_ HER DREAM. ns slop 3d dreamed that, where the sea- y 1 oe a form to-day; The sun seemed drooping in the western sk The wo seamed sobbing as it hurried by, “Stay, stay.’ Its golden hair, outstreaming in the wind, ht the sun’s dying glow; Among he curls a spray of seaweed twined; A fairer vision you will never find, 1 know. Then as the sun sank slowly in the West, Softly the form drew near, And laid its crowned head upon my breast, And Jo! I cried aloud and could not rest Por fear. I woke from out my strange and troubled dream ; The young moon, calm and free, Shone through my window with a tender beam, Yet still a pressure on my breast did seem To be. 1 rose from out my chair where I had slept The livelong afternoon; And opening full wide my door I stept From out the house, while on, above me, swept The moon. Upon the bare cliffs where the sea bird flies The moon its radiance shed; 1 wandered down, and neath the starlit skies A child with golden hair snd close-shut eyes. Lay dead Rocket : OR, The Nautch Girl’s Champion. It was many years ago that I found my lot cast with the Great Western Hippodrome, one of the first circus or- ganizations that had ventured into the interior of British India. The venture had proved fortunate almost from the start, After perform- ing to excellent houses in Madras, Cut- tack and Calcutta, on the coast, we had pushed victoriously up the Sacred river, capturing Patna and Benares on the way, and were at last in the midst of a perfectly stumning season at Agra, high gp on the Jumna, and with regal Delhi, and thence, across the country to Ba- roda, Bombay and Goa in golden pros- pect. In Agra, as elsewhere, we were equally popular with the native popu lation of all castes and with the British residents, both civil and military. In- deed, we were intending to remain there tor a month or mere, when an unfore- seen event promised to cut wus short i) our career. In the midst of our third performance before a vast and brilliant throng, plen- tifully interspersed with wealthy rajahs trains, that were fairly pearl 3.7! and their harem lustrous in *° barbaric the feature that had preved our best card + patives brought abo, the in Ti series of marvelous trick scenes enacted by Seraphina called her, with Rocket, ot trick humored as the girl alone knew how humor him mensely powerful, of exceptional rily so ferocious that no one had been able to make much of him until we had fortunately engaged the services of Ser- aphina whilst in Ceylon. FO, and 3 Lie it among terruplion. is feature was a a8 we ur best horse, when to a superbly beautiful, im- sngw-white stallion intelligence, but ordina- careering on him like an Amazonian vis- + don of delight around the ring, without saddle or bridle, preliminary to her startling denoument—that of linking her ankles under the animal’s throat, and, stretched backward along the ribs and flank near to the spectators, to make two circuits thus—when a young rajpoot was seen to suddenly rup excit- edly through the spectators to the pavil- ion occupied by the chief rajah of Agra and his household, together with some distinguished foreign residents, and be- gin to talk loudly and earnestly to that magnate. The rajah made some reply. Then a trumpet sounded from the pavilion, and an official loudly announced, in pigeon English, that, by reason of a startling revelation just made with regard to the peerless equestrienne, the performance must come to a close at once. A sensa- tion ensued which could scarcely have been surpassed by anything down on the bills. Then the official made public the tura of the revelation, In brief, the young rajpoot had recognized in eur Seraphina a former slave of the harem of an uncle of his, Prince Mzhapootra, na a rich but miserly old rajak of the vi- cinity, who had died two days before. joining a troupe of mountebanks and Nautch girls, from whom she had come into our employment as has been stated, and had succeeded in eluding until now, when wis claimed, and must be straightway stored to the dead man’s estate, mirabile dicty, this was the Not only had the avaricious o outlived wives, had for Nirvana, members of his seraglio into his better- rupees | that to the consternation of his high-caste and pious relatives, he lay dead, without so much as a single wife or female slave to serve a suttee on his pyre—that is, offer herself (%) up to be burned alive with his insensate old carcass, after the an- cient and aristocratic custom of the Hindu nobility ; But lo! with the re covery of the fugitive odalisque—our own-—our beautiful Seraphina—here at last was a solution to the difficulty, and she was now claimed and appropriated offering to the grim oriental woloch of sutteeism ! The wild this announcement she not worst, but lighting out ’ MS the legitimate before converted his also, shortly remaining beloved S80 NOW, as a living excitement was indescribable, It was tremendous, Seraphina retained % her Rocket Bi Mii s, sufliciently to him self-control in charge bbls hobbling and ive after mwuzzling, and him as was her wont, ulder haltering stood le facing the go absolute d her fate of wre sted Ww a delicate appeal a warm, living picture of less beauty in supreme distress assemblage of rajahi’s de- mand, like an unrest, ( ‘onquete, livid with rage and anguish, prostrated himself before the gold and purple pavilion, wringing his hands and majority of the vast its disapprobation the ocean in Poor meter, which was brilliantly illuminated by sunlight admitted through a glazed aperture directly overhead. A trumpet was blown, and Rocket was first admitted by the sudden opening of a grated door, Superbly beautiful, powerful and spirited, he bounded into the centre of the arena, and stood there pawing the sand, with his head erect, eves blazing and nostrils ex- tended. The tiger was admitted almost imme- diately afterward. He had not been in ; the least exaggerated. In size, strength and ferocious appearance he was the most appalling brute we had ever conceived of. Licking his chops in silence, with his fiery eyes never for an instant quitting the horse, he at once set up a slow, me- chanical pacing around the extreme edge of the part, moving around and around if on a pivot, with his head bent down like a dog, was equally watchful of every grant our Seraphina absolute immunity from all caste obligations, on the sole condition that she would find some beast, wild or tame, that should suc- cessfully champion her cause in a con- test with Jabdahor, the famous king of the rajah’s unexampled wild beast col- lection, the contest to take place in the arena of the royal menagerie on the following morning. Failing in obtain- ing such a champion, or in the event of such champion being vanquished, if ob- tained, Seraphina was to be given up to be burned alive on the funeral pyre of her quondam lord. : Such was the decree, The rajpoot relatives made no at- tempt to disguise their satisfaction, while the sympathizers with the poor girl were correspondingly despairing, This can readily be made plain, Jab- dahor, the pride of the rajah’s collec tion, was famous throughout the upper India as the hughest, the most power- ful and the most ferocious royal Bengal tiger that had ever been captured tamed he never had been--or, as many that had ever He was said to be five feet four inches high at the shoulder, eleven feet in length from to tip: with of hurdle with a carcass of a buffalo in his teeth, nary cat would get foe, Suddenly, of warning, tric springs, bulk of the without so much as a growl been . ch and as if averred, seen, impelled by elee tiger was seen tip a capacity 8 gonist. The latter, the quicker and warier, flash, he the full with his lashed out heels, him with against the the pit, again, with head confronted him pivotally as the tread as if however, ill grown as an away with a W caught tiger in and in numerous encounters Lo ‘et . breast have killed lions. throttled panthers pairs, ribboned up other 1 is, forced di will, wall lowered before a crash gers into hile ne when he Sir wible-horned rhino- and caused the most . . tiger resuming his lent it had ai formidable rogue-elephants to squeal for nok bean interruptes atall. “In the spring, eried the hear, But 1 ection that the regarded as of the demand of the suttee seekers. No wonder rajah’s decision to ast in the thir kill we all next, or at i ‘ Feud $= 7% 55 t was at first tantamount Jabadahor will surrender poor giri to ihe tidak. in 8 voles 10 be Dro the it was when, first shock of hardly MICE the SETA x Lie arn ment had But passed to for the tiger was blinding h 1 one, better judgment, In a few minutes th but with e Again stallion spring was repeated, ven phina started forward with a glad ery of relief and gratitude. success than before, the hind hoofs of the the assailant, the latter from, though were speedily resumed, with undiminished energy. Proudly rearing herself erect, with harled bac flashing eyes and breast a-heave, she spoke in a clear, ringing first in Hindustanee, and then translated her words into English, “1 accept your august highness’ con- dition !"* she cried ; “and my champion is here at hand, with kind mana- ger's permission.” looked in- voice. did not s0 promptly his silent footed cirgli apd apparenti watchfulness an my She ocket with But it was himself towards of a catapult, Not across the who, responded with shrug | quiringly at Monsieur, doubtless | divining her meaning, only did the her pit, this time jaw and dislocated shoulder, bu the We | an eloquent, even an ecstatic and with a i and she then and i laced her hand caressingly on Rocket's “This shall pion.” she cried | i THY sv} | Another semsation! Thunders of Bl in which proud ¢ of mur reitreated, i grimace ; followed up repulse wit] repeats heels, whol of be my cham. | Shocks from 1 terrible ilvery mane. completing Ui ord Indeed, from that instant Jabdahot abbed to his fru welled up the ne © el evidently } heart's content NE AS Nest K, . # . : ric Binge bi vi 2vevy curveted spit rhe and nothing bu } Rahman s though with warrier-like in- | PVR around the arena, beet the rajpoot contingent snort followed by a shr trivmphant whinn the g the viet In was hedd | didn’ weaken in the Jeast, being wholly O88 nfident as to the yingcory, though Rockel’s lorious steed remained tab no myth in their favor, indubi fighting qualifications were The high rajah and his more than shared POW ETH, i Pests to i. then. train spite of the fear in probably and his disguised chagr the maj: present joined in the rushed from every British throat ; whi Saraphina, without a movement on tl this confi- un dence in Jabdabor's (rratified smiles beamed everywhere from the pavilion, while the little old rujah him- self gleefully rubbed his skinny paws at the result, Right or Wrong; is the Lesson of the Clock.. ——— Tick | clock. Polly Marsh and hardly noticed it, But the soon to wind it up. It was Thursday, and as sure as that day came, hook and wind up the old clock, But besiaes being Thursday, it wa ing Tom how to spin a new top, had just been given him, Dame Marsh was busy dinner ready, she glanced at the happy children, wish he would come, try to begin the New Yea: wish he would come,” getting and was saying softly, with us, So deep in thought was she, thal the clock, Tom just ther OL rd remembered s flung down his {op ar in a lemper, » he “1 ean't do it! “shi iry.’ “Hush, (:rannie as she took dow “You sl never : ’ (ear n the clock hush. Tom, ee r you wi ng niobod ¥ wouldn't can’t, © Ay 8 learn to do anvthi and shouldn't say shan’t, or You are bx have Se) teach you. only a wee vet, and hardly you nmi in afl yihing | give up 1 soon.’ i Tom hid his 1 | grandmothgr’s apron, ghty to kick crossly to his sister, for he knew Was nau his top and see lock,” 3 1 na “Come me said Dame Marsh, and children e | old ¢ a wise ; loving woman, tried g | train Kil otheriess f 4 the two m AVE. In SINies, Tom's face he heavy weg while the lum swung gravely from side to side if a4 IInoment WAS r as he watched t wing drawn up, big pend y d it never meant “Why do i Polly * 0 slop. wind up those weigh “ . . “It wouldn't go if you did not, Polly. gravely, ‘‘Grandfather 11 about that on Christmas day.’ and so eve ught the and the jut tick just it. dear it was bought weigh yd up. t8 Work < wou Sys qv When we : x0] TON SAN ip us, we are ioing be we “But l} real work i y his in. vet,” said Polly, Y our gentle Then which it i OTE “Yes, now is Wu dear, be Yo vou have, Wi obedient and in 10 eam IORSONS Weil, sides ticking and striking, may call the clock’s hard work, right le ie | & face which shews us the —-— The words were hardly out of his mouth before Brown, Browning and Williams had drawn from the pile leav- ing Hoperaft the fourth to draw, He took a toothpick. Bob drew a second time, and the others followed seriatim, Hoperaft’s quick eye ran over the pile. He saw where he was about to land, and he tipped a quick wink at Williams and Browning, Banana Bob had drawn the fourth time, Before Browning could reach the pile Hoperaft threw the remaining Soothpie ks out of the win- dow, saying: ** That settiesit, You jose, Bob.” “How 77 dealer ‘ Why, sponse, The wine shrewdly said the astonished cigar 8 | the re- you drew last.”’ was 1 ! Mr. Williams obsery ‘ Excuse Bob, but you're not very fiy.’ was paid ing . he, a Certainly He Would. Ly The other evening as a muscular citi Montcalm gate | zen was passing a house on street, a lady, who stood at the called out to him “8ir! 1 t $icsi ION * What's the you for protec- appea trouble hie asked as stopped short ‘ There’ wouldn’t ; 1 HE { 4 a the house, ang he i 8 ail a0 Out cle ordered wel 1 see about ' that iN : hereupon the bide ix woman the house An gave i ed into He abie, his coal to bold and sai spilt found a man down at u ig on his Fa wis, ie supper-t and he took him by the neck and remarked : * Nice Come out it ; ¥ stvie of a brute you are, eh 7 o' this or I'll break every bone in your body ! wis not the ud it broken hauled The man fought back, at had been and upset, that he a chair wo WAS oul table doors fling and given a Then, as the muscu- placed hi where it arked 2 old by the through the gate, itizen the me then, tramp, you move on or I'll finish you.” ! Tramp!" shouted the vic- I'm no tramp! 1 own yis property and live in this house id ‘You eR, leg IS, & boot he brass-faced lar ¢ would do “NOW wi hurt TeInar U- you : Tramp tim. as he got up, ti do vv that’s my wife holding yous the victim, other. and gi = made a grab ‘Thunder !*’ whispered ry ie Ak ’ 5 Or 2% : 41 a8 hie gazed from one to the realized that the wife had square through him ; and then he P01 J salitE BAAS ada ik | The Cost of Living in France Ee eX working-class of Mulbouse, ip might be a under this estimate but, upon accepted The sixteen families wk } the Similar expenses we little over or a little in ‘nS 1 other distriets in France ; the whole, the results may be There had always been a mystery about her. We had found her a friend- Jess Nautch girl, hungy and sick, in Colombo, where She had been deserted by the troupe of jugglers, snake charm- screening forth his protests like one as a fair average. possessed. The English officials nobly and earnestly seconded him te the best of their ability, though the rajah’s voice was at that time autocratic over the part of the chopfallen rajpoot to detain her, rushed ever to our part of the benches and fell sobbing with joy into the transported Monsieur Conquet’s arms, together, if in anticipation of a prodigious treat, compared with which kis royalist practical joke would be nowhere, A fight te the death between the as So all little children, as well as big peo- ’ | tabulated by M. Armmangaud were pie, their faces whether | they are doing God's werk. When you chosen from different classes of work- : men, and their expenditures varied frons look cross and pout, as some one did . - : (W yng & “hy - Tar ay - —“ just now, you are like a clock, which is 1100 francs to J000 francs per annun can rhow by ers and dancing women with whom she had traveled. There was reason for suspecting, from a certain superiority of language and demeanor, that she might be a fugitive from some great man’s household ; but she would never afford the slightest inkling as to her antecedents, and little did we care what they might have been, for that matter. An odd incident revealed an extraor- dinary and mysterious power over the equine temperament ; she was induced to exert it upon Rocket, with such sur- prising results that our enthusiastic manager, Monsieur Conquete, had en- gaged her forthwith at a salary that must have inclined her straight, night- black hair to crispiness at the outset. During the ten months of decent treat- ment, wholesome food and immunity from mental fret, she had, in addition, to becoming our chief attraction, blos- somed and rounded out into one of the most lovable, bewitchingly beautiful piece of nut-brown femininity you can imagine. A romantic attachment had arisen between her and Conquete, who intended to make her his wife at the close of the peninsula season ; and she was as popular among her fellow-per- formers as with the spectators, who were attracted alike by her beauty, her courage and her talents. Imagine, then, if yeu can, the sudden shock we underwent when, on the occa- sion alluded to, it was sundenly and publicly announced to as that our pre- cious Seraphina (it was by this nom de guerre that our manager had replaced tne -consonantal jaw-breaker under which she had originally come to us) was in all probability to be ruthlessly torn from us, and to meet a fate the most awful that has been evolved eut of Hindu caste prejudice. fortunes and lives of the native popula- tion of his provimce, and British re formative measures had not then made the progress they have since made in crushing out the hideous customs and abuses of the caste tut the rajpoot had been reinforced by many other kinsfolk of the defunet Maha- pootrs ; they belorged to the Kshatruga caste, which is second only to the Brah- mins, and they vied with each other in volubility and insistence upon the right- fulness of their claim, that the gir should be forthwith given up, and thus a suttee be fumished for the cremator- svstem. ial embellishment that bad been arrang- ed for the following day. It all lay with the great high rajah of Agra, as be should decide. He was an odd- looking, wrinkled little old nabob, half buried out of sight in his jewel crusted robes and turban, with twink- ling little eyes, and a facial idiosynerasy when he smiled that was suggestive of both an amused gorilla and a hyena in hysterics, He let every one have his or her say, with praiseworthy imperturbability, then corked up the entire hubbub with an impatient gesture, and finally, after a few whispered words with the dia- mond-dusted chief begum at his side, smilingly announced tiwough his herald that he had formed a decision. This was awaited in an agony of suspense. The high rajah was known to have a penchant for cruel practical joking, in which the throwing of un- suspected sudras as tidbits to his favor. ite wild beasts, and kindred oddities, had been features, from which the general anxiety with which his fiat was looked for can be better imagined than depicted, At. last it, was proclaimed. The monarch of the jungle and the auto- erat of the stables, with the liberty and life of the prettiest girl in India for the stakes! Could aught be more guinarily fascinating ? ances in Agra, san- | on his word, and the fame of Rocket girl went before us in the shape of a advertisement such as bill posters advance agents combined had never The assemblage broke up tumultu- ously, Seraphina being ordered into the of her late master’s relatives for the time being. The next morning found the smal amphitheatre in the rajah’s menagerie crowded to suffocation by the elite of Agra society, native and British, per- sons of lesser consequence not being admitted, with the exception of the members of our troupe, Seraphina, of course, included. The first glance af her made us suspect that no kindness had been thrown away upon her by her cus- todians. Picturesquely clad in slight folds of snow-white, richly prnamented jamdari, which rather expressed than veiled her exquisite proportions, she occupied an isolated position near the rajah and his party, from which a full view of the arena was obtained, Her eyes were lustrous with hope, and she occasionally cast upon us, especially upon poor Conquete, a glance full of encourage- ment ; but at the same time a nervous twitching of her lips told of the agony of suspense she was suffering, This may be more fully appreciated when I say that on her way to the place she had been, with a refinement of cruelty, compelled to pass the funeral pile already thronging the corpse of her late lord and master, and upon which it was confidently expected she wonld be forced to immolate herself at the closeof the extraordinary trial by battle that was about to begin. The arena was a high walled pit, cir- custody Y ganized, i Old fired up, perforee, without se much as a apology of a suttee do him We opened in where (0 tremendous business, at the close of the Indian Seraphina became the of Monsieur Conguete, vw ence, a an calnpaig happy Thev sul and opened a hotel in gratuitous guest to the day death, AH 1 UU sain Brilliant Prospects. going down Austin avenue, are you bound for ?"’ tablishment. There is millions in it.’ “ You don't say so?" brother has just graduated as a doctor He is going to practice in Leadville Good-bye, take care of yourself.’ asian AGIA A 5 Recorder of a vagrant. cular in form and about sixty feet in dia- yourself 1 pointing to the wrong time | vou are bright and smiling, you are t ling the right time, and are like a lit sign-post pointing to heaven, ‘ { OMpAInon, 8 n - A Neat Trick. 1 Mirth vegetated like a mushroom Hoperaft's, in Franklin street, week. Senator Browning, the Hq Arthur DD. Williams, Robert Brown. a well-known cigar dealer a n d n tamrant, were at dinner, » { called frown the table on | suggested Banana Bob, “ Possibly it can’t be Browning observed. done,” M very fly,” Mr. Brown replied. me by counting yellow splinters, to let Hop in for the wine.’ Bob threw three on the floor, eight--d’you twig ¥ he remarked. : on the table, ' Ate you in ‘tor inquired, “ Why, each of us keeps on toothpicks, one after another, And n® * A plied in a tone of wncutauty, Hose swallowed up expenditure, food 61 per per cent, being reserved for mis- In the matter of food the highest expenditure registered was 72 per cent., and this item of exe penditure thus distributed ; 33 per cent for bread, 14 per cent. for meat, 13 for milk, 24 per cent. for groceries and 16 per cent. for miscellaneous aliments, The great est expenditure upon bread in any indie vidual case was 48 per cent. It was thus seen that the average expenditure of these sixteen working-cimss families of Mulhouse upon bread was a little over one-fifth of their total expenditure. This being the case in the average, and the greatest expenditure being about one-third of the total expenditure of the families, it will be seen that, taking these figures as fairly representative of the expenditure upon bread among working-class fail is an exaggera- tion to say that the chief item in a working-class family’s expenditure, in France at least, is the bread bill, that is, from £44 £120 accommodation, as a rule, 15 per cent. of the total clothing 16 per cent., and cent, 8 cellaneous purposes, 4 Year, 6. tie Was WAS at mn. C nd as I. a“ fou 4 Ayia ——— ob] TA peasant in Sweden never passes fellow -pessant without a polite lifting of his hat. This explains why so many Swedes come to this country. Trey some to avoid catching cold inthe head Ss Sn The editor wrote that “he was a member of an old family of musicians,’” Sd when it WprCaed in the paper it “a member of an old family of | J ance. Je mp Ju