$ ? ?' f THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH -' .f. "M ' v . , THIRD PART. PAGES 17 TO 20. " V"V 'J&r xL 'jm jjg w - js . i &v K ' CITY'S SEAMY SIDE, Exploring the Crowded By Ways of WMtechapel. HAUUTS if, OF THE HIPPER. What Was.Seen in the Kojal London -, Theater for One Penny. A CHEAP EESAUBAHT IH LONDON mniE ros tbi swatch.! E speak of Whitechapel nil fin invnlnntarilr tBv shudders, for "Jack the Ripper" and his gruesome deeds come to the mind. And yet one cannot but have a sort of curiosity to see the place and the peo ple from whom so fiendish a monster could spring if, indeed, he is one of the teeming thousands who inhabit the scene of his crimes. It was this curiosity which led me to ex plore the regions of Whitechapel ; and one pleasant evening we took the "yaller 'bus" in iront oi the Bank of England, wherein T CREyrss? Wh Extending a Warm Welcome. ia piled up wealth enough to make all the 'poor in London rich, and leaving to our left the Boyal Exchange, where England's shrewdest business men listen dally to the teart-beats of the financial worldjjo up Cornhill and along Leadennall street until we come cuton Whitechapel road. It is a wide street the widest we have teen in the metropolis but none too spa cious to accommodate the seething, surging tide of humanity which presses along in ceaseless procession. It is between 7 and 8 o'clock. The thousands of men and women, girls and boys and children who have been penned up in factory, shop and close room, hard at work, all day long, arenow out for recreation and sport. The shops dingy and small the most of theru, bat apparently crammed to the root with goods are filled with customers, while the busier Market on the street, "the constant fair" of which Besant speaks, is a sight not soon for gotten; for here are peddlers, hawkers, cheap Johns, quack doctors, street preachers, temperance orators, the Sal Tatiou Army, organ grinders, flower girls, street singers, slight of hand performers alftalking at the top of their voices, here one. urging the crowds to embrace an oppor tunity to buy which may never come again, there another beseeching them to accept a free salvation ere it is everlastingly too late. singing, playing, praying, pleading, jostling and crowding along, all very much in ear nest, all good humored. And where do all the children come from? Surely such troops ot them are found no where else on earth. They are here in droves, bareheaded, barefooted, dirty and . ragged, darting through the crowd, dodging miraculously the horses' leet and the wheels The heroine and Ute Villain. of vehicle', playing in the gutters and on 'doorsteps, apparently healthy, and if not happy, then their glee is certainly well '. 'counterfeited. ' PALACES FOB THE POOE. The buildings are old, mostly small, and certainly far from imposing in appear ance with the exception of the public .nouses, xnese are ornate and gay beyond compare, and pat their humble surround ings to blush. Their great double-doors swing on noiseless Hinges, the windows are ' of stained glass, ornamented with many a strange device, while the floors and walls are set with gay tiles. The "private bar," for the refreshment of those who are too good to mix their company or their drink with the common herd, the "ladies' bar," where fair creatures rather easy as to manners, loud as to dress and gayas to conversation, sip their glasses in respectable seclusion, are furnished in magnificent style, while even the general bar, a sort of common ground where all, old ' and young, men, women and children, crowd to drown their sorrows and augment their joys, is gorgeous with brass and gilding and mirrors. It is ft study to note the people there. There are so many types of character. Sough, bearded workingmen taking their 'arf o bitter and going quietly home; rough-looking men who evidently don't work much, and whom we wouldn't care to meet in a lonely place after dark; swaggering young bloods who call the barmaids by their first "..! -".?. vr"rz?-. "i"""' . " I 1 w wnSl y , buses wiin uresmiiue assurance, womca with babes in their arms, to whose lips they press the glass after they have inbibed ot its contents themselves; young girls, scarcely in their teens, yielding to the persuasions of their "chaps" and taking "just a diopj" old. toothless -women, drinking fiery gin ana garnishing their animated conversation with many a "sez T and "sez she." "Wrecks of manhood, wrecks of womanhood, wrecks of childhood, even, all are here clutching at The 'Tragedian. the cup which sinks them deeper in deg radation and despair. Nor is the picture altogether without its amusing side, for there are those who are drunk and want to sing, those who are drunk and thirst for gore, those who are drunk and desire only to sleep, but none of these enjoyments are permitted them, and they are unceremo niously bundled out on the street, where a policeman orders them to "move on," and they stagger along with the great proces sion. These public houses are to be seen on every side. They are the curse of that sec tion. Other houses are old and shabby, but these are bright and gay; other places are deserted, these are always full; shops may have no customers, the bars are ever busy. Why so many of them are licensed, and why they are permitted to sell apparently indiscriminately to old and young, drunk and sober, is a mystery, and one cannot help thinking that if any place on earth needs a Judge White it is East London. A COBDTA1 IXTITATIOjr. We stroll along until a crowd, principally children, in front of a little, low building attracts our attention. There is a sign dis played, "The Boyal London Theater," and a rusty old curtain, is draped across the Iront of the house. A red-faced gentleman in top boots, and whose voice is in the last stages of huskiness, invites the people to come in. "Do not delay, good people," he cries. " 'Ere's yonr chance to witness the grand dramyof 'The Flowers of the Forest, hin three hacts, to be followed by a screamin' fawce hentitled 'Three-haporth o' Cheese.' We'avejust returned from a tower of the Provinces, where we heverywhere met with hunexampled success. Hour company hin cludes Mr. Hedward Mortimer, the world renowned tragedian; Miss Clara Fitz'erbert, the great hemotional hactress; hand halso, "Billy Kirk, the comegian, who 'as brought smiles to the faces of two 'emispheres. Hadmission honly a penny; children a 'apenny. Come forward now while seats may be secured. That you may know what sort of a hentertainment awaits you, the company will come to the front of the 'ouse and give you a hexibition of tlreir powers." The talented troupe came ont and Billy Kirk, an old man who looked about a's jovial as a tombstone showed another mem ber how to "see nothing," and perpetrated several other lite antediluvian pleasantries It Slight Save Been Jack the Sipper. to the uproarious delight of the children, after which Mr. .Mortimer, a sallow gentle man with flowing locks of black, trod a graceful measure with Miss Eitzherbert. A last appeal against further delay was made by the husky individual, and then the bell rang for the curtain to rise. We gave a sixpence to the lady at the ticket office, who produced the fourpence change from a mys terious pocket, apparently located some where in the innermost recesses of her being, and went in. The theater was about 10x12, and the seating facilities consisted of two planks placed on boxes. The very select audience was made up of two disreputable-looking old men, two young women, three young men, an old man who smoked a long clay pipe during the performance, nine small boys and ourselves the entire house amounting to thirteenpence-hapenny. The husky .gentleman lound seats lor us by knocking two unfortunate small boys off a plank, and the curtain went up. A DRAMATIC TREAT. What a drama that was! We almost break our hearts laughing at the old comedian's jests, while Mr. Mortimer was tragically ridiculous. He trod the eight by ten stage with majestic stride, and murdered the gipsy maiden's noble lover and the Queen's English with equal rutblessness. Miss Eitzherbert, as the gipsy maiden, was by turns "sweetly solemn, -wildly sad." "'Ere comes me father," she cried. "Ho! will 'e give cf e a father's blessin' or a father's curse?" Her parent, a stout gentleman in a blue silk jacket, corduroy trousers and a bat tered Derby hat, soon dispelled her doubts, for he cursed her in ''good, set terms" and drove her from the Bomanycamp. A weak knoed young man, who continually forgot his lines and wss alternately promoted and sworn at in audible tones lrom the wings, killed someone, for no discernible reason. bnt declared before "'igh 'eaven, hi honly hintended to wing 'iml" At last the cur tain went down on the only seene, an inter mission often minutes was announced, and the husky gentleman again besought those outside no longer to delay. By this time it is 11 o'clock. The crowd on the streets show no signs of diminution, and the fun seems even more hilarions. We leave the "Boyal Theater" and look around for a guide to take us into that section made notorious by the murders. Strange to say, those whom we approach manifest a disin clination to give any information. At last we find a young gentleman moistening his day at the "Lamb and Flag" who tenders us his services. He introduces himself as "J. Sharp, Esq," and informs us that he nightly supports Isabel Bateman in the drama of "Jane Shore" at the Pavilion Theater, assuming the arduous part of popu lace. "Under this incipient tragedian's guidance we leave Whitechapel Road and traversing Baker's Bow. Old Montague and Great "j" -n:;. -. ?....? v mw wictw wumc vna .inwum street, j " ' $?? ' : A Weurq now about ihe center of the scenes of London's most startling tragedies. It is a forbidding neighborhood. The houses are low and mean looking, the shutters on most of the windows beine closely shut The streets ore narrow and ill-lighted. The cross streets seem almost deserted, but those leading from the road -are thronged. Publio houses abound, of course, all of them crowded, and the noises are suggestive, sometimes of revelry, some times of riot. Groups of women, mostly young, many not over 15, come out and go along, apparently hall-crazed with drink and excitement. Singing, shouting, laugh ing, the echoes of their wretched glee come back from the dark, dismal streets like the shrieks of the lost. Hades could hardly hold a sadder scene than this. AN EAST EUD EATING HOUSE. At one corner is a large eating house, where the coarsest food is served, fish, sausages and fried onions seem their special ties. The process of cooking can he seen through the windows, and scores of hungry eyes watch the viands sizzling in the grease. There is quite a crowd, and the waiters are selling pennyworths and halfpennyworths of their delicacies on all sides. Children buy a sausage and divide it on the curb stone. Old women mumble at a slice of bread spread with onions and lick, their skinny fingers afterthe savory feast Bough looking men, with red handkerchiefs about their necks, tear a fish to pieces and chew it regardless of bones, A gaunt, hollow-eyed woman, holding to her breast a pale, sickly baby, begs a penny and buys a fish. Before tasting it herself, she picks the bones from two or three mouthfuls and gives them to the babe in her arms. Then ravenously de vouring the remainder, she folds the child in the corner of her scanty shawl and flits away into the darkness. It is thus all over wild, reckless, defiant drunkenness and debauchery, or abject, de graded poverty and want One looks in vain for a ray or spark ot good. It is not there. The better jside of human nature seems utterly gone. There is nothing left but that which is unlovely,coarse, hardened, yile, lost We have had enough, and take a short cnt to Brick lane. ' As we pass along a nar row, dark cross street, a man comes out from the darkness of an alley and looks at us. The light of a lamp on the other side shows his face, thin and ghastly pale, with large black eyes, deeply sunken, out gleam ing with a strange glare. In one hand he carries -a black oilcloth satchel. There is something about his glance which makes one's flesh creep. "jar. Hydel" I Involuntarily whispered to ray companion. "Jack the Kipper!" he answers. At which- the tragedian from the Pavilion Theater incontinently takes to his heels, nor do we overtake him until the lights and crowd on Brick lane restore him to com posure, we readily accept his rather lame apologies, for, as Mr. Snngsby would say, "not to put too fine a point upon it," we had felt somewhat like hurrving ourselves. We are soon back on Whitechapel road, and dismissingl J. Sharp, Esq., with his re ward, we go to the Metropolitan Bailway station to await our train. Here we find Mr. Billy Kirk, the ancient comedian of the "Boyal London Theater," accompanied by a fresh-faced, honest looking young man, evidently his son. We strike up a conver sation, and learn that on their wav to the station the young man had taken his father into a public house with the filial intention of buying a "dram" for him. A dispute with the bar keeper over the payment had led to a score of ruffianly hangers-on attack ingthem, and only the timely arrival of the police saved them from serious trouble. A CEUSHED TEAOEDIAN. The old actor was greatly worked up. He paced the platform with the stride of a Kemble or Macready, and grew more tragic with each word. "Talk habout yer Hinjrlish fairplay!" he cried. "Where do ver pet itr who rim it yer? Whafll they'xro?"i3reeT'upBeV 'ind yer, 'it yer hin the-neck hand jump hoa yer when yer down. His that the way Britons used to fieht? His that the war thev doe hin TTamxricn? No! Hi've been there, hand I know them by 'art Hin Hamerica no gentleman hever raises 'is 'and to hanother. Hif two gents quarrel they don't go hat heach bother with their 'ands, but they locks themselves hup hin a dark room, ties one 'and be'ind their backs, drors their bowie knives, hand there, halone hand hin darkness, they fights by the hear, hand not by the heye. During this bloodcurdling recital he crosses one hand behind his back and darts from one side of the platform to the other, dealing furious cuts and slashes at an im aginary foe. With artful flattery we say: "Sir, you ought to be on the stage." " 'E's hon hit now," cries the son in a delighted aside, at which we express grati fied surprise. 'Honly a poor clown, gents," says Mr. Kirk in a i self-deprecatory sort ot a way only a clown. 'A poor player, that struts hand frets 'is hour hupon the stage, hand then his heard no more.' The time was but no matter, no matter," and he waves the part away with gloomy sternness. Just then the snorting trains rush in ont of ue uarsness or tne underground lines, and he and his sou go their way. and we go ours. Henhy Hall. A JOKE OK BIS AUNT. The Bad Boy Gets In Tronblo by Asking Impertinent Questions. Detroit Free Press. 1 There is a small boy in this town who sel dom speaks but when he does he "always says something smart His latest is this. Hjs-elderiy maiden aant was entertaining a young beau, and they were looking over some pictures in an old book filled with works of ancient art 'How charming those costumes!" re marked the aunt gushingly; "howl I wish I had lived in those days when people wore such beautifni clothes." 'Well, didn't you?" piped in a shrill voice at her elbow, and a moment later a snull boy went to bed with a tear in his eye. That Unfortunate bcalTpln. Mr. Milkitt Have yon any real spring butter? TheGrocer No: but we've coj'a prettv I good specimen of a real sprin og, an' he don't like t' be guyed! -Jwlgt) PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, CHRISTMAS IN CAME Mrs; General Caster Tells of a Yale Tide on the Frontier. A JOLLY DIHfiE&IH THE BAEEACK8 Merriment and-Joy Despite UnfflYorable Circumstances. HIKING GISTS DKDBE DIFFICULTIES rWBITTXX rOB TBS SISFATCH.1 Sometimes I think our Christmas on the frontier was a fsr greater event to us than to anyone in the States, we all had to do so mnch to make it a success. Our ingenuity was taxed, to the utmost, as we had no tempting shop windows to point out to us by their beguiling beauty what would be "just the thing" for this or that one. "My brain reels," said one of my pretty friends, and she ran her fingers through her bangs in a most reckless manner, farrowed her brow, thus proving that the "reeling" was going on.and I knew that the rapid approach of December 25 was the cause. "I have made John a smoking jacket, slip pers and all the stereotyped presents for men, audi last summer, while the cam paign was keeping our people in the field, I made, him a robe-de-nuit that he said was so beruffled and'befrilled he knew he would mistake his identity, And that if I clothed him in such purple and fine linen for I even put in lilac ribbon he would surely take himself for somebody else, which meant me. Now, what shall I make this year?" This despair was brought to- an end by a happy thought An old cap was ripped, the visor, which had survived the tooth of time, was rubbed and oiled into freshness, and the "exact copy" we all pronounced equal to the best work of a military hatter. The really difficult part of the work was the insignia of the crossed sabres for the cav alry, and the number 7 of our regiment underneath, worked in bullion. The latter was obtained by rubbing a pair of tarnished shoulder-straps, turning the golden thread, which was still bright on the under side, and using it for the new work. Whatever we did we were obliged to con coct under very trying circumstances, if we attempted secrecy, for our men were always in and out of the house dozens of times a day. We had no opportunities for long, uninterrupted sessions ot occupation, as do women in the States, where the husband goes to his avocations in the morning and does not appear until 6 at night The offi cers' day began at reveille, when they went to roll-call, then came stables, guard-mounting, inspecting the mess, drill, perhaps court-martial duty and dress parade, stables again, retreat and tattoo roll-call. It will be easily seen that they were flying in and out of their quarters between these various duties all day long. SECEECT AND CELEBIIJT. I watched for months a horse's head being stitched into canvas for a sofa pillow. No real horse had a more active life. When the sound of a clanking sabre and the jingle of spurs announced the arrival of the head of the house,, the work was rolled in a heap, thrust under a lounge, or in a drawer, with a celerity that increased with practice; for the quick movements of an active cavalry man necessitated great haste on the part of anyone who vied with him in speed. A Seventh. Cavalry bride attempted with great trepidation the manufacture of her first masculine garment a smoking jacket It was impossible to make a success without lnnumeraDie-riryiDgs -en,-so-she lrapressru- the striker (soldier servant) into her serv ice. He was a model of neatness and re spect, and SB he wa3 about the size of his captain, and had little else to do bat stand and be fitted, the garment was gradually smoothed into beautiful shape. While the scissors snipped and the needle flew in the busy fingers, the striker stood guard in the ball or on the porch. If he saw his captain coming home across the parade ground, he came to announce the arrival, but should he appear unawares from another direction, a lively little tune whistled in the corridor was the warning that sent the jacket flying into the depths of the closet, while the little bride, with a conscious blush, met her hus band at the door, trying to look as if holi day presents had never entered her mind. The Christmas dinner was a feast that re quired long and earnest search in cathering the materials for its construction. It we chanced to be near a little town and few forts on the frontier are without a village just outside the very edge of a Government reservation no one" rode through the place without throwing a calculating glance into every yard or about the door yard of the less pretentious huts. A chicken, duck or turkey was quickly noted, and the owner was called out to find a booted and spurred cavalryman at the door, who accosted him with the usual frontier salutation : "I say, stranger, can I engage my Christmas"dinner oi your CHEISTMA3 FAEE. Once we were thrown into a state of envy by one of our officers, who surprised us on the long-looked-for holiday by roast pig. The apple that distended the jaws of the toothsome little animal might well stand for the apple of discord, until we found how much he paid for the piece de resistance of his dinner table, .naturally he would have to pay well, for every one out there in that country that was just begun, was anxious to increase his stock. That same dinner, we had as an ingredient of the soup tiny birds that were delicious. They reminded us forcibly of the nursery rhyme, "Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie." That winter tras extremely cold, and there was no sign of insect or animal life on the bleak plains except these hardy little snow birds. The ground about the stables where the horses were fed and groomed was black with this swarming bird life. They were very lame and settled themselves all over the horses. Sometimes an animal's back was completely outlined from the ears to the tail with these tiny chattering creatures. But no one bad thought until this Christ mas feast of utilizing them. Though one of the-remote garrisons in which tte were stationed had enough people within its limits to make a good-sized town, there were but three children of officers. The row of houses occupied by the laundresses had the usual ornaments to the iront door and steps that is common to the Irishman, but the three youngsters in the garrison were all the child lite we saw, and they were idols in their way. One mother gave up from the start trying to celebrate with a Christmas tree, but the others persisted. .Notwithstanding mat even on a summers day we looked as far as the eye could see on the sunburnt grass of the plains, WITHOUT A TEEE, or hardly a twig of green; still, the fond mother somehow seemed to believe that Should anyone go far enough they would either find an evergreen, or else, by some necromancy of the nineteenth century, a withered tree would be made to put forth foliage especially for her boy. The child's "paternal" sent a detail ot men from his comnany in every direction, but no signs of green could be found in that desert land. Then the commanding officer, now deeply interested in the canse, sent another detail of men for a radius of 40 miles around the post, but with no success. The soldiers, tired of the tedium of their confined winter life in garrrison without drills, parades, or scouts, undertook even more than was re quired of them, but the search was hope less. Still undaunted, the doting woman tboueht out a way. Down by the river the l a&cicbuu ui wuoii uu veeu icrceu vuttuu- skeleton of what had keen a green cotton- wood sapling ia' the suamer was cut the proper height, and fastened upright in a Jbox standard ia. the sitting reosa, The I DECEMBER 22, 1889. branches of this she covered with green tissue paper, and cut leaves out for its sparse foliage. Fortunately, there were tapers at the sutler's, for these stores, of which there is one at every post, are like a village shop, where the merchant starts out by buying "a little of everything," and as years advanced the old-time things are shoved back on the shelves, or put out of sight, for1 ihere can be no "clearing out" sales on the borders oi civilization. Among this surplus stock, a box of the old Noah's ark occupants was unearthed, and a few of the wooden toys dating back to the childhood of our oldest officer. The stiff little trees, with their verdant tops. of burled sbavincrs stained a vivid green, were not more prim than the wooden soldiers, with the wonderful chest development, who grasped rigidly an old time gun; but the little king at this revelry reached just as greedily for the ramrod-like soldier as he did for the colored glass balls or the apples bristling with cloves which swayed over his head. A CHEEBFUI. SAY. If one onlv considers that we were hun dreds of miles from a railroad, that it was the dead of winter, and that it was only with the greatest difficulty, and even at the risk of life, that our mail reached us, it will be understood what obstacles were sur mounted to celebrate even a baby's holiday. Our universal custom was for all of us to spend all the time we could together. All dayJong the officers were rnnning in and out of every door; the "Wish you Merry Christmas" rang out over the parade ground after any man who was crossing to attend to some duty, and had not shown up among us. We usually had a slcighride, and every one sang and laughed as we sped over the country, where there were no neighbors to be disturbed by our gayety. If it was warm enough there poured out of gar rison a cavalcade vehemently talking, ges ticulating, laughing, or humming bars of Christmas carols remembered from child hood, or starting some wild college or con vivial chorus where everybody announced that they "wouldn't go home till morning." in notes very emphatic if not entirely musical. The feast of the day oyer we adjourned from dinner to play some games of onr child hood, in order to make the States and our homes seem a little nearer. Later in the evening, when the music came up from the band quarters, everyone came to the house of the commanding officer to dance. With a garrisom full of perfectly health ful people with arteterminationlo be merry, notwithstanding the isolated life and.utterly dreary surroundings, the holidays were made something to look forward to the whole year ronnd. Elizabeth Bacon Custeb. AIL UNANIMOUS!,! APPE07ED. . Amusing; Replies of Experts and Epicures to Perplexing Questions. Youth's Companlpn.l An epicure, who was also an ardent sportsman, wss asked suddenly to name the best fish; He was greatly embarrassed, he says. He thought of the delicious smelt, of the salmon, of the shad, of the Spanish mackerel, and the more he thought the more impossible became the decision. Then all at once the word came to him, and he answered, "Gentlemen, I think the best fish is a fresh fish." This reply was almost as happy as one given by a famous negro cook in Richmond. A company of diners-out got into a warm discussion as to which bird should be pro nounced the finest for the table. Some favored the woodcock; others set the canvas back duck at the head; a Philadelphia man stood up for the reed bird; a Western man talked about the grouse and the pheasant, undone or two would have it that none of these were, equal to the grass plover. Finally it was agreed to leave the question to the xookJrTK hesitated; looked tronrone man to another, and scratched his head. Then he delivered himself thus: "Oemmen, 'pears tome dat de best bird am the American eagle, nicely spread out on a ailvah dollah.-" His verdict was approved and he got the dollar. THE ANT AS A FIGHTER. Tho Little Insect Remarkable for Its 1'ngnacltr. Prof. Jlorso In Globe Democrat.) Ants are terrible fighters. They have very powerful jaws, considering the size of their bodies, andjtherefore their method of fight ing is by biting. They will bite one another and hold on with a wonderful grip of the jaws, even after all their legs have been bitten off by other ants. Sometimes six or eight ants will be clinging with a death grip to one another, making a peculiar spectacle, some with a leg gone and some with half the body gone. One singular fact is that the grip of an ant's jaw is retained even after the body has been bitten off and nothing but the head remains. This knowledge is pos sessed by a certain tribeof Indians in Brazil, Sonth America, who put the ants to a very peculiar use. When an Indian gets a gash cut in his hand, instead of having the flesh sewed to gether as the physicians do in this country, he procures five or six large black ants, and, holding their heads near the gash, they bring their jaws together in biting the flesh, and thus pull the two sides of the gash to gether. Then the Indian pinches off the bodies of the ants and leaves their heads clinging to the flesh, which is held together until the gash is perfectly healed. TEIING TO C00E SNOW. A Chinaman Mnch Surprised Because the Staff Molted A way. Youth's Companlon.l A little California girl, finding snow in the piazza corners one morning, and suppos ing it to be a-new sort of flour, made up several "patty cakes," and gravely took them into the kitchen to cook them. She put them on top of the range at the back, and went out at once for- more "dough." When she returned, her mother's Chinese cook stood by the range with a broad grin on his usually stolid face. "O Sam, did you go and eat my cookies?" cried Lily. "Eire eatee Lily's cooky," answered the smiling Sam. Alter the little girl's mother had been called, and had explained the mystery, Sam told how he also had once been deceived as to the nature of snow. Sam had been a laundryman in San Fran cisco when he first came to America, and it was quite natural that he should apply the unknown substance to the uses of his trade. "Me no findee snow & China, all samee here," he said. "Me findee heap snow down Sin E'an'sco one day. Me catchre pan fall, all samee starch! Hot water! Starch all gone, all samee Lily's cooky." i A Gory Mishap. Mrs. Meserve I'm sure I heard a pistol shot, and (as her husband appears) heM-lp ! mur-r-rderf (partiallr taints.) rwas trying your new tomato ketchup, and a bottle burst ia say face. Judge. CHRISTMAS THRICE WITH Hawsleys The Lights and Shadows That Fell on the Manu scripts of Three Sermons. -WRITTEN FOR "THE BY REV. T. DeWITT TALMAGE and MARION WHIE. The ethical portions of this story, as expressed by 'James Pardee," are contributed to the work by Br. Talmage. The plot and narrative are by Mrs. White. CHAPTEB L 8TOEH AT HOME AND AT SEA. Y name isPardee.with a James before it, and aBev. before that, and a B. D. -at the end of all. That is to say, I am a clergyman; and I have a pastorate out in Minnesota, where I do my chosen work far away from my old friends, but among plenty of new ones, and so am not a complainant against my for tune. Indeed, it is not about myself, ex cept incidentally that 1 have taken my pen in hand to write. Let me begin by setting the fact down that I can never pass a Christmas without thinking of the experiences which accom panied my preparation of three Christmas sermons. It came about through acci dentally meeting Arthur Hawsley in Broadway, while I was on a visit to New York. I had gone East to be lazy during the holidays at the end- of 1881, and was making a leisurely round of book stores, picture galleries and art tiiuseums, when I encountered my old friend. Arthur Hawsley and I had not met since quitting college. He was married, he said, and after we had exchanged the facts of our personal history, he took me by the arm, saying: "Now, I shan't let you off! You must come and take your dinner with us." "But Mrs. Hawsley?" Idemurred. "Louise?" he responded; "she will be charmed. An old friend like you my best friend! She will be delighted to -see you. Be tide, I will make it a matter of duty, I? live My First Christmas Dinner With the Havaleyu beyond the Harlem river in a little suburban village, where there is a church o! your denomination. The pastor is ill. The con gregation is threatened with the lack of sermon on Christmas Day. You shall come and preach it." "I consent," I replied, "and I believe I will preach on the sin of laziness, x have felt ashamed of myself for lolling about New York for a week. I am as afraid of indolence as any reformed inebriate is afraid of the wine cup. He knows if he shall take one glass he-will be flung back into in ebriaoy. And I am afraid if I should take one loug pull of nothing to do I would stop forever. So I will preach for your folks, if thev wish it; and J will ten tnem mat notn ing is accomplished withont work, hard work, continuous work, all-absorbing work, evnrlnstin? work. Domitian. the Boman Emperor, for one hour every day caught flies and killed them with his penknife; and there are people with imperial oppor tunity who set themselves to some insignifi cant business. Ob, for something grand to do, and then concentrate all your energies ot body, mina ana soui upon luatuut iumj, ana notmng in earth or hell can stand be- Man Overboard! fore you. There is no such thing as good luck' "I would like to talk with you about that," Arthur said; "about working with a purpose. So come right along home with Little Mrs. Arthur Hawsley was a pretty bride and housewife, in the cozy home wherein I was introduced to her by my friend yes.-very pretty, with her bie, wide open eyes, her fresh color, the dimple in her right cheek when she smiled, and the fluffy blonde hair hanging almost over her eyes. When we three were seated about the table in the bright, cozy dining room, with its cheerful fire burning on the hearth, I felt like ejaculating, "Oh, the luck of Arthur Hawsley!" in spite or what I had remarked to him about there being no such thing as luck. The place seemed a domestic paradise. We are seated at table; outside the rain is pouring down in torrents; from the street can be heard harried footsteps, acd the 1 THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH THE ( rattling of vehicles over the stones. We ore exhilarated by the feeling of comfort in such contrast with the dreary weather without The dinner, too, is delicious. The servant has just brought on some little birds, nicely browned, dripping with juice, and altogether exquisite to look upon. "Oh, how nice 1" says little Mrs. Haws ley; "quail!" "Pardon, my dearest," returned her hus band; "these are not quails, but squabs." "Oh, but, my dear, I am quite sure " "No, darling, they ore squabs 1" "Quail I" ? "Squabs 1" So it went on. Ah, lire. Hawsley, if you had only foreseen this moment I A quarrel within six months of the wedding day! She cried as if her heart would break. I can yet hear her despairing sobs. And what a silence, there was otherwise in the room J I sat dumfounded in my place. I wanted to say something to act as peace maker, bnt I couldn't think of the right words to say. Not much of the unfortunate birds was eaten, and the meal was finished Sir, I Claim You as My Witness. rather lugubriously. It seemed to me that, if I was to prepare a Christmas sermon in that house, the theme at hand wonld h mn. jugal felicity. After quitting the table Arthur and I went to his library, where we were soon talking reminiscently, as old friends are apt to on meeting after a'long separation. "You have been abroad, then?" I re marked, after he had mentioned something that he had seen in a museum, at Cairo. "Oh, yes." he replied. "I have become an EgyptolngW-a.Terlttthl crank on the subject and you will be interested in my researches." The storm had increased, and a Tin-wllntr gust of wind made Arthur shiver, although the room was warm enough. "0, it isn't this storm that shakes me," he explained; "it is the recollection of one that our ship encountered. We hadhad a fair voy age, but as we approached the Gulf of Coron the sky becan to darken. Squalls aro fre quent at this point of Greece, where the cur rents from three seas meet, broken by the in tervening promonotories of Morea. This evening the current from the Cerigo Chan nel was running dead against us. Niriit was falling, and the water was gray and angry, the sky opaque and sullen. On our land aide the high masses of Tavgetus shut off the horizon with their black' wall; from the side toward Egypt the wind and the sea were breaking against us with a fierce roar The sea grew rougher, and we were assailed by a squall of wind from the northeast. The channel was as black as ink, and the uneven gusts knocked the shin to and fro so that it was hard for her to keep on her way. One by one the captain shortened the sails, keeping only the smaller ones. As we rounded the cape, in order to avoid the reefs we had to make a consider able angle with the wind, which was grow ing stronger every minute. At the first turn of the tiller two heavy waves swept the deck. The boat reeled like a drunken man and leaned over so far that the starboard rail almost touched the water. The captain saw that he must take be more sail, and he shouted his orders to the quartermaster, who signaled them to the men. When the com mand had been given no one stirred. It was necessary to climb to the top gallants, that is, to climb along a sail yard which was at that moment describiog an arc of almost 90. A second time the whistle sounded. The men seemed nailed to the deck. The cap tain's anger rose, and he spranz toward them and cried: "You are fine sailors to be a'raid to go aloft." At this point in Hawsley's narrative a tap at the library door interrupted him; and in response to his ''Come in!" a map entered. If I were to 1 ive a thousand years, I should never forget his face. He was about CO, tall and muscular, with what people call a square head. His eyebrows met on his forehead in a straight line, "his face was smooth, and his hair was shaggy and red. He was the incarnation of ob stinacy and brutal insensibility, if his face did not misrepresent his character. "This is Josiah Burabam," said my friend, by way of introduction; and he added in a low tone to me: "He is a gardener, and be taKes care oi our little place here." Then he raised his voice. "I had begun to tell Mr. Pardee of the loss of Martin's life." "Well, don't let rae stop you," Josiah gruffly responded; "I wouldn't mind hear ing it again myself," and he stood slouch ing by the door. t "Martin Jeffries was the stepson ot Josiah," Hawsley went on. "He had been a sailor, but latterly had settled down here as a gardener with his stepfather. He was a firm, stalwart young fellow, and if he were alive would be the husband of the girl of his choice. He had saved up (1,000, by thrift and industry, and in a year more in tended to set himself up in business. His mother was the custodian of his savings. He gave the money to her, dollar by dollar, and she depositee! it in a bank as her own. Well, when I planned my trip to Ezypt, in quest of intiquitiCT, I needed a stout, bandy assistant, ana Martin wasglad to go. He proved a valuable aid in getting and pack ing my 'finds,' and he was returning with me when our ship salted into the storm that I was describing. The captain called ont. I as I said before, You are fine sailors to be afraid to go aloft.'" "Then the ex-sailor, Martin Jeffries, started for the rope ladder." "I'll go, Captain," the volunteer said. "Then, grasping the ropes with his power ful hands, he began to make his way slowly op the l.tdder, which the wind shook and rattled against the rigging. We watched him mount. The wind which swelled ont his jacket like a vail, caught him every few moments and flattened him against the lad der! When he reached the top of the mast the darkness was so dense that we could so longer see hiss. We saw only his shadow passing la iront ot the looKout lantern. An WBn instant later, as the captain tarnedaway to give ah order, his voice was drowned by the crash of a piece of wood, followed after art interval of two or three seconds by the dull splash of a body falling; into the water. " 'Man overboard 1' was the err. "The captain ordered a boat to be lowered. The sailors rushed toward ft, but it had not been let down more than a fewfeet when the) wind seized it, tore, it from their hands, and dashed it to splinters against the side of the? ship. Meanwhile, the vessel in obedience to the tiller, turned about and presented it self diagonally to the wind. The sails abruptly fell along the masts, and we were left to the mercy of the mind rfnd waves Deceived by a Dead Man. Poor Martin was clinging to a piece of th boat and rolled about by the waves." Josiah Burnham was listening as eagerly to Hawley's acccount, as though he had not heard it a dozen times before, but his faea was so strangely devoid of sympathy for his stepson that, at the time, I could not imagine that the adventure had proved serious. "I demanded that an effort be made to rescue Martin," Hawley continued. "The captain shouted quickly to the officers and sailors: 'Can we try to save this man? Those who agree to it raise their hands; and be quick!' We stood under one of the lan terns, and the sailors were grouped about us waiting for the supreme decision. I declare) to yon, if it had been broad daylight oue would have seen that these old seadogs were as pile as any seasick girl. They gave one rapid glance 'toward the horizon, the direc tion of the waves, the dark line of coast be yond. The ship was headed straight for the rocks. Each man shook his head, but no one raised a hand. Then the captain spoke V the crew: " 'Upon our consciences, weall declare that we can do nothing to save that man. God have mercy upon him.' Then, turning; to the helmsman, he cried: 'Starboard, and straight ahead.' "The ship turned again, offering her sails to the howling wind. She leaped over the waves like an arrow. I ran to the stern, un fastened a lantern and held it far out over the water. Eive or six fathoms away Mar tin was dancing about among the waves, which at times held him almost upright. When he saw me in the light of the lantern, he stretched out one hand toward me and his lips moved as if to speak. I leaned to ward him with my hand to my ear, to hear the last words of toe poor fellow. They came to me clear and strong above the roar of the storm: " 'Tell mother to give my money to Maryl' "An enormous wave came along, leveled the surface ot the sea, and I saw nothing but the deep furrow of the vessel as she ran from, the jaws of death." Hawsley stopped and turned his face ia' harsh reproach upon Josiah Burnham. "And Mary?" I questioned. "She was the girl who was to have be come Martin's wife," was the reply, "and -his.direction about the money was as sacred ,: as any formal will that ever was signed and sealed. Yet it was legally worthless, be cause the money was technically the proper ty of his mother." "And she would not obey his wish?" "She died before there was time to make the transfer, and Josiah Burnham the ob durate man standing there inherited from her, and keeps it from the girl to whom it rightfully belongs. I have told him time and again what I think ot it. Won't you, Mr. Pardee, say something to him." For" a moment I was hesitant, and then I' said: "Mr. Burnhampa life of mere money-, getting is always a failure, because yon. will never get as much as you want. The poorest people in this country are the millionaires, and next to them .those who have hair a million. There is notascissor grinder ou the streets of New York that is so anxious to make money as these men who have piled up fortunes year after year ia storehouses, in government securities, ia tenement bouses, in whole city blocks. Ton ought to see them jump when they hear the fire-bell ring. You ought to see them ia their excitement when a bank axplodes. You Murdered Your Wifel You onght to see their agitation when there is a proposed reformation in the tariff. Their nerves tremble like harp-strings, but there is no music in the vibration. They reaa ine reports irom wail street in ins morning with a concernment that threatens paralysis or apoplexy, or, mora"' prooaoiy, they have a telegraph orattle- phone in their own house, so they eaten every breath of change in the money-market. The disease of acoumnlation has eaten into then eaten into their heart, into their lungs.into their spleen. into their liver. into their bones. Chemists have sometimes analyzed the human body, and they say it is ' so much magnesia, so much lime, so much chlorate of potassium. If some Christian chemist would analyze one of thse financial behemoths he would find he is made up of copper, and gold and silver, and zinc,, and lead, and coal, and iron. That's no', a life"t worth living. There are too many earth3i quases in it, too many agonies in it, too); many perditions in it." 1 There wss the theme upon which I com-S posed mucbot my Christmas sermon, and.Xfj ii.vum a. nihil pUU ilUUUU UCUflCafrV wuuej ia jay mino. CHAPTEB IL a 8TOBT or arAianroinr; A year rolled around, and again I was sj guest at the borne of my friend Arthur Hawsley. He had written with mncstj sociable urgency, and had added the flatler-j ing argument that the congregation gxeatlyj desired to hear another Christmas sermon? rom me. it bsd happened that X couldj withouttrouble absent myself from my ownfl pulpit, and so I was once more at ths Hi.Ji1 Jer table & week before a Christmas fdaVA. T.ittlji AfV. TT...1.... w31U U 'J? W . " ... An.j, nihil tuo larac aispitt m iJ . 4 --.-. X3 a.r ' 6".ft