-- x. Dark Days Passed. “Won't you buy a bunch of flowers for your lady ?"’ The gentleman to whom this ques- sion was addressed looked down into the face of the speaker, a rosy cheeked boy of eight or nine summers, little fellow had a tiny basket on his ym, filled with bouquets such as we are wont to see in May or June. wers of the spring time, suggestive of the bright and happy days of our childhood when we were told by the teacher that we might vote for our next May Queen. Roses there were, white and pink moss roses, wild roses, and snowdrops ; lilacs there were, too, and all made up in lovely bouguets that it needed but a glance to know that a most artistic hand had arranged these chilkren of the spring. “But, my boy, it is the beginning of September—where did you get these lilies and roses from ?"’ “They are not real flowers, sir, they are artificial. Mother and auntie make them." The gentleman looked more astonish- ed than before, and after a keen look at the lad, he asked : “Where do you live, my boy ?"’ <¢ Away outside the city, in a cottage, We have real flowers, too. I have a flower patch of my own, and mother lets me plant just what I please. But, won't you buy a bunch of these, sir? They are only twenty-five cents, and they won't fade as soon as other flowers,” + Yes, I will buy two bunches of you, if you bring me a bouquet out of your garden to-morrow. Here a half a dollar for these and another half for the flowers you are to bring to-morrow. Don’t fail ; I shall expect you at this hour, here in this saloon, where I generally drink a cup of choco- late.” The little fellow thanked the man, and was off in a moment. ‘Why had the man questioned the lad so about his mother's dwelling place? He could not account to himself for it, He, who came and went every day, and drank his chocolate in hardly looking up at any one, had actu- ally held a conversation of ten minutes duration with a little boy. Soon after he left the house, forgetting to empty his cup. Well, that was something new, and the waiters noticed it and commented upon it; for the gentleman had been their regular customer every day, for nearly a year, and they had is silence, never known him to speak to before, except to order his customary after drinking in silence he would lay his money down and walk out as moodily as he had en- tered, The next day after his conversation with the boy, the man came a half hour sooner than his wont, and he seemed excited. Every now and then he glanced toward the door, as if his life depended on the flowers that he was expecting. He had not long to wait, for the littie fellow had evidently been as anxious to bring them in time as the gentleman fo get them, Aftera glance at the beautiful bonquet, he said, more to himself than to the child, who seemed to be expecting a word of praise for his quickness or beauty of his pets, any one beverage, and it was “I thought I was not mistaken. No one knew how to arrange a bouquet like her. And the resemblance of this child! My God ! could I, after all, have been deceived ? It cannot be; I must have certainty.” Rising hastily from his chair, he grasped the astonished child by the hand and said : ** Come, show me where your mother lives, my boy, I must see her.’ ** But mother never company, sir. She only lets the old gardener come into our house to tend to the flowers.” “But I must see her. is your mother’s name ? thought of that before.’ ** Mrs. Norton, sir.” A shade of disappointment flashed over the man’s face, but only for a moment. I must 8¢ your mother, child, else your face, too, deceives me.’ The lad made no more objections. ** If we take the shortest road home,” he said, * we must go through the market house here, and then the other streets will soon be passed.’’ The walk was quite long, and cspe- cially so to the gentleman, who was traveling it for the first time. At last they came in sight of a little cottage sees Stop! What I might have could hardly be seen, so thickly was it covered by vines and creeping plants, But one glance showed to an observer that no unskillful hand had been at work, and an uncommon mind must have planned the whole, to make the small place so complete a paradise. Opening the gate, the child led the way up the graveled walk toward the house. On the portico, which was not only conceal- ed by vines, buf two splendid chestnut trees, he was received by a voice of sur- ‘What has happened ?’ ¢ Mother, dear, don’t beangry. The gentleman who wanted my flowers said he must see you, Here he is.” gentleman, who was just stepping on the portico. He had stopped at the sound of the voice, and then reeled as if about to faint ; but, rallying himself, he walk- ed on until he confronted Harvey's mother, The lady looked at the gentle- man in surprise, and was about to turn | away ; but one more look and then a cry, and she would have sunk to the floor had not the strong arm of the man caught her, But she did not faint; she was only overcome for the moment. ‘ Harvey, dearest, or I dream ?'’ it is you “ Yes, my beloved wife, itis I. After a whole year's search I have at last found you, through what I know as our boy, whom I left as a babe,” After mutual explanations, the gentleman said : *“ Ah these were bad days, when I had to leave you and our darling boy so destitute through the failure of that bank.” “ Did our creditorsseize all ? “ Yes, all; except our jewels.” “But why did you let me mourn you as dead all these years? Tell me that first.’’ ‘ Darling, I wrote so often and never received areply. Not a word of en- couragement in these weary years of turmoil and trial: You know I left for China. I wrote from every port where we stopped and with every returning ship or steamer I sent you letters, After my arrival at Pekin, I wrote to you again to take heart, as I had the good fortune to get a situation in an Amer- ican tea-house, and would, as I did send you half of my salary which was to be deposited semi-annually at the bank of New York.” “1 must be there yet, then, for I have never drawn any, nor heard a word from you and mourned you as dead, as my wearing When I turned my jewels labored hard, for than a year at a millinery store, sister taking care of our boy. you can see by widow's weeds yet, into money, I more That was the hardest of all, to be separated from him so much. But I did it, and after I had along very comfortably, for sister Ruth assisted me so faithfully. At iast I had accumulated enough to lease this little place which was at that time a perfect wilderness and you see what four years of patient toil have of it. We had ample time to make our artificia flowers, made for than a year, Harvey has been in the habit of selling them for us, Yesterday I some bunches as I used te do for and more arranged you, and gave them to Harvey to sell.” ‘“ And it has been the means of my finding you ; for I had made inquiries jor you everywhere, and no one knew of your Thank the kind Lord who aided me. We will purchase his place, for I have ample means and whereabouts, we will forget in our future happiness the dark days that are past.” -. Personals. The late ex-Congressman Lewis Selye of Rochester, N. Y.. began life as a blacksmith. The crar's new throne for the coro- nation is of black oak, carved richly, costing about $0000, 1ts style is sadly suggestive, The Queen of Servia writes all her husband's letters, although the poor thing cannot paint, or embroider, or play the piano. On her ninetieth birthday, Mrs. E. A. Jewett of Georgetown, Mass, , coast- ed down hill on a hand-led at a speed faster than that of a railway train, T'he oldest clergyman in Massachu- setts 18 Dr. Leonard Withington, Pastor Emeritus of the First Congregational Church of Newbury, Mass., born in 1789, The Emperor of Russia often plays battledoor and shuttiecock with his chil- dren. People record such facts as if there were some reasons why emperors were not human beings, It is said that the four stars, Nilsson, Patti, Modjeska and Langtry, will carry £350,000 out of the country at the elose of their tour through the States, If they wish to double the sum, they will leave it behind them in investments. Once a year the Emperor of China, with all his ministers, plows a furrow across a field for the encouragement of agriculture, and the Queen of England enters the lists as competitors at local fairs for the same purpose, family friends from others in the church at the wedding of the daughter of Mrs, | Attorney-General Brewster, where the bride was assisted by ten bridesmaids, A band of Indians from the far West ' recently visited New Haven, and when they heard the Yale boys yell they drew ' wpart and wept to think how they had | been fooling themselves for years with the idea that the knew how to howl, Scientific and Useful. Sir William Thompson follows Dr, Thomas Reid in ascribing to man six senses instead of five, namely, the sense of force, of heat, of sound, of light, of i taste and of smell. An excellent soap-bubble preparation is composed of oleate of soda and glyce- rine, and from it bubbles two feet in diameter and of exceeding brilliancy can be blown, Some of these have been kept forty-eight hours under glass, An apparatus for recording the exact speed of a train during its entire run, including stoppages and startings, has been invented by M, Pouzet. M. Jacquellin says that carbons free from ash ean be made by passing dry chlorine gas over pulverized coal or coke heated to bright redness, According to the Sanitary Review the causes of the high mortality in Memphis have been shown by Dr. Thornton to be connected chiefly with the negro popu- lation, In Great Britain the large sum of $40,000,000,000 1s invested in railways, Some of the engines weigh 45 tons and take a load of 60 tons at a speed of from 48 to 50 miles an hour. There died in New York city last year 37,951 persons, The whole num- ber of suicides recorded was 199, against 166 in 1881, and 152 in 1880, Of these 165 were men and 34 were women ; 71 were Germans, 50 Americans and 20 Irish, Bordeaux red is a new coloring mat- ter for wine, It appears to be a nap- thaline dye. Its presence in wine can be very easily detected. Silk is turned by it to a granite red, and the addition of a little ammonia makes the doctored wine brown. A strong infusion of sassafras root is recommended by Dr, Hinton as a pow- erful remedy for poisoning by Rus toxi- When it is cool eloths are wet in it and applied frequently [to] the patient, A day's treatment will effect a cure usually. The grapevine in France is surely and steadily failing. The phyllogera has no doubt contributed much toward its de- struction, but aside from that the vine codendron. seems to be in a state of natural decay. The young and vigorous vines of this country must in the future supply the deficiency of the French vineyards, Bricks are thus made without baking : Equal parts of hydraulic lime, sand and are pounded and then mixed, being made into a paste by the addition SCOTIA of water. This paste is submitted to strong pressure in molds, and afterward hardened in cold The bricks therefore, it will be seen, simply consist walter. of hydraulic cement, There gained in blindfolding a balky horse advantage If the habit is not inveterate, closely band- is sometimes an aging the eves will distract the attention and set the animal at work again, To ao this with the best effect the bandage must fit closely over the eves, and the common blinders which only partially exclude light will not answer as well, Artificial slates: Boil four gallons walter, add when boiling, four pounds and one and one-half ounces borax, and then one pound gumalac, in small portions. Then add two ounces lamp-black, eight ounces silicate and solution nine ounces silica. of soda (sirupy), one pound When this mixture is of convenient thickness it is applied on thick paper, Some experiments have been made by M. Decaux, on the effect of the electric light on the colors of cloth and paintings, ete. The colors were exposed for 1500 hours under thin glasses to the action of an arc light at a distance of 150 em. (about 60 inches), and under these con- ditions the effect of the electric light was found to be similar to that of sun- light, but only one-fourth as great. It is almost a self-evident fact that there should be some other way of dis- posing of sewage than turning it into streams, But there is hardly any cen- sure too severe for those who cut and store ice from polluted waters, Or- ganic germs of disease are contained in such ice. People drink water cooled by it in the summer, when the system is most liable to sickness that may last all the year round. An automatic electric mechanism that is designed to announce the ap- proach of railroad trains has been tried on whit is called the Paris-Lyon-Medi- terranee line, It consists of a box filled with mercury placed under the rail at the required distance from a bell. When a train passes over this box the mer- cary is so agitated as to form contact with the wire communicating with the bell, and thus make it ring. The South says that s number of ladies of Sumter, 8, C., have organized a silk hssociation, bought land near the town, purchased mulberry trees and silk-worm eggs, given notice of applica- tion for a charter ind entered upon the venture in a very business like manner. The ladies propose to buy a reel and reel off the silk in Sumter instead of sending the cocoons off, and hope to have at y time a silk man . or Thomas Taylor of Washington has made some investigations which convince him that the common house- fly, aside from being an annoying pest, isfpossessed of the capacity of transmit. ting disease by carrying the germs from place to place. It has been proved by numerous ex- periments that flour cannot bear the action of the sun, even when not ex- posed directly to its rays. When flour is exposed to the heat of the sun an alteration takes place in the gluten similar to that produced by the heating of the stones. For this reason it is ad- visable that the transportation of flour should take place, if possible, on cool days or by night, as well as that flour should be stored in a cool place, A favorite antidote for rattlesnake poison in Mexico is a strong solution of jodine in potassium iodide. Mr, H. H. Croft has tested some of the poison itself with this solution, and finds that a light brown amorphous precipitate is formed, the insolubility of which ex- plains the beneficial action of the anti- dote. When iodine cannot be readily obtained a solution of potassium iodide, to which a few drops of ferric chloride has been added can, perhaps, be used as an antidote to snake poison, The sunflower does not turn with the sun, but a recent observer finds that a majority of the flowers do have a pre- vailing direction when opening. Inthe case of one of the perennial sunflowers ( Helianthus mollis), of sixty-eight flowers up to one time all had their heads in- clining to the southeast. Three day ater this, with seventy-three flowers open, twenty-one (among the older flowers) had advanced toward the north- east, their horizontal faces becoming nearly erect during the journey. A non-conductor of electricity has yet to be found, for all substances hith- erto discovered are conductors of the force under certain known conditions; but those which offer a great resistance to it serve the purpose of non-condue- tors in practice, although they may be all classed as good or bad conductors, The best conductor known at present is silver ; the worst conductor is solid par- affine. The Mayall metal, a substance composed of plumbago and rubber, re- cently patented by Thomas J. Mayall of Reading, Mass, , is said to be economical and most efficacious in this connection. Dr. Merkel states that the height of an individual after a night's rest, meas- ured before rising from the bed, is two inches greater than it is in the evening, measured standing, There isa grad- ual diminution in height, caused by the vielding of the plantar archesand of the intervertebral discs di- individual rises, of the The sinking at the of an to one-eighth of an at the hip, two-fifths of cand a sudden the articulations when at the lower extremities, minution, occurring ankle one-third knee, inch is inch ; at the one-twelfth an inch, The shortening at the knee is probably the cartilages. At the hip there is, in addition, a sink- ing of the head of the femur into the cotyloid cavity. For our Better Halves. Somebody has found a new use for the rubber-cloth hooded garments, If glazed on the inside, they make excellent fever- proof suits, and may be worn by doctors, due to the elasticity of nurses and other persons compelled to enter the rooms of those sick with contagions disease, Silk muslin kerchiefs in white or colors are made up for house wear in very simple styles. They are bordered with a frill of lace, and have a small velvet flower in one corner. Nef squares and scarfs have the flowers from Spanish lace applied in the ends or corners. Scarfs of Oriental lace almost a yard wide and two yards long are shown for summer wear. They have very deep borders on the end of medalions or flower designs set close together and are sprigged over nearly their whole surface, The patterns for summer dresses indicate a decided Jowering of thestandard of good taste, for every one of them is made of flowered mate- rials. and two have birds in the design. There is nothing very new about the styles in which they are made, although in two the drapery is massed very high, apparently puffed out by some stiff sub stance, and in one model this armge- ment is carried to absurdity, the puff being so large as to suggest that it is meant for a child to sit upon while the wearer stands. As for sitting down while arrayed in this way it is clearly impossible. Black illusion dresses are dotted with pearl spangles, beetles’ wings or butter flies, rather than with jet, by London dressmakers. The effect is better than that seen when jet was worn by every second woman in a ballroom. The waist most in use for young girls’ ball dresses in Paris is crossed in front and at the back and has a belt fastened by a rosette, It has a delightful air of old fashion which makes the wearer, if at all pretty, look positively babyish, Still another use has been found for the little silk tufts, They are hung to the loops and ends of satin ribbon which sometimes trim the panels of skirts and Dasar have a very good effect. » The Last Railway Census of the United States. The Becientific American collates the following railroad information. The census report of 1880 relating to railways shows that for the fiseal vear ending 1880, there were operated in the United States 86,7814 miles of railway, the cost and liabilities for which were a little over five thousand six hundred millions of dollars ($5,658, 914,158), The average cost of the railways, counting capital paid in and borrowed, has veen approximately $62,552 per mile, The aggregate transportation earn- ings for 1880 were $680,450, 5094. and the expenses were $352,800,120, Net earn- ings, $227,650,474. After paying inter- est and other fixed charges the amount available for dividends was $110,344. - 97. The total railway stock subject to dividend was over two thousand six hundred and thirteen millions of dollars ($2,613,606,204), on which a trifle over 4} per cent. average dividends were earned, and an average of 2.70 declared. the balance of 1.80 being held, The earnings per mile were $0,088, per mile, $4,065, Freight {rains earned $1.65 per mile, and cost to run 98 cents per mile. Passenger trains earned $1.19 per mile, and cost to run them 70 cents per In round numbers, 201,000,000 tons of freight were carried ; average distance each ton, 112 miles. Passengers to the number of 270,000,000 were carried ; average distance each, 23 miles, Expenses mile, No. of passengers killed, 148 Injured, 544 H 9% 617 1475 1513 2541 Total killed and wounded for 8215, The equipment is as follows employees other persons * 5674 1RR0, No. of locomotives, 3 PRSSETIZETS CATS, 12.580 mail, express, and bag EHREe Cars 4.475 fonioht " nr 8160 Cf 21 PTI CA Yi O18 11 at} w ¥ aii olher car quip 80 138 ment 8415045, 450 The " - as follows number of railway emplovees is ] pio} office clerks, Stationmen, Trainmen— Engineers h $44 Conductors All others Mach Carpenters All otl hers Shopmen nists Trackmen All dther« mei 11s for the vear ni Af — Sanitary. Errecrs or roo Mucu Bras Work FOR CHILDREN, Dr, R. 8., delivered a lecture on ** National Necessities as Basis of Natural Education,’ before the Society of Arts, and brought forward the following facts : “In large taining about six hundred children, half girls and half boys, the means of indus- trial occupation were gained for the girls before any were oblained for the boys. The girls were, therefore, put upon half time tuitions ; that is to say, their time of book instruction was re- duced from thirty-six hours to eighteen per week, given on the three alternate days of their industrial occupation, the boys remaining at full school time of thirty-six hours per week, the teaching being the same, on the same system, and by the same teacher, the school attendance in weeks and years in both cases, On the periodical examina- tion of the school, surprise was ex- pressed by the inpectors at finding how much more alert, mentally, the girls were than the boys, and in advance in book attainments. Subsequently, industrial occupation was found for the boys, when their time of book instruc- tion was reduced from thirty-six hours a week to eighteen, and after a while the boys were proved, upon examina tion, to have obtained their previous relative position, which was in advance of the girls.” ; Teraxus rrom A Cantovs Toorn, ~The Amevican Jowrnal of Denial Science says that a very remarkable case of fatal tetanus, ascribed to the irrita- tion of a carious tooth, was reported some time back in one of the West of England journals, The patient was a shoemaker, residing at Bridgewater, who Bad enjoyed excellent health until he was seized with violent pain in the side of his head. He was treated in the first instance by a chemist for neuralgia, but the becoming aggravated, Mr. Kemmis, a medical practitioner, was called in. He found the patient in- sensible, with his jaw locked and im- movable. Treatment, however, was una ; the man remained insen- sible, and died in a few hours. At the Richardson, F. the one establishment, con- sane opinion that death was due to tetanus brought about by a decayed tooth, and - he characterized the case as a most ex- traordinary one, a statement with which every one will agree, Simple trismus from some form of dental irritation, generally the difficult eruption of wis dom teeth, is not a very rare phenom- enon, and cases of it are recorded, But general and fatal tetanus from a similar cause is happily of rare occur- rence, Mr, Tomes has recorded a case which was apparently due to the opera- tion of pivoting, and Wedl has men- tioned one in which tetanus followed the extraction of a tooth. In Mr. Tomes’ case, as in the one the particu- lars of which are given above, death oc- curred very soon after the first appear- ance of muscular spasm, Curious Facts. A spring in St. Tammany parish, Louisiana, pours forth clear, cold water all day, butat sunset it suddenly goes dry, discharging no water until the sun rises again. While sawing veneer from a wal- nut knot an Indianian discovered in the twisted fibres of the wood a perfect pic- ture of a spaniel’s head. as accurately drawn as if by the pencil of an artist, and when framed this na- tural curiosity has all the semblance of art. The lines are One theatrical sham which has been revealed by a florist is the remodelling of designs received by actors and actress The material of a flower ship re- ceived in the first act appears in the shape of a harp in the second, of an an- chor in the third, or of any other de- And all the time the audience is amazed at the extravagant profusion of flowers. The contrarieties of Chinese, as compared with us, have often been The Rev. Selah Brown them We shake hands as a salutation ; a China- shakes hands with himself. He stands at a distance, and clasping both together, he shakes them up and down at you. Weuncover the head asa mark €8, sign. the commented on. writes about as follows: man of respect ; they keep their heads cov- ered, but take off theirshoes for polite- ness, We shave the face ; they shave head and eyebrows. We ent our finger nails ; consider it to from inches long, which they are obliged to protect The Chi is outside his coat, and his drawers out- they aristocratic have nails three to five sil : ir VEr CASes, aman’s waistcoat side his trousers, We blacken our shoes ; he first course at dinner, and dessert at last ; whitens them. We have soup as a they have dessert at first and soup at last. We want our wines ice cold ; the hot, We bury in the earth; they on its surface. Chinese drink theirs scalding With us, black clothing is a badge of mourning : with them. white garments indicate the In that is the old men who flv kites, walk on stilts, and play the shuttlecock, and, to keep up their odd ways of doing things, they play the latte: with their feet instead of their hands of friends, 1 sR land of opposites it In China women do men’s work, men are the milliners, dresfmakers washerwomen, and and With us the right hand is the place of honor; with them it is the left hand. Indating letters we place the vear last; they writeit first. They always speak of the mariner’s compass {their own invention) as pointing to the south. We pay our physicians when we are sick 3 they pay while they are well, but as soon they get sick the pay stops. Here men kill their enemies, a China- man gets revenge by killing himself, We use a soft pillow: they a block of wood. They launch ships sidewise. ring bells from the outside, and actual- Iv turn their screws in the opposite di- rection from durs. -—— - Swedish Expediiion to Spitz- bergen. The expedition dispatched to Spits- bergen last summer by the Swedish Academy of Sciences. under Baron G. de Geer and Dr. Nathorst, two eminent naturalists, has resulted in a greatly in- creased knowledge of that desolate land, The outlines of the fjords and valleys of the southern part of the island and the relative depth of the seas around it and Scandinavia have been mapped out, rendering it evident that Spitzbergen is a ridge placed upon a comparatively level plateau, identical with that from which Scandinavia arises. This plateau sinks abruptly into the ocean west of Spite. bergen. The fjords and narrow valleys are due to the action of glaciers, Old gravel beaches and marine shells occur far in- land, showing a considerable re-eleva- tion after the subsidence that followed the glacial period during which the mountains were sculptured. Some of mals of Scandinavia exist in Spitsber- gen, a circumstance due to a former