Ki ' 1 "i ?.-r : &Mt TtfftT rtl" "O f . ' 'V v - PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1889. r THIRD PART. 29, ) W OF LETTERS, One Day in the Life of a Uni formed Bearer of Good and Evil Tidings. A TRAVELING PHILOSOPHER Who Has Daily Glimpses Into Komances of Keal Life. the MISS MACHIAYELLIS' LITTLE SCHEME. Tramping Through Rain and Mud with a Letter-Carrier Lights and Shadows or Botnan Nature The Girl Who Writes for the Papers At an Italian Boardlnc Home People Who Are Hard to Please, and Others Who Are Easily Satisfied The Felon's Wife and Her Weary Watch. rWEITTES FOB THK PISFATCH.1 Every morning, as sure as the clock. Somebody hears the postman's knock. English Ballad. .ujsi. clever person has discovered that 'the distance traversed by a city letter carrier, in the course of an or- r dinary official life time, equals, if it does notexceed, thecircum- ference of the earth. , "Whether this be true or false, it is at least certain that a Pitts. "burg carrier tramps through as many dif ferent degrees of tem perature, and endures as many climatic changes, as ever did that most famous of all world -walkers, the wan dering Jew himself. In the fierce heat of midsummer, or the nipping cold of the winter months, the car rier's work never slackens, never abates. He splashes through rain-washed byways, tip to the ankles in grimy mud. The keen winds of January buffet his face, and pel him pitilessly with stinging Eleet The snow crunches beneath his weary footsteps, and slips in at the crevices of his thickest boots. But letter carving has its bright side, like every other human occupation. To the student of human nature, the carrier's route supplies instances innumerable. There are letters for the plutocrat in his breakfast par lor, for the toiler in his attic The carrier passes from stately dwelling modelled in the most ornate styles of Europe, to reeking shajntics erected with an unhappy disregard of the principles of architecture and testhet ics. Consequently every phase of city life is seen by him, and it is his own fault if he be not a philosopher. TBOCBLE FOB THE CABBIES, A fchort time ago a Dispatch reporter JJiss Huchiavelli's Little Scheme. set out, on the rounds, with an intelligent carrier. The route selected embraced a highly fashionable, and a decidedly unfash ionable quarter of the town. There was no special line between these two quarters, but the one faded imperceptibly into the other as darkness into night. First the aristocratic streets were covered. There was no emotion to be found there; everything was conducted on the principle which puts grief away in the vest pocket until it can be indnlged in withont shock ing society. A few of the idiosyncrasies of the proprietors, however, could be noticed from the manner in which they wished their letters delivered. Everybody had a special way, and woe to the luckless carrier who dares to disobey the command of the house holder in this respect. One gentleman pro vides a slot in his door; another hangs a letter box in the outer hall. .Others wish their letters -pushed under their doors; others again like them thrown over through the transom. In some houses it is the cus tom for the carrier to descend the basement steps and tap at the windows till someone comes to take the letters. The postoffice rule requires a wait of 30 seconds, but very often this limit has to be exceeded. On a rainy day, waiting in the area is anything but "agreeable, for the water from the eaves pours down one's back in little playful run Jets, and often there comes a small Niagara, which knocks off one's cap and saturates the letters. In some of these houses the people offered tea and coSee to the carrier, but alack, he bad no leisure for these creature comforts. Beer and whisky are often proffered him, but the postal authorities strictly forbid the use of drink, even on the coldest and wettest days. Though his very heart soak in the waiter, though his limbs be nnmb with cold, the carrier must not drink any stimulant whatsoever. The day was rainy, so one pretty maiden wanted the postman to bor row her umbrella. He was obliged to re fuse. "Haven't hands enough for it, miss," he said, and verily he had not One arm was occupied in embracing his mail, thel otner in lenaing on jne virulent attacks of other umbrellas, which came hurrying up the street, sweeping off hats, and poking ont eyes on their way. SHE WEOTE FOE THE PAPEES. Two or three gentlemen met the carrier in mid-street and asked for their letters. It must require long practice to enable a man to recollect, precisely, everyone for whom be has a communication, yet it is seldom that the carrier makes a mistake. At first they leel a little awkward when thus sud denly accosted, but they quickly get used to it Another thing, hard to remember in the fashionable quarter, is what particular youne ladies wish their billets-doux held over for personal delivery. A fair creature meets the carrier, quite by accident of course at the corner, back of her home. She assumes an expression of countenance, al most .Machiavellian in its capability to de ceive, and says: -Oh, Mr. Carrier, I am writing for the newspapers on thesly, and I don't want my folks to know. Will you please keep all mj letters till you meet me r r. stiafn tn anwnia nlaa ' In person. uon skd """ -j j- of the carrier agree, uu Mu AW 1. !b 1 PKs; k. W f'7LS3S jWwHl- WWlrrXS SJMDX "newspaper" letters come for Miss Machia velli, who manages to meet the post in per son every morning. The enrious part of the affair is that all the letters are in the same handwriting and bear the same postmark. Gradually therich streets become exhausted The cook's toothaches had air been inquired after. The colored helps had made as much fuss as possible. There were no more glimpses of "madamoiselle en papilottes," or of monsieur in his dressing gown. Ma chinery began to whirr on every side, and the sidewalks got muddier and more un pleasant. A German store was reached, and ,an oblong business letter delivered. The Germans, it appears, get very few letters; hardly any from the Fatherland. In this re spect they differ vastly from the Italians and Irish. On the way was an Italian boarding house, which gets some 200 letters per week. A small army of Diecos and Luigis live here, every man doing his own cooking and shifting as best he can. The courier was re ceived with a graceful bow from the chief personage in the house, who took the mail from his hands, and proceeded to read out the names on the envelopes. One handsome young fellow was kneeling by the fire, watching some stew or other, evidently not expecting a letter. Suddenly the "padrone" called out "Giovanni Battista Stovelli," or some such name. The young fellow was on his feet in an instant, his black eyes ablaze with light He took the letter and put it gently to his lips. "Mia madre," he said, showing his white teeth in a happy smile as he went off to read his mother's letter in some secluded corner of his own. NO QBUMBLEES HEEE. "How." said the carrier, "we are enter ing the Irish quarter. These Irish are the best people in the world to get along with. They're not particular whether you put the letter under the door or over it You may leave it in the middle of the yard and they won't complain." The route lav down a long narrow passage into an alley. The rain had ceased by this time, but the water from the roofs came trickling down the sooty surface of the bricks like tears down the cheek of a coalheaver. Unfortunately a good many of these tears jail over the immaculate shirt bosoms of unwary visitors, and the only safeguard against thisdauger is to copy the denizens of the locality and eschew lanndried shirts altogetner. The labor had now commenced. To dis tinguish house No. 21 from house No. An Italian Boarding Bouse. 22 when the former is so wedded to its neigh bor that they seem to be one dwelling, is a matter of extreme difficulty. A good deal of delicacy is necessary in the matter of se lection, as the lady who lives in No. 21 will feel degraded if "them folks next door" get her letters, while on the other hand the fam ily at No. 22 regard the exterior of their mansion as so much more respectable than that of No. 21 that any mistake is looked upon by them in the light of a direct in sult The alleys are crossed by one or two causeways of sound earth, but these are hard to find and hard to follow. The greater part of the surface consists of mud, beneath which are various strata of cabbage stalks, potato peelings and miscellaneous matter, such as lobster tins and old boots. Yet in the midst of all this dirt and disarray there is human nature in these alleys joyous spirits, deep feeling, honesty and" industry. These people live here but for a while. By-and-by their natural qualities will carry them to the surface out of these murky depths. Their rise is only a matter of time. THE LETTEE THAT MXVEB CAME. At one of the houses a girl came out with a wan, wistful face. "Any letters for me?" she asked; and when answered in the nega tive, she bit her lip and turned away with a lingering look at the carrier's face, as though still in hope he might be mistaken. "She has asked me that question every day for the last three months," the carrier said. "I wish to heaven she would not look at me like that; it freezes me up like. I al ways feel ashamed of myself when I have to tell her that there are no letters tor her." It was the dav for the delivery of the Irish newspaper mail. There was a paper for a Mrs. Doherty, who lived in a vard up another alley. The carrier groped his way up the narrow passage into the yard, anil cried out, "Mrs. Margaret Doherty." There was a dead silence. A lean, spiteful-looking oat came out of a back door, and picked its way gingerly over the uncer tain surface. That was all. Again the car rier cried, "Mrs. Margaret Doherty." This time an npper window was lifted, The Felon' Wife. and a voice was heard to say: "Wait a minit, can't ye, till I make myself dacent" Mrs. Doherty had both her hands up lifted, as though arranging her hair, and she evidently spoke with a hairpin or two in her mouth. After a while she came down a portly rubicund, body, with s pleasant face, distinctly Irish in its charac teristics. She took the paper, opened the wrapper and exclaimed: "Shure it's the Skibbereen Eagle; the same blessed paper. Talk of The Dispatch an' the rest of them rags. Give me the Eagle any day." A few more old country letters and the Irish mail was distributed. Some of the communications were slipped through the apertures in broken windows, another was thrown up to a man in an upper story and deftly'caught in mid air. Then it became time to make for the less interesting streets once more. THE MXON'S WIFE. "Why does that poor girl ask you so con stantly for letters?" asked the reporter when a strip of dead wall was reached, and the carrier had a few spare moments. Til tell you," remarked the sage dis tributor of good and ill, "she's a felon's wife. Her husband was sentenced to prison a few days after they were married. His time was up three months ago, and ever since she has been expecting a letter from him. But as you see, the letter has never come." And soMhiS poor heart eats itself away in the dismal old shanty waiting patiently for lafffii. fmm H frAf?1lva atamvi a laffa that never comes. Such are a few of the V sights a carrier comes across in his' rounds. None of them very dramatic none of them very emotional, because the emotion and the tragedy are not displayed upon the doorstep. It is in her lonely room that the poor wife weeps for her recreant husband; it is in her cozy kitchen, surrounded by her little clan, that Mrs. Doherty recalls old places, and chuckles over old names, as she reads the veracious pages of the Skibbereen Eagle. The rich man receives his bad news in his study, among bis books and papers. None can see the weak side of his character, there; A Dreary Promenade. he may be just as pathetic as he pleases. But even from the outside view of these, the carrier guesses what goes on within. That is why he is a philosopher. So let him tramp his way through every street and alley in this city of iron. Let him bring news of death or of ruin to one household news of fortune or joy to an other. Under his rough gray clothes he has a good heart and true; but circumstances have made him a philosopher. BBENAK. POCKETS FOR POKER DECKS. Convenient Receptacles In Which Extra ' Cards May be Hidden. Chicago Mall.: "I don't remember exactly what it was, but I know I was telling a poker story when the tailor said: " 'By the way, do you want any poker pockets in this suit?' "1 looked at him rather, inquiringly and said: " 'Poker pockets?' "" 'Yes,' he said, 'pockets for poker." "I told him I didn't know what he meant He laughed, and said: " 'I mean special pockets for playing poker.' "I told him I had never heard of such a thing and asked him to explain. Then he said: " 'I make clothes for a number of solid business men and the club men who like to play poker. They also like to win most poeer players do. So I make special pock ets in diffeient parts of their clothing, just big enough to hold a playing card. For one man I make a pocket in the right leg of his trousers about midway between his nip and his knee. The opening of this pocket is in the seam and is not discernible, and as the man plays along and gets a card that is likely to prove useful, he quickly buries it in this pocket by a dexterous move, which he has practiced till he has it pat, and when he needs this particular card, he springs It and scoops the pot. " 'For another customer I make a pocket in the top of the left coat sleeve at the cuff."' NOT MUCH OP A-FELLOW. A Hoosler Farmer Thinks Christopher Colnmbus Didn't Amount to Much. New York Eun.3 "On mv last trip throuch Indiana." said a New York drummer the other day, "three .. ... tf . ,t ... a nlrtnt at 41.A f.wnn i.. ! a small town. It was kept by a dreadfully innocent-looking old chap, and in order to guy him a bit the boys put him on that I was Christopher Columbus, the discoverer of America. The old fellow gave me con siderable attention, fixed up the best room in the house and introduced me to his aged wife. Next morning as I sat on the veranda smoking a cigar he came along and queried: "Let's see. What did you do?" "Discovered America," I soberly replied. "Oh, yes." He looked disappointed as he went away, and in about ten minutes he returned to say: "I've had it all wrong about you." "How?" "Why. I kinder had it that you was from Washington, and I was thinking you might get my boy Sam into some office." ."No, I'm not" "You are only Christopher Colnmbus?" "That's all." "All vou ever did was to discover Amer ica?" " "That's all." "Humph! I'll have to charge you extra for them three biled eggs this morning, and the old woman thinks she ought to have an extra quarter for making real coffee- for you. Ton orter told me last night that you didn't amount to suthin'l" K0YEL PISCATORIAL CONTESTS. How Pegged-Down Matches Are Conducted by New Orleans Anglers. Heir York Snn.i In New Orleans the anglers amuse them selves with competitive fishing contests; the like of which are known nowhere else. They are called "pegged-down matches." The method of conducting them is as follows: Two fishermen of repute choose sides com posed of not more than 20 persons each. The day for thematch having been decided opon, lots are drawn for positions on a certain long bridge. Each man has a number marked upon a stick, which is nailed to one of the piles of which th'e structure is built When once assigned to a place an angler cannot move a greater distance than 30 feet either to the right or the left The fishing commences at an early hour of the morning and continues throughout the day. The worth of the fish is given in figures from 100 down to 5. The tarpon is marked at the highest number down to sorts of the smallest value. The contest is decided not according to the amount of fish taken, but in relation to their excellence as expressed in numerals. The defeated party at the close of the con test gives a supper to the conquerors. No New Orleans angler has as yet taken a tarpon, called there silver fish, with a rod. With Regard to the Unities. His Pet Waiter (to Monsieur Bapierre, the sword swallower) Ah, my dear monsieur, bonjour. I have you made a sandweech to-day to se best of myapproprutene&sl Judge, GrJa Ubt 1 w& JSsW IS SOCIETY COBRUPT? Ella Wheeler Wilcox on Our "Social Weaknesses and Defects. CItT AND RURAL LIFE COMPARED. Things Wherein American Social Life i3 a Little Loose. THE WORST MAN THE POETESS ETER MET WtiniH TOE THIS DISr.TCH.1 It is only the rustic, the dyspeptic, or the declasse man or woman who is forever talk ing of the "corruption" of society. Many excellent people, whose lives have been passed entirely in rural places, imagine the society of large towns to be a hotbed of im morality and godlessness. People who have striven vainly for social place and failed to find the open sesame are often loud in their denunciations of the suc cessful, and are wont to compare society to a whited sepulcher. But the cosmopolitan, observant being, with a good circulation, knows that human nature is the same the world over, and that everywhere is the same mixture of good and evil. During a month I once passed in a re mote and sparsely settled country place, I heard of more immoral actions among the quiet denizens than I had heard in two years in the largest city of America. Yet should one take the trouble to select at random, in the most respectable part of the city, the same number of human beings, it is wholly piobable that an equal number of equally immoral, if less vulgar actions could be re counted. The whirl and rush of city life seems alike unconducive to great thoughts and small gossip, but the morals of people are very much the same mixture of good and bad iu all civilized communities. I think the repression of country life as often brings latent propensities for evil to the surface, as the temptations of city life. One'of our smaller towns has been prolific in the product of adventurous women, who have achieved notoriety in the divorce courts; and it is a curious fact that few of the ereat adventuresses of the world's his tory were born or bred in large cities. But, whether in town or country place, he who seeks shall find that which he seeks. AIT EASY THING TO FIND. The man or woman who sets forth on a quest of evil is sure to find it. Early in life I realized that there was more pleasure to be derived from observing1 good than evil, and consequently sought and lound it existing in abundance about me. It is the crude idea of the youthful mind that the world is divided into two armies the good and the bad one clothed in 'dark ness upon the left, one in garments of light upon the right, ana in deadly opposition to each other. As we mix with the world this illusion vanishes, for we find the two armies clothed in the same habiliments, mixing together amicably, and the deadly battles are fought, silently and out of sight in each human heart, between right and wrong. A great native virtue, planted too gener ously in a human heart and deprived of careful cultivation, often degenerates into a rank vice, and the world not infrequently mistakes a sterile and inactive nature for one of great chastity and self-denial. The summer sunlight is beautiful and beneficent, but it is as prone to produce bugs as butter flies, weeds as ferns, while the winter sun produces neither. Yet the summer sunlight is ot more use to us than winter's chill rays, despite the bugs -and weeds. A wise gar dener uproots the one and kills the mischiev ous insects. There' is no more godliness in negative goodness than there is heat in winter sun. light, which does notjproduce bugs or weeds simply because it has not power enough to warm anything into being,, and not from an inherent objection to weeds or bugs. Absolute virtue is that which seethes: with active impulses and is forced by will and reason into unselfish channels. A BEAl BAD MAN. , The worst man I ever knew had no 'vice. He attended church and broke no comiiand ment and indulged in no excesses. Yet he nagged his wife and 'children to the grave, and destroyed every flower of pleasure which sprang up by his hearthstone and ruined the tender young lives about Ihim with the unceasing tempers of a household tyrant and petty demon. j Disagreeable tempers and uncontrolled nervous dispositions ruin more homes than drink or vice. A fault-finding or sarcastic tongue in a family circle drives more inen and women to evil than original sin. A lady said to me once: "I demand good manners before good morals from my ac quaintances. Bad morals can be 'hidden, bad manners cannot." I think I would demand good motives first of all, since good morals would of ne cessity ensue; and he whose motives were truly good mubt, too, desire not to give ollense by bad manners, and so all three virtues would be his. Were I to select the one good quality which is most indispensable to me in an in timate iriend,'I would without hesitation say sincerity. Nomatter if she be bright, gitted, refined, amiable and witty, full of appreciation and affection, yet an insur mountable wall stands between my heart and hers if she be not sincere in small mat ters and in great "Come and see me soon," I said to a friend one day, who stepped off a car as I stepped on. "Yes, to-morrow or next day," she re plied. In consequence I stayed indoors during both days, missing a drive and a luncheon, which I declined because I felt that my share in the engagement necessitated my remaining at home during the specified 48 hours. She did not come, nor did she send an apology. She had spoken from the lips only, and she had supposed my invitation was a purely polite one, which would be satisfied with a speedy promise and tardy I nlfilment But a fine code of honor in these small matters permits no carelessness of invitation or reply. If I say to a "friend in passing, "Come around and see me to-morrow," it is my duty to remain at home during that day, or to send word it obliged to go out We have no right to say these things on im pulse, and then waive the responsibility they incur. It savors of moral worthlessness and irre sponsibility, A -WAlfT OP SIKCEEITY. I once knew a gentleman who was prone to make cordial speeches to people in whom he really felt no interest In a public con veyance one Saturday morning he encount ered an acquaintance from a neighboring city, who was journeying to another State in company with his wife. Now, my friend had but slight acquaintance with the couple, and really felt no especial regard for them; but with an effusive air he smiled, and said: "1 wish you'were not obliged to hasten on your way, we should be delighted to have you stay over Sunday with us." To his utter amazement the couple-conferred to gether and accepted his invitation with thanks. When he arrived home with his encum brances he found that his wife had given the servant a holidayand that the presence of these almost strangers would utterly spoil the pleasure of tfie Sunday dinner to which she had invited a few intimate friends on the day befortf. "What oti earth made you ask those people to come home with you?" cried the wife in desj&iring tones. "Because I never dreamed they would ac- uept, ejtpiauieu iuq uusuouu. as, too many invitations are given be- cause the people are not expected to accept I I wish the expanding minds of children could be inoculated with the vast import ance of sincerity in speech andaction I wish they could be indelibly impressed with the idea that to make ever so small a promise, or to give ever so casual an invi tation for the sake of creating a pleasant impression upon the recipient, is as repre hensible as passing spurious com. Morals are matters requiring several gen erations to rectify, and human beings grow more moral in tendency with every century. The passions of men and women are vast emotions, which only the Creator and time can control and improve. The most strictly educated and carefully trained men and women sometimes become the most immoral in after life, and in our search for good, whether in our own hearts or our neighbors, we are constantly surprised by stumbling upon hidden propensities for evil. We are all working out toward something higher. But as we go, we might help the growing generation by teaching it to be sincere above all things, and strictly accurate in keeping its word. Ella Wheelee Wilcox.( CASTLE OP IDE DOUGLASES. Now tho Property of Sir Hero Dolrymple, of the Court of Sessions. October Harper's. But now, as we tnrn our back on the Bass, another ruined castle, grander and far more massive and lofty than Dirleton, fills the eye. On a lofty jagged cliff that seems to run out into the sea, and is washed on three sides by its waters, stands the far famed castle of Tantallon. Sir Walter's description of it in,"Marmion," if not the highest style of poetry, is a wonderfully correct word-picture. The origin of Tan tallon Castle, the renowned stronghold of the Douglases, is unknown. For centuries it was the great citadel of the family on the east of Scotland. Its situation was so remarkable, the struciure so strong, and the, means of defense so skillful, that it seemed to defvmilitarv attack. In 1479 the barony of North Berwick and the castle of Taatallon having been fortified some time before by the Earl of Douglas, were given by (James IV. to the Earl of Angus, the fanjous "Bell-the-Cat" of Scottish history, who figures in "Marmion" as the lord of the place. In the days of the next earl the castle stojd a siege by King James V., but the King was unable to take it. In 1639, how ever, it was taken by the Covenanters; thereafter Cromwell's troops besieged it, ana amra feeble defense it was taken again. Alput 150 years ago the castle became the priperty of Sir Hew Dalrymple, Lord Presi dent of the Court of Session, in whose family it sill remains. LUNATICS AND LEGISLATOES. Onl of the Unfortunates Thinks There's Little Difference Between Them. All iny (Qs.) News. epresentative iteed, of Putman, was one of he Legislative Committee sent to inspect th( asylum. There was a dance on the nidit the committee spent in the investiga- tioa, and Mr. Beed took for a partner one ofihe fair unfortunates, to whom he was introduced: JJ'I don't remember having seen you here babre," said she. "How long have you bbn in the asylum." 'Oh, I only came down yesterday," said e gentleman, "as one of the Legislative mmittee." "Of course," returned thejadv. "How upid I am 1 However. I knew von wer iither an inmate or a member of the Legis 1 ature the moment I looked at vou. But how was I to know? It is difiicult to tell which?" A 6-TEAE-OLD PHILOLOGIST. A Little Boston Girl Argues Learnedly on the Use of Words. Sew York Suu.l A bright and interesting 6-year-old girl in Boston has been the cause of a philologi cal discussion somewhat wider than most 6-year-plds generally arouse. She persists in using the terms one-th, two-th and three-tb, instead of first, second and third, and when her elders try to convince her of her error she shuts themup with the retort that it is just as proper to say one-th as to say fourth, fifth or sixth. The matter of euphony doesn't seem to have been considered much in such discus sion as Boston folk have had on the subject, and many of them want to know if the child Is not more right than wrong. They think our language is not properly ele&r, and that absurdities are tolerated fiom a conserva tive notion that it would be harmful to eradicate them. TIED TO THE DOOR BELL. Novel Scheme to Prevent n Youngster From Wondering Avrny From Home, Detroit flewis.l A 5-year-old youngster living of High street is in the habit of making excursions down town every time he has an opportunity of getting out of the house. As his sojourns are unattended and,as far as his parents are concerned, unannounced, they have occa casioned the latter no end of anxiety. Kecently, however, the young adventur er's papa hit upon a scheme to check these undesirable wanderings. One end of a clothes line about 30 feet in length was fastened to the front door bell, and the other end secured about the youngster's waist, and thus he is allowed to play about the front yard. If he tries to get away a ring of the door bell exposes his guilty in tentions. It's pretty hard on the bell, but it saves his parents a good deal of anxiety. ETADING THE MAINE LAW. Wines nnd Liquors Charged to Hotel Guests ns Deep Son Baths. Boston Post.1 I heard a few days ago of an ingenious device which the proprietor of a hotel in a seashore resort on the coast of Maine em ploys to cover up his sale of an. article which the law prohibits him from serving to his guests. A Boston gentleman who re cently left the hostelry, on calling for his bill was surprised to see a charge for "deep sea baths." As the guest had not indulged in this luxury and could not understand why it should be charged in the bill if he had, he inquired of the clerk what this item meant He was told that it'eovered wines and liq uors, and in his case it referred to cfaret wnicn ne naa taKen with his meals. A Rocky Physiognomy, Conductor Tickets! Commuter Say, you've seen my ticket four times already on this trip. Csnductor (apologetically) Beg your rjarrinn linl vnn daa. sip vnn'v A ... .1 r ,." I". ' " j-; tw mighty hard face to remember. Judfire, The I V AN IRISH-AMERIOAN ROMANCE. Written for The Pittsburg Dispatch -BY- ' - WILLIAM J, FLORENCE. CHAPTER I. A BIT OF IEEIiAXD IS AHEBICA. HE town of Elm wood used to be a farming suburb of New York City. Now its boundaries are obliterated.and it is a section-of the city lying be tween Central Park and the " and nearly built up with fine residences. Between the times of these two conditions it had a pe riod of occupation by small gardeners and others who lived in the humbler kinds of homes, some of which were mere huts on the rocks. The grading of the streets left some of these structures at a conspicuous elevation, and the artists of the magazines and the other illustrated periodicals were fond of sketching these picturesque views. The poorer shanties were occupied by squatters, but the next grade better yielded ground rent, however slight it might be, to the own ers of the land. Btft there came a point in the extension of the city's builded limits when, by means of a city ordinance, these objects were swept out of existence. The early moon of an August evening was shining on Elmwood Hill and was favora bly lighting it up as a remarkably close re semblance of a rural scene in Ireland. On the shelving rock stood two cabins, com posed of a miscellaneous collection of ma terials, yet formed into a rude semblance of cottages. Vines covered some of the lack of architecture, and the moon was not severe in exposing the points of ugliness. They leaned against each other, back to back, as though for mutual support, each being con scious of its own structural frailty. A pig sty was close by, and a pen for goats, while small patches of garden had been made of the soil which covered a portion oi the stone. Up the ledge a stairway led, by means of an interspersion of rock-hewn and board-built steps, from the street to the cabins. TJp this ascent climbed a policeman in uniform. He had been detailed to serve notices of ejectment to the inhabitants of Shantytown, as the neighborhood was commonly called, and his day's task had reached fnto the evening, end ing with this visit to the homes of the O'Bourkes and the Beggs. The occasion was, indeed, like that of an eviction in Ireland. There had been plenty of warning, however, and when Phelim O'Rourke, smoking in front of his door, saw an officer approaching, he knew the errand before it was delivered. The visitor simply handed a paper to him and. delivered a similar one "into the adjacent' premises'of. the Beggs. O'Bourke put on a pair of a iron-b"owe"d spectacles, "shrelded the flame of match with hfs palm, and by the flickering light slowly read the formal notice. A learned man in his way wa3 O'Bonrke. He had once taught school in his native Ireland, and his head was full of book learning which was of no practical, value to him in actual utility. He was a vague dreamer, an inventor of wildly im practicable theories and altogether a man entirely unsuited to earn a living in a city where adaptability is the first element of personal success. Instead of making and realizing simple plans for the support of himself and his wife, he gave his thoughts to almost it not quite irrational philosophiz ing. It was different with his son, Donnell Mickey Beso' Bide With the Witch. O'Bourke, a handsome young fellow, who joined him. His hair had the auburn of Ireland in its close-croppea efforts to be curly; his face bore the open good humor of his race: in a peasant costume, instead of the clothes of a .New Yorker, he would have looked like a veritable "broth of a boy;" but his tongue had lost the brogue of his 'native land, for he had emigrated in chilShood. Even his father's Irish speech was put faintly characteristic, as he handed the document to Donnell, and asked him what he thought of that "I, think it is time we quit the shanty and the rock anyhow," was the spirited reply. "I'm" earning $12 a week, as a lawyer's clerk, and in a year I'll be a lawyer my self. If you can somehow, bring in as much, fath'er, wo can afford to live in better quarters." The one lacking thing to complete the Irish-American scene agreeably was a pretty colleen, and she came into it from- the resi dence of the Beggs. Wide-open gray eyes, with dark lashes, had Nora Begg, and the clear white of her cheeks was freckled like the stipple of an engraved face. She seemed younger by two or three years than Donnell, who was 20, and like him she had been brought across the ocean too early in life to leave the brogue of Ireland on her tongue, A modest girl, and a neatly dressed one, was this New York colleen of .Elmwood Koct. uiose aweiiers tnere had she and Donnell been, and closer yet had their hearts become. When she was told that the eviction was a certainty, and there upon Donnell asked her to walk with him, she blnshed a little, but took his arm, and itwas evident that their conversation would relate to the question of a future home. kEven the abstracted Phelim O'Bourke vaguely understood that as he watched them out of sight While Phelim O'Bourke was still meditat ing ubon the document his neighbor, Micky Begg, zig-zagged up the stairway. Micky was a sad example of intemperance, and he had just returned from the "berren" of old Peter McGlathery. As the bottle was passed around very freely, after old Peter was put underground, Micky was full to the back teeth. To show his sobriety he called upon O'Bourke to see him jump from the three-legged stool, which stood by the doorstep, totbe bottoraof the washtub. He put himself in position and said: "See me iep, and' then say if I'mdhrunk; Hur roo!" . "Areyoucomin'in, Micky?" came in a nman'a a1.1i. vntun frnm within, fftr TVmr i I I HWM.MM a 1UIQ IWW ..w ....., .v j CK on ELM WOOD HILL f Mrs. Begg was a helplessly, hopelessly bed- nuueu invalid. "Divil a step till O'Bourke sees me Iep from the tnb to the stool. I can Iep like a goat, me darnn."1 And giving a spring in the air, Mickey came down with a thHd, nearly crushing a goat that was comfortably sleeping near the cabin door. "A nice example you are, Micky," said O'Bourke, solemnly, "to come from a fu neral as drunk as a piper. Get up, Micky, here comes the priest" Sure enough, Father Hanley, who was returning from old McGlathery's funeral, came along. Micky had picked himself up, brushed the mud from his clothes, and pat himself on the stool before the Father came up. "How are you, Phelim?" said the priest "And the children? Well, I hope, God bless then!" "Yes, Father, they are well and hearty, and can eat as well' as any childer on the rocks. I Wish yon would spake to Micky, Father. Be wasn't looking after. To-morrow morning he has to be up bright and airly, for we're going to be evicted. Look at him as drunk as a fiddler." "Yes," said the priest "I watchedhim at the funeral. The death of old Mc Glathery should be a warning to him. That sinner did not draw a sober breath for many months. Do 70a hear me, Micky?" said wnm A XIFE OF SPLEJDID MI3EKY. the priest, shaking up his stupid parish ioner. "Don't you want to buy him, Father?" replied Micky, "He's as fat as butter." "He's thinking of selling the pig," said O'Bourke apologetically. ."It's got to be made.a. riddance of, and he's drunk enough to fancy heVbactin Ireland bound for a faifWithlhe porker." ' JMT "Listen, Micky," said the priest. "Yon see how that toper, McGlathery died, did ye not? What canyon expect to gain by this constant inebriety? Think of McGlathery's endmvmanl" "He'll "roast like pipe clay,'replied Micky in a maudlin manner, his eyes now half opened, and tears running down his cheeks. "And," he continued, "if it wasn't for the black spot on his belly he'd bring more'n I'm axin." "Oh, yon are incorrigible, Micky," said the priest, as he roared with laughter at his parishioner's answers. A shout of laughter was heard, as three Eretty, bright-faced children came up the illside, and, with hands filled with wild flowers, came' running toward the priest, who received them with a kiss for one, an embrace for another, and taking the smallest in his arms held her high in the air till she laughed with childish glee. They were O'Bourke's youngsters, and had stayed till, dark in Central Part, thus getting home by moonlight "Well, darlings, J'm glad to see ye this blessed summer evening. You are all as pretty as the flowers, andjeflectgreat credit on yo'ur loving mother, who takes such good care of vou." It is something to be remembered, the fondness the Irish children have for the priest. The appearance of "the Father" in an Irish village is" the signal for a general assembling ot the children, who run toward the good man, and, climbing around his legs, with shouts of welcome, nug and kiss him in token of their love and veneration. The jocks of Elmwood presented the same characteristic. "Bun into the house, my darlings," said Father Hanley. "I want to speak to Mr. Begg on a matter of business. Come here, Micky; you are sober enough to listen to what I have lo say. Lady Maud Tennison, from the big house at Kilrona. where you came from, has written me a letter. She was very fond of your Nora before you emigrated. She has" lost her own daughter since then, and she writes that she constantly thinks of her dead pet's foster sister, Nora." "Yes, Father," said Micky, now perfectly sober from bis short nap, "her ladyship was always fond of Nora, and Nora seemed quite taken wid her, too. She is a true, good lady, and a Christian woman. Sure, didn't she put a beautiful stone over the corpse of ouiu aroiaa in xLiirona -aooey, at ner own expense, the darlin', and ain't she loved by the poor people from one end of Loch Der mid to the other; God bless her!" "Listen to me. Micky, it you're sober enough to comprehend. Lady Maud writes that she will adopt Nora as her own daughter, if she can get a complete and legal release from her parents. I suppose it's Oonah that I must see about it" "Yes, ver reverence. It's the mother that decides." "Is she able to see me?" "Please come in and try." The priest entered the cabin, and found the bed-ridden Oonah Begg lying awake on her couch. She was feeble with an incura ble malady, which had been originally caused by a street railway accident a year before, and which was sure to result in her death at no distant day. He gave her a priestly blessincr. and then delivered his errand very gently and considerately, for .he knew that no true mother could at onee tolerate the suggestion of giving away her daughter. When he had at length read the letter to her, and she fully comprehended it she cried: ''O, I couldn't do it, Father. I couldn't it would kill me." "It is a pity it isn't Dolf that somebody wants." the priest exclaimed, "and not the daughter that is a comfort to you." "Don't say one word, if ye plase, against me boy. May be he isn't what he ought to be, but lam in hopes he will come around right in time." "Well, I hope so," and the priest in dulged, in the frankness of advice common to his profession in dealing with the poor and Ignorant of .their parishest "but he'll have to mend a' deal to become a good boy. I see him too much with the toughs and the gangs. But there donf cry, Oonah. We'll trr in -rnfnvm TVilf. amA m . V..M think the matter over. BemeraVer. she will receive a good education, aid become a rauul lad,. Won't that hr a tiifailhs,1 you, &r yesrknow ttftryoa v't l remain with Iter. Tkiak it 0Ter,,0asVr& father Hraley omsmxI IrM Ms to fiad PiMfta O'BMriM ad MUfcy engaged in a- dialogue in wHek tlw 1 all being dose by rhtim. xbm anderratie man' was dtteMTMas; pwy ssbjeet whMi, so e w wiuag.Mi elucidated in a sneeek the previa lBjr DOiere toe &nnc jvibw. j.mw n . . il.'t" - irl.. nu4 !..-- . body waioh met itftfce muc mow Of s- loos, and was composed of a mm att irrational theorists, each, qm of whos seated to listen to the walialiti1 rest for the sake of betar hoard ytfcsX when Ma tars same. Thev wew'iotls murhlv at variinee with- all things that they wold't mH 1 saae of their club in aeerdoB w;l dictionary, and at tinm they took:j IbzUbz resolutions direetios hovj fairs of the universe ought to Mt Phelia O'Bourke was about the them alL In the address that M 1 ered, and about which he was the befuddled Mieky.he faftdj thesrr which, even to hi seemed singular laoeea. -is wpj so interested that they had mhIhM ' convivial funationof theeluk. XMsrl glasses had bees empty fer a WKHt 1 hnrir before he 'finished. Vat; wm M elusion. the mugs were qaMdy fttWi the overtopping foasa ran. dew ti in the table. "Here is to the hojjt," said mm, ' Mr. O'Beurke's theory say Mr ftt 1 on O'Koarke's sell." That was nnixT Iasfhter. so O'Bourke his aeeouBt to his neighbor; aatiis clared that he had impressed Ms I members lsanteBsety. -"You've brains enough aad te Phelim." said the priest, after 1 enough of the cOHolBdiDe narrative ' derstaad that O'Boarke was Ml new. stransre aad imn?aetieM his own layeatioB- "Why; is your eaaeauon seatiDty, as yew neii oeosr xte u. oe a i5 &i onejday. for he's strengthen intr hist! good work, while you're dulttig witn yourphiioBop&ieairubbisiu" While the priest was speaking Half came up t&e stairway, gave to none too respeoti'al 'good ev siese&ed late his huaote' netaa Hl-leekiaf Wkrw, Depraved bod habits aad a.: uon. UJte teree men eoaversod a utes about the impending evietiaa. they were startled by an outcry, li feeble yet shrill voiee of Ooaah they hurried into her cabin to find was the matter with her. She lay eyes closed and exhaustion ex thin, wan faee. Dolf Beev, hr son, sat in a ohair tipped book vail witli !.! Mm. t.lAA WM crossed stiffly over tee other, aad Ms lag brows so lowered aver hi eye half their evil light was TittWe. "What is it?" Father HmIos- ing a.seaton the edge of teethed. And So They Were Married. ing one of the invalid's bands. "Km shi bov been doing anything to you? ? "That's Tight!" Dolf exelalaed "Asl her don't ask me. Of coarse ahe'tf tj you the truth, and I won't" Z "Did he strike you?" the priest aehod,! seeing a reu mars; on me wosaan s wnec, M though she had warded off a. blow. vi "He didn't strike me." she n "He tried to rob me. He ksewaiy haafcestj aouars naa oeen drawn lroas Ike s bank that I had it here under jaei T A li .,- !. . . - iia part av wnai we railroad Jems SjMCl me ler uao ucciuem, aaa now we Ve ffetil us it fer the hirin' of a plaee to Kva'Ji When he thought I was fast aslape he in on tip-toe. and feels fer it Bat I -on awake, and I scramed with all say Tnich.?'"'! which wasn't much. I'm sorry to tail it o( him, but sure, the priest ought to knew And I had to call fer hilp, hr ho'd'i stolen me money." The priest patted the womaa's had, MfLj earn sooiaingjy; a.1 ever nsiael k BteTerJ mind it." jsut turning to the yeasg bhm,v us auuresseu mm witn bitter eapMsHtK "Dolf, I knew you were a brute; MMi came to be so I don't know, for yer dytag-g uiuiuer iicxb u a gooa woman, aad yseg 4 father's one fault is the drink. rjivi' Known ot you striking youcpoor, halslssgl isomer, ana tnsi ootn leroeieM &MI cowardly. How you've tareed ibm most contemptible thief for you'd stoats me very money mat she received ia mov mo.. fn1.. ISA. Tt-TS J-!-- V S You'll come to sose had end if yes. doat rejorra yourseii. Dolf said nothinz. but snllenl-i-i his arms, unerossed his legs, picked m hfc t hat and slouched out of the oabta. 3t)j stamped down the stairs to the strep, saSj -. . j vn uem nit steps toward ma grogsjory w his gang congregated, bound to get etrw. whistcy could be obtained without atoftor.fr Micky Begg waa sober by this state, oad uis cuauuui&ry ssiwufla ror ni who : fested itself in the exolamattoeL. atni! thrash the devil out of hiia that's what 1 do." "Don't'do that" Oonah said. "Lavi to Father Hanley. May be he'll be when 1 mdesd, and do better." 8he i her eyes and was silent for a miaste; she said with a sad xsaile: "There's 1 ant news. Anvhew. it nlsnis.r ' The doctor was here. He said 1 1 . -Z T-T- live longer than six. asoBtfcs at the . There, Mieky, dea'tbesony. At It liiiHHr'r7V 'atsslst .1 $m .s? 11 rr ! -m 1 I, Iff Aj t ts. 1 WMgLgHMllii8WWil3g