EEE ey ( tt. Bellefonte, Pa, February 13, 1891. CHANGED HER MIND. Dear BeLLk ; I went to church lastnight, And saw your friend. Why, he’s a fright! At least I think so. What is there, pray, About his looks that made you say That I'd admire him? Goodness me! He’s homely, Belle, as he can be, Monstrous mouth, retreating forehead, And goggle eyes. I think he’s horrid. # # J've seen that Mr. Knoxagain— Your friend, I mean, that homely man Of whom I wrote—and I declare I must admit he has an air About him that one must admire, But, Belle, I think I soon shall tire Of his rade manners. Why, the man Stared till I had to use my fan! * # J went last night to the soiree, And who, think you,chanced there tobe? Why, Charley Knox! We staid till four. I danced with him six times, or more, And he asked me—but don’t you teil— To go with him next time. Now, Belle, I’mnot in love. You'll laugh, I know, Bat still I say he’s not my beau. %* % Qh, Belle! Oh, Belle! what do you think Happened ? Ican’t sleep a wink Until I've told my d-arest friend— My maidenhood is at an end. That Charley Knox! Oh, dear, Oh, my! 1 don’t know whether to laugh or cry— I never yet did feel so queer— Just think ! I am engaged, my dear. . GRANDMOTHER'S “COMING OUT” PARTY. BY LAURA B. CULVER, IN “THE HEARTH." “Grandma dear, it's really to be one of the very loveliest affairs there has been this winter. It's my ‘Coming Out,’ party, you know, and mamma says it shall be just as nice a one as any of the girls had, and Gertie Flint's was awfully swell. Now, Grandma, don’t lock shocked, that’s only a bit of slang,” and Dollie Laigh looked such a sweet, bewitching sinner that grand- mother laughed as she shook her head. “Remember one thing, dearie,” she said, “you are only nineteen, and I don’t wart my Dollie spoiled. Be sweet, frank and simple ; don’t try to copy girls in society, but just be your own little self.” “I will, grandama, darling, I will, and if I ever begin to feel too gay and giddy I will just come up here and you shall preach me one of your nice ser- mons to make me good,’ and Dollie kis- sed the true woman who was her chief mainstay in life. “Maybe, my darling, if I tell you about my first party it may amuse you a bit. Yes, indeed, I did have a lovely party, although they were not very common in my day, but you know I was great grandfather Benham’s only daughter ; I had two brothers but no sister, and father and mother decided that their Dollie should have a party. They did not call it coming out in my day.” “Oh, yes, grandma, do tell me, I know it must be lovely,” and Dollie number two settled herself on a stool at grandmother's feet with her brown curly hair laid against her knee. “Well,” began grandmother, “I was Just eighteen, one year younger than you, but young girls then were older at that age than they are now. Father was one of the wealthiest farmers in that district those times, and as I was always fond of study he let me take Latin of the minister, and have a governess for French, mathematics and history for a whole year, which was a, great advantage in-my day. Oh, father did very well by me, and I guess he never regretted it, for I was quick to learn and bright as a cricket in those days, mot at all unlike this Dollie, al- though maybe it seems almost impos- sible to you now.” And the old 'ady, who at eighty was a beautitul example of what old age may be, looked down into the eyes that looked so lovingly up into hers. “Well, I ‘had studied hard and the «crops were particularly good that year, 80 one night, some time in November, father said to mether, ‘Liddy’—moth. er's name was Lydia, but father never spoke it so. ‘Liddy, don’t you think we ought to give our Dollie a party ? She's got to be quite a large girl, and I think it’s our duty 'sides being our pleasure.’ “Of course I was all interest in a minute, and mother was almost as much interested ae I. “‘That’s just the thing, David,” she sald ‘we do owe Dallie a real nice par- ty 'sides our pleasure, and if you're agreeable, and nothing happens to pre- vent, she shall have it.’ “Well, then, set the day, says fath- er ‘for I'm more'n agreeable.’ ‘How would Thursday week de? says mother. ‘That's the—Ilet me see —the fifth of December.’ “So it was all decided. Father en- gaged the ‘fidaler’ of that part of the country, mother went to making good- ies, and I set myself to writing the in- vitations. I had lots of friends, and as our house was large I didn’t need to leave any ane. All the boys and girls of that neighberhood eame, and my dear, your grandfather was the hand- somest one among them.” And the dear old lady sighed as she looked up at the portrait ot a handsome old gen- tleman which hung where she conid always see it. “Well, they began to arrive in twos and threes ard sleighfulls, and moth- er and I were waiting to receive them, mother in her best black eilk and | in as handsome a pale blue satin as ever you set eyes on." “Thomas Hayward, that's your grandfather, was among the first, and mother said that after he came she bad hard work to make me receive properly, I was so interested talking with him. Maybe I was, for young girls will have their day. David and John, my brothers, were there; they each had their sweethearts, and we did “have a gay time, “After they had all arrived the fid- dler struck up a lively tune and we | tripped it gayly for two or three hours, | By that time mother had our feast ready, and delicious it was too; how we did enjoy it. Mother was consid. | ered one of the best cooks thereabouts, and she had taught me so that I was not far behind her. . Well, we took a long time at that, and when we got through father proposed some games, | so David volunteered to be blindman | for a good game of blindman’ buff, and we all joined in. “As I said before, I was very spry of foot in those days, and they all tried to catch me, but one after the other tailed till finally your grandfather was caught, and he vowed he would catch me. By that time the fun waxed fast and furious; five minutes passed and he had not caught me, when at an un- lucky moment, or perhaps it was a lucky moment, as I was crossing from one side of the room to the other he heard me. He knew my step, as [ had on a pair of new high slippers, fresh from New York, and they clicked as I walked. He made one dive, and dodge as I might he had me fast. As he was tak- ing off the bandage he stooped and whispered, ‘You know what that means to me, Dollie. Oh! If I could only catch you for life’ Bat I only tossed my head, and took my turn as blindman, playing so excitedly that I ran into a table and upset every thing on the floor, then, calling myself an idiot, I calmed down, and after that we played more quiet games, and finally wound up with the Virginia Reel: “Everybody said ’twas a great suc- cess, and we went to bed tired out but happy.” “The next morning, as [ was going through the hall, I found one of Tom’s driving mittens which he had dropped in the hurry of getting oft the night before, and then I began to think to myself, he will be coming for it soon, and—but I did not get any further than that for there was a knock at the door and I went to answer it with my heart beating like a trip hammer. ‘Good morning, Dollie,” he said, ‘I think I dropped one of my driving mit- tens last night, have you happened to see it? I answered that I had just found it, and running to get it where I had dropped it on the hall table, hand- ed it to him, and he said, standing there and looking down into my eyes, ‘Dol- lie, is that the way you mean to give me the mitten? And I foolishly an- swered, ‘No,’ and that’s about all, only when father and mother came in, he marched boldly up and asked my haud, and I, blushing away like a piny at his side. “Well, motherand father liked Tom, and the end of 1t was, he went off home with the promise he wanted, and I went singing around the house, so hap- py and preoccupied that I upset a pan of milk and the boys made all manner of tun of me,”” And here Grandmam- ma stopped and laughed, “What a sil- ly child I was to be sure,” she said. “Ob, Grandmamma! I think it was splendid, but my party won't have any such ending as that, I'm afraid,” and pretty Dollie the second took fer turn at “blushing Tike a piny.” “I hope not, dearie, Grandmother can’t spare her sunbeam yet,” and as Dollie kissed her and went down stairs, she sat and smiled at the portrait which hung on the wall, though there was a drop in each eye as she said, “1 hope she will have as good and kind and faithful a husband as my Tom.” A Praying Saloon-Keeper. Bancor, Me., Feb. 1.—The recent revival throughout the State of the prohibitory law, due to the Republi can administration desiring to placate the Temperance party, has led to the revival of the old female crusading band of prayers, whose means of driv- ing away obnoxious liquor-dealers is to constantly besiege their places and nold impromptu prayer meetings therein, Several saloons have been closed here by this means, and last night an attack was made upon the salooa of Robert O'Brien. The latter was equal to the emergency. When the band appeared his restaurant was nearly full af customers. The proprietor invited the ladies to seats, and asked them to pray, and then himself offered the fol lowing prayer : “Almighty Creator in heaven, thou Whe bast made the heaven and the earth, and created man in Thine own image as ruler of this earth, whilst ani- mals are living on grass and water, thou didst teach thy servant Noah to make wine, and Thou didst not punish bim for making intemperate use of it. At the wedding of Cana, Thine only son, Jesus Christ,transformed water in- to wine when the juice of the grape was exhausted,so that the enjoyment of the guests might not be disturbed. The great reformer, Martin Luther, said: ‘He who does not love wine, women and song remains a fool all life long.’ And ll the great men upon this earth have heen drinking of the wine Thou hast given Thy children upon thisearth. “0, Lord, we pray Thee, have pity upon these women here who are ot grateful for Thy gifts. They dress ex- travagaetly, and lead their husbands, by other extravagances not tending to our well-being, to bankruptcy, depriv- ing them of all pleasures.ef this world, yea, driving them to suicide. “0, Lord, have mercy upon these ladies. Look upon them; they wear not even the color of the face that Thou hast given them, but they are sinning against Thee; and, not con- ¢ent with nature, paint their faces. O, Lord, Thou eanst also perceive that their figure is not as Thou hast made it, but they wear humps upen their backs, like camels. Thou seest, O Lord, that their head dress consists of false hair, and when they open their mouths Thou seest their false teeth.” “0, Lord, these women want men out using the power Thou hast given to man, that all women shall be sub- ject to man. Amen.” Curson’s Mills, Mass., was greatly as- tonished to see a live pickerel weighing about one and one-half pounds drop in the road at her feet. Looking up she | discovered hovering about the spot a } | | i large American eagle, which had evi- dently secured the fish from one of the neighboring brooks. | who will patiently accept all this with- | | pa, couldn’t the old patriarchs afford to “Till Death Shall Part.” BY ROSE SEELYE MILLER. I have heard it said that to write well upon a subject, one must know no- thing of that subject except by theory. If lack of knowledge is needful to write well upon the subject of marriage, then I can only write ill, for IT am married. I do want, however, to say a few words in favor of marriage, so much seems to be written against it, and when I consider the infelicity of some wedded couples, I cannot wonder at it. There is one fact, however, that impresses it- self more and more vividly upon me, and that is this. Persons happily mar- ried cannot candidly write against that which they know very greatly augments their own happiness, Therefore, when I find people talking against marriage, I arrive at one of three conclusions— the person is unhappily married, or is not married at all and is expressing a theory, or the views presented are not candid. Now, why not look at the matter fair- ly ? I think there are very few girls so foolish as to expect an unclouded life, even when married to the man of their choice. There may be some such. I am glad that I do not know many girls of that stamp. I advocate marriage, but I do not ad- vocate a thoughtless assuming of the marriage ties: There are so many cau- tions, so much said about the seriousness of the step that a girl’s mind is apt to become filled with forebodings, and she wonders if all men are brutes—-if none of them are to be trusted. I know at least of one girl who was so strongly in- fluenced by these croakings against marriage that she made herself and lov- er miserable for years, before she could quite consent to name the day. The time was set vaguely for spring or au- tumn, or some other time, but was put off and put off. Forone reason or an- other, until the patient lover decided that patience had had its perfect work, and would admit of no further delay, and the two married. Their married life is an ideal one. They work hard, but the hours spent together are happy ones. They are both human—both commonplace. There are trials, and differences of opinion, but beneath it all, and beyond it all, is the strong course of true love, whose fiow is all the stronger and sweeter, because of obstacles to be overcome, faults to be overlooked, for- bearance to be practiced. Want may come in at the door but love need not fly out at the window. Indeed, love is the one sweet gift which the rich cannot monopolize or money buy. I have heard married women say, “If I had never married, if I were free, I would never marry;”’ It may be possi- ble that these women are justa little to blame if the lover has been entirely lost in the husband, though to the wife that name husband ought to be the sweetest one on earth. I do not advocate marriage as a pan- acea forall ills. I think many of life's gravest mistakes are made when people marry. I sometimes wonder why it is that so many miserable marriages are made. Ttseems as if they might do better, but this can never be until one considers the relation practically and prayerfully. If lovers quarrel before marriage, I see no reason why they will not do the same afterwards. People who are quite opposite in temperaments are usually more congenial than those of like characteristics. There may be such a thing as love at first sight, but I believe that this grand passion is more frequently of slow growth than otherwise. The fact that love comes slowly is more for it than againstit. Jonah’s gourd grew up in a night and perished ; it had grown so rapidly it had no corresponding strength, so could not bear the vehement east wind. It is the same with the spontaneous passion misnamed love, If its growth is too rapid, it cannot endure the “east wind” of common trials, in com- monplace life. Never flatter yourself that your life will be an uncommon one, an exception to the general rule. Mar- ry, but by all means use as much thought in regard to the matter as you would give to the selection of a new bonnet. You take a good many things into consideration when you visit yonr milliner; certainly, when choosing a life-long companion you should use as much common sense. People should be well acquainted be- fore they marry, and before they agree to marry. They should know each other not only in company dress and manners but in commonplace dress and under the test of commonplace cares, and ever when knowing each other as well as possible, marriage will reveal traits of character never suspected in a previous acquaintance. Remember, one thing, however, at the marriage altar you take the vow ‘for better or for worse,” “till death,’”” not divorce, “shall part.” Then if you find it is for “bet- ter,” well and good, but if experience proves it is “for worse,” your vow still holds, and you are bound to “love and cherish.” I believe it would be for “better” nine times out of wen, providing both parties were fully determined 1t should be so. Avoid the first quarrel as you would avoid a draught of deadly poison. Be one in purpose of living together pleasantly. Never lay aside the cour- tesies you practiced in courtship. Let each one be ready to yield to the wishes of the other, and my word for it, the lit- tle plant you called love when you mar- ried will be like a tree planted beside the water, stretching forth broad branches of peace and good will,budding and blossoming and bringing forth fruit for the comfort and blessing of all with whom you come in contact. A happy marriage is a very sweet and blessed thing, and I am glad that there | are many hearts and homes that can testify to the hallowing influence of this tie. — Eaxekange. MisLeADING.—Freddy Fangle—Pa- buy their clothes ? Fangle—Certainly. ‘Why ? now. Freddy Fangle—Because the Bible ——A lady returning to her Lome in | 88¥, “They rent their garments.” Time 1s PrECIOUS. —Jack Hustle— Will you marcy me? Rita Rustle--This is so sudden, give me time. Jack Hustle-~You can’t afford to waste any more time, You must be 26 Say yes, Rita, MAMMA'S GOOD-NIGHT. Mamma loosens the baby’s frock, And takes off each little shoe and sock ; She softly brushes the golden hair And pats the shoulders, dimpied and bear; She puts on the night-gown, white and long, Humming the while an evening song. “Daytime is over ; Playtime is closing; Even the clover, Is nodding and dozing, Baby’s bed shall be soft and white, Dear little boy, good-night, good-night! Mamma kisses the little pink feet, And the tiny hands so dimpled and sweet, The rosy cheeks, and the forehead white, And the lips that prattle trom morn till night : With a last fond kiss for the golden crown Gently and softly she lays him down, And in the hush that the twilight brings She stands by her darling’s bed and sings; Over the billow Soft winds are sighing ; Round baby’s pillow Bright dreams are flying. Here comes a pretty one sure to alight ! Dear little boy, good-night! good night !” — Eudora G. Bumstead. Reuben Started It. It was election day in a town in Ten- nessee, and while the crowd of men on the streets seemed good natured and in- clined to peace, there were several old pioneers who shook their heads and re- marked that such a condition of affairs bodied no good. One old farmer beck- oned his son into a public stairway and said : “Look a-here, Reuben, don’t you start no fuss around yere to-day.” “Fur why ?” “Kase the man who starts a fuss is gwine to get chawed to strings in no time. This crowd is onery, Reuben.,’ “Hain’t I gwine to tell old Parke that he stole our hogs?” queried Reuben. “No, sir. He’d breed a fuss quick- er nor scat. You jist hold yerself level, Reuben--mighty level.” Reuben promised to and then slanted his hat on his ear and sailed out to spit. over his shoulder, hunt old Parke up and call him a hog thief. He had scarcely got the words out of his mouth when something hit him and he dropped, and in less than two minutes there was fighting for two blocks up and down the street. Rube’s cld father was in the bar of the hotel taking a drink. The sounds of conflict brought him out just as Roube crawled up the botel steps. He had a broken nose, a broken jaw, two black eyes, a scalp wound, a cut hand, and was almost naked. “Is that you, Rube?” shouted the old man as he bent down to geta closer look Rube nodded his head. “Found old Parke and called him a hog thief, I reckon ?” Another nod-from Reuben. “Well, I told ye, and now durn yer good-fur-nuthin’ hide, I hope ye won't be able to dig sassafras fur six months to come! Howsumever, bein’ as a row has started, and bein’ I’m allus to home when thar’s fightin,” I'll sail in and warm up a little.” Grant’s Devotion. It is doubtful, says the N. Y. Graph- ie, whether any chronicle or romance of the days of chivalry contains so touching an ins‘ance of matrimonial devotion as that lately told of General Grant. When the honors came upon the Grants, like sorrows to the house of Denmark, not single spies, but in batta- lions, the mistress of the White House began to renew the dream of her girl- hood—to have her cross eyes straighten- ed. Wishing tosurprise the president, Mrs. Grant, telling nobody, sent for the most eminentjoculist in America. He willingly promised to undertake the op- eration, which he assured her would be easy to accomplish and without danger. The goed lady could not contain herseif for joy, and, woman-like (am I right, mesdames?) gave way when she saw her husband, and confid :d to him her secret, the pleasure she had in store for him. He looked wistfully into those dear eyes which bad held him with tender gaze through all the trials of a checkered career, and said, in a simple way, “Julia, I wish you would not change them, [love them as they are, and they might seem strange if altered.” Nor Launcelot, nor Romeo, nor lover of any clime or age, ever spoke words of tenderer gallantry than those of the hero of Appomattox. Couldn't be Supposed. A man from the ‘West was telling a few of us in the smoker’s compartment about some of his adventures in Mon- tana, when a very young man in a very checked suit, with very red hair and freckled face, stood in the door and in- uired : “Did I understand that you were from the West?” t¢Y es, sir.” “Way out Wast 2” $i Yes, sir.” - “Glad to meet you, sir. I wanted to ask you about the Indians. They are very savage, I understand.” “Well, yes.” “Delight in torturing their prisoners, don’t they ?”’ “I believe they do.” “Well, sir, let me state a suppositious case,” drawled the young man. ‘‘Sap- pose I was walking across the prairies out there, far from human habitation !”’ . “But you wouldn’t be.” “But suppose I was.” “But it is not a supposable case.” “No! Why not, sir?” ‘Because the minute you got outside the dooryard a jackass rabbit would tumble you over and leave your dead body for the coyotes. Oh, no. Noth- ing of your general appearance could ever walk on a Montana prairie far from habitation !” The young man swallowed at soma- thing in his gullet, tried hard to smile, and withdrew with the observation that he never could endure very much tobacco smoke. Corp ComrorT.—* We can die only ' once, ' the doctor said, consoling his patient, nearly dead. He answered: “That trouble is. Ifa dozen timos I wouldn't mind this.” A LovER WITH REMARKABLE SAND. | --Miss Bullion-— Will your love for me last, Jack? Is it founded upon the rocks ? Juck Marigold —Why, of course it is —on your rocks. The Obstinacy of Man. The Remarkable History of the Famous Jones County Calf Case. The Iowa Supreme Court has finally affirmed the decision of the lower courts on the celebrated case of Johnson versus Miller et al. better known as the Jones county calf case. The verdict of the lower court was for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. Twenty vears ago Miller and John- son owned and tilled adjoining farms in Jones county, and were considered well- to-do and prosperous. Miller lost a number of calves the total value of which was about $45. He charged Johnson with the theft of them and had him indicted by the Grand Jury, and he was convicted on what appeared to be rather hazy testimony. The case went to the Supreme Court and was re- manded for a new trial. A change of venue was taken to Benton county, and after two appearances in the Supreme Court and toree trials in the District Court Johnson was acquitted. The costs, however, had been heavy and both farmers had plastered their farws with mortgages to meet them. After Johnson’s acquittal he brought suit for damages against Miller and others for malicious prosecution, This case also had a devious run through the lower and higher courts, the last trial having been in Black Hawk county, where the plaintiff was given a verdict for $1,000. The jury returned a general verdict and also answered a number of special inter- rogatories that did not warrant the verdict. The Supreme Court evidently thought otherwise and affirmed thejudg- ment of the court below. The case is a monument to human obstinacy. As heretofore mentioned it has bankrupted everybody connected with it except the attorneys. The orig- inal parties to it were comparatively young men when it was begun. Some of them did not live to see the end, while those that did are gray haired and bent with age and have seen their fruit- ful farms melt away in the vortex of litigation. The total cost, as previously estimated, in the criminal and civil cases will almost reach $20,000. How Would This Look Nowadays? One hundred years ago the leading men in the United States read in their Bibles that the body is more than rai- ment, but they dressed according to the advice of worldly wise Polonius : Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy— For the apparel oft proclaims the man. ‘When Gov. Bowdoin, a tail, dignified man, reviewed the troops assembled at Cambridge, in 1786, he was dressed in a gray wig, cocked hat, a white broad- cloth coat and waist coat, red small clothes, and black silk stockings, John Hancock, thin in person, 6 feet in stat- ure, was very found of ornamental dress. He wore a wig when abroad and a cap when at home. A gentleman who vis- ited Hancock one day at noon, in June, 1782, describes bim as dressed in a red velvet cap lined with fine white linen, which was turned up two or three inches over the lower edge of the velvet. He also wore a blue damask gown lined with silk ; a white stock, a white satin- embroidered waistcoat, black satin small clothes, white silk stockings and red morocco slippers. Washington, at his receptions in Philadelphia, was dressed in black velvet; his hair was powdered and gathered behind in a large silk bag. His hands were encased in yellow silk gloves ; he held a cocked hat with a cockack on it, and its edges adorned with a black feather. He wore knee and shoe buckles, and at his left hip ap- peared a long sword in a polished white leather scabbard, with polished steel hilt. The Oldest Man on Earth. The oldest man in the world is a citi- zed of Bogota, in the Republic of San Salvador. This new Methuselah declares that he is one hundred and eighty years old, and it would seem he flatters himself, for his neighbors give the assurance that he is older than he says he is. He is a half-breed named Michael Solis, whose existence was revealed to Dr. Louis Hernandez by one of the old- est planters in the locality, who as a child knew Solis as a centenarian. They have found his signature among those of persons who contributed to the building of a Franciscan convent which exists near San Sebastian. His skin is like parchment, his long hair, of the whiteness of snow, envelopes his bead like a turban, and his look is so keen that it made a disagreeable impres- sion on the doctor. Interrogated by the doctor, he answer- ed complaisantly that his great age was due to his regular mode of living, and to his never ziving up to any excess of any sort whatever. “I never eat but once a day,” he said, “but I never use any but the strongest and most nourishing foods. My meals last a half an hour, for IT believe that it is impossible to eat more in that time than the body can digest in twenty-four hours. I fast the first and fifteenth of each month, and on those days I drink as much wateras I can bear. T always let my food become cold before I touch it. It isto these things that I attribute my great age.”’—New York Journal. ——TF. Heap, a keeper of the Glen. dale National Cemetery near Richmond, Va., has a desk, made in 1610, which has been in possession of the Heap fam- ily, of Enclan®. Ivis said to have been used by Oliver Cromwell in 1647-48 when fighting Charles 1. It is of an- tique oak, beautifully carved and high- ly polished. EERE bb FRIIS TF A Lire SAVER.--“A great many people owe their lives to that doctor,” said Kickington. “Is he an able physician ?” “Tt isn’t exactly that that I referred to. Heis never in hisoffice when you , want him.” where the ——The hump on the back of the | dromedary is an accumlation of a pecu- | “each meal,” say Dr. William A. Ham- f mond, “is what may be called moderate liar species of fat, which is a store of noucishment beneficently provided against the day of want, to which the animal is often exposed. dary or camel can exist for a long peri- od upon thishump without any other food. The drome- Ericsson’s Exactness John Ericsson, the inventor, had not. only genius but the “immense capacity for taking pains’ which somctimes ac- companies it. All his work was so ex- actly done that he could demand from workmen the most exact observance of details in the drawings fornished for their guidance, without fear that they might go astray. ‘When the steamer Columbia was built, engines were putin according to his designs. Tt was customary at, that time to get the length of the pistoh-rod from the engine 1tsc1f, and a man was, one day, engaged in measuring it with a long baton. Captain Ericsson chanced to go on board, at that moment, and go- ing up to the workman he roared : “What are you doing there, sir ?”’ “Getting the length of the piston-rod, gir.” “Is it on the drawing ? “Yes sir.”’ “Then why do you come here with sticks ? Go and get the length from the drawing sir! 1 do not want you wo bring sticks when the drawing gives the size.” At another time a workman was en- deavoring to put in the engines of a steamship, and found great difficulty with a small connection which is des- cr:bed as being *‘crooked as a dog’s hind leg.” Finally he went to Ericsson and informed him that the rod could not be put in place, ‘1s it right with the drawing?’ was his query. Veg sir.” “Then it will go in.” And on another trial it did. The master brain had left nothing to be sup- plied by the ingenuity of others.— Youth's Companion. are ——— Thoughts of the Dying. In the Societe de Biologie, Fere affirmed that a dying person in his last moments thinks of the chief events of his life. Persons resuscitated from drowning, epileptics with grave at- tacks, persons dying and already uncon- scius, but momentarily brought back to consciousness by ether injections to utter their lust thoughts revert, to momentous events of their life. Such an ether in- jection revives once more the normal disposition of cerebral activity, already nearly extinguished, and it might be possible at this moment to learn of cer- tain important events of the past life. Brown Sequard mentions the remarkable fact that persons who, in consequence of grave cerebral affections have been par- alzed for years, get back at once when dying their sensibility, mobility, and in- telligence. All such facts clearly show that at the moment of dissolution im- portant changes take place, reacting up- on the composition of the blood and the functions of the organs. PP —— Anether Wonderful Dog. A mun who drives a pretzel wagon around town has a great curiosity and patent advertisement in the shape of a yellow dog. This dog is sort of Scotch terrier, and he is wonderful because he does notsitin the seat with the driver, like ordinary dogs, but he jumps on the horse’s back, runs up toward his shoul- ders, and, with fore-feet or “ue horse’s collar, he rides through pe:fectly at: home in his strange position. The horse trots along with a lumbering gait, which must be most uncomfortable to his canine passenger, but the dog holds his “seat,” sometimes on three feet, some- times on two, seldom on all four. He seems to like it, too, and appears to en- joy the wondering stares and amused glances of people who see him in his great feat f.r the first time. The driver appears unconscious of the sensation his pet is making, but all the same he en- joys it as much as the dog does.—Chica- go World. Duly Warned, “Lookee here, Jim Shipton, I jist want yer to understand who itis yer sassin’,”’ cried an irate Dakota woman on the occasion af a trifling connubial diologue between her husband and herself, “J jist want ye to bar in mind thet it ain’t none o’ yer common, low down ‘Western women yer talkin’ to, but a lady born an’ raised in the state of Mizzoury an’ used to good manners, be cosh! A lady whose par was a justice of the peace and one of the prominentest men in the town-—a lady what useter sing in the choir, and who never knowed what it was to so- ciate with the common run o’ folks till she tuk up with you, dem yer picter! An’ don’t you persume to raise up an’ saas me as if yer was my ek’al, Jim Shipton! Don’t you dare doit I"—Drake’s Magazine. Parsnip Souvp.—Take about one- fourth of a pound of salt pork ; chop it moderately fine and fry it out; turn the fat from it into a soup kettle; add one large onion chopped fine, halt a cupful of chopped celery and two good-sixed parsnips, cut in small pieces ; add salt and a little white pepper and one quart of water; cook slowly until the vegeta- bles are tender; then pour the soup throngh a course sieve or colander, jam- ming through the pulp of the parnsips ; put it on to heat again, add one pint of milk, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter and a little cayenne ;do not al- low the soup to boil hard after the milk is added, and after it is poured into the tureen add a teaspoonful of finely cut boiled beet ; cut the beet in slices, and wipe each slice dry before cutting it for the soup. ETT SCTE ——-John Bancroft, a man who was a tramp eight years ago, and who died recently at Portland, Ore., bequeathed all his property, estimated at $15,000, to a woman in Sacramento, Cal.,, who once gave him a meght’s lodging and breakfast and $1 besides, together with some good advice. “One good cigar smoked after use, and can rarely inflict any damage to the system. The exceptions occur in those persons of peculiar organization, impressionable and easily disturbed by stimulants, and sedatives or narcotics, —— Ming a — ——