x Bellefonte, Pa., May 4, 1894, “S— THE BEST THING IN LIFE. The best thing in life ? it’s ‘the bloom on the peach, 2 It was here just this moment, and now it is one. It's tho thing we strive most for, yet never can reach ; It’s the beauty that heralds the coming of mora. It's the bubble that breaks. The dart shet from the quiver. It's the dream that Love cheats his blind votaries with. 1's the glow on the ‘hilltop; the mist on the river; The dew on the flower; it’s the perfume we breathe. We can never attain it; it eludes us forever, We stretch forth eager hands; it is gone from our sight. All life is a struggle of useless endeavor Wien Death drops the curtain and puts out the light. . —IMargarel Ravenhill BACHELOR GIRLS BOTH OF THEM. “Would you mind passing the sugar, Aunt Jane?’ I said—I was taking early tea with my Aunt Jane Lamber- ton. Aunt.Jane hastened to push me the article in demand in her usual prim manner, and as I looked at her the funniest notion seized me. I laugh- ed aloud frivolously, and I said what I never should havesaid in a sobermom- ent: “Aren’t we two typical old maids, Aunt Jane, taking our dish of tea to- gether, you know ? You with your cat, I with my dog !” I saw at once that the inspiration didn’t take with Aunt Jane at all. She made astraight, hard line of her lips (a bad sign,) and buttered a crust with much precision. ‘You have an unfortunate way of expressing yourself at times, Eliza- beth,” she said disapprovingly. [wish te goodness I could break Aunt Jane of calling me Ehzabeth, and the way she does it, too, as if I were all capitals or italics! She does it be- cause everyone else calls me Betty, and that is Aunt Jane's way in everything. I really believe if Aunt Jane knew, or believed, rather, that anyone was so downright foolish as to call me dar- ling she would faint dead away—that is, if fainting were not such a dreadful weak and foolish thing to do. Byron, or whoever it was, must have had Aunt Jane in his mind whea he said “woman is a miracle of contra- dictions,” because Aunt Jane can be as nice as possible when she wants to. I believe it is unwritten law that I'm to be her heir. Really, I’m quite fond of Aunt Jane yet Aunt Jane looked so severe after that unlucky speech of mine that I was frightened and made an effort to brighten things up more. “Oh, well, not old maids, you know, aunt, They have a nicer name for it now. Say we're two Bachelor Girls. Sit up, Dick I”” and I bent down to hide my too smiling countenance in the effort to balance a lump of sugar on the nose of my beautiful fox ter- rier. “No need to say anything at all about it, as far as I can see.” said Aunt Jane tartly, making a dreadful, hysterical rattle with the spoons. “If Iam single its purely from choice (it always is with Bachelor Girls like Aunt Jane). Whether it is with yon or not, of course I can’t say, but I sup pose that to be twenty-four and not yet married and some man’s slave, nowa- days implies that vou are to be-an old —er a Bachelor Girl, Elizabeth.” I stirred my tea reflectively. Aunt Jane likes to see young people ser- ious. “Well, and after all, aunt,” I pre- sently said, ‘‘aren’t we much happier as we are ?”’ Aunt Jane was charmed with the depth of this reasoning. “Why, really, Elizabeth,” she said pleasantly, “really I do believe you are getting to be very sensible. You are growiag so like you dear mother when she was a girl. Sometimes when you come upon me suddenly, or hold your head so, I declare, child, I could be almost certain that it was your poor mother before she married your father. Only your mother was a beautiful woman. Elizabeth, You are not.” Now that’s so characteristic of Aunt Jane. She raises you up to the seventh heaven only to dash you down to goodness knows where. If you were the Venus of Milo Aunt Jane would rather die than you koow it. Of course, I know I'm not Venus of any kind, but then I know I can’t be so very bad-looking, because I al- ways have plenty of attention, if I do say it myself ; and if I wait for Aunt Jane to say it will never be told. Ifit’s a disgrace to be single.” went on my aunt, fixing me with her eyes, “then I'm afraid 1'm disgraced forever, and by my own fault. I had scores ot admirers when I was your age, Eliza- beth, and that was not so long ago.” (Thirty years or more is a trifling bit of coquetry on the part of time to Aunt Jane evidently.) “I’m sure you had, aunt,” I hasten to reply dutifully (and untruthfully,) “and perbaps if you had married some of them—-"" “I could only have married one of them. Elizabeth !"” interrupted my _.. aunt in the tone of a stern moralist. “True, aunt, fortunately for your- self,’ I said pleasantly. “Would you mind giving me the wafers, aunt? Thanks. Taking them altogether, aunt, men are not to be relied upon.” “I doo’t know much about them now, but in my time young men were entirely different” declared Aunt Jane making, a ferocious dab at the water- cress as though it were the young man of her epecial aversion. “For one thing, their mothers were not abject slaves to them, and the girls didn’t spend all their time running after them.” “Gracious goodness, Aunt Jave ?’ I axclaimed indignantly, “the girls don’t run after them now.” : “Oh, don’t tell me, Elizabeth,” and Aunt Jane toseed her head scornfully. (Aunt Jane’s head make me frantic, it’s 80 aggravatingly neat aud ladylike.) “Don’t tell me Elizabeth,” said Aunt Jane, “haven’t I eyes, haven't I ears? Why, only at the Snowden’s tea last week—By the way, why weren't you there, Elizabeth ? I thought you and Margaret Snowden were such triends.” I pulled poor Dick’s ears until he howled, but I wase’t going to tell Aunt Jane that the reason I didn’t go to the Snowdens was because I had quarreled with John Chandler and knew he would be there. It is simply impossi- ble to get Aunt Jane to understand a love affair. She gets things so awfully mixed. If she had been more sympathetic perhaps I might have teld her about— well, never miad. “Well, there was your Margaret,’ began Aunt Jane again, seeing that I didn’t answer. “There was your Mar- garet, looking rather nice and rather flirtatious ; and there was that yeung ‘Chandler posing as lackadaisically as you please. I declare, young men who once get a notion they're good looking are simply unendurable. Be careful, Elizabeth1 Remember, this is my best china, and it doesn’t improve a cup to be treated like a cannon ball I’ (Cannon ball! Such exaggeration !) “As was saying. I don’t see what in the world she sees in the fellow. I can’t see what she sees in him, or he in her.” “Butdo they, Aunt ?” “‘Do they aunt,” mimicked my aunt in a way that would ruffle the temper of an angel. “Now, what do you mean by that silly speech, Eliza- beth 27 “Well, I knew what I meant, but I .couldu’t explain to Aunt Jane. I only said instead: ‘“‘Aunt Jane, I think the! nicest way for you and me to spend! our old age is to travel until we die, don’t you 2”? ! “Until we die!” almost shrieked Aunt Jane, and her two front curls went bobbing around in the most ner- vous senseless fashion. Aunt Jane has a perfect horror of death, which is the | one convincing proof to me that Aunt Jane has never been seriously in love. | I only know that if when she was a girl, John Chandler—but, what is the | use of raking up old quarrels? I hope we have had the last. But how I’m ever going to break the news of our final engagement to AuntJane without being disinherited 1t more than I know. She hates men so, and especially John because John adores me. Yet, if’ Aunt Jane could but attempt to realize | how I hate that odious old Mr. Diiling. : He thinks “Elizabeth” (he copies that | from Aunt Jane) “is so interesting,’ and I know he’s only hunting after: Aunt.Jare’s money. At any rate Aunt Jane went on to say : “In the first place, how could we travel without a man, Elizabeth ?”’ and she frowned that question at me over the teapot. ‘Is that all aunt? Would you want a man when you hate and despise them al] so 2” My aunt gave a little cough, “Oh, well not exactly a man, child® “There’s Mr. Dilling, for instance.” (I knew that was, coming.) But goodness, isn’t hea man, aunt?’ I asked in some surprise. It was sach fun to have Aunt Jane on the mental rack if ouly for a minute. And my aunt said: “Who. yes, yes, certainly, to be sure,” and got herself into a nice state of con: fusion. ‘But then, you know, he’s a widower, Elizabeth, and they’re always different. Mr. Dilling is such a nice man ; quite one in a thousand, my dear, He—" “Oh, Aunt Jane I” I laughed rashly, “I do believe you are falling in love I | “Elizabeth Lamberton I” cried my aunt, and poor Dick and I were nearly startled into a fit. I don't dare to imagine what would have happered next if some kind fate hadn’t sent Maggy Mara 1n, salver in hand. “Well Priscilla,” demanded Aunt Jane so sharply that the girl fairly jumped, There's Aunt Jane again, for you. She won’t bave Maggy called anything but Priscilla just be- cause her present fad happens to be the Mayflower. (I rather think Mr. Dill ing or somebody belonging to him came over init.) If I were Maggy, I would charge two dollars instead of fifty cents extra per week for the priv- ilege of having my name, changed, but being only Elizabeth, I just grin- and bear it. It's so perfectly idiotic. Maggy was so frightened at first she didn’t attempt to answer. “Well, Priscilla,” said Aunt Jane again, “A letter, please, 'm, for Miss Betty, which was lift be a missinger bye.” Aunt Jane scrutinized me over her glasses, while I trifled with my cake and held on tightly to the edge of the table. : “Why, how did anyone happen to know you were spending this particular afternoon with me, Elizabeth ?” “I'm sure I don’t know, aunt. I don’t think I mentioned it to him—to —that is—to anyone.” It vexed me so to feel my face flaming up. Aunt Jane can make one feel so like a con- viet. “Mentioned it to—to—'' she began in high displeasure, and I felt that my hour had come. Aunt Jane glanced quickly at Maggy Mara. “You can go, Priscilla.” ‘Oh, av you plaze, 'm,” . said the buxom handmaid, sidling up a trifle nearer and getting almost as red as miserable me. “av you please, 'm, would yez be mindin' av 1 had wan av me gintlemin frins intil the kitchen this evenin’. Cook’s going out an’ it do be lonesome.” “Another man, to night, Priscilla |” cried Aunt Jane turning around to face the culprit squarely, and I couldn't help feeling glad that Maggy seemed almost as reprehensible as I did—to Aunt Jane at least. I almost expect- ed her to fall down on her knees (Maggy, that is,) but her staunch Irish lood came to the rescue and made her brave, impertinently. “Yez do be talkin’ a] if I kept company iviry noight av me loife, ma'am. Shure, au’ it was away last Saturday noight yez said I cu’d have Michael Granigan in to sit wid me, ma'am, but the scamp he up an’ past the house loike a streak, an’ in he wint to Delia Maloney, an’ yez can’t tell me she hadnt her bould face shtuck out at the soide gate a lurin’ av him in till her. Well, she can have him, thin, av that's her (aste,”’ and Maggy drew herselr up breathless, but defiant. 1 “And pray, who is it you expect this evening, Priscilla,” said my aunt uon- invitingly. “Shure, av’ it's Jim Doyle, 'm, as foine a fella as yez'd want to see, an’ I met him in the Park last Sunday was a fortnight.” “Met him in the Park, Priscilla |” screamed Aunt Jane, in italics and capitals, and I am glad to say Maggy didn’t even flinch. “Deed, thin, an’ I did, 'm,” she de- clared. ‘“Me’n’ Joolia O'Donnell was standin’ on Girard avenue bridge, a-lookin’ at the hoats, an’ up he comes, as jaunty as ye plaze, an’ tips his hat that polite and eez, sez he, ‘Oxcuse me ladies,’ sez he.” “Stop, stop it at ounce, girl,” com- manded her mistress. ‘I will listen to no more. To speak to a man in broad daylight ! It is outrageous—positive- ly outrageous.” “Qutrageous,” began Maggy, but the enormity of the accusation suddenly overwhelming her, she disappeared behind her apron and emitted a heart- rending sob. “Oh, never mind, Maggy,” I manag- ed to say soothing. “Aunt Jane didn’t mean it.” For this overture [ was rewarded with an unexpected glare from Aunt Jane. “Arrah, Miss Betty, she did an’ she did,” gasped the afflicted one. “To | think av me own mother’s daughter called outrageous for spakin’ to a da- cent bye—" “There, there, go along with you, do. Have the man it you want him,” said Aunt Jane sternly, but don’t blame me when it's too late. You'll be sorry when you're in your grave,” she added in sepulchral tones, and then whisked her chair around to me, while poor Maggy went sniflingout. If I could only have gone with her! ‘Oh, to be a candle, or a lamp. or a tramp, or something that somebody could put out. But no, I was doomed, “And now, Elizabeth,” began Aunt Jane, with her most inquisitorial air, “who, if I tay ask, who is the young man so favored as to be made aware of your every movement? Another for- tune-hunter, I suppose.” (A penalty ot being Aunt Jane's prospective heir is that every man under 99 is a for- tune-hunter—all except Mr. Dilling of ancient pedigree.) If Aunt Jane bad only turned her head away instead of eyeing me in that uncomfortable man- ner, I might have been able to answer but as it was the words refused to come. I was crimson and speech- less. “A pretty thing.” aunt (oh! what a wife Aunt Jane would have made for Solomon!) “A pretty thing to intorm a young man of your every movement, as though he cares two straws |” Now however did Aunt Jane guess. I could stand it no longer. “But he does care.” I burst out, “and it’s not true when you say he doesn’t I” “Hoity, toity,” said Aunt Jane ag- gravatiugly, “and has he then assured you of the interesting fact.” “Ob, Aunt Jane,” I went on excited- ly, and, indeed, I scarcely knew what I was saying. “You've no idea how good heis. He's not like other men. He never tries to squeeze your hand, and he never tries to kiss you ; and at the same time he is so devoted, so deferen- tial, so—so—"' A look of horror had apparently frozen Aunt Jane's countenance. “Elizabeth Lamberton,” she gasped, are you mad or crazy ? Squeeze my band! Try to kiss me, indeed! I should like to see the man—" “Oh, he wouldn’t aunt, he wouldn’t,” 1 hastened to say in perfect good faith ; and then, being utterly wretched, I got out my handkerchief. Aunt Jane can’t bear to see me cry. There was quite a silence, broken only by an effective sound of woe on my part every now and then. : Presently Aunt Jane spoke in a kinder voice. “Who is this from, Elizabeth 2’ The letter! Dear me. I had al- most forgotten all about it. “It’s from John Chandler, aunt—I think.” “Think ! I presume you know more than you think about it,” said Aunt Jane witheringly. ‘Suppose you open it and see what that young man has to say for himself.” Thus encouraged, and with a profound sigh. I obeyed at once with trembling, icy-cold fingers, and tried to read a love letter—at least, it wae a very nice note from John asking me if he might call again in the evening, silly goose—with Aunt Jane's eyes piercing my soul like two unfeeling gimlets, skewering me, in fact, from across the table. I don’t be- lieve Aunt Jane was ever in love—at least, I don’t believe anybody was ever in love with Aunt Jane, I don’t care what she says. “Well?” she said saddenly. And being startled I stuck a corner of the paper in poor Dick's eye, so that the tears came to him too ; and then I got bot and cold. “It is from John Chandler, aunt, and he's very well—" “Very well, is he,” said my aunt tartly, that’s a blessing to be sure.” The tears sprang to my eyes again, and I arose with a show of dignity. I could never tell her about our engage- ment, at least, not yet. “I must be going, Aunt Jane. It's almost 6 o'clock.” “Well, if you must, you must. I won't have it said that I kept you out until ungodly “To-night, is it,” she repeated a bit got, coatinued my | at the Hanlons’ reception to-morrow. And what have you got to wear to the Dudley’s next week ?” “My blue, aunt,” I said dispiritedly. As though I were thinking of the Dud- leys! “Well, that's beginning to look the worse for wear,” said my remarkable relative. ‘Go to Moore and get her to make you something respectable. You can send me the bill. When you're young and pretty—more or less—you might as well dress nicely,” said Aunt Jane, quite benignly by this time. AuotJane Lamberton is a gigantic monument of moods and tenses. “There, child,” she finally said as she gave me a pecky kiss, “you mustn't mind if I was a bit put out. The men have spoiled my temper. Come to din- ner Sunday. I expect Mr. Dilling and I want you to know each other very well,’’ ebe said at the door. “All right! I'll let you know, aunt,” I said without enthusiasm, as I picked Dick up. “Good-bye!” But I'm not going, unless John Chandler goes with me. I'll let him tell Aunt Jane. Besides, I have a great notion that Aunt Jane has some- thing to tel me, and I don’t want to hear it. I simply despise that odious old man, and so does John. Imagine wooing Aunt Jane! John says it's simply ridiculous.— Agnes Marie Mulholland. The ‘Wonders of Brazil. Its Magnificent Distances and Marvelous Water ways.—The World's Greatest River.— Facts About the Father of Waters. Although any school-boy can tell you that Brazil is as large as the whole of Europe, or about the size of the United States, exclusive of Alaska, few people have a ‘realizing sense’’ of its enor- mous extent, Even its picture on the map, which covers nearly half of South America, and the figures in the geogra- phy, which give in a total area of al- most four million miles, fail to convey to the average mind an idea of its real roagnitude. Let us get at it in another way : Suppose you were going from Newport News to Santos, the southern- most port at which the United States and Brazil Mail Steamship calls—a dis- tance ot 5377 miles,requiring four weeks to make the journey with the most favor- able winds and waves. After two weeks’ steady sailing, when you arrive at Para —Brazil’s northernmost port of conse- quence, at the mouth of the Amazon River, 2902 miles below Newport News —you are amazed to find that you have come only alittle more than half way to Santos ; that the distance between Para and that port, both in the same coun- try, is nearly the same as that you have traversed in coming all the way down the cost of the United States, Mexico, the Central American Republics, Ven- zuela, and the three Guianas, past Bar- badoes, the West Indies, the Mexican Gulfand the Caribbean Sea. And yet Santos is a long way above the southern boundary of this vast country, whose Atlantic shore-line measures 3700 miles, therg being several important Brazilian ports below it at which our steamers do not call—notably Paranagna, Desterro, Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre and Pelotas. A LONG WAY BETWEEN PORTS. The half dozen seaports, which rep- resent about all the cities of conse- quence in Brazil, are distant from one another as follows : From Para to Mar- anhao, 364 miles ; from Maranhao to Pernambuco, 792 miles ; from Pernam- buco to Bahia, 389 miles ; from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro, 735 miles ; from Rio to Santos, 200 miles , from Santos to Pelotas, 250 miles. It is not surprising that the insurgents, who are by no means conquered, though temporarily driven from Rio de Janeiro, can tran- quilly maintain their ‘Provisional Gov- ernment’’ at distant Desterro in spite of the President and his army, and that the people of the remote northern prov- inces are still living in peaceful ad- herence to the traditions of the by-gone empire, regardless of Republican hap- penings at the Federal capital. BRAZIL'S GREAT RIVERS. Note the river system of Brazil, which is unequaled in the world for the num- ber and magnitude of the streams that present a net-work of water-ways as complex as the veins in the human body, with the Amazon and its large tributaries standing in the relation of main arteries, The Amazon, the larg- est river in the world (though not the longest), runs a direct course through Brazil of 800 miles, from its source, about sixty miles from the Pacific, to the Atlantic Ocean. The great river,San Francisco, which runs from north to east, a thousand miles across Brazil, is navigable for hundreds of miles before pouring its floods over the wonderful falls of Paulo Alonso, and again from the sea to the falls by largest vessels ; the Rio Negro with five hundred miles not regularly plied by steamers, and nobody knows what extent of navigable waters above; the mighty Maderia ; the Solimoes, on which steamers now run 1350 miles ; the Branco, Xingu, Tapajas, Araguay, Tacantins, Doce, Mananhao, Paranahiba, Vizaharris, Paraguassu, Jequtinhonha, Parahibal- do-Sul, Uruguay, Iguacu, Paranapane- me, Tieta, Para and many more that are larger then the Ohio or Colorodo river in the United States, with thou- sands upon thousands of miles of navi- gable waters. THE RIPARIAN SUB DIVISION. The river-system of Brazil naturally resolves itself into three sub-divisions : That of the Amazon, or northern ; the San Francisco, or eastern; and the Parana, or southern, There are many rivers as large as the Yellowstone or the Susquehanna that empty into the Atlantic between the mouths of the mighty rivers which give their names to the three sub-divisions of the general system ; but by far the larger part of the waters drained from the three great water sheds of Brazil find their way to the ocean through the channels of the three above named. Another remark- able feature of this complex river-system is the commingling of the sources of the affluents to the three sub-divisions, A I EST ATE WY SCR TCO SSAA 00 the incalculable extent of these water- ways and their interconnections and yet barely begun to be developed. THE GREAT PARANA. Take the Parana, the main stream of the Southern sub-division, which re- ents from the Brazilian State of Minas- Geraes, where they rise among the sources of the San Francisco. Its waters are navigable by large steamers away up to the falls of Guayra, on the western border of the State of Parana, and above these by smaller ones for about 800 miles. This river receives the waters of the Paraguay, whose sources are in the centre of the State of Matto Gresso, near those of the Rio Tapajos, a mighty affluent of the Amazon. Lower down, the Paraguay is navigable by steamers from Montevideo for over 2000 miles; and this 1s the route taken by troops and passengers from Rio de Jan- erio to Cuyaba, capital of the important State of Matto Grosso, which is situated on one of the affluents of the Paraguay. THE FATHER OF WATERS. And what shall we say of the Ama- zon—the true “Father of Waters’’—the most wonderful river in the world ? The statement of a few plain facts is suffi- cient to give free rein to the imagina- tion, and on this subject imagination cannot carry one beyond the. truth. With its tangled network of tributaries and channels,creek and ignaripes, which penetrate every country of South Ameri- ca except Chile and Patagonia, and has been likened by some travelers to a vast archipel ago, by others dubbed the © Med- diterranean of the Western Hemis- phere,” and described by Joaquin Miller as “Dark and dreadful ; wide, like an ocean—much like a river, but more like a sea.” With its affluents it furnishes fully 50,000 miles of navigable water, more than half of which is available for steamers. Its eight principal tributaries are each over a oy miles long, and upward of 350 other branches unite to form its main stream. ON A COLOSSAL SCALE. The largest ship that ever was built could sail from the ocean into its mouth and straight up the river for 1500 miles ; while for many hundreds of miles along its lower course are innumerable lateral canals, called igaripes (literally canoe paths), which boats may travel without ever entering the main stream—like the bayous of the lower Mississippi du- plicated on a collossal scale. The Ama- zon basin is more than three times as large as that of the Mississippi, includ- ing a vast untrodden forest, fitteen hun- dred miles long by a thousand miles broad, whose edges only have been ex- plored by a few adventurous rubber- hunters and seekers after valuable woods. The river at its mouth is 180 miles from shore to shore, and ;320 feet deep ; at Sentaren, the most important interior city of Brazil, it is ten miles wide, and away off on the Brazilian frontier, 2300 miles above its mouth, it i 18 still 70 feet deep and a mile across. i Thirty million cubic feet of water flow j out of the Amazon in every sixty sec- { onds. Itsordinary current is four miles i an hour, and its tide is perceptible five i hundred miles from tne shore. FALL FLOODS, Most of the tributaries being subject to a constant succession of freshets, the main stream never runs low ; and as most of the affluents are in the southern hemisphere, the river has its greatest flood when the sun is south of the equa- tor. Its gradual rise begins in Septem- ber, increasing about a foot in twenty- four hours. The difference between its highest and lowest levels is seventy feet, and at flood-time enormous acres are covered with water, vast forests being submerged, so that the tops of tall trees, sticking up out of the water, look like bushes floating on an inland sea. The greatest danger of Amazonian navigation is encountered at this time of year, when it is impossible to keep in the regular channels, by missing the course and getting lost in the unknown forests. STEAMERS OF THE AMAZON. Though the world’s greatest river was discovered more than three cen- turies and a half ago, it is only about 40 years since steam navigation began on the Amazon, and barely 25 years since Brazil declared the river opened to the ships of all nations. Yet, now-a-days steamers regularly make the following “magnificent distances :” From Para to Manaos, straight up the Amuzon 1100 miles ; Manaos to Iquitos, by river Solimoes, 1850 miles; Manaos to Santa Isabel, by the Rio Negro, 470 miles ; from Manaos to Hyutanshan, by the Rio Purus, 1080 miles ; Manaos to Sao Antonis, by the Madeira river, 470 miles ; Para to Bayao, by the Rio Tocantins, 156 miles ; Leopoldina to Santa Maria, 5¥0 miles ; making a total of 5,196 miles of stream navigation on the Amazon and its southern sffluents alone, without referring to the naviga- tion of the branches of the above named rivers, which would increase the amount of some 38000 miles, nor to the other great rivers of Brazil. There are 53 cities in Brazil which have a popula- tion of 5000 and upwards; 81 which have a population of over 10,000 ; 14 of over 20,000; 7 of over 40,000; Para has about 60,000; Sao Paulo, 70,000 ; Permembuco, 150,000 ; Bahia, 180,000 and Riode Janeiro, 407,000. BRAZILIAN RAILWAYS. When the Empire came toits sudden end in 1890 there were 72 railroad lines in Brazil, with an aggregate capital of $4,000,000 and about 9000 miles in operation and under construction. Of course nothing has been done sinca that day toward railroad building or any other improvements, the people being too busy first in celebrating the prema- ture birth of the Republic and after. wards in fighting for or against it. The central and most important trunk rail- way of Brazil, and one of the earliest constructed —that formerly named by the Don Pedro Segundo. but now call- ed the Nutional Railway--starts trom the city of Rio de Janeiro, across the Serra do Mar through numerous tun- nels and cuts, and divides into two main branches, one traversing Minas- Geraes, and the other entering Sao Paulo, where it connects with a line which will admit passage from the other by boats, by cutting short channels, in | many cases without the necessity of | from the capital of the latter. State. Railway construction has found its most rapid development in the State of hours.” declared my | locks between the head-waters. Mere | Sao Paulo, and there the traffic has aunt rising also. “Isuppose you'll be ' words can convey but a faint idea of proved most profitable to the lines. possibilities of navigation that have yet ' ceives the waters of its northern afflu- RAILWAY EARNINGS. The expenses of the National Railway which is owned and operated by the General Government, have nev- er been less than 50 per cent. of its earnings ; while the expenses of the railroad from Santos to Jundiaby, in Sao Paulo, which belongs to an Eng- lish company, average 87 per cent. The Paulesta railway, which 1s a pro- longation of the last named, and runs. through the heart of the Sao Paulo eof- fee district, from Jundiaby to Campin as, belongs to a syadicate of wealthy Brazilians and makes an annual reiurn of about 9 per cent,. on its capital of $11,000,000. Tue Mogyana railroad in the same State, which connects with the preceding and is designed to penetrate to the interior, has about 350 miles al- ready in operation. The Leopoldina Railway, in the three States of Rio de Janeiro, Minas-Geraes, and Espirito Santo, has an extent of 800 miles of capital of $26,000,000, and a portion of the line has a guaranty of 7 per cent, from the State of Minas-Geraes. THE AMAZON VALLEY ROAD. The first and only steam railway in existence and operated in the great Amazon valley is the Bragance, and its history presents a rather discouraging financial showing, for the reason that it is yet nowhere near completed and the part constructed is being run at an ac- tual loss for the purpose of developing agricultural and other enterprises along its route, rather than to meet any pres- ent great demand for railway communi. cation by the territory now reached. Its final purpose 1s to reach Braganca on the seacoast, 202 kilometers east of Para, and there to join a projected rail~ way from Braganca to Maranhao—the two roads at some future day to form the part of a continuaus coast line from Para to Rio de Janerio. Braganca has no harbor of account, but bounds in agricultural products. About 75 kilo- meters of the railway are now in opera- tion, after a fashion. That is, four trains leave Para at 4 oclock on the afternoon of Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday ; each returning the following morning. Be- sides these an excursion train leaves Para at 6.30 a. m. on Sunday, and three freight trains during the week leave Para on the mornings'of Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday. The freight con- gists mainly of building stone, sand lum- ber, timber and firewood. The regular trains are composed of one first-class passenger car, and one car for baggage and express matter. PHILADELPHIA-BUILT LOCOMOTIVES. Passenger cars from the United States have now almost displaced the old-fash- ioned English compartment-cars on the Brazilian railroads, and our American locomotives are preferred to all others, as they are the only ones adapted to the sharp grades and curves that character- ize the railways in the mountainous dis- tricts. On the steep grades of the Leo- poldina railway the Baldwin’ locomo- tive, of a peculiar construction, has re- cently taken the place of the English “Fell ;”” and the same company has far~ nished some powerful locomotives of the cog-wheel sort to the Gram-Para rail- road, for the fifteen per cent. inclines. where the ‘“Riggenbach’’ machines were formerly used.— Fannie B. Ward. Asparagus Culture. A gardener in the Philadelphia Farm. Journal gays : I set my asparagus plants shallow be cause I wanted early “grass.” For this reason I have to cultivate shallow over the rows to avoid injuring the crowns. A neighbor's patch was nearly ruined by a careless helper who ran the culti- vator® with the common hooked teeth a little too deep. I stir the soil as early as possible and broadcast two or three pounds of nitrate of soda per square rod of five pounds of a good complete ferti- lizer. Ido not mean to say in the above that the nitrate of soda is equiva- lent to the complete fertilizer, but I use bone dust and muriate of potash freely on the farm and in the garden, and where these are so used nitrogen is about the only fertilizer required in the early spring by such a crop as asparagus. ——— ‘Why There are No Color ed Coxeys. VELAsco, Tex.,—The following con- versation between a young negro and an old one was overheard yesterday : “Look yer, Ung Jackson, I don’t hear um r2ad nuthin’ ’bout no culled genermen in Coxey’s army. Dat sorter prise me.” “Yas,” replied the elder with great dignity, “an’ I’se sprised at yo’ ignunce, too! You specter see er nigger in are’ gang whar vittles is scarce? He ain’ gwine be dar ’cep’n’ he bin tied han’ an’ foot an’ sumbody stanin’ ober ’im wid er shotgun.” Another Knockout. WasHINGTON, April 28. — Judge Bradley to-day overruled the motion of counsel for Representative W. C. P. Breckinridge for a new trial of the cele- brated Breckinridge-Pollard breach of promise suit. . Bond was fixed at $100 for an appeal which Breckinridge’s counsel gave notice would be taken te the Court of Appeals of the District of of Columbia. Matched. “Do you wear eye-glasses because you think vou look better with them ?"’ asked Miss Pert. “I wear them because I know I look better with them,” answered the short- sighted man sadly. ——Banks. “That real estate man who has an office across the street has just made a sale.” Rivers. “How do you know ?”’ “How do I know? Haven't you seen him smoking a cob pipe every day for the last six weeks ?” “I think I have.” “Well, can’t you see he’s smoking a cigar ?”’ TATE Advice, Let Coxey Drink Moxie To strengthen his nerves. And then we Can surely Get on to his curves. — Minneapolis Journal.