THE LAKE DISTRICT, Wakeman Draws a Pretty Picture of the Homes and Customs of the Cambrian Peasantrj. THEIEB IS HEUTRAL 6E0UHD. SetU Lore Them for Their Caledonian Blood, and Irishmen for Their Celtic Parentage. PEEPS IKTO THE HASSITE HOUSES. Cviiositin of Sillcet ir.4 Iks Ceremonies cf Xirrlagts ari Burials. ICCRItESrOXDEWCK Or THX DISrATCH.1 Keswick, Esolahd, April 17. The Scotch glory in the straths and crags of their highlands and islands; the Irish have a pathetic and mournful pride in their ancient Celtic and later ecclesiastic monu ments, and an exultant pride in their Giant's Causeways, their lone peaks of Donegal and Connemara, and theif matchless Killar ney, while the English fondly fancy that, outside the Lake district, among the peaks and valleys of North Wales, are scenic beauties of surpassing splendor. But the English Lake district is, as it were, nature's feast for common enjoyment. It is the one spot in the three kingdoms where gentle genii of the place are powerful enough to annihilate the race bitterness of centuries. Indeed, it is the sweet and pen sive lullaby-nest of all Britain. Its geography, ethnology and etomology may have much to do with this. The region, from a race standpoint, is almost neutral ground. It is in the Northwestern, and all things considered, the most remote portion of England. Its area comprises the North ern, sea-detached part of Lancashire and all of the important shires of "Westmoreland and Cumberland. Three sides, its North ern, Western and Sonthern, are shut in by the Irish Sea and estuaries, while a natural barrier on the Eastern side is lornied by the Pennine range of hills, which furnishes Yorkshire, Durham and Northumberland their wild and savage tells and moors. nave Xover Been Disturbed. Peopled originally by Cambro-Celts, their descendants clung to a region almost inac cessible in the past, and thus sustained, from the barbaric stone age to the golden age of poetry and art, few abrnpt divisions B'id impingements from Boman, Danish and early English invasion. All influences for chance were consequently gradual and gentle, and never markedly unequal from the English on the east and sonth, the Irish on the west, and the Caledonians on the north. During three extended visits to the region, in winch most of my time w.is Dassed among the peasantrv. there have been found very manv dissimilarities between these people and the peasant class in any other portion of England. Though the student oi bonks may tail to find this apparent iu the literary re mains of the hosts ot prose writers and poets who drew almost their sole insuiration lrom the lake countr ; and though there may re main no evidence that these curiou distinc tions attracted the eery-day attention of the men and women of genius, who so long lived where thee contr.ists were constantly ap parent, the interesting fact still remains that Cumbrian men and women, as all the inhabitints o North Lancashire, Cumber land and Westmoreland are generally called, .ire almost as different from other lowly English folk, in tradit.on', superstition-, manner, enstoms, ami particularly in vernacular, as are those of "Wales, who so patriotically treasure every vestige of their ancient Kymnc life and tongue. The I Scotch are most kindly disposed to their Cumbrian brethren across the Sol way, for they know that in their veius flows an ad mixture ot Caledonian blood. The Irish across the narrow channel are drawn to them, as to the Welsh, because the Cum brians have with the Irish aud AVelsh a common Celtic parentage. The region is English through centuries of domination and gradual absorption of English nation ality. The Families of Statesmen. If ethnological reasons, though but half consciously recosmzed, render the English LaLe District common ground of delight for all British nationalities, the distinctive status and character of its peasantry cer tainly give it an added charm to the traveler who has interest in men s well as in mountains and rocks. The larger propor tion of the rural population, or dalesmen, ore the families of 'statesmen," or men owning and farming their own tiny pieces oi land. These have come down to them iutact lrom baronial times. In those old davs the border incursions from Scotland taxed to the utmost the wits and re-ources of the northern oarous. To provide and retain required forces for their often sore needs, the system of parceling out the land, in tee, and enfranchising the villein retain ers to hom they were given, was resorted to. More fortunate than the poor clansmen of the Scottiih Highlands, whom the decay of the clan system barbarously drove lrom their homes and soil, the decay of feudalism left these Cumbrian "statesmen" the actual possessors ot the (oil. Many of their little "estates" have being gradually swallowed np by the nobil ity, and by rich men who have become mighty landholders in the lake region. But there are thousands remaining who to-day occupy the very same parcels o. ground, de fined by the identical metes and bounds, possessed by their v.llein ancestors of hun dreds of years atro. Houses Dug Into the Mountains. These have "stood still." They have sus tained little encroachment. I have found "statesmens," houses in remote glens, all the way from the Solway to Morecambe Bay, where can be traced the entire series of evo lutions in habitations from a cell quarried out of the mountain side to the hall-modern heavily-built, rock-thatched Cumbrian cot tage. Aloug the Solway Firth, atBowness, 1 can point out a hal -score of these so old that carvings and altars dug from the nearly lTOO-vears obi Roman wall of Severus, are built into fireplaces and outside walla. Of these dalcsmens' cottages Wordsworth, him self born among them, says: "Hence buildings, which in their very form call to mind the processes ot nature, do thus, domed in part with a vegetable garb, ap pear to be received into the bosom of the livn g principle of things, as it acts and ex ists among the woods and ficlas." Precisely as in Wordsworth's time, out side the Cumbrian cottages you will find the shade of sveamores anuVa "tall fir through which the winds sing when other trees are leafless;" a little orchard; an ample herb bed; a near nil or springspout with its ceaseless wimple; a comely garden; com fortable stone out-bnildings for grain and for winter housing of the cows and the tiny but hardy Cumbrian sheep; and always the shed fur the hires of bees which distill from the mountain heath the darkes't, but ever the sweetest honey in the world. Interiors of tho Custles. Their interiors are no less characteristic Standing in the door of any one, your eyes may again trace, iu the antiques ot utensils and lurnishiegs, a complete museum of rustic household evolution from the stone age to onr own age of Brummagem and brass; for you will find the quern, old as Aryan llre, the ancient Celtic raetber or drinking cup, the rudest and earliest make of spinning wheel with delft of the first English kilns varied by minT faulty bits of "Wedgewood," brought here from Stafford shire by hawking Gypsies; and mingled with these, various tawdry household orna ments and utensils of the present time. Cumbrian peasants are as a rnle "house proud;" and In years of wandering among the lowly ot Enropean countries I have never come upon any rnstic folk the interior ot whose habitations were such shining ex amples of homely comfort and restlulness. There are ot course exceptions. Now and then you will find settlements like Waten dlath, hid among the fells between Borrow dale and Thirlmere, -where may be seen all the sodden squalor occasionally met among the Scottish westcoast crofters and in the Irish westcoast fishing villages. Their houses are dark and dirty, the floors uneven, the furniture craxy, the men clad in ragged fustiau and the women in coarse wool and wooden clogs. These are sheep herders nnder a later sort of feudalism. Sold by Their Fathers. In every such case the history is that their fathers before them sold their little "estates" to the encroaching laudgrabbers, and their children are consequently to-day in pre cisely the wretched serfdom wrought by lorrllordis-n in the Scottish Highlands and in Ireland. But with the habitations o! "statesmen" the interiors are charmine. The floors are usually of the same huge slates as those covering the roof. They are scrubbed and cleaned until they shine like dusky mirrors. Frequently you will find them particularly near the door and fire place, decorated with white, ochre and ver milion chalk in figures and scrollwork em bodying strange fancies in rustic art. The living room, or "firehouse" as it is called, is always very large for a cottage, o"ten from 18 to2o feet'square, low, but with the rich est of old aud polished beams in the ceil ing. Indeed, old oak may be found in pro fusion. The long, solid tiblc, with benches at the side, where the "statesman," his family and all servants sit together at meals; the "long settle," or two-yard long seat, at one side of the fireplace, and the "sconce," or bench, on the other, under which the night's fuel, called "an elden," is placed; the chairs, huge and high, and requiring a strong arm to move them; the high, narrow, sprawling legged bureaus; the many iron or brass bound chests; the beds, rinse and strong enough to hold giants, for these Cumbrians are often tremendous in stature are all of oak, curiously carved and often wondrouslv polished. All this is sometimes varied by pieces of mahogany almost as unique as can be tonnd among the peasant homes of Brit tany. From this large, clean "fire-house." or living room, there are in all directions inviting vistas through wide, low doors and cosy tone "leantos," perhaps each built in a different century, to tiny-paned windows, splayed like turret-windows, white with inner curtains, and in summer, ablaze with outer bud and blossom. Some Oddities in Dialect. The dialect of the district, which I can only touch cpon, is very curious, and con' tains many pure Celtic, Norse, old English and foreign words. The affix "ment" is in constant use, providing added quantity or emphasis. "Diriment" thus becomes a col lection of dirt, and "shamement" increased contempt in the expression of shame. A bull "heels," instead of bellows. Anything crooked is "cammed." "Sad" is heavy, and a "sad-cate" is one made without "rising," and is all its name implies. A road is a "wad;" and a young pig, instead ot a boy, is called an "urchin." A "had dery" day ir a drizzling day. A dancing night is a "tansy;" no donbt from the Ger man tanz. One whose actions make him a byword is a "bysen," and a short thick-set man is a "botchy." "To few" is to fare, or to arrance. "Dal!" is the expletive form of "The Devil!" but "donnet" is the devil himself, or one no better than the devil. When one is over-tired from, labor, he is "thewed." To "saunter" is not to strag gle or dally, but to meditate; and if you are "boggart-owned" you are destined or fated to be given over to some evil spirit Bad, loitering boys are "Driving-sneevils;" that is, of no more account than if driving snails; and a Door "bandylan" is an unfortunate lass "banned from the land," or driven lrom home fellowship. "A cope" is a jockey dealing in worthless horses; "bag gin" is food, and the "singing binny" is a hot cake baked for tea. Arriving a't one's kou-e is "landing hoarae." A "scrowmolly o' eggs" is a dish of scrambled eggs. If you accidentally overheard yonr peasant host speaking of you to bis wife as a "terrible" or "fearful soiisy mon," it would only mean a compliment; but if he spoke of you an a "bonny pistol" you could understand your self to be regarded as an arrant knave. Customs of the Communities. "Village and home lite lire very simple and uneventtul. Each little community is sufficient unto itself because of the un broken custom of never "hiving off." The younger shoots of tho family grow up be side the old. Entire valleys are found peopled bv "statesmen" of the same family and name, pronounced acquirement, physi cal peculiarity, or location of habitation, such as "Jock the Kussler" (wrestler), "Pdish-tnoD (porridce-tub) Ben," or "Dick o' th Kiijc;" providing ample dis tinction. Courtship is carried on iu a prim itive and vigorous way that would shock modern delicacy, but all manner of mitings remain firm and true. Marriages provide extraordinary festivals, aud, after the feast, numberless useful offerings from friends are made to the bride who receives them sitting in state. The dead are "watched" from decease to burial, and funerals furnish subdued diver sions with heroic feasts. Candlemas, Curl ing Sunday when friends nelt each other with peas, Good Friday, "Powsowdy-nieht," Christmas time and all christenings are boisterously celebrated. Leaping, wrest ling and running are the principal amuse ments of the, vouths and men, who excel those of other English provincial districts; while the ancient custom of "rush-bearing," which will be described in a luture article, is still here in vogue. The severely pious European peasantry seem to be extraordi narily superstitions, and the Cumbrians are no exception. Every crag, dale or lake has its respective demon; while the universal spook is the "bogle." Edgar L. "Wakemait. THE CHICAGO WAY. How a Determined Patron of the Drama . GoiH1h Alone' Worth. Sew Vork Tribune.; A theatrical manager who has recently found his way back from Chicago, tells the following story of the determination of a Chicago patron of the drama to get his money's worth: "I got to town a few days ahead of my. company, and the theatre was then occupied by Gustav Ainberg's com pany from Munich.called'DieMnencheiner.' One evening 1 was standing near the gallery door, when a little street boy came up to the window, bought a ticket aud went in. He was- in the habit of coming to. the theatre every week, and never thought of looking at the bill to see what the play was to be. Well, in a few minutes that boy came down stairs again with the most disgusted look on his face I ever saw. He had been up there, and had found the audience laughing at and applauding something that he could no more understand than if it had been Greek. But he took aretnro check as he went out, and he was heard to mutter some thing about 'Dutch,' 'bloody moonshiners and done np. Well, sir, he went away, aud in less than ten minutes he came back with another boy as German as sausage and sauerkraut He bought another ticket for tho ne- boy and took him into the theater. Of course, I saw what he was doing, but I followed him up into the gallery, and there he sat and made that little German translate tbe whole play for him. It he had asked for bis money back in the first place, prob ably he wonld have got it; but no, be ad mitted that he was beaten, 'done up,' and rather than have bis first quarter wasted be senV another alter it and tried to get the most of bis money's worth that he could." Shoes for Baaeball Flayers. Oyer a thousand men are under contract to play ball, and this means that over 25, 000 will be paid for baseball shoes this year. Every member has three pain a year, cost ing the club flS and the member $9. Tbe shoe worn is made of kangaroo leather and tbe soles are very light, only strong enough to hold the rivets which keep the spike plate in position. The plate is so large that it covers the ball of the foot entirely, and there is no wear on the leather at alL Tbe shoe is hard to make because the tem per of the plate has to be just so. THE ' THE HOTELS OF TEXAS Bill Kje Has Difficulty in Getting 'His Afternoon Siesta. MISTAKEN FOR A STAGE HBBO. Hot tke Line Btar Mocking- Bird Insti tutes Her Httile Yolee, THE CHOOTAWa AND ETEUSOAH JAGS tCOBBXSrOXDXKCX OV THX DIsrATCB.1 SxiLii Stabbing- rs I the Lone Stab State. ( PEAKING of the stage, and the tempta tions and trials that beset it, I got a room at the hotel in Austin which, although a very pleasant one, did not have a very prompt service connected with it There was also no key to It, so whenever I went ont for an hour or two I bad to pack my trunk and lock it. Then I had tbe excitement of unpacking it again when I pot back. In the afternoon I decided to take a siesta, so that my voice would be nice and smooth for the evening. I put the bureau against the door, and, taking down my hair, "was soon in a profuse slumber. At this moment the door was rudely burst open by a locksmith, who said that he had come to put a new lock on the door and fit a key to it This did not occupy over an hour or so, and after- that he went away with the old lock, leaving the door ajar while he got a new and more desirable loct. I fell asleep again then, for I was worn out with the long and weary miles of railroad travel. They Never Kap Upon the Door. Then came a bright voung chambermaid with a fresh porous towel for the room. She put her pass key into the door and turned it two or three times. They always do that, whether there is any lock on the door or not Even when the door isn't locked they most generally sock a. pass key into the late keyhole, and rattle two or three pounds of brass key checks on the outside. They do not knock unless they have peered through the keyhole and observed that the guest is dead. Then they knock timidly, shrink and go away. j The chambermaid cannot understand why a great big man should desire to occupy his room at the hotel during the day time. That he shonld want to write or rest in bis room seems very morbid to most of them, and a man does "have to be pretty well worn out in order to stay contentedly in the aver age hotel room; but be. does sometimes get where even a second-hand grave with a lock on it would be welcome. But the room I refer to was an aggravation in another way. I could not get anybody to come when I rang. People whom I did not care to see dropped in every little while, but when I rang nobody came. J 'terward I was told that I had occupied wnat is called a "the atrical room." Took Nye for an Actor. "We are annoyed very much," said a hotel clerk the other day, "by r certain kind of actor the onewhoplavs the smaller parts on the stage, and who tries to manage the universe between times. He generally plays the part of the associate villain, or the deathbed, or the unsealed doom, or something like that, and at tbe hotel he ap pears as its first mortgagee. Well, we give him a room that has an electric bell wire.but it does not connect with tbe office. It is at tached to the coffee mibb in tbe kitchen, so that when he imagines he is ringintr his bell he is really grinding the coffee for break fast By some mistake you were supposed to be an actor though auyone who had ever seen you on the stage would know bet ter than that and so you were given the theatrical room." And yet the death rate in Austin is very highly spoken of. In 1887 it was fourteen per thousand. In J.888 it was twelve to tbe thousand, and in 1889 it was only ten. I liked Austin very much indeed. There is no malaria there, and tbe Legislature is restricted by wholesoms sanitary regula tion?, so that Austin is a very healthful and handsome place. Tbe Capitol building has a fame that is world wide. It is a very har.d'orae building, resembling the Capitol at Washington, but built of a beautiful chocolate-colored stone instead of marble. It Is Good for the Fhyslqne. The latitude of Austin is the same as that of Jacksonville, Fla., and the climate is peculiarly copious even at this season of the ZVle ChimbermaUVt Vtttt. vear. I was told in Chicago that I would lose CO pounds while traveling through Texas, as tbe hotels were exceedingly bad. I have gained eight pounds, and the weight of my excess baggage has also increased while here. I now leel like a new man. I am no longer afflicted with low spirits, dread of a violent death on the scaffold, night sweats, constant craving for food, ringing in the ears, repugnance to work, or moth patches. The mocking bird is quite common in Austin. It is heard very oiten in the wild wood putting up a ptsan at early morn or set of sun. I beard one the other morning that could give a very good imitation of a guinea hen. It was so good that no one conld tell the difference. So she might about as well have been a guinea hen, so far as the listener was concerned. We should learn from this to imitate only those who are worthy. Here was a sweet voiced songster of the woods who could have sur prised and delighted every one, but she had prostituted her talents to an ignoble .end, and through the long hours seemed content to cluck and rattle with the monotonous and metallic clatter which characterizes the vacant mind oi tbe guinea hen. The Choctaw and His Jag. Along here one occasionally sees the noble Choctaw associated with an Etruscan jag. The Indian and white man are quite different when sober.but exactly alike when drunk. Their aspirations, hopes, fears, passions and tendencies are tbe same then. The Choctaws have a village under the man agement of a chief, who attends to every thing, even to the punishment for murder. The law of the State does not pool with the Choctaw settlement If one kills another in an unguarded moment, the chief sends for tbe murderer and tells him what he thinks of him. The country in spots Is still quite unset tled, and the primeval forest may be seen for miles and miles. Yesterday a slight, girlish figure might bare been seen tripping gayly toward the depot as the train ap proached. She was ail dressed np and had 5F FTTTSBlTRG - DISPATCH. a little portmanteau. Her figure was grace-, lul and petite. She dressed neatly, and her clothes fitted her like the bright and angry suificeol aboil. She seated herseU with great dignity, and everybody's eye was upon her. A fine looking traveling man removed tbe curl papers from his nfoustache, and there was a general sensation through the car. I was anxious to hear her voice, for I am a crank on that subject. No mat ter how beautiful a woman maybe, with a harsh voice she is a disappointment, L with tbe rest of the passengers, remained almost breathless waiting for her to speak. What the Texas Beauty Said. As the train slowly moved out of the depot she opened the window, looked out hurriedly, and with a little winning yet im patient toss of the head exclaimed: "Ob, rats! they have left them there trunks of mine." (This is an actual fact) Then it was so still there that all you could hear was tbe quick, half-drawn pants of a colored man from Nagadocbez. Texas Is a marvelous State, as I have had occasion to say before. There are 16 kinds of climate and a million kinds of flora and launa in this vast empire. Cotton grows in great abundance in almost all parts of the State, and at Galveston, fifes, bananas, oranges and lemons are to be seen growine as naturally as potatoes. At Galveston the oleinder is the natural hedge. Instead of Her Sweet Angelic Voice. having to carry this fragile Scandinavian down cellar every November In a large tub, it is left out by the citizen of Galveston jnst as the Michigan man does his thrashing machine, to bullet tbe storms of winter and to come up smiling in the spring. The oleander is now in- fnll bloom. Also the cape jasmine, a big, beautiful bloom that jnst turns itself loose regardless of expense and perfumes a whole county at a time. Needed Ills Stump Fuller Badly. Texas, of course, is quite a new State, and often for miles along the road the newly cleared fields are heavily and profusely punctuated with stumps. I never regretted more thoroughly my.haste and thoughtless ness in coming away without my stump puller than I have on this trip. . Yesterday, on tbe Houston and Shreve- 'port road, a man who had boarded the train about an hour before looked out a window just as we were going through a sort oi swamp and lost bis hat off. It was qnite a while before he could get the train to stop, but it did, and heaven is my jndge, the train stopped but the conductor refused to go back after the hat Tbe man who lost it had to go back and get it himself. It was a miserable old felt hat, with a broad brim and an oily dado arounl the crown too. I never saw a cannon ball train stop for such a poor hat Business Is poor on this road, and so it has to bo obliging. It requires over 11 hours to run from Houston to Shreveport, and then sometimes you are on tbe Shreve port 'bus three hours more. Tbe Shreveport 'bus is reckoned all over the world to be the toughest method of travel known. Streets Liko Tose of the Bast End. The streets of Shreveport have no bottom, and, as in many other Sonthern cities, thousands of dollars' worth of bricks,brokeu stone, gravel and idiocy are piled on top of this rapacions and hungry mudhole, only to disappear in a month or so, and year after year a hollow chested treasury sobs upon the bosom of a tadpole infested street, while the commercial man, the most dangerous advertiser in the world, damns Jbese wretched roads in every city where he reg isters, and thus a little ill directed energy damages the fair fame of an excellent town. There is something 'spicy and free and reckless and thrivingand unconstrained and hospitable about Texas, though, that cap tures me. If your soul is getting corns on ;t lrom trying to turn' around in tbe wall pocket of a flat, and you feel yourself get ting conventional and pSkey. and stiff and morbid, and the moss is beginning to grow on the north side of your soul, licht out lor Texas big, wide, breezy Texas, where peo ple know you on the cars and beg your par don if they step on yonr feet; where the cactus welcomes to its fuzzy bosom the cul tivated chappy in the thin white flannel panties; where tbe toothsome jelly of the chapparel berry is spread thick upon the bread of industry, and the mustang wine of the Alamo mantles in the beautiful, pickled olive complexion of the vaquero's daughter. Bill Ntk. WOOD FOB LOCOMOTIVE FUEL. TChmt Strikes the Traveler When Be Bides Into Sonthern States. IWBITXBN-rOR THE DISPATCH.: Tbrougbout tbe border States of tbe Sontb the fnel for domestic use as well as for run ning machinery is wood. On all the rail roads wood is used exclusively for firing the engines. Each tender of the engine is stacked high with short lengths of wood ready for use, which, have been gathered from the immense piles thatare seen at reg ular intervals along the lines. Pine is plentiful in the coast States, and is the wood principally used. It kindles easily, as everyon knows, and generates' rapidly an intense heat, and still" dees not consume as quickly as. at first appears. Passenger trains are frequently ran from 117 to 129 miles with one cord of this wood. The traveler on these roads is apt to find the thicK; black smoke from the rich pine thrown off by the engine equally as annoy ing and disagreeable as tbe sulphur fumes from the bituminous coal in common use on roads throughout the coal regions. Back from the smokestack is thrown a continual xhower of sparks, making a pretty sight by night. These bits of fire, as a rule, die out quickly, and do very little damage. Bnt a spark "may occasionally enter through an open door or window and burn its way into your clothing or the cushions of the ceat Another disagreeable leature attending travel on these roads Is the dust you'en counter at all seasons of the year. Close th" windows and doors of .the coach as you wil, the white sand dnst will enter tbe crevices and cover you from head t6 foot Belore you reach your journey's end you will likely think ynu will either be suffo cated with the tar smoke of the pine fuel or strangled with the dust. .For this reason travelers once; passing over Southern rail roads see tbe necessity of providing them selves well with linen dnsters or traveling cloaks as a double protection against sparks from locomotives and dust of the wayside, INFANT BOOMS IN THEATERS. , A Scheme to Enable Mothers to Attend the Opera With Their Babies. Canton Kcposltory. An old Canton bachelor, who is annoyed by babies at theaters more than at church, suggests something for opera houses like Dr. Locke, formerly of Canton, proposes for churches. He banded the scribe & item from East Liverpool, whioh reads: "Bey. 'Dr. Leake, of the First M. E. Oburcb of this city, believes he has hit upon a plan that will .allow a mother to go to church without leaving her babe at home or without the child disturbing the entire con gregation. He proposes to have an infant room, heated and properly furnished, and have a corps of competent women take charge of the babies daring the service, thus allowing everybody to enjoy the preaching." SUNDAY. APBIL 26, LIFE THROWN AWAY. A Case From a Physician's Notebook -That Is Far Too Common. WAR81KGW0KDS FORKUSY VYOHES The Exgalsite Nervous System Eequires Delicate Attention. COSDIT10NS OF SOILS AND HABITS IWKITTBir TOB TOT DISATOff.l While so many bright and valued lives are wasting Hopelessly with disease, while tbe faculty are earnestly discussing new treatments of tuberculosis aud grip. it is time to study the lessons of common sense in regard to health. The tendency of the best minds is to accept the methods of spe cialists with discrimination, to hesitate over singular treatment and follow more rigidly the lines of health, including those of comfort The people have a right to know what concerns their health and lives. Such questions interest them more nearly than social topics or politics. It is time they knew more about themselves, the beating of their own hearts, the condition of their own blood, whether life or death .giving to the law and to the testimonv on these things. If I condense and transfate the epics of doc tors' note books, it is believing that the laity cannot know too mach about matters hitherto left in the exclusive keeping of the medical profession. It is no more safe or just to do this than to leave our property solely to the care' of others, heedless our selves of the rates of interest or profit accru ing a neglect which commonly leads to ruin. Storj o a Lost Life. The following stury is condensed from a tract by an American physician well-known both sides of the Atlantic. It is so signifi cant in its cautions, ! have chosen it for a first lesson, spite of its unhappy ending. Bead aright it'reiterates the hopeful ability of the human system to resist repeated at tacks of disease, if strict conditions of health are obeyed. What these conditions are it repeats in staring type. Is it blind ness of head or heart which cannot inter pret? In May, 1887, Mrs. , aged 25, came to New York for medical care. Her father and a sister bad died of tubercle, and her blood was tuberculous; (a) the sputum had lung fibres and she was also suffering from inward enlargement In one month of care ful dieting and medication her cough dis appeared, tbe lung gave evidence of heal ing, the blood became healthy, the heart beat easier and the enlargement was re duced to normal size. Her. case had shown unusual progress and she had with her great resiliency done more in a month than is usually accomplished in six. She Flayed Too Hard. During the summer she did fairly well: had been ordered to take much outdoor ex ercise. This she overdid (b) there is such a thing as patients playing too bard as well as working too bard. Family tronbles wor ried her, and different beef (c) gave her diarrlima, so that in the fall she began to run down again. In November she returned to New York, traveling alone: caught cold. on the sleeping car (c) and had an attack or congestion of the lnngs on arriving, which set her back. Still 8he pulled out all right, and in January went home. Before leav ing she walked to the top of the Metropoli tan Opera House, over 100 steps, to hear lit tle Josef Hoffman play. She was in good flesh; no cough. On reaching home she walked nearly a mile over an icy road up a hill to her bonse without fatigue. AH went well awhile till her cook left; her; then came a great deal of trouble in getting help; the patient bad to go into the kitchen and cook for seven beside ber family; (b) bad to go into the kitchen is hardly truth. She was a woman of good family, her father among the first in his profession; her mother highly cultivated. The patient had, one of those exquisite nervous systems that brooked no delay; (b) she loved to carry on her household. with the utmost precision. Be fore her first child was born she had for one summer carried an affairs for a family of 17. (b) Her husband owned a large stock farm with an extensive and expensive plant of full blood cattle in a malarial region (a). Didn't Beallze the KosulU. Neither he nor.she realized the suicidal result of her working, so in ber great desire to keep things running smoothly (b) she did work she ought not to have done,and the first result was congestion of the lung the right one this time, not the left, which was the one with tubercle. She came out from this attack ot congestion, and later in th'e spring, while driving, tbe horses started; she pulled ber little son in by one hand and severely wrenched herself so that sharp pains came on. Iu May, 1883, she was without a servant and did her own work (b), did not feel well, was tired, had much pain in the top of the head, blood not normal, yeasty present in spores. Soon she was taken sick with chills in. back, lever, vomiting and de lirium (a). She was relieved, but from a bright, cheery, hopeful person she became irritable and despondent, and at times dis trustful of her friends. It seemed as if all the good work done her health was thoroughly undone. She convalesced slowly, fed with oysters, chicken, cream, new milk, fish, etc. In August the cough began to come back, and, despite the phy sician's urging to live as before, on beef alone, the poor, sick' woman was so shat tered by tbe meningitis that she could not There can be no doubt tbe wrench received when she pulled the boy into tbe carriage had hurt her much. Another Wonderful Improvement In September lung fibres begau to appear in the sputum, and on the 15th of tLat month she bad four hemorrhages, finally controlled by the atomizationof persulphate of iron one part to 64 of water, and the use of bngle weed and witch hazel internally. She again took to bed and said she was going to die. Hectic fever came on, bright spots on cheeks, skin cold and sweaty, pulse 120. She was encouraged to come down to close beef diet, broiled. For her cold skin.and its sweaty condition acid batbs were used with salicin, also the primary current from a galvanic battery in very small doses for tbe internal trouble. It was truly wonderfnl to see how that woman im proved. In one week's time she was o'ut of bed, was soou out driving, the 'sweats stopped and tbe cough greatly diminished. But the later part ot October she was so much depressed by the malaria (a) that it was decided to make'a change of climate. The malaria, of course, was left behind and she improved. A few weeks before Christ mas she decided to make up a box of pres ents for her children. It was feared the brain work of choice and the labor of needic-nork in these presents would injure her. These fears were fully realized; she had a very bad attack of borne-sickness and ber appetite left her; she was given, as much leeway as possible in ber diet and the cough came back. Tho. night sweats re turned, the lung fibres again appeared, tbe bright spots in the cheeks showed that death was again making good time in the race. Christmas night, altera sad day, she said: "Doctor, I am going to put my appe tite behind my back, and eat broiled chop ped beef four times a day in my room; I do not want to see any other food." What the Beet Did for Her. In four days she said, "That 'beef really begins to taste good fb me." After tbe middle of January she never coughed train. She had a well defined-goitre; (a) alter going on rigid diet it slowly disap peared and never bothered ber any more. March, 1889, she bad a severe attack oi pain in the left side which extended up by the heart and down the arm. I puzzled the doctors, till they found a fibrous thickening of the bowel. Now this fibrous thickening was of the same nature as the excessive de velopment of connective tissue in tbe go'tro (a): if the nutrition conld be held on proper bans "nature in time would take it away, as shehd done with tbe goitre and in other l'89L cases of thickenings. It must be remem bered that such mal-developmenta in tbe bowels are of poorly vitalized tissue and very prone to pain. The indication was to keep her comfortable, the bowels open and ber nutrition as healthy as possible. She was fed on beef, with a little vegetable food, the bowels, kept open with small doses of chemically pnre sulphate of soda (Glauber salts) and the pain controlled as best possible. , In May she went to the seashore at Buz zard's Bay; here she was doing qnite well when she 'went home back to malaria (a) and less careful habits. Malaria attacked her and probably there was some ptomaine poisoning from pepsin ('), at any rate there came on excessive fermentation, agonizing pain, and she gradually sant, dying early in Angust Thus ended a brave life. Some of the Thoughts Suggested. This history, duplicate of many which a stranger can hardly read without bitter re grets, provokes some searching questions. (a) What right has any person of tuber culous blood and descent to marry early in life, till the system has fuliy matured its re sisting strength or else has developed its tendencies to disease? To marry young and enter on hard work in a malarial climate is sheer suicide. Bnt how raany'people am bitious of getting on in life, stop to think that to take the best business chances in an unhealthy region is throwing the dice with Death? In this case, with tubercnlous blond and malarial air, the dice were loaded. TJp to the very last it was the ma larial poison, not the tubercle, which killed. (b) The exquisite nervous Bystem is at once the delight and the anxiety of doctors by its . susceptibility to good or bad sur roundings. Grosser natures are insen sible, apparently, to bad air, bad food and depressing circumstances, but once attacked by disease go down fatally, more surely than the high strung, delicate sort The latter are easily depressed, bnt given', a chauce get the better of a dozen attacks which kill ordinary people. It is monrnful that social and inferior ambitions turn off this'spiendid force to money making, show housekeeping, to observance of social and family rites, to petty economies even, while health aud life are set aside. Overworked From First to Iaut Heavily weighted as she was by birth and bad air, this smart, sensitive woman mnst overwork herself from first to last. You can see her, working for a household of 17 peo ple the first summer of her married life, when she should have been most careful of her self; breaking down in the spring of 1877; better in a month; overdoing her outdoor ex ercise in the summer; Tunning down in tbe fall; well from January till the cook goes, and she needlessly takes the work for seven besides her own family, and breaks down with meningitis in May; cough again in Angust; bleeding from tbe lungs in Septem ber; feels sbe'is going to.die, but under treat ment is out'of bed'in-s: week. "She flees tbe malaria which depresses her, but docs not leave her misdirected energy behind. Everybody else is making Christmas pres ents, upon 'which women squander money and strength, as brides do on their trous seaus. She feels- she must not be behind tbe rest there must be & box of presents for the children, no matter if their mother's life goes into that box. This remnant of euergy should have gone toward laying up strength. Anyhow, spending it left he bankrupt for tbe time. She never had strength to squan der any more in the nine months remaining of her life. A woman with vitality enough to vanquish a goitre in September, if pru dent of ber strength, might have possibly escaped tbe fibroid which finally wore her out with pain. Measure Work by Strength. Ten thousand wives and mothers will read this, who used the same caution for the com ing summer and year, which could have saved this brave, rash invalid at least some precions months of life. Will they have courage, if needlnl, to measnre their work by their strength, to let anything go which conflicts with health and easy living? How many will have conscience and loyalty to their own to 'say: "I must give up this committee and club work. I cannot attend a reception or give a dinner this season, perhaps not for a year or two, till my strength is settled again." Friends want to visit them or insist affec tionately on visits from them. Doctors should be subpeenaed to say how many good women have got .their death in entertaining visiting friends, or going tiresome journevs to visit others. If the startling truth were known, the ghastly list recited, friends would not be hurt, or busfauds disanpointed by a refusal to be worked to death in tbe name of hospitality given or received. As for housekeeping, it is better to take the children ont of school all summer to help mother, or hire a boy for indoor work if no sort of help is available; better to sleep in unmade beds and eat canned dinners, wear rough dry linen and sweep once a month, dreadful penalties, but worth endurance to save needed strength. Death Larking In the Nerves. If you can't'keep up with society and housekeeping together, let society go first, and housekeeping after it, rather than trade on nerves till they let the soul out I can not write strongly enough on this point Tbe one thing invaluable to a family is the life of its mother and wife. When once the vital force begins to run down it seems as if everything could be de pended on to drive a nail in one's coffin.. The indiflerent beef whose fault was that? The cold caught on the sleeping car, un ventilated, unprovided with sufficient cover ing, ill warmed or overwarmed, does not matter; one is as bad as the other. .Sleeping cars have sown seeds of death in many a frail traveler. The ptomaino poisoning from pepsin not prepared with sufficient care whose fault was that? The latter finished the deadly work and clinched tbe last nail which shut this" woman away from ber world forever. It is impossible to deny that the prevention of any one of these disasters might have left the balance of vitality in ber favor. The growing refine ment of bnmauity means increasing suscepti bility for good aud evil. And there is no evil, whether a chilly sleeping car, food ill prepared, or impure medicine, which you and I may not have to meet with vital energies so depressed, that it is the fin ishing stroke to our lives. Tubercle causes death what causes tubercle, meningitis; fibroid, crip? Microbes bred and nourished of the false conditions of onr soil and habits. Correct these, and microbes, tubercles and fibroids disappear. Shibi.ey'Dabe. MmSTJMMEB SHOW IH VEEM0ITT. The Xgacy of Winter Never Disappears Entirely Until August Hew York World. "Snow on the lOth.of April?" exclaimed a Green Mountain man. "Why certainly. If Senator Edmunds objects to the climate of Washington as too cool for him, I have uo idea he will ever reside in Vermont again. It snows all through April up there as olten as not and Vermonters haven't bad the grip either. Why, I have seen snow 115 feet deep on the lt day of August in New Hampshire. "There is a spur of Mount Washington, you see, which runs down toward "Vermont and almost bhuts in a deep valley at its foot Tbe winds that sweep over the moun tain all winter long drift the snow into this valley, which has very little natural outlet, being on tbe north side of the range, and the snow accumulates in it until by spring it is sometimes 1,000 feet deep. Of course, as soon as the weather gets warm it begins to melt and keeps on melting until August, bv which time there'is about 100 or so feet only left-" A Gastronomlnal Failure. Philadelphia Uecord. Under the impetus of a good-sized wager, a Seventeenth ward blacksmith the other day attempted to eat 500 rawoysters. He began promptly at 3 7. M., but at 4:10 threw up the sponge on the 426th oyster. He then went back to bis nvil, made a horseshoe, went home and slept soundly all night Up to 300 he said the oysters tasted all right, but after that they lost their flavor. He attributed his failure to .the low .temperature of the room, and said if it had been warmer he conld have eaten the whole 500. FOUNDLINGS' FUTUKE. Care That Is Bestowed on the Outcast Waif3 of a Great City. SET FREE AT THE YYE0KG TIME. America's Criminals Arerage Less Than . Twentr Tears of Age. WHAT IS CAUSHT IK TAB LAWS KBT tcoBBisroxncscx or Tns msrATCH.i Nb-w York, April 25. "About 200 in fants a year are found deserted in tbe streets of New York," said tho. police sergeant in charge of a station house. The future of those who begin life thus inauspiciously would not appear to be very bright Yet the humane societies o'f the metropolis take pretty good care qf these waifs, found upon the doorsteps, in hall ways, or on the park benches. They are sent to tbe Infants' Hospital, Bandall's Island, registered, named and either adopted by childless people or are farmed out to persons ontside of New York. The care of these foundlings ceases, bow ever, when they are 16 years of age. They must tberealter scratch for themselves. Aside from those lucky enough to find well-to-do papas and mammas the children. of nobody probably fare no better and no worse than the children of thousands of poor or criminal parents who live within the shadows of the great ci.ty. The Baby's Health and Appearance. It is by no means unusual for healthy, handsome babies from the ranks of these abandoned children to find happy homes and loving hearts and to never know that they were born to anything or anybody else. But the great majority of babies are not handsome and a very large minority of the poor little Anocents promiscuously left around town are- not even healthy. The official baby farmers in the country have the financial, inducement of $12 per month 110 for board and. $2 for clothes to pro long the infantile existence. When the latter arrives at an age when it can "pick up cblps;"'that is, render some service.why, that is so much additional. Its career thenceforward till 16 is that of the tra ditional "bound boy," or girl. Everybody knows about what that is.- ., From 16 years of age the 'future of the foundling may be classed with that of tbe children ot the indigent population sen erally. Perhaps the fonndling has some what the advantage in, point of discipline. At any ratj, the physical struggle is prac tically over. From that time forward the individual is presumably ably to look out for himself. ' The Critical Years of Life, The moral fight has just begun. Let those youths and misses who are close-sheltered neath the parental wings during the period embraced between 16 and 21 not chate and fret in tbe apron strings, but thank heaven for that counsel and protection. .If there is a block of years to be picked ont of human life nnd laid aside marked "critical" it is I the period from 16 to 20. Four-fifths of tire entirecriminal popula tion of New York, from year to year, are embraced in that narrow limit More crimes are committed and more people go wrong in that period of life than all other years flat together. Bead the long list of females scooped in byoccasional raids in Chinatown and the other purlicns ot this city. Girls from IS to 201 Bead the story of daily crimes. Hoodlums, burglars, murderers boys from 15 to 211 Setting aside the hardened class who have passed the critical period and are now numbered among the in cnrrigibles, the entire criminal calendar of New York crimes and criminals, males and females comes practically within 15 and 21. Caught In the Police brae Net The other night tbe police swooped down upon the worst quarter of the city a quar ter reeking with the opium dens and dregs of Oriental viciousness. The streets were blocked, the alleys and back'ways guarded, then a special squad were sent in to beat the bushes for human game. Only the women were to be taken. And these poured forth by scores, many but balf dressed, in the attempt to escape. They were cornered like sheep in every direction and were marched in one compact body over 50 of them to tbe station house cells. They were young American girls of from 15 to 21. Not a mature woman among them in point of age. They were children who ought to be in the schools and members of Sunday schools. Instead of that they were found with the very wor3t product of civil ization. And do you presume for a moment that arrest and 'temporary imprisonment had any humiliation for these girls? Not a bit of itl They sang songs all night, "as if they were at a picnic," said a ketper. Treasons ot the Police Court. Let the interested investigator sit in the little morbid crowd of regular morning visi tors in any of the police courts and take an inventoryof humanity in the dock. Clear away the human rubbish of drunks and vagabond. Now, what do you see? Young faces. Yontbful figures. Boys. Girls. Ninety per cent American born. These are New York's criminals. These boys and girls are being ground through the modern mill of the gods the police court for every crime conceivable and, aye, in conceivable! Yod didn't expect to see such a sight as this. No; you thought only of men aud women of mature age with seared faces, gray hairs and faces case-hardened by long continued offenses against the law. And 'here aud there you will see just such peonle, but almost every one of them began wrong-doing buck in the period of adoles cence. The general run of the material is early manhood and early womanhood. Almost All of American Birth. Go to public resorts about midnight, and later. Look around you well. Yes; it is the same phase of youth and beauty. And Americans, tool They are of tbe Anglo Saxon race. The same tongne you beard from tbe prisoners' dock. Tbe same lan guage that arose in the feminine chflrus from the station house ceils! Where are tbe despised Italians? Where are tbe alleged offscourings ot the Old World that are dumped into New York at the rate of 2,000 per day? Not here. The "off-scouring" are at work. These are American-born boys and girls, the Droduct of American civilization. It is the young aud inexperienced who sthmbie and fall ont out of the ranks. It is the province of youth to err. As a rule, men and women of mature age do not commit crime. Excep tional cases there are, it is true. But, as a rule, the boy who passes the age of 21 in safety is all right His character is formed. At 25 a straight record is a coat of mail and sword and 'buckler. Accident alone can down bim. A girl in her 20th year un spotted by the world Js reasonably secure against tronble, and this whether she is under tbe parental roof or is alone and working lor a livinpin New York. Care For the Ninety and Nine. Millions are spen( here annually to pro mote the advancement of tbe human race in morals, in education,, in art and 'science. Not one dollar in a thousand so spent goes even in the direction of. those whose moral welfare is,a social hazard and tbe environs ment of whose daily Jfves makes, them a standing menace .to law and order. It is the same old scriptural case of the ninety and nine just men taken excellent care of and tbe one sinner being allowed to shift for himself, or,, to go to the devil. But the loater and the thief and their chil dren being raised to the station house cells of New York are.part of a great social prob lem; difficult to reach and comprehend, Tbe solving of that nroblem in these davs. as of I. old, would require eonsiderable well di SS rected human energy, much money and the backing of the Almighty. There are hot-beds of heathenism in this city ten times more appalling thin any that ever existed in darkest Africa. 31 ere can nibalism of the benighted Senegambian is but a disagreeable feature compared to the moral rottenness that underlies civilized -Gotham. ClTAKLTJS TjIEODOBE MUBSAT. Woodpeckers and Sparrows. The English sparrow has a mortal enemy in the common red-headed woodpecker, who, though no giant among birds, is as big as balf a dozen English sparrows and not afraid of half a hundred. The woodpecker' beak is so hard, and his head and neck are so powerful, that in a single peck he can kill a sparrow. The Nicaragua Cabal Isn't New. In the early days of the Spanish occupa tion there was talk of a canal across the Isthmus of Panama, and a Spanish explorer named Gomara m 15ol indicated tbe Nicaragua route as. the most feasible between the two seas. SCOTT'S EMULSION Of Pure Cod Liver OH and HYP0PH0SPH1TES g of Lime and Soda Is endorsed and prescribed by leading; physicians because both the Cod Liver OU and Ilypophorphlles are the recognized j agents in tbe cure ot Consumption. It Is ( as yoiabauie as mus. Scoffs Emulsion & is a wonderful Flesh. Producer. It is tha Best Bemedy for CONSUMPTION, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting- Dis eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds. ass. lor scott s Emulsion ana taxe no other. JIUUl'l'O ,.HU13UV. SOLD BT JOS. FLEMING A SON. 412 Market street mbl9-S2 l'ltthure 2 BOTTLES Remnvtd every Speak of Pimples and Blotches from my face that troubled mo for vears. MISS LlZ- Robekts. sandy Hook. Ct. T)URDOOK BLOOD BITTERS. SOLD BY JOS. FLEMING A SON, 412Marxet Dtreet. mh!9-S2-D PUtihnrE. MEDICAL. DOCTOR WHiTTIER 814 WJNN AVKNUK. PITTdBUKG. 4- As old resident know and back lltes ot PltM. burg papers prove, is tbe olJet established and most prominent physician in tho city, de Totlns special attention to all chronic diseases. fmiersNOFEEUNTILCURED MCDXni IQ ana mental diseases, physical IN Lit V UUO decay, nervous Uenility. lack ot energy, ambition and none, impaired memory, disordered eigne, sett distrusr, liashtuluess, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimple, eruptions, im poverished blood, failing power", orsinic weak ness, dyspepsit. constipation, consumption, nn flttin; the person for business, society and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured, BLOOD AND SKINfeeV blotches, fallln; hair, bones, pains, glandular, swellinss ulcerations ot tonzue, innutu, throat! ulcers, old sores, are cured fur life, ana blood notions thoromrnlv eradicated from the S7srem- II DIM A RV kidney and bladder derange UnllirMl I i ments, weak back, gravel, ca tarrbal discharge, intlammitlon and other painful symoioms receive searching treatment; prompt relief and real euro-". Dr. Whittter's lire-long, extensive experience Insures scientific and reliable treatment on, common-sense prini-iplei. Consultation free,' Patients at a distance as carefully treated as IC here. OfflceboaM.9A.jLto8p.if. Sunday, 10 A. Jr. to 1 P. Jf. onlr. DR. WHITTIER. oli Penn avennp. Pittiburg. Px ja-i"-D3nwte GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE CURES NERVOUS DEB! b! T Y LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF MEMORY. Tall partlcntars In pamphlet, tent tree, atie genulna Oray'a' fbpeclfle sold by drMjrUU oalyla yellow wrapper. Price, l per on receipt oi nrlre. br addru! zct THE GRAY MEDICINE tfu, Bnttaio, -N. i Told mr-lttsborK byS. d. HuLLANli. cornsc BmltaneUaad Llbertrsa. mni7-W-DWX CRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE SOLD BY JOSEPH FLEMING 4 SON. 112 Market street, fiiwnnrn. NERVEfAND BRAIN TREATMENT Bpeeifle for Hysteria, Wrrfnew.ttttrKraraIffl.'W'fc fulness, Mental Depression, Softenlntfot tao Brain, rw ultlnr? In Insanity and leading: to misery decar and deathTPrematuro Old Age, Barrenness. Loss oi rowe In either sax, Inxoluntary Losses, and Spermatorrhce caused by orer-exertion of the brain, self-abusa or OTer-lndnigence. Each box contalnsonemonth'a treat ment. 31 a box, or six for $5, eenfc by mail prepaid With each, order for six boxe-, wfll send purchase cnrinteo to-reftind ei v f ti9 tTKitment fall-it? EMIL G. STUCKY. Drueeist, JTOland S401 Ponn ave., ana Corner Wills a4 Fulton st PITTSBURG, PA. myl5-51-Trasa XK. HANDEK'S i ELEGTR1G BELT toe WEAMEJ jnMKNdebUium through dlseasd of Athirwlie. VVH SjIKENOm KliJuie "current left Instantly, of we io?leltt)CO in casX BELTCompiete tiand op- Vorst cases Permanently- Cnre.1 In tare, months. Sealed pamphlets free. CUtoa or ad dress SANUEN ELtCTKlO CO.. 81 Broadway, flew Korfc. myg-U-TTSSq r rtBOUKfCrtTliE MILLION FREE OME TMATMENT; Wlin lYltUlifAk LkC llllbli TVroll CTremriC. OHGANIO lad KERV0TT3 DISEASES in both sexes. Bar bo Belt till Ton rtad tali boek. AddreU. 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