Sill tmw WWM Wcmb mmM st i i riiis was tne W of G troop F mffal romance irst Cav alry G troop be it known is just now very comfortably housed and the en listed men are having a better time than the captains used to For G troop has seen some of the hardest service known to the regular army It has served all the way from the fiery plains of Arizona to te moisture and frost of Washington It has gone to more old forts and there builded new ones than any other organization that ever rode horses But it has been well command ed from the far away time when R F Bernard was captain and Happy Tack Kyle was second lieutenant not to mention Mr Winters who was first lieutenant down to the present when gentlemen as modest and a whole lot better accoutered take care of the for tunes of company G All that has nothing to do with the romance The man in the case was call ed Big Smith The first name be longed to him of rights for he was just as tall and just as heavy as the maxi mum cavalry limit would allow and he called himself Smith because that nev er had been his name Big Smith was from Dallas and he was about as good a type of the genu ine Texan as a man would find in a months travel He Avas handsome af ter a virile and un Bostouese way and Iiis voice was of that deep and mellow quality which suits itself to nonsense songs for the pleasing of women He knew enough to gdt along Avith the in tellectual and Avas able to buy enough to get along Avith the other kind He Avas at his home an altogether accept able fellow Her name is another matter Besides It is another name now anyway And there is no use bringing her into the romance of G troop any further than she is Avilliiig to come It seems there Avas some sort of understanding fol lowed by a misunderstanding between them and Big Smith shook the dust of Dallas from his shoes Avent down to Garveston and enlisted in the regular array He must have regretted their quarrel a good deal for the regular army in 1S71 was composed in lanre part of about the hardest lot of men that have got together for military pur poses since Mr Falstaif joined the forces of Henry IV Once in however there was nothing for it but to stick and Big Smith addressed himself to the task of waiting He made a good soldier and Avas pro moted As a corporal and later as a sergeant the only complaint against uim was made by the tailor It took too much buff flannel to make his But he was a very good fellow gives to drink pay day as became a frontier warrior given to lighting occa sionally when that seemed the proper escape valve for abundant energy However he never failed in the one es sential He did his duty- He could ahvays be relied upon His fort was Iimia in the hottest oven of Arizona where the Coorow Apaches frequently made the camj still hotter Sunday inspection was the same there ns everywhere After the roll call and scrutiny on the parade ground the men repaired to their squadrooms and each one stood at the foot of his bunk while the officers AA alked through glanced about for signs of carelessness and cor rected or commended as the jkse might require and then Avalked out again Often citizens visited the officers at Fort Yuma and the privilege of attend ing in the squadroom inspection was prized The soldiers Avere so interest ing That Sunday an unusual number of women Avere on the balconies in offi cers row while the routine Avent for ward on the parade ground and there was a general offer of an even bet that some of them avouUI come doAAn thi line with the captain And some of them did They were very interested The soldiers stood there so absolutely oblivious of any presence so erect and formally mili tary so painfully clean with their bunks behind them rolled up and the folded blankets ranged on top the little personal vanities of eacli man on the wall at the head of his bunk an hi kit box open at his feet Big Smith had a number of bcoks that were not often lent One was a collection of verses with a Dallas book sellers card for a mark The other Avas a Aery stilted and tedious account of the Avauderings of a queerly fortunate person with a habit of alluding to him self as a much enduring man No one but Big Smith had ever looked very deeply into either The first sergeant came down through the squadrooms at the head of the group of officers and Avomen his brass and braid as fine as skill could make them his saber clanking in a very om inous way Tention he called as he appeared at the door of Big Smiths squadroom And every soldier added a little starch rgawsaw11 CXOCXOCXXXXXXCOaXC 1 0V ROMANCE OF G TROOP CC0CCXCOX030CCX0Z j to the general stiffness of his bearing The officers did their customary quick sweep of the room and its details but the women unused to such things tar ried a little longer Why there are books said one of the visitors Big Smith looking straight ahead as a soldier standing at attention should heard the voice and the red blood ran down and his face grew white as a rain washed bone But he did not waver Yes they read assented the cap tain a little proud of his men Why its Homer exclaimed the same young woman scanning the title a little more carefully Is it calmly inquired the captain He was not just sure what Homer might be but he gathered from his vis itors tone that it was surprisingly creditable to the owner of the volume I canJt see the title of tne other book said the lady leaning forward and peering at the shelf on the wall Smith hand down those books commanded the officer but his tone was kindly Big Smith for once in his life was clumsy As he handled the volumes one slipped He stooped to recover it but the leaves fluttered and out fell a photograph the portrait of a woman It fell face up on the bunk and he re covered it in an instant In that instant however the young AAoman saAv it and the hand she had extended dropped at- her side She reeled a little said Why my in an odd little voice and was conducted by Happy Jack Kyle the second lieutenant to the outer air Big Smith put the books back on the shelf and presently the guests being gene hammered Billy Murphy the bully of the squadroom without any adequate provocation That Avas the day before old Cachise Avent up the Gila on the last raid that he rode The man on post No 1 told the sergeant of the guard when the second relief arrived that he had seen a fire far to the north but no one im agined it A as a summons to the south ern Apaches Just after guard mount in the morn ing Lieutenant Kyle rode east with the Avomen visitors He AA anted to show them some petrifactions and give them a drink from the Aztec spring While the bugler was blowing recall from fatigue Happy Jacks horse came galloping into the fort and the trum peter changed the last note in the call to the first note in Boots and saddles They Avent out twenty strong Big Smith in the lead at the side of the captain whose guests were in peril Two troopers galloping in the column exchanged remarks about him Wasnt fit to live with till he heard hoots and saddles said one of them Groaned all night Always puts liis breeches under his blankets and sleeps on them to keep them creased said the other Didnt take em off at ail last night And they galloped along quite indif ferent to danger only hoping now and then Cachise would wait for them They were untutored young rutnans but one was a dead shot at thirty yards and the other stood off a band of Utes a day and a night one time in the mountains But when they came to the Aztec springs and saw the Apaches they head of the canyon Lieutenant Kyle and the women Avere hiding And Cachise had just fired the grass Avhere the horses lay The flames Avere driving up the cut as if it were a chim ney The twenty troopers charged at the Apaches and the latter fled Avith de risive laughter The fire Avas lighting their battle for them Big Smith dropped from the saddle and ran to the edge of the canyon All right lieutenant he called cheerily The man Avas strong and virile again Avas even exuberant and cheery Such Apache bullets as came his Avay across the canyon acted as a tonic and spurred him He dropped over the edge crashed down through the dry chaparral and guided by the lieutenants shouting went straight to the little group where he found two frightened Avomen and a plucky officer with both arms broken by a rifle ball Big Smith put his arm around ono of the Avomen and climbed with her carrying her presently for she fainted till the two untutored ruffians and the captain could pass down a lariat and lift her to the level Then he tumbled back calling en couragement all the time and stood before the other woman Avhose face was quite the Image of the one in the photograph wrhich had tumbled from the Odyssey to a bunk in the squad room the day before Her he took in his arm as the other one and held her close climbing through chaparral that was already burning and over canyon grass that Avas a carpet of flame rubbing the fire from her skirts when they caught and presently lifting her clear of the ground and carrying her for better safety speaking hopefully in spite of Cachise and his frequent charges And he yielded her up at last and went back where Kyle game to the end had fallen while trying to climb with out aid from his hands white at the lips and silent with agony SgF HE TOOK HER I2T n i win mi i a HIS ARMS Cachise thirty yr rds away Avas try ing to get a bullc out of his breast clawing after it as savages do and spitting out blood with his Spanish-Apache-American curses That ended the fight and no so daring adventure has ever since come Avithin a days march of Fort Yuma The young woman came doAvn to the spadroom that night where Big Smith Avas lying a little the Avor1 Cor his burning and knelt by the side of his bunk to thank him The captains wife came with her and poor Kyle pale with pain sent his compliments Big Smith rose up and tried to stand at attention but they made him sit down The untutored ruffians went out of the squadroom and left them while the bugles were blowing tattoo So that Avhatever they said only she and he and the captains wife might tell you They left when the roll call was over i and Big Smith turning his face to the Avail waited for taps and wished he like Kyle could give his two arms for the woman j Anti tnat was tne romance ot u troov Grants Name Would -it have made any difference in history if Grants initials had not been emblematic of his country U S United States They also stand for Uncle Sam and Unconditional render Suppose he had gone to Wesfj roint as Hiram and the boys had call ed him Hi for short Suppose ha had gone there as Hiram Ulysses in- stead of Ulysses Hiram and the caJ dels had called him H H G Hug Would not that have made a change n his career We never had a publiq man to make so many changes in his name as did Grant Hiram Ulysses- Ulysses Hiram Ulysses Sidney and Ulysses Simpson were the variations NeAV York Press Englands Bi 4 Merchant lUarine The merchant ships of the Unit d Kingdom have more than 1200uui tonnage no European power has v Avondered how ever the captain would j nuiCii ns 20fi0000 get out of this scrape There was aj little gully full of dry grass and chap 1 You are always grumbling about the arral At the mouth of it lay the two boys having dirty ham- Look at yoiv horses both dead Somewhere be own hands occasion- pai ticulari tween that point and the spring at the j duriug very cold weatLor ft- W HIAWATHA AS HE WAS beautiful Indian Legend Which Must Have Inspired Longfellow The Indian story of Hiawatha is even more beautiful than that which Longfellow has told so charmingly in the justly popular poem bearing that title but it depicts the hero as a very different man from the bold and tender-hearted warrior of Avhoin the poet writes The Indian story though in part fiction is founded on fact there is no doubt that such a man as once lived and that he played a leading part in forming the compact of the Six Nations says a writer in the rittsburg Dispatch According to the story Hiawatha was the wisest man of the Onondagas and when the different tribes Avere troubled by the Hurons Avho lived to the north of them and the Algonquins who were their Eastern neighbors he proposed a meeting of the tribes to form a union for mutual defense But the scheme was defeated by Atatarho a great war chief of the Onondagas who was jealous of dividing his pow er and Hiawatha Avas driven out of the tribe He did not give up the plan however As he journeyed toward the south he came to a beautiful lake probably Oneida On the shore he picked up a quantity of beautiful Avhite shells Hiawatha living alone all this time and never seeing any man learned much lrom the great spirit It wa3 finally revealed to him that his people wore at last ready to unite and he hastened back to them Then there Avas a great meeting which all the chiefs attended Atatarho still sat back defiant saying never a word When at last Hiawatha arose and be gan to speak the people Avere charmed by his voice and listened in silence for it seemed to them that he spoke with the Arisdom of the great spirit himself Lifting his strings of wam pum HiaAvatha unfolded his plan for the union telling off on each shell the position and power allotted to each tribe and to its chief Atatarho was to be made the great war chief of the confederacy Avhich shows that Hia Avatha Avas something of a politician and at this event he gave way and the treaty was adopted While the people were celebrating the treaty Avith the usual feasting it was observed that Hiawatha was sad and silent Feasting is not for me he said when his friends urged him to join the festivities I am to go on a far journey At that moment a beautiful white ca noe Avas seen approaching across the lake driven by some unseen power When it reached the shore HiaAvatha bidding farewell to those Avho had crowded about him stepped into the canoe Avhich moved rapidly aAvay As it reached the middle of the lake it sud denly rose into the air Higher and higher into the blue sky flew the white canoe Avith its single passenger until it became a dim speck and then van ished altogether That Avas the last of HiaAvatha but the league Avhich he founded continued for centuries and was never conquer ed by its enemies and every year since the wampum has been brought out at the great council and the solemn rites with which Hiawatha had instituted the confederacy have been rehearsed Harmless Respirators Scientific investigations in regard to the health of those engaged in the ari ous industrial occupations have re sulted in definite regulations public and private which are of benefit to the community as well as to the indi vidual The fact is proved beyond any doubt that sedentary occupations in ill ventilated apartments and those which expose the workmen to the in halation of dust should be especially avoided The different sorts of dust vary too in their harmful effects thus the sharp dust produced in the grinding of needles and steel tools and in the mining of metals is particularly irritating and the mortality from con sumption among operatives in such in dustries is high but operatives thus engaged may diminish the liability by wearing respirators over the mouth and nose while at work In a number of factories in Massachusetts and pre sumably elsewhere in Avhich consump tion has made serious inroads upon the operatives the adoption of measures for the prevention of a dusty atmos phere has secured a marked diminu tion of the prevalence of this disease among those employed in them The fact also appears that o Avners and su perintendents of mills factories and Avorkshops can accomplish much to ward the prevention of tuberculosis among those whom they employ by the introduction of adequate systems of Aentilation and heating and by the use of hard and smooth floors without cracks or crevices Iodine for Piano Players A modest appearing young Avoman entered a drug store in Madison ave nue one morning recently and Avalking to the end of the counter nearest the prescription department mutely held out both hands lOAvard a clerk Avho chanced to be standing in that particu lar place This clerk equally mute reached behind a screen and brought out a blue glass bottle from which a brush handle protruded After stir ring the contents of the bottle with the crush for a few seconds the clerk daintily brushed the tips of the young womans fingers with the mixture leaving a dark stain around the top of each finger nail With a pleasant nod of her head and low murmured thanks tue young woman quickly Avithdrew from the store and the blue glass bot tle was put back in its hiding place Observg a puzzled expression on the face an old patron of the store v had come in to get a cigar the fk said iodine Wlnit Cor asked the smoker Prevent fingers from getting oore 4 L -- replied the clerk She is from the musical conservatory Avhere she prac tices on the piano three or four hours a day In order to prevent the finger nails from coming in contact Avith tho ivory keys she has them cut very short SHE FOUGHT A WILDCAT 4 Brave Minnesota School Tcachatrf Experience with an Ujrly Brute Miss Martha Culver a school teaciier who lives near Grand Rapids Minn and Ave apply iodine to take the sore- j Is a heroine in the eyes of the residents ness out of the ends of the fingers after they have been subjected to three or four hours of pounding Most piano players you Avill observe have their finger nails cut to the quick so that no clicking sound is emitted Avhen they strike the keys We keep a bottle of iodine and a brush for the special use of the pianoforte pupils of the con servatory They come in here for treatment two or three times a week and pay by the month New York Times 2S3d S- V r v - v The estate of Mrs Margaret Oli pliant the authoress who died June 25 is under 25000 It Avas left to her adopted daughter An Oregon Boyhood by Louis Al bert Banks is an interesting narrative of the authors early life in the unset tled Oregon of ante railroad days Henry James whose recent novel What Maisie Knew has had consid erable success is giAing up his connec tion as a correspondent of Harpers Weekly Mr Bellamys Equality is likely to be read in a greater number of lan guages than any recent American book One of the latest propositions received by the publishers is for a translation into Bulgarian Gilbert Parkers new story is to be called The Battle of the Strong It is to appear as a serial in the Atlantic Monthly It will be remembered that the Atlantic printed Mr Parkers suc cessful Seats of the Mighty Louis Zangwill who has heretofore written over the initials Z Z has decided to use his full name in future believing that it Anil cause less confu sion Cleo the Magnificent is the title of his new book Avhich by the way does not allude to the French dancer No one is quite sure just Avhat has brought about the present Dickens craze but one and all acknowledge that they are reading or writing or talking about Dickens The newest London editions of the great novelists Avorks are to be illustrated by Phil May of the London Punch and Charles Dana Gibson of the New York Life Mr Gladstones recollections of his friendship witli Arthur Henry Hallam are announced as the leading feature of the Youths Companion for 1S9S Mr Gladstone calls Hallam the noblest man he ever knew The general list of contributors to the periodical for next year is as starry as usual ranging from the Duke of Argyll and Thomas B Reed to Kipling Zangwill and Cy Warman Distance Mercury Would Reach While almost any one knows about the principles on which an ordinary thermometer operates there are a number of things about this apparently little instrument Avhich are not gener ally knoAvn and Avhich are of a great deal of interest One of the most pe culiar of these is the question of the length of tube Avhich the mercury in the bulb of an ordinary thermometer Avould fill if it Avere stretched out in a single column the size of that in the tube Most people when asked Iioav long this Avould be Avould probably say from five to fifteen feet Avliile as a matter of fact this couinn of mercury Avould in an extremely delicate instru ment be miles in length The reason of this is that the column of mercury Avhile it appears quite large is really of almost infinitesimal size If the tube of a thermometer is broken one is at first at a loss to see where the mer cury goes in but close examination will disclose a fine line much thinner than a hair running across one end of a little slit in which the mercury rises As it has its flat side toAvard the eye it appears to be quite large and the convexity of the outside of the fube through which it is seen mag nifies it and gives it that rounded ap pearance AAhich is so deceptive The reason why the slit is made so small is to give the greatest ratio of result for the expansion of the mercury in the bulb Boston Transcript A Chapter of Russian History Here is a little bit ci Russian history that is not told in the school books and is not generally known When Cath erine II met her husband Peter III for the first time his ugliness caused her to faint It was only her ambi tion to become czarina that enabled her to go through with the Avedding cere mony The terrible consequences Avere inevitable Catherine forced Peter to abdicate in her favor after Avhich she murdered him But before these events had taken place Catherine had taken up with Count Soltikoff who was doubtless the father of Catherines son Paul Avho succeeded to the throne only to be assassinated a few years later AVhftre People Live Longest In Norway the average length of life is greater than in any other country on the globe This is attributed to the fact that the temperature is cool and uniform throughout the year When a man is a loafer he is put on tne rock pile when a woman Is a loafer she is put in society When a man makes a cent his kin hear that he makes a dollar of her section and she is deserving of all the praise that has been lavished upon her She had an experience Avith a irildcat recently which proves her to be a girl of uncommon nerve and pluck Miss Culver is obliged to Avalk five miles to and from her school every day through dense pine Avoods and usually has no other companion than a small rifle Avliich she carries as much for sport as for protection Timber wolves are very numerous in the vicinity of Grand Rapids and have caused the set tlers great annojance and considerable damage by preying upon their stock Miss Culver is one of the few persons who have encountered the animals at close quarters and under desperate cir cumstances Since October she has killed Avolves lynxes Avildcats bears moose deer and rabbits One day while returning from school Miss Culver had a tussel Avith an ugly wildcat viiich cost her a deep painful wound upon her right arm and the ruin of a costly fur jacket Avhich came in contact Avith the animals Avicked claws She had heard the crafty step of some animal in the thicket Pres ently it came a big hungrj looking wildcat creeping stealthily over the tangled underbrush until it came to tho clearing Avhere it stopped looking cau tiously about as if it expected an en jeniy Miss Culver took deliberate aim and fired but as she pulled the trigger jthe wildcat crouched down to the earth and the charge just grazed its back The school teacher rushed forward to SCHOOL TEACIIEK AND AVI XI CAT finish the job Avitli a blow of her gun barrel but the Avounded animal sprang into the air and landed with its fore paws upon the breast and right arm of his fair- antagonist tearing the front of her jacket to shreds and cutting a deep scratch in the arm Seizing the beast by the throat and forelegs she succeed ed by a desperate effort in releasing herself from its grip and another sweep of the gun put an end to the struggle ANN VISITS THE WHITE HOUSE She Saw the President and Shook Hands with Him Aunt Ann Landrain an old colored woman of Ghent Ky had saved enough money to buy her a good home and furnish it very substantially She had also purchased an upright piano Just after the presidential election when Harrison was elected she inform ed the colored citizens of the town that she Avas going to visit the President says the Louisville Dispatch Her de parture Avas a very quiet one the old carpet sack in her hand and the dress she had treasured for years She was gone about four days and when she returned her self important air told you she had met the President She said I des Avent to de house an knocked on de door A yaller nigger come to de door and say Who is you and who you want to see and I sez I dont want to see you possum head I a rant to see yor master II j tried to shove me back but I swung my carpet sack and he left me go I went on in through de house dea as I used to do down in old Mars Joels an a lady come laughin like an say Aunty here dis way and -he fetched me in to whar de Prcideut sot wid some gentlemen He had whiskers and body des like anybody else an I shook hans wid him and tole him who I wuz and when I tole bout beln de haid cook down at Marse Joels on Green River an how I made yaller niggers stan roun like I done dat Avun in de hall des now he laughed like lie would bust He had em take me and git me something to eat an I didnt hesitate to drap some of de good things In my carpet sack De lady what showed me through avuz a mighty good woman You didnt think I wuz going to git to see him did you Wall made up my min to see him an I pushed my way through an I dun made up my min to see God an Im gAA ine to push my way right through till I git to whar hes at St Louis Globe Democrat Famous Bible Distributer Perhaps the most famous distributer af Bibles in the world was Deacon William Brown of New Hampshire He began the Avork in 1849 and kept It up till his death a few years ago at 3ie age of 76 During that time no fewer than 120000 copies of the scrip tures were giAen out by him and de spite his age in the two years preced Xig nis death he cam assed 239 town3 pd visited over 80000 families An Arizona Strinjj Band Tourist What is thzt crowd over the Jray Native Thats out string band Tourist Preparing to give an enter pinment I suppose NativeYes going over the river to lynch a horse thief Donkeys Gringo and facts are stubborn wncsfcg 6ggg T f y 7 jL r