THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. SECOND PART. PAGES 9 TO 16. M'-"! i $? CHIEFTAN AND CHUM. "William Nye Drops a Few Pearly Tears on the Tomb of Colorow. A COLLECTION OP GUILTY STAINS. The Novel Experience of an Advertising lay Figure. A SENTDIEXTAL ASPECT OF F0L1TICS iivjuitex fob thk dispatcn.1 Still at Large. I OUGHT not to allow any fur ther time to elapse before payiug a desprved tribute to the memory of my old frieud and comrade in arm, Colorow, the Chief of the Southern Utes. I will now dOEO. Colorow was not regarded as a great statesman even by his tribe, but he won the faith and approval of his people more espe cially by his pa tient and efficient methods of untir ing homicide. He did not care for the pomp and circumstance of war, for the blast ot bugles, the neighing of red-nostriled chargers or the gaudy trappings and par aphernalia of combat He preferred the quiet ot the boskey dell, the silent night, the sough of the pine or any other sough erer so that he was not included him self, the auict of the forest, the deep hush of the lonely culch, with none but the Great Spirit and the regular arniy to watch him, then with a steady aim and the click of his approved "Winchester, the echoes and the lonely prospector died away together. The stream moved gently on. Then Colorow's own special buzzard de scended from the crest ot the hills and be ;;an his inqnest. The modest chieftain robbed the dead and then went on. He did not ask to be banqueted on his return. He scorned the popular approval and asked for no recognition other than the conscious ness of duty well done. That was Colorow's style. Do I not know him? Have we not roamed over the North Park and Muddy Pass and along Owl creek and over Independence Mountain together, or very nearly so, I be ing only two or three mountains in advance? HIS GUILTY STAINS. But he is gone. Colorow celebrated his Christmas by sitting around the depot of the Great Hence. Philanthropists tell us that he has gone directly to heaven. I hope not. That is I hope he has not gone directly there. I trust that he had a chance to stop somewhere on the road and wash away his guilty stains. When I saw him buried in the 2orth Park I noticed that he had the largest collection of guilty and other styles of stains of any savage I had ever asso ciated with. If Colorow has gone directly to heaven, and it becomes generally known, it will certainly do much to discourage travel that way next year, and salvation, which has heretofore" been entirely free, will be placed on the list of articles requir ing protection. Colorow's death was caused by pneumonia directly, brought on by exposure. It seems that a year ago at a full dress ball, given at Ousary, he fonrot to bandage up his lungs when he changed from a nigh to a low-cut rest, and pneumonia harvested the great warrior just as yuletide was coming on. He was not a ready speaker, and as a lecturer and reader of his own words he was repeatedly criticised, but he was a lifeless foe and would rather do that than anything else. He started in as a young man to wipe out the United States, and though he did not succeed he has done what he could. He did not care for publicity or press notices. He just wanted to know that he had the ap proval of his own little smoke-tanned con science and then he would take an old rag and some kerosene oil and clean out his old rifle and start out again. Some days he Interviewing the Lay Figure. would scare up two or three white men and get them all. Other days lie would have to content himself with a little dead child. Very often he played to poor business, but he never murmured or repined. A CONSERVATIVE MAX. Colorow did not believe in industry or open hostility. He as a conservative Jack the Bipper on his father's side. All his ancestors were loug-lived people. That is, they generally succeeded in living longer than those who looked at things from a different standpoint. Those who disagreed with the Colorow family gener ally ran across each other in a better land. He" was quite like all successful murderers and reminded me in many ways of old man Bender inhis more prosperous days. Still he had an air about him which though fla vored with the past, still commanded respect, and when he usked a man at the table to please pass the butter, that man would drop everything else he had on hand and pass the butter. Colorow once jumped one of my mines, but I forgive hjm now that he is dead. I did not criticise him at the time, lor the day he jumped the mine I jumped the country and so I thought I would say nothing more about it I hud just been down the gulch a little way and was returning. As I strolled on, up the little trail. I burst forth into song. My soul was full and just' seemed to swell up in one of the most joyous little pianos that ever jolted the geological forma tion of Colorado. It was at this time that Colorow and I were thrown together. I knew him by his scarred and powder-bnrned face. From what be said I could see that we would never be happy together and so Iwentaway. There could be nothing ip common between two men of such entirely opposite tastes. He was a thick-set, hairy man with an im mediate gun. I a tall, lithe, blonde person, less hairy than he and ill-fitted for assassi nation. "Whether the mine will now revert to me, together with the 65 feet ot water and assess ments, I wot not I would not wot if I wanted to. I only know that Colorow is dead, and that knowing him as I do, I would Ms Uraft MB advise the angelic host to conceal its crowns every night; also to see that the aged chief does not push the women and children over the battlements while they are looking the other way. DBIVEIT BY ADYEBSITY. I met a sad-looking man in the smoking car the other day. He was woe begone and cast down, and looked as though he had a suit of clothes which did not fit him and there were dried clover blossoms in his hair. The air of poverty and the haymow pervaded his neighborhood. He told me he was well educated but poor, oh so poor. He looked down in hie clothes and said they were not made especially for him. I told him that I had judged so. He said he was a college graduate but somehow had never succeeded because he only knew what a lot of other people knew and the other people had secured the job of knowing those things at a salary while he just knew them for his own amusement. Last summer he was driven into New York, not by his own coachman as some are, but by adversity. He was compelled to do anything and for a while sold terra cotta gum rings for umbrellas on the street. Offnhewas temptfd to eat his assets, he was so hungry, but did not do so. At last, hunger compelled him to seek other avenues of trade. So he tried Seventh avenue. He hired out to act as a lay figure. That looks like an easv job, but little doesthe average barbarian "know of toil. He hired himself to a bed manufacturer. In the show window it was the custom to make up a handsome bed, using the Morpheus Joltless Couch or some other new style, collapsing bed and baby grand pianos combined. He hired to repose in this bed at so much per dav and his board. All he had to do was just to lie there like little Eva in Uncle Joins uabin company ana jook sweet, breathe perfectly naturally or like the wax works in the assassination groups nt the Chicago museums, and not allow himself to actually go to sleep, for then he might snore and disgrace himself. AET CRITICISMS. People used to flatten their noses up against thfc widow from 6 o'clock in the morning till 8.o'clock at night, looking at the beautiful bed and the wax man with the nice fuzzy whiskers as the counterpane rose and fell with each gentle resperation. It was real good. It was not what you could call sedentary business and yet it was not difficult It was not, however, a calling w hich aroused the faculties much and a man without a college'education could have soon learned so the crowd would not have known the difference. Sometimes people would criticise him and say he needed this and he needed that in order to look life-like. Some criticised his hair, others said one ear was bigger than the other. Most everybody saw where they could have improved on'him. His clothes were put away by an at tendant each day, and brought hack to him at night. He never knew where they were. He only knew that he lav like a boarder taking his rest with his folding bed about him. One hot day last summer a little boy came up to the open window and threw a big cannon fire caacker in on the lay figure and then went away lrom there for a few weeks. That was the time when the college grad uate dressed in a long robe, de nuit, trimmed with red tattering around the yoke and sleeves, and with a special train to it. abandoned the position which he had before occupied. That is the reason he attracted attention as he passed the City Hall on his way to the Brooklyn bridge. That is the reason why he now wears a suit of clothes which he ordered in a hurry, a suit of clothes which was made for the lay figure in a Xew Jersey corn-field but which were doubtless returned as unsatisfactory. A FLUENT TALKER. Still he was a good talker, and his con versation interested me very much. He got to talking finally of the South and inci dentally of the bloody shirt element on the one hand and the gum tolu reconcilers on the other. Incidentally he used, as nearly as I can recall it, about the following language: "The growth of conciliation between the Uorth and the South is the slow growth of years and the work of generations. "When any man, North or South, in a public place takes occasion to talk in a mellow and mawkish way of the great love he now has for his old enemy, watch him. He is getting ready to ask a favor. I know that there is a beautiful, poetic idea in the reunion of two contending and shattered elements of a great nation. There is something beautifully pathetic in the picture of the North and South clasped in each other's arms and shedding a torrent of hot tears down each other's backs as it is done in a play, but do you believe that the aged mothers on either side have learned to love the foe that shot her son and burned hit beautiful home? Do you believe that the crippled veteran, North or South, now pas sionately loves the adversary who robbed him of his glorious youth, made him a feeble rnin and mowed down his comrades with swift death? Do you believe that either warrior is so fickle that he has de serted the cause for which he fought? "No, sir. This maudlin, mawkish style of parlor theatricals is worthy of the real estate speculator and the bloodless, windy wars between men who battle for post offices. "Let the gentle finger of time undo the physical devastation wrought in the South. Let succeeding generations seek through natural methods to reunite the business and the traffic that were interrupted by the war. Let the South guarantee to Northern inves tor security tohimself and his investment and he will not ask for the love which we read of in speeches,but do not expect and do not find in the South. FOOD FOE T1IOUGIIT. "Two warring parents on the verge of divorce have been 6aved the disgrace of separation and agreed to maintain their household for the sake of their children. Their love has been questioned by the world and their relations strained. Is it not bad taste for them to pose in public and make a cheap Romeo and Juliet tableau of them selves? "Let time and merciful silence obliterate the scars of war, and succeeding generations, fostered by the smiles of national prosperity, soften the bitterness of the past and mellow the memorv of a mighty struggle in which contending hosts called upon Almighty God to sustain the canse which it honestly believed to be just. "Let ns leave the hollow mockery, the gush and rhetorical rot of reunited hearts to the fickle politician and the ague-stricken speculator who sells us an orange plantation in the everglades of Florida or a town lot covered with mortgages and fringed with alligators. "Let us write and talk less for declama tory purposes and do more for posterity. "When you see two people calling attention to their affection for each other, that is the time to speak to the police about it." I do not indorse all he said, but there was food for thought in it, and when he left the train, I asked him to dine with me some evening and be the life of the party. Bill Nye. A friendly Encounter With Colorow. FEMININE CLUBITES Once More Beproached and Criticized by the Bold Ouida. HARDENING EFFECT OF CLUBS. They Please tho Avenge Woman, But Not the Woman, of the World. ONE DEFECT IN MODERN EDUCATION. tWKITTZN TOR THK DISPATCH.! ANDIDLYit is a false philosophy which per suades people that enjoy ment is to be found in excitement alone. The only really valuable training is that which teaches a manor a woman Jent to the fitful and 1 1 rtiiilrl v fiTinnetArt nlf!l. iirae nf cnntal llfp Society has many ex cellent uses; it forms the mind in one way as much as education forms it in another. The friction which it affords with other minds softens prejudices, dissipates preconceived ideas, enlarges the intel lectual horizon and animates and vivifies the whole intelligence; when it is of a high and delicate kind itself. But the safest mental preparation for it is that which does not overvalue or depend upon it. Those who cannot live without excitement, whether it take the form of parties to meet the Prince of Wales, pr of cheap trips to eat shrimps at Margate, are unhappy, de pendent on others, never independent of fortune. Club life will inevitably teach women to be more and more intolerant of privacy and monotony. AVomen usually like a thing to a dangereusly exaggerated extent whan they like it at all. It is al most certain that if they once acquire a taste for club life they will "become impatient of any other; the constant quid novi? the con stant change of society, the mimicry of mas culine liberties and the case with which their personal wants are supplied, will all become pleasures which will grow on them. "Women's clubs will, I repeat, never be much needed by women of the world who al ready possess all that such clubs would offer them in more satisfactory forms, but they will become A DANGEROUS ATTRACTION' to those classes of women, unhappily so much upon the increase, who, not mistresses of any home where they can reign, educated enough to be restless and vain, owning or earning competence enough to afford them leisure but not luxury, professing a sterile and unnatural indifference to the opinions and affections of men, who plunge into charlatanism, science or politics, in their search for excitement. Thse women, meeting only other women, will increase their own discontent and in noculate with it the contented. The society of women is not good, in a great degree, for a woman. Women will harm the mind of a woman much more dangerously than 09 men out of 100. "Beware of female inti macies," was said by a wise diplomatist to his daughters, and the advice was sound. "Women's clubs will be 'hotbeds of suoh in timacies. , The jealous dislike with which men re gard the attachment to a female friend of the woman they love is well founded. To the friend are confided the dearest secrets and the most dangerous confidences, and in her the lover or the husband almost always possesses his greatest and most insidious enemy. Few men nre very wise ind few women are thoroughly loyal. All influence which has a tendency to estrange women from men is bad, bad in itself and bad in its results. Men are not as virtuous as women would like them to bef nor are they often as clever as they imagine themselves to be, but, such as they are, they are indefinitely better objects of women's affections than women theniselves.'and the mental atmos phere which they bring with them is more robust and invigorating; whilst their views are, on the whole, juster and more sensible about most matters. TIIE WOMEN OF THE WORLD. Why women of the world are wiser in their judgments than women of the bour geoisie is due to the fact that the former is constantly surrounded by an ever-changing society of which men are the most numerous members and the most intimate in associa tion with her; the latter is, on the contrary, thrown for her intiniate associates almost entirely upon female companions. The man is, perfiaps, the strongest and best man who lives little with women, but the woman who lives most among women is by no means the sweetest or the wisest woman. There is an inclination among women in the present days to deify themselves, which is fraught with immeasurable vanity, egotism and woe for themselves and others. Women's clubs will be the nucleus of this undesirable self-adoration now so general in the weaker sex. There is in women a hos tility to irard men, a jealousy of their powers, an envy of their pursuits and their awards, which is pregnant with extreme mischief, and needs ho encouragement from external circumstance. There are too many, far too many, women numerically; masses" of these women are well educated and unemployed; they are being taught to believe that their salvation lies in forcing themselves into careers alieady overstocked byraen; and the inevitable result will be a deadly hostility between many classes of the "two sexes. Clubs will largely increase that class of women who are already antagonistic to men, who are restless and uncomfortable in their homes, who have a passion lor physical science because they hope to satisfy through it their unwholosome curiosities, and wno possess neither the qualities which can at tain a brilliant position nor the resignation which can accept an obscure one. The women's clubs, i. e.. those for women alone, will almost certainly be chiefly con fined to the middle classes. Women of fashion will neither need nor care for them. Their members will be almost entirely re cruited from the large class of tolerably clever, infinitely discontented women who are often declassees, always discontented and ill at ease, and who pass miserably from the fruitless restlessness of youth to an un loved and unlovely maturity. THE DEFECT IN MODERN EDUCATION. The supreme defect of all modern educa tion is that it occupies itself solely with the mind) and scarcely touches or attempts to form the character at all, and the more scientific or "special" the education be the more absolutely under its domination is the development of the character neglected. The hnman mind is finite, like the'b.nnian life; and if very much of one thing be forced on it, it is greedily filled by this to the ex clusion of other and often more valuable things. Unselfishness is a more precious quality than "all the ologies," and tact and delicacy sweeten the ways of life far more than does the ability to dissect a living organism or do an advanced problem in Euclid. Competition in the schools hardens into unconscious vanity and egotism the naturally soft and pliant tissues of female character, and in after years club life, if it become general for women, will unques tionably increase tnis onensive selt-concen-tr.Uion. The most "clubable" man, the man who most frequents his club and makes it the center of his existence, is usually also the most egotistic, self-centered, sell-indulgent of men. It is because he studies himself exclusively that his club fulfills to him the whole ideal of existence and satisfies him ZK.W330 ifiaSnM PETTSBUEQ, STJKDAY, absolutely. The same effect upon woman will be more fatal, since more essentially unlovely is selfishness in her than in him. Everything which tends to take women out of their own homes is injurious to the world at large. The employment of one class of women in workrooms," shops and factories, the university training now bestowed on another class, the constant stir and pub licity in which the highest class of all live and move 'and have their being serve alike to destroy the essential charm of women and remove them from the sphere of their natural happiness and influence. Club life will do this more and more, and will sub stitute the hard glare ot continual publicity for that subdued light of home in which women are at their best and happiest It is for the convenience of the average woman that a female club world is about to emerge into existence; and it is to the aver age woman that its effects will be eventually most baneful, if, at the commencement, it may appear to offer her repose, amusement and economy. It may flatter the vanity and mislead the ignorance of the sexto pass their lives in public dining, reading, talking and letter writing in the peopled rooms of a club house, but it will not give to them Miranda's charm, Desdemonajs tenderness, Juliet's passion nor Cornelia's virtue. Ouida. AN INTERESTING HEIRLOOM. An Oak Chest and the Condition Attached to the Possession of It. Boston Courier. In a certain Boston family there is an heirloom which is both interesting and, in these degenerate days, most suggestive. It is a dower chest of carved oak, not wholly unlike except that it is smaller the chests in which Venetian brides of old used to be stow their wedding outfit. This dower chest has been in the family nearly a century, and in it the oldest daughter of the family is expected to hoard the linen which she prepares against the day of her marriage, much after the fashion of German maidens. The one condition attached to the possession of the chest is that the girl owning it shall with her own hands make every article put into it. The will of the first owner provided that the chest should descend only to daughters of the house who would without assistance do all the sewing on their outfit of household linen. Thus far the condition has been scrupulously observed; and thus far, also, each owner of the chest has, in passing it on, left in it an elaborate piece of embroid ered table linen. In a time when the old-fashioned house wifely arts have the reputation of being neglected, there is something peculiarly pleasant in the idea of the dower chest and the way in which it has been carried out. The fourth bride has within a year taken it to her new home, stored with linen and damask, hemmed and embroidered by her own fingers, which handle a needle with no less dexjerity than they have been trained by some of the finest masters in Europe to "fly over the keys of the piano. The dower chest has become an institution in which not only the possessor, but all her family take a just pride, and skill in needlework is hardly likely to die out in that particular race as long as that carved oak coffer remains to exercise its beneficient influence. LOVELI WOMAN'S WATS Furnish a Text for Numerous Complaints From a Cbronlo Grumbler. A chronic grumbler met a Dispatch re porter, and sure of a sympathetic listener, began unfolding his tale of woe. Said he: "Saturday night, about 5 o'clock, I went to the postoffice to get half a dozen Etamps. How long do you think it took me? Nine teen minutes by the clock. The trouble? Oh I the little space between the walls and the window was just full of women women with market baskets, women with bundles, women with babies and women with umbrellas. They stepped on my cornB, elbowed me around as if I had no business there, and twisted me this way and that until I thought I never would get out A half dozen times, when I got almost up to the window, I stepped back a little for some lady to be waited on, and three or four women thrust themselves forward, crowding against each other and pushing me back. Without acting in a very ill mannered way I couldn't possibly get my stamps sooner, though if each comer had taken her turn in getting to the window all night have been waited upon in half the time. "But if thewomen showed no respect for a man's rights and privileges, neither did they for those of each other. Men who want to purchase stamps or tickets in a hurry form a line and take their turns. Women do nothing of the kind, bnt each one tries to get to the Iront first and pushes the smallest and the weakest of the crowd out of the way. The dear creatures are very delightful at home, no douot, but not in a crowd of strangers. Then they are ill-mannered and make no attempts to conceal their rude ness." And the grumbler looked, as he uttered tha last word, like a man firmly convinced of the truth of what he was Baying. But he must have been mistaken, of course. A GRANGER'S MISTAKE. An Agriculturist Who Thought the Union Depot a Counlrj Station. "Whar's the ticket office?" asked a middle-aged farmer of the telegraph operator at the Union depot. "Just across the room," replied the teleg rapher, pointing the way. The country man walked over. -Evidently his eyes were not good or else he had never been in any but a country railroad station before. He walked up to the little frame which incloses a sheet of glass be hind which the daily weather bulletins are posted. Mistaking this for the ticket seller's window he began tapping on it to attract attention. He succeeded. That is, the people in the station all bejan gazing at him and wandering what he was trying to do. The ticket agent was too busy to notice him. The granger kept on rapping, but the supposed window didn't raise. Finally some person showed him where the office was and he purchased a ticket to some station in Fayette county. IT AFFECTS THEM STRANGELY. The Sight of n Dentist's Chnir GivcsPatlenta Chills and Fevers. "It's queer the way people are affected by visiting a dentist's office," remarked a den tal surgeon to a Dispatch reporter. "Some no sooner come here than they seem to be seized by a sudden chill which Bets them to shivering all over. They get in the phair and I turn on the natural gas to make as much heat as possible. Why, I've even had to put blankets around my patients to keep them comfortable on a warm day. Others are thrown into a feverish sta'te, and the perspiration breaks out the minute tjify sit down. Then ot course I have to shut off the fire. "But the sirangest thing about both classes of patients is that their chilliness or feverishness leaves them immediately after they quit the chair. It is nervousness and dread that cause these remarkable phvsical effects, I suppose. But it's about as" hard on me as it is on them, for the unevenness of temperature in the operating room, which I must perforce endure, keeps me suffering from a cold, catarrh, or headache about half the time." . Who would waste money? We call at tention to the fact that Salvation Oil costs only 25 cents. JANUARY 20, 1880. HISTOET OF. A CIGAR. The Material From Which It is Made and How It is Put Together, IN SHAPES TO SUIT THE SMOKER, By the Aid of Skillful Hands and Curiously Contrived Machines. PITTSBURG TOBIES GAINING GROUND rWBITTEN FOB. THE DISFATCH.I IGAR MAKING is an industry which furnishes employment to thousands of peo ple in Pittsburg and Allegheny. There are over 200 cigar factories in the two cities. Many of them are small, to be sure, yeUhe aggregate annual revenue to the United States Government arising from the tax on their products reaches an enormous figure each year. The cigarmakers are a class of whom the general public hears and knows but little. Unless there be a strike and strikes are rare in this trade they never figure in the newspapers, but pursue their calling quietly, unostentatiously and in dustriously, year in and year out, helping largely toward swelling the grand total of the figures which represent the value of the annual output of Pittsburg's varied manu facturing interests. Probably no other in dustry of like importance commands so small a share of the public attention. It is probably not generally known, and yet I am assured that it is a fact, that the largest cigar manufactory in the State is located in Pittsburg. This establishment employs over 250 workmen, women and girls, and last year paid into the United States Treasury the neat little sum of ?GG, 000 for revenue stamps. As the tax is $3 on each 1,000, this represents & product of 22,000,000 cigars, or about G3 cigars per year for each man, woman and child in the two cities! And this, bear in mind, is only what one factory made. Divide up pro rata an toe cigars made in ail tne lactones during the year and there would probably uc cjjuujju .all vu hue ivy ui cat,u giuuau iv keen him fiiirmliprt -with fimnlcine material for qnite a number of years, if not for the'' rest oi nis ntetime. Stripping Tobacco. But fortunately for the manufacturers they don't have to depend upon home cop sumption. Their goods find a market in all sections of the country. Even the much maligued and ridiculed Pittsburg toby which the Government, with a sublime dis regard for the eternal fitness of things, classifies and taxes as a "cigar" is finding its way eastward and westward, and bids fair, in time, to make itr influence felt and smelt throughout the whole United States. Most men smoke cigars, yet cpmpara tively few know how they are made. Peo ple seldom trouble themselves to visit the kitchen and ask the autocrat of that domain how he or she prepares the various dishes that make up the daily bill of fare. They don't care, at least men don't if the food taste well. It's the same way about cigars. The average smoker cares not how they are constructed if they have the aroma, fragrance and other qualities which he likes. Yet the process of cigar-making, as it is carried on in large establishments, is most interesting. In order to gain some infor mation on the subject I went a few days ago to the large cigar factory before mentioned, and was courteously shown through it by the proprietor. We first visited the lower floor of the building where the tobacco is received, un packed and prepared foe the cigar makers. It comes in large cases, the leaves being bunched and tied together in small packages called "hands." Some of it losts 10 cents a pound and some as much as Bunching. 51 90. There is a great difference in the grades and prices ot both foreign and do mestic tobaccos. There is also a great differ ence in the value of different crops from the same ground, Pennsylvania tobacco in one year may be of poor quality and the next year's crop may rank among the very best of domestic tobacco. Soil, climate, rainfall and drouth, each and all, have their effect in adding to or detracting from the value of the crop. The influence of soil is particu larly strong. Other conditions may be ever so favorable, the plants may grow and flourish luxuriantly, yet certain localities can never raise good tobacco, because they haven't the right kind of soil. The leaf may be ever so fine in appearance and yet totally deficient in the agreeable flavor which makes it valuable. The climate and Psoil of Cuba impart to the tobacco grown there the qualities which have made the word Havana famous among users of the weed all over the world. The influence of soil upon the crop is so great as to be noticeable in leaves coming lrom the same field and even from the same acre of ground. Experts are able to judge, by examining specimens of leaf tobacco, in what part of the country it was grown. It takes years to acquire snch knowledge, and however long a man may have been engaged in the tobacco business, it is still possible for him to learn something. Sumatra tobac co is the highest priced of the imported material for.cigar making. Thirty-five cents per pound is the import duty. This leaf is used as a wrapper lor fine cigars, and iad mired not so much tor its flavor as for the fine color and rich glossy appearance it gives to the cigar. Some Pennsylvania tobacco is of excellent quality and brings a high price. Pennsylvania "Havana seed" leaf of the crop of 1887, is worth 75 cents per pound. Ohio, Wisconsin and Connecticut tobaccos are also largely used by Pittsburg cigar makers. When the tobacco comes to the factory it is, of course, perfectly dry. It is taken from the cases and dampened by steam, then put through a great number of pro. cesses for the purpose of "sweating," color ing and otherwise preparing it for use. Prom this floor it goes to the stripping de. 'P i Cf!r& partment, where the moistened "hands" are untied and the strong mid rib of the leaf dexterously removed. This work is done by women "and girls. When the stripping is finished, the tobacco is sorted and ar ranged in pans for further manipulation. In another room are the machines bjr which tobacco is cut into cigar "fillers. ' The apparatus is so arranged that the mate rial can be cut of any length desired, and the machinery does its work very rapidly. The tobacco for filling the cigar is taken, along with the leaf in which it is wrapped, to the "bunching" department, where the body of the cigar is made and shaped. This work, formerly all done by hand, is now entirely performed by ma chinery. The bunching machine is an in genious t contrivance, worked by a treadle after th'e manner of a sewing machine. It arranges the fillers, puts on the first wrap per and leaves the cigar almost perfectly formed. As the "bunches" come from. the machine they are taken by the operative and placed one by one in wooden molds having space for 20 cigars each. The molds are then subjected to pressure for about two hours, when the cigars are ready for the final wrapper and the finishing process. One girl with a machine can bunch about4,000 cigars a day, an amount of work which it would require five persons to doby hand. It is but a short time since machinery was introduced in cigar making, but its use ap pears to be rapidly gaining ground. Putting on the outside wrapper and clip ping the large end or buttis the final step in the manufacture of a cigar. This also is Wrapping Cigars. done by etrls, who perform their work neatly, skillfully and rapidly. One girl can wrap from 1,000 to 1,200 cigars per day. The cigars when finished and dried go to the packing room, where they are sorted, packed and the boxes stamped and marked ready for shipment. As there are about, 14 dif ferent shades of color recognized by cigar makers, and each color must be kept separate, the sorting is quite a particular job. Tobies, both the mold and Wheeling varieties, are made in the f.ictory in large 4UUUUUCS. j.ne so-cauea w Heeling toby. r stogv, which has but 5made entirely by hand. . - one wrapper, is An exrtert r.ttrnr. Quaker can roll about 5,000 tobies per day. a-cmua inn uiusi interesting o ejects ot study in the whole factory are the variously designed labels that adorn the interiors of cigar boxes. On these, and other lithographs used for advertising purposes, hundreds of dollars are expended by the manufacturer. The amount of ingenuity displayed in some of the designs is surprising. One cigar label represents three huge grasshoppers, sitting on a fence, smoking; behind them is a devastated wheat field, and in front a fine field of ripe grain, while over all is the legend, "In this wheat by and by." It is scarcely necessary to state that cigars of this brand are intended for the Kansas trade. Another label is marked "Hayseed," and pictures a farmer trying to blow out an electric light. On a box of cheroots are the words "She roots," with the picture of a large, fat hog. It pays to spend money and time on labels, as a name that catches the popular fancy.may sometimes cause the sale of millions of a particular grade of cigars, whereas the demand for the same quality of goods, under another name, would perhaps he very slight. E. W. Baetlett. WANTED EXCURSION RATES. A Granger Tries to Get His Railroad Ticket nt Bottom Prices. A rustic looking man, about 45 years, of age, stepped up to the window of a Pitts burg ticket office and asked the fare to K ,naming a station some 40 miles out of the city. "One-forty-five," returned the ticket seller". "Hey?" "A dollar and 45 cents." "I'll give you a dollar and a quarter apiece and take four of them." "Couldn't make areduction if you should take a hundred." "Seems to me you don't care much about encouraeing trade." "Don't want the trade that comes that way. Will you have a ticket or not?" The man attempted to argue further, but wassileifeed by curt replies. He finally handed out a 810 bill and asked for four tickets.' When he had received them and his change, a Dispatch reporter who had been standing near, asked the agent: "Do you often meet such customers?" "Oftener than you would suppose. It is an old story with us. The man who wants to knpek down prices bobs up at the depot occasionally, as "he does everywhere else. He is alway a person unaccustomed to traveling, of course, but that doesn't pre vent him from being a nuisance," HOTEL CURE FOE CORNS. An Oil Tilnj Says Crude Petroleum Will Fix Them Evcrv Time. "You are troubled with corns, are yon?" said a Pittsburger to one of his friends who walked with a peculiar, limping gait. "Well, everybody has a remedy for them, but the trouble with most of the remedies is tnat they are no good without faith, and the man afflicted with corns generally considers his case hopeless. But I cau tell you of a cure that is simple and effectual. Soak the afflicted portion of your feet for a considera ble time every night the longer the better in crude petroleum, then saturate a cloth with the same stuff, wrap it around your toe, put your stocking on and go to bed. A few nights of this treatment will cause the corn to disappear. "I first heard of this remedy when I was living in the oil region, and of course I laughed at it. But a little inquiry among the men who worked about the tanks and wells convinced me that they believed in it They stid they were never troubled with corns, and assured me that the frequent wetting of their shoes in the oil a thing they cannot avoid in their occupation had the effect of driving all these troublesome excrescences away. Try it and it will cure you." A Dispatch reporter, who overheard the above conversation, gives the prescrip tion for what it is worth, not vouching for its curative powers. BOUQUETS AGE IN FASHION, And the Men Who Wear Tbem are Bc comlnfc More Numerous. Said a Pittsburg florist: "The custom of wearing button-hole bouquets seems to be slowly gaining favor here. I have a few customers, clerks and business men, who stop in regularly each morning on their way down town, and buy bouquets. A iew years ago any man in this city who did such a thing would have been looked upon as very eccentric, even if he had not been set down as a dude by,his associates. "But In other cities, notably Hew York and London, the practice has long been common. There almost every well-dressed man that you meet wears a bouquet.whether he is at work or taking a holiday. Pitts burg is slow about adopting such fashions, but she takes them up eveatually. A button-hole bouquet is an indication of good taste, and it looks as well on a cheap coat, as on a fine one." The Colonels Cards. AN OBlGHfAIj 8TOBY OF -AJMOERICA-N' IXFOE WRITTEN, . FOB "THE DISPATCH" 33Y FBANKIJN PILE. Copyright, 1889, CHAPTER IX. OX AND BESIDE LAKE GEORGE. The face of the sun may have outshone the face of Mr. Jonas Pootle, that day in Sep tember, but for genuine geniality the man beat the orb, all things relatively consid ered. The sun was doing it in a general, functional way, and had not jnt returned from a bridal journey to Europe, but was merely sailing over Lake George for the millionth daily time, more or less, accord ing as geology and the ages had counted. The grandeur of his accustomed round had the lonesomencss of unmated monotouy. To the eyes that were a part of the effulgence of Mr. Pootle's visage the limpfd water of the lake, and the miniature Alps of its bounda ries, were new; but if in place of the scenic beauties there had been the sterllitv of a desert, the lustrous jollity of the old fellow's happiness would not have been greatly dimmed. He sat centrally in a small yacht, ballasting the craft with his weight, while aboard with less careful dis posal were his bride, whom we have known as the Widow Gansett, and with whom his honeymoon was not inclined to expire with its month; Colonel and Sheeba Dallas, whose cross pnrposes had not been active during the time of May Morris' absence, and who had worked in 'harmonious busi ness toeether, without once discussing the subject of their disagreement; and May and the rivals in gallantry towards her, Victor Leroyd and Winston Dallas; beside two outsiders and a servant girl. The two strange members of the party were Arba Van Kensselaer and Knicker bocker Knox, proudly descendent from Dutchmen of early New York. Miss Van Bensselaer was widely awakened from the sleepiness of her honored ancestors, and was a thorough exponent of the brisk, alert and piquant belle ot Fifth avenue at the present vmfM (2t I ITZZir XQ.t? C a r, 5. L, ?' .-iM 5' -LiLJ'Si SSSJ&ZXr?SJ lVAWfl'rH&' iWw'Wi4 "BUT, COLONEIj SAM DALLAS WAS SO COWARD." period. Mr. Knox was not as different from his 1788 progenitors. Cigarettes had taken the place of the long pipe in his month, and there were other changes of aspect and habit, but he was mistaken in supposing that, like the voung lady, he was aroused and quick ened intellectually. His drawl and dawdle were not altogether affectations, and he erred in regarding them as complimenary to his cleverness, for he conld not have betokened acute or active disposition if he had wished to. But it was no matter, as it would have been if he had not inherited a million, and had been compelled to earn a living. He was to marry MissVanRensselaer, as soonas she had enjoyed freemaidenhoodsufiiciently, and so there was nothing unusual in their personal affairs; but when, two days before this sail on Lake George, the Pootle party from Europe rejoined the Dallases at Sara toga, Arba and May found familiar school mates in each other, and therefore chance added two persons to the excursion. The plan of the day comprised a railroad ride from Saratoga to Lake George, a sail as much further northward as wind and time permitted, an hour or so ashore for luncheon and then a return in the evening to their hotel in the great summer city. The mid dle of the afternoon and the middle of the iaunt were reached simultaneously. The breeze lulled almost to a calm as the boat got under the lee of a tiny mountain. "Don't call it a hill, if you please," Miss Van Kensselaer remonstrated to Knox, who had directed attention to the sharpness of its reflection in the clear water; "you ought to be thrown down to the top of it for belit tling the darling of a Mount Blanc." "Compromise on monntlet," was Knox's offer. Even the ballast, Mr. Pootle, shifted to look over the side of the careening craft at the inverted counterpart ot the eminence. "If we could just fall overboard and get to the summit of yourmountletby sinking," said he, "I'd say that's the spot to lunch on." "And if that hamper doesn't make some of us long for a derrick before we get it up yonder," said Mr. Pootle, "then I'll eat all that's in it" "No, you won't Jonas," said Mrs. Pootle. "Your wife couldn't see you die of gorge while her stomach was empty. I'm hun- gry." So were they all; and without more ado they began the ascent, with Vietorand Win ston, as the first relay, carrying the basket between them. "Knick," cried Miss Van Bensselaer, "I'll race you up to the maple yonder." 'And let's show them the pace that two members of the Westchester Country Club can make afoot." The girl won, and not because the fellow permitted her to, as he would have had the spectators believe. The lightness of his spirits did not make him forgetful ot the heaviness of his physique; but his suggestion of the hilltop as the right place tor their luncheon was accepted with enthusiasm, notwithstanding the climb that it called for, and which they started to make as soon as they got ashore. "There's nothing like a brisk run up a steep mountain," said Miss Van" Bens selaer, as she flung out her arms that were ouly half hidden in filmy sleeves, and stretched her legs behind the curtain of her skirts, to get rid of the cramp of sitting low in.the boat, "to make you led like taking your feet off the ground and using your wings, They were a company fit to be seen on a ' Lake George hillside. The ladies' craces of person and dress were not misplaced in the picturesqueness, and the gentlemen were not much out of harmon, with only Mr. Pootle's rotundity appealing for the benefit of the doubt. As they climbed they chatted good-humoredly, excepting Colonel Dallas, who permitted himself to relapse from his false pretenses of well-bred gaiety into a condition that looked sullen. 'The Colonel is cross," Mrs. Pootle ac cusingly remarked. "I deny it" and his instantly forced jollity was in his best vein of impersona- tion. by Franklin File. "And Sheeba has been melancholy ever since we rejoined yon at Saratoga," the persisted. "I believe you two havs had a falling out." "Hot we. Yon and Mr. Pootle haven't billed and cooed for three weeks of your honeymoon any more uninterruptedly than we have for twice as many years. Onr wishes never collide do they Sheeba?" "Oh. no," was Sheeba's smiling lie. Knickerbocker Knox enlivened himself sufficiently to offer to relieve one of the other young man at the basket. "I don't know what time it is by my watch, my dear fellows," he languidly said, "but I ought to do a turn at the hamper." "It is a quarter to 4 by what used to be your watch," said Winston, taking out a fine gold timepiece. "What used to be your watch, Kniek?" exclaimed Miss Van Kensselaer. "Did you give it away rather than carry it up hill?" ,rNo,'i was the evasive reply; "I dropped it by chance, you know last evening." "And Winnie picked it up," was the Col onel's proud aside remark to Sheeba. "A trifling wager," said Winston, with a laugh like a cock's crow. He permitted Knox to take one handle of the basket, and soon, in the clambering which the sharp, rough ascent necessitated, he' was apart with his father and Sheeba. "What diamond is that?" the Colonel asked, as to a gem of considerable value that glistened in a ring on Winston's hand. " 'Twas Knox's 'tis mine. I got him to put it up against my glass one we cut the cards my pack and I won." "Very good; but there is a richer game in hand. Winnie, you must play your trumps for May Morris here and now. This is a romantic place. You're a plausible, pre sentable chap. Why the devil shouldn't sha accept yon? Are you going to let her slip you?" The Colonel was still an urbane and dig. nified gentleman to view from beyond hear ing distance, but Bis low tone was sharp and vicious. "Well, dad," and Winston took a cue of cool impertinence from his parent's manner, "all the way over the Atlantic, half a week in London, all the way back, and two days at Saratoga. I've played the cleverest game I knew against Vic Leroyd. He hasn t got any careless points away from me. If he's winning the prize, it's in spite of the best I can do." "I will tell you why he is winning her," said Sheeba. in deep desperation. lou have been queering onr game?" was the Colonel's rough accusation, "No, I haven't. Victor Leroyd May, and he is an honest fellow." loves "He has broken his pledge not to on the cirl." spoon "You may be sure that he has not spoken, his love, but you may be just as sure that she knows of it. Winston does not love her." "O, I'm inclined to think I do," Winston interposed. "A fellow can't be positive, you know. Anyhow, my passion for her fortune is the intensest sort of thing you can imagine." "You've told her that you love her?" tha Colonel asked. "O, yes, a dozen times, in one way or another." "What does she say?" "She doesn't say she's overjoyed." "She doesn't say she won't have it?" "Not outright. She's such a deucedlr amiable sort of a girl, do yon see, that she won't wound a chap by anything rude, I rather think she admires me." The fellow's heedlessness and vanity angered Sheeba, and she passionately said: "Now, Sam, you are a gambler. Let this game be fair and I won't dispute the result, Victor and Winston hall offer themselves to May. She shall choose between them or refuse them both. If she accept your son, I will abide by it. The misfortune will be ft sqnare loss, and I won't squeal," "Misfortune? Come, now, mamma" Winston began, but she ignored him; and so did the Colonel, whose flush of anger was hardly mistakable for the heat of exercise. He growled: "If she accepts Lerovd, I swear to you tha t she shall be made ashamed and unhappy for life. I will tell her-" ' "Stop, stop for heaven's sake." "What's up, parents?" Winston asked wonderingly. "I don't seem to be on the inside of this business." "This woman forgets that we play fo win," was the wrathful response. "She wanta me to deal honest cards and take even chances of losing. If we do lose, as there is a sky above ns," and a half raised fist menaced Sheeba," "she shall be exposed to the girl for what she is " "Keep that from even Winston," the maddened woman exclaimed, and with her open palm she struck the Colonel flatly on the mouth, "or I'll" The threat was not spoken, and the blow caused a calm instead of heightening the storm. Habitual control of their nerves enabled the Dallases to compose themselves as the party drew close together again, and the Colonel sank the faintest trace of choler in a heartyinsutence upon taking Victor's end of the hamper. That left the unmarried five free to choose companions during the brief remainder of the ascent. Victor and Winston gave each a gallant arm to May Morris, and with their help iha was taken rapidly anead oi tne otners. Xbe way was green with turf, yellow and red with autumnal leaves, gray with rocks and still more variegated in colors here and there by wild flowers. Frequently May stooped between her escorts, or ran a little way from them, to pluck a flower, and at length each, hand was strained by a clutch of a big bouquet ' "Beautiful, are they not?" as she held a bunch before the eyes of each young man: "and do smell them." ' They let her bury their nosea in the flowers, and neither could discern any par. uamy wucu sub next pressed tne two rival handtuls against her own face. A rain h slipped away from their arms, with ft '