The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, February 25, 1898, Page 3, Image 3

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THE RED CLOUD CHIEF.
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INTERNATIONAL FSIS3 ASSOCIATION.
CHAPTER XIII.
I X III O 11 t It had
gone by six glori
oils and blissfully
happy months, dur
ing which Mr. ami
Mm. Harris kept
their secret well,
anil Pick was all
the world to' his
wife Doiothy.
During two of
those months they
remained abroad, living In the smaller
towns on the Riviera, seeking no in
terests heyond themselves, but leading
a quiet, peaceful life of love, of which
neither had become the least weary
when Dick's leave was up and It was
time for him to go back to his duly.
Now, as the 13d were still quartered
r.t Colchester, It became a (mention of
mjdic Importance for them to decide
whore Dorothy should take up her
abode after this. Colchester or Its Im
mediate neighborhood was, of course,
nn Impossibility, ns her whereabouts
might nt any moment be discovered,
ttaud also Dick's real name. Dick sug
gested that she might go to Chelms
ford and take rooms there for the
time: but Dorothy had stayed more
than oneo In that sleepy little town,
nml It was therefore almost as im
possible as Colchester Itself. So final
ly they agreed that there was no place
in the world like London In which to
hide oneself and have a good time all
the same, and therefore they came
back to town dnrlng the last week of
Dick's leave, and they took a little Hat
in Kensington, Just where Dorothy and
Barbara could get on very comfortably
without any servant, and yet could be
near to good shop and a tolerably
lively street.
"I'm afraid you'll be awfully dull,
darling," ho said to her when they
Lad takon possession, and his last
evening had come, "because, of course,
you won't know any one, and you arc
not at all likely to get to know people."
"I shall have Darbara," said Doro
thy, smiling bravely.
"Yes, you'll have Darbara, but Bar
bara won't be much company for you,"
he answered. "I do hate all this con
cealment. I hate leaving you at all,
and I hate having to live, as it were,
on the sly, and I'm afraid always that
Home one you know or one of the fel
lows will be seeing you, and that they
may get hold of a wrong Idea alto
gether, and and I sometimes feel as
if I should Ilka to kill that old savage
at Aylmcr's Field."
"Hut, Dick dear, nobody will see mo,
and If they do they will think I am
Dorothy Strode still. -Remember. I
don't know many people In all the
world, and none of your officers know
me at all, and If they happened to sec
me with you they wouldn't think any
thing of it. Really, I wouldn't worry
nbout that if I were you, dearest, and
ns for my being dull why, I am never
dull. I never have been used to hav
ing moro than one person nt a time
Auntie nil my life, and now you. I
Hhall get on splendidly with Darbara,
and I shall always be able to look for
ward to the days when you will bo
coming homo."
"And I shall csmc like a bird when
ever I got the ghost of a chance," he
cried, tendorly.
"And I," cried Dorothy, "am going
to mnke n study of gowns. I have al
ways boon used to making my ordinary
gowns, and I shall have lots of time,
and I nm going to begin as soon as
you aro Kone. I nm going to make
myself somo beautiful tea-gowns; they
will mako mo look married and dig
nified they will mako you respect
me, sir,"
"But you don't want to look married
and dignified," he cried, half nlarmed.
"Suppose you meet some one you
know, and"
"I shall not bo wearing a tea. gown,
Dick," cried Dorothy, with a gay
laugh.
"Ah! no, no, of course not." he an
fiwered, relieved. "All tho same,
though, did -you not tell me tho other
day that you had a cousin somewhero
or other?"
"Oh, Esther! Yes, but she," care
lessly, "she Is in Egypt."
"But, my dear child, she won't bo
In Egypt always," he rejoined; "and
if sho comes back to London, which
sho is suro to do "
"By no means, Dick," interrupted
Dorothy, quietly. "Esther is Just ns
llkoly to go off for tho summer to Now
Zealand or Finland as to come to Lon
don. And oho would not specially
amnt mo up If sho did come here. She
is beautiful and rich and very Inde
pendent in her mind, but she is six
years older than I nm and thinks very
little of family ties. In any case, sup
posing that I met hor In London to
morrow, sho would certainly not try
to pry Into my affairs, and even If I
had your leave to toll her part of tho
truth sho Is perfectly safo. I assure
you that you need nover worry yonr
HOlf for a single moment about my
cousin Esther."
So Dick was pacified, and tho fol
lowing day went to Colchester not In
a very happy frame of mind, all tho
amo. "I hato leaving you, Dolly," ho
oald voxedly, "I hate it. I'vo a good
mind to throw up my commission and
trust to Fat and tho old savage."
"Dick, Dlciv!" she cried, "how can
srj3 v r ??' j rt
u wcyj a Jr
you bo so foolish? Supposing that tho
'old ravage' did turn round on you and
stopped your allowance, where would
you be then? If you aro In the army
you have always tho chance of going
to India, and I don't know that I
would not rather be In Indlt. as Mrs.
Aimer than have these dreadful part
ings here."
"No, no!" he cried hastily, "l
couldn't take you out there. I've nl
waya had a sort of horror of tho east,
and 1 would do anything to avoid run
ning any such risk."
So he went away with a lump In
his throat which made him glad that
he was safe In a cab, leaving Dorothy
to face the next week by heself that
Is to say, except for Barbara, who was
Jubilant at having got her long holi
day over and delighted to be at work
again.
To Dorothy Barbara at this time was
a wonderful study of which she was
inner tired. For Barbara had been
born and bred In the country, nnd had
lived more years at Ciravoleigh Hall
than Doiothy could remember, and her
comments on town people and town
ways were something more than amus
ing. "Ah! they did things In a queer son
of fashion at llalloway. My cousin
.toe lives nt llalloway- yo.. know, Miss
Dorothy bo's a plumber In quite a
largo way of business and has money
In tho bank and two children at board
ing school learning French anil music
and Heaven knows what besides. Mrs.
Joe used to go out every Saturday
night to get her stores in for the week,
as she always mild for Sunday, I used
to think. Never did I see such mar
ketings! A quarter of a pouud of but
ter and four fresh eggs. She regular
prided herself on those fresh crrs.
My dear,' said 1 one night to her,
'them eggs have been laid at least a
week, and I doubt If 1 should bo far out
If I went as far as ten days.'
" 'You sec, Barbara,' says she, 'you've
been used to a country life, with now
laid eggs, and gallons of milk and but
ter by the stone, nnd I dare say you
feel a bit plnchod-llke here. But If I'd
let myself go In butter and live on
now-lald eggs at twopence-ha'penny
each well all I can say Is, I should
have had to rest content without any
boarding schools or anything put by
in the bank.'
"I don't say, Miss Dorothy Mrs.
Harris, ma'am, I should say," Bar-
I DRAW THE LINE,
barn went on, In her wisest tones
"that 1 should wish to go ngnlnst
my cousin Joe's wife 1 i that respect
a thrifty wife is a crown of gold to a
man that has to work for a living; but
at eggs that have never seen n hen for
nearly a fortnight I go draw tho lino
to call 'em fresh, that Is."
Bui although on most evenings Do
rothy used to tell the old servant to
bring her sewing and come nnd sit
witli her in tho pretty little drawing
room, It must bo confessed that at this
time she found her llfo dreadfully dull,
and as each day went by sho seemed
to miss Dick In her dally llfo moro and
more. For though she hnd been used
to a quiet country home and a quiet
country exlstenco, them hnd always
been plenty to Interest her. Ml.u
DInndnle, If somowhat old fashioned,
In hor ideas nnd strict In her notions,
hail been both tender and Indulgent to
hor little orphan niece, and hnd, more
over, always been a clever and enpa
blo woman with whom to nssoclate.
Then, about a country house there aro
nlways so mnny different points of In
terest. Either tho moles havo worked
at last from tho meadow under the
hedge and bolow tho very best bit of
the velvet lawn which is the very pride
and dollght of your eyes, or the rats
havo suddenly acquired a pert measure
of audacity and have scraped and bit
ten a now hole in tho corn-bin or iho
newly filled potato bags, or havo gone
further and found their way Into the
prlnclpnl pantry and created a regular
stampodo among your servants. Or
porhaps you catch one of the slnnors
In a new trap which cost flvo nnd six
pence, and when you go to see its
wicked, hoary old occupant you feel
that If it never catches another, this
one Is well worth tho money. Or If
train nnd other means, consisting of
horribly smelling poisons suggestlvo of
the ir.fcrnal regions, fall you, perhaps
you have tho professional rat-catcher
up from tho vlllago with his box of
sinuous, red-eyed ferrets, and then yu
have your revnso on the rats.
CHAPTER XIV.
HERE in no end to
the Intel est which
hourly crops up out
of the unexpected
fu a country life
Perhaps the speck
led hen starts lay
ing, or she sho.vs
unmistakable signs
of a stronger la
fetlnct of maternity
than usual. Or one
of the cobs easts n shoe, or a wind gel
up In the night and tears a large
branch off tho grent weeping willow
which shelters the most easterly cor
ner of your garden, where the wind
sweeps up the keenest, straight from
tho great North Sea. Or maybe the
corner of the shiubbery, where Hi"
mushrooms have always grown, no
body ever knew why, has suddenly
bloomed out with broad, pinkish fun
gi, and you feel as If you had found
a fortune, although you know perfect
ly well that the market value of what
you have discovered Is not, at fhe out
side, more than threepence. Still, that
does not lessen your pleasure In the
least, and you carry them Indoors and
present them to every member of your
household, your visitors If you
iuivo any, your family, and, finally,
to your cook, as If well, as If you were
a second Columbus and bad discovered
a new America.
Then In the country you are a neigh
bor of everybody! If you llo as Dor-1
othy Strode had been used to live all I
our life, you know why Janet Wen-1
ham was not at church on Sunday, and I
why Elizabeth Mlddleham's girl left
that nice place at Whlttlngton, and
how Elisabeth Mlddlehani cried for
days over It. and her girl's Intention to
take service In London and see life.
And you know all nbout It when Mri.
Jones has her mauve dinner gown
dyed chestnut brown, and how It Is
that tho rectory curtains keep clean
year after year, although white .?llk
with a delicately tinted stripe would
be ruined In three months In some
houses. Yes, you know everything
about everybody In the country, al
most without knowing why you know
It.
But In town, In London town, It Is
all so different. It Is true when you
get known In ixnidon, the gossiping
Is nearly as bad as If you were the
center of a small village set; but to u
girl sltuntcd as Dorothy was, London
Is a social blank. She knew nobody,
and nobody knew her. She did not
want to know any one, and apparently
the Inhabitants of the metropolis re
turned tho compliment. Yet, never
theless, It was terribly dull. Her pret
ty little fiat was on the ground lloor of
the block of buildings which was dig
nified with the name of Palace Mai
slons, so she had people above and
people below her. But Dorothy knew
them not. There was a sweet-fared
lady on the first lloor Immediately
above her, a lady who dressed well and
had a sweet-faerd little child with her
sometimes, and Dorothy fairly yearned
over her and longed to say "Good
morning" when they met in tho com
mon hall of tho Mansion. But tho
sweet-faced lady did not know the
exact standing of Mrs. Harris, w.id
lived at No. 1, and in her dread of
even rubbing elbows with "a person"
she resolutely mndo her eyes shone
and her lips steol whenever she saw
tho slight, girlish figure approaching
her.
Then thoro was a lady at No. 2
that was the basement, u sort of Wel
beck Abbey In mlnature. She, being
a stout and buxom widow, whose
grandchildren came running In at all
tlmea from a house on tho other side
of the High street, might have ven
tured a kindly word oven to "a per
son," but she nover did. No, on tho
contrary, whenever she came across
poor Dorothy she Invariably sniffed,
which was rude, to say the least of
It.
(To bo continued.)
WON'T FOLLOW HIS ORDERS,
Anuuiulc nml Dynpepllo Cilrli Sluko tin
riiyolrliitu Angry.
"When anaemic girls, sleepless wo
men nnd dyspeptic children arc brought
to me, I feel like going out of busi
ness," declared a bluff, brusque, well
known physician, in a burst of lndlg
nation over n enso that ho had just
been called to attend, says the Now
York Commercial Advertiser. "I havo
one patient, n girl of 18, who might is
well go to n fortune teller for advice for
all the benefit sho will ever get from n
doctor. I give her a Hcoldlng and draw
up a set of rules for her to live by, pro
scribing certain things to eat, certain
times to sleep, eertuln hours for exer
cise, glvo hor a tonic and dismiss her.
Do you think that girl Improvos? Not
she. In a fortnight sho trails Into my
office, pallid and melancholy. I haven't
the heart to scold hor, but I antlclpato
her answers to my questions. "Una sho
taken tho tonic? Oh. yes, nlio hasn't
missed a dose. Has she eatwi pastry
or lobsters or drank Ice water or Ice
cream soda? Well er onco or twlco.
Has alio eaten the oatmeal and raw
beef and drank the hot water and beo'!
tea? Yes. She doesn't add 'onco o
twice,' but her pale face adds It. And
has she gono to bod early, got up early
and slept after lunch? Well, not every
day. And yot this girl of Intelligence
and npparent common sense wonders
why alio doesn't get well. Why does she
think 1 glvo her Bpeclal Instructions?
To amuse myself? To havo them dis
obeyed? I nm going to try onco more.
If she doesn't oboy mo then I shall pos
itively refuse to attend her further,"
and tho doctor banged the big paper
weight that Bomo fair "hysteria case"
had given him for Christmas nnd look
ed so good-naturedly ferocious that one
could not blame the girl for being in
d'fferont to bla wrath.
NEGROES RANK JIOII.
C.EADEPS AT THE CAPITAL OF
THE UNITED STATES.
Unity Aro In I'uhlW. oilier . , Client
hum, I.'. I!. Cooper, .lolin It, l.jiuli,
.Inhn I'. 1mmi, I), t(, r.rucn nml
(JrorRo II. Wliltit.
If In each city u loll hould be made
j? eminent colored men who have at
tained to national prominence, Wash
ington would ptesent a larger ll.ct
than any other city In the Culoii. says
the Odd-Fellows' Journal. All of those
distinguished citizens formerly losld
ed in varloiM state, and with but a
few exceptions began their residence
here In the capacity of government of
ficials. Some have abandoned their
former abodes and have become a,
part of the capital's permanent popu
lation; others still retain a residence
in the states and when their tonus
of office esplie will ictiirii to their
homes again and. take up the labor
they left In the cities or towns whence
they came. If you want to meet some
of the men who are known through
out the nation we can readily find them
In a morning's stroll. If we .step
down the street we will be at the city
ball. Right this way and in here. The
gentleman writing at that huge desk
is II. P. Che.ithau. lie is affixing his
signature to the recorded deeds. Twice
member of eoiigioss. he bt now iccord
er of deeds by President McKlnley'n
appointment. Now we will go one
square south of bete on Foiir-aud-a-
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Painters have time and again pic- was sinking. She was noticeably down
lured the sinking of a ship at sea. by the head.
The scenes have usually been the crca- When twenty-two feet win reported
'.Ion of the artist's imagination and tho everybody was oidercd Into the boats,
reproduction of an Impression carried Mr. Llghtfoot not forgetting his cum
in the memory. An accurate photo- era In the oxeltoinont. It was early
graphic presentation of a vessel In the morning, and the boats lingered around
several stages of foundering Is boiiio- the ship. Three hours elapsed between
thing quite novel, and that is why the taking the pictures entitled "Deserted"
series of nicttirtM takon with a camera and "Down by the Head." A little
by Mr. Cecil Llghtfoot, who was a pas
senger on the Tal-lloku. an Ill-fated
Japanese steamer, and who watched
her from a lifeboat while she went
down In the Atlantic off the Portu-
gueso cosat last July, pos
sess so much Interest. The
photographs were reproduc
Ed in tho Strand, which con
tains an account of the dis
aster. The sinking of the Tal
Hoku was occasioned by a
collision with another vos
ccl lu a thick fog. An hour
later there was five feet of
water In tho hold. The cap
' " ' m ' "' ' lJCSfl ril!fvJP"l CX-H J I'M Ti u
final f'lunqp
tain hoped to reach Malta,
but
when two feet more of water was taken
In another hour ho decided to mnke nt
once for Lisbon. Fifteen hours later
sixteen feet of water was reported,
and It was then realized that tho ship
Half street. This Is tho Colored Amer
ican building. This first lloor leads to
the press and composing rooms, this
next one to the office. Tho mnn at
that farthest desk is E. E. Cooper, the
first negro In tho history of the race
to publish an Ulustratlvo Journal. For
four years he was proprietor of tho
Indianapolis Freedman, and at the
head of that sheet commanded nation
al attention. Ho organized nnd has for
more than four years controlled and
edited tho Colored American. With
this paper, which roaches tho race all
over tho country, he has demonstrated
tho possibilities of negro Journalism,
and has risen in tho rank of editors
until ho Btnnds among tho lenders of
the foremost few. Iet us walk around
on F street. This largo yellow-brick
building is the Capital Savings Bank.
Come upstairs In tho front room on
tho second floor. This Is tho office of
Lynch & Terrell, attorneys-at-law.
This man seated at tho desk, with
nuistncho and hair two-thirds gray, Is
John R. Lynch. For many years he
has been before the public eye, at
tracting attontlon by his successful
ventures In politics. Ho was speaker
of the houso of representatives In
Mississippi, a mombor of congress,
chairman of tho national Republican
convention In 1888, and fourth nudltor
of tho treasury under President Hnr
rison's administration. IIo Is now n
practicing nttorney and j resident of
tno Capital Savings Bank, the wealth-
Icat banning institution of the rare.
Out we go-and up the street threo
sq'tarcj. Now, a portion of this build
ing Is uu annex to the government
postolllce. Ivook In the rooms nc wo
go by all are white faces, eh? Well,
step In here and nolle r that colored
man dictating letters lo that while
stenographer, that Is John P. (1 recti of
CIe eland, (). He was state senator
for three terms lu Ohio, lie Is now
chief of the Mump agency and the head
of Ihlh oillcc. Eve.;.- stamp Issued and
distributed by the g.n eminent passes
through his bureau. Tluce squares
and a half tnul we tdmll be at the otllce
of another pionilnctit man. ThU large
stone building In the Ohio National
Bank. We'll t ike the elevator, slop
at this lloor, this way; step In here.
This Is the office of B. K. Bruce, ox
icgister of the ticnmiry. and ex-recorder
of deeds. There he sits making
out a check. He Is now a real estate
agent and broker, lie Is said to be pros
pering. Last month lie loaned to the
Nineteenth Street Baptist Church
$10,000 at fi per cent Interest. Let us
walk to the west. This Is the White
House and the man leaving Is Oeorge
II. White, the only colored represen
tative In the LVth congiess. He lias
pi nimbly been to the President urging
the appointment of a constituent.
A (Juror I'oiirt nil l.
Dick Harris (that was not Ills nul
iiiinu but It will do for our piesent
purpose), the rag and bone gatherer,
was a familiar figure In certain par
ishes of Noith Devon some forty or
fifty years ago. The periodical vIslM
of Dick, his donkey and his cart, were
T1IK LAST MOMKNTS OK A
later n displacement of the vessel's
engines occurred
which materially
hastened the end.
Presently t h o
T7
fell forward, Jerking the cords
bridge
communicating with tho slrcns.cnusing
them to utter a wolrd screaming fare
well. The next moment tho Tnl-Hoku
as Bhown lu the pictures "The list
Few Moments" and "Tho Final
hailed with pleasure by thrifty house
wives, anxious to get the accumulated
rags out of the way, And as ho gave
"tuppence" a pound for white rags, and
a "lin'ponny" a pound for colored, and
paid In caBh, the money thoy receive I
for them was not by any means de
spised. One morning, while on his
l omuls, Dick called at a certain farm
house. His knock wan answered by
Sally, the farm servant, a girl that ho
had Been on former visits to the farm,
but with whom ho hnd no further ac
quaintance. She told him that tho
"missus" was away, and that sho didn't
know what there was to soil. Now
Sally was not a tidy girl at any time,
nnd on this particular morning her
dress nnd apron looked bb though they
rightly belonged to Dick's stock-in-trade.
She was a lanky, angular girl,
and most people would have thought
her vory unattractive. But Dick evi
dently thought otherwise, for his next
question wnB, "What would'st tha zay,
If I was to offer to take thee rags an'
bones an' all, an marry thee." Just
what answer Sally made to this queer
way of "popping the question" Is not
recorded, but Ita purport may bo guess
ed from the fnct that tholr marrlngo
bnniiB wero called shortly after, and in
duo time they were married In the vil
lage church,
If the sun had nothing to do but
ehlno on the truly good it wouldn't
have to get up ho early.
Mill '
-m.r.----ji1yi1mjp - i
MANY NOW niDE ASTRIDR..
i;itirii Women Now .lolnlng with Nan
hrn ii f Tlintr Chlcnc" Blitur.
New York Is ascribing to the blcycle'a
InHuence the practice of riding astrldo,
but Chicago horseback riders of both
sexes have become so accustomed to
the "rational" method that It no lon
ger excites comment when seen on the
boulevaids on pleuniiit diys. Last tall
a number of New York's smart set
ladles of modest and retiring habits,
as well as of high social position tin
dertook lo introduce the cutom ut the
cross-country hunts on Long Island
and up the state. A special ildlng cos
tume was ordered from Paris, and this
was adopted by all the lady menihuin
of one fashionable club, which meets
at their country clubhouse not fifty
miles from the city. This costume was
a modified bicycle bloomer suit, or.
rather, a divided skirt, with the bloom
era underneath. When dismounted the
suit had the appearance of an ordinary
skirt and coat, and when ttstrldo of the
hoi so the uklrt concealed all except the
tips of the boots. It was far moro
modest in appearance than the old
faahloued tight-fitting riding habit,
anil ccitalnly more artistic. The lead
ers In the crusade enjoyed their cross
country rides so thoroughly that they
determined to Improve their opportu
nities tills winter. Any morning now,
before most of New York'n population
Is astir, one can see young and middle
aged ladles of wealthy families riding
mil ride In Central or Riverside park,
accompanied either by their male rel
atives or a solitary footman. They
f
KOUNDKKINO STICAMKK.
- 3M333 - 333333S - M3 - - M
Plunge"- dived deliberately head fore
most Into three hundred feet of wa
ter and was never seen again.
"As the sea rushed Into the, furn
aces," adds Mr. Llghtfoot, "steam and
water gas were generated, and these,
lushing up through the smokestack,
caused a kind of explosion which Is
very plainly seen In the last photograph
I took. Just as the ship was disappear
ing. The upward rush of steam car-
ried n greni quantity of soot
from the fines, and thla
caused a dark cloud to hovei
over tho pluco where the
Tnl-Hoku sank. There wan
no whirlpool of any kind.
When this grent vessel of
11,100 tons took her last dive
tho little flotilla of boats
could not have been more
than 150 yards dlstnnt.
vrB?;
-.
'-''u0'" Stnnillnir bv after her dis
appearance, we saw pathetic bits of
wreckage coming slowly to the top."
A physician says that cigarette smok
ing causes softening of the brain; but
he doesn't say how ho found it out.
take their exercise at this unseemly
hour bcenu8o of the publicity that their
riding mnn-fashlon would crento when
the park Ib full of people. But all of
this secrecy will not bo ouEcrvcd much
longer. An attempt will be mndo to
Introdueo the custom so generally that
by another season no more will be
thought of riding a liorso astrldo than
of a woman riding n bicycle. Tho La
dles' club of Horseback Rldora has
been orgnnized in Now York to popu
larize riding astrldo. From a hygienic
point of view tho now method of riding
la of great advantago to equestriennes.
Nulvo l'urontnl Orthography,
English board school teachers can all
produce charming examples of naive
parental orthography. Hero are two
scraps from the correspondence of cer
tain Australian mothers. The first Is
nn excuse: "Plese, sur, ml kids kant
go to skule, as there close is wore aout,
an thoy knnt git more till tho wheeta
sould." Tho next refers to clothing:
"Dear Mr. : Pleaso send one pat
of aoks to fit a boy of 10 years old ont
par to fit ono 9 years Old ono par to fit
ono 7 yenrs I want the threo pars all
cast Iron stoklngs," London Globe.
Ilnrenln Fllture.
Madgo Tho man she Is going, to
marry is n millionaire. Marjorio
Yes, and sho says he Is a bargulu. You
know he ia Gl).
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