THUECITY OF SOMEWHERE, In tho beautifnl City of Somewhere Men never fade nor grow old, Beauty is beauty forever, Hearts never fa 1 or grow cold, K ind words only are spoken — Soothing, aud soft, and low As the wind sighing over Molian harps, W herever the light winds blow Qver the City of Somewhere, Qver the magle sea, Bear on, Life-bark, o'er the perfumed tide, Win that Rainbow land for me. In the beautiful City of Somewhere Bong-birds are pluming their wings, And the turq oise-tinted atmosphere To its deepest concave rings; And on its way to the deep-bass Sea The tenor River sings. No touch of olden Master, No solemn and saintly choir, With hymn from dim cathedral aisle Could rapture like this inspire. © golden boat and silver sea, And sails of satiny sheen, O milk white sails and ivory oars, Ye will bear me well, 1 ween! Our odorous masts are of sandal wood, And up at the peak they hold A pennant bearing the City's sign,— An anchor, browdered in gold C—O —— AN ALLEGHENY GYPSY. I recognized her at once, It is true that I had only a glance at her face, but that glance was enongh to con- vince me that she was the original of the picture Tom Grabam had shown to me, 1 had taken refuge from the shower under a cattle shed, and, seated therein on an old milking stool, I watched the swaying of the gray portiere which the strands of rain wove for the doorless doorway. With the water through the decaying roof and the gen- eral dsmpness of wy condition forcing itself on my attention, I began to won- der why [ was there. That morning I had been on the east-bound *‘express’ my mind than of Saratoga or Newport; but when the train flashed into the little station the place looked 80 €0Oi and inviting, and offered such a con- trast to the fierce heat I expected to { When we were woll past bend in the road, and moment when I saw the last of the flnt- I tarved but saw no one, and went on. Again I made me turn i i the hotel that there was a gypsy camp Saveral persons met two queer-looking meu on horse- back, with huge saddle bags, that were It made a flutter lingered after tea to talk it over, result of the discussion, those As a Indic A and drive atone became quite cautious, Tiond moemmas forbade their davghters to driv: in the direction of the camp. The only lady who seemed utterly reck- Again. After I had taken breakfast I strolied down the shaded road that leads to O ik- land, whioh at first almost solitary, soon horses, carriages, and brightly dressed ladies, of the numerous dog carts, buckhoards, and phastons with the hope of discov I was disappointed, and walked on over the smooth road, unheeding the dis tance, until the sight of a church spire and other evidences of a settlement showed me that I was near Oakland, 1 went on into the village. found a friend at the hotel with whom I dimed, and was returning to Deer Park when shower fell from the clouds that com- pletely drenched the mountains and re- viyed them from the drowsy unconsecious- ness of an Angust midday, The ran ceased ns suddenly as it came, The sun came out with a small kerchief of cloud over ona eye and a light breezs rastled the newly varnished leaves, The fringe foot-paths at the roadside twinkled with innpnmerable rain drops, and muddy below, I had just left the cow-shed and re sumed my walk when there came dash ing down the road a small equipage, consisting of a brown pony and a yellow dog-cart. In the cart were two yonng ladies in summer clothing, their face of foamy lace, There ferns showing under the seat, and the brow of the conquering pony was wreathed with oak. the downward and level road, came to an abrupt stop at the foot of a hill not his burden upward and onward, he whip, the paraso! lace ceased to chafe its silken island, s)ght until even the red tassel of the gheuy horizon, posed to guide the wilful pony was nn- doabtedly Ksleanor Sawyer; and Eleanor Bawyer was the young woman to whom Tom Graham had devoted himself, in spirit, so unsuccessfully, for over two that Tom had not been allowed a nearer devotion, It was a mystery to every one why old Mr, Sawyer was so uncom: promising in his opposition to Tom Graham, for he was a young man © good family and good habits, with a growing reputation and income, Certain it was, however, that il that young person had presented himself at Deer Park Mr, SBawyer would either have restricted his daughter's freedom to the second story verandah, where he kept his own gouty foot bolstered up on a chair, or have whisked her off to some other resort at the first appearance ol the adversary. 1 recalled these things which Tom had told me as I climbed the hall behind which the dog-cart had set, and to my surprise saw that the brown pony had come to a standstill aud Mias Sawyer seemed to be remonstrating with her companion, who, evidently in a state of great perturbation, was glancing anxiously toward s tent at the foot of the hill. It had been pitched since my morning walk to Oakland, and there was an undeniable gypsyith air about the evcampment that bad prob- ably frightened the more timid of the young ladies in the omrt, I them and went on down the hill and soon discovered that they were follow. ing me and were subduing with difficulty the brown pony to a slow pace. In front of the tent lay a swarthy man watching a fire that had just been kindled under a black keitle, He was a repulsive being, and I could not won- der at the timidity cf the young Behind the tent gleamed the white sun bonnet of a traveler's wagon, and one or two mules were tethered near by. 1 eyed the man sharply, but he no urual drive spite O pexiont in the nsnal direction in mysterious camps or dark com- d men I may as well say hore that after my first day at Deer Park I hd been mneh with the Sawyers’; 1 had discovered that Mr. Sawyer and my father were I-time friends and elassmates; and the old gentleman hal recived me very cordially for my father's sake, and bade ms kesp an eve on his danghter and his as In the case of the latter this be- | came an easy and most willing privilege, | but with Eleanor Sawyer it was a difler- | hat young lady develeped a will power that amounted to obstin- I well remember the last time I 1 shall not attempt to deserine her as she | appeared to me that atternoon; but the | glenm in her gray eye and the fresh get, I remember thinking that Tom (Graham was a lucky man to possess the | heart of all that beauty and freshness, | While thus thinking, 1 wa'ched the flatter of her blue veil until sho disap- | around the corner of the east | aannsx of the hotel and then 1 sighed. Dd the spirit of prophecy possess mv | nl? Did my mental vision penetrate the future and perceive that I was not o see ber again? It may be so, for 1 | sighed and toroed to the gentle Alice to iispel the cloud that for the moment | had obzeared her loveliness, AL my 4 on the green uplanas in front of the hotel, whera all day long the shadows of the yeung trees wind around their bases like phantom dials, She seemad to prefer silence, so I said nothing, but esausd back in my chair, walching the blae smoke that rose from behind a hill | to the southward. Yesaterdsy she and I had gone over the hill to investigate the | orimal cause of s0 much smokiness, and | ifter discovering a little saw. mill that | was eating its way Shrough the grand [ st, we were content to ride back on | oad of lumber that came down the wooden tramway to the raudroad, For days we Lad been plan- ping to watch asunset from theObserva- tory which is perched hill, At its height the loftiest peaks of the Alleghenies the horizon as ar as the eve I proposed and Alice disposed; so we elimbed the hill aud the little stairway to the Observa Ors 4 ma in several n a neighboring uoteh CAN see, the kpife-work of the summer boarder who usually sncoeeds in oarving his name in something more permanent we watched the alternoon express as it | glided into the station in a clond of steam: we watched it pull ont again, neard it whistle for Mountain | Lake, three miles further down the | road, By this time the sun had dropped until it seemed impaled on the dimmest | peak if the distance, Ib a mowent the | whole west flushed crimson mountain peak was radiant, Every | The little | Very grada- | The northern and | agezinst the glowing sky. ally the color faded, The dim peaks | A chill wiad swept | across the mountains, Oar clothing ! was already damp #ith the dew, so we | Alieghenies, That evening there was great excite. ment in the hotel. Before tea time it became generally known that Eleanor Sawyer bad driven ont alone on the Oakland road and had not returned. A telegram seni to her friends st the Oak- | land Hotel brought the ansver that she | had not been there that day. Eleanor's poor father was almost wid, He had known but tittle of the gypsy camp, and when the ladies poured into his horri fiad ears the aoccoun: of the repulsive | black man, the myserions men with plunder on their horses, his very blood ran cold. Men were at once despatehed duwn the road to enter the camp snd discover the truth, They returned with the information that the camp was broken up, the wagons gone, The worst suspicions were confirmel, Eleanor had been abdnoted by the gyjsies ant prob. ably hidden in the mounhin {astnesses with the view of obtaining a ransom. The distracted father did nd know what sourse to pursue, To send jut parties that night without any kiowledge of the route of the abductors wis imprac ticable; and the helpless old rentleman in spirit. Excitenent ran igh, The ~room was deserted, and groups of eo were in tas office disoussing probable features of the note entered the office, and as he ap - prosched the desk there was a sudden stillness in the room. “For Mr, Bawyer,” he said, in a low voioe, | gave the old gentleman the note, “Oh, dear Mr. Suwyer do tell ue, is it from Flasnor?” chorused the ladies, Mr. Sawyer glanced at the address. | It was his daughter's writing; but, i with tle sense of relief whioh it gave, | camo a strange reluctance to open the note in the presence of such an als | dience, “Yes, ladies, it is from my daugh- lingered, “Oh, is sho safe; where is she?” | came from one or two of the more ven- | taresome, | The old gentleman saw it was of no | nse to try to evade them. Hae opened the letter, and, ater glancing at its con- 1 “You may read it, madame,” ne said, She tonk it and read aloud as follows: Dear Para: The its members, I suppose my dear Tom never thought when he joined the geo logioal survey (in order to be near me in the mountains) that the party would be taken for gypsies. vant, whom from the plans, caused that impression, and the imagination of the ladies sup- plied the rest, Dear papa, Tom and I were married you tha pony and this note. In the meantime do not harden your heart agaiust your affectionate danghter Evgavon. There was silence as the reader con cluded, aud without a word the crowd cougenial atmosphere of the parlors, That evening, just before 11 o'clock, as I was smoking a good night eigar on the piazza, I was joined by Alice Wol- verton, “Did you know of this?” she de- mangded severly as we reached a seciud- ed part of the porch. “Know of what?” I asked, evasively. “0! Eleanor's planus, That she was going away?” anxi sly, “With an Allegheny gypsy? ves, | knew." “Oh, shameful |” she cried, starting away, bat I caught har had. “What is shameful?” I asked, she not right to go?’ *‘Not in that wey, no,’ “Isn't 1t right for a woman to go with the man who loves her?” § “No, it is not, tho parlor; it 1s chilly here.” ‘““But yon cannot go with me, wouldn't be right.” “Why not?” in surprise. “Because I love yon.” “Oh!” Bashing, “Good night,” it Well, “Was ’ it “Good night.” I answered, and we said again a hall hour after. ward, - - Peregrination Pigeon. Peter Cartwright was the well known Method st pronee sort of peregrioation pigeon, who wer the hilig and swamps up b tolic wing He strong as be was brave Pp meetin set of r name of a fle war a flew & 808 feared nothing, and wha A into rot i tot as ceria 2 ighs who haa Major f.. who was a pr though a grest fimesesf with the roughs, fiying into a desperate mage, sad thought Cartwright would fight him he won'd challenge him. “Major, if you challenge me [ will ac cept it,” answered the preacher “Well, sir, | dare you 10 mortal com- bat.” “AL right, mr, I'll fight you. And, sir, according to the laws of honor 1 suppose it 1» my right to choose the weapons with which we are to fight.” ‘Wertainly.” the Major rephed, “Well, then, we will step over here jot and get a eouple of corn. think I can finsh you with y vy? ae RO. ihle with a Teak Rn trie the service, nent citizen, ident: fad HEenner 8a 1 The Major waxed hotter. He clenched if I thought 1 conld whip you | would smite you in a minute,” “Yea, ves, Major,” the militan minis ter asserted; ‘‘but, thazk God, you can? whip me; only don't you attempt to strike me, for if you do, and the devil gets ping you ever had in your life.” ended it. Another bully attempted to whip the Rev. Cartwright, who answered: never like to live in the dread. reslly intend to whip me, come and do ut now.” The bully oontinued bis curses and threats, and th: minister jumped off bw horse, and going up to hum, said: That ened, or I will put you in the river and baptize you in the name of the devil, for surely you belong to ham.” The bully repented, and afterwards became one of the preacher's best friends, Charm of Flowers Flowers seem intended for she solace of ordinary humanity. Children love them; quiet tender, contented, ordinary them gathered. They are the cottager’s treasure, and in the crowded town mark, as with a little broken fragment of rainbow, the windows of the workers in whose hearts rest the covenant of peace. Passionate or religious minds contemplate them with fond, feverish intensity; the affection 1s seen severely calm in the works of many old religions painters, and mixed with more open and true country sentiment in those of our own pre-Haphelites. To the child and the girl, the peasant and the man. ufactaring operative, to the grisette and the nun, the lover and monk, they are precious always; but to the men of supreme power and thoughtfulness, precious only at times; symbolically and pathetically often to the posts, but rarely for their own sakes. They fall forgotten from the great workman's and soldier's hands, Such men will take, in thankfulness crowns of leaves or crowns of thorns--not crowns of The alerk handed the note to boy, flowers, The Nine-PViate Stove, i TI - | of the forest, it required as much attention ag a locomo- | tive nowadays when out on the road, and | the tidy housewife was just as careful in up a8 the engine man and fireman do their { darling ron horse. Sometimes 1t Was | determine whether the persons congregated around the stove were trying to keep it WATT OF Vioe Versa. But this pioneer of the stove geperation was a very primitive article of domestic comfort, It had no side doors, por was furnace chamber. It was propped with a sone or & brick which served a two-fold purpose, as it also regulated the draft io the smaller opening in the door. Iron was | dear in those days, and there was no iron poker to stir up the smouldering embers or shovel to empty the chamber of the nshies when filled. | board as a shovel grandfathers were happy even with these | original appliances for arousing the refuse. While crowded around the stove in order to keep warm, it would in- | deed be passing | brain of man would not be stirred up to | considered aa apology for a stove. snd hinges for the sides of the stoves fol- lowed. as well as hinges for the door closing | for the small vent. By the first improveinent the part above | the furnace and the apartment for carrying off the smoke was couverted into an oven, {in which ex silent bread and cakes could i ne baked, and roasts and fries of all kinds turned cut. The top plate of the slove was used as a griddle, and from it buck wheat, corn and flannel oakes wee turmed off by the dozen, In fact, those old 1m proved nine-plates did a vast amount of | good culinary work, until they were sup | nlanted by the renowned “Hathaway Cook | Stove,” which wes exocedingly popular and had an immense sale, but was no less a | voracious devastator of the wood pile, and { the terror of the man who provided il | with sticks cut exactly to fit its fiery tur nace. plate until it was as amoothly cast, and as nicely ornamented with vines and flowers { and designs, ss any of our popular parior ol stoves are, or the kitchen cook stove But coal as a fuel became chesper snd wood dearer, hence these old fashioned stoves had to give way to the coal-burner, hath by ressod of economy, heat and fue, already prepared without the aid of the axe, the maul and Rude as these old nine pistes were they served a good and useful purpose in their day, but whey oou'd not iss’ always, 10 view of the changed circumstances of both nature and people. Thev bad to give way to something better, at least for cities, towns and villages, thoug in some remole pars it the State, where wood Is yet plenty, one of these ancien' stove jandmarks is mon. reh of the wood pile and the yet unfelled | forest. the iron wedge. ———— : Seraping off Barnacies, ne and ses them i em scrape barnacles f from the bottom fleamet Mail F rant hink Lens 3 {d an empl Company to a S00 TRORn + it ga Ye OG of expense in the steamers. ned operation that 4 through after the Pacific, little creatures trouble are thicker fnd their growth more mapidly ‘in Pacific waters than thev do in the Atlantic.” The reporter and his informant were in the vicinity of Hunter's Point Dry Dock, and on entering the yard the City of New York was seen high and : dry on the supports, and a large number {of men, each with a tnangularshaped i scraper of bard metal in hand, were | working on her. handles attached to the were ground on each of their three edges. The sound of the ! resembles that produced by { trowels in spreading mortar, | much louder, contr oY 1 OSS 5 ¢ $84 ALialn though and there was also a nacles clung with greater than their neighbors, It was a whole- | saleslaughter of these parasitic animals, | which In some spots incrusted the bottom of the ship to the depth of an inch and a half to two inches, ' “They're only small clingers, these | barnacles,” sad the Pacific Mail man, “but like fleas on a nervous individual they are very much in the way, though | they are little."’ | ‘“T'o what extent do they damage the | bottom of an iron ship?’ asked the re- porter, “It isn’t for the damage to the ship so much as the way they impede its i | was the reply. | “How much time each day ot sail- { ing would this steamer lose by bavinga coating of barnacles on her bottom?” “From fifteen to twenty-five miles.” en bottomed vessels than on iron?” “Yes; but they are not so thick on chief objects in having a vessel co bottomed. The barnacles do not like te poisonous nature of the enpper and do not begin to cling to it until it has been partially neutralized by the action of the salt water. Iron ships cannot, of course, have copper bottoms, as the | expense would be too great In making | a solid bottom of copper and there is no satisfactory way of atlaching the sheet. ing. To partially obviate the tendency of barnacies to collect on iron vessels a strong solution of verdigris 18 now mixed with other ingredients and used on the bottom below the red waterline, and for this reason all the lower out. mde surface of the steamers of this company now have a green color, such as you now see they are putting on the under side of the New YX ork’s stem.” The reporter watched the process of scraping and observed that as fast as a large section of the barnacle-covered rR SOFAS HAO ——— | rust was mada wis washed men, ors with pots of from furnaces along the side Over each of these furnaces wis a tank [filled with green lignid that babbled visible nndernenth clean by another set sghin's one could not but consider poisonous | from the nature of the compound { whence 1t fssued, “How long does it take for a gang of | workmen like this to remove the he rna- cles from a ship?’ asked the reporter. | **About two days, Sometimes they | pnt on a8 many men as can work eon- | veniently on a vessel's bottom. You see the ea is to save expense It costs a vessel from $500 to $1.000 a day dock, and the men who do the work on this steamer are furnished by the Mail the job as fast as possible, t would the company as much doc each dav if only two men were employ. ed in cleaning a bottom as it would if | there were 100 at work.” “Does the mixture that they are now applying act cnst kage green | cles?” “Only in 4 measure, he iron and form where the little Trey spread 1 i solve it and eat into rongh rusty places, | elingers gather and grow, | very fast and to a considerable depth when a vessel is lving still for an ex- | tended period, but when on the trip to | China and returning a vast number will hottom. | how they 80 | vessel is in motion.” ““Are there no other and means for preventing thelr presence?’ “There may be,” they have not yet been discovered. thousand different preparations have been tried, but none of them are of much account, if we except Lhe verdi- gris compounti, and that satisfactory. A fortune awaits lucky man who can discover a compara. tively inexpensive and at the same time durable mixture, which, when applied to a ship's bottom, will render distasteful a place of re barnaclies they | infest it. enllect easily when a A it 80 © LO these en 1 $1 + Lil Will no longer HKuee Breeches. The old reeches are mak y come into f 11 not be a kneesy a man not really in . 10 wear them. ly pre betier of b ng £4 ashior 1 iW matter needy Withon ined by © e SLANCeS legs, nic man had WeAr trousers RT Be pot be sa rnost ¥ sufficiency the iNous encasei in masculine ntaloons of | wearers look eves of ti eral propor alike—a general bachelor, well as a mental comfort to the poss | SOT every variety of limbs embrace every variety of formity; AVETrage being of inexhaustible, rey Probably | one really fine pair of carrying a ma Y ders who ie \ of the 1isiveness legs employed in 's stomach and shonl- men them- s about | WRIK 1D the proud tie] vies Knee bi ed and thia ht to even 1 Casual « the mo LselIver A AN 55 A Mental with anual Trauning. Manual exercises, { same Lune in highly attractive to healthy Doys. you doubt this, gointo & manaal training-school and yourselves, Go, for instance, forging-shop, where metals are through the agency of heat, which are at the ellectual exercises, the see for into our wrought A score aproned, with many a drop of honest sweat and bther trade-marks of toll, stand up to their anvil with an un- much they enjoy thelr work. What | are they doing? and hands, They are studying defini- “iron,” ' “steel,’’ “welding,” “temper “upsetting,’’ “cuuling,” And, in the shop whore meials are ing. | better name, we call our machine-shop), i i vestigation. ly conducted, both mental and manual. Every tool used and every | process followed has its history, its | genesis and its evolution. Vega is now the brightest of the visible ! fixed stars and will be found nearly over | head in ine evening. This 1s one of the | stars whose distance from the earth has been the subject of long continued and | elaborate calculations conducted by the | Washington astronomera within the past two or three years. lis parallax is ahout one quarter of a second, a point as difficult to measure as the d ameter of a quarter of | a dollar a dozen wiles away. The oom. | puted distances of fixed stars are generally { stated in the number of years it would require for light from them 10 travel through space at the same rate of speed that it passes through our solar system, about 182,000 miles per second. Al this rate 1t would take light trom Vega some 16 years to reach the earth. Bo fur us we are aware, however, there is nothing known about the speed of light outside of our own system, aod it may be possible that it fishes instantaneously or nearly 80 over the billions of miles which separate one solar system from another, If we are forced to measure with our own solar sys- tem yaristick the vast distances which intervene between our sun and the mil 1008 of other suns which the telescope reveals, wé are driven 10 the conclusion thai, in lvoking at some of (he remotest stars which powerful instruments render visible, we are beholding them, not as they sppear now, but as they appeared centuries ago, and that they may be blotted from the sky hundreds of years before thev crase to shine for ue; a conclusion which appears unprobable, if aot incredible. 18 AIA Vega. » i Mujkittle's toy Asin, When Mrs, Mul qittle went the sewing society the other day she agreed, | after uci persnasion, that the young- | ster might accompany her The sight of 86 many ladies, all sitting in a room, on making something | greatly interested the boy, and for a | time he walked aronnd without address- ing the benevolent women, whose fin- { to intent gers flew for the benefit of the heathen, | Finally he approached an old lady who was busy with a press board and asked: | “Whose coat is that?” | “This is for some poor little heathen boy,” replied the old lady, tapping the hot “goose’ with a damped finger, and | procesing Lo press a real, | “Where does he live?” “Away over the ocean.” “Did you ever see him?" “Oh, no.” “Then h will fi “1f it don’t fit one it will fit er ow do youg know the coat m?" “Haven't the heathens got thes? ' “No. They ar “Haven't mothers?’ sey s poor and ¥ got any needy,’ fathers or en,’ Nell, why don’t they buy clothes : +9 } 1€ Ch 12 for ‘ **They | sides they t of a nakex 1 1 { dren? t any* money, and Jothes these] ve bee avell nee “Sor 1 ramily, ain’t it?” him a moment, €x- Hooose’’ fora hot on She looked at changed and replied “Yes, all need things, They have never had any. “Then how do you know the want | "em now?"’ thie Cool 2, they clothes, poor YW? SBecauss “W hat there?” “He? “is hb healh “What de rascair’ “His clot} * that standin’ over o » tla i Lig ¥ Worn out. Lis coat?" Kinesss, that's wi ev 7 ew up that bol i x © 11 r the heathens?” asked LU the young Bay. “wy ax “AL 20 On | yourself," { “Then give me the shirt.” “Move on, 1 tell you." He went back to where Lhe | man was handliog the “‘goose.”’ “Run along, little man, for 1 don™ | want you around here.” “W hen are you going to make your | boy some ciothes?” “None of your business.” “Jt ain’t yours either, is it?" “Hush your mouth,” “] couldn't hu: h anything else could 1p “There, you little imp. You've made | me burn my finger on the goose,” “How did I make you?" “Great Car, boy. go away from here. Whose brat 1s this!” arising and pointing te the boy. “Willie,” callea Mrs Mulkittie, | “opme away,” advancing. “1 thank | youu, Mrs, Spillers, that he's no more of a brat than yom son.” “My son never goes around bother- ing people,” replied Mrs spiliers. “1 don’t allow Willie to bother peo- ple either, but some people are easily bothered,” “Yes, and some mothers don’t know how to take care of their children.” “And,” said Mrs Mulkittie with emphasis, ‘some mothers allow their | children to go almost naked while they gad about. That's what they do,” and the indignant lady tossed her head. Mrs, Spillers flew into a rage. She shook her fist in Mrs, Mulkittie's face, and just then the inquisitive youngster and Mrs, Spillers’s boy made a break at each other, grappled and rolied ort the floor. Then the two mothers began 10 swing corners. Altogether, the affair was one of the most enjoyable events of the season, as the young ‘‘journal- jst’? says in speaking of a strawberry festival. The sewing society adjourned sine die, and it is feared there will be a decided falling off wn the heatben’s ib 1 the heathen’s?” You are heathen Away. a old wo- Maid of the Mist, A steamboat. is being ouilt on Niaga- ra river below the falls, and next season will carry passengers up almost to the falling water. It will be named “Maid of the Mist,” after the famous boat which run down the river through the when the sheriff (ried to seize it and came out safely. Men searching for lnek to givethema ride only scare up horses for enterprise to saddle