a- l vf ii i 4 AHTTB w JjOrOESiANA BY ary Severeux IITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY DON C WILSON COpyrfeAt 03 6y lftfe foonri art CbTywyJ CHAPTER XXIII The twelve months elapsing since the September afternoon that witness ed Rose de Cazeneaus disillusion in regard to her trusted Captain Jean had been uneventful ones for her until very recently when she had met Lazalie under Gen La Roches Vospiiable roof and for the first time in her life found a girl friend The dark beauty and indifferent manner of the Spanish girl possessed a strange and powerful attraction for the gentle natured Rose and Lazalie feeling the others admiration and liking had reciprocated in a way that brought to the surface her better and more womanly self The general had for a guest at this time the son of an old friend Col Thomas Stewart of Kentucky who sending young Harold to New Or leans upon a matter of business had asked for him La Roches hospitality La Roche and the two girls were breakfasting when Lafitte arrived Erigida who was superintending cer tain domestic matters in a front room of the house was the first to see his approach Gen La Roche with the impetuos ity of a much younger man sprang from his chair and crossed the room to grasp Lafittes hand welcoming him in words which were but careless ly heard for the npweomer glanced from Lazalie who had followed her bests movements to the childish fig ure still seated at the table to the lovely face flushing and paling by turns while the violet eves with a startled and yet not altogether dis pleased light showing in them were raised to meet his own Not offering to touch her hand he said with a bow I hope mademoi selle that I find you quite well She answered ift a low voice her manner with the color still going and coming in her cheeks suggesting I nothing more than usual shyness I wish to present you to my friend Captain Jean who has come to see mo upon a matter of business Mr Stewart now speaking to Lafitte as the young man rose and took the for mers extended hand is the son of an old friend whom I think you have met in past years He was then En sign Tommy Stewart but now he is if you please Col Thomas Stdwart of Kentucky a member of General Jack sons staff I remember having met him in New Orleans some years ago and I am pleased to make the acquaintance of his son As the breakfast proceeded accom panied by a general and inconsequent chatter Lafittes keen eyes took note of the way in which the young man looked at Mademoiselle de Cazeneau and it seemed to him that not only was she conscious of Stewarts atten tion but that it embarrassed her A fury sudden and savage possess ed him at the thought of this hand some young stranger daring to covet what was to him who had Known her so long the most precious thing in all his world By Jove exclaimed Harold Stew art By Jove Senorita Lazalie what a fascinating fellow this Captain Jean is The two were sitting in a shaded summer house Mademoiselle de Caze neau having disappeared immediately after breakfast making as Brigida told Lazalie the excuse of wishing to see her grandfather at Kanauhana Have you known him long he inquired Yes for several years she an swered carelessly adding as though feeling little interest in Capt Jean I wonder why Rose slipped away alone She always likes to have me go with her If Lazalie could have seen her lit tle friend her wonder would have been increased gr - And why should you and every one dreadful Turning from her and while Albert the butler showing as much pleas ure as he thought it dignified to mani fest was by his masters order pre paring another place at the table Lafitte told Gen La Roche o the sail ors who were waiting outside with their burdens and the general pre ceded by Lafitte started to leave the room as a cheery whistling accom panied by the sound of footsteps upon the oaken stairs announced that Har old Stewart was coming down to breakfast Lafitte was already in the hall and Li Roche pausing a moment turned back to say in a carefully lowered tone Senorita Rose I must warn both of you to have a care how you mention the name of Lafitte in the hearing of young Stewart Remember he add ed with unmistakable emphasis he must be Captain Jean and no one else so long as he is here with us Lazalie nodded with a smile of ap preciation but Mademoiselle de Caze neau looked with troubled eyes at the general as he hurried out She was greatly puzzled as indeed she had been more than once during the past year to understand how it was that people for whom she could hr ve nothing but respect should seem to find no objection to fraternizing with the dreadful Lafitte and she was beginning to wonder how much of un truth there might be in the terrible stories she had heard concerning him It was all a perplexing puzzle and the girl sighed as she stirred her chocolate Lazalie hearing the sigh laughed ao her white teeth bit into her toast Why do you sigh so woefully my little Rose and look so tragic These gentlemen have their secrets to pre serve especially just now when one cannot be sure that his neighbor will not betray him for a chance to curry favor with the governor or he is not scheming for opening the way to the English Roses reply whatever it might have been was checked by the entrance of Gen La Roche and Lafitte and young Stewart stared suprisedly at the tall straight form following his host Stewart said the general I idiii3 like him so much such a wicked man Up in the room assigned to her at Kanauhana and made invitingly cozy for their beloved young mistress by Barbe and Zeney the latter by the way never failing to show her jeal ousy of the French womans closer relations with Mademoiselle Rose was that young lady lying a tumbled mass of pale blue draperies upon a large old fashioned divan Her head and face were buried in the pillows and she was sobbing convulsively It was thus that Zeney found her and the old negress pausing on the door sill exclaimed shrilly La-la-la What is this Precious bird tell Ze ney who it is that has brought tears to the light of her eyes She spoke in the French patois of her fellows but with a better accent and choice of words The sobs ceased but the face buried itself still deeper in the pillows and a little hand waved her off impa tiently It is that proud Spanish missy exclaimed Zeney with sudden anger I dont like her She has made you cry Come home my honey dont you stay where she is Lazalie has nothing to do with it was the reply uttered with a spirit and emphasis that appeared to re store the speakers composure She knows nothing of it I tell you It is with manifest indecision only that I felt unhappy and I cannot tell my self why But as if determined to find a reason I wish that Capt La fitte had not come to see Gen La Roche this morning La la said Zeney a new light creeping into her shriveled face while she nodded her turbaned head until her long earrings clicked against the string of gold beads tightly encircling her skinny neck Then good Capt Jean is still alive and well I am glad so glad Why should you be glad What makes every one love him so de manded her mistress petulantly as she wiped her face and eyes with the morsel of cambri and lace serving her as a handkerchief Why should I not be glad my pret ty one Aye so long as Zeney lives she has reason to be glad when ali is well with Capt Jean But why should you be repp4ii Viijjifi Mademoiselle do cazeneau her man ner softening somewhat at Zeneys evident sincety And why should you and every one like him so much such a wicked dreadful man The adjectives were indisputably harsh more so than the manner ini which they were uttered and the let eyes held a suggestion that the speaker would not object to knowing that her application of thorn was mis placed Wicked dreadful echoed Zeney shaking her head violently No no never Is Captain Jean either of these But Mamman Zillah once told me said Mademoiselle de Cazeneau with the air of one seeking to remove un pleasant doubts from the mind that years ago when she belonged to a man up at Contraband Bayou she saw Capt Lafitte and two other men go Into the woods with a horse They had shovels and picks and she fol lowed them to see what they would do She saw them digging a hole like a grave but it was a big chest they dug up And there was gold in the chest for she saw it when the men began filling some bags Then she was so frightened for fear they would see her that she ran home to her cabin And here Mademoi selle d Cazeneaus eyes opened wide to their full width and her voice took a minor note while her manner be came imbued with horrible suggest iveness a few hours later she saw the horse come out of the woods with the bags across its back but only Capt Jean came out of the woods with the horse Zeney laughed derisively and again shook her head That story came on horseback Missy along with the others you have heard and Zillah ought to be well whipped for telling such a wicked lie If she ever saw such a thing then the two men had gone off in some othei way to look after their own business which was what Zillah ought to have been doing But Mademoiselle de Cazeneau was although apparently against her own will still unconvinced for she added impressively Zillah said that they afterward found the two men dead in the woods And I have heard other stories too of how he has made men jump intc the sea when he burned or scuttled their ships and took all they had on board Capt Jean steal Capt Jean mur der cried Zeney her eyes flashing with indignation Such things he never did and all such stories are lies black lies How can you be lieve them or think of them my honey when you once thought him so good and noble The question was unanswered and Zeney after a moments pause added If there is any truth in such talk it was wicked Capt Laro who did these things but Capt Jean never Laro Capt Laro said her young mistress with a puzzled little frown and raising a hand to push back the clustering hair from her now cooled cheeks Ah yes it comes to me i have heard my mother speak of him it was he who brought her from France It was he too who brought Capt Jean here to Louisiana He did the girl asked in sur prise And did you know him then when he was a boy The negress nodded He seemed a comrade then young as he was ol the captains a comrade in business He was a wicked very wicked man a scallerat this Capt Laro and it was surely he and not Capt Jean who did the wicked deeds you have heard about my honey And where now is Capt Laro do you know Zeney Dead and gone Missy so Ive been told And if so then ne is down with the devil I reckon answered the old woman grimly rising to her feet as Lazalies voice was heard from the hall below calling Rose my lit tle Rose where are you To be continued SUPPLIES DURING A SIEGE Primitive Incubators Used When Gib raltar Was Beleaguered Some months after the siege of Gib raltar began Admiral Rodney reached the rock with twenty one ships of the line and brought in vast quantities of supplies In April 17S1 about a year after Rodneys visit Admiral Darby with the British grand fleet also anchored at Gibraltar and brought in supplies On one occasion a vessel from Naples was driven to the rock with G000 bushels of barley which the garrison found of unspeak able value Then too while the bom bardment destroyed most of the houses the English found it possible to raise large amounts of vegetables and garden supplies They even raised chickens follow ing out an original method of incuba tion the forerunner of the process in vogue to day Eggs were put in tin cans and kept heated by water until they hatched In order to get the brood cared for it was necessary to take a capon pull out the breast feathers scratch the fowls breast with nettles until it bled and then settle him upon the downy chicks The relief given the smarting wounds by the soft down of the brood was so great that adoption speedily followed Chicago Chronicle Wheels Used as Alarm Bells Locomotive drive wheels can still make a racket even after having been worn out for traveling purposes The railroads give them to small towns as fire alarm bells They are framed nnd hung up for that purpose being capable of alarming a wide territory when properly pounded Mcjt of the smaller towns in New leissy have them r J - i i ATTTT EW USUEMAFZA BY MJARY EVEREUX YITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY DON C WILSON CHAPTER XXIV Zeney who had little liking for the Spanish beauty now took herself off and the two girls soon went down stairs together to see the Count de Cazeneau whom feeble and emaciat ed they found lying back among the pillows of his chair On the floor near the counts chair were two sacks which both girls saw were the counterparts of those brought to Gen La Roches house that same morning and an old negro one who seemed trusted in his masters affairs was on his knees having just finished tying the mouth of one of them His master then as Lazalie and Rose entered the room making a motion for him to desist he had sub sided to the floor apparently waiting for the call to be ended and Made moiselle de Cazeneau felt that her grandfather was desirous that his vis itors should leave him This they did and were half way across the first field when Lazalie put an arm about the shoulder of the slight figure beside her Little Rose when I found you I saAV you had been crying and Ive been wondering about it ever since Will you not tell me what has been troubling you Rose lifting a pair of earnest eyes to the dark brilliant face asked Tell me Lazalie have you known Capt Jean long Lazalie came to a halt and her lids narrowed as they dropped over her srarkling eyes from which all laugh ter was gone Known him long Yes and no I doubt if any soul even those nearest him can claim truthfully to know that man I lived for many years in my uncles house where Capt Jean also lived that is he came and went But for the last three years Ive not seen him until this morning Something in her tone something in her face her manner caused a sus picion to flash through Mademoiselle I happen to know because I have heard the same talo from my uncle who knew this boy at that time The boy is now known to you as Capt Jean Lafitte Capt Lafitte was the amazed half incredulous exclamation Lazalio nodded Capt Jean Lafitte repeated Rose de Cazeneau her voice faint with as tonishment And yet she added as if trying to grasp the wonderful fact he told me when he brought me to my grandpere that he had known my mother but I supposed he had met her in New Orleans Was it Capt Jean who brought you from the Choctaws asked La zalie now surprised in turn Mademoiselle de Cazeneau nodded but seemed disinclined to enter into details and fortune favored her in this for Lazalie said There is Capt Jean now He was coming across the fields toward them apparently on his way to Kanauhana But just as they no ticed him he took a sharp turn to the left in the direction of the tim ber where at the edge of the woods two men stood as if waiting his ap proach One of them was Shapira who was leaning on a long gun and his compfinion was Baptistme That man with the gun is the one from whom grandpere rented our new plantation said Rose as the two girls walking slowly watched La fittes tall figure approaching the waiting men I wonder where he lives He is always about the fields and woods yet there is no house for many miles except Gen La Roches and the one at Kanauhana Far in the depths of the wood upon whose edge Shapira and Baptistine stood and upon the domain of Kanau hana was the entrance to the so called Colonneh It was apparently nothing more than a ragged fissure of earth choked by vines and tangled forest growths and suggesting only the lair of a wild beast or deadly serpent But some J4JJJI Then Barataria will defend herself de Cazeneaus mind impelling her to say before realizing that she had ut tered the words Lazalie do you love or hatexCapt Jean Lazalie turned so fiercely that her small companion was startled and regretting her query hastened to say You speak kindly of him yet your eyes seem to hold no kindness for him I myself do you know I really dread him I cannot tell what to think about the man for Zeney says it was not Capt Jean who killed men and burned their ships and was a wicked pirate but that these things were done by another man whom Capt Jean was with and who is now dead Did Zeney tell you the name of this ather man this wicked captain who did such cruel things inquired La zalie with assumed carelessness and her companion could not see the sul len fire in the dark eyes now staring straight ahead Oh yes he was called Capt Laro Rose was startled by a peculiar laugh from Lazalie whose face was still turned away But the hardening curve of the red under lip to be seen in profile told her that she had said something to affect the Spanish beauty unpleasantly She could not help feeling uneasy and after a short silence added with the wish to say something which might give no offense Is it not rath er odd that it was this very Capt Laro who brought my mother over from France Lazalies face had regained much of its usual expression and Mademoi selle de Cazeneau feeling somewhat reassured slipped her hand within the rounded arm of her friend And my mother told me of such a handsome boy who was in the place with them that night one this Capt Laro said he was as lond of as an own son A curious look was in the black eyes that glanced sidewise as Lazalie asked What was the name of this wonderful boy That I do not know my mother never thought to mention it Lazalie laughed Shall i tell you his name You How can you possibly know it years before an Indian had imparted its secret to Lafitte and Shapiras de ceased uncle the former owner of Kanauhana had been one of Bara tarias most faithful agents Gen La Roche and Lafitte had held a long consultation during which the latter had told his host of the recent visit from the English officers of their proposition and of Beluches de parture for New Orleans for the pur pose of laying the Baratarian offer before the governor La Roche like Lafitte wondered at Beluches unexplained failure to re turn He also expressed surprise that in the face of such an unusual and im portant event he had not been sent for by the governor with whom his relations both personal and official were very close and who he felt as sured mid not decide the matter upon his own responsibility I must go to the city this after noon or to morrow morning at the lat est the general had said when the consultation was ended and the clock on the mantel of his study had by chiming twelve caused Lafitte to rise saying that he must go over to Kanau hana and see Count de Cazeneau He was back within an hour but saw nothing of Mademoiselle de Caze neau until all were seated at dinner when young Stewart was giving a lively account of something that had occurred that forenoon while he was hunting The story created considerable laughter and Lafitte noticing the softened look and gracious manner of the Island Rose toward himself as cribed them as well as the fearless glances with which she met his eyes to an entirely wrong cause They would have made him very happy being so like those he had formerly known had it not been for the belief that love for another man was now tempering her feeling and at titude toward himself just as the real ity of his own hopeless love was giv ing his bearing toward Lazalie a gen tleness he had never before accorded the girl and which despite her cool reception of his advances brought a brighter color to her cheeks and awakened In her heart a strange thrill of hope The effect of Zeneys defense of Lafitte and surprising in formation that he was tho hoy whom her mother know had taken In con notion with her former admiration for him greatly shaken Roses recent prejudices and with womanly Incon sistency sho felt hurt becauso ho was unablo to realizo this alteration in her feelings From pain she soon passed to anger the exact sourco or nature of which sho could scarcely have ana lyzed But its Immediate effect waa that she entered into a seeming filia tion with the young Kentucklan who vas only too pleased to respond All this furnished a new and singu lar illustration of loves blindness these four playing at cross purposes and wilfully misunderstanding ono another while beaming upon them from tho head of the table was Gen La Roche his eyes and heart filled with unsuspected admiration and love for the beautiful Spanish girl who so far as could bo inferred from appear ances regarded him simply as her friend and banker Just as dinner was over a mud bespattered negro and horse appeared before the outer door tho former bearing a letter from Gov Claiborno to Gen La Roche urging his immedi ate presence in New Orleans Why you black scoundrel thun dered the general his face ablaze with wrath after ho had read the letter and glanced again at its date this is five days old amr should have reach ed me four days ago The frightened messenger looked woefully at his left arm which was in a sling and explained that a short distance from New Orleans down by the little Bayou dOr his horse had fallen and broken a leg while he him self pitching over the animals head had been stunned and lay until found by some negroes living in a cabin near by who had bandaged his arm and shot his horse Come inside with me while I make ready to start said La Rocho to Lafitte after ordering his horse to be saddled I want a few words with you When in his own room he handed the letter to lafitte and fuming about lit a cigar while giving instructions to his valet in a most impatient man ner that bespoke mental disturb ance The governor had written him that having received from an unexpected quarter a proposal promising valu able support for the defense of New Orleans he had called a meeting of officials and prominent men of the city at which he the general was urged to be present I see said Lafitte after perusing the letter that tho conference was to have taken place two evenings ago Yes damn it replied La Roche rousing from his abstraction But I doubt if Claiborne takes any de cisive action before I can get to him You think then that there can be no doubt of Baratarias offer meet ing with favor How can there he was the dog matically put question Claiborne will not be so foolish so lacking in foresight at such a time as this But now showing a little anxiety even should he refuse you will not go over to the British The flash of Lafittes eyes would have been sufficient answer to this Eut he said quietly In such case I shall remain neutral And if the British attack Bara taria suggested La Roche Then Barataria will defend her self To be continued Depended Upon the Appropriation Senator Cullom says there were no weather maps and no weather science when he was a younger man To these new fangled notions lie ascribes the increased volume of modern talk about the weather In fact he thinks we should have much less weather were it not for the governments sci entific meteorologists The lack of foundation for weather talk said he in conversation about the cold wave reminds me of a Chi cago man who came here years ago in behalf of an appropriation for some health project in that city Pleuro pneumonia said he easily is just sweeping through Chicago Oh no 1 answered You cant mean that severe cases of pneumonia are prevalent now in Chicago Well he explained they will be if we dont secure this appropria tion Washington Post All to Ee Renounced Prof Duncan Campbell Lee former ly head of the Cornell department of oratory is an Adonis in form a Ches terfield in manner and a Beau Brum mell in attire His one time colleague Morse Stephens could readily obtain employment as a dime museum fat man did he not find history more lu crative Finally Prof Harry Powers of the same institution though one of the most genial of men was nothing less than Mephistophelian in appear ance Coming down the compus one day this striking trio passed two ladies one of whom was evidently a stranger being shown the local sights Her companion was about to explain Those were professors Professors indeed interrupted the visitor I should call them tho world the flesh and the devil New York Times 200 Persons Over 70 Years of Age A canvass of the city and township just made by George Phillips an old resident to ascertain how many per sons were living at the age of seventy years and upward found 200 viz males 95 females 105 The oldest person found was Mrs Emily Cattlen colored aged 99 years Quite a large number were horn in this city and vicinity Salem Corro spoudence Cleveland Leader