wz . THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH '-F SECOND PART THE STINGY BRETON. His Entire Lack of Hospitality in Contrast With the Irish IOD CAN OKLY PAY THE FORMER, While the Celt is Insulted if Ton Off er Him Compensation. PICTURES OF THE PEASANT HOMES ICOKRXSrOXDENCE OP TOT BISPATCH.I Vannes, Brittany, January 2. Sev eral weeks' wandering in Brittany hai made one characteristic of the Breton folk very plain and clear to me. They are not a hospita ble people. I think tney represent an opposite extreme in this particular to the kindly Irish. In all my wanderings among the lowly of many lands I was never before refused food and shelter; and if they were ever proffered and charged for, or if a slight gift of coin dextrously placed among the children was allowed, it was always as if with something akin to shame tbat bitter poverty prevented a full expression of the generous wish within the heart. And in Inland, what whole-hearted, tender and evenSggressive hospitality is there every where! "With delusions and snares, with devices and excuses, with finesse and mon strous lies forgivable, you are wheedled inside to the Irish hearthstone, and plied with cead mille failte (an hundred thou sand welcomes) if there is not enough left in and about the woebegone place to grow healthy hair on the wailing cabin pig. Bless their generous hearts, how aggressive they sometimes become! I shall never forget two instances among countless others where Irish hospitality was illustrated to me with startlingand ludicrous emphasis. I had passed the night with a peasant farmer in the lake region of Conamara, be tween Toombeola and Bonndstone Bay. His father, a weazened but remarkably spry old man, was living with him. They vera pitiably poor, and I could see that the scant entertainment I had got was a sore tax upon their slender resources. On de parting, as is the Conamara custom, my host and the little old man set out with me some miles upon the road, each insisting on carrying some one of my belongings, and both, full of the truest friendliness and con cern, warning me against this pit-fall and tnat, and above all that I "fcape an aisy eye on the murtherin' consthabulary." until the moment of parting came, when tneir goodness and poverty so touched me I could not resist the risk of offense, and, while shaking the little old father's hand, I man aged to leave a halt crown within it. MONET AX INSULT TO THE CELT. "With a "whoop!" yon could have heard a mile the old fellow sprang three feet into the air. He dung the money at my feet; and his hat and coat came after. In sn in stant he was dancing about me, delivering sundry taps and curlings tbat cracked and rung stingingly, and perforce placing me in a condition ot the liveliest defense. "While dodging and parrying, I gave utterance to the blandest explanations. But they were of no avail. Fight I must. Fight I did. Wholly on the deiensive with the old man, whom I soon tired out, the son took np the affair, depositing his jacket upon the road wail, and spitting upon his hands and cracking them together with a terrible re port I must own they both fought fairly, and with mary kindly injunctions and warnings; ana we had it there on the old stone road until the dust hid the spectacle from the rest of Ireland. But I was the best-trained, best-fed man, and, thongh ashamed to say It, "bested" the two of them until tears of admiration ran down their generous faces, and shrill and pathetic tor rents of oratory thanked me for the added entertainment I had given them, while "Luck go wid yez!" and "God's blessings on yez!" reached me as far as I could hear along the pleasant way. But I offered no Irish peasant money for his hospitality after that. In the other experience I was not so fortu nate. I was trainpinc down the Boyne from Navan to ancient Drogheda by the sea. Full of loitering and revery I had paused at a canal lock beside one of those lovely Boyne cabins, set like a bitof cameo against the emerald of firs and onyx of black clifis above. Beyond, across the Boyne stood the ruins of the De JLacy castle of Dunmoe, be low, a picturesque old mill. The whole place is always instinct with olden glories, and " from the mossy wheel That flashing plays 'neath old Dunmoe An ancient sound doth steal." While leaning on the old lock and drinking in the beauties of the spot, a tall gaunt Irishwoman appeared in the door of the cabin. I must come in and rest by the fire, she said. I thanked her, but declined, as I felt I must hasten on. It was a long wait to Drogheda, and I wanted to get the even ing train for Belfast Surely I would step in and have a sup of posset No, I would move on. SVHEEE HE MADE A MISTAKE. Then the old woman came out and con fronted me. She clutched me, dragged me to the bank, lifted me out as easily as though I had been a household cat, carried me into her cabin and set me before a cheery peat fire, and for two mortal hours, while drying me out, filled my body with food, and my memory with such evidences of Irish hospitality as I can never forget I missed my train at Drogheda; but I learned at the lock on the Boyne to never refuse proffered hospitality in Ireland. You will never have anything of the sort to learn in Brittany. Call at a roadside cottage here and ask for shelter and food for the night, and the whole family will crowd into the door to obstruct yonr passage. Then they will silently and sullenly look you over. Whither irom? Whither bound? If a foreigner, they are even shrewd enongh to demand your passport. If o vagabond, de serter or ticket-of-leave man will they har bor. Finally assured yon are none of these, they set about bargaining tor the last sou they can wring from you. The food you are to get to the very color of the coffee is set powerfully against your monev. Their own poverty, their bewildering number of chil dren, we loneiy roaa to the nearest village inn, the fact that at the next cottage they wonld probablv mur der you as well as take you in; all and much more is set forth to make your bargain a hard one. They are shrewd and canny, these simple folk, and they will make you very, very miserable until the price is set and paid down in hand, for they will not trust you with thr sum until morn ing, lest your appearance belie your ability to pay; but the lugubrious transaction once settled, and a few sons scattered among the children, which are immediately snatched away and hidden in the farmer's strong box, the atmosphere suddenly changes. Yoa are the guest now. All the inn-keeping polite ness, suavity and attention ot Paris itself are vonrs; and until yon leave, every son! in the cottage puts every other duty aside to minister unto yonr wants and comfort PICTUBE OF A PEASANT'S HOME. A Breton peasant-farmer's home is one of the strangest compounds of filth and cleanli ness to be fonnd in the whole world. There is not a cabin in all Ireland so embedded in dirt as in every Breton farm cottage. The pig roots before the door, hunts and haunts at will within doors, and sleeps within the same peaceful atmosphere as the household at night Goats and fowls are on precisely the same footing as all other members ot the family as to occupancy of the home, and the cow, donkey or horse "looks calmly in upon all the household proceedings from its "lean-too," and breathes content upon you from its open manger above yonr box bed. In winter and summer the walls of the cot- tftire form mnvntnf etnll fnndippant. rmals, if the fanner possesses them, or steam witn me lumes of piles of decaying manure. To the farmer these bring bis wealth, and it is more preciously cared for than his wife or children. Numberless farm-homes I have visited were scarcely accessible through a narrow isle to the door, the only windows being boarded up and covered over with the vile stuff that it might be better guarded and none go to waste. Upon this is piled all garbage and refute from the scanty living, until the place has the appearance o f a West ern "dug-out" with its entrance through a hole in the hillside, and the smoke from the fireplace ascending through a hole cut high er up along the hill. The floor within is the bare earth, worn by feet and baked by fire to the consistency ot asphalt. It is kept swept clean and, smooth by tremendous osier brooms which perform like service in the adjoining pig-pen and cow-house. There is but one fireplace; and all the cooking for man and beast for the wise Breton farmer takes as much pains with the food of his animals as he demands for his family is done within it, in and upon huge brass and iron utensils that wonld be difficult for yon or I to lift Above each fireplace will be found curiously carved crucifixes, many I have seen being marvels in hand carving, and bright, colorful pictures of the saints, or the "stations" of the sacred Passion. There is bnt one room. TEET LIKE A. THOUGH. A table of some hard wood is built on fonr huge costs driven into the ground, and in this table will be found permanent cavi ties, carved out of the top, which answers as receptacles for food. Into these the smoking contents of the casserole are poured, and the family fingers fish for the morsels, and the family mouths suck up the broth, of the daily "etuve or stew. Black bread sops up what cannot be drunk, and this, varied by occasional draughts of whey, with still less frequent mugs of black coffee, form the Breton peasant's constant diet "Vegetables are sparingly used. JLhese are boiled for the cow and the pig; for every earthly pos sibility in food beyond that which will sus tain human life must go into something which can be sold and increase the family hoard. Along the sides of the walls will be found a most curious collection of bureaus and strong boxes, or chests. It is not unusual to find in the lowliest of Breton homes, and standing in state upon the bare earth, bureaus and dressers of the richest woods and in most wonderful carvings of the six teenth and seventeenth centuries. One old piece which I found in a peasant's home near Uarnacwas made in the fifteenth cen tury, and its maker's name and the date were cut in the wood as a part of the splen did floriture carved in the two outer posts. This bureau nyist have weighed 400 to 500 pounds, and wonld have been worth as many dollars at a collector's in Boston or New York. The locks on all these pieces ot iur niture are immense in size, made by hand, and the hnge drop-handles are ot" hand wrought brass. I know of no country whose peasantry are so singularly rich in ancient furniture. It is prized as heirlooms, but the owners of many of these venerable objects claim that the most of these' rare pieces originally came from the old castles or manors now in ruin and decay. At one end, or tne side, ot the average xreton nome are a nan-oozen ot the univer sal box bedsteads. Hanging from the roof, to be lowered at night and raised by day, are two or three box, or osier-plated, cradles called "bransels," in which the infants are stowed away at night, the only care they ever seem to receive. THE TBEASUEE-BOX A3 rUEXITTEE. Nearthebedsare various strong boxes with huge padlocks. These contain provisions, the farmer's hoard of money, and they also serve as seats. Near the table already de scribed is another table of huge timbers but lesser size. On this stands an osier cover as large as, and looking precisely like, the ancient willow bee-hive of our ancestors. A cord runs from this to a ring in a rafter, and thence to a peg in the wall, within reach of the housewife's hand. The first time I saw this affair swung creaking into the air I was startled, Its office is to cover the Breton "family loaf." But what a loaf it is! From two to three feet across it and from eight to ten inches thick. "Hunks" are hacked off as hunger wills, and so ravenons is these peas ants' appetite that a loaf of this size lasts the average family no more than two days. But out ot these surroundings and conditions come to the fetes, "pardons" and fairs the cleanest and brightest peasant folk your eyes ever beheld. Though every drop of water is brought from the roadside fountain, or vil lage well, in brown ewers upon young wo men's heads, enough is brought to souse the youngsters often and well; and man or wo man of the Breton farm family knows no sense of fchame in bathing before the fire place and your own wondering eves, if the set time for body scrubbing happens to ar rive while you are bilietedwith the family. The huge brasses upon the rare old furniture in every Breton home, are constantly pol ished to a dazzling brightness. Cleanliness of person is a part of the Breton's religion. Every cooking utensil is scrubbed and scrub'bed alarminglv. The pains taken with milk, butter and cheese would astonish even a Mohawk Valley housewife. While the outer workaday clothing may shine with grease or gain added weight and sub stance from layers of filth, the undergar ments are scrupulously clean and sweet. And you cannot find a bed in all Brittany whose linen is not as fresh as a bed of violets and white as a bank of newly fallen snow. THE SLATES AND THEIB MASTEE. At home the Breton peasant is a sullen, sodden drudge. The only exception is in the master ot the house, who gravely stands about and, while puffing his long, slender pipe, is ever a quiet bnt effective driver of his family of willing slaves. The wife and children, and especially thewiteanddangh ters, ceaselessly drudce" with the almost in conceivable bitterness of manual labor abont the home and in the fields. They are beasts of burden endlessly. No respect or consideration is ever shown the woman of Brittany. "Once married, ever a beast," is a pathetic proverb among them; and there are no beautiful women among these peasant slaves. Some of the men have good forms, and they are tall, shapely, grave and fine. Some even possess classic faces, intensified by their long coarse hair, and wide, blact, low-crowned hats. But a Breton peasant woman is as a shape less block of Vood, wrinkled and bent by stormy wind and weather, her spotless white cap, her shapeless bodice and her huge wooden shoes giving her limp and lifeless form grotesqueness, bnt never picturesque ness and interest You have seen the beaten, half-fed donkey as it canght a moment for rest spread its legs for support and drop its head upon its rough old breast? That is the nearest picture one can give of this human drudge. StandingbeforeMillet's "Angelus" those who have never seen Brittany and its people exclaim, "What marvel of devotion the artist has put into that peasant woman's posture!" I tell you he has drawn with infi nite realism the universal posture of these dumb and sodden beings, the endless legacy of brutal slavery, dolor and pain. Edgab L. Wakeman. Be Was Discharged. Chief Bigelow has forbidden the placing of small theatrical bill boards on telegraph and telephone poles. He was informed that his ordinance man had revealed to some of the theatrical people the intention of the Chierto have the boards torn down, and the Chief discharged the man from his service. He afterward changed his mind and rein stated the man, bnt he says it must be un derstood that state secrets must not be re vealed by employes of the department A iS,0ESIAJ?: description of the i "?l0.ofhB famous Insane artist of Brus- , .licit, iu AU-muttBow'S ZQ-FAOE DIS. PATCH. THE TALMAGE TOUR. Luxurions Travel, Early Rising, a Long Delay and Sacred Scenes. JOPPAANDTHEWAYTOJERUSALEM Our Dragoman, fertile Sharon, and the Valley of Ajalon. Eamleh SPECIAL HONOES TO AMERICANS tcoBSESPOxnxxcx or the dispatch.! Jerusalem, December 10. The steamer on which wo embarked for Joppa, as relat ed in my last letter, was palatial in its ac commodations. It was provided with elec tric light and every modern convenience. The staterooms of this magnificent specimen of naval architecture were as large as the double bedroom of an ordinary hotel, and comfortably, not to say luxuriously, iur nished. We enjoyed sumptuous fare at din ner, whieh was served soon after we went aboard. The subsequent promenade on deck was in a deliciously balmy moonlit atmos phere; and it was infinitely refreshing before "turning in" for the night, to luxuriate in a sea bath. Bed was welcome alter a weary dav which closed thus delightfully. We were announced to reach Joppa at 4 the next morning. .As the steamer was booked to stay in the harbor all day, the hour of disembarkation might be set to suit the convenience of passengers. DE. TA1MAOE -WAS ANXIOUS. This was as pleasant an arrangement for people going to bed as could be devised; but Dr. Talmage was so excited at the idea that in a few hours he would see the Holy Land, that he could hardly bear to wait, and when he retired he gave positive instructions that he be called at 3, and if land were in sight before that hour, to notify him at once. All aroused at the time mentioned, with the prospect of waiting several hours before land conld be sighted. At 8 o'clock the coast of Palestine first came into view. Seen from the deck ot the approaching steamer, Joppa presents a very pleasing ap pearance. Its stone houses have the sub stantial and venerable look proper to a town of such antiqnity and historic interest; and the lofty trees here and there in the city augment the enjoyment felt in the picture, while the morning sunlight gives the best effect to its attractiveness. ESCAPED A BIDE ON SHOULDERS. In common with other ports on the Syrian coast Joppa has no harbor. To land there is sometimes hazardous, even impossible, and at best row boats have to be used in the conveyance of people from ships to the city. We were in good luck in that this means was practicable, and escaped the experience of being carried ashore on the shoulders of brawny residents, whose financial interests depend largely on the discomforts of other people. We took buta short time to our breakfast, and soon started out to visit points named prominently in sacred history. The identi cal house on the seaside occupied by "Simon, a tanner," has long since succumbed to the decay wrought fay the long lapse of time, but there is good'reason to believe that tra dition does not err in pointing out the exact spot where it stood and on which another house now stands. As we stood on the roof ot this building, which probably is exactly like the one in which the Apostle Feter lodged, Dr. Talmage read and expounded Actsx. A DKIlvKTEOM ST. PETEE'S WELL. Before leaving this interesting place we drank from the water of the sante well at which St Peter quenched his thirst When we returned to the hotel to lunch, we found that our host outdid himself in the warmth and abundance of his hospitality. The principal dish set before us was a turkev, the symbol of American good fare, and the Stars and Stripes waved above the building. Mr. Landlord expressed himself delighted with the privilege of entertaining Dr. Talmage, many of whose sermons he had read with much interest In the assignment of rooms for the party, my illustrious friend got No. 33, which' is known as "Chinese Gordon's room," the hero of Khartoum having once occupied it Strolling along the seaside, my memory recalled -the friendship of Hiram, King of Tyre, with David and his son Solomon, and the cordial assistance he rendered in the con struction of the temple and other buildings at Jerusalem, in sending huge rafts of timber from Lebanon to Joppa, then, as now, the Port of the Holy City. It was at Joppa too, that Jonah took ship when he made the foolish effort to flee unto Tarsbish from the presence of the Lord. UNLIKE THE SEA SCENE. Joppa has crooked streets. Many of its houses are built of mud, and there is a great deal of squalor to be seen in the city. The suburbs are beautiful. Many garden orna mented with stately trees adorn the prospect and delight of the observer. I noticed palm trees, cypresses, pomegranate, orange and lemon trees. The hedges seem ,to be ex clusively a rich growth of cactus". Every where are evidences of exceeding fertility. The soil from which such abundance springs has been brought down by streams swollen by heavy rains. , The next morning after our arrival in Joppa, the Talmage party left lor Jerusa lem, having secured the services of David Jamal, a Nazarene, as dragoman. He is the man who served in the same capacity Dean Stanley, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of Edinburgh and many other persons of distinction in their visits to Palestine. Jamal has been eminent among local draco men during the past 20 years. It was under his guidance that we inspected the site ol the resurrection of Tabitha, "which by in terpretation is called Dorcas." THEY CELEBBATE HEB PESTrVAL. The festival of Tabitha is celebrated near Joppa, when the women of the neighbor hood, dressed all in white, gather round a fountain surrounded by orange trees, and sacred to the memory of that sainted woman and called by her name. Our guide took US to the Jewish rnlnnir under the direction of Baron Bothschild. where Hebrew youths are educated as me chanics, thns giving a practical turn to the hope of every faithful Israelite that Pales tine will yet become the country and home of the chosen people. The bright and healthy-looking Hebrew schoolboys one sees in Joppa and the neighborhood gives encouragement to the expectation that the night of the race will be succeeded by a bright morning. Well out of Joppa on onr pilgrimage Jeruwlemward, we looked back on a city presenting a loay, castellated appearance as seen from the landside. The city slopes down toward the sea. At this season of the year the loveliness of Sharon, through which we passed, is less obvious than in the springtime, but the fig tree and its support ed vine, the numerous olive trees and the general aspect of fertility brought to the mind passages dear to the memory of the Bible stndent MANr LIKE BEBEKAH. On our wayVe encountered quite a good many people going to Joppa, among them women in the blue cotton garb of poverty and without veils, sad looking, many of them, bnt with rood fentnw.. .) -o,ri snJes , Jrh,ey ned burdens on their heads of fuel, vegetables, etc, and walked with the proud poise which these descend ants of Bebekah possess without the need of its conscious cultivation. Turkish soldiers at guardhouses, fine, stalwart fellows, cigarette in mouth, were passed at intervals, and strings of camels loaded with goods. Everywhere along the villages on the road we saw large numbers of Hebrew people. This circumstance deenlv interest,) n- . Talmage. It seems that they are rapidly PlTTSBtrKGr, SATURDAY, JANTJAET 18, 1890.. increasing in numbers, and the effect is a natural one.of strengthening their confidence that in the future they will again possess the land. We slopped at Eamleh for breakfast This pretty little town, which boasts of several thousand inhabitants, is claimed to have been Arimathea, the birthplace and residence of the loyal man who begged the body of Jesus and provided for its sepul ture. THE BUGGED VALE OP AJALON. After leaving Bamleu we drove through the valley of Ajalon, which is abont three miles from Latrone, a village named in memory of the penitent thief. The conntrv thereabout is rugged to admiration. Pur suers as well as rmrsned must nave endured great fatigue, after the battle in which the Amorites were defeated by Joshua when he said: "Sun, stand thou still upon Gideon; and thou, Moon, in the Valley of Ajalon." Our faithful Jamal pointed out Gideon in the distance as we speeded along our way. The suu was now very hot and we fonnd our ordinary clothing exceedingly burdensome. In the early morning, however, our heavy overcoats were necessary to comfort. We stopped for luncheon at the gate of the Valley of Ajalon. There, too, we changed horses and rested about an hour, alter which we resumed our journey. Very soon we reached the hills on which David tended his father's flocks.and where he successfully de fended his charges from the lion and the bear. A short distance beyond is the brook Elah, whence that rnddy youth took the five snjooth stones, with one of which he slew the giant who defied the God of Israel. Here was an opportunity for Dr. Talmage toen rich his collection of curiosities. According ly he dismounted from his horse, and, going down to the brook, selected a number of just such pebbles as he supposed were the choice of David 3,000 years before. We resume our ride for the last stage and soon appear the evidenees that we are ap proaching a great city. Bight before us rise the walls of Jerusalem. Our hearts beat faster as we see them, and faster still as our approach becomes nearer. The sun was jnst setting, gilding the walls and domes of the city, as at 5 o'clock exactly, we entered Jerusalem through the Joppa gate. Louis Klopsch. BELLEYUE ANNEXATION. J. D. Watson, Esq., Sams Up tbe Arguments in Favor Thereof Tersely. J. D.Watson, Esq., a member of Bellevue borough Council, admits that the body isn't of much, use, bnt he says the reason is that it can do nothing for want of funds, and the people will not submit to being taxed to the extent necessary to put the borough into shape. He says the roads are almost impassable, but the taxation yields but 58,000 a year, and after deducting $4,000 lor schools, which can be but indifferently maintained for that sum of money, and $2,000 for other neces sary government purposes, there are bnt $2,000 left, which is insufficient to make and keep up even good boardwalks. Mr. Watson states tnat annexation to Alle gheny City wonld give them entrance to the city toll free, as toll conld not be charged in the citv limits, and they would get more for $5,200 than they now do for $8,000. He also states that if tbe boroogh is to be pnt into shape demanded by intelligent public opinion, it will necessitate an expenditure for streets of $40,000; for public buildings, $10,000; water works, $100,000; schools. $20. 000, and fire engine, $6,000, a total ol $170, 000 of a debt, the interest on which will be $10,500, to say nothing of taxation to provide a singing lund. Mr. Watson also states that some non property holder may go into court and force the opening of some roads on which pro- ceedings have been taken in court and make the borough smart He contends that personally he cares nothing about the matter, but thinks annexation wonld be a blessing, and opines that the opposition comes largely from railway employes, as annexation would cot benefit the railway companies. HELP FOE THE GIRLS. An Entertainment to be Given tor the Benefit of the Club. The Working Girls' Club held a very in teresting meeting Thursday. The new en terprise is moving along cicely and the in terest is increasing daily in its workings. The club has now got past the first stage of development and is in need of funds. The kind ladies who have been pushing the en terprise made the fact known among some of their society friends in the East End and a number of yonng ladies and gentlemen have offered to give an entertainment next Thursday for the benefit of the club. At the meeting Thursday evening it was decided to hold the entertainment in the Palace Parlors next Thursday. Members of tbe club have taken it upon themselves to sell tickets for the entertainment It seems a pity tbat a larger hall was not secured, as it is understood that the entertainment will be a novelty and no doubt will attract many citizens, who at the same time can do something for the club. There has been a wrong impression scat tered that it was a sectarian institution. Tbe ladies are very earnest in wishing every body to understand that it is non-sectarian in every way and that it is wholly for the mntual good of the girls. After the club is put on a self-sustaining basis, the girls will be expected to run it themselves and the ladies' will "step down and out." NATIONAL PRISON AFFAIRS. Arrangements Soon to be Made for the Next Congress. Bev. J. L. Milligan, chaplain of the Western Penitentiary and a member of the Executive Committee of the National Prison Association, will attend a meeting of the committee in New York next JTues day. The meeting is for the purpose of arranging for the next congress of the asso ciation. The matter of national representation to the International Prison Congress, to be held next September in St Petersburg, at the invitation of the Czar of Bussia, will be considered. Names of delegates will be recommended to the Federal Government for appointment Ex-President Hayes, president of the national association, will likely be one of the delegates. WINTER EXCURSION. The B. & O. Blake Final Arrangements for tbo Annual Washington Trip. E. D. Smith, Division Passenger Agent of the Baltimore and Ohio road, has arranged his annnal midwinter excursion to Wash ington. The trip will start Thursday, Jan uary 30. and return trips will be good for 10 days, allowing travelers to stop over at Bal timore. This is the third season these ex cursions have been in existence. The former trips were eminently success ful. No donbt is anticipated by Mr. Smith, bnt that the publio will patronize this trip, as the previous ones were. Two Pullman cars will leave on the day ap pointed, one in the morning and the other in the evening. NOW IN THE SCHOOLS. I.a Grippe Tackles tbe Children and Keeps Many of Them Home. Sixty pupils failed to report at the Bed ford schools yesterday. Some are known to have a la grippe and the others are sup posed to have beenkept away either by the new disease or colds. To make matters worse two of tbe teachers are sick with la grippe. A tour of the other Sonthside schools failed to find any marked decrease in at tendance. Several of the schools reported that the attendance among the primary scholars was below the standard, nut at tributed it in a measure to the cold weather BEANCH HIGH SCHOOL New Scheme to Utilize Some of the Spare Sonthside Booms, TO SAVE PDPILS GOISG SO FAB. Views of Different Principals Given Ee gardlng the Hove. SOME OF THE BEltEFITS POINTED OUT The agitation started some time ago for a high school on the Sonthside is not dead by any means. When it was brought to the notice of the Central Board it was talked over and a decision rendered that there could be but one high school in the city without a special act of the Legislature. There the matter has been allowed to rest for some time, as far as the Central Board is concerned. The parents, however, are not satisfied, but are looking around for further developments in the work of obtaining a high school for the Southside. Some educators think that the Central Board has taken a wrong view of the mean ing conveyed by the words "high school." They believe that saying, "There shall be but one high school," does not necessarily imply that there shall be but one bnilding, or that the buildings connected with the school should be in one spot, or that there cannot be branches of the High School in different sections of the city under the same management as the High School. A BRAND NEW SCHEME. The latest scheme advanced is that high school classes be taught in some of the va cant rooms oi the houses on the Southside. It is maintained that the high school classes, in the first two years at least, could just as well be taught in some of the empty school rooms in the Southside as in the city. The Knox School has rooms to spare, and so have some of the other honSes. A tour among the principals of the South side found them all in favor of a high school on that side of the river, with the exception of the West End schools, includ ing the Thad. Stevens, Biverside and Luckey schools. Prof. Slattery, of the Biverside Schools, said he couldn't see where a high school on the Southside would be of any benefit, especially as far as the West End is concerned. If there should be a high school on the Southside it would probably be located near Twelfth street, to make it central, and that wald not help the West End, as their pupili might as well go to the city as far as cost and distance are concerned. Prof. Slattery said that one objection he saw to the plan of occupying the spare rooms in some of the Southside buildings was that all the teachers in the present High School are specialists in their different lines of teaching. If the plan proposed were adopted, the pupils would not have this ad vantage. IT IS A SERIOUS STUDY. Continuing, Mr. Slattery said that from' one standpoint an accessible High School on the Southsidemightresultin more pupils going to the Central High School. At pres ent only about 5 per cent of those in the Thirty-tonrth ward ever enter the High School. Whether more would go could be only ascertained by experiment If any thing could be done to advance education and induce the workingmen to have their children climb higher than the ward schools it should be done. As it is a great majority of the pupils leave school and go to work after they have reached the third-reader grade. Prof. A. C. McLean, of the Luckey Schools, said he had been too busy endeav oring to bring his schools up to the highest grade possible and make them second to none in the city, to think much on the question. Being among the younger prin cipals, he could not speak with weight in re gard to Pittsburg, but thought it was a grave problem, and should receive a good aeal of thought and study before any move Was made. Jf rot. McLean has a very large attendance in his schools, and says he is pleased with the outlook and hearty co operation of all in that district for efficient education. Prof. John Golden, of the Bedford Schools, said he did not see why it would be neces sary to have a special act of the Legislature to establish branches of the High School; but of course there could not be a separate high school, under a different Central Board. A MATTER OP DEFINITION. He said it rested on the way you defined "High School." Some school house might be chosen, as suggested, for holding High School classes, and a district divided off wherein the High School scholars of certain schools in the immediate neighborhood conld attend. The teachers could still be un der tbe control of the High School and, after passing the first two years in this way, tbe pupils could finishat the High School. It is certainly a long distance for pupils to go to attend the present High School, and, if such a move would also result in more taking the High School studies, it would be a good thing for education. To say the least, the proposition was worth earnest considera tion. Miss Hare, Principal of the Birmingham schools,said she was in favor of a high school on the Southside;butshe would not have one for a moment if the pupils conld not have the same advantages as those in the present High School. Prom the present state of the problem she thinks that to divide the schools would not give the pupils the advantage of tbe use of tbe apparatus unless some scheme cot yet formulated could be devised for branch schools. PEOPLE LAZY IN THIS AOE. The genial lady principal is a strong ex ponent of physical development She said that the people of this age were inclined to be lazy, and, by a too frequent use of street ear, forgot that'it was good forthem to walk. She said that in one iway she thought the High School in its present site had been of physical beneht to pupils. She has not had a single case come to her knowledge wherein the pupils were not healthier and more rugged while attending High School, or of one where they have suffered from the exercise thns made compulsory. Mrs. M. IS. Kedman, ot the Hnmboldt Schools, said she was heartily in favor of a high school on the Sonthside. Her assist ant, Mary E. Lauffer, was also in favor of tbe move. Pror. W. J. McClnre, of the Morse School, was in favor of a Southside High School, or a branch of the present High School, if such an arrangement conld be made to work.' He said a very small per centage of the pupils attended the High School at present. DOWN WITH THE GRIP. Hair the Students of Odell Laid Up With the Disease. At Odeil College, distant 15 miles on the line of the Panhandle Bailroad, one-half of the students are suffering from la grippe. Tbe disease, however, is in a mild form, and no alarming symptoms have been thus far manifested. The construction of a new boarding house with a capacity for 150 guests has just been completed; this guar antees ample accommodations for any ex pected increase in the number of students for the present or coming session. Threatening Nen'York. Nine Chinamen passed through the city yesterday bound for New York in charge of a contractor of their own race. He repre sents a firm whose intention is to introduce Chinese labor in New York. They will be put to work as hod carriers, etc. m rHIfST "OF TH NE evening in February I was idling on the ten nis courts at Trichinopoly, in South India, after tbe games were over. The men were gravi tating toward the club, bent on re freshing them selves with iced drinks and whist; tbe ladies were sauntering about in couples, or sitting in gronps under the trees. The sun had set in a blaze of orange light, and the hot fiery color still bathed the sky and landscape, though it was fast mellowing into a rich warm purple with the rapidly advancing night of the tropics. I was very hot from the exertion of the game, and I plied my fan vigorously. "You are just the person I want to see, Mrs. Haddow," said a voice at my elbow. I turned and saw Mrs. Savile, the Collect or's wife. She and I had been together in the station some two or three years, a long time for India. During that time our ac quaintance had ripened into friendship, for we had many pursuits in common. She was fond of painting, so was I. She sang di vinely and I played her accompaniments. We both devoured all the new books we could lay our hands upon, and talked them into shreds afterward. "What is it? A new song, a new book, or a new frock?" I asked. "None of those fascinating subjects this time. I have a new idea in my head," she replied. "Then hand it out at once. New ideas in I SAT DOWN ON THE this monotonous Indian life are as rare as angels' visits." "I want you to come with us to see tbe new bridge and sluices over the river. They are being rebuilt, and there is some dispute about a bit of land. A small wayside tem ple stands in the way of one of the piers, and the people do not like to have it touched. My husband has to decide whether it must be removed, and he must go and see it" "I shall be delighted to go. When and how shall we get there?" "It is about 15 miles from the town. We shall post a pair of horses and drive. Col onel Brevis, the superintending engineer. will go with us; and we propose staying tbe night at the engineer's bungalow, which is close to the bridge. Can you go to-morrow morning?" "Yes, and as early as yon like." "Take your sketching things. There are some lovely bits for painting down there. And now come for a moonlight drive." So away we went, speeding over the dusty roads toward the racecourse, in search of a breeze. HVery early the next morning, long before daylight, I crept qnietly from my bed so as not to disturb my husband. I "dressed and breakfasted by lamplight, and hurried off to Mr. Savile's house, close by. Tbe night air waa sharp and heavy with dew. A beautiful planet shone like a miniatnre moon in the West, and the Southern cross was just in clining toward its setting. Mr. and Mrs. Savile were ready to start when I arrived, and the servants were bust ling about in the darkness of the morning, swinging lanterns recklessly in their hands as they passed up cloaks and shawls into the carriage. We got in without delay, as every moment before the rising of the sun was precious. The horsekeepers stood aside, and the strong, well-fed Australian horses sprang impatiently forward to their work. As we passed under the big banvan trees tbat bordered tne drive, a green parrot flut tered in the leaves above and called to his fellows to awake. I looked toward the East and saw a faint gleam of light on the low, flat horizon. We left the well kept, respectable cantonment behind and reached the sleeping town. The roads be came narrower and more dusty, and were bordered by low mud houses. Through the dim light of dawn I could distinguish the slumbering forms of the natives, wrapped in dirty sheets and lying in the happy nbli v ionof deep slumber by the side of the foul drains that ran the length of the streets. The air oi the thickly populated town was unwholesome and fetid, and it was a relief to tbe senses wnen tbe JBiver Cauvery was reached and the city passed. We crossed by the bridge which had stood many a flood, and fonnd ourselves in the sacred island of Srirnngam. Jnst before the river reaches Trichinopoly it divides into two noble channels, each half a mile wide, and forms an elongated island of wondrous iertility. At the head and foot ofthe island, where the stream parts and re joins, there are enormous sluices, which regulate the flow of water in June and De cember. Twice a year tbis Nile of India, which is said by the credulous natives to have its source in the sacred fount of the Ganges, poms down a big volume ot water, some 25 feet deep a brown, whirling flood that carries fertality in its waters in the shape of a rich alluvial deposit Every drop that passes through the sluices is utilized. A vast network of channels carries it over I Looked Toward the East. n TTTnn nrT K mm bun thousands of acres, and leaves nothing for the devouring sea. Alter passing the bridge, the road turned sharply to tbe right, and we drove by pad dyfields, cocoanut plantations, gardens of betelnnt leaf, plantains and sugar cane, and uuder avenues of tarnmrinds and banyans. Tbe carriage lights were extinguished, for the sun would soon monnt above the horizon, dispelling tbe pale blue mists conjared up in the night and the dewy haze that over spread the rich, flat landscape. At the half way point we found fresh horses, and in an other hour we arrived at our destination. We were all hungry and glad to find hot coffee, toast and eggs awaiting us. The servants, sent on over night had everything prepared. After a hurried meal we started out to see the bridge. Colonel Brevis and Mr. Savile, accompanied by the engineer in charge of tbe works, went to examine tbe arches, some of which were already built, and others were in course of construction. Mrs. Savile and I, feeling disinclined to walk in the sun, sat down under a shady tamarind tree on the river banc and pre pared to sketch. "We will walk this evening after sun down," said Mrs. Savile in answer to her husband's invitation to accompany him to the works. The gentlemen were gone a long time. In tbe fascination of the work tbey forgot the sun, which in the sonth of Xndia bears very great power in February, the heat and the glare of the sand. So we strolled back to the bungalow. We bathed, changed our warm frocks for cooler ones and prepared ourselves to spend a long day. Prom the windows of the bungalow we could see up the river. The Port Bock, at Trichinopoly, crowned with its heathen temple, stood on tbe horizon like a sentinel gnarding the pre cious stream. A silvery streak of watei wonnd its serpentine course through the broad, gleaming bed of sand. Here and there, still pools the home of the hideous mugger or alligator shone with dazzling light reflected from the sky. The low banks were fringed with pampas grass and grace ful palms; and herds of buffaloes wended STEPS OP THE TEMPLE. their way slowly down toward the water, sinking knee-deep in the hot, dry, loose sand. Colonel Brevis, Mr. Savile and the en gineer returned to the bungalow at 11, very hot and sunbnrnt, and very thankful for cold baths and a substantial breakfast. "You ladies must really make an effort to get as tar as the sluices this evening. They are well worth seeing,' said Colonel Brevis. "We should like to do so Immediately, if you can take us," replied Mrs. Savile. "You must be prepared for a long walk. The sluices are below the first bridge, which you saw this morning, and which merely crosses the overshoot of the river. This 'anient ' as the natives call it and we have adopted this term is one of the largest irri gation works in India," said the Colonel. He took the greatest interest in all his en gineering, and was especially fond of irriga tion, as it brought wealth to the people of the land. At 6 in the evening we left the bnngalow for our walk. I was very tired from the heat and the early rising. Much as I wanted to see the sluices I must confess to having started very unwillingly. Mrs. Savile had managed to sleep during the day, bnt the mosquitoes had effectually destroyed my slumbers. We followed the same path that we took in tbe morning. The snu was just dipping below the horizon, leaving a path of molten gold behind him. The yonng moon already floated overhead, pale and sickly before the glory of the west The ground was hot be neath our feet, and the air still and breath less. It was a fortrnnner of the hot weath er, which in a month would be upon us an evening to sit still under the trees rather than to take a stiff walk. Arrived at the river bank, we stepped down into the dry, sandy bed. The sand was warm and closed over our feet at each step almost to our ankles. .We walked or rather, I should say paddled heavily through it, by the great arches and piers that looked enormous, now we were Deiow mem. a oroad, shal low stream of water tricbled under the last completed arch, and we crossed the wster by a rough, temporary bridge of planks. Underneath this last arch, and standing about the center of the river bed, was a small temple, built of granite upon the firm foundation of a rock that upreared itself in the very middle of the river's course. "What is this? A temple?" I exclaimed. "What an extraordinary place to choose for it," said Mrs. Savile at the same mo ment "Yes. It was pnt there long before an English engineer laid his finger on the works. This bridge is built on magnificent foundations, which were laid long ago by some wise old rajah, who knew the valne of the waters to himself and his people," said Colonel Brevis. "And do you mean to say that the founda tions, made so long ago, still stand?" ex claimed Mrs. Savile. "They not only stand, but are as good, if not better, than anything we could make ourselves. You see how we value them by adopting them. We are obliged to give the bridge a serpentine course, you observe. Mr. Jumes, here, will tell you that building arches on the curve is no easy matter." "Is tbis the temple that is the subject of the dispute?" "No; there is no dispnte abont this. Twice a year, just before eaen monsoon, the na tives come and do 'poojah' here. They are firmly convinced that the number of goats and fowls sacrificed to the presiding deity of the river will influence the abundance of the water. Government never interferes with tbe religion of the people, as you know; so we'are directed to leave the temple where it is and build oararch over it" "But, surely, the water will wash a bnild ing like that away?" "No; at fnll flood it rises to the base of the temple, but it does not reach high enough to displace it The temple is very old, and in olden days, I dare say, this has been the scene of many a hnman sacrifice." "How horriblel" said Mrs.Savile. "Come along; let us go on with our walk," she con tinned, leading the way. Bnt X lingered behind. Somehow the scene faseinated me. The stream murmured pleas antly as it cowed past the piers, and the luuuu, wuicu gaiuereu iigut BVSlW (HAMJkitt I ! in the rapidly advancing darkness of the troples, silvered tie rippling water below, I -.J warai i "Let me stay here till you return. X so tired and disinclined to walk." I pleaded. "Leave you here alone? Why, we shall be: gone an hour or morel" cried Mrs. Savile, stopping and turning back. "Never mind. I shall enjoy it" '"You need not bealone," said Colonel Bre vis. "I can call a peon (or messenger). I told a man to wait for us on tbe opposite bank in case we wanted anyone to carry coats or wraps." Hedrewont a silver whistle and blew a shrill blast A voice in the distance answered "Sah'b!"and presently an old man came ont of tbe gathering darkness and stood before ns. "Bamalingnm, stay here with this lady and take care of her till we return." The old man bowed low and touched his forehead with his fingers. The party then hurried off and plodded their way through the soft sand till they were lost in tbe silver-gray moonlight I tnrned to the quaint temple. It stood un der the shade of the archway, just jutting $&J15 t MfPm :fer Under a Shady Tamarind Tree. ont far enough to rear its strange figured roof above the bridge. It looked down the river branch as thongh joyously mindful of every drop of waste water that went over the shoot The stream that owed its sonrce at the present time to hidden springs in the river bed washed the great rock on which the temple stood and tnrned sharply to the left, leaving a broad suit of sand immediate ly in front The river bed was fringed with, cocoanuts, and, though small in comparison with the Cauvery itself, it was many times broader than onr English Thames. I sat down on the steps of the temple. They were cnt in the living rock, and were worn smooth by the action of the water, and by the thousands of worshipers' feet. Old Bamalingnm squatted in the fashion of his country below me, close to the water's edge. He did not look at me, but buried his face between his knees, and appeared to sleep. Doubtless the old man had had his evening meal ot curry and rice, and the sweet, natty poppy-seeds that flavored his dish were beginning to take effect and bring him blissful dreams. I wished I had brought pencil and paper, for T could have sketched in black and white. However, I was not sorry to sit idle and rest I had no fear of robbers or wild beasts. A native watchman was, X knew, sitting at the other end of the bridge, and the peon was here at my feet The water lapping tbe piers sonnded cool and refresh ing and broke the silence of the night Far away in the distance the jackals occasion ally raised their melancholy howl, or a gray monkey, disturbed from its slumbers in the tamarind top, gave a shrill scream. I had sat thus for 15 or 20 minutes when I heard a slight noise behind me. I tnrned and saw an old man with close shaven head. His wrinkled forehead was marked with the trident that claimed him for one of Vishnu's own. A loin cloth wrapped closely round his body was his sole gar ment His chest was smeared with sacred ashes, and bore a second trident in bright pigment He was the caste man in charge of the temple, no doubt a person held in great ven eration by its votaries. The door of the building was open, and there was a lamp burning dimly before the rude idol inside. The image shone in the yellow light with the anointing oil, and was adorned with a wreath of faded oleander flowers. A smell of burning incense and oil came out and mingled with the nightair. Bamalingnm raised his head and spoke to the old man in Tamil. "What does the old man say?" I asked, after the two had conversed for soma minutes. "He says very glad missus come to sit here," replied the peon in his Madrassee En glish. I was surprised, as I quite expected to hear that my presence was considered a pol lution. "Why ia he glad? Do I bring good luck?" X asked. The curious old pair approached me, and Bamalingnm pointed to my hand, on the1 1 Smiled at Their Queer Fancieu back of which was a large brown mole a) disfigurement X had often considered It in my youth. "That mark, good mark. This day, good day," and Bamalingnm pointed to the waxt ing moon. The temple man waa still closely regarding me. He seemed fascinated by my appearance. Again he spoke in his own language to the peon, and from the little I tJn ATfP A t T Hal m A .a T2 T. f A . ' j.mun ue was asung aim questions which he would not answer. "Tell me what he says, Bamalingnm: X shall not be angry," I said encouragingly, for the old man interested me in my idle ness. They made such a harmonious fore ground to the tropical moonlit landscape; upon which X was feasting my eyes. "He asks what year missus born, and what month." ' I told him, and the old man's eyes abso lutely glittered with delight He clasped his hands together with an ecstatic gesture and exclaimed, "Swamil swamil" "Plenty good water coming; plenty rice missus bripg good luck to river." I smiled at their queer fancies. "Yes; I hope the water will come when the bridge and the sluices are ready. How long have yon known the river?" I asked the old guardian of the temple, the peon, translating. "Seventy years," was the answer. "How many big floods have yon seen?" "Ah! too many to count" "And famine times when no water came?" "Six," whispered the old man, looking nn easily at the staring stone image that he had tesueu lor mree-score years and ten. It was considered unlucky to mention evil times or sickness so near the temple. ""One year, very bad year. Swam! very angry. People killing no goats, no fowls: forgetting Swami thirsty, wanting blood. Swami shut up the clouds and lock up the water. Not one drop coming. No rice, no eocoannts. no plantains. People very side and die; cattle die, all die," and the man shook his head mysteriously. "Bnt the water came next year?" "Yes; Swami drink the blood of one Brah min girl. Then Swami pleased and send big flood." This savored of human sacrifice, and & shudder passed over me. A light mist waa floating over the water, and tho moon waa aimmea dj a lormiess vapor. The light had died out of the West, and a fitful breeae Mew np the river into my face. "It is getting cold: I will m tj,v ,. uuuKBiun, ' ssuu K US peon. mIiim $9 Y f .1 A Aft- . " Tha otbk MMrtffl fenrsid ud saeke vslaf ' My, ",'ww5tWu wmt iiWmIVHv ft ill - ' I 'V M m 1 I :A A .'fJ&Jffik X ftijfrffiifiwftfiilfc