""': AtSttr Vxvf&n fh-fj ' .t . 'ft l I 9 i 18 well-trained savage. It was she who indi cated to Clendenin that they must not be .encumbered by hags Xo. 1, 2Xo. 2 and No. 3, who were wondering, and even now plan ning flight. It was she who brought the withes with which these hags were tied to young maples, one hand behind each and one hand tree, with a convenient gonrd of water not far from each. It was she who led Clendenin to the creek, made him walk some hundred yards in it to lose his trail, and then to leave it bv the most careful de vice, that the trail might not be found. She discovered from him, he hardly knew how, where on the same creek Curwen's party were encamped, and by the time when they were all awake, not two hours from the time Clendenin had left them, she and he relieved 'the anxiety of his commander by appearing on the side of the creek to which they had not crossed. Prom this moment she was the guide, so absolutely needed, for the lost party. The condition, easy enough to describe, was difficult enough to handle. Curwen's party had three horse for six men. The horses,therefore, were hardly a help in mat ter of time, but they were a convenience in fording creeks, and in carrying such pro visions as they needed to carry from one camp to the next. Curwen dis liked to fire a single unnecessary shot; and to carry a haunch of venison for a day even was better than to risk exposure bv firing a rifle. Rachel Clendenin explained by counting fingers and by signs of the sun's passage that they were still two days from the Muskingum, where they would strike the old war trail from what we call San dusky to the Ohio. They could not under stand what she meant, but they did see that tier object was to cover these two days' march as promptly as might be. Her own masters had gone off on the warpath to the south only the afternoon before. Had Cur wen not crossed their trial at night, he would have seen it, and it would have con fused him. Rachel knew their object it was a settlement a few Kentuckians had made on the north side of the Ohio. But with her broken English, and with every gesture of dissent, she warned Curwen and her brother against any at tempt to follow them. The best their party could do was to reach the Muskingum trail, still well to the east of them. Her own lords had but just returned from it, and before her own escape and Curwen's perfectly visible track was discovered all must be beyond pursuit. She hardly gave them time to fasten the packs on their horses before she led them on their way. Curwen would gladly havei put her upon his own horse, but she refused absolutely, with the only approach to cheerfulness which showed'itself in all her dogged action and eloquence of gesture. She would not keep them back; that was clear enough. But,so soon as they were clear of the buck eyes and maples and in the broad trail of the open -prairie, Curwen called her to walk by his side. It was clear that not only her party, but many parties had recently come this way, and, to Curwen's horror, she told, as well as by gesture she could, the story of what may be called their campaign. He was fascinated by the easy gesture by which she made clear to him things where neither he nor she had available words; and, as the day went on, this sign language became more and more easy to him. It was only too certain that the Indians were "on the warpath." In one cabin two men had been killed in another, three. She was most careful to say that they did not encumber themselves with prisoners. "When Harry asked, with uneasiness, what would become of the women whom Clen denin had tied, Rachel Clendenin expressed the onlv terror which she showed all that dav. It was certain that one, at least, of tne men ot tbe party would appear at tbe lodge again, before nightfall. Her fear, in deed, was that he would come sooner. She had this reason for unwillingness to make any delay. At the fords, where naturally tnere was a little pause lor tne better man agement, she drove men and horses across with a certain passion. It was clear that she was resolved that davlieht of that dav should put the largest possible distance between them and her companions of yes terday. Even when night came, she would not permit a halt. It was within an hour of midnight when the relentless fury, asZapoly called her, in a queer pity for the tender ieeet of men who could not keep up with her savage energy, acquiesced in the bivouac which, against her purpose, Harry insisted in making. But before any semblance of daybreak they were on tbe alert again. "She "be not one fury," Zapoly said this time, "she be wot you call him, one fate, mid one wip, S S S erer to go." But he went, like the rest of them, and it was well he did. By moonlight they left their lair, which was no more. Daylight showed that she had been quite right in her geography. As tbe sun rose they came into a trail still , larger than this they had been following. Curwen learned afterward that this was the great war trail which led northward to the lakes. He knew where it would lead him, as he followed it south. For, so long as the course of the Muskingum served it, it fol lowed the valley of that river. "Go, go, alwavs go." Not for a moment for a stick which has worked through the Count's dainty boot. Hardly a moment for a pack that has turned on a pony's hack. Go, go, always go. She made them drink as they crossed the rivers, and what they ate they must eat as they marched. And as the evening gathered in, Harry Curwen had reason to bless her ior the rage with which she had driven them to this speed. For now the dull Scotchman him self, who was, it possible, a worse woodman than Zapoly, began to recognize signs which showed that men had been here be fore. Once and again a sapling had been recently cut off, and this by a steel ax or hatchet. At last the path was marked dis tinctly by woodmen's blazes, which they all understood. Xo one needed urging now. The footmen fairly ran, Rachel Clendenin, with her brother, leading the file. As she came out from the forest, into what was evi dently a partly opened clearing, she sprang uponthe trnnkofalarce buckeye which had fallen, and, with an instant gesture, com manded the silence of the rest. Curwen, who was the next ot the party, sprang from bis horse, and stood in an instant By her side. They could see the settler's cabin, the thick smoke from the chimney marked the hour. But the girl pointed to what no one could have failed to bee two giant Indian forms, one at each side of the little window of the cabin evidently watching it to pre vent escape. "What was at the door tbey could not see. Zapoly raised his rifle, but Rachel flung it down and she was right. All the men in succession sprang from the fallen log. Two of the party, with more spirit than could have been expected, rushed toward the window. As tbey did so, they drew shots from different quarters, for the little clearing was watched from more points than the fallen buckeye. None the less did Clendenin lead and Curwen follow. Upon the door, when they could see it, one of the savages was swinging a heavy tomahawk. The wood gave way as he did so, and instantly a puff of smoke from within followed the blow. The besieged party had fired. No one seemed to be hurt by the shot. Curwen could see all this as lie ran. It seemed as if his feet were tied. He leaped from ridge to ridge of the ploughed land, Clendenin still two or three steps in front of him. The three Indians shouted in scorn as the shot passed them, bat were not prepared for the sally which followed. Tne cabin door flew open, and, "before they really knew it, two large men sprang from the" house and grappled with the two nearest of the savages. All four went over together. The fifth man, a tall Shawnee, without an instant's pause, raised bis tomahawk, aimed a blow at the head of one of tbe whites; and then, before be could deliver it, Jell back dead, with the weapon in his hand. All this Harry Cuiwen saw as he ran perhaps CO paces it seemed as if those paces would never be taken. He-could see the knives of the wrestling men flash in the air. He could see Glen denin fling himself upon the first group. Then, as he closed with the second, it was clear that his help was not needed thjere. A cry within reminded him of the two men at the window. He pushed at the door. It was bolted against him. But women's voice cried out, "Bull kin! you know me. Open this door and I -will kill you." , ,, a r 'We iricaos incnuB, - upcu cur wen. "Do not fire the redskins are all down." The door flew open. "Harrvl is it vou?" And Sarah Parris dropped the useless rifle from her hands. To him it was almost, of course, that -it should be she. For all these many days, his terror had been the agonized question, where was she, in the midst of these horrors. For her, it was as if he had fallen from the sky. But there was not an instant for curiosity. He seized her gun, and turned to the groups behind him. But here his help was not needed. The boldness of the sally had suc ceeded. One of the Indians had been stabbed to the heart by Cephas Titcomb in the first blow which" he gave. The other had fallen heavily against an nntrimmed stump,and had been for the moment stunned by the blow. Nathan Choate had both his hands around the man's neck, and bothhis thumbs squeezed tight upon his windpipe. Clendenin's fall upon tbe other two had perhaps discomposed Choate at first as much as the other. But Clendenin was wiry and quick, and before Curwen could come into the fray, he and Cephas Titcomb had pin ioned the fallen warrior. At the moment, no one knew that one and another musket ball struck here and there around them. But, after it was over, Titcomb fonnd a stream of blood running down his leg, and knew for the first time that a shot had grazed his side, cutting open his hnnting shirt, and. as he said, "lettin' down my braces." No one stopped vet to speak even except in a word. Led "by Curwen, all rushed to the other end of the house. But here thev only met the Scotchman with Zapofy and Rachel Clendenin; the others bud kept themselves sheltered in the wood. Rachel herself was the only person who showed any prudence; it was she who had led them around to that side of the cabin where they would be under cover. Harry Curwen had no experience for the occasion. Strange to say, Cephas Titcomb, the Newbury ship builder, was the born sol dier now, who directed the reloading of the empty guns, who stationed each man at the right point, at the same time taking care that the prisoners were dragged into the shelter of the cabin. The skulking soldiers condescended to appear after all firing was over. And it was clear enough after five minutes that the outlying Indian scouts had abandoned their posts and fled. The two men at the window had both been wholly surprised. One of them lay dead killed by a pistol shot; the other was'a prisoner. A rapid council was held as to pursuit of the disappointed red men. There were but three of them, or at most, four. Of the whites of both parties, there" were eight, be sides the two Titcomb boys. The party sur prised in the cabin were the Titcomb family, with Sarah Parris and Choate, who was spending the winter there. Only four or five shots had been delivered by the Indians watching outside. Rachel Clendenin had been studying their trail for hours. She was sure that there were never but eight of them. Two of them were here, bound hand and foot; two of them lay dead in front of the house and one behind. Should the vic tors follow the fugitives, and save the neigh borhood from further danger? Zapoly offered some unintelligible advice. Harry Curwen was confused from some doubt as to his duty as a soldier. But, as has been said, he was no longer the com mander. Cephas Titcomb took the word. "No, boy, let well enough alone. "We'd better thank the Almighty that you come here jest when ye did, and not one minute later. Et was the bullet that struck Bull skin when his ax was raised et was that that settled this fight. And I think, sir, so I fur as 1 understand, that et was you that fired that shot for a bird on the wing." He turned to Zapoly and he was right. His prompt and exact markmanship had turned the fortune of the day. " Then, in a rapid consultation, the ar rangements tor the night were perfected. Cephas Titcomb, the younger, and his brother were sent to warn the settlers at Big Bottom of the attack and escape and de fense. "When, not two months after, the horrible massacre took place in the block house of that very settlement, the boys re membered well every detail of their visit of that evening. For Cephas Titcomb, the father, his wife and Zapoly and the Scotch gardener took care. For himself, he ridiculed the fuss they made, and said if they wonld let him alone be shonld do well enough. But they were right and he was wrong; and Zapoly dressed the wound with the skill of a surgeon. Harry could not yet have more than a word with Sarah Parris. The horses were to be cared for, the dead were to be dragged away and hidden, the captives were to be secured. It was easy enough to make provision, on the great mows of prairie hay, for better beds than the fugitives had known since the day of battle and defeat. "When such cares for the men were over, Curwen saw, well pleased, that Zapoly had engaged Mrs. Titcomb in a bi-lingual, not to say polyglot, conversa tion. And then.and not till then, he begged the girl he worshiped to come out from the cabin with him, with some shawl thrown over her head and shoulders, and they walked together, in the open air, under the light of the clear moon. 'Sarah," he said at once, "my own child if I dare say so I have been riding day and night in terror and think with what reasons. Do not tell me God Almighty did not send me here." No, she did not tell him so. She could sar nothing. Nor, indeed, was he dissatis fied with her silence. "Words are but poor things sometimes not very good things at the best. He was with her. If he dared and he would dare soon he could put his arm around her waist. Meanwhile, why should she speak, or he? Last night, if any one had told him she was alive, he would have been happy. Actually they waltced without a word to the landing at the riverside, where the rem nant of the old ark was still moored. He led her on board the boat and made her sit on the gunwale. And then he did not say what he had thought he should say if God ever gave him sight of her again. He said: "How many of these old arks I passed as I came down the river." "Ton passed this one," said Sarah. And the humor of his missing her came across even the tragedy of the night, and, perhaps, ior the first time, she smiled. "I knew when you passed us; I am ashamed to say I waved" my handkerchief at you. And I wish I could say you replied."" "Think of it," he said, "and that I did not dream of what I was doing." Then he told, almost passionately now, of his successive visits to Marietta, and how Gen eral Putnam would say "Whitcomb" in stead of "Titcomb," and that he had to leave when he had no answer to the ques tion of questions. But for all this neither of them cared. It was all a pretence. He was talking that they need not be still. And of a sudden be broke off: "Why do I talk this stuff to you? Ton know what I want to say to you. I want to say to yon that morning, noon and night, since that day you wrote me last, my one thought has been to come nearer to you, and to deserve to come. There has really not been one hour, dear Sarah, but the thought of you has made me a better man and if, before then, I ever forgot to say my prayers, it has not been so since. For al waysand I will not say how often I have begged God to take care of you since you wonld not let me. Sarah I have remem bered you every minute, and that is the reason I am here. God Almighty has heard my prayers " "And mine," said she. And Harry Cur wen hardly cared that she should say any more. The Eitd. Copyrighted, 1SS9, by E. E. Hale. WATCH FOB. TniSt Next week THE DISPATCH will offer to Its renders n fascinating- novelette from the pen of SIDNEY LTJSKA (Henry Hnrland), entitled "MKTAMOttPHOSISt Belnsan Ac count of a Strange Experiment In Peyebolo cr. Recently Conducted by a PhTiicInn." This serial Is In the ' best style of tbat Author's famous original vein of Romantic .Psychology. Don't feH to rcai It. CTE " CLARA BELLE'S CHAT. The Fashionable Four Hundred's Latest and Funniest Fad. RIDING OUT FOR AFTERNOON TEA. Prevalence of Accordeon Skirts and DI rectoire Gowns. THE. CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION FUSS rCOEBXSrOXPENCE OP TUB DISPATCH. J NewXoek, April 23. In these sweet golden days of springtime it appears that the swell young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of tea. Quite the funniest fad that has yet been taken up is this of .the tea rides out to the Claremout Club on the Riverside Drive. I was sitting on the piazza out at the Claremont last Thursday after noon. First you must understand that this house on the banks of the Hudson is one of the dearest and snuggest places in the world wherein to study the budding excellences of lovely ruralness together with the cooling charm of refreshment There is an uninter rupted view of the sparkling river stretch ing away to the north and a broad expanse of undulating country spreading off to the east. The Biverside Drive, hard and shiny as a ballroom floor, and quite as bright with its gay procession of carriages, is in imme diate proximity. As I was saying, I was enjoying these al fresco attractions last Thursday afternoon. At about 4 o'clo;k lour carriages, techni cally called broughams and T carts, came spanking up to the steps of the hotel. Four very beautiful and splendidly dressed ladies jumped daintily into the outstretched hands of their escorts. That great beauty, Mrs. Bnrke-Roche, was one of them, Mrs. Van Kensselear Cruger another, and Mrs. El liott Booserelt another. No sooner were these precious burdens set down upon the ground than a cavalcade of riders came swooping full tilt up to the house. cup or SOUCHONG. There was a skurrying of grooms, aflutter of girls descending from their horses like birds from a bush, and the air was filled with gay laughter and musical voices. Harry Xe Grand Cannon, the young leader of germans, wa3 one of this happy party, and whn he went up the steps he took with him a queer looking box which he ap peared to be very solicitous of, refusing to trust it to one ot the hotel waiters who ad vanced to relieve him of its burden, t. found afterward that this box contained rare old Souchong tea, and that all these people had come out on the shore of the beautiful river just to indulge in their reg ular 5 o'clock tipple amid new scenes and breezes. Moreover, I learned that a coterie had been organized which should follow out the same programme each Thursday, and so throughout next month the casual visitor to the Claremont will have an opportunity of seeing how pretty some of the women in the Four Hundred look over the edge of a tiny Sevres cup.how gallant the men are in their elegant spring trousers, yellow kid cloves. boutonnieres and white gaiters, and how very jolly a tea party can be when the bev erage is Souchong and a retinue of servants await your bidding with your horses and vour soft, glistening carriages to carry you back through the park to dinners "made tempting by the fresh scented airs of an April drivel THE ACCOBDEON SKIBT. Faster Sunday was as warm and brilliant a day as the June of the poets ever brought forth, and, ot course, the sidewalks on Fifth avenue after the churches were out present ed a scene of astonishing splendor of color and gorgeous material. Words would fail to suggest the tortuous crowds of handsome ly dressed people that lounged and stared at each other, or the remarkable display of new costumes that blossomed on all sides like flowers. But one development in the ever change ful evolution ot the feminine gown was painfully apparent, and it showed emphati cally the tendency of woman, when she has a good thing, to run it into the ground. I refer to the skirt known as the "accordeon." To the female mind this word expresses a very great deal. Awhile ago the Psyche knot claimed the attention and cultivation of feminine New York. Then came the Hading veil. Now it is tbe accordeon skirt. And it promised on Faster Sunday to make the landscapes of the approaching summer very monotonous. Fifth avenue shivered with these arrangements on that day. Their long, vertical lines of perfect regularity crinkled and broke into rays of vari-colored light till the eye yearned for something rest ful and still. Dozens and dozens of these skirts, in green, red, black, white and every other color played their soundless tunes along the Faster pave. DIRECTOIRE GOWNS. But I doubt if thev became anvmore tiresome in their profusion than did the all prevalent directoire dress which so many hundred young women are arraying them selves in at this moment. The epoch of puffed sleeves, short waists and long stretches ofhmp skirts, is indeed returned. The directoire gown was something of a favorite for house wear a season or so ago, but it never got on the street to any notice able extent until this spring. I think Kitty Brady was the first girl to wear the gown in open air, and gradually they became popu lar for theater wear. Now they have reached the tiresome stage of profuseness, and the thoroughfares are thick with them upon all shapes and styles of feminineness. Perhaps the most conspicuous departure in the way of an appurteuance to women's toilets is found in the parasols of this season. The sticks of these have been elongated from their former convenient shortness' to the length of a shepherd's staff. The most re markable of all the parasols I have yet seen was one of plain green velvet with a slim white stick fully five feet long, the end of the stick being supplied with an enormous silver crook. When this parasol is held over its fair owner's head, tbe crook inter feres with her feet as she moves. When it is closed she uses it to w.-ijk with, after the manner of an Alpine guide. A DIFFERENCE OP OPINION. Fanny Davenport, the actress, has had a trifling difference of opinion with the Bev. Dr. Houghton, pastor of the Little Church Around the Corner. It is not necessary to explain, so often has it been Dublished, that the Church of the Transfiguration, which was so notoriously nicknamed by reason of the funeral services of Comedian Holland, is by no means a little or insignificant con cern. On the contrary, it is an extremely fashionable Episcopal church, standing on, ground alone worth $250,000, and with a congregation representing a vast deal of style and riches. And I may be guilty of repetition in explaining that llector Hough ton, although known throughout the land as the chaplain of the theaters, is an exceed ingly dignified, sensitive and exclusive sort of a clergyman. He has officiated willingly in the burials of actors and actresses, be cause the duty has accidentally been put upon him. He has even permitted himself to be elected an honorary member of the Actors' fund. Not long ago thieves broke in and stole his solid silver communion ser vice. Several actors and managers impul sively proposed to replace the articles, and with much finer ones, by means of a theatri cal subscription. x DR. HOUGHTOtf DECLINES. Dr. Houghton bad already declined as politely and as suavely as possible, many sorts of personal favor from the stage, be cause he never goes into a theater, and on the whole is a condemnor of dramatic per formances. Therefore, he consistently re fused to receive the utensils of the holy sac rament of communion from players, but he did it in a graceful and considerate manner.. Now. it is one ot Dr. Dobgh ton's doctrines that -marriage is a eoveaaatjior life, that I'lTTBUBQ - i)i&PTOH, once the bridegroom and the bride say that they will cleave unto each other as long as thev both shall live, the words have their ordinary meaning, and therefore he will not perform the service of marriage for any per son who has already a husband or wile liv ing, no matter what decree acourt may have granted. Fanny Davenport and Melbourne McDowell have played the lovers on the stage so long that they love each other really, and, altera great deal of dicker and bother, she has gotten legally rid of her former husband and McDowell has similarly cleared himself of a wife. Being thus pre pared for new wedlock, they fixed upon the second week in May for the time, and New Tork City for the place, of their nuptials. They also fixed upon Dr. Houghton to tie anew the knot that had been untangled. A friend went to him on the errand. -A POLITE BEFUSAl. "I cannot do this," the clergyman re plied. "I have been sorry on many occa sions to decline my services for divorced parties." One of these instances was that of Kate Claxton. "If the gentleman and lady desire par ticularly to be married at the Church of the Transfiguration they may do so, and some other clergyman may act in my stead some Episcopalian who does not view the matter exactly as I do." That is why the wedding of Fanny Daven port at the Little Church Around the Corner will not have the noted pastor to officiate. It may be added, by the way, that Dr. Houghton has just had a request refused by theatrical people. He was put up to the idea of requesting all the city managers to close their hodses on Good Fridav evening. This he did in formaj terms. Two of the fashionable theaters had already decided to shut their doors, but aU the rest were open as usual, and only three of all the managers took pains to even write an excuse to the worthy priest. CENTENNIAL SQUABBLES. Sam Ward, the famous gourmet, lost his reputation as a dinner-giver and bon vivant when he ordered three white meats to follow each other in immediate succession, and it was through the superabundant privileges Ward McAllister sought to secure for the Four Hundred that he came to grief. His successor is Stuyvesant Fish, who may now be regarded as tbe boss absolute of the Astor-Vanderbilt society. There are few men more likely to attract attention any where about town than "Stuyve" Fish, be tween whom and Ward McAllister there has been a good deal of highly amusing cross-firing of late, over the change in the control of the Centennial Committee of Ar rangements. Mr. Fish has pronounced Mr. Ward in competent, and the latter has reported that the trouble all came about through Fish's conniving to be allowed to dance opposite the President in the opening quadrille. This of course Ward wouldn't permit, "that man Fish" being a "railroader," and there fore, in McAllister's opinion, socially dis qualified for a leading position in the great affair. To this delicate compliment, Mr. Fish bluntly rejoined that McAllister lied. Then, while the compliments were fiymg, tbe busy yacntmg millionaire, -Ulbridge x. Gerry, came to the support of Mr. Fish, whereupon McAllister deftly turned the laugh upon him also, by explaining that Gerry, who coveted the post of presiding officer at the banquet, had remarked that Mayor Grant "hadn't brains enough to run the speeches." The town enjoyed the episode immensely, although it brought mauy severe heart burnings to the principal actors and the Four Hundred. who IS PISH. Now that the fusillade is over, people are curious to know more about McAllister's successor. Probably not a few society men are anxious about tbe consignment of rare old Burgundy, which McAllister himself bought and stowed away in a special cellar, so that the guests might have a royal treat of two small glasses apiece, or, perhaps, it is about those wonderful Havanas "Weeds that cannot be duplicated, doncherknow." Somehow, Ward had a prime faculty of getting the best things together at a pinch. Will his successor be as clever? they now ask. Well, "Stuyve" Fish will probably look at things differently and through younger lenses. He is only 38 a little over half McAllister's age. He hasn't .reached the epicurean stage yet, and has never felt a twinge of gout. He is' a railroader in the broad sense a railroad president. His con nection with Illinois Central, which he pulled out of the slough and got roundly abused for it, demonstrated his cleverness. He has accumulated wealth, wholly inde pendent of his inheritance; moreover, it is common talk in the several clubs to which he belongs, that he knows how to spend and how to keep, and is business clean through. He carries an imposing presence, is fully six feet tall, and weighs quite 185, with just a hint of a coming 200 in the future. Still he is not as handsome a man as his elder brother, Nicholas, who was named for the famous old grandfather, nor does he dress as nattily as Hamilton, Jr., the youngest brother. AMERICAN AEISTOCEATS. , His outdoor suit is usually quite plain. He walks with a splendid stride that is in odd contrast to 'McAllister's careful, meas ured gait, which might be termed a sort of mathematical prance. He has a trick of caressing his big brown moustache which, in any othei man, would be accounted as nervousness. His wife was the daughter of William H. Anthon, a lawyer whose name was as well known 15 years ago as that of Frederic B. Coudert is to-day. His wife brought him no fortune. Of course the Fish family pride them selves upon their revolutionary descent, and in this respect Stuyvesant Fish mav be called the typical leader of the Four Hun dred. The family has been in politics, too, as well as business, and has furnished diplo mate in its time. Nick, Jr., now a bank er, was in the State department under his father, and afterward represented our Gov ernment in Holland. Hamilton Fish, Jr., is now in the Assembly, representing Duchess county. One sister is the wife of Sidney Webster, equally .well-known in law and diplomacy, and a frequent editorial contributor to the newspapers and maga zines. Webster, by the way, is a Demo crat, the only one in the family? Two other sisters are Mrs. Eoeers and Mrs. Benjamin. Still another, now dead, was the wife of the second son of Sir Stafford Northcote. The third generation of the family is al ready quite numerous, and there certainly seems to be no prospect of the stock running out. CL.ARA Belle. Shnli Women Propose t Widow Coy-Smith Always show a re spect for your elders, Edith. I'll take the first chance at him myself, and if I don't succeed you can try. Judge. A Primitive Place. Kansas City Stir. J Tuscumbia has neither a bank nor a church, although it has been a county seat for over 40 years. The people there keep their money in old stocking legs and play mumble peg on Sunday. An Enterprising Burglar. Kanias City Star.! A thief at Nevada entered an ice cream saloon the other night and stole three gal lons of cream and went back the,next night and got away with the freezer and, .the .re- BOHDAT, APBID 28, AN INDIAN BATTLE. Desperate Fight With Crazy Horse's Hostiles at Slim Bnttes. GENERAL CROOK TO THE RESCUE. Repulsing a Simultaneous Attack All Along the Line. SLEEPING ON THE FIELD OP BATTLE rwBITTBN FOB Tint DISPATCH.:! In a previous article the forced march of Crook'scolumn to the rescue of Major Mill's surrounded battalion was described, and in telling of thedeathof "Buffalo Chips" Bill Cody's old friend and "partner" allusion was made to the general engagement which took place on the afternoon of September 9, 1876, between General Crook's entire force and the Sioux and Cheyennes under the Chief Crazy Horse. Now comes a request that the combat itself should be made the subject of this week's letter. Look at the map of Dakota and trace our route. Pursuing the Indians from the Big Horn Mountains in Wyoming we had crossed the Little Missouri near where the Northern Pacific bridges it to-day; had fol lowed eastward to the south fork of Heart river, and then, with only two days' rations left, pushed southward 'by compass through flooding rains, crossing the north fork of the Cannon Ball near Bainy Butte, fording the north fork of Grand river with Pretty Stone Buttes (Les Belles Pierres) ten miles away to the east, and eating our horses to keep alive. Here it was that Crook sent Major Mills with 150 picked men and horses from the Third Cavalry to push forward to the settlements in the Black Hills and return to meet us with all the provisions he could buy. This was on the night of September 7. At dawn on the 9th Mills had pounced upon and captured the village ot Amer ican' Horse, a noted Sioux chief, and was in turn surrounded by the rallying rush of all Crazy Horse's bands who were in scattered camps all the way over toward the Little Missouri. Just at the eastern edge of what is now called Burdick county, Dakota, lie those strange, crag-topped up heavals called the Slim Buttes, and, nestled in a beautiful amphitheater just about the middle of their eastern slope, lies this vil lage of the Sioux, crammed with trophies of the Custer battle and rich in furs, robes and Indian plunder of every descrip tion. The warriors had made a lively at tempt to recapture it at once, but Mills and his men had entrenched themselves and hurried off couriers to Crook with the news, then hung on to their prize until he could come to the rescue. FIRST ON THE GBOUND. The Fifth Cavalry was the first to reach the ground from the north just about the time that Crazy Horse's bands began to ap pear on tbe sinus irom the west. Xhen came the battalions of the Second and Third Cavalry, the pack trains and the athletic battalions of infantry a full regi ment made up of detachments from the Fourth, Ninthand Fourteenth commanded by Colonel Alexander Chambers. By 2 P. H. Crook had all his force perhaps 2,400 men on the ground, and by 4 p. M. Crazy Horse had mustered band after band, and, with 1,000 warriors at his back, dashed into the attack, hoping to recapture the village and the prisoners we had already taken, or at least to run off the big herd of ponies some 400 orthem that .aims had "corraled" at daybreak. Earlier in the afternoon, however, as told in that previous letter, we had had a lively experience in capturing a lot of Indians lurking in the head of a ravine at the south ern edge of the village. In this affair "Buf falo Chips" and a Third Cavalry trooper were killed and several of our men were seriously wounded. The Indians proved to be "American Horse" himself with several of his warriors; one wretched, trembling old hag of a squaw; two or three younger women; two young girls and one little mite of a 4-year-old child. The chief had re ceived'what was eyidently a mortal wound, but was calm and conscious. Some of the soldiers gently carried him to the biggest lodge in the village, and there our surgeons did their best to save him. The other In dians, surrounded by an interested throng of troopers, were escorted to the presence of General Crook. It was odd to see with what eagerness they seized and shook his hand, and with what piteous appeal they looked into his kindly, bearded face. The old squaw, shaking as though with palsy from fright and dread, cowered at his side, clinging to his left hand, and looking fear fully around her. His right hand was grasped by her companions, one after an othereven the wondering little papoose, strapped on his mother's back, having his tiny fist placed by her in the General's palm, before she could be satisfied that her baby, too, were to receive "The Big White Chief's" protection. INDIAN FIENDS. Had we fallen alive into their hands those squaws would have been the head devils in carrying out the most fiendish tortures sav age ingenuity could devise until death came to our relief, and doubtless while re joicing in the fact, everyone of them thought us "heap fools" that we did not make war that way. One young woman, the only really beautiful Indian squaw I ever saw, stood calmly and unconcernedly looking on, and holding up her right hand, which had been pierced by a bullet, in order to check the flow of the blood. A rich color mantled her cheeks through the dusky skin, and I gazed at her in no little wonderment. Neither pain, the imminent danger of her recent experiences, nor loss of blood seeded to have affected her in tbe least. When our half-breed scout Frank Gruard told her and the other women to follow him to the teepe where the surgeons were, she strode away like a queen. South of us the ground sank away some 60 yards, then rose in grassy waves and slopes until it rolled up to the foot of a glistening white-walled butte. West of thatwas a sort of valley. Then, a little over half a mile away and running nearly north and sonth, the main range of the hills. Directly to the west of us the ravine We were in seemed boring d winding course into these hills and a little brook came trickling down. North of a net work of little ravines and contees that came together just 100 yards or so east of where we nad planted our headquarters flag, the ground rose to a high knoll and there fluttered Merriti's worn colors and there was the very center of the position oc cupied by the command. TJpham's bat talion of the Fifth Cavalry was faring south in the ravine where we had made our liviMifif and tliA nnn mnra ictinO inef )M.tWM..., MUU Ul. Alibi HVW .... JHW nliyiif KO irn.i. f nm .in Ifdcnn'a battalion joining almost with TJpham's right, was facing west on the plateau between the ravines; then came the battalion of the Second Cavalry "and then those of the Third reaching almost around to the east. Here, there and everywhere, grazing quietly and thankfully, were the herds ot troop horses and pack mules all under strong guard. Out on the slopes to the south side of us were the 50 odd grays of Captain Montgom ery's 'ompany B, of the Fifth. Every thing was quiet; not an Indian bad been seen for an hour except those whom we had "routed out" from the hole in the bluff side, and we were all chatting together and im patiently waiting for our cook's summons to supper; the infantry battalions had stacked arms under "Merritt's Hill" near where the wounded were lying in the middle of the village; the surgeon had just lopped off theueg ot Lieutenant Von Luettwitz who had been shot early in tbe morning, when, all on a sudden, out to the west we beard the bang, bang of rifles, and the boy trum peter of C troop shouted down to u& "In dians firing into the herdsl" It seemed as though it was the signal for the sudden sprouting from earth ot hundreds of painted, feathered, darting horsemen. A. STAMPEDE. All at the same 'instant, on every side of va.'i thoBgha-ix-c-r sevea , hundred yards 1889. away, from'behind the sheltering bluffs and buttes and ridges, dashing down to the attack, yelling like fiends and firing like boys on the Fourth of July, on they came, score after score of Crazy Horse's warriors, bent on stampeding our poor, broken down horses, and bursting through our lines. In stantly every officer in our party sprang to join his troop. General Carr took one cool glance about him, said "Sound to arms! Bradley," to our headquarters trumpeter and bade, the orderly bring his horse. In stantly, too, the men of TJpham's battalion seized their carbines and sprang into line. "Sound the advance, Bradley," said our placid commander, and the stirring notes rang along the dripping ravine. The men scrambled up the slope in front of them, and ran nimbly out toward the herds, now scampering in for shelter. All but one herd. "Look! look at the grays!" is the yell. Sure enough. Montgomery's horses-, startled by the sudden clamor and following the lead of one fool of a charger, are scam pering straight up the long wave of prairie and into the very teeth of the Indian skirmishers. A shout of mingled warning and dismay goes up, A GALLANT RETRIEVER. Another moment and they are lost to us; but, darting out beyond them, spurring his steed to the top of his "possibilities," Cor poraLClanton turns the leader to the left and half drives, half guides him around in broad circle, and in less time than it takes to write it the whole herd comes thundering down to camp safely. Such a cheer as goes up .for Clantonl Three minutes and all the herds horses, ponies and mules are driven down into the ravines out of reach of Indian bullets, and all the cavalry lines dismounted are jauntily opening out in skirmish order and. driving rapid and telling fire on the foe. The'infantry come rapidly forward on the left of TJpham's men; their "Long Tom's" burst in to swell the chorus of Indian "Winchester" and cavalry carbine, and in ten minutes the roar of murketry breech-loaders with us, magazines with the Sioux sounds like a second Spottsylvania. The grand, simul taneous dash, planned to surprise Crook's veteran command and stampede his worn out horses, has utterly failed in its object. The herds are safe under cover, and in their place long lines of fire-flashing skirmishers are seadily breasting the slopes, pushing back the yelling warriors before them. And yet, how scientifically and skilfully these Indians fightl Keeping 500 or 600 yards away, darting at full speed up and down along our front, they maintain their rapid fire and a constant watch for any weak or wavering point along the line. Every now and then some one of their number will spring from his pony and lie down to take deliberate aim at some mounted officer. General Carr on his big horse, sitting right behind Mason's men, is an especial object of their attentions. They miss him, but make it lively for everybody around him. Brave old Sergeant Ehreiber, of "K" troop, gets a bullet through the thigh as he stands composedly watching the fire of his men, and two or three others along this front are compelled to drop carbine and go limping off for surgical aid. One young warrior in his eagerness ventures too far and "Paddy" Nihil, of "F" troop, runs a few yards for ward, kneels, takes deliberate aim, tumbles the Indian out of his saddle, and, amid the cheers of the whole battalion, secures his pony. BESCUING THEIB DEAD. Down come scores of warriors from the bluff, full speed, and in an instant they have wheeled about and are scampering back for shelter, bearing the body of their comrade with them. And so, too, until it grows too dark to see, every time an Indian drops, a rush is made and, whether killed or only wounded, the body is thrown across some sturdy pony and borne away behind the screening ridge. Bight out on the skirmish line with the men is that prince of good fellows and journalists, Finnerty, of the Chicago Times. He has dropped his pencil for the minute and is blazing away with his rifle, but when be sees the trooper capture the pony he runs over to congratu late and take him by tbe hand glorying in the exploit of a brother Patlander. Learning-his name he delightedly heads a new Iiaragraph "Nihil Fit," then resumes his ong range rifle practice. On four sides of a big square now or at least a great, irregular circle the combat is at its height. First in one place, then in another, by furious dashes the Indians strive to break the lines, but everywhere are met by cool, steady volleys. "Halt" and "lie down" have long since been signaled, and the skirmishers are now prone upon the sward, for the Indians have been pursued so far back tbat their bullets no longer en danger the herds and the wounded in the village. Little by little the fire slackens; little by little the dripping skies change from gray to dun, then to brownish blue, then night settles down upon crag and prairie; the red flashes grow less and less frequent, and at last die utterly awav. Slowly the lines are drawn in while strong picket guards are posted, slowly and ten derly the seriously wounded men are borne back to the surgeon's lodges. The adjutants tramp around from battalion to battalion making up the list of casualties, and when at last I get back to headquarters to make my report, some poor devil of a half-starved scout or trooper has stolen what has been saved as my supper, and I celebrate the vic tory of Slim Buttes on an empty stomach, but roll in myoldNavajoblanket,and with a poncho formattres8, the prairie for bed and the weeping skies for a roof, sleep as soundly and as blissfully as ever man slept on downy pillow. Charles Kino, TJ. S. A. THE ORIGIN OF THE COP. Eugene Field Explain How tbe Word Came to be Applied to Policemen. Chicago News. Mr. E. W. White, of this city, asks for information as to the "origin or the term 'cop' as applied to a policeman." It is a contraction of the word "copper," which is English slang for a police officer. Accord ing to Hotten, "to cop" means to seize or to lay hold of anything unpleasant. A "cop per" is one who "cops" or apprehends un pleasant objects. In America the phrase "to copper" is frequently heard, and it seems to have two distinct meanings one signifying "to clinch," "to insure," "to consummate," as "I coppered the chance as quick as I could." The other usage of the word obtains among gamblers almost ex clusively, "to copper" a card at faro signi fying that the gambler bets that that card will lose. The derivation of the original slang word "cop" can only be surmised. Ifmay have been a contraction of the Latin word "capere," to take, or it may have been a contraction of another Latinword "corpus," a body. Perhaps the funniest philological coincidence is to be met with in the En glish word "pole-horse" and the old Greek word "polos," both words meaning the same thing. Contagions Hnicallly. General Washington What has my lieu tenant got? General Wayne Five aces, sire. General Washington S'deathl I opined .1 A ..... M.a-elnr In ill. S!tf1A tnt tfftth General Arnold wonld in time contaminate :oul uenerai acnuyier, can me guttrui Se. , . v - llKjEtHf Jgflggj"9 RvTiiSKi 4 EYERTDAY SCIENCE. The Power of Simulating Death for an Indefinite Feriod. BITUMEN DISC0VEBED IN TEXAS. Insanity Dae to Poor Physical Training in Youth. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL NOTES. PEETARED FOE THX DISPATCH Headers of The Dispatch who desire information on subjects relating to indus trial development and progress in mechan ical, civil and electrical, engineering and the sciences can have their queries answered through this column. Dr. Tanner, wlio some years ago created a sensation by his 40 days' fast, now asserts that the outward signs of death, as accepted and depended upon by physicians, are all deceptive, save one and that alone is in fallible. He says: "I have so disciplined my mind and body that I can take upon myself, at volition, a trance state, and while in that condition, X propose to be buried, just as a dead person is ordin arily buried, in a secure, regularly-made coffin, placed in a grave five feet deep, which will be filled up, and the earth compactly jut in and mounded over. I shall remain there four weeks, then be disinterred, resuscitated and fully restored to the tuli vigor and strength of my normal condition. This is not impossible; it is no new thing." Dr. Tanner expects to have all his arrangements perfected by May 15, which i3 the day he mentions for the carry ing out of his stated intention. It is well known that the fakirs of India have the power of suspending animation, and the Journal de Medicine, Paris, of February 7, 1889, gives a very interesting account of the preparations which the fakirs make before "hibernating," and it proceeds, to describe cases so well authenticated as to be beyond question where fakirs have been buried for periods varying from six weeks to four months. Similar cases have been re ported from time to time, and it is impossi ble to doubt their genuineness. If we can not explain these cases, we can find a host of analogous facts in the lower animal life, as, for instancs, the hibernation of dormice and other animals, the revivification of fish and frogs after a winter passed in ice; the vital resistance of toads and other liviug beings inclosed without nonrnishment for many years in small, hollow places, etc. Alum in Bnklnc Powder. Prof. J. W. Mallett, of the University of Virginia, who has been making an exnaus tive series of experiments with alum baking powders, and studying their effects uponthe digestive organs, has just published his re port. He says that alum itself, when added singly to bread or other food, is positively injurious to health, and that its use, even in the small proportions sometimes used to im prove the appearance of bread made from unsound or inferior flour, must be regarded as highly reprehensible, its injurious effect being in no way lessened by its combina tion with carbonate of soda to form baking powder. Sanitation and Sanity. Sir Edwin Chad wick, in an address on. sanitary 'science, says: "Physicians are be ginning todeclarethat a large amount of the crime for 'which punishment is inflicted is due to insanity, and that insanity is due to low physical condition which sanitation by eaTly physical training would remove. There are experiences to show tbat this is the fact. Dr. Ashe and others conversant with the lunatic asylum declare that, as a olnsn Innatips are of low physical condition. and that that low condition is reducible by sanitation and early physical training, tbat is to sav, of the 80,000 lunatics who now burthen the rates. Of 30,000 blind persons, the late Dr. Bclph declared that two-thirds might have been saved by early sanitation." A Quick Motion Valve. An ingenious device has been patented by Mr. J. H. Fagan, of Chicago, for closing steam and other valves quickly. In the ap plication of this device the ordinary screw thread is not dispensed with except when, through accident, it becomes necessary to shut down suddenly. An independent bushing is used to carry the ordinary op erating screw of the valve, which by a sim ple attachment can be locked in place, thus utilizing the screw thread for raising or lowering the valve; or in case of accident or necessity it can be relieved, and by the aid of the lever instantly lowered to shut off steam. Elevator1 for Home The. Apian fora simple and inexpensive ele vator for private dwellings in place of the ordinary staircases, is attracting attention in Berlin. It is on the principle of the in cline railway, and the motive power is furnished by the city water, which is applied in the cellar. Each flight has a separate chair, so that one person can ascend from the first to the second story while another is on his way from the second to the third, and so on. The arrangement is described as re markably simple, sale and effective. Coit of Storage Battery Dlalire Power. The Julien Electric Traction Company publish some valuable and interesting figures as to the results obtained on the Fourth avenue surface road in New York in running cars with storage batteries. Their car day's work is 57 miles, which is run without recharging. In 40 days the gross earnings of the storage battery cars were at the annual rate of 59,106 75 as against 56.387 50, the average earnings of horse cars on the same line, and the net earnings of each car will more than pay its entire cost and equipment at the end ot the first year. During the 40 days that the test car has been at work neither batteries nor motors have required attention or expense for repairs or renewals. The difficulties which beset the early stages of the Julien system have been one by one overcome, and now the service is smooth and effective. The cost of motive power is calculated at $3 10 per day of60 miles. That is the cost of energy at 2 cents per horse power, and $700 per annum for maintenance of batteries and motor. Traveling Electric I.Igbr. A traveling electric light has been used in Germany with much success. The ar rangement is a very simple one. A dynamo, with an engine to drive it, is mounted on a wagon, something like that of a steam fire engine, containing boiler, fuel box and water tank, complete for a night's service. A supply of wire and a number of poles corresponding to the number of lights re quired are added to the equipment, which is then drawn by a pair of horses to any desired place. On arriving there the poles are set up where required and stayed with wires fastened with stakes driven into the ground; the lamps are then hung to them and properly connected, and the engine is set in motion. The lights immediately kindle, and from 1 to SO lamps can be onerated. according to the power of the machine. As the lamps can be suspended anywhere, and are not affected by wind or ram, the advantage of the apparatus to con tractors and others who have to carry on night work is apparent. An Electric Drill. Among recent patents is an electric drill, which promises to almost revolutionize mining as well as tunneling. It is ran by a motor, which has its power froia the elec- rtxieity frosa a large dyaaaw of'4W-light power. It is stated that such a dynamorill run 20 drills easily, each one with a capacity of boring on an average two inches a min ute in the hardest kind of rock, and son is softer kind. Beraarkable Proareo at Electrical Science. In commenting on the giant strides which electricity, is now making, Prof. Elisha Gray establishes the fact that a greater ad vance has been made in the last 20 years than in all the 6,000 historic years preced ing. More is discovered in one day now than in 1,000 years of the middle ages. Electricity now carries our messages,, drives our engines, rings our door bells,, scares the uurgiar ana supplements, wnerc it ura not supersede, the stothescope in the diagnosis of diseases. Its applications are daily en tering more and more into- our domestic lite, and day by day becoming more be wildering in their marvellous-adaptability: and yet we are only on the threshold. Sawdnst Paper A mill has been established at Ottawa, Ont, which makes paper pulp out of "saw dust The paper made wholly from sawdulfi- is said to form an admirable sheathing'that is fit for building after being tarred and dried. A better quality of paper is made by using one-fourth waste paper. The mill has a capacity for converting about 12,000 "tons of sawdust into pulp annually. Bltomen In Texas. The need of material for serviceable-pavements is one very widely felt. la many cities asphaltum brought from the famous pitch lake of Trinidad, has been used, being .mixed with a certain amount; of calcareous matter, and heated to such a point that it wonld harden on cooling. The natural mixture of limestone and bitumen fonnd in the deposit of Val-de-Travers, of which tha French have so freely and successfully availed themselves in the construction of their pavements, is thus imitated". The re sult is a pavement that resists the action of air and water lor a considerable length of time. A very important discovery has re cently been made in Texas. In Colonel J.L. Tait's trip to the southwest of that State, he picked up a small piece of dark-blue lime stone which, on examination was found to be impregnated with bitumen in almost exactly the same proportion as the Val-de-Travers product, and it was further found that the quantity available was equal to any demand that may arise. In addition to this, many deposits of bituminous sands or shales occur which yield 10 per cent, and sometimes a larger amount, of bitumen. India Rubber for Pavements. In Berlin experiments with india rubber for paving purposes are proving most satis factory. It is said to be not only noiseless, but also durable, and unaffected by heat or cold. It is peculiarly valuable for use on bridges, its elasticity preventing vibration. Present Age of the Eartb. The present age of the earth has been placed by Sir William Thompson at 100, 000,000 years, while the speculations of others have given much larger figures. There are, however, good grounds for regard ing 16,000,000 years as a moderate estimate. Scientists concur in thinking that this is but a small part of the earth's existence, and everything leads to the belief that its total evolution through the immensity of space will exceed 1,000,000 centuries. Accuracy ot Firing; Big: Gun. Of the recent tests made on board the Ve suvius, not the least interesting was that which demonstrated tbe ease with which the range of her projectiles can be changed. This is accomplished by varying the amount of air admitted to the gun barrel in the rear of the shell. The air is always admitted Irom the firing reservoir to the gun at a pressure of 1.000 pounds per square inch, and the valve which controls the admission of air must be so delicately adjusted that the amount may be varied at will and to a nicety. In other words the valve must work to such perfection tbat the final pres sure upon the shell may be diminished trout 1,000 pounds per square inch to a pressure just sufficient to drop tbe shell a short dis tance irom the muzzle. Pecnllnr Form of Epilepsy. Prof. Charcot, in lecturing in Paris recently, illustrated his remarks on a special variety of epilepsy by exhibiting a patient, who after having made numerous excursions to Paris, started on January 17, about 7 in the evening, in an access of "ambulatory automatism," and walked thus for ten days. When he awoke he was on a bridge in a town which he did not know. It was in Brest, where he had arrived during his access. 31. Charcot also cited an example of an analogous case which declared itself after a fall. It was that of a porter who was epileptic, and who, after this accident, was seized with a similar access and trav eled during eight days without stopping and without consciousness. A CABINET OFFICER'S COUSINS. IoU oi Friends and Relntlrei When a Man Hoi Power. New York Tribune. "I never knew until recently," said one of the Cabinet officers, who had pre-empted a cozy corner at the reception given in honor of Senator Morrill's 79th birthday, "how many cousins the Lord blessed me with, or how much affection they had for me. Why, they are thicker than cherries on a tree, and I have been compelled to de tail one clerk to attend to their correspond ence, for they each and every one insist on my showing my affection for them in some substantial way. , "My class in college, too, has grown to unrecognizable dimensions. J thought I knew every man in it, but the college would never have held at one time all the men who pretend to have graduated when I did, and each and everyone of them loves me like a brother; but the most wonderful evidence I have yet received, is from a man in the town where I was raised. When we were boys I had occasion to thrash him; 1 thrashed him well," and the Secretary smiled a smile-flf. content as he remembered his boyish feat; "but I was always afraid that he had, never forgiven me, so yon can imagine my joy when I received a letter from him last week thanking me for each separate lash. I had given him. There are some roses as an offset to tbe thorns of a Cabinet office." $1,000 REWARD to Bin; one who win ocebsdiat Dy proof oar cusn thai Acme Blacking WILL NOT INJURE LEATHER. WCXTT ft BlXDOUS. M.v... i4-tt m mk at thiau ter t&e 1 Jngmethod: Hang strip rf!"i:ta boUlo of Acme BlAcking. and tear it tbw for dey or a. month. Take Ft out and bang j P to oiy a4 w amina tU condition caroW-"eomrmend ladte to make a ataular tort with rjK-I5!5tnii gentlemen witb any lioaid '?1t"L0'Z ? Jng.orwitbUoIdbUcijnetnitooffloalnatooojBax, Wolff'sAGMEBlacMng Mil m rT "" ""thnr WATERPROOF, SOFT, AND DURABLE. Ztt beautiful, rich, GLOSSr P0MSH is oa eanaled. &nw later aw ewtoyox. A Pollen. Laata a MmKfc ftfWwuw, sad AWeekforMetitiaeaaHejTleee ! erea Four Xamtka wtthees reaorats. WtLFF Jb mUMLMI. mumm :&ximm. fL' VSg!yf V I Ujy UJrnfkTT ,j 1W 3ial Vt yr . -I A"1frfrrWatri?sriii -W X-3i