TSBURG DTSP ... W SECOND PARt '''"'' I XiE SA , - . 1 IT TCH: w PAGES 9 TO 12. t mm ISLE SCENES Splendidly Pictnred by E. L. Wake fe! man, ff ha Writes From Fayal. rV PIC0A5D 1TSM0UKTAIN GRANDEUR I A Slender Black Bising From the Sea and Hating White Bands. (SOLITUDE IK MOST TAKIKG ASPECTS ICOssxsroxsxKcx or thx sisri.Tcn.1 Fatal, Azobes, if ovember 13. Copy right After a voyage of four days from St. Michael in a little Portuguese trading coaster, dnring which we had touched at the port ot Augra, in the Island ot Terceira, and Vellas, in the Island ol St. George, I finally debarked at Horta, the capital city of the Tsland of Fayal, and at once made preparations to cross to the near Island of Pico, whose famons mountain of the same name I was desirous of ascending-. The Azorean island of Terceira is so named from its having been the third in the order of discovery. It has about 180 square miles and a population of nearly 60,000 souls. There are few mountain heights or ocean headlands of impressive pictnresqueness, none furnishing scenic views of grandeur, but within its 70 miles of coast line are , many noble plateaus often reaching eleva tions of 3,000 and 4,000 leet above the sea. Terceira, however, enjoys a few distinctive Superiorities, from the Azorean standpoint. It has always been the most loyal to the Portuguese crown. Kb less than three Portu guese rulers have made this island their temporary residence, and fine monuments in token of the fact have been erected. The capital and chief port, Angra, possesses the aristocracy of the Azores. Titles are as com mon as donkeys in Angra. Then, too, its streets are more modern; its public build ings handsomer; its whitewash and paints .re whiter, bluer, pinker or yellower than elsewhere in the Azores; and to crown all, the city is the only one in the islands which boasts an enclosure for the festa detouros, or bull fieht The Island of St. George is a complete con trast in many respects to Terceira. Its area is perhaps 90 square miles and it has a pop ulation ot fully 19,000 souls. Topograph ically considered, it is the most interesting of the entire Azorean group, save perhaps Pico, which only surpasses it in the extraor dinary height of its single tremendous mountain. Its coastline of some 20 or 30 wiles faces on the southwest of both Fayal and Pjco, and is one of the most impressive sea walls I ever beheld. INCOMPARABLE PALISADES. Anyone who has caught half-views through .a shifting Quoddy fog of the northern sheer headlands of the grim island of Grand Mauan, off our northeasternmost Maine coast, can form an excellent idea of this mighty mass of headlands which -.for half a day's sail confronts one from the Azo rean Sea. They are mightier, vaster and incomparably more grim and weird than Manan's dark northern heights, for, .with scarcely a break, here are almost precip itous heights rising not 300 and 400 feet above the waves, but from 800 to 1,500 feet. "Vellas, the chief city, or rather hamlet, lies like a beggar in the sun beneath these Heights, with volcanoes behind, not so long ago extinct but there remain evidences ot their destructive belchings which once all cm -mminu&iea me near nanuet oi ursu lina., Tellas is antiquated, woebegone, slothful. Its cathedral and hospital are the only two structures at all noteworthy; the people of the island are lazily engaged in agriculture, fishing and wrecking; and the peasants, who are most picturesque in dress anil manners, are as primitive in all meth ods of labor as were the Moors when in Spain and Portugal, from whom the inhabi tants are said to have sprung, and to whom they bear strong facial resemblance. The Island of Pico, with an area of 80 square miles and from 25,000 to 28,000 in habitants, is in two particulars the most in teresting of the Azores. Its single tremen dous peak, from which the island derives its ..came, furnishes the highest elevation to be 'seen by mariners in Atlantic waters; and its women are the most beautiful to be lound upon all the Atlantic shores. Pico, the mountain, is nearly 8,000 feet above the sea level. It can be descried for a distance of 75 miles at sea. Its formation is volcanic, and at the present time it is simply a slum bering volcano; for from the crater at its summit there constantly pour streams of air of such intense heat that in the moonlight, or in certain conditions of the atmosphere, at dawn or twilight, a pale flame is 'easily discerned from the opposite shore oi Fayaf. .Pico, the island, is the southernmost of the middle Azorean group comprising Graciosa, St, George, Terceira, Fayal and Pico, and is shaped like an Indian club, its handle to the east, and its blunt head, with its sharp lava-flint 8,000 feet high.jatjihe western end. WHAT PICO IS LIKE. 1 It is only separated from Fayal by a nar row channel which the Horta and Madelena Pescadores and boatmen will row you across in less than half an hour. In its half dozen little cities and perhaps fwc-score hamlets, you will see more beautiful women than yon will encounter in a year's ordinary observa- tion in Europe. Even the old married women and grandams poises that lustrous beauty which remains with fadeless eyes. But the meninas and the senoritas, the girls and misses, are physically winsome past all telling. This Pico maid has the delicately arched foot of the Spanish woman, and her short skirts disclose limbs as graceful and shapely. If her splendid figure has one fault it lies in her lack ot height, bnt In nearly ev ery instance the compensation is found in perfect proportion. Her complexion is -waxen and creamy with no carnation in her cheeks. Her mouth is large, mobile and tremulous. Her teeth are faultless, and the enthusiast would insist that her lips were maddening. Her hair, not black as with most Southern types, is of that misty brown color which one may sometimes see on the sides of mountains opposite the sun. But ler crowning glory is melting, languorous, yet flashing, eyes. Her facial beauty is not greatest in repose. Then, if unconscious of observation, as with tne women of all tropic countries where intelligence is lack . jng,.her face has a trace of the splendid ani mal'in it; and a noticeable touch of helpless ness and pathos. Bnt bring her features into active play with a man at the other end. of the effort, with her large, dark, dreamful, glowing eyes, firing and melting behind long, dirk, half-hiding lashes, with the endless supple and willowy movement "of every portion of her splendid body !or .her every mental and physical laculty plays in -responsive harmony with her tongue or her eyes and you have come close to some thing which makes you long for an artist's power. They say here that the women among American and English tourists call these winsome Pico maidens "perfectly torrid creatures." Doubtless. The Pico girls forgive this, for it somehow increases the surreptitious admiration of the defamers' husbands. MOSTSrNGTJLAB AND STEIKISO. From the distance of St. George or Terceira the mountain, Pico, has the sppearance of a slender black cone rising from the sea, its farthest heights truncated here and tnere br shining bands of white. From the heiehts behind Horta, in Fayal, if an occa sional cloud should intervene,its appearance at incalculable height and size is wondrous lr fascinating. Down at the water's edee in Horta it seems that a precipice of immeasur m. .ititnffe is looming above you. Thelon- , cer von look, the more portentous this seem-, 'ing grows, for the mountain is seldom clear cut azainst the sky, until one is actually possessesed of sense or apprehensivenejs lest that more than a milefei unseen reach wfcnlned lava u auont to tnmDie.gcrois the channel and beat the Island of Fayal, a powdered mass, into the sea. Viewing it from a boat while skirting the incomparably picturesque shores at its base, one can think of no better way to de scribe it, especially when remembering that every atom of shore and mountain was belched forth from the earth in volcanic fires, than in the old simile of a vast cinder heap where the huger slaghas continually rolled to the outer edges into the sea, endlessly forming a broadening base as the finer siftings continued adding to the height of the perfect cone above. Nothing could be more interesting than a study of the seaward exposures of Pico's base from an open boat. The northwestern headlands are extraordinary and impressive. For from 200 to 300 feet above the shore im mense layers or strata of dark lava show edges as clean and plain as a new-laid wall. They are each evidence of a separate over flow of lava from the volcano above. These come squarely in places to the water's edge like huge backwaters of masonry. Again they are crumbled and broken or blended as if by torrents of lava, and bevondsuch phenomena as these, there are always ragged lava crags jutting from the sea showing where the molten masses have seethed and cooled. TTOBN JJ.-WAT BX OLD ATLANTIC. Again, for long reaches, these precipitous strata, where the coast has received the full force of the Atlantic's poundings, have been worn into arches, and have carved out pil lars and fashioned buttresses, until for hun dreds of feet in height, as though some earthquake rent had divided them and cast one portion beneath the waves, were the most curious and fanciful representations of ruins of vast once-hidden temples. Nor is this more curious than the view from your boat of the sides of Pico almost to the clouds from this grandly picturesque base. It seems to the eye as though the entire sur tace of the mountain was covered with a net work of tracery, in its own lava colors; as if the suiface ot some black dunce's cap had been finely wrought in delicate threads of Guipure, lace. This strange, threading is wnere ine once lamous jrico vmeyarus were. There is not a single atom of substance de serving the name of vegetable soil from base to peak of Fico; bnt years ago, in these myriads of little walled compartments rising above each other like the seats at a theater, the vines grew lush and green from the black stones and scoria?, until no vineyards in Tuscany -produced finer grapes or fur nished prettier scenes, and 25,000 casks of vine were annually sent to Fayal for ex portation. But the blight came, the vines were totally destroyed, and though now their culture is again slightly reviving, for a quarter of a .century the dry little lava pockets have added to the dark, dreary barrenness of the mountain sides. The little town of Madelena at the island landing is a quaint 'old nest of sloth and somnolence. But these island folk are handsome, beaming with good nature, and the fact that the stranger comes to Pico., makes every soul with whom he comes in Contact a radiant companion and friend. So you arrange for your guides and supplies for the mountain ascent for hut a trifle of money. These guides will wear sandals and have much trouble with their feet Most strangers bring strong, heavy-soled shoes. But I have learned something about mountain-climbing all tourists should know. BIO BOOTS JDST THE THING., Always be provided with an honestly made pair of boots. Have the tops reach nearly to the knees. Wear them under, your tramping trowsers. And always have the heavy soles well spiked with iron nails. You may not be able to cavort about like stage shepherdesses. But you will be able to hump along quietly and reach the place you started for while your over-nice com panions and picturesque guides, are limping painfully oenina, or tarrying in tne clouds beneath,' to remove sections of glaciers from under their heels or knife-like cinders from between their bleeding toes. That was the condition of my guides before we had climbed five hours, and we were compelled to halt at midday at a no greater elevation than 5,000 feet Here we remained for three hours, with out a single glimpse of scenery. A light, misty cloud apparently enveloped the entire mountain. But we pushed on, after much entreaty with my guides when I had re vealed my determination to reach the peak and remain there for the nieht Every step was now insecure; notdangerous, but upon pumiced slag and gritty cinders, which break from under the leet alarmingly. Fall ing often from this sort of footing, or trip ping oftener in the stunted heather, we finally reached the very top. Nothing was to be seeu but a streak of cinders to our right and left, and, as the miststill enveloped us, what appeared to be the level surface of some measureless immensity at our feet The hot air rose before us suffocatingly. The damp mist swirled behind us drearily. "We had no more than time to grope about and hunt a pockety hollow against the outer warm rim of the crater, dispose ourselves hastily" for the night and crunch a little food from our haversacks, when the dark fell upon us pal- Sably like tbe flap of some majestic wing, y guides dare not move, through their superstitious fears. In five minutes I was never so soundly asleep. So far as I know, it was as comfortable a night there at the very top of Pico's spire, as before Vicks burg in '63, or in Chatahoochie'a death flaming forests in '64. A STBANGE, "WEIED STILLNESS. "When I awoke, the stars, glowing with those wondrous flashings and pulsations of the stars in tropical skies, were looking squarely into my eyes. For a little there was stillness as profound as tbe eternal si lences. This was broken by two tremen dous snoring. My guides were safe from Pico witches and warlocks now. But lying thus, there came a strange sense of isolation, loneliness, insecurity, dan ger. This was intensified into posi tive dread by a singular treuiulousness of the very lava bed where I rested. You will feel something like it at the top of tall spires. I even wondered if I arose I might not from the very fascination of it all whirl and Blunge down there 8,000 feet into tbe Fayal channel. A host of such fanciful vagaries possessed me, until a dimming of the stars, a fading and paling of their luster, diverted my thoughts. Then they seemed, one by one, to disappear. Their black back ground changed to filmy gray; that to nearly lavender; that to a Kile-green blue. Yes, it was tbe glorious dawnl I was hardly upon my feet before the vermilions were in the east, while I could still see above the western horizon the undimmed stars, so great was the height whereon I stood. At my very feet was the vast crater nearly 2,000 feet in circumference, its walls in places from 200 to 300 feet high, while from the dark seams of its perfectly level floor the steam and smoke ot the slumbering volcano curled up ward as peacefully as from winter country side chimneys. GBANDEST 07 CrCLOBAMAS. One cannot count time when a sole think ing possessor of such a height and scene; but at last tbe hideous fascination of Pico's crater wore away, and I turned upon the grandest cyclorama my own eyes ever be held. Sea and horizon were blended save where the sun, like a majestic globe of fire, flung to the zenith its glorious dyes and mantled the sea to the island's xim with a flood of tremulous Crimson. To the north east and north rose Terceira, St George, and far and faint in a setting of reddened onyx, fair Graciosa in a serf-rim of glitter ing pearls; while the tender green of Fayal's softly outlined heights, seemingly so near that one could answer the pipings of the goat-herds upon her hills, was nowhere broken save where Horta's pillared houses gleamed in ghostly white through the west ern discs, of her winsome, circling shores. The exultation, the elation, the soul-feasting glory, of snch a height and scene, Is more than one who cannot fly can long en dure. I awoke my guides. We scrambled down the mountain side. In an hour we breakfasted in an upland valley at a herder's cabin, and at noon we were among 'the fishers and bleachers of Madelena by the sea, EdgabIi. Waxeman. RICH GARDEN SPOTS To be Opeded to Settlement on the Great Sionx Reservation. AN EXPLORER'S GRAPHIC 8TGRT. Talleja of Grand Beauty and Surpassing Fertility Found There. UNIQUE AHD W0NDEKFUL BAD LANDS The 11,000,000 acres of land soon to be opened to settlement in western South Da kota are attracting a great deal of attention at the present time, and whatever can be authoritatively stated in regard to their adaptability to the purposes of homeseekers cannot fail to be of interest It is not prob able that much of a "rush" will occur to this new public domain until spring, even though the President should issne his proc lamation declaring the land open this winter. The report has gone out through all the world that this new domain is remarkably fertile and capable of being made highly productive, for this reason it is anticipated that thousands of families will settle upon it in the succeeding year; that cities will grow up as if by magic; and that num erous fortunes will be made. Indeed, many reasonable people prophesy that at least 100,000 settlers will take up their permanent abode there during the next summer. What, then, is this reservation, that so much has been written about it and that it is attract ing such general attention? Why have so many seemingly authoritative reports gone forth concerning its richness and value? asks a correspondent of the St. Paul Globe. The portion of the reserve which the Indians have ceded by recent treaty to the United States Government embraces all the lands between the White and Cheyenne rivers of Western South Dakota, including the counties of Sterling, Stanley, Pratt, Presho, Lyman, Nowlin, Jackson and Ziebach, and all the lands embraced in the counties of Scobey. Delano. Bhinehart Choteau, Mar-. tin and Wagner, north of the Cheyenne river, or lf,000 square miles. BICH GEAZING BEGIONS. The portion of this immense area be tween the White and Cheyenne nvers is un doubtedly the most suitable for agricultural purposes, and it is estimated that two-thirds of that territory is good arable land. For the most part, it is ot that description known as rolling prairie. It embraces the valleys of the White, Cheyenne, Bad and Missouri rivers beside many beautiful basins and valleys of lesser size. The White Biver Yalley, in the southern part of this section, is by far the most fertile and attractive. The White river is a stream of considerable size, which rises in South western South Dakota and winds its sinuous length about 240 miles in an easterly direc tion to empty into the Missouri. Nearly the entire length its banks are fringed with a thick growth of cottonwood and box elder trees, which will furnish lumber and fuel for the 'settler. The valley will per haps average 20 miles in width, but in some places is much narrower and in others much wider. It resembles the famous Elk horn Valley in Nebraska. , In its wild state it is a thing of beauty,, with its expansive area of fertile plains; its tall grass waving as far as the eye can see; its groves, through whose foliage the glint of the stream is shining; its distant hills, on whose slopes and in whose canyons there appear clus ters of cedar trees. There, too, fat range cattle browze upon the nutritious grasses, even in winter, for there, as in the Black Hills, these grasses cure upon the stem and make the whole reserve one. of the best graz ing regions in the world. sous of the drawbacks. But, however beautiful or fertile a coun try may be there is always some drawback which becomes apparent in a short time. So it is with the White Biver Valley as with all the reservation, in fact There is abund ance of good water in places, but there are many localities from which it is wholly lacking. The streams are for the most part affected by alkali, or by some foreign sub stance which renders them almost useless for domestic purposes. This is said to be due to the fact that both oil and coal exist in large quantities beneath the surface. Whether that is true or not remains to be developed, but one thing may be asserted as a fact, that there are everywhere indications of coal, and the croppings of that mineral are very extensive in the bluffs along the vauey. Investigations show that the upper por tion of the White Biver Valley, and, in deed, the entire western part of the new do main south of the Cheyenne river, are su perior to tbe eastern half. This is because the soil of the western part is a sandy loam which holds moisture, while the rich e-nmbo soil of the other portions is impervious to' that most necessary element Throughout the White Biver Valley, however, there are certain to be many large and prosperous communities established. The Bad river, called by Indians the Wakpa Shicka, takes its rise in the western part of the reserve, and runs in an easterly direction, midway between the Cheyenne and White rivers, about 180 miles to the Missouri. It is a narrow stream and its yal ley is not more than eight or ten miles in width at the gteatest The waters of this stream are affected by alkali, and are not suitable for consumption. The BOTTOM .LANDS ABE BICH and capable of being made highly produc tive, like those of the White Biver Valley. The vegetation is luxuriant, but the timber, which makes the White Biver Valley most desirable, is rather sparse. On both sides of the valley the divides are high and broken. There are many places where these divides are singularly adapted to grazing, and it is very probable. that; for this reason, both the large and small stock grower, will locate in the Bad Biver Valley, and allow their cat tle to roam over the divides, which will probably remain open for some years to divides contain clusters of cedar trees, which will be found very useful to the settler, and they, with the drains and gulches, will fur nish excellent protection to tbe herds which will roam over the unoccupied lands in the winter. The Cheyenne Valley is a sort of a land of wonder. It contains immense tracts of good agricultural land, of the description of those of the White Elver Valley. It also con tains many thousand acres, which, for many years, will be used exclusively for grazing. The Cheyenne Is the largest of the streams which traverse the reservation. There are high bluffs and extensive plateaus along its whole course, and its bottom lands are a scene of wild beauty and the seat of great fertility. '1'ne raggea Dluns are gumbo bills and are very rich, but of so sticky a charac ter as to be very hard to work. Its plateaux are level and fertile and even now form the ranges of great herds of cattle. On the Black Hills side of the Cheyenne many prosperous settlers have established fine farms, where they raise n)t only ine cereals, but blooded stock of various kinds. The country is peculiarly adapted to horse cul ture. THE "WONDEBFTJL FBATTBE of the Cheyenne Valley is, however, the mauvals terres or Bad Lands. Nothing like them exists anywhere else in the world. They are unlike the Bad Lands of North Dakota, and are indescribably unique. It is impossible to give any very good idea of them bywords or pictures. To be appreci ated they must be seen. They are at tbe western extremity ot the ifcserve, just east of the Black Hills. It is a .misnomer to call tbem "iJad lianas " Decause "bad' weald serer be Mggected by the appear-1 PITTSBURG, . SATURDAY, ance. "Mazy Land" would be far better. They are most deceitful and perplexing in their effect upon the eye and mind. In ap proaching them one seems' to see a great white city rising from the plains, with tall spires, with roofs and chimneys, with pin nacles and minarets. It looks' in the dis tance like a walled elty-'of, ancient times, and we could almostistfect to see vast crowds of people andjraldiersla arms, mov ing through its gates. T, So complete is the delusion which ,they produce that during the past summer a Swede, who had hut recently arrived in this section, and knew little about it, while searching for land, being far from any set tlement observed the strange forms of the Bad Lands in the distance, and supposing them to be a great citv, made for them with the intention of spending the night Beach ing them he passed in through one of the openings and was toon lost in the mazy windings of the innumerable gulches, draws and canyons which traverse this remarkable region in every direction. DANGEROUS DELUSIONS. It is an easy matter to find one's way into the Bad Lands, bnt it is far more difficult to find the way out again. The poor Swede soon discovered that he was like the lost cava lier in the enchanted forest of fairy tale, and wandered around in search of an outlet without success. The mazy windings teemed to become more labyrinthine and perplexing as he went on. In vain did be try to discover the place where he entered, and ever and anon would come up against the great white wall which towered perpen dicularly above his head and extended around this region. For several ttays he was lost in the windings of the Bad Lai ds, and during that time was without foo or water. At last a cowboy found him-lyng on tbe ground in one of the canyons i a state of exhaustion. He was taken to ;be nearest ranch and on regaining his strer ;th told of his adventures. There were m ny stories of this character told by the cowfc ys who herd their cattle in the Bad Lands, nd have become familiar with their windi igs and passes. It is a mistake to suppose that the Jad Lands are a useless area. The canyons nd some of the levels, which occur in plaies, contain a. rich vegetable growth. For jhis reason very extensive herds of cattle ban and do find valuable grazing there. is not at all probable ihat settlers will, at tast for two or three generations, select linds embraced within the Bad Lands, but stick men will never fail to appreciate and.nake that of the grazing advantages. Onjac count of the remarkable character of this amazing waste, and the never-failing inter est which it has for the curiosity-seeker, some South Dakota citizens have proposed that the State secure a) grant of the pad Lands from Congress, and set them apart torever aa a oiate pars. POINTS POE ?IONEEBS. Many rumors of nineral wealth have rained currency both i south Dakota and the neighboring States, In that portion which lies north of the Cheyenne river some prospecting for gold nd silver has been done by Black Hills n iners and some ex peditions are already section for the serins. proposed from that It is not well, how- ever, for anybody to be a astray Dy reports ot the existence ofgold.putside of the Black Hills, in South Dakota! It may be found in this northwestern pa.lt of the reserve and indications can be aut toritatively said to exist, but they are not s ch as to cause any excitement Miners wl have prospected on tbe Indian Territory ilaim the existence of gold there in payi g quantities, and assert that they on producing by reason ' desisted from of the inter- ilicej bnt miners, terence of the Indian like fishermen, do not care to admit failure, and are i: enious in ex cuses. It can be.statcd a n. facthowever, that coal exists inrthe noahweatern"parPoi the reservation in large Quantities, as has been proven by development work done there. It is not of a superpr quality, as far as known, being of the ligtte species, and not suitable for coke. Thaindications, not developed, in the country bltween the White and Cheyenne rivers, an that immense quantities of bituminous loal exist there and in the spring many companies of coal prospectors will go in searchof that mineral. Taken all in all, the nevf acquisition of the Government presents an ample field for the prospector, the farmer, the stockman and the speculator. Perhaps no section of the United States presents so many oppor tunities for men of small means, and for the honest and intelligent worker.) Bat above all tbe openincr of the tract between the Cheyenne and White rivers is like opening a gateway to a country which is not only a magnificent empire in extent, bnt also in richness and variety. A TEAIT IN HUMAN NATUEE. Braddock Citizens Finding Funic With tbe Municipal Officers. . It is refreshing to hear how candid some people are when they are en rapport, dis cussing the affairs of their neighbors and themselves, and especially municipal affairs, and think no outsider is listening. People, generally in the suburbs, are very sensitive to outside criticism, and though the ladies can rip the absent up the spine at sewing circles with neatness, savageness and dex terity, and the men can do the same thing in the groceries, criticising with refreshing freedom the actions of their Councilmen and others in authority, they have a holy horror of seeing their criticisms in print SomeBraddock citizens were yesterday overheard venting their views respecting the way things are conducted in that borough, but they collapsed instantly when thev found a reporter in their midst The gist of the criticism was that Brad dock borough Councils were too much un der the domination of the Edgar Thomson Steel Works Company, and the interest of the citizens at large suffered in consequence. One Councilman, whose name could not be caught, was accused of an indisposition to take his own medicine. The said he had assented to an ordinance requiring peo ple to put down boardwalks, but did not construct his own. .lney also intimated that while the Burgess was a nice man, he hadn't backbone enough to force all to obey the law equally, and thought as he was a candidate for re-election ho had better re form his lines speedily. Said one: "They are all .good men, bnt need strengthening, and as J. B. Corry has been working up picnics for the benefit of the churches I think he might divert some of the proceeds for the purchase of strengthening plasters to put on the backs of the burgess and some Councilmen." How much further the discussion might have gone is hard to conjecture, for just at this juncture the reporter's presence was discovered, and the committee went Into se cret session. A Widow of 16 Remarried. Florida Timcs-Unloir. j Jesse Breedlove was married at Clermont a few days ago to Mrs. Lillie Ludingft6n by 'Squire L. H.J Todd. .The bride waa a widow only IS years of age, she having been married when only 12 years old. Her husband died two. and a half years ago. They will live at their new home, Mt Vesta. New Well Broacfat In. The Guffy Brothers yesterday brought in a well on tbe Wetzel farm, not a great dis tance from Arbuckle No. L Though it hadn't shown so far for a great gusher, Mr. Stewart seemed to think it wasn't by any means to be sneezed at The Arbuckle No. 2 was not in yesterday afternoon. , . ET" COIJJ3G-E GYMNASIUMS and the methods, used there in training athletes are describes in to-morrow's DISPATCH byProt Goldio,ib 4 - DECEMBER 14 1889. THE WATER SUPPLY Warmly Discussed at a Public Meet ing field in Berkeley's Hall. OLAIMSrOF AN INSUFFICIENCY. Different Persons Tell How it Has Greatly Bothered Them. THE COMPANY SAIS THERE 18 PLESTI The question of an Insufficient water sup ply on the Southside, which has been smouldering away with only an occasional outbreak, seems to be burstinginto a blaze, and on its spurt promises to rival the bridge question in the interests of Southsiders. The first complaint made before a meeting was at the TaxPayers' Protective Association last Tuesday evening. After the speeches on organization, etc., had been listened to, the question box (a new wrinkle introduced) was opened and out popped ther very inter esting question, "Have we a sufficient water supply?" u F. C. Belnhauer, who led the crnsade against the Monongahela Waler Company two years ago, was prepared for the question and, producing a big volume containing a report of the investigation, he "showed up" the water company in a way that must have made their ears tingle. WATEB AT THE FIBES. The speaker called attention to the Oliver fire, and quoted the remarks of Mr. Oliver, that if there had been more water at-first the fire could have been handled better and with less loss. All the recent fires on the South side were taken up one by one and the water company handled with hard gloves. He said there was -a cry going up all over the Southside, and something must be done, either by the extermination of the company, or in tbe line of action by Councils to compel the corporation now supplying the Southside to live up to their contract Mr. Beiuhauer sat down, but had hardly gained his seat before J. Yocum, a butcher on Carson street, jumped up. He said he had a slaughter house on Twenty-first' street, and when he wanted to kill anything forhis market, he had to stay up nights and wait for the private consumption to lessen. He said that he was charged 132 more on his insurance because the water supply was short This, he thought, shouldn't go on long, and he didn't care how it was done. 'but would like to see it stopped. TDBTHEB EXAMPLES GIVEN. This speech ended the meeting, but not the agitation for a better water supply, which only needed someone to start the ball rolling. Beinhart Klinzing, who hag a meat market on Bradford Street, between Tenth and Eleventh streets, said that he went np to his slaughter house last Wednes day to kill five hogs, but had to give it up because there wasn't water enough. In the evening he went up again, but could get only enough water to kill one hog. Mr Doyle, of 908 Bingham street, said he could not get sufficient water for house pur poses and was greatly inconvenienced at times. It his alwas been his custom to take a bath Saturdays and recently he went up to the bathroom for the purpose. He turned the. spigots, and sat down and watched the watef trickle for three-quarters of an hour. J It was then only two inches deep, jn thtf tub. and he had to go to bed without hy bath. frEST END COMPLAINT. The troible in the West End is familiar toreaderaof the papers. A late issue said that when Mr. Stengle, Superintendent of the Monongahela Water Company, was seen in regard to the West End trouble, he ad mitted that there was insufficient supply on the Southside, especially at -fires, and that the Ipucping machinery was not strong enough.) When Mr. Stengle was seen by a Dis patch reporter, he first said he would not talk and snapped his fingeTS. .Finally he warmed up and said it was all wrong; that it was all malice; that the whole Southside was well supplied with water, except about 25 families in the West End. He was asked if the company intended to do something for these families, and he said they had no plans made to that effect. The few families were iu a section not buildintr up fast, The fire question had not bothered him, he said, as nothing had been proven at any time to show that the water was short. THE COMPANY'S END. "Why don't the citizens over there cry 'No water?' " said Mr. Stengle, pointing out of the window to the Soho district. "They complain of short water, and why isn't a howl sent up?" He was asked why a corporation could make such a good thing out of the water business when the city, until the present year, has failed to have surplus in that line. In reply he asked why private corporations could buy castings for $3 when they cost cities $32. He said that all other cities did have im mense revenues from their waterworks. Nothing would suit him better than A very small percentage of the surplus from the water of some of the large cities lice New York. At the next meeting of the Tax Payers' Protective Association the question will be again discussed and some lively develop ments are promised. A GRAND EAT HUNT. Men, Boya nnd Does Have a Llrely Time of It at tho Market Home. About 9 o'clock Tuesday evening a num ber ot men crept into Market Hall and plugged up all the holes and barricaded all lines of egress. In the office of the Market Master was a crowd of men and boys, aqd Messrs. A. Stucky, George Metz and T. Taylor, with their dogs. When all was ready the dogs were released and the hunt began. The 50 or more hunters "beat tbe brush," and the dogs were not slow to run down their game. "Bats, Irish!" "Take 'em, Fannie!" "Here he isl" and similar expressions, with the scrambling of feet and yelping of the dogs, made the old hall ring. As fast as they were killed the little ro dents were laid ont by the stove. At last some one opened the stove and poked in it. Ten big fellows, were foundto have taken refuge there, and were soon laid to rest Mr. Stucky's dog wis a blooded rat terrier, and seemed to take things philo sophically. He had his mouth too full of rats to bark. At one time he caught two at once, and in all, killed 11. At 10 o'clock. 30 had been laid by the stove, and the hunt was still going on. Great sport was had, and the marketers will doubtless be less troubled by the little pests in the future. Anotber hunt is promised soon. He Has Skipped. A man who gave his name as J. E. An derson, and claiming to represent the Na tional Furniture Company, of Pittsburg, sold packages of needles In McKeesport, giving each purchaser a numbered ticket, which Be said would give a chance to draw a suite of furniture, which would be given away at theJTifth Avenue Hotel in McKees port yesterday. It was discovered yesterday that Anderson had disappeared, and that the furniture, which he lettt the hotel, was a toy set BEWASEof counterfeits! Buy the genu ine Dr. Bull's, -Cough Syrnp, the beat and etwiSKt,? r T THE EIGHTH DAY. PABTL WAS nearly 2 o'clock A. M., but Mr. Bidnlph still eat lathe study of his house in Park lane. The gas was alight and a pile of books and papers lay on the table before him, but these he did not regard as he lay back in his chair with folded arms, looking . downward with a Hlyfixed expression as snougn ids eyes sou features were strain ing to hold some conception which the mind was engaged in dissecting. At length he muttered, half aloud, as he sat np in his chair: "Let me spell the thing out in so many words. Within two months at the outside I shall be declared a bankrupt and an embezzler, if I cannot produce at least 5,000. How am I to get this money, which I want -to save myself from imprisonment and my family from starvation? There Is only oneway. It involves, no doubt, the sacri fice of some 200 or 300 lives, if not more; but it is the only way in which I can save my own liberty and character and the lives of my family. Why should not I adopt this method? For fear of consequences either in the present or the next world.wonld tlQ, if fill fif wS ' B KT il lib Kfi&Q t-jrt JipjL BEFORE A SLATTEBNLY-LOOKING GIBL. be the answer. . I have ai little belief in a future as I have in a past world. Neither one or the other have any connection with our present life If, indeed, they have any existence at all. I may, therefore, dismiss that consideration. Now, with regard to the present world, what is to deter me: the fear of remorse or the fear of being detected? ' I need not dread remorse any more tnan X should if I were about to destroy a number , of rats. Either they or I must go. My safety depends on their destruction, so that I am not acting wantonly, but on exactly the same principle as the monarch who slaughters thousands to gain or maintain his throne. And now, about the risk of de tection. That is really the only thing to be considered. I shall go to Mi II wall to-morrow afternoon and see Denton. He can supply me wfth what I want He is in my power. I need not be afraid of his Inform ing: besides, he has executed. I am certain, a number of similar jobs. When I have seen him I shall know how far the thing is feasible, and what the risks are. In any case it will only be a question of choosing the lesser of two dangers. Others must die or I must fly, and it Is not very easy to fly nowadays, when they canjsend your portrait about the world by telegraph. Yes, I must see Denton, to-morrow, or rather this after noon, and come to a conclusion one way or other at once." Saying which Mr. Bidnlph lit a candle, put o'ut the gas and went to his bedroom. Mr. Bidnlph was a merchant who lived with his wife and family of five children in Park lane. His eldest daughter, who had married an American some three years pre viously, was staying with her husband on a visit with him at the time. Denton was a chemist and machinist who had seen better days. At the time I speak of he occupied a house in West Fleet street, Millwall, where, under cover of carrying on a stationer's business, he prosecuted, as we shall see, certain curious investigations of a chemical nature. Next morning, while the family were at breakfast Mr. Ashtou (Mr. iJidulph'a son-in-law) read a letter he received by that post, inlorming him that a distant relative bad just died and left him a considerable amount of property, which would, however, require some time and care to realize. The letter also advised him to return as speedily as possible to America, as it was important he shonld attend to tbe administra tion of the estate himself. The Asb- tons would have left for New York at once were it not for some engagements they huA In Iiondon. As it was, they arranged to take their passage by the Cunard steamer that was to-leave Liverpool on the following Friday week. I may as well mention here that Mr. Ashton was 'in very moderate cir cumstances until the death of his relative, and, as the property he was left would take some months to realize, Bidnlph knew that it would be useless to apply to bim for the funds he required. At about 4:30 o'clock Mr. Bidalph took a steamer from London Bridge for Millwall Pier, where he arrived shortly afterSo'elock. West Fleet street is a very long street, com posed of about 800 one-storied bouses that run all round tbe peninsula known as the Isle of Dogs; and to one who has been ac customed to tbe better parts of London nothing can be more dreary and depressing Be Lay Sack in flu Chair. than is the impression left by this random mixture of little lodging houses, pablic house and shop "Everything abemt the place seems diminutive, sordid and peverty Stricken. Tbe landing stage is sear the Winning I of West Tlet street,' aa u DeaWi hBff was near the end, Mr. Bidnlph had to walk about a mile belore he reached it A thick, drizzling rain came on before he landed, and there being, of coarse, no omni buses or tramways, not to speak of cabs, iu tbe place, he was thoroughly wet and splashed with mud when he reached the dingy little house of which he was in quest There was nobody In the shop when he en tered, and he had to rap twice on the counter before a slatternly-looking girl answered his .summons. "Is Mr. Denton in?" he asked. "Father, sir?" was the answer; "no, sir, but I'll send and fetch him if you'll wait a minute. Jenny," calling to somebody at the top of the house, "run round and tell father he's wanted. A gentleman's here." In a few seconds a boy of about 10 came into the shop, saying: "Jenny can't go; she's minding the baby. I'll get father, sir, in a minute. The gentle man who was here on Monday?" he added Interrogatively, looking askant at BIdulph. "No," replied Mr. Bidnlph; "but I want to see him your father, I mean at once. Look sharp; here's twopence for you." , 'Thank yon, sir; I'll be back in a min ute," said the boy, as he disappeared into the street In about two minutes he came back, walking some few yards behind a little, man whose shabby dress con trasted strangely with his counte nance and bearing. Casually the thing might pass unnoticed, but to even a slightly observant eye it seemed like a masquerade. Denton, for it was he, was a man who was slightly under the middle size in stature, but there was a certain degage dignity, if I may use such an expres sion, in his gait and carriage that made him seem a good inch taller than he really was. On his oval face there was that far-off. ab stracted and imperious expression which marks the educated mind that is constantly pondering on large subject. In the wealth ier parts of London, Cheapside or Begent street, for .example, such a countenance and figure in Its threadbare, ill made garment, A conical utett Cylindfir. would have been noted by many people ai one of theccentricities of Loudon. lathe Isle of Dogs it, simply had the effect of making people pay an involuntary and ux ogrrA g THET ENTEBED A BOOM conscions homage to a superior spirit by standing a little out of the way as it passed. "Well, Denton, Fm glad to see vou," said Bidulpb, aa Denton entered the shoo. "Yes, Mr. Bidnlph," replied the latter unconcernedly. "You wonld like to have a chat with me, I suppose? Better go up stairs, if vou aon't mind. This way, if you please. Mind the banisters. We'll be quiet here." As he spoke they entered a room that was large, apparently, if jndged by what might be supposed to be the dimensions of tbe other rooms in the house. Its only furniture consisted of two deal tables and three wooden chairs, a miscellaneous assort ment of bottles and metal vessels, and a kind of gas stove. Having motioned his visitor to oae of the chairs, Deatoa sat down, saying "Well, Mr. Bidnlph, I caa be of some ser vice to you, I hope?" "Possibly," said Bidnlph 'with affected carelessness, Yob are engaged in your fa vorite researches, I pressae?" looking round the room as he spoke. "Yea," replied Denton, "I have been ex perimenting lately in a sabjeet that k only in itsiafsBcyasyet" "And that?" asked Bidnlph. "The science of explosives," was the an swer.. "Oh, iBdeed," said BIdulj, who .had tamed s little pale. "Ye, indeed," rejlied Deaioa, without The outline of tbe feasors eas.be tela gsanwfi BJT a aystaBa 9C mbmmv ywSMs, JS77 v & 'is w'ow r a . v-r m mm n. TMV.0 - c ;snsim m WW takin? his eves off his visitor, "and mads one or two rather important discoveries ra There fras a tone of sarcasm in his voice aa " " "he spoke. "Sou remember what happened' when the English and American fleet were cruising off the coast of Pern In 18687 No? , Well, the Chilians were bombarding Valpa- . ralso while the English and United States fleets wero looking on, when Commodores Welles, of the United State3 fleet, said to -' Captain Martin, who commanded the En glish fleet, 'Come, let us stop, this. 1 caa sink the whole of their (meaning the Chil ian) fleet in 30 seconds.' Captain Martin. however, did not consenVand so nothing was done. Th Time newspaper, in re- x lerrinc to tbe matter, sooke of Commodore --. fXfmVmm' anioTi aa ft. riia nt VnVS. .J bunkum.' It was nothing of the sorf.Tiow; ever. The American navy is possessed cfs j cannon balls which are made of metal tofi hard that it cannot be welded by it action. St Pointed at Se Spoke. on the plate,, cannot be raised in tempera ture more than a few degrees "by any known process, and which will, consequently, cut through any obstacle. I have lately dis covered now this metal, which is called 'an nealed steel,' is prepared." "The Admiralty would give you 50,000 for the discovery," said Bidnlph. "The Admiralty would do nothing of the kind," responded Denton with acerbity, "They would mess me about for years, as the War Office did poor Schneider, ir they did not ignore me altogether. No, no, Mr. Bidnlph, the British Government is a very fine institution, no doubt, but it has never been famed for its liberality inventors. The original discoverer of this annealed steel was a shoemaker, who gets 55,000 a year from tbe United States Government : for holding his tongue abont it Had ha been an Englishman he would probably, have had to patent the invention to protect himself. It would thus have been mada known to everybody, and would, in all likelihood, be adopted by the nation a few years after the patent expired. But this has nothing to do with explosives, and I have here the model of a shot that will sink any ship in the Davy in five seconds, and which is simpler, I think; in its action and construction than tbe American shot" He took from off a shelf a conical steel cylinder, about 4 feet in length and 1 foot in diameter at the base. The bottom screwed on and off; it ms hollow inside, and at tha apex there was a button which pressed inward by means of a spring. "Now observe," he continued. "Bound the apex you see there is an India rubber cushion, which prevents any rebound when J- this shot is discharged against the side of a vessel. When -the cylinder strikes the sido of a ship, it simply falls down without re bounding; bnt the button is driven In, a bottle of acid is smashed inside the shot; dynamite, with which it is stored, is ignited;. in ibout three seconds the dynamite ex plodes; the shot by this time is beneath the level of the keel. What is the con sequence? Why, that as enormous volume Of water is driven from under tho' ship, which falls into the gulf thus created and is lost. Perhaps voa will think that all this Is visionary. It is per fectly practicable, however, and was sug gested to me bythe way In which Lien tenant Maury sank the Wacbusetu in the Savan nah river at the close of the American war. LHe fastened together with a rope two cylin ders containing gun-cotton, and let them, float down the river. The rope canght tho hawser of the Wachusetts, which was lying; at anchor. The cylinders, thus impeded in. their course, approached each other, the current of the river pressed forward their spiral sprines and exploded the charges sim ultaneously, with tbe result that the ship with 640 men disappeared. When she was raised som6 years afterward by the United States Government, it was found tnat not a scratch of paint had been taken off her bot tom or sides'. The explosion, by displacing many thousand tons of water, simply caused a vacuum into which the ship fell, and fa which she was buried. My process is tha same in principle, bnt much more simple and certain in its operation. "And now, Mr. Bidnlph," he continued, when they had spent some minutes in ana lyzing and discussing this "cannon ball of the future," as Denton declared It to be, "you have come to see me on business, I know, and I shall not waste your time any further with matters that are of no named - TS THAT TTA3 LARGE. iate interest to you. Is there anything 1 can do for youv" He spoke in a manner that was as uncon cerned and business-like as if be expectedialj reply of tbe most innocent nature. Bidnlph was silent lor a moment then he turned a. little paler as he said, in a forced, coa-j strained voice: ia "Yes; by packing about half a hundreds weiebt of dynamite in a box and arranging! it so that it will explode on the eighth dxyj after it has left this house." "Certainly." replied Denton, in a Jertj fsctly indifferent, matter-of-fact tone1 "Nothing can be easier. But about thai terms?" '"Before we speak of terms let me kaovrV your modus operandi. What guarantees have I that your machinery will work ae- curatelv, and without discovering itself by any ticking or noise? There was a case ofJ that kind recentlv." f 3 "I do not use "any machinery to explodes ''Not use any machinery?" exclaJssedl BIdulph. "No,"" wa the answer; "that was tbe oIA-1 fashioned, clumsy metbod. My apparatus works much more silently and certalrily.1 Yon sea that row of bottles?" He pointedj as ne spose about a dozen Dottles whiei were suspenses uy corns iram the ceiUaf neck downward. They were corked asvdj filled with a yellowish-colored IitraiM 'Now, caye guess what I aadskfwUM . frf 1 Hffl 1 : .ss 4M -? " a4j a j& .. 'jam... ..i "Sf ' 1