$ it 't THIRD PflRT7T i- , fmm LIFE IN PARIS. t Famous French Hostelries. and tho $ Epicurean Dreams They Evolve. t 5K0BLE CEEATORS OP KBW DISHES. A hcre to Go to Get a First-Class Dinner With Bare Old Wines. IB0ME OIIEAP BUT GOOD EESTAUEAKTS rcoBBiEPOSiMarcx or thx diepatch.1 PBIS, May 3. Did you ever hear the anecdote about Sam Rogers, whose reputation as a giver of dinners and breakfasts will lire as long as his poetry? "Will you come and break fast with me to-morrow morning?" he asked a London lady one night at tie opera, and she prompt ly replied: "Won't I!" which pleased him more than anything else that could have occurred. There is a good deal in dinner and dejeuner giv ing, and I have had the great happiness in my time to be host as well as guest at some tolerably famous feeds here in Paris. There was one breakfast, I remember, to which 1 was invited at the Cafe Voisin, along with some 12 or 14 other fellows, and we sat down punctually at 11 o'clock. We all smiled when we saw before each plate no fewer than two dozen oysters, accompanied by a golden lemon, and a bottle of fine Sauterae. The oysters were followed by kidneys a la jn!5JJ$S Old French Country Inn. brochette, then came in some pate de foie gras deliriously truffled, and as a windup to this lovely feast mine host, a French author, made us on the table, then and there, a hot sauce for a wild duck that was one of "cious thines I ever tasted, Th. , was not a better meal than a few of us enjoyed about a er a theater performance, and ten by Howell Osbora. .. LITTLE SUPPER. 1 been to the Varieties to see rag about midnight dropped in the Avenue de l'Opera a repast such as makes my en I think of it. We had soupers de la cour, and this ;ourtly soup was chiccen ips ot rarest Sevres. Then ;au au petit pois, and to succeeded a roast chicken on andas tender and beau- jile of a new born babe. JKxiih owe..jrril-,spatanf d . . cy winch time we were ready for the i asperses sauce hollandaise, and then came lucious strawberries,coffee and liqueurs. In the meantime there were white, red and golden wines served us; ior the Sauternei were blanche, the Boideaux rouge and the champagnes the color of virgin gold. There are some fine restaurants here in Paris, ten or a dozen, not more, of first-class ones, and hundreds in the second and third class. The first eating place ever known in tbis city was established by a man named now don't jump Boulanger. That was about 150 years nco, and the iellow was a wit as well as a cood maitre d 'hotel,- for he took out of his Bible these words, "Veni ad me, omnes, qui stomacho laboratis, et ego vos restarabp," and stuck them up over his lront door. Struck by the word "restarabo," the inhab itants of that part oi Paris gave Bo dan ger's place the name of "restaurant," and it soon became th trade mark ot all who were in the same business. ABISTOCBATIC COOKS. ' Of course eating houses are much better now than they were then. I should be dis loyal to some of the chefs I know if I said otherwise; and yet there were "Vatels in those other days, also noblemen and princes of the blood who deigned to learn how to cook, and some of them created new dishes. Was there ever such another place for res taurants as the Palais Boyal used to be? Why, they were all over it; on the ground floors, on the first and second stories, even down in the cellars, and the Caveau, an underground place, was quite a resort when the opera was over, just as the Cafe Procope was forthose who went to the Comedie Fran caise, which was then in the Faubourg St Germain. It was in the Pal (lis Boyal that the Trois Freres Provincaux was established, and there Barras and Bonaparte often dined to gether. Nearly 100 years Water a branch of the Trois Preres Provincaux was opened at the Philadelphia Exposition, and only two days ago a friend of mine from San Fran cisco complained to me of the stiff price he had to pay ior a lunch which himself and wife eat in it. Another restaurant started about the same time in the Palais Boyal was the Cafe Chartres, now called the Grand Vefour, and where Grimrod de la Beyniere was a regular client. He was the author ot the "Almanack des Gourmands," and his grandfather died from eating pate de Joie gras. It was Grimrod's father who built the house at the corner of the Place de la Concorde and the Avenue Gabriel that is now occupied by the Epatants Club, as the consolidated Mirlitons and Imperials' are called. ATBAID OF LIGHTNING. He not only built the house, but he con structed in front of it, deep down in the earth, a refuge from thunder storm that was topped and surrounded with roof and walls six or eight feet thick. This enor mous vault is still in existence, and on its top earth has been laid and grass is growing. It serves as a splendid terrace for the club members. "When Grimrod's father was quite sure the weather would be fine he used to wander back and forward on one of the old bridges, with now and then an oc casional peep down into the flowing Seine. , As for the Grand Velour, it is a richly gilded restaurant, with a tolerably good kitchen, and where you can get sole a la sauce Mr. Mornay to perfection. It, how ever, cannot be classed as among the best in Paris. Of course, it is rather difficult to show which Is the very best, but I think if you asked the proprietor of any of the first class ' places which after his own fs the 'best he would name you the Maison Doree. What makes it complete is its all round excellence; that is to say, its wine cellars are well stocked with the best cms, its chef and head assist ants are skilled in their calling, and the service can seldom be complained o I admit that the Cafe Voisin has a much more famous cellar, and there is no denying the fact that no other restaurant in the world can show such a wine list as that old and splendid house at the corner of the Bue St. Honore and the Bue Cambon. But sometimes the cuisine is first-class and , sometimes it is not; and there seems to be a 1 II Bill LI th( i" disposition at the Voisin to neglect new comers'and to impose upon old customers. When a head waiter or one of his garcons serves you in a negligent manner, forgets your order, or brings you something that you never called for, then things are not going along in first-class style, and that Is precisely what happened to me the last time I dined "at the Cafe Voisin. But there are in the cellars of that house red wines from the Bordeaux country which w?re bottled as far back as 1811, and the price lor each bot tle is just f 20. fc vandebbilt's joskpe. Bonvivants have high opinion of Big non's old place opposite the Vaudeville Theater, now known as Paillard's. It is a small place, richly gilded and decorated inside, but cheap looking as to Us exterior, and it stands at the Tery top, both on ac count of its cuisine and its wine cellars. This is the place where Joseph was head waiter when Vanderbilt ran across him. Joseph was not the cook of the establish ment; of course, he is a cook, for all good maitres d hotel in Paris restaurants are chefs by profession, but they are never the chef ot" the establishment. Joseph was not only head waiter, but he prepared a good many of the sauces that his clients liked, and there never was another person who could look after a roast wild duck better on a chauffing dish, or serve youupapoulet gras with a salad of bis own seasoning so well as he. We used to get the best attendance aad the best dishes out of the fellow by givin him carte blanche for the breakfast or the dinner but the bill used to make us wicce when we paid it Apropos, Mr. Vanderbilt does not pay Joseph $8,000 a year, nor even half that sum. There is not a Vf in America, nor in any other country, wno gets more than 2,500, and very few receive that much. Further up in the Boulevard des Italiens, on the same side of the way, is the Bue Helder, and a few vards along that street is a restaurant called the Lion d'Or, which ranks among the best in Paris. I think, though, that the service is not always what it should be, but I am very fond of the cooking. Having peeped into THE LION D'OK ' you can retrace your steps to the Boulevard, pass Tortoni's and the Maison Doree, and presently you will come to the Cafe Biche, which occupies the ground floor and entresol of the New York Life Insurance building. This is where poor Harry Homans had his headquarters, and I sometimes dropped in there to have a talk with him about things iu general. The Cafe Biche can boast a rare clientele, and there is one thing that is cer tain, the rhef does prepare the nicest sauces tor fish and fowl that were ever eaten. The Cafe de l'Opera, under Drexel, Harjes & Co.'s bank, in the Boulevard Haussuiann, is a restaurant to be recommended more for its high prices than for its excellent cuisine, and yet it ranks among first-class places. The Cafe de'laPaixhas more customers than any other establishment in the capital, but it is not a first-class restaurant "it is a place where eatables are manufactured," was the way in which oqe of my Prench friends described it the other evening. It is a popular resort for fast men and women, both for dinners and for suppers, and its pri vate rooms are the scenes of frequent orgies. The dinners at Durand's are notso good as are the breakfasts. This is the restaurant opposite the Church of the Madeleine, where General Boulanger made his headquarters during the electoral campaign of last Jan uary. It is famous for its Chateaubriand beefsteaks; the chef cuts a tenderloin of double thickness, places it between two or dinary round steaks and cooks it by broil ing them over hot coals. These outer slices are thrown away and the inner one, cooked to a turn, is served with potatoes, as you like diem, soufile or a la creme, being the better way; and I should advbe you to also 'drink white instead of red wine. CHEAP BESTATTBAITTS. There are innumerable second-class res taurants, and very few indeed are poor ones. It is not an easy matter to name them all, but the general'opinion is that Marguery's, up at the Gymnase Theater, is entitled to first place, especially for its fishes and its fine wines. The Bestaurant Noel, in the Passage de Prince; the Cafe Sylvain, oppo site the Grand Opera House, in the Bue Halevy; Champeaux,acrossthewayfromthe Bourse; Foyot's in iront of the Luxembourg Palace and just around the corner from the O.leon Theater; the Tavern Anglais, in the Bue Eoyale, and Lathuille's, be yond the Boulevard de Clichy, are among the best of the second-class restaurants. I had often heard of Lathu ille's, but as it is so far out of the way, and I seldom go in the Batignolle's direc tion, except when calling on M. and Mme. Benjamin Constant who live in that part of the town it was not until about two weeks ago that I went there with a party to try it for the first time. Wc dined fairly well, still the onlypleasant souvenir I have of the establishment is a bit of history that the proprietor related me concerning the establishment and its foundation. Origin ally, so it seems, it was au old-fashioned sort of a roadway inn that stood just behind one of the torts or fortifications which de fended Paris on that side of tho city. The Ambassadeurs, Laurent' and Ledo yens. are three popular houses in the Champs Blysee; they are tolerably good places at which to dine, and their clientele includes some of the more prominent men of letters of the capital. As -for res taurants at fixed prices they, too, are plenti ful, and in their way are worth recommend ing. Most of them are located in the Palais Boyal. Finally we have the bouillon estab lishments, that is to say those cheap eating houses where you are served by women, and w here you can got a fairly good meal for very little money. Duval, the man who first started them was a butcher; he left a large fortune to an only son, who spent nearly every dollar of it on Cora Pearl. When she had cleaned him out she kicked him out. In her time she spent millions, and she died in abject poverty. I believe he is in a madhouse. Heottt Hayitie. THE INSIGNIA OP SORROW. Colon Worn by Different Nationalities to Dcnoto Mourning. Besides black, the following are used as a sign of grief for the dead. Black and white striped to express sorrow and hope, among the South Sea Islanders. Grayish brown, the color of the earth to which the dead return, in Ethiopia. Pale brown, the color of withered leaves, is the mourning of Persia. Sky bine to express the assured hope that the deceased has gone to heaven. This is the mourning of Syria. Cappadocia and Armenia. Deep blue in Bokhara. Purple and violet to express "Kings and Queens to God." The color ot mourning for cardinals and kings of Prance. The color of mourning in Turkey is violet. White (emblem of hope) the color of mourn ing in Chins. " Henry VIH. wore white for Anne Bolcyn. The ancient ladies of Borne and Sparta wore white. It was the color of mourning in Spain till 1498. Yellow (the sear and yellow leaf), the color of mourning in Egypt and in Burmah. Anne Boleyn wore yellow mourning for Catharine of Aragon. I ' " IP! f ' 3 Ancient Bridge Over the Seine. THE PITTSBURG GATE THE JDDGE A QUARTER A Beggar Takes Pity on a Congressman nnd Offer Illm Money. Wuaing-ton Letter. Congressman Honk, of Tennessee, is wearing a new suit of clothes. The mere statement ot the fact will not, probably strike the people who have not the pleasure of Judge Houk's acquaintance as one of much importance or significance. But Houk's every day friends know him better, and unless they have seen him lately they will hardly credit the news. The truth is that be is a man so careless in his attire and so indifferent to -his personal appearance that a single new outward garment is an event in Houk's life; the donning of an entire new suit at once marks an epoch. It came about in this wise. The Judge was walking in Pennsylvania avenue recently with a couple of Western friends, when he was accosted by a tramp whose raiment might have been fashioneble and new on the day of Jackson's first inauguration. " 'Sense me, may I interrupt you for a moment? Will you give me the price of a meal?" Houk promptly replied: "I'm sorry, boss, but! can't help you. I've just been trying to get the price of a meal irom these gentlemen. I haven't had a mouthful of victuals to-day." "Well, I say, pard, you look it," re sponded the tramp, as he sidled up to the Congressman and looked him over. "Here's a quarter; you are worse off than I am." Judge Houk declined the proffered chari ty, but he suddenly decided that if his ap pearance was such as to excite the commis eration and benevolence of a Washington tramp it was time for him to visit a tailor, and he lost no time in doing so. I don't vouch for this story, but "they say" that Houk tells it on himself, and it so it's true, for the sturdy East Tennesseean is as truth ful as he is both wise and witty. IT DOESK'T HURT TO BE HUNG. Such Ii tho Testimony of a Dion Who Has Had the Experience, That the job of hanging at Ozark was "bungling" there is no doubt, but that the Buffering was great, except in the case of the man who fell and revived, is far from cer tain. In 1864 John Burns, whom I have known long and well, lived in Newton county, this State, on Indian Creek, about ten miles south of Newtonia, writes a Springfield, Mo., correspondent of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Mr. Burns was a quiet man, trying to conduct himself without offense to either side in the War of the Rebellion, so that he could re main at home. But some persons thought Mr. Burns had money, and a squad of rob bers, in those days called "bushwhackers," called upon him to investigate bisresources. Mr. B. said he had no money. The bush whackers then tried the persuasive powers of a rope. They took a line like a clothes line, made a running noose, slipped it over Mr. B.'s head, put the other end of the line over the ceiling joists of the room they were in, and swung Mr. B. clear of the floor. He is about 6 feet, large-boned, weighing 180 to 200 pounds. Three times they pulled him up, roughly, letting the body slump to the floor. Mr. B. says that each time as bis feet left the floor and the weight of his body came upon the cord he became instantly in sensible, and continued so until he revived after falling. He felt no pain at any stage while suspended. I have more than once questioned him particularly about this. He does not knowliow long they kept him up nor whether he was motionless or in con tortions while up. He did not fall on the noose was simply pulled up. It was just strangulation, with a partial stoppage of circulation of blood to the brain. No -wrrioot-TesuIta-faUewodcOBlyJTatsoreneM of thenecK. . - A SABBATH-BREAKING BIRD. Terrible 9IUfortanen In Store for a Wicked Little Jackdaw. Irish Cor. Providence Journal. J Up to this present hour of my life I have held firmly to the belief that birds, beasts and insects all religiously keep Sunday,and now, to my sorrow, 1 am forced to open my eyes to the sad fact that some of the lax ob servances of these latter days are creeping in among the birds, and for, what other purpose than the repairing and refurnishing of his nest does that , jackdaw want the tuft of hair he is so vigorously pulling out of the strawberry cow's back? Why does she not flap him with her tail, and so bring the old-time vengeance on the Sabbath breaker? No, she just gives a lazy look round, a little intimation to the jackdaw not to pull so hard; he answers with a pert "caw," finishes extracting just the lock of hair he wants and flies off toward the mined summer-house, where, no doubt, he has a cozy nook. But the nestling or the Sabbath-breaker will come to no good mark my words. The nest will be robbed; boys will cruelly tear the screaming young ones from their parents, from the free life of tree and field and loug and happy flights through the warm air of summer; they will be carried to some poor cabin in a narrow street, most of them will perish miserably of hunger.or of over-feeding, or of worry; of dogs and children; the survivor will live on, wings clipped, so that he may never know the bliss of a bird's greatest joy; he will have red rags on his legs and a red crest burnt in with hot seething wax on his head, and so live on, a mark of scorn to all free birds the son of the Sabbath-breaking jackdaw. TROUT CAN REMEMBER. Proof That FUh Have Reasoning Vower nnd Exercise Iu Philadelphia Press.! "Some time before the death of Seth Green, the celebrated New York fish cul turist and naturalist," said a Philadelphian who takes great interest in piscicultural matters, "I paid a visit with him to the fish hatchery of that State at Caledonia. In one of the ponds there, at that time, there were 6,000 large brook trout, every one of which had been captured with the fly tied on barbless hooks in unfrequented brooks in the Adirondack region. These trout, Mr. Green said, had conyinced him that fish have reasoning power and memory. When they were hooked, he said, and were reeled slowly in by the careful fishermen who were capturing them for the State pond, they had time and opportunity to note the form and character of the tackle that made them pris oners. According to Mr. Green they never forgot that experience. . "The trout had been in the pond a long time, the females never being allowed to .spawn there, and wonld follow Mr. Green as he walked along the edge of the water, tossing bits of liver into the pond. To show that his theory about their memory and reason was correct, he would carry a cane and a fish rod concealed behind his back. If he took the cane from its concealment and held it out over the water the fish paid no attention to it; but the moment he produced the rod with its reel and line attached away the trout scampered like a flash to distant parts of the pond. Mr. Green told me that he would permit anyone to cast a fly in that pond to his heart's content, as he was satis fied that not one of the trout would come near it, so vididly did they remember their enemy of five years ago." Patience Sometime Gives Out, Omaha Herald. J Human nature is very patient, tfct there are times when its trials are too great. Thus we hear of book, agents being found dead. - PITTSBUKGr, SUNDAY, MAT 19, 1889. THE COLORED CUBAN. A Stalwart, Well-Proportioned and Picturesque People. WORKERS IN A IAND OP DRONES. Living on a Piano of Equality .With Their White Neighbors. THE HOYING TALE OP A YELLOW DOG CCO&BEsrONDMCE OF THZ DISPATCH. 1 HAVANA, May 1. "Nice Ohaney oranges, boss? nice Chaney oranges?" The speaker was a typical Cuban mammy, good na tured and sparsely dressed I She was stationed at the door of her cabin, where a primitive counter had been erected. TTrjon this she had A I iv nil J Orange Tree. arranged the "nice Chaney oranges" she offered for sale. I bought some in order to talk to the woman, who se'emed intelligent. In the midst of our conversation a man emerged, from the interior of the shanty, which con sisted of a ground floor of mother earth and a roof of the dried leaves of the pineapple. The man was white, and looked as if he might be a common laborer. My surprise was great when mammy with a smile of happy possessorship told me he was her "man." At this point a small colony of pickaninnies of different sizes and degrees of duskiness came on the scene. This job lot of assorted cherubs, mammy Informed me, composed their family. Well, I was horrified. I did not then know that this is of common occurrence here in Cuba. Any white man who wishes can assume the re sponsibilities of a family of mulatto child ren. No legal form is necessary. Men may be seen everywhere walking about with veritable "Queens of the Night." OBOTVDING OUT THE WHITES. This mingling of the black and the white is going on so rapidly that the probabilities are that in 100 years Cuba will be a black country. The negro is crowding out the white element, which only decays in a land never intended for it. I once made the statement that the Cuban men were ugly, insignificant and unattrac tive. I take it back. I had not then Been the Cuban negro in all his glory. He is a most splendid type of manhood; strong, stalwart, sinewy, perfectly developed and splendidly proportioned. His complexion is not the golden brown of our SoutheA negro, but is as shiny and black as polished ebony. A Cuban negro, six feet in height, dressed in cast-off garments in various stages of paucity and dilapidation, with a white turban around his head and thick brass hoops in his ears is one of the most pictur esque sights in Havana. By intermarriage with the Spanish the negro features are often nearly eliminated. Then we see the ttuly handsome Cuban darkey with the straight black hair, the oWrlv nnt features of Srjain. and when carrying upon his turbaned head a tray uiieu wim vrupiua iun, no bwb m ...j in antique bronze. The negro, like the sugar cane he loves, is tropical. Without any apparent excuse he is happy. Beneath a sun that would be sufficiently hot for a clam bake he sleeps on serenely. "Until 12 years of age he runs about absolutely 'naked. After that time he wears as little as possible. THE WOBKEES OF CUBA. The Cuban negro is not idle. In this country of inaction he works. One-half the population of the island is black. The whites, by some conventional law, do noth ing. The blacks then are forced to do it all. I mentioned that there was not much thrift and a good deal of rocking chair in a Cuban's life. "Who then directs the house hold?" The negro servants. They nurse the babies, do the marketing, make the beds, in fact, "run" no, the Cuban never runs manage the house. They all eat, too. Every one who feeds them is convinced that a Cuban negro can eat. Some of them will tell you that they never had enough to eat in their life. I enjoy fun myself, so I soon questioned about the amusements of the negro. I learned that he just had one dancing. The typical negro dance is an expression of joy. Sorrow is soon conquered through its agency. Any Sunday evening you may see him dance. His only orchestra is a drum, fashioned by himself. He holds the drum between his knees, and beats it with his open hands. He wriggles, he writhes at the pleasure it gives him. At the same time a buxom yellow girl and a barefooted lad are dancing an African can-can. She is coy he is gallant. They simply shuffle and twist themselves. There is neither skill nor beauty in it. The pleasure is derived from moving the body in time with the monotonous notes of the drum. Originally clumsy and awkward in movement, inade quate in the matter of calves and often mal formed in the shape of his ieet, a negro can dance all night to" the tune of five notes played over and oyer again on a battered guitar. . . NATIVE AFRICANS. Women soon adapt themselves to a new language, and I soon constructed a mongrel dialect by which I could make the Havana darkies understand my wants. They speak the Spanish, eliminating the harsh sounds from the most musical language, and leave' off all unnecessary syllables. I managed to talk pretty well to them, but when we came upon the native African I had to fall back upon the worn-out and old-style maxim, "Silence is golden." Manynative Africans who have been captured from war ships and who still speak their own heathenish lan guage, are found in Havana. .T noticed three slits In their cheeks, which our inter preter said were marks of beauty in their country, but I know they were the effects of their dreadfnl language with its unpro nounceable consonants. They entertained us by singing a song of their country. Now there is sincing and singing. That which they designate by the name of singing I should simply call wail ing. Talk about wails of lost souls; tbey sink into nothingness when compared with the wails uttered by these Africans under the deluding name, music If ever there was a lugubrious performance, this is one. The negro song or Cuba lacks the plain tiyeness of our plantation melodies and is always semi-religious in character. You WrtM "JVJc? Chaney Oranges, Boa " rk can readily believe this. All the Cuban idea of religion is embraced in the word, hell. Its religious songs are suggestive $f the most intense woes and tortures of that perspective place. , A. YELLOW BELLE. V The yellow girl is one of the most at tractive phases of negro life to be encoun tered. She has enough white blood in her to enable her to still further turn-up her cose at the blacks. Nearly as white as her Cuban mistress, she is a dangerous rival. The degree of difference in the complexion w lessened by the wholesale application of powder. She chalks her face with it, not regarding the manner of its appliance, nor does she try to delude the spectator. She tinges her cheeks with rouge and stains her eyebrows with dark juices. If not' too closely examined the yellow girl is really very beautiful. She begins to keep her eyes open, or what is better, eoquettisbly drooped for beaux at an early age. All .week she runs about in a tawdy skirt of her mis tress', bare-footed and dirty. On Sunday she blooms out in the glory of a bright colored dress, shoes and perfume, ready to captivate some gentleman of color. Every negro speaks to every white person he meets. He touches his hat and nods, ex pecting you to dp the same. A nod or a smile makes a Cuban negro happy. Even a beggar would rather you refuse him a penny and give him a smile than to give him the money and deny him the smile. They are the best-natured and generous peo ple in the world, and most of themre kind ly and polite. After hoarding up enough Cuban Basket Makers. to buy a meal of sugar-cane to him the embodiment of earthly bliss-a Caban ne gro will give you his cane if yon ask him for it. I A TALE OF A DOG. All the negroes own dogs, usually the va riety known as "yaller dogs." I wanted to buy one, but preferred -a more exclusive breed, One day I accosted a negKf,wlo was carrying the most respectable specimen of a dog I had seen in Havana,' saying: "Have you that "dog for sale?" She grunted what I discovered meant "No," but added that she had a lady friend, Miss Jamaica, who had. I told her to bring Miss Jamaica in company with her dog to my hotel at 11 o'clock on the following day. Now, every darky in Havana owns a dog, and they all "must have received official in formation of the fact that I wanted to buy one. To buy a dog in Cuba stamped me as a curiosity. Doubtless among the negroes, no one had ever been heard of who didn't steal a dog if he wanted it. At auy rate, the news of the American "freak" spread, and the owners ot canines were told to pre sent themselves and their pups at the Pasaje Hotel the next morninpr at 11. I relate with agitation what transpired upon that ill-fated day. People tell you that "to-morrow never comes." I devoutly hoped that this one wouldn't. It did, how ever, and some of the candidates were on hand by 6 o'clock A. M. eagerly inquiring for her who had in a rash moment said she wanted to buy a dog. By 9- o'clock the arched court was A MOVING MASS OP DOGS and, darkies. The yelping suggested the. NeVYorBTUog fihowWteaTeame-oul to breakfast-I was besieged by a score of dog owners, who proceeded to describe the good points of their animals. I felt as if I were possessed. I was afraid to chooie one, though they were of the same nondescript species, lest the others might revenge them selves in some unique and barbarous fashion. I made a pretense of looking over the dogs. I then announced that I would wait a few days before making a selection, and distributed some Spanish scriot among the disconsolate owners of the dogs. This method of dismissing the dog fan ciers sufficed to make them happy, and smiling and content they left me once more in peace. Until the last five years the Cuban negroes were in a state of revolting servitude. They worked under leaders whose emblem of au thority was the whip. Now they occupy a state of comparative freedom. Their chil dren may go to school if they like (which they often don't),, and all occupations are open to them. Of course the negro lives and has his pleasures apart, but hs is not driven from the enjoyments of public places because he is black. The white man who chooses to associate witbT the black is not hated on that account. If he live with a black woman, he is compelled to have a permit from the Governor General, and is forced to support her and provide for her as he would for a wife. This law is about the only obligatory one in the Cuban code. Wherever the negro thrives he is in all re spects the same. He retains with his color his African nature. "The Ethiopian can not change his skin," neither can he change his social, merry, loquacious, docile and thoroughly unsubstantial character. Lillian Spenceb. BUE DROPPED HEE POEEK CHIPS. An Accident That Canoed Great Embarrass ment to a Hanshty Young Woman. New York Sun.j One day last week a beautiful and haughty young woman in a very stylish costume walked up Fifth avenue. Past the Calu met, the New York and Union League Clubs' windows she swept with a swift, regular movement, looking neither to the right nor the left, and the only acknowledg ment that she gave of the attempts of the clubmen to win her smiles was a disdainful curl of her thin beautiful lips. In one hand she carried what looked like a card case. At the corner of Forty-third street a fat, red-faced little man, in a hurry to catch a down-coming stage,brushed roughly against her. He struck against the hand in which was the supposed card case, and the latter fell to the sidewalk. It burst open and out rolledalotof small pokerchips. The youne woman seemed in danger of an attack of hysterics, the little man blushed and stammered his apology, while a Union League Glub man came up in time to rescue the cardcase and chips. A smiling throng watched him pick up the chips, put them deftly back into the case and hand them to their crestfallen owner with a most graceful bow.The young woman barely acknowledged the kindness, and went swifter down Forty-third street, where she disappeared in a brown-stone house. House Hunting;.. Mrs. Tab Tes, my dears, I like the house very much, bat that bootjack looks very suspicious. Life. I JK MsfWTGl METAMORPHOSIS; Being an Account of a' Strange Experiment '.in Psychology, Eecenfly Conducted by a Physician. . . Written for The Dispatch by SEDNET LUSKA (Henry Harlanrl.) Leopold Benary, an old New York physician, prevents Louise Masarte, a beautiful young woman, from suiciding fn the East river at midnight The woman says she has 'neither" friends, relatives nor money, and she is haunt ed by the memory of her past She resists the doctor's interference, but finally agrees to go to his home, where he engages to show her a better way out of her trouble or to release her within an hour. There sho tells the physician that sue has been guilty of a crime that cannot be outlived. The physician tells her that he can, by means of -an operation, obliterate her memory of all 'past events; that mentally she will he as a newly-born babe. Ho offers to per form the operation, and with the aid of his sis ter Josephine educate her in her new life. She accepts the offer, and the next morning the op eration is successfully performed. The physP cian and his sister educate her, and introduce her to their friends as their niece, Miriam. Four years later the doctor is saved from tho blizzard by Henry Falrchild, a youns sculptor, Dr. Benary Insists upon the sculptor remaining at his house for the evening, and Introduces his niece Miriam. Tho sculptor recognlzes the Blrl. 'OHAPTEB Vm. The hall was quite dark. From the end of it, directly behind me, came the response, "Yes, brother." "Ah, you are there?" I questioned. "I have been waiting here for you to wake. I did not wish to disturb your sleep," she explained. "And they where are they now?" "Mr. Fairchild Is in the spare room, where he is to sleep. Miriam is in her room. I could" not come to you so long as they were together. It would not do to leave them alone. That is why I wrote the note." By this time we were in my chamber, and I had closed the door behind us. "And now, for heaven's sake, explain to me what this means," I said, holding up the sheet of paper. "It means exactly what it says. -He has recognized Miriam." "Oh, it is impossible," I declared. "I only wish that you were right," sighed Josephine, dolefully. i "But how but why but - what what leads you to think so?" I stammered. 'His action when he first saw her when she and I entered the room where he was to greet him this forenoon." "Oh, it is impossible, impossible, I re peated. "What was his action? Wlfat did he do?" The instant he laid eyes upon her he started, and caught his b'reath, and colored up, ana then turned white, and then red again. "Merciful heavens!" I gasped, panic stricken. "What ever shall we do?" my poor sister demanded. "Did did Miriam notice his embarrass ment?" I inquired. "I think not She did not appear to, anyway." Then befell a pause, during which I re flected. "Well, brother?" queried Josephlne,after the silence bad continued a minute or two. "It is impossible: it is absolutely im- possible. L'said, having. jfloverstLA.good. deal of rayeff.possessioni '-"Her own mother would be unable to recognize her. She is altered beyond recognition- Why, that dead woman would by this time be nearly 30 years of age; whereas Miriam doesn't look 22. Besides, the whole char acter And expression of her face are changed." -"All that is true; and yet he started." "Well, even so; what of it? Perhaps it was of her resemblance to the dead woman supposing him to.have known her. But he would never dream of identifying her as one and the same. A young girl ot one or two and twentyl A sad-eyed, sorrow stricken woman, ten years her senior! The probability, however, is that he never knew Louise Mnssarte at all; but he started and colored up at the sight of Miriam, because she fs so beautiful, and he is Ka young man and an artist. What quick- blooded young iellow wouia not coior up at the sight ot, so lovely a young girl? Or else, it is imaginable, he has seen Miriam herself somewhere, before in.the street in a horsecar or where not; and was im pressed by her; and then he started for sur prise and pleasure at finding himself under the same roof with her. Yen, my good Josephine, have jumped to a conclusion. The chances-are ten to one it is a false one. Afterward, for instance, did he follow up bis start with such conduct as justified you in your suspicions?" "No. He simply returned our saluta tions, and behaved toward her as he did toward me, as if she were a perfectly new acquaintance." "Good! And then, consider the non chalence and freedom with which he talked to her at luncheon I No, no; it is impossi ble. Well, I will keep an eye on him during dinner; and alter dinner you and Miriam must leave us. alone together to dis cuss our cigars; and then I will seek ta find out what the true explanation of the mat ter may be." And my sister and I descendetLto the dining room. "CHAPTER IX. Throughout the meal I carefully observed Fairchild's bearing toward Miriam; and my satisfaction was, great to see in it only and exactly what, under the circumstances, could rightly have been expected. Frank, gay, Interested, attentive, yet undeviating ly 'courteous, respectful, and even defer ental, it was precisely the bearing due from a young gentleman of good breeding to the lady at whose side he found himself, and whose acquaintance" he had butvlately made. "So that," I concluded, "of all conceiv able theories adequate to account for his behavior at first setting eyes upon her, Josephine's is farthest-fetched and the least tenable." For the matter of that, as I had assured my sister, I was confident that her own mother, had shebeen alive, must have failed to identily her, so essentially was she altered, both in expression of 'countenance and in apparent age. That Fairchild did not do so I was certain. His manner ex hibited neither surprise, mystification, curi osity nor constraint. It would have re quired a far cunninger actor thanl took him to be, so effectually to have disguised such emotions, and he really felf them, and he could not have helped feeling them if, hav ing known the dead woman, Louise Mas sarte, he had recognized her in the young and innocent maiden, Miriam Benary. The right theory by which to explain his con duct at first meeting her, I purposed dis covering, if I could, when he and I were alone. He a3 Miriam had a great deal of fun together making the salad, in which enter prise they co-operated, not, however, with out much laughing difference as to the bett method of procedure. He claimed that in stead of rubbing the howl with garlio one should introduce a chapon, or crust of bread correctly tinctured with that herb, and fatiguer it with the lettuce, while our niece vigorously maintained the opposite. And .finally tbey drew lots to determine which policy should prevail, Miriam wi nlng. ' "I am defeated, but my spirit is no broken," Fairchild declared. "If there i one accomplishment upon which I pride myself, Miss Benaryr it is my proficiency in the science of gastronomy. You have taken it out of my power to display my skill in salad-making, but now, if yon are a-generous rival, you will give me an op portunity to distinguish myself in the con fection of an omelet It is an omelet of my own invention; a sort of cross between the ordinary omelette au vin of the French and the Italian Zabaniano. I shall require the use of that chafing-dish and spirit lamp which I see on the sideboard, the sherry de canter and half a dozen eggs. I promise your palates a delectable experience; and you, Miss Benary, by watching me, will acquire an invaluable art." So, with much merriment, he proceeded with the manufacture of his omelet, Miriam observing and assisting. When it was com plete fe unanimously voted it the most de? licious thing in the way of an omelet that we had ever tasted. Bat Miriam sighed and said, "It is all very simple except the jnost important point The way you toss the omelet up into the air, let it turn over, and then catch it again as it descends I am sure I shall never be able to do that." "You must practice it with beans," said Fairchild. "A pint of beans dry beans, you know, the kind used for baking. Three hours' practice a, day for six months, and you will do it almost as easily as I do. With the advent of the coffee the ladies left us, and haying lighted our cigars we smoked for a few minutes without speaking. Fairchild. was tho first to break the silence. "Well, Dr. Benary," be began, "lean do 1 ' i - g A EMmf "OH, MY DABLINO UNCLEf YOtT AEE nothing but congratulate myself upon the, happy chance that brought about our en counter this morning. For once in jny life I was in luck." "It seems to me," X replled,"that it is I who was in luck, and who have the best oc- Luasion Sot sslf-congrtulation." -xnai wouia aepena upon me auoious question of the value of life," said he. "I am skeptical whether we confer a boon or inflict a bane upon the human being whom we bring into existence or whose exit there from we prevent It is probable, indeed, that except for our meeting you would at this hour have been numbered among the honored dead. Brit very likely either en joying the excitements of the Happy Hunt lneJGroundor sleeping the deep sleep of an nihilation very likely, I say, you would have been better off than you are actually, or can ever hope to be in the flesh. About my good fonune, contrariwise, debate is im possible. Here I am in veritable clover, smoking a capital cigar, after a capital din ner, and the richer by the acquisition of three new friends, for. as friends X trust I may be allowed to reckon- you and your ladies. Had I not happened to run across you in the way I did, on the other hand, I should now have been seated alone by my bachelor's hearth, with no companions but mv plaster models, and no voice to cheer my solitude save the bowling of the storm." "It is very flattering of you to put the matter as yon do; but being modish in no respect, I am least of all so in my meta physics. Therefore I cannot share your pessimistic doubt of the value of life; and I assure you I should have hated bitterly to leave mine behind me in that ungodly snow bank. It is true, I am perilously close to the scriptural limitation of man's age; and I ought perhaps to feel that I have had my fit and proper share of this world's vanities and to be prepared for my inevitable journey to the next, But, I must confess, I am so little of a philosopher that I should dearly like to tarry here a few years longer; and hence, I maintain, my obligation to you is indisputably established," "Well, then, so far as I can see, we may consider ourselves quits." "Hardly; the balance is still tremend ously in your favor." Alter that we again smoked for awhile without speaking. Then again Fairchild broke the silence. "I wonder whether you would take it amiss, Dr. Benary," he ventured, "if I should mention something which has been the object of my delighted admiration al most from the moment I entered your house?" ".What is that?" Iqueried. "I fear you will condemn me as over-bold if I answer candidly; but I shall do so, and accept the consequences. The circumstance that I am an artist may be pleaded in my behalf if I seem to transcend the bounds of the conventional." "You pique my curiosity. What is it that fou allude to? I do not think you need be apprehensive of my wrath. My ex tended edition of the Lite of Sir Joshua? That is the result of ten years hard labdr. Or my Quadroon woman by Sartain? It's a wondertul piece of flesh painting, truly. It looks as though it would bleed, if you pricked it." "Yes, it's in Sartain's best style. But this is not what I had inmind; neither is the life of Sir Joshua, which, by the way, I have not seen." "Not seen it? Oh, well, I must show it to you directly we go upstairs. But what then? I do not know what I have worthy of such admiration as you profess." "You-have a niece; and I allude to her extraordinary beauty." My pulse quickened. Here had he, of his own accord, broached that very topic upon which I was anxious to sound him. "Ah, yes, Miriam," I assented, a trifle nervously, and wondering what would come next. "Miriam. Yes, she's a very pretty girl." "" "Pretty!" he repeated. "Pretty? Why, my dear sir, she's who, in fiye years I've not seen so beautiful a woman. And it isn't simply that she is so beautiful, but its her type. Her type I believe I am safe in calling it the least frequent, the rarest, in the whole range of womanhood. Forgive my fervor. I speak as an artist, as one to whom the beautilnl is a constanstudy. It is a type of which you occasionally see a perfect specimen in antique marble; but in flesh and blood, not oftener than once in a lifetime. To say nothing of her coloring, which a painter would go wild over, eon- "pages 17 roo: sider that magnificent sweep of profile. Brow, nose, lips, chin, throat, described by one splendid flowing line. It's 'Junoesque, sir. It'sworth years of coramonplacenes x to have lived to See, it in a veritable breath-' ing woman." "Yet," I admitted, "it's a fine profile, noble face." "Her type is so rare," he went on, "that, as I have said, nature Succeeds in prodno--ing a faultless specimen of it not oftener than once in a generation. Of faulty speci menscomparable, I might say to flawed castings she turns oat many every year. . Have you been in Borne? Trastcvere tsems with sucb, 'failures women who approach, but always falllamentably short, of the per-1 fection yourniece embodies." "Yes, I know the Trasteverine, and I see j the resemblance you refer to. But as yo intimate, they are coarse amct crude copies of Miriam. That expression of high spirit uality) which is the dominant note is her face is quite absent from theirs." "They compare to her as pressed terra cotta compares to chiseled marble. In all Lmy life I have known but one woman who r 1J 1 .; J 2 .1.. ... I..-.!. 3iT coiuu ub xueubiuueu iu tua muuu uxcaM n.u her, and she was a good distance behind. Why, to-day, when Miss Benary came into the room where you had left me, I declare for a moment my breath was almost takea away. I conld scarcely believe my eyes. Such beauty seemed beyond reality; it was like a realized dream. I forgot my manners in my admiration, and it wis soma seconds before I remembered to make my bow. When our friendship is older, Dr. Benary, you must permit me to model her portrait" Thus was my mind set at efse. Presently we i'6ined the ladies, and while Fairchild and Miriam chatted together in the bay window, I drew Josephine aside and com municated to her the upshot of our post prandial conversation. She accomplished a mighty sighand professed herself to ba vastly relieved. CHAPTEB X Fairchild became a frequent visitor at our house, and an ever welcome one. His good looks, his good sense, his honesty, his high spirits, made him an extremely pleas- ant companion. We , were always glad ta - THE BEST MAN IN THE -WOBLD.' see him; we all liked him cordially. I told him that if hedidn't mindpotlucx, he must feel at liberty to drop in and dine with ua whenever his inclination prompted and his; leisure would permit Ho took me at my word, as I meant he should; and fromJthat time forth he broke bread witty-aaTieveS seldomer than one eveniotrimt of the seven. At the end of a month; or perhaps six weeks, Josephine said to me, "Do you think it is well, brother, that two young people of opposite sexes should be thrown together as frequently and as closely as Mr. Fairchild and Miriam are?" "Whynot?" questioned L "The reason is obvious. How would yos be pleased if they should fall in love?" "The Lord forbid I But I see no danger of their doing so." "There is always danger when a beautiful young girl and a spirited young man sea too much of each other." t "But Mr. Fairchild pays no more atten tion to Miriamthan ha does to you or me. They are never left alone together. They are simply good friends." ' v "As yet, perhaps, yes. But time works) changes. True, as, you say, they are never . left alone together not exactly alone, that is. But are they not virtually alone when you and I are seated here in the library oyer our backgammon board, and they ara there in the parlor at the piano ?" "But, my dear sister, the two rooms arras one. The folding 'doors are never closed." "True again. We are all within sight and hearing of one another. But as a mat-, ter of fact yon and I give no heed to them, nor do they to us. There are certain laws of nature which should not be ignored." "Well, what do you want me to do?" I inquired, rather testily. "Shall I forbid Fairchild the house? Forbid my house to themanwfco saved my life?" "Oh, no, of course not. You know I could not wish such a thing as that. Mr. Fairchild's claims upon our gratitude must never be forgotten; and besides, I like hlnx and I enjoy his visits as heartily as yo do Only-" "Only what? If I don't forbid him tho house, how can I prevent him, and Miriam, meeting? Shall I direct her to keep her room whenever he comes?" "I do thinkbrother, it would ba well if she were not always present when he comes. If you wish to hear my honest opinion, X believe it'is to see her that he comes so often, and not to see a conple of soberelderly persons like you and me. I cannot fancy that you and I are so irresistibly attractive as to draw him to our honse as frequently aa once or twice a week. However, I only wished to call your attention to the matter.' . It is for yon now to act as your best judg ment dictates." , "Well, then, my good Josephine, I shall not act at all. There is no occasion-for my acting. I shall be unjust and unreasonable) to prevent these two young folks getting what innocent pleasure they can rrom each, other's society and friendship, simply be cause, in the abstract, it is true that they are not incapable of falling in love, x might as reasonably enjoin. Miriam against ever going1 out of doora,- because it is pos sible that in the street she might be run over; against ever drinking a class of water, because it is possible that the water might contain a disease germ. You nftva conjured up a chimera. Your fears ar those of a too imaginative woman. When I perceive the first symptom of anything sentimental existing between them it will be time enough to act" "Perhaps then, brother, it will be too late," retorted Josephine, and with that she dropped the subject Well, of course, as the reader has fore seen, that very complication which my sis ter feared and warned me of, and which I refused to consideiv-of course that very complication came to pass. Fairchild fell in love with Miriam, and Miriam recipro cated his unfortunate passion. Otherwise, his name had never been introduced, into this history, or rather there would have been no such history to relate. In June, 1888, Josephine, Miriam and I went down to the little village of Maskata quonk (familiarly, Quonk), on the coast of Maine, then to rusticate until September. Toward the end of July Fairchild joined us there, pursuant to an arrangement made era we left the city; and it was on the evening of the 15th of August that he requested 4 few minutes' private talk with me, and then iaformedme of the condition ot affairs. "I love your niece with all my heart and soul, Dr. Benary; indeed, I have Joyed br