In The Corufield. ——— ons Anon corn-blades are springing Out from the earth's dark mould; Unto the air and sunshine "Their leaves they now unfold. The slender blades grow stronger Under the dew and sun, And the huge grows clearer, deeper, Of the green stalks every one. There's a rustle of leaves in the cornfield, As the August breeze goes by, "Mid the stalks are the children playing, And they look to the bending sky; They ask whence comes the voices Of the winds in their mild, sweet mood, And wounder if its from Heaven, If it is the whisper of God, The field becomes a forest Of stalks and tassels and grain, When skies are grown more sober And falls September rain, Then the reapers with thelr sickles Garner the ripened ears, Symbols of life's ripe harvest For the granary of the years, IC RSA MALGRE LUL There never was a more popular young physician than Dr. Tredickar. His manners were the perfection of the sympathetic, ns tact and his judgment were only equaled by his devotion and skill, his personal magnetism was im- mense, and the cures he wrought were marvelous, Fresh from the hospitals as he was, and eager in the pursuit of his science, many old families welcomed him the aging physician who bad carried families, just setting up for themselves, chose him as likely to go along the road with themselves to the The | event certainly justified their and report of the young doctor's abil went through ide even extended to that not unfrequently he was called in consultation there with longer and wider repute than his own. | end, Clioice; | the country the next large city, so | physicians of | His diagnosis of a case was soswift and | sure that people used to say that Tredickar could tell what ailed you by | looking at you; and many a good man averred that she was more ben fited by his touch upon the pulse tha by another doctor’s prescription. V very little medicine; the case was ex- | treme when the druggist. him in Ins gig he was wont to administer, apparently potent, and made up under his own formula. From a peculiar liquid in a | phial he measured one drop; if by any | accident a portion of another drop left | be sent much custom to | He certain medicaments that | carried about with | the phial, the glass had to be rinsed and | the single drop tried again; to this drop a half-glass of sweetened water being added, the patient was allowed a tea- | spoonful of the result once in six hours, | if waking. It wasgenerally understood that this liquid was something of Dr. | Tredickar’s own importation, difficult | to obtain and enormous in cost ; and the gratitude his patients felt for the Kindness of his thus procuring and Keeping on hand what they could hard- ly have procured for themselves was | something excelled only by the rapidity | with which they picked up health and | strength under its effect. the remarkable things he was fond of administering was a tiny pill that he always had about him, and that he left in small numbers to be taken at morn- ing and night, under certain other ai- rections, always ordering that if the patient felt too much braced on the sec- ond day, with ringing ears or crowded sensations in the head, or a pain in the left thumb, the namber was to be less. ened, the pills, however, to be taken three days, and then omitted for three days, until a cure was affected. If these and the liguid did not work in such cases as he prescribed them, then Dr. Tredickar seemed to take another view of the case, to devote himself to it with personal assiduity and flery earnestness, and to endeavor to bring the patient up a8 if on the strong wings of all his pow er and learning. The fact was that Dr. Tredickar be- lieved in nature. He knew that in cer- tain malignant phases of disease the physician and strong drugs and heroic measures are as necessary as aw to breathe; but he believed that many whimsical, bypochondriae, feeble mind. ed, weary and worn-out patients were to be helped by a purely hygienic treatment, by proper diet, and other aids to health, and should not have one organ or another interfered with by the strong poisons of drugs; and in every such mstance he gave his priceless lig- uid and little dark pills, and let nature and the tonic effect of hope and faith do the reviving work. And of course he bad many such patients, as many such people abound; and the cures were #0 satisfactory that his fame spread in wide and wider circles, people who had been hurt and not helped by drugs leaving other physicians for his adviea, And he gave the advice, and his dark little pills too; and with some individ. uals relief. came quickly, and with others where the system had been still further upset by strong medicines, not 80 quickly. If he had at any time doubts as to the empiricism of this treatment he excused it to himself by stating the weakness of human nature, and by remembering that as cure was what was wanted he was the one to de- cide how to effect the cure, But as Dr. Tredikar’s practice in- Another of | pt ing slices of simal bits that once he bad, and, fre. quently called away, he would leave the task to pretty Dorothy Merle to finish, and she would divide and redi- vide the tiny segments, and roll them between two fruit-knives, and set them in the sun to dry,and have all Lis boxes filled with fresh supplies of the little dark pills when he came home, Dolly did that no more faithfully than she did everything else, though; she was housekeeper and maid-of all-work and general overseer for the young doctor, and knew very well how to take care of him, and of herself, too. She was a pretty thing, this young Dorothy Merle; not very tall and rather slender, with dark brown bair falling off the low white brow in natural waves, with brillant hazel-brown eyes and small, fine features, among which was a mouth whose rosy lips parted over teeth like seed pearl. She seldom smiled; she was a grave little body, in- tent on her duty, a farmer's daughter, brought up to be a lady too, with a good common education and simple manners, Often when. the doe- tor returned from his visits he left his study and went out into her little sit- the fire was and the hearth was clean, and sat down there to have a glass of milk to school ting room, where of ginger bread, and creased he had not the time for divid household matter, ana then from | disinterested common- Somehow this bref el Sense, rest and 1 2 o5el + Ove wo learning more every listen, Often, her br ighted with terest, the doctor “by Jove! ! Why wien r cheek flushed and WI eves would what a prettily wasn't she station of life? old If Forse rort ey HOSEL DUITYILE in some olher and stormy ing the pleasure of ite Dorothy. was saying: **Con- sation nobly planne ife herself.’ woman over at he wondered why he 3 t beside and sit g of all t man at speaking: formed slowly, If only uld pretty women co be pa nese jong s s friendly words, never knew. One day he Spinsier in engaged her, she said; and It was of no Dorothy was y * ¥ Orrent Of of her sweetness and then in one decision- all del ght purpose, him to her charm and i s} i Teed mg-faltering use for i decision of I no Tage and thing of Doiothy, and search as across any trace of her. other, discarded his dark now, but he plunged back into his busi- ness with a sort of madness, He tried he never looked at a woman er spoke to his spinster if he could he p it; he studied as if his life depended on it; practice he had been on the point of surrendering to the new doctor he re tained, and he rode far into the night to exacting people on outlying farms. and was up early in the daybreak for, his laboratory experiments and books: he forgot to eat, and he was unable to sleep, Of course such devotion to work had its own reward in one way. Dr. Tre. dickar was becoming a com fortably rich man for a country practitioner, and was reaping a ripe harvest of fame, that was, however, as worthless to him as the breath of the idlest breeze, And so one year followed another until twenty had slipped away, and the babies to whem he bad given their first bolus had babies of their own ; and fevers and consumptions and amputa- tions and autopsies filled up the meas ure of his days; and there seemed to Dr. Tredickar nothing worth living for; and worn with work, irregular food, unhealthy hurries sympathies, disgosts, fatigues, one morning Dr. Tredickar discovered that he was without appe- tite, without strength, without a hope or wish, looking on the world as a mass of disease, and saw, with hardly sure prise or regret, that there was no health in him. Dr. Tredicker had scarcely the ener- Zy left to set about curing himself; he really did not care. Ie took one little dose and and ther, and would not have taken them if his aged spinster had not set them by his plate, As he looked about his dull and desolate howe he thought that this was the time when a man needed a wife and cheer, and cursed himself for not thinking of it twenty years ago. Dr. Fellows enme to see him, and told him he must do so a REAR SERA Rly less and melancholy. Then Dr. Har. vey came, and said he must do this and that; and he did, and he felt so much worse that he went himself to see Dr, Field. And then all three bad a con- sultation, and one shud it was the heart, and one said it was the spleen, and one said it was the kidneys, and he himself wits sure it was the liver, And as they could do nothing that had not already been done, they sent him off to the springs to see what the old earth could do. But the Virginia springs did Dr. Tredickar no good-—hot or eold or sul- the Canadian did phur—and springs Yermont and were equally him no good, and the the Arkansas springs worthless in has case; and at was on his way to the Wisconsin springs, hopeless, listless, wretched, alling gen- and ailing particularly, mere force of habit trying to get well did or simply inct of erally and vet not caring whether he not, with no object and no aim — inst self-preservation, ; He was within couple of Waukesha a miles of when he encoun tered Allen on the cars—an old cls not met for ye and of course they each had a work the frst Waukesha?” CONS ingly, LH I tried it. i Was in precisely your and topic was heal tried them all mdition. al me $ it me tell ured a good she—1'd just as lie fit ! “Nonsense, Allen.” “No nonsense about He cured me; she's ie a comfortable + has some wonderful nostroms 1 tf . 3 : 21 A RIIOW, 8 iv “Natural 1 . Taylor’ if she o. If she ean, re cure comes from, 8 t} £3 bd i nather dis snd was thi IArviston 1 wt ¥ ¥ . VIO’ presence, It was a comfortable matronls ¢, he found: but he wasted ond glance or thougt . whi ed his tf unar | W RREMOE 2 symtoms and welt , just had so often been nt with his own patients paused, “I think I can “If vy implicitly obey my instructions for ¢ months, I + veal sew undertake it em as he im for doing. pale And when he wis the low reply. 2 w can help you, without your prom- The felt as if he was really willing to pr 15¢ anything, And he did. “In the first place, then, "said his new doctor thought a moment, vlar point of your nourishment. are not te go without eating because Un cool water, not iced. Have a good breakfast, you know best what dis tresses you least. No coffee or tea, but shells, if you like. No stimulant, no quinine, no quassia, no iron, no strych- nia, during 2 day: no morphia, no chloral, no bromides, during the might. At 11 o'clock in the forenoon I wish you lo have a raw egg beaten up with milk on one day: on the next day alter nate it with a full cup of strong beef tea or veal tea; on the third day with plain milk. At one you will dine plain. ly but satisfactorily At three, take another glass of milk, or beef tea, or egy, whichever you did not take mn the morning, & plain but hearty supper at #ix, and between supper and bed.-time another glass of milk, If you wake in the night, have some milk standing by you to drink; but you won't wake. None of your food should be hot. You will take no other medicine than some which 1 will give you, Can you remem. ber all this?" “1 should think so.” “Please repeat it,”’ He was humiliated, but be did 80.” “Now. today I want you to walk — “Walk! It's all I can do to drag one foot after the other now.” “I want you to walk a quarter of a mile and back,” she said, not heeding his interruption, *‘and do that every day for a week, The next week make it a half mile; the next week a whole mile, Keep that up for three weeks, and then double your portion until you can do ten miles & day with ease,” * “I never can in the world. “Do as I say, if you please, Before your walk take 8 tepid sponge bath, and on returning from walk rub yourself down thoroughly with a flannel mitten—1 will give you one; then go to bed entirely undressed for a couple of hours, and rub yourself again on rising. (Goto bed every night at 10, and lie in bed ten hours. are not to open a book or look in 4 news. paper for three months’ “Impossible ['* “Perfectly possible. You have Idea how well the world will without your attention in such case. You are to do everything which implies the no get on to rest it; when you are able to walk gun with Be as This Hmped much out of COOrs 48 you can, is she ACTORS one among many boxes. “Take one first dav,” she said, “two the next, 3 after a | hen i Weel the three ink aia, , bluntly, “Because if there is any mnel in them I won't “Never ree months, no fee till you are cund, Good m *" tT +} : ng. And the door wa opened, } y x Oiitatde ¢ tf Via LE WARS O61 Lie mitside of 1 gy MEEVEE] O DAY uy ee, alu + of yout i B IRIYBK slew { “14 * be said, severely, * Tavior." answered bh married. | ought, Mrs. Q sie been . i, assumed name,’ “You wil “1D vou think 1 he cried, g back to the East alone? Crue; day in And Dr brown-bread Tredickar's wife still makes pills from every > _—-— evolutionary Reminiscences, The following letter from the grand. a lieutenant in the Revolutionary rmy, who was one of the escort pres ent at the hanging of Andre, is an in- teresting and trustworthy contribution Calcaco, Nov. 6, 1885, My Dean Sin.—The wanton de struction by some miscreant in human form with dynamite of the monument erected by yourself in commemorstion of the spot where Major Andre, of the British army, was hanged October 2, 1780, deserves the execration of mane Kind, and such vandalism should be condemned by the entire world, as it no doubt will be. Major Andre was a gallant officer, and there were none braver than Andre, This is shown by the hazardous and death task which he undertook for the good of his country. The cause in which he was enlisted was a bad one, but one with which he had nothing to do, My grandfather, Lieut. Levi Par- ker, of the Continental army, and at that time with the army of Washington encamped in near proximity to Tappan was one of the escort that saw him hung and ever after that day regretted the sad event which took Andre to his doom, He always said that by the stern rules of war it tould not have been otherwise, but deplored the fact of Andre's execution, while the one (Gen Arnold) who planned and plotted the expedition which took Andre to his fate went free, though doomed forever thereafter to disgrace which nothing could take away. Trusting that there may yet be found some manner in which your praiseworthy object may be fully accomplished ard the identical spot where the brave young officer suffered the death penalty be forever perpetua- ted with granite shaft or otherwise, I am most respectfully yours, (Signed) CmanLesC, H SEINE The Maternal Instinet in Reptiles, PRO hsin! 1 mis ——— ‘The cold-blooded adder would scarce- ly be selected as an emblem of mater. nal love, and yet there can be no doubt that it has frequently lost its life while | Beeking to preserve the existence of its young. Mr Garratt in a recent edition of his interesting Marvels of Instinet, gives a very circumstantial account of an stance in which a very large adder was seen on a bank by the roadside basking in the sun. The narrator of the story advanced to assall the crea- ture with his stick. On observing him { he gave a slight hiss, at the same time raising her head a little and opening | her mouth. The signal was understood throat. But offspring caused down her for mother’s destruction, for the | glided thought her act de- i and the snake, gorged with Mr. into | strike again, { young, lay dead at his feel her body ¢ ratt then removed he siders.” He opened the and the four y alive, The little t come of the “in iniuke oung all came out animals of form had they knew not Mr. the dom Inanners s A8 ange happened as if Crane | Lo go or what to do. att noyed apparently at ib | has been sometimes expressed nukes affording thei from danger: sth Sanford the a well-to-go her own son, I Years oid, Satur he father was absent ies in Hen { the « SAYS | mother the | father's Winchester rifle from and entered the prush-thicket the house and the mother was picking cotton. his rifie on a stick, the boy says he sent a bullet whizzing through his mother’s { brain. After she had fallen he lowered his rifle and shot her four times, each ballet entering the body, Having sat- isfied himself that she was dead, he emerged from the thicket and drew the body about fifty yards and carefully covered it with brush, He then hid | the rifle in the woods, and entered the house to await his father’s return. About 8 o'clock the father came home and instituted a search for his wife, assisted by the boy, who professed he had not seen his mother since noon. The father did not suspect the boy, and they together searched the neighborhood all that might and next day. Sunday evening some neighbors fonnd the body secreted under the brush, and suspicion was directed to the boy Valentine, the only person on the plantation with his mother at the thine, On being pressed he confessed everything, saving he had also intended to kill his father and bury them both in the barnyard; then he was gotug to write to his ancle in Wisconsin and tell him they had both died, and after this he said he was going to sell the plantation and buy a lot of fine horses and start out robbing stages, and organize a band of robbers with himself as chief. When his father learned that his only son was the murderer he was driven nearly crazy. { comm itle day AT He £1} WAL rietta Jail, 4 v it i field he took and was in his rack between the tield in which his Resting Waar Sux Sain. —A boy who has been sent to carry asilver card basket to a young lady as a bridal present, was asked upon his return to the office, if he found the right place, ‘Oh, yes, “See the girl herself?" “w on “hd she seem “Very much so.” Farly Traditions, The stories which cirenlate through our cities, or in a thickly inhabited neighborhood even in the country, or find thelr way into newspaper columns, have always In these days, be they never #0 strange and startling, a touch of the if a ghost makes his or her appearance it is realistic and prosaic about them, sure to be arrayed in a coat or dress of the most modern cut, and sitting railway in if a 4 thie or hanson cab: she mntter-of facet carriage youug lady elopes does it in coolest, post manne: ible, and never forgets to pack up very poss even her tooth-brush: the horrors wotmetling 4 al savors of the commonplace in thel; aAtmad 1 ‘ sensationalism, and generally have for scene of action a seullery full of wes, and enlivened by thé melo. or a market garden peopled with } bushes, ever, very different in the region whither our readers, Exmoor, linger among ghost would Ling Ly Were ali es i5y parents en give when he desired { be removed n after death This fact conhbdential her finger OWhD servant, as kr isbhand’s intrasted with the whole arr ntendin ho had been { the funeral angements—his mas. * "i fh i - g 0 meet © Sad pro- | cession until it got Lo the place of inter. The man’s dishovest greed was excited by the thought of the diamonds ring. He stole to the where the ba ly had been fepos ment, chamber ited, and tools he once oO in the the coffin with some with him, hoping at get possession of the coveted treasure: but the ring could not be got off the cold, stiff finger, so he used a knife to try to remove it. What was his terror when blood began to flow from the sup- posed dead hand, and the lady sat up and gazed around her, No record tells what was the ultimate fate of the would- be robber and unintentional preserver, but legendary lore says the lady, asa token of thankgiving for her restora- tion to ber husband and children, built the church on the site of the old host- lery, opened brought nA A SSS Plains of India. Iu the piains of India at the eom- mencement of the monsoon, storms occur in which the lightning runs like snakes all over the sky, at the rate of three or four flashes in a second, and the thunder roars without a break for, frequently, ene or two hours at a time, During twelve years’ residence in india, says a writer, I heard of only two human beings, and I think, three build« ings, being struck, although in parts of Lower Bengal, the population amounts to more than 600 to the square mile. I always attributed the scarcity of aocci- dents to the great depth of the stratum of heated alr next to the ground keeping the clouds at such a height that most of the flashes pass from cloud to cloud, and very few reach the earth. The idea is supported by the fact that in the Himalayas, at 6000 feet objects are fre- quently struck, I have seen more than a dozen pime trees wiich have been injured by the lightning on the top of one mountain between 8000 and 9000 feet high. In the British islands thun- der storms are sald to be more danger. ous in Winter than in Summer, and such a fact, if true, can be explained by the very thin stratum of air then interve.