Good. My questions shall be few-Only those formal ones which, as a physician, I should put to any patient whom,! was about to treat. First, then, what is yourname?" I opened my casebook and prepared my stylographic sen for action. "My name is Louise Massarte." "Louise .Massarte," I repeated, writing it down. "It is a foreign name, is, it not? Were you born in this country?" "I was bom in the city of Tours, in France." "Native of France," I wrote then, aloud, "Of French parents." "Yes. I am French br blood and birth. But I have lived in America all my life. I was brought here when I was 2 years old." "You speak French, then, I take it?" ' "I speak French and English with equal ease." , "Any other language?" "No other." "How oldare you, If you will forgive my askina?"' "I shall be 26 on the 8th of August" "Are your parents JivingV" "Both my mother and father are long since.dead." "Have you ftnr brothers' orsisters?" "I was an only child." "Are you married or single?" "I have never been married." "And now, finally, is there any fact or circumstance which you would like to men tion and have recorded? for, you must bear in mind, you will shortly have forgotten everything connected with your past; and if there is anything you will wish to remem ber, you fasid better fell It to me now, and I will make a memorandum of it." To my surprise she blushed crimson. With eyes fixed upon the counterpane, cheeks aflame, voice tremulous and faints "There is nothing, nothing, that I shall wish to remember," she replied; "nothing but wbut J efiall be glad to forget." Alter .i little pause, she added, "I will tell you mv whole history, sir. If you require it. It will bo hard lor me; but it is your right to know it, if it is your-wish." My sister rose, offering by a gesture to leave the room. "J. I think it would be easier for me to tell it, if you would stay, Miss Benary," the poor young creature faltered. "My child, you must not tell it at all, you must not think ot telling it," I put in. "It would excite you, and pain you, and fatiguo you; and any how it is better that neither myTlster nor I, nor indeed any liv ing -rerson, should hear it. You yourself shall have forgotten it in a little while. Why should anybody else romemberit?" She sighed with evident relief, and mur mured "Thank yea. Yea we rery goad." - l"J - -- T-- - WM Jjfy stster josepeine set down at her sea- side ana tee awl eM feer head. t At this marc of tenderness the woman's lips parted and quivered. Then her eyes filled. All atoned she buried her face in the pillow and wept passionately, while her frame, was shaken by strong", convulsive sobs. This was too much for me. I quietly stole out of the room, leaving Josephine to com fort her if she could; and descending to my stodyI procured my instruments and the requisite anaesthetics. I watched her carefully as she recovered from the effects of the ether. An unusually small quantity of that drug had sufficed to deprive her of her senses; and now her xe coverywas extraordinarily rapid. Having taken her respiration, her tem perature, and her pulse, and having found each to ba nearly normal, I looked her straight in the face, and demanded, making every syllabic clear and emphatic, "Louisa Massarte, da yon know me? Had I addressed mv inquiry to a year-old infant the result would have been the same. She gave no token of having compre hended. - I repeated the same question in French: "Louise Massarte, me reconnaissez vous?" with precisely the same- negative; result "V j-.-"-- w wmi "L a: ,,s AS" XNCIDEirT OP I then wrote that question both in French add English on a slip of paper, and held it before her eyes. No sign of Intelli gence, In the end I applied tests to each of her five senses, and satisfied myself that each was unimpaired. After which, "Well, Josephine," I said, "unless all signs fail, we have succeeded to admiration. None of her senses has sustained the slightest In jury yet she has lost the knowledge of lan guage, both spoken and written. Now let ns darken the room. Inflammation, is the onIT evll consequence we have to fear. We at5t' 'keepieritf darkness and itt silence untfi tne wound; has healed. The wound healed rapidly. Not an un pleasant symptom of any kind manifested itself. And. as I had foreseen she would do, my patient rclearned th? primary lessons of life with an ease and 'ckness that Seemed almost miraenlouS'. "i 4ad an ticipated this, because she was an adultr because, that is to say, her brain, as an orcan, was of mature derelopment She began to speak as soon as ever we allowed ourselves to speak in her presence, at first simply imitating the sounds we made, but very speedily coming to employ words with understanding. A single lesson taught ber how to walk. After my sister had drested her twice she was perfectly well able to dress hersel1". At the end of an in credibly short period she could read and write as easily as I can. Of the former capability she made good use, detouring eagerly all such books as we thought wise to gjve her. Her progress, in a word, pre cisely corresponded to that made by a bright child, only it was infinitely more ;apid ; and what a fascinating thing it was to observe. I need not stop to fell. It was like watching the growth and blossoming of some most wonderful and beautiful flower. We were permitted, so to speak, to be eye witnesses of a miracle. If yon had met her at the expiration of one year, and had conversed with her, you would hare put her down for a singularly intelligent and well-informed, yet at the same time singu larly innocent and unsophisticated girl of 18. Yes, I mean it a girl of 18. For the most astonishing result of my operation most astonishing, because least expected was this: That id body as well as in mind she seemed to have been rejuvenated. With the obliteration of memory, every trace of experience faded from her face: yon would have laid a wager it was the face of a young maiden not yet ont of her teens. She had said she was all but 26. It was unbelievable when you looted at bernotir. To the desperate-eyed woman whom I had dissuaded from sell-destruction on that clouded sum mer night a year gone by, she bore only such a resemblance as a young sister might have borne. To Josephine I remarked, "Is it possible that we have builded better than we knew? That we have stumbled upon the discovery, which the alchemists sought in vain the elixir of youth?" "Indeed, brother," Josephine assented, "she has the appearance and the manner oflT," "It only proves," said I, "'tho truth of the old commonplace, that it fa experience and uui. biuio nmvu b;i- uue, hiiut? ucing iimpiv the measure of experience. Her experience has been undone; that is to say, her mem ory, the storehouse of her experience, has been destroyed. Hence this return to adolescence." Then I laughingly offered to perform my operation upon Josephine herself, to the end that she. also might enioy returned youth; which offer Josephine laughingly declined. "It is very fortunate, brother, that this alteration in her appearance has taken place," my wise sister added; "for now it will be impossible for anybody who may have known her in former days to identity ner, a danger wnicn, otherwise, we should have had to fear." "Yes," I acquiesced, "that is very true." The disposition which our visitor de veloped, furthermore, was if so sweet and winnine A quality that in a little while she had taken all our hearts captive and be come the delight and the treasure of our home. Welovcd herlike a daughter, and the idea of evei1 parting with her was in tolerable. Thereupon we put our heads'to getber, and entered into a small conspiracy, agreeing to represent to her that she was our niece, the child of our brother, an orphan, 18 years old, by name Miriam, who had some time sfneo sustained an accident which had destroyed her recollection of the past As onr niece, recently arrived from New Orleans (our own native city), we in troduced her to our friends. She recipro cated our affection in. the tendercst manner, called us aunt and uncle, and was In every respect a blessing to our lives so beautiful, sefceatle, so merry, so devoted. ThtH nearly lour years eleesed; sad it wasMeaeey, the 12th of KaMk, 1M6, the df7Mjbgntaowwlem. ,'y CHAPTER V. On that day certain imperative Mmm demanded my presence down tows. IhaA been summoned, in short, to appear a witness in a litigation that was pending! the Court of Common Plea a camsMM which I felt myself the more disposed to obey, inasmuch as a penalty of 9Hr at tached to contempt of it Therefore, de spite the unprecedented brutality a' tie weather, and the earnest lemonsfaaaees a Josephine and Miriam, I was foolharfy enough to venture out The clock on our parlor natel-peea marked a few minutes before 10 when X left the house; my immediate destination being the Pifty-fblrd Street station of the Thirl Avenue Elevated Bailway, distant from mj door not farther than a quarter of a mile, and In ordinary circumstances as easy fire minutes' walk. However, it must be remembered I was at that time within threeor fonrmonthsof eoau pleting my seventieth year; add such s storm was raging and such a gale blowing as might- hare strained the mettle of a youngster one-third my age; a veritable tempest, indeed, the like ot which Man hattan Island had never in the memory of man seen before. I don't mind owning, therefore, that I was pretty badly exhausted when I arrived at my journev s end, and that I had consumed a good half hour la getting there. My path, as it were, had led through one continuous and unbroken drift knee deep at its shallowest, waist high at its average, and frequently engulfing me up to my chin. Through this I had dug and plowed my way, with the wind cold and furious in my teeth and underarunnin fira of snow flakes, frozen so hard and driven with such force that they stung my face like bird shot and nearly put out my eyes. I can assure the reader'it was no child's play. My nose and ears, from burning as if in a hath of scalding water, had become numb and rigid like features of wood. The moist V !- r THE BLIZZAED. ure from my breath had congealed' in my beard.until that appendage felt like an Iron mask. My legs were stiff and heavy; my shoulders ached. My-respiration had be- come pamfdl and laborious;, my heart action so faint as to induce sickness similar to that; which one suffers at sea. And finally, to cap the climax, when Z reached the station, I found a chain stretched across the entrance to the staircase, and a placard announcing that no trains were running. So that I had earned my labor for my pains; and there was nothing for me to oo out to turn my lace oaex towarynoaq and retrace my steps. t-" Exhausted as I was then, 1 set forth at once upon that undertaking Of course It wax exceedingly imprudent fdrme to do so. wituuiifc lifsb svc&jug Biieifcer in soma mop, and there resting until I had in a measure recovered my strength. But I suppose I dlcl, not at themomentrealizehowfargonel was, and the prospect of regaining the comfort off my own fireside was a delioiously temptine1 one- So Off I started, down Fifty-third street toward Second avenue. "Very soon, however, I had reason to rev pent my rashness. Midway in that block 'av mountainous drift of snow stretched diagJ onally across the road. I wss half blinded, my wits were halt frozen; I underestimated its depth, and plunged boldly into it Next instant I found myself buried tip to my nose. I struggled to push on. My legs were as immovable as if bound with ropes. Then I strove to dig myself free with my hands. My arms, too, I learned, were pin ioned as in a straight waistcoat. Here was a pleasant predicament; and one that constantly increased in interest For, to sty nothing of the deadly and aggressive cold, the snow was pouring down Upon me by the bucketful) and I appreciated very vividly the fact that unless I speedily effected an escape, I should be covered over' my head. My only hope, it was obvious, lay in call ing for assistance. Whether other hamaai beings were within hearing distance or not, I had no means of discovering; for so opaque" was the atmosphere rendered by the multi- tude of snowflakes that filled it, I could see ' nothing beyond a radius of two or three yards; and even the houses that lised the street were indistinguishable, except whea by fits and starts, for a second at a time, the wind rent asunder the veil that hid them,. However, my only hope lay in trying the experiment of a call; and that I did with. the utmost energy I could command. "Help! Helpl" I cried. JBut at the sound of my voice, my heart sank. It was the still small ghost of itself to such a degree bad the exposure and the hardships of the last half hour depleted my, physical resources. And besides dampened by the blanket, of snow in which I was en- reloped, and lost in the roar of the duttU , cane, the likelihood that it would carry be' yond a rod in any direction seemed lnfin ltesimally slight wen, am lost, thought J, "here no" 00 yards from my own doorstep, lost as hopelessly as if wrecked in mldocean.. Well, they say death by freezing is compar- ' atiTeij yaiuieas. j.b wui boob do over.i "Bnt'' Suddenly, with the desperate nnreason-, ablenessof a" man In extremities like him, '' who drowning, clutches at a chip. I re peated my feeble signal of distress: ''Helpt J iieipr- I waited half a minute, and repeated iff for a third time: "Help!" t Coseeire mr emotions to hear imtantlr. and from immediately behind me, the ret ...... .. U l-.lt... f V..u... ilTT.11 .. there!" ; 1 "Hearcn be praisedl" I gasped. Then,""!" uan you neip me out oi tnis nriitr - m "I shouldn't wonder," cams the reply."! "I'll try, anyhow." "to And therewith I felt mrself seized br two! strong arms, lifted from off mr feet andVai moment later set down upon a spot of,the"j pavement which the wind had swept nearlyJ clean, where l bad a chance to see ana to! thank my rescuer, CHAPTER VI. if$ Hn was a tall and athletic-looking aanHj perhaps SO years old, with ruddy, good humored face, an honest pair of blueeresi and a curling yellow beard. He wejert seaisstmcap wnicn came aown over, his ears, sealskin gloves which reached 'up -i t.r -ln.w -1 , .1.- -f-LL-c ttUUTi; ills CVBk Bin I H uwij tv fciia eDOW9,4 a pea jacket and rubber boots, His beard,? his eyebrows and so much of his hair, asl was exposed, were thick with fro sen. snowj and from his mustache depended series or"! Icicles, where his breath had coadeaied and! congealed. 'I believe t hare to thank you for serins my life.'! I began, in seh a veiea u i mhIjI muster, and I noticed that myuttenMeWM