Es EATRSTE TN A” “Bellefonte, Pa. November 28, 1890. MY NEIGHBOR JIM. Everything pleased my neighbor Jim, When it rained He never compigined But said wet weather suited him . “There's never too mueh rain for me. And this is something like,” said he. When earth was dry as a powder mill, He did not sigh Because it was dry, But said if he could have his will It would be his supreme delight To live where the sun shone day and night. | When winter came, with its snow and ice, He did not scold Because it was cold, But said: “Now, this is real nice ; If ever from home I’m forced to go, I'll move up north with the Espuimau.” A cyclone whirled along its track And did him harm— It broke his arm, And stripped the coat from off his back ; And I would give another limb To see such a blow again,” said Jim. And when at length his years were told, And his body bent, And his strength all spent, And Jim was very weak and old ; “I long have waited to know,” he said, “How it feels to die,” and Jim was dead. The angel of death had summoned him To heaven, or—well, I eannot tell ; But I know that the climate suited Jim ; And cold or hot, it mattered not— It was to him the long-sought spot. GRACIE’S MISTAKE. BY RUFUS HALE. When Doctor Sanford came to the village of B and put up his mod- est sign over the door of the little house he had hired, there was some excite- ment among the female portion of his neighbors, The new doctor was a fine-looking, manly fellow, and it was soon ascer- tained by all the single ladiesin the viliage that he was unmarried. In the course of a few weeks he had an extensive practice. In fact, it was really surprising to observe how many blooming young women who had hitherto enjoyed good health, were suddenly afilicted with headache and rheumatism. The doctor also received invitations to social gatherings, at one of which he first saw Gracie Barton,a girl of nineteen and the belle of the village. Gracie was something of a coquette— ber only fault. In other respects she was just what a young woman should be—kind, gentle and obliging. Perhaps she had been a little spoiled by the admiration she had always ex- eited among the young men, She was certainly a beautiful crea- ture, finely formed and graceful in her movements, with a lovely face, lighted by a pair ot large, starry-brown eyes, full of piquant expression. It was not surprising that the doc- tor was much pleased with his new ac- quaintance. Not many weeks after it was ascer- tained that he had called upon her aunt, and asked her permission to pay his addresses to her niece. In fact, it was soon discovered that, for some rea- son or other, Gracie did not play the coquette with the doctor, as it nad been thought she would do. People wondered thereat, but the cause of her forbearance was simply that Henry Sandford was the only man she had ever loved. Miriam Beak, one of the village girls, not quite so attractive as Gracie, had vainly endeavored to win the young doctor. She was not an amiable person— was spiteful, envious, and in women’s native eiement of love, disposed to be revengeful, She had hoped that Gracie, by her coquetry with Sandford, would lgse him. For she had observed, with the quick perception of her sex, that the doctor was not the sort of a man to be trifled with. But when she perceived that her rival showed no disposition to “tease” her lover, she was both disap- pointed and angry. Resolved to make a desperate at tempt to bring about the desired nis- chief, she said one day to Gracie, on meeting the latter: “What do you think Dr. Sanford said to me yesterday, when he called on mother, who you know is one of his patients? He said that you did not dare to play off your coquetry with him, as you had done with others.” Gracie only smiled, but Miriam knew that her shaft had taken the in- tended direction. The next time she met the doctor the beautiful girl was cold and resery- ed. “Gracie,” Sandford finally said, drawing his chair close to her side, “you must know by this time that [ love yon. I have dared to hope that you think enough of me to become my wife.” { She was silent. There was a flash in her eyes such as he had never seen there before. “Now for my triumph,”she thought, with difficulty hiding the expression of the deep joy that thrilled her heart. “He shall see whether I dare to tease him or not.” “You do not answer,” continued Sandford. “I hope I have not been mistaken.” “And suppose you have been—what then 2” she said, with a toss of her head. In that ease I would have to bear my disappointment,” he answered, sadly. . “Don’t. pine away, I beg of you. We could not afford to lose so good a doctor.” “I perceive I have been mistaken,” said Sandford, quietly. He arose, and without another word, walked out of the house. Gracie, all this time, sat like a statue. Loving this man with all the strength of her womanly nature, she had really longed to throw herself on his breast the moment he proposed to her. Now he was gone. Would he ever come “back to her again ? Ier brain whirled—she felt faint and dizzy. Deeply did she regret that she had | trifled with him. ! All the next day she sat hoping he | would come to her., : Bui this day and the next passed | drearily away without her seeing him. That very day Dr. Sandford lett the village. # 7 I It was soon known that he had gone away, as doctor, aboard The Wanderer—a merchant ship bound for Japan from a neighboring seaport. The captain, an old triead of hig, had written to him, soliciting the accep- tance of the position. . Gracie was a girl of strong, des feeling. = Her grief wore upon ‘her. In vain she struggled against it. The strength of her attachment overcame her woman's pride: Constantly did she behold little trifies to remind her of her happy days with Sandford. ; ; There on the centre-table was the pleasant book from which her Jover had so often read to her. There, on the mantle of her own room, was the little ebony casket he had presented to her as a keepsake. She often picked it up now, and lTook- ed at it with a strange, choking sensa- tion in her throat. Everything of this kind she saw only served to remind ner that his leaving her was her own fault. Had it been his; her pride might have come to her assistance. Miriam, now that the doctor was gone, regretted the falsehood she had told Gracie, and which was the cause of ail this trouble. The sight of that pale, sad girl was to her a continual reproach. Days, weeks, and months rolled on. At length came the news that Te Wanderer had been lost at sea, with all on board. Gracie said nothing. She did not even weep But she grew paler and sadder, and her step becam slower. At times she would look at her aunt with a strange, wistful expression on her face. Often she would sit for hours in herroom, holding the little ebony casket in her lap—turning it over and over in her thin hands. At last she said to heraunt, ina hol- low voice, that almost broke the heart of her tender, loving relative: “Aunt, I am going away.” “Going away? “Yes, to join papa.” Mr. Barton was in businessin Hono- lulu, Sandwich Islands. Well did Gracie’s aunt, with the swift divination of a woman, know why ber niece desired to go there, It was in order that she might pass over the great ocean, and, perhaps, in looking at it, see the very spot where her lover's vessel bad gone down. The two at length sailed in a ship called The Watchlight tor the Sandwich Islands. When at last the craft was within a thousand miles of the port of her desti- nation, Gracie, looking over the rail at the white, roaring waters, brought her- self to imagine that this was the place where the ill-fated Wanderer had found- ered. -She watched it long and earuestly ; then she went into the cabin and lay down in her berth. Her aunt found her there in a brain fever. For days she lay raving in wild delir- ium, calling again and again on her lover, bidding him come up from the depths of the sea and take her down there with him. When Honolulu hove in sight the fever had passed, but its victim was low white, helpless and hollow-eyed. The fiery diseased had left her so weak that she could hardly move— could speak scarcely above a whisper. The cool air of the sea fanned her brow. Through the open cabin window the invalid could see the lines of waving palms, and white strips of beach, with huge breakers rolling in towards them, and natives in their canoes skillfally riding over the lofty surges. She could only see them dimly, for her life seemed slowly drifting away from her. “You think then there is no hope ?” whispered her aunt to the old doctor who had attended her during her ill- ness. He slowly shook his head. “I am afraid there is none,” he said. Gracie smilea faintly. She seemed to guess what the two were saying. She placed her haed in that of her be- loved relative. “Good-bye, aunt,” she murmured. “I know I must die, but I should like to see papa before [ go.” “A telegram inforging himJof your illness was sent to him, dear, when we were off the point. I expect him every moment.” Halt an hour passed, and still he had not come. Gracie vow lay white and still. Scarcely was there a movement of the eyelash. The doctor looked at his wa'ch. “She may not live ten minutes long- er,’! he whispered to the aunt. : All at once footsteps were heard on the deck, An almost unearthly expression lighted up the hal'-~loscd eyes of Gracie. A faint color tinged her cheek. A form quickly descended the, com- paniou stairs and sprang to the side of | the suflerer’s berth. “Henry Sandford! Dear Henry I murmured Gracie, in an almost 1naubi- ble voice. “Doctor Sandford I" cried her aunt. | It was, in fact, Henry Sandford who had come—he who was supposed to have been lost aboard The Wanderer. “You now think there is hope, then?” “Humph! I should think there was!” chuckled the old physician. “She has got the medicine she wanted —the only medicine that could have cured her.” And he discreetly withdrew from the cabin. j ! Explanations soon followed. The young doctor, with several others, had been saved by means of a floating spar when their vessel founaered. They {were picked ap the next day by a craft | bound to the Sandwich Islands. Sand- ford then resolved to practice his pro- fession at this place. mp Among his patients was Mr. Barton, Gracie’s father, whom he had lately been called upon to attend for an at- tack of the gout. As there were many people in the world of the name of Bar- ton, Sandford had no idea that this person, of whom Gracie had never happened to spedk, was her father, un- til the telegram came. Mr. Barton read it aloud to the doc- tor, who was at that time with him, and then, stricken with anguish that his gout prevented his going to his dy- ing child, he requested Sandford to hurry aboard and try to save her. Even before he spoke, Sandford had started. He was soon aboard on oae of the swiftest boats in the harbor, and as shown, he reached the ship in time. 1t is needless to say that Gracie rap- idly recovered under the yoang doctor's “treatment.” She frankly explained to him the cause of her conduct towards him when he proposed to her, and he informed her that he had never spoken the words attributed to him by Miriam Beak, Four months later the happy couple were married at the bouse of the bride's father. Two Cheap and Nice Dishes. I once knew alady—she was English, and the wife of a machinist earning a moderate salary—who bought every day of her life a piece of meat, either beef or mutton, for baking, and after her family had dined off it, the remain- der was thrown away. I ventured once to suggest that many nice little dishes could be made from cold meat, but she instantly silenced me by the avowal, “We don’t like hashes,” adding, what was the true reason of her wastefulness, that she “wouldn’t take the trouble.” Her children were always buying bak- er’s cakes and buns, and a paper of candy was perpetually lying about. Reason manifest. they craved the va- riety she refused to furnish. But very few American ladies who pay any attention to housekeeping g.udge putting a little brains into cook- ing. Brains, as we know, convert bones into relishes. In the South there is a homely saying, “Soup meat good enough for niggars.” Yet, in truth, soup meat, if properiydealt with, is good enough for anybody. Now for the de- monstration. A “knuckie” of veal costs about ten cents. To convert it iu- to a white soup and a delicious side dish proceed as follows : VEAL SOUP. Wash the knuckle, put it into a saucepan with three pints of cold water and a level tablespoonful of salt. Sim- mer tor one hour and a half. Then re- move the knuckle, cut of all the meat and put it aside. Restore the bones to the kettle. Add to the broth two or three sprigs of parsley, quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper and the same of celery salt. Stir either one rounded tablespoonful of corn-starch or two of flour into a cupful of sweet milk, add this and half a gill of granulated tapi- oca, or rice Let the soup boil showly for one hour and a half longer, making three hours in all. Remove the bones before serving. SIDE-DISH OR MINCE. To the pieces cut from the knuckle bone, add a small cooked slice of bacon and a .small onion which has been sliced and fried brown . in half a tea- spoonful of butter. Chop very fine, season With quarter of a teaspoonful of pepper. Break in an egg and mix lightly into a loaf. If the bacon has not seasoned it sufficiently add half a teaspoonful of salt. Have a small bak- ing-dish buttered. Then take a cuptul of cold boiled rice or pearl hominy and line the dish thinly, bottom and sides: © Put in a layer of the meat, them a layer of rice, over which sprinkle a few bits of butter ; then another layer of the meat and another of rice without butter. Put over the top a layer of fine bread crumbs, lay the bits of but- ter evenly ever them, and bake in a moderate oven for half an hour. Ig should be brown and crisp. When cold, slice this Sand serve for luncheon in a dish trimmed with parsley. Any friend who happens in will probably ask for the recipe. When one has bought an’ ordinary soup bone of beef, the meat may be cut from the bone, after boiling for two hours, and made into a side-dish or en- tree preciseiy like the veal. The bones will finish ‘the soup very well.— Good Housekeeping. r——— A Hero in Overalls. Locomotive No. 69, of the Chicago and Erie Rai.road, exploded last Satur- day night, while hauling a freight train. Fireman Kirby was blown from the cab, sustaining fatal injuries. Engineer Mur- phy, severely scalded jumped from the wreck, breaking his leg as he did so. The train ran seven hnndred feet before halting. I When help arrived Engireer Murphy was found crawling on hands and knees along the tract, carrying with him a lan- tern to signal a passenger train which was due in a few minutes. The train was warned of the danger ahead, and A new strength seemed to come with him to Gracie. She partly rose, threw | an arm around her lover's neck, and laid her cheek on his breast. The old doctor stared. oo “The most wonderful ease I ever heard of I" he cried. “She knew Lim before ; ‘he was her lover,” whispered Gracie's aunt to the speaker, who, being a little deaf, had not heard what had. been said by the invalid when the young doctor entered thejcabin, , “Oh! ah! T see.” thus saved from disaster. Could any: deed of valor on the battle- field surpass in merit the act of this bumble engineer, who though his flesh was blistered by steam and his leg brok- ‘en, grimly set his teeth and dragged . himself along the nesto avert the dan- ger which threatened others ? Congress awards medals to those who Together we walked in the evening time, Above us the sky spread golden clear, And he bent his head and looked in my eves, As if he held me of all most dear. Oh, it was sweet in the evening time ! 4 wheat 8 Li Narrow thit path, aorbrouch the way. Bat he was near, and. thé birds sang true, And the stars came ont inthe twilight gray, Ohiyit was sweet in the evening tim! Softly he spokzef the days long past, Softly of blessed davs to hoe : Close to his arm, and closer I pressed, The cornfield path was Eden to me. hg itwas sweet in the evening time! Grayer the | gh grew, and grayer still, The oss listed: home through the purple Be shade’ £24 y The nightingales sang where the thorns stood high . As I walked with him ia the woodland glade, ' Oh it was sweet in the evening time! And the latest gleams of daylight died ; My hand in hisenfoided lay ; We swept the dew from the wheat as we passed For narrower, narrower, wound the way. i Oh, it was sweet in the evening time! He looked in the depth of my eyes and said ; “Sorrow and gladness will come for us, sweet; But together we'll walk through the fields of life Close as ‘we walked through the fields of wheat.” Young Lumberman’s Device. How He Outwitted His Father. Sweetheart’s In the Philadelphia Sunday Times the following story of interest somewhat local is related : : “Another tale, in a more cheerful strain, is tod of the great flood of June, 1889, which devasted the Susquehanna Valley ut the same time the Johnstown calamity occurred. A well-to-do resi- dent, whose house stood close to the riv- er, had a beautiful dauchter to whom a handsome young lumberman had been paying suit. For some reason the wooer did not tind favor in the father's eyes and he wus forbidden to communicate with the girl. He continued his toil and patiently bided his time. A few days before the flood he started up the river to assist in bringing down a raft. The raft was duly started, but the water continued to rise to such an extent that it was deemed advisable to tie up. This was found to be out of the question, as the flood had covered the ‘“snubuing posts,” and so the raft drifted on, carried by the current. Scores of untenanted houses were passed, and they finally ap- proached the home of the voung man’s sweetheart. As they drew near they saw the whole family upon the roof frantically beseeching for rescue. Aided by the current the crew guided the raft so that it just scraped the eaves of the house, and with one accord the victims began to leap upon the inodern ark. The lover, however, seeing that his sweetheart was safe, grasped a pike and refused to let the father on board, shout- ing, ‘Will you give me Mary 2 The old man’s face depicted woefully the in- ward strife between prejudice and self- preservation, but meanwhile the raft was slipping past, and a moment’s hesitation would be fatal. ‘Take her,” he yelled, the pike was withdrawn and he leaped aboard¢ ‘hut, d n me,” he continued, ‘if 1 ever get you in a hole likethat, Bill, I'll drown ye.’ “The couple were married at Lock Haven.” A ————— The Pickpocket’s Art. The chief object of a pickpocket after certainty, is speed. He cannot dally with his victim by the hour. What he does is to be over in s flash. Speaking of pins and studs, there has never been a fastening so complex but the expert thieves could defeat in a motion. They do in their business as fine work as any Houdin, and the thief himself conld not analyze or explain its detail. His pow- ers of execution have gone far beyond his power of perception or relation. A pickpoccet consults. his own ner- vous condition constantly. No fine la- dy ever has such a time with her nerves as this aristocrat of the outlaws. If he does not feel right he won’t work. “When he does, I've known one on the impulse to take a car on some well dressed and wealthy street, and seating himself side to the window, survey the shirt front of everywould-be passenger a the car came up. The moment one showed a diamond in his linen or cravat the thief would hurry to the platform to get off. He would time his mancuvres so as to meet his man on the step of tha car. They would collide. The thief’s hat—a stiff silk or Derby—is in his left hand, and covers his dexterous right, which is put forward to protect its owner in the collision, It touches the new- comer right where the diamonds spark- les, and is still covered by the hat in the other hand. With an apology, the thief steps out of the way. The whole affair is the tenth part of a second, but as he bows his resret he has the diamond in that mysterious hand of his, and, as I have said, he could not detail the moves by which he attained it, even it he should try. — Kansas City Star. ———— “De Gang” Was Astonished. From a New York Letter. A large nan walked into one of the improvised polling booths in the vicin- ity of Madison avenue, New York, on the first day of registration. For or five men sat around the tables, copying lists and preparing their books. They paid no attention to the comer until he said, after waiting patiently for awhile: “I would like to register.” “Where do you live ?' inquired one of the clerks rather grufily. The rest looked. at the would-be voter rather suspiciously. “No. 816 Madison reply. “What's your name 2} “Grover Cleveland.” The man started as if he was shot He was so excited that his book fell to the floor, while “da’ gang’ rose to their feet and awkwardly expressed their con- fusion by removing their bats. Mean- while the ex-President o! the United States registered like any other citizen and walked away very much amused. — Elizabeth Comstock, the Qu aker avenue,” gallantly resend the drowning, and we. ‘distribute more than a hundred million | dollars annually among survivors of the late! war. Engineer Murphy deserves both a medal and a pension.— New York Telegram. preacher, now aged and infirm, living at Union’ Springs, N. "Y,, has in‘her | lifetime visited 122,000 prisoners, 195,- | 000 stick and wounded soldiers, 85,000 | inmates of poorhouses and, almshouses on both sides of the water. was the | They Tald Mr. Hill That Christ Was ie ae ———————————————————— A CN TET TERE THATW ALK THROUGH THE WHEAT. Duped by Spiritualists. . Elephants at Work. The Hon. Carter H. Harrison in his SusQUEHANNA, November 1.—1In the And our pathway ent throught the falds of | Criminal Court of Susquehanna county, Bn | ut Montrose to-day, there was concluded one of the most singular cases in the hi:- tory of the State Scores of witnesses gave | their testimony and people from all over this region crowded the court room ev- in Urgent Need of Money. | ery day. . Olive Brown and her husband, Phil- ander Brown, spiritualists, | Browns represented that they were in tirough their peculiar doctrine and manifestations, such a hold over Paul Hill, an aged man residing in Brook- lyn towns ip and formerly of Iowa, as | to obtain from him nearly $3,000. communication with the spiritual world, that Jesus Christ was in need of money and that Hill must furnish some to be favored ; also that Hill’s first wife, now in the spirit land, needed money for clothing, etc. : Hill trom time to time furnished mon- ey, which was placed ina beltin the presence of the trio. During the night the money would vanish, and Hill be- lieved it went to the spiritland. While on the witness stand Hill told of the manner in which the spirits instructed himself and wife to do various things, and of hearing the spirits singing “1 ‘am so Glad That Jesus Loves Me.” They also heard railway trains running in heaven and saw wills turning out lum- ber to build the heavenly city. = Mrs. Hill often conferred with St. Peter and St. Paul and with Mr. dill’s first wife. After a long deliberation the jury found the prisoners guilty, and they will be sentenced on Friday. One Trial Was Enough. “When the Kansas Pacific was first opened,” said B. W. Vedder, a locomo- tive engincer, ‘the Indians were very hostile, and there was consta..t fear that they would wreck the trains. That they did not is due to their ignorance of the iron horse and of the best methods of destroying it. “One of my firemen had an experience with the Cheyennes that he will never | forget. He was on the road near Fort Wallace. when he saw that the Indians had cut the telegraph wire, and knew that he might look out for squalls. They were never satisfied with simply cutting the wire, but chopped it into inch pieces with their tomahawks to ef- fectually stop the mysterious messages. As the train came near a large patch of sunflowers ‘which grew on both sides of the track over 100 Indians rose up and stretched a strong rope across the track, braced themselves, and prepared to re- ceive the shock of the locomotive. As was afterward learned, they had taken rawhide strips, braided them together, and with a force of fifty at each end of the rope, thought that they would be able to stop the train. The instant the locomotive struck the rope the air was tull of Indians. They were thrown in all directions. Some were jerked clear across the train, and more than a dozen were killed or seriously irjured. This was the last attempt made for years to step the trains.” The Quinine Ha#it. . The quinine kabit is astonishingly on the increase. The New York maiden who scorns cigarettes and who knows not morphine is becoming a willing slave to the insignificent-looking little quinine pill, which she swallows at all times and under all circumstances. She carries a dainty vial with her and, upon the most trivial excuse, out comes the stopper and down goes the quinine—two, tour, six grains. as the case may be. Colds, indigestion, headache, ennui, all have their panacea in this dose. The saddest part of itis that the girls will not induigequietly and unostentatiously. They swallow the pills openly, they dis- cuss the matter openly, they persuade their friends to go and do likewise. Naturally their heads buzz like a saw mill, but such trifles have no effect upon them. There is one thing which should be brought to their attention, however, and itis this ; according to the best physi- cians, quinine, taken in large quantities, produces deafness —New York World. She Kept Both. Congressman Kilgore, of Texas, tells the following story: “During the war while on furlough, I pulled up at a cabin in Louisiana. There wus no one there but a woman. I bad $1 in my pocket, which 1 offered to pay fora chicken which was smoking on the table. She refused to sell, but was willing to wager the chicken against the dollar that she could beat me jumping, T to make the first jamp starting from the doorstep. I took a survey of the very short woman. I was a long legged cuss, and I put the dollar on the table by the chicken. "I then took a position on ths doorstep, and swung my hands to and fro, plaming for my flizht through the air. Then I lit out. By the time I hit the ground and turned to see the woman follows, she had shut thedoor and fasten- ed it on theinside. The only thing I could see was the muzzle of a double barreled shot gun.” ‘He Wasn't Up IN Navrican TERMS, —Alonzo Gushington (to Miss Anasta- sia Prim, his afiance I)—See von yacht, Anastasia. how it lingers near: the shore, as if loath to leave it. [| am as the yacht, with you the shore. Anasta-, sia. Miss Anastasia (stifflv)—Alonzé, vou are not a nanticalavan, ae vou? Young Gushington—No, Anastasia. Miss Anastasia—Then T pardon vou. Youne Gushington ==Pardon me, Anastasia 2 Why pardon ? Miss Anastasia—Because you are evidently not aware that von yacht is hugging the shore. rua Sundav-school Teacher — “And when the wicked children continned mocking the good prophet two she bears came out of the, mountain and ate up over forty of the wicket children. * Now bovs, what iesson does this tench ns 2° Jimpsy Primwosé~2¢T know.” “Well, Jimsy?” _ + “It teaches us how mang children a she bear can hold." the against the others, aside and guided his piece through them with a sagacity almost human. and tugeed a whispered word from the mahout and the promise of nice food he bent to it. Still it stuck. for half a mile, he got on his knees, straightened out his hind legs, and put bis whole force intoa push. successful, satisfaction in the gentle flaps ot his huge ears and the gracafal curve of his proboscis as he put it up to the mounted answer, but cast “Race with the Sun,” describes a visit to some timber yards and saw mills in Rune goon, where he saw what he callz the lions of the eity—the working elephant. The lumber ‘s not sawed into boards, but the slab is taken off and the good stuff left in the form of square timbes. The logs are many of them three feeu in diameter and thirty or forty feet lon. These the elephants draw from the river and pile in systematic order. Then, when they are needed, they roll then, t» to the ways and assist in adjusting then for the saw. After the log is cut the elephant goes. among the machinery, takes the slabs: The | away and carries the good timber and piles it up or lays it ently upon the ox carts to be bauled off. : While we were present a carpenter wanted lumber fiom a particular io. which was under several others One of monsters rolled the upper logs off and pushed the chosen stick to the mill, The way was not clear—the log butt d He pushed these His stick became wedged, He pushed it would not budge, but at With a whistle audible He was We could almost read bis mahout, asking for his reward. Sticks more than two feet thick and twenty feet long are lified bodily upon the great ivories and are then carried off aud laid upon the gangways so gently as not to make a jar. elephants carrying such a timber along a path not three feet wide among masses of loose logs. We saw oue of the He had to plant his fore feet upon the logs, and thus walk a con.iderable dis- tance. ing upon his hind fezs. The corner of n frail little bamboo hut stood in his way. He looked as if he were walk- He lifted the log over the roof, and bent is body so that his sides gently scraped the corner of the house and did not shake it. A hundredth part of his weight would have caused it to topple from its pile foundation. A RN ——————— What Lies Beyond. Wayland Hoyt repeats a story which has come down from the Sixteenth cen- tury of Philip Neri, the saint. A young man, a student “in a famous Italian University, came running to tell him of his aims of life. He had entered the law sho)l because of its wide reputa- tion, and would spare no pains to get through with his studies as soon as pos- sible. “Well,” said the saint, “when you have got through your course of study what do you mean to do then 2” “Then I shall take my doctor's de- gree.” “And then?” “Then I shall have a number of diffi- cult questions to manage, and shall catch people's notice by my eloquence snd by my acuteness, andfzain a great reputation.” And then 70 “Why, then there can be no question but I shall be promoted to some high office, and shall make money and grow rieh.’? “And then ?7 “Then I shall be comfortably and honorably situated with wealth and dig- nity.” “And then ?” “And then I—T shall die.” “And then ?” ‘Whereupon the yonng man made no down his eyes and went away,—Sl. Louis Republic. Three Rude Scamps Well Answered, Two or three idle young men were lounging around a street corner the other evening just as the down-town stores were sending home their employes. “Let’s have some fun with the girls 1” said the ringleader of the trio. “See that girl in the front seat of the grip ? Let’s speak to her!” Then, ss the ear stopped at the corner, the impudent fel- low tipped his bat, with how do you do Kittie Johnson I” «Why, says another “if that isn’t Kittie Johnson I”? «How d’ye do Kittie 77 said the third. The young lady, a pretty, Indvlike girl, was surprised and indignant. Her face grew white and red by turns, Most of the passengers understcod the situation. Finally, the girl, her eyes twinkling with merriment, and conscious of the support of her fellow-passengers, an- swered in a clear ringing voice that every passenger could hear, “Why, how do ‘you do, Tom, Dick and Harry I When did you get. out of jail ? Who went bail for you all 7 The car start- ed up amid a storm of applause, while the dudes on the corner smiled sickly grins at each other.— Chicago Journal. — Many disease germs enter through an open month. The ' mouth was not made for breathing. but for eat- ing and speaking. The nose was, made for breathing, and air, passing through the long moist nasal passage, is purified and lenves behind dust, disease germs and various impurities, while the air is warmed and tempered tor the lungs. But when the mouth is left open, dust dirt and disease run down into the lungs and fustening, there, develope and de- stroy the whole system. —— About eighty-eight million bush- els of Ameriean corn were exported to foreign murketsin 1889. In 1888 cnly about 23,000,000 bushels were exported. The demand for American corn in for- eivn markets steadily increases as the value of that product as an food is better appreciated. As a sub- stitute for oil cake for stock its demand 1s also increasing. The artificial hatching of chick ens hus been practiced in Egypt for 3000 years, the old process being found: more effectual than the so-called inventions of this country.” Our’ consul general at | Cairo tells ud in his last report that the © marketable crop of artifeially hatched chickens in Kgvpt for the curient, year is over 15,000,000, and this was’ not a flourishing season either. article of: -