<h2>CHAPTER III</h2><h3>PICTURESQUE PANAMA</h3>
<p>A Panamanian cart loaded with English tea biscuit, drawn by an old American army mule, driven by
a Hindoo wearing a turban, drove up in front of a Chinese shop. The Jamaican clerk, aided by the San
Blas errand boy, came out to supervise the unloading. The mule wriggled about out of position, a
Spanish policeman came along and everybody got out and "cussed" the mule.</p>
<p>That is Panama, every day. Across the street is an Italian lace shop run by a Jew. Next door is a
printery, operated by a Costa Rican. Just beyond is a French laundry conducted by a man from
Switzerland, and on the next corner is a beautiful Chinese store where they sell everything from
Japan. Cloisonné and lacquer and curious carvings, silks, embroideries, scientific
instruments—they are all here. You can buy Canton linen, Hongkong brass, Nikko carvings,
Hindoo embroidery, German cutlery, French microscopes, Canadian flour, New York apples, and
California grapes all within a block. And the products of Central and South America are all
about.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The street in front of the shops is full of Panamanians, Peruvians, Ecuadorians, Chileans,
Colombians, and San Blas Indians, besides some representatives of every country of North and South
America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. Canal Zone Americans walk past Yankee business men, and native
police crowd the mestizos off the sidewalk.</p>
<p>Panama is a jitney town, and the honk of the never-silent horn punctuates the clang and dash of
the trolleys and automobiles down a fifteen-foot street in a mad race to see which can get through
first. Overhanging roofs nearly touch above blooming orchids and talking birds that scream across
the narrow streets. Gloomy interiors and stumbling stairways lead up to spacious apartments and
breezy balconies. Above are occasional roof-gardens. All the rooms have high ceilings, all the
streets are paved, and all the kids wear clothes—sometimes.</p>
<p>There is no possible human shade or tint that is absent here. The Anglo-Saxons are white, more or
less. The Jamaicans are black, mostly. The Panamanian is most often a soft and pleasing brown, done
in a number of wholly unmatchable tints. And the natives from these many sunny countries round about
are of every known color-tone, from chrome yellow to Paris green. This is the human kaleidoscope of
the earth: shake it up and you will get a different result every time.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="imgleft" style="width: 348px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-041.jpg" width-obs="348" height-obs="450" alt="Baths-Wholesale and Retail" title="" />
<span class="caption">BATHS—WHOLESALE AND RETAIL</span></div>
<p>You may not like it, but you can never truthfully say that Panama is not interesting—all
the time.</p>
<p>The streets are clean. Daily sweepers and nightly garbage men take care of that. The sidewalks
are narrow, of course. Perhaps these two-foot sidewalks account in part for the innate courtesy of
the Latin mind. One must be either polite or profane when he makes his way along these little
ledges, often two or three feet above the street. A portable stepladder would help some.</p>
<p>Some of these houses are old, very old. A few are new; most of them have stood here one or two
hundred years. There are many three stories high, a few boast of four stories, but the most of them
have but two. Third stories are popular because of the breezes that blow and make life
comfortable.</p>
<p>Plazas are small, but parked and well kept, and they are used as only Latin-Americans know how to
use a plaza. The little ones are garden-spot oases in the deserts of bare walls and wide
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span>
eaves. Santa Ana Plaza is the heart of the city, and there is no hour of the day or night that there
are not people there. If you really wish to see the world go by, sit on the stone bench at Santa Ana
Plaza and look about you. If you stay long enough, you may see anybody, from the latest naked brown
baby to the last chosen president of any country you may name.</p>
<p>Sitting in the plaza is a business by itself in this country. The North American uses a park as a
short cut, cross-corners, to get somewhere. But with the tropic citizen, the plaza is an end in
itself. He is not going anywhere, he is just sitting in the plaza. He may not even be called a
bench-warmer—the bench is already warm. He is sitting in the plaza—that is all.</p>
<div class="imgright" style="width: 180px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-044.jpg" width-obs="180" height-obs="500" alt="Convent Door" title="" />
<span class="caption">CONVENT DOOR</span></div>
<p>The band-night parade in Santa Ana Plaza is an institution. Around the central garden they
saunter, to the swing of the very good music from the central pavilion. The outer walk is wide, and
so is the parade. Clockwise walks the inner circle, three abreast, all young men. In the opposite
direction saunter the young women, also in threes. 'Round and 'round they go, talking, laughing,
listening, looking, lingering, while the band plays on. It is a good band too. And not the least of
the exhibit is the clothes the women wear. In matter of graceful and apparently comfortable costumes
the Panamanian girls need apologize to none of their northern sisters. Who is to blame
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>
the boys if they keep on walking around for the sake of seeing the seeable, especially when she may
be quite worth watching? Every added turn means one look more. It is all very dignified and proper,
but human nature is the same old composition in every land, and the blood in the heart runs red, no
matter what the tint or tan without. In a land where the customs of chaperonage are exceeding
strict, and no young woman is supposed to be left alone with any young man for the briefest moment,
it is easy to see why the band nights in the plaza are popular. Ostensibly the young women, after
the manner of their kind, have no interest in the young men, but just the same, their soft brown
eyes have the same old way of wandering at the right moment; it is the same old trick and it works
in the same old way.</p>
<p>The cathedral plaza is rather a different matter. Here gather the elite, in numbers on concert
nights, and more or less on other fair evenings. The grown-ups sit about on the benches and the
children run and play, care-free and comfortable. Well-dressed and content, these are the best of
the old native stock that used to live "inside" the walls of Panama that the Spanish king thought he
should be able to see. There are usually a few Americans with the crowd, and it is a peaceful and
restful family scene. Were it not for the incessant clatter of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span>
the trolleys and jitneys the place would be a good rest-cure. But as matters now stand, there is too
much pandemonium for any permanent peace.</p>
<p>Out at the point of the seawall, near Chiriqui Prison, stands an old stone sentry box. It appears
to belong to the prison now, but there was a time when the outlook from that point on the bay of
Panama was the viewpoint of Panamanian life as it faced the Pacific and marked the place of
departure for shores unknown. It is prosaic enough now to stand beside the little old stone tower
and watch a big liner leave the canal and throw back its smoke-plume as it steams out to sea, having
left the Atlantic Ocean seven hours before. Gone with the days of the explorers and pirates are the
mystery and menace of it all. The sentry box meant something then. Its lone occupant scanned
anxiously the horizon for the sail that might mean fresh
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span>
plunders, news from the world beyond, bountiful booty or stolen treasure, or perchance a fight to
the finish with other pirates as unscrupulous as the villains on shore. Now the children gather
there at sunset to play, care-free on the high wall overlooking the Gulf of Panama.</p>
<p>Old Spanish houses are built with the yard inside. It is delightfully intimate and cozy, but not
very democratic. Green and clean and cool are these little parked "interiors" of the better houses.
Some of the common patios are dirty and disheveled, and the worst of them are better left alone, but
the American Health Department looks after the sanitation of them all.</p>
<p>Chino (Chinese) shops sell everything, but, aside from the fine stores on Central Avenue, are
mostly devoted to native trade. Out in the interior the Chinese storekeepers transact practically
all the business of the country. Wherever there are two or three families gathered together, there
the Chinese storekeeper is sure to appear, ready to harvest any small or large coins that may be in
circulation.</p>
<p>There were at one time about five hundred saloons of all sorts in Panama, This number has been
greatly reduced with hope of complete extinction, owing to the exigencies of the near-by American
soldiers on the Canal Zone. The monthly payroll of the Zone is a stream of gold, and it is a case of
losing that gold or cleaning up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span>
Panama. Military orders and voluntary boycotts made Panama a lonesome town for the latter part of
1918.</p>
<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 400px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-046.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="326" alt="Official Lottery in Bishop's House, Panama" title="" />
<span class="caption">OFFICIAL LOTTERY IN BISHOP'S HOUSE, PANAMA</span></div>
<p>There is the official lottery, suspiciously located. To be sure, the bishop does not personally
supervise the drawings, and perhaps he does not get anything out of it, but no one who knows Panama
claims such to be the case. When did the hierarchy ever oppose a gambling game that promised profit
for the cause? Gaunt, hungry-looking cripples and pobres hang about the corners selling lottery
tickets. Evidently, none of the profits come to these unfortunates.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Panama City has its neighborhoods like any other Old-World town. "Inside" the old wall includes
the original fortified town on the little peninsula jutting into the bay. Here live officials,
professional and business men. Beyond this lies the town that overflowed the wall and now reaches
down to the park in front of the Tivoli Hotel. This is the barrio of Santa Ana. Caledonia and
Guachapali and San Miguel lie across the railway and serve to fill in the space between the Spanish
town and the Exposition grounds. A mile and a half beyond the palaces of the exposition lies Bella
Vista, beautiful for situation and rivaling Southern California for its real estate enterprise. Over
toward the Canal is Chorilla between the Cemetery and Ancon Hill. At the end of the five-cent car
fare on the line to the savanas is the famous—or infamous—bull ring. Who said that
bullfights had been abandoned? Not much. Between bullfights and prize fights the season is not
allowed to drag, and it must be admitted that the number of American patrons of these brutalizing
contests is not to the credit of the kind.</p>
<p>The open market where the fishermen come ashore is one of the show places of Panama. Pangas and
chingas and craft of every sort, except the modern kind, bring in on high tide cargoes of bananas,
coconuts, charcoal, camotes, rice, sugar, syrup, rum, papayas, mangoes, lonzones,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span>
chiotes, poultry, pigs, ivory nuts and a score of fruits and vegetables unnamable by the
uninitiated. When the tide recedes the boats lie high, if not very dry, and the unloading proceeds
apace. It is an interesting and lively scene, and the bicker and barter go on by the hour.</p>
<p>Hard by is the big native market, resort of housekeepers and servants in search of commissary
bargains. This one is fairly clean and is the morning recreation of thousands of shoppers.</p>
<p>Panama has its theaters, of the sort to be expected. One of the movie houses compares well with
the best anywhere, and most of the others are in good condition. The national theater is a credit to
the country and forms a section of the national palace. On the Canal Zone the clubhouses, sometimes
called Y. M. C. A.'s, put on several picture shows a week in commendable effort to supply recreation
to their patrons.</p>
<p>The architecture of the old churches is a bit disappointing to travelers who have seen the
splendid buildings of other Latin lands. The Cathedral has two modern towers, a clock in one of
them, and the twelve apostles in life size on the façade. The Jesuit Church by the Malecon is very
old and rather interesting. Recently a new concrete tower has been added, of striking appearance,
but not closely in conformity with the architecture of the church. This church contains a famous old
painting of purgatory and heaven,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
and down below, the flames of the lost. It is notable that in the place of purgatory are bishops,
priests, and kings. There are ten people in heaven, and ten in purgatory, and of each ten three are
women. Query—Where did the painter think that the women belong? It is an interesting question,
especially for the women.</p>
<p>The big Merced Church on Central Avenue has a curious and interesting little street chapel on the
corner of the sidewalk, and here are arranged curious exhibitions at Christmas and Easter. I saw
here the ancient village of Bethlehem, with the inn and manger and oxen; but there were also a
miniature lake with a steamboat, and a grocery wagon delivering goods to the ancient Bethlehemites.
The stores bore advertisements of patent breakfast foods.</p>
<p>No place can be truly romantic until it possesses some good ruins, and Panama claims distinction
in the old Flat-Arch Church near the palace. The interior is now used as a garage, and no one but
the tourist seems to think the place of any interest. Two blocks away stands the façade of the fine
old stone church that has been a ruin now for years. The interior is now a stable, and the old walls
of the college have been used for the construction of a modern cheap tenement house. The stone front
of the old wall stands as a fine example of the architecture and building of 1751, when the church
was finished.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The San Filipi Neri Church, at the corner of Avenida B and Fourth Streets, is made from stone
carried in from Old Panama. This church is said to have the most beautiful interior in the city,
but, as it is very rarely opened to the street, the visitor will have to accept the statement
without opportunity to judge for himself.</p>
<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 500px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-050.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="287" alt="Ruin of Famous Flat-Arch Church" title="" />
<span class="caption">RUIN OF FAMOUS FLAT-ARCH CHURCH</span></div>
<p>The savanas lie northeast of Panama and beyond the ruins of Old Panama. The rolling slopes of
green and the growing number of villas will make this strip of country valuable and famous before
long.</p>
<p>Of Panama's hotels not much need to be said, except that they are good of their kind. Latin hotel
standards are different from those of North America, but good judges of hotel life have pronounced
those of Panama to be quite endurable.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There are always two or three daily papers in Panama and an indefinite number of weeklies. An
immemorial custom exists by which when any citizen has anything on his mind that he feels he should
unload to the profit or otherwise of the public, a printed pronunciamento is issued and circulated
about the streets by boys, handed out freely to everybody in sight. This really effective method is
sometimes used for important matters of state.</p>
<div class="imgcenter" style="width: 218px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/illus-051.jpg" width-obs="218" height-obs="600" alt="Eighth-Grade Room, Panama" title="" /> <span class="caption">EIGHTH-GRADE ROOM, PANAMA</span></div>
<p>The educational system is modeled upon the best Latin-American standards, with primary schools of
four grades throughout the Republic. Provincial centers have schools with two, and in a few cases
four years more. The National Institute, at the foot of Ancon Hill, maintains a normal school for
men and a liceo which grants the degree of Bachelor of Arts upon the completion of about the
equivalent of the American college freshman
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span>
year. The young women are given a normal course in the Women's Normal School at the Exposition
grounds. There is no coeducation above the primary grades. The Agricultural Experimental Farm and
School, abandoned as an experiment station, is used as a reform school.</p>
<p>Taboga Island lies off shore and furnishes a point of much interest. It is the week-end Mecca of
the Zone people and also of many of the Panamanians. There are a good American hotel, several fair
native hotels, good fishing, tramping, an interesting native village, a healthful climate, and a
fine view—and all within ten miles of Panama.</p>
<p>If the prowler is looking for real adventure, he can seek for it on Gocos Island, three hundred
miles south of Panama. Here are said to lie hidden somewhere ten millions of dollars' worth of
treasure, stolen from Callao and other points between 1820 and 1830. Harvey Montmorency wrote it up
in a book entitled On the Track of the Treasure, and so well did he tell the story that four large
expeditions have been organized and sent to find it. One man is said to have found a little gold for
his pains, but the others went home poorer than they came. And if these are too easy destinations,
there lie the Galapagos Islands off the coast of Peru, said to contain many possibilities, of many
kinds. Peru is supposed to have the islands on the market, and anybody with the money can purchase
one, all his own.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />