KEEP AGOIN ! If you strike a thorn or rose, Keep a-goin’! if it hails, or if it snows, Keep a-goin' ! "Tain't no use to sit an’ whine When the fish ain't on your line; Bait your hook an’ kesp ou tryin’! Keep a-goin’ | | When the weather kills your crop, Keep a-goin’ ! When you tumble from the top, Keep a-goin’! N'pose you're out 0’ every dime? {iittin’ brokeain't any crime Tell the world you're feelin’ prime! Keep a-goin When it looks like all is up, Keep a-goin' ! Drain the sweetness from the eup, Keep a-goin’ ! See the wild birds on the wing! Hear the bells that sweetly ring! When vou feel like sighin Keep a-goin’! {Frank I. Stanton in Atlanta Constitu tig Lion, Her Celestial Adorer sing and pretiy. lit tle, was so dist She was prim IS, She ractingly Three of these qu usual combination. of note. She came up to New York to study Her ni alities are an un- Therefore worthy bookkeeping and shorthand. name wus Alice Pearson, ane a mania for converti The whic was kept by a stout Brown house at voman-—Mrs. the essence of let the boarders freeze all by 1 may That i havi nificent had able to stand ravages of Mrs, Brown's pork and beans the longest. He was a medical t. and his name was Caldwell. He was very gzood-l by-the-by. There were sixteen | Brown's establishment Miss Pearson came d Two weeks afterward twenty-one, and within ¢ Brown's li reached. The newecom ticed, were all me: n who ' who ai on heen studen MaRing Wi IL —— th snouct enough, York Worry me Chung bli washed and ironed was noticed that wh be { with linary work, whole of + 9s #1 Sixth s De compared been had a mania She tried waitre made strong tal 4 Lilie has abiee turned her attention to F “How do you lo. Mr. Chi greeted him with one he came for the Inundry **Ni cha,’ replied the Cel “I guess he means ‘How Pearson,’’ struck in Millie sweeping the room “Oh! Ni cha, Mr. Sing.” The Chinaman did not facial muscle. estial. dy Miss who was change a He did not want to look sad, and he could not grin any harder than he was already doing. The left side of the six padded coats gave a great beat outward. That was getting on, The loved one could now converse as fluently in his native tongue as he in hers, That was getting on. The next time he came he brought one of those little reeds with a bunch of hair fastened in one end, which thn Chinese use for pens, and pre- sented it, with his immovable grin. That gentle smile of his was so fixedly wide that Oaldwell declared the top of his head to be an island surround- | ed bysmouth. A somewhat exagger- | ated metaphor. Still it was what one | might call a generous smile, The following week he lnid on her shrine a packet of Chinese firecrack- | ers and had learned to count up to five | in English. She had eight articles | in the washing, but he began over again at ‘one’ when he reached the place where ‘‘six’’ ought fo be, so that was all right. Miss Pearson never got beyond “Ni cha’ in her study of the Chinese tongue, but Fah Chung applied him- self with ardor to the mastery of English, and went about his laundry practicing—''One collie, one collie, two cuff, two cuff, one collie, two ~ ecufl.”” When he got so that he could say, Aloo lightes, washee soon, done sSlatteday,’”’ Miss Pearson thought it time to begin her spiritual admin- istrations. Accordingly she took him down to the boarding house drawing room one Saturday, he got the draughts between the fire- less grate and the door beautifully, and discoursed to him, , The girl was sincerely in earnest, and it was something of a shock when he turned toward her that un- smile and affably re “*Meo likee Melican gal” Fah Chung slept in a tiny box of the back of his laundry. He oan began “wasting his riotous’’ Chinese grecn-inde hairpins, which ISO he took her washing home, Oriental dealer, and gave him a half dollar for one of the pins, and would have none of it, she took it that it was below his price, so re- turned the pin, ahd pocketed the money herself. Finally it dawned on her that he was making her a present. She promptly deelined the gift, but the vext week it turned up again, i he much-refused every article ‘bob up gerenely’’ Saturday that she it to rid of it, and Fah Chung grinned harder, worked later, The fever of the New seized him. He longed took ret and ate less, World had to amass riches. With all her primness, Miss Pear- ff a somewhat adventurous The great town to her coun- I, was full of wonders: Wola In Was « and 2.848 8 fi young pret an, if she as independent ne . VY woman oi choose, in New York life if i re hi reel her nDassion I OWn prother for Her studies usually "We exXpior- but on those ever il engaged by other house nw» *Uisne sinner gray bonnet an fortunate nderoed out int ht wo why, bu itt ii raid 11, particularly after Miss Pearson fasten a rose inl ton hole, There are some things that change it neither in America nor in China, anid the heart of the Fah Chung In with tions, to ‘Feast f religious festival r is one, Fourth of fire-crackers and illumina- be a kind of American the Lanterns’ '—a great fact. There he love might take the iy. of in mistook. Decidedly. But Fah Chung was right when he euessed that the object of his pas regarded him more in the light of a lover than she would some old woman who chose to wear a pig- tail and unusoal shoes, The change in dress shadowed upon Miss Pearson's mind the fact that her laundryman was a man, and her manner toward him became some- what reserved. That was good for a beginning. He wrote her a —=she took it for a laundry list, by the bye-—in his native tongue, of which he declared his passion. He knew she could not read it, but it was an outlet for his feelings, He got his lodger to address the envelope. As it stood she could read and he the inside, so that made it even. It was rather a pity that Fah Chung could not have learned a little more of the customs of his adopted country earlier. The knowledge might have saved him from making two great mistakes, The first lay in the fact that he had not curtained his laundry win. dow. Strolling down the Bowery one bright afternoon and enjoying to the full the rush and roar of life in that Broadway of the lower class ‘‘Goth- amites,”’ Miss Pearson was amusing herself by counting the different na. tionalities represented in the shops and so on. At the last corner she came upon Fah Chung's laundry. She stopped at the window to admire the scrupulous cleanliness and to sion no Now the ways of American launs drywomen ure not as the ways of Chinese laundrymen. i The former sprinkles the rough dried clothes by dipping her hand into a basin of water and flirting the {drops from her linger tips. Then she rolls the garment up tightly aud lays it away for an hour or two to absorb the moisture evenly. Not so the Chinaman, He fills his at the same time as he is ironir 2 it with his slender yellow ironing with ardor, was probably never so thunderstruck in his life when it was snatched from his hands and a lovely little face as red rose with anger and disgust disclosed to him Miss indignant brown eyes, The rest of her things lay on a shell near, and, scolding fast as her tongue could wag gathered them up, thrust them into a piece of paper, threw a half j upon the table the amazed Chung in the standing bewilderment his cheeks puffed ont with his mouth full of water, and his black staring. After that Miss things to an scrubbed month, Chung fingers, Pearson's she and marched away, meantime in helpless CVes Pearson sent her Irishwoman, them to within a and the of Fah knew them Alas ! mistake—a fatal one— pieces laundry no more His second sprang from a national difference of views regarding death and all thin appertais which exists be- tween th xtreme East and West, He sent comfortable or ng thereto Wel the Bowery. Caldwell lover to sad aon no account venture ¢ streets between Bowe rs when he wi it lie Tr wande Or 8 while, at ito any of frondway and the Ro, one oven hospital, she duty to do so, Mulberry street ter street, unex that had been last half hour. From the top of Baxter street there is a short, very narrow, very dark turning leading into the brilliantly lighted Bowery. This turning is very quiet. filled with gambling and opium joints. The police rather avoid It rejoices in the deseriptive and suggestive name of Dead Man's Alley. As Miss Pearson wasabout to enter it she was stopped by a Chinaman, who motioned her not to come thas way. Recognizing Fah Chung, she indignantly brushed past him, and | with great stateliness proceeded on. Half way between ‘y ) 3 following her for the It dens jw Chinese the place. close behind her—another figure quickly amd quietly ran between j them. there was a muttered oath, a | slight struggle, and something geam- ted in the hand of the taller man, (Just then Miss Pearson reached the | Bowery, and in Dead Man's Alley [one man was running swiftly and si- { lently toward the sheltering crowds {in Baxter street, and the other, alit- (tle Chinaman, lay on the ground bleeding to death. When Miss Pear- on, on reaching home, found that her purse was gone, she exclaimed : “There! 1 knew that a creature who sprinkled clothes in the disgust. ing way he did wasn’t honest!" ~[L. Hereward in To-day. AANA FA AO Po AAAS AAAS, How to Silence Critios. en dn, A t desirious of the laureateshi was bitterly complaining to a frien in a London club of the conspiracy of silence that was waged by critics sgainst his effusions. ‘How ought I to meet this conspiracy?’ he asked. “Join is, ’ replied the friend —| Lone don Truth, SIGNAL SERVICE. cr BEST IN THE WORLD. it Is Right Just Seven Times In Ten.-Moethod of Conducting the Various Observations. It has been shown that t! pers centage of verifications of rain, tems perature, wind and cold wave fore. United States Weather misleading only about out of ten, and uncertainty which deal Jurean are two or three times considering the with prophets have to must be admitted to be In 1892 the predicted within 24 hours in different places $844 times, and 71.2 these forecasts were verified, tnin within 48 was predicted 444 times, and 53 per cent of these rains were In 1893 storms within & hours wer ! elements this result re murkable, service ram wr ent of per o« hours forthcoming. rain nounced fil B.5 We cent o Only 70 storms were {ore- cast two days ahead, and 62.6 cent of them Much bet predicting the cl In 1801 r forecasts w Came on tor sity! Ore Of IRANI $ of ti uture, hou per 1841 eth] per cel i ere veri cent of the 48 hou %1.9 proj hele cent I 8G ernment seleet Weather Bureau. Messages are also ed tel railroad stations and : places, and are sent by 1 3.065 points and delivered by re to 1.264 stations. The total number o pla ¢s to which the forecasts or warn This \ 1 giirond ings are sent is 9.3238. 11 beg and places who get their information direct from the offices throughout the country, 1 it take in 121 points on the ast and the shores of Great where danger signals are posted There another branch of the weather service of which the people in large cities know very little, but which is of great importance to the farmer. This is the State Weather Service, organized for the collection and publication of information relat- ing not only to the weather, but also to the crops State bureaus are de- pendent almost entirely upon the voluntary efforts of intelligent citi. zens, whose labor is furnished with out compensation, and whose individ. tal reports are receivea at the central stations, compared and sum- marized in such a way as to form the basis of general reports. Monthly reviews of the prevailing weather con. local weather or does “On of the Lakes, is ing, cultivating and harvesting of crops, telling the most important facts about the weather, with their probable effect upon the growing crops from week to week. This ser. vice in many States also has the coe operation of an agricultural station, and the weekly bulletins contain in- formation with regard to pests that imperil the crops and the best way of treating them. Many of these vol- unteer observers are farmers, some of them are doctors, and others are men who have only a private interest in keeping a record of the weather. It may be sald that their work is gener. ally thorough, their reports concise and their observations valuable. Some of them are furnished with a sot of instruments, and teany others ars hot, As there are less than 170 meleoro- logical stations in the United States | that are conducted by paid observers, {each one of these stations has io { cover about 22.000 square miles of { land, and the data supplied by i means would be very inadequate were it not for the information that is fur- nished through Weather The latter w began Town as early ns 1875, and in Missouri in 1878, but the sufficiently value yenrs, wenther Lhe 1s the State t Service, ork in stem has not been tO he grat twelve or thirteen le that the are mailed b spondents &0 as to reach th Tuesday morning ossible they ¥ “yy general of for more than It is crop reports now ¥ Corre o central stations on and so far as j wenther rece They fire | comments upon short order leth Beminnted, ure h1e report {o § ench State is also sent to Washing to help out the : ial We i Bureau To the (Ore A TERRIBLE TEMPTATION. How a Doctor Was Tempted To Be come a Cannibal. place le Canaan starved « taken of their br for a party of the ship and when 1 saw then away “That terrible doctor continued, was the ot of all career that gloomy whenever I think I almost always think Washington Post. temptation © OY makes me f 03 of my iteand it, -— { Promotion on the Field of Battie. On the field of battle the Emperor Napoleon would pull up in front of “3 around him. would address each by his name. He would ask each to mention whom among them they considered most worthy of promotion or of a decoration, and then passed on to the soldiers. Such testimony de- bound the various regiments to- gether with the bands of confidence and esteem, and these promotions, granted by the soldiers themselves, had all the more value in their eyes, In the course of one of those distri- butions of military rewards, which were like family scenes, an under officer was designated to the Em- peror as the bravest and the best. The Colonel, while agreeing that he possessed all the qualitios necessary to make a officer, added that, in rendering htm this justice, he re tted that, on account of a serious rawback, he was unable to recom- mend him for promotion, “What i it?"’ asked Napoleon, quickly. *‘Sire, he ean neither read nor write,”" “I appoint him officer, Colonel; vou will mors Baron de Meneval. | | | i | i i COME BIG SALARIES. ga Pay of Representatives and Rulers All Over the World, The United 8 and Representatives alike, year each; and to the eers of the two Houses it Year euch an: ink Daves rf 1 i 01 ICrIRigtirs tates pays its Senators E5000) » presiding offi- ys 88 GiKd £1.000 10 £10,000 to and BR 000 each to the } $ One Cinss another 318 ®idin i Lneland othe i to the memb youse of Lord sa Fast ; lords or the house « ommons, but has = and a chancellor the speaker of the commons salary 44 filent to B25 O00 house : lord draws n si that of Preside £20 ON) is #1 i as the income e of $27 O00 (xs Mo ilniii 1 OF % Sweden and Norway $000 ix) a year fron allow. ¥) wu fF 9) { $20 and year O00 fr m Great itain France Russia Tl ving of Belgiun INE}! Rn Year. 8 reo ives $240 (HR King of Spain and .y a lowe has an A Year, his family have an allowance of 000.000 a year. The Emperor William gets 1.225, 000 from Prassia alone, and saved of his allowance from his grandfather is said to have £12 000 000 out the state. The Czar of Russia is credited with receiving more than $12 000,000 from his government. —{ Washington Star, A Railway Cushion Car Cleaner. The French have brought carpet cleaning machinery to a high stats of efficiency. One of their latest ma- chines not only beats the carpets of railway cars, but also brushes the cushions while drawing off the dust. With this machine, operated by one man, 350 carpets or cushions can be cleansed in an ordinary working day. The machine consists essentially of a strong frame containing an endless band, beaters, revolving brushes, ex. haust fans and suction pipes. The carpets are attached to the endless band, the revolution of which brings them under the influence of the beaters. These consist of ten stout leather straps fixed on the iron arm of a horizontal revoiving drum. Mean while the cushion is being cleaned by the backward motion of the table on which it is placed while in contact with cylindrical brushes. The dust raised by the beaters and brushes is drawn by the fans into the galvan. ized iron pipes and di by tha current of air outside the building, «= [New York Telegram. the statement that little George ashitgton cut down the cherey treo.