25 FLOATING TOT 01 ? A Trip Down the Allegheny River on a Rafl of Logs With a Tiny Bubble for a Pilot. KEITHER A JAR KOR A SOUND. J Sha Sides of the Beautiful Tallej Seem to s Be Gliding fist Like a Panorama, HOTT TO GUIDE TflE UNWIELDI CBAFT Bene cf tt Rifttmen of Zulj Dijf tsd Eteiiet Tim tht Ltnkir Begioas. 1WPITTKK TOR TTIE DIBPiTCH.3 r. HE wealth of the for. rest has come to the ' doors of Pittsburg. It came silently and al most unobserved. It freighted on none of the iron trsini of com. mecce; it was propelled bv no powerful steam- TheLaiK boats, its approach was unheralded by the merry horns of wagoners; nor did any white sail fly from its mast. Up where the Clarion river flows into the Allegheny a fisherman's rod cut a plavfol ripple in twain, and there was instantly born a tiny bubble. The bubble started off jauntily on a voyage down the romantic Allegheny. About the same time a raft of lumber, an acre in area and worth thousands or dollars, left the shore, and drifted down stream also. The bubhle became its pilot Guided by a bubblel "Whoever heard the like? Drifting with the currentl What eould be more enchanting? JCorel Methods of Travel. All torts of adventures in locomotion have fallen to the lot ol the writer in a varied career of journalism. Speeding to Cleveland at the rate of a mile and a fraction per min ute to overtake the Garfield funeral train and report the burial of the dead President dashing into a handcar on a high bridge on the way and killing seven men; riding from Pittsburg to Cincinnati on the crest of the great flood ol 1884, in the United States relief steamer, and changing to a johoat at the more perilous points; rattling down a gravity tramway in the Allegheny Mount ains with a drunken brakeman in charge; utilizing locomotives and handoars in re porting the Johnstown flood; enjoying the princely entertainment aboard Andrew Car negie's special train which carried President Harrison and a party of seven from Wash ington tn th onenin? of the Allegheny Li brary; pulled in a rough farm wagon by the borses, Beaver and Bucephalus, over 1,000 Stttrlna a fiO.000 Raft. miles of cnuntrv roads in Western Tennsyl vanial Of all'of them what oould be more novel than a rait ride to Pittsburg? A Lone Career of Floating. "Oh, yes, come aboard," cried the good natured master of the raft in question. "It's mighty slow, though, and you'll be apt to be sorry that you didn't take aValley train instead of this way of traveling. Have I been ratting on the Allegheny long, you ask? Well, yes I have. This is my third trip this season from the mouth of Clarion, and I have been taking timber down to Pittsburg for 15 and 20 years. Be fore that I used to boat oil in flat boats from Oil creek down the Allegheny to the city. I was employed on the first boat load of oil that ever came out of celebrated Oil creek. "Do I know the channel pretty well by this time? Yes, I do. Yet you could take this ratt down to Herr's Island as well as I can. Watch lor the deepest water. See that bubble on ahead there? Well, that would be a good guide. See how it's bob bing over toward that shore. We should go about in the same direction. Right! Let her go to the right a little, men!" Guiding tho Mighty Craft. And then, altogether, the four steersmen at the front of the raft lilted the great oar handles high above their beads, and, turn ing their backi to each other, walked across the rait with their faces away from shore. They kept step together. As the first reached the edge ol the rait he dropped bis oar, and at tn.it signal all the others did the same thing. Then there was a retreat, and again the oars were lilted and pushed through the water. A third time, and then the order was bawled out for the lour steers men at the rear end of the raft to push to the left once. Now the huge floor we were floating upon had swung deftly into proper position. The bubble, glistening in the sunshine, was fairly in the middle of our path, far out of reach of thchuge oars. O.irt.1 That is what they are called; but what giant oars they arc I "It doesn't pay any more to bring them back to the lumber regions by rail from Pittsburg," remarked the master. "Freights are high and we can get a fair price in town .for the 'blades.' When the raft is ready for its oars, we go out and cut down e young pine tree. The widest part of the trunk is slit, and into it is fitted a big plank, which, as vou see, has first been tapered off in the Kawmill from thick at one end to, thin at the other. That is the 'blade.' Each raft must have eight of these oars. That means eight pine trees and eight huge planks. It would Drifting With tht Ovrrtnt. be tco good freight for the railroads. Bo we eboie to cut down more pines every time than coin money for the railroads." How tha Steersman lt And now as the raft glided softly with tbe sluggish current the steersmen sat idly upon their oar handles. Each man bad a bit of board ready, and as he rested from steering for a spell he stood the hoard on end and i- in rrru7r x.-'.-l.,,.'-,.fai4r- . J4,r.- ....:3...;:zuunBiiafQBaaaBamaKBB iNtBIfllfi pMaMSaBeMaBSSgajSM lp"Wlil'll HP "" niMinpp J'"'- "'" '"'I-'"-T-flHrfTBTTilTr bringing the end of the oar handle down upon it, formed a very comfortable seat. Most ol the river timber that now goes t the Pittsburg marKet comes out of the Clarion river. It is put into that stream from the woods of Clarion and Forest coun ties, 40 and SO and GO m "lies above the mouth of the Clnriiiu. In lorraing a Clarion river "package" about 1 hemlock logs are lashed together by means of pme strips. The wo6d for this purpose is selected and sawed into small strips with great care. When dry then can be twisted into a hoop without breaking. A pine bough is laid along the ends of 15 loss. In each log a hole is bored on either side of this bough and then the pliable wooden strip looped over the bough, being held in place hy stakes driven into the holes. These 15 logs furm a "plat form." A "package" consists of six "plat forms." This is floated down the Clarion to the Allegheny river, und upon reaching that wider stream the real rait is made up. A. Clarion river raft, or the six platforms containing about 100 logs, is steered beside another one and Jashed toijt by means of larger boughs aud larger pine loops. Four of these "packages" complete an Allegheny river raft, and the rait thus formed usually contains from 400 to 500 logs, and so remark able is the economy of the construction, of the temporary craft that not afoot of rope or a pound of nails has been used. Yet it Is securely and saiely lashed together. Floating; the Dressed Lumber. Boards, or dressed lumber, are bnilt into rafts on a diffeient plan. -A "platform" is ouilt eight boards high, and fastened together bv stakes mortised through all of them. One platfortn contains 50,000 or 60,000 feet of boards, and as it takes nine platforms to make a complete board rait that would represent a large amount onioney. "For instance, there is an immensely valuable raft of pine boards," reuiarfced my rftsmau host as we floated pt Lngan!s eddv, the next day. "It contains 400,000 or 500,000 feet of boards, besides the shingle, lath, etc, lying on top. Pine is the bonanza in the lumber market at Pittsburg tins ye ir. Just think of ill That there rait of 400,000 ; TILLAGE OJT THE "WATES ABOVE feet of boards yon Bee is worth 15 cents per foot. And what's more the owner is Andy Cook, ot Cooksburg, on the Clarion, and he will get full prices for it It took all year to cut, slide, hew, saw, plane and raft that one lot of boards, and Andy's usual custom is to tie up at Logan's eddy, 14 .miles from Pittsburg and wait until your city lumber merchants are readv to accept his prices. He would let the raft rot there but what he got what he fixes bis heart on. But then 'Andy is rich and can afford to hold his lumber all year if necessary. We poor jobbers can't." f Some TTell-Known Raftsmen. "Yes, Cook got rich on lumber. Do you know, sir, the first 1,000 that ever went up into Clarion county came from Pittsburg? It was taken back by raftsmen and we're still at it. It's true that Clarion county has made money out of oil, but her real wealth had its origin in her trees. You Pittsburgers ought to be familiar with some names con nected with the Allegheny river rafting business. There was Sam Short, and Joseph Hyde and J. Cobb. Did you ever hear how Short lost $41,000? I guess not. You'retoo voung. He had that nfoch gathered to gether to raft to Pittsburg, when the great flood of 1865 occured. It took away every log. Hyde lost a lot, too. The two agreed to divvy with Cobb it he would start down the river In search of the lost logs and gather them up. He recovered a good many thou sand dollars worth, but before the division was made Cobb failed and Short and Hyde got nothing. "Ah, yet, my friend, hemlock is not worth much this spring," and the genial raftsman surveyed his great raft of hemlock logs du biously. He paused, as though calculating the tremendous amount of bard labor ex pended in bringing them down from their virgin condition to this perfected state. "But MAKING TXP THE SAM! AT they were cut aud so we hare to sell them for what we can get. "Now, you see, the fates were against us, one way or another," he continued. ''Win ter before last we had no snow, and couldn't get to the rivers with our logs. And here the past winter we had .entirely too much snow. The hemlock market is practically elutted,.I henr, the lumber bringing only Gyi and 8 cents. Oak brings 9 and 10 cents, and pine, which is scarcest, is selling for 15 cents. But last year pine sold for 20 cents and oak for 13. Andy Cook is said to have secured 22 cents for his pine in 1890." IJvInc; lu a Floating Xlonse. Probably half the rafts on the Allegheny this year carried shanties aboard. These often housed women und families of children bound for Pittsburg on their only excursion of the year. The shanties are put together of dressed boards as temporary as possible so as not to injure tbe boards lor a sale. In a .shanty is a portable cooking stove, a kitchen, and three or iour bunks. There is a community of these shanties on the rafts that mske their rendezvous between tbe Forty-third street bridge, and Pine creek, at Pittsburg, which is a verita ble village on the water. One day last week it had a population of 100 souls. From Logan's -eddy down to Herr's Island a distance of 14 miles there was some where in the neighborhood of three-quarters' i ot a million dollars worth oi timber rafts and lumber moored last week. Next to Logan's eddy,' a favorite ierminus-for rafts, J is Muiingr eddy, opposite iiulton; sharps burg, Pine creek", Lawrenceville and Herr's Island. Leaving their rafts at these near points above, the owners come on to Pitts burg by rail and negotiate for tbe sale of their lumber. Back and forward the rafts men and purchasers flit on the railroads, and at last when tbe dicker is completed the raft is broken up and' floated down to Duqnesne way in small sections. A 'ide on a raft is uK&tialljr without In. z : ' , - . . ,. - '- i-,.-MsMw.iajrai MiMIMlli f THE cident Shut your eyes and you could, not make yourself believe yon are on anything moving. There is no noise because there is -ibsolutely no friction. Not even a ripple in the water is heard. But with open eyes and a keen appreciation ot the rugged scen ery of the Allegheny Valley on a balmy, supny spring day there is ample enjoyment in the experience. A Pleasure to Travel So. Farm houses, aud trees, and people do not seem to be whisking past you in the twinkling of an eve as they do when seen from the windows of a railroad train. There is not the ceaseless' throb and vibration of the floor beneath you that racks the nerves aboard a steamboat. No jarring thing dis turbs one on this journey by rait. It ie a genuine panorama that is passing on either shore, because we glide by houses, trees and people so slowly that there is time for the eye to absorb them all. The charm of it, though, is in the indescribable quietness which seems to invest everything. W.e are driiting with the current, and the current is almost imperceptible in its movement. With the softest glide we round tbe sinuous FORIT-THIKD STREET BRIDGE. bends of the river. On and on we go, and all without a sonnd, without a tremor and apparently without motion. The eddies are the favorite haunts of the raft. Between the mouth of Clarion river and Pittsburg the names well known to raftsmen are Miller's eddy, Gray's eddy. White's eddy, Logan's eddy and Hulings' eddy. The last two named are in Allegheny county and arenamed after families cele brated in the history of the Allegheny river. Logan's eddy is jnst below Logan's Ferry. Alexander Logan settled there and established the ferry in 1786, clearing a large plot of forest three miles in extent and trading with the Indians. Hulings' eddy is named after Major Hulings, grand father of the present Colonel Willis J. Hulings, of Oil City, who was also an In dian trader, and who purchased from the savages the first lot of timber ever rafted down the Allegheny. L. E. Stofiel. YOU KAY KEEP THE CHAHG2. A Pretty Little Ragamuffin Who Was Ont on a Big Spree. New York Herald. 3 She was. about 9 years old, and she was swinging along lower Broadway with a great air of taking everything in as she went along, aud enjoying herself very much. She did not seem to think about herself or mind the fact that one toe was coming out ot her shabby shoe, or that there was a bole in her old, faded woolen hood, from which waved a small plume of flaxen hair, or that her soiled cotton dress was not a very warm covering uqsuppleniented by any wrap in the raw, damp air that lovely spring, was just then treating us to. She plunged into the crowd around some workmen who were lajiug a pipe; she crit- THE CLARION'S MOTTTH. ically examined the leg of the man who ex hibits some form of masculine garters on bis own person, and then coming to an apple stand kept by an old woman she did the thing that makes her worth "nutting in the paper;" she laid down a coin, a nickel, I suppose, and picked up an apple. Just as she was getting ready to plant her teeth in it the old woman held out her hand with the cjiange and now if I could just show you the happy, the magnificently kind gesture with which that bjessed ragamuffin of a young one took that old woman's wrist and pushed it back she was not going to spoil her spree taking penny change from a poor old woman, not much that was what the movement saidr-and then she moved off a step, aud after stopping an Instant to take a monster bite she swung on down the street with never a glance backward. DBEW f ICIUBES OF GEEELET. A Story Told of the Splendid Woman Who Was Mm-xied Jtccontlj. New Yorlc Tress. When Horace Greeley was a regular at tendant at Dr. Chapin's Church, there was always to be seen at his side a bright-eyed little girl. She was a mischievous young ster, and the people in surrounding pews Sometimes discovered that, with a paper and penoil in hand, she was drawing a picture of her dear old father nld-nid-nedding in his seat Borne of the very strict churchgoers, who believed that no sin was excusable in church except that of going to "sleep, pre dicted a very bad end lor the mischievous little girl; but, is tht fairy books' say, she grew and she grew, and afterward became a very good woman. Thisself-same mischievous girl is Miss Gabrielle Greeley, who became the wife of the lie v. arrant Montrose Clcndenin Xhurs' day, April 22, Tht Iloatmg Shanty. . - - I PITTSBURG DISPATCH. WEALTH'S PENALTIES. New York millionaires Coyer Their Houses With Bolts and Bars. DOK'I DAEE SIT IN THE WINDOWS. If tbe World Knew Jay Gould Better It Would Think More of fllm. RICH MEN WHO ARK 'DEMOCRATIC tCOHRlSFOHDENCa OT THS PISrATCS.l New Yoek, April 25. A short, very slight man, with the build .of a girl, was' leaving a brownstone mansion, at Forty seventh street and Fifth avenue, the other morning, when a very buxom young lady cantered her horse to the curb In front of the door and '-dismounted, with the aid of a groom who bad beeu riding another horse by the side of hers. The operation of aid ing the young lady to dismount consumed something .like a minute of time, and this was sufficient for the assembling of eight or ten pedestrians, who formed two thin lines across the pavement, on either side of the front stoop and the carriage block. It was very natural that these spectators should linger there, for the mansion was Jay Gould's, the man was-Hhe millionaire speculator and the young lady was his only daughter, Miss Helen. In New York we do not see as much of our fellow-citisens as if the town were smaller. We get lost in our own crowds. Even to me, who am about all the time, it is an event to run across Gould, as I did on this morning of which I speak, or to chance upon Grover Cleveland plodding down Broadway with his still faithful Colonel Lamonf, or to be hold from afar the gloss and sheen of Colonel Elliott F. Shepard, by far the best dressed and neatest man in town. Go aid Isn't Very Accessible. But I could not help feeling, as I pansed for an instant while Jay Gould waited to kiss his pretty daughter good morning, that the instant ol publicity was one of great un pleasantness to the millionaire. It is not merely mv own but a general estimate that he is personally the most cautious of his surroundings among all of our great men. He has had some cause to mistrust the gen eral hodge-podge of humanity, because early in his great career he was violently assaulted, and since then he has been an noyed by cranks in some instances that have been made public, and I snspect in more that the publio kuows not of. For these reasons it is, I suppose, that be is next to never seen alone, that he employs detectives for his safety and that it is easier to see the raw gold in tbe vaults of the sub-treasury than to get access to him in his office or his home. , lu one respect Mr. Gould is like Mr. James G. Blaine, lor they both give their acquaintances the impression that they make the most of their slightest ailments. Perhaps it is not fair to compare Gould, who is only slightly dyspeptic and who keeps about all the time, with Mr. Blaine, who I Almost a Monomaniac with regard to the variations of his pbysioal condition. The slightest Indisposition alarms the great statesman exceedingly, and it is said that lie will shut himself up in his home for four days when he has a sligh cold, or for a whole day if he is threatened with a headache. Mr. Gould' keeps to his private car for bed and board whenever he travels, solely because of. the systematic care he believes it'is necessary to exercise to keep his health. It has always seemed to me a misfortune that he thus,' for one reason or another, retires so completely from the scrutiny of the public. It is a misfortune because, from what I hear of him, I have drawn the conclusion that he has many personal qualities that would attract publio ndhiira- lion, if there was ahy public knowledge of them. It has lately been the custom for the very rich men on Fifth avenue to bnild extensions of glass and iron to their houses, always opening out of their dining rooms and always filled with flowers and 'palms and ferns. One deep philosopher friend of mine calls these extensions the abdomens of tbe avenue," because tbey are usually arched lite an alderman s corporation and because they mark the location of the dining room in every case fit monuments to what Carlyle called "the age of the belly." Jay Gould and His Flowers. Of all these flower-crowded extensions. Jay Gould has the largest and the one that contains the choicest collection of not:house treasures. It is lit that this should be so, for among all our rich and our great men none is more lond of flowers or better versed in their study than he. His neighbors on the aveuue make their dining rooms the chief features ot their bouses, und use the extensions and the greenery within them" merely to enlarge and to beautify these ban queting halls.' The flowers serve as screens behind which to hide a handiul of musi cians in some houses; iu others, the main. purpose or the extension is to provide a place for the keeping of the palms, lilies and ferns that are set upon the tables on great occasions. As Hamlet said of the play, "the dinner's the thing" in all these bouses. But it is not so in Mr. Gould's case. He likes the flowers for their own sakes. His nature 'goes out to them; he fondles and trains and studies them; and at his summer home in Irvington he keeps every sort of flowering plant that his money can buy and that will endure artificial conditions. There must ba-a broad strain of gentleness in such a disposition, and it is evidenced quite as strongly again iu Mr. Gould's fond ness lor his home and his family, within whose circle he is idolized in return for his devotion to it.' Better'yet, he must be cred ited with children that are as sensible as any rich man's children iu the town. An Ago of Household Armor. It seems to me that a timid millionaire is a p'er'ect representative of the wealth of New York City. There is no other wealth like it. It lives behind bolts and bars a forti fied, prisoner-like existence. You sec the houses of dukes aud earls in Belgravia in Loudon, and of princes in Fans and Berlin, but you see nothing about those mansions to give you the idea that the people within them are leading a frightened existence. Good and plentiful police without and hosts of servants within give those aristocrats a sense of securitv that has never been dis turbed in time of peace. But "on Murray Hill and on Fifth and Madison avenues iron bars and gratings confront you on every house. Between the formidable portcullis that is lowered across Mr. Tiffany's doorway at night, and tbe huge bent bars of iron that cage the windows of Henry Villard's base ment, there is every sort and gradation of household armor on Murray Hill against the thieves that break through and steal. So far as I know, without exception, every rich man's house has all its lower windows barred with iron' and every one has either solid or grated basement doors, both front and back. The second-story windows are mainly free of these devices, but even some of these are grated, and you will scarcely find one that has not got a Fan-Shaped Guard of Spiked Bars set in the window corners to keep thieves from stepping upon tbe window sills to cut out the panes of glass aud let themselves in. The doors have innerdoors and bolts and chains, like prison gear, and inside shutters,4 otten lined wun iron, are sunsuiuteo lor tbe outer shutters of olden days. High and massive walls of masonry surround the yards, and savage-pointed railings surmount the walls. These devices reveal better than words can tell the uneasiness and anxiety ef the aver age rioh New Yorker. It is a heavy interest that men and women pay upon wealth, heavier than usurers extort, even though it be not measured by dollars. -I often think of this cost of carrying riches when I see the Tanderbilt. Astor and other millionaire women going in their carriages to ex-Post master James safe deposit bank in Forty- jjkoeo. street jm sacs ino (jjamonds ana 1 STJNDAy, " APEIL '25, other Jewels they have taken out to wear at a ball or a wedding. The safes at their homes, in which the minor jewels of everv day wear are stored, must be in themselves a source of deep anxiety, and it is with a vast sense of relief that tiiey see the bulk of their jewelrv locked up in the vaults of cast steel in Fortv-second street before they-de-part for Europe or their country houses in the summer. Couldn't Look at the Procession. I thought in a new way of the penalty of riches as I stood watching the pageant in which General Sherman's casket was the most conspicuous object. It happened that exactly opposite where I stood, on Fifth avenue near Thirty-fourth street, was the mansion of William" Astor, whose son's marriage with Miss Willing recently" took placejn "Philadelphia. All the shades in the windows were pulled down except in the basement, .where the servants were massed and were looking out at the parade. The little vagrant street boys had packed them selves on the grand staircase oi brown stone and a few stood on the stone balustrade. Every now and again when ajiew burst of music heralded the approach of a band lead ing yet another division of the grand pa geant, I would see the shadesfin the upper windows pulled a trifle to one side and some members of the great laud baron's family would furtively peep out upoa the grand moving scene of uniformed meg. A code of etiquette all their own made it impossible (or undignified, which is the same thing in their case) for an Astor to deliberatelyvsit iu a window and enjoy the rare spectacle, yet thej were human and they could not resist stealiug an occasional glimpse. at that which they knew was inter esting the whole nation and had attracted between 800,000 and 1,000,000 s'ouls to line the route ot the parade. The ragged street boys who trespassed on their stoon could do what the Astors wanted yet did not dare to do. Channcey Depew's Easy Life. We have some very rich men who do not allow their riches to hamper them in these ways, to be sure.' . Chauncey U. Depew, for instance, though not himself a millionaire, is the custodian of more millions not his own than any other lawyer in America. He manages tnose ol the Vanderbilts and those of the estate of the late Horace F. Clark, as well as of other old or departed friends, but he ha"s never altered the easy-going, com fortable habits of his hardest working days, and you will meet him on foot ten times to once that yon sec him in his carriage. Just now he has been having an experi ence that mu6t seem very queer to him, con sideiing that he is the best known man in town. He has long been a member of ie Century Club, as he has of a score of leagues and clubs and circles. For years he cotild not go to the Century Club because it was down town and he was up town, hut since it has opened its new house- iu Forty-third street be has been dropping around there lor a midday bite once in awhile. The few who lounge there in the daytime have happened to be Men Who Do Not Know Him. and he has had the astonishing experience of walking through the rooms and sitting down to bis luncheon without being recog nized. Not only that, but when he asks for his account the waiters say, "Your name, please?" just as they would to some beard less young fellow who has just been elected and is making his bow to the premises. The famous .Rockefeller brothers, Will iam and John D., are very plain and natural in their wavs and mingle freely with the medley of humanity that make's up Dr. Armitage's old Baptist Church on Fifth avenlie. If is a thoroughly demo cratic sight to see "Brother William" passing thj plate on Sunday mornings, but one can no., help wondering what he must think as he rakes all the pews on his aisle to find at the end that he has only collected ?20 or 525 when his own income in the same number of minutes amounts to a larger sum and when he could put his hand in his pocket and buy the church itself as you or I would buy a popcorn ball. Hi WW John attends "class meetings" end relates his religious experiences, precisely as he did when be was a poor and struggling man. When he Speaks of his wealth he refers to ninisen as "tne trustee of the Lord" or as "the custodian of the Lord's wealth," and those who know of his extraordinary bene factions are not quite as strongly inclined to smile at the words as those who think them mere empty phrases. Wnys of Spending Money. "Uncle Russell Sage continues to be as democratic as 'any millionaire the town boasts. I saw him the other day, under his slouch hat, iu his old-fashioned carriage, leaning out and bandying chaff with a lot of young hoodlums whose talk amused him. The city has had little influence upon Mr. Sage. I wonder the bunko men ' do not sometimes mistake him for a stranger. So far as our born New York millionaires are concerned, I do not know one whose wealth" has puffed him upor made firm timid. Tbey bar and bolt their houses, however, and build them as near like burglar-proof safes as they can. A little knot ot Standard Oil and other millionaires, who live near one another on the sound, keep a private car, fitted up like a clubhouse, to be bitched to whichever train they all agree to take into and out of town every night and morning. This is not done forexclusiveness so much as for sociability and comfort. The same sort of arrangement is provided for on tbe'new Long Branch steamers. Pri vate cabins cost as high as $500 for the sum mer in addition to the fare, but they find plenty of takers among the verv rich men who live along the .coast. Some like to gamble, some like to drink, others like to take tneir hats and coats off and. lounge about, and still others like to be exclusive. It is with money as it is with war. The stronger you make armor the more powerful do the missiles become, and the more rich men there are the more varied are the de vices of the world at large for making them spend their money. Julian Ralph. THE QUEER BATHED UT BLOOD. An Old Dutch Legend That Originated a JUethod of Punishment. Tne Dutch, who settled ju-Elizabethtown, N. J., in 1786, brought with them from the Fatherland a mode of execution that was tbe result of an old Dutch legend, which re lates that in olden times a reigning queen had a habit of bathing daily in human bjood, says the New York Press. No me(bod was then known of extracting all the blood from the. body, so that hundreds of lives were daily sacrificed to satisfy Her Majesty's eccentric desire. As there was great danger ol depopulating the whole country, the court lool conceived the idea of the "zffrow," a wooden shell shaped like a woman and lined inside with hundreds of daggers. The victim was placed inside, and by touching a spring trap the machine would close violently and riie unfortunate wretch would be pierced through and through with hundreds of holes, through which the life's blood vould.swifiIy pass out. The blood, would pass down through a pipe leading to the Quceu's bathtub, and when sufficient was in She would bathe. The ma chine sacrificed thousands of young maids and boys, whose blood the Queen preferred to tbe blood of adults. Following the regime of carnage, the machine was used for the execution of criminals up to the eighteenth century, when it was discarded in this and the mother country. Hard to Capture. Jewelers' Weekly.3 A New York firm a few days ago re ' ceived an order for a souvenir spoon to gratify the whim of one of the natives of New Jersey. The emblem required was a mosquito. .Considerable trouble, it is said, was experienced in finding a satisfactory model tbe text books on Insectology fur nishing, it seetis, very meager illustrations of the famous and greatly feared disturber of men's dreams. Alter a diligent search and tnuoh Inquiry it was discovered that an adventurous apprentice of the company had eaptured a fine specimen of the insect dur ing tbe summer and had preserved the con quered free lance impaled nnnn a nfn Thereupon there was "great rejoloing iri'the "factory and the- Jersey customer was made nappfr , fijfeiL M&&Emm Sjha3 3feSjSifa-Ji.r 'sti, dL.&J'feiSflsftis. JtriHalj?T.--ip TiJiL-,Otfj. ! ..' JjfrSuJ'l.i'1- 'xiijiL i. ' j.r r "1 Vrb&-TJi1il'ti''Jtf!tiii.itii?r.rri i ilffiiiittfW' '"si-1-. S Lfistfer rrCTtl't?' JwSgAJ&flslfctfslB 1891. SPIRIT OF OLD ABE. Analysis of the Speech Fat in His Month by MrF. Richmond IT DOESK'T READ LIKE LIHC0LS. Kone of the Marljr Fresldent'i Story and Simile in tbe Effusion. WHAT HIS GHOST MIGHT HATB TOLD IWMTTE1C TOB THI DISPATCH.! The latest new thing perhaps in Spiritual ism recently published is a discourse from Abraham Lincoln relating his experiences in the spirit land. This speech was given by Mrs. Cora Richmond, who claims to have been possessed by the spirit of "good old Abe," wha came from beyond the stars somewhere, and furnished the brains and the inspiratiop. Those who have been looking forward to this revelation will be wofully disap pointed for a much dryer'or more tedious five columns of verbiage, it would be hard to find outside Of the long drawn-out doc trinal sermons of the old-time preachers who were paid, as Mrs. Richmond is, to set forth all .the mysteries and miseries of the unknowable, What is truly, won derful is that anybody can believe that putting off tbe mortal form could make such an amazing change in the powers of the great war President. When he made speeches here on earth be was eloquent by sheer force of truth and plain speaking. He rarely failed to point a moral and adorn a tale by a little story a touch of pathos, or quaint humor, but he seems to have grown strangely dull and pompously solemn in bis utterances as an angel. Some of the sentences afe as many as 23 lines long, and tbey have to be read a half dozen times or more before the point when point there is is discovered. Requires Culture to Comprehend. To reach what he is driving at it is neces sary to be familiar with the profoundest conventional cant of Spiritualism, and must have embraced heresy of tbe wildst type and be prepared to accept as solid truth a contradiction of the most orthodox articles of belief. If be had talked as he did on earth with what gladness and deep interest would his countrymen listen to rcmarksl If be had given token that since putting on immortality he had lost none 6i his power of Impressing an audience, if, he had marked the paragraphs that were especially intended to be forceful and convincing with a preceding typographical fist or index fin ger as he usually did, if he had sat down upon some of the fanatics of to-day, as he did upon some of the rabid Abolitionists of his time", if it could have been shown by .Mrs. Richmond hat it was really the bona fide spirit of "Father Abraham," held in such patriotic remem brance, that possessed her, and was speaking for the benefit of the nation he so much loved, the speech would have been published throughout the country, and filled the round world for that matter with transcendent in terest. If Mrs. Richmond is familiar with tbe his tory of "good old Abe," when in his boy hood he was rescued from ignorance and degradation by his saintly stepmother, Sally Bush when he practiced law obscurely iu Illinois when in the fall glare of public life he achieved fame and obtained a place in his country's story second only to that of Washington, she could hardly have represented him as prosily tiresome in his speech on the government of the world beyond, as was Senator Blair on tbe educational bill when he meandered along at such length of bore dom as to empty the Senate chamber every day for weeks, and made it a cause of won der that tbe verv chairs and desks did not cry out against Boch infliction. One of Old Abe's 'Earmarks. Mrs. Richmond might not thought It Was nice to introdnce any of "Old Abe's" good stories Into, a speech on so grave a subject, but it would have been a real relief from the deep solemnity and spiritual stuffing if he had answered the conundrum, with which, as Ben: Perley Poore relates, he used some times to stave off persistent office-seekers and to which no reply has ever been given so far as we know: "What is the difference .be tween an Amsterdam Dutchman and any other"dam' Dutchman?" Some such illus tration of "Old Abe's" characteristic style would have enlivened the discourse, made it more true to nature and supported the testimony of DryJen and spiritualists themselves when he says: We snlrlts have jnst such natures We had for all the world, when human crea tures. Lincoln passed the barriers between this earth and the world invisible on tbe 14th of April, 18G5, and returned in spirit on the 15th of February last in Chicago. Whether he ever was down before we do not know, though, judging by what the spiritualists tell us, he spends the main portion of his time in "England. In his Chicago address he announces that wheu he" so suddenly found himself transported "beyond the beautiful river" he had three distinct causes of regret. The Martyr's tQhree Kegrets. The .first was because, in the fulfillment of the duties assigned him, he bad not been more perfect or brought more perfect powers to tbe solution of such gigantic problems. This is sad. It seems to give a little color ing to Wendell Phillips estimate of the President that "he was a small man that as a pint p'ot he was full, but as a quart meas ure he was not so full." But tbe world knows of no man that could better have filled the place of Lincoln in the great Civil War. The second regret was the Arrow of the family, friends and the nation. The.third was that the human fqrra, that had become useless by its occupant no longer existing in it. should have been .made the subject ot such 'ostentatious display, such long con tinued exhibition, while the living spirit, grieved by apparent neglect, waited recog nition by the fires of the nation's altar. "Many spirits," he adds, "feel this keenly. That the physical image receives such adu lation, while the spirit, flooded with its new 'lound light, scarcely receives a thought, is indeed a subject unworthy ot considera tion." What the lamented Lincoln really meant by this reproach is not very plain to see. Ingoing honor to his remains the country Was certainly living up to its light, and as to his spirit "not receiving a thought, it Was universally set down that no man was more entitled tb the glory and happiness of heaven than be. No Chance to Praotloe lair. It will strike the denizrns of earth as strange that-according to his statement, given through Mrs. Richmond, Mr.LincoIn finds his.occupation as a l.urver gone in the "world over there." There is no formality of law in the new state. Mock courts and legislatures are held by those still tethered on the border land .by some earthly weak ness or ambition, but they are only such as school boys or amateurs play tit here below. This will be news for the lawyers. He also said that spirits are naturally at tracted to their homes. The Northern spirits went to the North, 'and tbe Southern spirits to tbe South, but there was no war fare among thenu In the further state ment that tbe spirits of Italians and Hun garians 'and Chinese would naturally go home, there will be found comfort for many in this conntry. One of the strange things told by the spirit of Lincoln is that "spirits assooiate together from similar conditions, tastes and desires. They may not ha've known each other on earth, while those who have been associated iu reUtionahip or necessity in this mortal lite will sometimes not find themselves together in the .spirit life; indeed, many never . see each other at all." This will be good news for those unhappily married. The wife who has been wedded to "a clod. Ojrtiea ihejpuiej bejg-i.dyjw TU will jfeidJAuBHS?A 93-34 Wsjterjtreet, aajo Mho did hie dinner, ! - . . .. '-..'.. A her soul's mate, while "the clod" will link to the condition of congenial clods. He Knocks Dante Out. .Another piece ol information is the same, in different words, to wit, that there Is no "great white throne" to be found- any more than an orthodox eternal fire, where, among the flames, there'will be wailing and gnash ing of teeth forevermore. Dante was wrong when he peopled the Inferno with souls lost forever. These, according to the spirit of Lincoln, are' only for the time being inlfill ihg the conditions incident to their earthly states. Milton was wrong when he made Hades a permanent place instead ot a transitory one between the earthly and diviner, kingdom. The purgatory of the Roman Catholic is sufficiently extensive for, him to repent of all his earthly sins. The purgatory idea is correct, and tho Andover heretics are all right as to the "state of probation." These conditionslast in the spirit world only until they are outgrown. Another interesting fact as reported is that the "congress of spirits" are not both ering themselves much about the Govern ments of America. Europe or the Orient, but "are intent upon impelling minds on earth who are in positions of Influence and power and are sufficiently intelligent to draw from the knowledge of the skies and the moral resources ot the universe such thoughts as shall make the law makers of all countries seek to legislate more nearly like those of tbe skies, and asa shall tend to give mankind a broader opportunity for tbe highest that is within humanity. Instead of troubling or caring for the puerile schemes of commerce and the worship of Mammon this "congress of spirits" wait sometimes silently and sadly above the halls of legislation for one to rise who may be in spired with a better word and a higher truth to manhood. He Is Something of a Socialist. It may be inferred from some of his re marks that "Old Abe" has growh to be an Anarchist, and is now an upholder ot the red flag of Socialism. However, as he con cludes' that this heavenly condition of thing? can scarcely be expected to come for 100 years or more, it is hardly worth while to dwell bs be does so lengthily upon this theme. It maybe said that the gist of his whole argument is" thatonly "Spiritualism" can be relied upon to get the world straight. But, alter all, Lincoln's coming down in the spirit would have beeu decidedly more interesting if he bad jjiven his personal ex periences, rather than a dissertation upon spiritual government. Who would not like to have heard of his meeting with "led and "Willie" of his seeing Sally Bush aud his first love, whose death embittered his earljrlile of bis talks with Stephen A. Douglas, of his encounter with Horace Greeley and Wendell Phillips and Simon Cameron and Conkling? Who would not like to hear reliable news of Secretary Stan ton, Chief Justice Chase, Charles Sumner and bluff Ben Wade? Who would not ap preciate news concerning the present goings on of Grant and Sheridan and Hancock and Sherman? ' A Grand Reception to Sherman. By the way, although the spirit of Lin coln said nothing of his friends and com panions in the spirit land, a medium iu are cent spirit circle in Detroit.who was possessed by tbe ghostof asoldiernsmed Charles Hblt, who was killed at Cold Harbor, gave the in formation that a grand reception was given to Sherman in the spirit land'on the night -of February 16, at which all the soldiers on that side were present. The sight, be says, was beyond description." Sherman was re ceived by Lincoln, Grant and Sheridan first, and then treated to a rousing welcome from all the assembled spirits ot tbe rank and file. Speeches were made bv the snirit3, songs were sung and "Sheridan's Ride" was recited. Doubtless "Marching Through Georgia" was shouted by these heavenly hosts, although this fact is not mentioned in tbe account. All the spirit soldiers from the different worlds are said to have been present on this occasion. One of tbe spirits located ou Mars has promised to relate his experiences on the red planet. His story will be awaited on "the tip-toe of expecta tion. A." With ail these wonderful manifestations aud communications from the- "great beyond" it seems clear that the world will soon be well posted on the subject of ghosts, and be able to call up spirits at' will for all the information tbey desire on what goes on beyond the blue. It may be that the time will come when Spiritualism can show itself to be based uporr something more substan tial than the jugglery now manifested by way of daik cabinets and slate writing. Indian spirits and "s&b," but it has not yet arrived. How people can be taken in and deluded by rappings, table tippings, projections through stone walls ol live terrapins and flowers, serving up of letters every morning from the Empress Josephine, and all the varieties ot delusion and illusion is past the comprehension of reasonable people. Be-jSie Bramble. . THE MEECrFULAU"ACOHiA. A Fable Built 'After the Style Invented by One JEsop. Somervllle Journal.! A Fawn was bounding along the edge of a thicket, when an Anaconda sprang forth and seized him; and, winding his body around .the unfortunate creature, held him fast in his coils. The poor Fawn, after struggling in vain to escape, cried out: "Oh, sirl have pity, for even now, asl passed tbe jungle, something struck me in the side, and now you cruelly detain me." At this remark the Anaconda glanced at the Fawn's side, when be saw that a wound bad been, made there by a poisoned arrow; and having an aversion for tainted meat, he released his hold, and said, with quiet dig nity in his tones: "Go, sir, to your people, and tell them from me that the Anaconda has soft spots on his heart and knows when to be merciful." On hearing these words tbe Fawn glee fully fled; but died upon reaching the threshold of his home. Whereupon, the Anaconda, in lieu of a meal; found amuse ment iu tying himself up in a very peculiar kind"of a'knot, which he had learned from a shipwrecked sailor. He is indeed audacious who expects a reputation as a philanthropist for limply being good to himself. FOUND TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS. A Maine Lad VTho Could Have Had a Small Fortune If He Had Ueen Dishonest. "Walter Mills, a boy employed in Adams Brothers' boot and shoe store, Bangor, Me., was walking on one.of the streets the other day when he saw an ordinary-looking pack age on the sidewalk, which be picked up. A moment's examination showed him that it contained a big roll of bills, and before disturbing them he looked around to see if the owner was uear. Just ahead of him was a stranger, and the boy, much excited at his find, rail ahead and touched hjtu on the arm.' The man turned and young Mills said: "Have you'lost anything, sir?" The hands of the stranger flew to his pock ets, and his face paled as he exclaimed, "Great God. I have lost $2,0001" - Mills asked no more questions, but thrust tbe package into the bands ot the lucky man, who proved to be Ira W. Davis, of Eas Co'rintb, brothcrof ex-Governor Davis, and a country lawyer, who had come to Bangor to transact some business. He of fered the boy a liberal reward, which was immediately refused. The money belonged to other parties, Mr. Davis merelyhaving it in trust, and this, of course, added to his delight at recovering it. The Judge Gave It Up. New Tork Morning Journal. Police Justice Duffy had a difficult ease to settle between two tough women who had been arrested for fighting. Tbe Judge had a hard time in trying to get an intelligible account ol the trouble between them, and at last said sternly to one or the women: "Now, Maggie, answer my question plainly. What passed between you?" "Stove-lids, Your Honor." Then 'the Judge gave it up. 'FtTHiriTTjliB packed, stored and shipped. BL00JI IN A DESERT' Arizona Has Mo?t Fruitful Lands Be sides Its Burning Sands. RIVALS CALIFORNIA FOR FRUI1, Its Oranges the Sweetest, and Figs TlrlT as in the Orient. WHAT TO B0 WITH THE EEDSK1S1 iconnisrosDENCTK or the oisrATos.i Tombstone, Ariz.", April 21. Much of Arizona is a desert that it is completely a Sahara must be stated to the contrary. Tod often tbe impression is left that it is entirely void of vegetation an uninviting field savt to the gold and silver prospector. The) prejudice formed will soon dio away when one beholds its immense plains covered with luxuriant herbage, intermingled with flowers ot every hue a land of eternal sum mer, where the orb of day is scarcely eve dimmed and whose skies rival even thost of Italy's serene aqd placid clime. Taking into consideration the whole aspeet of this remarkable territory, there is hardly another portion of our vast domiin so capa ble of arousing the curiosity. Who does not fall to wonder on beholding for the first time the petrified forests, and those peculiarly shaped buildings and canals, that bear wit. ness to a bygone civilization! Not alone tli!3, but here natural scenery abounds of which the eye can never grow weary, a vai riety being lis most pleasing leature. Seated on sure footed bronchos we slowly wend our way along the slopes of thoss wondrous mountain ranges rugged in their loruiation, yet at once picturesque and awe-, inspiring. A lofty peak is climbed, front the sunimit of which a matchless view II obtained, while oiten the attention is dl recte'd to a strange phenomenon one of those beautiful mirages, lor which this re gion is famous. Where no water is, a lake can clearly be descried. Now a city may be discerned, the outlines ot the buildings appearing distinctly. Many have known towns and other objects hundreds of mile distant to be brought before their gaze but alter all this may not carry much weisrht, for the mind is too often liable to conjurv up a resemblance. The Bain Comes Too Irregularly. To be convinced that this country is not altogether a barren waste, it should be visited shortly after the rainy season, say ia the commencement of August. Sufficient water is all Arizona needs to make it prod uce the most plentiiul supply of cereals. If the terrific rain falls, which at certain periods convert ail the deep ravines into roaring torrents could only be retained ia large reservoirs, to be dulv distributed over the land during other portions of the year, -the land would blossom as the rose. The trouble is too much of the precious fluid is wasted it comes in larger quantities than is necessary at the time beiuj. Tbe day is not fur distant when tbe In. genuity of this thrilty people will assert itsell by making a net work of dams and water ditches throughout the territory. Already several of these cisterns have been constructed at a cost of several millions, showing that tbe inhabitants are fully alive to its importance. The system of irrigation bringswith.it untold benefits, and it has beeu pretty well demonstrated that in this Fdr West, where from necessity it mnst be depended upon, the yield is greater than ia those districts which rely ou uncertain rains. The business of agriculture and stock" raising are both lucrative, the latter is still in its infancy, but is making rapid head way. A lair estimation of the number of cattle grazing ou the different ranches at the present time places it between 7,000,000 and 8,000,000. As there are no snow storms here, there will never be anv loss of cattle) byexposure. The mines of the Territory contain untold wealth, notably those in the southern part, which produce abundance of silver, and mushroom millionaires are nnmj erous. The lruit growing industry front present indications will, in the near future, outstrip California's. Salt River Valley has the finest specimens ot peaches and apn. cots I have ever seen. The fig also growl luxuriantly. Only lately the orange was In troduced and it nas exceeded the expects tions of the most sanguine. A Solution of tho Indian Problem, Looking at the Indian from the stand point of an Anzoni citizen, I can safely as. sert that patience has ceased to be a virtue. We can never tell when these Government wards will creep Jrom their reservations to' enter upon thefr work of carnage. The few troops that are placed in the Territory are insufficient to cope with them in cases of emergency. On, you sentimentalist?, at home iu the quiet of your firesides, whining over Indian -right-; you fain would excuse tbe villainous Apache iu all bis deviltry. Witness his handiwork in the hundreds of unmarked graves that dot the hillsides of this smiling land, then go back and preach, if you dare, of the injustice done to the murderous Apache. Arizonians will 'not forget tha howl of rage raised by the maudlin Indian sympathizers concerning -the price which, was placed on the head of that arch scoun drel, Geronimo. No name was bad enough lor the citizens who offered the reward to rid themselves of bis presence, and finally, when he was captured by General Crook, instead of being banged like any ordinary criminal, the protestations of his white) friends succeeded lu getting him a com ortable berth in Florida. I understand ha is noW a Sunday school teacher, and on tha fly leaf of his Bible are written the words' "Jesus loves me; this I know." I think the best policy would be to divide the unruly tribes into small bands and seat ter them through tbe difierent States, where they can do tbe least harm, fqr as long as they remain iu a country like this, with so many natural strongholds, they wijl never cease to be a dangerous element. There is some talk of the At ar Department enrolling tbem in the army anything at all, so as ta get rid of them. There Are Some Good Indian. While writing on this matter it is fair td acknowledge ("hat there are Indians and In dians. The Papagqs and Navojos are not to be reckoned in the same category with tht foregoing; they are quiet and law-abiding) and are making rapiu strides toward civili zation. The Utes, of Colorado, may also be included iu this list they have advanced considerably within the last few years. X am glad that tbe bill introduced fiito Con gress to remove them from their good land to a wild and mountainous region in Utah was defeated. They are becoming self-support . Ing where they are why should they be -transferred to a'barren trjet, where they will -retrograde into barbarism, and become pan ! pers at the expense ot the Government. Too much credit cannot be given that 1'itubnrger who foughtao nobly in their defense, and to whose efforts more than any other is due the defeat of this.outragrqus measure. TJuliks many Eistern folks who never saw an. Indian (except a wooden one), he does not suffer from intellectual dyspepsia occasioned by an overdose of Fenimore Cooper's tales. Having lived iu the wilds of Utah and Col- " orado for years be had an opportunity to study the question; ia a broad and liberal sense. The last time I met him be ex plained in the following words bis position toward Poor Lo: "Do not misunderstand me. I have no sympathy to waste on an Indian, but in simple justice both to. him and the Government, I would mate tho red devil work for his living." My readers will agree that this is the trot 'solution of the problem. J. M. MoAuniZB, An Unfortunate Simile. Boiton Htr.ld.3 Ethel Aud because he isn't sentlatatsl or sssthetie, yon have broken off the engsgt ment? Tell me about it. Maud Well, one day, just to try hiss, X told him I didn,'t think he cared very muds about me. Ethel Well? Maud And he said then (hit he loTed.