K . K5a3f.ri,Rfc?,A-. ianaws .J IS3fWWP3p..j V - . - ' v - -1 - . - iK ' ' ; - -- . -- - - iv. " : - t'W '-- ;, v ir. V-V- I? 16 ever "since you were a clrild. "While vou have not seen much of me, perhaps, stifl I feel a certain right to care for-rou." "You are very good, indeed you are,'" Daisy answered prettily, "please don't scold me, the first thing, to prove your goodness." Breton noted a new air of half coquetry. The shy, silent girlish dignity, which had inade her seem to him unlike other women Tras broken by a touch of that light wooing W3V women have; women who live on admiration, women who win by their wily daintiness Yet her sweet dark eyes had -already shadowed into graveness to meet Iris own. "Would it not be possible to con "vince her of the dangers she faced, to in duce her to go home again? Even as he thought this, she said: "You must meet Jdiss Sonaday." "I have met Miss Sonaday." Ehc did not note his inflection. "Ah! if you know her, you know what m dear, sweet, true girl she is." "1 have observed that she is very charm ing" A brilliant idea struck Daisy. "Won't you join us at supper after the theater? I know Freda nil! be glad to have you come." Supper after the theater. How well she knew the phrase; and this was Daisy! "Will you not permit me?" "Oh, nol Freda and I have supper here. The head waiter lets us have a little table, though it's after hours." "Rather lonely?" "Oh, no! Charlie or Parlance those are hovs in the company often come with us. I should like you to meet them, too. They are such nice fellows." "Every word went through Breton. "1 shall be delighted, he said referring back to the supper. "May I call at the theater for you and Miss Sonaday?" "I get out carlv before the piece is over. '"We hjd better all meet here." Freaa, however, was particularly late. Breton and Daisy had already begun sup per when, with a flinging open of the door, the came. Her cheeks were bright and her eyes sparkling. The Persian lamb boa she had u.ed in the last act was still in soft fleeciness about her throat, and her cap had a specially jaunty tip. Daisy realized un casilv that her friend looked more than usually "like an actress." "Is this Mr. Breton?" Freda extended her hand, adding: "I didn't know whom Daisy meant I meet so many people, but I remember you quite welL" This with an arch turn of her head and a little smile up through her lashes then: "Let's have sup per up stairs, Daisy. This big room, lighted at one end, alwava gives me the horrors. Mr. Breton will understand that our , rooms are our parlor. Besides Fred Stick or iscomins." "Fred Sticknor, who was at school?" "Yes, they close to-night. I persuaded llim to v ait over. The company docs Bal timore next. He's gone down to get the manager to change nis ticket He can go over just as well in the morning." Daisy felt a bit bewildered, but before the knew what was going on supper was served in Freda's room and Freda was giv ing Breton permission to order wine. , "Champagne?" "The actresses' wine?" she said mocking Iji "Yes, it you choose. " "How willFredknow where we are?" ven tured Daisy. "I told h'im 238. He will come right up. It was rather late for him to ask in the of fice. You see," turning to Breton, "we stage people are careful of appearances when'its quite convenient." J Daisy flushed. She fancied she caught a ! glance from Breton. Oh, if Freda would only act like herself, her sweet, bright, 'usual self! A footstep sounded in the silent hall, and Freda called as someone passed the door. "Here you are, dear boy! Mr. Breton Sticknor. Fred, you remember Daisy. , "Very little changed, I think, don't you? Sit clown, sit down." Meanwhile she disposed of Sticknor's leavy coa on the bed, which was pretty welL covered now -with raps. Then sha opened the door slightly. "That," she explained, "is for propriety." She looked at Breton. "Of course the peo ple who go by say to themselves: Those dreadful actresses, having supper at this . lourJ' But at least the open door proves that we are observing the proprieties. As for being actresses, half the critics will tell you that I, for one, am none; and as for Supper, we must cat actresses or not As for the hour how coujd we make it earlier? You outsiders arc so brilliant in your judg- ment of us. Not that we are any better than we -eem"' Freda lifted her glass airily. "Tliat would be impossible!" said Breton Softly. "Just like a play, isn't it, Fred. Daisy, you are not eating." Poor Daisj 's head was too much in a whirl to permit of her eating. "What had come to Freda? She and Breton were so hrillianly merry that the silence of Stick nor apparently passed nnnoticed, but Daisy wondered at his heavy frown and his look of pain. By 1:."0 Freda said cheerily: "We must turn you out Daisy and I have gone beyond our hours. Daisy and I here usually sup on crust and cheese, and retire at 12. Bo, too, does Fred, I'll warrant Bv the way. You have been so quiet, Fred that you may stop a few minutes to tell Daisy and me'of your wanderings. But, you Bir, must go." "I shall hope to see more of you later," Said Breton. "You might come to the theater." "v "Yoa are too good!" V "I hope notl" Their eyes met, and poor "Dais felt like crying. "" "You were good to permit me to outstay your other guest," Sticknor said wearily, 'but I fear I cannot amuse you." "Ugh! don't look so sombre. Daisy, Fred here has a lecture for me. Bun in Tour room, that's a dear, and spare me the humiliation of being scolded betore you." Daisy glanced helplessly at the clock, then said obediently: "Good-nieht," and passed to her room through the connecting door. She knew Freda would not like her to close the door. Daisy was tired and nerv ous. She laid her head on the arm of the big chair and presently fell asleep, while the two others conversed in earnest tones. By and by Freda's hand on her shoulder waked her. The discussion with Sticknor was over and he had gone. While Daisy combed her pretty dark hair before going to bed, Freda sat, her face away from the light and her head down. Presently she said: "You "aren't engaged, or anything like that, to this Breton, are j-ou?" "No'." cried Daisy, in some alarm. "Likes him?" "Freda, what makes you talk so?" "Well, do you?" "He was a friend of my father's. They Iiad business interests together. He he is older than he looks. He was often at -the house." "Like vou?" "Oh, dear! I don't know." "Don't get so flurried, Daize; I jnst granted ts know." In the midst of her embarrassment it oc curred to Marguerite thaf her friend's inter est was somewhat intrusive. Freda seemed to divine the thought, for she protested air ily: '"Not a bit of it, sweet field flower. I met him some time ago on the Casino roof. I was with a party of boys charming fel low! I have on ida he wants to experi ment Now, I'm very conscientious about prior claims, and all tliat regard them sa cred, and that sort of thing. However, as it is!" Freda kissed the tips of her fineers toward the chandelier and smiled prettily. "I should hardly take Mr. Breton for.a man inclined to flirt," Daisy said, almost Stiffly. "You never can tell, dear girL" "And, oh, Freda, I hope you won't lead aim on. You you seem so reckless." "Men can take care of themselves; and fchy shouldn't he experiment?" "He is a gentleman." "Fiddlesticks doubtless. And a man of honor, as the world goes. But, dear me; it's not a man's province to set the reserve of every woman he meets. It's his business to respect a woman's self-respect, once he is sure of it; and, in the case of us actresses and many other woman who work their ay, he has a right, if he pleases, to make himself sure of it." "Freda, stop!" The woman whose heart can be won is worth no better, and whoever is smart enough to win it insincerely is absolved from tjlafee by the mere fact that he could win it Oh, believe me, these are your gentlemen' as we find theml" "What is the matter, Freda? You aren't a bit like yourself. You were so different, too, atjsupper." "My dear, they tell us an actress' life is one continued round of pleasure and dissi pation. "Why not take it so sometimes?" But there were tears in her eyes as she way to turn. The more I try to get right with myself the worse I leel." Fred Sticknor's pained face recurred in a flash to Daisy's mind. "Freda, darling!" As often happens between women, the thought passed without words. "Yes, dear," Freda said miserably. "He is the best fellow in the world. I should cut off my right hand rather than hurt him. Yet, see-see how I actedl" "Do you care for him?" Freda started up gloomily in front of her, saying absently: "The woman, who in this lile of ours is lucky enoueh to be loved honestly, ought to care." Then remember ing Daisy, she cried hastily and with un mistakable decision: ".No, dear no I don't care for him I I think." CHAPTER VL Or 'WHAT OOOD? "Bird," said Kildare, "I've got to have more money." The girl's face lighted. "How much?" "Five hundred dollars." "Oh, Bob!" "Is it too much? Never mind, then." "No, Bob. I don't mean that; but are we doing so oadly?" " "Dash is a fool that's what's the matter. I have told him to order printing and stuff for The Merry Miser.' we have got to do it. That's what I want the 5500 for. Of course, if it inconveniences you " and Kildare turned as if to go. "Please don't speak so. Here it is." Kildare took the check. "TJm! Any more word from your law yers?" 'They they have sold something, Bob." "More advice, too, I suppose." "Yes. But it's none of their business. I have a right to use my money as I please. "When I am 21 1 can have everything. And, Bob, dear, I believe there is a good deal." "How about that will of yours? Suppose you die?" She laughed a pitiful little laugh. . 'The lawyers said it was all riglny didn't they. Bob? Then of a sudden she reached out" her arms, crying: "But, oh, I would rather live that I might give it to you my own self!" Her face had turned a strange white and great tears fell. "For heaven's sake, brace upl" said Kil dare. "Get some color in your face. I am sick of seeing you look this way always either making scenes or moping around." "Dear Bob, I I don't mope, and I am quite welL" "What's the matter with you, any how?"' She drew a hard breath and her lip began to quiver, though her tears had stopped. Presently she lifted her eyes solemnly to his. "Don't look at me like that! Arent you happy?" "Yes except for" "Except for what?" "Ob, Bob! Let me tell them!" The man scowled fearfully. Bird began to moan and twist her fingers together. Then she slipped to the floor and clung to his knees. "Boo! Bob! please. I will not be a bit more bother to you than I am now indeed I wou't! As it is my heart is breaking!" "Why don't you do a little of that at night? "Women will not do their best act ing on the stage." "Acting! It is my life going from me. It isn't much to ask, dear. Let me tell them. Let me tell Freda." "No. And shut up this infernal non sense. "What good are you to me that I should make such a sacrifice for you? Let's quit all this foolery or" he smiled grimly I'll not let you play in the "Miser.' " She drew herself from him till she could rest her head on a chair near, and, with her face hidden, crouched, sobbing. Kildare paced the room. Once he pushed hei fretfully with his feet At this she rose, understanding that her position irri tated him, and crept into a chair. Her wee face was haggard and her eyes woefully big. Kildare spoke more gently, "AYhy do you make me unkind to you by being unreason able?" "I have given up so much," Bird moaned, as if to herself; her brown eyes wide and unseeing. "All my ambition 'is gone, ex cept to please you except to play well enough so that" you will keep me in the cast All my friends are gone! gone! I would not dare try the latch of. my own home, for the" fear that it might not yield to me. My mother! God knows how, her heart fares in these lonely days. They used to call me pretty. Look at me now. All all gone into the great gulf of your cruelty! All! even the strength to bear it I am weak and ill. All gonel all gonel" "And your money, too: you forget that, eh?" "Yes, Bob, and my money, too." "Anything more to work off' your mind, Baby?" All over your complaints and winnings and tantrums?" She struggled to her feet, crying: "Robert! You will be sorry, you will indeed. Hard as you are, your heart must warm sometime. But oh, my dear, I love you. Let it warm a little to me now? Don't wait until the time is too late." Kildare snarled an inarticulate exclama tion, seized his hat and made for the door, turning at it to say: "Are you such" a fool as not to know yet that a man won't stand talk like this? he more true it is, the less he will stand it Get over this streak of idiocy. The sooner the better for you, and keep your mouth shut" "With this he slammed the door open and strode out "I wonder what I shall do," the jjirl asked herself aloud, a chill despair settling upon her. "I wonder what 1 shall do?" She crossed to her trunk. The upper tray was an orderly confusion of all kinds of feminine elegances: gossamer handkerchiefs in transparent cases, lace scarfs, an amber handled creamy parasol; a couple of fans one a sumptuous group of plumes, the other costly lace silk stockings in all dainty shades, with silver and jewelel clasped gar ters to match, gloves upon gloves upon gloves, and two or three jewel cases. From an unsuspected drawer in one of these Bird drew a bit of half printed, half written paper. Looking over it seemed to give her new courage. She thrust it back nastily, and replaced the box. Then, as her face grew haggard again, she said to herself: "Of what good? Of what good?" Perhaps she meant the finery in the trunk; half disordered by her hasty dis lodging of the box. Perhaps she meant the pearls and brilliants the box held. "Of what good? Of what good?" CHAPTER VIL HENROYD -WANTS LOOKING AFTEK. Breton's "duties" must have been accom modating, for they brought him to a goad many towns when Kildare was playing them. He found it difficult to make up his mind about Marguerite. Freda, too, she warded him off so cleverly that he also found it difficult to make up his mind about her. Meanwhile, Breton's family were grad ually thrown into some excitement They were a "good old family," mentioned, if you please, in the book of "American Aristoc racy," with a page and a half all to itself, too. Henroyd had been something of a black sheep. The family really did not ex pect Henroyd to marry, unless he got,a for tune thereby. As for his marrying an ac tress, it was unthinkable. Yet, rumors were abroad that his intentions seemed al most serious. Mrs. Breton wrote to a sis ter. She really could not herself stoop to protest over such a matter to her son; he THE might think she believed.it The sister ap proached Henroyd indirectly by letter. "Can yon, Henroyd, with all your pros pects," she wrote, ''afford to be constantly attendant on actresses, however charming they may be?" But she got no answer at all. Neither did various aunts who broached the subject get any satisfaction. Breton merely ex claimed between his teeth and wondered who had been talking. It all put him in an irritable frame of mind, and when a cousin ran into him on the street and asked: "Going over to Boston?" he growled out: "Yes is it your business?" The men turned into a lounging place. "How are the folk?" Breton asked. "Well, except great "Uncle Pratt You are as interested as I am in the news that he's a little shaky." ""We ought to come in for a good share of the old man's stuff," Breton mused. "TJm yes, but you must stop running after pretty actresses." The old man did too much of that him self in his time to take it amiss in us," Hen royd said, awkwardly. ""Who is she, Breton?" "What's the story, now?" "Don't lose your temper, Breton. Prettv actress in "Washington admirer in attend ance in the very view of his "Washington contingent of relations. "Washington is a bad place to begin that sort of thing. Quiet watcn various reports. Handsome admirer, for instance, appears at various towns along the company's route Even here, in Phila delphia, under the eyes of the home con tingent of relations. Here is to her, dear old boy! But don't get tangled up. "Why go to Boston?" "I believe my relations are all malicious idiots." "Don't be a fool yourself, Henroyd, I'm one of your relations and I have a sincere interest in your welfare. It won't do for vou to get the old people down on you. I like actresses myself. It's a pity. The aver age women does not hold a candli to the aver age actress for attractiveness. There is a catch and go about her. The advantage is a man can quit when he wants to. You must keep quiet till some of these old people knock off Don't'let them think you are going to marry one of these women." Breton thought of Marguerite and answered whimsically. "I don't know. I might marry one of them." "Good heavens! 'You can't marry an actress?" "Why not?" "Oh, it's nonsense blithering nonsense. Fall in love with an actress, if you like; spend your money on her, if you can't help it; but marry her? Never!" "See here. If it comes to that, why not?" "My boy, my dear fellow, a man wants to be sure of the woman he marries." Breton felt Marguerite affronted. He glowered over his glass and said in his throat: "An actress may be a good woman." "No offense, Henroyd; but who knows an actress is a good woman? She may be, of course. But you can't in nature feel sure of a woman who goei through what an actress must go through, and a man must be sure of the woman he makes his wife." "Do you know what you are talking about?" "Yes; I do. I'm talking about women from 18 to 28 women $o live in the world, with no guidance but their own caprice; no protection but that of their own prudence. "Women who are open to the attentions of any cad who can get an intro duction to them. I'm talking of women whose ambitions aid vanities are constantly catered to, and whose attractiveness invites attentions, invites temptations against which their unprotected position affords them no safeguard. "Women, too, whose daily companions are these actor fellows mostly no acoount duffers, but deuced attractive. "Actresses are charming; they know how to dress; they are dainty from top to toe; they know how to walk; they are witty and saucy and bright; they are a bundle of fas cinating femininities; they can help a fellow get a headache, and sympathize with him when he's got it; but a man does not want to marry such a woman." Breton swallowed a good deal of brandy. He did not like the idea of Marguerite's being described in that way. "I am stopping too long," he said, gruffly, and they parted. That evening Mrs. Marimone, Boston, re ceived a telegram as follows: "Henroyd wants looking after." 3b be Continued next Sunday. BITS OF FESHKIHE FANCY. Flat hats will remain in favor for winter wear, but not with wide brims. At the seaside this motto has been adopted: When in doubt wear blue serge. Thk panier is making headway. Full puff ings on the hips are among the things to be looked for in the near future. The most acceptable present for your lady friends is one of the new designs of hat pins. The most admired are those of a single dia mond setting. A pretty morning gown has a skirt of dark blue India silk, with rows of hemstitching across the bottom. With this skirt wear a silver gray silk olouse waist. The late summer parasols, whether of foulard or surah striped, "spot.ted" or plain, are lined with light and delicate tints and have amazingly long handles. A tew words of prophecy: The hours of the "Louis" coat are numbered. Just two inches below the hips will be the order of the tailor's autumn day. The short jacket is weary of banishment and will come home to its own again. Slilpfers mndo with sides of undressed leather or cloth exactly niatching the stock ings and with toes of patent leather, or em broidered, or beaded, make the foot seem small, for the sides catch no light and all that one sees is the bright point of the shoe. TnE present popularity of yellow and ecru in silk, organdie and grenadine is especially becoming to brunettes. The most stylish gowns fashioned of these fabrics are ptin cess shape, rosettes of velvet ribbon adorn ing the lall of cream color lace set on the hips. Air effective and novel portier can be made of rope, the kind ordinarily used for clothes lines. This is cut in regular lengths, one end of each piece fastened at the top of the window to the rings on a pole. The lower end is then fringed to a depth of six or eight inches with admirable effect The greatestnovelty of the season just now consists of thin silk blouse waists which are made of almost any colorof soft, pliable silk. Cow s-tail red, coral red, water green, emer ald greenf pale green, orange and the deli cate shades of blue are the favorites. Over these blouse waists a sleeveless vest is worn. One of the prettiest and most novel of the season's conceits among the Parisian dress makers is the epaulette effect produced on evening and demi-toilet gowns with flowers. For this puipobe, large or small flowers are chosen, according to the fancy of the indi vidual, and when mixed with grass or foliage, give a decidedly military effect. The German Emperor is said to be ex tremely fond of his big. kind-hearted blonde frau, and Is reported as saying: "I could wish no better to the men of my nation than that the girls would follow the example of their Empress in devoting their lives as she does to the cultivation of the three IPs Die Kirche, Die Kinder und Die Kuche" (the church, the children, and the cuisine). The most elegant handkerchiefs now are all white. They are trimmed with white lace and embroidery, with an edge of Valen ciennes lace fully a finger wide surrounding the open hem. The old-fashioned style of setting lace and emDroidery in the corner of handkerchiefs has come in again. Handker chiefs with colored borders are fashionable, but not so chio as those with colored centers and white borders. Soke of the- eleotrio dinners are realiza tions of more fantastic dreams than those related among the Arabian Nights' wonders. One recently given was served upon a table of glass shining through fine white linen, with countless electric globes beneath its surface. A carland of roses wound down through the centre, broken every now and -then by nymphs holding wreaths of flowers, each! blazing with lights. Dr. Mott on Spew's Wine. Dr. Mott, of the Bellevue Blospital Col lege, gives his unqualified endorsement to Speer s wines, and recommends their use to sickly females and consumptives. It oan be procured of any first-class druggist PITTSBURG DISPATCH. CAPE COD GKANGERS. A Glimpse of Cleveland, Jefferson and Booth on Their Farms. WISE PAPERS AGRTCULTUEE. Proceedings of Farmers' Alliance Chapter 832 and Its Influence. ; TBOUBLE WITH A JEHU OF BOSTON COBRESPONnEXCE 01" THE DISPATCH. Cape Cod, Mass., Aug. 28. Barnstable county, which is oo-extensive with Cape Cod, is the easterraost county of Massachu setts and has an area of 290 miles. It con sists of a peninsula which is Bixty miles long, terminating in Cape Cod. It is bounded on the east and south by .the At lantic ocean and on the west by Buzzard's Bay and the Cleveland boom which juts up against it. The soil is mostly light arid sandy, producing the resinous germ of the John pine and the bright red boxberry Dairy products, corn and wool, nourish here to some extent, and the little Farmers' Al liance at Buzzard's Bay, of which Mr. Jef ferson, Mr. Cleveland and Mr. Gilder are members, meeting on the first and third Tuesdays of each month,' furnishes a most entertaining place to go for an evening. There you will hear of the ravages of the curculio and what the prospects are for ensilage and persiflage this fall. Mr. Jeffer- Could Sear on the Outside. son keeps 1,600 head of cows on his Louis iana place, and it is said raises his calves on condensed milk. He loves dearly to fool with agriculture. TISHIKG ON BAINY DATS. On rainy days, when Mr. Jefferson can not work on the farm, he may often he seen in an oilskin coat digging for angleworms, while near by you will see Mr. Cleveland with an old peach can almost filled with these delicious insects. The two start off together, and are often gone all day fishing in Buzzard's Bay, Buttermilk Bay or some ofUheir tributaries. Trout came down into the salt water for the shrimps and also, I judge, for the breeze and' change of scene, so that often the brook trout and sea bass, mackerel, weakfish, bluefish, eta, are caught in the same waters. All sorts of sea food, from the large, aromatic codfish of com merce to the kippered herring of the work aday world, are found here in the front dooryard of the great comedian. It is rather low of course to accept of a man's hospitality and then speak lightly of his agriculture, Dut I must say that those members of the Buzzard's Bay Farmers' Alliance, Chapter 832, whom I met, includ ing those I have named, and also Mr. Booth and the Elder Couldock, did not fool me with their farmer talk for a single moment. I did not know something about farming, so I was not permitted to join the Alliance. I was permitted, however, 'to look over some of the papers prepared by these gentlemen, and I say that if such men are to wield the balance of power in '92 the underpinning of our national fabric will become very porous indeed. GIVING ASPARAGUS AIT AUtnTG. JWr. Cleveland's paper on "How to Air an Asparagus Bed" showed that the most pro found statesmanship may be connected very often with the most pitiable ignorance re garding farm work. People never do have to air an asparagus bed. Mr. Booth, who has been visiting here this summer, and who knows very little regarding agricul ture, was admitted by card, while I was shut out. He followed Mr. Cleveland's paper with a discussion regarding "Spring and Fall Application of Mayonnaise Dress ing in the Cultivation of Asparagus." "When people talk that way about growing simple garden truck and are given a life membership in the Alliance, while one like myself, who farmed it successfully as long as his wife's money held out, and who, therefore, ought to know something regard ing agriculture, is not permitted to join the debate, it naturally has a tendency to em bitter one. Mr. Gilder read a paper regarding the "Ko tat ion of Crops," and described a new machine by the use of which he thought that crops could be given a rotary motion. From this the discussion became general, and gradually drifted into literature and the use of fresh liver and cod's heads for crabbing purposes. The use of iambic versi fication and the chub rod took up the at tention of the Alliance for the rest of the evening. From what I could hear on the outside, I judge that these men knew no more regarding the uses and abuses of agri culture than do the Socklcss Simpson and the umbrageous Feffer. SOME TRIALS OF THE FABMEK." Mr. Couldock showed how the farmer suffered, how he was trodden into the earth and ill treated till his life was not worth living. He said that it is a do's life. He showed that the farmer is reviled secretly by the politician and. hoodwinked at the polls, ground down by the money lender and skinned by the merchant, ridiculed by the comic papers and lied about by the un- f : a 1 i it... 1 i cuiuii; papers, uajru uy tuc mwjcitt auu then barbecued by the fruit tree peddler, bunkoed by the bunko steerer, .gouged by the green goods man, ignored by Congress, cursed by the consumer, skun by the wealthy and peppersauced by the poor, peeled by the penniless and tobaccosauced by the usurious, dogged by the Sheriff and" taxed to his grave, that he may prosper the interests of the non-resident. Mr. Couldock then read a paper on "How to Keep Boys on the-Farm." Buzzard's Bay is only a short ride from Boston. A bright correspondent of the press is at the station. I did not know it when I went there. He was disguised, I think, as a baggageman, for I saw no one but the regular station men when Mr. Kob son and I got ofij but the paper the next day had a graphic account of all we said and did, both when we landed at Buzzard's Bay and when we left the day afterward. I do not know who he was, but he was a success' from a' newspaper standpoint. He was graphic and described how my clothes seemed to fit me better than I could have done it myself. Far better, in fact, for I .might have been prejudiced. He was not. He just laid aside all feeling and hewed to the line, let the chips fall where they may. Just as the Prince of "Wales would do. GEOVEB 0S HIS HEALTH. I did not succeed in drawing out Mr. Cleveland regarding his candidacy, but he said naively, as he turned aside to spit on his bait, that his health was tiptop. "That," said he, as he unfastened his hook from the wainscoting of my trousers, "is one thing which I liko about me. "While not in any sense a candidate, you may say in a general, way that my health is right good." "What I admire about Mr. Cleveland," said Mr. Jefferson the following day, "is. JKoAImitmn:c Jnfff Wigs . SUNDAY. AUGUST SO, that he is a just man. Even his enemies must admit that. When we go out fishing and return at night,Mr. Cleveland will not accept more than his just share of the catch. I do not say that Mr. Blaine would expect to catch 'chubs' and 'pumpkin seeds' all day and then expect to offset them against brook trout, but at the same time I think he might consider that his conversational powers would offset his suckers, while Mr. Cleveland does not try to so work his diplo matic gifts as to keep him in grub. He is a man who wants to give substantial justice to everybody, and of course this does- not suit those who never tried it. Mr. Cleve land and his wife make 'good neighbors here, and he has never borrowed anything vet that he has not returned. I help him in haying and he helps me in harvest. "We ex change works. I let him have my 'autobi ography' to read and he loans me some o his most spicy old messages to Congress." THE FOOTFAtL OF THE BOOM. Property has greatly appreciated in this country since the arrival of the Clevelands, Jeftersons and Gilders. From 532 per acre paid by Mr. Charles Jefferson, the price has gone up to 250 and $300 and even to a price per front foot. But fortunately the 'specu lator will not get a chance at it, for the colony holds enough of it to keep the semi barbarism of a boom out of it. "What can be sadder than the stealthy footfall of a ?2 boom in the soothing silence of the primeval forest? Looking over the United States, it is wonderful how health and pleasure resorts have built up within a few years. From the east to the west, from the north to the south, the coast and the hills are freckled with cottages and inns for those who have learned that a change of air is better than the entire pharmacopceia. Kantasket Beach, the Coney Island of Boston, is a beautiful stretch of shore, giving upon Boston harbor. I saw a wagon load of young men on the Jerusalem road who had been up to Nantasket and im proved their health so much that they spoke about it in high terms to every one they met, even stopping a good'many car riages to tell joyfully and yet with ill guided elocution aud confused rhetoric, now the sea air bad benefited them. The following day they followed up their dietetic course with 12 hours' gentle exer cise in macadamizing thearoads of Cohasset, returning at night with a healthyiglow and in charga of anofticer. THE HUB KT SUMMEB. Boston does not seem so deathly quiet in midsummer as New York. "Whila the hot weather reduces the speed of-pedeslrians on "Washington street somewhat, I succeeded in getting a shoulder knocked off before breakfast as I was hurrying down to the common for a brisk walk and also to see the parched and feverish frog pond, hoping that at that hour I might find it moist, with mayhap a froe in it Boston used to ba ' called Shawmut by the entomological red orotner. it was atterwara called xremont, pronounced Tremnipnt. This pronuncia tion when it gets as far as Pittsburg be comes Treemont and at Chicago, Tremont. It really means trimountain, because itwas located on the tops of three hills. The herdic is a favorite relaxation in Boston omong,the middle classes. I have fought with cabmen in all countries, but never got hold of one that I could whip till I came to Boston "this time. You always know when you get into a herdic that you will not only have a pleasant little choppy ride, but that you will know exactly how much to pay when you get through. Un fortunately, I paused to pick up my valise, which had fallen off' the perch of the driver. He should have gotten it himself, because .improvements in His Escape. he was the one who dropped it, but he had a skittish horse, and so I got it. But, of course, we stopped while I did so. "When we came to settle he charged me double price because we had stopped on the way. A SETTO 'WITH THE JEHU. . I saw that he was a consumptive, and knowing tliat he had a skittish horse, I raised myself to my full height, a thing that I very rarely do, and told him that I would" give him only the price of a single trip. He then struck at me with his whip, which fortunately hit me so that I had an oppor tunity to catch it by the lash, and quickly jerking it, he meantime retaining his hold upon it, I pulled him from his perch, and, maddened by a cup of chocolate which I had just drank at the tavern and the fumes of which had risen to my brain, I struck him repeatedly with my clenched hand, one knuckle of which I allowed to protrude in a way calculated to give him great pain, at least if it hurt him as much as it did me. I had just polished him off and made good my escape, when a policeman, less than a block away, closed the AtlatUic Month ly, in which he was reading a continued story, and started for me. I thought I had already made good my escape, but at this time I decided to make some more improve ments on it, which I did, and soon might have been seen gayly perched on the after deck of Mr. BobsoVs steam yacht, the "Why, and, with the wind on my quarter, was speeding swiftly toward Cohasset. It is very seldom that I imbrue my hands in the warm, steaming blood of a fellow being, but when I do there is generally a good stiff market for mourning goods among his immediate relatives for a week or so afterward. Bra. Nye. UNCLE JEESY BUSK SC0BES. His Advice to Full the Tassels Off Corn Seems to Be Very Good. The Agricultural . Department lately sent out a circular advising corn growers to pull the tassels off their corn, because much of the strength of the plant went into the tas sel, and by removing this the yield of grain would be increased, says a Missouri farmer in the St Louis Globe-Democrat. I have tried it on about ten acres, and though it is yet too early to state the result with exact ness, the indications are that I will have about twice as much corn on that patch than on any other similar area of ground on my farm. The ears are far mpre numerous, and already considerably larger than those of plants the tassels of which have been allowed to remain, and for one I think Uncle Jerry Busk has made known a good thing. v It Is Malaria That Alls Ton. If you have a constant dull headachej or a periodical neuralgia on one or both sides ot the head, malaria is the cause. If you have a furred tongue, no appetite, heavy feeling at the pit of the stomach, belching of wind, it is malaria that does it Shivers of iiervous chills, flashes of heat, cold sweat, and a feeling too hot or too cold, are all in dications of that subtle and health-destroying poison known as malaria. In some localities the air is filled with it, the water permeated by it, and the soil infiltrated by malarial emanations so completely that en tire escape is impossible. To all such Pe-ru-na is a boon and protection. Pe-ru-na will prevent or cure malarial chills and fever and fever and ague when all other medicines fail. For sale at most drug stores. Directions on each bottle. For a free book-on malarial diseases send to The Peruna Medicine Company, Colum bus, Ohio. 1891. BEST- ffl 'C0L0KAD0. A Pretty Cottonwood Grove Where Olive Thome Finds Peace. PAR DOWN IN A LITTLE CANYON. A Enstic Frame Cottage Surrounded by a Colony of Pretty Tents. THE SCENERY OF THE GREAT STATE COBRUSPONDESCI Or THK DISPATCH. Cheyenne Canton, Col., Aug. 12. Imagine a pretty one-story cottage, set down in'a grove of cotton wood trees with a gnarly oak and a tall pine here and there to give it character, and surrounded, as a hen by her chickens, by tent', six or eight, in every conceivable position, and at every possible angle except a right, angle. Add to this picture the sweet voices of birds, and the music of water rushing and hurrying over the stones; let your glance take in on our side the grand outlines of Cheyenne Mount ain, Made drrably sacred by the poet's pen And poet's grave, and on the other, the rest of the range, overlooked, by the snowy cap of Pike's Peak, 14,000 feet higher than the streets of New York. Do this and vou will come a3 near to realizing Camp Harding' as one can who is hundreds of miles away, and has never seen a Colorado camp. Do not think, however, that camps such as this are common, even in this land of out-of-doors, where tents are open for business, even the business of education in the streets of the towns, and whjre every householder sets up his canvas in his yard, for invalids to sleep in from June to November. This little settlement of tents is an evolution, the gradual growth of the tent idea in the mind of ONE COMFOBT-IiOVTNG 'WOMAN'. She came here seven or eight years ago, bought this grove under the shadow of Cheyenne, put up a tent and passed her first summet thus. The next year, and several years thereafter she gradually improved her transient abode in many ways that her womanly taste suggested, as a wooded noor, a high. baseboard, partitions of muslin or critonne, door and windows of wire gauze. The original dwelling has thus, step by step, frown to a framed and rough plastered ouse, with doors and windows, while grouped picturesquelyaround it are some of the most unique abiding places in Colorado. They are in effect handsome hard-wood boxes three feet high and of different sizes up to 14x16 feet, with platform in front and canvas roof. The "boxes" are without tops; and each side is surmounted for its whole length with a wire-gauze continuous window, capable of being tightly closed by the under canvas of the two which form the roof, or opened for the air to sweep through. Inside these structures are models of com fort, with regular beds, and furniture, rugs on the 'floor, gauzy window curtains, drap ery wardrobes, and even tiny stoves for. cool mornings and evenings. They combine the comforts of a house with the open air and delightful freshness of a tent, where one may near every bird twitter and see the dancing leaf shadows in the moonlight Over the front platform the canvas cover ex tends to form an awning, and a wire gauze door, in addition to one ot wood, makes them airy or snug, as the weather demands. THE CUBE OF BEST. In one of the rooms of the original house your correspondent is delightfully domi ciled, enjoying the comforts of the East with the freedom of the "West. Better still, she was perfectly rested and refreshed before the end of a week, and since that has been laying in new stores of life and energy for the coming ten months of care and work in the city. Magic? No; onlya little clear common sense, practically applied, which whosoever will may profit by also. Here is her method, her "rest cure," her "foun tain of health;" tired reader, "Go thou and do likewisel As her train rolled out of Jersey City one Saturday, night her only desire was for rest She had been hurried and worried up to the last, but the moment she was alone, with her "section" to herself and no one to speak to, she "took herself in hand." All her affairs, all her interests, all her respon sibilities she shook oft, with the dust from her feet, and left in that busy city where a few burdens more or less would not matter to anybody. "With her trunks checked, and her face turned toward the far-off Bocky Mountains, she left the whole work-a-day world behind her, departing, so far as she was able a liberated soul, with no duties excepting to rejoice and recruit. IT IS A DIFFICULT TASK. This is not so easy a3 it sounds. Done thoroughly it is like a rending apart of one's very life; but it . can be done, it has been done, over and over, and H is a charm more potent than magic to bring restoration and recreation to the brain and nerve-weary worker. To bring herself fully into the restful state of emancipation from her habit ual environment, she interested herself in the study of her fellow passengers as if they were a new species, their peculiarities, their little idiocyncrafies, indications of character all from which the close observer may know what manner of persons they are. Above all, the car porter, who is always an amusing study, the most imposing personage on the train; an autocrat, who rules his small domain like a Caar; whose gracious permission is necessary before one can open a window, which he at once fills with a screen, clogged with the dust of ages, to keep out cinders, and fresh air as well; his carefully studied evolutions in opening and making up the berths, conscious of being the cynosure of all eyes; lastly, the struggles of the subdued and meek passengers with the difficulties of undressing benind a curtain in a space one foot wide, and then the lulling to sleep by the monotonous rattle of wheels over the rails. Behind the friendly curtain, moreover, is freedom. "Windows may be opened (if one has strength to manage a sleeping car win dow). Sweet country air and cinders may be enjoyed together; the eye of the dictator is not upon you. ACBOSS THE CONTINENT. So she went on, day after day, night after night, till she entered Kansas which was new to her. By that time she had succeeded in banishing to the farthest cor ner of her memory, behind closed and locked doors, all the anxieties, all the perplexities and problems, all the concerns in fact,'of her home life. She was like a newly-created soul, fresh and eager to see and enjoy every thing. She refused the morning papers; she wished to forget the world of strife and crime, and to get so into harmony with the trees and flowers, the books and the breezes, that she would realize herself Kith and kin To every wild-born thing that thrills and blows. In one word she wishes as nearly as possible to walk abroad out of her hinder ing body of clay, for only in this way can one truly rest and recreate herself. She looked out of the windows to see what the Cyclone State had o give her. It offered flowers and singing birds, broad fields of growing grain, and acres of rich black soil newly turned up to the sun. Everything was fresh and perfect as if just from the hands ot its maker; it seemed the paradise of the farmer. From the fertile fields and miles of flowers the train passed to bare blossomless earth; from rich soil to rocks; from Kansas to Colorado. That part of the State which appeared in the morning, looked like a vast body of hardly dry mud, with nothing worth mentioning growing upon it Each little gutter had worn for itself a deep CHANNEL -WITH PBECIPITOUS SIDES. And here and there a great section had sunken, as' though there was no solid foun dation. , Soon, nowever, the land showed inclination to draw itself np into hills- tiny ones with sharp peaks, as. though pre paring for mountains. Before long they re treated to a distance and grew bigger, and at last far off appeared the mountains, over topping all one great white peak, the 4 Giver of gold, king of eternal hills. A welcome awaited her in the summer home of a friend at Colorado Springs, in the very presence of the grand mountain range, at ohe end the beautiiul Cheyenne, with its tender memories, and behind and above all the snow cap of Pike's Peak, with its thrilling associations of gold fever times. , Four blissful days the enchanted traveler gave to friendship and the mountains, and then she set up her household goods the few she had brought in this cottonwood camp on the banks of the Minnelowan (or shining water), a mad Colorado stream which, formed by the junction of two from the canyons above, comes tumbling down from the Cheyenne, rushing and roaring as if it had the business of the world on its should ersand must do it man-fashion, with con fusion and noise enough to drown all other sounds. DELIGHTS OF COLOEABO. Four things attracted the traveler to Col orado. First, friends few, but precious; second, the hope of rest and change; third, the wish to see the wonderland; fourth, to spy out its birds. As to rest, it is to be had in perfection, for both soul and body if one chooses to take it One may swing in a hammock and be happy all day watching the "clouds that cruise the sultry sky" a sky so blue one never tires of it; or beside the brook he may "lie upon its banks and dream himself away to some enchanted ground." Or he may study the ever-changing aspects of the mountains; their dreary, veiled appearance with the morning sun full upon them, their deep violet blneness in the early evening, with the sun behind them, and the mystery of the moonlight, which "sets them far oft in a world of their own," as tender and unreal as mountains in a dream. He may do this day after day, and night after night, indulging his soul in dreams and raptures and poetic flights impossible to everyday mortals in every day life. He may observe, but he's far more likely to become excited, and finally bewitched by guide books and photographs, and talk all about him, of this or that canyon, this or that pass, the Garden of the Gods, Manitou, the Seven Sisters Falls, the grave of H. H., and unless he is a fool or a philosopher, be fore he knors it he is in the full swing of sight seeing. He becomes learned in bur ros, the "Ship of the Bockies," so indis pensable, so common that even the babies take to them. THE SIGHT SEEKEE'S WOE. He climbs peaks, he drives over nerve shaking roads, a sheer wall and a frightful Srecipice on either side, he toils up hun reds of steps, he goes quaking down into ruins, he looks and admires and trembles, till sentiment is worn to threads, purse de pleted, and body and mind alike a wreek. For this sort of traveler there is no rest in Colorado, there is always another mountain to thrill him, another canyon to rhapsodize over to one who is greedy of "sights" the tameness of Harlem or the muddy flats of Canarsie will afford more rest. A& to the teller of this ever true tale, she can bear to be near sights without seeing them. She believes what she hears never were such grand mountains, never such soul-stirring views, never such hair breadth roads. She believes and stays in her cottonwood grove content She knows how it all looks, lias she not peered down into one canyon holding her breath the while and with slightly differing arrange ment of rocks and pine trees and brooks, are not all canyons the same? Has she not gazed with awe at the "trail" to the grave and watched without envy the sight seeing tourist struggling with its diffi culties. ALMOST COMPLETELY HIDDEN. Nothing is more fascinating to the stranger in Colorado than the formation of its canyons not only the grand ones running up into the heart of the mountains, but its lesser ones, cutting into the high table lands, or Mesa, at the foot of the hills. The oft-mentioned cottonwood grove far example, with its dozen of dwellings and a natural park of a good many acres above it, with tall pines that bear the marks of age, is so curiously hidden, that on may come almost upon it without seeing ft It is reached from Colorado Springs by an electric road which runs along the Mesa south ot the town, as the car nears the end of the line one begins to' look around for the grove. Not a tree is in sight, right and left,' as far as can be seen, stretched the treeless plain to the feet of the eternal hills; not even the top of a tall pine thrusts itself above the dead level. Be tore you 13 Cheyenne grim, glorious, but impenetrable. The conductors stops. "This is your place," he says. You see no place you think he must be mistaken. "But whereTs Camp Harding," you ask. He points to an obscure path "trail," he calls it which seems to throw itself over an edge. You approach that point, and there, to your wonder and your surprise, at your feet nestles the loveliest of smiling canpon-like valleys, aspen, oak and pine, with here and there a tent or red roof learning through the green, and a noisy rook hurrying on its way down hilL , A PABADISE OF THE WEST. By steep scramble you reach the lower level, birds singing, flowers tempting on every side, and the picturesque, narrow trail leading you on, around the ledge of rock, oyer the rustic bridge, till yon reach the back entrance of the camp. Before it, op the narrow valley winds a road, the car nage way to .the Cheyenne Caneas. Colorado Springs is a really beautiful town of broad streets and pleasant homes with every modern' improvement Its flowers and foliage are kept green and grow ing by constant irrigation, the whirligig sprinkler on every lawn, and the sugges tive "ditch" beside each street It is very droll to an Easterner to see a lawn "put in soak" and a row of trees with their feet in the water, but these are very acceptable at tentions to Colorado vegetation. So per fect is the weather that strangers resent a rainy day as if it were a personal insult, and but one person is on record of wearying of the perpetual sunshine. That was an Englishman, who announced himself as "tinsdof your beastly blue skies." So dry is the air that invalids and the "night-air fiend" sit out till bedtime, and sleep tran quilly in tents or with doors and windows wide open. Thus it is in sumnur; in and near the town "east of the mountains and west of the sun," as it appears to the temporary so journer. "What it may be the other 11 months one should stay a year to find out Olive Thobne. BAILB0AD mCOHSISTEHCY. How a St Irfrais Conductor Was Bounced for a Thing He Could Not Help. Bailroadmen who make rules for the safety of lives and property are often ex tremely unreasonable, says a railroader in the St Louis Republic. In one of the yards of a particular road at a terminal, in fact a freight conductor who was handling a lot of empties received orders to immediately get off" the main track for a special. He had his train almost made up, but was so sit uated that he found it necessary to back in over two tongue switches. Both were un steady affairs and must be held open or closed, or become unreliable. He had no time to wait for help a minute, so he held one of the switches himself and waved his engineer back. The other switch jumped open when the train was about half in, off the track went half a dozen cars, and the "special" was delayed a long time. The conductor was summoned beforethe master of trains and here is what was said: Master of Trains Where were yon when switch No. 1 jumped open? Conductor I was holding switch No. 2. 5L T. "Why didn't you hold No. 1 or have it done? - . C. They were both liable to jump open and I had no time to wait for assistance: I did not know that No. 1 was any more lia ble to fly open than No. 2. jr. J "Well, you ought to have been t,winff the one that flew open: yon are suspended for 60 days. J FROM THE FLNGER TIPS ! A Person Can Be Identified Withont Any Element of Donbt SOME TERY KEMAEKABLE TESTS. Simple Precautions That Will PreTent Premature Baldness. THE CANTEEN SYSTEM U THE ARM.. fwm'rrcT Ton the dispatch, j There has always been some nnsatisfao tory element in the methods hitherto adopted for purposes of identification, and many cases are on record in which crim inals have escaped punishment in conse quence of the miscarriage of the system which has been relied on for the establish ment of their identity. According to Fran cis Galton, there is no longer any occasion for doubt or difficulty on this score, and he has shown that in the examination and reg istration of the marks on finger tips is to ba found an almost infallible method of identi fying human beings. The marks on the finger tips are the mouths of ducts issuing from the glands of perspiration. Such ducts, of course, exists all over the body, and their issues are surrounded by slight elevations of the skin. But there is a dif ference between the ducts on the inner sur face of the hands and the soles of the feet, and those in the other parts of the body, in that in the former the ducts are contained in delicate ridges, which are like craters along the crest of a mountain chain, while in the latter the ducts are contained in sep arate elevations like craters in isolated cones. It is the convolutions of these ridges which form the patterns on the finger tips. The general character and details of these markings are preserved at various periods of life. The proportions of the ridgeimay change with fatness or leanness, and as the hands are altered.by use, disease or age, the pattern, as a whole, may change in length or breadth, but the number of the ridges and the details remain the same. The finger tip has been aptly likened to a piece of lace, the outlines of which may be changed by stretching in one way and shrinking in the other, but which always has the same number of threads. Mr. Galton gives a great number of instances in which the certainty of this finger record is established, notably that H a friend whose impressions were preserved in sealing-wax for 17 years and found to correspond with recently taken impres sions.a The same correspondence is shown in cases where the impression of the thumb of a child of 2 years is compared with the record of the same child when 15; in the finger prints of three persons in childhood, and again after seven years; the finger prints of many persons at '25 or 30 and again .at SO or 60, and those of a man at 63 aud again at 80. The making of the impressions is a very simple process. Over a glass plate a coatin of thin ink is spread by a printer's roller, and the finger tips are pressed lightly, upon the glass and then upon paper. Mr. Galton has so much faith in this new system that he looks forward to a time when every ton vict shall have prints taken of his fingenby the prison photographer at the beginning and end of his imprisonment, and a register made of them; when army and naYy re cruits shall go through the same process; when the index number of the hands shall be commonly inserted in advertisements for persons who are lost orwhocannot be identi fied, ahd when every youth who is leaving his home for a long residence abroad shall obtain prints of his fingers at the same time that the portrait id photographed, for his friends to retain as a memento. How to Delay Italdnes?. , An English physician has written to tha papers to exhort people not to grow bald, before their time, because there is no need, that they should if they will take only rea sonable care of their heads. After premis ing that one of the great primal causes of premature baldness is civilization, rith,its many artificial restrictions, he dwells on " the importance of taking care of the gen eral health as one of the surest ways of keeping the hair on. He recommends everyone to avoid tight-fitting hats and collar unless they be of some parous ma terial, and to ventilate all headgear which is not porous at the top and sides to allow a free current of air; not to sit or stand with the top of the head near a gas light or lamp light, as the heat thrown out is apt to paralyze the scalp tissues and dry up the hair itself; not to adopt the common practice of dipping the comb in water when arranging the hair, as it produces decomposition, and rancidity of the natural oil, and so leads to "rotting;" not wash the head oftener than once a fort night, and then 'rub in the yolk of an egg, and thoroughly rinse in warm water into which has been thrown a pinch of borax, dry carefully and apply a little pure olive oil; if the nair he naturally dry, apply a little olive oil occasionally; if naturally oily wash occasionally in a lather of tepid water and soap bark; wear an oil cap while bathing, as salt water is most injurious to the hair: avoid stiff brushes, treat the hair gently and use the comb as little as possible; have the ends clipped once a month, but don't close crop. Effect of the Canteen System. The introduction of the canteen system into the American army has had a marked influence on its soldiers. Its immediate effect as gathered from the reports of officers in command of various stations is that drunkenness has been abolished and the offenses incidental to it, for which formerly nine-tenths of the men were tried, have entirely ceased. It is surprising what a well-managed canteen will do to check crime in regiments. An English officer, in telling of his experience, says: 'I was de termined to put a stop to the crime which I found -a feature of my battalion when I came home from abroad to take com mand. Acting dn the advice of a good Sergeant Major, I did every thing I could to provide a well-ordered can teen, clean and comfortable reading rooms, gamefi and field sports for the men, and, above all, a'well-served bar, where my men could rely on getting an A 1 glass of beer. I told my officers what my ideas werej and they supported me. Instead of rushing off to town whenever they got a chance they stayed in quarters with their men. The ef fect of our Bystem was most marked; from being one of the worst disciplined bat talions in the army, I soon found myself in command of one of the best. A well man aged canteen, where the soldier knows that he gets his moneys worth for his money, is the zreat essential to good discipline,' and, what is of almost equal importance, the offi Ui (VliAlUAfc CUUUl Aujuvra abVy fca wui- uld identify themselves, iudiciously e, with the men off parade." cers snouiu i of course, Rapid Photography. The great progress that has been made in the methodsoy which rapid movements can be analyzed is well seen in a series of photographs lately taken. The subject of these pictures is a dog jumping over a small bush. In the act of making one jump tha animal has been photographed 24 separate umes, and each picture-is not a silhouette, as was the case with many former attempts of this kind, but a little picture showing half tone and detail. Some of the attitudes appear very ludicrous, for they represent phase of movement which the eye is unac customed to and cannot possibly appreciate. Notably is this the case in the commence ment of thu jump, when the dog's hind legs only touch the ground; and again, at tha finish of the jump, when his legs are .gath ered together in a bunch. "w. Jt-