Lilies. In the baby’s tiny fist, Tightly held and softly kissed, The Lilies, In the maiden’s golden hair, Breathing perfume on the air, The Lilies, In the snowy bridal wreath, Shading happy face beneath, The Lilies, In the chambers of the dead, Crown with grace the lifeless head, The Lilies, « Mamie Alice Smith, “The ternal Goodness.” “Oh, frie: ds, with whom my feet havo trod The quiet aisles of prayer, Glad witness to your zeal for God, And love of men I bear. H] trace your lines of argumen’, Your logic, linked and strong, I weigh as one who dreads dissend, And fears a doubt as wrong. “Bat still my homan hands are weak To hold your iron creda ; Against the words ye bid me apaak My heart within me pleads, “Who fathoms the Eternal Thought Who talks of scheme or plan? The Lord is God! He neadeth not The poor device of man “7 walk wi h bare, hushed feet the ground Ye tread with boldness shod, I dare not fix with mete and bounl The love and power of God, “Ye praise his justice; even such His pitying love I deom; Ye seek a king; I fain would touch The robe that hath no seam. * Ye soe the curse which overbrouds A world of pain and loss; I hear our Lords bestitudes And prayer upon the cross * Mare than your sohool-men teach, withi Myself, alas, I know! Too dark yo cannot paint the sin, Too small the merit show, “1 dow my forehead in the dusk, I veil mine eves for shams, And urge, with trembling self-disiras}, A prayer without a claim, #1 sce the wrong that round me lies, 1 feel the guilt within; I hear with groan the travail ories, The world confess its sin, “Yat in the maddening maze of things, And wssed by storm and flood, To one fixed stake my spirit clings; I know that God is good! “ Not mine to look when cherubim And seraphs may not see, But nothing can be good in Him Which evil is in me. * The wrong that pains my sonl below, 1 dare not throne wbove ; I know not of this hate—I bnow His goodness and His love! 81 dimly guess from bisssings known, Of greater out of sight ; And with the chastening Pealmist own His judgments, too, are right, “1 long for household voices gona, For vanished smiles I long, But God bad led my dear onea on, And he can do no wrong. “1 know not what the future hath Of marvel or surprise, Assured a'one that life and death His mercy underlies. “And if my heart and flash are weak To bear an untried pain, The braised reed He will not break, Bat strengthen and sustain. “No offering of my own I hive, No works by faith to prove; I can but give the gifts He gave, And plead and love for love. * And 80, beside the Silent Sea, I wait the muffled oar; No harm from Him can come to mo On ocean or on shore, 4 % I know not where His islands lil Their fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond His love and care. “Oh, brothers; if my faith is vain, If hopes like these betray, Pray for me that my feet may gain The sure and safer way. “ And Thou, oh Lord! by whom are goen Thy creatures as they be, Forgive me if too close I lean My human heart on Thee.” —J. 7. Whiltier, ICLISE. nn. 5 She stood among the summer mead- ows, dreamily watching the clouds float toward the far hills. Her bright hair fell loosely over her shoulders and canght the glinting sunbeams in its meshes, Her hands were carelessly folded, and round ker waist she had bound a wreath of flowers. Anon a butterfly would light at her feet, then rise and clumsily flutter off to a safer distance. She heard the hushed sigh of the wind through the clover; and from afar there came the bleating of sheep. Boon it grew nearer, and sat the head of the flock strode their master, his towering form sharp-cut against the glowing sky. He beckoned her away; but she stood there, idly wondering. Again he beckoned her. “] am not afraid of your sheep,” she said; “you may lesd them past me.” “Not that,” he answered ; “but they fear you.” #] would not harm them,” she re plied, and walked slowly toward the flock. But they stared at her timidly, when she spoke to them they fled. and “ Why do they fear me ?” she ask ed. ¢* Becanse they do not know yon.” I should like to know them,” she said, lifting her dark blue eyes till she met his gaze. “Then come to-morrow to yonder hillside.” He drewa flute from his pocket, fitted the pieces together, and strode past her. Then putting it to his lips he played a weird, sad melody, till the sheep hud- dled around him, when he led them away. On the morrow Victor, the shepherd, sat beneath the birches, waiting. At his side a streamlet babbled, singing its way through mossed banks dowa to the flowery valley, He was reading; but now and then he would lift his eyes from the page and look away toward the hills with a sad, gloomy longing in his face. Presently the sound of ap- proaching footsteps fell upon his ear. The branches parted, and Llise stood before him, G Ah, is it you ?” he exclaimed. Yes,” answered she, langhing, ‘it is I, Elise; and who may you be, Mister Bhepherd ?” « Victor Da Montfort,” he replied, while a hot flush overspread his face. “Da Montfort ?” she asked, in aston- ishment. “i Yes. That was my father’s name.” She would have asked him more, but his stern look frightened her, and she was silent, “ And you would know my shesp ?” he questioned. « Yes!’ answered she, timidly. He took his little flute and played softly, till Elise almost fancied that he had eanght the liquid notes from the brooklet at his side and turned them into music, Slowly the sheep approached, but, seeing Llise, remained stationary at a short distance. Then one bolder than the rest came forward, and Victor called it by name. But when Elise put forth her hand to touch its head itturned and fled. VOLUME XV. Tt fears you still,” said Viotor; ** you must come again to-morrow |” Elise noticed the book which he had laid aside on her approach, It was a vopy of Homer. And as she sat there on the rock beside him, while the soft wind whispered in the leaves overhead, he told her the story of ‘‘ Achilles’ Wrath ® aod the * woes unnumbered” that sprang from it, till his strong frame quivered with excitement and his dark eyes kindled fiercely. Elise sat listening and wondering, crushing with her dainty foot a violet that bloomed close up against the stone on which she was sitting. . She wondered at the stories that he { told her, and at the flerce eloquence of | the words in which he clothed them. | She wondered how he, a simple shep- | herd, had come to know so much; and, | last of all, she wondered why he did not | praise her beauty, as the young men in | the great city were wont to do. But when he had finished he caught | sight of the trampled flower at her feet, i and oried: © Ah! You have crushed it!" “Itis only a violet,” she answered, | with a laugh. { “Only a violet!” he muttered, flercaly, | as she sped down the hillside. ** Only {a violet, and what am I? { He took his flate and sounded a | sharp, shrill strain that echoed wildly { among the glens and copses, But as | tha sheep gathered round him and rubbed their heads against his knees, | the musio sank into a subdued, plain- tive tone, and the shepherd, snatching | his book, led his flock rapidly home- | ward. The months of the summer rolled | peucefully onward. The green flelds { mellowed into gold, und the reapers garnered the heavy grain. The days grew shorter, and at night white fogs | hung over the valley. | Every day the shepherd tended his { Tock upon the hillside, and every day | Blise—the laughing, wayward Elise— | came to him to read to her, or tell her { the strange stories he had learned, ! And Elise, too, changed with the changing months, This strange, strong { man had thrown a subtle spell about adr. | She pondered over his words and dwelt | upon, his thoughts till she taught their | fiery energy, and hungered to hear him | speak them again. { She did not laugh so often now, and when the dusk came she did not care to romp with the villagegirls on the green, | but would steal away to her chamberand sit at her open casement, watching the { stars and the moonlit bills, whilea sense nameless longing filled her sonl, | She dil not ask herself what these things meant, but, without a question, yielded to the current that was closing round her, letting it bear her whither it might, One day they had been reading Henei together, and the sad spirit of the poems kept them silent after the book { had been laid aside. Elise spoke at | last, | “Imust leave yon soon, Victor.” | «Leave me!” he cried, starting to his { foet, with a flushed face and a flerce, | passionate look in his eyes. | Then he grew pale, and sat down again in silence, i “Yes,” she said, with a light, forced { langh. ‘* You silly Victor, I must leave you! My father is coming here to- morrow, and I am to go back with him to the city.” jut he answered her nothing. All through the afternoon the heavy clonds had been looming up against the West. Now they had spread themselves over the sky in thick masses, and the air was hushed into an ominous silence. As Elise spoke a heavy wind rushed through the pines on the hilltop, and the rumble of distant thunder fell upon her ears. “I must hasten home,” she said, “be- fore the storm comes.” “No,” answered he, pointing to an eddy in the brooklet, where the hesvy drops were already plashing, “the storm is here now. See, the sheep have sought shelter, and you must stay in yonder hill hut with me till it passes.” Elise looked up at the angry sky and trembled. Above her towered a mass- ive rock crowned with a single pine that pointed weirdly toward the frown- ing heavens. The willows shivered on the banks; the brook leaped over the rocks with a harsh, hissing sound. Suddenly the air was filled with a sheet of blue flame that shot out forked tongues in every d¥rection. Thare was a terrific crash. The earth shook and the pine above them was eplintered to its roots. Elise cast upon” Victor a look of speechless terror. Then she stretched out her hands toward him, and fal- tered, “Oh, Victor, save me!” and tot- tered and was falling to the earth; but with a glad ery he caught her in his arms, kissed her passionately and rushed with her to the hut. Then she opened her eyes. “Is it youn, Vietor 7” “Yes, my darling I” he answered, al- most flercely. Then she wound her arms about his neck, and clinging to him convulsively burst ino tears. And Victor sat there holding his priceless burden, while the wild storm raged over the valley, and the frightened sheep huddled closer together under the sheds, § Of 11. When Victor met the father of Elise the story of bis love, the latter stared at him in mute astonishment. “What!” he exclaimed, at last. “You have-dared to love my Elise?” “Yes,” answered the shepherd, with great, unconscions dignity. “You low-born villain!” ghrieked the old man. ‘Leave me at once, and never again let my eyes rest on your cursed face!” And Vietor left him —left him with- out speaking a word, and with a dull, heavy pain crushing his sonl into sense- lessness. But the nightsmiled peacefully down upon him as he walked along, and be- hind him the lights of the mansion glimmered through the gloom. Was that her form among the trees? His heart "gave a wild leap, and then stood still in his breast. “ Victor!” she whispered. “Oh, my darling!” he groaned, tak- ing her cold hands in his, Then he told her all —told her of the glad light which she had shed upon his desolate life ; told her of the wide gulf that must forever yawn between them now ; told her of the coming years, with their rounds of hopeless, heartless work, and that she, Elise—his own Elise— must be his own no longer. And Elise listened timidly to this great, passionate man as he laid bare to her the struggles and the weakness of his heart ; but when he had finished she said, softly : B “You must hope, Victor, you must ope.” “What!” he exclaimed, helplessly, as some stunned child trying to recall its consciousness. She looked at him long and tear— fully. Then, throwing her arms about him, she sobbed : and hope for me.” There are times in the lives of men when even the strongest feel weak- times when a gentle, timid woman may become a tower of strength, and with her faithful, trusting love Gods sweetest oconsolations to the erushed and bleeding spirit. Elise made Viator Ouoe he had looked upon her as a frivo- lous girl; she had grown to be a woman and sanctified his whole li‘e. murmured, at length. and in a moment he was gone. elastic step. soul. pame and a fortune for his Elise. A week later and embarked for strange lands. of Africa. There fortunes were rapidly made, if one could but stand the ecli- mate. But Victor was stro ness threw their pall upon his hopes, eign land? toiled with unflinching vigor, strug- he might claim Elise for his bride. The laboring seasons toiled along in their monotonous course. The suns of summer parched the ground, and the winter's rains cove it again with flowers. town and many perished. strange lands glided slowly into the streets. Bat Vietor worked, scarcely heeding the changes that were going on around him. His face became bronzed, and the firm lines deepened themselves in his brow and around his mouth, spoke but little, and the men who met he cared for little else. notes and crept into his heart and shone from his dark eyes. voyage?” asked a landsman. another. But the captain laughed, things, lads, when the storm comes!" heeded her not. sight of home—a blue, misty ridge on the far horizon—and they said that he should soon see the summits of his native hills, thoughts to occupy his mind. He fell into a pleasant reverie, be aware of their presence. thinking of Elise. Was she still the same trustful Elise, and was she still waiting for him? He felt blissfully certain that she was, and his face lit up with smiles. His pet monkey leapt upon the bulwarks, and startled him with a dismal ery. “Bs still, you brute!” savagely. Then his eye fell uvon the sailors, who were gathered around the boats. “What is the matter?" he asked, ap- proaching them. he said, way, and shouted to the captain : five minutes |” “ Lower away 7’ cried the captain. The boats fell into the water, “In with you, lads, quick! for your lives! In with you, sir!” said he, ad- dressing Victor, who was staring help- lessly at the sailors, He obeyed mechanically, but a sud. den thought flashed across his mind—a maddening thought, full of untold hor- ror. ** Where is my chest ?" he cried. ‘No time for your chest!” shrieked the captain, shoving him downward. “See, she is settling already !” “Oh, heaven!” lio groaned; and they dragged him into tho boat. In a moment they were off. “There she goes!” said the captain, tonching him and pointing to the sink- ing ship. The monkey was sitting upon the bulwarke, grirning at the receding boats. But as the waves floated over the deck she rushed to the masthead, shrieking—a shriek that floated over the waters like the wail of a lost spirit and made the stout hearts of the sailors quake with fear. Then she sunk into tne hollow, gurgling sea, never to rise. Victor buried his face in his hands. His joy, his hope, all the brightness of his life was gone, and the pitiless fu- ture closed around him with relentless power, At night he found himself in the streels of a strange city. Aimlessly he walked through the busy thorough- fares, seeking rest and finding none. His brain throbbed wildly, and at his heart the insatiate pain was gnawing. He pressed his hands to his forehead and peered into the faces of the crowd. They stared at him coldly and passed on. He was a stranger, and they cared not for him, It was after midnight, The hum of traffic had ceased, and the streets were silent. The click of the watchman's footsteps on the pavement or a snatch of ribald song shouted by some noisy reveler out into the sweet night were the only sounds that disturbed the tranquil air. Suddenly there was a ory of ‘‘ Fire!” —a dreadful, shuddering ery, that throbbed and rang through the startled air, till the faces of sleepers grew pale, and they awoke trembling. It was caught up by watchmen on the corners and echoed by watchers on the house- tops. It called forth the life of the city. Out poured the crowd from gloomy marble mansions, from gaudy saloons, from foul basements and reeking alleys. The flames grew fiercer at every mo- ment, with a roaras of an increasing tempest. Dense masses of fiery smoke rolled npward and spread themselves above the doomed building. The crowd was suddenly hushed into silence. At an upper window they caught sight of a blanched, terror-stricken face, and through the roar of the flames they heard a voice of plaintive pleading. They called for ladders, but they | called in vain. They stood upon each other's shoulders, and sought to reach | her, but fell down baflled. They tried | bolted, i “ Make way!” oried the crowd, as a | gigantio form rushed up the marble | stops, He flung his massive strength | against the doors and they cracked, | snapped, but refused w open. Once | The crowd cheered, and the tears | rolled down many a hardened face. The thiok smoke rushed through the open | doorway and hid him from their sight. | But he found her at last, wrapped her | in his heavy coat, and staggered back | through the flames. He could not see, fire burned the garments from his arms he rushed downward, They saw him | at last, and sent up a wild hurrah, But he did not hear it. They took the bur. | and fell to the earth. his face. It was Victor, He had risked his life for one he knew not, | bore him away. When he awoke to consciousness it was bright morning. The sunlight | streamed into the room in which he lay, | garden without, | the ceiling above him and wondered 1@ wished that he had perished in the | and who was it that he had rescued? He looked around the room. The walls | bad stood a vase of flowers. A canary was singing in a gilded cage. He tried to remember, | steadily at her, That shapely head, with its rippling golden hair—surely it could belong to none other than Elise | eyes and looked again, exhausted. | pered ** Elise I" With a great, glad sob, she eried : “ Oh, Victor, do you know me ?" faintly. She pressed her lips to his and broke The sweet, passionate | into sobbing. ve her relief at last, and | tears of joy she answered : “Yes, Victor, it is your own Elise." He lay for a long time silent, “I am very weak, Elise,” * You have been ill for a long time, dear, but you will get better now.” He felt that he should get well, but a sudden theught crossed his mind. “ Where is your father, my darling ?" | he asked. ! the dear, scarred hand that meant so | much to her—and the tears gathered in | her eves as sho answered: “He is dead, Victor; snd I should died, too, if you had not come to save me!” “Did I save you, Elise?" he mut- | tered, dreamily. He closed his eves. | pet. From afar there came the hum of | the great, noisy city. the window heard it, and trilled his | gladdest song. And Elise sat there | holding her Victor's hand, while her heart was filled with sweetest music. A Cattle Raach, Many pens have essayed the task of in the far total and radical misapprehension of the subject, corrected only when he himself crossed the plains and saw with his own eves. The idea is a difficult one for the Eastern mind to fully grasp. It is required that all preconceived notions { lated stock farm must be abandoned and a totally new set substituted. Fences, | green pastures, stables, the whistling | meadow when the sun is casting long shadows, the stone mansion embowered in stately trees upon the overlooking hill—this picture of rural beauty that out our land must be laid aside and Western cattle ranch. He who would successfully follow the business of cattle. raising npon the plains must keep ever on the frontier, pushing farther on into the wilderness as civilization follows in his wake. If he is pressed too closely, he must strike into a new country *‘to find a range,” His judgment must be exercised with regard to several partic. ulars. The country he selects must be | with here and there patches of grease wood, white sage or other browse to | serve as food in case the grass is covered | by a fall of snow. He must further assure himself as to the perennial character of the stream or water-holes upon the range, upon which the cattle are to depend for one essential element. And, lastly, he should also see to it that the country affords good shelter from the winter winds and storms, secured by clumps of trees, bluffs or other features of a broken country. With feed, water and shelter assured, he feels that a suitable range has been found, and returns to drive thither his herd. Into a heavy freight wagon is loaded the whole ranch equipment, including tent, bedding, cooking utensils, and provisions to last perhaps a year. The mounted herders drive the cattle with many a whoop and halloo, and the procession strikes out for the new country. Over the rolling plain, making a wagon road as they go, fording un- known streams, finding a way across deep ravines, often suffering for water, and making many a dry camp, riding all day long under ths scorching sun, with alkali dust, stirred up by ten thousand hoofs, blown into mouth and nostrils, riding all night long around the prostrate herd, and sometimes gal- loping away in the darkness to check, if possible, the wild stampede—thus for months, it may be, the procession moves on until the selected rguge is reached. Here the cattle are turned loose to explore thair new home, to eat, drink, wander and rest at will, to forget the hardships of the long drive and to grow fat upon the nutritious grass, Meantime the site for the ranch-hounse is selected, a few trees are felled and logs cut, and a low, dirt-roofed log cabin is quickly thrown together. Several small fenced inclosures, or corrals, and a branding chute are soon completed, and the ranch may be considered as establishod, No title to the land is secured ; none is desired. The sovereign American citizen simply takes possession, fully persuaded that it is his privilege to dedicate to useful purposes the waste places of our great country.— Lippincott, FOR THELADIES, Avabh Women, women dye their hair a dull red color and frizzle and pull it down over their faces, ugly than an old Arab woman; but teen to sixteen years of age, and who They have beautiful forms, small feet small rosy lips, white teeth snd very smooth, good complexion. They wear their hair plaited and thrown back to hang down over their shoulders and They soon fade, however, and become as ugly as they were before beautiful. In towns the women cover their faces when on the street in the night of men, but they like to have | Christians see them, and will uncover | their faces if no Mussulman is looking. | Grenadine Dresses, Two kinds of grenadine are combined in stylish black dresses, and the newest trimming for these is French lace in { thread patterns, though the Bpanish | lace is used when the grenadine is bro- caded in Spanish lace designs to repre- | sent detached roses, great peoaies, fruit, leaves, eto. Another trimming for gre. | nadines is sealskin fringe of chenille in | vary much smaller and finer sleek strands than that used during the win- | ter, but massed together to reseiable Batin-striped armure grena- dine is much used in combination gren- | adine dresses for plaitings edged | with French lace to form flounces, and also on the aspron front lof deep round overskirts, The | a rache. | stripes are used to form three or four soft puffs that cover the lower skirt as far as the flounces at the foot; the | basque and deep apron over-skirt are of | brocaded grenadine, and the striped | plaiting trims this apron. Plain sewing- | while the skirt has its satin surah dine, with all its lower edges hidden, | lower part left open, and trimmed up each side with Spanish lace frills. { the foot, and a lace flounce coming out | grenadine falls on the satin. Another fancy is what seems to be a princesse dress of black armure grenadine with a panier sash and long black diapery of | striped grenadine. This sash is sewed | great loops of a bow in the back, which | fall over striped drapery that is attached | to the back widths of a plaited armure | greuadine skirt, Bias bands of satin | three inches wide, or straight bands of | stripes, or else smooth rows of lace or embroidery put on the skirt before it is | plaited, are the most effective trim mings for plaited skirts of plain grena- dine, Fashion Notes. Little girls wear white neckties, Colored grenadines will again. be wora { them. Colored silk rivals satin for bride's | dresses, | tian red. Panier draperies modernize last year's dresses. | triennes, | | by ladies, Kate Greenaway dresses for girls are very quaint. | black slippers, | Flowers are superseding feathers on | spring bonnets. {| White wool | wathetic styles. | Black stockings are now more stylish | than colored ones, { The christening robes of babies of | fashion this spring are of pale pink silk, dresses are made in | ciennes. | Ivery white Breton and Moresque | laces are combined with the beavy ecru | ficelle or Medici laces in forming neck | lingerie, Garden or tea aprons of satin are { much vorn in London. The favorite pattern for this use is the Kate Green- away border or group. in the hair, on the shoes, and fastening the bows and draperiss, The long plain skirt of some rich, at the bottom, worn with a panier bo- dice, gains ground every day. Sumatra straw is a new braid which is of a soft shade of beige or buff, new fiber is quite as popular as Manila or Belgian straw, All dressy todices for young ladies are laced nt the back; they open in a square or heartshape in front, and are usually bordered with lace, embroidery or beaded applique bands. Four different materials, harmonizin in color and effect, are sometimes usec upon new French wraps, Two mate- rials at least are used, and few outside garments are exhibited which are made wholly of one fabric. Raw silk in Roman plaided designs showing artistic combinations of color are much used for children’s and young misses’ spring costumes, Some of the handsomest of those are made up in conjunction with dark myrtle green velvet. Stylish traveling costumes are exhib- ited, made of Vigogne of a dark almond color, a neutral shade of beige, or pale silver gray, with waistcoat, pelerino enfls, and bias band for the tunio, made of plush of a contrasting olor. Summer silks of light texture are now shown with groundworks of olive, claret, moss green, marine bire and golden brown, with handsom«Jy exe- ented designs of birds and uowers printed in natural colors upon their surface. The Pope as a Farmer. How many people are there, asks Land, who know that the pope is a farmer? Such is the fact, however, and there is reason to believe that he makes a very good thing of it. Leo XIII. is, however, neither a grower of cereals nor a raiser of stock, but a breeder'of fish. The lagoons of Comae- ohio are thus turned to profitable use. Eels ure the staple food, and several tous of cooked eels are sent from the lagoons every Lent. The fish come up in immense schools from the Adriatic, and are fed in the lagoons on other fish provided for them, until they are nicely fattened, when they are killed and cooked in a vast kitchen. SUNDAY READING, Abldeth Forever, When the great traveler, Daron Hum. boldt, was journeying in South America, in the air, which seamed like a hush Bat that was followed by a fearful convulsion of the earth, which made all hearts quake, And Ham. his soul was as great as that in the world without. All his old views of the safety of the earth were destroyed in a mo- ment. Bhould he fly to the hills for help? The mountains were reeling like drunken men. The honses were | no refuge, for they were crumbling and | falling, and the trees were overthrown, | Then his thoughts turned to the sea ; | but lo! it had fled. Bhips which just | before were floating securely on its sur- | face, were now left rocking in the sands, Being thus at his wit's end, he tells us he *‘looked up, and observed that the heavens alone were calmand unshaken.” How grateful to the fearful and trembling heart it is to know that “through the mountains be removed | and carried into the midst of the sea,” moved. These are some of the things which cannot be shaken: “Even from everlasting to everlasting Thou art God.” “Thy kingdom is an everlast. ing kingdom." “The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting. ~The Watchword, Religlous News and Notes. The Baptists have a total member ship of 2,386,022 in the United States. erected, has been totally destroyed by fire, St. Paul's Evangelical has been destroyed by fire, The American Baptist Missionary The London City mission employs visits last year, and induced 5,740 per- bons to attend worship, aries, The overture giving in The econ- Itis a curious fact forty-eight Presbytories new Carvadian Catholics in According to the the Roman tho and the Methodists 4 008 In the In the In Manitoba the Catholics oc A _a._.n._o Fight for Life With a Bear, A recent issue of the Troy (N. Y.) IR. Derby, of Saranac exploit Fridayafternoon. While driving irom the Prospect house to Blooming. Derby saw an infmiated bear ranches of the tree. With genuine creep unobserved by the bear to within a short range, when he opened fire upon the brute. The first fire took effeot in the shoulder, and was quickly followed bya second which lodged in the bear's head. The only effect of these was to distract the attention and increase the fury of the bear, who abandoned the siege of Maloney and directed his attention to Mr. Derby. He charged furiously upon that gentleman, who coolly discharged two more shots with wonderful preci: sion at the head of the approaching brute, and turning, beat a hasty retroat in the direction of the road. The who turns the scales at 230 pounds. Not a moment was to be lost. The quick eye of Mr. Derby discovered a tree near by. Bpringing into its lower branch- es, he reached a point of safety half dead from exhaustion. The bear, bleeding profusely from many wounds, was undaunted and aggres- sive, and did not leavo his enemy long tc arrange a new campaign, but began the ascent of tho troo. Mr. Derby drew a sheath knife, and with that in his teeth prepared for a desperate en- vounter, Discharging tho three remain- ing shots of hia revolver at the head of the bear, ho seized the knife, and hold- ing by a limb with his left hand, stinck desperately at the fore foet of the climber, nearly severing one claw, and cutting enormous gashes in the animal's shoulders and Wd iy While struggling for his life the limb by which Mr. Derby was holding broke and he was precipitated to the ground ton foot, sustaining severe bruises and a badly sprained shonlder. In his eager- ness to reach his foe the baar tumbled from the tree also and rushed at Mr. Derby, who had recovered his feet, and, unable to retreat, was awaiting the at- tack, his sheath knife in band. The ‘bear arose on his haanches, and by a dexterous thrust Mr, Dorby’s knife was driven straight through his heart and the animal succumbed. Mr. Derby suffered severe scratches and loss of considerable blood. His clothing was literally into strings by the claws of the bear, The French census shows that, though the rural population is declining, yet more than one half the total population still depends on agriculture as a means of living. There are 18,513,525 indi- viduals, comprising 5,970,171 heads of familioa—and the rest dependents—en. gaged in agriculture, a —— II evs ao wv A butterfly hunter in Florida gets an average of five cents apiece for his cap- tures, though some rare specimens bring much more. One very rare speci- men sells as high as $10 per pair, Tp — ————— THE ICE-BOUND JEANNETTE, Lieutenant Danenbhower's Acesant of ihe VYessel's Destruction. Lieutenant Denenhower, in his re. vital of the Jeannette's Arctic vovagze, gives the following account of how the doomed vessel finally went to the bo! tom after a long imprisonment in the ice; The Jeannette was finally released from her joy fetters after an imprison ment of twenty-one months—that is almost the entire duration of our voy- age—and during which time we had been drifting with the pack. The im- portant point of this drift is that we traversed an immense area of ocean, at and it can now safely be said that land does not exist in that area. Of course the depth and the character of the ocean bed and the drift were also determined, as well as the animal life that exists in this part of the world; also the charac. ter of the ocean water and many other facts of interest which were finished with the discov of the two new islands, At this Dorat we had a fooling of pleasure and pride that our voyage bad not been entirely in vain, sud we felt sure that we conld edd considerable to the knowledge of this have got out safely without loss of life the voyage would have been a grand success, Captain De Long, in my opinion, entered the ice boldly and de- liberately, with the intention of trying the most hazardous route to the pole that has ever been contemplated. When spoken to on the subject within a few days after we found ourselves impris- oned, I stated that to be my opinion, daring and magnificent venture on record. To return to the Jeannette, She was floating idly, but, of course, could gides by almost itless masses of ice pool in which she conld bathe sides. he starboard half of her old eradle re and quarter to await her chance to escape. The rudder had been previ- ously shipped and the screw propeller had been found to be un 80 at to the southsast of us I will now describe the supreme and final moments in the life of the d one hour on deck, v, for exercise, the last relapse of my left eye having taken Isce a month previous. I went on Be at 1 o'clock in the afternoon and wind regions of the Pacific. A large party guille mots if possibla. My hour was up to move toward us, and I was fas cinated by the dangers of the situation. The captain was on deck and imme. diately hoisted the hunters’ recall, which was a big black cylinder at the main truck. They to come in one by one, and the last ones were Bart- lett and Anequin, who were jdragging a seal with them. At the time of their arrival the ice was in contact with the port side of the ship, and she was heel- ing about twelve degrees io starboard with her port bilges heavily pressed The two hunters approached on the port side, passed their guns to me and came up by a pes end that I bad thrown to them. The pressure on the ship was terrible, and we knew that she must either lift and be thrown up bod- ily upon the ice or be crushed. Daring the whole cruise provisions, tents and boats with sleds were kept ready for immediate use, and at this time every step was taken for the impending catas- trophe. One watch went to supper at 5.30, and the officers had bread snd tea in the cabin at 6. I was on the sick list, with eyes bandaged, but told the doc- tor that I could get the charts and in- struments together and be of assistance. He said he would ask the captain. Each officer kept his knapsack in his room and most of us thought it was time to have them on deck; but we would not make the move until ordered for fear of attracting the attention of the crew, who were at work on provisions and boats, While I was taking tea I saw Dunbar bring his knapsack up and put it in the cabin, Feeling that the moment had arrived 1 went for mine, and at the head of the ladder on my return the doctor said to me: ‘Dan, the order is to get knapsacks.” It seems that he had stepped below and found water in the wardroom, which he reported to the captain, aud the order was then given to abandon the ship. The national ensign was Long was on the bridge directing the work, Lieutenant Chipp was confined to hia bed. I threw my knapsack over the starboard rail and returned for clothes, but on stepping iato water when half way down the wardrobe ladder I realized that the ship was filling rapidly. The doctor and I then carried Chipp's belongings out, and I was told to tuke charge of the medical stores, especially the liquor. The ship in this condition was like a broken basket, and only kept from sinking by the pressure of the ice, which at any moment might relax and let her go to the bottom, The crew worked well, and Edward Staar, seaman, especially distinguished himself, He was doing duty at the time as paymaster's yeoman or “Jack of the Dust.” The order was given to get up more Remington ammunition, and he went into the magazine when the ship was filling rapidly and succeeded in getiing two cases out. This man was in Lieutenant Chipp's boat afterward. We always thought him a Russian, but he spoke English very well and never would speak of his nationality; but during his dreams he talked in a language that was neither English, French, German, Swe- dish, Spanish nor Italian, and most of the men thought it was Russian. He was an excellent man and a giant in strength. The captain thought a great deal of him, for he served him faithful- ly in every responsible position. When the order was given to aban- don the ship her hold was full of water, and as she was heeling twenty-three degrees to starboard at the time the water was on the lower side of the spar deck, and I hope that our friend, the London Standard, will not now think that we deserted her and left her adrift in the Arctic, as was stated in one of the issmes of that paper. We had a large quantity of provisions on the ice about a hundred yards from the ship, but Mr. Danbar, who was alive to the occasion, advised the shifting of these to an adjacent and more favorable floe piece. It took us till 11 r. a. to effect the removal. We also had three boats —namely, the first cutter, second ont- ter and the whaleboat. As soon as Dr. Ambler had looked out for Chipp he relieved me at my post and 1 went to wp pr SARE ——r _- — heen detailed previously to eom The order was given to camp snd get coffee, so we pitched our tent abreast of the whale and I set about fitting ont for the retreat, over to the shi her and found the os Colas fie looking at her under-water port side I a body, which was hove well out of water, I observed that the 's side between the foremast and had been buckled in by the re, and that the second w was hanging st the davits, also that the steam cutter was lying on the ice near by. Coles and Bweetman captain if we could lower the second whaleboat, and the esptain ssid ** No. fi three boats, howeve, were consid- ered en and while the ice a to be the favorite with all blanket in which he and were lying; the weight of the the ends ing the middle falling through. The order diately given to shift to another floes piece w. Mr. Dunbar selected for us, This was sbout three hundred § { sk E 18808 1 5 thi i 3 ; : £ E 3 nette, which for many dured the embrace of ster. The Jeannette sank o'clock of the morning of Jane 13, eo ee the anniversary ak i were detained there four days in mak. ing preparations, and on the doctor's recommendation awaiting the improve. ment of about a quarter of our pati, who were debilitated by sto dis- orders supposed to be tin poisoning from tomato cans. g i X i —— Accounting for the Sea Serpent, Bir Charles Lyell made some inter esting siiefabts to trace the sea ser Ee | by u wings appearsnoe | porpoises in line in a heavy sea—the | effect upon the eye of their continued | rise and fall, He dwelt upon the mo- tions of a large shark observed puing | through Torres strait at a high rate o | speed, the dorsal and caudal fins, with | the swell, being reproduced so quickly | and repeatedly on the retina as to give the impression of a series of hk The elevated head in the air, so quently noticed, he explained by opti- cal illnsion, or that the animal was a seal, or one of the monster | thirty feet long, that might have stra | from the north or south. The | shark, or hockmar, of Norway, Ww attains a length of from Shinty So Shi Ty bs ecmeaRent vn y this belief was strengthened by an enormous one that was cast ashore on the Orkney islands. The flesh was partly destro and the enormous { dorsal fri into fragments. The shark was described as a sea the jagged dorsal as hair, and a most remarkable story concocted, which still holds its 9% 38 Mo ola a Tie idea suy © Koch sea serpen which was made of fossil whale verte- | bree from Georgia, arranged in s row, | and exhibited to the Bostonians as the | “sea ser pant.” Tape fishesol the genera Gymnetras and Regalicns have been | found thirty sad sixty feet 1 aoocord- ling to Lord Norbury, and it been | soggested that they may have been | taken for the sea serpent; but, though long, they are remarkably slender, and not snail-like, and have a lateral motion that could not be contorted to corre- spond with any of the accounts given.— Lippincott. A St, Petersburg Incident. A St. Petersburg correspondent tells this story: As I was saunter. along the Catharine canal the other with one of the late caar's Sia dowcatnpa, I witnessed a spectacle wholly n for me. A poor devil of a mioulik=_olé, bearded and haggard, dressed in adirty starlet shiti=shud sto] Scjare Si cua ere u o Ww. il IL de as he stop he knelt down and bent his to the ground three times, Then he advanced to the threshold of the little gothio edifice, where fifty candles are always kept burning, snd lifting up the hem’ of his red shirt he Fiumageld in his pocket Jong and mlly, and at last rew from pocket a tiny little piece of silver coin —all that the usurers had left him, and dropped it into the silver money box placed there for the maintenance of the commemorative chapel. Immediately the two military sentinels on guard at either side of the entrance, presented arms. The moujik prostrated him- sell three times again, and went his way. All Russia was painted in that simple trait of character. Volumes upon volumes of travels in the land of Peter the Great, however anxiously perused with a view to self-instruction, could not have taught me as much about it. A silver dollar with a bit of coneave mirror set in one side is by gumblars called a ‘‘shiner.,” By laying it among his pile of coin and dealing over it the operator can know what every player holds for that deal, the cards being re- flected in miniature. A member of the Mining club of Leadville has been caught using a *“‘shiner.” By means of it he won $2,600 in a night at poker, A hungry rat devoured fifteen canary birds in Cleveland, Ohio, in one night recently, and in consequence grew so | AB corpulent that he couldn’t escape from the cage. That rat was killed with much promptness.