Bellefonte, Pa., May i, 1891. AT THE DOOR. I thought myself indeed secure, So fast the door, so firm the lock; But lo! he toddling comes to lure My parent ear with timerous knock. My heart were stone could it withstand The sweetness of my baby’s plea— That timorous, baby-knocking, and, “Please, let me in—it’s only me.” I threw aside the unfinished book, Regardless of its tempting charms, And, opening wide the door, I took My laughing darling in my arms. Who knows but in eternity I, like a truant child, shall wait— The glories of a life to be, Beyond the Heavenly Father’s gate? And will that Heavenly Father heed The truant’s opileating cry, Asat the outer door I plead, “Tis I, eh, Father! only I!” — EugeneRudd. ECE Er ———— -A NOB HILL PRINCESS. BY EMMA S. ALLEN. She lived, as a princess should, in the palace of her father, the king. It was one of the richest and most beauti- ful of palaces, standing on an imposing terrace and looking down with all the majesty of a royal abode upon the sur- rounding houses, though many of them were equally splendid. The king, after all, was net a king, as he had no more royal blood in his veins than a hackman er a car-conduc- tor, He had left the aged father who had given him the royal blood of hon- esty as an heritage, and come to Cali- fornia in “the days of 49" to search for gold. He had found the gold, and since that good fortune had created the hunger and thirst for more and more gold, there seemed to be no limit to his ambition. Everything he touched had ‘turned to gold, and for .years people had called him King 3idas. The name clung to him after ke built his palace on Nob Hill, and it was some- times varied by the less classical ap- pellation of “Old John Vernon, the Bonanza King.” The Princess Beatrice was the only daughter—the only child. She was the power behind the throne, even be- fore her weak little mother succumbed to the ill-health that had driven her all over the face of the earth in search of new climates and new physicians. Since her death Beatrice had worn the ermine exclusively, and worn it with such unaffected simplicity and grace that she was not spoiled one jot or tit- tle. There was something in her na- ture too sweet and womanly for any amount of money or power to choke out. She stood, one evening, on the mar- ble steps of thie grand piazza, looking in her own dreamy fashion at the steel- blue waters of San Francisco Bay, just as the sun was going out. through the Golden Gate. She was wondering, as she had grown to wonder very frequent- ly of late, why her father seemed changed. He had a secret which he was evidently keeping from her as long as he possibly could—but a secret that must be made public sooner or later. Something in the expression of his face as he avoided meeting her eyes, told Beatrice all this. She wondered every- morning if he would tell her before night what it was. Her questioning eyes scrutinized him very closely across the fine damask and glittering silver and crystal as she handed him his Mochu or Oolong at breakfast, lunch, or dinner. “Do you believe it is possible that he is going to fail?’ she asked her very dearest friend in all the world— father barely excepted—Helena Ashton that afterngon. “How can he fail?” said Helena, with an inexpressible gesture. Miss Ashton was an extraordinary girl in a very ordinary position in life, She was the oldest of three daughters, and had very good reason to be proud of a talented older brother who was putting the zeal of his life into his pro- fession. *‘Oh,” rejoined Beatrice, composedly, “he might as well fail as 2 “As the Bank of California ?” “As well as ‘some other men who have failed. I wonder how it would seem to be poor.” * ‘*As poor as we are?’ “No, you are not poor. You belong to that happy class of which Young tells in ‘Night Thoughts'—‘a goodly competence ir all we can enjoy.” Your father enjoys life as well—far better— than mine does, because he has that in- terest in another life that all my fath- - er's money cannot buy; and your mother—oh, Helena! if I only had such a mother! But I never had.” The princess would have cried if she had been a erying girl; but she only swallowed a little sob as she bent over Helena's artistic work-table. When she rose with sudden vehemence from the mahogany and eld-rose plush chair in which she had been idling it flew back and struck the unfinished paint- ing on Helena's easel, throwing it, face downward, across the long, curved rockers. “Never mind, the paint is dry,” said Helena, not stopping her work in the velvet bed of arasene lilies. “You could not hurt it any if it was not, It is a storm at sea.” Beatrice carefully replaced the pic ture and adjusted a drape of amber silk across the easel. “You paint so much better than I do—you do every thing better than I do. You always did, since we began to go to school together. Your broth- er promised to find out what my mis- sion in life is”—blushing slightly and getting behind Helena's chair. “He has given up the quest, I presume, as a hopeless one—something past a law- yer's ability to ferret out. Good-bye, dear. Will you be at Mus. Adley’s ‘At home’ to-morrow evening?’ “Oh, yes.” . Helena put down her work and went arm-in-arm with her friend down the stairs and out upon the lawn, They you prefer to talk with her?” stood together in the iron gateway for a few moments, then the princess was driven away from the pretty Queen Anne house—a picturesque affair in dull Indian red and terra-cotta shades —to the portals of King Midas’s palace. It was not alone of her father and his unaecountable actions that Beatrice was thinking as she stood on the piaz- za looking over the waters of the bay. “If I were a poor girl, I believe— but he is too proud—too true and per- fect a man to ever think of-—there isn’t another like him in all the world.” Which scattering reflections certain- ly had no reference to her royal parent. The unspoken thought brought a blush to her face that made her brilliantly beautiful, even to the stupid fostman who answered her questions in the hall. “Is papa at home yet 2” “No, miss. He went away an hour ago 10 be gone until to-morrow night. He left this message for you.” Beatrice read the scrawling hand- writing on a large white card that the obsequious servant handed her on a silver salver. Dear zirTLE Princess: To-morrow night I will tell you all chat I think you must suspect now. It will be a blow to you, and perhaps you will blame me so much that you will nev- er forgive me. I ought to have pre- pared you for the news, but I put it off from day to day with cowardly assur- ance. ‘To-morrow will do as well.) Come in to the library to-morrow even- ning after you return from Mrs. Adley’s and I will tell you what the papers will announce the following morning. Your FarHER. There was no more doubt in Bea- trice’s mind. = She was sure that her time for heroic action had come. There would be no more days of idleness and nights of revel for her—no mere luxur- ious sipping of the richest wine of life from golden goblets—no more treading of rose- strewn paths ; but thorns and bitter draughs and work—real work for her daily bread—would be her in- heritance. All this she pictured in the few brief moments she was ascending the velvet-carpeted stairs to her own beautiful suite of rooms, She touched the button of the tele- phone that her extravagant fancy had caused to be constructed between her sanctum sanciorum and Helena's sitting room. Just at that hour the pride of | the family was having a few moments’ | chat with his favorite sister, his six ! feet of splendid manhood stretched on | a couch just underneath the telephone. He sprang up as the bell tinkled and put the receiver to his ear, touched the button and waving his hand in pro- | test to his sister's interference. “Hello, Lena! Do please come up and stay all night; papa is away from home. He left a message for me. My suspicious are correct, I am satisfied— he is on the verge of financial ruin. He has promised to tell me to-morrow night after | return from Mrs. Adley’s. The next morning, he says, all the world will know of it through the pa- pers.” . There was an excited ring in the voice away off in the Nob Hill palace. “Princess Beatrice, I don’t believe it in spite of your correct suspicions, Helena has just been telling me, in confidence, of your anxieties. Itseems to me the trouble must be something elce.” If the telephone could only have conveyed to him the loud beating of a woman's heart, what a useful inven- tion it would have been to him in dis- closing what he had never been able to find out when the princess was talking in the same room with him. He wait- ed a moment for her reply. *No,” it came presently, with metal- lic precision; “it cannot be anything else, Is Helena there?” “Yes, your Royal Highness. Do “Certainly. ell her I will sead the carriage for her if she will come.” “May I come with her!” “If you choose.” Helena pushed him aside. “No, he can’t come with me. What was it you told him that you intended for me?” : After standing silently listening to some long sentences, she replied : “All right, I will be ready, Phil is not coming, for he is only waiting for dinner to be off on some special busi- ness with his client.” Beatrice was one of the latest arri- vals at Mrs, Adley’s that night. She was never more simply dressed, and never so lovely m Philip Ashton’s eyes. He had sent her the first flowers he had ever bought for her—passionate blood-red roses—and she wore them: with the simply-made cream satin. Aside from the rich lace in neck and elbow-sleeves they were her sole orna- ments. Even the diamonds in her ears had been put away, for appearance's sake, on the eve of her father's ruin. “Did I do wrong to come ?”’ she ask- ed Ashton, when he stood under a pot- ted palm tree in the music room, look- ing-at her in the dim radiance of rose- colored lamps. “Why wrong?’ “Because people will make remarks about it, in the morning, when they know the truth.” He covered her hand with his own ag it rested on the back of a low divan. “You are very philosophical in re- gard to the matter. Why are you not at home, as most girls would be, cry- ing and wringing your hands ?” He had never before so committed himself by word, lock and action. Beatrice understood the underlying significance of the question. She an- swered it ywith the same roundabout directness. In spite of all their past reserve they understood each other per- fectly. “I don’t believe,” frankly meeting his adoring eyes, “that I am so very sorry—sorry enough to cry or wring my hands; I mean myself.” : A strange, sweet knowledze kept them silent for several moments. When a passing couple had gone out of sight and hearing, Ashton took both her hands. how long I have loved the king's daugh- ter with a hopeless love ?” “Perhaps,” said Beatrice, ‘for as long a time as you have made her be- lieve thatlas ‘the daughter of a hundred earls, she was not to be desired.’ ”’ He lifted the hand to his lips. “We succeeded in misunderstanding each other perfectly, ther. I should never have been braye enough to ask King Midas’ little daughter for her hand with all the royal jewels in its palm.” . %. 0% %. ® x =» Beatrice tapped tremblingly at the library door at midnight. After some little delay her father opened it and smiled very much as he ‘had been in the habit of doing before he became “peculiar.” “Come in, my dear,” he said kissing her, as he always did. “Don’t wear your seal-skin in this warm room. Did you enjoy the evening at Mrs. Adley’s? Sorry I could not go with you.” As he did not seein to expect an an- swer to any question, Beatrice made none. Shesank into the huge depths of the nearest chair and stared blankly at the old gentleman. He was not pale and haggard and showed nosymp- toms of paralysis. On the contrary, his face wore a blush like a school- boy’s and his eyes shone with any- thing but a wild despair. The terrible thought came to Beatrice that perhaps the calamity had been the means of darkening his mental faculties. certainly did look foolish enough to warrant the suspicion. : “Don’t look so distressed, my dear.” he began. “What I have to tell you is not’ so terrible, after all—only I should have prepared you for it grad- ually. Don’t blame me too much you know ‘there 1s no fool like an old fool.” “Qh, papa! tell me the worst at once. For myself I do not care—but for you it is dreadful.” Beatrice began to sob as she flew into her father’s arms, “What is dreadful for me? You don’t know anything about 1t?” de- manded he. “I know enough to satisfy my sus- picions.” “Well, what do you know 2’ “Oh, papa! why do you act so strangely ? I believe you are crazed with trouble.” : The old man scratched his bald head. “Bless my bones! What isthe mat- ter with you, Beatrice? It isn’t such an awtal calamity for a man to be mar- ried if he is sixty.” Beatrice stood gaping with astonish- ment, “Well, my dear, is that what you knew ?"7 laughed her father kindly. “No—no! Is that all?” “Yes; that isall. It 1s enough to make me teel as young as I did at twenty-five.” “And you are not bankrupt? We are not on the brink of ruin?” John Vernon laughed uproariously. “This is too much fun! Marion,” he called, going to the half drawn por- tierer ot the adjoining room, “come and enjoy’ it with us.” As the curtains were drawn back Beatrice saw a sweet-looking woman take her father's hand and cross the room to where she stood in the third or fourth stage of her amazement. She was not half as old as her millionaire bridegroom—not more than five years Beatrice's senior. “Beatrice, this is the new Mrs. Ver- non—Queen Marion, the Princess Bea- trice.” When they all separated for the night the princess and the queen swore hfe long fidelity. “It isn’t strange that you loved such a little woman well enough to bring her into the palace to usurp your prin- cess, papa,” she told her father, when they were alone fora moment. “But she must have married you for your money." “Well, perhaps she did ; but Ashton can't have it all in that case, you see.” Beatrice had made him a confidant, even in the presence of her youthfnl step-mother. The little telephone bell in Helena's sitting room tinkled madly in the early morning hours. “Forgive me, Lena, for keeping you waiting so long for the news. Have you been asleep in your chair 7” No; Helena had been taking a very comfortable nap on the couch, obliv- ious to her friend's sorrows. She re- ceived the news with unmitigated sur- prise, and, when she said good night and shut up the instrument, glided through the hall to her brother's door. A light shone through the transom— the ruddy glow of a coal firein the grate before which Ashton was stretch- ed in an easy chair, clad in a dressing gown aud slippers, dreaming, but not asleep. “Well ?”” he interrogated, sitting up, “has the telephone told the whole truth 2” “Yes” “Poor old man ! he bears it 2” “He bears it beautifully, I think Bee is really to be congratulated ;” and Helena’s grave face became canvalsed. “It isn’t very much of a laughing mater, is it!” said the young fellow seriously, “Yes, it is—the most decidedly fanny thing I ever heard of,” said Helena. And her brother thought so, too, five minutes later. He did not laugh yery much. “Atter all,” he said, “the world will say I am marrying the money instead of Beatrice,” There proved to be truth in the newspaper report of the previous mori- ing. A large wholesale house in the city went into bankruptcy, and the same papers that blazoned the news abroad published romantic versions of “old John Vernon's “marriage with a beautiful young lady of Oakland. “Perhaps,” said Beatrice to her lov- er that evening,when he called, “I can persuade papa to disinherit me, if you object to even half the money. You see, he might easily leave everything to his wife.” Did she say how “My little princess! Do you know She stood beside him, wearing her He ——— TE diamonds again, and a soft, trailing tea gown of white and gold India silk. He laughed happily. “Since I have become so hopelessly entangled, I shall have to submit to my fate, royal jewels, princess and all.” “That sounds heroic. We will let the world say what 'it pleases,” and Beatrice placed her hands, in his. *If you had not proposed to me in such an accidental way, I am not sure but I should have taken the step myself, ‘Philip, my king.” Teaching Lions, Various Steps Explained by a Practi- cal Trainer. Long before I began to teach lions, says B. E. Darling in the New York Telegram, I had been acquainted with the character of the animals. I had dealt in wild animals, had attended them, fed them, and so I was accustom- ed to them. I knew considerable about their nature and habits from observation and not from the reading of books. I used to be particularly interested in the baby lions or cubs, and would endeavor to cultivate their friendship and make them fond of me. When I resolved to train these lions to perform tricks I started with fourteen of these animals. Only two of that num- ber proved serviceable, and those I now have, and they perform at each of my entertainments. Of the twelve lions I discarded some were stupid, others died, and some were vicious and several times hurt me. In training the animals the first thing I did wasto go in their cage and sit there. Nothing more than that; sim- ply sit there hour after hour. You may ask whether I wasn’t afraid to do this. No; because, as I say, I had for years been accustomed to be with wild beasts. I will notsay it is a pleasant experience to go in a lions’ den, but it is not so bad as you might think it would be if you know the animals you deal with. When I first went into the cage the lions would growl; now and then they would act as if they were going to bite me. When they were kind and quiet I would falk to them pleasantly as you would a vicious dog you were trying to train to like you. I would call them “good old fellows,” “fine old fellows,” and s0 on, and so they would get used to a kind voice. After a while, some two or three months, when they were in their quiet moods I would venture to touch them, finally to pat them gently on the head or tv stroke them on the back. When they were cross I would stand apart from them, but without showing any sign of fear. I used no force with them. Such a method might do in training some kinds of animals, but it would not do with lions. By being in the lions’ cage day after day, and spending hours at a time there and never ill-treating tiem I gained their confidence. Naturally they are afraid ot human beings, or rather, I should say, they dislike the presence of human beings. In their native state lions, when young and active, live by hunting in the forest far fromm human habitations and seldom quit their re- treats while they are able to gain a sub- sistence. When they become old and unable to surprise their game they bold- ly come down into places more frequent- ed. They attack the flocks and herds near the habitations of the shepherd or the husbandman. [t is remarkable however, when they make their sallies, if they find men and quadrupeds in the same field they only attack the latter and never meddle with men unless pro- voked to a fight. Lion tamers before me have not sought to teach the animals tricks. It was my ambition to appeal to their good sense and intelligence, the same as we do in the case of the dog or the horse. So, after I had gained the confidence of my animals,and was able to touch them, to stroke them and to pat them on the head, I would pick out the best lion and put a chain around his neck and lead him around the cage. It took a long time, you must remember, before I could touck him, and a longer time still before he would allow me to put the chain upon him and lead him any dis- tance. : ‘When T had arrived at this stage of the training I was on such familiar terms with my beasts that I allowed my- self to talk sternly to them, and repri- mand them if they did net obey my commands. But there is this important thing to be borne in mind in the the training of lions(and I will mention it in case my young readers wish to adopt my profes- sion):—You must continually keep your eye on the animal and see that you are not worrying him and making him do toomuch. You learn to know his disposition simply by being with him, the same as you know people by being with them and studying their disposi- tions. A lion easily becomes confused when he is being taught, and when he gets in that candition he is apt to be ug- ly and dangerous; and so one of the] principal parts of the lion trainer’s art is too watch the lion, to study his disposi- tion and tostop before you have given him too much to do. Training a lion is something like training a bulldog; you must first gain his confidence and you ‘must let bim know you are his master. After the lion allowed himself to be led by a string I would march him around an arena, run with him. Then I would put trifling obstacles in his way. First a small log, which he would learn to jump over; then gradually I would increase the size of the obstacle, using firsta small box, then a larger box, and so dn | until finally, after many days of regular | exercise, I hed a jumping lion. | The some kind of training was pur- sued in teaching him to ride the bicycle | and to drive him like a horse—it was a | gradual process of leading him on. Af- | ter I had got him so that he would be led around the arena it was not such a dificult matter to drive him with reins instead of leading him with a rope. The same with riding a tricycle, though | that is a more diflicult trick and took a! longer time to teach, but it was simply leading the animal on from one style of the performance to the other until he bad mastered the art. 1t has taken me from ten to thirteen months to train my lions. Some are more docile than others. One is very affectionate, more like a dog than a wild . { I go out,” she said, artlessly. | careless that it woulda’ be safe. A mon beast; one is savage at times, but he is driven to the chariot at every perfor- mance. You have some times heard that a lion tamer charms, magnetizes or hyp- notizes the animal with his eyes. That is not true. It is possible to pursue this course with human beings, but a lion will not remain quiet long enough to come under such influence. The best lions in the world come from the central part of Africa, from: Nubia and Abyssinia. The latter is a particu- larly rich country, full of forésts and all sorts of game and wild animals, My lions came frome these sections, When I am in countries where the horse is used as an article of food I feed my lions on horse meat. The reason for this is, that coming from a warm climate the flesh of the horse which contains consid- erable heat, will warm up their blood better than any other kind of food. I do not use it in countries where it is not used for human food, because the meat might be diseased. In this country I use lean beef, and the animals are giv- en about eight pounds a piece a day. A Ghastly Necktie. Awful Experience of a Mining Pros- pector in a Colorado Landslide. “Yes, that may be an old necktie, but it is not the queerest neck wear I have worn,” Henry B. Gillespie of Aspen, Col., remarked to a servant at the Grand Pacific as he was removing a little Chic- ago real estate from his countenance. “I once wore a corpses for a necktie. “It was in the afternoon of March 10,. 1884, that I started up Aspen Moun- tain to visit a claim which I thought was located upon my land. Should I find that my surmise was wrong, I in- tended to purchase the owner's right for $73,000, and accordingly I took my mining superintendent with me. It was snowing quite hard. The mine-owners refused to al- low me to go down the shaft to make level explorations, but consented to al- low my superintendent to accompany them, I remained in the shaft house with a few laborers. At exactly 5.40 o’clock, one of the miners asked me the time. I had just closed my watch, when crash | and we were hurled into a promiscuous mass of timbers, men, ore, snow and ice. ‘We had been enveloped in a genu- ine Colorado landslide. I fell near a stack of ore bags corded several feet high, The roof timbers fell so as to allow me about eight inches of leeway. Around my neck, bent into a semicircle by the pressure of the terrible wall of ice and snow that was heaped above, was the lifeless body of the miner who had asked me for the time. Poor fel- low, he found that time, all time was before him. His head and shoulders were crushed into a jelly, which the ever-sinking weight squeezed around my neck until the torn flesh penetrated my clothing. His lower extremities shared a similar fate on the other side of my head. My breathing was restricted. A few feet away and resting upon my outstretched right arm, was the mangled body of another vietira, Three others perished in the shaft. “There I remained in that silent, op- pressive cell, with my ghastly necktie until midnight, when a rescuing party of 200 inhabitants of the mining camps ot Roaring Forks cut me out of my icy prison. The snow had become ice ; hence the small army of willing miners found plenty of work for their picks and spades. But if my situation was terri- ble, what was that «of those imprisoned in the mines? They were not so cramped for room and oxygen, though. “Only four men buried in that aval anche were rescued: Now, that is how I once wore a peculiar necktie.’,—Chi- cag News. A St. Louis Charity. A meek-eyed, mild spoken man drop- ped around to the hotel in St. Louis one evening last fall, and as fast as he cane to any one whom he sized up as “safs” he said : i “Tt is a case of charity—a notle charity—but we are opposed to any- thing like a subscription. The widow wouldn’t have it that way, you knaw. ‘We bave, therefore, arranged for a tn- round go between the Missouri Terjor and the St. Louis Chain Lightning. Comes off at 10 o’clock- -admission 31. Its for blood, and the money goes to the widow of the best dog-handler inthe United States.” i It seems a sort of duty to go aronnd with the crowd and pay the admistion fee. The affair was to come offin a barn, and when the principals entered the ring there were sixty-two of us/dol- lar men present. They shook hands, ‘put up” in good shape, and the kpow- ing ones predicted a hot time. the first punch the Terror made, however, the other fell down seemingly uncon- scious, and after working over him for five minutes the meek-eyed man stood up and said : | “Gents, I am sorry to inform vou that Chain Lightning is a dead man. He has evidently died of heart failure, and under the adverse circumstances the fight cannot goon. I'll haveto send for the police.” : Of course everybody made a hustle to get away, only too anxious to escape arrest and detention, and the bara was emptied in thirty seconds. Next day, as I was going down the river on a steamboat, I heard two men in the stateroom next to mine disputing. “Well, make it an even divide,” said one. “Of course, ils even,” replied the other. “Bill worked in the crowd, you played dead on em, and I had the rig there to get off. Purty slick game, but you died too soon. You ought to have waited until I got in one on you.” —————————— -~“No. I never carry my wateh when “I am so Why a person could steal anything right from under my nose and I wouldn’t miss it.” Then the young man stole & kiss right from under her nose and she didn’t seem to miss it.—QChicago Tri- bune. I was a sufferer from eatarrh for fifteen years, with distressing pain over my eyes. I used KEly's Cream Balm with gratifying results. Am apparently cured: —Z, C. Warren Rutland, Vt. How to Control Him. How to control man is a nice but nt a difficult problem. The average man, and it is folly to waste time on one be- low the average intelligence and cuiture, is mentally and moraily amenable to improvement. He is a well meaning, pig-headed, thoughtless creature, but he 13 fearless, loyal and responsive to good influence. Civilization has made man a warring animal, aggressive and domineering: ~ Ii was once a measure- ment of physical strength between man and man, now is a measurement of brain against brain. Men, since time began, have heard themselves and that for which they stood,. reviled and abused. Men are used to opposition. Antag- onism spurs them on, rouses the fight. Antagonism only hastens the evil it would avert. Men arc unused to kind. ness. Admiration tickles them and praise bewilders them. The man who goes to battle mighty in the armor of his wrath is laid low when his enemy { burns incense instead of powder. The | foundation of matrimonial comfort must be laid at the very beginning. Nowhere is delay so dangerous. Solo- mon, to whom we are all indebted, nev- er said a wiser thing than *‘whoso ruleth Lis spirit is greater than he who taketh a city.” Consequently a quick and ex- acting or a jealous, selfish or silly wo- man must lose the day and put up with an irritable and indifferent husband. Praise at the right time and for the right thing is the secret power over a man. This praise, however, must not be thrown out indiscriminately or in solid chunks. It must be opportune and delicately minced and seasoned. One does not fish for crabs with a quar- ter of beef. Just as much asa crab can grasp at one time is the rule. A woman must not only hold between herself and her lord the velvet shield of silence and patience, but she must en- circle his neck with a silken lasso of diplomatic speech. Being unused to all flattery and praise, he is necessarily susceptible. Don’t flatter a man on his personal appearance. The moment you make him conscious of good looks you have developed the poser or the masher. Assure him tenderly, however, that, though not an Apollo, his appearance suits you. Pointout to him the weak- ness of other men, and tell him how grateful you are for his freedom from such faults. Hold up before him your ideal as reflected in himself. It will stir his plastic soul with gratitude and develope in him a mad desire to be what you have painted him. When he occasionally droops, gets cross, refuses a reasonable request, or comes home late, don’t rail or weep because you have suffered. Simply look the patient mar- tyr, betray no feeling save disappoint- ment in this sign of his weaknees. He will consume with regret and scramble back to the place on the pedestal, rre— A New Indu stry. The firm of C. Y. Mayo & Sons, of this county, have shipped to a party in Pensacola, Fla., this week, a sample carload of sweetgum 1des, or satin wal- nut, as it is known commercially. This timber has been on the market for a number of years, being shipped to Europe from New York, New Orleans and other points, but up to the present time none has beea shipped from this section of Alabama. Mr. Mayo, who has given the subject considerable study, says that the sweet- gum timber to be found in this section is of excelient quality and size, and he be- lieves there is good money in it for some one. He will make a thorough experi- ment with it any rate. It will com- mand a price of twenty-five cents per cubic foot and will not be required to stand a high aversge in size. Further devolopments in this line will be duly reported. CT —.——— American Tea. Mr. Gill, an expert on tea, shows from careful calculations made in China, India and Ceylon that teas are produced and made ready for use at an average cost of from 4} to 5} cents per pound. China, he tells us, which formerly en- joyed a monopoly of the trade, now pro- duces less than half the tea used in Eu- rope and America, and he maintains with great show of reason, that the tea may be grown in large areas of the Southern States as successfully and pro- fitably as any where else in the world. A rich, sandy loam of good depth and drainage, and a moist climate, are the two essential requisites, and the tree or bush will stand a considerable degree of cold. . : Two OLD GuUNs. — Mr. William Moulten, of this town, has in his posses- sion two old guns which are remarkable in their way. One was carried by his great grandfather, Timowny Kingsley, in the campaign against Burgoyne’s in- vasion, and he was present with it on the memorable 17th of October, 1777, when the young English adventurer laid down his arms. Mr. Kingsley used to say that ‘it was the grandest sight he ever saw.” Mr. Moulton also has a gun carried in the French and In- dian war by Captain Durkee, of Ash- ford, which was afterward carried in the Revolution by his great Uncle, Captain William Moulton. Both of these arms are substantially in the same condition as they were when they were in active service. RevorLurioNArRy Winows.—Twen- ty-three Rovolutionary widows are on the pension rolls of our government, though we are in the second century since the close of the war. They must have been youthful bride of veterans, like the Scotch lass of seventeen who married John Knox when he was in his sixtieth year. ——“Where are you going my pretty maid ?” “I'm going a shopping, said. “And what are you buying my pretty maid 27’ “Nothing. =~ I'm shopping ; all,” she said.-— Washington Post. sir,?? ‘she that’s ——The hourly rate of water ever the Niagara Falls is 100,000,000 tons, representing 16.000,000 horse power ; in the total daily production of coal in the world would just about suffice to pump this water back. -n &