NO LOSS, There the warm sunset sank he sea; ht wavelets broke, he low breezes spoke, 1 There the eve's magic woke Rapture for both of us, Yon, love, and ma There the gray morning rose Over the sea; There the t There the wind’s moaning swell : .. 11 ick raindrops fell, Murmured farewell, farewell! for both of us, and me. » noontide shines, ng yet; vowed and wept; gladness crept; he record kept? oth of us ASTRANGE MANIA. Brom In the fall of the year 184— a family and all efforts on the part of the people in that little town to find out anything of their past history, except that they were Judge Henry Wamble and wife, and daughter, and-son, from Tennessee, proved unavailing. The family had arrived unexpectedly one evening about dusk, and as they rode in a said he got a ghmpse of them. ‘Sg 2 one L covered wagon Squire Cobl t a glimpse of the daughter for 11 1 gaid Bernard Wilder, the handsomest and smartest young h PRCT 1 OW In all tant nsiant was the prettiest 1 ever saw. If she turn the heads of all the Ix will have to leave.”’ And so the people the Wamble family mysterious as ever. “Squire Cobb,” said “judge” called, had arrived. *'I tively a strange monthe after the months aiter ue am could witch, Edna? 1 that all h explanati “Yes, and did it never occu hey would get » it nk iL vers n never 0 you ““Why, that this matter o ankad i looked 1n susp! ‘* Listen: Shoemaker other night to ask her father’s t t N y One knew He never returne there the permission to J her, time he had nighbors. . Pickrell went on errand. Bernard Wilder the way, and waited how he met around ou find out succeeded. there—but here he comes now: tell you all about it.” “Ben, exclaimed several voices from the crowd, that had gathered in little store where I had been talking to Squire Cobb, ‘‘tell us about Ed. rell, and what you know." “Well, when I had waited the Pick- outside lover ought to come out, I started to walk off. when 1 heard a dull thud, followed by a faint laugh—but iaugh as froze my blood and made my teeth chatter, and you know 1 am no coward. I could not make out any- thing make me determined to find out what it all meant, and what had become of Tom Shoemaker and Ed. Pickrell— and perhap :the others. And ask every ope present to keep silent until you hear from me again, going to anravel this mystery, or dis- appear as mysteriously as did others.” “You do not intend to try your fate in order to find out that of the others?” asked Squire Cobb, “1 do not know about that, I will connected with this mystery, Edna Wamble is ignorant and innocent of it. SOTTOW, saddest and sweetest look I ever beheld. me to come there In a hurry, and see her,’”’ and Ben at once walked to the corner of the block, where Edna stood, pale and trembling, awaiting him. “Ah, Edna, have you come to recon- sider your answer and clear up this mystery?” he asked, “No, no; Mr. Wilder,” she cried, “I love you too dearly—I mean I have too much regard for your future happiness —t0 permit you to do what you might ever regret. If you could penetrate the secret of my life, you would turn from me, Dear Bernard-—Mr., Wilder, I mean-I came here to ask you not to come to father’s to-night—to never come at all, 1 ask this in the name of the love you profess for me. Ob, if you stay away and trust me, I-—father is calling and I must go,”’ and she was gone are Benard could stay her, “Her strange eagerness made him more determined than ever to go there 3 that very night. But one thing almost drove him wild, and that was that she what was nndcubtedly a series of mys- terious crimes, He went to the house about dark, and was admitted to a large room in which were only two chairs and a table, one chair setting in the centre of the room at the end of the table, The judge gave him the centre chair and took the other himself, and called to Edna to bring wine. set it on the with two colored glasses, and retired to The suppressed tone: She did so, and a side room, “So Mr. Wilder, you want to ask the Well, you don’t know what my friend. Take a glass of wine, and we'll talk it over.’ you ask, Just then Bernard noticed Edna at a side window, with her hand 14) h and i up to her 1 | mou shaking her head nega- tively understood that he was not to drink. But what was he i to do? He had no excuse not t land to use his pistol, whl brou be He instantly thou Quick as a flash he 1 ht ril od . would rovoked unj lence as yet, ght a plan and said: “Judge will yon please? I get me a lump sugar, drink v without As the old man t 1 his back, Bernard cha: never ged the glasses quickly, and remamed as if he suspected noth- » return of the judge, Berna: gar in his wine, and he - drained the KiIa85e8, the judge boi hy, you steal my daughter have pre ' RIASSEs, li Bernard, ne hist Tennessee. losk of amazement, | at last, and you must } Bern arid my more tha a, Nard, my more than dearest friend. stay. I can now tell you all that has been so mysterious, Come, sit i down here by me,"’ “Years ago I had a sister, three years older than I was, Father almost wor- shiped her, and seemed to have a per- fect dread of some young man falling her. This ed him to often times treat young men | who called with almost Well, to be brief, sister Ethel in love with a worthy, noble Father having no excuse | except his desire to keep sister at home, | They went to a neighbor's and married, and father forbade them both from the They went to New Orleans, and in two months both died of yellow fever, and no one but mother and I could sooth him. He was always pas- | sive with us, i of a madhouss, and being rich, and soon learning to humor his whims, we | came here to please him. The strangest | part of the story is that one of his whims was to administer a powerful in lave od 0 1 in love with and 1 IMAITYIng did fall nan, objed ted, house, | thought likely to gain my while they were in a deep sleep, he | would precipitate them through the floor, by a trap door under the chair you sit in, into the basement beneath, He would then indie them, by some means unknown to me, to leave, prom- | sing either to not come in s0 many } years, or to never reveal to any one | why they never got me, how he did this, but I know he never | harmed any of them,” “Well, I can inform you, if the oc- | casion of my luckier friend’s success is not too sacred for a third party,” said Ed. Pickrell, who came in just then, Edna and Bernard both were sur prised, “The judge would come to us,” con- tinued Ed, “‘after we awoke from a deep dream of peace, and show us a note from you, Edna, telling us that if we loved youas we professed, we would leave and be silent; that your father was mad, and any further advances would make him rave. That if we would hope for your hand, we must leave until his mind was restored or he died. Of course this always did the work, I had not gone yet. Your ] { brother always did the negotiating with the lovers, I find.” | “I never wrote such a note,” said { Edna. said Bernard; “that is ano- { ther of your father’s strange manias, | Very well, Edna; since hope has been | held out to all of you, and I have not been bound over yet . Qe '" ‘1 see, , I guess I will have { to settle the disputes by taking my little bright-eyed will held open, upon breast like one who was weary and had been seeking such Edna, if she come,”’ and he his and she | nestled arms his | & resting place for years, The judge recovered, all his { consent to the marriage of i the and had lost He gave his ready Edna and coolness had madness, young man whose i restored hin to reason and life. All the x | somehow, and came bac snished ones heard ir time ty #10 time uo present at whole the wedding and join village in rejoicing the over happy termination of “Strange Mania.” A sn Population in the Arid Region, 20m Denver Nevada es east of he Sierra mot of rainfall that , 48 i Tue, MaKes the arid the Medit- ie patches of is are tilled, it ir home market 1 Ole Agr! however much the lat temporarily, and manufacturing looms up, come to consume much more than our anid region its hope for a upon its | farmers can raise, “he must depend for large to manufac- dlales , 1lat ' 11 . population abilit ture for the agricultural to the It must hold the same re- Jation to them that New England has long held to the West and South. Of course the ebb and flow of mining will | always furnish a large but transitory | population. But manufacturing is al. most as permanent and constant as ag- | riculture itself. It can be carried very far and made to sustain millions of peo- ple engaged In fabricating articles for all parts of the country. In this way | it is quite possible for the arid region | to sustain a population nearly as large | as an equal area in the humid portions | of our land, isms AAI se — Whalebone, east of us, i | Few persons know what the whale- | bone of commerce represents in the liv- | ing animal. Whalebone, in fact, re- presents an enormous development of the gum of the whale, and exists in the | living animal in the form of two rows of plates, which, like a great double fringe, hang or depend from its palate, | One hundred of these plates exist in the mouth of a whale and the largest plates may measure from eight to ten or twelve feet in length, The inner edges of these whalebone plates exhibit a frin. ged or frayed-out appearance, and the whole apparatus is adapted to serve as a kind of gigantic sieve or strainer, Thus, when the whale fills the mouth with water, large numbers of small or midute animals, allied to jelly-fishes and the like, are engulfed and drawn into the capacious mouth cavity, The water is allowed to escape by the sides of the mouth, but its solid animal con. tents are strained and entangled by the whalebone fringes, and when a suffi. clent quanity of food has been captured in this way, the morsel is swallowed, Thus it 1s somewhat curious to reflect that the largest animals are supported by some of the smallest beings. Two Clever Collies, If you New should visit Central Park, York, some fine morning you might see young Shep, the collie that 1s being trained to take the place of old Shep, the eighteen-year-old veteran, at his lessons, Ile is never whipped, not even when he does wrong or makes mis- takes, because that breaks the spirit of a collie, as, indeed, of any other kind of dog, and a shepherd dog must of all things be brave. When he doesn’t carry out an order correctly, or in such a way that the sheep can understand him, old Shep is sent with the same order and Shep Junior is made to keep watch him until it is first le still and His ply to guard a hat or a coat or stick thrown the by the shepherd, and he is left the him the importance of executed, won 18 sim } upon grass . out with it sometimes until late in evening Lo show the fidelity, very first essentu n Next he is hepherd gather the and learned, | wong the flock and findin them are imagined, with a flock sixty-nine lambs do it, for tiie flock, server they all look almost ul, old She Pp can C4 ', Are vel beauty ¥§ a + VAriely and Scottish pebl Kinnoul Hill, YE AIX near Perth, or mila Aa I0 continued and extended long i, or: for. the raw material of the Lave be mined rocks 05g six} to viel industry. The agate quarries of Oberstein were abandoned owing to the discovery, fully half a century ago, of a rich supply of those stones in the river gravels of Uru- guay. Some German workers in agate, who had emigrated to that region, ticed the courtyard of a paved with pebbles that reminded them of the agates of their native Oberstein. Specimens were accordingly sent home and cut, and tha» surmise proved cor. Since that time there has been a regular export of agate nodules from Uruguay to Oberstein, where they have long formed the staple material used in the agate mills, These ‘Brazilian ag- ates.” as they are called, when brought to Germany, are arranged in lots and sold by auction, stones of ordinary quality bringing, it is said, not more, usually than fifteen shillings per hun- dredwelght, “German agates,"’ age thus, for the most part, South Ameri can stones cut and polished at Ober- stein. The extent of the industry has greatly inoreased with this ascession of fresh material, and a few years ago there were no fewer than 153 agate mills, working 724 grindstones, and giving employment altogether to about 3000 persons. Cheapness of labor ana a plentiful supply of water power have had much to do with the continuance of this industry at Oberstein. The la- bor is both ill-paid and severe. The agate worker, says Professor Rudler, who some years ago visited the mines and mills, “lies upon a low weoden grinding-stool, specially constructed to fit the chest and abdomen, leaving the limbs free; the hands are engaged in holding and grinding the agate, while the feet are firmly pressed against short stakes or blocks of wood screwed into the floor, the reaction enabling the grin- der to press the agate with much force against the moving millstone, The friction thus produced causes the agate to glow with a beautiful phosphoresent light, and red carnelians under this treatment look, it 1s said, as if they were red hot, The millstones are of no- farmhouse red sandstone, measure five feet in di- ameter, and generally make three revo- lutions per second, The finer agates are sliced by means of steel wheels diamond or ¢ and the into they bu conrser stones are simply chipped Afterward are polished on rotating rig ill emery powder, shape and ground, cylinders of wood or lead covered with meistened tripoli, The ingenuity of the agate worker is not confined merely to cutting, cary- ing and polishing his material manner of He ceeded in varying its colors by artificial means, Ti into all 3 1 1 BLADES, HAS fAI80 BUC 1e layers composing an agate differ considerably in porosity, those that are transparent, for example, be- ing less porous than opaque layers, SS 1 6s ¥ { Tr on al ’ SOme, indeed, seem to be allogethern impervious at ordinary smperature and pressure; and agats al (1 then Wi HAN stein and in India -- Mock Marriages, TT okt and . I'he LL ANG 113% HOg peopie, more . regard marrage mber of n um nock weddis that ti \ rags § 144 "ICL to light in “make believe’ marr unusement there, bat if it ber of sad denouements ought to admon- tittle HIE wholesome order. it of this kind occured ish the elders that a advice or correction would be in The latest expl in the vicinity of New York, where two some Kind were mock married to two mischievous all In the nonsense been uproarious, but it transpired in a day or two that the man who perform. ed the ceremony was a person author- ized by law for such purpose, and that the young people were therefore legally bound to each other. In most severe penalties have been prescribed for men falsely impersonating clergy- men or magistrates and in those capac- ities assuming to perform marriage cer- emonies, Many innocent have been lured to destruction by such means, and it has been found necessary to pro- tect them, or at least make that method of villainy exceedingly danger- ous and unprofitable, The other style of mock marriage, while not to be class- od in the same category, is in some re- spect quite as reprehensible. In the latter there is no well-defined conspir- acy to deceive anybody, though both of the parties to such jimeracks do fre- quently find themselves deceived. It would not be out of place to legislate such performances into the realm of misdemeanors at any rate. The ten- dencies of the times seem to be favorable to the growth of the idea thal marriage is a ceremony to be lightly entered into and its obligations to be easily put off, A mock martiage ought to be impossi- ble in a private parlor or in any respec. table company anywhere as a mock funeral. m— I RP — Though we seem grieved at the shortness of life in general, we are wishing every period of it at an end. The minor longs to be of age, then to be a business man, then to make up an estate, then to arrive at honors, then to retire, young women at a party of cadets, They were fun and the enjoyment of must have states girls wo FOOD FOR THOUGHT 1f you would not fall into sin, sit by the door of ter do nov nplation. rren but that Nothing present is so ba there are fertile field Nothing is so g0 ignorant of i» is beyond eredulo i becomes wr bit Wild There is always : it is the sl Converts who boast ness are not always I'he progress ol not so rapid as tha ward and shall be, is impossible. Conf thing ratber than two, of God. He that fears most trusts most. He tha ttrusts most fears most. The action of man is a representa- tive type of his thought and will; and a work of charity is a representative type of the charity within, in the soul and mind. He seldom lives frugally who lives by chance. Hope is always liberal, and they that trust her promises make little scruple of revelling to-day on the prom- ises of to-morrow. Honest or courageous people have very little to say about either their cou- rage or their honesty, The sun has no need to boast of its brightness, nor the moon of its effulgence. Some favorable event raises your spirits, and you think good days an preparing for you. Do not believe it. Nothing can bring you peace but your- self. Nothing can bring you peace but the triumph of principles. A man may usually be known by the books he reads as well as by the com- pany he keeps for there is a companion- ship of books as well as of men: and one should always live in the best com- pany whether it be of books or men. Moral beauty is the basis of all true beauty. This foundation is somewhat covered and veiled in nature; art brings jt out and gives it more transparent forms, It is here that art when it knows well its powers and resources, engages in a struggle with nature in which it may have the advantage. A silent look of affection and regard where all other eves are turned coldly away--the consciousness that we pos sess the sympathy and affection of one being when all others have deserted us —48 a hold, a stay, a comfort, in the deepest affliction which no health could purchase or power bestow. Alas! how few of nature's faces are left to gladden us with their beauty! the cares, and sorrowings, and hnges ing of the world change them as they change hearts; and it is only when those passions sleep and bave lost their hold forever, that the troubled clouds pass off and leave heaven's surface clear, lence and fear a when we speak