After the Storm, All night, in the pauses of sleep, I heard The moan of the snow-wind and the sea, Like the wail of thy sorrowing children, O God Who ory unto thee. But in beauty and silence the morming broke | Qlarflow ing creation the glad light streamed; And earth stood shining and white as the son | Of the blessed redeemed. Oh, glorious marvel in darkness wrought | With smiles of promise the blue sky bent, Af if to whisper to all who mourn Love's hidden intent. it a hree Shadows, | VOLUME XV, 1 Jooked and saw your eyes In the shadow of your hair, As a traveler sees the stream In the shadow of the wood ; } A ETI NTS. 188 ©) iw @ ©) ay NUMBER 5. And I said: “My faint hear! sighs, ! Ah, me! to linger thore, To drink deep and to dream In that sweet solitnde.” 1 joined them. No one seemed to want ‘him, Maud, with her usual perverse | ness, had given him a eareloss grosting, | and turned away to lavish her brightest | smiles and merriest speeches on Gilbert | Livingston, a man oe he cordially { hated and despised. Mrs. Wellington | alone seemed to need him. She was nervous, weak and timid, dreading the { journey, and unable to control her i children's madness, so she olung to | Thornton with instinotive trust in his | sober strength, He never dreamed, | being blind as men are, that Mand saw { every motion that he made, that she | had so placed herself as to hear every {word he spoke. He only saw, with i wrath and shame, that she was flirting | openly, desperately, with that soulless, | brainless Livingston. Bat even Thornton shook off his | gloom when they came among the hills, | The highest peaks were white with i snow, reflecting the setting sun with | dazaling brilliancy against the marvel ious blue of the sky. It was very i cold, but clear and still, when they left over I" she said, low, unnatural VOiIee. “I'm anxiously, * Do try to help them," she pleaded, 80 earnestly that the men all resolved to try, though it was of so little use. Taking a rope Little tied all the volun teers firmly together ; even the ing swell," Livingston, as Goorge called him, offered to help. When all was ready they crept along the west ern side of the house with little dif culty. Bat when they reached the corner they went down like planks, They tried again and again, and then came back into the house tired and ex- hausted. its afraid 80," he answered, 1 looked and saw your heart In the shadow of your eyes, As a seeker seeks the gold In the shadow of the stream ; And I said: “Ab, me! what art Should win the immortal prize, Whose want must make life cold And heaven a hollow dream 1 looked and saw your love In the shadow of rour heart, As a diver sees the pearl In the shadow of tho sea; And I murmured, not above My breath, but all apart “Ah! you can love, true girl, And is your love for me ¥ early darkness made the terror of tha storm more awful, Maud still strained her eves through the deepening gloom, | The storm at that moment was at its height. Clatehing the window frame tightly with her fingers she pressod | her dilated eyes against the pane, and | | the cars for their drive of a few miles, SW with speechless horror the roof of | Mr. Little met them with his six-horse | the large barn swept of as if it had | stage; the wind had not left enough been paper. It was all ie more ter | snow on the rising ground for sleigh- rible because not a sound of the falling {ing, to Maud's regret. It was an ex. timbers could be heard above the | hilarating drive. The clear air made | Seaseless roaring of the wind. . | each inhalation an increasing joy. The It was an awful night. No one | langhter and the sweet, ringing voices Nw of sleepiag. They clustered | of the girls no longer jarred upon him; [gether about the R02 afte} terror, {he was a boy Himself, and startled | *rom ima 1a he hg dittle spoke { them by his wit and gayety. Maud was reassuringly. 16re Was no danger for | delighted. She warmed toward him, thems Ives, he said; the house Was | | and left poor Livingston shivering out | Hrmiy built; large beams passed Ciagon- of the sunlight of her favor. It was all ally 1 rom floor to ceiling through the going to be a perfect success, she parlition walls; it was not possible that | thought, and blessed herself for the | they could give way. | inspiration. hearts were not easily assured, Maud ., alone had no thoughts for herself or The hotel, when they reached it, |, “oo. 0 Wo, 0 8 after the stars had come out superbly in | fless barn, and she strove to pio. Rosgelty, AN EAST BLOW. The summer hotel amoung the moun- tains was almost deserted. Half a dozen of the late-staying guests were gathered in the little parlor for their last evening. A high September wind turned their thoughts to the desolate ness of the winter months in the White Hills. Msud Wellington, always a leader in talk and sotion, called to the landlord : ; “Oome here, please, Mr. Little; tell us how you ever live here through the winter ?" | “Wa'al, you jest come up here and She had seen «ae roo | THRIFT OF THE PEOPLE, Some Facts Concerning the Distribution eof Gevernment Hounds, No. Cirenlar 223 from the census ordinary interest to the people. Its purpose is to show as nearly as possible the distribution of registered bonds, or rather the ownership of the national debt, It shows the number of male and female holders and the amount held in the several States and in 117 cities: less than 8500 to $50,000 and upward. According to the register of the treas. ury the whole amount of the registered | FACTS AND COMMENTS, Feet and Foot Wear, A Lyon (Mass) letter says: As by { common consent the ladies are consid. | young fish than of children in that city. | For while more than half the children die belore the age of five, the fish com- missioners say that only about two per are destroyed, About 30,000 people in the city of The the different roads ol During t railroad companies. pended there by in wages will foot annually, i { natural that we select for comparison | ladies’ foot-wear., In New England the | shape of the foot is rather flat, broad, {and a medium instep, The style of | boot worn is of neat, modest Appears | ance, with a broad flat heel. The vamp { is ont plain, the top of the boot is a | plain curve, and a black boot is inva Congress | a button is a favorite. Leather shoes mestig holders and by banks at the time 250, It appears that the aggregate number of holders of bonds were as follows: Hate 6a i ; §825 917 1 100.00 1060.00 Omitting the six per cents from the calonlation we find that of whole other bonds £2,202 were males, 29 320 were females and 1,027 are coporations, and of the amount held the males owned $327,185, 500, the females $90 358,350 and cor. porations $2327,451,600, The average per head adds: For male the of course representing | uals of both sexes), $148, 953 20. | No loss than $410,279. 400 was held in amounts of over 850,000, 858730. individ Bruised and burned in the Spuyten Duyvil (N. XY.) disaster—his arm con- sumed to the elbow and the throes of death wpon him-—Oliver B. Keely thought of his wife and sent her a mes- sage of love~* Write to my wife and give her my love"-—a last, precious message to a gtr oken heart. That man | fort, service an dgeneral neatness—ohar- | acteristios unconsciously adopted from the surroundings of every-day life { Tho shape of New York feet differs | ttle from New England. Doctors Among the Boers, There is no man a Boer has greater | reverence for than a doctor] yet those | in the Transvaal are mostly unqualified | practitioners or quacks of the most an- | dacions kind. But he will drive miles | to feteh one of those fellows, and hand | over the fee with a grown, without a | thought of disputing it. The rapacity | of these practitioners is incredible, Not | many months ago a Boer living on the highroad to Pretoria called in a local doctor to sttend his wife, Everything i | doctor asked as his fee $750, and got it. And this man had only driven some eight miles to the farm. A more amusing incident happened | when another doctor was called upon by a Boer, with an urgent request that he would come out to his farm to at tend a sick man, “How far is the farm?" asked the | noross the toes and higher at the in [ step. Yonr New York consumers de- mand style and fit. They want the { vamp cut lower and longer; a heel “* About twenty miles.” “ Twenty miles—twenty pounds, A pound a mile.” To which the Boer agreed, and went away to fetch his “spider.” On returning he found his friend a little the worse for liguor, but Mississippi at Minneapolis, Miun., bids | fair to become one of the most notable | structures of the werld, It will con. sist of sixteen eighty-foot spans and | ferring for material leather of the lighter grades. New York manufae- | { turers manufacture largely for the | home trade, and a large proportion o | off he took him up and they drove away. After going some few hundred yards the doetor laid his hands on the reins, stretching one out and hiccup 1,000 feet. It will support two railway State. Philadelphians are very slow to make ** One mile—one pound.” The Boer, willing to humor him, gave falls $500,000, the London Zoo- There is a bird in try one of our east blows! I tell you, the clear air, looked as if prepared for ture the fate of Thornton and the two | stock, in distinetion from a finish that is dull and pliable. There is also a de- mand for cloth shoes, or sloth top with | leather vamp and heel piece, known as DOBG~ “Two miles—{two pounds.” This was too much even fora Boer, and he turned and drove back, doing as best he conld pm A SSB. THE FARM AND HOUSEHOLD, Prevention and Treatment of Milk Fever, One of the best methods of prevent- ing milk fever is to feed the cow several weeks to several months before ealving —aooording to its danger—if in winter, on ordinary dry hay only, with a quart or so of wheat bran, night and ning, to keep the bowels open ; if in summer, let her ran on a poor pasture, snd at ali times have a large lump of Liverpool rock salt to lick at pleasure. If the cow has been dried off a couple of months before due to calve, Bir the to parturition, and if the bag shows ex- tra full, then begin to daw a small quantity of milk from it two weeks or less before her time, and inereuse this, according to the fullness of the bag, till the calf is dropped ; then milk her clean after the calf has sucked, at three equal intervals in every twenty-four hours, In the meanwhile do not in- crease her feed for a month or more, till all daneer of fever is If the cow has continued to give milk up to within a few days of the time for her to calve, as is sometimes the case, then perhaps it will not be necessary to milk ber till after calving, Keep her dry and sheltered from storms and from excessive cold or heat, See that the water she drinks is pure, and that she has all she wishes to take at least three times per day, Never let this water get ioy cold, and after caly- ing give it slightly warm for a few days. As soon as affected, if not al- ready in a comfortable stable, put the cow into one, litter the floor well, and always keep this dry snd clean. One of the most simple and effectual scriptions for this disease is a pound of Epsom salts dissolved in three or four quarts of warm water mixed with two tablespoonfuls of sweet spirits of 600 in amounts varving from 825, 000 to 850,000; from $10,000 fo 8 5,000, logical garden called the homnbill, you don't know anything about the whose keeper stands ten feet off and nitre. Wet up a small feed of whest bran with this, If the cow will not a siege. It was closed, except a few | “foxed ” shoes. The extremities of | without advice. rooms on the ground floor of the west mon with him, without food, without 2 I know a third case, where a doctor maountings. You only come up here when it's warm and nice, and Mr. George he drives his team around, what d'ye call it? ; “Tandem I" suggested George. “Yes, tantrum; and he takes you irls to drive, and it's all very pretty. est let him be here in the winter, and he'd drive tantrum, sure enough.” “Wouldn't it be fun?’ asked Maud. “Wonld you really take us in if we came up next winter “] guess most likely I could. You'd have to kinder put up with things, though. I'd be real glad to see you, nzow; the winters is awful lonely I” “I am in earnest, and I will come if the rest will. 1 think it would be jolly,” ssid Maud. “Yes, quite too awfully. ghastly jolly,” murmured ber brother George, whose slang was overwhelming. The others all promised they wonld join her if she formed a party, and the next morning they separated and forgot all about the plan ard the promise, as people do. It was late in December. The holi- days wero approsching. Maud Well ington wa: restless and dissatisfied. The seascn bad been very disappoint- ing. Everybody was dull and stupid; Germans were tiresome, dinners more 80, and she was tired of Boston and every one in it. And all this was be- cause a certain Thomas Sedgwick Thornton had not appeared in the city 2s she bad expeeted. It was none the less tne becanse she would have de- nied it, and that she had always langhed at him, and professed to hold him in the most perfect contempt. She knew perfectly well that he was a hard work- ing lawyer in New York with little time for holijay making, but she was ite unreasonable enough to think that such trifles as business made no difference. He ougkt to have admired her enough to have made any sacrifices, snd made haste to continue the sum mer's scquaintance. It made no differ- ence to her, also, that there were many others as assiduous in their devotion as he was remiss. He was the Mordecai at the gate, and she was unhappy. The wind howling round the corner of the honse took her thoughts back to the last evening in the mountains, snd a sudden resolve made her spring to her feet. * Mother,” she cried, rushing irto the warm library, where her mother sat dozing before the fire, “I have made up my mind, We will go up to the mountains and see how they look with the snow on them.” “Yon crazy girl! we won't do any- thing of the sort.” Mrs. Wellington always made a point of seeming to oppose her daughter's plans, but she always did just what her children told her to do. Mand wast- ed no words in entreaty, but coolly told her that she must go, without any more ado. With Maud to decide was to act. George was delighted with the prospect fire, with no roof to shelter them, and perhaps crushed by the falling timbers, for it had been too dark to see the ex tent of the disaster, She told no of the sight which she had witnessed. Only she and Little knew what had happened. All that was best in her and south sides. On the north and east every blind was securely fastened. “ Have you had an east blow yet?” asked Maud, as they dashed up to the door. “No, miss; not yet,” said the land- lerd. “1 guess we will hev, pretty quick, though. The maountings hev kinder looked like it all day.” “1 hope it will come. 1 should con- ole night. Never again could she silence her better, nobler self, Very base and sider our whole trip a failure if it contemptible seemed all her wiles, her doesn’t.” caprices, her coqnetries, It had been Mr. Little shook bis head and smiled | Mer Wild folly that had placed Thora doubtfully. “I guess when you've seed ton in this danger. It she had not de- ope vou ‘won'h be likely to ‘want to see layed the men they could have returned another very quick.” to the honse before it was too late, If The next day was gloriously clear. he were alive when morning dawned he | There was Bo wind stirring as yet. It should know how bitterly she had re was this stillness that roused the fore- peisted, ; : h bodings of the landlord. His guests | She remembered how she had trifled had s magnificent walk, they said; they | Fith him when cnce the ‘summer be- climbed part way up Starr King and fore he had told her that he loved her had a view a hundred times more su- | Wore than he had ever loved any being perb than they had ever imagined it | before or ever could again, She had could be. It had been hard work not meant to Jrive him away from her; climbing over the slippery rocks and she had only meant to tease him for a they came back to the house delight. ltt. But he had taken it all in fully tired and in undiminished spirits, | 470¢st, and now The general hilarity flagged not dur. | 0¢8#ed to think of h ing the cozy evening round the huge, her. : EH open fire, and one and all pronounced would he have been so silent? She their satisfaction and delight—all ex- | little knew that the man who was all cept Mrs. Wellington, who had not | Sincerity could not understand the in- stirred from the fire all day, and who | SiBcere. grew more and more nervous ss the £2 er except to despise He wonld never care for her talk about the expected east blow eon. | COUT#e, and sbe loved him with all the tinned. forca of her strong, ungoverned heart In the morning Mr. Little's pre- After that night of agony she could dictions were verified. The city peo- | BeVer be the same. ple's ears were startled by what he had | Lhe pale daylight dawned upon her so often described as the ‘“‘roaring of White face. The wind died slowly the maountings.” This strange, steadi- | 40Wn as the sun came up the troubled | ly inereasiog roar, which seemed so in- | °KJ: The ruin of the night was re- explicable, filled some with alarm, some vealed to the weary watchers, ‘ with most enjoyable excitement, Mr, . Three men came slowly up the hill, Little calied them to see the * churn- | 'ired, hungry, half-frozen, but safe. ing of the clouds up the chasm,” and, They had made a comparatively warm looking, they forgot to smile becanse | Dest for themselves in the hay, where he pronounced the ck of the last word as | they bad passed the sleepless night. he did in the first. It was a sight not to | 11 part of the barn which sheltered be forgotten, a grand, terrible sight, as | them and the cattle aud horses had the angry clouds came up, rolling over been uninjured, and not A man or beast and over, as it seemed, through the gap | had been hurt by the falling beams. which opened out toward the east. Mrs. Wellington could not be in. Within the house there were hurried | d3ced to remain an unnecessary mo- reparations. Mrs, Little and her sons | Ment in the terrible place, and late in went sbont making everything as fast the afternoon the subdued party were as possible, while her husband and his | 0 the cars returning to Boston. Thorn. two men went to the barns to give the | to confessed that it was the most un cattle and horses food and water to last | comfortable night he had ever passed, them till the storm had passed; for but that he would cheerfully Lave un- when it had reached its height, neither dergone far greater hardships for the man nor beast could stand against it (reward that it brought him. Before | Thornton, George and his classmate they had reached the city he had prepared to go down to the barn and learned of the agony which the night's help them, for the time swemed very SUSpense bad been to Maud, and sh short, Every moment the tempest in- had acknowledged her love for him in creased in violence. Quick as thought | duswer to the passionate reiteration of Maud wrapped herself in her fur cloak, | !i® devotion to her. And this was the | and said she wonld go with them. Her work of an East Blow, Harper's Bazar. | mother was so distressed that she would TL have desisted, but that she caught The Editor and the Smallpox Doctor Thornton's look of disapproval and dis- It wus nearly noon, and the city edi- gust, she thought, and then nothing tor in his sanctum 2 could bave prevented her. Seizing her | finishing touches of Ba “laa he mad k brother's hand she rushed out of the such a “lark; he had not DOWD | house. The barns were west of the | Inter.Ocean loeal room were grimly what to do with the holidays. Notes | pote], some little distance down the pondering ) were immediately sent to those who had hill. The wind carried them on as if | work would fall to them when the cus- | been with them when the proposition | they were straws, and drove them tomary *“ Book ready, gentlemen,” | was made, and to several others who | breathless against the building. Maud | should be heard. his ight be Sangenial spletia, a en had never dremmned of its force. When | The city editor had just decided that | ey writen nearly ud sald, | they were inside the barn, and the door | the church reporter needed a little re- | ih period o i to. willoto had been closed with difliculty, Thorn- | laxation, and booked him for a dog | that Mr. Thornton. 1 aot tol kb. 0 er, ert oy | fight, when, in response to a rap on the | L If yon do | door, he ejaculated in his blandest | would add much to the general hilarity, the h instantly y om. *Coma™ en | but I am alridd it woulda's © © re not go back to the house instantly you | tones, * Come. book, while the waiting scribes in the 85.000 to 810,000, £2500 to 85,000 ; from $1,000 to $2,500, 30; from 8500 to 81,000, $13, than 8 HH, 87,505, 004, I'he number of persons was as follows: from 3,070 950 3 (119 7 oll; less Classes Malos, Fomalos N % »y FOR rim Totals « tosses grapes at the bird so rapidly that nobody's eye can follow them through the air, but the bird's eye can, catching overy one in its bill at almost every conceivable angle; of half a dozen grapes shot at him in cession, he will not miss more than In this country he could get a firs! class position in the national base- ball league, one, Ex Governor Bagley, of Michigan, | who died not long ago, was a very sue cessful man in business and eccentric in his habits of life. In hi directed that his employes—those who had made his fortune—should not suffer by his death. They wera to be retained in the service of his heirs, for | & time at least, and on the day of the style are seldom worn in Philadelphia, | and the demand is free from any very | marked peculiarities. Baltimore people are hard to suit, but, once suited, hold to | agiven style for a long time. They want | a shoe handsome in outline and finish, | loped vamp and often scallups at | the top of the boot. The foot is longer | or narrower in the hollow of the foot, and needs to be fitted tight to the last, From Baltimore, too, comes a demand for large sizes, often as high as nom. | ber nines, which is large for a lady's | shoe, These, of course, are for use on | Bouthern plantations, and in this market the widest, | The distinctively Bouthern foot is | narrow in the hollow of the foot and widens at the ball. The shoes worn attending a patient called at the house ninetsen times in one day, asking for his foe at each visit, and managing the business by calling at the front door, leaving through the kitchen, and going rouid to the front again. But then he was a bit drunk too, The fees are given in written promises to pay, called * gool-fors,” as Boers seldom keep sums of money in their houses ; and these *“ good-fors™ are readily taken at any store where the Boer is in the habit of trading, the storekeeper knowing that they will be his produce. — Blackwood, Some Yary Old People, At 92 John Bojourner, of Louisiana, 14.790 abd Tolals................ LT 7814 It is gratifying to observe that in| { rs reside in cities, and they hold 85 per The following table shows the geo distribution, omitting cor | Rection L840 101 The thrift of New England is appar. Of | This does not come from from the memories of Massachusetts shows the lar 10,408. These three States who hold bonds. Massachu- who work in her many manufactories. or 32.60 per cent, rent of $644,900, 400 (omitting the six Masachunstts, Pennsyl- Distriet of Columbia—an excep onal location, for it is natural that many of the thousands of government should put their earnings into the bonds with which they are necessarily so familiar. The Territories with fourteen investors holding in all The sectionul distribution y 18 as follows (corpora- tions omitted): Section. By Males, Per cont. : £5 15.83 Middle States, , ,....... 208.925 1M 68 Southern States, ....... 3.18 Westorn States ........ 43.57 5, BH 13.82 books 43 Total ........... Section, £327,185, 500 100.00 i Per cont, 23.06 61.74 r Females, 20,820. 550 55,788,100 n iy £ him out and ask all the rest who were Wili Bop Do able Je go at all there.” “ Right you are!” said George, “I'll send an invite to the old duffer; he's not half a bad fellow, after all Of course he won't put in an appearance.” But it is the impossible which hap- pens. For some occult reason Mr. Welinton chose to join this wild expe- dition, and presented himself at the ap- pointed time at the rendezvous. With the exception of himsell and poor Mrs. Wellington, who looked already vic- timized, it was as gay a party as Boston could farnish. As usual, it was Mand who was leader and prime favorite. But she was admi- rably seconded by three of her friends, only a little less bridient and daring than she. Then there were two or three society men who would have gone any- where that Maud and her set proposed, Little did they care for the grandeur of mountain scenery in its severe winter dress, but the trip promised much fun and unlooked-for opportunities of car- rying out certain intentions, Last and noisiest of all came George Welling- ton, a Harvard Sophomore, with an equally reckless and hair-brained class- mate, whom the ladies alternately petted, snubbed and used as foils in their most serious schemes, Mr. Thornton felt out of his element, as he had done so many times during the summer. He was not keyed to the rame pitch of high spirits and unceas- ing gayety. He was grave, quiet—a man who was terribly in earnest about everything he did. m the first mo- ment that he saw her he became fasci- nated with Maud, against his will and betier judgment. Her beauty, wit, ca- prices, would not let themselves be for. gotten. He was angry with her, he heartily disapproved of her a dozen times a day; and then, when he was most indignant with her, he discovered that he loved her with » love which he could not reason away uor live down. He was more bitterly enraged with her than ever to-day, as the cars rapidly bore them toward the mountaigs. He roared so they could scarcely hear each other even then. Maud was biiterly ashamed of her folly, but not one whit afraid. Even Thornton conld not help admiring even while he blamed her, He | asked Little to take her and “the boys" back to the house. He himself, being strong and large, would stay and help the men. It was the best plan. The four had a hard fight to return. Hold- ing each other's hands, one keeping | behind the other as much as possible, | they struggled up the hill. Once they | fell flat to the earth, but regaining their | fect after a moment they toiled on and | reached the protection of the house. Little said be had never seen ths “blow come on so fast.” There was no use in | his trying to go back to the barn ; the men would do what was necessary, and | his strength wes halt used np in efforts already. eyes were fixed on the barns. The others gathered round the fire in awed silence. The terror of the storm was upon them. It seemed as if nothing could stand against its violence. Mrs. Wellington was nearly fainting with fright. She was certain that the house in a strained, hard voice, * Mr, Little, how long does this sort of thing generally last?’ “ Wa'al, it begins abaout noon to be the worst, and it keeps it up till next morning.” ¢ Ought not the men to come up pret- ty soon?” she asked again, with ill-con- cealed anxiety. Oh yes, they'll be up directly, I But they did not come. Once Mand saw three figares creep arcund the putiially sheltered side of the building, ut when they reached its front they were struck down, and she saw them crawl on their hands and knees back in circumstance struck her. Little geen. Calling Mr. cursed himself and his folly in having \ N The knocker eame, and proved to be | and the medical persnasion. Said he, | “How do ?” and the greeting being re- | turned, he resumed: : ‘* You see, haven't been around late ly; been busy; little matter in the paper I was going to ask vou to say something about for me; would have been np before, but been busy; so much smallpox about; I've been nursing one man with smallpox for eight days, and only just ran away now to—" “W.h-a-t? Get out. You don't want to see me. It's a man outside, Here, hil” And the city editor hollered for the contagious diseases editor and rinderpest reporter. This member of the staff, who draws a princely salary for doing balloon excursions in the summer and epidemics in the winter, was absent however, having stepped out to buy a sealskin overcoat, The doctor continued : ,it's short; don’t trouble; {only an item. Bad case? Yes, | as 1 was saying, eight days—" | “Get out!” {| “Afraid of smallpox? There's no | danger. After eight days" { “Get out! Write a letter to the paper, and we'll print it! Get out |” The request to get out was here ac- companied by demonstrations, and he got. That is, the caller got as far as the passage, where he was told through the keyhole to communicate by postal card, which ecard can be soaked in vine- gar first, and then read with a telescope from the top of the shot tower, - Chicago Inter-Ocean. The manner in which various butter. flies break through the shell of the cocoon is very interesting, Some drop | & minute portion of lignid from the mouth, which #oftens the shell ; others exude acid, and others still pierce the shell by means of protuberances with which their foreheads are furnished. Polonaises of black moire silk will 2,888 5560 10,842,150 21 11.99 Western States, , ........ . £00,8568,350 Total................ Btates to invest in government securi- ties will be found in the table showing the number of private bondholders to State. That table we give, excluding the District of Columbia: Massachusetts, .. 950 Kansas, .......... New Hampshire, Vermont 670 West Virginia S80. Colorado Maine........ Pennsylvania New Jersey, ...... 260 Tennessee, ,...... 240. Territories 240: Florida. .......... 130 Bouth Carolina, .. 100° Texas 100: North Carolina, 7. , 70 Alabama 60; Mississippi 40 Arkasneas ,........ 40 Minnesota 30; Nebraska 30 Oregon Virginia. ......... 380 Georgia Wisconsin 30 Statistics are given from 117 cities. The bulletin closes with the distribu- tion among banks and other corpora- tions, as follows: Corporations, No, National banks, , 335 Savings banks, , 483 Private banks,,, 88 Insur, companies 478 Trust companies 187 Exp. companies, 6 Maryland Delaware Kentucky Michigan Amount, £10,251,400 131,224,400 10,994,150 60,857,450 19,484,060 640,100 Ler capita, £3,060 12 271,686 18 124,083 127,316 + 98,423 106,688 3: 1,627 $227,421,600 $148,058 2 ~ New York Herald, EE —————————— Confusing, Bishop Bloomfield has been a wid- ower and had several children. He mar- ried a second time a widow with a family. One day he asked a country clergyman to dine with him, telling him: “You will only meet onr family arty,” The clergyman found a much arger number assembled in the draw- ing-room than he had anticipated, and was introduced by the bishop thus: “These are mine, those are hers and Totals be worn | white satin and black vel- vet stri] for underskirts. those are ours,” presents as follows : Fifty dollars to all who had been in his service five Years, | fifteen years, On a cold night a prisoner who was | being court martinled on the United | States flagship Lancaster, at Nice, | Fravce, broke from his guard and leaped into the water. Some sym are scalloped. Materials are nsed of the | brightest finishes. Facings are of lively | colors. White stitching is often seen | Often, toe, a flower, | tion, traded with white or colored | stitching, relieves the plainness of the | material. Until recently lace boots | have been preferred to buttons, snd | & neat bow is often worn at the | bottom of the lace. The Western people | At 109 Richard Leonard, of St. Au- gastine, Quebec, was burned to death in his cabin while lighting a fire, Rachael Brown, of Hagertown, N. J, was 115 on New Year's day. She can still do a day's work if need be. The evangelist, Archibald MoArthur, who died recently st Dunoon, in Beot. land, was born on Beptember 5, 1777. Mrs. Haldeman, of Mahanoy City, Pa., of the marines, pushing them aside, jumped in with clothing and equip- ments on, caught him after swimming 150 feet, held him under water until he on deck with soldierly rigidity and | gravity, the Alps at the time. The corporal ded for promotion, ir Boston and Amsterdam. Bir E. and Dr. Jacobus Westheim, of Am. sterdam, representing investors in Hol. land, have just bought two million Marshall & Co., of London, good part of levee lands in the Yazoo delta. A Nashville syndicate holds 100,000 nores in Tennessee and Missis. Constitution, scarcely a commercial paper is without its advertisements of Southern land schemes, The town of Dennisonville, near the south end of New Jersey, has a singn- trees out of a swamp where they have lain for hundreds of years. The swamp {is ten miles square, and the trees are piled to an unknown depth. The dig- ging has been going on for ninety years, {and but « fraction of the timber has The trees are large, and the wood, whch is perfectly pre- | served and not even waterlogged, is { ured for making shingles, tubs and | pails, | at the depth of a few feet, by prodding, | clear away the earth and roots and ent them off at top and bottom with a saw like that used to cut ice, when the logs | rise in the water and are hauled out. It is supposed that the trees grew there when the swamp was filled with fresh water, and that, by some change of | land, sea water suddenly came in| and that the trees wore overthrown and | buried. A French chemist named Gros pro- fesses to have made a discovery which { the charge brought by each against the other of having used poisoned bullets during the late war. This horrid accu- i | geons on both sides, who have persisted | in declaring that poison was present in | sufficient quantities to baflle their skill. 1 { liberate human contrivance, but to the The | developed in the sides of the barrel a | small quantity of prussic actd, which | rapid transit, and this fearful poison | was consequently lodged in the wounds | of many a luckless Frenchman and | German. Hence the reason why it was | 80 often found to be diffieult, or even | impossible, to heal even slight wounds, { and the doctors on both sides were { justified in their declaration that poison was present. The fact that similar poisonings of the wounded did not occur formerly was due, says M. Gros, to the paper used, which ab- sorbed the small particles of poison and regularly cleansed the gun-barrel, A Smart Towa Girl, Miss Bélle Clinton, of Iowa, though only twenty years of age, has proved herself the smartest girl in the state. Bhe saved $160 by school teaching, and borrowing a span of horses from her father, rigged up a prairie schooner, and with her little brother for company, started for Dakota. She homesteaded 160 acres, and added a timber claim of 120 acres by setting ont ten acres of trees. She has three thousand Llack walnut trees growing, and expects in ten years she will be worth $25,000, She spends the winters at home with her father, and next spring will take out mors trees and add 160 acres of new Jad to her estate by taking up another claim. | Louis, where the tendency is more | Southern. A rough climate needs | stanch shoes, and more leather is! really a greater necessity than to any | other class of wearers, | Owned to His Record, | The editor was sitting in his revoly- | | ing cane bottomed chair when Tornado | | Tom, the traveling terror of Texas, | cameo in and demanded retraction of the | statement that he bad swindled an | orphan out of $4. “It's a lie clear through,” said the | Terror, striking the table with his | fist, “I'm as good a man as smells the | | atmosphere in this section.” ‘* Perhaps you are better,” said the | editor, meekly. | “My record'll compare with yourn,” said the Terror, with a| | sneer; “ perhaps there are a few little | | back rackets in your life, sir, that { wouldn't bear a microscopic investiga ion." | “Oh, sir,” said She editor, visibly | agitated, “don't recall tho past; don't | bring up the memories of the tomb; | | know I've led a hard life—I don't deny {it. I killed Shorty Barnes, the Bowery | boy of New York—hacked him all to | pieces with a kuife. I have atoned for | it a thousand times. I blew a man’s | head off at a log-roll in Kentucky, and | bitterly have I Fepented of my folly. 1 | slew a lot of inoffensive citizens of | Omaha over a paltry four.dollar pot, | simply becanse I got’ excited. Ob, { could I but cheat the tomb of the men { I have placed in its maw I would be { happy. But it was all owing to my favorably | Robert Warnock, a veteran of 1812, and an inmate of the Dayton (Ohio) soldier's home, was cut off by cancer at the age of 103, Three Tallahassee warriors, with their families, survive the chief Chips, who died recently at Bartow, Fla. It is said that he was 100 years old. With memory unimpaired and form erect as it was fifty years ago, Mrs. In. man, of Smithfield, N. Y., has begun ber second century. Aunt Dorcas, who died on a recent Sunday in Sumter county, Ga., was'108, and had outlived all her kindred. She bad been married three times, but was childless, Thomas Shofield, of Montville, Conn., 01 years old, continues to walk nine miles to renew his subscription to the newspaper that has always printed this item, John Blszinger, of Camden, N.J., who can read without glasses, has cele. brated his 101st birthday. He was born near Moscow, Russia, and is an old soldier. His father lived to be 108. a A Woman’s Romantic Life. Elizabeth Hatzler, who died not long ago in Philadelphia, was born in 1790, at Landon, then one of the French pos- sessions, and when twenty years of age she married George Hatzler, a sergeant of cavalry in the French army. While yet enjoying their honeymoon the hus- band was ordered to join the memor- able expedition against Russia, and the wife determined to go along. Mrs Hatzler was present at all the princi. know that I have been wayward, wicked, and you have a right to come | here and recall those WEhApDY memo- { ries; but it's mean for all that. No body with a heart would treat a man | like you have me. Don't leave, stranger; { I'll tell you all. I sawed a man's head { off with an old army saber just for—" I'he Texas Terror was downstairs and half way around the corner, while the editor, taking a fresh chew of rattle. | snake twis!, continued his peaceful | avocations as quietly as a law-abiding | citizen, ~~8Salt Lake Tribune, i a - | A Checkered Life, The Leadville (Col.) Democrat gives | the sad particulars of a life wrecked by | whisky, An old man named Joseph { after he had taken a drink at the bar. | In his end it seems was consummated | a8 checkered a history as ever fell from | the pen of a novelist or romancer., The cow. After the promotion of her has. had many opportunities to see the em- peror, and on several occasions con- versed with him. An accident to her { husband separated them from the main body of the army at one time, and for nine weeks she dragged him on a hand sledge over the frozenground. Through a guide's treachery they were held pris- oners by the Cossacks for nineteen months. They were exchanged in time to rejoin the French army and undergo the sufferings and privations of the dis- astrous defeat which almost annihilated Napoleon's forces, Through all these vicissitudes the sex of the woman re- mained undiscovered. Mrs. Hatzler emigrated tc this country in 1846, and lived for twelve years on Fort Delaware, while it was being built by Major San- | ders. Up to the time of her death she retained the full use of all her facul. ties, and it is said that since leaving the battlefield in 1814 she never sufferer i { Democrat says : Years ago ho entered Oxford univer- sity, In his stndies he had developed a peculiar and marked taste for astrono my, and at the conclusion of his term | had studied the science of the skies so long and well that a chair was offered him term of years with honor to himself and profit to all with whom he was as- sociated. At last a combination of dis- | tressing circumstances lured him to | leave England, and he came tc this | country. tis needless to trace how he came to this city four years ago, and was not long in drifting into the posi. tion of a public charge. A little proper- ty in St. Joe furnished him with a pit- tance every month, and in the interim he was kept at the county poorliouse. It was pitiful, beyond all words, to see him seated among the paupers, listless and almost nnconscions of what passed about him. Now and then something would flit across his face that seemed almost like a recollection of better and brighter days, and then he would sink back into the dark eclipse again, They called him the professor, because oc- casionally he would speak in a way that told his fellow unfortunates that he was one day better than they, and they treated him with something akin to consideration. He will be buried to- morrow at the expense of the county. Mr, Webb, a London cutler, was poor until he hit upon the device of adver- tising his ware on the splashboard of the cabs. He left a million dollars to | any results of her long exposure. She | spoke English, German and French fla | ently. { Some Long Tunnels, The longest tunnel in the world, the | Bt, Gothard passage beneath the Alps, | was opened for traflic in January, It is | practically finished now, but like all | public works is subjected to ‘delay for | the sake of the last touches, The St. | Gothard tunnel, however, has been put | through more expeditiously than most such enterprises, It was begun in 1872, is nine miles and a quarter long, and has cost $10,000,000. Burope and the Alps also claim the next longest tunnel ever construct. ed —that known as Mount Cenis—which was opened ten years ago, This is seven miles and a half long and cost §15,000,- 000, Next in length comes the Hoosao tunnel in Massachusetts, four miles and three-quarters in length, on whose excavation about $14,000,- 000 was expended. In all three the powerful modern forces, com: pressed air and nitro-glycerine or dynamite, played important parts, Through postal service between the English Baril and the Adriatic will be established by the way of the St. Giothard tunnel on its completion. rm AISI A The Mountain of the Lord is a solid rock, 100 feet in height, rising above the street level at Manti, Utah. The Mormons are building on this emi- nence a temple of fine marble, 95 feet by 170 in areas, and} handsomely 3 take it so, then put the salts and nitre solution into a strong necked bottle, raise up the head and pour it down the throat. Repeat this every morning till cured. This simple remedy rarely fails, even in the worst cases, if all the above directions are carefully followed. Rub the bag with lard, mixed with the last strippings, every time the cow is milked. This renders the bag soft and pliable and prevents the milk from caking in it.— National Live Stock Jour. nal, Farm and Garden Notes, Keep sheep dry under foot. This is | even more necessary than roofing them. Young cows do not give as rich milk gives poor milk aud a fat one rich milk, Grass grown on manured land gives a more nutritive fodder, richer {espe- cially in albumnoids) than that grown upon unmauured or poorly manured land, The difference is sometimes as great as ten per cent, A heifer coming in at two years old is the best time for developing her fa. ture milking qualities, Comfortable quarters, generous feed, regularity ia feeding and kind treatment will do munch, however, in rearing a fine milker. The Gardener's Monthly says that in England apples are dried whole. They seem to be first pared and then placed under pressure, as ther are always much depressed. A kind named Nor- folk Beafing seems almost wholly used for this purpose. An Ohio farmer wants to know what per cent, of grain is lost by the process of threshing, and suggest that farmers see that their straw and chaff piles are run through the machine a second time, and note the result. He believes that, so far as his kvowledge extends, susagh is wasted to pay the threshing bill. The Asiatic breeds, such as the Brah- mas and Cochins, if overfed with rich grain and sueculent roots will soon be come too fat to be serviceable as layers. Fowls need to be well fed in cold weather, but great care must be ex- ercised with the breeding stock in par- ticular, as if they become too iat their eggs are often infertile. Allow plenty of green chopped vegetables, such as onions, cabbages and turnips, Manure the land heavy enough to make it loose, and plant for several years crops that could be cultivated throughout the season; or, what is still better, grow two crops the same year, and keep them well cultivated through- Couch grass can be easily killed by hoemg it once or twice the last of July and first of August with a sharp hoe, cutting the grass an inch below the surface of the ground. The complicated character of the nd- der with its thousands of little reser. voirs renders it necessary to observe If milk is Jeft in the udder the | will readily remove the watery portion, but the chusy material | is removed with difficulty and is liable | to remain and inflame the udder—pos- | sibly destroy a portion. Every particle | fall. till the cow is dry. ! As to the five-wire fence, a short time | ago I was driving some hogs, and hog- | like, they “took another notion,” and | ran right through the wire fence, and | though the barbs made them squeal, | they did the same thing again and | again, and they were not pigs either, | but hogs that would weigh over 300 pounds. Another objection to barbed | wires is that horses and cattle in pass- | ing along or standing near, especially | in “fly time,” often switch in that di- rection, aud often stay switched. A farm can be stocked with sheep cheaper than with any other gnimals, Sheep will come nearer to utilizing everything which grows ou a farm. Less labor will be required for getting feed and stock together. The returns will come in sooner and oftener than with any farm stock except hogs. Less money is required for shelter and feno- ing, and less labor is required for herd: ing, when outside pasturage is acces- sible and preferred, And finally, a bandsome income on the investment can be had withont the sale of the animals tk_omselves. Recipes, Ke Grorer's Pubuixa.— One” pint of breadcrumbs, half-pint of flour, tea- spoonful of baking powder sifted in flour, a little salt, balf a pound of raisins, quarter of a pound of currants, quarter of a pound of chopped suet, coffeecupful of milk, one egg; tie tight- ly in a bag and boil three hours; to be eaten with hard sauce. Fisapatrs.—To make fishballs, cut or pick codfish in small bits, take care to remove every piece of bone ; let it soak in cold water for an hour ; rinse it in another water ; let it cook slowly for twenty-five minutes ; season with milk, butter and eggs ; mix with ‘his about double the quantity of boiled potatoes; add milk or cream to give the desired amount of moisture ; shape in round cakes, roll in flour, and fry until brown in hot lard, If the lard is not hot when they are put in they will soak up the fat and will be unpalatable, : Anson is 98, His grand home! You see a lamb frisking mother's side, sad js moment; while its heels are kicking AT, have it down before you. Hines ing to travel in I tainly take a ey twinkling of e. I have @ an eye, seen pictures of moving crowds, o ships in motion, of men ; horses racing, taken b: with the most TR ———— When to Advertise, An old merchant, who had - habit of a Maik 18 | abit of sa nthe theory) that the most peer ty. advertise freely is when times are dullest. Accepting this as fact, the present is a good time to advertise, Be- fore the holiday trade was brisk, but since it is not 0 brisk. Hence mer chants do not advertise go freely. Here erence, advertising should be more brisk. If merchants have bargains to offer now is the time to indues pur- Tor rials and oe Book That watch for i a al their shelves and invite dust.— Chicago Times. Oil of cloves is good for tooths A few drops on a bit of botton. Heavy persons growing too ston comfort should stop eating b tatoes, sugar, etc, and {a above-ground vegetables, eto, : Bot Celery boiled the milk served as a | to be jure far shen :