AN OLD TIME ROMANCI. Right here, in this v,etrable oak tree's shade, My grandmother®. other sat one day, In solemn state and in stiff brocade, Awaiting a lover, a knight they say. Down yonder hillside with flashing spur He came like a vision, o'er field and fen, fn his satin breeches and gold-laced coat, And 8 queer old dresser he must have heen, i do vot think I could have funcied him so, In his wedding plumes and his vonnet gay— And Mistress Lucy, if she could know, Would smile in disdain at'iny choice to-day. By his side, o'er the stairway her picture hangs, A dainty lady, so proud and prim That more than half of my wayward blood It ts very plain must have come from him Here is a letter a century old; ’ For true kuightly sentiment very well, And a dashing hand, but it must be tld That my cliarming dl could not spell: ‘®onered madam eyes bereft ‘May not dwell on thy form and face so fair, “8iill the promise of hope to my poor heart is left, ‘Avd at dawning of eve I aspire to be there." ” and deer, though mine 1 should like to know if at eve he came— Why, of course he did, for am I not here? Proudly bearing his ancient name Aud if on that sofa they sat asunder Fully two feet, as was proper and right, Could be ever manage to give her, I wonder, Half such a kiss as I had last night? Ah, Lucy, though minuet and spinet, And curtly manners in grand array, Tell on, old story, there's something in ft That reaches the heart just the same to-day And I wonder when my little day is over, And my grandchildren flit "neath this ola tree's shade, &f they'll say, “She had just such a noble lover, And as true and tender a wife she made." ———————l— HEINE'S FIRST LOVE. THE DISILLUSIONMENT OF A GREAT PORT To those who are acquainted with the romance of Heiprick Heine's life, his writings must seem almost repel- lent. In this age, when optimi-m is as incontes'ably a fad as was pessim- ism in the «ays when La Rochefou- oavull’s bitter maxions secured th: an. robation of the court of the Grand oparque, it is customary to hear the “Reisebilder” disposed swamp, with hero and therea brilliant, most to make of Heine the cynical, dis trustinl man he was humanity is only half pardonabls. Its found in the inner nature of bat there can be no donbt that its la- tent germs were developed by the at- tachment which msrred his life, yet which stands ont lixe an oasis from the aridity of a misspent, or, at best, only half well spent. When this first love began it would be diffienlt to teil. Molly Heine was the poet's cousin, and grew Up in 8 CiO& which Le writs ness and rorrow ote | fife companioaship of finite tende ne iein yt reciprocated, and in thore vears all that wes best and por. eat in the man's rature wed 1 L. “f brought her a lily which I bad plocked,” be says, “and 1 said to her: ‘Be mine, that 1 may | arn to be good and happy like thee,” ” But the iiyll could not lest. Hein- rich w nt to Goettiogen, and Molly was betrothed to Mr. Friediander, who, like the Heines, was a Jew. Hein rich's wonnd was deep, and it gave no promise of healing. He travelled and wrote, but he nursed his grief, like the morbid man he was. “With m reat sorrow I make my litie songs, e wrote. From the North sea to the oaths of Lucca, from the mountains of the Harz to the canals of Veniee, the pilgrim wandered, gleauing from each place a memento in the shape of a song. Fleven years pasced before Heine eould bring himself to wish to see his cousin. But at last this desire came, and it was too strong to be resisted. He was then covered with glory, At less than thirty years he could faith- fully say, “When the greatest posts of Germany are pamed, my nam~ is smong them!” He was the idol of Germany, sad his fame in letters was enhanced by the celebrity of his con. quests over feminiue hearts, The cynical, canstic man, whose soul seemed suffering from a secret disease, was irresistibly attractive to women. His nstare, on the other hand, was too impressionatle not to reflect the sents ments which ho caused: but these were Zz His | Te uns & si all stood out indelibly the image of his eat liest love, those happier pays Heine went to Hambarg where Fran their meeting would be Indicrous if it were not pathetic. Heinrich was led by an old servant to a room where the Light of a single lamp diffused itself; on the threshold, the old woman stopped and said: “She is bere.” The poet entered, wondering at his own composure. On a divan was seated a woman, dressed ina gown of soft tinted cashmere. In the dimness he could not sec her features, and he faltoringly nsked: ‘Are you? He stopped, and Molly, rising an- swerad: “You, my cousin; it is L"” He co ald see her now, and the tears rushed to his eyes; he would have wished to flee; he cursed himself for having come. The woman b:fore him was no longer the Molly he had known. She was almos! an old woman. on fous bad sufficed to transform the y girl whom he had worshipped into & woman old sand wrinkled, whose ince Lad lost its animation and whose form had g own leavy and ungainly. The negligence of her dress accentnat- ed these deicets, and the impression able dreamer saw the goddess of his fotay irapsformed into a German “hausfran’ of the most prosaic sort But Heine, too, had changed, and as they held each other’s hand, they were each silently striving to conjure tho like- ness of the past from the altered feat- ures before them. It is difficult to sa from which of the blows which Heine's love for Molly caused him, he suffered most, His poetic nature must have made this last disenchantment the most acute, for in it he could not even find the self-pitying consolation of “little songs.” His drean. had been twice rudely shattered, and henceforth he vould live and love in t e past. : The man who never, in spite of his genius, was lovable, was made still less 80 by this circumstance. Yet, for all his faults, there are few who know his life and writings who will not echo the words of Mutthew Arnold, written at the German poet's grave: The spirit of the world, Beh Laing the absardity of men Their vaunts, their feats— Let a sardonic smile For one short moment Wander o'er his hips, That smi] - was Heine! For its earthly hous Tie strange guest sparkled: Now "Lis passed away. 1 hat was tielne! and we, Miyrawds who Live, who have live What are we all bul a mood, A singe rood of the lhe Of the spirit in whom we exist, Who al ' 12% in one? I———————— A A» the Forelgner. A marrigze ceremony in Algeria 18 an interesting relic of ancient customs The bridegroom goes to the bride, and the guests assembled outside the house will wait for Soon the from the summit of some neighboring bill, and the marrige procession approaches the bridegroom's house. Tue pipers ulwuys come first in the procession, then bride, muffled up in a veil, tudinz a muie led vy ber lover. Then comes a bevy of gorgeously dressed damsels, sparkli with silver orna- ments, alter which the friends o' the bride follow. ‘I'he proce-sion slops in front of bri house, and the girl's friends line both sides of the pathw:y. The pipers march off on one side. while the bridegroom lifts the girl trom ths mule and holas her in his srms. I've girl's iriead upon throw earth at the bridegroom, when he hurries forward and carries her over the threshhold of his house beat him with much laughter In the evenings on such occasions the pipers and drummers are called in, and his coming. coming the ny - the lerronm’s «HIere- nor does a desist g and exhausted each other; until pantin coupis they step I'ne dunce has great energy of movament though the steps are small and changes sligi®, the dancers only circling around occasionally. But they swig thelr bodies with an astonishing energy and As { neflore 80 do they gunnienass leaves fuller th vibrate before the gale thoy shake. they shiver and trem- nivering arms, wave cam lost in Lhe pon while i the pipes and indlotmont ial World. for all eloquent ind by a pitil rnity and poa EF gocinty an who soug By $b 8 BLO rouch the dark of suicide A way woman of good education, of moral ex refined from starvation to death because no one oC llence, of honest puronos= . of sensibilitie she was driven would give her employment in New York because she had no ‘references.’ In letter left in miserable garret where she lived she wrote: “Woman who were so ignorant that | felt sorry for them would not take me into their kitchen because I could not show ‘city references.” | tried to ex plain that I had never had to work: and because I was not born and bred in the gutter I presume | must starve.” She might however, have found easy employment in comfortable homes. There was plenty of steady work within her grasp. She confess ed as much hersell. These are words: “‘Widowers who advertise for housakeepers, and then gently losinu- ate that you add wifely duties to do- mestic arrangements, are very plenty in this city, but 1 do not approve of such economy.” She preferred starv- the the streets from house to house, in all sorts of weather, seeking ‘‘any honest But she So she finally dashed out her brains by a leap from a fourth-story window, leaving behind on the bureau a ‘‘reference’ Paradise while many a ‘‘charitable” grand lady knocks in vain at their bar. This is one of the saddest cases in the list of sad suicides, sand is a mournful commentary upon the charity aad There is no harder condition imposed by life than that to which the “gene teol poor” are subjected when reduced to destitution. here seems to be literally no hope for them. They have neither the assurance to take op- portunity by the throat and demand relief, nor the miserable obsequious- ness to beg for alms where they should have the right to earn their support. They too fi have but one or two alternatives as solu- tion of their iife probl shame and death. This woman in New York pre- fers the headlong Junge into the terrors of death to a onorable life. Happily one can be buried without re " And the Little Woman Knew the Cateman'’s Weaknass, Now and then one finds a person who understands railroad human na- ture, as exhibited by the gatemen in the depots. Thelr orders are to pass no ene in without a ticket, and it is the easiest thing in the world for them to wave back old age, youth, beauty and anybody else who wants to pass in to meet a friend expected on that train. One of the surliest officials I ever saw, says tha New York Sun, has a gate in the lL. & N. depot in Cincinnati, and I have seen him turn stiflly away from desperate men, weeping women and howling children. I'o every protestation he hud but one answer: “Can't pass’ thout a ticket.” The other day, while | wus watching him, a little, syed woman came gliding into the throng waiting at the gutes. OF the twotenders she selected this one Jo oper. te on, although any one could have seen that the other had the biggest heart. Aftor several peo- ple had been turned away she slid for- ward in a graceful way and inquired “Beg pardon, sir, but am | speaking to tye president of the road?” “Neo, ma'sm!’ he stammered, thrown on his beam ends by the query. “Ah! you look so much like him! Are you the superintendent?’ “No, ma'am n “I'nen, you must be the manager?” “Hardly, m am.” “Dear me! but how could the peopls ken?” she went on. “Hull were one of the high officials, and I am so dis- to find are not. Per- ugh, you have the general powers when he 1s not blue not exactly. be s0 mist em said you appointed haps, the managers here? “What is it, ma'am? “My sister will be in on the 6.30, end | so want Ww go inside the gutes and help her with the children. As you must have the authority the manager in his absence, I make bold to " you " ’ Of “Certainly, ma'am; walk right jn" he interrupted. “You are #0 kind™ “Don’t mention it." “But all leadiog railroad ever cour euus,'’ vit of tally, und line down the de We turned to mea nre sin said us a purtiog thon she male bee prt look at the ga‘eman, and the change was surpri-ing He bad braced ualil his hsight was in- creased by four inc his ft was thrown out. and he was sand ng as stiff as a crowbar, while a man pound- ed him on the back and oTerad to lick the him if he would come off the perch. Tae little womaa of all bud found his weak spot up 104, can stuffing out of A woMax, driven by the vicissitudes of life to throw her home open to board. re, finds the experience, as most other women who try it do, difliealt, to say the least. But she says, philo- sophically: “I am learning human na- ture. I have discovered that the soft. voiced, refined-looking woman often carries tigerish claws beneath her vel. vet, and that the frank looking, well- | dressed man may develop into a ‘Med- dlesome Matty’ before my eves I | don't know why humanity should be | come brutal when it essays boarding, {but it seems to. A woman called re cently, liked my apartments, and re- ' aging =mile abe ssid, wit Len 3s 3 series of aes iors eat: on. : new pet fere my stairs snd somewhat cleaner day? Were to Kinds 6 CRTIN than they anpes ed ny bedfclean? Did of meat for dinner? Jmwe-made bread entirely? and, nally, Did | maid open the froat door as a rule? This | was a gratnitons impertinence. I was | taking the letters from the postman as she came up the steps, and naturally | received ber. And then she went away, after taking tiiree names as references I insisted in tarn that she should give me one, that of a lormer landlady, and it was one of the small compensations i of my lot, when she wrote me a week | later taat she found my references sat- isfaotory and would take the rooms, to reply thet I had found ber reference most unsatisfactory and was sure | could not tolerate her exactions, “A man came to me the other night, | and after forcing my price down as low as he could, asked me if my husband was a Christian, if my family attended | church and Sunday School, if my other | boarders were Uod-fearing people, ‘and if Bunday was observed with re- higions quiet by everybody in the house, “People ask me to take them cheaply be rause they are saving to buy a house or because the husband has extra office expenses, or, as ong gushing creature told me, ‘becanse we want to go tv Europe next Summer.’ The more the want the less they want to pay. Loo at the adivartisotisents for hoszd wanted,’ ‘everything unexceptionable,’ anl ‘terms moderate.’ Would those people think of going into a shop and saying, ‘I want your most ex ive goods at a low price? Yet they do pre- cisely that with me. Barroundings, appointments and service that mean a serions outlay they demand and are not willing to pay for. They cannot afford to keep up an establishment to their liking, and they ask me to doit for them without adequate compensation, The average man or woman seems to part with his courtesy, sense of justice and humanity when he starts out to be- come a boarder,” that I bias Ve 5 3 i Us § A Crusade Against Klsabug. A preacher in a peighoring town haa just undertaken a violent crusade agulug kissing at church fairs Be n the most perem manner hus forbidden the Don of his flock to engage in games which end i» osoul rewards a ay veto, curiously all come from unmarried | certain age. New York Journal. WIIHOUT RELIGION, Mr. James Knssell Lowell, our late Minister to England, recently, in aa aiter-d noer speech, replied to some skeptica: diners out, as fol ows: +‘ fear that when we indulge onr- out a religion, we are not perhaps | awaré how much we are sustained at present by an enormous mass all about | us of religious feeling and religious | convictions, so that whatever it may be | safe for us to think—for us who have! had great advantages and have been | brought up in such a way that such a charaeter—I do not know what would mankind if they undertook to play the same game, may attach to a few points of the doe- which was simply what all Christians believe— t will be ism, or ary other ‘“ism” which and nsen Christ, is infinitely the degenerate sons of heroic ancestors, founda- men of the by and edaeated in schools, tions of which were laid down the lad ier by which they have climbed up, and persuade men to live withont (God and leave them to die without hope, “The worst kind of religion is no religion st all, and these men living in juxnry and ease, indulging thems lves in “the amusement of going wituout re- ligion,' may be thankful they live in lands where the they neglect hus tamed the beast in ss snd ferocity Gospel might long ago have eaten their ¢.r- cuss 8 like the Bont Bea Island rs, or ent off their heads and tanned | hides like the monsters of the French | revolntion, When the mieroscopic search of skepticism, which had tinnted tive heavens al sonnp led tae disprove the ex stenoe of a Crestor, has found a place oo decancy, comiort and sconrity s 1p- ip ot ng and eduestiug hiseinl ren, gooiled and nupolluted; a place where ! age reverevemd, iufacoy respected, wanhood respected; womanhood bou- ored, snd human hfe beid in die re- gnrtd—when skeptics ean flod soch a place ten miles square on tins glo e, where the Gosoel of Curist hss not cleared the way and laid the founda- tion and made decency and secariny possible, 18 will then be in order for the skeptical literati to move thither and there ventilate thar views, But so long as these men are dependent npon the religion which they discard for every privilege they enjoy, well hesi ate a little before they seek to rob the Christian of his hope and in who alone has given to man that hope of life eternal which makes life tolera- of its terrors and the glooms.” grave of its AD I nized by "Harper's Magazine.” Shortly after the death of Cwmsar's ! daughter Julia, who had married Pom- pey, the latter grew very distast to- Canar and before much time the two had become thorough- ly estranged. Bratus having remark- Pou pay ireatine h hearing that piatake in wd, Cassar observed: m He ough i were fis mother ’ x. i . 9 iis lathernin-law. i thut Brutus foolish siake tara] if naland of l tliat evening Joine : Oliver Goldemith's modesty has be- come proverbial, but he was by no be is sometimes represented. David Garrick, who fond of his little joke, once asked Goldsmith before a party of gay Londoners: “Why does an uss bray when he can argue so e.o- quently with his hind hoofs?” “Why do ye ask me?’ asked Goldsmith. “Boca. you are an ass.” replied Gar- rick, with a smile. Quick as a wink came the reply; You'reanother.” It is vot likely that Garrick after this trified much with dear old Noll. On another occasion, Bosworth hav- ing sald in Goldsmith's hearing that the “Vicar of Wakefield” should have been called the Vicar o! Sleepfleld,” modest Noll turned toward him and without a moment's hefitation eried: “Shut up your mouth!” Dr. Johanson nearly laughed himself into an apo- ploces fit over this when Sir Joshua Reynolds told him about it next day. “WIL" said Bacon one day to Shakespeare ‘thoy say | wrote your playa” Shakespeare laughed. “Why doy augh my William?” my , they think you are the swan of Avon. You're a devil of » swan, you are,” Ben Johnson said it took one of Ba- con's strongest essays to keep him from striking the poet. —New York Sun. EE iC —— Thought He Could Bait Father (to editor). “1 would like you to give my son & chance in your printing office. Editor. “What can the bey do?” Father. Well, at first he couldn't do anything more than edit your pa- mechanical department, but later on, when he learns sense, he'll be handy t¢ have around to wash windows, keep lamp chimneys clean and sift ashes. ~ Norwalk Record. You can tell what kind of a spirit there is In a man by the way he treats FOOD FOR THOUGIULI Riches lie in self-sacrifice, “J serve,” is a truly moral moto. True freedom stands In meekness, Ignorance never settles a question. In nature here is no blemish but the mind. None can be ealled deformed but the unkind, Every man is some kind of a cow- No | proud, {| Any work is bard work to a lary | man, The cross can only be seen from a Cross, Every good man monuments, He who knows most grieves most for wasted time, I'ride, generally, is at the botiom of all great mistakes, man is who knows himself bullds his own Even vinegar has to work in orGer io be worth anything. Thou must be true to thyself, if thou the truth would teach, Lvil sha'l hunt the violent man, to overthrow him. There is nothing sadder on earth than an unhappy child, have always The arp'e you musn’t looks the swe. $ast, Peware of child ren and fowers, people who do not lova Troubles will run when you look them squarely in the face, People do pot grow into grace by looking at the faults of others, No mao is so worthy of envy as he that can be cheerful in want, No [ife 18 wasted unis It sloth, dist ous §y Or ¢ war lice, ends in Til’ me whom you live with, and ] { will tell you wao you are, Life, likeeve y other blessing derives ils value [row 118 wee a one, A Wotnan ean nur dange ois on u b.e.cle than wien sie thows Lens, te al i deal of shin‘ng belore there was Lnyboldy bere Lo notion it. The law is always written on stone, DULL graCe cotties Ww us through a loviuyg heart, The man who an ler takes to get rich at th» expouse of bis couscicuce will fiva that he can’t ao it. i he sun did a goad Commonplace people see nodiflerence belween one man aud another, Cultivate not only the corc-fields of your mind, but the p easure-ground also, Resignation is the name of the angel wii h carries the most of our soul’s { burden, A skeplic is one who knows too | much to be a good fool, and too little | to be wise, One bird in the bush charms for the natural man in the hand, He who can take no icterest in what is small will take false Inteiest In what is great. bas more than two is race in this nes he 8 oul of When aman has ran b world and tie end ¢ breath, There is a great des] of good ind lazioens, dinrer ws TF £ a = for a regu- Never 28k the devil to you are willing to take Li lar boarder. Frui less is sorrow for having dons ! amiss if it issues not in a resolution Ww do 80 no more, { It is distressing to see that human | genius has limitations, and human stu- | pidity bas none. {| Families are a good deal 1. ke clocks. Too much regulation may easily make | them go wrong. A hypocrite is a counterfeit, A coun- | terfeit is one of the strongest proofs { that there Is a genuine. The nearer a man gels to his battle field the smaller the reason grows that there should be a battle at all Among the “rights” an individual may claim of society, room for the de- velopment of the individuality stands foremost. Tt is just as easy to pull up a weed by its roots as it is to cut it off; so it is as easy 10 remove & vice as to correci it. I know no friends more faithful and | inseparable than bard-heartedness and | pride, humility and love, lies and impu- dence. Two-thirds of the pily in this world is nothing more than a secret ratisfac- tion that somebody 1s worse off than we are, The man who is “generous toa fault” is mostly generous to Lis own faults He treats them well and they stay with him, Before you start out to atiain a seat on the highest pinnacle of fame, bear in mind that it rons up to a pretty sharp poling, The young woman who declares she | 18 just as mad as she cau be doesa’t be gin to be as mad as she 18 when she says nothing about it. ' We have prefessors who leach the art of talking correctly. Why can’t we have some who will teach the art of listening patiently. The woild will be neaver right when & man bas Jearned to Jaugh a little jess at his neighbor's troubles, and a little more at his own. Somebody asks for a definition of a philosopher. A ph is a man who earns §9 5 week and is con. tented with his income. nk So A eae wor somes elie him a ng spots on a : HURSE NOTES ~The Iowa Centr: Btock Fw Butler county, ons of the larvest Lona, was reported sold recently, by desars. Stout, of Dubuque, to Joh® Lush, of Accley, 14, who will cut #8 up slo smal farws, ~dJudge P. P. Johi ston has positive. ly declined to serve another year a8 President of the Kentucky Associaton of Trotting Horse Breeders, and Mr, John E. Green will probably become his BUCCessor, ~Mr. Jacob Ruppert lost by death recen’' ly the weaning chestnut filly, by imported St. Blaise, dam 1mpoi ted Po- lenta, which he recently purchased at the Belmont sale, paying $2500 for mother and foal. —There were three 2-year-olds to beat 2.20 at vanesr Park, Mair, Ky., during its meeting: Thistle Dew, by Sentinel Wilkes, 295; lady Prinecton by Princeton, 230; and Lakewood, by Norwood, 27%. - Lockhart, 2 14}, is up to the present time, the fastest trotting representative of the Nutwood family, Hs dam, lapidan, by Dictator, was bred by aptain B. J. Tracy, Lexington, and she 18 now owned by W. A Mec Afee, ~The Jewett Farm has another great yearling pacer in a filly by Bonnie Boy, son of Vatchen Wilkes, that, it is said, ca make a wile in. 28), Bhe is cut of a mare by Rochester, and her second dam is Lady Delmont, the dam of SlLer 9 9 man, < 259 — Althoigh Director, 2.17, was a game racehorse, and is well bred, he was despig~d by Kentucky breeders bee fore Balisbury bought Lim, His sno cess In Cuiforna bas Lesa wobe ferful, and he vw iH now be brought back to Kentucky to euler ser- Vice, 2. 9 “ dd. G. Davis, for many ye ri Supers Highlawnu Farm, lias pure chased uli th stock belmgin to the volte nit tas ees! Lhe Loam for a teri of vests, lle will sell at an early doy ali the brosd-wares nl slozk, res evrg ouly Aleant r tur stud » TV. 00 tilenudeid 1 “iva © 5 0 2.23, — Ben 16, Keuney, who ha hal charge of Majcus 1 a's rotlers thi year, Las Laken Lis back to Ih versie, Mout. fle recei ty vol i addy Winon, 2 1}. R« Cleary (2), 2 20%; Fautasie 2 4} «ud Winel, 3-eai-vd ully, Uy Wi kes Boy; Mieiry Will, 2-;ear- uid colt, by Willen, ~—Mr Simmons. of New Douglass, LiL, not outy wm 8 x horses with glao- siers recen iv, bit bis own life as well Whenever Lure 8 Lhe slightest sus) vou of glanders in a stalls a competent veterinary surgeon should Le sent for at once. It is ove of the most inf.c- tious of diseases and incurable, —F. 8 Gorton, * hicagn, has soid to Sisson & Lilley, Grand Rapids, Mich, a half interest in the bay horse Pleasan- ton, 18 £2, foaled 1888, by Director, re- cord 2.17, dam May Day record 2.30. This horse is full brother to Margaret S., 4-year-old record 2.124, and May Day is also the dam of 1. cas, record 2 144. ~=J, Malcolm Forbes, Boston, Masa, has recently purchased from. A. J. Alexan ler, VW oodburn, Kv, bay filly hh rvs le n: i foaled May 20, 1:01, by K W likes, | Wavelet («ster to Viking, 2}; Was te. Fairy Bele and nt. Also a bey Cliy 1-91, by King Wilkes, “ 29 Uy a roid. { dam Puen; | ——Atthe t ack of the Iowa Driving | Park, recent y, A. L. Sardy drove Joe | Jefferson aoaiust the four-mile pacing | record, 108°}, lowering it to 10.10 { The old r cord was made by Longfel { low at ran Fiancisco, in 1861, and has stood for thirty years, Joe Jefferson now holds the work's pacing records for thres miles and four miles. —It is said of Manette, the dam of Arion, that she would never trot a little bit. Her gait is the run, and she was frequently used as a runner to acoom- pany and and stimulate trotters. With ber inheritance of trotting blood this is strange, and stranger still it 1s that she should pe the one to prodace the won- der of wonders, #= The body of the Arab stallion Kis. met, which died recently from poeum- onia, contracted on the voyage from England, will be brought from New York to Philadelphia. Mr. Randoiph Huntington has presented the body to Dr. R. 8. Huldekoper, who will use the skeleton in his lectures on the anatomy of the horse. ~The brown stallion St. Valentine, 2.20, by Westwood, son of Diack dam Laura Logan by Americin Clay trotted in 2.174, over his owner's new kite shaped track near La Belle, Mo, recently, He went to the half in 1.07. St. Valentine !s said to be the largest horse in the 2.20 list. He weighs 1408 pounds in racing condition, ———— I A —————— Hams Por Your Serap Beek. A teaspoonful of borax added cold starch will make clothes stiffer than anything else, though it adds ne polish. In using ammonia for domestic pum poses one tablespoonful to about a quart of water is about the ordinary proportion. It you dip the wicks of lamps in strong hot vinegar and then dry them it will do away with much of the dis agreeable smell Belore beginning to seed raising cover them with hot water and led them stand 15 minutes. The seeds can then be removed easily without ¢ particle of waste An old recommendation often given oung housokeepers is 10 use toa leaves on sweeping carpets; but their use oa delicate should be avoided, a