?- ' 4.S 'J . ( to. -. .- ' ? 'V&rwfirostMi 4 Hd?! - -'"Ac- THE i r- Ji. --ir - - , . U 1 wl A -,.'' 1-lWeV- .. SECONDyPARL i-ii.-iA ri ,m t J r ft m M m K "ft M r A' . " ( A POPULAR CQBNER, Something Afcont Ihe Visitors to the Postoffice Gorridors. STARTING A LETTER ON ITS WAT. Troubles of the Stamp and Delivery Window Cleiks. DECLllfE OP THE SPECIAL DELIFEET rwnrmjr roa tb niErjiTcn.i HBOUGH the cramped corridors of that section of I he queer old Government uilding devoted to the Post Office, flows an in- -reasing stream of people, nd the tread of many feet has worn great ridges in the stone steps, and even the pavement which serves ns approaches. It is a simple truism to say that Post Office Corner js the most fre quented and central location in Pittsburg. The" tide of humanity ebbs and flows through qneerold SmithCeld stne audJFifth avenue archways of ancient color and graceful-curves from early morn till dewy eve. Appointments' of all kinds are made and kept; marketers catch widely diverging car lines by making use of the postoffice as a "terminal; box owners rnsh in furtively'and -glance through the glass for the letters that seem so slow in coming that they never ar rive, "hundreds of young people meet in the corridors quite by accident; the public in general rushes in to start the machinery ot the mails freighting Uncle Sam with hopes, fears, bids tor fortune, news of families and individuals, in a word, their inner selves concealed onlv by a thickness of paper. But above all is the Tery apparent fact that the zMs B2.aaL t cH.tL.y .ii'THs. SZ!?2S BOXES TnEOUOU WHICH 4,000,000 BETTERS FLOW AX2TOALLT. floating population of this big city rotates 'around this center. An astonishingly large percentage of the oul-of-door population of the city passes through the postoffice corridors. Some have some distinct business, others wander around the office countless times a day, jnst as it they could lay claim to business connections of ttje highest character through affecting dealings with so honorable an old gentle man as Uncle Sam; much upon the same principle that a man will dine in the Bowery on n 20-cent basis and adjourn to the steps of the Astor House with a tooth pick adjunct and a well-led expression. A EtrSHINO TIDE. . But there is -by no means a marked Tamount of Idling in Mhe -corridors. Xonr - average Pittsburg business -man docs not " allow his heels to cool very much. The stream of these gentlemen actually pours Ovmet: "GtmmeaZteo-CenlStamp,' outg&ud in the archways all day long. Mes sengers and young clerks dive through the crdwd with bundles of mail matter or pack ages. Greetings are exchanged, hands hastily pressed, hats raised to pretty women for the fair sex is constantly represented. Acquaintances pass the compliments ot the day and season, and unless limited to the simplest salutations, busy people elbow you, walk on vonr pedal pets or sweep you around with scan test ceremony. The post office corridors contain the most kaleidosco pTccrowd to be fonnd in the two cities. In. -this connection the figures on the amount of business done by the departments coming in direct contact with the public, arc indicative of an-amount of postal busi ness which a few cities, like Cincinnati, St. Xouis. or Kansas Citv. would do well to equal, and can never beat Taking up the I lure slots, turougn.wnicn rittsDurg s letter mail is sent, some interesting computations can be made by anyone with a genius for statistics. There are five 'of these orifices wHcbjyawn unceasingly and cry, like the daughters of the Horseleech for more. The length of each orifice is eight inches, undi a width of an inch or so. Byv way of facilitating the proper separa tion'or the mail matter into sections ot the country or tbe universe to be reached, the postal authorities have neat signs over fonr of.the boxes indicating the points of the compass. The first box to the left is "South," then comes "Uorth," then "East," then VWest," the two last boxes getting, as ajmatter of course, the bnlcof the mail. "Withfits usual discriminating intelligence tbVpublic generally obeys the mute behest aid'drop' letters accordingly. Those who sdfop a letter to Chicago in the Bast box -" would be surprised to know how much in- ' convenience it causes the clerks on the in side. So that quiet transmission is really subserved by attention to the implied re Through these cardinal point boxes an enormous amount of mail flows. Superin tendent of Mails Stephen Collins hauled out a big book, and after some rapid marks with a pencil, said tnai in w uiuum u ocptcui ber the daily average of letters -was 90,000. On the customary asis of 50 letters to the pound, nearly a ton of letters found its way toithi. inrf?irff ihi. offiee In every 24 hours. kiHardlvlossimportantrethe twoalotsof r'""TMWf .:. thmnirli irli if h ECW1D2 tiers HMtHtH , M.r-- J -i i and small parcel ate dropped into the maws of the postal. There it also a small window adjacent I through which larger parcel are received. a-uu jjujuuu w4 we amp fflau ucpatuucui i- erages 1,500 pounds of mail matter received per diem. THE SPECIAL DELIVERY. The special delivery box is a law unto itself. This branch of the quick transmis sion of mails idea started out several years since with a great flourish of trumpets and really enjoyed desultory popularity. But for wme reason it has steadily retrogressed in its employment as a means of transporta tion of messages. Not over 175 letters per diem are dropped into the box at present, and it is understood that this state of affairs is noticed all over the country. Collec tions are .made from the box every half hour, and the special messenger boys are under strict injunctions not to tarry by the wayside while en route with the aecellerated missives. Despite every effort to push the service it is steadily declining in patronage. An expert in human nature says that one reason why the district messenger boy is, the favorite emissary for sadden or impor tant message, is because the person who sends the letter can wait around until the 4LJ5L3M. A btceet Applteantfor JiaiU f(Big5)5)g5 boy returns -and then ascertain accurately just how the addressed party -received the missive. Especially is this said to be a cor rect hypothesis when the sender is a young man and the receiver a young woman, or vice versa. Bnt this is coBJecture. How ever, there is no doubt of the decadence of a system which a capricious public clamored for rigorously, hailed with satisfaction and wearied of eventually. The chief place of interest in the corri dors of the postoffice is the stamp window. The dark, good-natured man who passes out the stamps so expertly and makes change so affably is Mr. L. Cells. He is a long Buffering employe of the Government, and nas aoont as lively a time passing out an cqniyalent-for -the $1,200 he handles every day as could be imagined. Some of the stamp combinations thrown at him would baffle the most expert mathematician. Here is one taken at random from the calls which come every five seconds in the course of the day: "Give me 31 2-cent, 1 10-cent, 6 postal cards, 1 stamped envelope, 2 lettersheets and the rest in 1-cent stamps," says a breathless individnal balancing a dollar of onr daddies on the abbreviated counter. The problem is 31 2-cent, 62; 1 10-cent, 72; 6 postal cards, 78; 1 stamped en velope, 81; 2 letter sheets, 87, 13 1-cent stamps rounding up the dollar. Bnt the stamp, seller has the goods piled in tne cus tomer's hand and the dollar iu the drawer before the traditional "Jack Bobinson" could be said. His mental arithmetic seems entirely infallible, and when change is involved in the transaction the money and the stamp appear with truly MARVELOUS RAPIDITY. The large majority of stamps sold are 2 cent. A great maur 5-cent stamps are sold he'e for foreign mail, .a stamp of that de nomination taking a half ounce of letter material anywhere in Asia. If the letter exceeds halfan ounce in weight the foreign countries light onto it for the extra postage. The letter must be of exact weight for trans mission to Australia, a 12 good cents is what the service demands. The 3-cent letter-sheet, which is a sheet of note paper and a stamped envelope com bined, is a highly ingenions postal device for which the last national administration was responsible, but it has never had any share of popular iavor for some unexplained reason. The sheets were not printed by the Government, but by a private firm which furnished the sheets to the Government and awaited the results on the sales. The latter have not been a remarkable financial achievement. The inventor of the device was smart enough to secure a fat sum from the firm which went into the scheme and has since doubtless had occasion to congrat ulate himself udoq his sagacity. One of the most interesting features of the arrangement of the corridor are the lock boxes, of which there are 1,022. There never were any call lock boxes in the PitU- UnOe Sam Conngning Oeait-Lettert to the Grave. burg Postoffice, that idea pertaining ex clusively to the bucolic mail service. The revenue to tfce Government from the local lock bores is a trifle over $8,000 per annum. Very few of the above number are emptv, as there is a slowly increasing demand tor private repositories of mail matter, which has been heretofore met by the extra bores, a nice adjustment of demand and supply! The carrier service extensions are thought to be the means of keeping the lock box de mand at a normal basis. It is a singular fact that the, only cities in America having more lock boxes than Pitts burg are New York and Chicago. Cities of Pittsburg's size or even above it, have far less lock boxes. Officials attribute this to conservatism, arguing that' Plttsbnrgere cling with great tenacity to eU customs. The possibility of confusion of Yale keys or the chance of duplication and robbery of boxes was mentioned to Mr. Collins, who stated that even if a key was lost it would be a pretty hard thing for if an evil-minded person was to seenre a lost key he would have no chance of trying the fit without arousing suspicion. The Yale Company makes special numbers for postoffices and no one but the postmaster could order a duplicate of a box key intelligently by the record kept of each .box and number of key. A box-owner could ofcourse, order a duplicate by simply using the nnmber stamped upon the key. But, as he vfould be the only one who would know which box the key fitted the seal ot secrecy would remain intact, the scheme of parties renting boxes and corresponding without the use of postage by means of duplicate keys, is sometimes tried, bnt not often. The use of canceled stamps was not much of a success, either. Ko matter how clever the removal "of the canceling stamp, it was a pretty hard thing to eradicate the ink, espe cially1 the kind now in use, which is printers' ink and "permeates," as Louis Harrison says in the "Pearl of Pekin." Uncle Sam is not asleep, and the penalty of three years in the penitentiary is too severe to warrant any infractions of the laws against defrauding the Government of post age. There are 70 newspaper lock boxes, which front upon the corridor leading to the up stairs of the building. Many of them are filled four or five times a day, which be tokens the importance of the Pittsburg pa pers upon the exchange lists of the journals ot the nation. THE GENERAL DELIVERY. The general delivery windows are the cen ters of a large amount of attention, almost exclusive in fact, from the floating popula tion of the city. Hundreds of people who are in Pittsburg only for a few days have their mail sent to the general delivery, not desiring to have it sent to boarding houses or hotels. In a general way, however, all undirected mail goes o the carriers, who try to locate the owner. Failing the letters go to the directory clerk whose duty it is to try and find the addresses of people not in the directory. If the carrier fails to locate a letter he stamps it as follows: "Have your mail addressed to street and number." Then the diiectory clerk ruts on the folllowing inscription: "Not in Directory." Then the letter goes to the general delivery boxes,of which therearenp ward of 200, for all possible snbdivisions of the alphabet and first syllables of names. There are about 4,000 letters carried in ibe general delivery. If a letter remains in the boxes a week without being called for it is advertised. Two weeks are given the owner to call for bis property, and at the expira tion of that time the letter is sent to the Dead Letter Office. Does TJncle Sam shed tears, one wonders, as he empties sack after sack of moribund letters into his little postal cemetery? Hon many hopes, aspirations, checks to tide over financial crisis, and other important or vital matters have been sum marjly buried? As a result of advertising, an average of one-tenth of the letters are reclaimed. As for applicants for letters, there are at least 1,000 s day, many of whom come back time atter time with blank despair written in every feature. Others, again, come up smiling every day and never get a letter in the course of the year. It's a capital place to study human nature. The most pro nounced nuisance with which the clerk has to contend is the man who insists that the United States postal department is all wrong and that he,'s all right There is some epistolary flirtation inci dental to every postoffice, and Pittsburg is no exception. Finely dressed young girls perfectly -sell known to'the clerk, come up to the wiuqow and ask for some name noth ing like her, own. .There it, of course, no option but to deliver the" letter, but some times the clerks exercise a wholesome dis cretion in soarine away the would-be fair offender against propriety in correspondence. Many women come to the window and call for letters in three or four names. Very re cently orders were issued against this prac tice, and the supposition is that the ukase emanated from the good and great Mr. "Wananiaker, who is, despite misleading reports, as smart as any ot the balanced the politicians and rounders. "When the postoffice has four times as much room as at present, in the new build ing, it will be pleasanter for Uncle Sam's Pittsburg mail service employes. "Wales. THE AMEKICAK LION. Peculiarities of n Savace Beast That In habit the Far West. Chambers' Journal. The mountain lion of North America is one of the most dangerous of the wild ani mals which are fonnd in the mountains of the Par West. Althongh called a lion, yet this animal bears no resemblance to the African lion except so far a its fierceness is concerned. It really belongs to the same family as the wildcat or catamount, but is of much greater size, gen erally being about as large in bodyand limb as a full-grown sheep dog. It is rarely seen in the vicinity of settlements except driven thither by hunger, when it will attack cattle, sheep, horses, or poultry, and at times human beings. But, as a general thing, if not molested, it will not attack human beings, though, it wounded, there is no animal which will make a more desper ate fight, regardless of consequences. It cannot oe driven off from an attack as long as life lasts; it must be killed to be beaten. Its chief peculiarity is its cry, which the most experienced hunter has at times mistaken lor the wail of a child in distress. This feature makes the beast more dangerous, especially if he should establish his lair in the vicinity of a settlement, be cause, unless a person is an old-timer, he will be deceived by that cry whenever he hears it. It is the most perfect imitation of a child's wail of lament I ever heard, more perfect than the cleverest mimic could ntter. HE HAER0WLI ESCAPED P0TEETI. A California Millionaire's Experience In a New York Hotel. It does not seem easy to realize how cheaply you live in California until you have tried some of the Eastern hotels, says the San Francisco Chronicle. E. J. Baldwin went to a, hotel jip New York for a rest. He was only go ing to stay a few hours in town. It was about 3 o'clock when he registered, and he wanted to take a little sleep before he was called at 10. The gentlemanly clerk recognized the name and the man, and looked pleased to have a whack at the long purse of the California millionaire. Bald win had several hours' sleep and was called at 10 o'clock as ordered. He went to the office and asked for his bill. It was handed to'him S30.V Mr. Baldwin looked at it. "I am very much obliged to"yon for wak ing ma at 10 o'clock." "Why?" ' "If I had slept a few hours more it would have busted me." 1 . Pan tbo 1'le. Detroit Tree Press. The Bev. Joseph Cook says: "Beware of the nation which does not eat pies." Come to think of it, the nations which don't care for pies, are great on revolutions, loose in their morals, and are gradually degenerat ing in rank as war powers. It takes mince pie to keep a nation in the front rank. A Concrecatlea ef One. Lewlston Journal. 1 The Ellsworth American puts it mildly jvnen it says mil ise resident Binuier at IslejaVXaut'is "very4perseWring."' OHi recent Sunday evening he held a service with onlj'histeelf ad settaa 'mreseat. "' PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, A HPSKHG KOMANCE. Finding a Bed Ear Compels a Pretty Vermont Girl 6 Decide BETWEEN TWO EAGER. SOITOES. She Had Promised That Her Answer Should be a .Kiss. HlGtfFOK AT A TEEM02JT HUSKHTG BEE (connESroirnsxcE or rax dispatch.: Lahe St. Catherine, Vt., November 30. "Dancing in the barn" has been a fa vorite fashionable diversion in the society that spells its name with a capital S ever since Mrs. Vanderbilt gaye the initiative barn ball at Newport, and Lenox hastened to seal the ceremony with the sign of popu lar approval, but no swell stable festival could equal in picturesque effects and genu ing enthusiasm the series of old-fashioned harvest revels and husking-bee carnivals that have been given here during the past month. Mrs. "Vanderbilt requested her guests to leave their dia'monds at home, we are informed. The country maidens haven't any to bring; but they don't need them, lor glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes, laugh ing red lips and shining tresses that all the Newport diamonds could not buy or lease, need no adorning; while shy, sweet grace of bearing, and the quaint dignity of unaf fected simplicity in demeanor lend to gingham gown and calico frock a piquant charm and beantv. Over the dun, barren fields, through the rustling golden glory of fallen leaves, and beneath the soft splendor of the late Octo ber moon the country lads and lasses hasten to the hnskings with swift and willing steps. One, two, and even tbree miles they walk, though horses stand idly in the stables, for who would ride when the jol liest part of the whole proceeding is the walk home with your best girl after it is over, and the lingering good night at the gate? The yellow corn shocks are piled high against the old barn walls, where, 'in swaying festoons of aromatic cedar, lanterns flash out of the dark and make heavy shadows on the bright flushed faces of the metry workers; fringes and tassels of pine droop from the dark brown rafters, and through it all subtle sweet odors drift from the hay mow, whose summit is lost in the gables. High up in a corner of the peaked roof is fastened a wreath of cedars, where never a girl wonld dream one would be hung, and if any unsuspecting maiden ven tures unconsciously beneath it, or is in veigled by some mischievous youth into its vicinity, she pays a mistletoe-bough penalty to whatever swain happens to be quickest at her side. A KISS TO BE PRIZED. How the sweet, glad voices ring thron'jh the rustling of the dry stalks as swift brown fingers strip the hnsks away and toss the ears over their shoulders into golden, glow ing heaps, which the men carry away in baskets! What a shout and mad chase when the red ear is found, and the fleet footed finder rnns from her pursuers, brand ishing it aloft, and how graciously and sweetly, when .the race is over, she lifts her moist, warm lips to the swiftest runner in a kiss that is a kiss, with a smack to it that you can almost taste yourselt the other side of the room I And when the work is done how quickly room is made for the, long, table, improvised out of barrels and boards; where jugs of cjder, heaped-up plate..ofbrowndongh-. nuts, great square tins of pumpkin pies, and piles of red and yellow apples are placed, while crazy seats of cornstalks accommodate the guests, who are served from the plenteous store! "We reverse the conventional order of proceedings hereand, instead of a lot of stupid men tearing dis tractedly about the table and spilling most of the viands they try to secure for their ladies, the- men are seated themselves, and the light-footed maidens, with their de.t, skillful hands, serve them, and afterward sit down beside them to share the feast. Once it is dispatched, men and maidens alike help to clear the floor, the fiddler mounts a rickety platform, and all join in the old fashioned country dances with the joyous abandon of children until the moonbeams get tangled in the distant treetops, and warn them that it is time to pair off, like birds in if ay, and start on tbe long walk toward home. But of all the frolics Farmer Jenkins' husking bee the other night was the rollick ingest, jolliest, merriest and gayest. In the first place, the farmer has the biggest barn and the best cider and the prettiest daugh ter in the whole township, and, in the sec ond place, his wife makes the sweetest doughnuts and the thickest pumpkin pies and the richest molasses cake ot anyone near here. And, in addition to all these attractions, a pretty little romance was brought to a charming finale in a most original and quaint manner just before the husking was done. A. RURAL BELLE. Janie Jenkins is a most bewitching bun dle of willful womanhood, with delicious, demure little ways that win your heart, but with a certain still proud dignity that com mands your respect If ever stp lifts her long, dusky lashes and reveals the wistful depths of her -wonderful eyes, you feel like taking her in your arms as you would a baby that is sobbing; but if you so much as touch the tips of her fingers she flashes a look of scornful defiance from those same depths that would right about face u whole regiment of men. Even In her childhood's merry games of forfeits no daring rustic laddie ever .presumed to claim his rightful kiss from Janie, for she didn't believe in kissing and nonsense and would have none of it, but she was a blythe, brave, bonny little maiden, who knew hnw in Kteer hn- own sled down the sparkling snow crust inv. winter and sail ner own crazy skin over the waves in summer, and thought no more of going out in the pasture to catch and mount the vixenish, perverse little mare she would persist in riding (though not a man on the place could handle her) than other girls think of picking a bonquetof roses for their corsage. Everyone felt a little bitof awe in Janie's presence, even the old biddies who knew she never would amount to anything because she would not learn to bake and brew; and the honest country boys who admired her afar off, and, flushed with strange, eager joy, they couldn't understand when she smiled, on them. But there was one person who wasn't afraid of Miss Janie, and that was Harrison "Wilkins, whose mother's farm joined her father's, and who took her out in her little cart on the first journey she ever made in this world, when she was six weeks and he was 6 years old. It ws Harrison who carried her little shiny dinner pail to school when she went to learn her a b c's; who taught her how to steer the sled and sail the boat; who bnried her kitten when it died; who helped her break the spirit of tbe fractious mare, and showed her how to sit the saddle firmly and hold the bridle well down in her firm little hand. It was HarrisOn who took her where the first May flowers came in the springtime; who showed her where the first straw berries ripened in Jnne, and who shook .the, first chestnuts down for her in October; who .helped her with her sums in arithmetic and fought her bat tles and who never feared or heeded her pretty imperious ways at all. Perhaps it was the care that his father's death brought to him as a child that developed his Strength and firmness and fearlessness; perhaps it was only the dignity of his great love 'for Janie, that made him her master. "Theday thev burled the kitten he'told ber at to. cry, Sbr"he Would "be Ills little Wife oase'dav; nndwhea:f she indigantlyHise hw yowj nevet.'Bever'to be anyWdy Vwile, JnljJ DECEMBER 1, 1889. laughed and said, "That's all right, Janie for now, but you'll change your mind some day." ?tri& CITX" LOVER. Every one in "Wilton thought Janie and Harrison were to be married that is every one but Janie when there came upon the scene Adolphus Comstock from a distant city, who was the son of her father's oldest friend. He came for the fishing and the sketching, bnt he stayed for something else. He knew women only through the con ventional formal medium of society, and was such an exasperatingly and indifferent cynical creature that he piqued most wfimen into displaying their frivolous and least attractive characteristics to him. He cared more for his pointers than for his sister's chattering friends; for a trout brook, his rod and flies, than any moonlight excursion or picnic, with a galaxv of pretty girls who must be waltzed with and talked with. But Janie knew the favorite haunts of the speckled beauties herself and could give him points on the fishing question beside. Harrison hai taught her.. She could pull herv skiff steadily and still to where schools of bass hid in the cool waters of the lake, and land the gamiest of them without a scream, and when she cleared a five-rail fence on the wicked little pony which he had seen her saddle and mount, his respect grew into wondering, piquant interest- He liked the proud reserve witn which this little rural beauty met his advances, the pretty scornful curl of the red lips at his finest compliments, and the haughty poise of the small head as her eyes flashed" cnarming negatives to his proposals. He fancied what a wonder she wonld be once she learned her power; what a queenly beauty in the apparel which his wealth could give her; what a strong tender woman, once her spirit were broken, and her heart melted. Harrison looked on grimly at all this wooing, ground his teeth sometimes as she rode bv with the handsome stranger on the horse he taught her how to ride, but al ways smiled at last in confident content, and said to. himself: "She will flirt with that city chap to the end of the chapter, but she wJlLbe my wife at last" He told her so the day of the husking, when he was help ing her fasten the cedar festoons. Her face was temptingly near his as she raised it to lift to him some moroof the greens, and they were just beneath the kissing wreath, too, but when he would have claimed his just and lawful dues she stopped him witn a pretty protesting "please," and as she turn ed ber flushed face away he could see tbe full white throat quiver a little as with a sudden contraction, and the lips trembled strangely. They were all alone in the big, fragrant place just for a minute, and be stooped suddenly and caught her with a noose of the green rope he was draping, and asked if she hid forgotten that she was to be his wife some day, and when, instead of the usual protest, she only laughed and told him softly that when she was quite sure she was ready she would give him the kiss she owed him, he freed her and went on with his hammering and whittling. AT XHE HUSKING DEE. That had been a trying day for Janie. She had helped her mother with the baking and her father with the barn decoration. She had ridden twice into the village for some forgotten ingredient needed for the mysterious processes going on in the big, sweet pantry, and, worse than all the rest Adolphus Comstock had proposed to her in the little parlor, where she sat polishing the Bcarlet apples for the supper. It was all so sudden, and everything was in such a flutter that she'didn't know what she had told him, but was dimly conscious of turning away her face whence would have kissed her, and faltering out something, about her giving him he kiss some time when she was sure .she anld.be. all.frvhjtu that-he asked ,her to be Janie was horribly afraid that night as ibe tbpugbt it all over, while she braided her long, glossy hair into a coronet for her graceful little head, that she had half promised to marry two men, and the worst of it was she didn't quite know which one she did care most for. It was too bad of Harrison to say what he did when she had so much to do and no time to think it out at all, and after she had had one proposal. But already the people were coming, and there was no time to think then, so she flew into a dark blue gingham , dress, with a broad collar turned back from her 'soft, white throat, and knotted with scarlet rib bons, tied a red apron around her trim waist, and tripped lightly down -the stairs and through the moonlight to the barn, where she met her guests with her merry, glad greeting, and there seated herself on a big corn shock, with her small, shapely head outlined against the yellow corn heap at ber back, and hot blushes sweeping over her face- Something evidently was the matter with Janie, for the lithe, brown hands that usually were swiftest of all at tbe work trembled provokinglv as she tore the yellow husks away, with the soft eyelashes resting against her warm, flushed cheeks. Such a laugh as arose when Janie of all others found the first red ear, bnt the girl herself grew strangely pals for an instant; then with a bound she flew as fleetly as a deer round and round the room, in and out among the workers. One by one the pur suers all dropped out ot the race, except Harrison and Adolphus.. The people knew pretty well the state of affairs between the three, and watched with breathless interest the result of the race, which seemed to them significant and prophetic. A KISS AITS A BBXDE The girl's steps grew slower.and at length, finding herself in a corner, she cangbt at one of the festoons and half climbed, half drew herself up to the top of the great corn heap, where she poised turned, and faced them like a frightened bird in a snare. Adolphus wonld have dashed up after her, bnt Harrison pnt his big brown hand com mandincrlv on the other's shoulder and bade him wait. "TTnw. .Tanfe. "he said, in the oliLl confident, sweet tone, "come down and taKek your pick." ' Just for a second she waited, but in that fatal second came back to her all the years of sweet companionship, of helpfulness and trust. "Why, of course she couldn't live without hicq; of course she was to be his wife some day, of conrse she belonged to him hadn't'he always said so, even by the kitten's grave, and just then the corn shack she stood on gave a great slide, and, with out any effort of her own, she-was in his arms, and everybody was cheering and shouting in the place. And right in the midst of it all didn't Harrison say with a triumphant gleam in his flashing eyes, "I told you so, Janie; and now for the kiss." She lifted the shadowy lashes just for a second, with a look in her eyes that made the big, strong fellow feel as weak as a woman, and kissed him softly once, twice, thrice, before them all. Then she ran away, and he couldn't get near her again, until after the tables were cleared ana the danc ing was to begin. The stranger disappeared, and no one could find him at the supper, bnt when the long lines of Virginia reel had been formed he mounted the quicklr improvised plat form, took Harrison's violin, bade him go and find Janie to lead tbe dance, and then he played such music as our people never heard before, and watched Janie trip down the center with both small hands held fast and hidden in, hei' lover's broad brown ones. The next morning be went away, and there's to be a wedding on Christmas, and he says hek coming back to play while Janie leads the dance again. .Laurel. A Trat hi si FJibcrmatt. Trojr Press, l Isaac T. Baker, -of Comstocks, father of Eallroad Commissioner Isaac V.Baker, Jr., tell a new story to his friends. He saldr -"I'm over 70 years of agej and soman has eyersbaywa'we. Never Kfired a, pistol, or, Kara wwjK mj- AiMS.t 3A yv WJ m(Dii vw wM. ' Tlwrt ww a eod.-aM the ftany MIw wm sagtirtdJtoewfliasrasBiiiffcT CHAPTEB I. It had grown dark on Burnt Ridge. Seen from below, the whole serrated crest that had glittered in the sunset as if its inter stices were eaten by consuming fires, now closed up its ranks of blackened shafts and became again harsh and somber chevanx de frise against the sky. A faint glow still lingered over the red valley road as if it were its own reflection, rather than any light from beyond the darkened ridge. Evening was already creeping up out of remote canons and along the furrowed flanks of the mountain, or settling on the nearer woods with the slow home-coming of innumerable wings. At a point where the road began to encroach npon the mountain side in its slow winding ascent the darkness had become so real that a young girl ca nter ing along the rising terrace found difficulty in guiding her horse, with eyes still dazzled by the sunset fires. In spite of her precautions, the animal suddenly shied at some object in the ob scured roadway, and nearly unseated her. The accident disclosed not only the fact that she was riding in a man's saddle, but a foot, and ankle that her ordinary walking dress was too short to hide. It was evident 'that her equestrian exercise was extempore, and that at that hour on the road she had not ex pected to meet company. Bafshe was ap parently a good horsewoman, for the mis chance that might have thrown a less.prac tical or more timid rider seemed of little moment to -her. "With a strong hand and determined gesture she wheeled her fright ened horse back info the track and rode him directly at the" object. But there she her self slightly recoiled for it was thebodyof a man lying in the road. As she leaned forward over ber horse's shoulder she could see by the dim light that he was a miner, and that, though motion less, he wjs breathing stertorously. Drunk, no doubt! an accident of the locality alarming only to her horse. But although she cantered impatiently forward, she had not proceeded 100 yards before the stopped reflectively and trotted back again. He-had not moved- She could now see that his head and shoulders were covered with clods of eartli and gravel, and smaller frag ments lay at hi' side. A dozen feet above him on the hillside there, was a loot-trail which ran parallel with the bridle-road? and occasionally overhung it. It seemed possi ble that he might have fallen from the trail Hand been stunned. ' Dismounting. sne succeeded in dragging him to a safer position by the bank; -The act discovered his face, which was young and unknown lo her. Wiping it with be .; $fcjtJiatgj-flift..iig5 SHE COULD SEE BY THE JM silk handkerchief which was loosely slung around his neck after the fashion of his class, she gave a quick feminine glance around her and then approached her own and rather handsome face near his lips. There was no odor of alcohol in the thick and heavy resDiration. Mounting- again, she rode forward at an increased pace, and in 20 minutes had reached a higher tableland of the mountain, a cleared opening ia the forest that showed signs of careful cultiva tion, and a large, rambling, yet picturesque looking dwelling, whose unpainted red wood walls were hidden in roses and creep ers. Pushing open a swinging gate, she en tered the inclosure as a brown-faced man, dressed as a vaquero, came toward her as.if to assist her to alight. But she bad al ready leaped to the ground and thrown him the reins. "Miguel," she said with a mistress' quiet authority in her boyish contralto voice, "pnt Glory in the covered wagon, and drive down the road as far as the valley turning. There's a man lying- near the right bank,' drunk, or sick, maybe, or perhaps crippled by a fall. Bring him up here, ualess some body has found him already, or you happen to know who he is and where to take him." .The vaquero raised, his shoulders, half in deprecation, half in disappointed expecta-' tion of some other command. "And your brother, senora, he has not himself ar rived." A light shadow of impatience crossed her face. "No," she said bluntly. "Come, be quick." She turned toward tne house as the saan moved away. Already a gaunt-looking pld man had appeared in the porch, and was awaiting her with his hand shadowing hisi angry, suspicious eyes, and his lips, awfin querulously. , "Ofcourse, you've got to stand oat tfcre. aad give orders, and 'tend to year own fcaaaVi nets afore yoa think a-' saiaainc to yosa". owa Asta aad blood," fe aaM aaariavaoly . "Ifcat'sallyeaeawr ttwaWasfekaMai Msia , S3 .,, ; 1 ,- , sairMMstluaiHit far k - --- i mm urlitw w rl A 1 sV - turned the girl, with a certain conteajKious' resignation. h g "Oh, yes," struck in another voicafwhich. seemed to belong to the femalpfthe first speaker's species, and to be its equal in age and temper; "and I reckon you saw a jar bird on a tree or a squirrel on the fence, and either of 'em was more important to yon than your own brother." "Steve didn't come by the stage and didn't send any message," continued the young-girl, with the same coldly resigned manner. "No one had any news of him, and, as I told you before, I didn't expect any." 4'Why don't yon say right out you didn't want any?" sai(Hbe old man, sneeringly. "Much you inquired! Nb;I orter her gone myself, .and a would it I was master here, instead"of me and your mother beia the dust of ihe yearth beneath jour feet." The'young girl entered th'e honse.followed by, ihe old man, passing an old woman sealed by the window, who seemed to be nurslne'her resentment and a larze Bible. 'which she held clasped against her shawled bosom, at the same moment Going to the wall she hung up her large hat and slightly shook the red dust from her skirts as she continued her explanation in the same deep voice, with a certain monotony of logic and possibly of purpose and practice also. "You" and ofher know as well a I do, father, that Stephen ia no more to be de pended upon than tbe wind that blows. It's three years since he set foot here it's three years since be has been promising to come, and. even getting money to come, and yet he has Beyer showed his face, though he has been a dozen limes within five miles of this house. He doesn't come, because he doesn't want to come. As fo your coin; over ia the riage office, I went there myself at tbe last moment to save you the mortification "of asking Questions of strangers that they know have been a dozes time answered. already." There wa3 such a ring of absolate truth fulness, albeit worn by repetition, ia tbe young girl's deep honest voice that for one instant her two more emotional relatives quailed before it; but only for a asosaent. "That'gight!" shrilled the old wonan. "Go oa and abuse your own brother. It's only the fearyou have that he'll make his fortune yet and shame you before the father and mother you despise." The yotafig girl remained standing by tbe window, motionless and apparently passive, as if receivingan accepted aad usual pun ishment Bnt here the elder woman gave way te sebtjwid smerincfceret anatliBg, atVEioli the jortlferiwift away. Whether LIOHT THAT HE WAS A MINES. she recognized in her mother's tears the or dinary deliquescence of emotioa, or whether, aa a woman herself, she knew that this Mere feminine conventionality could notpowlblv ,be directed at her, and that the actual coa- met netweea mem naa eeasea, sne paesea slowly on to an inner hall, leaving the male victim, her unfortunate &tber, ia sacenmb, as he always did sooner or-ltr, to their j a fluence. Crossing the hall, which wss deco rated with a few elk horns, Indian trophies and mountain pelts, she entered another room and closed the doer behind, her with a gesture of.relfef. The rooea, which looked upon a perch, presented a riagnlar combination of jaasca lino, business occupations and feminine taste and a&rameat. A desk covered with papers, a shelf displaying a ledger aad ac count books, anotherseontaiaing works of reference, a table with a vase of fewer and a lady's riding whip upon it, a Map of California laaked on either side by aa esa breidered silken workbsg aad aa oval mir ror deeked with grasses, a calendar aad interest-table hanging below two schoolgirl craysas of classio heads, with the legend, "Josephine Forsyth fecit" were -part of its iaeoagraeas accessories. The yeaag girl went to her desk, bnt-preseatlr moved and tarcea toward the window taoaghtfally. The last gleam had died from the steel-blue sky; a few lights like star paints began to prick eat the. lower valley. The expression of BaeateBoas restraint aad asriaraaee had aat yat-faeM from her fee. Yet she had Veen aeeastomd to scenes llke,tfe sue she bad lost passes! throagh slaee her girlhood, five years ago Alex aadacXorsftb, her ancle, had broaghther totaaaspet then a mere fee; aafcia on the bHlstie ft arefage front ttia iasaarfarisMd tmm,-turn ot oa asjwr taatnar and hi Ul-temperwt 'wtts. Here. J?orsyta by: reason ec atrnwra afeafaataraad Imafaa eayasiay. a nati jggfe 'i MmiiiMM mmm r- between the' Brothers,. Josephine ?; her position is the heart aad home' of '1 uncle withoat espousing- the cause 'Tot either; and her father-was too pradeataetr to recognize the near and prospective ai?f vantages of such a mediator. Aecnstosll to her parent's extravagant denunciations, and her uncle's more, repressed bnt practi-sal! contempt of thenr, ihe nxtfortnnate' girl early developed a c-rnlcal disbelief ia th virtues of kinship in tbe abstract, sad as' er personally; Believing that her ftej auu uocie lairiy represented taainrteraM accredit calmly. True to - ttrfinitaj-, 'rst justice, which, she had ereets tn?crumblls2 ruins of her own A. iliAr, she was. tolerant of ererythin? batici JHalto-her higher growth, had gi-MsnM?a) Peculiar capacity for business whMs'ia3 tmmu UUIEKUUU .AIM UU2I1IT. HflWOarMr-i ;uearea ner to ber uncle. iramuis wftktM strong passions and prejudices of mkSHS naa none of these feminine me! wholesome distrust of tMphrinritept'im therefore, that when be died, twawsanKSM it was found that he had left her iiifi property, real and personal, limitad only byj a swgie cQuauion, one was to fflBerta ina vocation oi a "sole trader, ' aad'carryg on the, business under the afcsae of "J A Portytn." If she .married tbesfcrt a-kdj husband's, inalienable under the-"Married? Woman's .Property Act and subject darf u uc me uujjt w ucruwo control aa-a 1 sonal responsibilities as a trader. The intense disgust and discomfitare7j her parents, who had expected to oit actively participate in their brother'aTfoil tune, may be imagined. But it waVfasi equal to tneir tury wnen Joiepnine, iat of providing for them a separate aaiais nance out of her abundance, simply oKii to transfer them and her brother to'hQw house on a domestic but hot a busiasta equality. There being- no alternative ihat their former precarious shiftless life ia their "played-out" claim in the valley, "tl wisely consented, reserving the sacrtd rigM: of daily protest and objurgation. la tfc economy of Burnt Bidge Banche they sJea took it upon, themselves to represent' shattered domestic altar and its nntrifiil Lares and Penates. So conscientiously 4M tney perioral ineir tass: as to eves oees allylmpede" the business visitor to the l and to cause some -f t'nn mnin riiiiTiJfijjj neighbors to seriously doubt the yosag- Wtti commercial wisdom1. Bnt she waiiSl Whether she thought her parents a i ty or whether she regarded their proseali'I tne ugnt oia penitential atoaeaHrJJ some previous (disregard of the, m knew. Public Opinion inclined" to tWlaiS The black line of ridge faded oat wMTlwl abstraction; and she turned frarfts32f dow and lit tbe lamn-pn her JuK.MmfSia, low light illnminaM her fswt aaaatSl Un their womanly graces there wi of what some people believed "to WrsT; hub cuaxacicr, c&cepfc a MagMHyi look of critical inquiry aad pati tidn in her dark eyes; Her lea Wm was somewhat rigidly twisted kt aTSSl on tne top ot her head, as if MNi: security than ornaaeat. Brow waafa the prevailing tint of her eyebrews, IMMH aet cyeiasues aau. eyes, ana was evta gestpdin tbe aligSt aalluwBSMofltrl plexion. Bat her lips were well eiari fresh colored, and her hans and fci ! for a pretty girl had the not nggMtai i iBiHg more. pae sat oawm ana Began to eTissai or papers oelere her with taate aaelattentlea to,toil that ifar eyas; paatiac at. prattiiv katt taows, aatf Jm tvaamaatUjM;! we with a saate of sonethifif foifliHaa ptttewwaaarwora aafttuy aaas usteatajr. Tm sobbkIoI raagfc her father's aaern tee aeaeaia i upoa by a eahivatea aad a terauee. "All right; I'll speak, tol oace. w ait there." aM taadeeri the well kaowa payskia uliwrmtfl Dr.Daeaeaae. ".Look here," he said, with aa : that was eelv saved froes beiaer l a soft iatoaatie and a reaasarfaf met Migai aelplng an aaaMaat bagey. YW orders, eh?" "O, js","j ssid Josepatae, qa man i. saw ea taeroaa. "Well, it's a had. case, and waste - atlentioB. Aad as your hoasa is tit!: est, I case with him here." "Certainly," she saidgravely. "! to the second reem beyond 9tr s - it's ready," sfee explained to tw. aTi17itSI in 4Va-Vail tuasalvuS 4Va - "AnilTnAfc-Wi"iai.l b J-- -- closing the deor behiad aad regardJacp wim cnueu ejge ou always ; like to see sesae of bt Queer eas thbris oaai-ai serious one, tear laifceti just touch aad ge with hiss. IhstVaf pieee of th,sa pressing ob the bigger them that, bat aa aisek aavitfi BaratXidge was atoDjf hi I !' to hit it X wast seeKbedy bee. Ie bj, soe oe wne oaa mm a bsm speage, eh? sew oae who iaa't j laint or sereaat, or evaa aftaaa a breadth, ea?" The oelor reee qaiekly to the girl's aaa ner eyes Kiaftiea. "Ill cease, thoaghtfally. "Whoiahe?" si xne aoetor tsarea atigsuy at Has 'a essential anery. "Doa't kaaw: ea MM river mlaen. I reckon. It's i I'll go ami gt everythiag resely.f Detter, a aaasa, witn aaeesiaaaa j ner gray frees, "pnt soraetaiaae A rpur - Tkti niffwittilB nxuLi did not Merir color. A. asosaent later she entered the i wss the oae that had always beea for her brother; the verv bedoa HucosscleBs man lav had beea that morning with kwnnlu this of this passed throagh aeriiast i saw tsai me aoetor had. wheeie it, a thestroagliaht in the eeateraf thai stripped its oater eoveriaf JeasMaal thaaahtfaliwss. aad tae mattresses, eat it dta aat saeaajp thesasMTeosr. There waaasjial(al ia us uc mm soon ireesuy eaeaea aa aiowes NauaiMaeatnaeaaMMu the, open asorooea case, like a jewei i we' taoie, saiBiHg witn spouses a the heacLof the bed one of herawai the "poweenl Bill foreman, wa with the atiaglad curiosity aad. perknee or ee accustomed to sat uantui MmUt A fif alu. Ail it7l at the oealraJ. nneoaseioBs Scate bed, wheee sadnrings seeaed to her ton been viearioaefr transferred to cerned, leaf, aad drawn- feces" Aastl down upe ms iawaaitr. Xaaa ninely woo its d before the bated w-Maiu and aaoahtssa displayed above -j uiilu, iiiimm eraci o job apea i nsu csnssaieer ay Daaaagee, m i from wale the dark tansies ef i been ruthlessly sheared, the Segaa ?m tne ooetars aaeoneern ia nisi "yhat Mattered who or what srar-i - The operatka began, "ita aa earnest iatellieeaee she had thnv & nmLttlv atl? mill ilTllA"d the -doctor's -whispered orders, half aaUeiBated these. She was of a aiaralar eerieaitr that, far-freest mesa or IfftseMa, seemed to IiftlksPaaM abova f sjaWaary "weaknesses stVfcam sex, 'bat atoet aer snpensr al s round bar. Aisaost before tae'l oaerattoa waa over, aad she i eoual eari is the ostentotieassci with whsajk tie doctor seeased aaaj hitfatatWtostraaseab that asualaaaa to a silver-bead The storWketts htaathia; szm&zxa of ETiucyue. sue was quite prepared- feiitt' earlvefection and distrust oWmffft? bond J and dissipated brother BteatiimkaaA, jrr Jk , 4k .. . .' . ?. . ' W. 11 ff & . . K ir . -- ... II fw it-?-. .-'--'