» THE OLD GAKRET: tn the dear old home of our early years, A gloomy garret on ralny days, Resounded oft with our merry cheers, And witnessed most of our simple plays. Great chests and many a forgotten pile Supplied our various changeful needs: Quaint dresses, fashioned in by-gone style Clad us like heroes of doughty deeds. Now Or twas n Wo Ali Baba and the bin Hood ¢ 1 life's term wou! The fervid fancies and cuileless joys That made the old t's rafter ring 34 With merry shouting of girls and t OF FAITE MARIA PENELLETON KINNEDY, I don’t think 1 was ever so thankfal to hear a man's step in myself, to my “Because I am goin will be gone rooms in Bee, ns several hours.” I meekly said, “Very well,” and Iaid agide my bonnet. What it is to be a grandmother! Yes, I gave up the list chance of seeing *“I'he Rivals,” and I will never get over it, for the wretch could have easily put off her “outing” hal | stood my ground. Bat she went, and Nell and I bad a fine time with the tot, and 1 sat in the bow-window and feasted my eyes once more on the sun-bathed, windswept bay, thin whieh thers e be nothing more anntif ut iful world, 'm fire id cake, and in this be ences, ALY . thien at fuil on the island, and the lights 1 tha red were nigl hed alone or 11 t & hi ri I i ri $ Riu tO d il reo him. For a remember “le: t Liat she whon dinner baby to be r {he eive we did not think it but me Came long time A $e £1 Fé njesty,’’ nor AI ' gone so ong; over and the t ior comfortable for the night, room, and the dining room, fear- drawinz-room Nell sat in the i ing! in spite of their vig Persian cat, This supply of milk for the day by watching £ on the en Mrs, general discomfiture. name hss happened?” he cried, ¢Nell-" “Is all ri * Baby— “All right.” ‘“I'hen what 1s it?" 3y that time I had gotten myself in band, and was properly ashamed of my foolish behavi or. A grandmother, and acting like a schocl-girl! Bat I had been through quite a siege those past weeks, and I was nnstrung even before the finale, as I will explain. 1 had come to the dear little where my son and his wife played at housekeeping, early in the fall, and we had been so happy all together, and I sewing, reading, charming ex ursions all about the love- ly island, while he was all day in the city busy at work, his heart fall of his Little home, and kept warm thoughts of the love awaiting him there, Then the fong evenings, when we talk- ed and sung, and had a good time gen. erally. Then all was changed! ght,” I gasped. . she eo kept in the background till the milk was poured into the jug set on the shelf by for then paws, and looking most side our empty milk-jug. Bat thought him everything and made as much ax we did over floor: pious be Romers that ws adorable fuss ove r him our baby, fo RO back to th af if the garrulity of a allow me to do so. i io not know st have 48 aimost, night, however, grandmother will long 1 . : been hours, thoug as 5 Dow mn mua by evervihing was a8 death in the whole buil ing. denness a frightful shriek fling noise, accompanied by a snorting, panting, sonud heard “Help! help!” smali a bit of humanity could cause such an upheaval! We had been so oomfortable, and the tiny drawing- foom was such a bright, cosy living- place, whose lights shone out upon us through the big bow-window when we came out, tired and exhsusted from our work or play in the city, that it was the very core and essence of the home. morning, the flat was honored by the coming of Miss Lansdale, a portly En- ghsh woman to whose care the little | | i i § i Ken and 1 day to come! First, we were driven from the drawing-room, because there the baby must be placed in two big arm-chairs with a pillow for bed (there was no space for a cra lle), and we kept her from sleeping. Next, we must not go into Nell’s room, for we excited her, My room was the third in the suite, and Idared not move a chair for fear of Miss Lansdale’s wrath, so I econld not stay there. The dining-room an! kitchen were at the back, and here 1 took up my residence, with no sun- shine, no piano, mo compszuy! Poor was over, 1 remembered that I was virtualy alone in the flat, for Kate was worse than nobody in an ergency, and of cour e Nell could d@ithing. I dared pot go to unlock the door and try to discover what was the matter, for fear of alarming ber. But my ean- tion was unavailing; she hai been aroused by the noise, and I had to go to her at once. She was dreadfully agitated and I could not leave her for a moment. The struggle below seemed to have ceased for a little time, and 1 pictared to myself the Romers urdisee in their beds, and horrors, and was feeling very unhappy about them, when there was an unearth- ly yell at my very ears, and a thunder- ing knock at our hall door. Nell threw her arms around me, and implored me not to leave her; bat the knocking continned, and I thought i distinguished Mr. Homer's voice. I told her so, and she at last released me. I could scarcely find strength to get The janitor bundled her out of the “Lift” quite early in the day, and we sent her wages to her with a request that she would not show her face again at any time. Nell and baby were not hurt at all, ad so it is only a very odd adventure which happened to grandmother, and one which that old lady will not soon forget. — Homemaker, ——— . WEP om— COOKERY. LEMON CHEESECOAKYS, f OLE « y it whites, in a basin, leavinzr ont half a pound of two large 1 , and two ounces tad, Line nd three-parts 1 mixture. Now ent | rounds of paste with a cutter dipped in hot water, and a sizesmalior than the one used to line the moulds with, Cut the centre with a much inller cutter, place this ring on the cheesconke, which will prevent its i AY, § ry ] (ry ited [CC O One ott of these boil { un hour, MOUSSE AU CITRON, Pat six ounces of lump sugar into a | small stewpan with the grated peel of i a lemon and a gill of of water: boil to a { syrup. Now beat three whole eggs of dis- a Sance- minutes, hot syrup and half an solved gelatine, Whisk | pan of boiling water for ten | then stand the basin in cold water, and continue whipping till cold. Gar- nist &« mould with cherries, or any pretty dried fruits, pour the mixture in, and place aside to get firm. CHARTREUSE OF ORANGE, ounnoea over Peel for or five oranges and carefully take out the liths in ther natural divi. sions; put these on a hair sieve in a cool place to drain all night, which will cause a fine skin to form over them. Now melt a litle jelly, pour it into a saucer, dip each piece of orange in, {and arrange them in a close circle | around the bottom of a small pudding that will be at the top when tarned out. When the first row set, arrange ier above it, placiog the oranges continue until the basin are covered: it t three rows Next pour a little melted jelly in; when it has set, a little custard, in which a small quantity of gelatine has been dis s0'ved; then jelly and enstard until the | basin is full, allowing each row t ) before the other is poured in, making jelly the last. When it wanted, press the jelly from the basin | all round; it will then turn ont withont | any difficulty; garnish with chopped | jelly, with bere and there little stars of | red currant jelly. is anotl the reverse of WAY; the sides the i will abou take ) ORANGE MOUSSE, Rub the peel of two Oranges on a quarter of a pound of lump sugar and put them into a stewpan with half a gill of cold water; when dissolved boil to a thick syrup. Put the strained juice of three large oranges Into a Msin with two whole eggs, commence whisking, then add the syrup and about h «If an ounce of dissolved gela- tine; continue beating over a BAUCOPAD of boiling water until it is quite warm: now place the basin in cold water and whisk until it is perfectly eold: pour | ato a fanoy mould at once. BREDASDROP PUDDING, CAPE RECIPE, Bonk an ounce of gelatine in oold water for an hour; when quite soft add the grated peel of a lemon, a cupfal of | a pound of boiling water, half loaf | sugar, the juice of three lemons, and the beaten yolks of six eggs | the fire till it thickens, but it must not i bil; have ready the { whites, stir all together, { fancy monld, and stind in 8 cool flues | to set. Bafficieut for a quart moul: i. as a sheet, dashed up the corridor into earth, havin us, to which he betook himself shortly ful, and missing wife and home. Our good Irish girl, Kate, spent her fime in tears. She was daily, nay, ing pleased ‘‘Her Majesty,” who told us she had ‘lived housekeeper in the best families in New York” and evi- dently felt far above us all on that score. I'll do her the justice to say Shett Alia ye a0 8 dint 2 but oh, how we lon for ure! The days dragged heavily, but we bad no excuse to give her for dispens- ing with her services, so thought there was nothing for it but to wait as patient- Iy as we could till her time expired, and we were free and independent citizens once more. The afternoon preceding te morn- ing of which I am giving a ramblin history had been one which had tr: my soul. The whole sutdmn I had wanted to see “I'he Rivals,” —played as only he who was then gi it to the pub can play it,—but of course I not been willing to leave Nell. so had put off going until the very inst matinee, which took place on this memorable Saturday. I said no about it for fear 1I should be disapvointed, and | did not wish the children to know how much I cared to see the play; but after lunch- con I dressed m ,» and with bonnet on went to bid “Iyoung ones” good- bye. As 1 entered the drawing-room, a stately form rose from the ons depths of our b st arm-chair (by which was pliced a table, covered with fruit and eake on Nell’s India chioa!), nows- paper in hand, and greeted mo with a cool stare, I hurried on fo the bed- room beyond, thinking to escape, but “May I hask ‘ow long you will stay ?" “Why do wish to know?” the closet door, which burst open in just as he had his hand on it, and oA ed to view the swollen, dis- torted countenance and portly person of Miss Lansdale. ‘Her Majesty” was waiter, and very drunk indeed. And then ensued a very pretty fight. The dame was a mighty warrior with bat she had a power- fal opponent in Mr. Romer and he succeeded in preventing her landing in the kitchen, and with one desperate push sent her down on her throne to the lower regions, When he had recovered his bresth a little he told me of the dreadful fright poor Mrs. Romer had received. We suppose the woman must have wandered into the n cellar and pulled herself up by the “Lift”; at all events, she appeared suddenly at Mrs, Romer’s bedside with the Persian cat in her arms, which she proceeded to lace comfortably under the covers. ra. Romer shrieked, Mr. Romer awoke, and made for the woman, who tussled with him, then broke away and ran to the kitchen, whare, before he could stop her, she had pushed herself into the dumb-waiter, and pulled herself up out of his reach. Fearing she would frighten Nell to death, he threw on his dressing-gown and dashed upstairs to our door, determined to keep the woman from landing in our rooms. Terrified as I had been, I could but lsugh when 1 pictured ‘‘nurse” oare esonti Mrs. Homer with the A oat, nki she held’ the hab in her arma, was attending to Ne I did not go to bed that night, and #0 when morning came and Ken's was heard, and I saw him come in so fresh and wholesome, I really do not wander that I gave way to my nervous ness, for the horrors of those few mo- ments, which had seemed like hors, had been a sore trial to a quiet old grandmamma like me, whose life is passed old-world surroundin where nothing ever happens out of the BASPBERRY CHEAMS, Mix two tablespoonsful of raspberry | jam with the juice of half a lemon, rub | through a hair sieve and put into a | basin with half a pint of double cream, whip it to a stiff froth, aad then fll small fancy paper cases with it. Stick not a preserved cherry, Garnish the edges with chopped clear jelly, and ar- range on & dish with chopped jelly, or they may be frozen in an ice cave; then omit the jelly. -—— of Henrik Ibsen has been painted by the Swedish painter, Frithiop Smith. One sees at once that it is no ordinary man. This man, sees through the conventional lies and end- less hypocrisy of society. His head bears testimony of a proud and daunt- less power, such as only kings and ts are wont to But there a look of unforgivingnass in his face, and one doubts whether he ean ever Isugh. The resemblance to portraits of Goethe as an old man is unmistakable, only Ibsen looks severer and sterner than the great German poet. It seems to me just as dishonest for the laborer to take more than he earns as it 18 for the employer to pay him less than he earns, Miss Many EK. Byro, teacher of as- tronomy and director of the observa. tory at Bmith College, has been elected a member of the British Astronomical Du. pe oo. Co the great suanam Con ag. thority on the RY Dien ree, died lately in California. He had the most complete collection of versions in ex- statics, snd many of them were himself, vy Mms Mourn K. Owvnow, who hes been at the head of the German de- riment of the colored high school of Ro oo Reto oi Coal outs offer no trar of Oberlin Coll Miss Churoh uated rou Ober a 18 1884 vid nguis n special mentioned for her ae 8 record hn Greek, and then traveled and studied abroad for three years, If she te the offer from Oberlin she will be first colored it is said, of the i to un inn 1 basome a fnembar A xuw portrait older of the faculty UNMOTHERLY MOTHERS, ——————— Though we are nowadays growing more accustomed to the fact that women must work as well as weep, and that it is as much their mission to plunge into the great sea of working life as it is to look as attractive and be as fascinating a8 possible, there still Jurks in a vast nomber of minds the feeling that a “woman's noblest station is retreat,” and that a professions! woman must of necessity be a neglectful mother, It is still a common cry that women had very much better be at home look $774 heir children and making pud uniting the house hnen, king an income Or, maybe income independent of that their husbands in the ture, of art, or of commerce. ré is a great deal of truth May be the in all that is sid on t matter, Do- Glues, than sed only an 5 Or O 14 £3 : y fields of is is accord so well might, Hot as they Al i haps, and however anxious Won - worker may be to fullll her duty home and do justi ¢ to her art or busi- ness, 1t is useless to deny that it is not only a severe stran but ni mpossibility for her to do both. { 1t 18 not given to all women to the cholce between the two Work a grim necessity to many, and how loy- ally professional women stru:gle to di vide their time and attention | home life and buginess duties can never | cmade known to the world at large. At all events the majority of mothers who are lavoriog truly and earnestly are at least working for their children; { if it is not theirs to give all their timé | to the little ones who are their deares { possession, they have at least the satis. ; action and the comfort of knowing : that each pecuniary and artistic suc- cess, as they may attain them, will all be for the benefit of their oflspring. It is from necessity, not from r= yortion of { the cares and the delights of mother- | hood, and some have even sacrificed | health and strength in their efforts to well b avoid 8: doing. But daily experience and observation | prove that it is not so munch the busy { workers but the drones that fail to fol- | fil the first and the highest duties of It is, after all, the socie- of | womar bood. | ty mothers at whom the first stone condemnation should be thrown. | | them no legitimate exense can be foun i, and surely it must be hard indeed for them toreconcile with their conscience the knowledge, that upon baby lips the once sacred name of ‘me 1% 0 oiten but an empty sound, and tha! ther’ 1 ! small joys of having mother at hand to kiss away the tears, and soothe small BOTTOWS, The one true touch of pathos, to my mind, in Ibsen's play, “The Doll’ {| House,” is in the nurse's remark to | Nora, that her children miss her al- | though they have all their new toys. There are toys and infantile amuse. i 2 of every kind, and nurses, who may be the incarnation of kindness and good nature, to amuse; but all thesame, it is mother for whom these wee people long. if the little ones are very picturesque or pretty, they may sometimes be util- ized as attractive soccessories in the park or at afternoon parties, but So- ciety mothers do not see their way to farther concerning themselves with the lives for which they are responsible, There is no time, they argue, to spare, for the conventional, monotonous de- tails which nurse understands so much better. It is not fashionable, and it irritating to the nerves to worry abont about. When the rush and the tarmoil of the season is over, society's votaries may perhaps spare a few weeks to their | children. Traly the danger that maternity will lose its sweetness for nineteepth-cen- tury women, and that the harry and rash and “advancement” of the age will make motherhood to be lichtly es- teemed, lies not in the fact that women are competing with men in the fields of | labor, but that Society, the god of feminine idolatry, is swamping with its | overwhelming waters of gaiety and ex- | citement all the time and energy and | sweet solitude and “conventional” anxiety for their babies that: is sap- posed to belong by nature to all woen, -—— HINTS ON EATING. Don't smoke immediately meals. Don’t take animal food more than twice daily. Don’t drink green tea and use black tea moderately. Don’t average more than twenty- four ounces of fluids daiiy. Following are a few pointers that are well worth memorizing: Don’t believe that eating fat will make you fat; quite the contrary holds true, Don’t let your entire food exceed thirty-four ounces in twenty-four hours. Don't eat gamey meats; remember that “‘gamey” is the hyper refined word for rotton. Don’t forget that healthy persons genetally lose weight in winter and gain in summer, Don’t eat much meat and increase its quantity only gradually when re- covering from a fever. ay Unt id that Shewing tobacco is most injurious method of using the weed; the contrary is true. Don’t allow your servants to meat and vegetables into the same compartment of the refrigerator. Don’t eat . When it is sbeo lutely unavo to do so it shouid be rendered harmless by being exposed to strong heat long enough to be converts ed into a decided gray color, even to its innermost part. “Don’t pour a mouthful of coffee into an empty stomach, even if you must tear a button from your coat and swallow etore, Boi Arabic proverb. This app ss well, ~Dittsbury Gazette. after FOOD FOR THOUGHT. No one 1s wise at all times, To be simple is to ba great, Never chide the wing of time, The rattlesnake is no Natierer, Time 18 money because it slips away fist, Nothing is more simple than ness, There is no easy path leading out great- of life, A rainy day is a s" alow over wt happl- ness, What would a man do without things? and OC irve your name on hearts of There it. is no void loud rainbow withouta ¢ et All is OO. The hero 18 {obeys his will, | Remember the world has no one whose use for gloomy people, Error may be clasped so close we can- not see its face, Merit may not always win, but it can stand it if it doesn't, The better you liver the truer wil! be your obituary notice. An honest nan pays up. The other kind has to pay down. Poverty is no disgrace, but disgrace is poverty intensified. The coward 1s one whose will 1s dom- inated by his sensibility. He that is not open to conviction is not qualified for discussion . We carry and lock upa heaven starry light within our breasts, Much of what appears to be selfish- ness is mere thoughtiessness, of { Don't take a position of responsibility | snd then shirk its duties, | Sometimes we can best help our friend by keeping out of his way. It Is the early bird that i +} i particular fits on gettinr home, 3 | is catches Love generally changes o quetiry to | sense, aud prudery to silliness, ¥ 4 Wit is the wine of intellect: do let illsnature turn 1t into vinegar. 01 The cats that drive away mice are as £00d as those that cateh them, Every virtuous and wise being is in himself a proof of immortality. Men exist for the sake of one an other, Teach them or bear with them Life is a beautiful night in which as one star goes down another rises, The university of wisdom, lie all | other rules, has its excepuions, Man's every motion serves either to express or Lo repress his inner nature, The longer we live the more numer- ous are the ties that bind us to earth, The scoundrel is one who subordinates all public ends to his private interes:s, Listen to the winds; they are either fresh or salt If you can but imagine 1t, Holiness is love welling up in the { heart, and pouring forth crystal streams. Weak and wicked are the two worst can be charged | things that anybody | with, Hypocrisy is a hard game to play at, i for it Is one deceiver against many ob- | BOIVOIS, | Itisall right to say blow your own horn, but some men haven't any horn to blow, Self-respect unbalanced by respeo! { for others degenerates into egotism and | pride, { The man with rheumatism bas no pat'ence with the giddy young folks who ! dance. The reason why all the works of na- ture are so impressive Is because they represent ideas, Nothing but the infinite pity is suffi- clent for the infinite pathos of human life You may as well separate burning and shining from fire as works from faith, When talking to common-place peo- ple it Is common sense to make use of comon words, His size, weight, color of hair and eyes—eoven his Intellect—No; but his beart, yes, Where all are seliish, the sage is no belter than the fool, and only rather more dangerous, . A fool is not necessarily a man with- out any sense, but one without the right kind of sense. A soft, low voloe is a good thing in a woman, but she ought not to use agood thing too much, The saint is one in whom both the sensibility and the will are subject to unselfish motives, Dollars are of little worth unless one has sense enough to change, them into something useful Because your trouble was occasioned by your own faults doss not make it any the easier to bear, Practice makes perfeot, but the per- fection resulting from piano practice is tough on the neighbors, How man In the volume of lafe we shoul fl diftsrently it the leaves would turn back, sly Mt Ore Sanger thin 1k 10g Jolite wha Jou don't . To work withuat using your : is like washing dishes J old Dri, you must take more time and muscle an ing ite ves life such a sth courage an edge as sight of new truth and the experience of fresh love, it, i i | HORSE NOTES, ~Stockton, Cal., has a kiteshaped track, ~dJohnston, 2.05} does not seem to be as hard to beat as his record. ~John 8, Campbell’, who has bees been quite sick, is mending rapidly, Nearly £30,000 was plaved int the pool-t=2x at Cleveland recent ly. ~Happy Bee, 2.171, is the fastest 4- year-old that has appeared this season, ¢ Bar, the off horse, t back 1 grass coun. $ ib vi i rul lo bit ii# Wak Temp ol Bel 10 Kingston d a furiong Is Letween year-old pacer Pussy Cat was given a trial mile in 2.524 at Buflalo re- lis Id at agetion Cal Cakiand, al, tiv Vis eC rece! his I Wa, JwWered 3 ’ ’ A Iccas, 2,223, vy loca, | ord to 2.1 13. ~=J3elie Hamlin’s Hanks at Buffalo Buflalo horsemen. — Blue Belle, 2,203, by Blue Bul), has trotted sixty-five heats between her rec- ord and 2 8), - by Nancy 104 surprised defeat in 2 —Lady Sheridan, pacing record 2.18%, was bred in Nova Scotia, She is by Buoell’s Phil Sheridan. ~ 34 Rosewater, 2-year-old pacing record =f 2.204, got & mark recently as # 4-year-old of 2.164. ~The Monmonth Park Association has surrendered Mondays and Fridays to the Guttenberg people ~ Miss Alice is well thought of for the Charter Oak §10,000 stake. She worked an easy mile 1n 2 15% recently. ~—W. Bradbury, of San Francisco, claims to have discovered and pur- chased the dam of Little Albert, 2.19%. rac- as M. F. Dwyer is a power In the ng world with three such horses Longstreet, Kingston and Raceland oy William M. pacing it t Singerly race at 223 18 pacer the {free-for-all Ill, recently -in 2. ¥ out of Jay-Eye-Bee’'s t of a accounis, Woodbarp A gelding dam was, at last of work-horses Ei $ al team It is sald the Rapold Bros, were offered $10,700 for the 2-year old filly Promenade after she won her first stake at Baratoga. — The black gelding Black Diamond, 2.104, by Pegasus, dam Lady Taylor, by Cooper's, Stockbridge Chief, died recently at Goshen, Ind. ~During the thirty-days meeting, which ended at Brighton Beach recent ly, 211 races were run, in which 412 diff rent horses competed. Thirteen American trotters with records better than 2.20 took part im a recent meeling at Hamburg, Ger many, * «T, H. McGraw owner of Pickpan- n'a and Wonder, resides at Pough- keepsie, and has a stock farm at bay City, Mich ~Lrit Davis seems to be winning all his races in te Kentucky ecicrt, He won six out of nine races at Harrods ~ Michael Lochman was seriously in- jured in the steeplechase at Jerome Park, ms mount Little Mc Gowan, falling while running through the field. ~Andy Me Dowell has purchased Sciota Gurl for Mr. Marcus Daly. He says that be will hook ber double with Yolo Maid and pace against any team in the country for big money. —Simon Long, employed at the Prov- idence Mill, Cecil country, Md., owns a full brother to Pretty Belle, 2.26}, which he drives on the road, and is always ready for a brush, ~The 4-year-oll filly, Her Highness, was not purchased by Milton Young, but by Charles Beed & Sons for thew Falrview Stud. It is Mr. Reeds's in- teution to breed him to Exile, ~It is likely that W. FI. Me Carthy will soon sever connection with the Brookdale S'able as tramer. A. J. Joyner 1s spoken of as likely to sucoeed him, * ~The brood-mare Nectarine, by Wilbam Welsh, dam Lady Me Kinney, dam of Nil Despmandum, 2.94, ete died at Woodburn Farm recently of fatty degeneration of the heart. ~J., Malcolm Forbes, Boston, has purchased the chestnut ge.ding, Wilkin, 2.274, foaled 1881, by Abdallah West, dam Rosa Wilkerson, by Humbold, from George H. Hicks, Mass, -Potomac will not be the turf until late in fore and this, wi tion of his feet renders a rest SArY. Alvin and Rosalind Wilkes have eac trotted ln 2.16 in a race this season. Alvin did nis at Cleveland recently, while the Wilkes mare did the trick at Buffalo last week, beating Alvin, BR who made a pacing record of ch: Cleveland recently, has a trotting record of 2.18. Minnie R. and Jewett are the only other horses that Jiave ecards at bath gaits better than