Im think it's clear "That somethin’s goin’ wrong o' late—to sce her sittin’ there A-dreamin’ in the doorway, with that look into her eyes, As ef they still was restln’ on the ole time fields an’ skies, .Bhe’s always dreamin’, dreamin’ o' the life we left behind. "The little two-room cottage where the mornin’ glories twined ; The roses in the garden, the vellow sunfiows ers tall, : The viclets—but she, herself, the sweetest flower o' all, You see, she useter sit there in the doorway, 80 content, The sunflowers follerin’ the sun, no matter where he went, The brown bees sippin’ honey and a-buzzin roun’ the place, The fuses climbin’ up to her an’ smilin’ in her ace, An’ now she can’t forget it. When I tell her “Little wife, There ain’t no use in grievin’ for that simple country life,” She twines her arms aroun’ my neck, an’ smilin’ sweet to see, She says: “It seems so far away to where a 19? we useter bel There ain't no use in chidin’ or sayin’ words 0’ cheer; There's nuthin’ in the city life like she was useter there, Where preachin’ cum but once 8 month an’ street cars didn’t run, An’ folks they tole the time o’ day by lookin’ at the sun. An’ larks got up at peep o dawn an’ made the medders ring, & tll you, folks, when one's brought up to Jes’ that sort o thing, It's hard to git away from it; old feelin’s bound to rise. An’ make a runnin’ over In a woman's tender eyes. So there she sits a-dreamin’, till I git a-dream- in’ too, An’ when her head drops on my breast an’ sleep falls like the dew, Arn’ closes them sweet eyes o’ hers, once more we seem to be In the old home, where we'll rest some day together—bher and me. — Atlanta Constitution. COMMODORE TODDY. He wasn’t bigger than a pint of cider, but bright as the brightest kind of a brand-new button. Everybody called him “Toddy,” so one day I asked him if that was his name. “No’'me, my real name’s Charles Algernon St. John Clinton,” he an- swered, tumbling the first two names into something like Charsgernon, be- tween a decided lisp and the big words, “Then why do they call you Toddy?"” “Oh, en I us a baby gin an’ sugar an’ water cause I howled all er time, cause I wanted my mother; she died an’, an’ ey wanted me to stop cryin, 'en I stopped. When I howled again ‘ey gived more gin water an’ sugar. ing for my toddy. me ‘Tod.’ I'm eight now.’ “So you are eight years old? ‘ey gived me an’ They said I us howl- Sometimes ey call ' me You are a big man,” I said, trying to get an arm about him to cuddle him, for I bad a little boy just about his age. “Where's your papa?” “I never had none. He us drownd- ed before I was borned; that why my mother went and died.” I tried to kiss him, but Toddy wasn’t sentimental and wriggled away with, “Do you want to see my muscle? I'm fearful strong. 1 got more muscle "en any feller. I guess I'll go an dig clams.” Off he ran—a very little boy, tanned to almost a copper color, barefoot and happy. 1 felt very tender towards Toddy, and asked Mrs. Bell, the sweet-faced landlady of the Bay View House where we were stopping for the sum mer, about the child. All she knew was that he was a Mrs Clinton's great-grandchild and that the old lady was very feeble; he was in charge of the servant, who left him pretty much his own “but,” said Mrs. Bell, in conclusion, to devices: “he’s a very good little boy. Often, when 1 went out with the shildren, we would meet Toddy play- ng on the shore. Sometimes I have #een him sailing along on a plank, sculling with the stave of a barrel. He would sail on or in anything that could float and seemed not faintest fear of the water. Sometimes when we went down to the long dock where our little boat, “The J. A. C.” lay, he would go with us for a row; he knew all about the river, and was wild to manage the boat. When there was not too much current I would let him take the oars in that way he got considerable prac- tice. One day the little man, ic a burst of confidence, told me he intended to dig clams and save money to buy a boat. “Then you'll be Commodore Toddy,” oried I. He was delighted with the ti- tle, and asked me always to call him + by it. “What will you nese your boat? to have the mother,” said the child. “I'd name ber after my father, too, oney his name us Charles Jernon 8t. John Clin- ton, just er same as me, an’ such a big name ud capsize a little boat, so I'll just eail it “The Dora.’ ” “Dora will be a very sweet name for your boat,” 1 said. “If 1 wanted ter wait till I'm tweny-one an’ get my property, I could buy a boat bigger'n the Minnie Cornell, but I wouldn't wait. 1 won't be round here’en I'm twenty-one.” Dear little Toddy, could you see into the future with your great blue eyes? A few nights after there was a com- motion at the “Bay View.” Mrs. Bell explained that the two colored girls who waited at table had gone out early in the evening and had not come home. She was afraid some one in the neighborhood induced them offers of higher wages to leave her service. «I didn’t think they would leave in this manner,” said the anxious housekeeper, ‘It's hard get good help!” “They may have got lost on these country roads,” I suggested by way of comfort. A little later in Clinton's servant came over and asked by BO to the evening Mrs. if any one knew where Toddy was, saying the last she had seen of him he was going towards the shore with Rose the two girls. Why they should have taken the Soy no one could surmise. If any of us could have suspected where that brave little soul was and in what peril, the rest need not have been silence. Bright and early the next morning a messenger went up to Mrs. Clinton's house to ask at what hour Toddy had returned. He had not been home all night and his grandmother was too ill to be told of his absence. Mrs. Bell, was much troubled—her girls had not returned. About 10 o'clock, Harry, Mr. Bell's nephew, called me to the side porch and told me he was very much alarmed about Toddy Clinton. Harry went on to explain that he had driven over to the next village on an errand for his aunt, and on his way back he had met tose and Nancy. He told them to Jump into the wagon and asked them if they knew anything about Toddy. At the question they both began to ery and Nancy, missing too, and scream, “Ain't that chile got home yet?” Between their crying and wail- ing he made out that on the l iI had given previous afternoon, when Mrs. Be them a holiday, they determined to go on the river. Meither of the girls had ever been in a small boat and knew absolutely nothing about the manage- to rew, baby “Well, welll” wok Toddy and night? Those great women took that interrupted }, “they kept That was very thoughtless of him away all them. Where is he now?” “Oh,” replied Harry with tears in his “] don't dare think. When they started they had the tide eyes, to to steer. They got’ way past Hill Cliff, ‘way past Lone Island. Rose aays Tod kept telling them it would be harder to get back, but they couldn't understand why it wouldn't be just as easy one way as another; they didn’t understand anything about the tide. Finally they let him turn back, with that heavy boat what could he do? but He managed, I can't see how. to get them up to Lone Island. They began to cry about staying there all night. “They let him go? Where is he now 7” I sobbed. “That's just what I answered Harey, don’t know,” tearfully. “Tod never got overto Riverdale, 1 stopped there on my way back. All the fisher. men are in and none of them saw him last night. It was very dark, Was no moon, know. He may have drifted goodness knows where,” Harry made up a searching party, some of the gentlemen boarders and there Jon three fishermen from the village, eight As they were starting off in the boats 1 went over to the hotel and telegraphed to the villages along the river where there were stations, but could get no tidings. There was no merry-minking that day. The children felt no inclination for play, we were all too anxious for the men to come home with Toddy., A very sad home. coming it was, for they brought only the mortal part of our dear little lad, and told how way down the river, eight miles past Lone Island, where he had left the foolish frightened women, they had found the boat Gelfting up- side down, and they waited for the tide to turn, rightly thinking it would send in the little quiet body. * The fishermen supposed that in the in all, had been carried out into broad waters of the bay, where, in the darkness, eome large vessel had run him down. » Loving hands laid him tenderly in his last earthly bed and covered it with flowers. The poor old grandmother never realized the sad story. It was better so. Myself had so loved the sunny- hearted child, I begged to be allowed to erect a head-stone, now over the little white slab surmounted boat named The Dora. of the stone memory of the little Commodore, child of Charles and Dora Clinton, aged eight years. He shall sleep, but not forever.” Turkeys for the President, From a time, almost, whereof the and it stands grave—a pure, marble the “In by a On base is written, loving only Nt. Algernon John memory of man runneth not to the contrary, the turkey-raisers of South Kingstown have bred and reared the largest fowl of the season, to be sent to the President of the United States, to be served up for his Thanksgiving dinner. The late Senator Henry B. Anthony made it select the turkey, the finest that con'd be picked from the flocks of Rhode Island, for the Chief Executive's feast, the Senator's the private secretaries, the Viee-Presidents their During not public career, only Presidents, but their and private secretaries, and nearly every Senator was also supplied with South County birds about this of the The Senator always procured through the agency of Fisk & Thompson's market, corner College and South Main streets, his to the portly proprietor being that he wanted tur- bat The supervision Reason year. them favorite remark keys ‘as fat as he was, confounded Senator this the table fowls of the powers of govern- not so tough.” exercised over ment for a score of years. When President in office John M. Brennan performed the The bird that Mr. Cleveland received two years ago was Cleveland was same functions, & corpulent beauty of exceedingly large proportions and finely moulded, with a skin ot tint. On was the of the “Thanks- the purest ane side President, monogram surrounded by giving, 1887." in a semi-circle, which answered as a8 frame. On the other side were the initials of the raiser and This work was hot needles, and was an idea which origi. of a So Tr. the pric kit FA flesh w ith uth Kings- BCHOOI-Inarm. I'he lettering I legible ii the BE when obbler was placed apon the President's table after the White House hef, South Kingstown i sentially a of CR8AryY requisites Many of They are principally but the ughtered food «# refused them, and they die with an gious number ng air and the prod grasshoppers, two nee fatmiRey, make a sp sf the farmers pecialty on corn and buckwheat, One of the largest and most success. ful raisers in South Kingstown is Ii. A. Whaley, of Wakefield. It was from key was selected. The bird was packed in a champagne basket, covered with snow-white linen, and was expressed to on Thanksgiving Eve.—Providence Jour- nal. 80 arrive in Washington as Besct By Partridges, W. Tourttellott, of E. Webster, which either may have #pite Three times this fall partridgos londed with big volt pressure have In two of the instances the One of the birds in coming in to him not only smashed and took along the entire upper sash of the window but broke the curtain fixture and tore it from its roll, and then Mr. Tourttellott after his heart had stopped thumping, unrolled the curtain, which was in a lump in the middle of the room, and took out a fine cock partridge that weighed a pound dead. — I A Maria Mayo’s 100 Sultors. Maria Mayo, the leading belle of Richmond, Va., had 100 suitors, and refused 99 of them before FEMININE RUSES TRANSPAREN™ TO EXPERIENCED CLERKS, Marks That Mislead and Tales That Do Not Deceive “Yes, we find a good deal to amuse us in our line of business,” said a dap per shoe clerk to a Washington Sunday Herald mau, even though our work is sometimes pretty tough on us. As in every other business, I suppose, it is easier to suit men than women in shoes, Naturally women take a good deal of pride in their | great difficulty we have is that they are | afraid we will think that their feet are large, and try to impress vou with the fact that last year, or before they were married, they always wore shees two sizes smaller, I have sold shoes for many years, but have vet to sel: a shoe “A good me hod of marking shoes, and one that has often proved a god- send to the French shoes sent to Here is one of them now. Notice the manner in which it is marked inside.” The reporter saw a double mark, 2 {and 42, the first placed above the | second. “When this shoe is shown to a lady,” | continued the salesman, “and tue gize { it is a number | upper figure. shoe by reading the But the below. shoe, | from the numbers | means 8 number 4 { mean a number § shoe, 2-22 {shoe is a number 2, and i marked. Should a line be neath the lower numbers, such as 2.32, that signifies the See?" “ But I should think the size of the | shoe itself would give the thing sway 7” ‘+ Not so: first, because a new shoe has i 2-32 would is willing and anxious to believe she {does. Ladies with small { but will often insist on trying on a | balf size or size smaller. | “Ladies with large feet seldom : be must rely { with the eye. upon measurements made Sometimes these ladies | they wish to buy a pair of shoes for a | will probably know in that manner what will be suitable; and isa or 6 1- | 2 too small for the general run of ser- vants' feet, | fully and critically, | and frequently | | shoos at & cost of $7 or 8%. i “It is queer, but the shoes sold | Washington are smaller than in other country, as any big man urer oan tell vou. What in Norther and Eastern cities are ne | sizes are run in here for men’s. sizes run from 4 1-2 to 6 1-2 | average. “I have clerked in Eastern stores where the average was from 7 to 11, but have yet to sell a pa's of shoes in | #ize above 10 in Washipgton. the women here it is different. Their | sizes run as high ss in the East, the | average being from 3 to 5.” | “Where are the largest men's shoes mm noting the sold bays’ These on av “Throughout the West. | enormous,” Another clerk who had been | had large feet, replied that it unques- tionably was. The average sizes worn He also stated { same as in ¢ hicago. Hushand 110, Wife 102, | A Mission Indian known to be over | 110 years old, and who came to San Diego across the plains as one of Gen. | old age. Father Ubach, the resident charity, living with his The wife is still alive, aged 102, He had lived with his wife in a wig- wam with a few other Indians, Among them is an old man estimated to be from 125 to 150 years of age, who can frequently be scen walking about town. Two children were born to Juan and his wife.~—San Francisco Chronicle. The BetterWay. When the three grown-up boys of George Zadock, a New Jersey farmer of 65, protested against his taking a third wife, he turned to and licked them off the farm to prove that he was a better man than at 45. It was an utgument which silenced all opposi- AON, asm————; FOOD FOR THCUGHT There is a good deal of preaching Ina smile, > Muskats in the stack never kill any- dy. Felfish men do not make good hus- bands, To be patient is better than to bs fae IBOUs, Pity is seif-evolved; enthusiasm is con tagious. The man who lives fast will be apt to dle quick. Appreciation and originality are near relations, The quivering Lp 1s the spasm of un shed tears, Flatiery is the praise which we hear of other people. Bad seed 1s sure to flourish the best in good soil, To the wise every experience in life is serviceable, People without hope are of no service in any cause, Doing god 1s a beiter occupation than digging gold. The rich: st man is the one who does most for o here, Love gives all things when it has all power behind it, A mule isnot as big asa horse, but he can kick harder, To day 1s the time to do; to-morrow is the fool’s seed t me, It takes life and effort to go up stream, A log can float down, All vices are expensive, ing is never profitable The man who is always looking for mud geseral'y finds it, No man knows how to live until he has Jearved how to die. It never gets so dark but that you cau see the sky somewhere, he highest tree is the one that the winds fight the hardest, That day is a failure in which you have not tried to make somebody happy. The more people know, the less they brag about it, Self-conceit 1s one of the first gods that men wo ship. 1f ali flowers were alike the bouquet market would be du L We can not choose our duties, but we can resolve to do them. No man can look at the stars without wanting to live forever. It would be a calamity to have flowers nd grass change places. There 1s hope for the man who is cone scious of his own faults, Three-fourths of total depravity crops out in out-and-out laziness, Men cure least for honor when most in peed of bread and butter, If men had made the world, how the man in the moon would grin. If you can’t do what you like to do, try to like the work you have to do. It is agood deal easier to be contented without riches then it is with them. There is more power in a so't answei than there 1s in a ton of gunpowder, One of the tests of a fine nature isthe eff ct joys and sorrows have upon it. If the earth was covered with flowers a’l the year rounl the bees would get lazy. Love and hope always live together, Kill hope and love will bring it to ile again, It is the incredulous who are most cre- dulous. Doubt is the fruitful pareat of belief, One of the sweetest things fu the fame fly is to see children heiping one ane other, Indulgence is like the self-devouring rocket; bu! cheerfulness is like the starry | heavens, If you want to bave the power to mould olber men, learn to control the man who wears your hat, Despair 1s ine:plent ruin, The first id dependent upon ourselves, the latter is ils sequence, There is plenty of post-mortem wit; even stupldity becomes wise when the opportunity is past. Some people's lives are like warm water on a hot day; nice to look at, buj one taste is esoagh. There is no such thing as being taken on probation 10 real life, A man must weigh all he claim to or go down, Thought in marble, stands the wear and tear of time for a long while, but thought in spring poetry 18 not so fortus pate, Weare the sculptors of our individual fortunes; exigencies which we ascribe to fat: are oftenest our own left-handed work, Much good can be accomplished ina tide time, The repartee you think of, fifteen minutes too late, might have cost you a friend. Some geniuses wiite poems in marble, and we call then sculp. ors; some write their verses on parchmen’, and we call them laursates, No man ever gels to ths top any- whers without first going through fires hot enough to show that he has good metal in him, We call 8 person honest, Has he been tried? Temptation is the true touch stone. Base mstal may pass for gold until some day it is tested and the solid discovers the alloy, There are two sorts of courage; one is moral the other is physical. The first is oulgrowih of conse latter of brute foros, A Man Who Wears Petticoats, Engineer Flanders gives the follow. ing description in the Atlanta Consti- tution of a strange sight in Macon : “I. was a man somewhat above the ordinary height with a long, snow- white beard and a pair of white mous- taches that nearly completed the cover- ing of his face. He wore 8 woman's old-fashioned fly bonnet, which flop- ped over his face and concenled his head, giving him the appearance of one those pictures of patriarchs that you tee in Sunday- school books, “He had on a calico frock that reached to his ankles, cut in the old- fashioned body and skirt style, which made him look still more like a patri- seal, The strings of his apron hung dowr. behind, just like those of a ountrywoman in her every-day dress of twenty years ago. As he came striding down the street, the legs of his heavy boots exposed at every stride, he was about the greenest specimen of humanity I ever struck, There was a mob at his heels and everybody stared «His name is Roberts, and he was oro and still lives in Jones County He has worn female attire since he sas 10 years old, as I was informed. He interfere He hed been off somewhere and was returaing to his home when be passed through East Macon * -—— ; Conquered Himself, “So you wish to learn Christian sci- — cn —— o—— Wrong do- “Yes sir. What are your terms?” “‘Five dollars for three lessons.” “All right, I'll take the first lesson The teacher than began to lay down “You must first learn ” said he, “ to conquor “All right,” the pupil answered. “You must exterminate every hn- ody.” “All right” the student agreed “Well,” the teacher one day remark- “All right; much obliged.” ““ But have you not forgotton some. “No, reckon not.” “ Yes you have forgotten to pay me “Oh, you see, I had a strong desire to pay you —a very strong desire of the flesh, as it were, but have succeeded in conquering all that sort of thing.” Arkansaw Traveler, ———————tr—— Penny Walk, Some time when you are in the state of mind that wants the amusement that opie like a poultice or a pudding-batter with the mud, if such a time ever is to want take the kind of io new ! has called a “penny walk.” To take a “penny walk” you toss a copper be- fore you start, to know whether yon If you toss if tails, take At the first crossing give the more directs. At every crossing turn as the copper tells you. You will be led into strange quarters sometimes on the responsibility of th®™%uttie guide, and will see strange sights, and hear mora wonderful things in an hour, if you haven't left your wits and your senses at home, then will occur to you in weeks of your routine experience. pe ——————— The Court Was With Him. A young lawyer was making his maiden effort before a jury in defense of a criminal. The evidence was all in, end he arose to utter the brilliant thoughts that had been s1® zing through his brain. He was primed for a fine display of oratorical pyrotechnics, but, | somehow or other he could not get a start. His mind became a blank and he stood trembling for a mom nt. Then waving his arms he bwran: ‘May it please the Court and gentle- men of the jury—My—ahem! My Officer, kindly get me a drink of water.” He waited for the attendant to return and tried to gather his faculties. After taking a sip of water he began again: “May it please the Court and gentlemen of the jury, I am happy-- a Atter a panse he again extended nis arm and exclaimed: «May it pleasd the Court and gentlemen of the jury My unfortunate client." This impressed him as a particularly oad opening, #0 he again hesitated. “Go on, counsellor,” said the Judge, encouragingly, “so far I am with you.” =~Chicago News. During the first five months of this year, the railroads show an increase in