Resiguation, I do not care If [may never climb the heights of fame, If I may nover win a glorious name Nor hear, with well-pleased oars, world's acelalm, I do not care. the 1 should not care Fhongh ull obscure and lowly ba my lot, fhongh men pass idly by and know me not, Though 1 should die and straightway be forgot, I should not care, 1 would not care : Though all the world should shun the path 1 tread, Though words of wore said Why, when the head shame and scorn of me grasses waved abova my I would not care, { would not care a cent plano hermit, most austere, u lowly hermitage severe, thousand dollars, say, a year, I would not care, Were 1 0 Living On thirty ESL SUNG IN THE TWILIGHT. Tr he sultry Che heat was unusual for an English Summer, and seemed to rest upon evervthing like a palpable weight. Even the clamorous london sparrows were silenced by it. The noise of wheels grinding on the stone pavements, when soma provision-cart stopped at a neigh- boring back-door, seemed an imperti- Denes the hot stiliness. To live at a Hans Brevdel thought, , demanded more energy than fate had left him. He y on a hin his “threestorv- * room, and panted restlessly with Six years in England had not f his German expletives to thoug with the wife of hi youth and his ] But when she die he quiet scenes among which they ha wd together berame insupportable him. The old longing of his boyhoo for a wider and more stirring life sessed him again, and he took his violin and his little daughter and went to England, But again in London h failed to find any bri i had never msen higher weeond violin in an orchestra, For the last lie, and s to or fe Wa yg IR SUCCESS, u ove. truret} tog i he three months his een 1 Ne mys he had been tl 13 malady which sa 1 beat down h } dwindl . ¢ half-crown, but Minng y too sadly well. She hs ng desperately over this ngs when her father’s exclamation moned her to his side, “What should she do-—what could sive do?" she had been asking herself, Her one sole accomplishment was to 1g, and she had never sung as yet for any one but her father. Her voice was 10t strong enough to sing in public, he had always said, In truth, he had been too jealously careful of his delicate blos- som of a girl ever to contemplate for her a fate which would compel her to strug- gle with the world. He had trained her very thoroughly, de Le sier 2 A8 onl 0 i {i F111 sing. worst came to the worst, she could teach -or something.’ “Or something’ is the stronghold of dreamers, but during those last three months it had seemed but a desperate refuge to Hans Breydel. And yet he lid not guess that already ‘‘the worst” was ale his door. That very morning the landlady had called Minna out, and asked for the last month’s rent, which there was no money to pay. “I don’t want to be hard.’ the woinan said, and vou always paid punc- tual up to now, 1'll wait a week or two longer, but more than that I cannot say. I'm a poor woman, as lives by her lodg- ers, ”’ “Oh, I'll get some money, somehow,’ Minna answered; and then she had come back nto the room with her father, and sat at the window watchin the Mot, sleepy children in the back street below; watching them yet taking no senso of anything, beset by the one awful question: What could she do to Keep arool over their heads-to give her «father food and carve until he should get ‘better?!’ The glaring sunlight shone down on “the heat-stricken, listless world, It seemed to ghrivel up all hopes, all fila. sions; to force her to contemplate the “bare and terrible facts of life. Where should she turn for aid or counsel? Her baffled thoughts seemed to go up and down purposcless on the wretched tread mill of her anxious questioning till her father’s exclamation broke the evil spell, and she hastened to him, glad of the interruption. She took up a fan and waved it to and fro, but seemed to make the musician nervous, ‘sit down,’ he said; ‘sit down, dear dieart, and sing, It may help me to for- | get the heat. And I want also to see what you can do.” The girl obeyed. Her fresh young voice rose on the heavy, heated air; a soaring voice, clear and sweet, conquer- ing for the moment her father’s listless. ness and discomfort. “Tieber Gott,”’ he cried: “‘hear her! It is a voice of silver, not yet, Sing yet once more the song ner, who loved me, and whom 1 loved in the far, old days, Sing the song he rest, tI, and bad talked { whieh we thought would be all of { cess and of glory about the future, ue SUC- the song that he put | our hopes aud our dreams into 3g." | A sudden thought flashed into Min i na's anxious heart--a hope so sudden i that it made her breathless, A { door seemed to open all at once: { ““Father,’ shesaid, | even now. Let me go to him! you once; he will help you now.” | dpi”? Has Breydel cried, hotly, ng himself in his | **Helj I will have We will help ourselves and each othe: i Shall I, who walked in the old days by Richard Wagner's side, grovel at 1 feet now; I, who have failed, who has i ) il 5 y aimnost i} 5 3 f1¢] I He 18 in London, bed as he Spoke, none of his help. 1s at his feet, 80: but y heart's succeeded? ing me once more hi } 1 r i He Ciell, music, and FEEL Bang uttered its ery of g le the door Heard song was over, Dr. Green to it from his t ing oulsi ¥ ii 4 fi it mught came ! ut by-and-by an r, and perhaps she m 1 NOW 80 many sil » forgot the cl ments of the emply years i . and dreamed again the old dreams, Mean- time, Minna dreamed also, sitting | side him; dreamed her young dream of | to-day; how she would sing to ome pur- pose at Jast, and how perhaps some | manager would hear her,—she had { heard of Rachel ,—and she would be { chosen of fortune and beloved of fate in | the future; but, first of all, she would | be able to help, in the present, this dear father of hers, and turn the days bright. | drew nigh. She gave her father some | beef-tea, and for her own supper she made a bit of bread do duty, | last the twilight fell—the long, summer twilight, that always seems so much longer in London than anywhere else, And seeing her father drowsily inclined, breath of fresh air. sleepy he would have been surprised at parting promise from the landlady to look after him now and then, Minna Breydel started out, to test, for the first time, the uncertain humor of the world, Once out of the door, her heart began to fail her. How should she, how could she, raise her volce to sing-—she, who had grown up in the shade, and had never, m all her life, sung for any other listener than her father? But from the very thought of that father she must gather courage. What joy it would be to help him! Some impulse urged her to get quite away from home and beyond. the proba bility of meeting any familiar faces be- fore she began. She wandered on and on, until she came near K n Gardens, Once or twice she was about to lift up her voice, and wads deterred by some gaze which seemed to her curi- ous or impertinent. She paused at length, before a pleasant house where were frequent musical gatherings in a quiet street of Kensington. © The draw ing-room windows were , and their t, white curtains sti with the soft breath of the evening. Who Might be behind those curtains? What fate for her did they veil? A star had arisen and looked down at i hugh Sng i hoe star n ope, They must be music lovers in the house for some one struck, with the touch of if to illustrate something that was said, With the sound Minna’s courage rose, and she broke the following silence with an uncertain note, Then her voice grew stronger, and she sang: “Why woop ye by the tide, ladle? Why weep ye by the tide? I'll wed ye 10 my youngest son. And ye shall be his bride: And yo shall be his bride, ladle, Hae comely to be seen, But aye she loot the tears down fa For Jock o' Hazledean." The tender sweetness of her voice the gentle dusk, The low wind stirring the leaves, the cloud-like white wings scarcely moving across the blue, the faint breath of the she and they were as one. white comrades, gather of emaories, “Hark!” cried one of how beautiful! curtains two men listened--good who had been talking pleasant plans and them, It is the soul of YOICe And then both men listened quietly till the song was over. There was a moment’s silence sudden impulse, the girl began to sing that other song which Richard Wagner had written for her father—that “of wonder and hope,’ full of present joy and future } Soft as itself the voice aros strong climbed towards heaven. Bho beard it and one of the*one who had wfore-——reached out and grasped his comrade’s hand. ‘Listen! listen!” two i song Qilise, men them sp Ren i and the seemed | the SON Was over, elder of the two sprang fron almost threw his hurry, and down the Minna B himself od before err Wag- 3 . gestina- membrance; since now the great musi- cian has gone on,—where the singers are immortal, and the made with hands, msm I WP Value of Foods. articles of diet are the safest, and that is, in my opinion, another argument in favor of plain living. lest are the safest, and let me add, the best are the cheapest. The butcher, have several qualities; and there is a stage at which all animal foods arrive, when kept in shops, which renders them to a large extent poisonous, and | teration. We often hear it sald that shop éges, as Lhey are called, are good enough for frying, with bacon for ex- ample, { egg that has even a suspicion of stale- ness about it is deleterious to health, not to say dangerous, no matter whether it be fried or boiled, | the same may be said of flesh meats of {all kinds, and I will not exeept a hare ior venison. 1 am quite prepared to { have this little sentence pooh-poohed by the robust and healthy. I only said that I | have the courage of my and furthermore, that 1 and dyspeptics, and those with deli cate digestions In my thoughts as | | write, I grant you, my heaithful athlete, who can tramp over the moors with gun and bag from morning dawn till dewy eve, and never feel tired, that the eating of long-kept game may not seem to injure you, but the t convictions, bare fact that piquant sauces and stimulants are needed to aid digestion, 1s exceedingly suspicious, There are two animals in } and i partict that like thei tender: on som fort eal must be Leaving | | aii: the present, they its seleclion, om i careful in syncrasy out of count for although every one ought to know what agrees with him and what does not, there are many things connected the value and digestibility obtained from various sources | that I do well to remind the reader of. most £1 i 1 Oe -_—- Popular Errors, nutriment in There 1. That there is any {beef tea made from extracts, is none whatever. 2. That gelatine is nutritions, It will not keep a cal alive, Deel tea and gelatine, however, possess a certain reparative power, we know not what, 3. That an egg 1s eq to a pound of meat and that every eat eggs. Many, especially nervous or bllious not eat them: and to such jurious, 4. That because milk is an import article of food it must be forced uj patient, Food that a person cannot endure will not cure. 5. That arrowroot is nutritious iy starch and water, ive quickly prepared. hat cheese {3 injurious in It ia, asa rule, contra-indica- ted, being usually indigesfible:; but it is a nutriment and a $ YU TY 3 61 temperament Lt, can- eggs are in- ia sin £3, Cases, concentrated She sought me “And she vheyed, 1 She but not. She cannot be blamed, sang under my window, knowing not that it was mine, the old song of youth and hope and love,—~the song I gave thee when we had wandered and dreamed and been happy together in the Black Forest, in the long ago time, And I remembered the old days, and I the pavement, with her face like the moonlight, and ber voice that I think must be like the songs of heaven; and I asked how thesong I had given thee found again my old friend than in ali else I have gained in London. Is theo Hans Breydel 7" And through the darkness the weak one again, as in the days of love and hope and youth of which the song had sung. And the rest follows, as a matter of course, The highest, dearest right of love is to help the beloved; and Richard Wagner claimed that right, On the shore of the North Sea, across which German eyes can look from England towards the fatherland, Hans Breydel spent the August and September days, And was it the breath of the sea or the breath of hope that breathed into him new life? At any rate he grew well again. And when the world went back to town, and entertainments for the Winter it was not hard for him whom Richard Wagner recommended, and who was Ric Wagner's friend, to get such a position as he had never held before, Thus came Beosparity] the violinist and his da fr “proherity and the fulfilment of long delayed hope—and to- day, if you go to one of prettiest houses in London, where Minna reigns as wife and mother, and Hans Breydel figures as proud grandfather, you will goo-—in the of honor over the man. tel-piece—richly framed, the song that Richard Wagner wrote, that Minna Breydel sang, and before it always a 7. That the cravings of a patient are whims and should be denied. The stomach often needs, craves for, and digests articles not laid down In any dietary. Sach are, for example, fruit, pickles, jams, cake, or bacon with fat, | cheese, butter and milk. | 8 That an inflexible diet may be | marked out which shall apply to every | case, i i ! i cided by the opinion of the stomach, The stomach is right and theory wrong, and the judgment admits no appeal. A diet which would keep a healthy man healthy might kill a sick man; and a diet sufficient to sustain a sick man would not keep a well man alive. In- creased quanlity of food, especially of liquips, does not mean increased nutri. ment, rather decrease, since the diges- tion is overtaxed and weakened. Strive to give the food in as concentrated a form as possible, Consult the patient’s stomach in preference to his cravings; and if the stomach rejects a certain article do not foree it. ¢ Length of Days. At London, England, and Bremen Prussia, the Jongest day has sixteen and # half hours, At Stockholm, in Sweden the | day has eighteen and a hatf hours. At Hamburg, in Germany, snd Dantzle, Prussia, the longest day has seven hours. At St. Peters- burg, and Tobolsk, in Siberia, day has nineteen hours, and the shortest five. At Tornea, in Fin. land, the longest day has twenty-one hours and a half, At Wardhuys, In BEDS. Of All Nations and in All | The beds of ths anclents had in gene- i ral few peculiarities i them from our own simpler | Both the Greeks and the Romans had { their beds supported on frames that re- sembled our modern bedateads; feather | and wool mallresses were common, {and the bedclothing, in the luxurious periods of each nation, were richly | decorated with elaborate needlework. North American Indians; but at a later | period they made use of straw sacks as | beds. The ancient | couch of peculiar shape and a profusion | of soft cushions and richly embroidered drapery. i In the Bible were probably of the ordi- nary simple kind. During the Middle Ages beds were made of coarse canvas { and filled with straw or leaves, These could be opened and the litter remade daily, as is tho custom to-day with the | matiresses in the old-fashioned inns of France and Italy. The bedsteads were low posted, and usually had a canopy at the head. In the Bayeux tapestry Edward the Confessor is represented {lying upon a raised seat, his head sup- ported by square pillows, and the | canopy over his head is attached to the wall. , in his romance of *‘Ivan- hoe,’ describes one of the beds in the mansion of Cedric the Saxon, as con- a rude ‘hatch or bed frame, stuffed with clean straw, and accom- | modated with two or three sheepskins by way of bedclothes.” ‘The bed of the Lady Rowena “*was adorned with rich tapestry and surrounded with curtains of dyed pur ? The Seo y ‘ ing oi house of dor stead, an 1mmense piture, having a Canopy rner by Lhe posis, hionable sleeping couch, lls mention ‘posted These paneled netimes of elegant The column ice of fan supj weame UU sorted al each ox he fas yme of the old ¥ seit work b bedsteads were 1 and massive architecture, huge ballusters, and rose dado bases, and all the with decora- | resembled fromm square frame pieces were carved tive moldings of various patterns, On some of ibe earlier bedsteads the col- umns terminated with figures repre- senting the four evangelists, In a medieval ballad there is mention made of *“the four gospelious (gospelers or evangelists) on the four pilloues (pil- lars, and heads of angels, all of one mould.” The invocation still u in some of the English country places i f this old cust« TK, Luke a C30 € yas } of Queen El one day while wandering about the spacious mans! re the mai were making the , and spying arrangement of the sliding beds quite taken with them. In his epuntry he had slept on straw in hostier’s loft, but in | found that rather i account of the cold. | master: **Sir, there are a sort of little | beds under the great beds in this house, Was own #4 Lae | you to suffer me to lie in one of them,’ In the sleeping chamber was usually a “perch,” answering to an oil lasaioned clothes horse, On it, says an old writer, “hang your clothes, mantles, frocks, cloaks, doublets, fur, winter clothes, and of summer.” Shakspeare’s *‘second best bed’ with ‘the furniture,’’ which he bequeathed to his wife, Ann Hathaway, was, un- doubtediy, one of those huge Eliza- bethan bedsteads with canopy, curtains and square pillows, The furniture eon- sisted of the “hanged beds,” *‘harden sheets,” of fine flax, “‘flock beds cover- lets,” *‘pillow beers” and “‘counter points,” so named from the fact that the squares were in contrasting colors, The well-to-do gentleman of the late Middle Ages kept a good supply of bedding. In “The of the Shrew,” Gremio glibly names over the furniture of his country house, and is | careful to include bed apparel, In ivory coffers I have stuffed my crowns, In cypross chests my arras, counter points, Costly apparel, tents and Fine Hon, Tukey RIOR’ ag with pear], Variance of Venice gold and neediework, The “Great Bed of Wave men. is the the Tudor style, twelve feet square, of solid oak, and elaborately carved. For three centuries or more it has been served at the inn of the Saracen’s in the town of Ware, in Hertfordshire, As many as twelve persons are sald to have slept in it at one time, How Paper Doors are Made, i Paper doors cost about the same as woud, and are said to be much better, because there is no shrinking, swelling, The is com- A SQUIRRELS LIFE A Pet With a Conscience—¥lis Advens tures With a Dentist, ssi ¢ fle began life by t nest when an infant, | hands of my nephew, then al srvard and lived in his pockets. le could be y at any moment if tor stand on his head -—which wa | convenient He always went tion, which aust have Deen very grat | ing to the professors, He became mine iat the end of 5 Burnmey That is, I said 1 would keep be ulely Time would fail to tell all He was f His int of the faniing out He fell the | put to glee Inasde its 03 vu 8 to recitia- became arn ways. superb tail, vellous, 1l¢ | affect bh than man right from ¢ x perient § gnid of all men an him alone I came { Wrongs from betraving fearing would tl asked now 10 brought at hen the victim and heard the tale, be said “I call it mur- der, plain and flat!” You might as { well kill a baby! Take him to Dr. ——, the dentist, Dr, — fell in Jove with | Pim, as most people did, and explained ito me that he would first cut off half { the length of the teeth, then the nerves would retract and he would cut off the rest to the right length a week later ; and thus the squirrel would not suffer pain, The burden of the operation, I must gay, fell upon me. 1 had to hold him, and he could kick like a mule. You kpow squirrels are very strong in their hind legs. 1 don’t think be was much hurt, but his rage and indigna- tion at the whirligig thing the dentists use was unbounded, and his shrieks brought people in from the street to know what was happening. As I car. ried him off the dentist said : “Come back in two weeks and I will take the rest off.” Ishall always beleve that squirrel heard him. The moment he got back into his house he seized a hick- ory nut and went to work atit. The next morning I saw a slight nick in one of the teeth. For two days nothing was heard but the sound of fling from his bed, to which be had retired. At the end of two days one tooth was off ; at the end of four he had the prettiest little pair of front teeth yom ever saw, and they never gave him any further trouble. I am sure you want to know what became of him. I don’t know. I went to Eu for a year, and left him with a friend. When I came back never mentioned him to me, and I never had the to ask for him, for I krew be must have come to some untimely end, ————— Hot air, drawn over steam pipes that are heated by exhaust or live steam and then blown through pipes to various points, where it is a satisfactory Inethod of beating shops. Ost ones, W hes saw