w 'tez. THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH., "V w SECOND PARTT PAGES 9 TO 12. PITTSBURG, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1890. IN QUAINT OLD SPAIN. E. L. Wakeman's Wanderings Take Him to Another Finisterre, AMONG CAGOTS, SCIONS OP GOTHS. Pierre Floquet, the Sardine-Fisher, and the Btorj of His Life. A WEAITH OP OLD EIP TAN WINKLE ICOBSXSrOKSKXCE OF THE DISrATCH.1 Santiago de Caupostela, Epaix, ) January 8, 1890. J One has all sorts of good luck in adven ture when wandering among the lowly of any land. A most unexpected passage from Finisterre. in Brittany, to Finisterre, in Spain, each the wildest and most romantio portion of their respective countries, resulted from becoming acquainted with the Breton peasantry and fisher folk about Carnac, Quimperle, and Concarneau. Prowling about brought me among the sardine-fishers. There are hosts of them at Concarneau. Thirteen hundred boats are in use, and the smell of curing and decaying fish is at times intolerable. But among the fishers there was an unusual excitement. One man, Pierre Floquet, formerly of Tregune, had beenmost fortunate for years. It was whisper ed among his fellows that he had somehow made league with the fairies at the old Druid stones of Carnac, at midnight of Christmas eye, long ago, since when no ill-luck could befall him. There was a legend, too, I found, which told that he was of another race, a race of strange, outlawed souls de barred from mingling with other human kind, because of some old long-ago physical curse or taint that had been put upon his an cestors. In any event, every haul of Pierre Floquet'e seine was a lucky one. "While his fellows dragged along in need-whipped pov erty, Pierre got rich, at least for a sardine fisher of Concarnean. The more I heard of the fellow, the more curious I was to know him. This was given added zest because of the wild tales told of the wondrous voyage he was about to make with his own family in his own new goelette, or schooner, which he had purchased for the, to the envious fisher-folk, astounding sum of 20,000 francs. The voyage was to Spain. I was going to Spain for a gipsy sort of tramp across that land of the Mediterranean. Why should I not become the companion of Pierre Flo quet? IXOQtTET AND SARDIXX-FISHERS. I found the devil-leagued family living in a hut under the walls of Concarneau proper, or Ville Close, which at high tide is quite surrounded by the sea, so near the water out of which their harvests had come, that twice each day it stole to the very threshold of the cabin and babbled for an hour or two with Pierre's half dozen chil dren. Then it went away with the dirt and litter of the place, saving them all mnch labor. "Why did I want to know the de spised and ostracised Pierre Floquet? That is what he bluntly asked me. Because I knew the sardine-fishers of America, and wished to learn if their sea-craft was like that of their brethren in Brittany. As Pierre Floquet believed this, after I had twice helped him with the seines over the rough waters of the Baie de la Forest, from which Du Gnesclin so savagely can nonaded the English garrison holding the old city for John de Montlort, and as I said nothing of niv hopes to join him on his voyage to Spain, we soon found a liking for each other; and this, in the confidence which came, revealed the secret motive of the voy age, the shadow which had set grimly be tween the man and his fellows, and finally gavemethesnugbertkofpassengerand friend on the Enrique ta del Meira, the Spanish named little craft which sailed out under Concarneau's grim walls with all of Pierre Floqnet's earthly possessions, chieflv con verted into checks on the Bank of Spain, Atocha 15, Madrid, for golden onzas, while a thousand Breton fishermen and their wives looked after in open-mouthed wonderment But that was a strange, wild story that came little by little from Pierre Floqnet's lips; a story that a Hugo or a Sue would have woven into a romance of the wierdest fascination. Among the Pyrenees, and the Aquitanian Mountain and Valley countries, both sides of them, especially in Spanish Oalicia, Navarre, Heuesca, Lerida and Gerona, in the French Heutes Pyrenees Gascony, Guienne, Poitou, and sparsely in Brittany, live a strange race of men called Cagots. DESCENDANTS OF THE GOTHS. The Cagots are believed to have descended from the Aryan Goths. "Wherever they live away from the Pyrenees, in France and Spain, these marked and shunned people are variously called Calliberts, Caqulns, Cacoas and Cahets. For a thou sand years they were superstitiously avoided by all other inhabitants near them. They were despised, persecuted, maltreated, re garded socially and legally as outcasts, and the superstition of the darker times attributed to them all manner of foulness. They were believed to be witches; nuvicros, or raisers of the storms and tempests, the Spanish peasantry called them. Every dark deed possible was within their power. They ex haled noxious odors. They bred pestilences and epidemics. They were companions of cats and owls, and could see in the night like them. They were completely and abso lutely ostracised, and compelled to live alone, or in quarters by themselves, and in towns and cities whenever they made their appearance, they were obliged to wear a scarlet cloth, that all others might avoid them. Down until the seventeenth century it was not considered a crime to kill a Cagot, if he offended. So Pierre Floquet and all his family were Cagots. His own storv? An hundred years before, his great, great grandfather was stoned to death in the little hamlet of Meira, on the sunny Bivadeo river, which leaps laugh ingly from the Sierra dp Tin no rim heights into Biscay Bay. Donning the garb and assuming the ways of the Gitani or gyp sies, the wife and children escaped into France, and finally settled in Brittany. They changed their name and vocation: be came fishers at Concarneau; others of the Spanish Cagots came; intermarriage re sulted. Some died and some Emigrated to America. Pierre Floquet toiled at his seines and the sardines brought him competence. With its increase came that indefinable longing that comes to know the land from whence one sprang. Enriqneta was his moth er's name. It was the name of the wile of the poor Cagot stonedto death by the banks of the Bivadeo, Meira was the village irora whence his ancestors had fled. TUB DREAM OF HIS LIFE. Pierre was realizing the dream of his life now in returning to Spain in his own ship, rich enough to be made alcalde of Meira; to bnild a great monument to the murdered outcast; to make his blood and kin re spected and feared, if not beloved; and some how I felt no mean thrill of pride and con gratulation in the pride of my fisher friend, despised Cagot though he was. Our goelette was a snug craft of 120 tons burden, and scarcely had we got out of sight of the gaping fishermen of Concarneau when our shrewd captain, stripping himself nearly naked, unwound from his body some scarlet and yellow stuff which proved to be the Spanish flag. When this was run up, everything was pronounced snug and tidy for the voyage, which, with fairly favoring winds, was accomplished in just lour days. I tound that an American's ordinary geo graphic knowledge of the Bay of Biscay is abject to modification, or rather expansion, pj even, once wiling across it, On. the maps of our youth-time it seems but a tiny, wrinkly hollow set in the coast angle north of the Spanish Peninsula and to the west of France, But its length from the Breton Finisterre to the Spanish Finisterre must be nearly 500 miles, while our sailingcourse exceeded 600. For two days and nights we skirted the French coast, by night now and then catching glimpses of warning lights, flashing or fixed, where danger lay; by day contemplating an unbroken line of plume like surf, surmounted by gray dunes of tempest-shifting sand, here and there jag gedly capped at the horizon-edge by the dark silhouettes ot stunted spruce and fir. Sailing the Florida Gulf, one says of the interminable sand and pine of the Florida coast, "Here is desolation indeedl" But in intense and awful dreariness, in the endless ness of utter desolation, it cannot be com pared with the French Biscayan coast, from the yawning mouth of the Gironde to the steely mouth of the Adour. Shortly we rounded the huge, long, flinty and lofty promontory of Finisterre, our schooner gliding into the great, silent and deserted bay like some lonely sea fowl skirting a lonelier coast for prey. TVHAT THE BAT IS LIKE. The Bay of Finisterre comprises at least 100 sqnare miles of almost fathomless water, shut in by eastern, northern and western granite walls. There is not a human habi tation in sight as you enter. The most pow eriul glass cannot descry living being or beast or fowl upon the heights or within the gorges between. There is not a single craft within the silent bay. Away around be hind one shadowy crag, hid in the stony loop of the promontory, are a few straggling huts and some fishers' boats drawn upon the beach of sand. These the sun lights up, but there is no sign of life even among them. They only intensify the grim and heart hnrting desolation to the beholder. Stern and savage grandeur is on every side. One seagull, whirling and half screaming with its whistling gurgle, starts up from some where behind the crag, and comes to us as if imploring food. Yet here it was that once 10,000 galleons paid tribute to the mighty pagan city of Duyo, and all the then known world maae homage to the mighty mistress of the sea. Hosts had been born, had mingled in her wondrons activi ties, had died, to give place to other myriad men who had lived their little lives in "the great city at the world's end." Here, too. the patron saint of Spain, St. James, had won the heathen Spaniards from Paganism to Christianity. Not so much as a block of stone or a tempest-ravaged grave can be found, as sign where Duyo was, to-day. Did the awful sea engulf it?" Can the tooth of time gnaw so fine and annihilatingly? Here should now sit, reaching with white wings of commerce the remotest places of the earth, the greatest city of Snain. Instead, in those miserable huts exist perhaps an hundred of the vilest, most ill-begotten, sodden and sinister barbarians of all Spain. No man, woman or child among them can read. They soak their bodies and besot their souls in fiery aguardiente. They are foul with sores, and reek in slime and ooze; and heaven help the helpless one that drifts alone among them. LIKE A BIP TAN WINKLE WBATTH. We came to anchor within 100 yards of the beach before a single soul had been seen in desolate Finisterre. Then a wretched sort of woman, half clad, emerged from her hut, and, steadying herself alongside the houses, disappeared within the door of the largest, which served to uphold a crumbliug portal along its iront Pierre Floquet and myself were then rowed to the shore by two ot his stalwart sons. Just as we landed the door of the large house reopened, and some thing resembling the wraith of Kip Van Winkle on his return from his sleep in the mountains, raised its hands to the sky and let them fall with an expression of surprise. comusion and utter helplessness. We stalked up the beach and accosted the figure civilly. "Pardon, in the name of God," spoke the thin old man, wbo-proved to be the alcalde of Finisterre, and wretchedly ill, "the plight we are found in. Every soul in Finisterre is afflicted unto death with some strange malady. You are welcome to port, be you Gallegans, merchantmen or pirates. If the latter, you may capture and carry off in bondage all our people, and there be none to lift a preventive hand. Would to God you were, if likewise you might rob our coast of this dread plague!" Then for the first time I found that Pierre held a Spanish tongue in his head, and it spoke with the strange accent of Galicia. He told the unfortunate alcalde his story cunningly, though making no reference to his Cagot blood; revealed the fact that he had casks of caviare and kegs of sardines, with sacks of good Breton onions and pota toes; and better yet, flagons of wine and brandy all for the honest people of Finis terre that they might join in his gladness at nearing the home spot of his ancestors. HE EXACTED A HOSTAGE. He also as cunningly told him, that when his family and goods were disposed at Meira, then himself and his eldest sons were tore turn and fish the sardines with his Gallegan brethren of Finisterre, and that meantime his handsome goeletle, Enrlqueta del Meira, should ride at anchor before his vcrv door as hostage for such performance. The wea zened old alcalde embraced Pierre Floquet ardently; but an unpleasant thought for me, in the line of his official duties, seemed to haunt him. What of the extrangero? the foreigner, who surely was no man of Meira, nor one likely to return to the sardinhas of Finisterre? Good Pierre's face grew long and solemn. Together we tried to make the official imbecile understand the harmless ness of my vocation; that I was merely a sunny-hearted viajante or traveler; a still more innocent autor or writer; and a lover of my fellow men at Concarneau or Fin isterre. Unfortunate word that one word, "autor." "Diablosl" were shouted upon them all. All evil to Spain might lurk in my inoffen sive appearing person; and the impotent, ill and harmless old wretch knew his loyal duty. In the name of the crown I must remain, under arrest. I could have thrown every cue of the stricken souls of Finisterre into the sea in an honr's gentle exercise. But I set myself as gnard over myself thatl might not escape, and, as sentinela and prisoner combined, passed my first day in Spain carrying onions, sardinha: and caviare lrom Pierre's boats at the beach, to the empty storehouse of the mighty alcalde of desolate Finisterre. Edgar L. Wakeman. HERE AND THERE. Stray Paragraphs of Newsy Gossip Cannot br Ear and Etc In a little chat the other day a Southside business man touched on a point that is well worth remembering in the line of precau tion against fire. He had been in the habit of throwing all his excelsior, waste paper, etc, in a vacant place back of the store. One day it was set afire in some way, bnt was quickly noticed and put out without alarm or any loss. Had the same happened in the cellar. It would probably not have been noticed, and there would have been a big fire. The mer chant mentioned Is a great advocate of fire pro tection In every way. He will not allow any ref use or easily ignited material space in his cellar at alL Should a fire hannen in the cellar. its discovery, until too late, is doubtful, and the smoke arising makes it nearly impossible to flcht it with good effect. Good clean cellars are one ot the surest preventives of fire. . Adoctob told a good story the other day. ot long ago two doctors were delegated by the Health Board to make a tonr of investigation or a certain district and vaccinate all those wno had not thus provided against contagion XrOIU SmallDOX. ("In A UHvnraa nthnranGnipinns .F. ,.... at.l .1 ,. . . . .. . . r . " "iu auu uuany askea "wnat Kind orcioC' tors thev were " Th.o tnM di, , ro-MRxi the regular school, whereupon she refused to allow them to vaccinate her children saying, I am a homeopathist and I'd rather have my children vacciuated with 'homeopathic stuff.' " The doctors in question had a good laugh over homeopathic virus being something superior to what they used. THKJf?111701 Gerge Washington; some AAAU thing abont the mtrint'. Wnlfh . tors: curious fact as to the origin bf the Stars """"H su ma BVRDA DESPATCH, ON SACKED GROUND. Talmage Takes Notes in and About Jerusalem and Bethlehem. HE ENDEAVORS TO BUI CALVARY, But the Moslem Owners Decline to Part With the Tenerated Real Estate. HOWDATID'S HANDSOMB SON IS HATED CSrECUX COItnESFOXDENCE Or THE DISPATCH. 3 South op Tibebias, December 16. Our tents are pitched south of Tiberias, midway between it and the famous hot sulphur baths, once enjoyed exclusively by royalty and nobility, but now the Mecca to which afflicted Jews and Gentiles from near and from far, make their way to seek health in their malodorous waters. The baths are sit uated on the banks of the beautilul Lake Galilee. We are enjoying truly delightful weather. The temperature is about 75 Fahrenheit, in the shade; balmy breezes temper the warmth of the snn. Horses and donkeys, some standing, others lying down, are resting comfortably after days of hard toil, and our various attendants are engaged in an apparently interesting conversation in Arabic Along the beach, natives wearing picturesque costumes, arc strolling in cease less procession. An occasional caravan of stately camels gives increased variety to the scene. In the saloon tent one of the waiters is setting the table for luncheon, singing or rather groaning in Oriental style, which, Dr. Talmage says, always reminds him of a protracted attack of nausea. Less than a quarter of a mile away and hard by the ancient wall of Tiberias, a num ber of Bussian pilgrims of both sexes are bathing in Lake Galilee. A hundred or so men, women and children form a semi-circle of deeply interested spectators about these people, who are clothed only in the garb of Eden. Immediately at the rear of our en campment is what is know as the Mount of Beatitudes; and it seems to he pretty well authenticated that there was the place TVHEEE CHEIST PREACHED to his disciples and a wondering multitude His Sermon on the Mount. Dr. Talmage is lying on the beach immediately in front of the encampment, with open Bible before him, making notes in a mammoth memorandum book, while the brilliantly reflected sun light causes his eyes to water. I write this letter sitting at the door of my tent, which is, by the way, elaborately decorated with exquisite specimens of Fgyptian needle work. The reader will remember that I ended my last letter with our arrival in Jerusalem through the Joppa Gate. We were made comtortable at our hotel after the hard ride of the day and remained within doors for the rest of the evening. But we arose be times to begin a comprehensive round of sightseeing. Though a city of 40,000 inhabitants, Jerusalem has not a well within its walls, and the water used is either rain water kept from the last rainy season some six months ago, or water carried in skins of animals by men or women, donkeys or camels, from wells more or less distant With thousands of houses Jerusalem hasn't one chimnev, and the traveler who, chilled by exposure or the humidity of its vault-like dwellings, needs artificial heat, must be content with the poor comfort afforded by a brasier of live charcoal, the substitute for stoves in the city. Perhaps it is due to the prejudice born of my religious training that notwithstanding all its discomforts and shortcomings as a city, its narrow lanes, innumerable dark alleys, miserable architecture, its mire and its filth, I left Jerusalem with many regrets. Of the city, Dr. Talmage said to me: "While I have been building up my ideas of Jerusalem all my lifetime, the highest summit of my expectation does not reach the base of the reality." The first morning after our arrival found us on the summit of Golgotha, the plaee ot a skull. Dr. Talmage opened the Bible he always carries with him, and read the story of the Crucifixion. The party consisted of Mrs. Talmage and Miss May Talmage, the writer and his wife, to whom the doctor pointed out at the appropriate passage in the narrative, the Damascus gate through which the Savior is said to have been led out before the tragic event that took place on the hill on which we were standing. Before leaving, Dr. Talmage said the hours he had spent on the hill Calvary were to him the most solemn and overwhelming ot all his life. There was the center from which the continents had been touched, and from which all the world would yet be moved. To him it was the most sacred place on'earth. "WHEBE CHKIST 'WAS CRUCIFIED. The reader is aware that within the med ley of buildings known as the Church of the Holy Sepulcher are shown what are claimed to be the scenes of the death of Jesus, His burial and resur rection. Where we visited is called the new Golgotha. It is situated without the city walls. After much careful examination and mature consideration, Dr. Talmage and many other eminent men, among them the late General Gordon,believe it to be the real site ot the Crucifixion. It stands immedi ately opposite the Damascus gate. No other place in or near Jerusalem so fully answers to the description in the Bible as the place of Jesus' execution. Its shape is unques tionably that of a skull. As Dr. Talmage in my opinion very correctly said: "A man need but feel the shape of his own cranium to be fully satisfied that this hill is the place of the skull." A rough outline sketch he made of it resembles the outline of a skull as one egg does another. Standing en the hill one is exposed to the view ot all passers by, "Look yonder," said Dr. Talmage, pointing to some huge rocks that seemed as it they had been torn asunder by an earthquake, "there are the seams in the Tery rocks that were rent at the Crucifixion, and there is the very road along which the people passed 'wagging their heads.' " Nearly all the archaeologists in Jerusalem agree with him in opinion as to the exact place of the Cruci fixion. After leaving Golgotha we went to the tomb which Joseph of Arimathea gave for the burial of the Savior. It is situated in a garden near by and almost at the loot of Golgotha. This tomb was excavated about three years ago. It was recognized imme diately by people capable of forming an opinion on the subject as actually the place it was supposed to be. The tomb is the only one in or near Jerusalem to enter which it is necessary to stoop, and in this respect it is unique in its correspondence with the description in the gospel. Dr. Talmage ac cepts the claim made for this cave as the one in which the sacred form was laid at rest. He produced his flexibly bound Bible as we viewed the place where" the Lord was laid, and read the scriptural account of the resur rection. "WILL NOT SELL SACKED GEOUND. As he commented upon the simple and graphic story he became possessed of an idea which prompted him to speedily remount his donkey and ride back to Jerusalem. His errand was to purchase, if possible, the triece of ground containing both the scene of the crucifixion and of the burial of Jesus. To this object he devoted the remainder of the afternoon, making considerable effort to ac complish it, but failing to do so. Fart of the land is nsed as a Mohammedan burial ground and the doctor discovered that no amount of money could persuade the Mos lems to part with the land where lie their Jucou. u.u u .ubcccucu ui uib piau to uuy I Calvary sad the tomb of Jesus, he would I M A A M I-i Af4 llA flnAAAAfAil Tkld h 1 . have made over the property as soon as ac quired to the Christian cnurch at large. The next morning we set out for Beth lehem, which is two hours distant from Jerusalem, when the journey is made with out deviation. Our gnide thought it better to show us Solomon's pools than to pursue a direct course to the place of our Lord s nativity. Accordingly we visited these wonderful specimens of skillful engineer ing, which are, even at this day, the admira tion of the world. Probably no other speci men of all the architectural creation re ferred to in the Old Testament is so well preserved as these gigantic pools, which the wisest of the Hebrew monarchs built for the purpose of insuring a bountiful supply of water for his gardens. They are now nearly 3,000 years old, and in their majesty still attest In silent eloquence the great resources and consummate skill of the men who built them. On our way to Solomon's Pools we saw what is known as the Hill of Evil Counsel, where Judas Iscariot hanged himself; also the Potter's Field, which was bought as a burial ground for strangers with the 30 pieces of silver which were the price of our Lord's betrayal. THE CITT OP DAVID. After returning from the pools we pro ceeded directly to Bethlehem, the city of David. Unlike the other cities of Pales tine, we found that it is inhabited mostly by Christians, with a few Mohammedans and no Hebrews. Its streets are narrow lanes, barely admitting a wagon of average width. We had hardly passed the gates leading into the city when our horses stopped suddenly. The street was blocked by a camel, which, being frightened at the noise made by our wagons, refused to stir an inch. After a good deal of effort he was turned, his head In the opposite direction from where it had been, and then led around the block to make room for us to Dass on. While the commotion incident to the revo lution of the beast was in progress, Dr. Tal mage and the writer left the vehicle and un dertook to walk bv way of change, but the slush and filth of the streets were so great as to compel us to return to onr canvas covered barouche. Thanks in great part to the dem onstrativeness of our driver, who was a Turk evidently in the habit of making his way in the world, we managed to pass through the throngs of people crowding the street, and reached the Church of the Nativity. We were received very politely by a monk who undertook to act as our" guide. He spoke English fairly well and did his best to explain every nook and corner of the structure. Beiore, taking us downstairs where the manger was in which the Savior saw first the light of day, he handed each of ns a lighted candle. He then led the way down to a series of natural grottoes, which nresent the appearance of a khan or inn such as are still seen in Palestine. At the head of one of these rooms formed in the solid rock, is a brilliantly lighted repre sentation of the Savior's" birth. This was pointed ont as the exact spot occupied by the manger in which reposed the Holy Child. After he had reverently surveyed the place, Dr. Talmage remarked: "The gate through which our Lord entered this world was a gate of rock a hard, cold gate and the gate through which He departed was a swing gate of sharpened spears." LONG NTTESED HATRED. When wo had returned to an ante-room of the church our guide invited us to partake of refreshments. He had prepared for us excellent tea and nice white bread. This was better than any bread we had eaten since leaving Cairo, and the honey he served us was deliriously acceptable. As the friendly monk had refused to take compensation for his companionship as our guide, Dr. Tal mage insisted on paying for the refresh ments we had taken, and availed himself of the opportunity he found in this way quiet ly to bestow a considerable sum in acknowl edgment ot the courtesy and hospitality with which we had been treated. On our'way'backrtfr;Terusaleni we'passed a Hebrew cemetery which lies under the shadow of Temple Hill. The Hebrew be lieves that there will be the scene of the great judgment Four tombs hewn out of the solid rock attract observation by their superior size and imposing appearance. Of these the Tomb of Absalom is the largest It stands apparently nearly 50 feet high, and is certainly not less than 20 feet square. Accounting for the large amount of rubbish about the base of this monument, is the fact, as I was intormed, that the faithtul Israelite does not pass it without throwing at it a stone to indicate his contempt for David's disobedient and wayward son. The stones thus thrown have made a ragged edged opening in the tomb of about 15 inches in diameter and about eight feet from the ground. I was further told that it was nec essary to clear the monument once a year of the accumulation of stones, which, often accompanied with curses, are hurled at the supposed tomb of King David's handsome son. Louis Klopsch. THEY DIDN'T MEET. Homestcnd Filth Responsible for the Pol lution of Sonthsldo Water. Yesterday afternoon was the appointed time for a meeting of the sub-Committee on Health of the Public Safety Committee, to whom was referred the resolution of Coun cilman Nisbet, relating to the abatement of the schindery nuisance at Beck's Bun. Only two members of the committee showed up, however, and they, Messrs. Nisbet and Don ley, were somewhat chagrined, for they were both prepared to ventilate their views, the result of investigation of the subject. Mr. Nisbet said he had found that the Legisla ture of 1885 had passed an act authorizing cities to abate nuisances within a mile out side of the city limits, and his researches on the subject had convinced him that the city could proceed under it against the Beck's run schindery. Mr. Donley said he was prepared to show that but very little would be gained bv abating the schindery, which, though a nuisance, was not the worst nuisance the patrons of the Monongahela Water Com pany had to contend with. Mr. Donley's personal observations had convinced him that the borough of Homestead and other up-river towns had more to do with fouling trie water than the schindery. A bend in the river near Homestead caused the river current to run down on the south side of the channel to the point where the Influent pipe of the Monongahela Water Company's works was located, and at this point an edtfy is formed, with the end of the influent pipe for a center. Consequently all the oflal of slaughter houses, sewage and other waste matter from the towns irom Homestead is carried right to the spot where it can do the most damage in impregnating the water used by the people of the Southside. Against TJnltlog. The proposition to merge the Sons of Vet erans with the G. A. B., which has been re cently mooted does not seem to gain favor among the leaders in either society, and for very good reasons. The G. A. E. men are not eons of veterans, but veterans, and the sons of veterans are not G. A, B. men, but sons of G. A. B. men. Hence the very ap parent incongruity in blending and becom ing one, as it were. Sinking Ilo.to Slowly. The. Young Women's Christian Associa tion, of the Fast End, who some time since determined to build a home for the care of the helpless of their sex, are looking around for a desirable and central location for the building. They have already secured the option on several sites, bnt are judiciously making haste slowly. HE A FY ?f Congress; the handsome and lov JJEiaiJAlngbachelorsana wealthyand ten der widowers that attract Washington girls, are described by M lis Grundy, Jr.i la TO-UOE- A CHANCE FOE BOYS. Gen. Pearson Pleased With the Nauti cal School on the Saratoga. TRAINING AMERICAN SEAMEN. President Lawrence Would Like to HaTe Some Pittsburg Lads. BUILDING UP THE MERCHANT MARINE On Tuesday last General Pearson, as Na tional Commander of the Union Veteran Legion, paid an official visit to Philadel phia, and while there as the guest of Presi dent Lawrence, of the Nautical School-Ship Commission visited the school-ship Sara toga. The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin in speaking of the visit says: "After thoroughly inspecting the vessel and seeing the boys at study the visitors re traced their steps to the deck. Suddenly the alarm bell sounded. Clang, clang, clang. Before General Pearson and his friends could gather their wits together, 06 lithe and energetic boys dashed upon deck, some from every opening, ready to suppress the names. It was an alarm of fire sounded to show the visitors how efficient the boys were in the fire drill. The result was remarkable. Some of the boys carried hose.others mat tresses and other material for smothering fire, while many held axes in their hands, ready to Tip open the deck in order to make an opening in order to give the hose full play. There was not the slightest confusion. Every boy took his assigned station, and when all had responded, which was speedily, every part of the vessel was protected. The visitors were astonished, and all the more so, when Captain Lawrence reminded them that the boys had only been under in structions a month. "We have a bright set of boys," he added, "and we expect to make good men out of them." ADMITTING BOYS. The Saratoga now has on board SG boys. These are divided into eight messes of 12 boys each. When everything is in good working shape, the school will comprise 144 boys. Nearly every day a boy or two are admitted. Two were examined to-day. About April 1 the Saratoga will start on a cruise to Fayal, one of the Azores, where she will stop awhile and then go on to Lisbon,thence XiisDon,inence to Southampton, Engla returning home some time in August. This voyage it is ex- nd, returnin This voyage pected will be prolific of great advantages to the boys. Next November it is proposed to take the Saratoga South for the winter, stopping at Port Boyal, Key West and the West Indies, returning in the spring. This nautical school has been established with a view to extend still further to American youth the fields of useful em ployment where hoys may be prepared for the important duties of the sailor, and be given so much scholastic, in conjunction with nautical, education as will enable them to enter the merchant marine service under the most favorable auspices. A GOOD COUESE OP STUDY. The Government has furnished the Sara toga with its full complement of officers. By an act ot Assembly the State of Penn sylvania and city of Philadelphia bear the expenses. The only expense of the pupils will be their clothing. The course of study is for two years, and in addition to ordinary English studies thorough instruction will be given in seamanship and navigation. The main object of the school is to edu cate American boys to become good sea men for the merchant service. In order to give intelligent and industrious youth ampleopportunityto advance to the highest position ouereu dj me mercantile marine, and to familiarize all (loosing to the pos sible contingency ot war) with the general dnties of "men-of-war's men," the discipline and routine of the navy will be observed as far as applicable. The boys will be carefully instructed under the direction of the super intendent in reading, writing, spelling, arith metic, geography and English grammar; and also all the dnties of seamen, such as boxing the compass, knotting and splicing, the strapping of blocks, reefing and furling, heaving the lead, using the palm and needle, the handling of boats under oars and sails, swimming, etc. The Saratoga is in no respect a reforma tory ship, and any boy of bad habits, or who develops a vicious character contrary to the regulations of the ship, will not be allowed to remain on board. President Lawrence in a letter to General Pearson says: "As I told you we are anxious to receive boys from all parts of the State, and would be pleased to receive some irom your part of the section. "If you send us any, we will try and, make good seamen and navigators of them, and will teach them the essentials that every man who follows the water should know, and even if your boys should want to go on the river steamboats after leaving the ship at the end of the term, they will know enough to make them valuable for that business." The boarding and tuition is furnished without cost to the boys, bnt parents must provide them with suitable and sufficient clothing during the course of study on the ship. EECALLING THE BENDER TRUL. An Old Juror Recognizes Two of Its Wit nesses One 1'rocnrlng a Divorce. Time works wonders. This axiom was exemplified to an old Pittsburger, at present serving as a juror in the Criminal Court, before Judge Slagle. In walking from the Criminal Court out into the hall, the early part of this week, he witnessed the Hon. Thomas M. Marshall conversing with several attorneys, and right alongside of Mr. Marshall, were two young women, also busy conversing. Mr. Marshall did not know the ladies, nor did they know him, although the juror was ac quainted with both parties. Twenty years ago Mr. Marshall was the attorney for Henry Bender, who was in dicted and tried lor the murder of Police Officer Stack, on the corner of Fourth avenue and Smithfield street. The eity had employed Hon. H, Bncher Swope, United States District Attorney, an eminent law yer, to prosecute Bender, and the greatest interest was manifested by the public. The case occupied two weeks in trying it, and was one of the grandest legal battles that ever occurred in the old Court House. The old juror, who was on the jury at that time, here saw the daughters of Henry Ben der standing alongside the veteran legal gi ant who, 20 years before, by his eloquence, had saved their father and had him acquit ted. The young women were married, and one of them just this week had an applica tion in the Common Fleas Court for a di vorce, which was granted on that very day of meeting in the corridor. How strangely indeed does time bring people together after many years, who are ignorant of the great issues that have come between them in the pastl The Northern Pacific: Open. The agent in this city of the Northern Pacific Bailroad Company received yester day a telegraphic dispatch from head quarters, saying that the road is open from one end to the other, and that passenger and freight trains are running on schedule time. The reports of snow blockades on that line were exaggerated. A Ter7 Natprnl Result. The new house of B. W. Hastings, at Emsworth, was destroyed by fire yesterday morning. There was no insurance except the builder's risk. Loss about (2,000. Fires had been started in all the rooms in order to dry the plasterinir. and the honss Jeft it Wim fta wnPjBb P ' A Strange Wedding. SHALL never forget, as rone as I live, the even ing when I came home form the Welton ball, where my eldest sister and I had gone alone, and where we had en joyed ourselves as two young people can enjoy themselves who have not a care in the world. I was the only son of a rich country-town banker, and, before choosing a profession, I was takingjife very easily and very hap pily. I had gone through my college career with some credit, though I might have done much better had there been no such thing as boatine or other amusements in the Ox ford world. I believe, however, that it was my great love and admiration for my mother which keDtme from running into excess of any kind. My father was very easy-going, and indulged me sadly; but my mother was al ways trying to show me how foolish waste of money was, and that, even if I could afford to be extravagant, it was harmful to my character. Some people said Mrs. Thorner was ridiculously strict in her ideas of bring ing up her children. I am sure we never thought so; and my four sisters,all younger than myself, were quite the nicest girls in the neighborhood; so at least Ithought, and I was not alone in my opinion. "Little mother." as we all called her, was in our eves the best, the sweetest ana ine most beautiful woman in the world. She treated me as if I were her friend, as well as her son, and she allowed me to share all her hopes and fears for our future. She often impressed me with the idea that I was to look after my sisters, and to think of them first, and not to allow them to wait upon me; nor was I to force my will upon them.merely because I happened to be an only son and only brother. How much I looked forward to taking mv eldest sister, Alice, to this her first ball. My father had been slightly ailing the last tew days, and my mother settled that she would stay at home with him if I would promise to look after Alice and not intro duce her to any desirable, fast young men. So off we started for onr long drive, lol- , j , , . f ,,. nnnartn !, khdh. f befilg b..ont from Hetty, is. Jj tit:....:. b Celiaand Minnie, I was very proud of Alice's beauty, and a little overanxious about her partners, till I fonnd a pretty girl for myself, after which I very nearly forgot Alice altogether. But why linger over these happy reminiscences? We had promised to get back at a reason able hour, and we were just strengthening ourselves for several hours' dancing by eating a good supper, when a waiter put a note in my hands. I tore it open and read : 1 Tore II Open and Read. "Come back at frighten Alice. 1 'once; say nothing to have sent James on horseback with this, but take a fly home immediately, xours, L. M. There was something very much the mat ter with little mother or she would not have written thus. My mind turned at once toward my father; he was taken worse; he must be seriously ill, or she would not thus have cut short our pleasure. Alice would look over my shoulder as I read the note, and I did not hinder her, thinking this as good a preparation of any for what might be awaiting us. Arthur Helston, a rich neighbor of ours, complained of Alice's hasty departure. I remember; she had promised him the last dance, but we only waited till the fly came for us and then drove off. Alice was tearful and frightened, and I tried to reassure her, to which she said: "Hugh, dear, I wish we had not come to this ball; but how could we know mother would want us?" "No, we could not guess it, Alice; but promise me you will be brave, and not cry, and that sort of thing. You are very tired, and had better go to bed when we get back. I can do everything mother may want, if there is any nursing to be done." Well, we got home at last, after what seemed an eternity; we had taken a fly from the "Bed Lion." but the horse was lame. and at the garden gate I jumped out, and took a short cut to the front door. I ran np the steps, and was in the hall in a moment No sound was to be heard; not a servant was to be seen; we were doubtless not ex pected so soon. Iran lightly upstairs, and knocked at mother's door. She opened it herself, and for a moment she said nothing. Her face was deathly pale, but she was not crying. "Mother, what is it?" I cried, knowing that it was something dreadful. "Hushl" she said. Then taking my hand she led me to the inner room, where my father lay dead. "Hugh, dearest, don't cry," she said, in an unnatural voice, "it was sudden. He opened a letter and fell back with a bitter cry half an hour after you left. Where is Alice? Prepare her. Oh, Hugh, my hoy, my dear boy, do not say anything." I folded myarms round little mother, not knowing what she meant, and drew her away from the room, for I saw she was not herself. "What should I say, dearest, but that you must make me do everything for you? I shall be your right hand, and shall not leave you. She disengaged herself from my arms and stood up against the mantlepiece so calm and so quiet that I was more horror-struck than if she had been beside herself with passionate grief. "Mother, tell me; there is something else." "Yes, Hugh, The letter your father opened was to tell him he was a beggar. The shuck of that killed him. Every penny will go the bank has failed; we are all at the mercy of the world." Some shocks are too great to realize; I was not crushed as she was. I merely smiled. "Then you and the girls will be kept by me. Spare Alice this evening; this will be grief enough for her. Trust me for the mture, nearest ntue mother. My mother gave way then and cried; blessed tears at last; they saved her life, and it was comfort enough for me to feel her dear head on my shoulder and to hear her murmur: "Ob, Hugh, my dear, brave boy; but it will be hard for you all, very hard yet every penny mnst go to pay our liabilities. We must rob no one." "Of course, mother, we will begin life again, and I will make your fortune. I am young, ana can worg, -- - l SlP p' W vMm! weeks. The greatness of our misfortunes bore me up, and my mother and the girls were heroines. But when at last all was settled the heroic spirit was not so easily kept up. It was all very well saying I would support my mother and four sisters; but even if I had been trained to hard work it would have been difficult to get a post immediately, and, as it was, I had no recom mendations except those of a young man brought up in luxury. I was forced to allow an old uncle to lend us a sum of money for our Immediate neces sities. My mother, who would not be de pendent on charity, took a small house in the country, not much better than a cottage. The girls did the work of the house, and she well, actually the dear little mother ad vertised to give singing lessons in the neigh boring town. I renewed my efforts, answered endless advertisements, and the money I got to gether by selling some personal trinkets I spent in a poor London lodging, the better to further my search for remunerative work. One morning, wearied out with failure, I took up a paper and read the following ad vertisement: "Highest references required. A gentle man, who can satisfy the advertiser as to his character and antecedents, and who can undertake the education of a young lady in Latin and Greek, mav apply in the first in stance to X. Y. Z. Strand. If all is satisfactory the gentleman may state his own terms." The advertisement was so extraordinary that I concluded it was another ingenious hoax; still, the last words fired my imagina- HUGH, DEAIIEST, DON'T CBT. tiou. So little seemed required; and I cer tainly knew enough Greek and Latin to coach a young lady, unless she were a very modern blue-stocking; and as to terms what should I ask? My testimonials were cer tainly good; I had plenty of friends who could speak for me; but 1 found these testi monials at present quite useless, for none of them could say that I had ever done a stroke of work, more than I could help, from my youth upward. Let me confess it I tossed a sixpence "Heads I go, tails I stay at home," I said aloud. The coin spun round, fell off the table, and settled at my feet. I went down on my knees and peered at the token. It was headsl 1 never waited for further consideration, but I got myself up in the most tutor-like style that I could, and off I went The given number in the Strand was a small bookseller's shop, and when I men tioned my business I settled at once that I was going to discover another hoax, as the shabby bookseller looked me over, and, then, having settled, I suppose, that I was a gen tleman, remarked: "Mr. Brown will be here at 12 o'clock; you can wait upstairs if you like. There's been a dozen gents after that advertisement already. If you prefer it, you can call again; there's sure to be plenty more." My heart sank low, butl stuck to the post "I will wait," I said. I Will Wait.IBaid. Weary waiting it was upstairs, in a dingy back room, full of old books. The room was so small that I hoped 12 more "gents" would not appear; and, happily, none came, till at last I heard a slow footstep on the creaky stairs, and an elderly man appeared. I stood up and bowed, and received in re turn a very scant salutation. The man be fore me looked like a London merchant, not ungentlemanly; but somehow the words business and money seemed written on his features. He was bald, had arav beard, deep-set eyes, which looked searching and unpleasant; his mouth I could not see, as it was hidden by a beard. "Mr. Thorner," he said, looking at my card, "you have read my advertisement; kindly tell me as much of your history as may help me to decide if you are fitted for the post I have to offer." My history was of the simplest; I kept nothing back, adding at the end of my re cital: "I did not take a first-class, but a good second; so that will show you I know enough to coach even an advanced young lady. As to anything else you may like to inquire about, the names ot my referees will snow you that you will hear the truth about me." Mr. Brown looked at the letters I handed to him very carefully. My heart beat a lit tle faster than usual. Strange as the adver tisement had been, certainly the man before me wb3 in earnest "Now, as to terms, Mr. Thorner, what salary do you expect should "the letters I re ceive abont you prove satisfactory?" I had a hundred thoughts in a minute. What could I venture to ast for the work required of me? If I were too grasping I might lose my chance, and. yet I must get enough to make my mother and the girls tolerably comfortable. I looked up, and evidently the piercing eyes opposite read my thoughts. "I hardly know," I stammered. "Of cpnrse, it was the hope of liberal remunera tion that made me come here. My mother and ray sisters are dependent on me." "That sounds well,"" said Mr. Brown, I thought a little ovnically; "but may I ask juu, sir, wuetuer you nave no ulterior J", on, nucmci jruuuoisuu ulterior mo- 1 i J I BIN 'i 3A5M ilfrspf marrying, and whether your affections are already ?" "Certainly not, sir," I said, quickly, "my mother is my only anxiety, and will" be for many years to come. It is very improbable that I shall ever marry, considering that I am without a sixpence." In my own mind I thought: "The old rascal fears I may make love to this young lady; as if any girl connected with him could weigh in the balance against my little motherl" "Very well," he said dryly, "I shall take your word for this. Excuse these pergonal questions, but they are of importance to me, and, on your side, yon are at perfect liberty to throw up my offer. As you do not name your terms, rray I ask you whether five hun dred a year, quarterly prepayment, would meet your wishes?" My astonishment was too great for words. I looked up surprised, and Mr. Brown added: "The terms are liberal, but there are draw backs to the post. You will be required to live in the country a lonely place, where there is no society. Even your pupil will not require your services for many hours in the day. I suppose you can employ your self. There will he a horse for you to ride, and you can shoot. A man brought up as you have been can do all this, but often he cannot put up with a lonely life. It is for this reason we offer liberal terms; but there is no society, and we wish you to make no friends." This was nothing to me, with the pros pect of 500 a year for my mother! I could dress and travel on, say, 50 a year, and the rest wonld keep the dear ones from real poverty nay, with some small degree of luxury. "Thank you, sir. I conclude I may, at special times, visit my mother; otherwise I can't accept your conditions. I might get JiL a little literary work to fill up my spars time." This was nothing to Mr. Brown. He waved his hand lightly, and added: "I will send you a definite answer when I have heard from your referees; leave me your address. I may add you will have no expenses, and will live in the house. Do you wish to ask anything else?" "No, sir, except yes. How long may I expect this engagement to last, supposing we mutually suit each other?" , Mr. Brown looked at me with that same peculiar searching glance that affected me powerfully. . Alter a very slight pause, he answered: .-u n v jrcaiD, auu fcucu vuu Will DSLTQ ! the option of continuing it indefinitely" He bowed me out of the room, and I re turned to my lodgings with strange, mixed feelings. I was overjoyed with the new hope; I was mystified, I was doubtful; but, above everything else, I dreaded disap- , pointment, and summoned patience to my help. How wearily the days dragged along! The third day I hardly went beyond a mile of my lodging, so that I might return at each post time. On the fourth day I took but one walk. On the filth morning I said to myself I would not stir out of doors. At last in the evening the postman brought me two letters. One was from the little mother. I opened it first, and read the last words, "God bless you, my own boy, but don't mind much it you are again disappointed. Your love helps me to bear everything." I took the letter, and looked at it several minutes, not daring to read the refusal. At last I tore it open and read: "Dear Sib Your references having proved satisfactory, I shall be glad to offer you the post in question. Kindly call at same address to-morrow at 12, when I shall give yon further directions. Youn faith fully, Thomas Beowx." CHAPTER H. Any man who has loved his mother as I loved mine will understand the pleasure I experienced when I inclosed in my next let ter a check for 100; for, besides receiving the joyful news that I was at once to go to "The Moat House," five miles from Lupton, at which station a carriage would meet me. Mr. Brown placed in my hands a check for 125,saying that he concluded I would bind myself to stay three months. I was, indeed, deeply thankful to have thus fallen on my feet, and yet I could not altogether prevent a feeling of anxiety as to what wonld be the result ot my three months at the Moat House. My good fortune seemed too good to be true; there must be a drawback, but I vowed that if the drawback could be put up with by man, it should bo endured by me for the sake of little mother. I may be forgiven for feeling intensely cu rious as I alighted at Lupton. Was my pupil Miss Brown? for Thomas Brown, Esq., had not deigned to give me any par ticulars. Would she be a very clever child, destined to be a Girton girl, and make us men hide our faces and burn our grievous laurel wreaths? Would she be, on the other hand, so spoiled and tiresome tbat I should givo up the task of teaching her in utter de spair? No, not if she were an idiot would I do that, I said, smiling to myself as the car riage drove away from the station. I expected riches, and I already saw signs of weaith the carriage and the splendid pair were worth much money. At last we enterea a large pars: ana arove lor quite a mile through a beautiful avenue now bare of leaves, then through another gate and over an old moat and round by a large eray stone castellated mansion which had been added to till the styles were various; but all was of dark, sad, gray coloring. The door was opened by a footman, who was not like the usual run of footmen. This one was quiet, dull, and evidently my ar rival was an event, for I saw him stare at me with a kind of stupid astonishment I was conducted to a suite of rooms on the ground floor. Everything was comfortable, even luxurious. I had a bedroom, a sitting room, and also another room where my din ner was now awaiting me. Nothing was wanting but life. I thought of my own . home, a mere cottage, bnt where all the girls would have rushed out to welcome me, and where mother would have made it look: like a palace. Here no kindly voice was heard, only luxury and a few stupid serv ants. I was to live alone. I had no idea of quarreling with mygood fortune, however. So I spent a happy even ing, subduing curiosity with an excellent dinner, and gratefully thanking "Mr. Brown," or whoever was master here, for Doocsneii oi choice boots. uuujkaucu Ul CUOICC DOO&S. '4 i i.-." .y- -k-,.