msBsa P357JsrsnFv!?"ff vK -" tf THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. THIRD PART. -a tf PITTSBURG, SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 189L PAGES 17 TO 20. SO THERE WHS WAR. The Tragic Events of the West Re-Enacted Out on Uncle Benjamin's Farm. LITTLE TOM PLAYS AGENT And Eis Country Cousin Gets the Worst of It as Bis: Injun. STARVED AKD FROZEN INTO A ROW And Then Unmercifully Walloped j the Great Whito Father. A TALE WITH AMORAL BI ME. WELDING ivutiix ros mi dispatch. 1 ITTLE TOMMY had gone out into the coun try to spend a few days at the house of his Un cle Benjamin, and to furnish cheerful com panionship for Ben's youngest boy, Johnny. His rustic relations re ceived Tommy kindly, little Johnny showed him all the sights of the farm, and taught him many innocent games. On th: afternoon of the second day the two boys stood in the lee of the barn throwing snow balls at Uncle Benja min's hens. It was a very chilly afternoon, especiallv tor the hens. Suddenly little Tommy exclaimed: "Xet's play Indian!" "Bully." said little Johnny, "and I'll be the great chief of the Sioux, Young-Man-Noi-Afraid-of-Eat-Poison." Liked the Heavy Bole. Tommy offered no objection, and the simple country lad thought it was very kind of his cousin to yield np the principal role without protest. He quickly armed Himself with a wooden tomahawk, got some red ochre lor war paint, levied on the rooster lor feathers, and made a scalping knife out of the handle of a tin dipper.after which he said, "Whoop! Let the pale face beware, for Young-Man-Not-Afraid-of-Kat-Poisnn is on tLe warpath." "I'll be the acent," said Tommy, "and vou must call me in the Indian tongue Fat-Man-witb-Beodle-in-His-Clothes. 1 "We'll play that this is the reservation," J said Johnny, pointing to a sunny spot; "it's good snowballing here, which will be handy when I ?et ready to make an attack on the agency." "Oh, no," said Tommy, "(he reservation js on the other side. This is the agency." Then he led Johnny to the northeast corner of the barn where it was colder than Siberia nud made him sit down on the bottom of a bucket which was frozen into the cround. T5e wintry wind whistled through little ."Johnny's hair and he remarked: "Say, if this is goin' to be the reservation, there'll be nn attack on 'lie agency in about a quarter of a minute." "Oli, that's all right," replied Fat-Man-Witb-Boodle-in-His-Clofhes. "it is the duty o the government to furnish blankets for the redskin." ' Tho Supply of Blankets. So little Tommy went into the barn and got two blankets, a fine large one for him self, and a thin one full of holes for the poor Injun. Young-Man-Not-Afraid, eta, licked very hard at this distribution; and be wound np with a loud war-whoop and the announcement that the attack on the agency was about to begin. But when he would have arisen to execute vengeance, he discovered that he was immovably attached to the bucket. He was lrozen "upon the reservation. "When little Tommy perceived this condi tion of affairs, he at once pointed out the fact that it was all in the game. He be lieved in playing games right down to the cold facts, and be had read of manv cases where similar but more extensive niisfort- rrozen on the Reservation. unes had hapi ened on the boundless prai rie. Then Tommy made up a large quan tity of hard snowballs, and played that he was a company of cavalry attacking an In dian village. Young-Man-Not-Afraid-of-Rat-Poison hurled his tomahawk, but as he could not go to get it again and the attack ing force would not come within reach 5f his scalping knife, he was thereafter de ienseless, and was massacred several times. Little Tommy taught him how to sing the death song, and insisted upon his bearing torture without tears. About Time for Rations. Then little Johnny shrewdly sucirested a chance in the game. "Don't the aeency furnish the Injuns with rations?" he asked. Fut-Man-With-Boodle-in-His-Clothes admitted tbat there were treaties to that effect. "Well, you go in and got ma to give us some gingerbread," said Johnny. "I'd do it myself if I wasn't frozen to this blamed bucket" So little Tommy went into the house and explained to little Johnny's mother the nature of the game they were playing. On behalf of the poor Indian who was obliged to pitch his wigwam on the northeast corner or the barn, he begged a piece of ginger bread. As for himself, he did not care lor gingerbread. It made his stomach ache. Hut Young-Man-Not-Afraid-of-Eat-Poison whs hungry for it. Thereupon, .Tommy's aunt broke off a large piece o gingerbread from a great brown sheet that was "cooling in the wood shed, and the remarked that it was very dis interested of Tommy to intercede for his cousin. As Tommy himself 'did not like gingerbread he might haTe a raspberry tart, lociiny got outside of the tart and then ik the gingerbread to the Reservation. Johnny was still sittine on the bucket and 1.2 seemed likely to remain there till the January thaw set in. His knees knocked together with the cold and he was endeavor ing to arrange his torn blanket with the T i i ! Jit 12i I holes all on the lee side, so that there wouldn't be so much draught through it. Like the Regulation Agent. When he saw the smoking piece of ginger bread, tears of rapturous anticipation washed gullies in his war paint. "Get some warm water and pour on the bottom of this bucket," said he, "and the Great Chief will come to the agency for his rations." "It will not be necessary," said the agent, "Let the red man hunt the buffalo and covote. The agent will take care of the rations." Then he divided the eingerbread into two equal parts, one of which be bit with the right side of his mouth and the other with his left. "When does the Great Chief come in?" asked Young- Man -Not-Afraid- of-Bat-Poison. "He doesn't come in," retorted the Pale Face; "he stays on the reservation." The spectacle of the vanishing ginger bread was too much for little Johnny. He had not realized before how hungry he was; but now every time the aeent took a bite. Zet The-FaUMan-With-ainaerbread-in-Eis-itouth Make Keititutwn. the Bed Man of the Prairie felt the empti ness within him growing vaster. When he shivered the front part of his body flapped against his spine like the fore-course of a ship iu a calm roll. It was unbearable. The Indian War Begins. With a wild war whoop, he sprang to his feet, leaving a liberal square of his trousers iu the icy grasp of the bucket, and clasping his scalping knife with deadly ferbcityi he bounded upon the unsuspecting agent. The battle was sharp, bnt victory quickly perched upon the standard of the Bed Man. In about a minute the agent lay on his back in the wet snow, and Young-Man-Not-Afraid-of-Tearing-His-Pantaloonssatastride of him, trying to saw off a handful of hair with the tin scalping knife. "IftheFat-Man-Vth-His-Month-Full.0'-Gingerbread desires to save his hair," said the savage, "let him make restitution. Give up that gingerbread or I'll saw your head off!" Under the circumstances Fat-Man had no choice. He gave up the eingerbread, and was afterward tied to the hitching post where an imaginary tire was built around him, and he was subjected to various tor tures, some of which were not so imaginary as the tire. It was his turn to sing the death song, and he did it so lustily that TJncle Benjamin heard him, and cama to the res cue. TJncle Sam Makos War. The situation quickly changed in favor of the Pale Face. Uncle Ben took the offender The Great White Father JPutt Down an Indian Outbreak. back to the reservation, and having found a large, thick shingle, he applied it in a man ner to make little Johnny regret the tenacity with which his natural "protector had ad hered to the bottom of the bucket. Mean while little Tommy picked up the remainder of the gingerbread and devoured it TJncle Benjamin played the part or the Great White Father at Washington until little Johnny wished tbat he was a cherub with no necessity for sitting down and noth ing to do it with, if the occasion should pre sent itself. Then TJncle Benjamin settled the Indian question by saying: "If you ever act like tbat again I'll whale ye within an inch o' yer life." Hcwaed Fielding. CELEHY IS BEIKG ABUSED. The Story That It Is Laden With Typhoid Feier Germs Is raise. The latest place where disease germs are said to exist is in celery, savs Dr. H. Jacob son in the St Louis Globe-Democrat. This is an exceptionally harmless plant or vegetable; it is nutritious and palatable, and is known to possets curative powers in cases of rheumatism and brain fag. But it is now said there is danger of its containing typhoid bacilli owing to the quantity of mannre of all kinds used in its cultivation. If celery is eaen both uncooked and un washed there may be danger of eating some thing that is injurious, but so far as the plant itself is concerned the danger is imag inary. Corn and vegetables grown on sewage larms have never been condemned as un wholesome, and it Is generally agreed that the juices of plants do not absorb manure or any kind of germ at alt A man might choke by trying to swallow too large a piece of celery, but he would findsit a hard matter to kill himself by aid of it in any other way. SHOEING THE BULLOCKS. The Corcan Blacksmith Sees the Beast is Securely Bound. New York Tribnne.1 The magnificent bullocks are one of the features of Corea. It would do a Brahmin's heart good to see them, although he would doubtless take exception to the ring through the nose and the load on the back. The method of shoeing bullocks is cruel in the extreme. The feet are firmly roped together and the bullock is cast on his side; then the head is pulled around until it lies flat along the side, and in this psinful attitude he hss to lie until the slow Corean black smith concludes the torture. Boston's Great Act. Boston Traveller. Mayor Hart takes great pride in the fact that during his administration the city of Boston hat not paid for a single pottle of BUMPED INTO A KING. Lillian Spencer Has a Thrilling Ex perience in Snnny Italy. ' ALMOST KNOCKS HUMBERTO DOWN. Her Impressions of Tbat Picturesqne Ionng Dade, the Prince. A BKIBK EHCODNTEE WITH FLEAS ICOBBESFOXDXKCI OT TBI DISPATCH! FlobENCE, Dec 21. S I said, I've just stumbled over the King of Italy. Imagine whether I am excited or uotl A king fancy it! A real live flesh and blood k i n g I I say stumbled over I mean stum bled into. Yes, stumbled is the word. I did stumble. To be exact I did more than stumble I fell. This is how it happened: I was dashing down the street in my American breakneck fashion, when sud denly I bumped against a man, who caught hold of me to save himself and thereby steadied us both. This man was his Gracious and Exalted Majesty, King Humberto, son of the hero, Victor Emnnuelo IX, father of that promising young dude, the Prince of Naples. Yes, this was the King. And I all but knocked him down. He took it in good pari, however. Smiled, bowed, asked me in French if I had hurt myself, and behaved altogether like the eon of a hero that he is." It all turned out happily euoueb, and if bad only curled my bangs properly the evening before I should'nt have minded at all. Not Presentable, of Course. As a matter of fact I looked a perfect fright. My hair was skinned back from my hyperian brow in a pealed-oniou fashion altogether unbecoming to my style of beauty. But these little details somehow or other never The King of Italy. do arrange themselves to a woman's credit. I have a perfect genius for meeting the right person at the wrong moment. Perhaps some of my American friends who have never had the honor of bumping into a king would like to know something of one's emotions under the circumstances. Well, frankly, good people, there is no other emotion on earth comparable to it. We are a republic; we scorn the nobility; we believe in the equal rights of man. No one is any better than his neighbor (unless he has a little more money), but bring fas face to face with royalty and we lose our heads com pletely. Now, as far as I am concerned, everyone knows me to be a true daughter of the Stars and Stripes, As for running into distinguished people, that is quite an old story with me. I have met dukes and barons and counts and lords, and never lost either my head ot my heart, bnt to meet a king well, that is altogether a horse of auother color. A Peep at the Prince. Later on I saw the1 Crown Prince. A smooth-faced boy with a fair sprinkling of down on the upper lip; an eye glass, a suit of the latest English-cut clothes and a smile in a word, this distinguished young sprig of the nobility resembles an out and out English dude. He lifts his hat in the most condescending manner. His air says plainly enough: "Lo, behold mel I am the Prince ot Naples." As we know alKthis, the information palls upon us a little. I suppose I should be put to the torture if a breath of what I am say ing should reach the fierce ."Italiannos," but between you and me, I honestly believe that tbat young fellow's blood is not alto gether a pure 22-carat mixture! If there isn't something plebeian in bis manner of lifting his hat, then I don't know a thoroughbred dog when I see' him. Good heavens, what am I saying, I mean a thoroughbred prince, of course. What put dog into my flighty head was the picture of Victorio Euianuello hanging opposite me on the wall. It looks for all the world like my little Kinc Charles spaniel and I never glance at it bnt I think of him. I don't mean this ir relevantly atall. On the contrary, it is a great complement to His Majesty. My King Charles is the most beautilul creature im aginable. The very "king of dogs," as His Highness was the "king of kings." King Huinberto'i Health. King Humberto it not in good health. For a long time he hat suffered with some mys terious illness which no one knows much about, except that it is a malady which has afflicted him for years. Thus it is that the crown weighs heavily on his royal fyead, I am genuinely sorry for King Humberto. I like him. He would have been still higher in my esteem had he remembered me when I saw him an hour later at the station. But he didn't. Perhaps if I had had my bangs properly curled ah me! Who knows. Our fate hangs on such a slender hinge. Still, I like King Humberto. And I am glad I bumped into him. I am sure he is a more agreeable person than his son and heirs will ever be. The Prince of Naples, how ever, is said to be a young highness of con siderable character. From his earliest boy hood be was remarkable for his passionate love of study. In this he served as a model for all his little cousins and play mates. To attend school was his heart's delight The Prince entre nons is said to be a prig. One of his tutors thus describes him. From a Tutor's Standpoint. "From the ago of 10 he arose at daybreak, took a cold batb, followed by a basin of soup, and then commenced his lessons. If he was a few minutes late in getting up his broth was kept for him later on. After his lessons, fair or cloudy weather, rain, hail, snow or shine, the Prince went for a ride on horseback. Dnring the balance ot the day the gaining or knowledge and physical exer cise alternated with one another, so that not a moment of the entire day was unoccu pied. "Even his pastimeswere studies. Hehad small fortifications in the park, collections of ancient coins, natural history, art and photographs. When be was 13 years of age he spoke fluently French, Italian and Eng lish, baring had as gouvemante an English f a - tmill if U mWJ MO ssF--w lady, daughter of an Indian officer, 'and having read in these three languages a great number of books, he could converse even when so young on hittory, geography, science, political economy. He could also speak Ger man. Added to all this the young Prince possessed a prodigious memory. Indeed he is counted a sort of royal encyclopedia." Hit Besetting Sin. All this Is very comme il faut, and Italy is no donbt fortunate in the talents of her future Kinerbut how can we foreigners be expected to regard him with the same vener ation and respect, even granting that he merits it. as long as -he persists in looking like a dude and acting like a coxcomb? But he is young. Eyeglasses and snobbery may go out of fashion before he ascends the throne. In any event, he is sure to learn better as he grows older If he grows older, which is a question. For, like h'ls father, the young Prince is ill. The Queen seems to be the only one of the royal family who enjoys good health. Margherita is always well, always young, always beautiful. She is the idol of the Italian people. Society is entirely ruled by her. Wealthy ladies whose antecedents are a little shady, or whose hold on the social world is not as firm as might be desired, make it a point to keep away from Florence or Borne dnring the Queen's sojourn in those cities. If tbey did not appear at courftheir absence would provoke malicious comment, and if they did Her Highness might deem it necessary to retire. In either event the result would be fatal. Women The Queen of Italy. handle hot coals occasionally, but they don't burn themselves if they can help it. Walking in Italy. Italy is an ideal country for a pedestrian tour. And the walk from Genoa to Florence is a revelation to the tourist who visits the kingdom for the first time. We walked right into the lives of the people, as it were, lived among them, traded among them, was of them in fact. They were very much surprised to see us meander into thei'r villages as we did, so much so that they stood aloof and regarded us curiously, not to say suspiciously. We were to their prim itive minds about the most extraordinary pair of females they had ever beheld. Iliad only to try a little of my brand new Italian on them, however, and they were all right. Anyone who spoke their beautiful language as I did became an object of their pity for ever after. The Italian peasants are a picturesque and artistic race. But they are dishonest, and oh, heavens, how dirty, A bathtub to them is an unheard-of and unknown com modity. I have no words to describe the dirt of which I speak. It is the piled np grime ot ages, inherited and bequeathed from generation to generation. Every child in Belgium was apple-cheeked and spot lessly clean. Every little Italian it swarthy, filthy and half naked. The word modettv it not in th5L.VJBoalailary.of these people. tj A Bow-Legged Kace. The peasant woman swaths her baby in tight liuen bandages, and ties its mummy like little body up in a small pillow case. This is done to straighten its limbs. And no doubt It does for a time, but as the in fant is put on its feet to walk at the age of .a few months they soon grow crooked. And every other child one meets is bow-legged. The first town we came to interested us very much. A description of one suffices for all. They are exactly alike. THe out side of the stucco bouse is covered with the most grotesque paintings. Obese little cupids, nantou syrens, prayerful virgins and impossible angels all clamor over the walls, peer into the windows and climb upon the roof. What they are supposed to be doing can never be anything but a mvsterv. The , entrance is nearly always through alow gateway imu a uijuiiru urics or Sioue payed courtyard. From this courtyard opens the living room. The most important is the kitchen-dining room, where one eats and drinks red wine and care noire and watches "mine host," the padrone, a slim, humble, excitable little .man, who dances round like a hot pea . on a gridiron. He shrieks to the poor waiters, bullys his wife the fat signora threatens to murder the long-suffering cook, and calls on every saint in the calender in his frenzy. "Bones of St Peterl" he howls to the coot. "will you be quick?" "-Death of the Vir". gin! reach me that joint." Method, of the Host. The waiter does so calmlv he is accus tomed to the padrone. His wild rage does not affect him at all. We are trembling with fright. Never before have we seen such fury. We have not learned yet that all padrones are alike. This one cuts our steak carefully from the joint, weighs it with a grand flourish, calls our attention to the figures registered on the scales, eulogizes at length on his honesty and finally claps it on tho big stove and charges us double'the price he would anyone else. Our bedroom is large, square, brick flored, cold, damp and cheerless. The bed is not bad but obi horror and this we did not bargain for in classic and poetic Italy the fleas. Ont they came in lull force. We remonstrated with" them mildly politely. We ventured to assure them that we were Americans and strangers, and that the cour tesy of one country to another was our due, but it was no use. Tbey didn't see it iu that light Tbey winked and smacked their lips and exclaimed: "Yum, yum! What do we care. We have tasted you. Yon are good; very good." "Misencordlal" we cried. But our enemies were relentless. "Americans!" they exclaimed with fiend ish delight "So much the better. We like the imported article as much as you do, " Lilliak Spenceb. SALT Df THE STREETS Will Increase the liability to Pneumonia Besides Being a Nuisance. Salt sprinkled along the car tracks by the street railroad companies, besides being a nuisance, is certainly injurious to the health or the people, for it gives them to breathe that which nature never intended they should breathe, says Dr. Cyras Edson in the New York World. There is a likelihood, too, that the breathing of this air disposes one to the development of the germs which cause pneumonia. The mixture of salt and snow has also a bad effect ,on the hoofs of horses. It causes them to so (ten. Dr. August Siebert has studied the sub ject of the increased number of cases of pneumonia and has discovered that the dis ease is more prevalent when humidity ap proaches the point of saturation. Now, the atmospheric conditions producing the maximum amount of pneumonia appear to be when a maximum degree of cold is com bined with a maximum degree of humidity. It follows from this that the predisposing causes of pneumonia are found in conditions produced by the use of salt in snow. .It it certainly sot a neoestary evil, and it would appear that, it increases the pneumonia death Tate; . ENJOYING A SLEIGH. The Metropolitan Idea of .a Good Time When the Snow Flies. NOT LIKE THE OLD-TIME PARTIES. Plenty of Toddy Takes the Place of Cider and It Comes High. A SPIN THEOUGH THE CENTKAL PAKE rCOnEESPOKDENCB OF THI DISPATCH. 1 New Yobk, Jan. 10. No man has ever really gone sleighing nntil he has tried Cen tral Park. A few inches ot packing snow on top of a frozen snrface is all that Is re quired in the way of a fonndation for good tun. If the air be dry and frosty not too frosty just frosty enongh to congeal the breath in tiny icicles on your mnstacbe and to cause your best girl to snuggle up to you as closely as she can get so much the bet ter. If you haven't any best girl with you on the occasion, and go with a city friend, the sundry drinks you pick up along the cheerful road houses on such a day will seem so much the better. The air must be keen and frosty to make sleighing enjoyable underany circumstances and anywhere. Sleighing must have a snap to it that is, some other kind of a snap than that which pertains to the ownership of horses and cutters. ' You discuss this feature of sleighing with your companion in the Murray Hill cafe over a cold toddy the toddy should always be cold as yon start out and hot after yon get in andeitherthe con versation, or the toddy, calls np tender memories of the time you used to Conttrnct Tour Own Jumper With a couple of saplings, an ax, a drawing-knife and an augur and drive forth over a shaggy and lUncertain country road to get "spelled down" by some backwoods lassie in short hair and pinafore. The snow was deeper and the sleighing better in those days and there was more fuu and less money. Your companion, who was never in the country in his life exceDt in a Pullman car, is disposed to sheer you out of these opin ions. Where did you get such toddy, yon know? This proves something like a settler, though the real thing is 25 cents a drink. The recollection of having gone down cellar for a mug of hard cider just before going out with your "jumper" isn't worth men tioning to such a man. But you venture it "There was a moral certainty you'd come back sober I don't question tbat," says your cynical city man. "Here we don't even start sober. We've got to put in three hours this afternoon and we can't be racing- around all the time. The expense " How Expenses Boll Up. The chuckle-headed young man who has been holding your horse now comes in and says the "'orse's been a waltin' 'alfn 'our." The expense you mentally figure up as you climb into the sleigh and give the chuckle headed boy a quarter, is already drinks, $1; four cigars, 80 cents; bov, 25 cents; time on horse, $1 6553 70. And you haven't started. It matters nothing a moment later, for yon glide into Fifth avenue at the swellest point of tbat swell thoroughfare and become a part of the most wonderful throng you ever saw in your life. There are two processions, of one of which you are a part, kicking snow into your neck, the other kicking snow into your face. They are made up of sleighs, carriages and de livery wagons and as far as the eve can reachithereis.no-hreak,ii' theja,a,nd, no, end The snow is banked high next to the carbs, leaving bnt a single team' distance between the going and coming conveyances. Out into this narrow passage an impatient driver occasionally whisks. bis frisky horse, dashing forward at the imminent risk of collision on either side. Your city man, with the observation tbat any fool can drive in a country road, brings your cutter sharply to the left upon the first opening and dashes down this narrow defile, to show you what a bright particular fool can do iu New York. It is very neatly done, though the space be tween you and the first sleigh is so finely drawn that the paint is scraped from the side oi your cutter. Hat Plenty of Dangers. This is tut an insignificant incident, but it revives, for the time being, the recollec tion of the price and stiffness .of the toddy and provokes speculation as to the probable cost of the entire outfit laid down in Central Park or Harlem.. You can only draw a long breath at each of these perilous dashes, and, shutting your eyes in the teeth of the whirling snow, mentally resolve tbat, if you are kindly spared by Providence to return unbroken to the bosom of your family, you will either favorably considur the question of hard cider or let this be yonr last sleigh ride. For you are perfectly aware that any remonstrances filed with your city friend will be in vain as long as. the sidewalks of Fifth avenue are lined with pretty servants and sightseers, and the windows oi the bor dering mantions are fnll of lovely and gen erous encouragement for somebody to get killed. That old trick you used to play when a boy taking out the standards of the old bobsleds and letting an old fashioned wagon-bed fnll of boys and girls slide off into the first corner snowdrift would be too tame for these people. And yet that was a right funny joke in your time. How the young fellows would scramble, each for his girl! And how those girls would shout and scream and flop around in the snow bank! Even the old Farm Horses Enjoyed That Pan. Those young men wonld always swear they'd thump the boy that did that job, but there was always two or three of the pret tiest girls in the crowd who would be sure to kiss that same boy next day. Central Park seems big enough for every body except on coaching days and sleighing days. Then it appears to be a little cramped and circumscribed, not to say stuffy. On this occasion, when everybody is in a hurry, it strikes you as particularly crowded, in adequate for a man of your means and showy prospects. Your old red cutter, that cost about what you are to pay for its use this ride, takes up as muoh room as a $1,000 sleigh. You didn't think of this con foundedly disreputable old cutter before, but are all at once conscious that you wouldn't be seen riding into a one-horse Western town in 'such an outfit. Yon in stinctively pull down the big fur robe so as not to show so much of the cutter's ankles, as it were. The thousands of magnificent turnouts fairly dazzle you. The Bleigh never before struck you as admissible of so many shapes, of such showy trappings, of so great an investment of money. Nothing Too Pine There. Nothing is too "loud" for a pair of fine horses, at a Central Park sleigh. Noth ing is too gorgeons in drivers and footmen and robes and plumes and other belongings. Flaming yellow and yellow and black, red, red and black (rouge et noir), 'red and yellow, are the rating plumes for harness and sleigh. Sometimes a saucy little pom pom, or paint brusb, of the hones' colors decorates the hats of the fair occupants, as well as those ot the driver and footmen. Far away, along the winding drives, in every direction, myriads of these plumes are waving and dancing in the keen -air to the muiie of thousands of tinkling, jingling, tlntinaoulating bells not the big hoarse bells that used to decorate the big, round belly of the old plow-horse of yonrs and that could be heard a couple of miles on a frosty night when the snow squeaked beneath the steel shoes, but strands of bells about the size .of hickory nuts, open bells of pnre silver, balls artliticallr.adlntted to mnsieal scale, golden bells, with the ring cf the wealth of metropolitan commerce In them bells that ring ont boldly and triumphantly the joy and happiness of the few and then, dying away over- the slopes and meadows and through the woodlands in a million broken, quivering sighs and sobs, echo and re-echo the never ceasing wail of the many. No, indeed; yonr old cow-bells were useful, but belong to the era of the "jumper" and charivari. . It's Fun, hut IT Costly. And then look at these people. Are tbey not alone-worth the 5 per hour? There are not less than 10,000 of them now circling about this'park. Harlem and Seventh ave nue and well, Charley White's somehow they range up breathlessly alongside of the cutter. You-have just recently found out that your $10 cutter is drawn by a $500 horse, and are feeling quite elated at the style in which the combination trotted around nine-tenths of the best outfits on the road. The feeling increases as yon get the ice out of your mustache and get more toddy, and you step to the window and behold tho animal nnder his big blanket and tbe boy in his ragged summer jacket at tbe bridle as if you owned both of them, and would like to sell the boy. Then you remember the bill again, and break up an interesting and timely conver sation between your city man and the bar keeper about the corkage at Coney Island last summer, by suggesting tbat thehorse is taking cold. Within the next ten minutes you are landed on tbe porch of the popular road tavern that overlooks Grant's tomb at the head of Biverside Park. Something Wrong Up Above. There is a vague notion that can scarcely be said to have iodged in your mind, but is slipping aronnd Joose tbere where your mind usually docs business, that you nearly run over somebody or something as you came flying across Harlem, but your friend says there's nothing in it, further compli. eating your line of thought by ordering toddy for both you and himself and the cashier and head waiter. You gaze out of the glass side of the restaurant at the noble Hudson full of floating Ice, and swear that it is the most magnificent sight in the world, and believe it City man says something about the American Bhine, which suggests to you TJncle Tom's Cabin and Fred Doug lass crossing into Canada on the crunching ice. Tbe head waiter breaks in on the discus sion with the point as to whether you'll have your ovsters small or medium. You brace up sufficiently to say you'll take a quart ot Pom. Sec. frap. This brings up a harrowing tale of the ice extortion of last summer, dur ing which the several hundred cubio miles of ice continue to float calmly down tbe river toward tbe sea. By this time there are at least four waiters buzzing around you. You eat, you drink, you are merry. You never had so much fun sleighing in all your life. Speech Past and Parlous. The confession that your old-time "jump er" and spelling school never could hold a penny taper to this is wrung from you before you reach the end of the bird and bottle. This is great You swell up visibly with in formation on various topics, which you de sire to impart to anybody who will listen; and when nobody will listen you feel that you may burst But your city fiiend is an unconscionable egotist, and will not give you a chance to talk abont yourself. The second bottle is pretty well under way, and your city man is making a speech to the tour waiters and the cashier a right good speech, too, it must be, because the waiters laugh. Yon know you have never been able to make a waiter laugh. At this point a singular phenomenon oc curs. Every one of these waiters has four legs. Funny you hadn't noticed it till now. You never saw, one with more than two be fore, and even these two seemed'to be cork to far as bustling was concerned. This is em barrassing, but you forget it in some indig nant remark oi your city friend about the proposed remoyalof Grant's body, whereat tbe waiters applaud vigorously. City man. pauses to give eachxone of his audience a quarter. You detect in this the secret of bis post-prandial eloquence. When It Becomes a Memory. While this is going on the head man says something about time to shut np for the night, and, with a growing consciousness that your last cigar is. rather too strong for you and that the waiters' legs had suddenly increased to seven or eight, you are bundled into the red cutter and are soon plowing fiercely aong the banks of the Hudson toward the great city. That is all you remember till abont 10 o'clock next day. At that hour you awake in your own bed and have a right smart job of it to convince yourself that von went sleighing the day before, and that it isn't a dream. The half smothered tound of belli ringt ib your head and hurts you. Horses, yellow and red plumes, old-fashioned jump ers and bobs, waiters, with thousands of legs, float indiscriminately across yonr men tal vision. Tbe stern loglo of a headache is alone irrefragable. When It Is supported by a $20 shortage you know to a moral, as well as physical certainty, that yon have been ont somewhere with somebody and probably had some fun according to the ac cepted metropolitan standard. When -yon meet your city friend later and receive tbe intimation that yonr share of extra time for a horse and sleight is $10 60, yon draw a check without a remonstrance yon are so awfully glad, that horse and sleigh got home, at all. Then you realize what it costs to go sleighing in New York, and wisely resolve to make that experience do tor the rest 4? f your natural life. Charles T. Mtjbbay. FIGTOES US ICE CREAM. How the Molds Are Made and How the Dealers Use Them. "Suppose I wanted a design, for an ice cream mold," says a confectioner in the New York Eerald, "I should send for an artist There is one man in this city "who is the ice cream sculptor. He would model iu clay the suggested design. From this, by well-known processes, I would in the end obtain a lead mold, divided into two parts and hinged. The first of these molds would cost from $50 to $150. The d uplicates would only' cost from f 6 to $15 a dozen. I have several thousand dollars worth of such molds. "Of course, I have to have more than one mold of a design, because It would other wise take altogether too long to fill an order. Sometimes I have 200 and sometimes more molds of one design all ordered in a single day. Consequently I must have a large supply of molds constantly on hand. These molds vary In size from that which is large enough to contain a score of portions to that intended only for a single person,'and not all of them are made for cream. Some are for candy, which now forms a large part of every elaborate design. "The cream is pnt into each half of the mould by an expert workman, who sepa rates tbe colors and puts each in its proper place. When the two halves are joined to gether and the lead mould removed, another workman goes over the work, smoothing it, touching up the colors and penciling tbe eyebrows an d reddening the lips. Alter 'the cream is removed it is put Into the freezing box and kept nntil it is served. I usually send a man with our icebox who serves the eream'when the proper time arrives. We get our black from chocolate, onr red from strawberry, green from pistacke and brown irom coffee. These are some of the in gredients of onr paint box." How to Wear Diamonds. Mew York Tribune. J The handsomest diamond ornaments now worn are in sun or star forms, and are set in platinum to show as little metal as possible. When worn as a pendant they are hung on a strong bnt almost invisible chain ot plat inum and gold. A renaissance scroll it an other pattern of these diamond ornaments, which mav ha worn as hrooeh. tinnrlmnt n. jeweled hairpin; 4his la made np solidly of I i diamonds in invisible- setting. A ROMANCE OF 'LIFE AS IT MAY BE MADE, warms- toe ihb nisrATcnt B"5T CrO-QXTZiT ZMZIXiLIEIR, Author of "Songs of the Sierras," "Songs of the Sun Lands," "Lifa Among the Modocs," and Other Poems and Stories. SYNOPSIS OF PKEVIOTS CHAPTEBS. The author meets tbe Princess, who Is the heroine of the story. In Poland. Her father had been sent to Siberia by the Czar. She dreamed of revenge; but at last, giving that up. deter mined to build a city which should be a model to all mankind, tihe and tbe author travel throngh the Holy Land and into E;ryp-. but finally select an oasis in tbe desert of Mexico fortbecitr. While tbey are at Cairo, Alexander is killed. Russian spies are on the Princess' track, and ibo bids the author go to the City of Mexico and tbere wait for her. Tbe author waits lor years at tbe City of Mexico, and at last a messenger from tbe Princess comes to him. , CHAPTER VIL My serene and ruddy-faced visitor seemed loath to rise from the table even after a very long and elaborate repast Trne, he had not tasted meat, but he had sipped his wine and broken his bread and still ate the frnit of my high and stony hill with such com posure and satisfaction that I began to grow a bit vexed and to almost doubt In my own mind whether it was he or myself that was master of the house. But then, had be not come from her? And had I not waited for years and for years, ransacked the whole world to find news of her? Well, I then could and would wait, even if it took a whole week and a whole case of wine to open his lips with his message from my Madonna. Late in the afternoon he drew out his watch. "You will forgive me," he began quietly, "but I think we worked quite two hours in the olive grove. That was quite enough for one day, eh ?" "Quite enongh, If yon say so, Mr. Mr. ? "My name? Hal ha! Well, ones more I must beg yonr pardon. But the truth is I was weary. It is a long journey; airship, APPEOACHCIO THE rail, steamer; the first journey I had made for more than ten years. And I was so glad to find yon, too, that I almost forgot my manners." "And your name?" I added, a little teverely. "My name! Ah, yes, my name is Father Blank. I am, or rather was, a priest, yon see." It so chanced that I had only a few days before been reading a list of those who had disappeared mysteriously in the dozen pre ceding years, all of whom had been, in some sort, people of distinction in tbe fields of thought and intellectual toil; and it sud denly came to me that this name. Father Blank, of the city of Blank, was among them. Let me omit tbe real name of this, real character and the details of his dis- appearance. To give his name and the name -of the city Irom which he disappeared after half a lifetime of eminent and splendid loll would only excite comment and possi bly came pain to some. "You are not then Father Blank, of.the city of Blank, who was supposed to have been murdered by one of the Irish faction t because of tbe liberality of his tenets in Christian teaching? " "The same unworthy servant of tbe people." he said solemnly. There was a long and awkward pante, in which hit profound sonl seemed to drift back and take up for tbe time the broken threads of his illustrious life of long ago. At length, by way of calling him back to tbe present, I said, half laughing: "Well. Father Blank. I now know that you must be very tired, indeed, ibryon have lost a whole dav in the calendar of your use ful life. Yesterday was Friday, this is Sat urday; and so you see yon ate meat on Fri day and fasted to-day." He looked at me kindly, and coming back ont of the past he merely said in a soft and dreamful voice: "No, I have not lost a day; and I did not eat meat on Friday. I did not eat meat to day, and I shall not eat meat to-morrow." I began to like tbe man, to love him. I leaned forward to his side and said: "Father Blank, yon will rest with me to morrow, and the dav after to-morrow, and many days to come." "To-morrow," he began earnestly, and 'pulling himself resolutely together, "I will be on my way back to the city in the desert, and you" will be with me." My heart beat like a battle drum when leading a charge. "Who who -who is it? Where I the city of the desert?" "She sent me to yon." He paused, looking me calmly and steadi ly in the face for a long time, and then let ting his voice fall, he added in a voice scarcely audible: "The builder of the city in the desert" 4 m 1 arose fronrmy place, drew a lone breath of fullest satisfaction and threw my two bent his neck. Then, sseain? back. ItooksTltatfros ft big c . whtro J I had tossed it when we sat down, and hur riedly placed it on my head. "Good! You are ready to go." "And, father, wherever she is and what ever she is, when you see her yon shall say tbat I have been tbns ready to go to her any time this dozen years. Yes, yes, I am ready to go. Begging pardon for this seeming breach of hospitality, I tell you that the olives will not suffer lor want of care. My people are not unused to these sudden de partures. I am a scribe, as you know, a servant and a soldier in the army of the press. I am ready to go, quite ready to go." "Very good; we will go now." My horses were soon at the door, and as we were driven to the station he asked whether I would prefer a voyage by sea and then a gallop for days over the deserts, or a ride by rail and then a voyage through the air. "I am well used to seas and deserts, but I know nothing about balloons; so if you please a horse's back is good enough for me." The same serene and restful good nature Eossessed him still, notwithstanding my half idden doubt about tbe possibility of his proposed voyage through the air, and he only said quietly, as we stood at tbe station window lor our tickets: "Yes, the solid earth is safest; but we have never yet had an accident in all the years that our air line has been in operation." As we took onr seats in the railway car be continued: "Of CITY XS THE DESEBT. course, the air ship in cities or in wooded countries where tbe enrrnts ot air mutte be narrow and often contradictory is impos sible. This sailing through the air wonld be quite a pitiful piece of work, save by the mountains and tbe sea, as compared with sailing over the level deserts. For there we have room and the atmosphere is always even and the currents come at their regular hours and seasons, like the rising of the snn or moon." And much more be said; much more that I ought to remember and write down. Bnt I was on my way to her. And where was she now? And what was she now? I did not want to hear. I wanted to think. I wanted to think of her, and of nothing but her; and to hope; to hope all things. Still, as timt) went by and we sped on our way the good man, I remember, would talk a little now and then. Yet I can recall but a fragment hero and there of what hesaicf. Amongother things I remember well bis dennnciation of tbe cruelty and the crime of modern cities. "They have no right to exist," he said, "these hot-houses of pestilence and deprav ity as tbey now exist Of old time there were walls to keep ont wild beasts and wilder men. This made it necessary some times to put one bouse on top of another to find room for the inhabitant. And so it was tbat we began to have two, three tad fonr-stpry houses; and women began to speed their time and strength climbing stairs. But here, to-day, in America, with half a couti. nent still a wilderness waiting to be built upon, what excuse, save that of tbe money grabber, can there be for crowding people like rats in ten-story houses? "And now let me tell you what may easi ly happen to these grand 10 and 12-story houses and their proud and penurious own ers," the good priest went on. "Some day the people will move out of them and leave them emptied of all but their misery and the rats and the fevers and the malaria. Yes, this may easily happen any day after our grea't cities are near completion and the people have tine to sit down for a day and think. Bear in mind, this same thing happened in Borne more than 3,000 years ago, and with far less cause for action and with forty ford more danger Jo the people than could follow now. For the barbarian, the barb, the savage, the fearful man with a beard, was waiting outside the walls with srord and fire. To be without tbe walls Was to be fare, de la mura, or fare, a foreigner. But nothing of that sort can overtake the people of this era when they weary of their wealthy masters. And when they do rise up and go outside the city, where will their wealthy masters find a man with influence enough to bring them, back simply by the recital of a fable?" After a time he- continued: "I see you look upon the idea of the people moving bodily ont of cities owned by monopolists as sensational. Well, then let us look at it from a strictly business point and from a shrewd rich man's point of view. Let at leave 'the people' oat entirely and look at UfroBarkhaionopollt'siajMljiafc "tot