pwT WWrW. I-- -- . "-v v-. x; i- rzfr-f gygs$F&m . " -..- v - 5- t ,. - -SS-VK.' IV X War - -a: : ' y-- 4 ,d TBDjT " PITTSBTJRGT DISPATCH; STJNDAY, tflJKE '5, .1889.' CROSSING THE HNE. A Day Spent in Seeing the Sights in Unique Old San Antonio PLEUTY OP MILITARY TITLES. A little Experience With Mexico Custom House Officials. FEATUEES OF OUB SISTEE BEPUBLIC WuSP i iwmiTUi fob the dispatch. SAX ANTONIO claims to be, and is, with color of title, one of the three old est cities within the limits of our glorious republic I possess a lj reverence for ancient til and holy things, ani mate and inanimate, hence I must notice them. There is suffi cient modern vitality in the place to give it spice to those who have a weakness for mixed drinks. Ton can,, being ot this generation, be at home in it and away from home. You may adhere to its business streets and live in the present, or you may wander off a few blocks and revel in the environments of two cen turies ago, or, again, among some of its modern homes of mixed architecture you recognize the domicile of your nearest neigh bor, Jones or Smith, it you happen to live in town or in the suburbs. There is nothing like style, and style has no limits either in bonnets or houses, and as if changes withthe moon it is not surprising that the minds of the builders as well as the on-lookers are tortured. Think of moving once a month to be in the fashion and thus keep peace in the family. And as forhomes well, San Antonio has them, ancient, perhaps modern. HOMES OP AIJJ KEfDS. But they are surrounded with flower beds und bread galleries, overshadowed by mirhtv trees that compel a plainsman 'to take o"ff his hat in reverence; they are not over one story high, as a rule, these homes, and one experiences a nestled .down feeling, a protection from bustle and money-getting, as one looks on them; there is a sacredness about them that the monthly changes in peaks and gables, and the taste for being in the fashion cannot aspire to. One of these exploits, not in San Antonio, without any cornice and mostly of shingles, and occu pied by an estimable gentleman of wealth, always remind me of a man who has been scalped. I have thought sometimes that the de signers have been attempting to imitate something and have met with failure, the most lamentable of all failures. And again, looking up and wondering at the irrecon cilable angles of some one of these modern achievements, I have gone on wondering mycdvility in that direction is greeted with imp ujdenoe. STREET 'SCEXEINS SAN AUTON10. Moving on, along astreet paralleled by a dead Avail and an ancient, lattice-windowed building on one side and some ot the modern marvel s on the other, I am more forcibly re minded' than ever of the incongruity ot the prevailing craze. It.is a good deal like at temptin e to patch an old garment with sew cloth. .Still the fragrance of the flower, the songs o.f the birds and the grand trees dampen one's disposition to cavil and force one to cheerfulness. The strangers I meet salnte me cordially and that has a neigh borly, non-Tnetropolitan influence which induces a home feeling. Finally, I en counter a G eneral taking bis constitutional, or perhaps, on the way to that indulgence, from other tJian a New England standpoint. The effect attending his numerous social duties of the night previous still lingers about him and attests their rigid perform ance. Our acyuaintance is slight, but suf ficient to comm and recognition on this occa sion. Had I visited the "West End? I had. San Pedro. Yes. The Alamo and the other missions? CertaJnly. I would not miss the missions in any circumstances. The military post? No, not vet. . "Great Gad. sir" I The most attractive feature of our city i You must not omit it,. sirl" I admitted, while I deprecated the pos sible necessity of soldiers, and my indiffer ence to military posts as a rule. My ex planation was lacking in tact; the General glowered and the pain ful effect oi his stock, as he bade me a ponderous good morning, dilated his neck, reddened and expanded his cheeks and I realized the loss of an invita tion to join him in his constitutional, while I pursued my own. BOEDEE OF THE TW'O BEPUBLICS. In the afternoon we are on the road asrain speeding toward the border between the two republics. The i-ountry presents the same appearance of prairie, with patches of chapparaland groves of live oak. The houses of upright boards 'disappear and wickiups take their places: A line of fence along the edge of a Celt of tinyber discloses lessly subject to the imperious will's of tin reasonable Mexican Custom Honse officials. A LITTLE EXPERIENCE. This was to be a new experience with me, odious to the average free thinking .Ameri can, accustomed to having his own way. I expected to be jailed over night and exe cuted at sunrise ceremoniously, but with celerity, because of an unbroken package of smoking tobacco in my possession. National pride hindered my throwing the peril out of the window, and while I silently debated the matter, at one time feeling regret at leaving my gun at home, the gofd-hued por ter of the Pullman Company announced: "Ladies and gentlemen will now have their baggage revised at the Custom House." In passing I inquired of this descendant of several races, touching the first proof.and verily he grinned, having passed a brief ap prenticeship in a printing office. I presented my open grip of collars and cuffs and the fateful tobacco box to an affable gentleman two shades darker than the porter. He smiled when he encountered the box, and said something to a bystander which I failed to comprehend, but supposed it to be an order for my immediate arrest, delivered in Spanish. The bystander relieved my anxiety by assuring me that the officer con sidered my luxury "the stall of life." The brother republican motioned me to close the grip and he then plastered a white paper upon it with a cabalistic and incomprehensi ble legend supportingthe talismanic device, "itevisado, m large letters. J. shall pre serve it as long as the grip holds together as a reminder of the Mexican's urbanity and the porter's pedantry. But I have lost faith in the general acumen and knowledge of customs possessed by the average New York tourist Ii. B. France, BDBMHG A MRQUIS. The Progress of the Cremation Move ment in Great Britain. FOUfi POUHDS OP WHITE ASHES All Thai is Left of the Lover of a Princess of the Blood. OffE ENTHUSIAST IB HEAELI LTHCHED THE EETE5GB OF THE APES. The Old Alamo Mission. PHj The Burro Hoy. whether itconld have any possible connec tion with the birth of the'baby, or with that other mystery of unspeakable sorrow, when the elaborate door is thrown open to let out the sweet little ray of sunlight that will never come back again. IHXS GE2TEBAXIOX AND THE PAST. San Antonio has her Generals, her Col onels and Majors nothing beneath in titles worth mentioning gentlemen who stalk about heavily with canes, their old-fashioned necks manacled in old-fashioned stocks; they bow stiffly, and make one think that they were Worn grown up; men who, in ordinary moments, say "Yes, sir," with em phasis, and in moments not ordinary, "Yes, sir, by Gad, sir." They live in the memory of the good old days, and one feels glad to have been born later. But it is a pleasure to meet them, they loom over one and im press us with the dignity of the old school and the importance of a small part of the human race when civilized. And then, too, she has her brisk man ol business in a Derby hat and cutaway coat. Think of a Quaker in a Derby, and a stiff shirt collar with a brilliant necktie and a diamond pin! Then there is the Mexican in one scale, but whom we shall no doubt find further on in several scales, considered from a social standpoint. Here he is serene and moves slowly ifancient ruts, ont of which he mav - be- neither coaxed nor dragged. His ambi- uuu eeeius uuiiieu vo acquiring a uauy liv ing peddling pecan candy, temallas and chele con came. He looks pleadingly ont of his great dark eyes and greets you with a conciliatory smile a remnant, perhaps, is mat iook ot tne hospitality that character ized at least one side of the house of his an cestors not quite four centuries ago. a gate and a not frequently traveled road winding picturesquely through the woodij n.i.trtieii!l.ii TVo..,tM,VT,w!.i;mT, him with offerings of fruits and nuts, when of the road and the gate as we rush by, but 4 he awoke he found his wants so provided . . .. . II frtv nnW (man caimnnta am W a a &- nl Hint l now They Pat to Death tbe Man Who Wanted tobe Their Kin?. Adele II. Flelde, In Harper's Young People. 3 A thriftless man who had a scolding wife resorted to ' woods to hang himself; but after he h. lied the noose his courage failed, and ho went home. His wife, on seeing him, said he had been gone so long that she had begun to hope he would never come back. This so wounded his feelings that he declared his intention of ending his life, and again betook himself to the forest. There he passed from tree to tree and de ferred the act from hour to hour, till he entered a strange gorge and sat down in the attitude of a musing Buddha under a branch on which he decided to fix his rope. Being exhausted by fasting and fatigue, he fell into a deep sleep, and was presently discovered by a wandering ape, who re ported to his tribe that he had 'found their ancestor. A council of the elders was then called around the sleeping man, and after due inspection they unanimously decided that he was indeed their ancestor,- and should be their king. So they carried him to their stronghold in a wooded glen, enthroned him in an arbor, and surrounded sufficient to learn that the rate sags in can sequence of a broken hinge, and the elliptic rnt in the ground proves that the accident is not recent. At dusk we were halted for supper, but I had no appetite. It was rumored we should have a good supper. Twenty min utes later I was ready to be qualified touch ing the truth of the report. The tablecloth was a wonder in whiteness; so were the nap kins. The glass shone even under a kero sene glow. There were bountiful bouquets of iresh flowers, and drawing my fingers across my white plate it left no trail behind. Dark aunties in bright calico gowns and gay kerchiefs on their heads waited on us. There were biscuits no larger round than a silver dollar that melted in the mouth; dainty salads of, to me, novel but exqnisite zest, coSee that rivaled the color of newly minted gold and of a fragrance I had deemed unattainable, eggpone and fried chicken tender fried chicken, that wonld have tempted the censorious palate of old Xucullus after a square meal in the Apol linarian Hall; the jellies and cakes were superfluous. Do not cavil that I thought of the preacher and the threadbare joke; but it could have been no such fried chicken that gave birth to that chestnut; a taste of it would make the preacher wish to spend the remainder of his iife here and, when he deceased, unlike the gallant "Little Phil" (peace to his ashes), to live in Texas, or within hail of that paragon in -the kitchen. But think of 20 minutes to devote to such a marvel 1 AN ETJB TO BUSINESS. Coming out. the deacon said he had a mind to stop over tin the next train. "Is it the egg-pone, deacon, or the chick en?" "Neither," and my susceptible friend de sisted picking his teeth to wipe his lips, and walked with me in silence to the train. After half an hour he said to me: "Do you know tnat ham commands 75 cents a pound in Mexico and lard in pro portion?" "I have heard so." "Why wouldn't it be a good idea to drive I n ! THE SOUTHERN MAX XF COLOR. And then there is the colored brother, with the dearly bought prize that was pre sented to him and which, unfortunately, he seems unable to manage, and we seem as weak as he in the solution of the problem. There is something of the old deference lin gering about the aged ones that lias nothing of servility in it It seems to me as cordial under the present gray hairs, as under the white ones of nearly a naif a century ago. It may be the dignity of inborn politenecs, only, out that is always beautiful. It canx'ot pos sibly detract from one's self respect or lower one's standing to yield one-half of the narrow sidewalk to another passing by. But the gallant young fellow in a red necktie and cane does not so consider it. He treads the earth as though it were created for his especial behoof and he has no hesitation in crowding the white stranger into the mtid; it is done with an air of lordly indifferen ce tnat ceases to De annoying Decanse it is lu dicrous. The ancient negro seems to consider hit'. rights assured, the young one thathe is only on the threshold ot their attainment, and hence, in his mind, every white man is eager to dispute his claim. He seems to cultivate a life of defiance and aggressive- " " ' "'-tiny of -the tact that made the -ay of his father smoother than ind his. What he considers mav never reach, while su- ossible to him outside of the parlor. It may perhaps be ch him, in the course of time, l hindrance to his rise is him- seems imbued with the same Adam that tinctures the rest of -ays someone else rather than oiiit is to blame for all errors. T jhave irrf yet failed to observe that when ja man made himself needed, the place was t , jready lor him. Mnrll of till" of tr4iic rif T-vrfatr i '(life, as well as its misery and the droll inci dents, are maae up or contrasts. 1. don my "blackfeltto Miss Blanche and Mr. Abraham .Lincoln Carroll, whom I encounter in an 4 .early morning stroll. I take off my hat 5 jCwith a purpose when I learn the young "f '-Sady's name there is barely a shade differ- $. nee,ia the color one is a (lead black and '-" She other shines. Miss Blanche is 3 years old, perhaps, the bearer of a corncob doll imd of little else, the we?"' it not being cool. "Young Mr. Carroll a rollicking t.efln,and thenars of the' gamin, and mF .. m . .r - ''jiit.Mjr .u, --. r- .u j. j for and his servants so deferential that he thought he might greatly enjoy lire among the apes. They continued to bring as tribute to him the best of It eir gleanings in the neighborhood and ail, the treasures they collected in their excursions to distant regions. He saw whore they had stowed the valuable ar ticles accumulated during past years, and at his leisure he examined and assorted them. One J day, when the apes were away he took aVl their portable wealth and made his way, out of the forest and back to his own ddor. His wife, seeing him more shabby than ever, poured reproaches upon hirt,i, but he silenced her by put ting a piece of gold in her hand. Hav ing enougih to live comfortably upon for many yearr. the woman became companion able. She soon told her intimate friend that her hos)and went awny to kill himself and came baak rich, and this friend urged her own huiband to do likewise. He in turn importuned his lucky neighbor to disclose to htm the method by which he got his fortune. Having promised secrecy and a' share of the plunder, he was intrusted with the story of election to headship amon!? the apes, and was given direction how to veach their retreat He then set off, followed the same route, sat in the same attitude under the same tree, and awaited the arrival bf the scout who should call the tribe to carry their returned chief into their fastnesses. V The apes had meantime deliberated, and had concluded that a being who had de serted them, taking with him their goods, was neither their sire (nor sovereign. So when a young ape foraging for provisions saw this second man under tbe tree he re turned home and notified the tribe, where upon the apes, moved to1 indignation and anger, surrounded him in force and tore him to pieces. THE BEST TEAES OF LIFE, Bat Only A JJcxican Caballero. hogs over there there is no duty on them." "Some enterprising American'has already engaged in that business." "Nolyou don't say I" His tone was one of disappointment and he relapsed into silence. Finally: "Did you notice those two pretty black eyed girls in the halJ, where we had sup per?" "Yes; one has a squint." "That's a see here, old fellow, that's a slander," and the deacon in dudgeon left me alone with my cigar, and to wonder where this inclination of his toward black eyes might lead him, perhaps myself, being his friend. SO WAGS THE TVOELD. Presently there came two of onr fellow passengers for a smoke and the discussion of investments. They were away from home seeking rest, but they might as well have remained in Boston or New York and suffered with dollars and nephritis. They hammered at general finances and the pros pects of Texas investments until I was con strained to ascertain by manual investiga tion whether or not the few dollars in my possession were melted. I found my pit tance safe. But the whole country was on the Tiigh road to the devil, and in New York, where I had supposed every man a financier, I learned of more "fools" to the acre than I thought the entire Union could tolerate and yet hope to exist. In fact, the country had been ruined and reorganised a dozen times in the last four hours, an d the conviction has been forced upon me hat we have but a sprinkling of great men left We have had a war with Germany o n account of Samoa, Bismarck was at one .time court marshalled, ordered to be shot or h;inged,bnt by the interposition of Divine Providence or Mr. Ochiltree, was rescued at th e sublime moment. At one time it was in timated that Ben Butler would look askance i nto the mess. If he should "then looke on t!" But it was too dark to see anything. . .Pending the discussion of these weighty m atters we crossed the Eio Grande and weaf upon & foreign coll,? lp- Woman Can Pt-operlr Mold Tbelr Happiness From AU the Year Arouno.1 Prom 21 to 25 might be the Ibest years of life, but upon one condition only that seems possible. The condition is, thaf. the man be in bonds of noble servitude of admiration to a noble woman. There will be much of disquiet attendant upon such a service; but it will be the restlessness of sure ana certain growth, and growth in the highest direc tion. Ah I but the woman must be of exalt ed mold little short, indeed, of a Aiv inity. Otherwise, it were diabolical. The Greeks had more than an inklin g of this method, although, as a rule, they ct'uld not rear such high-soulcd women as it is the privilege ot modern .Europe to excel .in. With them the philosophers played tt'ie part of the woman. Often they played :it detestably, but not always. The rare excep - tions were tnose unsexed men who had, attained to the state of pure contemplative spirits, to whom the world isbutthe shadow of a world. They made Greece. Similarly, the woman of our age who, from the most unselfish motives, devotes herself to others whether to individuals, or classes, or enure nations has in her to make the'man in his early manhood. This is well known, but it is worth Iteration. If only we could keep colleges of tried women for the finishing of the education of our boys! I warrant the result would be aston ishing. His Only nope. Sew Tfoik SnnO Henry (married six months) I fear my wife's love is growing cold. She used to come to the office two or three times a day, but she never comes now. "What shall I do? Prank Have you a typewriter? "No, but I can get one cheap." "Do- so. Then get a pretty girl to operate it, and your office will be full of your wife." A Summer Arrangement. " Omha "World. Z Jones So you and Katie have fallen out. Can't you make up with her? Brown Not till the ice-cream season is past. I've no money to waste on that lux ury, so I turn my cold shoulder toward her during the summer. It is the best I can afford to do. A Haughty Spirit. Stt'Al "Halice Hann, are -you a-going to get up from that sidewalk or not?" "Don't yer point yer finger at mel I won't take that from no one, an' I want .yer tcr understant oncet for all yer kin coax but Kianoi anve mei , JAjt. I . ., j .- J. Ml tCOBBISFOHDZKCX OT im SISPATCB.I London, May 22. About 15 years ago London society was greatly interested in a report, apparently well founded, that a hus band was to be found for the Queen's youngest daughter, Princess Beatrice, in the ranks of the British aristocracy, instead of scouring Europe for an eligible young German prince. There was no inherent improbability about the story, because the Princess Louise, an elder sister of Beatrice, had already wedded the Marquis of Lome, who had not even the recommendation of being rich. Society, therefore, set itself to work to fix the identity of the lucky young man. -Kunior nually settled upon tne .mar quis of Ely, and for onco rumor was right. The Marquis "was young, rich and hand some, and a favorite at court, where his mother, the dowager marchioness of Ely, was the chief lady of honor, and one of Her Majesty's few pvrsonal friends. Things were going smoothly when it was suddenly announced that Princess Beatrice had no intention of marrying the Marquis of Ely of anyone else, as she preferred to re main her royal mother's companion. The Marquis was seen no more at court. In De cember, 1875, he contracted a nnion, des tined to be fruitless, with Lady Caroline Anne Caithness, and thenceforward lived chiefly abroad. HIS MOETATj remains. Shortly after 5 o'clocjc on the afternoon of April 13, 1889, Mr. Lethbridge, a grave elderly gentleman, entered a first-class car riage at Woking station on the London and Southwestern Bailroad, carrying in his hand a beautifully polished brass-mounted oaken casket, which he carefully placed on the seat beside him. The tiasket bore' a brass plate upon which was engraved the follow ing inscription: John Henry Wellington Graham Loftui. 4th Marquis of Ely, Born 20tfi Nov. 181 Died at Nice, 3d April, Cremated at Woking; 13tn April, 18S9. "Within the casket was an urn ,15 inches high by six inches broad at the bjise. The urn contained about four ponndai of snow white ashes, similar in appearance to a sample of the best brand of Minneapolis flour, and two or three small pieces f beau tiful, silver-like frosted bone. The white ashes and the frosted bones were the mortal remains of the Bight Hon orable and Most Noble John, fourth Mar quis of Ely, the rich, handsome youqg npblo who 15 years previously had been within an ace of becoming the husband of a princess of the royal house of England. The casket at the present moment occupies a corner in Mr. Lethbridge's study, pend- int n decision as to which of flip fnflr rasllna belonging to the house of Ely shall finally receive it. The Marquis was staying at Nice for the benefit of his usually delicate health, when he was prostrated by a terribly painful in ternal complaint. He bore his sufferings with fortitude, and when informed that he could not live he wnte with his own hand directions for the cremation of his body, ordering at the same time that there should be no funeral procession or display. London society was grieved in a placid way to hear of the sudden death of the amiable nobleman, but that grief was soon turned to indignation when his unorthodox testamentary instructions became known. But the Marquis' relatives and personal friends in London loyally resolved to carry ont his last wishes, and a special agent was sent to the continent to arrange for the cre mation at Gotha, where the best crematory in Europe is situated, it was lound, how ever, that the formalities of crossing the Prench and German frontier with the corpse and recrossing with the ashes would be so numerous and vex atious that it was decided at the last moment to bring the re mains to England. But before cremation could be carried out many formalities had to be observed. Two certificates had to be obtained and sent in to the cremation soci ety, the first signed by the physicians who attended the Marquis in his last illness, and the second of a separate and independent medical expert who examined the body alter death, inquired into the circumstances connected with the demise and certified that there were no reasons for supposing that ex humation of the body would be thereafter necessary. This done, formal application was made to the cremation society to under take the cremation. The body was brought bv the agent to England in an ordinary coffin and placed in an ante-room at the Woking Crema torium, and on April 13 tbe final rites were carried out in tbe presence ot one or two friends and the usual officials. It had been arranged to hold a funeral service in the little chapel near the crematorium. The chapel was unfinished, but it had been con secrated and no difficulty was anticipated. The bishop of the diocese, however, per emptorily refnsed to allow the service of the church tobe read bei'oic carnation, although for some reason equally inexplic able he did not object to according religious rites to the ashes aiterwaru. lint the majority of the mourners were in a hurry to get back to town, and finding the doors of the chapel unlocked, they entered. EELIGIOUS .KITES. . - Among the mourning relatives was a clergyman, and forthwith he produced a prayer book and read the service for the dead. Then all save two or three faithful friends returned to London and the coffin was removed in solemn silence to the crema torium. The body was placed upon an iron plate, just within the open iron doors of the crematorium, the doors were closed and the remains were slowly drawn within the heat ed chamber. There was no perceptible heat at first, but within a quarter of an hour the furnace had attained a heat of 1,200 Fahr enheit, and it was impossible to stand with in six foet of the doors, although the actnal furnace was as many ieet within. There was absolutely no odor, and no smoke could be seen issuing from tbe crematorium. Within an hour and a half the attendant announced that the body had been com pletely consumed. An hour later the fur nace had cooled down, the doors were opened and the iron plate again brought into view. The iron, it was afterward discovered, had broken in several places with the intense heat to which it had been subjected. All 'that the fire had left of the fourth Marquis of Ely were the few small pieces of bone and a rift of white ashes which covered the iron plate like snow. The attendant, with a pair of tongs, picked out the bones, which, with the ashes carefully swept from the plate. 'were placed in an urn. une crematorium at vvocing was at first built upon strictly utilitarian lines. Bnt in I course of time it was found that people were repelled Dy tne piain Dries lurnace block and faotory-like chimney. A COMPLETE OUTFIT. Not even a hearse was provided for the conveyance of the bodies from the railroad .depot to the crematorium, and down to with in a lew weeks ago the coffins were huddled unceremoniouslyiinto a light spring van. It was resolved, in consequence of numerous complaints, to introduce a little more senti ment into the arrangements. Last Novem ber the erection ot a hall, waiting rooms and a chapel was commenced, and these have now been completed, with the excep tion of the chapel. The system in use at Woking is kuownon tbe Continent as the Cremstorjo Xioaiglirjo and was invented by Prof. Gorini. V The body is introduced Into the cremator- lhaBjberxnd when tie door which separates I the fuel combination chamber from the crematory chamber, has been drawn back, the flames from the furnace play over the body, which is placed with the head to the flames, and these and tbe products of both combustions descend the flue, and then as cend by side flues to the chimney. Not an atom of organic matter is allowed to escape into the atmosphere. When the cremation society had finished the Woking crematory they were disgusted to find that they were unable to use it. Bishops and lawyers denounced it as irre ligious and illegal, and for nearly ten years the big furnace remained cold save for occa sional experimental cremations of the lower animals. But in 1884 the question of legal ity was settled in an unexpected and sensa tional manner. Dr. William Price, an 'ec centric oiu gentleman living nearUardifi, in Wales, claimed to be a descendant of the Druids, and when his five-months old child died he decided to dispose of its remains in what he considered the orthodox Druidical fashion by cremating it. ALMOST A 1YNCHINO. Dr. Price could not afford to send the lit tle corpse several hundred miles tnWntinir even had he been sure that the society would receive it. He therefore fixed up a rude crematorium of his own on the top of a lovely Welsh hill, and one fine Sunday afternoon commenced operations. His cre matorium consisted chiefly of a pile of wood and. a ten-gallon cask of petroleum upon which the little body was placed. After some preliminary Druidicalincantations the old man himself applied the torch and soon there was a blaze which attracted all the people of the valley. The simple folks, having no sympathy with cremation or modern Druids, saw only a poor little baby's body being scandalously treated. Porthwith they heaped earth on the flames, rescued the balfconsumed corpse and proceeded earnestly to lynch the in human parent. The opportune arrival of the rural police saved tbe life of. Dr. Price, but he was put in prison and charged with misdemeanor in having attempted to burn the child's body. At the trial at Cardiff in February, 1884, however, Mr. Justice Stephen ruled that the cremation of a body, if effected without eausing a nuisance, was perfectly legal, and Dr. Price was acquit ted. Since then the cremation system has slowly but steadily grown in publio favor. The Marquis ot Ely was the first noble man to be cremated, Dut among' the distin guished persons who have given orders that their corpses shall be so treated are the Duke ot Bedford, Lord Bramwell, Sir Henry Thompson and Sir Spencer Wells. It is believed by shrewd observers of pub lic sentiment in England that the system of disposing of the dead by cremation is at last well under way. Blakely Hail. EELIGIOUS 80MHABY. CHBisnANiTY forbids no conceivable good motive, and permits no conceivable bad motive. Sunday School Times. The American Baptist Missionary Union cel ebrated Its seventy-fifth anniversary in Boston last week, Francis Wayland presiding. It rep- icum a vuuaubucimj oj 4uv,vwmemDers. The British Bible Society, of which the Earl of Harrowby is President, reports an expend iture for 1888 of 226,164, and receipts of 212, 615, against 226,fc63 for 1887. The distribution of Bibles also fell )0.000, from 4,000,000 to 3,500. 000. They were in 287 languages. Bishop Pabet confirmed recently, at St. John's Chapel, Washington, a class which was unique. It consisted of nine colored candidates, and the sister-in-law of Postmaster General Wanamaken the daughter of the late Justice Matthews, of tbe Supreme Court; the daughter of Secretary of State James G. Blaine, and Justice Gray, of the United States Supreme Court. A gentleman in New England has given $100,000. and Japanese gentlemen have sub scribed about $70,000, to found a Christian uni versity in Japan, according to a plan proposed by tbe Bev. Joseph Neeslma, of the American Board. The collegiate institution which Mr. Neeslma has been building up for several years, contains more than 9i0 students. Church of To-Day. Less than CO years ago the Lutheran Church of onr country numbered 200 pastora and 900 congregations. At present it numbers 4,200 pastors and 7,400 congregations, and upward of 1,000,000 communicant members, among whom tbe gospel is preached in eight different lan guages. The Lutheran Church has 32 theo logical seminaries, 25 colleges, 37 academies and other high schools, 32 orphans' homes, 8 hospitals, 3 deaconesses institutions, 1 deaf and dumb asylum, and 4 emigrant homes. It pub lishes so periodical?. vnruitan jiavocale. Thibet is the only known country on earth not open to missions. It has an area of 760,000 square miles, about as large as the United States east of the Mississippi river. The great est length from cast to west is 1,500 miles, and the population Is estinrated at 8,000,000. It Is the stronghold of Buddhism. Lbassa, tbe capital, is the "Rome" of the Bnddhists, and the Dalai Lama is tbe Buddhist pope. He is supioino in both temporal and spiritual tilings. One monastery has aboat5.000Buildhist priesrs. and there are about 60,000 in the country. Thibet is virgin soil for missions. Tbe country is tribntary to China. Illustrated Christian Weekly. In tbe felicitations following the completion of tho first hundred years of oar national life altogether too littlo attention has been paid to onr religious progress as a natiou, which has been, in many respects, even more marked than our material progress. It is too well known to be repeated that our professedly Christian population has far moro than kept pace with tbe total population. This is the layman's age, and cvory preacher's i oico is supplemented by a hundred pairs of brethren's hands. This is the century which has seen tho development of the prayer rocetrne, the Christian association. tho missionary society, tho Sunday school, and tbe" Christian endeavor society. As the Christ ian thinks of these things he may well tbank God, and take courage in looking lorward to a now century of relieiou3 nrosress. If he is not an optimist he cortainly ousbttobe. The Golden Mule. The Church is nothing if It is not the Church of Christ that is, founded by and drawing its right to exist and its authority from Christ. He came to establish a visible kingdom on tho earth, and the Church is that vUibleTclngdom. Its historical unity is, in our judgment, neither liturgical clerical, nor theological; it is vital a unity of spiritual life. But the unity is real. The Church Is not a mere group of disjointed corporations, oUTering from other rhirterod corporations only in having a higher, or at least a more mystical, cause to serve; nor a mere so ciety in which philanthropic and devout mo tives are Intermixed in varying proportions, and which fulHlls its whole duty to man If ic takes care of its own geographically limited constituency; and. above all, it is not a mere social club, which Is to be measured, like tho theater, by its power to draw, and differs from the theater chiefly in its inability to attract and entertain an audience as effectively. It is a real incarnation of Christ; a body in which He lives. Christian Union. A CUBAN GIRL'S HOME. Tlie Unchangeable Social law Which Compels a Young Lady TO LEAD THE LIFE OP A BECLUSE. The American an Enigma That the Spaniard Is Unable to Solve. LILUAN SPENCEE ON HATANA HOTELS ICOBBXSPOHTEUCJ! OT THE UISPATCn.l ?Z HAVANA, May 15. The laws of a nation are not more stringent than the laws which govern and hold in ab ject submission the so cial status of the Cuban code. Society here has for its basis the rigor ous conformity which has characterized it since the discovery of the island. It is as it was in the beginning, and ever will be in the time to come. One can form no idea of Cuban home life by AnAmerlcaninCuba.lmng in a hotel. The reason for this is obvious. The hotels are, without exception, execrable. And they are execrable without an ex cuse for being so, unless it is that the con servatism of the country is both inherent mm7 pattern probably in vogue a hundred or more years ago. A OIKI, EECLI7SE. With charming grace, both host and nostess conducted me over the establishment, tne iormer ouering me his arm with old fashioned gallantry, the latter following; speaking when snoeen to. bnt vouchsafing no single observation of her own. Etiquette demands this of mademoiselle, and made moiselle is a slave to etiquette. She was very pretty, very petite, very timid, and she blushed a little each time I spoke to her. She had never been to school, never played with other children, never tfalked through the streets, and yet tshe was 15 years old. There was ample space in her father's house for exercise, and there was no occasion for her to brave the peril of an out-door promenade. Sunday a priest said mass in the chapel which adjoined her boudoir, and she had not even an excuse to go to church. She drove away every day with her father in the family carriage, and sometimes sat in his box at the opera. She occasionally ac companied him to a dinner or reception, but this was all. No other amusements or pleasures had she ever known. Soon her father would provide her with a husband, and. as was her duty, she would cheeriully approve his choice. There was no trace o"f the monotony of her life in her sweet, girlish face. Its tranauillitr shone with a stronir. steady light from her soft, dark eyes. Her father was a tall, stately man of 50 or thereabouts, who treated her with great deference and addressed her as mademoi selle. He had the manners of a Chester field and the bearing of a prince. On the occasion of my admiring a very handsome piece of bric-a-brac, he immediately said in Prench (we conversed in that language), "C'est a votre disposition," meaning that since I admired it I might consider it my own. THEIB. MTIYE LAND. When Hungarian Immigrants Hayo Saved a Small Sam of Money, TflEI EETBM TO THEIR H0HES, Where They live in Peace and Plenty the Ucat of Theif laves. SCENES IN THE COAL 3IININ6'EEGI0N3 Benor Hernandez's Some. and hereditary. Questioning the proprietor, we learn that no objection is ever offered to the established rate of charges, which is exorbitant in the extreme. We are told that the average American, while he grumbles at the surroundings and is at no pains to conceal his contemptuous opinion of much that passes on around him, rarely makes any outcry about the items in his bill, though they are strung in a line to the very bottom of tbe long page. Five dollars is about the price charged a single person for a sing room, in which is neither hair mattress, window glass or carpet. This being the case, there is no apparent excuse for the hotel to continue in its primitive state ot discomfort and mismanagement. But it does so notwithstanding, having no doubt imbibed the general air of changelessness so characteristic of the people. They say of the Chinaman that he is as fixed as a rock; that you may send out y'onr missionaries and convert nim to your heart's content.but be will still worship his hideous deity in the Joss house, as he will go on eating with his chopsticks forever. THE CHAXGEIiESS CUBAN. Born a heathen he will live a heathen and die a heathen, in spite of ail the churches this side of Christendom. So it is with the Cuban. Custom does sometimes prevail on him to change an old cut of clotbes for a new one, but an idea he holds to and never relinquishes. Society, like everything else, bartakes of this conservatism. The laws "of the Medes and Persians were not more arbitrary. Etiquette has for generations prescribed thai a foreigner, to be admitted into a pri vate house, must be vouched for and accom panied by some member of Cuban society known to the family. In this case the Cuban hospitalitv is overwhelming. The best the house affords is spread belore the guest Through the ingenuity of an American THE AMEEICAK AX EJTIGMA. I believe it is customary in Cuba to nre- sent a guest with anything he or she may honor with praise. Hence, "C'est a votre disposition" is a common expression, which I fancy has very little weight in the mouth of the average Cuban. My own idea is that an attemnt td carry off any of the articles thus proffered would be frustrated by the timely arrival of the police. Of course I may be mistaken, but experience hastaught me that it does not do to take these people too literally. They talk too much to mean all they say, or so I am inclined to think. There is this, however, to be said: If tho Cuban is a curious study for the American, the American, on his part, la to the Cuban nothing less than a phenomenon. r A man who actually loves cold weather. cjiwho has an utter disregard for draughts a-iiuoan avoids a breath ot air as he does a pestilence who smokes cigars in lieu of cigarettes, who has made all his money him self, who never gesticulates or flies into a passion, who grumbles at his bill but pays it to a penny, and scatters all the loose coin in his pockets among the street Arabs, who hangs around the iron-barred windows; aman who takes in the whole city in single day, and knows all about it, too; who acquires a smattering of Spanish in a month that he never improves or forcrets. who whistles as he walks through the streets, and who loves his wife and is true to her, on general prin ciples, if nothing else, is a mystery to the Cuban gentleman. Liixian Spencee. Bnt Probably Loss. Yankee Blade. Namby I just lent $10 to Pamby; I wish you would make an item of it, Mr. Book keeper. Bookkeeper Shall I debit it to cash? "I guess you don't know Pamby very well. Put it in the profit and loss account." ' Frightened Away. Burlington Free Press. Beal Estate Agent I can let yon a very pretty cottage on Piano street for only House Seeker What did you say the name of the street was? Eeal Estate Agent Piano street. House Seeker Thanks; I believe I will look a little further. THE MISTEEY OP DEATH. A State of Cataleprr. Sometimes lasts for Days or Week. Boston Globe. Eew events have given rise to so mnch general-comment as the recent dissection of Mind-reader Bishop only a few hours after he was supposed to be dead. The pending examination into his death has shown that the medical experts, as usual, are much at sea on the nature of death and the certain evidences of its actnal occurrence as or dinary guessers. Man has a natural and a spiritual body. The suspension of activity in the natural body implies the release of tbe spirit. But just when the action of the physical body is entirely suspended is a matter of specula tion, tiH the final evidence of decomposition u auppiieu. j.uis nos Deen practically ad mitted by the physicians called upon to testify in the Bishop case. In the disease of catalepsy, or deep trance, the action of the nerves of volition and sen sation is suspended, while a weak action of the heart and lungs is continued for some times many days. 'That this action may become entirely imperceptible and life yet remain seems to he proved in the case of uishop. At any rate tbe doctors are not able to agree to the contrary. All the burrowing animals are in a state of catalepsy and live for months in a state of apparent death. Frogs have been taken from solid sandstone, after being imbedded for many vears, and resuscitated. How many men are cataleptic in the last stages of life is a matter which the doctors know scarcely more about than other people. rcosxEsr o.iuln cjs or ihi DiSPJiTcai., Newt Yoek, June 1. During one of his campaign .speeches at Indianapolis last summer, Benjamin Harrison said: "Tha gates of Castle Garden swing inward; they never swing outward." That was practi cally true. Yet one of the curious sights of to-day around this, city is the crowdof Hungarians constantly embarking for their om nome. i.he tide of immigration is ebbing and the tide of emigration is flooding with the Hungarians. It was the observation of several hundreds of these foreigners huddled together at ona of our railroad wharfs, awaiting transfer to the steerage of an outgoing steamer tha other day, that caused your correspondent to investigate the matter. There is just qna man to consult about a problem of this sort. That is Hugh Kiiigore, the leading "Emi grant runner," as they are called in this country. He is a middle-aged man who for six years had handled thousands of emigrants of all nationalities. He does this for one of the railroad companies that makes a point of shipping newly arrived foreigners to tha West and South. His attention was called to the crowd above mentioned. MADE THEIE PILE. He said they were really going home, having got out of the United Stales all they wanted. They never expected to return. They had saved enough within a few years to enable them to purchase or lease a littla property in their native land, on which ther could live comfortably the remainder o'f their lives. Asked to go more into details. Mr. Kiiigore said: "This is the third batch of foreigners that I have shipped home this season. These people are Hungarians who icame to this country two and three years aco, though a few may have been here about five years. The majority belong tobatchesthatlsteered from Castle Garden to different places in Pennsylvania within three years. Since then tney have been employed in the coal mines, and in some mysterious manner have been enabled to save enough money, not only to take them home, but also a littla capital to work upon when they get there. "During the coal mine strikes a hr years ago agents of the coal companies visited Castle Garden and enirajred hundreds nmn hundreds qf Hungarians to take the places of the English, Irish and Welsh miners who were on strike. The immigrants were paid one-third less wages than were paid the mora intelligent miners. As far as I could learn the Hungarians averaged about 1 30 a month in wages. Many of them got less than that, and a few who were luckier or more intelligent than their fellpw coun trymen got a little more. The point of the thing is that these people, most of whom had tamilies, were able to save from $200 to $500. There'is not a man in that crowd who has not at least S200 over and above his passage money to his native country, PECtTLIAE -WATS. La Disappointed. Chicago Tribnne.l "This isn't what I expected," said the new arrival in Guthrie. "I was told I would find riot and bloodshed on every corner. It seems quiet enough." "Quiet?" howled ' the thirsty-loosing Texan who had been in the place 24 hours. "When yon can't even get water for less than 10 cents a drink, how in thunder can It be anything else? I'm going on to Wich ita, b' goshl" Courtyard in Senor Hernandez's House. An Infant Hercnles. Exchange.! "Is the baby strong?" "Well, rather. You know what a tre mendous voice he has?" "Yes." "Well, he lifts that five or six times an hour." It Baa Reached tbe Cannibal Isles. Chief (to missionary) Are you lookin' for, your braddsx ? He's in de soup! Life. I acquaintance of mine, to whom nothing seemed Impossible, I was invited to the magnificent residence of Senor Vincent Hernandez, one of Havaca's best-known citizens. His house, or palace to more properly designate it stands in the heart of the city, directly opposite to that of the American Consul, and occupies one whole block. It is built of marble and is en circled by balconies. As through a ponder ous iron gateway I entered the square, stone-paved court yard of Senor Hernan dez's home, a garden of palms and various other tropical plants spread belore me. Here and there I caught sight of an orange tree. Looking up, I perceived that the building was erected after the style of a church, inasmuch as its roof consisted of a great dome, tinted in aznrc to represent the blue of the heavens. On this first floor I was shown the stables, the horses, carriages, bright metal harnesses, hung inclosed glass cases, and the marble baths. FASHIONS THAT ENDUEE POBEVEE. Ascending the wide staircase which led to the first story, paved also in marble, I found myself in a lofty circular hall, on which opened some 20 or more beautiful apartments, finished in the rare and costly wood for which the island is famous. Willow, rattan and ebony formed the furnl ture. The floors were of inlaid mosaic; the hangings, Japanese. The size and splendor of the rooms can scarcely be conceived. One after another they extended the whole length of the house. Mademoiselle Her nandez, the daughter of tho host, accom panied me through the sleeping apartmeuts (innc of which was an iron safe-in which were kept the family jewels) to a sewing room, where five black women were en gaged working on her linen. Some "were mending, others embroidcrim. Each articlo when completed was -consigned to a hand somely carved case, where they were ar ranged with prim regularity and order. About SO or more servants are retained by this family. In a closet were hung the silk dresses left to mademoiselle by her deceased mother and grandmother. These gowns may ba worn, but they mnst not be altered. Nothinz BBSt bdaltered in Cnb. not even KftdHsoiMlIe'i lwn, whieh is made torn a I Tbe Grclono Record. Detroit Free Press.! Kansas has had 14 cyclones in 6 years, and if any other State in the Union can show more wind than that let the record be produced. SCIENTIFIC SDMHAEI. The Prtsser locomotive, just Invented at Chicago, is said to bo noiseless, smokeless, and wonderfully economical ot fuel and of power. A botanical congress bas been called by the Botanical Society of France, to be held in Paris in August, for tbe presentation and discussion of treatises "on botanical subjects, pure or applied. Particular attention will be given to conslderins; tbe usefulness of establishing joint action looklnc to the Drcoaratlon of mini showing the distribution of species and genera over the globe, and to the characters for classi fication furnished by anatomy. Mount Vesuvius has been in a state of mild eruption for some time past, the most violent commotion being from about April 29 to May 2. The cone which bas been forming for the last ten months has fallen in, and a considerable outpour of lava took place from a fissure on the southeast side of tho crater. The outnour forms a long tongue of lava reachlne down the mountain; but It is not expected tbat it will reach cultivated ground. The eruption Is In many respects similar to that of Slay 2, 1&S5. and, it is hoped, will prove as harmless. bikce the beginning of February, the Babylonian expedition sent out by the Uni versity of Pennsylvania has been exploring the ruins of NIffer, whose site la. marked by an Im mense mound, about 0 miles southwest of ancient Babylon, and bordering on tbe Afflosch swamps, so-called from the tribe of Afflk Sf.lou S8Dn.at,awe" Tbr. Nifteris identical with old Babylonian Nipplrn, founded about 3,000 years before the Christian era. In its ruins lie buriedithe remains of the famous Bel temple, which will be systematically exulored and doubtless yield splendid resulls.-JoriiA Messenger. . Few educational enterprises have yielded larger results for tho amount invested than the Egypt Exploration Fund. Expendlngannnally since 18S3 between J7.000 and $8,000, it has dis covered or disclosed tho following interesting ?ilC8A Flttrom (the treasure city of Exodns i, II). Qoshen Tabpanhes (the Dapbns of tbe breaks), the city of Onia, Zoan. Am, Nau kratls, and. latest of all, Bnbastis (the Pi Besetti of tbe Scriptures). These discoveries have been conducted in a thoroughly scientific manner and have yielded rich results regarding tbe sciences, arts, aad industries of,r' - the early soaroesJofKJreekiihlatorT tlcnlftrlr.'ISlbllaalfcxul umb-- - 'AMtfWpMryg""6""-" ITT It.. Jl if I xiuw viicy uiuuugeu 10 save mas amount 1 is a mystery to everybody except those who. 1 n are familiar with the manner in which theyi lived. There are men in that crowd whosJ wages for the past two years has not beer more than ?350 a year or 5700 in oil, and je they are taking home with them J500. Tha . seems incredible, yet it is so. These peopi. ' lived amid squalor and dirt, and subsisted on food stuff that would be rejected by any American tramp. "They lived in huts and hovels provided by the coal companies, for which they paid less than $30 a year rent. A frame house such as would be used by an intelligent miner, whose rent would be $8 or 10 a mdnth, wonld be occupied by two, three and oftentimes four Hungarian families, who wonld divide ud the rent amon? them. "The unmarried men and those without families were boarded for $2 and $3 a week. Many of them had bunks down in the mines, and did not come up to the surface excepting once a week, and then it was to lay in a stock of black and rye bread, on which they would snbsist Tor days with no more nourishment other than water. This may sound like exaggeration, but anyone familiar wittoitfe in the Huncarian colonies in the coal mines will iell you that it is but a mild picture." THE SA3IE CLOTHES STTLl. Mr. Kiiigore called attention to the fact that while these Hungarians had been in this country for two years, and some of them longer, not one of them wore any clothing of American make. Prom their slender heeled boots to the rough caps on their beads, their ciotning was tbe same tbat they wore when they arrived in this country. In a few instances their boots had succumbed to the wear of time, but otherwise their clothing was old, dirty and greasy Hunga rian material. None of them conld speak English intelligently, beyond a few profane expressions. Many of the men could under stand English amazingly well, yet they could not reply in that language. Mr. Kiiigore is very emphatic in his be lief that such people ought to be prohibited from coming to this country. He said they never assimilated with other foreigners and did not appreciate the advantages of a free country. They could not be Americanized and were a greater drawback to intelligent workingmen than even the Chinese, because they were very powerful and muscular and could do any of the manual labor that the Americans. Germans or Irish did. and lived on so little that workmen of the latter na tionalities could not successfully compete) against them. U. S. M, i The Wrona House. Barpers atag-szlne.1 "You all remember the words of Web. ster," shouted the orator. "No, we don't," interrupted a man in the gallery. "He has so many words I can't remember more than half of 'em." Parental Advice. Nebraska State Journal. "My son, the only advice I can give you is to start at the bottom and work: np, no matter what may b.e your calling." "But, father, I intend to ba a well digger." MA Ii dp ' ATacfcjIeavensI What's the Batter witk youreyeSffBob?. SbA-' ow j.-.ve eeuK a iBree-riMr air&ati-.. SjBSJBHfSSUdKi3 OttKKBBdt & "7 JOiu, iifc ,. ieJ-JWa--Vgtfinifai-J- it;W HP