by . . - ,,' , l--s , , "'W'j v Kit w ia' - --" " ,. " ;.s ' -- " 5' HMsfctraa ".tVonnc pirl at his side. She 'was a Monde: fcot tall, the contradiction of her sister. The contradiction of her sisler in soul as in body - most especially. ' Sanello was restful, silent, dependent; so dependent. How helpless are we all in the hands of Destinyl Here was one woman born amid ' the elements of strife; companioned with those who shed blood, train td to trace her fineer placidly in the groves along the cabin wall where the messengers of death had ploughed, not unused to looking dead men an the face,6he was that which she was: Destinyl Fate! A most lovely woman; dying for love; made unlovable by destiny; fate! Such is the story of life. But let us hasten for ward. The year wore on uninterruptedly; If we may omit mention of the very fre quent visits of Farla and her sister at what they were now pleased to call "The Stu dio." . . Some progress was made in painting, but none whatever in the subject at heart True, the mystery of the flowing springs on the mountain top was a matter that held much promise in its solution. But how was it to be solved? The artist found some work in the little cities, sown like flower beds at his feet, and the "struggle for ex istence" was no struggle in the cabin on the epurof Mount Diablo. The sweetest loaf of bread in the world was to be had at any of the little flower-like cities below and all about Fruits? All the grapes, ptams, pears, all fruits you can name, were to be had almost anywhere for the picking up. Ana as for fish. There is your hook; any where you can find water, and all kinds of fish are yours. Meat? The land that sends meat to every great market on this globe is not going to let any man that toils .go hungry for meatl One most pleasant morning Farla dashed down to the cabin on her great, strong white stallion, and leaning a little forward from her saddle, cried out: "I have asked father for almost the for tieth time, and now he says you may go with us this morning to the islands. Take the Eteep trail down to the Straights. Our sail boat is there. Be quick or we may have to leave you." Thcgreit, wide-mouthed creature threw himself back on his supple haunches, reared his proud, white head in the air and then plunged on and on, roaring over the rocks. It was the one thing that the author de sired. Here now at last he was to sail through the dangerous Straights of Car quinas at the side of a man who ought to know their every secret. Arriving at tfe rendezvous just in time to take his seat in the boat he had a good op portunity, after salutations and introduc tions, brief and simple as possible, to con template the iorm and stature of the man, who by his strength and daring, had long been tb'e terror of all wrongdoers in his re gion. This giant in strength was a giant in size as well. Yet so exclusive and reserved was his life that the artist, so far from ever hav ing been at his house had never before looked upon his face. He had a full heavy beard; was almost a perfect blonde, this Portuguese from the Azores, this islander who still kept his'Home in some sort in the sea; choosing islands even more desolate and craggy than the most steep and stony of the Azores, where he was born and bred. His hands were simply huge, and as he un loosed and threw off the heavy cable rope from the prow of his boat the artist could sot help thinking of the man who had been found up on the top of the crags above them "with his back broken and his neck twisted nearly oft" Once fairly from land the silent man be gan in a quiet way and in a voice that was almost melodious': "You have heard of my trouble about the land; you live in the cabin where men came and tried to drive me out." The artist hastened to say that he had heard nothing to his disparagement "I am sorry; very sorry it all happened. But I had retreated from the inundation of people to the mountain top. There was no going further with my family; either they or I had to quit" "And they quit!" said Farla with the fierce look ana the firm set lips noted be fore. "As for those other matters, don't believe them. I donit go about the world breaking people's backs across my knee. Nothing can be laid to my door, nothing can be proved but that one trouble at the cabin." John Gray had been glad, very glad, if the man had not said so much. His assur ance that nothing more than the killing of the three men could be proved set his teeth on edge and made him miserable. He was now certain that his host tor the day, and for many days should a storm set in, was really in the habit of breaking the backs of people across his knee if people interfered with him; certain of it, because he took fsuch unnecessary pains to deny it However, the strong and steady hand at the helm would hardly be raised against him, he thought, and as they shot down the Straits the ill-omened reflections were shaken o2. The yellow sail filled with the favoring breeze. Farla held the sail rope. Farla held the winds, their lives as it were, in her own two hands. These Portusucse sailors have here the same yellow sails that dot the waters of Venice. They are made yellow with a mix ure of oil and beeswax. The oil and bees wax makes them tough and enduring. Some times the Bay of San Francisco is yellow, as a California field is yellow, with spots and dots: a flower field of water: great float ing California poppies! Farla and her lather manned thishuge yel low flower of the proud sunlit Bay of San Francisco. This left two fdlers. What more natural than that they should sit side bv side? It was not only natural butalmost absolutely necessary. Yet the dark brows of one there grew darker still; and steadily grew darker as the boat shot on. Suddenly there was a lurch that almost threw John Gray and Sanello on their faces. Instinctively nis arm fell about her and re stored her firmly to his side. And the dark brows were dark as muffled thunder clouds. "What could have done that?" asked Gray. "It was all my fault," answered Silvia after a moment's pause, to give Farla time to explain, which fhoulIenly declined. "It was like striking a rock," said Gray. "No; it was not a rock; something worse than a rock though when the tide is low. But with this lull tide I thought I could run straight aver it; over it now though." "What is it?" "Don't know; eddy I reckon; anyhow it has been there always; and we keep close to the shore when the tide is low hereabouts. For the water boils and boils there as if a buried river was boiling up." John Gray caught his breath at mention of a buried river and must have changed color, for he saw that both Farla and her father were looking him hard and curiously in the face. His eyes fell down to avoid confusion and they rested on the waters that leaped and leaped against the swift gliding little vessel. 'What a curious, mixture of waters." cried Gray suddenly. His artist's eye had detected colors and the confusion of colors which ordinary men would not at once ob serve. "Yes," said Silvia, "that is another queer thing. Here is yellow water and white water, black water and green, all mixed up together; only they don't seem to mix at ell." This contradictory speech, absurd as it may read, was as plain and direct a state ment of a curious fact as could have been made in so brief an observation. The writer recalls a singular and indeed a simi lar condition of things encountered while descending the Amazon river many years ngo. There from the south bank, about midway from the Andes to the ocean, a broad black river rolled its dark smooth waters into the light, white, airy Amazon. So for a whole day, if recollection is not treacherous, the waters p! the two minikin? streams refused to mingle. Ten, 20, 40, 60 miles below we still sailed now and then over and through broad, black and oily islands or solid bodies of water that had not yet blended with the bright waters of the Amazon. Ages hence, when we are all for gotten dust, the oil wells of the world will be on tbe headwater of that smooth, silent And dark river of unsociable deeps. CHAPTER VIL OUT3HBOTTGH THE GOLDEN GATE. The dash through the Golden Gate, if you care to go out with the turn of the tide, as did our little party that morning, is one of the most exciting, inspiring not to say des parate, if a gale goes out with yon in all this world. ' The reason is not far to reach. For you must know that the gate is very narrow. It is in fact a flume hewn out of granite. It is somethingmorethana flume; it is a mighty mill toil, with the tide running out Add a gale to this! An audacious Portuguese sailor at the helml A yellow sail so full that the mast is bent almost into a hoop! See that hoop thrashing the white foam of the water at almost every bound I The boat leaps from wave to wavel The dark-browed girl holds all in her two brown handsl A slip of the rope, a single inch of -loosened rein, and this gorgeous yellow flower would blossom no longer on the bosom of the foamy white sea at the Golden Gate. John Gray has a stout heart; but it is not in the boat It is back there with the bub bling and boiling waters of the Buried river. He has a stout arm; but it is not at all concerned with his own safety or his own comfort It is about the terrified girl at his side. She has been terrified, timid, trembling in a strangely unnatural way for one born and bred to the sea and of a race of seamen. What can'be the matter with her? She leans close to the man's side; is pale, silent as usaal; unaccountably sad. Farla's lips are set, as if never again to be relaxed. She has seen all. She has im agined 10,000 times more than all that has been; or ever can be. The father has seen that his silent little girl suffers and is silent and unhappy. But now the swift and desperate dash is over. Shot out of the gate, as if shot out of a gun, they at last take a long breath and drive on in a straight line and tranquil sea to the steep and stupendous islarids of unheaved rocs; so steep and so stupendous that they take the wind from the yellow sail. But in this haste to get through the gate to the open sea we have forgotten to give the simple reason for this flood and foam and rush of waters at full turn of the tide. It is this: the narrow gate is wide enough to admit a tremendous inflow from the sea at full tide, and so the Bay of San Fran cisco fills well from the sea. But it must be borne in mind that one of the great rivers of the continent is all the time pouring into the bay also. This Sacramento river once flowed" from very lar to the north. It drew its strength from the snows of Canada. Then the Sierras were broken through and the great river was cut in twain at what is now the farther Oreeon and found expres sion to the Pacific Ocean at that point The other end of the great Sacramento river is now called the Columbia river. But to get back to San Francisco bay; with this great river which drains the Sierras and nearly all of California, to say nothing of the sunken rivers ot Nevada, with this river pouring in at one side and the sea pouring in at the same time from tbe other you observe at once that the Golden Gate is more than doubly filled when the tide sets seaward. Add a cracking wind to this and you can see what a divinely audacious wrestle a real man may have here with the noblest elements of nature. John Gray took in a long breath after this dash; and as the boat began to round in under the shadow of the overhanging rocks las arm relaxed which had supported the girl at ins side. And all tnis without ( his hardly knowing what was done. Not so with Farla. She took in no long breath or any sense of rest She was on fire. She set foot firmly oh the narrow strip of white sand that hugged the edge of the rocky inlet where the party came to land but did not speak. The brave little boat with the yellow sail puffed and panted, as it it had been a great greyhound lolling its tongue and resting after the chase. The party climbed steeply up the one nar row way hewn out of the rocks in single file, holding fast to the outreaching and over hanging crags. On, on, on, up to the very clouds the great crags climbed! But here on a bench 50 feet or more from the water was a little hut of stone and here the party stopped. For here the partner of Silvia, a brother, had been waiting with the freight which he had gathered from the precipitous rocks. A dozen great hampers of big speckled eggs rested upon the door. A dozen curious black eyed children watched the strangers from behind the rocks and corners of tbe stone hut Two or three superannuated sail ors, stranded wrecks of sailors, lounged abont on the rocks; old sea lions that roared no more now. A brown and wrinkled old woman came shuffling out of a crack in the rocks in the rear cf the hut with a pipe in her toothless month. Such is the landing at the "Fa'leones." Half an hour of tugging at the heavv hampers of the huge sea bird eggs and all was ready for the return. "I am not going back. I will stay with uncle." The pale thin lips of the proud girl, the girl whose lips had yesterday been so full, so sensuous with life and love and humanity, these changeful lips parted very unwillingly to sav even this much to her father. She spoke to no one else; did not even seem to see anyone else. "Are you afraid to go back?" said the father kindly. "Afraid? ha, ha,, ha." Her laugh was hard and low and bitter. "Farla is not afraid," said the sister, in a kind, conciliatory tone, "and what is more I shall be afraid if she don't go. But I shall not be afraid if she is along," and turning half to Gray she said: "Farla is safe; so cer tain; she looks after everything."" I used to say that Farla looks after everything, and leaves nothing at all to God." "But you leave everything to God and mac!" There was a sting in the tail of this last speech, which only the father and sister heard; and even they only half understood. But seeing the proud and beautiful girl turn suddenly away, and start steeply up the overhanging rocks before them, the father chose to let her have her will.'Jas usual, and with a gruff "good-by, Farla, I will come to-morrow," led off down to the boat Hastily embarking, for the sun was fall ing down fast behind the rocks, the sail was once more to the wind, and the Golden Gate was before and not behind them. Some tacking and much adroit use of the yellow sail and the giant in the stern of the boat, with a half suppressed sigh, threw a glance back over his shoulder. An excla mation ot amazement, if net of alarm, broke from his lips! All turned their eyes in the direction of .the savage islands. There away up hun dreds of feet in the air, higher than the sun it seemed, the sinking sun behind her, a black silhouette standing in a background of IdI Her stream of black hair almost mantling her as the wind housed within its wondrous folds, lifted or let it fall. . Glorious! The goddess of the unpossessed seas! The father bit his bloodless lips; tightened hand on helm and was about to turn, about Then the face of his younger child appealed to him; the was cot so strong as Farla. And then what would returning avail? He was not a man of words. He knew that Farla was in peril. He did not say to her sister that she was standing where never man, much less woman, had set foot before. But he knew it well. He only set his teeth tightly and drove on straight for the Golden Gato and did not look back. CHAPTER VT1L APLOAT oir sax fbancisco bat. The full and flooding ocean rattled against the granite gateway on either side as the yellow sail with its three silent voyagers swept on up the bay under the gloomy guns of the fortress. The swift yellow sail was accompanied by a mighty snow white fleet of sea clouds that came in through the great Golden Gate like monstrous, wide-winged sea birds seeking shelter for the night How mightily heaved the swelling, surg ing bosom of the great bay unojer them! The falling sun bad been suddenly caught on the sharp horizon, between skyand sea; and awful fireflashes, like flashes from molten iron of some mighty forge flashed for an instant forth and the fleet of snow white clouds was a sea of gold and fire. Might and Majesty above them! Silence! Sublimity! God! Only a moment at the extreme end of the great narrow wharf that thrusts its long commercial finger far into the bay; a rattle of tackle and iron hook; the hampers of sea birds' eggs are in the air; the yellow sail is leaning to its work under a full wind; with the rocky 'walls of Carguinas Straits dimly visible in the light of the dying sun above the cleaving and climbing prow. "Sanello? Bello?" The massive, broad shouldered man at the helm, with a voice, and maybe a nature, like that of a lion, had suddenly broken silence. He seemed to have been almost alarmed at the sound of his own voice and tried to modulate it bv letting it fall and using the little pet diminutive by which he had called his child in her babyhood. "Bello?" "' "Well, father dear?" "What could be the matter with Farla?" The strong man sighed deeply, caught in his breath and expelled "at with such tre mendous force that he might have been earned as of kin with the surging elements about him. It seemed to have been the first real breath he had taken since he saw his first born lined out against the golf and fire of the dying sun on that awful and inacces sible eminence in the sea. Sanello was slow to answer; not that she really knew the cause of her sister'-s. strange conduct Indeed she, as well as her father had long since come to be prepared for much that was willful from this strong, pas sionate and determined girl. "Hello," do ydu think Farla is in danger there?" The voice was like low, far off thunder; and the hard, big hand held not steadily to the helm; but it shifted and lay doubtfully at its direct work, as if debating whether or no to keep on; whether or no to turn back into the night that had now enveloped them. '(If you think Farla is in any danger there I will land you and Mr. Gray at our cove and go back.'" The voice of the creat grizzly bear trembled, and the girl's heart was moved, as she said hastily: "Why no, father, I, for my part, can't thick of Farla as ever in danger from any thing.' She's so strong and confident and sure. Just see ho wit was with that white bull." At the mention of the white bull there came a low, deep chuckle of satisfaction and delight from ihe darkness back in the stern of the boat, and there was a stronger and a steadier grasp on the helm. John Gray had hoped for much in the way of close observation in the region of what he now felt was surely the mouth of the Buried river on his return, but night was upon them and the man at the helm laid his prow close under the frowning banks. The boiling and surging phenomena of the morning was entirely avoided by the cautious old sailor now and the yellow sail crept along under the crags in obstinate security; in absolute silence now as well. "The white bull?" queried Gray finally, of the girl at his Bide. "Yes, the white bull; but be snre don't mention it to Farla. You see the Pachelos' rich people, governors of California once had herds and lands all about Redwood Park and Mount Diablo. Well, a big, white bull, the most terrible creature I ever saw, twice as bad as a grizzly bear, took up his residence right down there by tbe Indian well where the three men are buried." A grunt of satisfaction at the mention of the three dead men came up out of the darkness at the helm. But where was the Indian well? and where were the graves of the three? All this was great news to John Gray. "You see," the girl, went on. "the bull found it very safe and quiet by the haunted Indian well there in the dense redwood thicket where the graves are that he stayed there all the time; all the time except when he would break out after mother or some of us children." "He deserved to be'ghoV "Shot? Full of holes as a sieve; lead enough to sink him. eh. father?" A jerk at the helm back in the darkness; and a sharp closing together of the massive jaws like the closing together of the iron teeth of a wolf trap, and that was the an swer and assent as the girl went on. . "Lead wouldn't kill him: his curly white hair was so long and his hide so tough that all the bullets we could fire into-him did no good; only made him more savage." "And he chased Farla?" "Chased Farla? No! that is a stranee part of it. He never chased Farla at all; all things seem to know better than ever chase Farla; but he chased everybody else. And one day when Farla and father were over to the Islands the white bull got after mother when she went to the spring for water, and ran her to the gate, and then pitched her clean over tbe fence. We thought she was dead. We children got her in on the bed,'and she lay there all day moaning and moaning, till they got back from the Inlands. And that white bull tearing and stamping and bellowing all the time at the gate till Farla came. Then he went back to the thicket that surrounds the Indian well in the orroya back of your old cabin." "And so your sister Farla frightened off the white bull." "Frightened him ofll She killed him! Yes.'she did. One look at poor mother where she lay moaning there, and Farla caught up father's knife, dashed down to the thicket, and father after her trying to keep her back" a low chuckle from the stern of the boat "but ho could only see her creep, like a panther through the nar row thicket; on, on, to where a great white heap lay breathing heavily by the Indian well and between two of the graves; the big, burly head thrown back and around on the side; sound asleep in a second, for he was very tired from his hard and hot day's work. Well, that's all. She was on him with a single leap, like a Califonia lion, and her knife was buried back of the ugly horns be fore he knew what hurt him." There was no mistaking the deep chuckle of delight that came up from the stern of the boat now. The recital of the daring girl'r deed gave the father confidence that all was well with her at the island and the helmsman drove his boat into the little cove, his harbor, his home, with firmness and great satisfaction. The moonlight landed there in full force and splendor at the same time. The great silver scimitar in the unseen hand of the eternal flashed in serene dominion over sea and land, and the little rock-bound and wood-hung cove was lit up like the porch of some sweet watering place to welcome its guests. Brit there was another boat there. Light came into the face of Sanello at sight of it. Darkness and rage in the face of her father came and kept possession as he saw this costly and richly finished little yacht lift and fall on the moonlit bosom of the bay. xne gin was anxious to ny up tee rocES, to reach home instantly; surely Swain was there. "Father, Mr. Gray and I will take the short way; right straight up; he can hold .on to the bushes and I can hold on to him." "Well." This was all the word the two heard in answer as Gray, impelled by the eager girl behind him, lay hold ot bush and bough and drew himself upward. Halfway to the summit in a little moon lit open space as the grass grew long and strocg( they paused to take breath. The poor girl was so exhausted that she threw herself face downward, her hands covering her face, into the grass. John Gray heard a heavy noise, as of the grinding' of heavy boulders together and looked a little way down the steep path. There stood Silvia; a huge boulder, a boulder big enough for a millstone, noised in his right band. The loud noise was,heard once, twice; the giant body swayed to and fro, to and fro. And then crash! thud! splash! and splinters and spars and tattered shreds alone marked all that remained of the gay little yacnt in tne moonlit cove aelow. "What was that?" asked the ;irl, rising up and turning half about Bj so eager her lover see or in was she to get forward and m that she did not seem to care quire further. But observing now making his way up tbe stl ner father and close at hand, as it nothing had hap; jned, she, Trig&J& by action rather than utterance, urged Gray hastily on. "But that Indian well? did you say it was close to the cabin?" He said this back over his shoulder right in her face as he made pretense of holding back some bushes from striking h'er too heavily. "Not two minutes' walk were it'not for the Brush; in that tall thicket; under the cliff; other side." The girl was out of breath and spoke briefly as possible. She paused a moment and then said in hurried whispers: "Now mind don't let Farla know. Tts her's; all her's. A little lake it is. Full of fish. Stone walls; lillies all about Beautiful! And she's got a boat in the well, or lake; a bull hide boat; made it her self; made it out of the hide of that white bull she killed. Now mind don't yon never tell Farla I told you. Come, hurry on; but mind, don't you never tell .Farla I told you." And so panting and out of breath they came through tbe redwoods to the opening where the mother -stood at the stout gate waiting. "Mr. Swain?" whispered the girl to her mother with a half glance behind for fear her father might hear her eagerness. "Gone, 'Rello gone for a long, time maybe. He left some gold for you with me; and the pretty boat for you down in the cove. But he's gone 'Bello; gone, my girl." She sank against the great oaken post and the mother's arms fell about her, as the wings of a hen fold over her helpless brood. The father came up, dark browed, silent, sullen. The young man passed on his way toward the lonely cabin; toward the graves in the thicket; the sunken old Indian well with its border of lilies, its bull hide boat; its vague possibilities of association with the old tradition here. Was this after all his search and'waste of time really the old tidal well with its rise and fall of waters into which the imperishable old Indian chief had been hurled? Was this indeed the verv spot from which first fluttered the gaudy flag of Spain on the rocK-built battle ments of Mount Diablo? And Farla? To house all those ponderous secrets in her heart What a mysterious beingl How much less a woman to keep her heart walled in as a well! Less than woman? Or more than woman, surely not entirely woman. But here the water is too deep. COXTISUED NEXT SUNDAY. Copyright, 1SS9, bv Joaquin Miller. CULTIVATION OP NUTMEGS. How They are Grown and Treated in New Guinea. Paddling into a little cove, says Captain John Strahan, in the Glasgow Mail, on the south side of the bay, we landed beside a clear rippling stream, and, having ordered the whole of the men to march in Indian file in front, we started.by a little rugged path into the mountains, with my interpre ter immediately behind me, and the Rajah just in front Every foot of the journey, which was laborious in the extreme, dis closed fresh scenes of verdure and tropical splendor, winding along the sides of deep ravines, sometimes dragging ourselves up the creepers and undergrowth, we ultimate ly attained an altitude of about ,1,000 feet above the sea, and then entered the nutmeg country. Here we halted and retted. The Bajah pulled some of the nutmegs, and ex plained how far they were from being ripe. Having rested sufficiently, we again started forward, and after scrambling along for about an hour, we gained a fine piece of table-land,over which we. traveled for about another half an hour, when we reached three houses erected in the very heart of the forest. These were used by the natives for drying the nutmegs. The country was everywhere magnificent, and the aroma of the spice-laden air delicious. Nutmeg and other equally valuable trees were every where growing in great profusion. The fruit of the nutmeg in .appearance resembles a pear, and, when ripe, opens and displays the nut covered with a Qeautiful red coating of mace. The nuts are then picked from the trees, put into baskets, and taken to the houses, where they are husked and placed on shelves. They are then partially roasted over a slow fire until all the moisture is ex tracted. After this they are cooled and carried down to the village in nets ready to be bartered to the Bugis, Arabs, and other traders who frequent the Gulf in their small prows or junkos at the proper season. A CASE OF HOD CURE. An Instance in Which Self-Prcservatlon Wns Stroneer Than the Infirmity. Lewlston Journal. " "The best case of mind cure that I ever heard of," continued the doctor, "happened in the town of Belgrade. My father told me about it. "01d Deacon Budger's wife lay in bed for years. She didn't know what ailed her and couldn't find anybody who did and some folks were unkind enough to hint that it was nndiscoverable because it didn't exist but there she lay year after year, without moving from the bed. It was a nice feather bed which her mother had handed down to her aud which she prized very highly. "Everybody pitied the deacon. He hired what assistance he could afford, but had to do a large share of theliouse-work, himself, and three times every day to carry a good square meal to his spouse, whose appetite was remarkably reliable. "One day the house took fire while the deacon was away. Did the deacon's wife burn up? No. The instinct of self-preservation was stronger than her infirmity. So was the instinct of feather-bed-preservation. She got up and carried her bed to the other side of the road. Fortucatelv tbe .fire was soon extinguished and she took her bed bacK to tne House and laid nerselt on it again. "Abont 630 o'clock that evening she asked the deacon why he had not brought her supper to her as usual, " 'Sarah,' said he, in a tone,that smacked mildly and sadly of self-assertion, 'if you ever-get anything more to eat, -you'll have to come out in tbe kitchen after it!' "And as Sarah had not been roasted, neither did she starve." A GAS-PE0PELLED CABEIAGE. A Description of a Wonderful Vehicle Exhl- bited In Munich. Glasgow Mall. 1 Messrs. Benz & Co., of Mannheim, have lately exhibited in Munich a motor of which gas is the propelling agency. The gas is generated by the contrivance from benzine or analogous material. The motor, which is not visible from without, is placed in the rear of the carriage, which has three wheels, over the main axle, and the benzine used in its propulsion is carried in a closed copper receptacle secured, under the seat, from which it passes drop by drop to the generator, and which holds enough benzine for a journey of about 75 miles. The gas mixture is ignited in a closed cylinder by means of an electric spark a very safe and reliable arrangement After regulating the admission of the gas the motor can be started by simply turning a hand-lever. The operator mounts upon the seat and by pressing the lever at his left sets the motor in motion, which then starts,the carriage being connected with tbe back wheels. The speed can be regulated at will by turning the lever backward or forward, and by pulling on the lever the motion can be completely stopped. The vehicle is steered like a tricycle by a small front wheel. Its greatest speed is about ten miles an hour. A quart of benzine is suf ficient for a one hour's trip, the cost of the motor power being thus about three-pence half-penny per hour. The carriage Is in tended to seat four persons, and in appear and somewhat resembles an ordinary phae ton set on three wheels. HORSFORD'S ACID PHOSPHATE For Impaired Vitality And weakened energy, is wonderfully suc- cesef ul. & Tin ftWrWPlirti flr irr' if . n r ina Titt-ffiMir ffitf t Tiritin JittT f 'f irfti in hWm Miilf f. iiriMiii mnMfTtr --!. I -T "t"1 "--"'"" .. j-r -. i.i -- . mi -i i ii jiHij''nmm ii ii ingajjMgMMaJuiuiuwrraHiiLiiiiiiiiii""'iiii , fi --- - . sffite; JlMtUM1 SOCKET ACTRESSES. Some of the Fashionable Women Now Preparing for the Stage. AN AMATEUR'S ROMANTIC HISTORY A Eeal Prototype of the Heroine of Tho ' Quick or the Dead. FOLLOWING MES. POTTEE'S FOOTSTEPS rwBirrsjj fob tub dispatch. 1 FTER Amelie Eives wrote a tremendous amount of gush about a dead husband's clothes, cigar stumps and the other per sonal belongings which the tempest uous Hal was obliged to leave behind him when he departed from the frenzied affection of Barbara, a chord of sympathy was struck in the feminine breast throughoutihe land. It takes a woman to appreciate the romance of a defunct cigar stump. Women unquestionably felt the nower of Miss Eives' emotion over the relics of a dead husband, for probably no incident in "The Quick or the Dead" has been more widely discussed than Barbara's affection for her dead husband's clothes. I accidentally discovered the other day that an actual flesh and blood woman, and one who is endowed with beauty, high social connections and considerable wealth, followed out the precise lines of Miss Bives' Barbara after her own husband's death. She cannot be aoaused of cribbing ideas from "The Quick or the Dead," for her form of hero-worBhip was inaugurated before the novel was published. In Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs' country house near Orange there hangs upon a rack in a room adjoining her own the last suit of clothes worn by her husband, including the overcoat with the t loves thrust half in the pocket precisely as e left them. Under no circumstances are these relics allowed to be disturbed, and they are cherished with the most tender care by the actress. A SENSIBLE WOMAir. If Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs were emotional or silly such action would be more or less absurd, but she seems to be a remarkably robust, well-balanced and sensible woman. She is an odd figure, inasmuch as she is the only amateur actress who has gone upon the professional stage and become successful, without a lot of hulla-balloo and clap-trap advertising. Every detail about her pri vate life has been studiously guarded from publicity, and probably the facts that I am setting forth now will see the light in a newspaper for the first time. The name of Serlan comes from the grandfather-on the maternal side, who was au Austrian baron. Her father was a near descendant of Jona than Edwards. From her early childhood she had a ro mantic history. "When she was very young she eloped and married Mr. Gibbs lnthe fana nf a. crnnri deal of familv ODDOsition. The voung people had more or less of a struggle for a time, but they had influential friends. A stanch friend bf the bride dur ing all of her troubles was the late Mrs. William Astor. When Mr. Gibbs died suddenly the grief of his wife passed all bounds. She was not on friendly terms with her family, she lived alone, grieving over her husband's death until her friends 'urged her to do something. She made up her mind to go upon the stage. She was unique in the history of society amateurs from the fact that she was impelled to the steps neither by n desire for notoriety nor a lust for money. Her fortune! is ample, and she has never been talked about, but she wanted some aim in life which would help her to forget the grief caused by her husband's death. She began to study with Mrs. Corbit It may be said in passing that as soon as Mrs. William Astor heard that Mrs., Berlan-Gibbs was going on the stage she terminated their friendship. Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs had a mag nificent voice when she was a girl, and in deed up to the time of her husband's death, but since the funeral she has not been able to sing. There seems to be no explanation of it. She has tried in every way to sing, but though there is no sentiment in it, the voice seems entirely to have left her. She dresses in white anal gold or white and silver, and is a slender aud spirituelle-look-ing woman. Many of her friends advised her to make a European appearance, or to come out as a star after the fashion of Mrs. Langtry and Mrs. Potter; but she refused absolutely. She went to Mr. Frohman and was engaged to play in one of his road pieces in "Ihe Wile," I believe and she is now touring through the country quietly without attracting any other attention than that which results from her artistic merits. METHODS OF SOCIETY ACTEESSES. All of this is more or less notable when one considers the usual methods of a society actress. All the shrewder judges of theatri cal life have urged women repeatedly to pursue the course which is followed by Mrs. Berlad-Gibbs, and it will be interestingto watch her career and see if the results carry out the opinion of experts. The question is whether a woman had better start in with a rush and carry her career through on the style of Mrs. Langtry and Mrs. Potter, or begin quietly and work her way up to the top by means of her art. Mrs. James G. Blaine, Jr., will go out this fall as a star, but in her case it will be im possible to work quietly. Her name will attract attention in every city in the coun try, and her debut in New York will keep the wires rattling in every section of the country for a week. Mrs. Blaine's advisers" are urging her to go slow, and she gives every evidence of tollowinz their counsel. but pepple are beginning to talk about her, and the influence of this species of young fame on a woman is very difficult to with stand. At the first night of "Cleopatra," for instance, Mrs. Blaine'was in a box, and she received as much homage as a princess on parade. People stared at her and gos siped about her with bated breath. She bore the. scrutiny with superb tranquillity. She is a slender blonde, cold and self-possessed-looking young woman. Probably nine people out often would call her beau tiful. The tenth judge of womankind would say that she looked as though she had a history. Her managers are trying to get a play which will have sufficient draw ing power to carry Mrs. Blaine in case Mrs. Blaine is not able to carry the play. The play will be starred and Mrs. Blaine will not That is to be the programme. If the play fails no stigma of failure will at tach itself to MrLBlaine's name. If the play succeeds, Mrs.telaine will be lifted to the position of a leadinsr star. She has had experience on the stage and will.probablj succeed in mating an income of $20,ouo or 63H fln1 a .... Bnrl ,a.nn linwnlf innnnniinllif . talked about by the newspapers. dunging irom me ouuook to-aay, tne coming actress who will follow Mrs. Blaine will be Mrs. Wilbur F. Bloodgood. This lady is walking precisely in the footsteps of Mrs. Potter. Nothing that Mrs. Potter ever did is left undone by Mrs. Bloodgood, and there can be no doubt in the mind of a close observer of the stage and its people that the similarity in the careers of the two women will be carried out to the end. Mrs. Bloodgood is having her photo graphs distributed, her pretty face is continually appearing in the dramatic papers, paragraphs about her dot the columns of tne press. She is a regu lar attendant at the theaters on first nights and at professional matinees, and she vigor ously denies that she Is going on the pro fessional' stage, precisely as Mrs. Potter did all these things two or three years ago. New York must have some woman to talk about,. ,and Mrs. Bloodgood would seem to be the coming viotim. Her face is not as pretty as "3lrs. Potter's, but she has a far better figure and unquestionably more dramatic power. AK EXCUSE FOE SOCIET2T ACTEESSES. r A lady of, my acquaintance, who has traveled a great deal, and who holds a prom inent position in society, in speaking of amateur actresses, said the other day: "Why shouldn't Mrs. Bloodgood go upon the stage? People sneer at Mrs. Langtry and speak of all she has lost by her profes sional debut: so they do of Mrs. Potter: so they will of Mrs. Bloodgood; but when you come to think of it there is not such a heart rending sacrifice in it at all. I have been in society for 20 years, and I shall in all like lihood be there ten years more, as I have two very young daughters to launch upon the world. Ihave seen many women come up, and I have also seen them go down. That is where the true wisdom of the choice of such women as Mrs. Langtry and Mrs. Potter comes in." "You mean to say that you indorse the action of these women in leaving their homes, their husbands, and all that goes with such a proceeding to go on the stage?" "I don't believe that either one of them ever intended to leave their husbands. It was not a result they looked for, and it is very often the case, as you know, that hus band and wife live in perfect privacy and happiness even though the wife is on the stage. Take the case of Maggie Mitchell, Emma Abbott and others. Mrs.-Larigtry's position was this: She was unknown when she went to London. Society took her up, feted her, and courted her in the most splen did manner for two seasons. The third sea son came around and Mrs. Langtry discov ered tnat sne was oecommg an old story. She .knew perfectly well that in the fourth season she would be dropped and utterly for getten in the rushing crowd. A number of rival beauties had come up from the ranks. A woman who has o'nee tasted a great suc cess cannot easily go back to, the retirement and privacy of an economically managed home. It is the same with Mrs. Potter. She reached the apex of her career when she went to London four years ago and went from Lady Bandolph Churchill's house to Bowes with the Prince of Wales' party. Everybody petted her. She was a shrewd woman, nevertheless, and she knew perfectly well that in a year or so to duplicate such a success would be an impossibility. TOO MUCH OF A BEOP. To come back here after that and settle down as the wife of a bank clerk on 6.000 a year was a difficult future to face. She went on the stage. The result is that everywhere she goes she is stared at, her Hie is full of excitement and movement, her income is large, and she has become interested in her art Incidentally she is a silly woman to make such a ghastly exposure of herself in the play of "Cleopatra,' but probably in five or six years from this she will be able to command an income of $50,000 or $60,000 a year, as Mrs. Langtry does, and have a pub lic career open to her until she is well on to ward her 60th year. These are the things that attract women, and it is useless to ad vise womankind against them. The brief career of Mrs. O'Sullivan Dimpfel points a moral. She did not leave her husband and home when she went on the stage, but she toot him with her. The result was a series.of tremendous rows. The actres3had not only to support herself, boost her name into prominence, and attend to the many other details of a woman who travels around the country,vbut she had also to smooth the fiery temper of Mr. O'Sullivan Dimpfel, and endeavor to pre vent her managers from thrashing him at short intervals. The strain was too much, and she went back to private life in Balti more, but it is said she will never again be received into society. A glance at the future reveals Miss Elsie DeWolffas acoming star. With her the list is complete. We have no others. There are 1,000 girls all over the country who dream off a success on the stage which'is not based upon purely dramatio ability, but alter the names oi jura, langtry, Mrs. .rotter, Mrs. Berlan-Gibbs, Mrs. Blaine, Mrs. Bloodgood. Mrs. Dimpfel and Miss Elsie DeWolff, there is nothing to come. Modjeska, Mary Anderson, Ada Eehan, Marie Walnwright and Julia Marlowe complain that there is no place in America for women of dramatio genius, and that the society amateurs are crowding women ot ability to the wall. It seems to me there is very little reason for alarm. Personally I have yet to see a "so ciety actress" who knows anything at all about acting. Blakely Hall. I00E TO I0UR PICTDEE COEDS. A Suggestion for the Approaching Spring Honso Cleaning, London Globe. A correspondent sends us, apropos of our article dealing with "Portents," an account of what he calls a singular circumstance. When he was at school some 20 years ago a prominent picture in the school dining room came down with a run about the dinner-hour. The same thing had happened some years previously coincidently with the death of a near relative of the head-, master. The recurrence of a similar acci dent caused our correspondent some anxie ty, as it happened that his brother and sev eral other of the boys were then lying ill. No harm happened to these patients, but the daughter of the house, a bright, cheer ful little girl, was immediately carried off by a relapse. unis story may certainly be classed with many others showing how mere coincidence often begets a tradition, however unreason able, of a casual relation between absolute ly unconnected phenomena; and from this point of view it is not worthy of any serious examination, even by the society for Psy chical Besearch. But it does lead to a more practical reflection as to the careless ness with which pictures are huog. House holders are apt to consider that picture cords are everlasting; and no doubt, the picture cord of the good old times will last a very long, time. But the modern wire, which is preferred nowadays on account of its con venience and light appearance, should al ways be carefully examined from time to time. It disintegrates sometimes very rap idly, and is frequently entrusted with too heavv a picture and frame. The movement of the picture which constantly ocenrs, helps on the natural action of gas and air upon the cord, and hence the many acci dents which every picture collector, who does not take care, has from time to time to regret When spring cleaning season re turns, this is one of the points to which it is always desirable to look. A TELEGBAPIIEB TALKS. Some Inventions That Aid, and Some Thoughts That Murder Sleep. "The typewriter is a most useful inven tion, but I doubt if anybody finds it of greater assistance than the telegraph oper ator." This remark was dropped byau expert telegrapher of this city in the hearing of a Dispatch reporter. Continuing he said : "Not all operators are good penmen, yet, however accomplished one may be in the use of the pen, he will find it vastly easier to take messages with the typewriter than to write them out in the old way. A man has to make his pen fly over the paper at a great rate if he wishes to keep up with the sender. The words are greatlyabbreviated, and if he gets a few words behind he is liable to become involved in a verbal laby rinth that he cannot easily get out of. But with the typewriter, one who is fairly ex pert can take anything as fast as it comes. There is no necessity for carrying words in his head, and consequently very little danger of making mistakes. ' "We are often called upon to take many thousands of words for press dispatches in a single night There are ail sorts of stories, tales of murders, fires, floods and casualties, which one doesn't want to re member yet finds it impossible to forget. After a hard night's work I frequently re tire to dream of the messages I have been receiving.and awake to find myself puzzling my brain over the spelling of a name or try ing t6 complete a half finished sentence. It's wearing work, yet somebody has to do it. CHILDHOOD MENACED By the Compulsory Education Wave Sweeping Over the land. DEATH IN CBOMD SCHOOLS. Eotv Fresh Touth, Bright Bye and Active Brain Can he Obliterated. AH EXAMPLE OP EDUCATIONAL- F0ECE f WEITTXK FOB THE DISPATCH. THE little lad In knickerbockers can hardly stand on his feet, those lieht, skipping feet, which rather flit than tread, for this is his first day at school. He is to have that dearly sought ambition to be 'long with the other boys." To be snre, there has not been a moment from early breakfast till school time and from 4 o'clock ml moon rise that he has not been with them, In games and adventures. But to be with the boys all day, not shut out from them by the 9 o'clock bell, or com pellsti to hover like a Peri in short pants arbund the school door till 4 o'clock ; to have "marks" and spell his way to the head of classes and share the responsibili ties of a boy's entire life so fill his soul that he only eats on one leg, with his head screwed over his left shonlder to catch the first glimpse of his comrades. God bless1 the boy, but'the house is so very still with out him, iUseems gone awry. What does he find at school as its doors close behind him? Have you never attend ed a scientific association at its annual meet ing and listened to topics notof thrilling in terest, while you felt forbidden to move in your seat or indulge in a cough or a yawn? And didn't a forenoon or two prove enough for you all that muscles and nerves cared to bear? You can stand being shut in your office day aftex day because some advantage is coming of if, bnt when the result is mere information, not exactly available in your walk of life, it is remarkable how tired your body feels after a day of hard sitting still. But our boys drudge at their Society for the Advancement of Useful Knowledge week after week year after year, without much idea ot the'service it may be to them. They want to be at their natural gymnastics of play and effort, which knit muscle and sinew in that great virtue of hardihood, the one thing which makes the difference, Prof. Huxley says, and all successful men know, between those who grasp success and their fellows, equally well informed and talent ed, who "lose their grip," on all that life holds good. HOW TO TEACH CUXCDEEir. Our grandfathers thought it well to keep boys at their lessons from daylight till dark, and, in English phrase, "tended" them well for not liking it as. well as being out with the, larks. They were as well persuaded their system was the best possible as we are of ours to-day, and it seems just imaginable that our habits may be as susceptible of im provement. The best teachers, the born teachers, who see into minds and capabili ties, begin to find this out and move accord ingly, in that wise magazine, Jiducatwn, which parents ought to read as well as teachers, the soundest, most sagacious men adviso the taking up education topic by topic, giving the whole attention to one or two studies only at a time. How supremely logical this is may be" seen by any man who looks into his own mind and knows that when he wants to learn whist or roof laying, the advantages of a country or the rights of the bi-metallio questions, he gives himself to that, and to that chiefly, till it is mastered. Putting his force and interest at the question, it is mastered without uneasy effort or loss of time. There is a pleasure in the sense of gaining information which supersedes every thing else for the time. This is the natural way of teaching children. It is the way they have to begin, for they cannot take any other study till they have learned to read a feat they accomplish, with tender brains, in far less time than they learn any thing else, because they give undivided at tention to it. lins faculty ot concentrating the mind on one thing, which is the great element of success in things little and large, is most studiously ruined by our present education. We chide a child for not learn ing a lesson or filling an order well, because, nrn 0AW h A 1aaa av mwn Uia mm J Aa t when his whole training has been to inter rupt and divert the habit of fixing his mind. HOW TO ADDLE BBAIXS. In the system of the public schools near est me, which is held to.be one of the best in the State and as near perfection as prin cipals can make it, hardly two days in the week have lessons on the same branches. The plan is so broken up with elocution one day, grammar the next, drawing one hour, political discussion the next and mathe matics to follow, that my own brain would be addled in trying to go through it, and it is a wonder that the pupils can carry over from one week to another what they learned the week before. t The mind, properly speaking, has no training by such methods. It receives a mass of information minced and mixed, indigestible as mince pie, and not half so inviting. It is told of Agassiz the elder, that, shut ting himself up to the sole study o'f a diffi cult language, he could so master it in six weeks as to read a scientific treatise in it with ease. To do this, in a language of different character from the Boman; is a teat, but to master one of the continental tongues in six weeks' close study is within the power of any well-trained mind. Yet how few dream themselves capable of this moderate undertaking, simply for the reason that not one in 10,000 is well trained or ever will be under our present hop-and-skip methods. Yet think of the service such faculty would be. in mercantile life, to travelers, to lawyers and legislators, to peo ple in new Territories. I declare that for want of such training common society, to one who has the use of his mind, is like consorting with a community of congenial cripples, born without limbs and awkward in the use of what they own. WHAT Y0UIfaSTEB3 CAK DO. That children are capable of learning all they are desired to know with a third the time and drudgery inflicted at present, I know by actual experience, and an experi ence of my own is not out of. place here. More yearasince than I can stop to count, at the ripe age of 17, 1 was teacher of a. country school with a few boys, who had the name of pretty hard scholars. I was warned that they would not study and they would moke trouble, which came true. But they were sturdy boys, to whom open air life was indispensable, and 'my good angel made me hit upon the idea of. promising them that whenever their lessons were well learned and recited they should be dis missed to play. They conldhave won medals for good conduct after that, and the clumsy, horrible lessons were turned off with ease and precision.' My "bad boys" were the comfort ofmylife,and were improv ing briskly, when the School Committee, in the person of our hard old farmer, got wind of it and interfered. Those boys must be brought in, and if they could learn and re cite three times a day in one study, with time to spare, they must recite six times, and If they wouldn't, I must "lick 'em." It was useless to point to the fact that the boys had already learned in a month more than in two sessions of the old way. "Ihe ker niittee' must be obeyed, and after one con scientious struggle to carry out tbe plan I threw up the school, vowing to myself that I would scrub floors for a living before I would ever teach school again. Suppose yourself shut up la jail six hours a day io learn the higher mathematics and the dreariest essays on criticismSi you ever skipped Jn magazines, and yon may feel what ordinary schooling is to children. Not one parent in a thousand ever knows the inside of a school building where his children spend most of their waking lives. I own that, calling for my lad one day in school hours, I was obliged to step down stairs to get fresh air while waiting. It was December, and the heat must have been 80 degrees in the room, where the breath of 60 -children, the smell of the boys clothing, not tne cleanest, aud of stale juncneons mixed a powerful brew that almost drove me choking to the porch. DANGEE DT THE SCHOOLBOOM. The effect of such air on teachers is pros trating and pitiable. I recall the beautiful graduates of the New York ITorinal College as they used to pass in filmy dress, with bouquets of loose roses, and the same girls not five years after, aged as they should cot be at 60, their complexions faded and lined, their hair fast turning gray, their eyes pale and tired as all women grow who lead in door lives at desk or counter, breathing im pure air and leading a monotonous, vexing routine. And if the school air thus affects women, what is it to the children? The epidemics of scarlet fever, diphtheria ana whooping cough which- ravage our towns, greater and lesser, must answer. It is idle in most cases to Took at home for the trouble. Dead air, breathed over ,and over by scores of lungs, 60 times and'more an hour, is precisely the same poison which exudes froma dead body in process of decay, and deposits the seeds of tubercle and putrid sore throat in the living tissue. I know a child kept at home for what was supposed mere sore throat, whose mother called the attention of the doctor just as he was leav ing to a rash the child had borne for two or three days. To the horror of all concerned it was scarlet fever, unsuspected by anyone, and bat for the chance remark the child would have played as usual with its mates and gone to school. In another case the mother in dressing a boy noticed dull red pimple3 on the back and sent him to the physician before school time. The inspector poohed at sending him a littlehreaking out caused by taking cold, but by noon the boy came home so ill that the family doctor was sent for and diagnosed at once a case of chickenpox so virulent that it could hardlv be reckoned less than smallpox itself. The disease had been taken at school, and when we know that chickenpox is only a lesser form of smallpox, dangerous if neglected, the risk of ha3ty inspection manifest I speak only of what comes within my limited experience. Teachers could tell 'far more tales. EXE ASD BBAET AT STAKE. When it comes to failure of the eye the evil is too well known to require many words. On the Continent it is remarked by the ablest doctors, that near sight and trouble with the eyes follows fast upon com pulsory education, and the prize scholars and winners in competitive examinations gain the,ir desire only to find it useless from failure of eye or brain in a short time. The light in the center of great classrooms can not be strong on cloudy days, while those next the windows in clear weather find it absolutely glaring. Add to this the poor type of cheap school books, the evening study demanded, the effect of foul air on the nerves of the eye, and there is too good rea son for the weakness of sight which increases in schools and among graduates. The evil, though hidden, is not dead. In too many cases the amauroses or palsy of sight, which is the first distressing sign of age, has to be traced to the injury done in early life In the schoolroom. Iu face of these dangers, not exaggerated or half so startling as the records of candid teachers, we are confronted by a movement, not to free the public schools from these in jurious conditions, but to crowd them still more by the most rigid laws for compulsory attendance. The most refined and intelli gent people of England are fighting the ogre of compulsory education in the kingdom, and we are allowing short-sighted Grad grinds to fashion the tetters on our society that the education rate per head may appear sufficiently cheap to satisfy the stingiest voters. ONE SAD EXAMPLE. If you could see the end from the begin ning, education in mere book learning would not be valued higher than life and health and social adaptation, as it is held. Since I wrote the last paper in this series Tstoodby the deathbed' of one of the most finely gifted, women brain, beauty, delicate, enduring physique and personal character to be found among women. For more than 20 years life had been one almost unbroken anguish of such pain as seems incredible. Her doctors such men as Seguin and Hamilton, spe cialties in nervous disease said it was the pain of cancer without its hope of speedy re lease. Borne bravely, heroically, silently. through those long years, she never excused herself one duty the trembling hands wera able to perform, but with corpse-like face, pausing for the intervals of maddening pam, went about her household tasks till mind and body both gave way, at the very last And this terrible doom was traced to her education. The bright girl, overpressed with studies to gratify the pride of her family, broke down with brain fever at 14, recovered only to be urged along the same route, with Latin, Greek, higher mathe matics, belles Iectres, beside accomplish ments, all taken not in smattering, but with the thoroughness and conscience which marked all she did. Prom graduation she went at once as teacher in a large and bril liant ladies' school, and, worn out there in a few years, wishinc rest and a home of her own, she married God help her! a home missionary, the last man in the world she should have chosen. She died, murdered as truly as if the knife had been set across her throat, who should have known ten good years of life longer. The very friend who had brought relief to her pain over and over, whose touch had soothed her delirium, was forbid den to remove her to purer air, or to employ a trained nurse at her own expense to attend the dying woman. In her last hours of peace years fell from her like a garment, and so fair, so bright she seemed with her tender tones and quick jesting as of one at ease in soul and body, It was trebly hard to let so much sweetness and grace go out of the world by the contrivance of coarse, merciless natures, tired of caring for her so long. But by her dead form I swore that such force as I have should go to t revent women from suffering such cruel lives, if plain speech and truth-telling could hinder them. God knows there is little enough tiuth in the world and sorrowful need for its being told. Let it tell against whom it will, I care not. It is time for old theories to be taken down, shaken, dusted and roved whether they will do 1 4 keep out the ght awhile longer, or whether they are disease-haunted, insect-eaten and falling of their ownweight Shielet Dabb. AH IHTEEESTING EEMLNISCESCB Of a Eteamb-at Journey Up the Allegbesy Into Now York State. . "That idea was formulated nearly 60 years ago," remarked an old citizen speak ing of the proposition recently put forward to connect Lake Erie and the Allegheny river by means of a canal. "There were people who believed in the feasibility of the project even in those days, and it was dis cussed in the newspapers at various times. "Perhaps you are not aware that a Pitts burg steamer once made a voyage up the Allegheny into New York State. No? Welt it is a fact, and as any file of old Pittsburg papers will prove." "Please tell me about it," said the re porter. "That I can do, for my father was a pas senger on the boat and X have heard him speak of the journey many times. The boat was named the Allegheny,and she made several trips to points far up the Allegheny river. In the spring of 1830 she ascended as far as Olean, N. Y., arriving there just a week after leaving Pittsburg. The pas- sengersVere allowed time to visit the cele brated Indian, Cornplanter, at the village where he resided, 17 miles above Warren. The bost carried a large number of passen gers and a good deal of freight going and "" Mturnlng.,r