rm In the Lane. They met in the lane by the pasture gate, “A bird sang---aweetly a little bird sang). ~~ gh it was chance, but he knew it was ate; {On a swaying tree-top the bright bird sang * 1 have something to tell you,” he gently said, She blushed like a rose-leaf and bent her head, While loudly the gay bird sang. * Hark to the bird in the old oak tree!” (“I love my love,” the wooing bird sang). * He ix bolder than I, let him speak for me, {** Now and forever,” the brave bird sang), “1 hear his musio, but, Roy, I fear Whea the snow blows into the waning year, He'll forget the song he sang!” Listen, love, to tha hopeful bird!" (** Love me, I love thee,” the fond bind sang) * Only in spring time his voice is heard,” (* I will be true,” the bold bird sang.) * Trust me, my darling! year through!™ “True, true,” the sweet bird sang. wtfelen Brine Grigg. Eideola, White winged birds in the sunset heavens, White sailed ships an the sunsel soa; But neither the birds that fly above us, Nor ships, wherever their haven may be, Are meant for me, The bamboo lsughs at the zephyr's wooing, Tossing the sheen of her sea-green hair; While a jowvoicad lover leans to the lotus, *1i:1 her tlushing cheek is yot more fair; Bus eastward going, or westward blowing, The wd that apaaks to blossom or tree “Are damb to me, I turn my face to the “maichlsss monntain.” Quoenliest queen iu the world below; Crowned as with crown of pure white lilios, Flowers of the winter frost and snow, The stars aud the clouds are in her secre, Bat not on me, w Out from tha hush of the brooding twilight, Rweet as the breath of the rose in sleep, Soft as the flush of the summer sunset Fading away an the purple deep, Dawns in a dream the shore of the silent Fashod by the waves of an infinite soa; This is for ma Shadowy sails that are set 10 seek ma, Shadowy plutons that beat the air, Shapes of baanty that rise to greet ma, Are yo but phantoms, and yet so fair? Breaking the bands of the dusk ssunder, Tremulons stars in their mystery Now shine for me! Stars that illumine my soul serencly; VOLUME XV. NUMBER 19. them go at cnce—but first bring me my dressing-oase and jowel.oase. They them now, before I go. I'll make no difference, and then I've done with them all forever—ungrateful set!” Parker placed a gorgeous inlaid dressing case and a massive brass-bound coffer before her mistress and departed, Lady Paulett drew the latter to her with some diffioulty. old woman lika me should ba rid of some of these burdeus,” she said, smiling grimly as she turned the key and disclosed cass upon case of mo- rocco and velvet snugly stowed away. She turned them ont and laid them all bright fire and eandle light. Parker moanwhile stepped noiseless. next room “Let meses, Dora? ost, She was to have my emeralds. choice, Bah! he'll pawn them; what else can one expoot? doesn't matter, possess, bad thought One feels those things when one is Won lerfu] stars, nnknown to the skies Wistiul and teader, vailing your splendor, risions, oh, radiant aves? ies on the shore of the silent, Washed by the waves of an infinite sea, Ye are the rea’—the livieg are phantoms Fading from me! —Fyom {he Japanese, A ———————— THE OLD WORK-BOX.| « I shall say no more; you may take | your own way, all of you. I shall never | interfere with you egain, for good or | bad, so good-bye to you!" and Aunt} Panlett hobbled off on ber ebony cruteh | like the offended old fairy god- | mother, The family looked at one another | with blank faces as the door clapped | smartly after her. i Aunt Puunlett was a woman of her word, and if the said she would go back | to her hasband's psopla, go she would | undonbredly, and then, what would be- | come of themall? | From that dsy—twenty years ago— when she, a ohildless widow, entered | her sister's scambling, out-at-elbows | household, to yesterday evening, she | bad ruled them all with a rod of iron, | by the might of a strong will and a long | purse, i Easy-going Mr. Hilton and his fair, | stupid, good natured wife, who speat a | placid existence doing wool work om | the sofa, her ideas seemingly bounded | by the requirements of the last annual | baby, were mere ciphers in their own | house, under her stern, yet wholesome | SWAY. 1f Mr. Hilton, atter ona or two cut- ting remarks from her ladyship, had | sadly resigned his ancient and comfort. | able fashion of spending the evening in his greasy old dressing-gown and | down-at-heel slippers—if the servants | shook in their shoes at the sound of | Lady Paulett’s bell, and a hint of “Aunt | Arabella” quelled the wildest nursery | riot—yet the handsome premium which | was to start clever Jack on the road to | glory as an engineer, the allowance | which sent studious Pierce to college | and saved bim from filling a stool in his | father's office. Dora's pretty gowns | and trinkets, Emily's singing lessons, | and the new piano, the summer trip to | the sea side, the winter pantomime and | Christmas party—in brief, all the com- | forts and luxuries of the family from | the pony carriage to the last baby’s | christening robe, came from the gen- | erous hand of the same beneficent old despot ; and now, now all were melt- ing away before their astonished eyes like summer snow, and Aunt Arabella was off to spend the rest of her days with the (George Pauletts—and why? Because, forsooth, pretty Dora, in- stead of carrying ont her aunt's inten- tions and waiting till, in the fullness of time, Spencer Paulett should return from the sea, fall in love and marry her, bad gone and engaged heiself to the parish doctor's long-leggei Irish assist- ant, with nothing in the world to offer her but a8 warm Irish heart, a decent share of brains under his shock of red hair, and an income which he modestly described as being on the wrong side of his account book as yet. There was an appalled silence, broken only by the sound of the old lady's crutch tapping off into the distance. Mr, Hilton retired behind his news- paper with the air of a man who had much to say on the subject presently. Mrs, Hilton sniffed feebly on her sofa. The smallest Hilton but one sat under the table sucking his thumb, sud vaguely conscions of evil to come, prepared for a wail. In a distant win- dow Doras wept and wept impervious to all her Cornelius’s vigorous whispers of consolativn, Pierce had withdrawn discreetly when the storm broke, through the window into the garden, where he was seen walking up and down in dismayed meditation ; and Jack, surreptitiously shaking his fistat the unconscious back of his would-be brother in-law, followed Pierce. Meanwhile, up the staircase and down the corridor went Aunt Ara bella briskly enough despite her lame- ness and her eighty years. She had two little rooms in a remote corner of the honse sacred from the intrusion of the most audacious of Hiltons. She entered the first of them, where a pale, meek young femsle sat sewing. * Parker ?” “Yes, my lady.” “] want my trunks, Find them at onee and pack up everything that be- longs to me.” Long attendance on her imperious mistress had deprived the gentle Parker of the power of expressing any senti- ment but that of meek acquiescence. “Yes, my lady.” “We go by the first train to-morrow, 80 be ready. And let some one take two letters to the post for me to-night.” “Yes, my lady.” Lady Paulett seated on to the next room, & bedroom furnished with a magnificent erection of mahogany and satin damask large enough to accom- modate ten little old ladies like herself. Lady Paulett seated herself in a tall old arm chair by the fire, while Parker lighted a large silver-branched candle- stick and drew a table near to her. « My writing desk, Parker, and you may come for the letters in half an h ar,’? ‘ Yes, my lady,” and while Parker hurried off to rummage out her mis- tress’ long-forgotten trav equip- roents Lady Paulett, in her neat old- fashioned hand, indited two short notes, addressed the one to ** Mrs, George Paulett, ¥astholm Hall, Wilmington, Yorkshire;” the other to “ R. J. Black- ett, Esq., Lincoln's Inn, London.” She had finished before Parker reap- peared, and after sitting thinking for a few moments, drew from her desk a folded . It was headed * Memo- randa for my will, 1869,” and contained young. them, Yes, here it is.” “Pretty little gentle thing, without my high spirits. were to happen to me in my life |—and what a dreary time I had had of it. I overlook her. diamonds. on my wedding day, and I wore them ing gown and slippers as a gentle 19 minder of bedtima. *Ah! it's lata, Parker. Well, I've finished. No; go and finish your packing and then coma. What am I to do with this ?* This was battered and shabby little thing. piak sarcenet lining was frayed and gone, disolosing the bare wood and In ‘the com. partments were odds and ends of mis eallaneous rubbish. The pocket in the lid bulged out with yellow scraps of paper, old-fashioned patterns for mark- 10g letters tied with faded ribbons, scraps from newspapers. ‘There were curiously out silk winders ol cardboard with silk of dim and long-forgotten made hair chair, a string of amber beads; pervading all a faint, sweet small of roses “I should like to have it put in my No one will care for it, and I cannot have it thrown dren. I had better look it over and burn all these poor littla treasures.” steadily into the fire—old valentines on huge square sheets of ooclored paper wonderfully embossed and sealed with tender mottoes in tinted wax, school friends’ epistles crossed and recrossed in colored inks. One she kept to the last. “Cornelia Clarke, what a dear sweet orveature she was! Dead and bors, and I used to go with her to daao- Why, here are the very garnet clasps 1 loaned her the night she came in early to put up my hair in the new giraffe We both wanted to look well that night, I remember, How we joked one another about Mrs. Lowder’s fine house for the party, and I would put to show how little I cared for any one noticing me. (I knew very well how it became me though.) After all, Mr, Paunlett, the rich London merchant, didn't come, only the sailor cousin, Hugh Lowder. He had been in the East and my Lord Byron's new poem just then, and expected something ro- mantic -a hero with a big black beard, and stories of corsairs and veiled bean- ties of the harem, and murdering despots ages, poor man)." a silk handkerchief. “ Arabells, my god-daughter, must was nothing he would not have done for me or baby. He gave them to me { { { i i eyes like my dear father's, taking no- tice of old! his coffin. And that very day he was put in My poor little son!” “It was a disappointment to find only a big, blue-eyed north countryman, so shy and awkward that the girls all turned up their noses at him for a partner till I tanght him the figures, which he picked up in five minutes, and then he wouldn't ask any one else to dance with him. ““He came to call on us next day and and Sophia some amber beads. Bhe lost half of them and I saved the rest. It wasn'é good enongh, he said, yet it was work all the rest, that dear little crystal ana gold flask of attar roses, How it has sconted everything I” She went over the tiny box, tenderly tonching the shabby old odds and ends, and the rose scent seemed to rise and fill the room. “And Josiah threw it in the fire! said he hated the smell, and would like to have thrown my little box after it. He was angry, all because wristbands. I had been stitching them it away from her with a trembling hand all I might be going to have some hap- piness in this world when he was taken from me. Sir Josiah never seemed to the fever that killed him, It was unkind of Josish, acd I think he felt ashsmed of himsell afterward, for he brought my fine new If that, * When I came here and saw Jack in his cradle he looked so like my boy 1 thought he was given back to me, Dear, good, loving Jack! I never can cast him off -1 must speak to Mr. Blackett about that. Now. My dress ing case? Ah! that must be Mrs, George Paulett’s, her initials are the same as mine. Sapphire necklace. Cameo set. Pearl cross and earrings for her three daughters. They're rich enough to have as much jewelry of their own as they want; and the rubies I must keep for Spencer Panlett’s wife, when he gets one. “ Why, that's the end of my list ex- cepting Cecilia, and there are Olivia, Maria, Grace, the little boys and the Well, I daresay I can find some remem- brance of their auntie for each—not that they'll ever remember me. Cecil must bave my work-box. She has my pretty taste in needlework (with a com- placent glance at the patehwork and tentstitch in which the golden threads in Rath’s gleanings and Rebecca's ear- rings still faintly glimmered). The new crewel work isn't so bad. I could have taught her something if 1 hadn't been going away, Parker |” Parker, a moving heap of brocades and furs, gave a faint, inarticulate reply: “My work-box I” Parker staggered off and returned with a queer little Chinese box with an inlaid landscape, a pagoda with two Celestials walking in the skies above it on the lid. “You're dreaming, Parker! When did you find this? I've not seen it these ten years,” Parker skurried away like a fright- ened rabbit, to return this time with a magnificent article—ebony and gold without, gnilted satin, pearl and yet more gold within. A turquoise studded thimble, crystal smelling bottle in case the fair worker should collapse under her ardnous labors, a pearl framed mir- ror by which she might refresh herself by occasional glances, curious imple- ments apparently constructed to sup- port the largest possible amount of gold chasing, withcut a point that would pierce or a blade that would cut among them; a receptacle for work, satin lined, padded, perfumed and empty, except for a half-made boy's cap, with the rusty needle still sticking in it. “What was there to work for when he was gone?” said the poor old lady, looking at the morsel of discolored cambrie. “What had I left in the world to care for then? What have I now, for that matter ?” She began with nervous impatience to open and close some of the cases al- most at random. “1 would have put them away forever, long, long ago, and been a faithful nurse to my husband, if he would have let me, all through those last, long, weary years of his life; but he never loved me well enough to wish for me—he cared more for his old }ousekeeper. ‘My lady is young and should have her pleasure,” I heard her say oace. He had married me for my good looks, and was not to be defrauded of his bargain, and I must dress and visit and entertain in cur large, dull and splendid house—weary, oh, so weary of it all. He was proud of me, in his way, and gave me all he promised when he asked me to marry him. Mueh good it was for me~father and mother ead —sister Sophia married and gone ~—no one left to admire my splendor or profit by my wealth.” Here entered I was thizking of Hugh Lowder. How handsome he looked and how kind, when he came to say good-bye before he went away to sea again! He took my hand, sewing and all (I could see the marks years after, where I had pricked my finger when I heard him cowe in), and he said, oh! so tenderly, * Bella, have you courage to marry a poor man, or patience to wait till I come back a rich one? and I had neither. God forgive me, as he has punished me!” She held the little box tightly in her hands, her whole figure shaking with emotion. “t God forgive me,” she cried again, and sank forward on the table sobbing among her diamonds. There was a timid knock at the door, but she could not hear it—then an She rose from her chair, look- ing strange and bewilderad as the door softly opened and Dora stole in, Her poor little face was all flashed and swollen out of its prettiness by hard crying, and her hair in a woe-begone touzle. ‘* Auntie, I've come to may—please forgive me if I was rude to you this evening; and please don't leave us! Cor—ecor—nelius and I are not g—going to be engaged any more !” Here came a bree:down and a burst of stormy sobbing. “Every one says—I'm s—sacrificing the whole family in my selfishness, so I've given him up, oh! oh! oh !—for- ever?” Lady Paule't made no sign—only looked with a half-terrified air at her niece, her old lips working nervously. “But I won't marry any one else, Never |? broke out Dora with sudden energy. ‘I'll do anything else I can, to please you, auntie. I can wait and wait, and perhaps, he says, if some day he comes back rich enough to please you—"' “You little fool I” broke in Aunt Ara- bella in her own sharp tone ; then sud- denly changing to a piteous shaky little voice : “Why are you all so quick to take up an old woman's hasty words? I'm sure I've never been unkind to any of you yet, Don't let him go, Dora. Can't you trust your old auntie? ‘Rich enough to please me,” Child! child! to think that some day I might have had to answer for two more spoiled lives.” Dora looked all wonderment. “There! there! go to bed, and if the others want to sacrifice you to their own interests, never you mind them. T'll let them know to-morrow what I think of such wicked selfishness ?” She gently pushed her amazed little niece out and shut the door. “Parker, are those letters gone ?” “Yes, my lady.” “Then let some one take two tele- grams first thing to-morrow.” “Yes, my lady.” “And Parker! Have you finished packing for to-night?” “Yes, my lady.” “Then put everything back in its place directly. I'm not going.” “Yes, my lady.”—Templs Bar, An Australian bug introduced in British Bouth Africa four years ago, along with a plant for the botanical gardens at Cape Town, has multiplied go as to threaten all the vegetation. They attack even the largest trees, and many handsome oaks in the grounds of the government house at Cape Town, said to be » hundred years old, were re- duced to such a state that they had to be cut down. It is particularly hostile to fruit trees, and on a single estate de- stroyed 600 orange trees, thereby caus- ing enormous Joss to the owner, SCIENTIFIC NOTES, A vein of hot water has been tapped pear St. Etienne, France at a depth of about 1,600 meters. This new geyser sonds a volume of hot water and oar bonie acid to a height of twenty-six meters. A Frenchman who had an imparme- able stricture of the gullet was saved from starvation by having mastigated food introduced into the abdomen by a syringe through an artificial opening in the abdominal wall, In a paper read by Dr, C. W, Siemens before the English Royal society lately, the ground was taken that all the heat and energy sent from the sun find their way back to the great solar ocenter, which thus suffers no diminution of its foroes. A man, or one of the lower animals, compelled to breathe for half an hoar an atmosphere containing 1 779 of car bonio acid, asorbs that gws in such quantities that one-half the red blood corpusoules combine with if, and be- vome incapable of absorbing oxygen. Whether American salt meat oan con- vey trichinm® was a question lately dis cussed in a paper by M, Colin and read before the French adam of Sciences. The conclusion arrived at was that the meat in question, as now importsd into Europe, might in very rare oases trans mit trichinosis when the animal was but recently killed, the pieces of meal large, and the process of curing imper- feotly conducted. The ground in the Jura mountains is in a state of movement, as is shown by some ourious observations pointed out by M. Girardot. Villages that were in- visible to each other at the beginning of the century, or even thirty or forty years ago, are now visible. First the roofs appeared, and then the upper part of the walls. Buch is the case with the villages of Doucler and Marigny, near Lake Chalain. Im portant changes have been noted even within ten years. The ventilation of the great Alpine tnunels under Mount Cenis and the St Gothard so as to free them quickly irom the smoke of trains has been » work of much difficulty. It has been propossd to create a current of air by the keeping of large fires ot one end, but the expense has been found exces sive. A French engineer, M. Pressel attained by cooling the air at some point in the tunnel by water, which would give the difference in density © the atmosphere necessa y to cause a draught. Cool mountain streams are numerous in the Alps, and could be readily applied to the parpose, Whipping a Blloeh, From a governing aspect the Biloch is infinitely to be preferred to the Afghan. Though physically inferior in bulk and weight of body, he is the Afghan's equal in courage and hi superior in endurance and intelligence. One especially good trait in Lis charac ter is that he never sulks or bears both. Here are illustrations in point. I never remember having an Afghan whipped in jail without the fellow showing by his sullen looks and scowl- ing face that he tore the stricker, if no! myself, a grudge for it. Bat here, in the Derah Ghazi Khan jail the punish- ment over, the Biloch is as frank and pleasant as he was before, One man, [ remember, who was a bad ohare ter, would not work. He was warned that he would be whipped. He merely laughed, and said: “That won't make any difference, sahib,” He was shown a wan being whippsd; he oaly looked grave. Finally, he was whipped himsel! He was taken out of his cell, stripped naked, tied wrists and ankles to the tri- angle, and given twenty or thirty—I forget the exact number—strokes with a ratan. Daring the operation he bit at the wood, bit almost through his tongue, but never either groaned or winced. The punishment over, he threw himsel! on the ground on his face, when the usual skin of cold water was dashed over him, and then the commiserating water-carrier stood upon the beaten rts to deaden the pein Still e would not work. saw him a day or two after in his cell, looking happy aud un- concerned, though he still must have been very sore, and for days would not be able to sit down. He was pleased to see me. He seemed to have an idea that not being in jail for any specific and proved offense, it was not right to give him hard labor, and so put him on the level of a convicted felon. I re- monstrated with him for his obstinacy, to no effect. One day I observed his splendid curls shining with oil or ghee, I asked how he had got it, He had saved it from his food was the answer. I out his ghee; still no effact, At last as his ex ample was becoming infectious, I warned him that if he did not work I should have him transferred to the Multan jail, whera I believed his Ab salom-like hair would be cut short. That threat frightened him—his ring lets being the glory of the Biloch; he said he would try to d work. He made a pretense of trying, and failing, was sent off to Multan, where, I have no doubt, he ix now, though prison-cropped, as smiling and light-hearted a do-nothing as he was here. Now, it is not in the Afghan nature to behave as that Biloch did and that Bilooh's case is typioal. Simi larly circumstanced the Afghan would have sulked, worked, fallen ill from fretting, and some day after his release perhaps killed the human instrument who had beaten him. I have known that happen in Bannu.— Blackwood, A Burning Lake. It is eaid that from one of the chief naptha wells of Russia the liquid shoots up as from a fountain, and has formed a lake four miles long and one and a quarter wide. Its depth is, how- ever, only two feet, This enormous surface of inflammable lignid recently became ignited, and presented an im- posing spectacle, the thick black clouds of smoke being lighted up by the lurid glare of the oentral column of flame, which rose to a great height. The smoke and heat were such ns to render a nearer approach than one thousand yards’ distance impracticable, Suitable means for extinguishing the fire were not at hand, and it was feared that the conflagration would spread under- ground in such a manner as to cause an explosion. This supposition led many inhabitants of the immediate vicinity to remove to a safer distanca. The quantity of naphtha on fire was esti mated at four and » half million enbic feet, The trees and buildings within three miles’ distance were covered with thick soot, and this unpleasant deposit appeared on persons’ clothes, and even on the food in the adjacent houses. Not only was the naphtha itself burp ing, but the earth which was saturated with it was also on fire, and ten large establishments, founded at great ex pense for the development of the trade in the article, wore destroyed. According to the Canadian census 109,485 widows are monrning for their lost spouses, and 50,803 widowers are u the same distressing state, FROM POVERTY TO, WEALTH, Hew a Licutennnt Gevernsr Hreoame Wenlitbyllicheos and Domestic Unhappl. nos, The divorce suit that has been insti. tuted by Mes, Tabor, wife of the lieu tenant governor of Oolorado, is another | illustration that wealth does not always | bring happiness with it. Mes, Tabor asks for divorce and $50 000 alimony per year, The faots are thus related by the Cleveland Leader: The unhappy couple were married at | Aungasta, Me, in 1837, und their carcer since that period has been marked by | transitions from domestic felicity to the most violent family jars; from absolute poverty to princely wealth; from the rude hovel of the frontier to the most Inxurious homa that the purse of a mil lionaire could ec mmand. In 1850 they started for Pike's Peak in a parlor car drawn by two oxen, taking all their property with them, and after drifting about the country for some years they settled down in the place where Denver pow stands. He searched in vain for “pay gravel,” and while he was pros. peoting she cooked bacon, made bread and kept up the household expenses by boarding miners, Finally Tabor built a log hut and started a store and | boarding-house combined, which was a | general rendezvous for the miners, | All the hard work of the establishment fell upon Mrs. Tabor, Bhe was the only woman within one hundred and sixty miles, and she did the cooking and washing for the miners, attended to all their wants in the store, weighed their gold dust on the only pair of scales in the neighborhood, making herself the waiter and drud, e of every one, In the meantime the husband yielded to the irresistible fever that seldom lessens its grip upon one who has once become its victim, and con. tinned his search for gold, He moved from prospect to prospect, from digging to digging, always believing himsell.on the biink of fortune, and while he reveled in golden dreams the wile diudged and toiled to procure for herself aod her royal dreamer the subatantials of life. In 1876 he began to realize some of his grand expectations, and he was soon known asa millionaire. Tabor contined to prosper at a won- derful rate, and is now considered one of the wealthiest men in the State. His wife's petition says he is worth §10,000,. 000, and has an income of §100,000 per | month, He spent his means lavishly | and surrounded his wife with every | luxury that money conld buy; but, adds the Leader: She says that he grew hard hearted in proportion as he became rich; that he absented himself from home for] weeks and mouths, and on one occasion | he offered to give her a portion of his large fortune if she hed 1 apply for a | divorce. All he h~s to say is that he | gave her $100,000 a few years ago, | which she invested, and which now | yields her $14,000 a year; that she | ts a woman and he hopes she will receive all the sympathy grow: ing out of the case. Both sides of the | story will only come out on trial. What | is certain now is that their domestic | happiness took wings the moment | wealth rolled in upon them; that as | soon as they ceased fighting with pov- | orty they began fighting each other, | Their happiest days were when they | were poor, and as they now sit in the midst of luxury and plenty it is prob. | able that their memory holds no pleas. anter period than when they sat to gether behind the ox-team and were being dragged ont into the Western wilds to seek their fortune nearer to the setting sun. msn IO 555350 An Odd Fire Escape. Passing Union eqnare the other day, anys the New York correspondent of the Detroit Free Press, 1 witnessed a trial | of a new fire escape of a rather peculiar | kind, It was an escape and a water | tower in one. At first there was what | seemed to be an enormons hoop-skir lying on a truck. Attached to the truck were cranks and levers, with fire. | men at hand to work them. Ina few | minutes the contrivance was elevated to | a height of suxty or seventy feet from the body of the truck, on which it then stood like the skeleton of a lighthouse, | In the center, asd running the full | beighth was a tubular iron pole, which | could bo extended or contracted on the | telescope principle. This carried the other parts up with it, as the cranks for | raising it were turned. The other] parts consisted merely of a number of | hollow brass rings, about six feet in| diameter, and attached to each other at distances of something over a foot by | light iron chains. Three lines | of hose were introduced at the] bottom and carried to the top| as the iron pole in the center | kept rising. When it was at full | height, and the rings all out, three | firsmen chmbed up inside, the rings | answering as the rounds of a ladder, | and soon had the neighborhood pretty | well deluged with water. With the | weight of the firemen at the top, the tower swayed like a tall tree in aj storm, and threatened at every moment | tofall over. But it did not fall, and | the men showing it off said that it could pot, as the mechanism on the truck kept it all right. It was curions to see the strange thing lean over from the street to the top floor of a building, and receive a man who crawled oat and descended by it, and then straighten itself ap again. The action seemed like that of an enormous serpent, with most of its body elevated and swayed by the play of the muscles. 1 should hardly think a nervous person would be willing to risk his neck on the thing even to escape from a fire, but the fire men who went up and down seemed to feel as safoas a boy in an apple tree, provided the owner of the apple tree was not around. Overheating Houses, Viek's Floral Guide advises against overheating plants, It says the tem- perature of the room should not be allowed to go above seventy degrees, and sixty-five degrees would be better. “(ive a little fresh air every day and all the sunlight attainable. An effort should be made to give moisture to the atmosphere, for our own good as well as for the life of the plants.” The ad- vice here given in regard to tempera ture, fresh air and sunlight is just as essential to human beings as to plants. Sensitive plants dry up and wither away and die if the surroundings are not favorable. So sensitive individuals sioken, get headaches and depressed foolings when the room is carelessly allowed to be heated to seventy-six and eighty degrees, when ventilation is never thought of, and sunlight almost wholly excluded. Especially in winter do we find sickness from these causes, for the overheating of farnaces and stoves is not as readily borne as the summer heat, and ventilation is pre- vented not only by shut windows and doors but by weather strips, aud the sunlight is absent a larger portion of the time than in summer. Therefore if you find that no plants will live in your own living rooms may it not be that it is too great a tax upon your own consti- tution to maintain existence in such a DR. LAMSON'S CRIME, An Account of the Case and Trial eof the Amevican Hung is Lundan fur Polsoning iis Brether«in-Law, The following is an interesting so count of the ease of Dr, Lamson, the American hung recently in England for murdering his brother-in-law, a young student : The trial of Dr, Lamson was one of the canses celebres of modern English criminal anpals, Lamson was an Ameri can, the son of an Episcopal clergyman well known in Paris, Florence and other Earopesn cities, He studied medicine at Paris, where he took his degree in 1870, and afterward became a licentiate of the Elinbarg College of Physicians and Surgeons, In the Franco-Prussian war he served with an ambulance corps, and in 1876 he was in charge of a Ber- bian hospital at Bemendria, and daring the war of 1877 78 was attached to a hospital at Busharest, From these services he brought back a number of decorations, Frenoh bronze and iron crosses, eto, and settled down to practice in Hampshire. In April, 1881, he visited the United States, spending several months in this conntry, His practice was not remunerative here, aowever, as in the fall he had to pawn his watch and surgical instruments. He wad married, and in the event of bis a lad of nineteen, affected with spinal complaint —dying in his minority, a sum of some £3000 would pass into the possession of Mrs. Lamson and her sister. Percy was at school at an establishment at Wimbledon, called Blenheim House, kept by a Mr. W. H. Bedbrook, where his brother in-law visited him every threes or four months. Hs was in good health, although his spinal trouble prevented him frem going about, save in a wheeled chair, He seemed to be on affectionate terms with Dr, Lamson. Late in November Dr. Lamson was stopping at Nelson's hotel in Great Portland street, London. He was out of fands, his vill had been sent up to him several times, but had not Ree paid, and on the 26th he tried to bor- row £5 from his landlord. Two days later he attempted to got a check for 815 cashed at the American Exchange. On Fiiday, December 2, he left the hotel, leaving part of his luggage as se curity for his uli, and told a medical friend named Tallock that he was go- ing to set out for Paris. Through him Lamson obtained £12 10s cash on the to Tullock that he had inadvertently selected the wrong book, having closed his acoount with the bank in uestion, He went with his friend to Wimbeldon, saying that, as there was a bad boat on the line that night, he would delay his departure for twenty-four hours and visit his brother-in-law. As told him that the boy was suffering and Saturday, the 31, Tullock again met the doctor, who told him that he was going to see his wife at Chichester, as he had missed the Paristrain. Lamson did see his brother-in-law on Friday as he claimed, but on Saturday, about 7 o'clock, he called at Blenheim House snd saw Perey John in the presence of Mr. Bedbrook, who produced some Dr. Lamson mixed some ground sugar with his wine, saying that it destroyed the alcoholic effeo:; capsules, telling Mr. Bedbrook that he had remembered him while in New York, and had brought him something lasting less than un hose the dootor left, sending back some money by a porter from the railroad station, with the mes. sage that he had forgotten to give it to his brother i-law. Percy soon ocom- felt just as he had when Lamson had given him some quinine at Buanklin, Isle of Wight. His pains become worse, and though doctors were sent for at 9 he died at 11:30. The police were at onoe informed, and suspicion was di- rected to Lamsom, The latter ap- peared at Scouand Yard on December death while on his way to Italy for his health, and bal returned, seeing his name connected with the oase by the papers, to remain in London till after He was, however, at once arrested, and the public prosecutor, St. John Wontner, soon discovered several unfavorable points besides those already mentioned. It was found that Lamson had bought two grains of aoconita No- vember 24, in the form of a dry powder, duced into the capsule, and that a vial marked ** poison’* was in his possession at thehotel. It was discovered at the post mortem that John Peroy had died upon the nervous centers, aconita beiog such a poison, and it being possible to administer a fatal dose in such a capsule as that given him by Dr. Lamson. The alkoloid taken from the stomacl of the deceased had killed mice when they were injeoted with it. A package of powders prepared by Lamson at Vectnor were analyzed, and, while many contained only quinine, in others there were found fatal quantities of aconite. One pill would nave kitled 100 persons, These were the powders Dr. Lamson had sent to his brother-in-law. Dr Lamson was committed January 20 on a chmge of willfal murder, He was found guilty after a trial at the Central criminal court in London, and sentenced to be hanged April 4. Strong efforts were made by Minister Lowell to obtain a stay of execution for the condemned man under instructions from President Arthur, and a reprieve was granted. The friends of Dr. Lamson then presented many aflidavits setting forth tho insanity of the prisoner. A peti- tion containing the sworn depositions of twenty doctors and friends, covering a period of two years, were sent to Lam son's counsel, but the efforts to obtain a new trial proved uravailing. Lamson wag thirty-five years old, of medium height and spare build. The trial at- tracted unusual interest, as cases of aconite poisoning are not very numer- ous, and there was a notable battle of medical men over the evidence. Lam. son was said to have made an unsuocoess- ful attempt to poison his brother-in-law previous to sailing for America. His wife, who believed him to be 1noocent, visited him almost daily. Attorney-General Brewster wears raf. fles on his shirts, in obedience to a vow made to his sainted mother, who ex acted the promise from him out of respect for the memory of her venerated father, who always wore ruflles on his shirts, Des Moines, Iowa, now claims the largest distillery in the world, The works cost $200,000, will employ 125 men, will consume 7,000 bushels of oorn daily, and pay a government tax of $15,000 a day. Tt will also feed 4,000 place.~Dr, Foote's Health Monthly. cattle. FOR THE LaDIES, Kamps and Notes for Wemen, A woman living at Cokesbury, Bouth Carolina, has made over $1,500 in the manufacture of feather fans, Mrs, Garfield recently reosived asa present from a Dresden artist a portrait on porcelain of her late husband, A Nevada yonug woman who is still in her teeus has been divorced from two husbsnds sud has married the third. There ave 533,620 women in Massa ohnsetts unrepresented by husbands, 204,641 of whom are over twenty years of age. The hair of Johann BStranss’ wife reaches to her ankles and weighs all of five pounds. Bhe used on it nothing but water of her native city, Cologne The young Kate Shelly who saved an Towa train near Doone, by her cours. goous and heroie efforts a year or two ago, is engaged to be married to the conductor of the train she saved, The latest caprice in Paris is the wearing of huge collars and ouffs crocheted of twine or linen thread. They are worn over dark woolen dresses, with a narrow white lace or liese rauche above the collar around the neck and below the cuffs around the wrists, A widow in Japan who is willing to think of matrimony wears her hair tied and twisted around a long shell hairpin placed horizontally across the back of the head. Bat when a widow firmly resolves never to change her name again she outs off her hair short on her neck and combs it back without any part. The wife of Senator Mahone has won in Washington the distinction of wear. ing handsomer jewels than does any other woman in official society. Her diamonds used long ago to be a matter of comment; and when she returned from Europe lately her husband pre- seuted her with additions to her jewel case valued at $40,000, Women are admitted to the bar on ual terms with men in Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolinas, Ohio, Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois. By an set of Congress, those who Lave been for three years members of the bar of supreme court. Fashlon Fascles. Block balayeuses appear in black Long Directoire coats are fashionable in Paris, New guimpes are of ecru lace over white satin, Pink and brown together are stylish for bonnets. Sewing silk grenadine is the fashion. able choice. The Cabriolet hat will be worn in midsummer, Shepherd’s check is liked for moun- tain dresses. Pelerines are worn smaller than they were last year, Dresden china handles are attached to dark parasols. English ladies have adopted the mas- culine pea jacket, | Flemish lace of creamy tint trims dark satin dressos, Yellow flowers trim dark green and black straw bonnets. White suits for summer are of wool Jersey gloves are worn outside the Visites made of India cashmere shawls are favorite wraps. . White net embroidered is used for neckties and chemisettes, The handsomest silk embroidered and bead embroidered designs are seen in applique bands, to be sewed on as trimmings of the handsomest silk cos- tuwes. They sell at high prices. The large red straw hats in porcupine braids are being rapidly appropriated by young girls of from eight to ten years, foe favorite trimmings are os- trich feathers or silk pompous of a darker shade of red. Long corsets are now almost uni- versally worn, and over the hips of the more expensive kinds are set narrow V-sha pieces of india rubber web- bing, which, though fitting the form perfectly, give it uncommon ease. A novel dress is made of scarlet sarah, eut princesse shape, and completely veiled with black chenille in diamond openwork patterns. A soar! of the chenille, bordered with a very wile chenille fringe, is laid in transverse folds across the skirt in front, and, being caught up in the back with large jot cinsps, falls in double-shawl points over the back breadths, The bonnet of most pronounced originality brought out this season is the *'London Witoh."” It is snimmense turned-up scoop hat, brimless in the back and short and flat at the sides, an emphasized, exaggerated old style Dan- stable. I: is vastly becoming to piquant faces, I:is trimmed with large quun- tities of flowers or feathers or ribbon, at the option of the wearer. Ia Paris, as a variety, young ladies have adopted, toa limited extent, riding habits of creamy white or pale buff in- stead of dark cloth ones. The bodice is a glove-fitting cuirass, lengthened behind into cost lapels and fastened and trimmed with buttons of carved pearl. The neck is finished with a ruffle of creamy lace; the sleeves are tight and partly concealed under the long gloves of soft deerskin slip over them. The hat, of white felt, is a tainesborough, lined with black or dark velvet and decorated with a long plume. Ancient Barlals in China, An Oriental writer has recently given an interesting description of an ancient burial in the Chinese empire. It was the custom for the wealthy man to pro- cure his coffin when he had reached the age of forty. He would then have it painted three times a year with a com- position rosembling silicate paint or enamel, which formed an exceedingly hard coating. The process of making this paint is now one of the lost arts of China. If the owner of the coffin lived longenough, the frequent paint. ing—each coat being of consid erable thiockness—caused it to as- sume the ap ce of a sarcopha- gus, with a foot or more in thiok- ness of this hard stone-likeshell. After death the veins and cavities of the per- son's stomach were filled with quick- silver for the purpose of preserving the body. A piece of jude would then be placed in each nostril and ear, and in one hand, while a piece of bar silver would be placed in the other hand. The body thus prepared was placed on a layer of quicksilver within the coffia, the latter was sealed, and the whole deposited in its final resting-place. When some of these sarcophagi were opened, after a la of centuries, the bodies were found to be perfectly y pis. served, but they quickly crumbled to dust on being to the air. WISE WORDS, Prodery is as perfume (hat oonoeals vitiated air, Nothing overcomes passion more than silence, : Faith snd hope cure more diseases than medicine, It is not wise to reject benefits when they may be refused. Happiness is like the echo; it answers you, but it does not come. A man without secrecy is an open letter fur every one to read, Fortune has rarely condescended to be the compauion of genias, When duty seems to clash, “the moral law alwsys has the right of way.” Excess of Seremony is wlways the companion of weak minds; it iss plant that will never grow in a strong soil. From the manner in whish praise and blame sre dealt out in this world, an honest man ought to c vet defamation. In life it is diffienit to say who do you the most mischief, enemies with the worst intentions or fri with the best, When a man dies they who survive him ask what property he has left be- hind. The ungel who bends over the dying man asks what good deeds he has sent before him. Unless a man can link his written thoughts with the everlasting wants of men, so that they shall draw from them as from wells, there is no mors immor- tality to the thoughts and of the soul than to the muscles the bones. Nearly Kissed Themselves to Death, Osculation is unquestionably a pleas. ing pursuit. It has been racognized as such from time immemorial, by gener- ations unnumbered of lovers, posts and even philosophers. There are doubt less, at the present moment, in this snd in other countries, many swains who ask no better than to be permitted to imprint “ ten thousand kisses,” one after another, upon the lips of the damse!s on whom they have bestowed their affections, They may, however, esteema themselves fortunate rtunities in this direction are somewhat limited, as the following troe story will show : At an evening party in Kelkheim, a few weeks ago, the conversation happened to turn kissing, and the question arose many salutations of this olass could be exchanged between two ardent lovers within a oertain space of time. As usual, opinions differed, and the discus- sion waxed warm. Presently a flery vouth offered to bet snybody present the German equivalent of a ten- note that he and his betrothed would kiss ue auotber 10,000 times within ten hours, provi they were permit- ted to partake of oh ht refresh- ment at intervals of half an hour during the performance. His wager having been scoepted and the money posted, the affianced couple addressed them- selves to the achievement of their con- genial task. At the expiration of the first hour their account stood credited with two thousand kisses. Daring the second they added another thousand, and during the third seven hundred and fifty to that number. Then, pitiful to state, they both broke down. The youth's lips were stricken with cramp, and the maiden fainted away. Later on in the evening she was compelled to take to her bed with a sharp attack of neuralgia. An even more distressing result ensued from this surfeit of tender endearment, for it led to the breaking off, b* mutual con-ent, of a hopeful matrimonial engagement. Young lovers should keep th's sad tale in mind snd mod: rate their transports, for, strange as it may seem, Dan Capid himself may be kissed to death.— London Telegraph —— AnElephant j3’ory. The elephant seemed to get tired first, and jast as the first streak of dawn began to show itself in the sky he turned and walked leisurely away. For a minute or two I heard him crashing among the thickets. and then all was quiet again, as if he'd gone right AWAY. * Now,” I thonght, * is my time to de camp, too,” and down the tree I slipped as nimbly as an acrobat. Bat I soor found I had been reckening without my host, for I had hardly touched the ground when there came a crash Lik fifty mad bulls charging through ar many “glass-houses, and out from the thicket, with his great white tusks leveled at me like bayonets, came my friend the elephant, who bad been on the watch for me all the time, Whether I should have ran or stood my ground, and how I should have fared in either case, can never be known now, for jast at that moment my foot slipped snd down I came, close to the tree. The next moment there was a crash as if two trains had run into essh other, and I made sure that I was knocked into a hundred pieces at least, aud that it was all up with me. 1 soon became aware, however, that I was still alive and sound, while a shrill, frightened cry overbesd told me plainly that it was the elephant who had got the worst of it this time. I scrambled to my feet gingerly enough, stamping snd pounding like steam hammers within arm's length of me, and there I saw a sight which, scared as I was, made me laugh till I could hard- ly stand. I had fallen just in time to escape the blows of the elephant's tusks, which had stuck themselves so deep into the tree that he could not pull them out sesin, and there he was, hard and fast, like a ship run aground. The animal's look of disgust and bewilderment at finding himself in such a fix was as good as a play to behold; bat just then I was in no humor to stop and ad- mire it, for I knew that he might break loose yet, and that if he did it would be all up with me. My first impuise was to take to my heels at once, but the next moment I thought bétter of it, aud decided to settle Mr. Elephant instead. I quickly fickad up and reloaded mw gan, which ad luckily escaped his notice, or he wonld have trampled it to bits, and, sorambling into the tree again, sent a bullet into his forehesd, which did its business, and left him standing bolt upright in a very picturesque attitude indeed. Where the Storms Hide, Near Wisconsin, in the Sunset moun- tains, a cave has been discovered which is one of the greatest wonders of Ari zona Territory. It is of unknown pro- portions, having never been explored avd the phenomenon connected with it that causes the wonder of beholders is the fact that a strong current of air rushes into the cave of sufficient force to draw into the Piutonian depths all light articles placed near the entrance. The roaring of the winds into the cuvern may be heard 200 yards away from the opening. Blessings ma 7 appear undethe shape of pains, losses and disappointments, but let him have patience and he will sce them in their proper figure, Hii B : will see Nineveh, Tabyion, and the cities famibar to us