FAITH, sn m— She sat where daisy blossoms tossed Their heads beneath an elm shade : Her hands upon her knees were crossed My bonny, laughing, goid-haired maid. tree's n lover's tone of fond command, 1 said, while sketching at her feet, “Pray take a daisy in your hand And make yourself a Marguerite.” “These foolish tell,” She answered, blushing winsomely, “Your lips have said, ‘I love thee well,’ And that's the oracle for me." —Kate Field's Washington. flowers have naught fd BUNCH OF VIOLETS. BY V. ETYNGE MITCHELL. cups and open-eyed daisies, over hills on which the lights and shadows of a summer morning were playing hide and seek, through valleys where drowsy cattle were grazing by the side of idle brooks train known as “The Wild Irishman,’ running between London and Holy- head. Seated in one of the riages, which had no other than herself, was a X face had the exquisite coloring of a portrait by Titian. Large brown eves shaded by curling lashes were in strange yet pleasing contrast to the golden hair which fell in wilful little curls about her forehead. As they neared Chester, the only station at which the train stopped on ng journey, the young lady leaned forward and watched with slight interest, the eager crowd of men and women who awaited the ar- rival of the cars. “I wonder what fate has in for me in the way of a traveling com- panion,’”’ murmured, and the answer to her thought came immediately, as a gentleman the much bronzed face, partment. Selfishly regretting the disturbance solitude, the woman opened a book, which she had drawn from her taveling bag, and appeared to be entirely absorbed in its perusal. 3 proceeded center car- occupant girl whose young girl its long store she of a traveler ered costume ent the com- of her young The newcomer at once make away parcels and umbrella, and ily taking possession of of the barely gl himself comfortable, stow- to a seat at r, facing end ca *r, DUl Anc- ng at her, Only the sound of or the whirof a turbed the quiet of the the busy wheels passing train dis- journey. The e example of it a stranger had followed tl a reel having { having 1 + was soon i taken ot if st in its ¢ 3 by a mischievous south rind, blowing with i iliarity through th disarranged from under the girl's hat. the offender mpertinent fa- window ne open the flufly curls peepis She rose impatiently to shut out but fate ordained that t should stick, whereupon she glanced with at the man who had dropped his paper and was looking full at her. For the first ti and a bow of coldly formal tion passed between them, Miss St. John,”” he murmured ‘I hardly expected to meet you here. Allow me 2. And, window, he quietly returned to his former position, while she, having expressed her thanks by an inclina- tion of the head, resumed her novel. The constraint of their was uncomfortable to the couple, who had evidently met and parted on some occasion which had either left them unfriendly almost as strangers, From under his heavy eyebrows the young man covertly watched his companion. She was holding her book upside down. A smile broke upon his lips as he observed this, and rattling his newspaper noisly to at- tract her attention he leaned forward impulsively determined to break the silence by addressing her, ““ May I inquire how your sister, Mrs. Arlington, is? She raised her head, but not looking at him replied with freezing discouragement of tone. ** Thank you; quite well.”’ ‘“ Ah, and your mother (with quiet perdistence), I hope she is better, Miss Bt. John. Am I correct in ad- dressing you by the old name? You may have changed it." ‘You are quite correct,” she re- turned icily. ii he winaow ; ort feminine helplessness me their eves closing the or Mrs. Arlington is clover, bounced with a noisy jocular- ment, strove to escape from it by fly- ing with spiteful buzzing sgainst the stantly suppressed, tipathy to bees ’’ young man, placidly folding his arms and smiling; changed.” “Among them your disagreeable habit of teasing,’’ replied Miss St. John, and turned her attention to some russet-colored cattle that lifted their heads from the tall reed sos to gaze in open-eyed wonder at the passing train. “Don’t you think,’’ suggested Mr, Dennison, when the silence again be- cama Sppressive, ‘‘that, ss we are likely to be shut up together in this compartment for two full hours, it might be more philosophical—not to say agreeable~if wo raise a flag of truce? We can confine ourselves to sommonpluaces—-the weather, ecatch- - ing bees, or other harmless topies.*’ Oh! confine yourself to catching bees, by all means,” she cried nery- | ously, as the insect in question re- { minded them of his presence by | bouncing against the ear of the | young iady. of remarks about the { weather,”’ she added more genially as she watched Dr. Dennison chase 3 interchange { offender through the window. | his throat a little nervously, ‘‘it a charming day.”’ son." ‘“Ah, yes; perhaps we may have rain, which was slow in coming.’ look probable to me.” Having delivered herself of this | brilliant speech, she arched her neck [with extravagant courtesy to exam- | ine the clouds. “We had thunder last week,” tinued the young man, desperately. “Is it retorted Miss St. John, “that you should turn your- necessary, which he sent by mai! with a bunch of Parma violets." Well 2"! whispered Miss St, John: well?”’ It was easy to see that she was at last deeply interested. “Mr. Dubois asked her in this letter if she still loved him to wear his flowers the next evening at a dance meet, He called her his ‘little gueen’—he was madly in love with her.’ ‘“*And then?’ the girl's sounded as if she were crying. “Oh, then, he went to the dance. She was there, radiant, smiling, beau- But she did not wear his vio- Her gown was white, but upon bunch of crim- son roses—which had been given to voice lots, me reports of what has been? to the present or future.” “There is no future for her companion, sadly. pantly, as if anxious words, he added “Pon't ¥ to the—weathbr me,’’ said Then flip- to recall his is a limit Sup- there for a topic? pose we try something else,”’ “We have talked long enough,’ returned the young woman, severely. 1] prefer to read.” And she lutely opened the novel. ‘‘Is it interesting?’’ he persisted, ou think reso- after a pause ‘Intensely, “It must be rather difficult to read upside down. Is that an acrobatic feat you have learned to accomplish in the four vears of my absence?” the length of time has not improved Miss St. It goes without saying that ners said accepted in silence i but left nis companion moment of hesitation he 1 If in the ed himse he whispered glance of angry tol- reach Holy- histle-downs we shall 1 will again. We were very good frieuds— aver JUst at once-—hut ourse that is sll inlly detest me. are wishing me I did not ss 5, the with flashing eyes thought exclaimed continued that » and enable you antagonism {oo my ke to hear the stories. Possibly ' I Pp 5 3 I wrote a book you remember ths words from her I rememixn hat. Itis entertain me Mr. Dennison on his fingers | [ov ging in you to your plot ye oun to hat is econnt Ss dramatic ps Miss Maude Vivian There is iress Mr. stricken artist, Mr. John Halifax—very hand very rich and icular. ~~ } ie Henry Dubois—a poverty. nothing in par- ene-—Central Africa.” ‘Your scene is 18 and | your combination of characters im- probable,” complained Miss St. John “Truth is not necessary in fiction,”’ responded the story teller. ““*Oblige me, then, by not romane- ing any more than is absolutely 1ecessary.’’ “Miss Vivian was fair and lovable. Consequently when she met Mr. Du- bois at a lawn party he fell in love with her and she reciprocated his af- fection. ‘A lawn party in Central Africa!”’ expostulated the young lady. .Pray! are you telling me a romance among the Manyemas?'’ : “The color of the skin is immater- replied Mr. Dennison, ‘but as preposterol rope—England will do. All went well with the lovers until, like the snake in the Garden of Eden, a third person stepped in, Mr. John Halifax. Well, one eannot blame Miss Vivian if she preferred the corn and wine of | Egypt to love in a cottage with pov- | erty." i There was a pause, which Miss St. John broke by exclaiming irritably : “You are not entertaining at all. | No “Why not?’ (politely). “Have! you never known of a similar cage?’ | ‘“ No, never, except in some absurd | ‘* By and by," continued the young | man, ‘Mr. Dubois decided to ‘win or | lose it all.” He asks Miss Vivian to | marry him at once and share his | modest income, which is, however, a | He~-made a fool of him- self.” “ Most girl. “That is true, otherwise women would not care for them ; but in this case the lady shared his folly.” “In what way?’ ‘“* She threw aside a loyal heart.” ‘* Probably she had good reason for so doing.” ‘It oczurs to me that you espouse her cause very warmly.” ** Possibly the young man was over- bearing and impertinent. She very properly declined to be a slave, It is a Briton's privilege.’’ ‘1 grant it. But suppose that Du- bois loved her deeply and truly ; that, realizing that he had spoken hastily and regretted it, and wrote her a lot ter full of entreaties for pardon, men do,” murmured the ¢ i The voice of the narrator trembled, but he did not glance at his compan- ion. Already they were approaching a tunnel which heralded the end of their journey. Miss St. John realized it and was thankful, for she hoped the semi-darkness might hide her falling tears. “That night,’’ continued Mr. Den- nison, ‘he met a friend who was to sail for Africa on the following day. with him. He four years." “Did it ur to him,” the young girl, reaching a out of which she drew a small jeweled was away O0e box and laid it Miss Vivian m the letter until ight not after the i and impetuous lover call. Besides was beyond re- she might With such but for his return. flows like Solway tide.’ 's y Already they were at the mouth of the tunnel. The whe the train sounded like thunder, plung Mis John pinning with trembling men ebbs like its 3 revolving revolving an instant before the engine into darkness Dennison saw a bunch of faded flowers to tl af he box ¢ ly he n her bosom ling diamonds in f the carriage lan All have held you ir these words waste i wher these n, drawin od me mi she he whis Darling enough. I these « CAN nev wi § 3 YO 154 loyalty again. Fiying Machines. Benjamin Franklin pare the balloon of his day t« who would presently to He thought the aerostation embryo, and it due time would do marvelous things. But his aspira One Imay now say, were sanguine, = Our aerial achievements literally ** in the ai our best aeronauts They are * blown about with every wind.” It is true that the parachute has been brought to considerable per fection, but that is not but falling. Itis samething to be able to fall softly from a great height. but it is not much, It hardly worth while to go upso far in order to come down again. This reflection applies to the very latest improvements in the science The winged man of Steglitz has, we are told, *'' accomplished a journey of 250 yards,” bnt this merely means tower he has built for the purpose with a spring board, or from a steep hill, he hae flown down that distance. As for the aerial machines of vari. ous kinds that are to ** revolutionize by dropping dynamite over cities and armies, they may be marvels of mechanieal science, but come was in tions, to are are involuntary flying, seems casion,”’ or even risen at all. Even the ** Maxim’ invention has, I un. derstand, ‘‘never left the rails,” which, although a great virtue ina locomotive, is very little credit toa flying machine.~{ London News. Nickel and Silver. Some authorities say that the prices of nickel and silver will event. ually cross each other. They argue that nickel is more useful, is scarcer, and is not so readily produced, and that as silver is used more asa symbol of wealth its value in that di- rection will gradually depreciate. In such an event there is a long road, because silver has in it the tradition of ages, and the poorer classes of the world would be actuated in its use as the rich have been, and for elong time the downward course would be stayed by this sentiment alone. [ Hardware, i Wool is now manufactured into nearly 22,000 different Kinds of goods. THE JESTS AND YARNS BY FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. Ready to Begin~--Better Than Elec tricity ~~ Modest Willie ~~ Early Depravity--Ete., ete. READY TO BEGIN. The Governor—Now that I've paid your debts, Harry, you can make a new start, Harry—Thank you, father; please lend me a hundred. —{ Truth. BETTER THAN ELECTRICITY. Agent—Wouldn't you like to have Mr. Binks—Don’t need it, I've a wife.—{ New York Weekly. WILLIE, got B LR MODEST ‘“No,”” said Willie Wibbles, “I'm not a bit afrail of a bicycle,” “You brave YOUng woman, “Oh not Willie modestly. wide one, said the are quite necessarily,” rejoined “You see,”] nevah EARLY DEPRAVITY. ‘Papa,’ asked To ‘who was Cain's wif mimny Goodman, a9 Rev, Dr. pause, the an, afte an omi ill you please Caroline HOous room thw how i TIE Ch — ICAO AN IDIOTIC BIRD I have ats every word I ¥ a parrot at hom utter of a . ' bird ejacu cus. —{ Harper's Bazar, Mamma —\} hiatt i% 3 onnny’ as “lye table (v1 3 nny —- Anvth mamma. - Newport Ne Ww $ PRACTICAL VIEW yv say the Wolf heir door.” Well 1 don't ow what there for—they never have anything in the house,” = New York Press, OF IT is continually ki he is OUT OF SIGHT Investor—] see you have a railroad mapped out here, but where's your town? a Land Boomer—-Well, to tell you the truth, it built yet; but there's six candidates for Sheriff in them gallberry bushes, one moonlight distillery, three Prohibitionists and a pond for baptism.—] New York Press. ain't TOO POOR. “Lend me ton, Fweddie.” ‘Can’t do it I have just been jilted by a girl worth half a million.”’ ef Life. A DIALOGUE FROM LIFE. “Where are you going?’’ ‘““To the chemist’s,”’ “Is it for yourself ?'’ “Oh, no, fortunately-—it's for my wife. "=f Le Soir. ABSENT MINDED, Benson—1 have a literary friend who is so absent-minded that when he went to London recently he tele. graphed himself ahead to wait for himself at a certain place. Smith-~Did the telegram have the desired result? Benson«-No. He got it all right, but he had forgotten to sign his name, and not knowing who it was from, he paid no attention to it, {Pearson's Weekly. FEELING I8 BELIEVING, TOO. Teacher] don’t suppose any one of the little boys here has ever seen a whale? . Boy (at the foot of the class)-~No, gir, but I've felt one.— [Brooklyn Life. THE GENIAL PORT, “Ha, ha” laughed the poet, “Here's a good joke.” “What is it?’ asked his wife, " Why," returned the genial bard, “a fellow wrote to me for my auto. ph the other day and I sent it to im. Then what does he do but copy it on a check and try to get some money at a bank. Tried to get good wish, my dear, with my name on a check, Ha, ha!’ = [Philadelphia BOCIETY ORNAMENTS, De Snapp~—I congratulate you, old Miss Purkey's face is rather plain, but she is worth $200,000, De Muttinedd—Thanks, dear boy. You are right. It was her figure that HER BOCIAL TRIUMPH. Mrs, Gossip—I hear you attracted much notice on your appearance in the social world abroad. Mrs. Numoney—I should say #0. I On an average $35,000 of diamonds every ball I went to. — Chicago Record. WAS AWARE OF IT. witness,’ ly sharply Gi ; for the defence lemember Yyou are on oath.” There ain’t no danger of nlied made $4 CRSC. Gn Know it," = FOR GROUND She-You vou know you are " He=lamd sing nothing of the sort I can get angry if She—But I don't angry except when 1 to.~{ Indianapolis Journal. A Wonderful Cliff. you wish me to wish you to ge don’t wish vou * Jeffrey's Clift, located four miles east of Hawesville, is a natural and a wonder. It consists of a huge cliff from 200 to 1 around, and looks as had set a huge boulder down face of the earth, the top of it from ten to thirty {eet deep, and before it was partially on the adorned it. There is probably more than a hundred acres of good land on top of it. Nature left no way for a man with modern vehicle to go up it, but at an expense of hundreds of dollars a wagon-way has been cut through the solid rock and the dirt graded up to meet it. provided for the lone tray- eler. On this wonderful natural produe- tion the towns of Cloverport, Cannel place, sail half way down the sides of “Salt Peter Cave,” and other points of interest make up its pecu- liar wonders. There is an aperture in the cliff on one side, about a foot wide, that sends out the year round a cold breeze. The warmest, sultriest day that can be imagined in Auguss, this constant flow of cold air greets the sightseer. It sits in the middle of the upper bottom, and the Ohio river curves more than half way round it at a distance of a mile and a half away. Truly this is a home wonder. «| Hancock (Ky.) Clarion. BH 5 PA AAAS. Boston has 446,600 population ana 858 police, who last year made 39,008 oy 8 A —————— Mew Very Delightful, “What charming weather,” we all say in the opening days of the early spring ; then off go the wraps and up go the windows to lot the balmy alr coms in-—with it comes in numerous things that ought to be kept out, We feel sore from stiffsned limbs, and many zo tottering sround with lame backs. Mr, Harry Willlams, Greenville, Cal., under oath writes onthis subject us foliows . “A lady suf- fered so severely with pains in the back for two days that she could not sit up, One ap- plication of Bt, Jacobs Oil gave the suffsrer a good night's rest, sad in the morning she was well.” That was charmiog, An underground railway up the Jungfrau Mountain is one of 18 of the Bwiss engineers, the late Proje Donfness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the Alneased portion of the ear. ‘I'here is only ons ry to cure Deafness, and that Is by constitu. tinal remedies. Deafue-s is caused Ly an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Fustachiss Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a ramoling sound or (myer. fret hearive, and when it is entirely clawed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tubs re stored to its normal condition, hesring will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten arm ‘ ed oy eatarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Hundred Dllars for any case of 1ialness (caused by catarrl) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send fog culars, free, F.J Caeser & Co,, Toledo, O. S¥ Bold by Drugrists, 75. mated that the ralls on the various rajliways of the « altogether 83. ~ O06 O00 tons, v . it is esti 842.5010rva Farm Wagen. be had for YOU Witt to the John The $42.9 best wagon in the world can a barrel cart for 83.5), Ir CUT THIS OUT AND BEND IT with 5 A d Co.,. red mammotl will yon A Palzer Se la Crosse, Wis, vou sive their nlalogue, whers his wagon umes body ayy dps d nenis, The Skill and Knowledge f the most per and popularisaxative remedy kuown have Calif Co. to reput ation of Figs, as it is concedes inxative. For sale by aB Essential to the produc {ect ensbiel the wnis Fig Syrup achieve a greal success inthe its remedy, Syrup of fo be the universal druggists Men Wanted, good men, men of iy 10 represent as. are many of the werica, and parties nd a splendid busi. yids iment That f the firm KB. F. Via. stated the cose ment it & Jake The Hest “Yes, sir; we want class character and our representats ETE RKowt Bern in ta hllimer 2d Kidney TAI ple soratory 1 8 PASO. attain. Shilah's Care it eures Incipiont Con. oc, I AR ENaran tes ion; itis the B st Cough Cure; Sik SCE #0.000 pins affections, ) have 7 TVRs MADY Years. Tested ny Ting, ’ ronchia he, ete. *) é i their efficacy by a test of e 25 cents ug rie eomotive beadlighis gain favor, 1f afMicted with sore eves nee Dr. Isase Thomp son's Kj e-water. Druggists sell at 2c per boitle Electric irons are usad in laundries BEYOND DESCRIPTION The Misery Before Taking The Happiness After Taking HOOD’'S. p— o =~. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.» “Dear Sirs:~1 have been in poor health for 30 or 25 years, and have been taking doctors’ medicines more or loss all the time. [did not and my system was all ran down, [1 thought { must die. but noticing several testimonials in the papers in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla i bought three bottles and found that it did me so much good that | continued taking it. | waa without appetite, slothfully sleepy, and had a eadache most all the time. In fact | cannot escribe my feelings, After using one bottle of Hoods Sarsaparilia | found it was doing Hood's*==Cur vine boo mi In fact | think ‘e Sa life.” R. H. Bisnor, Box 60,