WK ,R '35 jf THE. PITTSBIRG DISPAT -& . - HGISSifO 16. SECOND PIRLT "W" -lJf- r ! ft-. WOMEN OF BPEMAR Beauty and Business Among the Ad Tanced Women of the Orient. WIYES CARET THE FAMILY PURSE. A Burmese Belle and Her Peculiar Dress and Big Cigars. DESCBJPH05 OF A BUEMEBB DIHNEB, fCOBEiSFOKBESCI OF IH DISFATCK.1 Bangoon, Bttb- Kah, March 18. The women of Bur mah are the most ad vanced women of the East The Japanese wife is addressed as slave by her hus band and she never appears to help him entertain his guests. The Korean madame never appears on the streets except after dark, and the small footed Chinese girl is the slave of her mother-in-law. She has no rights that her husband is hound to respect, and he can sell her when he is tired of her. The Siamese girl, though a step higher injthe order of human rights, has to support the family, and she is, according to law, the property of the king. The Malay woman is secluded in the harem of her husband, and the millions of women of India, Egypt and Turkey are never seen upon the streets. The Burmese girls are the brightest char acters of the country and their gay silks, bright eyes and graceful figures fill every place with color and beauty. They mix with the men and they have equal rights in property end social standing with their hus bands. During the first years of the mar riage the man must live with and help sup port his mother-in-law, and he is by no means the master of the house. The woman holds the purse. She is the business man of the family and though at times it is said -that wife-beating tales place in Burmah, such instances are few and far between. JC heard of one to-day in which a man enraged by a shrewish wife attempted to strike her. A crowd gathered around and she taunted him, saying "Beat mel beat mel 1" The man raised his stick and brought it down sgain and again within an inch of the jroman's back, but did not dare to strike aer. Good Bmlueas Women. The business ot Burmah is managed by he women as much as is the business of Burmese Lady. France. The city of Rangoon has about 140,000 people, and it is the center of trade of lower Burmah. Much of the native bus iness is done in immense bazaars, covering many acres. These bazaars are roofed with heavy wood or iron to keep out the sun. and some of them cover several blocks. Their interiors are divided up into streets, which cut one another at right angles. These streets are walled with cases of goods of all kinds, which rise from the back of a ledge five feet wide and as high as a chair seat. Upon these ledges the bazaar's sellers sit with their goods piled around and behind them, and in these bazaars the Burmese women compete with merchants from all over the East. They are as sharp at a bar gain as the Parsee merchants and the tur baned Mohammedans who have stalls ad jacent to them, and the Burmese manufac tures of all kinds are sold by them. 'Without education in arithmetic and without know ing how to read and write, they can count profit and loss like so many lightning cal culators. I bought some silk ot one of them to-day. The price first asked was three times what I finally gave, and the girl who sold me made, I doubt not, 25 per cent profit. . A Burmese Beanty. She was a typical Burmese beauty and she sat with her legs crossed fiat on the straw mat of her booth with shelves of silks behind her and with gay-colored clothes on the floor all around her. In her mouth was a Burmese cigar at least a foot long and a fall inch in thickness. She offered me a whiff when I looked at her goods, but upon my refasing she handed the cigar over to her sister and attended to business. Pulling down one piece of bright silk after another, she spread them out on the mat before me and chatted and langhed while she sold. Girls mature here at 13 and 11 and this bazaar daisy was perhaps 16 years old. She was as straight as a post and, as plump as a -partridge, and her rich Burmese dress was well fitted to show out her beauties." The Burmese women are clad in two garments. One of these is a jacket of silk or cotton which reaches to the hips and the other is thetamehn. This is a wide strip of bright silk about five feet square, which is wrapped around the waist and the limbs and fastened with a twist at the front. It has the effect of a tight American pullback without the bustle, put on without underskirts. The opening of the skirt is at the front, but the women walk with a throwing out of the bare heels, which prevents the folds opening to an immodest degree. A Gar Coalnme. The wealthier ladies wear these dresses so long that they trail upon the ground. The colors are those of the rainbow and the most delicate or yellows, of pinks and of blues are used. My fair merchant wore a skirt of bright green and gold, and her silk vest was a rich cream yellow. She had several strands ot pearls about her olive-brown neck and her ears had great buttons in them of clusters ot diamonds, each as large as cuff buttons. She had bracelets on her arms and there was a gold ring on one of her toes, and in her hair was a bunch of bricht artificial flowers. She was, I judge, five feet hich. Hr eves were larse. solt and . brown, and ahnra these weredaintilv-arehtr? tout noi neavy brows, out oaa a weaun or I !"" "';. duck nair raiicu up m a pyra- I tajik L s 'is-mrMxm . j. .-?. I ill 23 midal crown on the very top of her head and this was fastened by a silver comb which rested ou the scalp at the base of the pyra mid. She was a fair type of a thousand pretty Burmese girls, whom I have seen here during the past week, and her costume was that of the country. A'TWaee Maiden' Dress. The fashions do not change in Burmah and it ought not to take a Burmese lady long to make her toilet. The tamenn i s worn ny an classes and in all parts of Burmah. The village girls and the women of Mandalay do not use the silk vest, and in its stead they have a strip of cloth which is wound tightly around the bust under the arms, leaving the neck and shoulders bare in much the same way as the women ot Siam. There is a scarf which is sometimes thrown over one shoul der, and this falling under the other arm is caught and is so arranged that it can, cover both shoulder if the girl should desire it. One meets many women, however, who do not use this scarf, and the ordinary dress of the interior village belle is about as decol lete as that of our fashionable society ladies. The village girls wear as bright colors as do the ladies of the better classes, but their tamehns are of cotton. They are in plaid patterns and are fastened with a simple knot atthe.waist ' Enormous Ear Pings. All Burmese women wear ear plugs. These are as costly as the purse of the woman can purchase and they are like no ear-rings you will find in America. The Burmese Lover. lobes of their ears have holes in them, each of which is from a half inch to an inch and a half in. diameter, and I have seen such holes through which a man's thumb could be thrust and not bruise the skin. In some cases women carry these big Burmese cigars in their ears and I saw a woman's ear yes terday in which there were gold rings which would have made good-sized napkin rings. It seems incredible that the flesh can stretch as it does, but some of the poorer women's ears are so enlarged by this process that the string of flesh which hangs down in the place of the lobe is almost as large around as the ear itself. The high ste lady has a hole in her ear about as big around as her index finger, and the ear plugs, which are about half an inch long, are often tipped with clusters of diamonds. They are sometimes of gold, and in the cases of less well-to-do people are pings of solid amber. The poorest women wear plugs of glass of bright green or yellow. The gold rings are often hoops of gold of about the same shape and size of an open-ended thim ble." Clears and Iiove-SfaUog-. Speaking of cigars, I bought two to-day of a woman in the bazaar. They arc each a foot long, and one looks for all the world like a -poorly-developed ear of corn with the husk on. They are very mild and have little tobacco in them, being made of owher leaves in connection with the tobacco All of the Burmese people smoke men, women and children. I have not yet seen any ba bies leave the breast for a whiff of a cigar ette, as the books on Burmah state thev do, but I see many 3 and 4-year-old children smoking, and the Burmese maiden learns to smoke as soon as she can walk. All of the girls are adepts in rolling cheroots, and in Burmese conrting the girl gives her lover cheroots rolled with her own hands, and the two lake, I doubt not, whiffs about in the smoking of them. 1$ is common to pass the cigai from one friend to another, and in a group of three girls, whom r watched having their fortunes told under the shadow of the great golden pa goda, I saw that one cigar did for the trio. The Burmese do-not court in the day time. Love-making goes on dnring the evening, and the lover never calls until the old folks have gone to bed. He always brings a friend with him, and the maiden dresses herself in her best, and paints and powders for the occasion. Elopements are common, and the lovers are so romantic that they un dertake them many times when there is no opposition ou the part of the parents. After remaining away for several weeks they come back and ask lor lorgiveness, and the mar riage is then often celebrated, though not before. A Simple Ceremony. The Burmese marriage is a very simple affair, Jt consists ordinarily of eating rice together in the presence of friends and Surmese Village Belle. of saying that the two propose to live to gether as man and wife. The matches are sometimes made by the parents and some times by professional matchmakers. The mpst common method, however, is by the young people fixing the arrangement for themselves and carrying on their billine and "cobing the same as we do at home. The .Burmese groom lurnlslies the wedding breakfast and he carries it to the house of the bride. After the marriage rice is thrown after the couple as they go to the bridal chamber and they are expected to pass seven days in seclusion, though this is not com mon. The newly married pair live with the bride's parents for several years at least, and in-case that one of these parents dies the other becomes an inmate of the family for lifetime. It is presumptuous for a young: man to set up housekeeping immedi ately after marriage and he is supposed to work for a certain time for his wife. Marriage Lamb Polygamy is permitted fa Barman and KingThebaw had 63 wives. Most of, the Burmese, however, have bat one wife at a time and to have more Uio respectable. The favorite time for mfryfeg is April ana aay,aaa boh mjmjwbsm are ssr PsoSml yi-? lliiBigBHBrrrsisssnM j" F ried before they are 3$. As to property rights the woman's money is kept apart from that of the man's, and she has an equal right with her husband in the prop erty earned during married life. In case of a divorce she gets oaok all of the money she brought into the family and half of the earnings. She has a right to her own earn ings and the laws of divorce are more in favor of her than her husband. She can get a divorce if her husband is poor and unable to support her, or if he is idle and lazy. If he is always ailing or if he becomes a cripple after marriage she may be di vorced, and on the other nana the man may get a divorce for three reasons. The first is if his wife has no sons. The second is if she does not love bim, and the third is if she persists in going where he forbids her. In addition to this divorces are permissible by mutual agreement. They are not com mon, however, nor reputable, and It is a Burmese saying that a divorced woman needs small wooing. Another Burmese say ing is that: "Monks are beautiful when they are lean, four-fooled -animals when they are fat, men whenthey are learned, and "women when they are married." Woman' nights. Burmese women are treated well in the family and they are the equals of the men in family affairs. They have -their say in all business matters, and the only place in which their inferiorityis noticeable is in re ligion. The Burmese are Buddhists, and a Buddhist woman has no chance to go to heaven, save by her soul at death passing into the body of a man. If she is wonder fully pious during this life such a transmi gration may take place, and I note that the chief worshipers at the pagodas here are women. Bnddhist teachers put women much lower in the scale of morality than man, and they maintain that the sins of one woman are equal to the sins of 3,000 of the worst men that ever lived. There are about 200.000,000 Buddhist women in the world, and none of these have any other hope of immortality than this. Nevertheless I am told that the Burmese women are more honest than the men and that their business promises are more to be trusted. They are not educated, as a rule, and it is only lately that there have been schools in Burmah for women. The Baptist missionaries are doing a great deal in this direction, and I visited a fe male seminary here which contained about 100 girls. They were very bright looking girls, too, and the President of the school told me that many of them could speak three languages and that they were fully as bright as the average American girl. During my stay an English spelling match was gotten up for my entertainment, and a class of SO girls were spelled down. They were all clad in the Burmese costumes and bare-footed, bare-headed, and with these tight dresses about their limbs they stood and spelled" the words almost as rapidly as the teacher could utter them. They had a queer pronunciation and accent, but they did remarkably well, and two of the girls remained on the floor for a full half-hour, going almost through the spelling book in that time. As the girls missed they one by one went back to their seats, some laughing and some pouting. But the two who re mained to the last tired out their teacher, and as she said "enough" they walked off proudly kicking out their bare heels as they lirted them from the floor in this approved Burmese fashion, which serves to keep the dress closed in front. Easy Housekeeping;. The Burmese woman has few of the troubles and pleasures of a New England housewife. AH of her cooking is done out of doors at this time of year, and her range never gets out of order. She builds her fire on the ground, and her cooking utensils consist of two or tkree;carthfrn pot& xnese and -a far of water with a eoeoanut ladle made up the kitchen furniture, and our" Burmese housewife is sot troubled with table-spreading nor dishwashing. She is never worried about her flour nor her bak ing powder. The Bnnnese use neither knives nor forks. Their staple food is rice and a huge platter of this is cooked for the family and placed upon the floor. In addi tion there is a bowl of curry, a kind of a soup, gravy-like mixture, which is seasoned witb fish and pepper, and which is very hot. The family squat around the rice dish and each has his own little bowl for curry and a larger one for rice. Everyone helps him self, putting his fingers into the rice platter and taking as much as he can squeeze up in his hands. The food is conveyed from the bowl to the mouth with the hand, and at the close of the meal everyone is expected to wash his own dishes. No drinking is done dnring the meal, and at the end each goes to the water jar and rinses out his mouth. I have seen many families jit meals, and in no case have I seen the chopsticks or knives and forks. The Burmese dinner is thus a perpetual picnic. Urine in Tents, n Living, as they do, the Burmese can not have much of heme life. The houses of the great majority are more lice tents than any thing else. They are made of pjaited bam boo walls thatched with palm leaves, which are pinned to rafters of bamboo the size of fishing poles. The most of the houses are ot one story, and this is built upon piles so high above the ground that you can walk nnder the floor without stooping. Under the house the live stock of the family js kept and there is sometimes a work room inside this lower foundation. The house has no furniture in an American sense; the family sleep upon mats and they keep their heads off the floor by resting them upon bamboo pillows. Still they are wonderfully civiiiicu uuuBiucriug tucir 3urruuuuings. They are the kindest and most manly people I have met since leaving Japan, and their women are bright, intelligent, and in the cases of the younger ones, beautiful. Feank G. Caepenteb. LOTS OF CnOOKED HOSES. Hardly Anybody's Nasal Appendage Exactly Strnleut and Becular. Lewiiton Journal. 3 I have been .making a study of noses late ly, and really it's astonishing to find how large a proportion of the noses are twisted to one side or the other. Try to find the median line of a person's face by tracing it from the'tip of his nose and. see how you come out! Many people who imagine that their noses are perfectly straight would find by a close inspection that those appendages gee or haw a little perhaps to their amuse ment and maybe to their chagrin. A Portland dentist tells a story to the point. Says he: "After I had fitted a set of false teeth to a lady, she exclaimed, 'Whyl you haven't got the middle of the set in the middle of my face!' "I looked again and told her I thought I had. " 'But just look at my nose!' said she. 'The middle of the set certainly is not in line with the middle of my nose.' " 'That may be,' said I, Tint your nose " 'Do you mean to tell me that my nose ain't straizbl?' ' 'Ithink that you will find that such is the case.' " 'How much is your bill? I'll pay it and you can keep your old teeth!' "She paid the bill, threw down the set and flounced out, as angry as an angry woman could be. She went home, her friends fold her how foolish she was, she laid awake all n!ght,ind the next day came back, apologized and had her work fin- lsnea." A Model MoMftiernrlBg- Tovra. In the-town of Bmbroofc. Ireland, where John G. Jliehardeea employs 3,000 people lathe bkihh fee tare of Irish lilea, bo liqnor rhas"been soMVferviO.'yeawJ'and as a result .there jsntaer pelieeB3B,-, pmoa, pawa- b ear pauper m ie tows. EgTgSBTm& STTETDAY, MA,X 12, 1889, WHY BO HEN DRINK? Resnlis of Scientific Queries as to the Causes of Inebriety. DRUNKENNESS CALLED A DISEASE, Frequently Hereditary, and Only to bo Gored by Heroic Treatment FEMALE INEBRIATES IK HIGH LIFE rwaiTOX POB THI DISrATCH.1 "Why do men get drunk? A number of learned Englishmen, who have formed themselves into a "Society for the Study of Inebriety," might possibly throw some light on this interesting question if anybody could. 3ut they don't They apparently accept the existence of the evils of drunken ness as a fact and devote themselves mainly to inquiring how said evils may best be remedied. I have one of their pamphlets before me. The reading it contains is very different from most of the labored reports and essays put out by scientific bodies, inasmuch as it is neither dull nor dry, but curiously inter esting as a whole. "Does Inebriety Con duce to Longevity?" is the subject of an ad dress delivered by the President of the society. It appears that cer tain persons, presumably interested in the manufacture -or sale of intoxicants, have issued cards, printed in various Ianguages,and circulated them very freely in Great Britain and elsewhere. These circulars purport to give a table fur nished by a committee of the British Medi cal Association, appointed to investigate the relations of disease and alcohol, from which it appears that the average age of total ab stainers at death was 61 years; that of decid edly intemperate men, 62; freo drinkers, 57; careless drinkers, 69, and habitually tem perate, 62. So the President raises his very novel query, and in effect answers it by the words, "Not much." A MA1T OF SIBAW DEMOLISHED. It is true, he says, that such figures were set forth.bnt it is not true that they warrant any deduction in favor of the superior longevity of drinkers, or that the British Medical Association gave utterance to any such absurd or unfounded conclusion. He points out that the reports were limited and defective, that the data were collected in a loose manner, that of the deaths returned only 2.8 per cent of all were those of ab stainers, and that the statictics were value less as a basis for general conclusions. The explanation of this apparent greater shortness of life among the teetotalers' is very simple. The general habit of drinking has come down from remote antiquity, while the abstinence movement is bnt some 50 years or so old. The great majority of our converts to teetotalism have been young persons, so that the average age of living abstainers must lor some time to come be much less than the average age of drinkers of all degrees. Such is the simple explana tion of this latest "Mare's nest of Bacchus. This explanation is corroborated by two other tables constructed by Tt, Owen and his committee. "When deaths under 30 years of age were excluded, the average age of the abstainers was about four years more than that ot the decidedly Intemperate. When all deaths under 40 years were ex cluded, the average age of the teetotaler was one year greater than that of the free drink en, and taoie than" 11 wr years" greater than that of the intemperate. TEMPEBANCE AKD WjITO ItEE. A conclusiveproof of the superior longev ity of abstainers over drinkers who are not drunkards, is afforded by the retnrns of the United Kingdom and 'General Provident Institution. The statistics are spread over 22 years, and embrace only the,lives of ab stainers and moderate drinkers, drunkards being excluded. In the temperance section the number of expected deaths during the 22 years was 3,937; the number of actual deaths was 2,796. In the general section there were 6,114 expected deaths and 5,984 actual deaths. These figures show only 71 per cent mor tality of the expectancy, "a saving ot 29 lives in every 100 among the abstainers, while among the non-abstainers there was a mor tality of 98 per sent, or a saving of but two lives in every 100. The investigation committee, instead of arriving at the startling and absurd conclu sion imputed to them, actually decided and stated in their report their full belief in the following propositions: That habitual indulgence in alcoholic liquors beyond the most moderate amounts has a distincttendency to shorten life, the av erage shortening being roughly proportional to the degree of indulgence. That in the pro duction of cirrhosis and gout, alcoholic ex cess plays the very marked part which it has long been recognized as doing. That total abstinence and habitual temperance augment considerably the chance of death from old age or natural decav. So does true science even witness to the superior heolth fulness of abstinence. The-more the effects of alcoholic intoxicants are inquired into, the stronger confirmation there will be of the truth of the foundation principle of the great temperance and prohibition move ments, that intoxicating narcotics are dan gerous articles, noxious to health and life, in all quantities which are followed by any appreciable' effec t. KTEBBrETr A DISEASE. In the same document is printed a paper by Mrs. L'Oste, an associate member of the society, who has been engaged in the study and cure of inebriety for 27 years, and who is now connected with a home devoted to the cure of female inebriates lrom the cul tured classes. Her belief is that nothing but the absolute and immediate discontinu ance of the use of stimulants in any form will effectually cure the drunkard. The former practice of weaning patients by de greesa sort of "tapering oft;" whereby the patient's supply of liquor was reduced grad uallyshe says reminds her of a man who, while drowning his superfluous kittens.used to take them out of the water at intervals to breathe, beitg finder the impression that iachlresh immersion rendered dying easier! She is now convinced that the system was wrong; it simply prolonged the pain, fos tered the craving for alcohol and lengthened the time required to thoroughly purify the system from all traces of it Mrs. L'Oste gives, as the result of her experience and obrervation, the following statements: "I am entirely of opinion that inebriety is a disease, often hereditary, the germs of which may sometimes be noticed even in children, frequently shown by their Inordi nate thirst and their craving for hot condi ments with their food, and highly" spiced dishes. I have seen this in several instances in the children of ladies under my care. One little girl of 10 1 discovered to be in the habit or taking pepper out of the cas tors and eating it by the spoonful. This tendency, all who have studied the question must know, is it constant trait in the adult inebriate. When the disease was not inher ited, I have found that the majority of cases Were caused by the nervous debility result ing from feminine disorders. XHEIB JTATtJEE CHANGED BY DKINK. "While under influence of the disease, the sufferers are not responsible lor their actions, their whole natures and characters undergo a complete metamorphosis, the most high principled and scrupulously truthful will stoop to such depth of deceit and degrada tion, as at other times they would shudder to think of. The craving for stimulants becomes so intense that they are faeapable of resisting it whea at liberty, and at .'this jstagewill hesitate at nothing, ewt see- lants. The consequenw of the continued in dulgence in"alcahol or drugs, is the gradual weakening of neTve power, both mental and physical, until at last the poison takes full effect and brings about in some cases partial and in others total paralysis,- beside many other grave diseases, such as diabetes, weakened heart, congested liver, etc." Mrs. L'Oste states that the length of time required for a complete cure varies between six months and two years, according to the age, temperament and physical health of the patient, whetherthe disease is heredi tary, the number of years attacks of in ebriety have continued and the nature and the amounts of the stimulants taken. A cure is rarely effected in six months. The. lady continues: "I have found the percentage of cures to be about 30 per cent These were not, how ever, as is so often the case, mere tempo rary cures, but the patient were to my knowledge absolute teetotallers for years, and manv of them are still known by me to be so. Others have of course, been lost sight of as years went by; but I have every reason to hope that after keeping well so long, thev have not relapsed.'' Mrs. L'Oste does not believe in the use of morphia or other 'narcotics or sedatives as remedial agents in cases where stimu lants are suddenly stopped. Experience proves conclusively to her mind, that, as a rule, when the effect of the drug has passed, the weakness, often engendered, renders the craving for stimulants greater. A sojourn in a genuine institution for the cure of the disease where there is no possibility of either of these drugs being obtained, is, in her opinion, the only chance of permanent cure. E. M. E. HaRI-KAEI IN JAPAN Tub Ancient and Barbarous Cnstora No Longer In Vosue. London Qlobe.J The ancient Japanese custom of Hari Kari, or Happy Despatch, has received its death blow. For centuries ifhas been usual for any exalted Japanese dignitary who may have mortally offended his sovereign to re ceive a polite official intimation to the, effect that his suicide will be pleasing to the authorities, and until recently it has been the unvarying practice for the offender to acquiesce resignedly, and, after summon ing his relatives aronnd him, to formally disembowel himself in their presence. If the culprit happened to be of exceptionally high rank, the sovereign would, as a mark of honor, send him a jeweled sword, with which to operate upon himself. But all these things are now of the past; Not long ago the Mikado was grievously hurt by the words and conduct of a high court official. The man was an old and very valued servant of the Crown; but his crime was unpardon able. Kext day, therefore, an officer brought him the fatal sword, a magnificent weapon, with a blade inlaid with gold and a handle encrusted with diamonds, together with a sympathetic intimation that his early death would be regarded as a benefit to the em pire in general and to the Mikado in partic ular. The culprit received the sword with all proper respect, but, as soon as the emis sary had departed, the wily Japanese in whose mind European habits of thought have evidently taken firmer root walked down to the quiy, went on board a mail steamer that was bound for Havre, and upon reaching Paris incontinently sold his sword of honor for 6,000. We never met with a better illustration of the eminently practical nature of the. Japanese character. It is exceedingly un likely that the Mikado will ever again trust one of his subjects to execute himself. Still less will His Majesty be inclined to favor exalted criminals with jeweled swords of honor. Tho'offices of a Lord High Execu tioner will probably be called into requisi tion instead) and wicked noblcswjll, for the future; be saved the trouble and anxiety of having to be their own, butchers. WOHEtf WITH DECEITFUL WATS. How They Fall the Weol Over the Eyes of Their Fond Hnsbnnds. Brooklyn Eagle. "Some of the funniest and even strangest things that ever take place anywhere occur in the lobby or a theater," said Mr. Walter Sinn recently. "It will p'ay you as a news paper man to hang around here for a while," he continued, "and keep your ears and your eyes open." I followed his advice, and the first thing I heard persuaded me that some married men pay much too heavily for their theatrical amusements. Two ladies walked up to the window where Treasurer Bichardson presides with ability and patience. One of the ladies asked for two 75-cent seats. She was shown the box office sheet, and the location of two good seats not yet sold. She said the seats would do very well and began to look for the money for them. Her companion said "Wait a minute, mister. Say, Mary, why don't you buy two 460-cent tickets? He won't know the difference, and we can have some icecream." The proposition was promptly agreed to. On the evening of the same day, just as the audience was leaving the theater a man, his wife, and a lady friend stopped, and the last mentioned lady stepped up to Manager Sinn and warmly, thanked him for some kindness which she seemed to think he he had done her. All of -the three persons were entire strangers to him, The following day he got an explanation. The lady had gone through her husband's pockets and treated him to an evening at the theater, where she could never get him to take her. She prarticcd a little deceit upon him by getting her friend to tell him that she (the friend) had received the tick ets as complimentaries from- the manage ment of the Park. The profuse thanks to Mr. Sinn were only a finale to the clever lit tle deceit A 1IYELY BEAR CHASE. Bruin Is Panned From West Virginia ThrouRU Maryland to Pennsylvania. A bear hunt, which extended over three States, ended at Cbambcrsburg, this State, on Sunday. On last Friday a big 200 pound black bear was driven out of the mountains of West Virginia by a party of hnntcrs and swam the Potomac river. Bruin made his first ap pearance at Williamsport, Md., on Satur day morning, and terrified the'town, several dozen hunters" and packs of hounds going alter him without success. Ho then crossed the Mason and Dixon line into Pennsyl vania, and made his next appearance near Green Castle. There another big hunting party was organized, but the animal escaped the men and dogs. On Sunday morning Bruin was seen near several small towns in Eranklin county. Pennsylvania, and the whole neighborhood turned out to hunt him. Late in the after noon he was Been near Quincy, eight miles from CHambersburg, making his way up the North Mountains. A big crowd ot men and dogs started after him. The dogs treed the bear,and he was finally dispatched after showing fight EASI TO TELL A DIAMOND. A Simple Method of Dlitlnsmlhlng the Gennino From 'the Fale. St. Lonli Globe-Democrat. - "It doesn't require an expert," said Dr. De Menil, 'to tell whether a diamond is gennine or not The test is very simple, and can be made in any,place, and in 'a moment All you nerd is a piece of paper and a lead pencil. With the latter make a small dot on the paper, then look at it through the diamond. , .. "If you can see bat one dot you can de- fiend upon it that the stone la genuine, but f the mark is scattered or shows more than .oae, you will be perfectly safe Jq refusing .upajic. .ii in a nBCnMBj 05 .coereH TtrtMH turn, NYE AND M'ALLISTER. Bill Has an Interesting Interview ' With Ward McAllister and IS TfiBATED WITH COLD DISDAIN. He Gives the Crest Trust King a Few Chunks of Wisdom. THfi BLASE TOUHd.HAK AHD WOMAS rwsrrrxx roa Ihe DispiTCH.t ONEof the saddest things- about the, streets New York" is the' blase young, man. Hatdly old enough to know how to harness a horse or milk a cow, even for a picnic party, he is already weary ot life. He knew everything when lie was little, and has gradually ad ded to It ever since. He cannot sit through The Blase Young Man. "Hamlet" because he has heard it so often before. He saysBooth Is failing. Hedon'tthinkthaWeffersonspeaks so distinctly as he used to do. He is sorry for everybody, and pities everybody, and wishes he could split up his knowledge and give the slivers of thought and experience to the poor. The blase yonng man never had any real fun in his life. Even his attempts to be real bad were disappointments. He will criticise his harp when he gets it and get his crown stretched before he will wear it He will also speak of the dampness of the cloud he is sitting on and make sarcastic re marks because he cannot wear pockets stitched on the outside of his robe or ny about with a shawl strap full of canes, The Blast Young Man Broposti. knocking the brains out of other celestial people or picking their eyes out and wear ing them away on the ferrule of his um brella. HE NEVBB LAUGHED. The blase young man never laughed heartily, even as a child. Nature disap pointed him. The little lambkins wereun tidy and the grass took the- polish off his shoes. He criticized nearly- all forms of vegetation. Throwing srdMsslng: -gown hastily over his shoulders, whileWnitiBp-for his clothes to be aired and, put on him, he looked at the doctor on the first evening of his appearance with a keen, searching glance, as much as to say, "You have ushered me into the world which I can al ready see is being frightfully mismanaged." He has no enthusiasm. He does not love anyone, because he fears that he might give way to a wild impulse and crush the crystal of his watch by means of the sunny bead of his soul's idol. He knowa bad things about everybody, but heightens the effect by striv ing, oh. so hard, to keep them quiet He has tasted every joy in the whole world ex cept the glad thrill of jumping off the East river bridge, and he could get a general per mit for that if he would only doit " When he was 16 he proposed to a woman 39 years of age, but could not do so withont first telling her that he had tasted of every sweet in life and that he had been oh, so tough and so naughty, and that he was really a great big horrid rake in disguise. "But you are innocent," he said; "you are pure as a freshly laundried snowflake. You are just bursting into womanhood ami I cannot alas, I cannot fool thee- or beguile thee as others might seek to do. I am a very wicked man. My soul is steeped in vice, but still I am noble. With all my ac cursed life of lust to look back upon, I can truly say that I have never forgotten to be a fentleman. T am a great big, generous earted but eunuied citizen. I have saw everything, from the Fourth of July to the Tooleries in France, Europe. I have saw everything in New York, and Fargo, Dakota. I have been abroad two weeks and tasted every delight of foreign courts, having paid fines in most all of them. And now after all tnis. can yon not love me all the better for it? Do you not .crave a blase young man with scars on his character, but yet noble and smart SHE IS STILL THINEUTO. She said she would think it over, and if she decmea to love mm sne would send a requisition for hip. And so he is still waiting for her to come and claim him, bnt rather hoping that she will not Then there is also the blase young woman beside. She has seen everything. She al lows you to tell her about something and then she says she has seen it several times. She has the chastened air of one whojias lost several husbands, but is willing to go through it again whenever heaven sees fit to designate another one. one has a far-away look like one who sees a swift-footed Welsh rabbit scooting across the horizon. When she was a little girl she used to play a little, but not uproariously. She did it according to plans and specifications fur nished by the old books representing chil dren in the act of romping and endeavoring to be gay. She had a large amount of wisdom at the time when she was born. She, could forget enough in a few moments to start a normal school. She was like the blase young man and the bnmble bee, big geswhen she was born. We should be sorry for the blase people wherever we meet them. They da not have any fun. They are afraid to laugh at any thing for fear that other people will think they never heard it before. They lead a sad life. When they get to heaven and their neighbors look for them to be surprised, the blase peopleof New York and Brooklyn will say, as they look around at the sapphire lampposts and the IB-carat curbstones, "Yes, Mr. Talmage was telling me about, those things eight or nine years ago." INTERVIEWING M'ALLISTEB. "And have you always been thus?" 1 asked of Mr. Ward McAllister the other day, as I seated myself on his escritoire and colleoted a carnation from the beautiful little bouquet by his side. 'What do you mean by that?" he asked, haughtily twisting his imperial and working out the wax, which he then wiped on a pansy I penwiper irom time to time. "I mean to say, Mae," I replied, "that-I would like to knowwhether this thing came, on you when: you was a child, or whes) yo'u began to notice whiskers bursting fort from their lair?" $ "Do yoa mind telling me what you refer to?" he again, asked, eoldly, taking a crest from his hip peeket sad rubbing it with a nail brseh.-f -' - , vi reer w Mmrseeeee4 usaiUBgMieertM S I IMlSTlSWlH IHM I Mil If I IS II' -,'T-lll KJ1 -? jftLa.a 1 r r nig , of American blooded trick jackasses to 400. Did yon think of it yourself, or did some newspaper man put the idea into your headf" "I owe nothing to the press, Mr. Ah Mr. Ah " "Nye is my name. N-y-e. Mr. Ah was my partner. Mr. Ah ,Sin. of California, formerly of Hong Song. My name is Nye. We come from the De Nyes, who got some foreign substance on their escutcheons in tho time of Looey the L and so came to this country. Still there is no royal blood in our veins. We can say that, truly. We have been a great family for hauteur and .reserve, and we can truthfully say that no dissolute monarch has ever been able to in- ( Interviewing the King of tne Crest Trust. traduce his scrofulous tendencies into our family tree." "Well, sir," said the great head of the Crest Trust, "I do not care to know especially what your history may be, or the history of your tribe, sir. I am not" in terested In: the matter. Moreover, I was just going out, sir." IEEATED. -WTTH DISDAIN. "So was l'in a minute, if I am not de taining you," I said, as I ran my arm play fully through his and looked up into his clear, cold eyes. "Just wait a little while and I will go with you. We can stroll along together anon. Do you not like anon? As asocial word. X mean. Not as a busi ness term, of course, but ns a kind of snapper on the end of a social tete-a-tete. 'Ah, yes, very good. "Very good, indeed. But I will not detain you." "You an not detaining me, Mac. You couldn't detain me if I wanted to go. But I do not want to. My chores are all done. I have copy enough on the hook to last a week. I am out for the day, old man. I am out for the day and we can have sport if you say the word. We can frolic over the hillsides, as the suspicion of migonette and goats come athwart the reeling senses. I know where the bock beer groweth rankest and the 'cavler sandwich' with cod liver oil and cat fish roe into it doth most abound. Come with me, Mr. McAllister, and let the tail go with the hide, as one may say." "You are a low, cawse person," said he languidly, "and I say again that I will not detain you." "Why are you so morbid about this mat ter of detention?" I queried. "You are not detaining me. I am soaking my soul in dolce farina, Mac I do not need to go back to the office till Saturday, and, in fact, I do not need to go there even then, for I have an order in for the week's pay. Let us be gay. Ward, if I may call you thus. Let u be free from care. Yon can take your coat off, if you feel better that way, while I am here; You need not fold your red sole leather gloves so as to make the fingers stick out of your breast pocket like the hand of a drowning man ordering five more beers, un less you want to do so. Be yourself for a day or twoMr.-MoAlUgtor,-jJ uuiae -with-me" e ' ?HE Willi -HAVE NOME OF NXE. "I thank you, sir, but Ihave other duties. Your, tastes are gross and cawse. You are a cawse man. You only carry one handker chief at a time, instead of two. We carry one in our hip pocket for using purposes, and wear one in our outside pocket with prongs on if, to please the eye. Yon think of nothing but patient toil. You are cawse. Your umbrella is gross and paunchy. I d not like you. Go away." Do you mean that?" "Yes, pf cawse I do. I don't want to be rude to you, but you offend me. You wear a soft hat, and yoa hold it inyour hand like a new bawn baiby. You try to conceal yaw nanfls by sitting on them, and you are just Hye Finds a Flshball In Mads Kitchen. . awfully cawse. I never heard of you befaw in me life. You are just as rude as can be. and I will not detain vou." "Thank you, sir,'5 now thoroughly in censed, "I will go away. I see your method. You draw me out in conversation, and then after I have told you all I know, you say you will not detain me. You say it several times. Yon do not show me the album or treat me courteously, and then, because I am shy and rattled, you call me 'cawse.' I would be ashamed to treat anybody that way, Mr. McAllister. I would not treat ,my own wife that way. I come inhere in a quiet,' off-hand way and try to make you feel easy with me, and you take advantage of it I put on a gay, debonair and naive air in your house, which I really do not feel at all. I do it so you will not feel that you must entertain me. I do not intend to stay to dinner, but just come here to have a talk as between man and man, about one thing and another, and you sit up there on the edge of your chair, LIKE A SNO-WMAN, with a hoe-handle for a spinal column, and expect me to be easy and graceful in my manners. I cannot do it I am not used to it Wherever I go I am courted and feted and made much of. In all the gay centres of young and joyous life, there you will find me, with my little Ion mots and repartee. Here, in the presence of a Stoughton bottle, a bump on a log, a fly-up-the-creek, Lcannot think of anything to say.' So I appear at a disadvantage, and I know It just as well as you do. I feel all the time that you are weary. You throttle a yawn every little while, just as jon begin to show the amalgam filling in vour back teeth. I felt somehow all the time that I was possibly boring you, because I know how it bores a feeble-minded person to fol low the swift flight pf those who think thoughts. I am sorry. I am pained to know that L have annoyed you, Mr. Mc Allister, for. yen look worn and haggard, as if you might'have been out last evening and perhaps overbrayed yourself." I then passed rapidly ''from his sight, in tending to go via the street door, but in the frenzy of my wrath I went out the wrong door, so tbiit X soon found myself in the kitchen. So' I stole oat through the wood shed, eatiag as I went a cold codfish ball, which Mr. McAllister had m .doubt at tested the eveiB before. ,'2u,rNxs. A'GEEAirSILENTAKIT' The Habits, Aims and Future of Qttl ' Mutes Told by Their Leaders. EESULTS OP THEIR EDUCATIOI.; They Are Eminently Fitted for Nearly Every Profession. QUICK TEMPERED BUT APFE0TI05AM' iwamz-T yoa tits dispatch.1 In prder to fully realize and appreciate the progress and prospects of deafmutes,it i necessary to take a glance backward. la all ages and in ail countries there have existed a certain proportion of deaf and dumb per sons; yet, only a century and a quarter has) elapsed since any effort was made to educate them. It is true there were a few spasmodis attempts and isolated instances of partial success, but not until the close of the eighteenth century did the work assume a character that demonstrated, not the possi bility or the probability, but the unqualified certainty of success, and a widespread recog nition of its importance. Prior to the time when Christ spoke the word "Ephphatha," we have but two au thentic instances in which deaf mutes were treated with any degree of toleration, via.J a son of Croesus, King of Lydia, and Quintuss Pedius, a relative of the Emperor Augustus. The thousands who lived and died before and after the advent of the Christian era were subjects of oppression and cruelty, were denied civil and religious privileges, and, at a certain period, were popularly re garded as objects of divine wrath, and as such, fitted for slavery or death. Scholars and philosophers alike agreed that it was impossible to educate the deaf and dumb. In this country the education of deaf mutes was begun 71 years ago, with a class of four pupils, in Hartford, Conn. At present there are 69 schools and institutions for their education in the United States, with an ag gregate attendance of over 8,000. There are. besides, fully 30,000 deaf mutes scattered throughout the Union, who are either grad uates of the different institutions or are too young to attend. TEACHING XEADES. The graduates of deaf mute institutions, as a general rule, engage in the trades which they have been taught while pupils; lor the institutions not only aim to give both a mental and a manual education, the male pupils being instructed in such trades as cabinetmaking, woodcarving, carpentry, shoemaking, tailoring and printing, as also the occupations of gardening and farming; while the females are taught plain sewing, dressmaking and the correct methods of performing the various domestio duties. Both males and females are instructed in the rudiments of drawing, and those who manifest any talent are educated initio higher branches of art Those who demon strata an ability and a desire for higher edu cation become students of the National Deaf Afntft College at Washington, which is sup- jiortedby the Government and is empowered ty Congress to confer degrees. it wouia De wen w explain uai mere are two distinct conditions implied by the term "deaf mutes.' Ten per cent of so-called deaf mutes can speak, but cannot hear, bav ins become deaf by sickness or accident .after Jearning to tali. In-some- caserees geaifal deaf mates have 'been- tatrght to speak. The vast majority are deaf and dumb. Deaf mutes generally intermarry; and it is only in very rare instances that a deaf mute marries a hearing person. They live happy and industrious lives, and are, with few exceptions, good, law-abiding, intelli gent and independent people, who claim, the rights and privileges and accept the duties and responsibilities of citizenship. Their children are invariably bright, and, very rarely inherit the affliction of the pa rents. During the past 20 years much ad vancement nas been maae. xnrougntne medium of newspapers which publish intel ligence concerning them, rapid strides ia social and business progress nas cnaracter ized them as a class, and at the same time once mora demonstrated the power ot the press. EVEET PEOJTSSION BEPBE3EN1XD. They have literary societies in most of the cities of the United States, where the deaf mutes mount the rostrum and hold forth ia silent oratory and debate. Solutions of vital questions of the day are usually essayed, and the more intelligent, through the me dium of their powerful and effective lan guage of signs, keep the less advanced posted on the topics of the day, develop and improve their argumentative abilities, and generate ideas that otherwise were destined to lie dormant in the brain. Beside these literary societies, there are annual or bien nial State conventions, which take up and discuss matters affecting the welfare of deaf mutes. That the effect of these conventions is salutary add far-reaching is acknowl edged by those conversant with matters re lating to the education and well being or the deaf and dumb. There are to be found deaf mutes in nearly every profession and trade. Strange as it may seem, there are deaf-mute ministers, lawyers, analytical chemists, apothecaries; artists, sculptors, teachers, editors, bankers clerks, book keepers, etc. Many have risen to positions of high emolument and honor, and did noi want of space prevent, we would like to give a few special instances. It would be advantageous to deaf mutes if the public possessed a more correct con ception of the disabilities which deafness imposes. There Is a tendency to exaggerate the extent of the misfortune. A little reason ing will show that there are few avocations which a deaf mute cannot pursue with aa much comparative success as one who caa, hear. " E. A. Hodgson, "Editor Dtafituti Journal. FE0H A TEACHER'S STAKDE0IHT. Deaf Mates Bo Ifot Receive Proper Coat!' erntlon In Popular Estimation. Viewing the subject from the standpoint of a teacher, whose interest naturally centers in the helps and hindrances which the deaf experience in their efforts to acquire an edu cation and the ability to improve their con dition, the outlook for their future is cer tainly very promising. We have seen their education in this' country rise from one school with four PH-. pils in 1817 to 69 schools with 'some 8,008? ; pupils at the present day, while the results attained in the way of instruction is simply marvelous, and have placed the American! system far ahead of all others. -Lais combi nation of circumstanees is traceable equally to the zealous efforts and perseverance of the ' devoted men and women who have raised ' the profession of teaching the deaf to suca a rank that It bas engaged the attentioa of some of the brightest intellects of modem times and to the liberality of our State Legislatures,, which, in most instances, havs amply provided for the deaf children withia their respective borders. Even the Govern ment at Washington maintains a college for the deaf, which, by the attainments aad. high positions held by its graduates, attests the wisdom of affording the deaf facilities for an extended education. Our schools seek, after tho ho,t .i..u results, special attention being given to the 4 inculcation of the Ideaof tf,,, ifoSIfS .! J and our moral obligations, to the acquiring 1 of a correct knowledge of"the English, laa- J Buc, which w meueat cnila is a forewa toHgae; to teaching articuIatJoa .andjliaj readlnghere practicable; andjitfc&eSl quiaitioa'of a aiannal:tra"d.bSI.aniitWl M