My Toast, Not to the queen of fashion; Not to the jeweled breast; ¥ot to the slave of fashion; Not to the royal crest. Not to the brow that’s fairest; Not to the eye most bright; Not to the genius rarest, Ihe toast 1 give to-night. Not to the rich, almsgiving; Not to the lips most red; Not to the great ones living; to the sacred dead, . Not My toast is far more cheery [0 every man with eyes, Who hears the drama, weary Behind a bat of size. i lift my goblet foaming, To that Who sweet girl, so sage, takes off her hat, ite and pat, t us see the stage. her 1 lift the 1 Brimming with sparkliog And quafl full measure, To each new pleasure, Her bare head gives to rine, OAKer, wine, REIS. WINNING A PRIZE. lignity to maintain, an and pack up,’ COO] OF goes, Of two ay aid Mrs nite ell 1, by half,” said Almira. her head. “*Anvhow h a fuss about it that Mr. esson has got to Although Mrs, ta word of fault to find, his way as regular Sat. comes around, and i cooms tos. But Mr. Pon- wouby Hunt says that don’t prove any- hing common folks that rood day's wages, will pay any money rowd themselves up among ipper ten! And she as good as said she was afraid ber Berenice would get in- terested in Mr. Cresson if he stayed teo ¢. because Berenice was young and y, and he did talk so pleasant and about his travels in Egypt, and And,” added I o> i go. Brow Lia Lis Ix i as irda might has one f 1h Lod { y aot these el the i h with her shin wen, “Mrs, Ponsonby Hunt says she most knows that he was one of the masons sent to Alexandria to find out tbout the removal of the Obelisk, when t was brought here. ‘Otherwise how would he get to Egypt?’ she says.’’ “Do tell!” cried Mrs, Chatter, red to tell him she wants her room,” went on Almira, “And the Smith’s, wiry for him, mother, he looked so be- wildered and lonesome, and so I told vim be might core here for four dollars y+ week! s0 let's go right upstairs, mother,” added breathless Almira, ee me AAAI “and see if we can’t change the carpet get a little varnish and shine up furniture a bit, and Almira flew up the stairs, with Chatter slowly trudging after. “But Almira,” Mrs, pleaded the pool old ' with a boarder! in my life!” “There's [ never kep’' boarders {oy do, mother.” cried Almira, “Only make him feel that he is welcome, and do all vou ean to fill We are plain people but I did feel awful sorry when 1 while Mrs. Brown 3 > the Ponsonby BAW ng that in the same ly 1 He mayn’t ¢ rent ippel I'ma sure, arm with a ‘‘swhat makes vou .} e-mason teller? an interest in 13% fn iS SLO) LOOK as might Haver change pi i Mr. Ponsonby 3 JUTO immer?’ cent smile. “Mr. wh OW {ress n! Kt cou nter-que “Impudent fellow thi to our Berenice jus taught him place, 1 Mrs. Brown any peace until him away” nodding triumphantly at the landlady, who was wailing Mr. Ponsonby Hunt's late .o'Did 1, Mrs Brown!" “My dear, my dear, what are talking about?’ cried Mr. Ponsonby Hunt, dropping his knife and fork in dismay. “Mr. Cresson! Our bank president! Why, when 1 heard he had been at this house" “Mr. Ponsonby Hunt vou must be out of vour senses!” exclaimed Mrs, Ponsonby Hunt acerbity. “This was quite a common the foundation stones of the old Lighthouse never gave she sent On supper You the man who has purchased this whole tract of land!” exclaimed Mr, Ponsonby “He is the president of our I never have seen him, but I'm told that he Is a very plain, unobtrusive gentleman, who never puts on any airs, and" Mrs! Ponsonby Hunt burst into tears, “Why didn’t you tell tae?” she wail- ed, “Beegase, my dear, I didn’t know it myself until I came back from Eu- rope,’’ sald Mr, Ponsonby Hunt, “Only to think,” almost screamed Mrs, Ponsonby Hunt, “that our Bere. nice might have attracted him. if it hadn't been for that bold, audacious waitress!’ “But here,” as Mrs. Drown after- ward told her particular friends, “I couldn't hold my longer, { And | Ys | deed, ma'nm, 1t was all yourown doing! And there hain’t a soul along the beach { here but is heartily glad th ag | pretty girl like Almira Chatter has go a husband worth having!” Mrs. Brown was right. She had but | expressed the voice of public opinion. As for Almira, she said but little, “1 love him? uttered. uf couldn't do more il vorth a | millions of undred tongue no 00d, $ she he was i money!” -— re - A CEYLON COFFEE ESTATE. wee Profits---The Leal Discase The flist thing a planter who was | going ing to start coffee planting on own account in Ceylon had to do was to look out for a suitable “‘block’’ of gle, by which name all virgin forest jung irgl is known, in contradistinction to forest allowed to his which had once felled and grow up again, which is known chena, All the forest lands are in possession of the British Government, and when planter had located a suital t in his application y» government, which then veyor, who surveyed it ounding jungles as well. up averaging and was then advertised to be public at neares! ment generally Kandy, ) 1 I as the the ile block he sen An into blocks h Lille auction Kaci i mountain nce } nex eared, This ors whose mode was have it c¢ was let ingalee contrac LO say axes or cut they 8 When the estate is have cost the planter for 200 altogether say 235.000 to 840,000 state in full bearing would in unkeep say $12,000 per annum; a very average crop would be 500 weight of coffee per acre, which would net $25 per hundred weight, This would give a clear profit of $13.000, but the usual crop was nearer eight hundred five. When leal disease set in, however. the crops were reduced to about one and two hundred weight an acre, sometimes as low as one-haif | hundred weight; while the cost of un- keep, owing to the dearness of money bearing J acre e ist greatly increased, so that ualess a planter had the purse of Fortonatus it | did not take many years to ruin him, After the estate is once in bearing coffee planting becomes more horticul- ture than agriculture, and manured. The manuring is most expensive part of coffee planting. On some estates large numbers of cat- brightness of § Redfern In the waning old trysting-place alone, ring—her wedding rig finga, She touched 11s, is vour wedding She looked « 4 ¥ flown at her linget start. her heart fail her at h “Why, Jack,’ flushing and with embarrassment, *'it finger. I hope 1 have not lost it Her husband threw het with a muttered exclamation, strode but of the house without a wor i. Il though the Spring night, from the rising to the settu g of the stars, Phyllis waited, but Jack did not return, She no ME 8 tone peaking Was on mn) from | but in addition to cattle a large quan- { tity of patent forcing | used, This was especially so arter leaf | disease made its appearance. When | that scourge first began seriously to | threaten Ceylon, the planters spared no ill over his cruelty. Morning came at last and fern. Jack's mother, appeared, Mrs, Red- SHR newborn babe was heard I * said Phyllis, : wd he may nes -- Fell Pure Water. LO ——— Andover Woman. HSE HO NOTES. ~30llah and Alcads are being backed heavily for the Kentucky Derby. to Ken- stand at —Phallas will not be taken tucky, but will continue Racine, After a one day's experiment at New Orleans, Sunday racing has been abandoned, to ft — Mike Dwyer left for the Arkansas Hot Springs ast week, accompanied | Lis little daughter, | Lady Haven | —P, MeCarney is driving ¢ a 4-year-oid 144 dam the Brustar DY 4 Bon OL 33X HATE, Bonner 0 for Maud 8. ay another I I anouiel J yw valuable a star when out per had sh +4 | hed the s biaad performed interest and phenomenal would have given next dav to have been able to re- store Harry Wilkes to what he was, But Harry, as a stallion, might never have attained the fame he has reached as a gelding. $1000 ~The breeding farm of J. B. Hag- gin, Rancho del Paso, California, is undoubtedly the most extensive estab- lishment of its kind in the world. The —-—-— Unsolved Mysteries, Mystery stand on a cold day, 1 up and Vige jy How a wil her head h her bare, across the and not think sit ina an « sleeves and visit w neighbor fence fifteen nite of taking ] and yet cannot cold half wrapped in furs and plushes, without shivering all and sneezing a week to pay church an hour, letter from Jack in her hand, “Your husband has returned the opal | Thousands upon thousands of dollars | were spent in experimenting with | every kind of known fertilizer. Agri- i eultural chemists of standing were . letter will explain the rest,’ Phyllis read the letter, and then, with a pathetic ery, *‘Oh, Jack! come back | | money might just as well have been | buried in the ground instead of the fer- tilizer, for all the good it ald. The disease hind come there to stay, and it | is there yet. i The happiness of your life depends therefore guard accordingly, and taxe care that you entertain no notions un. suitable to virtue and unreasonable to nature, The tulips had bloomed, and were withering on their stalks in the garden, of death. On her white, thin finger Hearmg of | { { i the evil he had wrought. the truth about the ring. too late. Jack was gone, “10 find him, and bring him back to her, if it costs me my life,” sald Rob, in remorse, und with a last look at her death-like face, he departed. But it was Another--How a young man can stand In front of the store, bareheaded, and buzz his girl for half an hour with- out a struggle, and yet can’t even go to the postoflice without piling on ali his clothing and then Kicking about the beastly cold weather, Another—How a little girl can go and slide down hill with the boys all when ber throat was 80 sore school, Another—IHow a boy can walk four miles and skate until after dark the same day his back was so lame that he coukin’t bring in a scuttleful of coal for his mother, a AI — The Lord takes up none but the for- saken; seeks none but the lost; makes pone healthy but the sick: gives sight to none but the blind; makes alive none but the dead; sanctifles none but sin. stock contains the names of 154 brood mares and eight stallions, The latter include three sons of Leamington Hyder All, oul of Lady Duke, by Lex- ington; Warwick, out of Minnie Minor (dam of Wanda), by Lexington, and Milner, also out ot a daughter of Lex. ington. Then there is the imported | Irish horse, Kyrle Daly, the two cele- brated Australian racers, Daredin and Sir Modred; Ban Fox (winner of the Coney Island Derby), by imported King Ban, dam Maud Hampton, by Hunter's | Lexington, and John Happy (a full | brother to the great George Kinney), by imported Bonnie Scotland, out of Kathleen, by Lexington. The brood | mares represent a large expenditure of | money and include many distinguished | names, among them Maud Hampton, | dam of Ban Fox and King Fox, that cost her owner $10,000; Miss Woodford, the Queen of the Turf] imported Age- notia, the dam of Pontiac and Pontico: Explosion. dam of Dew Drop; Bonnie Kate, dam of Bonnie Lizzie; Katie Pearce, dam of Lizzie 8. and Ballard Letola, dam of Unrest; Lou Lanier dam of Katrine; Lydia, sister to Barnes and Runnymede; Second- Hand, dam of Exile; Vandalite, dam of Hiawassee, and other producers of winners and distinguished racers themselves, The soul of man is not a thing which comes and goes, is builded and decay! like the elemental frame in which it ir get to dwell, but a very living force, = very energy God's organic will which rules and moulds this universe