STTP EM AAAAAJJtAAJJAAAAXJAttt jittr tt g Z - t flTITT TTVITTTVTTYTTTTTTYTTTTTTTTTTTTTT 3 The Bow of Orange Ribbon By AMELIA E BARR Author of Friend Olivia I Thou and the Other OnEto Copyright 1868 by Dodfl Mead and Company A ROMANCE OF NEW YORK 4W4HW44fi4W CHAPTER XVI For Freedoms Sake It was this thundery atmosphere of coming conflict or hopes and doubts of sundering ties and fearful looking forward that Richard and Katherine Hyde -came from the idyllic peace and beauty of their Norfolk house It was an exquisite April morning when they sailed up New York bay once more Joris took his daughter in his arms murmuring Mijn Katrijntje Katrijntje Ach mijn kind kind He gave Hyde both hands he called him mijn zoon he stooped nd put the little lads arms around his neck Lysbet had always admired Hyde and- she was very proud and happy to have him in her home and to have him call her mother The little Joris took possession of her heart in a moment In a few hours things had fallen naturally and easily into place Joris -and Bram and Hyde sat talking of the formation of a regiment Little Joris leaned on his grandfathers shoulder listening Lysbet and Katherine were oinpacking trunks full of fineries and pretty things About four oclock as Katherine -and Hyde were dressing Joanna and Batavius and all their family arrived Hyde met his brother-in-law with a gentlemanly cordiality and Batavius was soon smoking amicably with him -as they discussed the proposed mili tary organization Very soon Hyde -asked Batavius If he were willing to join it When such a family a man has he answered waving his hand com placently toward the six children he must have some prudence and consid eration It is a fixed principle with me not to meddle with the business of -other people If you go not yourself to the fight Batavius said Joris plenty of young anen are there longing to go who 3iave no arms and no clothes send in your place one of them It is my fixed principle not to meddle in the affairs of other people and my principles are sacrsd to me Have- you read the speeches of Adams and Hancock and Quincy Have you heard what Col Washington said in the Assembly Oh these men are discontented Something which they have not got they want They are troublesome and conceited They expect the century will be called after them Now I who punctually fulfil my obligations as a father and a citizen I am con tented I never make complaints I never want more liberty You may Tead in the Holy Scriptures that no Sood comes of rebellion Bram rose and with a long drawn whistle left the room Joris said sternly Enough you have spoken Batavius None are so blind as those who will not see Well then father I can see what is in the way of mine own business and it is a fixed principle with me not to meddle with the business of other people And he marshaled the six children and their two nurses in front of him and trotted off with Joanna upon his arm fully persuaded that he had done himself great credit and acted with uncommon wisdom The next morning was the Sabbath and it broke in a perfect splendor of sunshine They all walked to church together and Hyde thought how beau tiful the pleasant city was that Sab bath morning Katherine and Hyde and Bram were together Joris and Lysbet were slow ly following them Suddenly the peaceful atmosphere was troubled by the startling clamor of a trumpet A second blast was accompanied by the rapid beat of a horses hoofs and the rider came down Broadway like one on a message of life and death and made no pause until he had very near ly reached Maiden Lane At that point a tall muscular man seized the horse by the bridle and asked What news Great news great news There has been a battle a massacre at Lex ington a running fight from Concord to Boston Stay me not But as he shook the bridle free he threw a handbill containing the official ac count of the affair at Lexington to the inquirer Who then thought of church though the church bells were ringing The crowd gathered round the man with the handbill and in ominous silence listened to the tidings of the massacre at Lexington the destruction of stores at Concord the quick gathering of the militia from the hills and dales around Reading and Roxbury the retreat of the British under their harassing fire until worn out and disorganized they had found a refuge in Boston Joris was white and stern in his emotion Bram stood by the reader with a face as bright as a bride grooms Hyde turned to the reader who stood with bent brows and the paper in his hand Well sir what is to be done he asked There are five hundred stand of arms in the City Hall there are men enough here to take them Let us go A loud cry of assent answered him The news spread no one knew how Taut men poured out from the churches and the houses on their route and their force was soon nearly a thou j sand strong Joris could hardly en dure the suspense About 2 oclock as he was walking restlessly about the house Bram and Hyde returned together Well he asked Oh indeed all fortune fitted us We went en masse down Broadway into Wall street and so to the City Hall where we made an entrance And you got the arms Faith we got all we went for The arms were divided among the peo ple Where were the English soldiers Indeed they were shut up In bar racks Some of their officers were In church others waiting for orders from the governor or mayor And where went you with the armn To a room in John street There they were stacked the names of the men enrolled and a guard placed over them And now mother we will have some dinner the soldier loves his mess But events cannot be driven by wishes many things had to be set tled before a movement forward could be made Joris had his store to let and the stock and good will to dispose of Hydes time was spent as a re cruiting officer In teompany with Wlllet Sears and McDougall Hyde might be seen enlisting men or or ganizing the Liberty Regiment then raising Every days events fanned the temper of the city although it was soon evident that the first fight ing would be done in the vicinity of Boston For three weeks after that memor able April Sunday Congress in ses sion at Philadelphia had recognized tae men in camp there as a Continen tal army the nucleus of the troops that were to be raised for the defense of the country and had commissioned Col Washington as commander-in-chief to direct their operations Then every heart was in a state of the greatest expectation and excitement In June the Van Heemskirk troops were ready to leave for Boston near ly six hundred young men full of pure purpose and brave thoughts and with all their illusions and enthusi asms undimmed The day before their departure they escorted Van Heemskirk to his house It would have been hard to find a nobler looking leader than Joris And the bright young lads who followed him looked like his sons for most of them strongly resembled him in per son and any one might have been sure even if the roll had not shown it that they were Van Brunts and Van Ripers and Van Rensselaers Roose velts Westervelts and Terhunes Katherine and Lysbet had made the flag of the new regiment an orange flag with a cluster of twelve blue stars above the word liberty It was Lysbets hands that gave it to them But few words were said Lysbet and Katherine could but stand and gaze as heads were bared and the orange folds flung to the wind and the in spiring word liberty saluted with bright upturned faces and a ringing shout of welcome It was to be the last evening at home for Joris and Bram and Hyde and everything was done to make it a happy memory There had been some expectation of Joanna and Batavius but at the last moment an excuse was sent The child is sick writes Batavius but I think then it is Batavius that is afraid and not the child who is sick said Joris After supper Bram went to bid a friend good by and as Joris and Lys bet sat in the quiet parlor Elder Semple and his wife walked In The elder was sad and still He took the hands of Joris in his own and looked him steadily in the face Man Joris he said whats sending you on sic a daft like errand Joris smiled and grasped tighter his friends hand So glad am I to see you at last elder As in you came I was thinking about you Let us part good friends and brothers If I come not back Tut tut Youre sure and certain to come back and sae Ill save the quarrel I hae wi you until then I came to speak anent things in case o the warst to tell you that if any one wants to touch your wife or your bairns a brick in your house or a flower in your garden plat Ill stand by all thats yours to the last shilling I hae and nane shall harm them I have a friend then I have you Alexander Never this hour shall I regret The old men bent to each other there were tears in their eyes With out speaking they were aware of kindness and faithfulness and grati tude beyond the power of words Hyde and Katherine were walking in the garden lingering in the sweet June twilight by the lilac hedge and the river bank All Hydes business was arranged he was going into the fight without any anxiety beyond such as was natural to the circumstances While he was away his wife and son were to remain with Lysbet If he never came back ample provision had been made for his wife and sons wel fare but and he suddenly turned to Katherine as if she had been con scious of his thoughts the war will not last very long dear heart and when liberty is won and the founda tion for a great commonwealth laid why then we will buy a large estate somewhere upon the banks of this beautiful river A hundred years after this your descendants shall wander among the trelllages and cut hedges and boxed walks and say What a sweet taste our dear great great grandmother had And Katherine laughed at his merry talk and touched his sword and asked Is it the old sivord my Richard The old sword Kate my sweet With it I won my wife Oh indeed yes He drew it partially from its sheath and mused a moment Then he slowly untwisted the ribbon and tassel of bullion at the hilt and gave it Into her hand I have a better hilt ribbon than that he said and when we go into the house I will re trim my sword She thought little of the remark at the time though she carefully put the tarnished tassel away among her dearest treasures but it acquired a new meaning in the morning The troops were to leave very early and soon after dawn she heard the clatter of galloping horses and the calls of the men as they reined up at their commanders door They rose from the breakfast table and looked at their wives Lysbet gave a little sob and laid her head a moment upon her husbands breast Katherine lifted her white face and whispered with kisses Beloved one go Night and day I will pray for you and long for you My love my dear one Katherine held her husbands hand till they stood at the open door Then he looked into her face and down at his sword with a meaning smile And her eyes dilated and a vivid blush spread over her cheeks and throat and she drew him back a mo ment and passionately kissed him again and all her grief was lost in love and triumph For wound tightly around his sword hilt she saw though it was brown and faded her first fateful love token the Bow of Orange Ribbon Postscript Quotations from a letter dated July 5 A D 18S5 Yesterday I went with my aunt to spend the Fourth at the Hydes They have the most delightful place a great stone house in a wilderness of foliage and beauty and yet within convenient distance of the railroad and the river boats Kate Hyde said the house is more than a hundred years old and that the fifth generation is living in it I am sure there are pictures enough of the family to ac count for three hundred years but the two handsomest after all are those of the builders They were very great people at the court of Washing ton I believe I suppose it is natural for those who have ancestors to brag about them and to show off the old buckles and fans and court dresses they have hoarded up not to speak of the queer bits of plate and china and I must say the Hydes have a really delightful lot of such But the strangest thing is the household talisman It is not like the luck of Eden hall it is neither crystal cup nor silver vase nor magic bracelet nor an old slipper But they have a tradition that the house will prosper as long as it lasts and so this pre cious palladium is carefully kept in a locked box of carved sandalwood for it is only a bit of faded satin that was a love token a St Nicholas Bow of Orange Ribbon The End GOT THE BRIDES GARTERS Eight Fair Ones Gladdened by the Lucky Talisman The fashionable Riverside Drive district is tittering over the original ity of a young bride last week whose gifts to her eight bridesmaids were garters Each girl received a single garter The bride was deep in ar rangements before the wedding when one of the Danish servants told her of a popular superstition in her native land The maid said the very essence of good luck both for bride and briesmaid might be accomplished by the bride giving the left garter to her attendant after the wedding cere mony The Riverside Drive belle thought the superstition delightful and being somewhat faddish she decided to try the Danish talisman But cried the girl I have eight bridesmaids and only one left garter This predicament she confided to her fiance blushing prettily as she spoke the unmentionable word The man solved the problem in a moment He told her to wear eight pairs of garters for eight days and on the wedding day to wear all left eight garters In this way each bridesmaid might re ceive an acclimated garter teeming with good luck The ceremony was flourishing and before the white robed bride slipped into her going away gown she called her faithful bridesmaids to a retiring room Girls she said here is your gift Then she unclasped eight left garters that encircled her silk hose and each girl received her talisman A still worse dilemma was when the ushers asked the bridesmaids what their bridal gifts were They answered Something lucky In the Zoo They stood in front of the elephants watching the two big animals mov ing restlessly about The man was of aldermanic proportions of gener ous girth well fed apparently and also well satisfied with himself The boy was a little bit of a chap whe clung to his fathers hand quite des perately It was evident that the boy was enjoying his first visit to the zoo His questions were many The last one he asked in the elephant house was Daddy do you think that elephant is as heavy as you MILES IS AT HOME THE GENERAL TALKS OF HIS TRIP ABROAD HAS BEEN AWAY FIVE MONTHS His Observation Particularly of the Japanese Army and Navy Through Northern China to Siberia Notes of the Journey NEW YORK Lieutenant General Nelson A Miles commanding the Uni ted States army his wife and party arrived here Monday on the Lucania They have been abroad five months and in that time have been around the world One feature of the trip across the Atlantic for the general was the send ing of a Marconigram to King Edward VII February 9 When the Lucania was eighty miles from the Marconi station at Crook Haven General Miles sent the following message Midocean greeting with best wishes for happiness and health to his majesty and the royal family To which the following reply was received by cable on the arrival of the Lucania Monday 1 have submitted your message to the king I am commanded by his majesty to thank you for your good wishes and to say for him that it af forded him much gratification to re ceive it at Windsor KNOLLYS With the general were Colonel and Mrs M P Maus Henry Clark Rousea of New York F B Wilborg of Cin cinnati Mrs Miles and Sherman Hoyt Colonel Whitney was with the party when they left this country but return ed some weeks ago To his interviewers General Miles said I have been abroad for five months I left September 11 for the Pacific coast and there made an inspection of the forts and coast defenses from Puget Sound to Southern California On October 1 we sailed on the transport Thomas We stopped at Honolulu the Sandwich islands and then sailed for Guam We touched at the island then continued to the Philippines We spent a month there I examined the military situation and visited the principal stations and forts and inspected the troops There were no serious hostilities at that time The 20000 troops there were in fine shape We then Avent to Nagasaki Hong Kong and Canton The Japanese army is very well equipped and disciplined so is the navy When I was there they were discussing the question of raising a large fund for the equipment of the navy In the army they have most modern appliances The Japanese are efficient in their system The system of inspection and routine is much the same as ours They pay a great deal of attention to drills physical condi tion and gymnastic exercise Tne corps of the Tokio academy numbers about as many cadets as we have at West Point and it is a well constructed and efficient corps Continuing the general said the par ty went from Japan to Port Arthur and thence to Pekin I remained there a short time We have there a small detachment of troops the legation guard at the cap ital Everything there is quiet We were accorded an audience by the em oeror and the dowager empress They received us with a great deal of cour tesy and attention We saw the troops of the Chinese army and the troops of the allied forces which are still there General Miles party went through northern China to Siberia passing through Manchuria en route and on to Moscow HE RETURNS TO MISSOURI Cole Younger Goes to the Scenes of His Earlier Life ST PAUL Minn Cole Younger the pardoned bandit left St Paul and Min nesota Saturday for his old home in Missouri which he has not seen in twenty seven years when he left it to participate in the memorable North field bank raid which resulted in his arrest and imprisonment Younger had planned to leave St Paul Monday but he received a tele gram Saturday afternoon stating that his sister was seriously ill at Lees Summet Mo and he decided to leave at once He cannot under the con ditions of the pardon return to Min nesota He said he intended to locate in Dallas Texas and would probably go into the stockraismg business Mont Pelee Still Belching NEY YORK Captain Ebert of the German steamer Catania which arriv ed Sunday from Brazil reports that on Tebruary 4 while passing the island of Martinique he made an observa tion of Mont Pelee Much smoke was issuing from the crater and great quantities of lava was flowing down the mountain and into the sea causing big clouds of steam to rise from the surface of the water VALUABLE MAIL PACKAGE LOST Letters Containing 50000 in Cammer cial Paper Missing INDIANAPOLIS Ind A packago of letters containing upwards of 50 000 In commercial paper was lost by the poBtal authorities from a pouch on the Pennsylvania train leaving Louisville at midnight January 31 and running to Chicago via Indianap olis The postal authorities have failed to produce the missing package The loss was first made known by com plaints coming to the Indianapolis postoffice irom towns along the line Twenty one complaints have been made and nearly all speak of letters loBt with commercial paper in them The theory at present at the post office is that the package was left in a pouch through the carelessness of an employe after it was thought to have been emptied No suspicion rests on any one of wrong doing and no attempt has been made to cash any of the missing checks The Child Saving Institute of Omaha The child Saving Institute of Omaha is distinguished from other organiza tions in that this institution in some cases allows parents and relatives to know where the children are placed Some years ago an appeal was made to another society to take charge of a little girl nine years of age whose mother had died in Omaha The grandmother of the child who was 70 years of age and very feeble was anxious to know where the little girl would be placed This society said No you can never know her loca tion The grandmother was anxious to receive occasionally little letters that her granddaughter might write Being refused an appeal was then made to the Child Saving Institute of Omaha and the little girl was placed in a home near Fullerton Neb since which time she has written many com forting letters to the old lady in her declining years It does not appear to this institution that any harm was done to the child nor any one else in allowing her grandmother to know her whereabouts There aro many similar cases MR BRYAN IN NEW YORK Not a Candidate for President or Any Other Office NEW YORK Many women were present to hear William Tannings Bryan sneak before the Womens Democratic club in Brooklyn Monday afternoon Among other things Mr Bryan said I am just as much interested in public affairs as ever but I am not a candidate for president or any other office I regard the obligations that rest upon the private citizen as imperative as those imposed upon the public of ficial I have felt that I can no more es cape from the work that I am now trying to do than a man in the pen itentiary can escape the work imposed upon him I am not going to change my views on public questions and I am still pre pared to give reasons for my faith New Greek Letter Fraternity WASHINGTON D C A new secret leteter fraternity named the Sigma Nu Phi designed to embrace chapters in all the law schools of the United States has filed articles of incorpor ation here Members of other fra ternities will not be admitted The membership will be confined entirely to undergraduates of law schools and alumni associations and their facul ties It is proposed ultimately to own a fraternity house in Washington and to publish a paper here The incor porators are members of the faculty and under graduates of the National University School of Law UNION PACIFIC LOSES CASH Court Decides that 800000 Must Go to Government BOSTON Mass In the United States circuit court Thursday Judge Colt decided that the entire fund in dispute between the federal govern ment and the Emergency Loan Trust company should go to the United States The amount is 600 000 now in the hands of the Amer ican Loan Trust company of Bos ton The decision is believed to finally settle the long controversy between the United States and the Union Pa cific railroad for which the trust company acted as referee Monster Aerolite Falls SALT LAKE Utah A special to the Tribune from Bingham Utah says A large meteor struck the earth in the vicinity of this place at 404 oclock Saturday morning The fall nig body when it collided with the earth caused windows to rattle and the house to tremble while a sound like a mighty clap of thunder awak ened the inhabitants from their sleep nnmBlM UnWrjMXSwr Literature and Tobacco Somohow or other wo associate to bacco with literary mon but not all writers aro lovers of the weed Goethe hated tobacco Intensely and nover lost a chance to attack It Hclnrlch Heino had tho same dislike Balzac who lived on black coffee preached wisely to tho young about the vko of smoking and Victor Hugo and Dumas wore equally opposed to tho practice But tho list of French smokers comprises many great names such as Alfred do Musset Eugene Sue Paul de St Victor Prosper and Baudelaire Mme Dudcvant better known as George Sand often indulged in a cigar between the intervals of her literary labors The poet Bloomflcld wrote sweet pastoral rnymes with a cloud of to bacco smoko making a fog around hi head Campbell Mooro and Byron delighted in Its temperate use and Tennyson was a great smoker One of the quaint scenes in the realm of letters is that of Carlylo and his old mother sitting together by tho chimney corner each smoking a dark brown pipe and chatting earn estly the while Wanted a Sample Cigar Let mo have a sample of those said a woman after looking critically at several boxes of cigars which the salesman exhibited as Just tho thing for him The clerk put out one of the cigars in a paper case and handed It over as if giving away sample cigars was quite customary Thats the way women beat the Jokesmiths said the salesman when tfte woman had gone out You dont see so many jokes nowadays about women giving their husbands and beaux bad cigars Well thats be cause they get samples just as they do in buying silks and ribbons and try them on their men folks The he in this case will smoke that cigar to night If ho likes it she will bo In to morrow to buy a box of them It struck us as pretty cheeky when the first request was made of us for a sample cigar but now we are quite used to it and it pays bringing us quite a little steady trade Disliked Publicity But Young man the rising statesman said to tho reporter newspaper no toriety is exceedingly distasteful to me but since you have asked me to give you some of the particulars of the leading events of my life I will comply I do so however with great reluctance Here he took a typewritten sheet from a drawer in his desk and handed it to the reporter I suppose of course ho added you will want my portrait and al though I dislike anything that savors of undue publicity I can do no less than comply with your wish Here he took a large photograph from a pile in another drawer and gave it to the reporter Anecdotal matter concerning my self ho added you will find in thi3 printed leaflet as well as particular of my hobbies and tastes When this appears in print you may send me 25J copies of the paper Making Use of the Professor A Vienna professor of considerable fame used to take his midday meal at a well known cafe in that city One very wet day when leaving af ter his usual meal the learned doctor was astonished to find in place of his own shabby headgear a real sparkling Parisian hat He could only attribute this to the delicate attention of some kind friend and on reaching home ho displayed his newly acquired chapcau to his admiring family Next day when at the cafe as usual he was ac costed by a young man who politely remarked Doctor allow me to claim my hrt and apologize for the apparent mis take The fact was I had no umbrella you had I did not know what to do to prevent my hat from being spoiled In the rain and as I knew it would not hurt yours I borrowed it and now re turn it with thanks Washingtons New Senator Levi Ankeny senator elect from Washington to succeed George Turner is a millionaire banker and farmer Mr Ankeny is awkward and diffident so it is quite unlikely that he will take a prominent part in senatorial deliberations It is generally believed that but for the active and dexterous campaign conducted by his wife he could not have been elected senator Mrs Ankeny is a daughter of ex-Senator Nesmith Editorial Idea Our idea of an impossible feat is to walk past a crowd of boys with snow balls in their hands and looks digni fied Atchison Globe ff Next Week Ae Maid gf Maiden Lane A Sequel to The Bow of Orange Ribbon By AMELIA E BARK A most charming tala of the American Revolutionary period