Love and Time, Two lovers watched the sapset die In happy elonds that floated west; His lips caressed her silken hair, Her head lay nestling on his breast. “Ah, love,” he said, “I see that men Should make no count of hours and days; They live most when their sleepy hearts Do leap like mine in proud amaze.” “Yes, yos,” sha whispered, “all in vain I hear the bells of hollow towers; But your heart swiftly beating here Tells all too well the flying hours,” The Tryst, There was not a cloud in the deep blue aky, Nor a foaming crest on the sea ; And their breath came noiselessly. The soft sweet rays of the harvest moon, The beaving waters kissed, And the tight was shed on the Abbey head, And the tombstones that watch the quiet dead. And in calm I kapt our tryst. The blank black sky, and the blank black sea, Blent in the angry night ; The wild winds met, where the waters fret, In a belt of luminous light. They thundered along the hollow strand, Where the rain like a python hissed ; And near and far, from rook and soar, Bang the mighty challenge of Nature's war, And in storm I kept our tryst. White, weird and ghastly crept the tog, Over river, and moor, and coast ; Each fast.moored boat, on the harbor afloat, Loomed like a threatening ghost. The sea lay muttering suilenly, Under the veiling mist ; and the buoy-bell fongue, Where the tide on the lip of the rook was flang, And in gloom I kept our tryst, For while holy grief and loving trust With me kept wateh together, I reckon not, 1, of ses or sky ; Our hearts So 1 know, # To the spirit gr In faith I kept our tryst. Al the Year Round. A WOOING BY PROXY. ng back inadeep crim- th a white dress sweeping ng folds about her. y two or three men with he has grown and which is © joyous smiles of i'n whom he had loved 80} ¢ is watching her from the opi of the salon as he stands be ostess, and he tells himself r the last time. He is going to | resently and he knows ¥ Just how oc ¢ will lark eyes t never met his without confess t she loved 1} He Knows hat he will and what & Wii say she will answer, and the ole so different the Jeanne J Foy raise the « IN. re is no need of haste in this last scene of his tragedy. “A man should know when he is beaten,” he is thinking, while he smiles vaguely in reply to Madame De Soules commonplaces, “There more stu- pidity than courage in not accepting a defeat while there is yet time to retreat with some dignity. For six weeks 1 have shown her, with a directness that has, I dare say, been amusing to our mutual friends, that after ten years absence my « ct in returning to Paris is her he cannot avoid 1 ne in pt +, but sl refused to receive me when I on her or to permit me a word I have been a fool to forget these years in which 1 have regretted ber she has naturally despised me, but at least it is not just of her to refuse me a hearing.” The moment he has been waiting for is Cf The little court about her dis- perses is but one man side her, neces around with a look of 1 against the con- timtance « : 3 De Palissier has escaped from his hostess in an instant, and the next he is murmuring, with the faintest sus- icion of a tremor in his voice, “ Will Miramon permit me a is Sie has call up with her alone. [ that all Mae, be- “ Thanks, M. De Palissier, but I am not dancing this evening,” she replies, with exactly the glance and tone he expects. “ Will madame give me a few mo- ments serious conversation?” and this time the tremor is distinct, for even the nineteenth century horror of melo- drama cannot keep a man’s nerves quite steady when he is asking a ques- | ng pends. “One does not come to serious conversation—" she lightly. *“ Where may I come, then terrupts, eagerly. “ Nowhere. There is no need for serious conversation between us, M. De | Palissier,” she replies, haughtily, and | rising she takes the arm of the much- | edified gentleman beside her and moves away. It is all as he has prophesied to him- | self, and yet for a moment the lights | swim dizzily before him and the pas-| sionate sweetness of that Strauss waltz | the band is playing stabs his heart like | a knife. realize that he is standing quite mo- | tionless, gazing, with despair in his | eyes, after Madame De Miramon's | slender white-clad figure, and that two | or three people, who have seen and balls for | begins, on : he in- | amused pity which sentimental ca-| tastrophes always inspire in the spec- | tators. Some one touches his arm presently | cille De Beaujen, the young sister of | Madame De Miramon, whom he re- | members years ago as a child, and with | whom he has danced several times this! winter. | “And our waltz, monsieur?”’ she! asks, gayly. “Do not tell me you have | forgotten it. That is evident enough, | but you should not admit it.” “Mille pardons, mademoiselle,” he | mutters, hurriedly. “1 am very good to-night,” she says, putting her hand on his mechanically | extended arm. “Though the waltz is! half over, there is still time for you to get me an ice.” So they make their way through the salon, she talking lightly and without | pausing for a reply, while he, vaguely | grateful to her for extricating him from an awkward position, wonders also that she should care to be so kind to a man whom her sister has treated with such marked dislike, The refreshment-room is almost empty, and she seats herself and mo- tions him to a chair beside her when he has brought her an ice. “ Do you think, M. le Marquis, that it was only to eat ices with you that 1 have forced my society so resolutely upon you?” she asks, with a look of earnestness very rare on her bright, coquettish face, “I think you an angel of compas- sion to an old friend of your child- hood, Mademoiselle Lucille—" “1t was compassion, but more for my sister than for you,” she says, gravely. “ Your sister!” he echoes, bitterly. “Tt has not occurred to me that Madame De Miramon is in need of compassion, and yonrs is too sweet to be wasted—" « Chut, monsieur,” she interrupted. «Forget that I am as fond of pretty speeches as most young women and i | { | { | i 3 | VOLUME XV, NUMBER 35. mon's sister, who believes that much as she loves her, you love her even | more" For the second thine this evening De Palissier forgets possible observers | and elasps both the girl's slender hands {in his, as he murmurs, unsteadily, “God { bless you I" * You forget that we have an audi ence, monsieur,” she says, withdraw. ing her hands quickly, but with a smile of frank comradeship, “I have ! a story to tell vou, and not much time to tell it in, Years ago, when Jeanne { left her convent on becoming flancee to M. De Miramon, she met you at her first ball, and you loved each other, It of your house and only a sous-lieuten- the families were furious; but all would have ended as well as a fairy tale if you had been reasonable, Jeanne promised any amount of patience, but away and marry defiance of her parents; tormented her with and shamed her with suspicions until she dreaded those se ¢ret meetings almost as much as she longed for them, At last, after making a more violent quarrel than usual, you exchanged from your regiment at Versailles to one in Algiers, and left her no refuge from the reproaches of our father and mother but to marry M. de Miramom, He might have re fused to marry her after hearing her confess, as she did, that she had given her heart to you, and that only your desertion had induced her to consent to their marriage. But he had a better revenge than that. He married her, and for eight years he tortured her in every way that a jeal ous and cruel man can torture a proud pure woman. He opened all her let ters, he made spies of her servants, and not a day passed that he did not make some mention of your name. Our pa- rents died within a few months of the marriage, and 1 was at my convent. There was nothing to be done with her misery but endure it, knowing that she owed it all to your impatience. Can you wonder that she is unforgiving?" He is leaning on between them with folded arms and down-bent eves, and he is very pale, even through the bronze of ten African summers. “1 loved her always—" he says, al- most inaudibly; then pauses; nor does he finish his sentence, though she waits for him to do so. “You loved her? You could not hav® wrecked her life more utterly if vou had hated her. Can you wonder that she has grown to fear the thought of love that has been so cruel to her as yours and her husband’s? Monsieur my brother-in-law died two years ago God is so good!” continues Lucille, fiercely. “Since then Jeanne has been at peace, and she terror from disturbing the calm which has come to her after such storms. She » An you mn sO you doubts shrinks with absolute ou, she avoids you, because— tell you why #” can see his lips quiver even under the heavy mustache, but he neither speaks nor raises his eyes. “She loves you,” murmurs Lucille, just aloud. He lifts his eves now and looks at her dumbly for an instant, then, rising abruptly, walks away. “11 a des beaux yeux, mon Dieu!” she thinks, with a thrill of wonder that Jeanne should have had the courage to refuse him anything in the days when they were young together. He comes back presently, “My child,” he says, very gently, “ do not try to make me believe that, unless you are very sure, for if I once believe it again, I-—-1-—" “Iam as sure as that I live that Jeanne has never ceased to love you, and that you can force her to confess it “f you will make love to me.” #“]? You? me!” with a rush of color into his dark y 11 Lace, “Do you think so ill of Jeanne's sister 7” she asks, softly. “Pardon. I am scarcely myself, and [ cannot imagine how—" “Jeanne will not receive you be- cause she knows her heart and is afraid of it. She fears that you will destroy the hard-won peace she values so highly, But you are wealthy, dis- tinguished, the head of your name—a were ten years ago, and she ean find no reason for refusing you as my suitor if I consent, and as my chape- ron she must be present at all our meetings, You begin to understand ? jealousy ; make her remember—make her regret.” “But, forgive me, when one has loved a woman for ten years,” with a other.” “If there were, monsieur, I should never have proposed my plot,” she re- plies, with dignity. “It is because 1 sister, that I trust you. Dut it is not with one's heart that one pretends. cline,” “Decline!” he echoes, with a pas- sion none the less intense for its quiet- ness, “Does a dying man decline his The surprises week the next to proud and pa well understands, Though it is long since she has permitted herself to re- youth except his jealousy, she has be- she dreaded it, and when she receives De Palissier’s note asking the consent of his old friend to his love for her sister, the pain she feels bewilders and dismays her. With a smile whose evnicism is as much for herself as for him, she gives the note to Lucille, ex- pecting an instant rejection of the man whose motive in pursuing them they had both so misunderstood. But with a gay laugh, “Then my sympathy has been without cause,” the girl cries, “ By all means let him come, my Jeanne, It cannot wound you, who have long ago ceased to regret him; but he is the best parti in Paris, and tres bel homme for his age.” It is quite true there can be no ob- jection to the wealthy and distinguished Marquis de Palissier if Lucille is will- ing—none but the pain at her heart which she is ashamed even to confess to herself. So a note is written fixing an hour for his first visit, and Madame De Miramon prepares herself to meet the man whom she last saw alone in all the passionate anguish of a lover's quarrel. Is this wild flutter in her throat a sign of the peace she has re- think of me only as Jeannie De Mira- solved to possess? Thank (God! she | can at least promise herself that what. {ever she may suffer, neither he nor Lauaille shall guess it, There is a sound of wheels in the | courtyard, and she rises, with a hasty | glance at her fair reflection in a | mirror, “His old friend!” she murmurs, scornfully. “I dare say I look an old woman beside Lucille" Then she turns with a look of grace. ful welcome, for the door is thrown open, and a servant announces: “M. le Marquis de Palissier.” “Nothing could give me greater pleasure than to receive As my sister's suitor the old friend of whom the world tells me such noble things.” She utters her little speech as naturally as { though she had not rehearsed it a dozen times, and holds out her pretty hand to him. To her surprise he does not take it. How should she guess that he dares not trust himself to touch calmly the A PRINCESS OF ROMANCE, The Story of the Widaw of the Last Elector of Hesse, The London Telegraph says: Of the strange life stories that may be gleaned from that portion of the * Al manach de Gotha" dealing with dynas- tic and personal facts, few are more romantic than that which has just been concluded by the demise of Gertrude von Hanau, the widow of the last elector of Hesse, Her titular descrip- tion, taken from the German eivilstands- register, or official obituary record, is in itself the skeleton of a three-volume novel, It runs as follows: “Gertrude, Princess of Hanau, Ceuntess of Schaumburg, nee Falkenstein, divorcee Lehman." This interesting personage, who died kiss any time these ten years ? “You are too good, madame,” he { replies, very low ; and she reflects that he is of course a little embarrassed. “1 am afraid you had much to forgive in those days so long ago, but time, I trust, has changed me.” “1t would be sad indeed if time did not give us wisdom and coldness in exchangefor all it takes from us,” she ' says, with a quick thrill of pain that he should speak of ten years as if it were an eternity. “ Not coldness,” he exclaimed, com. enty-seventh year, was the daughter of a well-to-do wine merchant established at Bonn about the commencement of the present century. Endowed by na- ture with extraordinary personal at. tractions, she had several offers of marriage while still in her teens, and bestowed her hand, some fifty- eight years ago, upon a young Prussian paymaster called Leh mann, then serving in the Seventh lancers, a regiment quar- tered at Marienwerder, in West Prus. person she paid a visit to her parents in her native town, and during her eves that make her feel a girl again, “If you could see my heart, you" “ May I enter, my sister?” asks the from behind the portiere at so for tunate a moment for the success of her plot that it is to be feared she had been eavesdropping. De Palissier turns at presses her hand to his lips. “ Mademoiselle,” he says, tenderly, “1 am at your feet.” Then begins a charming little comedy of love-making, in which Lucille plays her role with pretty coquetry, and he with infinite zeal. And the chaperon bends over her lace-work and hears the caressing tones she thought she had forgotten, and sees the tender glances she im- agined she had ceased to regret—all given to her young sister in her unre- garded presence. = Dear God! how is she to keep the peace she so prays for, if her future is to be haunted by this ghost from her past? tient and used to suffering, but at length she can endure no longer, and not daring to leave the room she once and where she is at least beyond hearing There is an instant pause between the conspirators, and while De Palis- | sier's eyes wistfully follow Madame De Miramon, Lucille seizes her opportu- | nity with a promptness that would have done credit to a Richelieu or a Talleyrand, or any other prince of schemers. monsieur I” she mur- has been cold to me came, “Courage, murs. “She ever since note You your would make a premier at the Francais, only when vou say anything very tender, do re- member to look at me instead of Jeanne.” And she breaks into a laugh so utterly amused that he presently of Frederick William, electoral prince bavalry in garrison at Bonn. The young officer, who had quitted his father's court in consequence of a quarrel with the reigning elector’s “friend,” Countess Reichenbach, and was, oddly enough, notorious for his disapproval of princely peccadilloes, fell desperately in love with *“ Mrs to make practical recantation of his high i in her favor, by carry- ing her off from her husband. The fair Gertrude, however, promptly gave exclusively matrimonial. She was, in- his serene highness that her husband, Lehmann, was a sensible and manageable fellow, open to reasons of a certain sort, and that in all proba- judiclons persuasion would convince him of the expediency of parting with his handsome spouse for a consideration. Negotiations were ‘opened between the husbands in esse d in posse, resulting in a hard cash transaction, whereby Lehmann became pocketed this comfortable little com- pensation he proceeded to institute a ivorce suit against his wife upon the ment,” and as soon as the degree of scheidung had been pronounced, Ger- trude Falkenstein, ex-Lehmann, was ferred upon her the title of Countess von Schaumburg. The wedding took place in the autumn of 1831, the year in Which popular discontent with the elector William's regime in Hesse com- tate to nominate his son co-regent-—a step which practically amounted to his abdication in favor of Frederick Wil- mirth causes an odd blot in the poor chaperon’s writing. A month has dragged by, wretched- ly enough both to the conspirators and has come to an end at last. | sier to his role if he did not believe that in surrendering it he must give beauty—had not long to wait for the who, by the way, had been compelled sian service by his brother officers, and | indifference, has become the one charm of life to him. Madame De Miramon | and her sister are spending a week at her is to accompany them on a riding party, has arrived a little late, and finds | both sisters already in the courtyard, | with some horses and grooms, when he | enters. Lucille comes to him at once, | a2 he dismounts, with a look of alarm | instead of her usual cogquetry. | “Do not let Jeanne ride Etoile,” she! | says, anxiously. “She has thrown | Guillaume this morning.” : | Madame De Miramon is standing | beside an old groom, who is holding | the horse in question, and she does not { look at her sister or De Palissier as | they approach. | “Let me ride Etoile and take my to-day, madame,” De Palissier I says, eagerly. “I should like to | master a horse who has thrown so ex- | cellent a groom as Guillaume.” | “So should 1,” she says, with a hard | little laugh, and she steps on the block. “Jeanne!” cries Lucille, “I entreat you for your sister's sake. | She will be terribly alarmed,” De Pal- | issier says, hurriedly. “Then you must console her. The | greater her alarm, the greater your de- lightful task, monsieur,” and she looks | a defiant pain in her eyes | like a stags at bay. “I shall ride | Etoile.” | “Then I say that you shall not,” he | answers, putting his arm across the | saddle, and meeting her eyes with a | sudden blaze of command in his. For an instant they gaze at each other in utter forgetfulness of any other presence than their own, then i i horse | elose to him, " “I hate you! lowed by De Palissier. In the salon | sionate pride. “Leave me!” she says. you to speak to me.” He is very pale, but the light of trif umph is in his eyes, and like most men, being triumphant, he is cruel. imperiously. dropping the eyes which she knows are betraying her. holding out his arms. * Does it hurt have loved you all these years?” | “ But Lucille,” she falters, movin away from him, but with eyes tha dered joy. doorway. your happiness, my Jeanne, which would never have succeeded if you had known your sister as well as she knew JOU. tent with the wreck of any man’s heart § —fi donc! When my day comes, #¢ Like Alexander, I will reign. reign alone.’ And I will Harper's Weekly. sian capital her new mother-in-law, the electress—an aunt of the present Ger- thea- William thenceforth not be admitted to that place of entertainment. Toward the end of the year the aged electress, ig- was enthusiastically cheered by the au- vate box. This demonstration was continued in the streets when she left the house, and led to the populace guard, with drawn sabers, at his se rene highness’ express command. The Hessians never forgave their elector for giving this barbarous order. By causing his subjects to be ridden and cut down for cheering his own mother ~—a& venerable and deeply respected princess — Frederick William utterly destroyed his popularity in the realm of his ancestors. Between 1831 and 1850 Jountess Schaumburg bore her hus- band seven sons and two daughters, Princess of Hanau by the emperor of Austria. On the elector’s death in 1875 she inherited the whole of his enormous fortune, invested in state securities and railway stock, which will be divided among her eight surviv- ing children, the youngest of whom is a lieutenant in the Fourth regiment of Austrian lancers, Riis The Howling Monkey, We will begin with the howling monkeys, which are the largest found in America, and are celebrated for the loud voice of the males, Often in the noco a tremendous noise is heard in the assemblage of wild beasts were all roar- may be heard for miles, and it is loud- other animal, yet it is all produced by branches of a lofty tree. They are enabled to make this extraordinary noise by means of an organ that is ossessed by no other animal. The Jou jaw is unusually deep, and this makes room for a hollow bony vessel ated under the root of the tongue, and having an opening into the windpipe, by which the animal can force air into voice, acting something like the hollow celebrated traveler, Waterton, to declare that i { { i { | their origin in the inférnal regions. The howlers are large and stout-bodied monkeys with bearded faces, and very strong and powerful grasping tails, They inhabit the wildest forests; they ave very shy and are seldom taken cap- tive, though they are less active than many other American monkeys.—Pop- ular Science Monthly. A new industry reported is that pf sending frogs to England, ! SCIENTIFIC NOTES, Selentific men in Japan are discuss. ing the possibility of utilizing the ine ternal heat of the earth, A Belgian engineer is said to have invented a process by which he can weld steel at a red heat. He keeps an essential portion of method a secret, his There are 112 species of woods in North Carelina. In the entire South ern States there are only other varieties which are not found in that State, Mr, Villiers Stuart records that when the mummy of the great warrior Thothmes 111. was unswathed the body was found to be unusually short and slight. Hardly had a rapid photograph been taken of the figure than the fra. gile remains, as if in protest against the violation of their rest, vanished into dust, Flax is more extensively and more | successfully cultivated in Belgium than in any other European country, partic ularly in South Brabant, Hainault and West and East Flanders, in which the most beautiful flax in Europe is pro- duced, employed for the manufacture of the Brussels lace, and sold for that purpose, Before an English committee of in. quiry, Dr. John Horkinson has ex. pressed the belief that the whole of the electricity generated by one horse- power would not do more than boil a gallon and a half of water an hour. This opinion was given as evidence that electricity is not likely to ever be- come economically useful for heating purposes, Monkeys, says Alfred R. Wallace, are usually divided into three kinds— apes, monkeys and baboons ; but these do not include the American monkeys, which are really more different from all those of the Old World than any of the latter are from each other, monkey tribe into two families, one having its habitat in the Old World and the other in the New World. ——— Coronations, The present czar of Russia, after having announced that his coronation would take place with great pomp at Moscow, in the middle of August, sud- denly postponed the ceremony to an indefinite period. Several reasons were alleged for this singular decision. It was said that the health of the czarina was such as to make it necessary to postpone it. It was declared that the | czar was unwilling to mark the oceca- sion with concessions as to Russian land, which the peasants expected and demanded. Finally it was gravely whispered that the czar feared to be crowned, lest such an event would give the Nihilists an opportunity to attempt his life. The latter surmise is a very likely one. It is known that the author- ities of Moscow have plainly told the czar that if he was crowned in that city they could not answer for the preser- vation of order or for his personal safety. Preparations to attempt the czar's life have been detected in the ancient capital of Muscovy ; and more than one plot to murder him on the day of coronation has been unearthed. It may be that the Czar Alexander 111. will never be crowned. But this is merely the omission of a traditional, but after all, an empty ceremony. It does not add at all to a monarch’s au- thority to rule to be crowned. It is | merely a matter of historic pomp and | pageantry; it confers no new right or prerogative. Many sovereigns have reigned through long periods and have died uncrowned. Coronation is, indeed, a very ancient as well as a very imposing rite, It is known, for instance, that Solomon was crowned with great display; and it is probable that the Assyrian and Egyp- tian kings were all crowned. Corona- tion, too, in almost every country and period has been a sacred as well as a political ceremony. The head of the sovereign has been anointed with oll, which signifies his consecration to the service of God as well as of the state, The old Saxon kings of England were wont to be crowned, not at Lon- don, but in the ancient and august { cathedral of Winchester, or in that {lovely riverside town, Kingston-on- { Thames, Since the time of the Nor- man kings, however, the sovereigns of | England have always been crowned in | Westminster Abbey; and since the | time of Edward the First each sov- | ereign has been crowned on the same throne, beneath which rests the “Stone | of Destiny” brought from Scotland by | the great Edward, {land to date the i king from the day, not of his | accession, but of his coronation. | Between these two events the sovereign was called “Lord of England,” not | king, which title he only assumed after { he had been duly crowned. This was { the case both with Richard the Lion- | Hearted and his brother John, | Various reasons have served to | cause from time to time the omission { of the ceremony of coronation. It is reign of FOR THE LADIES, mim Fancy Haman Hair, There is at present, says the New York Sun, a scarcity of fancy human hair in the market, The scarcest hair Is pure white, and its value is con- stantly increasing, and if it is unusual ly long, that is, from four to five feet, the dealer can get almost his own price, while if it is of ordinary length it is worth from $75 to $100 an ounce, The fact that pure white hair is the court coiffure in Europe keeps the de mand for it very high. Moreover, it is much prized by American women whose own hair is white, and who de- sire to enrich its folds, for white hair the wearer. There is no fancy market for gray hair. It is too common, It is used to work into wigs of persons who are growing old. What is de washed-out pale red or a dull blonde, relation to red hair, except in the vivid. ness of its coloring. The demand for the virgin gold color is great in the capitals of Europe. A woman who gets a coiffure of it Is considered for- tunate. A young Hyooklyn laly of much beauty possesses a splend {1 wig, which she chanced to find in a shop in Nice, scanty supply of dull hair. It did not take her an instant to decide to have her hair cut short and to wear the wig. There are four type-colors of hair— white, blonde, black and brown-—and each of these has been sub-divided into sixteen different shades. The commonest types are black and brown, and these are cheap. Golden brown is much in favor, as is pure black, or what hair, streaked with gray, shows in con- trast with the false covering. Next to pure white hair the demand is for hair of the color of virgin gold. There are many braids made of hair colored to meet the demand with certain prepara tions, but they prove unsatisfactory, Many foolish women have sought to change the color of their own tresses, but they have uniformly repented the attempt, urest blonde type will sell for from 300 to $500, It is said that the Em- exsctly matched her own, from France, Switzerland and Ger- many. The country fairs are attended by agents of merchants in London, selves into the favor of young girls and persuade them to sell their tresses for glass ornaments or other gewgaws, Only at intervals is a prize like a per- | fect suit of golden hair obtained, and | it is said that there are orders ahead in | the shops of Paris and London for all | the golden hair that can be obtained | in the next seven years. When a stock of hair is collected by traveling | agents it is assorted, washed and | cleaned. Then each hair is drawn | through the eye of a needle and pol- | ished. When the stock is ready for | the market in Europe, the nobility is permitted to make the first choice. Fashion Notes. The new French coiffure is formed of flat bandeaux. A scarf arranged as a pelerine is a favorite drapery for the shoulders, Skirts of evening dresses are covered with foar flounces of embroidered tulle. Nearly all shoulder capes have a thick ruche of lace material around the neck. The newest bodices are glove-fitting, with large and full paniers around the hips, Freshly gathered flowers are used to trim the hats and corsages of country toilets, Bonnet-strings are made of very wide ribbon, tied in a butterfly bow under the chin, Race and coaching toilets are made of the gayest, brightest and richest materials, white lace only, are much worn by young girls, The corsages of some very handsome costumes are laced up in front instead of buttoning. None but home-made dresses, and yery ugly ones at that, are inflated with erinoline. There is an effort to revive wreaths headdresses and low clusters behind the ears. A Paris fashion is to carry very large fans in the carriage for sun- shades, instead of parasols, Flowers are worn to excess not only on all festival occasions, but also in the carriage toilet. The shirred or gauged Heligolanda be crowned, for fear of some ea- tastrophe similar to that which thé present czar is now threatened. Na- { poleon I. had no such fear, and was crowned with great magnificence at Notre Dame, The ceremony of coronation is still nearly every monarchy in Christendom ; but a king is just as much a king with out it as with it, It is the oath which every sovereign takes at the moment of his accession which endows him with the right and the responsibility of ruling over his subjects.— Youth's Companion. a I, Egypt as It Is, The Egypt of to-day is soon seen : Arab towns of mud huts, long lines of loaded camels and donkeys, and their Arab boys and women begging for bucksheesh ; the fields of the Nile and the great river itself ; the mosque and minaret ; the hooded women and tur- baned, long-robed men; the acacia luxury along with poverty, dirt with despotism ; all the plagues, including an abnormal government ; sugar mills ture, with a sunset that never fails to Cox. day, especially in the warm summer mornings, when numerous insects and worms are out, Make them indus- they have done their level best to get a living. It is the active and not the stupid hen that lays the most eggs, ward, Black and terra-cotta are the colors most useful for silk stockings, as they can now be worn with almost any dress of the stylish shades without being too striking. Among splendid novelties sent over from Paris are embroideries of metallic bullion and imitation jewels, incrusta- tions in relief upon velvets, brocades, damasses and satins, Flowers have almost driven feathers out of favor for trimming hats, A full wreath of roses, without green leaves, is tied by long ribbons around the crown of wide-brimmed manila hats. Coaching parasols are made gay with embroideries or paintings of hunting, sporting, equestrian and pastoral scenes, flowers, birds and immense gilt monograms or coats of arms or em- blematic devices, Among other fancies is that of fastening the corsage with tiny, bullet- shaped buttons, set on less than an inch apart. The buttonholes are made by machinery, Sometimes there is a double row of buttons. Satin ribbon three inches wide is Pointed belts out- Black failles, satins, poplins, watered | i } i grenadines, silk gauses and tulle are all in high fashion. Black silk skirts cov- ered with grenadine plisses and bouil- lonnes, and accompanied by silk or satin casaques or jacquettes trimmed with black Spanish lace and jet, make thoroughly elegant toilets, enabling the wearer to vary them by colored trim- mings and floral garniture if desired. on light dresses of one or more such as pale blue merveilleux and pale pink moire; the painted lace, colored | to correspond with these two shades, | would, however, only be used to trim the principal portions of the dress the sleeves, bodice and edgings, to the drapery. The flounces, panels or any- thing requiring a large amount of gar- niture, would be of the same lace with the designs left uncolored, A Ride on a Crocodile, and observer, has made the most ex- tended observations upon the habits of the South American crocodiles. They were fished for by wire hooks formed (of four pieces of hard wood a foot { long, barbed at both ends; to these | was affixed an animal of some kind, and with rope attached the bait was held over the river or pond, and if once taken the struggles of the cres- ture only served to hook it the more firmly, Waterton was probably the | first to ride a cayman, and the follow- ing is his account of a capture novel in the extreme: “I placed all the peo- ple at the end of the rope and ordered them to pull till the cayman appeared on the surface of the water; and then, should he plunge, to slacken the rope and let him go again in the deep. I now took the mast of the canoe in my hand (the sail being tied around the mast), and sank down upon one knee, about four yards from the water's edge, determined to thrust it down his throat in case ke gave me an opportunity; I certainly felt somewhat uncomfortable in this situation, and I thought of Cerberus on the other side of the Styx ferry. The people pulled the cayman to the surface; he plunged furiously assoon as he arrived in these upper regions and immediately went below again on their | slacking the rope. I saw enough not to fall in love at first sight. I now told them we would run all risks and | have him on land immediately. They | pulled again, and out he came—* mon- | strum, horrendum, informe” This | was an interesting moment. I kept | my position firmly, with my eye fixed | steadfast on him. | “By this time the cayman was | within two yards of me. 1 saw he | was in a state of fear and perturba tion; I instantly dropped the mast, (sprang up and jumped on his back, turning half round as I vaulted, so | that 1 gained my seat with my face in | a right position. I immediately seized his forelegs and by main force | twisted them on his back; thus they served me for a bridle He now | seemed to have recovered from his surprise, and probably fancying him- | self in hostile company, he began to plunge furiously and lashed the sand with his long and powerful tail. I was out of reach of the strokes of it by being near his head. He continued to plunge and strike, and nade my seat very uncomfortable. It must have been a fine sight for sn unoceu- pied spectator. The people roared out in triumph, and were so vociferous that it was some time before they heard me tell them to pull me and | my beast of burden further aland. {1 was apprehensive the rope | might break, and then there would {have been every chance :. going { down to the regions under wi. tr with | the cayman. The people now « gged | us about forty yards on the sand; '. was | the first and last time I was ever on a {eayman's back. After re at- | tempts to regain his liberty the cay- man gave in and became tranquil through exhaustion. I now managed to tie up his jaws and firmly se cured his forefeet in the position I had held them. We had now another | severe struggle for superiority, but he | was soon overcome, and again remained quiet. While some of the e were pressing upon his head and shoulders I threw myself on his tail, and by keeping it down in the sand prevented him from kicking up anot dust. He was finally conveyed to the canoe, and then to the place where we had | placed our hammocks. They cut his | throat, and after breakfast was over | commenced the dissection.” A Consumptive’s Fight for Life, A. H. Barnes, of Reno, Nevada, fights off consumption by wearing a silver tube which passes between the ribs into the lungs. In 1849 Barnes, then living in Sycamore, DeKalb county, Illinois, was declared an incurable con- sumptive. The Jung was tapped and he recovered. In 1563 he was again taken down by the disease, when he once more resorted to the tube and has worn it constantly ever since, There is a daily discharge of matter. Mr. Barnes is a man of very regular and temperate habits, does not use tobacco in any form nor stimulants of any kind, hardly ever uses any medicines, excepting sometimes a little iron for the blood ; is always feeling well when the hole in his side is open, sometimes feeling a heaviness there, but has got used to that. This case is certainly worthy the attention of medical men. It seems to give a man a new lease of life even when apparently as good as dead. When Mr. Barnes conceived the idea of tapping his lung all the physicians but one scouted it as a thing that would prove fatal. However, he per- suaded Dr. Woodman to perform the operation. In 1863 Mr, Barnes was in Honey Lake valley, and was on the brink of the grave. Now, again, the resident physicians were opposed to the idea of an incision, and after re- peated appeals for an operation, which was refused, Mr, Barnes borrowed a lance and cut open his side himself. He then inserted a catcher, and draw- ing off nearly a quart of matter imme- diate relief was found. The cough and expectoration stopped almost in- stantly, and Mr, Barnes was soon upon his feet again. Thus he has prolonged his life over thirty years. Playing for Their Fingers, The Malays have at all times been addicted to gambling. In those days, in Ceylon, they would “ play away the ends of their fingers ” over the draught~ board. They would sit down with a fire burning, whereon was set a pot of walnut or sesame oil, while beside it lay a small hatchet with an exceed- ingly sharp edge. The loser placed his hand upon a stone, and the winner chopped off a joint, when the mutilated finger was plunged into the boiling oil and thereby cauterized. Some men, fond of the game, but unskillful or un- lucky, had every finger shorn of its tip. —All the Year Round. nnn AAI AAA, In 1870 the value of all the men's clothing manufactured in the United States was $147,000,000. In 1880 $125,000,000 worth was made in the five eities of New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston and Cincinnati, The Dead. The dead alone are great, While heavenly plants abide on earth § Their soil is one of dewless dearth ; But when they die a mourning shower flower With odors sweet, though late. The dead alone are dear. When they are hers strange shadows fall From our own forms and darken all ; But when they leave us all the shade 1s round our own sad footsteps made § And they alone sre dear. The dead alone are blest. When they are here clonds make their day, And bitter snow-falls nip their May ; But when their tempest time is done The light and head of Heaven's own sun Brood on their land of rest. ——————————————————————— HUMOR OF THE DAY, If the mosquito would only stay to banal nk te a 0 from which we cannot be. 8 If we could read the secret of our enemies we should find in man’s life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility. DY well as it way increase the strength of virtue. It is in itself only power, and its value depends on its ap- plication. EH —_— ae A How the Chinese Make ».warf Trees, We have all known from childhood how the Chinese cramp their women's feet and so to make keepers-at-home; but how they miniature pines and oaks in pots for half a century has been much of a secret. first and last at the Seat k of vi wth, endeavoring oh oe TAY be consistent with the preservation of life. Take a plant—say a seedling or cutting cedar—when only two or three high, cut off its tap-root as soon has other rootlets to live upon, Pa end of the gen to rest on a stone within it. clay islthen put into the pot, much of it in bits the size of beans, and enough in kind and quantity a scanty nourishment to Water enough is given to keep it in growth, but not en to excite ! vigorous habit. So, like application of light and heat. Chinese pride themselves on the shape of their miniature trees, they ‘ strings, wires and other mechanical contrivances Lr mote symmetry of habit orto or their pets into odd, fancy figures. Weight of Million Dollars. actuary, has computed the weight of a million dollars in gold and silver coin, as follows: : The standard United States contains of ge tenths fineness, 258 of nine-tenths of fineness, 412-5 In round numbers the following represents the weight of a million lars in the coins named: of coin. 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