aim p—— Fo-night as I turned back the pages Of a book Time had fingered before, A nd whose leaves he'd the odor of ages, And imprints of much usage wore, A little brown curl I discovered, Vat fell froin the book to the floor. ld I sinned? don! Did a lover's sad tear the pag Heaven grant me its par- @ spot? The lower “forget-me-not?’’ It lay as if carved on a gravestone, And all of its sweetness forgot. ¥ held the curl up to the lamp-light, And, watching the gleam of its gold, There I heard with of the night A sad liltle story it told : But 1 promised the sacred old volume Its secret I would not unfold. the rush I would that the world knew its sor- row, ry 1 must not reveal, your book-case to-morrow 1 to your own heart appeal, know why the tattered old vol- Ih p44) © nid Aud en i you'll ume The little curl tries to conceal. RSA TIE SER, Al 1584 1 Paul. fall, had to go with him over the ifiic road to San Francisco, was at St, conductor, pe rsua Nort It was late i blo Kad - wilh a basket of provisions, Case my Wert On My journey. the season, and I feared a fr 101 fears realized, an 2 » depot I found a d in leon 110 Sige] O ke rood id lady seats my iy t yor + 1 { least t ne. an that I should bh pany for the gre wey, her dest took her withdrew i resolved to In sought the r the ater | nation back to CAT. 1011 She ag: drawing-room, and the soothing and a the ne out ito the ) stoke search of company smoker of xt which was oc« upied exclusively b who after a time dropped one or fguiet hints about the enviableness of position, and their desire 21 vi a 1i¢ berths, By« Roker Was +1 1 doubt ESS 1 andd-b i time, but lecture on the sin of gambling materializ examples.’ one felt quite di of his “terri after a while, 1 car and Mrs, Forsvth's door red to ask her if I might have the pleas ure of taking her to the table, and was pewarded by a gracious smile and a prompt acquiescence, Although I tried, without g to be inquisitive, to skirt round subject, I did not sue- | ceed in gaining any information as to her matrimonial condition. The next day, however, I was fortunate enough to discover that I had two or three times net Mrs. Forsvth's single sister when she had been visiting some mutual ac- | quaintauces in San Francisco, This fact served as a far better introduction than Hall's had been, and in the more intimate conversation that followed I at | last learned with delight that Mrs, For- | syth was a widow of over a year's stand- | AH wed] to ble went one my DOOKS, Sseenin the ther future home with her sister, We lost our dining-car, wuch to our regret, on the second day. day saw snow incessantly descending, and Mrs, Forsvth began to prophesy all ‘kinds of disasters, and even suggested mext station of any size, ing this course she was, however, dis- shaded by the joint eloquence of Hall and myself. Each hour that I spent in her society added to the charm that was aapidly stealing over me, by discovering mew similarities in tastes or ideas, and even by an occasional warmly c utested argument on slight points of difference, hen T awoke on the fourth morning the windows were thickly crusted with ice, and ‘though I could not scrape a place through which to observe our rate of progress, I felt sure from the motion tha! we were making little headway, I began” to feel a sensible yearning to reach the breakfast station, ard was when Hall came in, and ex- | pressed some surprise at seeing me up ! and dre ho wl, *1 think it me out.” I answered, “Tha last night was pretty queer. breakfast station?’ Forks about basket » supped Are | near Uh “The | ahead.” “And how long fifteen miles are 11 with a calm nese wl Lances was ich under the eircum \ a little as we go back?” scAfra { engine ant { nO Switch near, i up behi There's K for a 197 manage LOO DY men press my ag feminine chicken as began our repast whi ing. Presently reyt and langhed [his is “I think it’s very jolly “Oh! I don’t mean the breakfast, bu my sitting down as your guest, when, I had never: you. I said, “I'm an em nently respectable and proper person that is, for a lawyer. The conductor can vouch for me. He has known me for years.” “Yes he gave vou a character,” “Fhen you inquired?’’ I asked eager- Mrs, Fo three davs ago SON ‘1 assure vou,” ly, » “Oh, no,’ she answered, with a shade of mischief in her tone; *‘he volunteered the information.” “How good this tea is!’ I observed, tasting some that she had handed me, “I never could have made it so well my- | self.’ i “It certainly is nice, but it’s not due | to my skill, but to the quality of: the | tea.” I, of course, dissented from this view, | or at least glass eq, for I had no cups—of that tea, which | I was willing to swear was the most We were just finishing when Hall getting on so comfortably,’ “Yes, Yemarked Mrs. Forsyth; ‘‘the road is so smooth we could without any inconvenience. ”’ “You give the road too much credit, The fact is, we haven't moved “You don’t mean to say we're at the station already?” “No, ma'am; we're stuck.” “Stuck!” repeated Mrs, Forsyth, “Yes in the snow, Can’t budge an inch. I've telegraphed for relief.” “Oh, dear me! When shall we get out?’ “I hope to-morrow,” answerel Hall { { desire to make things as pleas: sible, | *Can’t you back { the lady, after a brief i spent in an inward “No, ma'am.’ “What shall w “We can only wait i try to send Forks by this : “And in the meantime there is basket s wnt 48 pos- asked vidently down?" Pause, © struggle, They'll trom , ma'am, One Provisions evening my I observed in ascheerful a tong { as I could command, [ had been year ing to offer my sympathy during H tion, but thought it be u ith the proce down easy ting ‘em 3 80 anxious to get said Mrs, Forsyth, ind lie down for a little i 1'11 be got { it better than I expect | observed Hall, as the door our sight Halt able to » tool ‘‘She's a { with an | would h i ting amount we done and tender my uosity, | \ was true Mrs, For more friendly and confi - mpet that t she possessed a qu ot i way of checking any at pts to digress into tende The third apparent ts rTeRS, morning n showed no change When Hall came in he, however, appeared unusually cheerful, “You look as if we were goin in ontside sit ' Lion io got “Not yet awhile. But that frost last \ a got a4 message will come down early this after noon, with extra snow-shoes, and that the men who think they ean manage it may try to get to the Forks, I suppose you have been on shoes “Yes: but to tell you the truth, I'm not particularly anxious to get away.” Hall broke into a quiet laugh. ‘I thought I saw which way the wind was blowing.'’ I didn’t quite relish his amusement, and was about to remonstrate and ex- plain, when suddenly a brilliant idea struck me,’ “Hall I exclaimed, “I want you to do something for me, and I'll be grate- ful all my life.”’ “What is it?” “When Mrs, Forsyth and I are at breakfast, I want you to" At this moment the latch of her door clicked, I stopped, and pulling him along, said: “Come outside; I can tell you in a min- ute or two, but she musn’t hear.’ On the platform I confided to him my scheme, What it was, and how it worked, the reader will soon learn, On my return I lighted the lamp, put on the water, and soon had the sim- ple breakfast ready Mrs, Forsyth did When she and did Keep long in she hier deplenisl Hie 1 Carne took her u not make custoin i + bout be ik Mr. ' 1 ¢ MCKIE : 5 up tl y With you. Ss DO use Crying, make the best of it." ‘Have y« ii evel “Yes ma'am, last year two davs,”’ And with lid again noticeable, “Twenty-two days alone,’ ejaculated Mrs, Forsvth, “in a snowy tomb, with a conductor and an old clergyman’? “Kate, dear Kate, won't you listen to me? Together the time will not be half we will share it. Think, of what you may save me from. twenty that tremulous eve- he went out she said, after a brief pause; to save your life, I might be “Then yon consent?’ I eried. “Are you very sure you love me?” *t As certain a2 that I breathe,”’ “Phen Robert—yes, 1 know your name-—that nice conductor told me you—you may ask the clergyman if he will. But oh! it’s awful to be married without a wedding dress.”’ “You shall have the handsomest that is to be got when we reach the coast,” “Phat won't be like being married in Remember, if you ever repent this, oy it. that I only marry you to save your life, “1 shall never repent. I love you, too much.” I started toward the door to soe the clergyman, She called me back, and as I held her in my arms she whispered, ‘Robert, I think I am a little selfish, after all.” The only way to have a friend 1s to be one, mo TALKING AROU FERNS, How a Coolness Sprang Up Hetween Two Friends New Use for Spring Chickens. nA SAS: A Free and Fearless Bill-Poster 1 udhesive nager hav ith Paulding find the w hole fy § ng woke ol ry 4 nce wo front of om of with show bills were pasted over, handsome {io away. In another instance, Paulding’s brigade pasted the sidewalks of Broadway and Fifth ave nue with dodgers that did not wear off for a week, When his men were in a merry mood they made nothing of dec- orating the backs of private carriages with advertising paper, and once they adorned a church front with the bills of a burlesque troupe, y $440 3 pavement, covered Even ‘4 and it indows him a clear the defilement the w cost sum I ——— — a - An Old-Fashioned Saving. This expression is a corruption of an when they migrate in autumn, form themselves into lines shaped like the the two lines following; and as they sail away, far above the trees, and beyond all danger from guns,-—on those cold mornings when the air is clear, and the glee, and join in a chorus, “Honk, honk, honk!” Any one who has heard those curions- ly sounding notes, never could mistake them. And the folks on the earth be- low who heard the birds’ wild call, in old times, realized the happiness of the winged creatures in being so high and safe, And so it became quite natural, when two persons met each other under peculiarly favorable circumstances for this or that enterprise, for them to say: “Everything is lovely and the goose honks high!” Bee Hunting in North Carolina, to this He sSo0Om ho stopped and ut- dumfounded suer by pre- his cocked rifle and giving the iperious order to ‘Stand and deliver.” The preacher as soon as he could col- his thoughts, replied rather weakly : My dear sir, I've got nothing in the world: I'm nothing but a poor Metho- dist preacher.” It was the fashion of that day for gentlemen to wear enormous seals and watch chains suspended from their fobs. and Mr. Cotton was in the fash. The quick eye of the robber (for n, impelled by « the man meant by § i ollowed him, urosity the man, w his pur TT ling a noted free-booter,) fastened on that watch-seal. “1 see you sport a watch,” “I beg you will spare me my watch,’ “No fooling.” said “Phelps,” impa- tiently. “‘Pass over that watch.” Reluctantly the preacher took out his watch and gave it to the robber, Before they parted ‘‘Phelps™ read his victim a homily on the ill effects of curiosity. ‘“This, sir, will teach you a lesson. Remember, when you wish to follow a stranger hereafter, first make sure that he is not a robber." Covon BYrup,—One ounce each of thoroughwort, si'ppery elm, flax seed and licorice stick, simmer together in one quart of water till the strength is best molasses, one half pound of loaf cold bottle tight. Dose one tablespoon- ful three ties every day, = .° a» “