and he made no explanation nor apology for his absence. 'Toil have been away all day," laid Joan, timidly addressing: him. "Yes," he replied briefly, and during dinner he scarcely spoke. Then Joan thought of her Ions: sleep, and wondered if her tongue had spoken in her dreams. She dare not ask the man who sat opposite to her with unbending brow. And tne Gen eral never alluded to it Joan's sleeping words had smute him sharper than a sword. He began to remember little things. Joan's complete prostration when Robert Conray died, and Miriam's firmer mood, though she declared the dead man had been her plighted lover. Good God ! had this fair woman de ceived him all these years? the General bad thought many a time during this miserable day. Had she loved Robert Conrar, and not her sister? Had he shot himself "in'tlie shame and anguish of his sin? Pilled with distracting doubts and fears he knew not how to act. And Joan sat trembling, know ing that something had happened; that something stood between her and her hus band's love. And when she went to her room at night the servants were conveying a bed into the General's dressing room. "What is this lor?" she asked. "The General ordered it to be put here, ma'rn," replied one of the servants and Joan said no more. She sat down, half benumbed in her room, and pnt her hands over her face. Had the blow fallen? "What did he mean? And Joan moaned alouil. Hours afterwards she heard the General go into his dressing-room, and lock the ad joining door. Then she crept to bed, but dare not sleep. And this went on for many dayt and night;. The General barely spoke to her, and Joan lived a miserable "life of doubt and fear. But the strain was too great to last. Joan's health broke down, and when the doctor was sent for, he said she had fever. She grew worse and worse, and one night became violently delirious, and her maid, who was watching her, got frightened, and ran down to the General, who was in the library, for assistance. Then he went upstairs, and stood by Joan's bed, who started np when khe saw I ffl liifcW Ira CALL ROBERT KOBEKT him. Her eyes were shin'ng .with fever, I and her face "was flushed, ami she evidently J did not recognize him. I " ' - "Whofp'ou?" she askid. "Joan ?' began the General, but with a wild, unnatural laugh .Joan waved him swav. "Yon need not star," she said; you are an old man call Robert Robert Conray, my dead loer." The General started and gnawed his lips under his white mustache. "Call Robert Conray and the man who killed him," went on Joan, yet more ex citedly. "He is liMing, the "coward who killed" my Robert Miriam knows where he is hid ask her, she has him safe." "Go from the room; I will watch her," said the General with pale, faltering lips, addressing the maid; "she is best kept very quiet when she is wandering thus." So the maid went away and the husband and wife were alone, and then once more the General addressed her. "Joan, is there any truth in this?" he Eaid, "or are they but dreams?" Joan's face softened strangely. "Dreams?" she repeated." "I see Robert in my dreams, and the man who killed him." "Who was the man?" asked the General, sternly. "Hugh Ferrars," answered Joan, readily; "and Miriam hid him." "Where did she hide him?" Joan put her hand to her head as if trying to recollect. "Somewhere by the sea," she said. "I can't remember, but somewhere by the sea." "And he did this," said the General, darkly. "He shot Robert Conray. Whv did he do it?" "He shot him, and he died he died!" moaned Joan, beginning to wring her hands and fling herself to and fro in the bed. "He tried to speak he looked at me. Don't you know my gown was all blood blood! Miriarn burnt it it was Robert's blood it drained right down into mv heart !" "Mr God!" muttered the General, below his breath, "this is too terrible." "Why do you stare so?" now asked the delirious woman, peering in her husband's pale face with her gleaming eyes. "Did you know Robert? He was not old like vou he was young there was none like him none, none!" And once more she wrung her hands, and then went on with her babbling words. But the General asked no more questions. He sat there as if turned to stone, lintening to Joan telling again and again her pitiful Ktory. It had burnt into her brain as she told Miriam, and now, when reason had lost its sway, the one dominating idea was ever on her tongue. She rambled on for hours; telling the stern gray-haired man who was watchine her how she used to meet Robert Conray in the still gardens. How they had loved each other, and how he had died. At last General Conray could bear it no longer. He started up and rang the bell, and bade the servants to go for the doctor bring him at once and when he came he gently shook his head after he had examined her. "The fever is running very high to night," he said, "she must be" constantly watched." Then the unhappy woman began again the old story of Robert Couray's death, and the doctor listened, and the General bowed his gray head and covered his face with his hand. "That unfortunate occurrence has evi dently got on her mind," said the doctor. He too Knew this tragic story, and how the General's nephew had been found cold and stiff in the early morning in the grounds of this very house. There might be some truth in all this, and there might not At all events he tpoke of Joan's wild words as the mere ramblings ol delirum. He stayed with her for some time, ai.d he said "he would send tu o nurses in the morning. She might try to throw herself out of the win dow; she might do a hundred things, for in case of lever you could never depend on the patient for a moment Joan was verr ill for days, for weeks after this; so ill that her father and mother were telegraphed for, but when they arrived she had sunk into a state of listless apathy. She did not rave now or talk of her dead lover. She lay with her eyes half closed, and rarely spoke. She seemed to recog nize her parents, but without interest. Mrs. Clyde tried to talk to her about Miriam, but Joan never answered. "Would von not like to see her, my dear?" said Mrs. Clyde. "She will soon be home now, and I am sure she would come and see tou at once if you wish her to do so?" But still Joan made no reply. General Conrav was standing in the room when Mrs. Clyde" said that, and he presently turned round and addressed Mrs. Clyde. "When did you say Lady MacKennon would return?" "he asked. "They were to cross to-dav, and she is going straight to Scotland to be introduced to her husband's mother," answered Mrs. Clyde. "But I am sure if Joan wishes to see her she would come here first." "I do not think it would be advisable," said the General, and then he left the room and Joan closed her sunken eyes. A letter came from Miriam the next day to inquire about her, and"1 Mrs. Clyde answered it guardedly. 'Miriam knew Joan had been ill, but not' how seriously ill she had been, and was. Mrs. Clyde had thought it kinder not to make Miriam anxious about her sister during her honeymoon. But Miriam had been anxious in spite of this, and when she heard her mother and her father were at Tyerord she grew more anxious stilL But Mrs. Clyde's letter from the General's house, after she had seen Joan, was on the whole reassuring Joan was weak, but re covering, Mrs. Clyde wrote, and the Gen eral did not think it advisable for them to have any more company in the house at present Joan had to be kept perfectly quiet, but when she was stronger she hoped that Miriam and her husband could come to see her. Mrs. Clyde added this apparent message from Joan (who' had not sent it) because Miriam had said something about seeing Joan before she went to Scotland. But after she received her mother's letter Miriam and Sir James decided to go direct to Kintore, and accordingly they only stayed two days in town, and then pro ceeded north. Shall we look at them for a moment as COXRAY, MY DEAD LOVER. they sat side by side in the railway carriage on this journey to Miriam's future home? On Sir James' face there was absolute con tent, and what on Miriam's? She looked very sweet and fair wrapped in the rich furs that had been purchased by Sir James lavish hand. She looked, too, in her hus band's face gratefully, almost fondly. The weeks they had spent together had certainly drawn her heart nearer to him. It was impossible, indeed, for a loving, sympa thetic nature like Miriam's to lemain quite cold to anyone so completely kind and affectionate as Sir James. She had not been used to mnch tenderness and consideration at home. Mrs. Clyde had always been the most important personage at the command ant's house at Xenbrough-on-the-Sea. But now Miriam found herself not only sur rounded br new luxuries, but by the si ncerest i flection and love. He was always giving her some pleasant surprise; always thinking how he could please her. She had not forgotten her fir&t love for the unhappy man, whose mad jealousy had so nearly shipwrecked her young life. But she un doubtedly had some leeling very like affec tion for Sir James. And he seemed so perfectly happy. He had no -misgivings nor fears regarding their future life "I am glad I can make him so happy," Miriam often thought in these early mar ried days, and if a dark shadow sometimes stole over her face she always tried to smile the cloud away in the presence of Sir James. He was naturally anxious that she should make a favorable Impression on his mother, and Miriam also felt a little nervous re garding the dowager Lady MacKennon. "She's old-!ashioned, you know, dar ling," he told her, "and a bit prejudiced, but you'll soon fall into her ways. " "And, of course, she will never think anyone good enough for you," smiled Miriam. "Ye, she will think you are too good," answered Sir James, with a tender light in his grey eyes, as they rested on the sweet face of his young wife This brief conversation took place during their journey to Scotland, and was like many of their conversations, very simple and kindly. They were excellent compan ions, and Sir James always looked on the bright side of everything. He was so genial that it became infectious, and Miriam sometimes found herself smiling quite brightly at his harmless jokes. His place, "Kintore, was in the Western Highlands, a substantial gray old house standing by the blue waters ot one of the most beautiful of the inland locus. Sir James possessed a large estate here, but the principal part of his income did not arise from the heathery hills and glens of his ancestral property. His mother had been the rich and only daughter of a Glasgow ship builder, and when his maternal grandfather died, some years after the death of his own father, it was found that the late Mr. Munro, the Glasgow shipbuilder, had be queathed, perhaps in the pride of his heart, a large lortune to "my grandson, Sir James MacKennon, BarL" To his daughter, Lady MacKennon, he also left a considerable sum, but the bulk of his money went to Sir James. Lady Mac Kennon, however, was a rich woman beforn she received her father's legacy. Her mother, the late Mrs. Munro, had "been an heiress, and at her. death she had left every thing she had possessed to her daughter. It was after this event that the father of Sir James had married her, and the people said he had done so to prop up the fallen fortunes of his house with money that had been, made in trade Miss " Munro (Lady MacKennon) was not handsome, had never been handsome, and was inclined to look upon fair skins and bright eyes only as snares of the evil one. Slie had been proud or. and deeply attached to her well-born husband; but she had car ried many of her narrow prejudices and ideas with her to- her new state. There fore, we can understand that Sir James, knowing well the nature of this stiff, somewhat self-righteous old dame, was anxious about what she would think of his young wife. And it will be as well to tell what she did think. It was dark, and had been dark several hours when the young ceuple arrived at the mansion house of Kintore. A handsome carriage had been waiting for them at the THE nearest station to Sir James place, but a half moon had shone out to partly light them on their way, and its glimmer fell on the waters of the loch as they droTe by Its side. . . "How beautiful it seems," said Miriam, with enthusiasm, who had never been in the Highlands before. "Wait till you see it in daylight," an swered Sir James, with some pride. They were both sitting haud-clasped, these two, as they approached their future home, and only thoughts of happiness were in, Sir James' heart As for Miriam, she was excited bv ber surroundings, and had not time to think. But as they drove up the avenue to the house she clasped Sir James' hand a little tighter in her own. "I feel quite nervous," she said. He stooped down and kissed her. "What for, darling?" he whispered. "You are only going home." Almost as he said this, they reached the hall door which was standing open to re ceive them, and several servants also ap peared. Sir James spoke kindly to some of these, and then turned and handed Miriam out of the carriage, and drawing her arm through his, led her into the lighted hall. And as he did this, a spare figure in black, with her iron gray hair plainly braided be neath her widow's cap, nppeared on the threshold of one of the rooms leading from the hall, and fixed her scrutinizing gaze upon the bride. For a moment Sir James did not see her, and Lady MacKennon did not advance. Then Sir James caught sight of bis mother, and with an exclamation of pleasure, ran up and kissed her furrowed cheek. "Well, mother, here we are," he said, "and this," he added, drawing his young wife forward, "is Miriam." "So I supposed," said Ladv MacKennon, and she held out a bony hand enclosed in a black mitten, "well, welcome to your hus band's home, Lady MacKennon." She did not offer to kiss her, and Miriam felt in a moment that her reception was not a warm one. But she made the best of it She smiled and put her slim hand with a graceful gesture into Lady MacKennon's. "I'm afraid Miriam will be tired, it is such a long journey." said Sir James. "I think, dear, you fiad better go upstairs at once and get off your hat and cloak, and then mother, I am sure, will have some thing for us to eat" "Supper is prepared, James; I thought it was too late lor dinner as it is past ten," said the dowager. "As soon as Lady Mac Kennon is ready yon can have it" She spoke with a strong Scotch accent, and looked a woman of very determined will. She was hard-looking, in fact, and the stillness of her manner and appearance made Miriam feel somewhat uncomfortable. "I shall be ready in a few minutes," she said. "Where is JTorS? You must show me the the nay, upstairs, James." "Come along, then," he said brightly: "it's so jolly to see the old place again,. motner, ana to see you loosing so wen. Lady MacKennon's hard face relaxed. "I am pleased to see you at home," she said, "and your wife." Thanks very much," answered Sir James. "Which room is she to have, mother?" "The blue room; the best," replied his mother; and with a" good-natured nod Sir ) James led his young wife away. In "tne blue room; tne best, as .bany MacKennon had described it, they found Ford, and a gaunt, grizzled, hard-featured Scotch woman, whom Sir James warmly shook by the hand. "Well, Jean, and how are you?" he said kindly. "This is Jean iiiglewood, my mother's maid, Miriam, aud she has known me since I was a baby." "Ay, Master Jim." said the Scotchwoman with a smile. "But I beg yer pardon, my leedy, I snouldna say Master Jim now, but Sir James, but I have minded him since he was a bairn. " Miriam smiled, and held out her handito the old serving woman who had nursed her husband. "Then I must shake hands with you," she taid, pleasantly. Jean made her best courtesy in .acknowl edgment of this honour, and then Miriam was left to the care of Ford, and presently appeared downstairs in a cbarmingtea gown ot pale primrose silk, fantastically trimmed with white lace and ribbon; and her prim mother-in-law glanced at her costume with disapproval. Sir James, however, was enchanted with it, and was delighted to see that Miriam was looking very handsome. "We bought that gown in Paris, mother. Isn't it smart?" he said. "I fear Paris is a very sinful city," an swered Lady MacKennon, with a doleful shake of her head. Whether aimed at the tea gown or city she did not explain. Sir James laughed good naturedly, and then they all went into the handcome old fashioned' dining room where a sumptuous supper was laid out The heavy sideboard was laden with costly plate, and all around were the evidences of wealth. The butler had grown gray in his lady's service, and, too, remembered "Master Jim," and looked with great interest on his bride. During supper Lady MacKennon relaxed some what, and it was evident that her son was the very pride and darling of her heart Her eyes rested on him, and softened as they looked. Sir James, too, was fond ot his mother. He got up when supper was over and went to her cliair and kissed her, and whispered in her ear as he did so: "Isn't she awfully pretty, mother?" Lady MacKennon made no jeply. She took her son's hand and petted it tenderlv, as she might have done when he was a little boy. Then she sighed softlv, wishing, per haps, that those days coufd come again, when she had been first in her son's heart But she made no complaint And when they parted for the night, as Miriam was about to shake hands with her mother-in-law, Sir James called out: "You should kiss her, mother." Then Lady MacKennon did for a moment touch Miriam's lovely face with her thin, blush-tinted lips. "I am not much given to kissing, James but she is your wife," she said; and then she turned and kissed her son. And when she went upstairs her old serv ing woman was waiting to undress her, and, of course, eager to discuss the bride. "Well, Jean, what do you think of Sir James' choice?" asked Lady MacKennon. "Weel, my leddy," answered Jean, "she's unco well favored, anyhow." "Beauty's but skin deep, Jean." "Av.'but the men folks think a lot a' it," said Jean, reflectively. "It's a snare to them," replied Lady Mae Kennon, shaking her head; "a pit into which rnanv fall." Keither Jean, nor her mistress, however, could complain that they had wrought much evil by their good looks. Tney were both plain, hard-featured women, and Miriam's beauty was no recommendation in Lady MacKennon's eyes. Still she did not deny it, aud she was gratified the next morning by Miriam's enthusiastic admiration of the wild and beautiful scenery around Kintore. "I shall never weary ot looking at it," said Miriam; "James, you never told me it was like this." "It is too late to see it in perfection," said Sir James, going to the. window aud laviug bis hand tenderly on Miriam's shoul de'r; "wait till we are here next August and September; it's splendid then, isn't it,, mother?" "It's like a fairy scene even now," went on Miriam; "how'blue the loch is, and the dark firs, and that great mountain towering away into the sky. And have you always lived here, Lady MacKennon?" "Since my marriage," answered Lady MacKennon. "I came here as a bride, and will only leave it when I am carried away to my long home."- "No dismal talk is to be allowed, mother," said Sir James, in his bright, kindly war. "I want Miriam to enjoy her first day in her new home." The inner drawing room was divided from the front drawing room by heavy bro cade silk curtains, which were alw ays kept closed on account ot the draught' They were both pleasant rooms, and on this day large stad cheerlul fires were burning in each. Miriam had finished her letter to her mother, and was busy writing to Joan, de scribing the scenery round Kintore and the place, when the butler raised the brocade curtains that divided the two drawing rooms, and, to Miriam's intense surprise, announced "General Conray." To be continued next veek.) PJTTSBURQ DISPATCH. THE DOGS OF PARIS. Hydrophobia Drove the City Author ities to a Systematic War. THEY ARE SMOTHERED BY GAS. At First the Tress and People Heoelled Against the Procedure. HrZZLES ARE -UNIVERSAL JUST-NOW CORBESrONTE.VCE Or TKK UISPATCB.J Paris, July 13. Y way of diversion I went one day not long ago to hunt up the Four riere. It is not an art gallery or a museum. It is what we in Amer ica call the pound, it mayseem like depraved taste to be visiting a pound in a city where two brilliant salons are open, where the great f . annual races are being Lrun, and where flower fetes are calling to gether all the nobility and fashion for com moners to gaze on, but the truth is the pound of Paris has been almost as much talked of this summer as the salons, and it has caused almost as many heartaches as the gambling at the races. The reason is simple enough. The Parisian authorities have resolved to prevent hydrophobia. That this disease should prevail in the city which possesses Pasteur seems a mock ery, but it is a fact Perhaps the reason is, K Ct-jC.. TIIE DEATH CAGE to a degree, because it does possess Pasteur. Were there no reasonably sure cure within reach greater pains to prevent the spread of it would undoubtedly have been long ago taken. Parisians T.ove Tlielr Dogs. There are in Paris, it is estimated, some 80,000 dog, about 1 to every 30 inhabitants. The Parisians are especially fond of them. Every lady of fashion owns her pet Many street venders keep them by their carts. A delivery wagon almost invariably is accom panied by a bright little mongrel, which sits on the seat by the driver and seems to have quite as much to do with the outfit as the man with the lines. Running free as they do, if one goes mad he is sure to poison many other animals. In the month of May last the institute, which M. Pasteur directs, received on an average 10 cases a day from Paris alone for inoculation against disease contracted by the bites of mad dogs. M. Pasteur conteuded that this was unnecessary. A few other friends of humanity in the city persisted in demanding protection. It was shown by statistics that in Belgium, Holland, Prussia and other European countries hydrophobia was almost unknown because dogs were re quired to be muzzled the year around. Finally the police determined to take the matter up in earnest For the three or four past years a spring excitement has been car ried on in Paris by an order that the dogs be muzzled, but the excitement and the muzzles passed away quickly. This year has been quite a different thing. An ordinance ap peared the 30th ol May calling upon the owners ot dogs to either" lead them in the streets or muzzle them. Getting Orders From Bulletins. In Paris the community gets its orders and its advice from posters. The bulletin boards bearing municipal and governmental posters are read quite as faithfully every morning by the populace as are the news papers. When the posters calling upon the people to muzzle their dogs appeared there was a certain expressive shrugging of the Parisian shoulders, but there was no special obedience. The police seemed quite as in different as the people. After a few days of laxitv, however, there was a sudden quickening. The policemen were discov ered to be "running down stray dogs with great persistency. The rumor went abroad that numbers were being killed. It was said that the Prefect of Police was in earn est' about the ordinance. The mental condition of Paris when it found that the law against its favorite pet was to be enforced was something astonishing. It was veritable hysteria. Fully two-tHirds of the press fell to abusing the Prefect. They called him a carricide and warned him sol emnly to beware of the judgment day. (Ordinarily the press of Paris shows no sign that it believes in a judgment day, but on occasions it can refer to that great institution with remarkable effect.) The stories of the arrest ot dogs and of their slaughter at the pound, when not called for, took a tragic tone, laughable to an Anglo Saxon temperament, but calculated to make French hearts burn and French eyes weep. The head lines announced: "The Massacre of the Innocents; Carnage Among Our Pets; Hecatombs of Dogs, etc., etc" The law was called Draconian. The "neighborhood of the -pound was declared to resemble p the precincts of the revolutionary prisonsand the scenes enacted there to recall the horri ble days of September, 1793, when it was men, not dogs, and the pike and ax and not a painless'gas were the weapons. 'I ho rrr Via In UeLelllon. Certain papers did no't hesitate to state that a few daily cases of hydrophobia was an altogether inadequate reason for spoil ing the happiness of the Paris dogs and one asked why if such an ordinance were passed another did not mate it forbidding wagons in the street, since men were sometimes knocked down and killed by them. The policemen were told that the business of arresting dogs was beneath them and that if they refused to obey their orders, the people would be with them. The high-ciass papers which upheld the wisdom of the or dinance and urged the Prefect to firmness were stigmatized as"Enemies of the Dog" and in the state of Parisian feeiing it was almost, as dangerous a name as spy in war times. It was the tragic tone of all this which led me to look up the fourriere. It stands near the heart of the city, a low building 7"(tA RwwLStbw ti3r &j&Sk BKBSfSjt-' Tji" i"" TO.M8gViWttigrTrri s&iSJA ffiflwM V Capturing a Small Specimen. SUNDAY, JULY 24 with the inevitable wall in front Over the gate are the words Liberte! Egalite! Fra ternitel the legend on every public build ing in Paris, whether devoted to senators or live stock. Below the motto was the word Fourriere. A permission from the Prefect of the Police was necessary to get in. In fact, no French institutions pan be visited without a permit. It is not difficult usually to get such permissions if you have plenty of patience and when once in hand they insure the utmost courtesy and full information. The day of my visit .at the pound the excitement on the dog ques tion was evident from without the gates. Men were hurrving in their captives. A gentleman was bringing forth a rescued pet and shutting it in a closed carriage while his wife and lackeys rejoiced aloud over the merciful deliverance. Within a half dozen people were searching for missing canines and abusing the administration in low tones for their vigilance. Thnv Kp Dp a Ceaseless Yelplne. The Paris pound is not for dogs 'alone. It receives all sorts of broken down and lost articles. A visit to its inanimate depart ment is said to be highly interesting, but as I had come to see dogs I hurried into the court from whence a great yelping and snarling proceoded the prison of the much lamented dogs. There were scores of them, of all sizes and all varieties, a few with aristocratic marks, but most of them noisy, sturdy, little fellows of mongrel type and common habits. AND GAS BETOKT. When a dog wearing a collar giving its owner's address is arrested, the police im mediately send the owner a card notifying him of the whereabouts of his pet. The animal is then kept three days. If at the end of that time he is not claimed he must go the way nf all the con demned into the "death cage," as the sensational press has dubbed it, and he suf focated by gas. There are a great manr of the dogs not marked, and these are killed at once. The process is simple aud not painful. Twelve or 15 dogs are put into a little car which stands on a small track at the side of the prison. This car is then rolled into a box at the farther end of the track. Into the box runs a gas pipe. The gas is turned on andin a le" moments a load of dead bodies is rolled out The barcasses are piled up waiting what? That is not told. They say the skins are made into gloves, the bodies thrown into the sewers. Thousands Killed In a Month. It is not a pleasant thing to See for one who loves a dog. And who does not ? but it is better than that they should go mad, even if there were no question of human life con cerned. The number of dogs killed at the pound in Juue reaehed into the thousands. The firmness- had its effect It always does with the Parisians, and a dog without a muzzle tin leading is to-day a rare sight. The excitement over the case, the demonstration, the opposition, the speedy and complete acceptance of the regulation are a good example of what one sees and hears again and again among these volatile people. A law, however sensible, if it touches one ot their senti ments raises a hubbub which to a colder temperament looks like a veritable revolu tion. If the authorities persist, however, the populace resigns itself as completely and quickly as it rose in revolt It seems to harbor no resentment, to forget its elo quent protests and its despairing wails. The question loses its interest now that there is no use in struggling, and a new excitemeut is looked for. In the midst of the excitement over the muzzling of the dog the fishing season opened. With its commencement there re appeared in Paris one ot her most pic turesque types, the urban fisherman. They are a numerous tribe. From one end to the other of the Seine within the city walls the quays are sprinkled with them. Some times they sit on the low walls close to the river. Again they hang out loug lines from the top ot the steep high stone banks. Often they select a quiet corner of a bridge. Again they rock all day in a little boat anchored to a bath house or a pier. I never saw one ot them catch anything. I never found anybody who had seen a fish pulled out. Parisians usually sneer at-the idea of there being fish within the walls and affirm that the products of the river at Paris are mainly broken bottles, rags and departed cats. Ida M. Tarbell. IXPL0BEK OF A DE3EBT. . . Charles Thtelson Undertakes a Perilous Trip Throuah Colorado. San Francisco Chronicle. Charles Thielson will long be remembered as an explorer of the Colorado desert, for within the past few weeks he has mad an involuntary trip from the month of the Colorado river to . Salton, a distance of over 600 miles, and the greatest wonder exists how he lives to tell the tale. On May 10 he left Yuma in an 18-foot skiff, going down the Colorado river to the mouth of Hardy's Colorado to hunt for the plumes of the little white crane, which are plentiful there. Not meet ing with success he went up Hardy's Colo rado to Volcano mountain, there camped and hunted for plumes. He then determined to follow up the New river, which comes into Hardy's Colorado two miles northwest of Volcano mountain, which place he left June 15. Entering up the New river, he found a slow current running northwest, and after proceeding 15 miles came to a laguna with "an in creased current; from that into a channel with quite a rapid current, and thought lessly went on, cutting his way through the mesquites until he came to another laguna. Then, realizing his dangerous position, he made camp and concluded that it was im possible to return by boat to Yijma through the channels on account of the rapid cur rents. The thought then occurred to push on and endeavor to reach Salton. Tne next day, thinking the water would rise, be, went back to his brat and found, to use his own expression, thaf'the water was being licked up by the sun." There being no sign of a rise he went back to Durmid, and, not being treated kindly, started lor Salton afoot to advise G. W. Durbrow of bis trip. At Sal ton he was taken care of, and to-day he was fitted out with provisions and water to re turn to his boat for his gun and baggage. Mr. Thielson will return to Salton aud will be the guest of Mr. Durbrog. The water shows on the marsh abou t four miles from the track at Salton, but with the great evaporation there is but little increase to the water, which is accounted for by the fact that only one stream is running into the lake, and as the river will be falling every day it is not probable that the water will attain a depth of over six1 inches on the marsh, which Mr. Durbrow says "will be very acceptable." 1 They Detest Their Muzzles. 1892: LIVING 'IN ENGLAND. Prodigious Efforts of British Editors to Pacify the Workers. CURIOUS REPORT FROM CHICAGO. letnal Prices Paid in London by a Corre- sporident of The Dispatch. WAGES LOW AND NECESSARIES HIGH cokkesfoxdixoc or th dispatch. London, July 15. A topio of never-failing interest oii both sides of the Atlantic is the relative cost of living in England and the United Siates.r The English press, al ways ready with an opinion on this subject, has been discussing it for some days with an assiduity which, in view of the pending campaign) is somewhat suspicious. There has been published recently a report from the British Consul at Chicago on wages and the cost of living in the States of what we know as the Middle West "Whether this report was timed by tha authorities here so as to make its appearance just before the election I do not know, but it has unques tionably been used for election pur poses. It is held forth as a sort of soothing syrup for the disturbed spirits of those classes who have come but lately into their political heritage, and who, from the recklessness of new found freedom and the desperation engen dered by long years of oppression, have threatened to upset things in this staid, old land, both politically and socially. To adapt such a report to a purpose like this has not been easy, and 1 can hardly be lieve the undertaking has been successful. Not having read the report in full, I re frain from adverse criticism upon it But to the conclusions drawn from it in British newspapers I can do no otherwise than dis sent in the most emphatic terms. I cannot believe, in the first placi, that such infer ences are warranted by the report itself. Indeed, from what I have read of it, I know they aie not; and even though, by any pos sibility, the statement of a British Consul should be found to justify them, I" am posi tively certain that these opinions would find no countenance in the facts of the case. They Concede the Higher Vf a;r. It is admitted in the comments of the press that wages in the United States are far, very far, in advance of what is paid in England. It is even conceded that in some branches of industry the average earnings of the American worker will amount per week to double the sum pocketed by work ers in the same lines over here. But the cost of living there's the rub, they tell us, and their assumption is that the relative difference in this respect is fully enough, if not more than enough, to make np in Eng land's favor for the relative diflerence shown in the wage sheets of the two coun tries. This position is taken and strenu ously maintained by every English paper that has fallen under my notice since the matter came up for special discussion, and it will certainly be through no want of pleading on the part of ponderous British editors if the notion is not crammed down the throats of the British public. One paper, an influential London daily, warns those wbo are thinking of emigrating to the United States to look before they leap, and its warnings are emphasized by the astounding observation that "bad as is the condition of the British workman, we think that he is much better off than his brother in America." Now, what I propose to combat in this letter is the assumption, which I hold to be altogether baseless, that living in England is so much cheaper than it is with us: and; dis carding details for the present, I shall offer only a few cursory observations npon this point If workmen can buy their neces saries at so low a cost as is claimed, it will surely transpire that living. in general can be conducted at a low rate, for it is incon ceivable that the general public would put up with prices which were out ot propor tion altogether to those paid for the same articles by the daily laborer. What, then, are the facts? r Bates on Railroads and In Hotels. As regards the cost of things to the aver age resident one lees at ouce how far fetched is this idea of cheapness if he only Jooks at the two items ot railway and hotel rates. To travel ou the English railways in a style at all comparable with that afforded on ordinary American cars, you must travel first-class. Even then ypu will get no con venience, beyond that of a fairly comfort able seat, and the rate will be 4 cents a mile. Second-class costs about the same as the American first class, that is, 3 cents a mile. Of conrse you can take a third-class ticket if you like, which will cost a cent per mile less'than this. But your standing is impeached by riding third while others are riding first-class on the same train. You will "get there" just as soon, but you will neither be co comfortable in body nor so happy in mind. At first-class hotels in large towns you will be entertained, of course, on the Euro pean plan. The lowest price for a iairly good room will be four-and-six, with one-and-six for attendance. This means $1 0, and if afterward ym fee the many persons for whose attentions you are supposed to have paid, but have not, in the extra one and six, it will mean $2. Your meals you can take where you please. But it will be a poor meal of any kind, and poorly served, which you will get for less thanSO cents, barring, ot course, the English tea, and here again - you will have to drop twopence for the waiter each time. So that even when you have saved all you can you will be running closely upon the Ameri can (3 50 a day rate. But it is common, and a little humiliating, to have to get meals, for economy's sake, outside the hostelry where you are putting up; and yet, if you" take them at these cheap English hotels, look at the cost Seventy-five cents for breakfast, $1 25 for dinner, 50 cents for tea, and it you take the regulation "fourth" meal, be it lunch or supper, about 75 cents more; which foots up'for the day, including room, a hotel rate of something over f 5. That's how cheap living is in England if you pnt up at a fairly good hotel. EncJIsh Workers Do Not Travel. To weaken the force of these observations, it may be said that the ordinary run of peo ple do not trouble hotels, and that those who do patronize them can afford to pay well for their entertainment Which may be quite true, but business men and those who travel, whether in England or Amer ica, are compelled to patronize such places. Not only, therefore, may we properlv bring them into account when the cost of living is under treatment, but they may surely be held, in the scale of charges they maintain, to express in some measure the current value ot at least the comforts aud luxuries of life, if not 0' its ordinary necessaries. As to railway travel, here the case is mucii stronger, for the poor man has to use the train as well as the rich. He "does not travel so much as his fellow toiler in Amer ica, because he cannot rfbrd to do so. He would probablv travel TOore, and, in conse quence" know more and enjoy more, if his wages were better, and he might do it even with his wages at the present standard if conveniences and concessions were afforded him in railway travel such as would put him on a level in such matters with the workmen in the United States. But clothing, we are assnred, is surpris ingly low in price. The common idea is that you can get it for about one half what it costs in the United States. This, how ever, is another fallacy. If such clothing as is worn by workmen at their daily toil, and such as the laboring classes are content to wear on Sundays and holidays, can be purchased any cheaper in London than in Chicago or New York, I have vet to see the advertisement of any responsible English shopkeeper which demonstrates this fact, and have yet to find any place, notwith standing the search I have maintained, where such clothing is displayed to view. The truth is that for the lower grade of goods and workmanship in the clothing line prices in the two countries are about equal. Cheap Clotblog I Not Cheap. And in higher grades the situation is something like this. The same goods which, when Cut in the American style, and fitted with American exactness, ana finished ac cording t6 the American quality of well paid workmanship, would cost yon in the laud of the stars and stripes about $45, you can get put together and hung on vour back here for, sav $25. But for the $20 you may have saved in money you will pay awfully dear in the sacrifice of comfort. I write feelingly upon this point, repeated experi ments in cheap English clothing having fully convinced me that garments which come at so low a price are never properly made, that they never fit and never give satisfaction. Nevertheless, you can get a good suit of clothes here quie as good as any you can get in America. The only thing is that, to do this, you must go to some fashionable, high-priced tailor a man who keeps good hands and pars fair wages. Here you will find yourself quite well suited in both the literal and figurative sense. You will find, too, that the cost will be, if anvthing, a little more than 'your tailor in'New York would have charged. It would be ungenerous, after saying all this, not to make an admission favorable to the other side ot the question. I do it cheerfully. I admit that in rents the En glishmanhas a decided advantage over us. He can get shelter cheaper than we can, as a rule, though not in all cases. It wonld be awful indeed if he could not, considering how much worse offhe i3 at the week's end in wages. But against this advantage I may well instance, with a very pardonable sensa tion of pride, the large proportion of Amer ican workmen who are above the necessity of paying rent, from the fact that they have become their own landlords. American Workers Own Their Homes. These solemn London dailies, in their comments upon the report ot the British Consul at Chicago, are telling their fellow subjects, for election purposes, that work ingmen seem to be "in no better condition to save money in the United States than in England." It takes all they get and more than they are able to get, they assure us, to clothe and feed their families respectably, because prices are so high. When, how ever, they inform ns incidentally, in th5 same connection, that, on the testimony of their own representative in that territory, something like one-half ot the wage work ers withiu the consular district of the mid dle West, are living in their own houses, they give away the whole case. This is let ting the cat out of the bag with a vengeance. But people in both countries need some thing more than clothing and shelter. Ilome Is more than foursquare walls, It needs something to endear it. In America the ordinary workman thinks that home, to he a real home, should have a carpet on the floor and, perchance, a musi cal instrument in the parlor. And if the cost of things is so much less here than in the United States, or, in other words, if English wages have the same buying power in England as American wages have in America, why is it. that the homes of Eng lish workmen are not brightened the same way? No Spring Chicken for John Boll. The American workman likes meat, and, as a rule, he eats it from two to three times a dav. He gets it; too, in most sections of the country, at trifling cost. With spring chickens obtainable at 25 cents each, ami. a good big fowl for roasting or boiling at from 39 to 40 cents, he can occasionally treat himself to even such a luxury as that But here meat is meat, and chickens fly too high, altogether to ever sit, except on the very rarest occasions, on the table of the work in gman. If you can pick up a fowl here for 65 cents, you are lucky indeed. You will generally find them roosting in the market the few that are available at about the attitude from of 80 cents to a 51 25. Here is another instance of the dirt cheapness, so to speak, of living in England. Of course they telr us here that working people do not need such delicacies as these. If thev do not. it is well they do not We are told indeed that they do not need much meat of any kind, and here again are con gratulations in order, for how on earth could they get much, if they needed it ever so badly?" For our own table, we are pay ing on the outskirts of London, 22 cents a pound for only a fairly good roast of beef. For steaks w e pay 24 cents, and for the best mutton chops even more than that Four Days' Waires for Two Days' Meat. Becently, in a market about 50 miles from London, I" put down 2 for a leg of mutton weighing nine pounds, and when yon con sider that to thousands of agricultural la borers living in the vicinity of that market town, the 52 I was assessed for only enough meat to last a medium-sized family a couple of days, represents two thirds of a week's income, you will get some idea both of what wages are in this country and of the ntter fallaev of the proposition, so strenuously contended for over here just et this time, that the En glish workman is as well off relatively as the workman in the United States. Such an idea is all moonshine. To be sure, the English workman man ages to live mnch cheaper than the Amer ican. He is compelled to do this because his earnings are so much smaller. He does it, however, not because prices are lowa'r, but rather as the result of the economy he is forced to practice, and the privations to which he subiects himself in the heroic effort to cut his coat according .to the small measure of cloth doled out to him. Henry Tccklet. Insrc's In the Ear. A physician, in discussing the preva lence of ear trouble, caused especially in summer time, when all who can fly to the country, by the entrance of earwigs and other insects into the ear, points out a sim ple remedy. When living insects find their way into the external auditory canal the ear should at onee be turned to a bright light, in the hope ot inducing the intruder to back out by virtue of the attraction which light naturally has for him. If this prove un successful the ear should be filled with sweet oil or glvcerine, which will kill the insect by occluding its breathing pores and generally float it out Sometimes, how ever, a syringe and warm water are necessary to remove it. In cases where these means are not at hand, as when hunting, blowing tobacco smoke into the ear directly from the stem of a pipe, the mouth being placed over the bowl and protected from it by the hand, will kill or stupefy the intruder, and, at all events, reduce him to a state ot inac tivity pending the ability to dislodge him. Tor Fassenpers or for Freight. The launching of a freight steamer re cently built in Scotland deserves more than passing attention from the fact that she was fitted for portable accommodation 'tween decks for 72 first class passengers. To pro vide for the large influx of passengers, which at certain times of the year avail themselves of the facilities to travel afforded by the company owning the steamer, and at the Fame time not to absorb any of the cargo space, it became necessary to adopt some svstem by which one of the principal carjo compartments could be transformed into passenger accommodations aud vice versa in the shortest possible time. A simple ar rangement was adopted. Two or three hands can make the change in an hour, and when done it is hard to believe with the curtains, carpets and neatly painted bulk headsthat this metamorphosis has taken place in a compartment ordinarily intended for cargo. S3 xcon!on to Cleveland Via Pennsyl vania I.lnes Tnesday, July IB, .from rittsburx for special train leaving Union stntlon 8 A. M.. and lor regular ttnins at 1:30 p. M. an U 11:05 r. sr., centnl time; tickets good to return until 3 nly 30. Inclusive. - Thsu Excursion to Cleveland, Via Pittsburg and Lake Erie Railroad, Tues day, July 26. Tickets Rood for return until July SO. Only $3 for tbe round trip, tusu . - z.t-. jcJ- .t&ejt&SZ - ' - MONEY ON THE OCEAN. What It Costs to Take an Atlantic Liner Between Continents. A WOOD CONCRETE FR01I GERMANY, Simple Method of Getting Additional Light Prom-a Gas Jet NEW PETICES FOE PH0T0GBAPHERS rwniTTzx ron thz dispatch:! In view of the fact that in a few months the Cunard Company will have two vessels afloat, which are expected to reduce the passage between Queenstown and New York to 5J or 5 days, some statistics givin by Arthur J. Maginnis on the ships, men and working of the' Atlantic ferry are of great interest In a ship like the Teutonic, to begin with, a sum of about $3,000,000 is invested, and the working expenses are proportionately heavy. In the sailing, engine and passen- Lger departments the large number of 322 nanas are requires a in tne nrsi, 101 in the second and 114 in the third. Ttje wages paid for these hands amount to, say, $1,500 for the sailing department, $4,800 for tha engine and $2,350 for the passenger, mak ing a total of $8,650 per month. When these figures are considered, to gether with the other expenses of mainte nance, office expenses, insurance, agency commission, shore staff, works, port charges, interest on capital, and depreciation, it may be fairly taken that at least the sum of $S0, 000 mnst be realized per trip before any profits can be counted on; so that some idea of the enormous sums at stake in the work ing and management of an express transat lantic line can be formed. Mr. Maginnis holds strongly to the belief that when these vast figures are considered, together with other equally extensive re quirements, the chimerical nature of some of the schemes proposed from time to time for forming new lines which promise three and four days' passage across the Atlantic can easily be discerned. He regards them as overwhelming proof that insurmountable difficulties are in the way of any company or firm without shipping experience who would create all at once a service more luxurious and having higher speed than that now afforded by the existing lines which would at the same time prove a financial success. To Save the Doctor's Hands. In the necessary use of disinfectants phy sicians are liable to special affections of tee skin, redness, eczema, Assuring, etc., and Dr. Meyer, of Berlin, recommends a treat ment which be has found of the greatest benefit in such cases. Every time the hands have been well washed with a freely lather ing soap, rinsed and dried, they should bo well smeared, especially the backs, with a small quantity of lanoline, which must be thoroughly rubbed in, the hands being after ward tubbed free from excess on a cloth. It is especially essential that the lanoline should be rubbed into the skin as com pletely as possible. Its favorable action is attributed to its property of readily mixing with water, whereby the moisture remaining on the skin after insufficient drying of the hands is taken up bv the lanoline, and the hands are protected by a minute layer of tat impenetrable to the' raw air. This is also an excellent remedy for the face of actors whose skin has suffered from the application of paints. seir Kind or Filter. An endless traveling band made of any material snitable for filtering, so arranged as to assume tor a portion of its length the form of an open horizontal shallow trough or cistern, is the latest innovation in filter ing method'. The band is mounted so as to cause it to make a slight descent atbne'end simultaneously to have the two sides or edges ot the fabric turned up. In this form the band extends horizontally for a certain length, and is then made to rise on an in cline and to spread out flat. A shallow traveling cistern is thus formed between the two inclines, wherein the water for filtering is received. Tne speed of the traveling band may be regulated in such a way as to allow it to be coated to any desired degree with the matter collected from the filtered liquid, and on continuing to travel it may be conducted through a cleansing apparatus, whence it will return cleansed and readyfor the repetition ot the operation. Braking ihe Gas Jet Brighter. As is well known, the light given by an ordinary coal gas flame is due to the pres ence of carbon particles in a highly heated and glowing condition. Those particles can be collected by placing a cold, white plate of porcelain or china in a coal gas flame, when the black carbon will immediately as sert itself. The thorough consumption of this carbon adds greatly to the efficiency of the light, and a new "blender" is said to effect it. This blender consists simply of a tin difc suitably fixed on tbe burner. This enables just as mnch air to be mixed with tbe gas as will prevent the deposit of carbon, making a clearer light, while the disc, assisted by the upward rush of warjn air, spreads out the flame into, a white sheet of incandescent and glowing carbon parti cles. The size of the sheet- is fully twice that of the zone of light given by the ordinary burner without the patent and is said to give double the light A Scheme for Rapid Photography. A ferrotype dry plate camera has been in troduced in London by which it is possible to turn ont a ferrotype print every few minutes with an apparatus which, all told, does not equal a cubic foot in bulk. This camera dispenses with the necessity for a dark room, and promises to give rise to a new industry in penny portraits. Another device which, will be appreciated by the large army of amateur photographers in this country also hails from England. It is a changing bag that weighs only a few ounces and packs in a very small compass. The bag fastens around the head, allowing the eyes and lower part of the face to go in side. " The plates are passed through two sleeve holes which are made to fit tightly around the wrist by the aid of elastic. The bag packs up into a convenient form, and will be of the greatest service to camera enthusiasts on the warpath. Making Concrete From Wood. A new wood concrete invented in Ger many is composed of a most extraordinary mixture. Shavings and planing mill chips, either of common or fancy wobds, which, maybe stained before use if desiredj'jJre mixed with casein, calcined magriestan limestone, glycerine, silicate of soda and a linseed oiL After being mixed the whole is forced by hydraulic pressure into molds, where it is allowed io harden. Whey dry the composition is said to be so strong and solid that it can be sawed, planed, polished and varnished. It is likely to-be utilized for panels and possibly as a covering for entire wall surfaces. Take Good Care or the Children. If you have children you will be inter, estcd'in the experience of Mr. John Cook, of Pilot, Vermilion county, 111. He says: "Two years ago two of my family, a young man and a girl, had very severe and danger ous attacks of bloody flnx. The doctor here was unable, after a week's time, to checS or relieve either case. I threw the doctor overboard and began using Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Im- Srovement was seen very soon and mr chil ren arose in a few days from what I feared would be their death-bed. It is a grand, good medicine." TuWThsa I iib&iMx:. ..-t.- t.nJk., .1 I n&m ; i S2S2SHS