I CAPITAL CfM-V rnuPiEK, SATURDAY, DECEMMKR art. tXo, s vtr . 11 (' ' .FROM TP CAPITAL. THERE ARE SOME HANDSOME MEN IN ThE LOWER HOUSE. BIk Hrnrrnl :nitl. or Xi'H Vork, mill itu itiir iiiiiiii i.utic iirn ciitiif. iii Illinois mid III l i ut-liK .luliii ,l Itu, llic HitninrNt. Scclnl CnrrFN)iiili!iicvi Wasiiinoton, Doc. 21. There nro sotno lino looking men in tlio now home of representatives. This Is distinctively a smooth faced house of commons. Just after the elections of u year ago noma ono dlscovereiNhat in nearly every case in which u licnrdluHS man had been pitted against ouu with a heard on IiIk face the former had won. At tho tlmo this statement was generally regarded as n joke, or as a conclusion drawn from two or three instances, which In no wiso established a rnlo. Dut when wo como to look over tho faces of tho men scut to TIIK LONG AND Till'. SHOUT Or IT. tho cyclone congress It is plain to see that in tho famous congressional fight of 1890 tho hiuooth faced men had tho luck and tho other fellows tho hoodoos. Just how many smooth faced men thero aro In tho houso 1 cannot say, but it is cortnin that not sinco tho war has thero been such a largo mrmbcr of them as thero is today. Among them nro some remarkably fine looking men too. Faces sure to at tract attention in any gathering are thoso of young Builoy of Texas, Bryan of Nebraska. Tom Johnson of Ohio, Btorer of Cincinnati, Miller (tho Greek) from Wisconsin. Fellows of Now York, Bcott Wiko of Illinois, McUiuin of Chi cago and many others unadorned by hirsute appendages. It is a notoworthy fact that, with a fow exceptions, ull tho smooth faces aro on tho Democratic side of tho hall, though both sides aro Demo cratic nowadays, inasmuch as tho ma jority members have spread themselves over a lurgo section of tho space dovolcd to tho minority. By arrangement tho Democrats took possession of ono tier of eents on tho Republican sido of tho hall, and this tier is commonly known as "tho Cherokeo Strip." Somo of tho best men in the party sit in tho strip, apart from tho majority of their friends. It happens that tho biggest man in tho houso. General Curtis, of Now York, has ono of tho biggest beards. General Curtis is a giant who stands 0 feet 0 inches In his stocking feet, and though comparatively slender weighs 2r0 pounds. Sinco taking his scat in tho houso General Curtis has been busy forming anew tho aciiuaintnnco of men who know him in tho troublous days of tho war, and among thoso who have taken tho big hero's hand aro many who fought on tho Confederate sido. Tho famo of General Curtis as a fighter spread throughout tho armies near the closo of tho war and has not yet been forgotton. Ho was promoted four or Bvo times for gallant services on tho Held, was wounded in tho breast in an eugagoinent in southwest Virginia and lost an oye in tho charge at Fort Fisher. An odd sort of friendship has sprung up botweon Air. Cablo. of Illinois, and Gen eral Curtis. Why they should bo drawn together is moro than their friends can understand, for they appear to have nothing in common. Ono is tho biggest man in tho houso and tho other tho 'smallest "tho long and tho short of it" ono a Democrat and tho other a Re publican, and whilo tho giant was a hero in tho civil war, tho little man was not old enough to fight with anything more dreadful than lead soldiers. Curtis has a long, patriarchal beard, whilo Cablo has ono of tho cutest little mustaches you over saw. The young Ulinoisau is so slender and so boyish looking that ho is sometimes called a dudo, but as n matter of fact ho is a manly man, an athlete, a great traveler, an adventure? who lias known what it is to face dan ger. Out in Uock Island, whero ho lives, ho is known to ovory ono as Uen Cable, and though a very rich man. being the son of tho presidont of the Rock Island railway, many of his warmest friends and most intimate companions aro poor young mon whom ho has known at school or in business. Ono story is told of Cablo which is too good to suppress. When ho decided to uiako tho race for congress in a district which had previously given a largo ma jority against his party, ho went to an old politician and asked him his advice as to how to carry on a successful cam paign. Tho old politician gave him a number of valuable hints, and added: "Just ono word more. Ton aro popular in this district. You can make a good campaign. But there is one thing you must do or Ikj defeated. It is a simple thing, and yet 1 fear you will not do it." "What is that?" "Give up smoking ciga rettes till of tor election. Can you do it';" Young Air. Cublo was silent for some minutes. It was apparent that a strug gle was going ou in his mind hot ween tho allurements of a seat in congress and the joy of cigarette smoking. In the end ambition titutitplieil over habit, and for sis weeks Mr. Cable Mas nocr seen in public with a clgatotto between hh lips. If he had continued smoking tho people of that district would not have sent him to cougrcs, where ho smokes as many cigarettes as he likes, One man who went away from Wash Ington a year ago without n beard and came back with one ou his face is tho famous funny man. John Allen, of Mis sissippi. Allen is without doubt tho funniest man now in congress, unless i now light of laughter shall bo discovered among tho new statesmen. Since dorr left tho houso and Sam Cox died Allen has reigned supremo in tho realm of con gressional humor, and ho is now fun nier than ho over was boforo in his Hfo. Usually wearing a slinplo tnustacho, ho now appears in Washington with a black beard all over his face. With this beard he has had no end of sport. It disguised him so that his best friends did not know him. luuumerablo stories aro told of tho pranks and deceits Allen has played with tho assistance of this beard. Ho has approached his friends in the guise of n tramp and begged them for a quarter, never failing to abuse them in round terms when his demands wero not complied with. To Congressman Owens, of Ohio, who was ono of Allen's fast friends in the hist houso, tho waggish member from Alississippi was introduced as a now inonibcr. "So you aro from Ohio?" drawled Allen. "Yes, sir." "Well. 1 never did have much uso for tho men from that stato anyway." Of courso Dwens fired up at this, "What do you mean, you ratty llttlo popinjay?" ho ex claimed. And as Allen, with a straight face and a most provoking manner, piled up the abuso of Ohio and Ohio men, the amused spectators became somewhat alnrmed for tho joker's safety, and final ly found it necessary to roveal his Identi ty to the irate member from tho Buck eyo State. Allen is in many respects ono of tho most remarkable men ever seen In the house. Ho is tho only man 1 ever saw in public life who can carry on an argu ment on any question under the sun simply by telling stories. No situation f.o desperate from a logicul ioint of view that Allen cannot at ouco rescue it by telling a story in point; no illustration so cloudy that lie cannot summon to his aid an auccdoto and make all as clear as day. Ono of tho best of his stories is of the last presidential election. Allen chanced to bo in Now York city as tho returns wero coming in. About midnight it became apparent that New York had gone for Harrison and that Cloveland was defeated. Gloom settled upon the little party of Demo crats who wero assembled in Mr. Brico's office. In a few minutes young Air. Hearst camo rushing in with a telegram from his father, tho lato Senator Hearst. This dispatch announced that California had gono for Cleveland without ques tion. At this everybody present bright ened up. Things wero not so bad after all. Only Allen appeared glum and silent. "What do you think of it, John?" somo ono asked. "Well," replied tho Alissis sippiau, "it reminds mo of Airs. Kemper down in my town. Air. Kemper had gono to miming ou a railroad train as a brakemau. a u d ono day u dis patch camo to tho good lady from up tho road that her husband had been caught in a wreck and had had his neck, ono leg and one arm b r o k on. Of courso Airs. Kem per was plunged into griof. But in auout nail an , hour another dis patch cume, ami as sho was a bright, cheerful sort of woman, who always tried to make the best oven of ad versify. AU',:N' ':akd. sho brushed away her tears and cracked up a smile as she read tho messago to her condoling friends and neighbors. 'This is good news indeed,' sho said: 'seo, they havo discovered that it was a mis take about his arm being brokon his arm is not hurt at all.' " Speaking of tine looking men, Air. Shively, of Indiana, whom 1 once before characterized in print as tho handsomest man in congress, is with U3 again, as handsomo as over. Ho is as modest and as witty too. When somo ono bunt oral him about tho reputation ho was getting as a handbonio man. Shively retorted by telling tho following story: Once upon a time Lunham, of Texas, had a competitor in his race for congress named Davenport. In tho courso of tint I campaign Lauham arrived in tho town i in which his competitor resided and repaired to tho hall in which ho was to i address tho people. Davenport, with the chivalry native to tho Toxau, volun ' teered to introduce Lunham to tho audi ence This oiler being nccoptod, Daven port proceeded in a most serious and dignified maimer to pronounce upon his competitor an encomium which, in tho liberality of praise, fairly exhausted tho ' garuituro of eulogy. With a twinkle of I mischief in bis eye tho speaker contin ( tied to ascribe to Lauham such a great number and variety of virtues and per fections that for a fow minutes tho vis itor did not know whether ho was human or divine. Tho keener part of tho as sembly wero inclined to commiserate Lauham ou the embarrassment of the situation, but when Davenport finally concluded ami introduced tho orator of the evening tho latter folded his arms anil said in tones deep, distinct and sol emn: "Fellow citizens, every word which my distinguished triond has told you concerning myself is the ( lod Almighty's I truth." Wai.tuu Ww.i.man. A hanio factory In Traverse City, Al ch turns out l.H.V.l haiucs a day. On I that scale it is mi uncommon industry, ! hames lioing tho pieces of wood used In tho collars of harnesses for druft horses. iLJiT mti ft I ff f k Jr . i IT A BOKXEO RIVEN. A CHAPTER FROM THE LIFE OF AN ENTHUSIASTIC TRAVELER. Iliirnrii l m Country WIhtii If You Would Wiilk Von Mint (in In m Itimt Art'ltl tri'ltir, Conking, I'UIiIiik, .Minlo Oilier Mutter. ISpvclul ('orrcnrHitiituiicp. London, Dec. 12. Borneo Is ono of thoso places where, as Paddy would say, all laud travel must bo done by water, for Stanley himself would llnd it hard to force a way through tho bristling mass of Impenetrable jungle too tough and pliant to bo cut down mid too full of moisture to bo burned up which fully bears out tho eastern proverb, "An ele phant cannot break it down, nor an ant wrlgglo through It." In fact, tho thick ets of Borneo, like thoso of South Amer ica or Central Africa, may lie best con ceived by Imagining u forest of inter laced telegraph wires, relieved by an occasional patch of llshhooks or of pen knives. Thus, when you start on a journey licau you hire a boat Instead of a horse or a carriage, and inquire, not about the stato of tho roads, hut about tho tides I and currents. Your native "houso boat," j with a roof overhead and windows along the sides, a cabin amidships for yourself, I n small pantry farther aft, and a fow i little rabbit hutches at tho stem for ! your Alalay crow mid servants, looks ! llko a cross between 'an overgrown gon dola and Noah's llrst attempt at an ark ' overcrowded by a false alarm of tho deluge. Tho only novel feature is a hugo ! staring eyo painted on each sido of tho bow. since, as the Chinese boatbuilder 1 will tell yoi. "Boat no havo eyo, no can 1 see go." Tho first twenty miles or so of the voyage nro gloomy and monotonous enough. Tho river seems to havo about i a hundred mouths, all exactly alike and 1 all equally overshadowed by the bluck funereal mangroves, which stand so thick along either bank lis to give you tho feeling of sailing through a monster hairbrush with bristles twenty feet high. The cheerless twilight of tho overarch ing thickets, tho black, sullen, slimy waters, tho close, damp, vapor bath at mosphere, tho sickening order of mud , and decaying vegetation, the sudden starting up over and anon through tho thick, oily stream of the homy snout and huge notched tail of a monstrous crocodile, all combine to make this part of tho journey rather depressing. Nor are matters much improved when you pass on to tho swampy jungles of tho fernlike "nipa" palm, which, however useful in furnishing utup (thatch) for mi i tivo huts and house boats, becomes rath I or a bore when you seo nothing olso for I twenty or thirty milos on end. But by degrees tho gloom lessens, tho ! banks grow "high and dry," tho hideous cobweb of swamp und thicket gives place to tho firm forest laud, and at ' length, sweeping around a sharp curve, 1 you como ull at onco upon a view that might make any man wish himself a painter. A vast tower shaped mass of sandstone thrusts itself out like a pier into tho broad, brown stream, crested along tho summit with noblo forest trees, whilo tho successive lodges or terraces of its steep, crumbling faco aro plumed with magnificent palmlike ferns, one sprig of which would havo covored Go liath from head to foot. In the base of this mighty cllfT, just above tho water's edge, yawns a deep black tunnel-like arch, all around which Ho packets of rice and tobacco, strips of dried fish, deer horns, "incenso sticks" and tiny red and wlilto flags. Your Alalay boatmen answer your inquiring look with an oxiiressivo (restore mid tint I single word "hautus" (spirit), these of ferings being in fact a kind of black mail paid to tho spirits of tho cave, who might othorwiso play unpleasant tricks on passing travelers. By this time you will havo passed four or five groups of rotting, tumbledown hovols. which wero ouco thriving na tive hamlets, for boforo tho coining of tho English to establish order with a strong hand, this whole district was so mercilessly ravaged by pirates that it was gradually forsaken by its inhabitants, I most of whom havo never returned. But as yon get farther away from tho sea I inhabited villages begin to multiply, j und a very queer sight they are. All I alike aro built in the regular Alalay i fashion, every house being a llttlo box of bamboos roofed in with palm leaf i thatch and raised high above the ground ou strong piles, which makes all the huts look as if thoy wore walking about on stilts. Tho only access is by a tang i gaii (bamboo huldor), and in tho middle of tho floor thero is always a largo square holo, through which slops and refuse of every kind aro ompticd on to tho ground below, till by degrees thero forms underneath the houso a perfect lake of miscellaneous filth, of which, aa tho Scottish gamekeeper said of his mas ter's shooting. "Tho moro said tho lent tho better." Nor is tho cookery of this strango re gion less primitive than its architecture. Half way up tho river you aro regaled by a hospitable penghulu (ii.Uivo chief) with a huge "chunk" of queer looking bluish-brown meat mixed with yellow fat, which tastes a good deal like rather gamy pork, but finally turns out to bo rhinoceros, a kind of beef which (as any one who has lieen in south Africa will admit; is not so bad when nothing bet ter can bo got. A little farther on you fall in with another national dish which is oven more remarkable At one of tho riverside villages two men como on Isiard with a rather tough steak smell ing strongly of musk, which they pro fcont to you as "eekan bezar" (big fish), And a very big fish it proves to lie, for it is nothing else than crocodile, the Borueans having apparently tho same theory of retribution as tho Jamaica ne gro: "Aha, imissul laud crab eat black limn. Nehber mind, Black man eat hoi" Crocodile fishing is as favorite a spoil in Borneo as salmon fishing iu Kurojw, und ut ulmost every betid of tho rivei you may seo one of (ho traps sot by tho Dyak for his natural enemy. Thcsouio us simple as they nro elfectlvo, consist ing merely oi two strong polos, pliant enough to bend without breaking, lashed firmly together and set deep In tho bank, To these poles Is attached a stout rope, and to the end of this rope Is fastened a short stick with both cuds sharpened, and a dead monkey or something else equally palatable fixed upon It by way of bait. Tho crocodile, greedily swal lowing the halt, gets this sharp peg stuck crosswise in his throat, and Is then easily hauled in despite all his struggles, after which his captors enjoy a sumptuous feast upon his flesh ami uiako shields of his scaly armor. Among tho minor deli cacies of tho Dyak bill of fare, snake plo, stowed monkey ami eggs kept till they can bo scented half a mile off hold u prominent place. In tho far Interior, however, where pigs are largely reared by the non-AIitssulnian trllies of tho forest, you can at times vary this queer menu with a griskin or a spare rib, and, in fact, tho one thing which still retards tho conversion of (hose savages to tho Moslem faith Is their reluctance to give up pork. In ono of the higher reaches of tho river you espy a small object floating down the stream toward you, which, as you near it, proves to lw a pretty llttlo miniature houso of the native pattern, adorned with a prolusion of (Iny colored flags and fixed upon a bamboo raft as small as itself, the whole thing being no bigger than a doll's house or a child's "Noah's Ark." Altogether it is u very charming little toy, but If you show any inclination to seize it as It passes, your Alalay crew wjll rulso their voices in alarmed and clamorous remonstrance, and tho tall, sinewy Sarung (native boatswain) will say very gravely, "Orang sakit" (man sick), and will then proceed to explain that this llttlo bark must havo been launched by tho friends of somo Dyak Invalid in a village higher up the river. In tho hope that his Illness may float away along with It, and If you meddle with It tho disease will Inevita bly fasten upon somo one on board your boat, or perhaps upon tho whole snip's company at once. About a mile farther ou there appears suddenly round a sharp bend a real lan tin (raft), such as one sees ou tho rlvors of Slam many yards In length und with a good sized hut in the middle of it coming down toward us as If it wero tho mother of tho infant raft that wo havo just passed in hot pursuit of her strayed baby. The presence of this strango craft is speedily and ominously account ed for by tho sudden shallowing of tho river, which is so besot with shoals and rapids just at this point that your whole crew havo to leap out onto tho bank and tow tho boat by main force, wading tho rough, kneo deep and often waist deep masses of black mud beneath tho full glaro of tho midday sun, while tho conMdorato sarang encourages them with tho comforting assurance that "even if they nro drowned it is only nasseob (fate)." When Air. Boatswain musters his men nfter tho work Is over, you will prob ably bo not a little amazed at the pe culiar names to which they answer. 1 roinonilsjr having a native "boat gang" on tho gold coast in west Africa, tho roll call of which ran as follows: "Brass Pan, Pea Soup, Princo of Wales, Red Flannel, Duko of Cambridge, Bottle of Beer, No Shirt, Bad Penny, Squint Eye, Son of a Gun, Dovil's Father." But this queer muster roll would pass qulto un noticed in tho interior of Borneo, where ouo is met at every turn by such names as "Kuloog" (worm), "Ubl" (potato), "Seeput" (sea slug), "Harlman" (tiger), "Ular" (snake), "Rossa" (deer). "Bua ya" (crocodilo), and "Pisang" (banana). In splto of their queer names, how ever, tho Alalay boatmen aro for tho most part very patient, good humored fellows, easily enough managed by any ono who knows how to deal with them. Many of them aro decided "dudes" in their way, and thoso who belong to tho government steam launches take great pride in their smart dress of whlto trou sers, scarlet cap, girdlo of crimson silk and blue frock, with a broad white "man-of-war" collar, thrown back over tho shoulders. They aro very fond of music, often timing the beat of their paddles to somo quaint old Alalay song, ami when thoy havo brought you to tho village whither you are bound und aro off duty for a time, instead of going to sloop, as you would expect, they often sit up half tho night singing ami telling stories. Many of tho songs aro improvised on tho spot, and tho jokes and personal hits which aro freely handled about on such occa sions aro always received with hearty laughter. Of tho stories, I translate ono as a specimen of tho rest: "Two men hud a riinputo about u wom an, each declaring that she was his wife. Tho ouo was a learned man, tho other u peasant why cultivated pad! (rice) in the fields. Being unable to agree, they went to tho kuzi (judge) and stated their case. It was a diflicult matter, and as if to make it mote diflicult still the woman did that which is hardest of all things for women to do she held her tongue and spake not a word. Then said the kazi, 'Leave the woman hero and return tomorrow.' They all salaamed and re tired, and on the moriow ho gave tho woman to the learned man, and sen tenced the peasant to fifty stripes with a rattan. 'This morning,' said ho, 'I bade this woman till my inkstand, and she did io like ouo well used to thu task, which, had she been a jieasant's wife, sho could never haw learned to do.' Then nil mon wondered ut the judge's shrewdness, and tho fame of his wisdom spread far and wide." David Keii. A I'iihI Hpt-iiker. The Boston stenographers, do not like to report tho sermons of Bishop Brooks, Ho started off a recent sermon at the rattling rato of 200 words a minute, and ho surpassed this gait as ho got wunnod tip with his subject. Four of tho stenog raphers who had lieen sent by different (Nijiers to rejiort tho sermon wero knockod out in a few minutes, and tho othors luwl to rest content with taking down such tmssages us they could catch. WISH I WAS RED CROSS STOVES P. S. 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