is: - -.- V A "kVfqPSF &?4rfi ""C HfK i. IS these thingsVbetter in France. It came last sight, afterNTd cone to bed: and the authorities or. this hostelry -were too con siderate to rake me. Then this morning, they say, they thought I was so much occu pied that they would do best to wait about -delivering it till I was at leisure. That's French courtesy -with a vengeance. How ever, you're safety arrived at last; and that's the important thing." "And Miriam? Miriam?" I inquired im patiently. The doctors are with her even now," he answered. "You got my cable-dispatoh, of course, and put off the operation?" "Zes, I cot your dispatch, and we put off the operation untiL the physicians all in sisted that it must not be put off longer that if put off longer it would be ineffec tive." Panic stricken, "Ton don't mean," I gasped, "you can't mean that it has been performed?" "As I just said, they are with her now they are performing it at this moment." "Heavens and earth, mant Did't I tell you that it would imperil her life. Didn't I entreat you at all costs to defer it until I could get here?" 'Ton did, certainly. But these other medical men, who were on the spot, and could examine her for themselves, were of one mind in declaring that her life would sot be imperilled, and that the longer the operation was delayed, the greater wonld be the danger of atrophy of the optic nerve. Finally, on "Wednesday of this week they fixed upon this morning'as the furthest date to which they could consent to postpone it It was a choice between going on without your presence, and taking the risk of per manent blindness. Bo I had to let them proceed." "Ton don't know what you have done I Ton have done that which you will repent to your dying day." I groaned, wringing my hands, "lou might have known that I should never have telegraphed as I did, that I should never have" taken ship for Europe st two days' notice, unless I was master of life and death but where are they? Take ' me to them. Perhaps it is not yet to late. Perhaps I am still in time to prevent it Take me to them at once." I doubt whether they will admit you. They would not allow me to be present; and I am her husband. I have had to walk up and down the hall, waiting." "Not admit me 1 They will admit me if I , have to break down the door. Take me to them this instant" "Very well," he assented. "This way." He led me up a flight of stairs, and halted before a door, at which he rapped. The door was opened immediately by an -elderly man in professional broadcloth, who said in French: "3Tou may enter now. It is finished." My heart turned to Ice. For a breathing space I could neither speak nor move. At last, with the composure that is born of de spair, "Finished?" I repeated. "You have, then, trephined?" 'We have." "And the patient is" "She is not yet recovered from the anaes thetic" We entered the room. Miriam, pale and beautiful, Jay unconscious upon a sofa near the window. Tvr other professional-looking gentlemen stood over her, one of whom was tanning her face. Fairchild presented me: "The American physician. Dr. Benary. The uncle of my wile." I was in no mood to be courteous or cere monious. Having bowed, "Gentlemen, I must beg of yon to leave me alone with the patient," I began, addressing the com- i pany at latge. My remark created a sensation. The French physicians exchanged perplexed glances, and a chorns of indignant Mais, Monsieur's rose about my ears. "Fairchild, I am in earnest," I said. "I insist upon these gentlemen leaving me alone with my niece. I look to you to see thr they do so. I have neither the leisure n the inclination to discuss the matter. - Every second is precious." Somehow or other, Fairchild prevailed upon them to withdraw. I suspect that they saw that I was in no frame of mind 10 bear trifling with. "Imay remain?" Fairchild queried. "No, not even you. I must be quite alone with her lor the present" "But " "Nay, do not waste time in controversy. Leave me at once." Fairchild went off. I sat down at the side of Miriam's couch and fanned her. CHAPTER XV. By and by she opened her eyes, and they rested upon my face. It was obvious that she saw me; her blindness had been cured. Almost at once, however, she closed her eyes again; and for a little while she lay till, like one half asleep. Suddenly she drew a quick deep breath, sat up, and looking me intently in the eyes, asked, ""Well? Is it over?" "les, dear, it is over," I replied. "Well, then, it is a failure, a total, ab ject failure. I have not lost my memory. I have forgotten nothing. 1' remember every thing. My memory was never clearer or more circumstantial. And you you said there was no chance of failurel" With these words, she sighed, and fell back upon ier pillow while I, with a deadly .sickness at the heart, realized that the worst which I had feared had come to pass. She "was Louise Massarte now. "Where was Miriam Benary? She was Louise Massarte. She had begun at the exact point where ' Louise Massarte had left off. And the operation which she had in mind when she asked, "Is it over?" was the operation that I had performed upon her nearly five years gone by. Where was Miriam Benary ? What had become of that sweet and innocent personal ity? And of the love with which she had blessed our lives? ''Yes, you nave failed, you have failed," she said again. Then all at once starting up, and speaking passionately, "Oh, why did you interfere with me last night? Why did tou cross my path and thwart my will? Whv did yon not let me die then, when it would have been so easy? Why did you bring me here to your house, to 11 me and intoxicate me with hopes that were doomed to be disappointed? Oh, it was cruel, it was cruel, of you. I was insane td listen to you. I was mad to place any sort of cred-' euce in what you said. It was so palpable a fairy tale. I ought to have known that you promised -the impossible. I ought to havers 'But it is not too late. Leave me. Leave the room. Let me get up and dress myself and go away. Where is your sister? She put away my clothes. Send her to me. I will not be detained here longer." What could I do? "What could I say? Oh, Miriam, Miriam," I faltered help lessly, "calm yourself. For heaven's sake lie quiet You will work yourself into a fever, into delirium. Yonr agitation may costvou your life. Lie quiet and let me think. My poor wits are distraught" She caught at the name, Miriam. ' "Miriam? Who is Miriam? Have I not told you mv same? Why do you call me by another? Do you wish to mock me? to Oh! oh! my head!" She screamed sharply, putting her hand to her head, "What have you done to me? What have you don to my head? Oh, I had such a pain it shot through my head. Oh, fool, imbecile, that I was, ever to enter your house." At this juncture the door opened, and Fairchild entered. "I could wait outside no longer," he ex plained. "I heard her scream. I cannot stay away from her." To my unspeakable amazement, she, at the sight of her husband (whom, I had every reason to suppose, she would not recog nize), started violently, and catching her breath, exclaimed, "What! You! Henry Fairchildl Here!" "Yes, dear Miriam," Fairchild answered, coming forward, and putting out his hand to take hold of hers. But she drew quicklr away from him. "curiam again: -Diiriam! What farce is this? Am X in a mad house? Are you both maniacs, that you call me. Miriam?, Oris it a chargdejye&ueMWM lor re wilder-. xnent? And yout Henry Fairchildl What are you doing here? You, of all men? Oh, this is some frightful trick that has been played upon me. This old man, with his innocent face, and his protestations of good will, has trapped me here. But for what purpose?' To what end? Well, Mr. Fair child, I suppose you come as Boger Beecham's messenger. Well, speak. What have you to say to me?" During the first part of her speech it was plain that poor Fairchild simply fancied her to be raving in delirium. But when she mentioned that name,. Eoger Beecham, an expression of extreme horror, mingled with blank incomprehension, fell upon his face; and he stood staring at her, with knitted brows and parted lips, like a man dumfounded and aghast "Roger Beecham," he repeated presently, as if dazed. "What do you know of Boger Beeoham?" "What Mo I know of Boger Beecham? What comedy are you acting? What does Louise Massarte know of Eoger Beecham?" Fairchild became rigid. "Louise Massarte," he gasped. "What have you to do with Louise Massarte? Was for God's sake, was she related to you? I noticed long ago a certain remote resem blance. But why do you speak to me of Louise Massarte? What can you know of her? Dr. Benary, what has happened to her? She is delirious. What can be done?" "I am nol delirious," she put in hastily. "But either you are oryou have cleverer talents as an actor than I have ever given you credit for. I cannot see the point or purpose of your mummery. Why do you pretend not to recognize me? Do you want to make me doubt my own identity?" "Hot recognize you? I? Not recognize you, Miriam, my wife! Ob, what dreadful insanity has come upon her!" "I? Miriam? Your wife!" Then she laughed. "Come, Mr. Fairchild, a truce to this mystery. What is your business with me? With what commission has Mr. Beecham charged you?" Fairchild sank upon a chair aud pressed his brow between his hands. "She is out of her senses, but how comes she to know those names?" he said, as if speaking to himself. Then, turning to me, "Perhaps you, Dr. Benary, can clear this puzzle up?" "This is hardly a fitting time or place for attempting to," I rejoined. "If you had only respected my desires, there would have been no snch occasion." "The time and place are certainly not fitting for recrimination. Will you answer me this one question: Do you un derstand what she means by her references to Louise Massarte?" "Yes. I will answer that I do." "Very well; I must now request you to explain that meaning to me." "Sot now, Fairchild," I protested. "It is impossible for me to do so now. But at the proper time I will tell you everything everything that 1, myself, know." "But the relation", the connection between them, between that woman and my wife. Were they were they sisters?" ".No, not sisters." "What then?" "Fairchild, I implore you to wait " But I cot no further. From the sola on which Miriam lay came a low peal of sarcastic laughter, which sud denly, however, changed into a moan, and next instant she threw up her hands, gave a sharp cry and swooned. Fairchild was at her side in a twinkling, and knelt there, siezing one of her hands and gazing with wild eyes into her face. "She is dead, she is dead," he groaned, frantically. "No, she has only fainted. But the con sequences of a fainting fit in her condition may be terrible," I said. "Oh, my darling, my darling," he sobbed, bending over her till his cheek swept her breast She never regained consciousness. I have not the heart to dwell upon what followed. This paragraph cut from Galignani's Messenger ot February 1 tells its own story: "Fairchild On Wednesday morning, January 30, at the Hotel de la Bourbon nage, ot phrenitis, Miriam Benary, wife of Henry Fairchild, of New York. The End. Copyright, 1SS9, by Henry Harland. All rights reserved. NEXT SUNDAY A Complete Bomamlc Historic Novel by JOAQUIN MILLEK, Entitled "FOB FORTr-EIGHT DAYS. THE THEATE0PH0KE. The Report of n Wonderful Invention Which Proved to be a Fake. Not long ago many continental newspa pers contained long accounts of an alleged new and startling invention, says an En glish paper, which was called the theatre phone. It was described as a device for utilizing the advantages of the telephone in conjunction with those of the automatic delivery system. In coffee-houses and other places of general res'ort were to be placed certain iron boxes, each of which was jto be connected by means of telephone wires with all the theaters in town. On a plate was to be the inscription: "Put a penny into the slot, pull out the delivery funnel, move the index hand to the name, of the de sired theater, and listen." Then it, was as serted, you might shut your eyes and ima gine that you were In the presence of Got or Bernhardt, or in a stall at the opera. For three blissful minutes you would enjoy the luxury, and then, unless you previously contributed another penny to the machine, the connection would be automatically in terrupted. Arrangements, it was stated, were in progress lor supplying theatrophones upon easy terms to private houses;, and the machine would, it was declared, be on show at the Paris Exposition. There were many leading articles on this new and brilliant invention, and handsome offers oi capital for developing the theatrophone reached Paris, addressed to MM. Marinovich and Szarvady, who were said to be the lucky in ventors. But, alas! the whole business was imagined by some wicked fooler. There is, it appears, no snch thing as the theatro phone; and as for MM Marinovich and Szarvady, they are righteously savage at the liberty that has been taken witn their names. Time, Trouble and Money Saved. ' Merchant Traveler, j j'lYoung man," said the deacon, "X hope you never got to horse races." "No, sir." "That's right There is nothing that leads to ruin faster. You lose your time, your money and your sense of honor. You are thrown in contract with the lowest, and you have nothing to look back upon except a life full of regrets. Keep away from the race track." "Yes, sir, and besides what's the use of going clear out there when there are so many pool rooms right in town." Literally Obeyed. Collins (the just-over hostler) Yez told me tobangSelim's tail,sor. Ol'vehadwan whack at it, an'Oi'm waitin fer him V cool down's bit, till Oi gets another claiapjwid ThK A DAY IF VERSAILLES -i - Scenes at a Grand Fete Given in Honor of President Carnot. A PAGEANT OP GREAT SPLENDOR In the Historic Groves Once Owned by French Kings Witnessed fcy A COACHING PAKTI OP AMERICANS rCOBBXSPOXDXXCX Or THE DI8PATCH.1 Paris, May 14. Last Sunday the old historical town of Versailles was in grand fete in commemoration of the visit of the President of the Republic, his Cabinet, any number of distinguished personages and more than 150,000 individuals from Paris, including untold numbers of foreign visit ors. Ever so many mail coaches aud pri vate carriages made the trip to the palace town that Louis XIV. created. Our turn out was a fine one, a spanking team of four grays, wearing harness spick and span, and an extra set of silver-tipped crossbars hang ing at the hind end of the coach. And you should have seen those who rode on it: Mr. and Mrs. M. H. DeYoung and Miss Dean, of San Francisco; the two Misses Libbys, of Chicago, beautiful girls, rich and good; Mrs. Cecile "Wentworth, an American painter of much talent, who exhibits annu ally at the Salon; Mrs. Seymour, a wealthy widow from New York, charming in her ways and handsome; Mr. Gorman, Presi dent of the new bank which New York and Chicago capitalists have just started here in Paris, and three other gentlemen. "We bowled merrily up the Champs Ely sees, through the Bois de Boulogne, and over the bridge at "St. Cloud. Going up the hill of the old town I -saw a famous lady just descending from her carriage at a cor ner villa, and my cry of "Vive l'Adiny 1" was echoed loudly by my friends when they learned that she was nbt only a compatriot, but the leading prima donna of the grand opera. Mr. de Young, who held the horn, tooted Adiny a few of his best notes, and she, all radiant, sang back, "Vive l'Amer ique!" with her purest tones. A GLIMPSE OP THE OLD FLAG. Further up the hill we met Mr. VanBer gen in an open carriage with his son, carry ing the Star Spangled Banner. VanBergen is one of the oldest and best liked members of the colony in Paris, and he was coming from his country residence at Montretout with the flag for his house in the Champs Elysee. "We were on the road at least two houn ahead of the Presidental party, but already there were plentyof vehicles'going toward Versailles. There were also regiments of troops marching thitherward, and it was pleasant to see them give way for us that we might proceed swiftly, as all good mail coaches should. We got finally into the Avenue de Paris, and many were the rem iniscences that that thoroughfare called up to those of us posted in French history. Here, more than. 100 years ago, lived a cer tain Countess who had royal favors be stowed upon her; there was tbe house, with its Italian balustrade, that Bontemps, head valet de chambre to Louis XIV. built after he had retired from domestic service. And it was from that house that Mehemet-Biaz Bey, the bogns Persian ambassador whom Mme. de Mantenon invented to distract her royal lover, started to the courtly reception given him by King and courtiers. PICTURESQUE SCENES. The nearer we got to the old town the more numerous were the historical mansions; those of the Princes of Conti and of Conde, of the Duchessed'Angouleme.and the house in which Mme. de Genlis wrote a new edi tion of her "Annates de la Vertu." At Versailles there were flags and decorations everywhere. The people of the town were in the streets, doors and windows teemed with human beings, and there was life and animation. Versailles had completely lost the cold and solemn aspect so habitual to it The streets were crowded with mail coaches and carriages, and every incoming train 'from the capital brought more spectators. The magistrates of the place were in their official robes, and so were the town authori ties, the members of the university and the leading citizens, all awaiting the arrival of President Carnot Our whip knew his way to the Hotel de Beservoir, and so we missed going through the immense triangle of the Place d' Armes. There were thousands of soldiers resting at ease in that part of town. Guns were stacked, cavalry horses were without riders, and the army of Versailles was taking things easily along the sloping greensward, under tbe shade of the four rows of magnificent old trees. The park of Versailles may not now be as beautiful as it was in the days of the "le Boi Soliel," but it is still a veritable Olympus, or rather an Elysian Field, where it gods do not wander, human beings may. "We left the park for a while, and walked to the grand Trianon. The richly gilded and oddly furnished rooms were crowded with sightseers, so we hurried through, with hardly a glance.at the royal bed which was once made up for Queen Victoria, though, she never slept in it, ana out ot aoors again, around the bend in the road to the stable Lhouse where State carriages are under cover. CHARIOTS OP FRENCH KINGS. You should see the splendid chariots which emperors and kings used to ride in, in those other day. The one that carried Napoleon I. and'Josephine to their corona tion is valued at 200.WO francs, and weighs I know not how many thousands ot pounds. It took eight stout horses to draw it through the streets of Paris, and it is wonderfully beautiful. There are half a dozen others in the same room, including one the young Prince Imperial rode in when he went from the Tuileries to Notre Dame to be baptized. It is richly made, but not much lanrer than the army ambulance which brought hisdead body back from the rushes in Zululand. Barnttm has tried frequently to buy one or two of these chariots, but the State has al ways refused to part with them. It was time to retrace our steps to the park again if we would see the waters in lull play; and as we roamed along my mind was full of old memories of the time when these buildings, these stones, these trees, were witnesses of stirring scenes in French history. The shaded walks, the marble statues, the fountains, the orangery, and the grassy swards, all have au indescribable charm in which the past is inextricably interwoven with the present, now in gay and bright colors, and now somber-like and dark with the flow of blood. A MONARCH OP RENOWU-. The dominant thought at Versailles is the presence everywhere of Louis XTV., and after him Marie Antoinette stands out the boldest The King was an absolute prince before whom even proud Venice humbled herself and kingdoms asked of him a sovereign. He was the very apotheosis of despotic monarchs, and on the day of his death the grand old chateau that he built took on the appearance of a tomb, and its days of pride, pomp and circumstance were over until the coming of the Austrian. Louis XV. tried to change the somber tone and failed; and it was not until the reign of the shepherdess of the Trianon that park and palace were gay, again. Once more it was dark and empty when the Bevolntion with all its horrors Came, and the tumults of the Empire and the. selfishness of the Restoration also left it In contiuual gloom. Louis Philippe, the citizen king, cleared off the cobwebs and swept the rubbish out; he even made needed repairs, hung master pieces on tbe walls, placed statues on pedes tals, waxed the floors until they shone brii liantl v.regilded and repainted cornices. The old chateau was turned into a museum dedi cated to French glory. Time-and again I have strolled, through its many galleries alone or accompanied by friends. I have -ii J J ,.- J 1 lr -r t always eujuyeu ieib i:nhHu,iii4Mui wujuio. . t" :j." ' n ,v..'.i.jti'i..' WBWS i-lliaBUKG LlfcPATJH, Sunday. I have stood in that room and looked down the long perspective, and pictures have risen up before me or GALLANT MEN, RICHLY DRESSED, with one hand clasping the hilt of the sword while the other raised their plumed hats to grand ladies in flowing gowns. I could see the Swiss Guards standing with their halberds, guards with helmets, sparkling with precious stones ; favorite courtiers waiting for tbe King to come; officers of tbe fialace in gorgeous uniforms; the monarch istening to the diplomatic speech oi some ambassador; duchesses and dames ,of lesser rank sitting in superb robes on footstools at the Queen's feet Then I could see these people moving slowly and majestically through the minuet or the pavain, and the royal personages, princes and princesses, ladies and gentlemen of rank and high de gree taking part in stately movements. There is nowhere else a vaster hall so sumptuously decorated; it is a gallery of mirrors 80 yards long, 15 wide and with a very high ceiling. There are 17 arched win dows looking on a lawn of waters, green grass and well-kept trees, and on the other side of the room there are as many corre sponding arcades covered the whqle length with mirrors framed and ornamented with plated gold. Marble pillars, richlyadorned and gilded too, stand between each mirror. The gilded cornice is'decorated ,with the crowns of France, cocks' heads, suns and fleur-de-lis. The panels of the arches and arcades are painted in a sort of cradle-form and hold 30 pictures by Lebrun, of big and little size, the whole representing the his tory of Louis XTV. from 1661 to 1678. and these paintings still preserve all their or iginal effect CURIOSITIES OP VERSAILLES. This gallery of mirrors has been the theater of several important events. More than 200 years ago this very month Louis XIV. received in it the Doge Lescari, ac companied by three Senators, who had been sent to make the excuses of the Bepublic of Genoa to the King ot France. Louis de clared himself quite satisfied with the Doge's explanation, and then good naturedly asked his republican visitor what he thought the most curious thing in Versailles. "To see myself "here," replied the ruler of Genoa. Last Sunday afternoon, as we were watch ing tbe waters, I asked a lady in our party what she thought was the most curious thing at Versailles, and she made precisely that same answer. In this magnificent hall were held the fetes of the marriage of the Duke of Burgundy with the Princess of Savoy, and on that occasion king and courtiers donned costumes of a sumptuous kind never before known, and which have never been equaled since. Persian mon archs have promenaded on its well-waxed floors, and Peter the Great honored it with a visit Kings of Denmark, of, Sweden, an Austrian Emperor, and a Bussian Grand Duke who succeeded his mother to the im perial throne, have been within its walls. But perhaps the grandest ruler Who has ever stepped foot in it since the days of Louis Quartorze was oneWilhelm, lor it was there they crowned ths Emperor of Germany in 1870. It was after that that President Thiers gave there a banqnet in honor of the Queen of England and the Prince and Princess of "Wales; and it was there Presi dent MacMahon gave the ball during the Exposition of 1878, to which too many per sons were invited, and where nearly a thou sand of us lost our hats and overcoats. A GRAND SPECTACLE. After President Carnot and his guests had lunched and the speeches were over every body went out into the park to see the loun tains play, especially that of the Neptune basin, which had not been so worked in many years. For a long while the superb basin was almost a mass'of ruins. The bas reliefs were broken, the stones disjointed, the statues cracked it presented s lamenta ble appearance. It took eight years of skillful work to restore it as it was origi nally, and last Sunday afternoon we all had the pleasure of seeing this grand fountain in full play. In it there are 2 enormous bases of bronzed lead, each containing little fountains, and over 60 other fountains from which the waters fall into the grand central basin. This fountain fete stretched all over the park, and it was of such, grandeur the other day as would have delighted the heart of Louis XIV., could he but have come back to life again and seen it as did our little party. Many of the crocodiles, the tortoises, crabs, nymphs, gods and goddesses have been re-gilded, the marbles have been cleaned and the borders of the fountain re paired; and as the rays of a bright May-day sun fell athwart the falling cascades, the jets and streams the effect was wondrously beautiful. In the evening we went into the open court before the old chateau to see the fire works. These were set off and sent up in the Place d'Armes, and there was no one in our group, cither those from New York, who have seen many brilliant exhibitions of this sort, nor those from the Pacific coast, who are used to grand things, who had ever before looked on such a marvelous display. Their exclamations of astonishment and de light were as heartv as if they had been so many children. Finally we "hurried back to our mail coach, made good speed to Paris, and before midnight were home again. Henet Haynie. BLUNDERING ON THE TfiUTH. Cuttinff Remarks From the LIpi of Canning Little. Prattlers. Scottish American. A gentleman, with a face "full of mete ors," and a Bardolphian nose, in every re spect a fully equipped "knight of the burn ing lamp," took a child on his knee one day and said: "My child, what a beauti ful complexion you have got." "What is a complexion?" the childasked. "Oh, your pretty red cheeks; they are so red." "And is that complexion on your nose?" the child asked, to the confusion of our Bar dolphian friend, and the amusement of the audience. Another child fell into a blunder through a curious but perfectly natural misunder standing. A very surly, cross-grained, and sour individual, who had a perfect genius for getting into loggerheads with everybody, had visited a family where, to the surprise of all, the surly gentleman included, one of the children paid him a great deal of atten tion. At last the youngster confided to the strange friend, "I should so like to stay at your house." Thegentleman was flattered with so much attention, and in his kindest tones asked, "And why would you like to stay at my house, my little man?" "Because," said tbe child, with the great est simplicity and frankness, "mamma says yon are next door to a bear." The child thought of a menagerie in the neighborhood; but the gentleman asked no more questions. Snakes Seem to Know Something-. Kansas City Star. A woman living in the vicinity of Bur ton was bitten the other day by a rattle snake while ploughing in the field. There are a few things which the women of Kan sas should leave for the men to do and even the snakes seem to know it. Tbe European Flan. SCjC-u,.-. 'XS? blXJAY, MAY 20, SOCIETY'S SERVANTS. Beautiful Booms for Them in the Houses of Millionaires. PARLORS AND BILLIARD EOOMS For Their Use in the Mansions of the Van derhilts and Others. THE DIGNITY OP FBENCH DOMESTICS tWBITTBS TOE TUS DISPATCH. The lodging of servants appears to be part of the great domestic problem. On this subject among mistresses there is a vast discrepancy. of opinion. I know of an amiable and opulent couple who always choose their town house with reference to the servants' rooms.. They argue that in every house they and their guests can be made comfortable, but not in every house can each of the five servants have, a room alone. So far they should be treated as mem bers of the family. This is a necessity for for their self respect, and self respect is an element in faithfnl service. "When it is impossible to give each servant a room, said the lady talking on the subject not long ago, there should be large screens provided separating the rooms, for it is every human being's right to have one spot secure from all intrnsion. On the other hand, a cook on a rampage will not be deterred for a moment by the fact that she has an airy, sunny room, and at her next place she may have to sleep in a dark hole off the kitchen with the other servants. At this moment a house in which the servants are superbly lodged is in the throes of a domestic cataclysm because the cook insists on baking the fish without the head and tail, and the mistress declares that the servants are simply spoiled by good treatment WIDELT DIFFERENT IDEAS. In servantdom, the conditions of living are as widely diverse as between Eleventh avenue and Fifth avenue, only in this case the conditions of Eleventh avenue are found as likely as not in Fifth. The housing of servants in some of the crowded fashionable boarding houses, and especially in English basement houses, is nauseating. The top floor is too valuable as rented space for ser vants, so thev are sacked away in the base ment. The basement of an English base ment house is below the level of the street and midway between the small front room and the kitchen; the servants sleep in win dowless rooms, and not infrequently have folding beds in the kitchen a tact which is discreetly kept from the boarders at break fast In the new houses, those which represent the latest and best things in architecture and domestic luxury, the provision for servants is in keeping with everything else. The staff of servants is neoessarily large, and of that class prepared to make de mands. In the Villard house these rooms were in the top of the house, a formidable and unbroken partition separat ing the men and maids. The rooms are fitted in hard woods and tastefully fur nished with furniture of light wood. Two bath rooms, quite as comfortably appointed as those of of the lower floor, made part of the servants' suite. In Mr. W. K. Vanderbilt's house the social life of the servants has been consid ered even luxurious. The basement is theirs exclusively. The entrance is by a special door. In front is a billiard room for -the men and a parlor and sitting room for the maids. Their sleeping rooms are in the mansard. These are finished in hard wood and attractively furnished. In the man sard also is a large room given over for their entertainment, where at times they may hold a servants' ball. ELEVATORS AND BATH ROOMS. In Mr. Marquand'a house the humanities are still further regarded. A servants' ele vator extends from the basement to the liv ing rooms on the top floor. Here they have prettily appointed bed rooms and bathrooms lined with enamel tiles ana answering to the most scrupulous demands of cleanliness. The housekeeper has here her suite of rooms, including a parlor. The square hall in Mr. Marquand'a house is carried to the roof, and gives place on each floor to a balcony and corridor. This is not omitted on the serv ants' floor, where through perforated carv ings they can look down on any gala scene below. Another instance of Mr. Marqnand's thoughtfulness is in a stairway leading to the roof, which has been terraced. Here in the cool nights, instead of hanging over the area to catch a breath of air, the serv ants ean sit and enjoy the famous southwest wind that so seldom fails and look down on the myriad-lighted town, a view in every season full of beauty. These, it must be confessed, are excep tional provisions, and only possible in an unusually large and specially constructed house. The general standard of servants' comfort, however, is higher. Many mis tresses take pride in their servants' rooms and make show places of them. In this case the servants are obliged to keep them tidy. I was in a servants' room the other day in one of the magnificent apartments on Central Park. A velvet carpet covered the floor, and the furniture was in keeping. This degree of luxury was merely incident al. The tasteful but cheap ash bedroom sets are chosen for servants' rooms, and the clean and comely bedsteads of black enam eled iron. Some mistress go further and add book shelves and possibly a few books, according to their zeal. The prints from the illustrated papers and attractive supple ments of the Graphic and Illustrated News are saved for their adornment. Young housekeepers particularly take delight in giving their personal attention to establish ing their servants. In this case their shock at the ingratitude of a servant who walks off in the midst of the ironing or dinner is pro portionately great APAKXStENT HOUSES. The problem of servants is increased in apartment nouses. In those houses in which rents are over 51,000 a year the servants' quarters are on the top floor. The rooms are not large, but are well supplied with light and air, not to speak of the more Ksthetic aspect included in views and sunsets. In the smaller apartment houses the servants' rooms are diminutive holes on wells. No ray of sun discovers them and the air is re ceived from the basements, with such addi tions as it collects from the inhabited rooms on the way up to the roof. Often the effect on the health is perceptible. In some houses it is worse than others. A doctor from Koosevelt Hospital not long ago said of a certain apartment house that it always furnished at least one hospital patient "There is no use of my doing anything lor von if-you go back there," he said to a ser vant whom he had just repaired. In the smaller apartments it is rarely nec essary, and never convenient to keen more than one servant The shifts to keep two are sometimes ingenious and amusing. The device of one mistress consisted of placing two iron cot bedsteads one on top of the other like steamer berths. One servant crept in and the other mounted. They had wire bottoms and nice clean mattresses, and were in every way comfortable. A servant, she said, at first objected, but finally oc cepted them. In apartment houses when the servants' rooms are on the same floor with the family, the life of the servant is so inextricably tangled up with' that of the family that the chances of friction are largely increased. There is no servants' sitting room, and if there were it would not only be disagreeable but unsafe to have followers or even visitors who wear bonnets and shawlsso near the family rooms, as.they must bo in an apart ment house. Whatever interferes with this intercourse disturbs those amicable rela tions which one would wish to preserve be tween mistress and maids. EVENINGS MUST BE FEEE... & Xt isidiffiealt'to akV,mitoweibelieve' .nHitSrallttifcMlrivwteyMdfiwMil 1869. questions that affeot domestic- service, the maids have the rigbtof it At leastwhether they have the right of it or not, the serious differences that continually arise in private households do not involve the matter of lodgment or of hard work, but spring from personal restraint and long hours. A servant may be willing to sleep in a hole and be without light and air, and to work like a locomotive by day, but she wants her even ings free. She cannot see when her work is over why she should sit in an apartment kitchen alone until bed time. In France they manage the servant ques tion better, at least in this respect. French apartment houses are built around a court. In what is called n. hotel bourgeois the apartments are owned by those who live in them, and the servants' lile is kept per fectly distinct The servant's entrance is by a private stairway in the rear of the court The main apartment connects with this division by a single door. When the labor of the day is over this door is locked. The servant cannot enter it, but the servant is free. When she goes out and when she comes in is of no consequence to anybody but herself. This personal freedom is more valued than wages. And it accounts (or the fidelity and long service that French servants give. In the French apartments that are let the servants' rooms are in the mansard. And tbe results are not quite so admirable. Tbe social qualities of tbe French are here un loosed; the gossip of each family is private property. Marketing in France, as every one knows, is done by the servants, who keep a book and each month receive their commissions from the trades people. In these servants' quarters there is a commu nity of interests, and at the end of the month the different commissions are appor tioned equitably. This prevents peaching on the part of some less fortunate servant in a family inconveniently small or unwar rantably economical, ABSOLUTE AUTBOCBATS IN FEANCE. Within their own apartments the servants are absolutely free, and it would be a mis tress ofcouragewho would endeavor to visit them or assert any authority. The servant's self respect would consider itself insulted, and the proprietor of it would discharge himself the next morning. French servants in this country sometimes enforce this rule on the mistresses. In the W. K. Vanderbilt house the only staircase from the first floor to the basement is throngh the butler's pantry. Mrs. Vanderbilt short ly after they went into the house told a Jen man who is my informant that one day she went down into her kitchen, and her French chef told her if she repeated the offence he would leave. This is an extreme case, bnt it is true that the great objection to domestic service by the better and more intelligent class of girls who work for a living is in the personal re straints they are subjected to. Numerous and reneated efforts have been made to in duce girls who wore lor starvation wages in factories to go into service. All objections may be sifted down to two which are suffi cient and reasonable. The first is that the men whom they may expect to marry will not visit them if they live out The current phrase is, "A man will not' marry me out of anybody's kitchen." This puts the blame where it be longs on the men. The desire of the girls to marry and to marry men who desire to better themselves in the world will not be considered unreasonable. The girl may consider household servicehonorable, but the man does not JIOEE FREEDOM NECESSARY. If servants were allowed more freedom; if a girl, when her worK was over, was free to come and go as she liked, her contract with her mistress having been fulfilled, men would not have to seek them in somebody's kitchen. In that case the objection to do mestic service by the more capable of work inir cirls .would be removed. With the knowledge I have of working girls, of their high principles, of their correct lives, of their fidelity and devotion, I do not hesi tate to say if these objections could be re moved, if larger concessions were made, and domestic service ranged more within the provisions of other means of livelihood, this class of girls would be more likely to enter it and in that case the woes of mistresses would be greatly lessened and the service greatly improved. Domestic service is so much in line with the ultimate and hoped-for destination of working cirls as wives and mothers that there could be no better training than they would receive in a well-conducted house hold. If they could be led to regard it is a training school for wives instead of a bar rier to matrimony the intelligence offices would be crowded wfth wide-awake, intelli gent, clear-headed girls instead of by the shiftless, slatternly ,and incompetent serv ants that now, as every mistress will bear me out, make up the largest part of that company. Maby Gat Humphkevs. A CEACKEB AMI SAM J0SES. One of the Curious Experience in the Iter! fallal's Cnreer a Belated by Himself. Hctr York Evening Bnn.l In conversation with I friend in this city a few days ago with regard to curious ex periences iu his career at a revivalist, Sam Jones said the most humSrous incident oc curred in a village in Georgia. "I had been painting hell in all its vivkdness of color.all its suggestions of ghastly significance and shuddenngs, and then, by Vvay of contrast, I pictured the delights of heaven as I un derstood them. Having -Arought myaudi ence up to the proper pitchXl thrust in my sickle "to reap the harvestsin the follow ing manner: "'Now mv friends how 1 many of you want to go to 'heaven? All that desire to sit down in the beautiful mansions on high will please stand up.' Nearly every person in the house arose, and after they had resumed their seats I asked if there Vvas anyone present who expected to reach (the bottom less pit For a moment no one stirred. Then from a seat back near the door in old man, tanned and weather-beaten, Evidently a Georgia cracker, slowly arose and deliber ately looked around over the auiience. He was so clow inhismovementstbanby the time he Had turned his face toward mi everyeye in the house was upon him. IiA a curious drawl, every accent of which wis plainly audible to every one present, he saw: 'Wal, parson, it looks ez if you an' I wasnhe only ones goin'l "Otcourse.thatfinishedmyworkthatnight The angel Gabriel couldn't have stopped thp rnnr nf Innchter which swent over that audience like a cyclone, and I adjourned the meetine as -Quickly as J. could wiin com mon decency. Bev. G. Washington Shortext I s'pects dat if de debble was to Idok inter dat ar Window an' shake n. hnc nh trnld at vo' nit. gabs, da wouldn't be one ob yo'u but what 3)aS $ A Sliehc misapprehension. J FHOM A STAGE BOOfc Shiiley Dare Reviews the Pasbion3 as Seen on Fifth Avenue. LACE GOWKS, HATS AND PARASOLS. White Bonnet3 All the Eage for Fetes, Visits and Theater. SOME ARSWEES TO ANX10U8 1NQUIEEBS rWBITTEt TOB THI PISPATCH.J The May weather is at its brightest, the streets lined with flower sellers offering heaps of mignonette and many-colored roses, and the charm of the Spring City be tween its rivers is at its best New Xork might be, and will yet be, a veritable pleasure city as much as Paris or Nice, when its artistic element gains ascendency and politics allow it to become the cleanest city on the continent, as it ought to be. A feature which strikes one from other cities is the Fifth avenue stages, with seats on the roof, filled with ladies and children, riding up to Central Park and taking all and sunlight possible on the way. A nar row winding stair starts from the wide steps at the back of the stage, so that it is per fectly easy to ascend to the roof, where seats very like school forms are ranged in rows, taken by women who know the value of air and sunshine. It is a very good place to see the dress parade up the avenue, for two miles and more, the wedding turnouts at the churches, the fresh toilets just from the cus tom house, and the picturesque houses near the park wiiicli give a lovely half-foreign air to the brown stone region. In the park bright carriages are flashing down tbe drives, the white collars and silver chains adding to their brilliance, and the wide lawns reach in fragrant greenness when the oat thbojtq passes the bust of Mazzini, the sad, forcible, far-seeing face dreaming over against the promenade and the peaceful meadows. The fashions of the fair time are artistic and captivating, a study of historic coquetries, -refined and toned down, from the jaunty chapeausand cocked hats in white straw and moire ribbons to the vapory lace hats, piled with white lilacs, and the pale, sum mery toilets which make women appear beautiful because their gowns ,are so. The lace dress, the lace hat and parasol are the toilet of the season, which makes any woman attractive. The straight gathered drapery of lace falls over a close silk skirt, the fan waist or sur plice waist, with its high ruff about the neck, is only relieved by the na.row white pearl edged ribbon tied ronnd the throat, with a little bow in front, in place of collar or rucne, tne same ribbon at tbe wrist witn a little bow and ends falling out of the open cuff. The dress is hardly complete without the big sash of soft moire or the flots of moire ribbon; the transparent hat is not oyer large, the vapory plain black net being preferred for its lightness of effect, shirred on satin wires, and trimmed with flowers veiled by cascades of lace. TKE FINEST MILIJirEBT artists aim at this effect of color toned down by lace, which falls half over them, and it is particularly softening to the com plexion. The parasol is ot the same lace as the dress, and its long slender handle is dressed with ribbons like a shepherd's crook. A bow at the top with rather long ends, one- Halt way up tne nanaie, ana one on tne large ring at the lower end are seen on French sunshades of gathered silk-striped net The fragrant cherry wood handles are choice, but twisted silver seems to be the rule. Gracefullittle shoulder capes and panties from the private modiste's are combinations of silk crochet, the finest seed jet and lace, airy enough to be no perceptible addition to attire, while adding the needed lines of drapery about the shoulders. Many eyes are old-fashioneU and artistic enough to feel that a woman who goes out in the street in a close-fitting dress without the semblance of a wrap, looks as If she had forgotten part of her costume. The newest and best mantles ore a deep, pointed collar or fichuof crochet and fine beading, with fall of pleated lace for a sleeve, and lace frilled deeply under the border of rose-crochet Fine mantles fol low the color of the costume, in bronze, gray pearl, silver, bright steel and blue steel, pale garnet to go with shades of old rose, aud all crochet of fine tricot stitch to suit the gobelin blues which do not take beading well. DRESS OF CEOCHET. Long jersey-fitting bodices of crochet in purse silk, with 'just enough beading to be in fine taste, imported at 35 each, very useful in adding richness to any black silk dress, are among the standard pieces of the toilet which never lose valne or seem out or date, Different parts of the dres3 are made in crochet, to give the fashionable puffs and straps without cutting up the fabric of the gown. Bich, plain black silks have Medici collars and shoulder pieces in blact crochet. the wide, flaring collar which lends becom ingness to any sort of throat or age, stiffened with fine satin wire inside. The shonlder puff to the coat sleeve is of crochet, reach ing nearly to the elbows: sometimes the lower tight part .of the sleeve is crochet, a fashion which skilled needlewomen may adopt for themselves. The wide girdle or stomacher is crochet, and rich fronts and panels for the skirt are among the most dis tingue ornaments. The white bonnet will be high dress for summer at fetes, visits and theaters. White straw and crinoline together form the pret tiest, most nseinl bonnets in fancy pokes which shade the eyes a little. White striped Bilk net and thenialines net, which dates its revived favor from the Princess Beatrice's wedding, make pretty hats, drawn on satin wire, with the ever-present WILD CLEMATIS or white lilac for trimming. Elegant capotes have the crown covered with a piece of point lace, either point de gene or round point laid in easy folds with a brim of fancy straw braid and knot of rich ribbon and aigrette, or a bandeau of fine flowers. The flower capote in shaded violets, fresh as if from the woods an honr before, has a curve or two of point lace, and a tuft of flowers to break its outline, but the high front trim ming and tbe crowns loaded with a dozen large rosebuds, are decidedly past style. The newest monteurs copy the modest bril liant Alpine blossoms from the flower haunts of the Pyrenees. An exquisite wreath of blue gentian with fine seeding grasses, veronicas and speedwell, pink and white myosotis, yellow hawkweeds and their downy seed tufts with the grayish powdered herbage of mountain sides are repeated ac curately enough to delight a botanist Tufts of golden green oats and grass with silvery plumes half ripe, sprays of tender birch leaves, newly untolded, or mountain laurel offer (he cool, delighttul contrast desired for snowy tulle, with crape embroidered golden gleams. POETIC CBEATIOHS. -i ,nl unniA M.d.n nw,!n,Lm,n fPlinnik m!11t..t A,A.l!.. .. fl ...1. - irshe knew how to wear them. Bnt the wJinp woman, somehow, nlmn.it alw.ivi nL ihdle, and her pudgy hand crushes the crape an(parnisnes tne tune wnicn surmounts ber comvonplace' fate, and she wears it with a broifte dress and amber-beaded, mantle whicKmske one hot to look at One re calls thd&irls in country churches, dressed in white Jjuslm, gown and mantle, with almond bl&n faces and blue eyes looking out. from tnewhite tulle bonnets which never lost theisYreshness with cool, careful handling. TbeSi knew how to dress in white, as sometwes one sees a lady at a earden party, a - an witn an instinct tor the fitness of XU gs, It 13 no use to say worn with anything-- . ''white, bonnets That does not aid the fitness of the matter. .Grthedwpl to a sensitive jsyeji.A.1 and becoming. Orthe toilet may be black and white, or gray and white, when the bon net will harmonize. A black Iwe or silk gown of good quality, a fichu or small map of China crape and bonnet of white crino line straw trimmed with crape lisse, fine pearl-edged ribbon and aigrettes would be in subdued good style anywhere. A FEW TOrXTZBS. I P. V. can cleanse her fine all-wool whiu sntt at home, but bad better rip the belt off the skirt and take out tbe drapery, as it cannot be pressed well without Wash In the purest soft water, blood warm, and plenty of it, making a lather of fine borax soap or white toilet soap, leaving the soap in the waterwbila wasMnetha dress, so that as tbe soiled goods take np tho alkali more may be dissolved for use. wash in sads twice, quickly, with the hands, not rubbing on a wathboard, and rinse fn weak suds with a little blneine in the water. Dry' In tho had and IroD, while damp, on tha wronR side. II cashmere on the right, if flannel or serge, using clean sheets and heavy hot irons. B. li C To ourl bangs without making them, fuzzy or fluffy, wltnbnt a hot iron, and to make tbem UiJ in rings, use tbe Montague halrcnrlers. found at any good fancy store. The best way, how ever, is to fold the rings of hair in tissue paper and pinch witn curling tongs. BlondeIonoramus Around-faced, young looking, ashey blonde of SO may choose for ber all summer hat to go with all sorts of salts, capote of black lace with transparent crown, and brim ot one row of fancy braid, with soft, satin-striped ribbon laid in flat scant foldings above the brim. Cover tbe wire crown with clear black net and gatber black lace a finger wide on this, either two rows ronnd tho crown or lengthwise across it, with a knot of fivo loops ami three notched ends of ribbon at tho back or near the top of the crown, and anarrow wreath of line pink forgetmenots just under the lower lace, and a pleating of black crape lisse, or black lacs under the brim, relieving the light hair. Black ribbon, with narrow dark, gav stripes is artistic and suits snch a bonnet well. Or a smalt poke of crinoline straw, the brim lined with black lace, tbe crown trimmed black lisse, embroidered In silver, black tulle scarf and nnets of two shades, or gentians. Or the same bonnet with white and silver nbbon. black lace and aigrette of pale green and gold oats. FOB A COFFEE PABT5T. to be given 30 gnests In June, send the parch ment paper, correspondence cards, with design of coffee service in pen and ink, and written noto requesting the pleasure of your friends' company such a date, adding simply "coffee from 4 to 6 o'clock," or the hours you choose. Serve coffee in the back parlor, having a table with drawn and embroidered damask cloth, coffee service, cups, baskets of wafers, thin bread and butter, crisp coffee rolls and rusks, small cakes and strawberries, witn or without ice cream, as vou like. Tbe wildest variety of crisp cakes is'in place at a "coffee" party. Tha German "coffee' afternoons is hardly com plete without a dark-spiced, crusty-loaf cake, having plenty of plums, or a sort of cake sand wich, slices of cake thickly spread with jam and laid together. The newest coffee service in silver has the tall, straight French coffee pot, either In rich repousse cover and top, or plain, burnished with an embossed band near the top and straight, stump handle or cocoa wood, ivory or amber, low sugar bowl and slender cream jug. The newest table linen for these parties is plain damask twill, or flnemomie linen, embroidered in clematis or hydrangea patterns with pale yellow centers to flowers, above drawn work borders, an eighth of a yard deep, above the inch wide hems. Sets of these cloths with IS napkins to correspond are $17 up. The point lace cake napkins and dovleys are new this season, and cost H each and upward. The hostess receives in tbe front drawing room, chats with guests, and asks them to have coffee not "will yon have a cup of coffee or tea," or "some coffee," as that is not felt in good form by sensitive peo ple. A friend usually pre sides over the coffee, or a servant in trala dress hands it and the cakes, while ladies sip coffee standing or sit ting, and gossip. It is very nice to serve coffee in a cool, wide porch corner, screened by awn ing on two sides, making a half garden party. A EE31EDY FOB A BED FACE. Readeh Bedness and flushing in summer and plethoria may be reduced by using Carls bad salts, Vichy water, seltzer aperient or Con gress water mornings, cool sponge baths, wear ing linen next to the skin and dressing lightly, using acid vegetable drinks at meals, lemonade or grape juice, and hard, whole meal crackers in place of bread. Attention to diet and per sonal habits, bathing, etc, must be rigid, as flashing and plethora are forerunners of serious apoplectic and paralytic troubles. The lady who inquires for a good steamer dreM and traveling salt for the continent is advised to have a good black American silk, with plain skirt and surplice waist, and FfeaO.' polonaise ot fine black wool. India twin or batiste with embroidery trimming. This with a white lace collarette or black lace one, rests and surah blouses will give variety enough for the tour and a pleasant change at the hotels. Blue black, slate gray or deep green may be chosen for similar costumes, but black is al ways ladylike and sate. Shiriey Bask A3 NEGK0 JIINSTKELS. The Time When Booth and Jefferson Cted Burnt Cork. Harper's Magazine. In 1850, when Mr. Edwin Booth was 17, and a year after his debut as Tressel at the Boston Museum, he gave an entertainment with Mr. John S. Clarke, a youth of the same age, at the court house in Bellair, Md. They read selections from "Bich elieu," "The Stranger," and the quar rel scene irom "Julius Casar," singing during the evening with blackened faces a number of negro melodies, "using appro priate dialogue," as Mrs. Asia Booth Clarke records in the memoirs of her brother, "and accompanying their vocal attempts with the somewhat inharmonious banjo and bones." Mrs. Clarke reprints the pro gramme of thisperformance,and pictures the distress of the young tragedians when they discovered, on arriving in the town, that the Simon Pure negro they had employed as an advance agent had in every instance posted their bills upside down. Mr. Joseph Jefferson, the third and pres ent bearer of that honored name, was un questionably the youngest actor who ever made his mark with a piece of burnt cork. The story of his first appearance is told by Mr. William Winter in his volume entitled "The Jeffersons." Coming from a family of actors, the boy, as was natural, was reared amidst theatrical surroundings, and when only 4 years of age in 1833 he was brought upon tbe stage by Thomas D. Bice himself, on a benefit occasion at the Washington Theater. The little Joe. blackened and ar rayed precisely like his senior, was carried on to the stage in a bag upon tbe shoulders of the shambling Ethiopian, and emptied from it with the appropriate couplet, Ladies and gentlemen, I'd have you for to know, . l's got a little darky here to j amp Jim Crow. Mrs. John Drew, who was present, says that t tbe boy instantly assumed the exact atti tude oi Jim Crow Bice, and sang and danced in imitation of his sable companion, a per fect miniature likeness of that long, un gainly, grotesque and exceedingly droll comedian. TELL TALE TD5E3. Hovr a Maine Carpenter Hlrei HlsSIen by Music. Lewlston Journal.! A boss carpenter in Maine had one ques tion which he always asked of journeymen who applied to be taken into his employ. Ii the applicant was found to possess all the other necessary qualifications, the "boo" would ask him: "What are your favorite tunes?" "Why, what do you want to know that for?" "You whistle and sing some at your work, don't you?" "Oh, yes." "Well, what tunes do you generally whistle or sing?" "Ob, there's 'Old Hundred,' and Auld -5 Lang Syne' and 'Down by the Weeping V. Willows' and" . ' iTli.i'...nit1, t. Kma Trnnlri exclaim. AMMV BUWUKU. ... .W. " "xon won't do lor me. jloo siuw, them tunes be-. Good-day!" pipe, or something penter would savat once: "I think you'll dol Takeoff your coat if you want to and gd to work." Anecdote or Brotu. " Harper's lt?lne.J j'ujL It is related ot Brutus thatwh'cafhoread Mark Antony's v fnajialoMiUoafovethe bdy ofiCsssaubjB rejMKfcedjatmplBoas ifiKM ;! On the contrary if the applicant answered. "Oh, I generally whistle '1'ankee Doodle,' or 'Money Musk," or The Fisher's Horn- oitnatson, tne car- K&eWgW; JHfge. wma