A Farewell. Good-bye! God speed thee on thy way Across the waste of waters wide! Fair winds and seas the ship betide, With starry night and cloudless day! Good-bye | from sight, but not from heart, Though half the world may intervene, In love, and hope, and trust serene, We nevermore can be apart. God keep thee in His tender care! On the firm land or rolling deep He giveth His beloved sleep, For His strong love is everywhere, 8. 8. Conant, in Harper's Magazine, What Is Life? Eycs opening to the light, a feeble ory; A fow short years, some jovs, more tears ! Eyesclosing into night; a quivering sigh; And this is life, Hands toiling, ne'er at rost, but more and | more Eager for gain; off tired in vain: Hands folded on the breast, the battle o'er; And this is life, VOLUME XV. Hditor and 00. PA. «) als AAP ro 1882, A SASSI ES ITA > A I NUMBER 9. | 33 woman's life means the speedy loss every trace of comaliness and grace. { “Well, Icallit a providence!" she { sald, coming forward with a sort of | silent rush as if carried by the wind. “The first day I've ever been lone some a mite or thought to care, but | he's gone below three days now, an’ Of A dauntless breast, where weak may rest; ] eart-silent, ne'er to move; a quiet grave; And this is life A promise of rich harvests, sowing done; i Bright hopes and trusts: but * Dust to dust Is marmured sadly e'er the setting sun ! fil A dawning fair and bright, a toil Some passing siowers that bring forth flowers Hoht—a heavenly ray; And this is life. lad day, t even-fide —— FOR LIFE. Eleven days on the road. By ro means the Union Pacifie, or any other | line of continnous travel, where the minimum of bounce and jerk is com- bived with the maximum of comfort | possible npder steady motion. A road still unknown to surveyor or engineer, bevond reach or thought of railroad. | man or speculator, and but just open- 10g np its two hundred miles or more of primeval forest, A road trodden | only by Indians or crossed by stealthy fox or ivnx, its length winding through | treacherous marsh and bog, snd swift. stream and deep, unbroken forest, s ** blaze” here and there, indicating at some points the coarse to be followed, | and where too obtrusive trees were cut away, the stumps left standing at just | the right heicht for impaling wagon. | bodies and stir ing upa degree or two | only | ¢f profanity in the drivers From Pembina to Crow Wing, and in those two | red miles of a loneliness | only the traveler of that region can | know, what had not the patient oxen ! vodergpone? Twelve miles the average | day's accomplishment, until Leech Lake | and some suggestion of a civilized road | had been resched. Heavy mins, swol- ; futhowless mud-holes. wes spent in hauling | turbid and turbulent | le the oxen stood | ug after their re- | ther side, bringing ge by package, on | bridge could be ing while the two | ross with them on | silent and calmly | whats fate might | as fore and background | rer, who swore in all dialects | English through to | iis black beads | fire, his small and | legs dancing wildly | 3g his lean arms tiwind ion Oi © 3 Bayo ver ; f invective. | ad ceased to amuse, | h by constant rains, | t by mosquitoes, | ferocity bevond | of the Eastern | \ that remained. | iled, and for weary | re weary mind but one —10 see the low stock- * Wing ageney, and an re & real bed, even if | ow, wonld be hailed where one would us daily stage, con- utpost of civilization | d, eighty miles below, and t where railroads conld be Agein s broken bridge gave another worning of unloading and swearing aud, reloading, and when at last the rushipg river was passed and the wagon nder way, a treacheronsand -hole suddenly swallowed umped load o its very depths, and 8 seemed likely to hold Then all struggled out while Boulanger shriaked rage and Neddo examined pole heels and fisked cut the provision- basket, putting the contents on a damp log to dry, patience at last took flight, 23d like the ancient prophet in one of Lis very meny trials and predicaments, “1 spake with my tongue; I opened wile my mouth.” ** I will not stay in this nest cf mos- quitoes and flies and wait hours for this final catastrophe to unsnarl. I shall march on to Galf Lake, where there is a beach, uoless this last flood bas turned it to water, and there I can sit ia the sand and get dry. Of course, now there is no reaching Crow Wing to-night, and we must make our camp at the lake.” For this journey was by no means a first or second one, and the ox-team was simply one more experience of frontier traveling. Canoe and flat-train and indian pony had all been tried, and eilber was better than this frightful crawl, inch by iceh, a3 it were, At Gull Lake, the first camping point the previous year, ten miles above Crow Wing, had been a golitary wigwam, ten- *d by a toothless but amiable squaw, 40 gave me fresh pickerel roasted in the scales over her fire, and affording a pew sense of what flavor and savor natural methods may hold, snd pota- toes hardly bigger than walnu's, bat dng in my honer from the field she had planted, Perhaps she would be there to-day. In any case, alone or with such society as she conld give, there waited for me the clear, still, blue water in its setting of silvery sand, the blasted pine with its eagle's nest, the hush and se renity of the silent forest. Five miles under the pines, where one was less tormented by mosquitoes, and then came a final one~ a wade rather than a walk. 1 had forgotten the bog and the corduroy had sunk gnite out of sight, though I could feel 1t now and then below the black mnd which held tena- cicusly to each foot by turn and yielded with a long, slow suck, like a smack of evil satisfaction over my tribulations. i could not have and, reloading, BOD TROT givinae n 1 fore-wheels, rs int minnie ilem ther tocether, and wild and w 1 Ten thousard Lards availed against that gray column of mosquitoes, whose sound seemed at last a trumpet call to other columns, and which, in spite of headgearand leather gloves, penetrated the unknown and unguarded chink or crevice, Through the swamp at last and ou! once more under the friendly pines, and I ran, knowing the goal was near, and seeing soon the Hashing sunlight on the blue water. There was a bend- ivg figure near the lake. Along the brook emptying into it corn aud peas and beans were growing, and, actually, bulsams and even sweet-peas ut the end! “ My squaw has been brought over to white man’s fashions,” I say half aloud, and then stopped short, as the figure sprang up and turned with a subdued ‘‘my gracious!” when she saw the mud-coated and caked, torn, and most disreputable-looking apparition before her. > wan a face, such watery and faded, yet somehow intense blue “eyes, #0 jofinitesimal a nub of hair, so shadowy yet resolute a wraith, 1 had uever yeu encountered, even in remotest and most unfriended cabin, where a | jest now, be the pond there, it was a An’ then to think of a white woman bain’ what I should see! Where be you from? I reckon it's a dry country you've left behind you,” she added with a twinkle, “ for you have brought all the mud with you. Now you come straight ap along with me, an’ U'll scrape you off some, Where's your folks ¥ “Six miles back in a mud-hola,” 1 | answered. with the ghostly impression still strong upon me. The voice was only a husky whisper, and a nearer view only intensified the bloodlessness of the skin hardly hiding the poor bones below. The woman laughed. “ Youthink I'm a poor show,” she said, itself to what I was. “You were not here when I went up a year ago? “No; I come in November. When you're in some of my clothes an' have had a cup of tea I'll tell you all about it. There's the house. Aint that pretty for Gulf Lake? Kinder comfortable #" Comfortable! A palace eould not have held a tenth of all the word meant ! A ‘‘but and a ben” only, but how spotlessly neat! Morning-glories and hops climbing over door and window, where white curtains hung; a spnow- white bed, shut in by moequito-bar ; a " and tins polished to their utmost capac- ity — one of shining blackness, the other of shining brightness—a dresser holding civilized dishes ; a shelf, where two or three books lay—the Bible, Whittier's poems and “ David Copper- field,” and a pile of well-worn papers; an old-fashioned rocking-chair with near it ; and, to complete the curious mixture of old New England farmhouse and frontier-cabin, a warming-pan hang- ing between the windows, its copper face shining like everything « Ise. “You think that's a queer thing to tote out West? said my hostess, who had already spread a cloth and out on fresh water to boil for the promised cup of tea. “I ’lctted on it before 1 was big enough to reach it, hangin’ there in grandmother's kitehen up in Vermont, an’ when I went West, least ways what was West forty years ago-— to Pennsylvany- I took it along for old times, and thea to Illinois an’ Minne- You'd say it wasn't much more use than Timothy Dexter's ship-load for the West Injies; but he made a fortune out o' that, an’ I sort of expect good luck from this one. Now, before that kettle biles, you might freshen up a mite. The heft of it we won't do nothin’ to till you've had your tea,” Words can never tell the delight of that fresbening—first in cold water in a real wash-basin, then the tea, drank to an accompaniment of narrative poured out as if mere speech were a gift straight from heaven. An in- domitable cheerfulness, a resolute grasp of these shadowy threads of life, seemed the strongest characteristic of this creature in whose faded eyes quick gleams of expression came and went, and whose alertness and even vivacity were miraculous testimonies to the im- perious will that governed the frail body, no matter what human weakness interposed. In the beginning, the story proved one I had often heard—the exodus of forty years before, when New England, more especially its northern portion, seemed emptying itself into the West, the white-covered, heavily-laden wagons passing day by day through the old towns, gazed upon by the more con- servative with apprehension and dis- may. ‘I hankered after home; I do it even now, once in a great while,” the shad- OWy woman went on; “but I ain't goin’ to dwell onthat. Likely's not you've heerd forty folks say the same thing. But what you hain’t heerd I'm goin’ to tell yon now. He came from | Maive, as maybe, I don’t sav—born a lumberman, an’ his father one before him. Av’'so, when Minnesota opened up, it come easy to put out o' Illinois, | where farmin' never suited him, an’ where there wasn't a stick o' timber, except along the river-bottoms, an’ he always half pinin’ for it. He knows his business an’ soon fel into work, an’ we | settled down in Minneapolis; that's | about as folksy a place as you'll find. But you gee I wasn’t never over strong, an’ I'd shook in them bottoms till it's my belief there wasn’t an inch inside of me that kept jest the place the Lord had laid ont to have it keep. Folks said the trouble was your gall ran ont into your liver; but I said your liver ran where it was a mind to, an’ your stomach into whatever else there ‘was, | an’ morn’n likely interfered with your lungs au’ kept you from having a long breath. That's the way it looked to me, even after I got settled in Minne- apolis, for mine got shorter an’ shorter, | an’ ut last, in spite of me, I was in bed, an’ the folks sayin’ I shounldn’t never | see spring, ** Now, the children had died as fast | as they come almost. There wasn't | one left ; an’ Hiram is set by natur’ on what's his own, an’ it seemed as if he couldn't stand it to lose me, tco. We'd been unlucky, too—burned out once | an’ the bank broke that had our money | in it, snch as it wes—an’ he was pretty | low ; an’ when time come to go up to | camp he balf broke down, an’ he said: | Malviny, I can’t. Supposin’ you | shouldn't be here when I came back. | I had better go as hand in a mill, earn less,’ ““* Hiram,’ I said, ‘you take me along | with you.’ You never saw a man look | more scared, for he thought I was goin’ | out 0’ my mind. But I hadn't noticed folks an’ ways for nothin,’ an’ I said: ‘Don’t you know jest as well as the uext one that the doctors keep sendin’ consumptive folks up into the pineries? an’ if your camp ain't as good .as an- other, I'd like to know. I can’t more'n die, anyway ; an’ I'm sick of bein’ tucked up in bed an’ an air-tight chokin’ me day an’ night, an’ I'm goin’ with you. ‘Malviny, you can’t,’ he said, ‘it's all men, There ain't no place.” ‘Then make a place,” says I. “'Tain’t fit,’ says he. ‘Women don’t know anything about a passel of men together.’ ‘Then the more reason for findin’ out, an’ seein’ if they can’t be made decent,’ says I, ‘if that's what ycu mean, I feel to know I shan't die if I can git up there; but go I will, if I have to walk an’ can’t do more'n ten steps a day.’ “ Well, he knew I was set, an’, though I didn’t put my foot down very often, I had it down then, square, an’ he set in a brown study awhile, an’ he says: ¢ Well, Malviny, ’tain’t no time to cross you, an’ I never wanted to yet. If you think you’ll hold out, 1’il start up the country to-morrow an’ see about havin’ a separate cabin next to camp. They’re fixin’ for winter now, an’ 1 kin go an’ come in a week. But I don’t see how youw’ll stand it, an’ I don’t believe you will.’ ‘Then I can be buried in ‘the i an’ | { woods,” says I; ‘I always did have a pine trees, * Wall, he went off; an’ I will say I didn't see myself how I could live till he got back, for 1 had another time of raisin’ blood that very night, It came pourin’ straight out; but I said: * 1 won't give in. It ean’t all run out, | oalenlate there'll be enough left keop me goin,’ “ Folks wouldn't believe it, but by the time Hiram got back I could orawl to the window, 1 sot there when he came in sight, an' he was astonished as you'd waat to see, But he had to lay in an’ git picked for goin’ up, an’ the very morning all was ready I must needs come down again. Well, he waited a day, an' then he says: ‘I'll go with the load, Malviny, an’ fix up a bit, an’ then I'll come back an' take you up on a empty sled, so's to make room for a bed an’ things for you to go easier,” °* wan't to go now,” I says; ‘l shall be dead if I don't! Well we argued some back an’ forth, an’ at last he says: ‘It ain't no use, Malviny. All's ready now, an' I'm goin' now, an’ I'll come back for you as I said;' an’ off he started for the barn. I was up that minute an’ into my warm things in spite of Mrs, Smith tryin’ to stop me, an’ when he drove round an' come in I jest walked to the door. ‘No, you don't,’ he says, an’ jest took me up an’ laid me on the bed an’ run. ** What got into me then 1 couldn’ tell; Lord carried me along, 1 reckon, Anyway, I ran too, Mrs. Smith after me, an’ Hiram jest drivin® off, an’ there I stuek to the runner and wouldn't let go. Hiram was pale as a ghost, an’ most eryin’, an’ he says, ‘For the Lord's sake, back, Malviny,’ an’ | BAYS, * For the Lord's sake 1 won't,’ an’ jest crawled up into the buffaloes alongside o' him. * There's one chance in a million of your gettin’ there alive,’ he says, ‘an’, if you're bound to go on that one, we'll try it, that's all;’ an’ off we went. ** Well, whether "twas the notion or the air away from the air-tight, or ear ryin’ the p'int, I couldn't tell, but I grew more an’ more chirp with every mile, eat quite a dinner, an’ slep’ night, an’ Hiram he jest kept still an’ waited. I knew he was waitin’. But we got through at last, an’ into these very pine woods beginnin’ Crow Wing. sniffed "em, an’ knew life was in "em if it was anywheres. When Hiram drove up before the camp, sn’ Smith, the overseer, come out, he looked a minute, an’ then swore right out: ‘ Bo you tarnin’ into a blamed fool at vour time o' life, to be bringin’ a dead woman into camp? he says. Bat I knew I wasn't anywheres near dyin’, an’ Smith knows it too, now. I'd give a sight if he wasn't below. He's 80 contented to have me round again, he says he don't care if we never stir from here the rest of our lives: aun’ I'm sure I don't an’ wouldn't. I walk under them pines, an’ small "em deep in’ an’ 1 says, ‘Here's your life-elixir, an’ no mistake: aa' if folks knew it th wouldn't die in little close rooms, 1 come out under ‘em. I was always a master- hand for ont-doors, an' he helps along the house-work, so't we can gar. den together, an’ Shahweah does what ne an’ me ain't a mind to. Mostly as long as daylight lasts I putter round outside ; an’ I ain't sure but what I shall be an old woman yet, even if 1 bain't but a piece of a lung left.’ ‘As for them men, you never see twenty fellows more set on bein’ agreea ble than they was. For all havin’ to whisper, I always managed to make 'em hear, an’ I did odds an’ eads for ’em, an’ they went in an’ out, an’ told stories, an’ sung, an’ one night I even danced ; an’ I never had a more sociable winter. I thought he'd be a leetle lonesome when they went below; but he takes a sight of comfort in the paper—wa've had it from the beginnin'—an' he don't seem to mind one mite. I always read considerable, an’ I go over an’ over the faw books we've got, an’ find somethin’ new every time. And I expect you'll laugh when I tell you the only thing that ever makes me lonesome or skeery, 'Tain’t Injins; I don't see but what they're folksy enough, when you git It's loons, 1 say they're the lonesomest thing in natur’, an’ when they holler I jest crawl all over. Bat then I can git along even with them, An’ now I'd like to know 3 an to gO 11 nil ne bY 3} ii every word ; but I'm dreadful sorry he Lippincott. - How They Used to Travel, In the sixteenth year of the reign of the first turnpike road where toll was taken, which intersected the connties of Hertford, Cambridge and Huntingdon, tury, however, most of the merchandise perted on pack-horses through short Between distant places a cart was used, a pack-horse not being able to transport a sufficient quantity eight miles, required a fortnight for In 1678 a coach for passengers between forty-four miles, completed in six days. In 1750 the one hour and a half. stage coach between Edinburgh and London. They started once a month from each of these cities. It took a fortnight to perform the journey. In 1835 seven coaches started daily performed the journey in less than forty. eight hours. In 1763 the number of passengers by the coaches between London and Edin- burgh could not have exceeded about twenty-five monthly. In 1835 the coaches conveyed about 140 passengers daily, Until the close of the last century the internul transport of goods in Eng- land was performed by wsgon, and was 80 expensive as tu exclude every object except manufactured articles and such as, being of light weight and small bulk in proportion to their value, would al- low & high rate of transport. Thus the charge from London to Leeds was at the rate of £13 a ton, being 13 1.24. per ton per mile. Between Liverpool and Manchester it was 40s. a ton, or 156d per ton per mile. Heavy articles, such as coal and other materials, conld only be available for commerce where their position favored transport by sen, and consequently many of the richest dis- tricts of the kingdom remained unyro- ductive. General Budlong A. Morton, alias Thomas A. Marvin, the celebrated swindler and bigamist, has earned a term of solitary confinement by an at- tempt to break out of the Virginia pen- itentiary. . Philadelphia has an artist named Swords hen eight years of age he was only a little bowie, HEALTH HINTS, Ohio, who had rhenmatism nineteen YEAS, says the following is wha! oured him: ** 1 quart rye whisky, 1 oz wild oherry bark (root), 1 prickly ash root, 1 oz Yi How dock root, 1 oz spike nard root, 1 ox gaenetian root, 1 oz gum myrrh If one bottle don't cure you, try another. Take three drinks a day. Two bottles cured me." White bread alone will not support animal life, grain will. The experiment has been tried in France by Magendie. Dogs were the subject of the trial, and every care was taken to equalize all the other conditions to proportion the quantity of food given in each case to the weight of the animal experimented upon, and so forth. The result was sufliciently marked. At the end of forty days the dogs fed solely on white bread died, of the Of, whole grain remained vig orons, healthy and well nourished The habit of commencing dinner with soup has without doubt its origin in the fact that aliment in this fluid form—in fact, readily digested-—soon enters the blood and refreshes the nungry man, who, after a considerable fast and much activity, sits down with a sense of exhaustion to aommence principal meal. In two or min utes after be has taken a plate of good warm soup, the feeling of exhaustion disappears and irritability gives way to he rising good-fellowship with the circle. The soup introduces at onee into the system a small install ment of ready digested food, and saves the short pericd of time which must be spent by the stomach in deriving some nutriment from solid aliment, as well indirectly strengthening the organ of digestion itself for its forth. coming duties, his \ taree sense of as — AS What the Japanese Eat, M. T. Van Buren, United States con- sul general at Japan, presents in a blue book some interesting facts in regard to the food of the Japanese peo ple. With a population of 80,000,000 people, there to be found in the whole country but little more than 1,000,000 head of cattle, Of these only 600,000 can be considered fit for foe i Therefore there are but two head of cattle for each ome hundred people, whereas in the United Bilates we have for one hundred mouths seventy-thre, cattle to fill them. Japan slaoghters however, 36,000 head of than one-half of which is « by the foreign population, the rest being con sumed by the Japanese army and navy. Mutton and pork are, outside of the treaty ports, almost unknown, Fish enters largely into the food of the people. Mr. Van Buren mentions that “ood, salmon, herring, mackerel, salmon trout, carp, eels, skate mullet, catfish and plaice are plentiful and cheap.” It is known that govern ment has {aken t: I in regard. to fish culture, and endeavors in every way to increase the products of the sea, sending for all American publications on these topics. The con sul states that * one-half of the people eat fish every day, one-quarter two or three times a week, and the balance perhaps once or twice a month.” It is their habit to eat a great many vari eties of fish raw. But the Japanese are more essentially vegetarians than even the Chinese, and all the land marine plants, with the tubers, seem to be placed under contribution, Among excentional food plants Mr, Van Buren mentions an acorn which grows on a small bush from three four feet high; it has less sugar than the nut from the chestnut tree of America, but has the merit of being free from astringent avd bitter quali. ties. Large quantities of these nuts are gathered, dried and eaten by the people in varions ways. We hear a is callie, more ¢ alten the active measures to anese use in large stance which they call ame. quantities a the starch of the rice or mallet into up to a bard candy very large, 5555 Law Expenses. Twenty-eight years ago a citizen of dollars, which he bequeathed by will to his son of the same name. Bat the will favor of the heirs, the son being dead. be worth about $35,000. All the rest has been swallowed up in law expenses, This is not by any means an excep tional case, but it fairly illustrates the rapid increase of the expenses of liti cably adjusted by compromise, A still more striking case has recent courts of the Middle States. A advantage of some legal technicality to suits before a local magis trate against large numbers of non-resi- property holders and business of money. In all these cases the par- ties—very well knowing that they owed no such money—neglected to appear before the magistrate to plead in the cases, Of course judgment was given against them by default. Then the game was to permit these judgments to remain unnoticed until after the time had expired for taking appeals. When that was done the claims were put into the hands of the regular judicial an- thorities for collection, and of course had to bo paid. I ——— 555 Barnum and the Bunko Man, An old gentleman strolling leisurely up Broadway, New York, was accosted by a well-dressed young man, who slapped bim on the back, saying : “Why Mr. Williams, how are you ? How are all the friends in Scranton “My name is not Williams,” was the reply, “and I don’t know anything about Seranton.” The young man in- sisted that he could not be mistaken and followed, talking volubly, till the elderly gentleman turned round and eaid : “Look here. My name is P. T, Barnum, and unless you clear out im- mediately I'll have you behind the bars in the nearest police station in less than five minutes, I was a resident of this city before you were born. Now go.” And he went. Senator Fair lives in Charles Sum- ner's old quarters at Washington. The senator is the richest man in Congress, and probably the richest officeholder in the world, His leisure is devoted to the study of finance, SUNDAY READING, A Peoulinry Prayer, church, Chicago, has abandoned peti tional prayer, and in place of saving “Let us pray,” now says, * Let us hold communion together.” He prefaced a | recent sermon by the following mono logue: world of eare and foil, that we may | open them upon a world of peace and pure reflection, We would leave be hind all sadness, all anxiety and all gloomy thought, and take counsel at this time of our holiest impulses and our sercnest philosophy, We would give freo rein to all that is best within us—to “run and be glorified,” and banish all that is unworthy and gross | We come here to think, in order that presently we may feel. May we think clearly and honestly, May we stimu late each other with such enthusiasm for truth as will lift us above servile regard for popular opinion, Oh, that we may be at least true, and uncon. ventional, and brave with out boust fulness, And may the truth beget in us its most blessed fruits, May sym. pathy be our daily garb, and honor the habit of our life, May charity shine in all our sets, and modulate with its sweet emphasis all our conversation, May we despise all lit tleness as unworthy of men. May we true of heart, gentle of speech, honest in thought, modest in utter ance, and above all may our communioa with each other so beget within us the spirit of love as that we shall be above inkind and stupid speech about each other. May we build up in ourselves and so also in others, true nobility of character, being kind to the poor, gen. tle to the sick, merciful to the fallen and charitable to the rieh, and thus help dispel the clouds which conceal the dawning of humanity's ideal day. Amen, be Keliglons latelligence. There are in Kansas 200 Presbyterian churches, with 12 044 members, of Massa all purposes last churches for The Baptist chusetts raised year $024,004. Mr. F. Wise, of Ireland, has given $100,000 toward the restoration of the cathedral in Cork, Michigan has 17 Presbyterian churches, with 16,156 communicants ; lowa 305 churches, with 20.8512 com- municants, The jubilee fund of tha English Con gregationslists now amounts to $500, 00, all of which bas been raised since October, 1551. The Mississippi Northern Methodist reports 21 952 members, 2.853 probatic ners, 304 churches, val red at $20,160, and 364 Sunday-schools The Methodist savs it has reported 2.971 conversions in 1882 It thinks that as an evangelistic force Methed- ism shows no signs of weakening, but many of Hs converts po to other churches, 4 ot : conference It is reported in Japan that the gov ernment 1s about to re-establish Shin. toism as the religion of the state, and to combat by all possible means Bud. dhism and the progress made by Chris tianit The total! indebtedness reported by the M: thadist churches in Philadelphia al the conference of 1581 was $542,967. { It has since been reduced to perhaps $500,000. There are but ten churches frea from debt, Archdeacon Macdonald, an Episcopal missionary in British America, has a field of work on the confines of the Arctic circle extending over about twenty degrees of longitude. About 1,500 natives have been baptized, and more than 100 are communicants, I aa. Hints on Calling, On leaving, never mistake a silk um. brella for your cotton cne. You may be termed eccentric. Do pot wear your muddy gums in the parlor, and wipe them on the carpet, It isn't msthetio, { If you are requested to “‘eall again” { sugaest that yon are willing to take { something on account, Do not attract attention by consult | ing your watch. You might be mis. | taken for a car starter, Do not talk too much of your valua- { ble jewelry, The hostess may think | you have too much “brass.” | Never commence a conversation by | referring to the weather. You may be | taken for a lightning rod agent. | Donot ask point blank how much | the paintings cost. Just casually in | quire where the lady buys her tea, { Beware of making free with the dog. | He may be capable of distinguishing { between a gentleman and a roghe. { the drawing-room. The odor of cab. age may be distasteful to the hostess, Do not make the first call if you are a newcomer in the neighborhood. Just wait until yon bave made several. On entering, always let your lady pre- cede yon keep a bad dog you may find it health- | ier to do ro. may hurt its feelings. Do not open or shut doors or win- room. When you want to get out, climb through the fan-light. Do aot tattle, from one family to another. If you have a wife let out the job to her. She do it more effectually, When a lady bas called who has re cently returned from a sojourn, do not wult until she is taking her leave before her back.” It may sound a little sug gestive.— Yonkers Statesmen, - IIs A Touching Inc dent, Midlothian mines, Virginia. tendent Dodds mounted a coal ear and and children, said: it grieves me to have to state to yon bodies of those you knew and loved will have to be abandoned, You know what fire in a coal mine means, and it may take months of watching to sub- due it. We will close the pit now.” The speeker's voice quivered with emotion. When he finished, a beanti- ful little girl of fourteen years, Annie Crowder, the only daughter of one of the victims, uttered a piercing seream and rushed to the mouth of the pit, crying: “Oh, do not leave my dear papa to burn down there, Let me get into the cage to go down after him. Let me save him.” The strong arms of the miners held her back as the fragile thing tried to make her way to the cage, and more than one blackened face was made blacker as the hand went up to wipe away the tears. Men sobbed aloud and turned away to conceal their emo- tion. The little girl, finding her pro- gress barred, swooned at the mouth of the pit. How Rugs Are Made, How many who stop to admire the carpet dealers know how the rug is made? That it is as it lies there warm, soft, bright with a dozen colors, fruits, birds or figures, history : First, the border and center then painted in straight lines upon paper, containing a ruled scale, and in the proper colors that are afterward to This paper rug is then ent up into strips, each contain. ing two spaces of the scale, and these papers are the pattern that the first or weft weaver is to follow, In weaving weft a warp beam say 200 threads in width and a wheep beam of 100 threads in width are re- quired. Two threads of the first and one of the second pass through the same split in the reed at regular inter. vals of say one-third of an ineh, the intervening splits of the reed being empty. The paper pattern is fastened to the middle of the work, and the weaver follows it exnotly as it is paint. ed; that is, the pattern may need six hreads of crimson, two of black, twelve of corn, ten of green olive, and #0 on, the weaver filling the *‘spot” exactly as to length and color. Having woven the fall length of the papsr as painted on the left-hand space the paper is begun again and the painting in the right-hand space is followed, and when all the papers which, laid side by side, form the rug, have been thus ished. The roll of weft-cloth is then run through the cutting machine, a ten ineh cylinder, around which a costinnous thread of knife blades is wound, The eylinder is revolved at a high rate of speed, and the weft-cloth, passing within range of the knives, is ent into strips by them. These strips do not urravel, be- cause in weaving the wheep thread is twisted about the two warp-threads and the filling is locked in. After twisting each strip to change it from being a flat thread into a round thread, it is wound upon a bobbin, aud is ready for the second weaver, who is called the setter. The warp of the rug is black flax; end the setter uses two shuttles, alter. nately—a small one, containing a bob. bin of two-ply or three-ply flax, and a weft. A white thread on each side, aud one in the middle of the black Wrap are the guides to the setter, who soos that certain parts of the weft. thread come under those white threads before he presees the welt in Each bobbin of weft will weave about three inches of the rag; so, if the rug is one yard long it will require about twelve bobbins, which mean twelve pieces of weft-eloth to complete it. But these twelve pieces, having each been eut up into ninetysix identical strips, will make ninety-six similar rogs. Therefore should the weft weaver put in, say, eight thre.ds {one-half inch in length) of a wrong color ur shade, that error would appear in ninety-six rugs. The setter having finished the ninety six sets of twelve bobhins, the rugs are ready for finishing. The machine throngh which they pass cuts the surface off evenly, and brushes them free of fragments of the materials used. This treatment brings out every detail of the design and heightens the colors. Most of the rugs made here are of flax and wool; others are of silk and shoddy silk. The weft for the silk rugs has eight strips to the inch, and to ent it requires 288 knife blades, each one of which must have a razor edge. The weft cloth and the blades must be set to a picety, since the variation of the sixteenth of an inch would make the knives cut the 288 threads instead of the filling between the threads. There is a firm in Glasgow, SBootland, who manufacture for the roval houses of Europe such elaborate designs as the Lord's supper, the weft-weaver, in some oases, using 400 different shuttles, . bric-a-brae. The lacquer ware of Bur mah is not so well known, and is dis- tinguished by an extreme thinness and flexibility. The supreme test of excel. in until the be bent breaking varnish, do not admit of reproduction by West- they touch ware or cracking the character of the materials used. It was onoe thought that Japanese lacquered goods were a spe. tree, A Burman has farnished to an Eng- of the mysteriesof the flexible Barmese lacquered ware. It seems that the smooth, polished articles of that sort are really bamboo baskets, mese forests grows a huge tree whose leaves can hardly be seen for masses of creamy white blossoms, with a fra- grant apple odor. These blossoms the tree is obtained a dark, thick juice that becomes jet black upon exposure to the air, The finely plaited bamboo ward pastes, composed of the thit see juice and certain wood dusts are laid The surface is polished by rub. juice and bore ashes, smoothed and of a powdered, petrified wood. Red is almost invariably the ground color, but a curious checker work is show the black wood oil through the The colors used in decoration of the ware are oils, In this way the Burmese make and strength, from small drinking cups betel boxes up to an elaborate structure six feet high, with sacred spires, which the king sends laden with food under the royal um- brellas to a celebrated pagoda in Man- Toe thit-see juice has many uses, Ap- plied to marble or clay images it en- ables them to take on gilding. Um- brellas are always varnished with it to make them impervious to rain, and all the racing and war boats in the country are aade by it more water-tight than the best calking in the world could effect, se ———————— The Panama Canal, Should the projected canals across the Isthmus of Panama ever be com- pleted, it will be at a terrible cost of human life. The climate is very un healthfal and laborers cannot; be pro- vided with proper food.— Dr, Foote's Health Monthly. A rich Frenchman who had a desire to know how a camel roast would taste, paid $4,000 for an snimal to get his roast from, It tasted like beef. FOR THE LADIES. Kpring Millinery. {last through a season, and the fine | straws are made as light as chip, and are far more dursble., English split { ind most favor, as they come in very {are very light in weight; these are | and ecru, and are in all the new shapes {both of bonnets and round hats. {These fine straws are also colored deep green, brown, blue, garnet {and black for bonnets to wear with { special costumes, or with white or black | dresses, | The red hats that were so fashionable | Inst summer are repeated in darker | shades, and in these smooth light { braids as well as in the heavy looking {rough straws. Manila i i i i i i i i { brimmed round hats. The porcupine | were worn alike for dress and undress | hats last year, Satin straw, Milan and pote bonnets that will be chosen for | dress, and also for the larger shapes | for watering places, | Theyellowish Tuscan braids are always | liked for summer bonnets, and are now | largely imported in plain, prove popular. In the new bonnets two kinds of Tuscan braids are com- bined; the principal part of the bonnet is the plain Tuscan, and there are in. | sertions of the lace straw laid flat in the crown and like a border on the brim, Thick clusters of loops of braid are imported in all the new shapes for horsehair or erinoline straws known as Neapolitan braids, but hitherto these they cannot be commended. The new shapes are not new, but showing larger pokes, wider brimmed round bats, and small eapotes. The pokes have crowns of various shapes— round, tapering and almost square— while the front projects upward so high that the fashion of trimming next the face will have to be resorted to in onder | to fill up this great space. | for this purpose, stuck about irregularly in the way seen in the bonnets of a hundred years ago. There are also worn just across the upper | inside brim of pokes, and to be placed at will, as best becomes the wearer's face, on the pew round hats, of dressy small bonnets, almost cover ing one side of them, while on the | feathers. Rather smail flowers are im- | For medium small bonnets the corcnet | rolled back like a corvnet. The round hats retain the large shapes of last year that are capable of being made so pie- turesque and becoming. The brims are very wide and flat, and are without wires, 50 that they can be made into almost any desired shape, but it is said they will be worn quite flat on the head, in peasant fashion, with the brim straight all around.— Harper's Bazar, Fashion Notes New trains are pear-shaped. Gold tulle trims evening dresses, Velvet dresses need little trimming. Yellow diamonds are in great favor, Guipure guimps are in new dresses. Silver gray is revived as a fashionable | dress color. Buttercup yellow is a fashionable | spring color. Bonnets grow larger and the poke | shape prevails, | American silks and satins are winning [ new praise abroad. | Flowers on dinner tables grow more | and more in fashion. Aisthetic dress grows more and more in favor in England. | Large polka dotted Spanish lace neck- ! scarfs are in high favor. Lace will be as popular as ever for | trimming summer toilets. black crepe de chine are much worn. the costliest and most elegant wraps. Colored Spanish lace appears spring wear. | bons strings. | trimming bonnets, i | season, and come in all the new desira- ble shades of color, Bonnets, muffs, pelerines, dress trimmings and fans made of peacock feathers are much favored. Feather bands are considered more elegant than fur ones as trimmings for | the richest wraps and costumes. Pale pink and silver are very fash {ionably combined in toilets designed for young ladies’ dancing parties, {| Feathers and jeweled combs are | more fashionable for evening coiffures { than flowers, eitker real or artificial, Long haired India cashmere, just be- cause it is uncommon and unpreten- | tious, is nsed alongside of the richest { silk, velvet and plush cloaking fabrics | for wraps of high ceremony. e————————— How an Alligator Eats. An slhgator's throat is an animated sewer, Everything which lodges in his open month goes down. He is a lazy dog, and instead of hunting for some- | thing to eat he lets his victuals hunt {for him. That is, he lies with his mouth open, apparently dead, like the ‘possum. Soon a bug crawls into it, then a fly, then several gnats and a colony of mosquitoes. The alligator don’t close his mouth yet. He is wait- ing for a whole drove of things. He does his eating by wholesale. A little later a lizard will cool himself under the shade of the upper jaw. Then a few frogs will hop up to catch the mos- quitoes. Then more mosquitoes and gnats light on the fiogs. Finally a whole village of insects and reptiles sottle down for an atternoon pienie, Then all at once there is an carthquake. The big jaw falls, the alligator slyly blinks one eye, gulps down the entire menagerie and opens his great front door again for more visitors.— Florida Lastier, . FACTS AND COMMENTS, It is estimated that as the result of = persecntion of Jews in Russia, 100,. RUMOR OF £ J DAY. A twofoot rule—Keep | “Iomnotsobad as I am said th» fashionable woman. The bashful lover who can’t bis fedlings cften sends ' them * President ” Taylor, of the Mormon married twenty- eighth wife - a Massachusetts widow. turbances with the other wives, and discipline, that the * President ” had to rs “ 141 thought Iwas going te , I know { should AF When she turned gr cinco, — ” Wilson Waddingham 1s & %>w York millionaire whose fame has not winged itself very far away from home. He is said to have made a million in one oper- ation in mining stock last year. He owns & million and half acres of land in New Mexico, there being upon the range 80,000 cattle, He has just built ven. A losomotive fireman on the Northern Pacific road becsine insane, ov rate of a mile a minute. The engineer managed to get the upper hand of his just iu time to prevent a collisior, The isappeared on the prairie. It was a Fishermen at Astrakban were over- taken with a shocking calamity during parts of Russia They are wont to go Student (not very clear as to his lass son) —* That's what the gale swept over the place, b up 3 every one of uch damage was being uprooted, and the roof of the new exhibition building blown off. The practice of keeping hives of bees the prefect of poiice has issued an or- der forbidden it for the future, except in the case of persons who shall have 8 preamble of the decree represents the great danger to the populstion of the existence of so large a number of bees to have my face w opinion of the council of public health | I ne'er was more infatuated Than for the department of the Seine con- New York juries have givens man $10,500 damages for having his eve put out by the shattering of a pane of g knee-pan got in a horse-car. In the car told the conductor where she wished to get out; he forgot it and went by at a rapid rate; she motioned to him with- | dinner fell on the company stinger in the corner said, trust that yon sre not familiar new ones.” —38t. Louis Hers, This is a Fashionsble Res'sorant. Do you not see the pi i y Do yo the Window bread for car stopped suddenly. A passenger's this with her inertia threw the woman heavily upon the floor. The railroads are finding out that people have rights td the The German carp, the valuable food- States, is making its way to all parts of it with grest rapidity. Mr. Abel Wright, who began with two or three dozens of the carp three years ago, thinks that he now has st least a mil- lion in his pond at Griffen, Ga He has sold more than 5,000 at twenty dollars a hundred, and cannot keep up they will go in, but he Wishes he : thought of a better Lie to tell ber.— Elevated Railway Jowrwal. WISE WORDS, g without almost see the carp grow, so rapidly Green | Everyth : vidual that 3 that does it increase in size. A asserts that an acre of water can be made as profitable as an acre of land, and it does not cost much to make the experiment, The Botanical garden at Washington bas a curious history. It has grown up with little help from the law. When the Wilkes exploring expedition re- turned to the United States about forty vears ago it brought back from the South Pacific certain rare specimens of flora of those regions, and Congress ap- propriated $1,200 to have them prop- erly cared for, and as a report of the expedition was to be published under the direction of the committee on li- brary the care of the botanical speci mens was placed under its supervision. Of course the thing grew, till now the Botanic garden is an ** institution” which costs about $15,000 a year and: upon which, first and last, nearly $600,- Most of us know something about the discipline of poverty, and feel quite ready to experience.some of the awful responsibilities of wealth. In the voyage of life we should imi. tate the ancient mariners, who, without losing sight of the earth, trusted tothe heavenly signs 1d: Shei: guidance - Truth can iy expected to adapt herself to the crooked policy and wily sinuosities of worldly affairs, for truth, like light, travels only in straight lines. pended. The garden appears to be use- that respect mainly for the purpose Oupni other qualities, It floats tne and vice. There is scarce . | exigency where its place Persons holding policies of life in- per ought not, to be surance would do well to examine them | for the purpose of ascertaining if any of ing, * In Cincinnati,” says the Detroit Free Press, ‘a company recently con- i through the clouds, while others make you feel 58 though a sudder cast wind, with its arms of cold fog, had caught you with too thin clothing on. Experience always leads to modesty wher oh y used. It never leads to The | boastful confidence or to self- iP It has been too often rebaked to claim infallibility, and too often humiliated to set up a primacy that may not be challenged. There is no kind of achievement yon could make in the world that is equal to perfect health. What to it are nug- gets and millions? The French finan- cier said: “Why, is there no sleep to be sold ?” Slecp was not in the market at any quotation. Picking Out the Weak Points of a Hl The weak points of a horse ean better discovered while standing ing th while moving. If he is sound be stand firmly and squarely on Lis lis without moving any of them, with plomb and naturally por n TE te ar hehe pointing o and t ruised, or if the foot is lifted from + round and the weight taken from it, : ey may De Suspected, be 4 tenderness, which is a preearsor of ease, If the horse stands 1 while in the poliey, that she could recover, because the proof showed that deceased died from cramp; but there is no cemainty that other courts will follow the ruling, especially in cases where death results from bathing in a tub and not in the sea. To persons unaccustomed to the bath the former, like the latter, would be ‘a voluntary exposure to obvious and un- necessary dangers,’ and might result in death. Wherefore, it is best to exam- ine the policies,” An Opium Den in New York. A New York police captain recantly visited an opium den in First street, that city. The smokingaoom is a small place in the center of a basement, admission to which costs twenty-five cents. Six men and ore woman, all well-dressed Americans, ocenpied two beds and were engaged in preparing the drug for smoking. One of them said he had not left the place in three weeks, and that he had spent in that time about §2 per day for opium. The woman said she was a Californian, and that she came to New York city because the laws in California prohibited opium smoking. Bowls of strong tea without milk or sugar were oceasionall brought to the smokers, and they dran copiously of it. Oae of the attendants sald that most of the patrons of the place were actors and actresses, some of whom were well «nown and very popular, es. Professor Riley says that theheat and dropght of the past sumer have killed off the Hessian fly, and that immunity from its attacks may be expected for | heard some years to come. cd - vy Bluish or mil dicate moon kin is r ugh and bard, §