' DONT BE IN A HURRY. Phaw’t be in a hurry to Answer yes or no; Nsthing’s lost by being reasonably slow. Te = hasty moment yon may give consent, Awd thro' years of torment leisurely repent, fa lover seeks you to become his wife, Fiappiness or misery may be yours for life, Thowe"t be in a hurry your feelings to confess, Bat think the matter over before you an SWer ves, Slwen iil one ask forgiveness for a grave of: tense, ti onest tears betraying earnest penitence, ity and console him, and his fears allay, And don’t be in a hurry to drive thechild AWRY, Perry brings us worry, worry wears usout, Busy going people, know what they're about. $hewd loss haste will bring us surely to the diteh, - And trouble overwhelm us if we hurry to he rich. Wam't Le iu a hurry to throw yourself away, : By the side of wisdom for a while delay. Miske your life worth living, nobly act your pare, Mad don’t be in a harry to spoil it at the start. Eran’t be in a hurry to speak an angry word; don't be in a hurry to spread the tgle you've heard. I¥aa’t be in a hurry with evil ones to go; And don’t be in a hurry to answer yes Or no. EVELYN. “Surely, to-night, I am the personifi- oation of the character my dear friends choose to ascribe to me: they ought to mecognize me,” Evelyn Kurtz exclaimed, with a hard bitterness in her usually masically modulated voice, as she viewed Trarself in the long French mirrors that intensified and multiplied the amber and maroon beauties of Aer boudoir. She was a handsome woman, this sprond mistress of one of an Eastern wity’s grandest mansions, The world— Ber world—said that she was haughty and icy as she was regally beautiful, There were others who thought differ. ently. however. It was enough that she was the joy of her father’s heart. Enough that there were those who knew she had a heart—humble, loving, piti- fal, A nature tenderly sympathetic, aad compassionate with the compassion of love for humanity, freed from pride and condescension. But there had come a time when her love for her father failed to satisfy every demand of her soul. She cared asaght for the adulation, the proffered passion of the men who thronged about hor always, Bat she had begome con- soious of the existence of a nature that she felt mated her own. She was vo soy, silly girl to tell herself that she could not know what love meant until it was sought, Miss Kurtz knew that the great lengings, the restlessness, that disturbed her life after meeting Ieroy Cummings was Jove for him, If be was never more fo her than now, a mere acquaintance, she could love no other man with the wealth of passion that throbbed in her heart for him, And what hope had she, she asked herself as she stood before her costly mirrors, arrayed for a grand bal masque, ¢hat Mr. Cummings, whom she had met but a few times, ever would be any- thing more than a mere stranger to har? “He thinks me wondrously beautiful, as I am,” she murmured, idly pulling on her long, white gloves. ‘And not that alone; not that alone, I am sure, "There is in his nature some subtle affin- ity for mine; in his heart some pulsings of love for me. But he 1s poor, and proud, and probably believes me heart- less and very cold. I never cared be- fore what society called me, I care «mow, because he will hear it.” She took her frosted white silk mask snd - went down to the grand lighted ai to receive her father's good by i, Miss Kurtz's costurae was singularly rect erche—embroidered frost, Her dress, ove graceful, trailing mass of some silken, sheeny fabric, dazzlingly frost:d--was wreathed with vines of «dead, icc-cased leaves, garlands of glit- Serving grasses, and tiny branches of tre os thickly coated with crystals, Her rough Just beyond, separated by folds of filmy lace, was the softly lighted Wbrary, Wooed by the dim seclusion of the room, she put aside the laces and ontered. collection of ohoice Esatibing > holo ia a black wi ropi mrbe vo wae ES PBR Sh ah ts Lo before this man that she would so freely make king of her life. “Ah! madam, you are one of the few that appreciate their blessings,” he said, with a quiet smile, “Nay,” she said, slowly, ‘I would willingly give all the blessings I have for one I have not.” And then® her partner brought her ice, bowing to Leroy Cummings, who replaced his mask ana went away, “It was Miss Kurtz; there was no mistaking her voice,” thought Mr, Cummings, wearily, as he re-entered the thronged saloons, “It is cruel that I must catoh the infatnation with which she inspires men! I-—I, a man with no heritage but toil and poverty, to be mad with love for her! Verily I am insane to dare worship her as [ do. Thank God! we are so immeasurably apart in station that no harm ean come of my madness! Is she, can she be wholly as cold as people say she is? As cold as that she chooses to represent to-night? What matter what she is to me?” But down the room the Krost glit- tered now, and Leroy made his way towards it. “Miss Kurtz,” he whispered, “will you honor me with one dance?’ “With pleasure, Mr. Cummings; I had no idea you knew me. Shall I keep this waltz for you? I would give you a choice, but all are promised. I think I can arrange all about this,” **You honor me too much. Believe me, I shall not lightly value the pleas- ure,” The crowd parted them, When they met again, and the courtly woman was within his encircling arm, her lustrous eyes meeting his, masks had been laid aside, and the rare, mad- dening beauty of her dusky, cream face was close to his own. Was it strange that for the few moments he held her thus his love was veritable mudness? Was 1t not a marvel that each seemed to the other cold and un impassioned? Is it not a false world that would have made one word of what burned in both hearts seem a stain if uttered? He sought a piace, the dance ended, where Miss Kurtz could get a breath of coolness from the conservatory. “La belle Kurtz is regal to-night, is she not? And such an appropriate cos- tume as she has chosen? Who do yon think she is making her latest victim? Mr, Cummings, Poor fellow! he is to be pitied if he gets infatuated with her heartless majesty. She is certainly an iceberg—veritable frost.” The words eame distinctly from among the plants, gleaming with blos- soms, just a hand's breadth away. Distinctly to Cummings, who fairly shivered with pain and anger, and bit his lips, who, forgetful of them, turned her patrican hands on his arm as plead- equal, entreatingly— “You know lieve what you just heard of mel” though he had never seen any other passionately to him, you, but that you are good and noble— a woman worth naught less than wor- ship; and that you are in no wise to blame that I have come to reverence you above all your sex. Do not think too hardly of me that I have spoken the truth; for, believe me, I am quite conscious of my own madness|” Weary weeks had passed since Leroy Cummings had breathed those words to Evelyn Kurtz, and passed from her presence, Since then they had never met, Wearily, with a deep sorrow ia her heart, she moved daily among the poor and sick; langnidly, coldly, more frost- ily than ever she smiled snd talked and danced in the salons of the rich, At last she told herself that there could be no unwomanliness in her, the heiress, suing to the poor man she loved. So she wrote to U and told him what his words had meant to her, for she, Evalyn Kurtz, had loved him. His answer, bearing a date three days old, had been placed in her hands. His answer, blessing her for her kindness but firmly stating that it was impossible for him $ so far forget what was due to her or his manhood as to fake advan. tage of her noble condescension. ‘With white lips she crushed the note in her hand. An hour later Miss Kurtz was tread. ing the streets on her daily round of errands of mercy, “] will eall on Lizzie before I go home,” she decided; and turned into a pleasant, respectable street, and ran up the steps of a house on whose door was a dressmaker’s plate, *Yes, I have been a long time away, Allie, dear, How is Lizzie?” “Quite well,” said Allie, lead the way to the second story, “We get along so nicely since you found this for us. Lizzie suys she shall soon y to the She is up a] woo £ £ Ead From that day Miss Koriz kept him supplied with flowers and luxuries, hen his mother died, she placed waxen blooms upon her quiet breast, Then came a night when ashe said to the dressmaker— “I have a favor to ask of you to- night, Lazzie., I want to lie down a fow hours upan your lounge. By midnight the doctor will pronounce the vardiet of life or death upon my patient, and I have become so interested I wish to hear it direct. I have sent the carriage home until one,” And so, wrapped in a warm shawl of Allie's, Miss Kurtz rested hor stately form upon the Little chintz lounge, and waited for the doctor's tap upon the door, Midnight, Ten, fifteen, twenty minutes after, Miss Kurtz arose, and went softly up to the sick man’s room, pushed the door ajar and entered, The doctor stood beside his patient, with his fingers upon the thin wrist. “He is dead,” Miss Kurtz heard him say, softly, And then another man, bending over the white, upturned face, dropped some fears upon it, At the sound of the woman's gently rustling dress both men looked up, and Evelyn Kurtz stood face to face with Leroy Cammings, his golden hair thrust back from a pallid brow, and tears in his blue, proud eves, ‘Miss Kurtz, poor Stanley is dead,” the doctor said kindly, "He was a friend of yours?” she asked of Cummings, from whom she had not removed her eyes, *‘He was, and X have much to thank you for in his behalf, If he had lived, it would have been through your kind “Or yours,” said the doctor, bluntly, ‘since you watched with him every night, You both did all you could.” “How is it I did not know this?” questioned Evelyn, still of Leroy. *“I took eare that you should not,” he answered her, He bad come close to her now, and was gazing with passionate longing into her beautiful, jsorrowful face. “I did not mean that you should meet me,” For a minute both were silent, then Miss Kurtz said, slowly and low— “Your pride is manly and patural; but is it not bitterly wrong?” “Oh, Evelyn, I have only such hum- bls rooms as these of Stanley's, What would the world say of me if I dared to ask you to be my wife?” His voice was fall of suppressed pas- sion, his eyes of intense love, despite his resolve not to be tempted, “Is what the world will say of more account to you than your own Lappi- “God forgive my folly! No, Evelyn, He gathered her hands 1a his, and her finger a quaintly- And so they were betrothed, snd as he led ber away from his friend's death bed, he whispered “God bless you forever, my noble wile; and forgiye me, that to you I Stiver Spoons, Probably there is no article of table or other household use in the produe- Almost all the work on solid silver spoons is haudwork; the exceptions are the rolling of the ingot into plates and the production of spoons with omamentation in relief, which is produced by recessed patterns on the rolls, The material for spoons is coin silver obtained from the Government mins in ingots, or from trade for old silver, or from the use of current coin, This is melted over a charcoal fire in plumbago crucibles to a certain heat, known to the Slope by the appearance of the surface of the molten metal. It is poured into cast-iron moulds, forming bars of about seventy ounces weight each, These bars are heated over a forge fire of charcoal and worked on an anvil by hammer and sledge, precisely as fren or steel is worked, or are rolled into plates or ribbons, Occasional anneal ings are necessary to prevent cracking, the annealing being heating red hot and quenching in cold water, The ribbon for the ordinary teaspoon is four and a half wohes long by three-eights of an inch wide. When rolled a blank of two and a quarter inches is lengthened to four aud a half inches, to thin it down to spoon thickness, Before rolling or hammering, silver is very nearly as soft na load; but with these cesses it oan be made hard and Good springs, retaining their qualities for can be made of silver ham- mered or rolled. To form the bowl of the Surf-Bathing in Winter, “Bathing,” said the proprietor of a row of weather-beaten boxes on the beach at the Highlands, N. J., “cannot be said to cease entirely at any time of the year. Of course, after ths middle of Beptember it wonld be useless to keep the boxes open, but now and then somebody comes to the beseh in the middle of winter, undresses hastily, and plunges in, Put he seldom remains in the water nora than a few seconds, and to say the truth, I have seldom seen the same face twice. ‘I'he finest days are chosen for such work, but, no mat- ter how brightly the sun is shining, it is an awful ordeal, and only to be under- taken by persons of strong constitu- tions, They come out, for the most part, looking as though the sen was boiling instead of freezing, dress them- selves on the beach as though they had no time to lose, and race along tue sand for half an hour. “I'he most persistent winter bather I over saw was a boy about 16 years of age, who used to come here a couple of years ago. He lived about a mile from the beach, and every morning from De- cember 1 to February 28, at 8 o'clock, rain or shine, he was paddling in the water. The most singular thing about him was that he could notswim a stroke, and did not seem disposed to learn the art, I offered to teach him, but he said, ‘No, thank ye; if I swum I'd be goin' beyond my depth and gellin’ drownded.’ ‘‘He never bathed in the surf, but al- ways in the smooth water inshore, He wonld stand breast deep for half an hour, occasionally ducking his head under, but for the most part he was contented with splashing the water over himself with his hands or wading slow- ly about, When be came out he did pot seem to be chilled, and, unlike most of the others, he dressed himsell at leisure and strolled home whistling, He was not a profitable customer, for he never bathed in summer, He said he hated warm baths, His family have gone to Nantucket, so I suppose he is now astonishing fishermen there.” A Sad sea Dog. Lisutenant Garlington, of the United States army, who is now stationed at Fort Buford, in Dakota Territory, and who had charge of the Government re- lief steamer Proteus that was sent to the Aretic regions last summer iv search of the Greely party, was in Pittsburg rec ently, and when interviewed said: “1 am sorry I cannot give you a con- pected story, as 1 have been working hard all day, and feel very tired, but I suppose the people would like to know my opinion as to whether the Greely party are alive or not, There is not a bit of doubt about it in my mind. 1 don't see how it can be otherwise, If they are at Lady Franklin Bay, which beyond a doubt they are, they are cer- tainly alive and well, Greely had plenty of provisions tc last him through the winter, and he was stationed where he could get plenty of fuel, and I see no reason for his not being alive, “I don’t see how he could well get away from the bay. The ouly season you can sled up there is in the spring, and that is the only way he conld move, I don't think he would attempt to move farther north under the cirenmstances, and if he had started south I would have met him when on that expedition last summer, “It i# not so dreadfully bard fo live up there as some suppose, provided you have plenty to live on. 1t is cer. tainly very cold, but one becom in a measure adapted to it, and does not mind it. We were within 2° of Greely station when our veesel was crushed by the ice. It was rather a trying positien to be ifn. Thousands of miles from aany succor and no means of getting out exoopt » a small boat. But my men did not lose conrage, they kept in good spirits, although our provisions were limited and we had {o use them sparingly, You can well imagine a man's feelings placed in such a position and knowing that when the supply of provisions is exhausted there is no pos- mbility of securing any more. “But, notwithstanding what I have come through, I would like to go back I intend to make n, when I get to Washington, to join the Rrantut expedition that is now being tied out. I bave nol seen as much of that region as I ‘would like fo, There is nothing so exceedingly charming about it, but there is a strange fascina- tion seizes one, when he has a taste of it, to see more of it, When you get up among the glaciers and rocks the scene is one of terrific grandeur and picture esque beauty, but the seme of dreari- ness, No sound or stir except now and TEE £ eis : ; § when caught between two such icebergs, No boat can ever be built that could withstand the pressure, Although they seem to be moving slowly, they have terrific force and are often crushed by their own weight, Walrue are very plenty up there in some places, At the mouth of Melville Bay 1 believe I saw a thousand at one time, They crawl up on the ice and lie there apparently asleep, but on the approach of a hunter they drop into the water in a lubberly, awkward man- ner which is amusing, At times they sport and play in the water and out and keep the sea in constant confusion, They are an interesting study, especially when they are the only animated crea- tures that can be seen, While watch- ing them one forgets that he is out of the habitable world, The only land to be geen is an alluvial deposit thrown up by the waves near the north shore of Greenland, There is a kind of moss growing on the rocks, but from what it draws the substance of lite I know not, One of the most interesting sights in the whole northern region 1s the falling into the water of huge fields of ice. You will see thousands of acres of ice and snow that extend high in the air, The water wears this away on the under side, and when the point projecting into the water becomes so heavy as to force itself off it breaks with a loud report and falls into the water, ‘I'he traveling is all done up there with dogs in sledges. The dogs are about as large as Indian dogs, and are able io draw about their own weight, They usually harness from eight to twelve dogs to a sledge, | and under favorable circumstances and smooth ice can go about sixty miles in a day. I the surface 15 uneven and soft the animals are worthless, and the sledge has to be drawn by hand,” mA AGI PIO The Mohammedan World, Though Ctinstendom cannot be said to be in dasger from El Mahdy, it 1s likely 10 be put to senous incoavemence. ‘The countries which the Mobammedans con. tro! are considerable in extent of territory; they interlace with Christian countries and across several of them he some of the world’s most important lughwayr. Others lie off the beaten tracks of travel and are only valuable for their scanty contributions to the world’s commerce. ln discussing the question we have to consider the dif- ferent opinions and interests among Mo- hammedans and the prospect of their unit- jog in lsrge numbers, either for the pur. pos? of holding their deserts or mvading countries controlled by Christians, but par- tslly occupied by people of their own farth. The majority of Mohammedan zealots are nomads, without fixed homes tor occupation, and often robbers by prio. ciple. These occupy the sahara in Africa, lining chiefly on the northern and soutbern edges, and extending more or less into the Barbary States, Egypt and the Middle and Western Soudan. There are several mil- lions of them between tbe Atlantic Ocean and the Hed Bes. East of the Red Ses they occupy all of Arsbis—a portion of them living in towns—8yna, Persia and Turkestan. They form an imporiant ®je- ment of the population of Chins and Indie. In British India there are over forty mal- The populstion of Persia is nearly eight ‘millions, partly vomads, The pop- ulatisa of Tirkestan does not exceed two pullions, mostly pomads. The pop- uistion of Arabis 1 perhaps cight mil. lions, divided between the towns and oascs on the deserts. A few millions more may be found scattered along the fouthesstern coast of Africa, between Cspe Guardafu: snd Cape Colony. The few millions of people who oocupy the Soudan are Mo bammedans by profession, though they have so intelligent understanding of the faith. Most of them ure negroes, with an intusion here and there of Arab blood. Their Kings, Bultans or Governors are mostly white or yellow. A few sre Af- ricans. Mohammedsnism bas made prog- ress 1m Africa alone of recent years, the sword playing its traditional pant io the conversion of! the feeble natives. These are the countries and the people on which the fanaticism of the Mohammedan faith must hereafter do its work. It is the ma- terial that lies ready to the hand of the False Prophet if he bas the genius or the power to use it 3 i #48 £500%, Health Hints, Don't shake a hornet's nest to see if auy of the family are at home. Dont try to take the nght of way from an express train atl a railroad cross 1 py talx back to a woman who han dies the fireshovel with grace and dex- tenty. Don't go near a draft comes toward you, run away. draft is the most dangerous. Don’t blow in the gun your grand. father carried in the war of 1812. It is more now than it was then. Don't hold a wasp by ihe other end while you thaw it out in front of the stove to sce if it is alive, It 1 gener If a draft A sght SS A HN SES A EB HA UII Americans and Weak Eyos. Within the past quarter of a century opticians say that the portion of the world’s population using eyeglasses has increased 400 per cent. At thet not very remote period, in country districts espec- wmlly, the eyeginss was regarded ns a silly toy, and its wesrer a8 a person de. ficient in brains, but pow the business of mounting and selling cyegiasses in this couniry bas grown 10 minenss propor tions. All the superior lenscs are 1m. ported from England and France at the rate of over a mullion pairs a month, and 80 per cent. of them are mounted in this country, the principal factories for the purpose being in Philadelphia and in Bouthbridge, Mass, The work done in these establishments is superior 10 any turned out in Europe, although not one of them was In existence ten years ago. It is estimated that there are st present in the United Btates ten million persons whe wear glasses, and the number 1s constantly increasing. Bome very interesting stat. istics and general information on this sub- joct were obtained from Mr. J. Ehrlich, an optician and manufacturer of Brazilian pebbles, who had been engaged in that business for the past twenty years, “Is the large increase in your business an argument in favor of the theory that the human race 18 degencraliog in our tuned’ quired the writer, “Not by suy means,” sald Mr. Ehrlich promptly, ‘“I'bere is nothing to show that the eyesignt of farmers and other men who rise and retire with the sun 18 not as good pow as il ever was, nor that the eyes do not last as long as ever. ‘I'he great in- crease in the glass-wearing population is to be found in the cities, and even there among persons who keep no regular bours, and who are compelled to write in bad and unequal light or under the glare of the ges.” “Dut did not tins condition of afisirs exist & quarter of s century back as well as now" “Not to the same extent. Year by year the population that is compelled to work under the gaslight is on the in- crease, and thus increase represents the number of persons who are compelled to use glasses two, three and five years sooner than they would under ordinary circumstances. Every year brings some new scientific imvention, and there is scarcely one of them that does pot ip- duce what 1 may term fasler living, and faster living means shorter healthy living for all the or pans, but especially for the eyes, which are the most delicate of ail.” “*What class of persons suffer most in this wayl"” “Those that sregenerally termed ‘mght owls.’ Among them are printers, iele- graph operators, mumcians snd writers for the daily papers. All men who are com. pelied to fix a slesdy gaze on a given point for any length of time must damage their eyesight sooner or later. This is the case with tallers, shoemakers, students and book-keepers, who work in badly highted offices, Then there isa growing disre- gard for the dictates of ordinary pru- dence 10 using their eyes. Ii 1s a common thing to see men and women reading on railroads and steamboats. This should not be done unless necessity requires it, and perther should 8 porson read by gaslight while reclining in bed. As a rule the most intelligent classes are whose eyesight frst fails them.” “How does 3t happen (bs! 20 many young children require giasscs nowadays?’ “There are two kinds of npear-righted- pess. Ope ys soquired from over-iaxing the eyes, and the other inberited by chil- dren irom their parents. The very young children who wear glasses belong to the iatter clase. Too close attention to study eventually deranges the vision of the young student and compels him use glasses.” “What proportion of the juvenile popu. lation suffer from imperfect vision?” “The figure msy seem large bul our estuna’e is sixteen per cent. This covers the ages from four to eighteen. Of course by far the largest number of these are to be found in Colleges and Youog ladies’ Semioarks.” “And of elderly personst™ ‘Seventy-five per cent. of those who are fifly years or over use glasses. 1 io clud, of course, those who use them occa- sionally as well a8 those who use them habitually,” “Do the mmprovements in glasses keep pace with defects in visionl™ ““T'wenty years ago pol ove in a hundred who wore glasses got a good pair; now twenty-five per cent. of the glasses worn are the best that can be made, and cost ees than infeior ones did formerly; twenty years ago the present style of glasses was rare, and were geoeral. Now the frame is of such finely tempered and delicate steel that the eye giass has driven those France, and the best of convex from Eng- The former sre used by short. El FLEE pei