WM '3S, ?v W i THE Pit TSBURG W DISPATCR - . f PAGES 17 TO 20. r THIRD PART. 5E. PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1889. jBBb? sfflljl- ORIENTAL SMOKERS, Pretty Women Who Consume a Hundred Cigarettes a Day and Others Who S&rSTICK TO THE WATER PIPE. jeS " The Betel Chewers of Siam and the Little Pipes of the Japanese. W HOW DIFFERENT KiTIOSS USB TOBACCO Baby Smoker of Farther India Children WIio Chen-as Soon ni They Are Weaned The Snuffers of North China Orlentnl Monnrchs Who Smoke nod Some Who Do Not The Qneen of Korea and Her Amerienn CIsnrette Tho Weed in the Land of the hultan The Great I'rohl bltlonUt of the Ensu tWiUTIES FOB TBE DIRrATCn.. IETTJE travels on foot; vice runs over the world at telegraphic speed. Tobacco was un known until America was dis covered. A half century later it had been intro duced into China, and within a few generations the whole world was using it. You will hardly find a place on this big round earth where the peo ple do not now smoke, and the Orient has become the home of tobacco. The almond eyed Japanese swallow more smoke than they do rice; the pis-tailed Chinaman glories in his cheap pig-tail plug, and some of the biggest and belst digars in the world are made by the women of Burmah.. The queen of benighted Korea smokes American cigarettes by the thousand, and the harem of the Saltan is tilled with fair ladies who delight in the hookah. In Japan men, wonienr and children are fond ot smoking, and one of the most neces sary articles of household furniture is the little tobacco hibachi; or box, about eight inches square, which, containing a bowl of -charcoal and a round bamboo tube, is placed The Korean Squat. before the visitor with a cup of delicious tea at the beginning of his call. Seated on his bare feet, cross-legged on the floor, he picks up a coal with a pair of iron chopsticks and drops it into his little pipe, and smokes dur ing his sips while he chats. His pipe has a metal bowl, less tha.. the size of a thimble, and its bamboo stem is about a foot long. He carries his tobacco in a pouch at his waist, and you note that it is'cut fine, like the tobacco of Egypt He rolls a pinch of it up into a ball belore he puts it into his pipe, and the pipe is so-small that two whins will exhaust its contents. HE SVTAXXOWS THE SMOKE and expels it through his nostrils, and then cleans out th pipe by knocking it against the brass- bowl of the hibachi. He takes from 10 to 50 such smokes every day, and as he goes from place to place he carries his pipe stuck in at the belt of his gown. Some of the most beautiful art works of Japan are pipe-holders, and balls of ivory made in the shape of figures, which hang at one end of the draw-string of the tobacco pouch. These last are known as netsukes, and they hang over the top of the belt, thus fastening the ponch of tobacco to it. Since the revolution cigarette smoking has become very common in Japan, and I had the pleasure of smoking cigarettes with the Supreme Court and the various officers of the Government. Tea and tobacco was offered me at the entrance of every depart ment, and I did not make a single call in Ithe whole country where I did not find to bacco on the floor. The Koreans are the laziest smokers I 'have ever seen, and they have the right to acall tobacco by one of its Japanese names, L-....... ... ... .w. o n;t M w mC puveriy A TurKi Felicity. weed." Outside of the most squalid of Ko- rean mud huts you seldom fail to find a "big hatted man, dressed in a long dazzling gown of delicate bine or red, smoking a pipe as long as a walking cane. In the vil lages you will see groups of such men, or of boys like them, squatted on their heels in a ring, each with a pipe showing out under his big hat. The bowls of these pipes are ''about as bit: as a small chestnut, and they rest on the ground, while the other end of ' the pipe is between a pair of Korean lips, or f incase the owner is talking, is resting lazily against his lower teeth. The higher the rank ot the Korean tbe loneer his pipe stem. A Yangban, or noble, considers a long,pipe a badge of aristocracy, as it requires a slave at hand to light it lor him. The Korean smokes these long pipes as he walks along th'e street, and every man andboy carries his tobacco pouch tied to his waist His other personal belongings he carries in a big sleeve in his gown, but his tobacco pouch is a work of art It is of leather or cloth, beautifully embroidered, and it hangs down from his belt just over his belly. Babies wear these pouches, but I understand tbe children do not SMOKE BEFORE THET CAN TVAIK. Both the Emperor and his son are cigar ' y- ette smokers, and the iiomea of Korea smoke the pipes of the country. Their only smoking is done in the company of their husbands and of their few lady friends. They are never seen on the streets, and such to bacco as they have is bought by their hus bands. There are few pipe stores in Korea, but yon find tobacco and pipe stores in every Japanese village, ana some of the pipes of Japan are costly and are works of high art The Korean "merchant removes neither his hat nor his pipe when he waits upon you; and, during such shopping as I did in the Korean capital. I was not given a single invitation to smoke. The Chinese smoke early and often, and it is as good as a play to watch one of the nobles of China using tobacco. He prefers the water-pipe, and he has a servant who puts the pipe stem in his mouth and waits till he has taken half a dozen whiffs before he carries it away again. The smoke comes bubbling through the liquid, and the almond eyes of the Celestial sparkle with enjoyment as the nicotine enters his blood. Li Hung Chang smokes in this way, and during the interview which I had withhim at Tien Tsin his servant held a pipe with a stem at least four feet long to his lips, and lighted it for him at intervals of ten min utes. The great viceroy took about ten, whiffs at a time, .and then the servant took the pipe away, pulled ont its metal bowl, refilled it with tobacco, bringing it back a little later on to patiently hold it to nis .Ex cellency's lips while he smoked. The Chinese do not use cigars nor chew. A Burmese Lady Smoking. They have a tobacco much like the American pigtail" twist, which they cut up for smok ing, and they are largely addicted to snuff You will find snuff stores in the larger cities, and the article used is coarser than the Scotch snuff. The women smoke, and not a few of the men and boys are addicted to the use of cigarettes. The average Chinese cigarette is the poorest and cheapest in the world. Yon can get three of them for one tenth of a cent, and they are dear at that BABY SHOKEKS. The baby smokers of the world are found in Siam and Bnrmah. I saw little tots of 4, as naked as on the day they were born, trot ting about Bangkok with cigarettes in their mouths, and the babies of Rangoon and Mandalay are tanght to .chew the betel nut, mixed with tobacco, 'as soon as they are weaned. The Siamese children, like their fathers, use their ears as cigarette and clear holders, and the lack of cloth ing or pockets on the part of the little ones necessitates their carrying these articles over their ears, as the American clerk car-lies- hrt-peBcil or pen.-'-I-saw one noble Siamese boy with a shaved head and a string about his waist, who had a cigarette over each ear and another in his mouth. His father, who was with him, was also smoking, and his mother had a cigarette between her lips. "When the party went away the mother took up the naked smok ing boy, and balancing him on her hip, walked oS, both smoking as they went. The thousand odd women who make up the harem of the Siamese King all smoke and chew, and it takes a good part of his Ma jesty's 510,000,000 a year to pay his tobacco bill. Each lady has to have her betel spit toon, which is of decorated china, the size of a coffee cup, and, if she is a favorite, she has also a silver box in which to carry her tobacco and betel nut- s The women of Burmah, like the smokert of Siam, use their ears as cigar-holders, bu they use them in a different way. Every Burmese girl prides herself on the size of the hole she can make in the lobes of her ears, and I have seen Burmese ears which had holes in them as big around as a napkin ring. These holes are made when the girls are young, and the lobe both stretches and grows until it gets as big around as the thumb of a big-boned man. Into these holes some of the pporer women of Burmah put their cigarettes or cigars when they move from one place to another. Cigars are more used than anything else, and the Burmese cigar istbe biggest of its kind in general use. It is from eight to ten inches long, and is often more than an inch in diameter. LOVE AND TOBACCO. The Burmese women are very beautiful, and even these big cigars cannot take away the beauty of their juicy red lips. Tbey make the'mouth look a little large while they are in them, but it resumes its natural size when the young lady, holding the cigar between her two first fingers, blows the smoke out in a stream. It is not unusual for a Burmese maiden to make her lover a bundle of cigars as a present during their courtship, and some ot the best of the Bur mese imported cigars are made by women. Tbey have their cigar booths in the bazaars, and they know how to sell at a profit The Burmese always smoke after meaIsEand they chew the betel nnt at the same time that they smoke, though many of them only chew in the intervals between the smokes. The Buddhist priests of Siam and Burman are inveterate smokers, and a common sight is a crowd of bare-headed, shaved-pated men in yellow gowns, trotting along with cigars or cigarettes in their mouths, and with bowls in their hands, going around to collect tbe offerings of rice which the people give them for their sustenance. The Burmese are very social in their smoking,and I saw cigars passed from one sweet maiden to another in the bazaars, and I saw a young man accept with a smile the cigar of a belle and smoke it while she waited upon me and tried to sell me some silk at an extravagant rate. Smoking is common during courtship, and I doubt not that these big Burmese cigars undergo the same method of exchange as does the wad of succulent gum among the lovers in the mountains of Tennessee. It Is different in India. Love-making there is a matter of bargain and sale, and such smoking as is done during the making of matches is between thematgb-makers and tbe fathers who wish to sell or bind their girls to infant marriages. The women of India smoke, but tbey do not do it during courtship, and they practically have no courtship. In some parts of the country to bacco, like opium, is used to a certain cx- H An Jlast Indian Pipe. tent to lessen the pangs or hunger and to de crease the appetite. It is raised in every province in India, and very nearly $760,000 worth are exported yearly. INDIAN -WATEE PIPES. The Indian pipes are of all kinds and descriptions. A very common one stands about as high as a baseball club. At its bottom is a bowl as big around as a cocoa nut, and often in fact made of a cocoauut This contains water. It has a hole inside of it, and at its top there is a pipe about an inch or an inch and a half in diameter, which runs up for two feet, and at the top of which there is a bowl in which the tobacco is placed. The smoker sucks a hole at the side of the cocnanut, and be sometimes has a flexible tube with a mouthpiece, the end of which is inserted in this hole, and the pipe then stands upon the ground. The hookah, or water pipe, Is in use to some extent among the Mohammedans of India, and cigars nd cigarettes are common. They are very cheap, and are not very good. Some of the best tobacco in the world is found along the Mediterranean Sea, and a great part of tbe revenue of the Sultan and Khedive comes from tobacco. The weed is a monopoly in both Turkey and Egypt, and the Khedive, in order to collect a big im port dnty on tobacco, has prohibited its raising in the country by a tax of nearly $160 an acre. The result is that American tobacco is now imported into Egypt It comes in the shape of tobacco for cigarettes. and it is sent first to Prance or.England and thence shipped to Egypt, The Turkish to baccos are very light and sweet, and they are popular all over Europe. Turkish cigarettes and Egyptian cigarettes are known everywhere, and there is scarcely a man, woman or child in Egypt Who does not smoke. Yon see Turkish merchants in the bazaars, with long hookahs before them, puffing away while they meditate upon Allah or 'drone oVer the pages of the Koran. You see smart young Egyptians in the high-cut broadcloth coats ot official rank puffing cigarettes, and I am told that the dear little ladles of the harem smoke their scores of cigarettes every day. Prominent among all the' rulers of the East, the Khedive of Egypt has set a good ex ample to his people by neither smoking nor drinking. He offered me a cigarette during the interview I had with him. and he told me he did not smoke because he believed it was not good for him. He abstains from liquor on the ground of personal health, and of the prohibition against drinking con tained in the Koran, and he is the great Prohibitionist of the East TAEIPP Oil TOBACCO. You can buy good cigarettes in Egypt for 70 cents a thousand, and, notwithstanding the heavy taxation, the cigarettes of Con stantinople are not overly dear. I found American cigarettes for sale in nearly every country of the East, and the best of our brands go everywhere. American tobacco is always expensive abroad, and the whole world acknowledges that we make as good an article as any other country. I saw no chewing whatever, save that of the betel nut, which is common in various parts of India and in Siam, Burmah and Malacca. I found the Manilla cigars tor sale all along the Pacifio coast, and I am told that these are made largely by women, who roll the cigars on their bare knees, and who fasten the leaves by licking them with their lips. There is a tariff tax on tobacco nearly everywhere over the world. The manufac ture is a monopoly in France and Italy, and one of the first things that is searched for in the baggage of tbe traveler is boxes of cigars. I shall not soon forget a curious experience I had with an ostrich egg. It was covered with Arabic carving, and was a very pretty work of Egyptian art. I carried it in a sqnarecigar. box, in whickut just .fitted when well packed with cotton. The moment my trunks were opened at station after station on the frontiers of various countries, the officers would pounce upon this. Their faces would brighten and they would almost smack their lips at the thought of the con fiscation of some good cigars. When the box was opened their smiles became frowns, and their bright eyes were shaded with sad ness. Eeakk O. Carpenter. THEY CURLED HIS HAIR. ' Girl Jokers' Fnp That Doesn't Please the Tonne Men a Bit. chicseo iiiii.: I met a friend who always looks rather chipper the other day and asked him why he wore his hat tilted down on his nose. ""Well," he said, "it's just like this: In the first place there were two of us, and my friend said he'd like to have me take him down to see some girls I knew on Oakwood avenue. Of course I agreed, and we went Now, by the way, did you, on the dead square, ever see a girl with sense I mean good, sound man's sense? Of course you didn't I thought I did when I met these people. Finest girls I ever saw, and I got to be right at home in the house. Well, I wasn't feeling any too well when we got there, and alter awhile I went out in the back parlor and laid down on the sofa. Then one of the girls came out, and when I told b erl was sick she said she was real sorry, and the good, kind creature drew up a chair and sat down beside me and commenced to rub mv forehead. Now, I know I ain't built like a fool, bnt hanged if I didn't go to sleep. Couldn't help it for the life of me. - "I don't know how long I slept, but I dreamed I was a boy again, and 'hitching on' the back of a 'bus, and that the driver had swiped me across the forehead with his whip. Did I wake up ? Well, I should say so 1 And what do you suppose it was ? A red-hot, sizzling curling-iron that those female jokers had been curling my hair with while I was asleep. I turned my head and they didn't know any better than to let go of tbe tiling and it hung onto my forelock and baked me. I've got sense enough to cover up the wound with my hat, so folks won't thinkl'm a branded criminal, that's all." A TALK WITH WHITTIEE, The Quaker Poet Wishes Half of His Paems Ilnd Been Destroyed. Detroit Free Prcs.i The visitors left, and Mr. Whittier came in and sat between my friend and myself in a pleasant, familiar way. He is tall and slight, and dresses in a clerical black with gray derby hat when he goes out the Qua ker gray. One can hardly imagine him writing heroic verses, or firm as a rock in his own convictions of right Mr. Whittier is quite deaf. I told him how much the people of Michigan loved him, and how his book was almost a text book in the schools ol Detroit "I have written too much," he said, with a deprecating motion of his wasted hand; "I wish about half of it could have been de stroyed, but I tried to do the best I could at the time. I wish now much of it had never been written." When asked which poem was his favorite he said that he did not know that any one in particular was, but that he wrote Snow Bound" after the death of his mother and sister, and it seemed to embody his own feelings more than any other. We told him how the ''shut in" society of Michigan, the invalid circle, loved and enjoyed hs poems, and he was much interested. Then I men tioned the fact that two verses of his "Eter nal Goodness" were creed and gospel to so many shipwrecked souls who had no special belief. I quoted the stanza: "I know not where His islands lift Their I ronded palms In air, I only know I cannot drift Bejond His love and care." "It would be a deplorable condition to be in to be beyond the reach of His love and care," Mr. Whittier said. "I only wrote what I believed myself." Would you know the secret of English women's great charm white, perfect teeth? Atkinson's Oriental Tooth Paste. sa MODERN CHAPERONS. Mrs. Admiral Dahlgren Telia Why Girls Should be Chaperoned, . A DISCREET MATRON SECESSARI To Watch Over the Innocent Bnt Heedless Conduct of Ingennes. A FEW WORDS TO AMERICAN GIRLS rwarrTES ron Tns dispatch. The first, best and most-to-be-desired chaperon for any young girl must assuredly be the mother she who has brooded over her-fledgling when a baby with tender de votion, who has watched her sweet bud of promise mature, who has from year to year assisted the development of the being con fided to her care. As the skillful gardener knows -well in advance the effect he seeks to produce upon hia, flowers by assiduous culture, knows even the delicate shading to be looked for as each petal expands, so a good mother holds in her heart a hidden lore, connected with tho life of her child, all unknown to the rest of the world. She may not be Ma in rammnnimttd thf knowledge to others, for it Is hers by the sacred right of intuition. This prerogative of guidance a mother may always justly claim. It is a part of .the holy mystery of motherhood. To our apprehension this matter of mater nal chaperonage does not seem an adapta tion to the artificial requirements of the social world, but rather an inherent right a natural claim, which a wise and careful mother cannot well forego. At the very time when her child Is launched forth from the safe and sheltered home moorings into the swift and dangerous currents of the voyage of life, the mother is most needed to pilot her dear charge past all quicksands and sunken rocks. She can supply by her knowledge the ignorance of youth. I would not ask why should a mother chaperon her daughter,but rather formulate my question into, Why should a mother not chaperon her daughter? I fancy in the discussion of such a propo sition it will be found more difficult to prove the negative, and when the subject is once properly understood, it must be con ceded that a mother should assuredly con tinue her care. There exists no reason why she should not But the question becomes rather more complicated, perhaps, when the mother may have died, or when from any cause it becomes impossible for her to perform this duty. A COMMON MISTAKE. 0 Then the American girl asserts herself. She has been reared in an independence of thought and action which makes her dis satisfied with all restraint She construes chaperonage as espionage. She declares that she will not tolerate be ing watched, and avers that she must be al lowed entire freedom and liberty of action, and she asserts that her own perceptions of right and wrong, and her innate delicacy of sentiment, are all that is needed to make it quite safe for her to go wherever and when ever she chooses and to do whatever she wills to do. Now this is true, and it is not true. In the first place it is a mistake to con found chaperqnage with espionage. To suppose that a chaperon is a spy on one's actions is a perversion of the proper functions of such an office. A chaperon is either a mother Or a selected matronly friend, whose tender interest or friendliness is the best guarantee against misconstruction. A young girl is supposed to be guileless, artless and confiding. These are very Ioveable traits, which will doubtless some day con tribute to the happiness of a home" circle of her own; but just in proportion as these attractions exist they become dangerons without guidance from their very nature, and on acconnt of tho inexperience of youth. Then young girls, even if ever so carefully trained, as to understand the nicer conven tionalities that regulate the polite world,are inclined to be heedless, and carried away for tbe time being by the exhilaration of a gay life. Thus, with the best disposition to do only what is proper, they commit errors that in a measure misrepresent them, and which they afterward regret Now, it is obvious that the dignified presj ence of a matron who loves them, or is at all interested in them, would check all inad vertent indiscretion from the outset, and thus in the end greatly contribute to their future well-being and happiness. The situations are innumerable that sug gest themselves where such a safeguard would be the greatest kindness. The French have a pithy saying, that "it is the first step that co'sts." How true I At what cost of vain and unavailing regret might the wise chaperon spare a heedless girll A lacility of broken engagements as well as of divorce would seem to go hand in hand. It is in either case a broken troth. DUTIES OF THE CHAPEEOST. Now one of the special duties of the mother or the chaperon is to guard their marriageable wards as far as possible in re ceiving the attention of men. An engagement, announced or unan nounced, is always more or less compromis ing, and should in honor be deemed a sacred promise not to be violated, unless for grave and most serious reasons. A young girl unguided is not very apt to weigh all consequences, and the future is to her very dreamy. She lives in her emotions and in the present, and sadly needs the aid of a pair of loving spectacled eyes to make her illusions safe realities. There are so many little things, which are not as trivial as they would seem, where a clear judgment is needed. For instance, in the matter of receiving presents. It is under stood that a gentleman has the privilege of sending flowers and perhaps, if the friend ship is well established, boxes of bon-bons to a lady. As to presents having a money value they are, of course, out of the ques tion. Yet the frequent acceptance of even the? e simple gifts is to be avoided, for to make these offerings habitually is a conceded and inenmbent thing for a lover to offer to his fiancee so much so that there is a society phrase concerning these little gifts calling them ''the regulation box of Huyler's," etc There is a very narrow dividing line, therefore, between the permissible and the not permissible. One takes it for granted that no woman other than a heartless flirt willfully encourages the attentions of a man simply for tbe vain gratification of being able to count his name among offers re fused, and therefore that any woman of average astuteness can readily check "in tentions" of marriage before a man becomes too deeply interested. It is also kind, to say the very least, to spare a man's vanity the mortification of a refusal. SOCIETY AS A HEMESIS. It is a strange fact that, in almost every instance where a vain coquette has openly boasted of her conquests, she ends by ac cepting tbe most ineligible offer. A vertigo of gratified vain-glory seems to seizoherand cloud her judgment Society then acts as a Nemesis, and comes in with its cruel and persistent memory, and the unfortunate contrastol what is and.what might have been is not forgotten by tbe "four hundred." Howoften is the sarcastic remark made concerning some belle, of "what a poor choice she made afteralll" Or, a score .of years later, one may meet a faded beauty bearing an obscure name, and all that Is of any interest concerning her is the re- mart that she once refused some self-made J man whose name electrifies became he has made a distinguished career. Perhaps a se date chaperon might have better discrimi nated if consulted. I once knew the wife of a man whose name belongs to the history of the country, who. upon being told that a certain lady had once refused her husband, pathetically ex claimed, "I am so grateful to her." With this warning to heedless girls, who perhaps would not, if guided by chaperons, have made such sad blunders, I wish to ex plain that I do not mean1 to sav that voutb. should walk with the slow and measured step of age. Not at all. The gay light-heartedness of a young girl is delightful, and. like the nearly morning dew, exhales long before tho loveliness of otoom is touched. It is a transparent atmos phere of beauty, Which of its very nature must be evanescent And the mother or older friend rejoices in this to them renewed freshness that recalls their own youth, and seeks to shield this exquisite charm that it may expand into a periect flower, and not be too rudely dis pelled. Dear American girls, you are true in all womanliness; you are adepts in gracious and winning ways that are numberless: in strength of purpose you are undaunted, as becomes the daughters of brave men; given all this yet are you not well Just a trifle too self-poised, self-reliant and self asserting? THE SOSEBTJD'S CHAEM. Wonld it not add a peerless charm were you to incline a little, in graceful compli-, ance to the parent stalk? Would it not be safer? The sunflower holds a very high head, It is beaming, diffusive, and strong; bnt he who looks upon it passes on and seeks thefragrant heart of the blushing rosebud, which he craves as his very own. It may be admissible to receive alone the visits of young men, but one finds as they grow older and make the retrospect, that if a mother had been present an added dignity would have been gained. It may be very merry to drive ont alone with an agreeable man, but it may not always be so pleasant to realize afterward that your innocent recreation has been mis construed. A theater party must have its chaperon, for, in the very presence of a public that is not always the most fastidious, there should be every possible protection. Parties and dances of young people with out the restraining presence of their seniors should not be encouraged. These may be conducted with the greatest decorum, but in the social life of young girls it is bad form to subject them to any hazards. Modern, society is complex and concrete. It has its meaning in all its rules. It is the result of tbe advanced ideas of ages of de velopment, and it is consequently neither aimless nor senseless, while its convention alities are the expressed formula of civili zation. Of course this does not imply a blind sub servience to the capricious dictates of fash ion. These ore ant to be as inane as their originators, and it is a safe rule, so far as dress and the manner of our entertainments' go, to avoid being noticed. It is such a paltry ambition to be known for what one has or wears rather than for what one really is. In conclusion, I am sure that when Amer ican girls reflect upon the advantages to be derived from the presence of a kind mother or friend in their social life, they will di vest themselves of the mistaken notion of being watched or restrained, and really de sire the aid ot such affectionate or friendly solicitude. Madeleine YIntok Daiiloeen. A MISSOURI ORATOR'S DESCEKT. He Cornea Down to Thrash a Rough, Then Calmly Resumes His Speech. New York San.l Down in Southwest Missouri four or five years ago a town had all arrangements made to whoop 'er up on the gjorious Fourth. The citizens had contributed in a liberal spirit, the day was fine, and the crowd large and enthusiastic. The orator ot the day was a slim, cadaverous looking man from St Joe. To stand off and look him over, you'd have bet your last dollar that an old gander could nave run him all around a ten-acre field. There were some lofty spirits in town that day, and one of them was Jim Bucks, a mix ture of patriotism, whisky, high jump, and rough and tumble. Jim sized the orator up, determined to have some lun with him, and took a seat directly in front of him as he stood on the platform to speak. The orator hadn't spoken 100 words before Jim interrupted him. He did this twice more and was warned to go slow. He didn't go much on dreams or warnings, how ever, and watched for another opportunity. Pretty soon the orator said: "And so this little band of pilgrim fathers set out with stout hearts and un wavering faith in search of." "In search of skunk's!" interrupted Jim. The orator made a long jnmp, lighted down on Jim Bucks, and Inside of two minutes he had him licked so thoroughly that Mrs. Bucks wonld have passed him by for a splatter of pumpkin jelly, which had dropped from a dinner basket. "When satisfied that this work was thoroughly done, the orator re turned to the platform, and continued in the same calm and unruffled tones: " liberty of speech and freedom of con science, and they found them at Plymouth Rock." He went on and delivered a really elo quent speech, lasting nearly an hour, and he was just concluding when Jim Buck crawled out from under a wagon half a mile away, where he had been laid, and queried of those around him: "Say! is that feller still speakin' or fightin'? Durn me, but I didn't 'spose ora tory included jumpin' Jim Buck's liver out of his bodyl" HISTORY OP THE FORK. How It Was Orlslnnlly Used Tho Noble Byzantine's Wife. It seems clear enough, in the light of neg ative evidence, that tbe few forks included in the silverware of the Middle Ages were not used as forks are used to-day. Since kitchen forks served as spits and for holding roasts, it is probable that the high-born lords and ladies of those times, who only ap pear to have possessed these instruments, used their silver forks "for toasting their bread at the breakfast room fire. There is some direct evidence that they were em ployed to hold substances particularly dis agreeable or inconvenient 'to handle, as .toasted cheese, which wonld leave an un pleasant smell, or sticky sugared dainties; or soft fruits, the juice of which would stain the fingers. Only one incident is related of the use of the fork in the nineteenth century fashion. This was by a noble lady of Byzantium who had married a doge of Venice, and continued in that city to eat after her own custom, cut ting her meat very finely np and conveying it to her mouth with ato-pronged fork. The act was regarded in Venice, according to Petrius Damianus, as a sign of excessive luxury and extreme effeminacy. Itsuggests a probability that the fashion of eating with forks originated at the imperial court of By zantium and thence extended to the West. Some hundreds of years had still to pass be fore it could be domiciliated in Europe, for this doge's Byzantine wife lived in the 1 eleventh century, while the fashion of eating with forks did not become general till the seventeenth century. Kino Trying Children. Hartford Religions Journal. J "The youngest of nine children which tried men's souls." This is the way it reads in the obituary sketch in a cotemporary. The line, "Who were born in times,'1 is left out, and should be inserted after the "children" in the first sentence. "" word A BREACH A NORSE-AMEKEOAN ROMANCE. Written for The Pittsburg Dispatch -BY- ' HJALMAR HJORTH BOYESEN. HEBE was a prayer meeting at Lars Steens rod's farm. The sitting room was bro wded with people; and all around the open windows eager listeners were standing, straining their ears to catch the words that fell from the preacher's lips. A current of foul, moist air, poured out into the hallway, where men and women stood packed together like herring in a barrel. Outside in the farmyard some small boys. now and then forgetting the solemnity of the occasion, fell to punching and teasing each other, and were sternly rebuked by their elders as soon as their altercations be came audible. Haifa dozen young girls in calico gowns and colored kerchiefs on their heads made a feint of listening to the fervid discourse, of which a phrase now and then reached them; but watched furtively the unregenerate behavior of the boys and snickered whenever one" got the betfer of the other, "Oh ye generation of vipers," shouted fthe preacher in a terrific voice of warning and menace, "who shall teach you to flee rom the wrath to come?" The boys, supposing the admonition was addressed to them, grew quite alarmed, and, seating themselves on a log in frontof the wood sued, in various awkward attitudes, glanced at each other with a half-cowed and shame-faced bravado. But they presently forgot their scare.and then commenced anew the same punching and pinching and challenging brag, which led to fresh quar rels. "I know where there is a skunk," said Thorsten Stletten, a tow-headed, freckled and chunky lad of 13. "I saw a drunk man yesterday," observed Gunnar Matson, promptly accepting the challenge. He was a tall, handsome youth of 14, whose coat sleeves and trousers were much too short for him. "My father has a cousin who is in jail," retorted Thorsten, determined not to be beaten. "But my father killed a man in Norway,' cried Gunnar, triumphantly. ' "That's a lie in your throat" "It is no such thing." - In a flash they had both tumbled down t .,.. , -.! J I A A irom ine log, gruppieu, ana, swaying 10 nuu, fro, fought like tigers. The other boys, wnoiiy ooiivious ox, iuo prayer meeuuK, yelled with delight, and shouted encourage ment to the combatants, while the girls on -tbe steps faoad about quickly and strove no more to disguise meir iuit:rtfc. javcu uo devout people about the windows began to gravitate slowly toward the scene of the conflict, and a vague sense of the disturb ance communicated itself within the sitting room, where the penitents began to look back over their shoulders and ceased to fol low the discourse. This flattering attention spurred the boys to do their best They pulled each other's hair and ears, planted blow upon blow in each other's.foreheads, tried to "hook" each other's leers, and resorted to all the dodges recognized in the art of self-defense. But they were pretty evenly matched; Thorsten mating up in Drawn wnat ne jacszea in size, They were yet in the midst of the fierce struggle and both heroically determined not to give up when suddenly a tall matron ly woman was seen pushing her way through tbe crowd. Without undignified excitement, but with a stern, set face which was much more awful, she swooped down upon the unsuspecting Gunnar, grabbed him by the collar of his coat, shook him as if he had been a bag of straw and carried him off in disgrace. He strove in a half hearted way to exhibit a hilarity which he was far from feeling; and the forced grin of mock jollity which he turned toward the disappointed spectators was rather pathetic than cheerful. It did not occur to him to make any resistance, however. He allowed himself to be dragged meekly as a lamb through the crowd in the hall into the stuffy sitting room, where the foul air soon sobered his combative zeal. "Now,"whispered his mother'giving him a little admonitory shake, "listen to the word of God, and repent of your wicked ness." The boy tried hard to listen and still harder to repent, but, strive as he might, his thoughts would tevert to the fight He re gretted bitterly that it had been interrupted before he had triumphed oyer his enemy. He saw plainly now where he had neglected an opportunity to trip Thorsten up, and he wished he could have had the 'chance over again. The parson, in the meanwhile, was thun dering away, threatening his parishioners with eternal woe if tbey departed from tbe pure Lutheran faith or sent their children to the "godless" American schools. He was a young man of somewhat squatty figure, inclined to stoutness, with sffat, flushed face and short, stubly hands, covered on the backs with coarse brown hair. His head, too, had a dense growth of the same adorn ment, parted on the left side: but a few tufts of rebellious hair stood straight up on the crown and at the parting. Though he had Biiaveu iu hue luwiuuiK. .us uiuhu ucsru root was more than visible on his chin. His nose and mouth, too, had a touch of coarse ness, and his whole appearance made the impression of a man in whom the Old Adam was strong, though probably kept in proper discipline. "No doctrine has destroyed more souls, my brethren" thus ran his impassioned discourse "than that seductive saying, 'in vented by the devil himself, that every man is saved by his own faith that is, that any faith, whether false or true, has the power to save. Why then have ye called ministers of the true faith the pure and undiluted Lutheran faith to instruct yon here in your Babylonio exile, if Methodist or Baptist or Unitarian doctrines, perhaps, might do just as well? I declare unto you, brethren in the Lord, you are a little faithful band Of the elect in the midst oi this land, of Egyp tian darkness and unless you hold together, stand by each other and the pure Lutheran faith and hold aloof from all intercourse with the pestiferous sectories who infest the region round about us. ye will imperil your sours; satyauon. xe can ,110 longer, Inventing Under Diffleullla. GF FAIT H, plead ignorance, for I have forewarned you in the name of the lord. And beware lest, though you yonrielves remain faithful, your children go astray. Siren voices of temptation besiege their hearts from all sides. Bemember, ySu will be called to ac count for them on the last day. The pros-1 peci oi weann, political omce and influence, and a high seat in the synagogues may lure them away from tbe simple faith and simple virtues of their fathers. But I tell you, ye have to choose between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of Mammon. What will it profit yon on the last day to have been American legislators or Sheriffs or County Clerks or to have learned the English language, of which soma are so foolishly f proud what will it profit you, I ask, in the sigm oi mm wno aemandeth not foreign languages, bnt truth in the inmost parts?" The pastor continued for another half hour in this strain, warning his hearers in the most impressive language that they could not learn the English language or hold intercourse with Americans, without running a grave risr of eternal woe. He elaborated his theme with great ingenuity aud.ended with an appeal for the endow ment of a parochial school under the direct supervision and control of tbe Norwegian Iiuiherau Synod. He finished this appeal with a long and fervid prayer, in which he besought God to save his people- from the abominations of desolation, from the un hallowed and sonl-destroying dance around the Golden Calf, which was, forsooth, the god of the heretical mammon-worshiping nation wherewith it had pleased him to sur round them. The meeting was then at an end and the pastor devoted himself for another hour to private solicitation, button-holing one by and refusing to let them go, until they had 1 pledged themselves in writing for an amount which he thought fair. If anyone, knowing that his turn would tome next, tried to steal away unobserved, the zealous clergyman dexterously intercepted him, and shamed him with dppeals to his pride and his fear, until lie had contributed his quota. It was true that Gunnar's father had killed a man in Norway, and that had been the prime cause of his emi grating to the United States. He had scarcely been to blame, however, for the "homicide, for Osmund Gait had attacked him first, and he had to kill him in self-defense. So the judge declared, though he was by no means favorably dis posed toward the defendant, and Hans Mat- son was acquitted. It was, as usual, a girl that was at the bottom of the trouble, for Hans and Osmund had been aspirants for the band of Martha Vik, and she had pre ferred Hans. After his acquittal Hans bought a ticket for New York; and the story was told (though some pretended to doubt it) that Martha followed him to CfarisUania, and met him on board the steamer when land was ont of sight She was desperately in love with him, people said. However that may be, sure it was that they were married by a Lutheran missionary in 'New York, and, during the Same spring, took home stead land in Minnesota. But, some how, Hans did not turn out as good a farmer as his wife had expected. He worked by fits and starts: but was more Interested in learning English than in burning stumps. Nearly every cent he had brought with him went for live stock and agricultural imple ments, and when, after a miserable summer in a dug-out, a simple log Jiouse was com pleted, and sheds were built for the cattle, they had to mortgage the farm in order to meet expenses. Then Gunnar was born, and things went Straight' for awhile. Hans took hold of the farm work in good earnest, and met the first payment on the mortgage, but then he lapsed into meditation again and his old restlessness got the upper hand. He had an idea that, if he could break away from his countrymen and all Norse associa tions, he had a fair chance of winning fame and fortuneamong Americans.. He broached the idea cautiously to his wife, who was so terrified at it that he repented haying spoken. She tried to make him promise never to entertain such a preposterous plan. That he refused to do, however, but he grew moody and silent, tinkered at a model for an improved threshing machine which he had invented, and lost all interest in' the farm. iWhen this had gone 6n for a couple of years, Martha concluded that nis case was hopeless; and she changed her tactics and began to urge him to go. If that was the only way to se cure his happiness, she woald no longer stand in his way. And so, one day, he took the model to pieces and packed it with some clean shirts and socks, which Martha had made for him, into his knapsack and started off for the nearest railway station, which was 40 miles distant That -was the last Martha or her sea had seen of hinr. Half a deaea letters arrived to be tare, at long intervals, during the first year of; his abseseebat they te-ld ealy of mishaps, dis appeiRtmeaM and privattoas. Martha wrote sieging him to Mtara, bat there ws always something aew 'to try, always femr, . Sunday Afternoon Callert. temptis -s-restieet whieh bade him iki heart and net give up the battl. If this 3 proved delusive, he weald acknowledge.; himself a failure, return to the Norse sMl1 ment and hide nil head in we e&isuey , corner. It was no w 12 years since tfee last letter, was received, and Martha took itfer granted that her husband was dead. She had tried: to institute inquiries, advertised let bias is the Scandinavian paper, etc., bat wih ae result. Several settlers had prepesed for her hand during this time, bat; thoarh se , ,4)lwYaJ-i 1. h. if mtt m 1.M1.W alia 1.oJ w ft.A a!1 mAR.. A Um. alluM.nf WJ -. ' grown np about her, and la a circuit of 39 -or 30 miles the country was largely is Tee session of Norwegians. They did all i their power to keep ont other saUeaaSttee from their immediate neighborhood; aad vented particularly their hostility os the Irish, if a representative of that raee dag a hole in the ground and staked ont a homo stead on land which they had reserved 9ki the occupation oi their brethren is tbefaM.- German Protestants they tolerated (tfeettgfc. they were far from likine thesO: bat tie ' j community of religion restrained tfcea fire avk4IB UVSUUUCa. AJ1U. 1UUICVIG1. VZTC. OTl- A mans were no lees clannish than the Nome- a.1.a hArfillli.a A . ...M A..B.. ...at "-1 men themselves, congregating la coamaal ties of their own, and rarely frest ehelee ea- rrn&rhin? tinon StfAndlnft-vlan -nreiB!H. In the meanwhile a church had beea-i built a simple frame structure aad afceat, as ugly as could have been devised aad a clergyman had been called over fresa Nor way. An ex-theological student, samed Saiveson, formerly addicted to .drink, bat now ostensibly reformed, roamed abeat the country, giving instruction, oi an aatiaaated sort, in reading, writing. arit&iseMe aad Bible history; Widow Matson, who wm anxious to have her son profit by Salvesea's. accomplishments, induced him to stay fcrv months at a time at her farm, aadtiadly" overioosea nis aemoraiizea aspect. At was enough for her. that the pastor isdetsed Saiveson; who in spite of his unhappy pre-i clivitles was perfectly orthodox, aid tralyS and nnrelr Lutheran. Gunnar. ea tba other hand, was inclined to take a eritfeaLi view ot him, but found his instraenea. o the whole, amusintr. Salvesoa alws-va' smoked a long pipe, when be taught; aad im. rumcoaa nose gieamea through toe seseice V while he spoke of Norway's past glory sd the great deeds of the Viking. OAea bej frew quite excited, scratched hk teas ead and wiped away the tears that triekl down his cheeks. "Thank God on your knees that yea wenj born a Norseman, boy," he would say, J'Jvc fe mtivlli Itta aa wall !.- -.2 ?&- .rr.'ir:t --? vr " """"s cuia icuweaiHan ---...--- mrJ loan. We are the proudest aatiea ea i or we ought to be. if we woald jead.easr- jusioryarignt, There waaa't aayD i if isaM lick those old Vikings. "Vy tniaaiiil Normandy a mere handful of thsai aad' when tbe King of France wasted Baaaj Bollo to kiss his confounded tee thiak ef 1Iei. -wcneBaB, kiss a Freaohasan's.tea tfoiionarpiy tool: him by the teat, i quietly turned hits upside daws. Swf-aiS him right, the fool I And whea they fal a in.. a mmmi goooiea up .Trance, those very sa or I think it was their grand sailed over aad pat JBaglaad pookets. Hoi Hoi Thatwaaa wasn't it?" ia -tr And thus the poor drnskea set waaMaMl The Groeeryman MaMtt a Bm-faSn. by the hoar, and, with hysterical oleeaeaea, glory In the deeds of his ancestors. Bewaa" so proud of being a Norseaaa, thsaafc g drunk one, that he forget all preseat arimrr In the sense of his historical graa Jiar. Jj .norseman araas lie oaee deeiaMeVwaa , better fellow than a Deutoehmaa or na aas "" !:.!... a i j unuum ur u uwrnaa sooer. Gunnar accepted this aad other declarations In good faito,.aad never aass tioned hiown superiority, by virtae m MS' 3 xiorae Diooa. to ail toe RreigaBaattlMt surrounded him. He heard eeatiaaelty the . same story from the pastor and all e 5 neignoors. Anecdotes were told at social gathering, Illustrating the' greed of the Americans, aad their scrupulous attempts to cheat the immigrants, The settlement, wteeh now large and prosperous, had a ssasn t coaiortaoie solidarity and c a snug little Norway, safely : eeawnrtsuss, i hedisd Jm diked against the wild oeeaa of strife and viae, which roared ia vaia i its aeienses. Gunnar lived la this state of idylHe I faction, untiLhe was 17 years oW. At 1 he tried bard to persuade himself Mm7! was content. And yet there weald he itfa whea a sadden disgust woald possess hies,' and the fatare that was in stare far would seem pitiless aad seas. Thsah" hall superstitions dread of the great that surrounded him had beea kapteswdf upon him from his earliest years, aad i of disaster consequent upoa a desire to plore it, had been dinned lute bis , could not suppress a restless take tbe daairenras plauee: If asW t hia skill as a swimmer. The great deadtfa' his ancestors, whien Halvesea had i to him in more or less distorted had set his blood coartlBg at a tempo; and vague visions of glery, j and substantial like eloads at a flamed his liaaffiaatieB. Bat ea the hand there was his father's isteto him. Outwardly thiaes were ceta smoothly enough. The widow f-dfM.'i tireless energy ana sciii na wercea i farm until it tea mem comtortaMy; naapua ob xae montage, aer a cernnowwHte get Gnanaf saiWr i or at bast engaged. Ha was, to 1m veryyoaag; bat net too yoaa to -rasrae aertsrbatioa e-f his Need at m cfa pretty glrL The mat tUafmal nuaseearety aaeaasac; aaa as a W9 B fOaraWM CBVyVanHVaa alBV f uat avaUM tiatK a win aad 1 U.HhHLiZ Kl'taaaaBBBBBBBBBBaV IsV