N—— Keep My Memory Green. My feet approach life's western slope, Above me bend the noonday skies; Beyond me spreads the realm of hope, Behind the land of memory lies. 1 know not what the years may bring Of dangers wild or joys serene, But turning to the east, I sing, “ Lord, keep my memory green.” Oh, land of winter and of bloom, Of singing bird and moaning pine, Thy golden light, thy tender gloom, Thy vales and mountains all are mine; Thy holy loves of other years With beck ning hands toward me lean, And whisper through their falling tears, “ Lord, keep my memory green,” I ——————— “ Perhaps.” Inwoodland ways nowstrangied with the mow The blue, sweet violets will soon be spring ing, The golden-headed aconites will blow, And in the meadows robins will be singing. And my heart answered me, Perhaps Or, if not then, when strawberries are red, And flag flowers stand among the blowing rushes, When roses bloom, and in the trees o'erhead There is a dreamy melody of thrushes, My teot again the mossy turi shall tread; And my heart answered me, * Perhaps!” Or, better still, I'll sail the windy sea, ing, And le "mid broken lights, and sea-drift tree, ringing — Yes, oceanwand, ¥when summer comes, I'll flee; And my heart answered me, * Perhaps! Qh, heart, I said, thine is the weariest way; Why wilt thou ever d senchant to-morrow . Time is so nigeanily with each to-day, Surely "ts well from future days to borrow Art thou afraid such draits will be to pay? And my heart answered me, * Perhaps!” Then "mid man's fretful dwellings, dim and low, _ Il dream of peace, eternal Sowers un- fading, And of that tideless sea whose happy flow Keeps not a note of sorrow or upbmiding, Some day I'll find that happy land, I know; And my heart answered, ‘‘ Thou shalt go! — Harper's Weekly. ADRIENNE'S STORY. I was never happy at Aunt Browne's, but there seemed no prospect that I should ever leave her. I had come out, 80 to speak, as far as any one so repressed could come out, but I might as well have staid in. I only sat in corners, talked with the chaperons, or listened to some garrulous octogenarian Aunt Browne's interest in me, such as it was, died a natural death after my first sea- son—it had always been weakly—and the resuit was a sad deficiency in my wardrobe. She had married off two daughters without difficulty, but a niece, it seemed, stuck closer than a burr. However, it was not my fault that I remained unmarried. I had done my best to be fascinating. Though 1 hated the idea of marrying for home or position, yet I was sure I should not find it hard to love one who was kind to me, if only on account of the novelty. 1 was thirty now, and not unused to hearing the cha rung upon the maid, and the who shouldn’t be choosers, by my younger cousins, Susette and Anne. But I had had one opportunity to change for better or worse of which they had never dreamed. ‘The son of Aunt Browne's second hus. band, Cedric Browne, had asked me to marry him, three years before, as we rowed up the river in June for the rosy laurel biooms to orate the house and @ viazmas for Suse birthday fete. 1 sometimes wondered what Aunt Browne would have thought of the proceeding. as she had set her heart upon marrying Susette to Cedric. Perhaps 1 refused him because ] was taken unawares, be- cause I was not enough interested to care about frustrating Aunt Browne's plans; perhaps I did not expect to be taken at my word, but imagined it the proper way to decline, in order to be importuned. I believe all my favorite beroines had conducted in this wise. However, we rowed home through the sunset, our boat heaped with the pink flowers, in silence. * Yon look as if you were laden with sunset clouds,” sald Susette, who was watching for us on the shore: but [ am certain that ‘Cedric looked like a thun- der-cloud. The next day was the fete. Every. body brought presents for Susette. Cedric gave her an antique necklace of turquoises ; I wus sure hi» had meant it for me. We had supper out of doors, under the great pine-trees, and danci ng by moonlight. That day [ began to re. gard Cedric Browne attentively. [I had known him under the same roof tor weeks at 8 time; I had lsughed and talked with him, believing him fore- ordained to minister to Susette's hap- piness, “as inaccessible as a star in 2 1.3 IES id DeLTArs had helped me with Adele's children, who had come to live at Aunt Browne's should regard me with any tender emo- tions I had never even dared to wish. till to-day. I had never observed til] to-day that his eyes weie as tender as stars, that his face was like that radiant countenance of Mozart in the masie. room, that his smile was simply en. chantment. It was rather late to make these discoveries, He did not leave us at once: it seemed as if he staid just long enough for me to know all I had lost. Since then he had been with usonce again for a w hole spinal affection that kept him on his back, and me by his side: and though Cedric used to relieve me often by day and by night, I could see from my win. dow. and from occasional g;impses into t.edrawing-room, that the balance of pany. **Aunt Susette’s bean is going to make me a kite,” Teddy confide Walter one day. § Sonfided 0 beg Who's he? asked Walter from his “Why, Cedric, of Browne. Bridget says that put the matter The next day, when Cedric came up to amuse Walter with the affairs down stairs, that youth demanded : “I say, are you really Aunt Susette’s beau, Cedric? Adrienne’s ever 8o nicer. When ma man I'll marry Adrienne.” 0 hen Jou be luckier than 1,” said edrie, winding up a top, inning it on his palm, P Praud spinning Ji was a your since then. went out; wus fairl L88¢¢, Browne had abandoned ail hopes an was a good nurserymaid, a clieap £LOVErness, an inexpensive companion. in the family. In the meantime I eould have marricd any day, if T had chosen to accept the Rev. Abel Amherst, snd transfer my labors to the parsonage. To be sure, this wouldnot have proved the brilliant marriage my aunt had ex- pected of me, nor the romantic one I ind dreamed of myself, and it was not till I came into possession of a certain family secret that I began to revolve the possibility in my mind. It seems that when my aunt married her second busband, Mr. Browne—Susette and Anne were both Lowelis—they had sub- sisted upon the patrimony left to Cedric by his mother, and that after his father’s death, Cedric had turned in the same yearly income from the estate for the family use, and that 1, Adrienne Lennox, owed my daily bread to the msn whom I had refused, and who had forgotten me, Earning my own livelihood was ou of the question. drudgery was my only vocation, and that was too badly aid to be encouraging. I looked at the ev. Abel Amherst often at this period, with a view to installing him in Cedric’s place, if Cedric would only vacate. Oddly enough, Mr. Amherst renewed his suit at this time, and pressed it with the eagerness of a lover, and for the first time 1 began to hesitate. “The woman who hesitates is lost,” said Susette, 1 had been out on the hills one day trying to make up my mind to forget Cedric, and marry Mr. Amherst; but course—Cedrie 80 herse'f.” as if beyond dispute, I no longer VOLUME XIII. HKditor and HALL, CO., PA. APRIL $200 a Y ear. in Advance. NUMBER 16. ' Amberst all the rest of my days, some. negative photograph There is a letter for you, Adrienne, said Aunt Browne, when I entered the of the daco, under Mozart's picture.” 1 went into the music room, but there giris has re- But no one | ““ Perhaps one of the moved it,” she suggested. “Grandma cooked a letter over the said little Teddy, reflec. | tively. “Yes,” sald grandma, “1 wrote a letter to your pa, child. 1 hadn't any blotting paper, but the fire answers the purpose quite as well." At that time I had never heard of Well, we ran- | letter, | “Who was it from, sunt? I asked. “How should I know, child? ““ But the handwriting — the post. mark? “The postmark was blurred.” “Had it a foreign stamp?” I asked, with sudden eagerness. Cedric had | gone abroad some months before, and | nad not heard of his return. “A foreign stamp! No. expecting a foreign letter™ **N-0; but it is the unexpected that always happens, you know,” “It's awiully provoking,” said Su- | sette. *' Perhaps it was only the recipes Mrs. Clark was going to send you.” “Nothing more likely: but what has | become of it? A 4 Were you It's a prolonged game of | hunt the thimble.” * And supposing it's a letter notifying you of the existence of a first Mrs. Awm- | by your forty-fifth cousin in Austra- And then the door-bell rang. Well, after that 1 suppose I must have | accepted Mr. Amherst. Everybody be- haved as if I had. I received congratu- lations and a ring, and the parish begun repairs upon the parsonage, before I could muster courage to tell Mr. Am- | herst all about Cedric and my mistake, and how [ wasn’t at all sure { could ever get over it, and care for anybody else, | but that { would do my t And he smiled inia sort of absent way when | told him, but seemed content to take | me as I was, for better or worse; only it did strike me sometimes that he was the most undemonstrative lover in Christendom; but I hadn't much ex- st, weren't as gushing in real life as novels pictured. He used to kiss my hand when we parted; that was all. He was very gentle, but a little sad, I tancied, wi h a look which might mean that he was afraid of .0 much happiness, or that to marry the weman he loved wasn't all | fancy had painted it; and often I thought | I had perhaps done wrong to tell him everything about Cedric so unresery. edly; yet I had only meant to be honest. | But the day was appointed, and sud- | denly Cedric appeared among us, when | I thought he was at the world's end. and he and the girls decorated the little | church with white field daisies andl grasses for the occasion. You may be- teve that I avoided the sight of Cedrie in the interval before the wedding as | mygh as possible, but somehow I was | aiways stumbling upon him: he seemed | to be perpetually at my elbow; he sur- prised me more than once with traces | of tears upon my face; the sound of his voice made my heart turn and quiver | within me. If [ had dared to withdraw | at this juncture, I'm afraid I should have done so; but it was too late: and | though 1 felt like a hypocrite whenever | Mr. Amherst appeared, his looks of! sober satisfaction, which reminded me of those lines of Matthew Royden on | Sir Philip Sidney, : * A tull assurance given by looks, Continual comtiort in a face, The lineaments of gospel books,” might have taught me that all was well with him. “You are the oddest sweethearts I ever saw,” gossiped Susette. *‘] wouldn't give » straw for such a lover: and as for you. Adrienne, you resemble a ghost more than a bride.” | In short, a thousand years of purga- | during those last weeks before my wed- | ding. Well, to crown the whole, Aunt | Browne said Cedric must give me away: | Lie was the only male relative, the head | of the family, so to speak, and he could | do it so admirably. | + We shall see,” said he. “I'm afraid | I should make a poor figure at giving | {riste mustache as he spoke, and looked at me just as he looked that day when we gathered the laurel for Susette’s fote | ~1 could have sworn he did. I didn't answer, for fear my voice would be | The wedding was to be quite private relatives. Aunt rowne ar- the proorieties: it clergyman’s bride parade. dicn't become a! to make a great At the church, I remember, 1e carriage door, and Then he drew my haif-lifeless arm within his, and directly the wedding march pealed | forth in great resounding waves of | melody. My grandmother's India snus. | lin blew out in abundant creamy folds behind me, and Cedric and I were stand- | ing before the altar, and Mr. Amherst | was reading the marriage service! I believe that Aunt Browne fainted, | or she would have forbidden the banns. | * You see, it was impossible for me | to give you away, Adrienne,” said Ce- | dric, later, when we were steaming out of town. ““ Amherst is a trump; and may | he find a wife as sweet as Mrs. Browne! If it hadn't been for him, I should have been of all men the most miserable to- day. What do you think he did? Why, he wrote me all that sad little | story you thought right to tell him, | and added that he would not deny he | was making a sacrifice: that in renoun- cing you he renounced all that made life lovely to him, except his work; yet he felt it was better one should fail of a heaven on earth than two should suffer and that if I loved you, as I bad once said, would I take his place at the mar- riage, and allow him to solemnize it? It was a whim of his to have it so, ‘to avoid explanations,’ he said. I couldn't believe in my luck, you now, Adrienne. We bandied letters to and’ fro, canvass ing the subject. I feared he had made a mistake, as 1 had renewed my offer some little while before, but had re- ceived no reply; still a dozen things happen to letters every day.” “Yes, and something happened to yours,” I said. Wears after, when Susette and Anne were married, when Adele's husband had taken the children home to a new mamma, and Aunt Browne had gone to “the land of the hereafter,” when Cedric was repairing the old house for a sum- mer residence, in ripping away the an- cient dado in the musie-room, which had always warped away from the wall in warm weather, leaving a little crack, the carpenters unearthed my lost letter. Had it slipped down there, or had Aunt Browne given it a push? We give her the benefit of the doubt.— Harper's Bazar, The notion of putting a light inside the body, so as to see what is.going on there, and'to take remedial or preventive measures accordingly, is not entirely new, but it is very interesting. This is she aim substantially of the * poly- scope,” an invention which, it is as- terted, will render an examination of FOE THE FAIR SEX. cm— Fashion Notes. Walistooats are going out of fashion, The day of the white chip bonnet is aver, A new lace is painted teather eves Silk muslin bonnet much worn, Shoes for street wear show the sensi ble English heel. Ruby beads and vellow pearls are the atest novelties in beads. Friegses should be from twenty-four inches deep. [tis impossible to make a collarette in peacock crowns will be twenty to out any white lace or flowers. Yellow sunflowers and erimson pop- pies are favorite flowers this season. Eugenie net, much used in millinery, shows giit threads in diamond méshes, New cashmeres come in all fashion. effect, Sleeveless habit corsages of velvet or satin are wornover ball dresses of tuile Or gauze, Satins figure extensively among hand. some fabrics for costumes and bonnet garniture. Beaded and jet passementerie forms a fashionable garniture for costumes of silk and satin. Beaded passementeries are used for trimming silk and satin largely man. The prevailing faney for directoire has brought undraped toilets Some of the new artificial lowers are furnished with celluloid leaves which 1} ie Spring and summer mantles weighted with a profusion of are Roe, rib The new woolen mixtures are no heavier than the French buntings, and are covered with Alternating dashes of TWO Colors, Corduroy underskirts will continue to be worn under draperies of silk foulard, Yeddo crape, and light woolen dress goods. Nun's veiling is the name of an inex. pensive dress material which ranks higher than bunting and comes in all the new shades, ’ Dresses of India muslin made in Paris are decorated with suitana scarfs Oriental silk, embroidered with either gold or sijver. Lutestring ribbons have heen revived by Paris milliners. They are made with tape borders or feathered edges in oid timestyle, and are called tafletas, Dresses with plan corsages, plain tight sleeves, and plain skirts without flounces, tabliers, or overskirts, are worn by some very fashionable women. Scarfs of scarlet tulle, beaded with tiny pearl beads, are worn to advantage by those to whom scarlet is becoming, in place of the white illusion neck Hats with black velvet facings trim- colors is becoming alone. Square handkerchiefs of bright col- Momie cieth which has steadily in- in handsome woolen goods finished Three smal ostrich tips shaded from pearl to heliotrone, from cream to Isa- one color, form the “ Prince of Wales » plumes empioyed on Tuscan and chip hats. The latest novely in dress goods is with Bayadere stripes of bright shades and bisck. domestics are yel low these bayadere last summer, A Paris letter says that the airy lace, satin and ribbin muffs have prov d so pretty an addition to the toilette that they have establisted a position in the ballroom, where they are carried in the hand or sewn to the dress. They look in the plain Oriental silks, printed with designs in goid or silver. Foulards are much used, not only in They are beautifully finished and come in sprays, delicate blossoms and other foriated patterns, broche designs and dots on They furnish one of Novelties in lingerie are constantly e Among the newest are silk petticoats cut out on the border in squares. In each of these open places Some of are not more than six inches long and The newest and simplest fichus are very large, and are of Indian muslin embroidered on the edges, so that lace is not needed for trimming them, though the latter is sometimes added. most are graceful additions toilettes for the present season, and will be worn out of doors during ; the wide- orimmed garden hats. they complete most picturesque costumes. In London for dressy occasions hoods and muffs made of brocade, with strands of gold running through, are very fashionable, rate from the dresses or jackets and are ribbon about three inches wide, muffs have ribbon and lining to match, and are trimmed with black or coffee colored lace. also of the same material. Fans and Their Literature, remote antiquity, lection of fans among the Egyptian antiquities in the British museum. Terence, who lived in the second cen- tury, B. C., refers, in one of his Latin comedies, to the fan, as used by the ladies of ancient Rome. The illustrations of vases and other remains of the ciassic times of Greece and Rome represent the kind of fans which were in use in those days, while the early manuscripts are embellished with drawings of those of medieval Bu- rope. The great pictures of Titian and his contemporaries carry the history down to more modern times. The fan was first brought into Furo- pean notoriety by Catherine de Medicis, who introduced it into France. Great sums were spen, in ornamenting tans, and any were painted on by the skillful fingers of Watteau. In the palmy days of tha French court, when Louis XIV. and Marie Antoinette lived, there was a profligate extrava- gance in fans, which was extremely profitable to the manufacturers of them, ueen Elizabeth, of England when in full dress, carried a fan. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, fans were used by gentlemen. During the present century (1827), it was a blow given with a fan by the Dey of Algiers every part of the human body feasible. t0 the French consul, that led to the war ! which ended in makings French colony of that whole region. The out-door tan was large enough to screen the face from the sun, and in oid prints ladies are seen carrying their fans in different positions, just as fanoy pleased them In old times, the fan was used to ex- press, hy peculinr movements, love, disdain, anger and other emotions, Gay, Flavia, says “ In other hands, the tan would prove An engine of mall fores in love,” In the eighteenth century, the fan was held up to shield the face when any- thing too shocking for female enrs was uttered. Pope makes an allusion to the discontinuance of the fashion: “The modest fan was lifted up no more, And virgins smiled at what they hlushed be. fore." During the same century at balls held "in London and elsewhere, gentlemen se- lected their partners by drawing a fan from a number placed promisouously in a hat. For that reason, the fans of the indies were carefully studied, as each | one possessed an individuality. A tourist in Spain, as late as 1881, wrote the following about the use fans in church: “Though not under. standing the services, I could guess the nature of it at any particular time, by the way in whieh the tans were waving, The difference between a litany and a thanksgiving was unmistakable; the minuter shades of devotion were also discernible.” In I871, there was held, under the pat. ronage of Queen Victoria, at the South Kensington museum, a competitive exe» hibition of fans. Large numbers were placed on exhibition from Egypt, Tur. key, Mexico and the islands of the Pa- cific ocean, and included almost every private and publie collection of any pote. The queen eceived the highest premium ($2,000) ora fanwhich once belonged to Marie Antoinette, The manufacture of fans is exten- sively carried on in England, France and Belgium, Whole villages in Pi. cardy are employed in the various branches connected with the industry. The Chinese have greatly excelled in the art of fan-making, and in the species of lacquered fans their superiority is ad. mitted. Cheap fans are manufactured in Canton as low as two cents a dozen, Fans are also made, to » fair extent, in this country. The total value of the tans annually manufactured in the world is pinced in excess of $500,000 An Ancient Dance in Taseany. A Chicago Times corresponaent, writ- ing irom Tuscany in Italy. says: Dur. ing this visit 1 witnessed many inter. esting rustic games and cergmonies, notably a marriage, with its escort of maidens with their lamps, and a dance celebrating that charming custom among ancient Italians, the opeding of summer, which Vis deseribes in a lamous passage ol his first eclogue, First came an invitation to the goddess of corn, two preity and graceful giris representing the priestesses of Ceres— the one fair and garianded with white flowers, the other dark. and crowned with purple flowers. They pause to strike their uplifted tamborines, while beliind them thelr sisters rush breath iess butshouting with flowing garments and outspread arms. T'wo young men with purple caps and embroidered vests advance, ench with a silver amphora or sacred vase of wine, which is first sipped by the priestesses, followed by the maidens who surround them, and then by the young men who closely tol. low up the rear, the whole accompan. ied by characteristic songs and recita. tions. Then all join hands, a youth and maiden alternately, and form twe immense rings, all being crowned with chaplets of grain and grasses, and the ricstesses deeked with additional gar. lands of the same nature hanging like a scar! across their shoulders, ; directs the movements of one ring until they all sink down exhausted. when { they are relieved by the other ring al- { ternately until the old Roman dis! on i the church tower marks the morning hours and pale moonlight gives place to the glowing day. Then they are led, smiling and bowing their heads, in the iri sid i o'der friends who are seated as specta- tors, and then again bounding off in a all imaginable shapes, seldom breaking the magic ring, returning again and again to the groups of spectators for ine spection and approval, and again bound- ing off in the mazes of the intricate dance. The leader will perhaps con. duct them to the brow of the Lill and then starting back some of them are sent down the bank and recovered by the clasped hands in the chain; and then laughing and shouting she leads them to the border of a mass of grain spread out to dry, and drawing back as long into the long white straw, the leader constantly passing through the ring and turning it, as it were, inside out. Along the blue Mediterranean or on the borders of the inland lakes the bright enjoyment to these dancers for many happy generations. IIT Perseverance and Health, A man who inherits wealth may begin In driving, in foreign travel, in hunting and fishing, in .ciub houses and society, hie may manage to pass away his time; but he will hardly be happy. to be necessary to health that the powers of a man may be trained upon some sub- ject and steadily held there day after day, year after year, while vitality lasts, the fund of vitality will have sunk so low that he can follow no consecutive labor without such a draft upon his forces that sleep cannot restore them. But so long as a man has vitality to spare upon work it must be used, or it will become a source of grievous, harrassing discontent. The man will not know what to do with himself: and {when he has veached such a point as that, he is unconsciously digging a grave for himself, and fashioning his own coffin. Life needs a steady channel to ran in —regular habits of work and of sleep. {It needs a steady, stimulating aim—a tend toward something. An aim less life can never be happy, or, for a { long period, healthy Said a rich iady { to a gentleman still laboring beyond his needs: ‘Don't stop; keep at it.” The be alive to-day.” And what she thought was doubtless true. A greater shock {ean hardly befall a man who has been active than that which he experiences | when, having relinquished his putstiis, | he finds unused time and unused vitality | The current of his life is thus thrown into eddies, or settled into a sluggish pool, and he begins to die.~— Sanitarium The Poets Laureate of England, The succession of the poets laureate of England, from the time “father of English poetry,” has been as lollows, with the date of their acces- sion to office: Geoffrey Chaucer, A. D. 1373; Henry Scoean, 1400; John Kay, 1461; Andrew Barnard, 1485; John Skelton, 1510; Edmund Spencer, 1590; Samuel Daniel, 1599; Ben Jon- gon, 1615; Sir W. Dasenant, Kt., 1638; John Diyden, 1670; Thomas Shadnell, 1680; Nahun Tate, 1603: Nicholas Roue, 1714; Lawrence Husden. 1719, Colley Clihber, 1730; William White. head, 1768; Thomas Wharton, 1785 Henry J. Pry, 1790; Robert Southey- 1813; William Wordsworth, 1823; Al- fred Tennyson, 1850. ert —————— There are three men to one woman in Arizona IN A PANTHER'S CAGE, A Female Animal Trainer who Gees In | Among a HalicDosen Falletirown | Mexican Panthers which are the Tere ror of » Whole Menagerie, The value of coolness and presence of mind was strikingly illustrated at Cooper & Bailey's stables, Philadelphia, where the great London circus was in quarters, In the main building, where most all the animals of the menagerie are kept, was a cage containing five or six full-grown Mexican panthers, whose flerce aspect and savage capers are the terror of all who pass through there, Directly opposite these panthers there is | a cage containing lions, and on either side of them are cages containing tigers and leopards. Savage as the tigers and leopards appear, there is not half the terror in them for the keepers that there is in the long, stealthy, cat-like animal, the Mexican panther, In size they are about ns large as a full-grown setter dog, though their whole appearance is | of the eat order, having long claws, sharp teeth, and evabills which, in their anger, gleam and quiver like livid fire, These animals at Cooper & | Bailey's, on the day in question, seemed worse than usaal., They had been fight. | ing among themselves until their heads | and ears were bleedimg, and upon the approach of any visitor near their cage they would spring against the iron grat- | ing, with gleaming eyes and exposed fangs, with a loroe that would shake the | cage from top to bottom, at the same time thrusting their claws through in their efforts to c¢lutehh the intruders | and bring them within range of their teeth. To stand off and look at them would provoke them almost to mad. ness. ‘They would bound against the grating with a loud and savage scream, and strike and tear at the iron rods with their claws in & way that would make | the stoutest-bearted visitor fall back and almost shudder to think of the con. sequences should they by any mischance onoe get at large. Evon the keepers | themselves, after they had volied up the tigers and leopards ard passed close to their cages in safety, made a detour when they came to the panthers, giving them a wide berth. Presently a young woman, dressed in bloomers and with her hair tightly done up on the top of her head, came along, with a stout whip in her hand. { “* See,” said one of the keepers, * she's going into the cage.” “What ™ exclaimed different voices, amazed. “She's going in among the panthers; she's training them,” said the keeper, “Surely shie won't go in among them as they arenow ™ said one, while others fell back still further and some hastened AWAY, Meantime, the girl had gone up close to the cage, whip in hand, and, with the assistance of the keeper—who was aso her husband-—the panthers were back in one end of the cage, the man using a long stick, with the end of which he gave them some vigor | ous raps on thenose. After a great deal of snapping and scufiling among each othor--each animal, every time he was | hit, seeming to visit his vengeance for | the blow on his nearest fellow they were all gotten back in the end furthes. from the cagedoor, The man then prot three or four terrupted frequently by the animals, some of which would now and then bound out of their corner over the backs of those of their fellows who stood in the way and land half-way up the floor of the cage, where they would draw themselves up in a crouching posture, and with eyes of fireand a deep, low | whine or growl they would remain | watching him as though only walling | spring. The keeper, without showing the least discomposure, went on with bis work until the door was opened. I'he young woman, who had been stand- | ing beside him with her whip in hand | and a pleasant smile on her face, with- | out a moment's hesitation stepped up and the next moment was inside the cage. The moment she got in there was the most terrific screaming and fighting of any time yet, The panthers would | jump over each other in their eagerness to spring upon her, and would spring halt-way up the oage, but no further, weing held fear. They would then one another and tear each | other's ears and seratch and fight, | this being apparently the only means | that would satisfy their ferocity. Mean. | time the woman stood perfectly still, holding her whip out and speaking to them in a soothing mapner, as though she was pacifying a favorite dog or eat. Gradually the screams and growls be. gan to get lower and lower and the figh- ing among one another began to cease Still they kept growling and looking at her and showing their teeth and snap- | ping now and then until she had ad. | vanced a step. Then they began to | grow! again, and one of them sprang | over the others and got nearest to her, but hind no sooner alighted than he was | ounced upon by another, and they again Po to fight. Then the young woman, would | back | by spring | ther andistruck one of the animals with the but end of her whip, at the same time scolding him. He sprang back to the end of the eage among the others, while the woman, carelessly letting her whip fall in a harmless position, pro- ceeded to soothe and caress the panther nearest her, patting him upon the top of the head and stroking him on the back | until his growls had almost subsided, | and he sullenly allowed himself to be petted, winking his eyes and mouthing having grouped themselves together in the end of the cage looked on with sul- len growls. If any advanced she gave them a sharp rap on the head and or tion she never lost sight of the others, ment and being always prepared to use Sometimes three or four, as though ward and approach sullenly, as though inviting her to caress them, too Then fied and quiet, and she scemed as much 80 many eats. But this pacific state of things would not last’ long. They seemed and to be ever on the brink of a revolt. be signalized by a deep would instantly communicate itself to the others, and the next instant there would be a quick spring and one of the animals would find himself pounced ive make them settledown for a little time. “What would be the consequence if she was to show any fear and retreat to- ward the door?” asked one of the by- standers, who had been almost spell- bound by thascene before him and had not found himself able to speak before. “The consequence,” said the keeper, shaking his head, ** would be that every her and tear her to pieces in a minute.” It gives some idea of the trade be- tween Minnesota and Manitoba that the imports into Manitoba at Pembina ameunted Inst year to $448,344, mostly in fur skins, and the experts to 8750,. 941, mostly in lumber, cotton goods, cattle and meats, iron and steel, plows, carriages, sugars and steam vessels, asst — Sixty million dollars is the estimated cost of the projected Euphrates valley railroad, which is intended to facilitate the intercourse of England with India The road will be over a thousand miles long and will be very difficult to build. / TIMELY TOPICS, Cetywayo, the dethroned Zulu mon. arch, scoording to a South Africa paper, is engaged in making mental notes. He has enleulated that each charge fired by ew foreign men-of-war in Table bay in saluting the fort was of the value of an ox. He also concludes that it is more expensive to keep up armaments in Europe than in Zululand, His majesty aise regards the queen's conduet in not answering his message of contrition as showing a great lack of courtesy, The sland of Rotumah, which has it, is situated a little to the north and his search for the mutineers of the Bounty in 1791. The island is only five miles long and half as wide, but it has a numerous population, the shore bein covered with villages, which touch and join one another. The soil is very fer- tile, and vessels often stop at the island for supplies, while the inhabitants make good sailors. msn According to the German imperial statistics for 1878 of births, deaths and population being 44.200,000, the mar- ringes numbered 340.000, the births 1,785,000, and the deaths 1.228.000, In the number of births was 936, - 000, and of deaths 839,000, so that the births exceeded the deaths by 97,000, In Germany the excess of births was 557,000—that is to say, that while in France the population increased in 1878 at the rate of 27 per cent, it increased The number of marriages in Germany Line greatly fallen off since 1872, when 493,900 were registered, The sum realized from the recent sale of the Demidoff paintings in Florence ($537,365) is very large, but it has heen excelled at least once pnd approached several times. The Gillott collection of Mr. Albert Grant sold Lis 205 pictures for $520.684; in 1875, Mr. Mendel's Manley Hall collection of 445 pictures sold for $499.800, and twenty years cariier, Lord Northwick's 1.881 pictures With. out making the statement too positively, it is probable that the largest sum ever actually paid tor any single canvas was £119,584, the picture being Murillo’s “Conception of the Virgin," which was bought for the Louvre at Paris, at the sale of Marshal Soult's collection in And possibly $60,000 is the largest sum ever received for a single this case being * 1807," the painter Meissonier, and the buyer A. T. Stew- art. ——— Here is a soene trom Leitrim county, Ireland, as described hy the correspon. dent of the Mansion House committee: On visiting the sick a few days since | entered the cabin of a poor old man, years old, 1 was grieved to see him in His hollowed cheeks, pene. I reached another this comprised four individuals—the father, an old man, unable to leave his bed unless carried; the son, the only support of the old father, and twa sickly sisters, one of whom is now far advanced of the giris did not look for employment, his answer was: ** No one wants her.” In Bonniconlan, county Mayo, two hun- dred families are destitute in a single They are in great distress—the They them without a drep of milk, without naked. . IS 15 0 In the Matter of Advertising. If you have goods to sell, advertise, Hire a man with a lampblack kettle ut perhaps the obliging conductor would stop the scoommodate an inguisitive Remember the fences by the roadside Nothing is so attractive tothe passer-by as a well-painted sign: ** Mill. ington's medical mixture for mumps.” Have your card in the hotel register by all means, Strangers stopping at hotels for a night generally buy a cigar or two before they leave town, and they need some inspiring literature for food besides. If an advertising agent wants your business advertised in a fancy frame at the depot, pay him about 200 oo cent, more an it is worth, and let him put it there. When a man has three-guar- ters of a second in which to catch a train, he invariably stops to read depot Of course the street thermometer dodge is excellent, When a man’s fin. gers and ears are freezing, or he is pufl- ing and “phewing " at the heat is the time above all others when he reads an advertisement. Print in the blackest ink a great sprawling card on all your wrapping paper. Ladies returning from a shop- ping tour like to be walking bulletins, and if the ink rubs off and spoils some of their finery, no matter. They never will stop at your store again. Don’t fail to advertise in every circus programme. It will help the circus to pay its bills, and visitors can relieve the tedium of the clown's jokes by look- ing over your interesting remarks about “twenty per cent. below cost,” ete, A boy with a big placard on a pole is an interesting ohject on the streets, and lends a dignified air to your establish- ment. Hire about two. Advertise on a calender. People never look at a calander to see what day of the month it is. The merely glance hurriedly at it so as to be sure that your name is spelled with or without a *p," that's all. When the breezes blow, wafted by a paper fan in the hands of a lovely woman, "tis well to have the air redolent with the perfume of the carmine ink in which your business address is printed. This will make the market for decent fans very good. Patronize every agent that shows you an advertising tablet, card, directory, dicviunary or even an advertising Bible, if one is offered at a reasonable price. The man must make a living. But don't think of advertising in a well-established legitimate newspaper. Not for a moment, Your advertisement would be nicely printed and would find its way into all the thrifty households of the region, where the farmer, the me- chanie, the tradesmen in other lines, and into the families of the wealthy and re- fined, all who have articles to buy and money with which to buy them, and after the news of the day has been di- gested, it would be read and pondered, and next day people would come down to your store po patronize you, and keep coming in increasing numbers, and you might have to hire an extra clerk or two, move into a larger block and more favorable location and do a bigger busi- ness, but of course it would be more expensive—and bring greater profits, — New Haven Register. There is not a single insane asylum in Arkansas. i 3 i RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES, Ex-Governor Brown, of Georgia, has given $50,000 to the Southern Baptist heologieal Seminary, at Louisville, Ky., to endow a professorship. There are, it is said, 150,000 German Protestants in Brasil, the majority o whom are Lutherans. They are very poorly supplied with pastors and churches, The Rev, George G, Pentecost, the re. vivalist, has closed a very successful series of revival meetings in Detroit— the most successful, it is said, ever held in that city, The Scottish Episcopal church has seven bishops, 212 churches, and 225 clergymen, against 1,639 ministers and 1.530 churches belonging to the Estab- lished church of Scotland, The Baptists of New Jersey have 175 churches, with 32,737 members. The | members, as related to the population of the State, stand as one to twenty- seven, These churches report 16.371 baptisms in the past ten years, or about 1,600 & year. The triennial session of the Free Will Baptist General conference will be held at Weirs, on Lake Winnipesockee, New Hampshire, beginning July 21. This is the centennial year of the denomination, the first church having been organized at New Durham, near Weirs, in 1780. The value of the chureh property of the Northern Methodist church in the South is estimated at $6 500,000, The benevolent collections last year amounted to $67,650, of which $10,130 ho contributed by the colored mem. ers. Chicago has 213 churches, besides 20 mission chapels and 11 Adventist and Spiritualist soeieties. The Catholics have 34 of the churches, the Baptists 24, the Lutherans 24, the Methodists 19, the Presbyterians 18, and the Episco-. paiians, Congregationalists and He. brews 10 each. The Freedmen's Aid society proposes | to the friends of the late Bishop Haven | to raise £30,000 for the completion of | Clark University, at Atlanta, Gs., as a | suitable monument to his memory, his | name 10 be given to a professorship in | the institution, in which he was very | much interested. i Itis estimated that among the Eng- | lish-speaking population of the word | there are 18,000,000 Episcopalians, 16,. | 000,000 Methodists, 13,500,000 Roman | Catholics, 10,250,000 Presbyterians, | 5,000,000 Baptists. 8,000,000 Congregs- | tionalists, 1,000,000 Unitarians. Of | other religious sects there are 1,500,000 | adherents and 8,500,000 are of no par- | ticular religion. | The Rev. Theodore Monod, a promi- | nent Protestant pastor of Paris, has been | deputed by a French missionary society | to visit the United States, to represent | the present condition and needs of | Protestantism in France, and to obtain | help for the evangelization of Paris and | other parts of that country. M. Monod | studied theology in the United Staves. | A careful inquiry into the statisties of | the work of the Methodist Episcopal | church in the South shows that there | are 213,776 white and 197,123 colored | members, a gain of 6,000 colored and | about B.000 white members in two | years. There was an increase in the same period of 129 preachers and 24,298 | Sunday-school scholars. The number | i aduits. The Salvation Army has considerable strength in Great Britain nual income of nearly $100,000, and its | organization inciudes 120 corps, 150 of- | ficers and 3,256 speakers. It holds 50,- | 000 meetings in the course of a year, in | 143 theaters and music halls, besides | about 40,000 open air meetings. One | estimate of the aggregate of the audi- | ences places it at 2,000,000, i It has an an- | John Bright. It is related that once a party o | Americans entered a studio, where a | fine portrait, just completed, was stand- | ing on the artist's easel. i “Oh,” sald one of the Americans, | “ that must be John Bull.” i “ No," quialy responded the artist, | “it's John Bright.” i The anecdote forcibly illustrates the | truly British physical type of the Qua- | ker orator and statesman. In personal appearance, certainly, he is an English- | man of Englishmen. Robust, though | not corpulent, of body; with a round, | t nose; his | ruddy, having a remarkable purity of | complexion and fine texture of skin ; the | eyes, large, gray, clear, bright, some- times stern and defiant, but in repose | often gentle and kindly; decision and | vigor most plainly expressed in the | resolute mouth and firm jaw and chin; | a face less mobile than calm and set; the brow broad and white, and arched | high st the top; the whole frame strong, | well-proportioned, almost massive, in. | dicating great powers of endurance, and | giving, even at his present age, no hint of that delicacy of health which has in recent years impaired his public activ. | ity. In his company, one has a keen sense of his power, one feels himself in | the presence of a born leader of men. | He holds his head high, and looks you, | and every one, full in the face; and that with a keen, searching glance that rather robs you of your ease. Seif-re. | liance, honesty, pride of intellect, reso- | lution—nay, even intolerance~may be read in his exprossi | John Bright is now"in his sixty-ninth year. He is two years younger than | Gladstone and six younger than Lord Beaconsfield; and as Engiish statesmen | orous race, and often continue their public activities into the | eighties, it may be hoped that he has | still some years of labor in the cause of | reform before him. His public life be- gan in 1843, when he was thirty-two years of age, in which year be was elected to parlinment by theold historic | city of Durham. Four years later he took his seat for the first time as the | representative of the great progressive constituency of Manchester. His career in the houseof commons, therefore, has extended over a period of thirty-seven years.—(Jood Company. § are a peculiarly vi A Ghastly Story. The wife of a skilled artisan named Schmid, ot Samara, Russia, gave birth to a child while her husband, who had | spent all his wages for many previous | weeks in liquor, was away from his | home upon a drunken frolic. Two days | after her confinement Schmid staggered in, and began to shout, with horrible threats and curses, for his dinner. There having been neither food nor | money in the house since he had last | left it, the unfortunate woman had had | no nourishment for herself or her babe since its birth, and the latter had died of exhaustion but a few minutes before | its father made his appearance. To | Schmid’s brutal menaces his miser- | able wife made no answer. She rose | from her pallet, wan and emaciated, | crept across the room tc the dresser, | took thence a large dish, which she car- | ried back to the bed, and, placing the baby's corpse upon the dish, set it down on the table before her husband, with the simple but awful words: “There is nothing else to eat in the house!” Schmid sat gazing with a glassy stare at his dead child for some time. Presently a neighbor came in and spoke to him, but he uttered no word and made no sign. Upon closer examination he was found to have en- tirely lost his reason, and he was con- veyed to a madhouse, where he still re- mains a hopeless lunatic. Tobacco and rhubarb are the pipe plants of the country.~—Marathon Inde- dendent FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD, Poultry Notes, Jovi must have ample range to do well, a Apply kerosene’ frequently and an- sparingly to the roosts, Fowls depend more on the eye in dis- tinguishing their food than on the taste, Superior is of the first importance o I fowls for breed- ing. The nearest they approach per- fection, most generally the better the results. Carbolic acid mixed with about thirt ris of water, and applied with a rush to the roots of the feathers about the neck, belly and vent, usuaily kill or fispel the vermin on fowls, The amount of fAesh-forming food Is greater in oats and oatmeal than in any other grain, being about sixteen per cent, ani the amount of fatty sub- is double that contained in 2 putting up perches use some judgment, at least in placing them so far apart that the fowls cannot peck those of another. This alone E n fruitful cause of many injuries happen- ing them in their endeavor to escape from their belligerent neighbors. Colonizing fowls in small flocks in the macner they are kept in villages and small towns is practicable. Any number divided into small lots with SSparate houses and runs will productive and profitable, if means and a ical know]- edge of poultry culture be at all times.— Poutiny Monthly. Halsing Seed Potatoes, Good crops may be grown on a variety of ot it must be — mind that s soil that is adapted to one variety of potatoes is not at all for another, and that one variety re- quires to be planted much thicker than Shot on 18 suis Kind of soil. it is of prime importance to that he should understand Lis ground and also of his WAYS cul my potatoes to a and by making the hills a tri and less seed in each, better obtained than by throwin the handful. The potato, from the tuber in the ner, naturally tends to deteriorate revert to its primitive condition. The causes which produce deterioration are a continual planting upon the same soil without a Shahfe of seed and imperfect cultivation. remedy is to procure recently originated varieties the greatest amount of natural vigor. If I was to make a list of any of the newly originated varieties, would name the Mammoth Pearl as the best for a general cropper; the Magnum Bo- num (not the English variety of the same name) for earliness and produe- tiveness combined—having yielded last year 548 bushels from one secre of ground, without any manure w i i%: E 2 . i 5 i giid i : : £ MHeetpes. Baxep Cory Mar Propine.—Boil two quarts of sweet milk; scald init seven tablespoons of corn meal. When a little cool add salt, three eges and half Break my rest, then—wail and ory — Thoul’t repay me by-aad-bye—by-and-bye. Fleeting years of time have spad—hurrie bye.—~ ; Still the maiden is nawed ; All unknown the soldier lies, Buried under alien skios; God in benven ! dost Thou on high Keep the promised by-and-bye- byani.-bye Ella Wheeler . 108 is being shipped from Montreal to States. & Sencup andar or syn ; season with nutmeg. ¢ in a moderate even oven three hours. Rock Caxes.—One pound of flour, half a pound of sugar, half a pound of butter, half a pound of currants or cher- ries, four eggs, leaving out two of the 1 an En cutters, and bake in a steadily heated oven. Frp Cmicxex.—Cut up, steam ina | HAC yates, sh roll = Sou, Broil on } a ron, or m tter In a Iry 3 pan; or lay in a pan with tle tte: and water, cover with another pan, baste often, and fry brown. In ei case make a gravy of the drippings serve in a gravy bo Toxcre Toast. —Take a beef ton that has been well boiled, chop fine, m with cream or milk, the beaten yolk an egg. a piece of butter, and sal taste; simmer gently. Toast thins! of bread, butter them, spread with mixture and serve hot. and het in a tureen. This is also nice without the toast, and is breakfasi or tes. HiT ¢ : it £ _E4 "3 1 i aw Eis Sheep Killed by Grass Seed. ] The penalty of getting hay seed in | one's hair must be serious in some parts | country where the Shetp tressed and often actually the seeds of certain grasses chilla,” which, having once fallen upon or been eauplt by the wool.quickly work their way through the skins of ani- mals into their flesh. The ripe seeds of these grasses are armed with recurved barbules whose points, being sharp =s needles, easily penetrate the skin, every moves git of the situa) sending lo grite ie deeper and deeper in e flesh. The mutton ex for sale in the butchers’ shops is sometimes so full of these grass seeds that it excites the at. tention of strangers. One newly arrived emigrant describes a fore-quarter of mut- ton as resembling a ham just taken from the bag of chaff in which it had been brought from Engiand. On close exam. ination it appeared that many of the seeds had still their long, thin tails 2 interlacing each other in every direc. | tion. He gees on to say that, on ques- | tioning the butcher, he was told that | they rarely killed a sheep that was not | more or less punctured in this way. It stands to reason that butchers’ meat, | such as this, must need to be thoroughly cooked before eating. From other ao counts it appears that the seeds are not infrequently found actually piercing the heart, liver and kidneys of sheep that have died from the effects of their move- ments. One writer says that he has found ‘the internal organs so crowded with the seeds that they felt like a bag of needles, if squeezed in the hand. On some “runs,” w these grasses are specially abundant, the annual Joss of sheep is a very serious matter. It has even been asserted that the northern part of Queensland is unfit for Sheep be- cause of the great abundance of the noxious grasses. Canceling Postage Stamps by Fire, | The toffice authorities of New | York city think they have arrived at a | practical and thorough plan of prevent- ing the second use of postage stamps, which is a fraud that has been practiced by washing off the ink with acids alter the stampine of the first use. Persons ment ha e been very ingenious in de- vising modes of doing the unlawtu. washing. A new process of cancelln- tion has been invented. and is in use in the New York postoffice. It is to scorch the stamps. Specimens of the new process show very effective work against the fraud of second use of the stamps, the cancellation mark being ab. solutely indellible. The imprint made is just the same as that made by the ink stamp, except that it is sight} burned and scorched in instead of being an ink impression. The new stamp is heated by aaa, the metal being thin, to allow o th quick heating and rapid cooling, It is used the same as an ink-stamp, but with a saving of time that will enable the person itto do at least twice the work that the ink- stamp would. In using the latter it travels between the inkerand the letters being stamped. With the new stamp the operation will be a continuous ris- ing and falling of a few inches. It can be used in all offices where gas is burned. An experienced hand with cancels about one hundred and twenty- | five stamps per minute : ; § 3 LH i i c E gs x - E 3 g : 21 “li g : of an hour and a cloud from the engi- *s face, and then in reply to the query aid “It is a queer thing. Therc's my en- ®, ot the best on the road, in per only twelve years old, and or pull with the hestof them. ago [ hadn't the least bit of making time, no matter how weight of the train. the word, held her y, and she seemed to word I said. To-da roundhouse, grow acting as if she with a gravel- X14 2 5 understand ever pd peti spu £2 Neaed to pick a vs it" “ Anything out of gear? “ Not a thing. She's been looked over twice, and we can’t find the least excuse for her conduct. She'il getoveritina day or two, perhaps. If she don't we'll punish her.” “How! : “Pat her before a freight or stock train. I've seen it tried a dozen times, and it most always worked well. Here she is now, bright as a new dollarand as handsome as a piciure, and I'll bet $50 that there isn’t the least thingout of or- der. She's simply sulking, the same as a child or a womun, and | know what started it. Three weeks ago, whiie on the night ex: she ht out for all she was the bit like a Fanning I hadn't choked her o a beaten schedule time hy twenty minutes. She acted mad right away, and in running twenty miles she gave me more trouble than I ever had with her in a run of three hundred. She lost steam, tried to foam over, her pipes, and when | wanted more steam she'd slide on her drivers. t back on me that night, ever since. nes do this? many of them. Some folks laugh at us and call it supersti- Som, but they never lived in an engine my run in with A Wildeat that Whipped Twenty-Five Dogs. The Americus (Ga.) Reyublican says: