DON'T MIND IT. Don't mind trouble, for the world rolls on Rollin’ an’ rollin’! The day dawns bright, but sO0On gone Rollin' an’ rollin’ 1 the light's slaught is usually sudden and vio. lent, like a wind which fells, with crashing fury, the oak which has 1 wrapped the poor fellow in my rugs and placed him in the flies— Flyin’ an’ flyin’! skies Flyin’ an’ flyin’! Don't mind trouble, for a life ain't long— Goin’ an’ goin’ | Just SWAaD your sorrow for a glad, swoet BONY Goin’ an’ goin’ ! [Atlanta Constitution. The Silver Siren. 1 was walking along Regent street, London. in the autumn of 92, with an eye indifferent to the charm that gay precinct, when suddenly in spite of my preoccupation I noticed, in a brilliant shop window, bearing this ant Novelty—Silver Sirens.’ It was in direct consequence of delusive gle my spirits were, pressed, that my luck seemed traitor and my whole destiny thwar ed. Hence as I read this sign I paused. Being an engineer by pro- fession. I had gone to Ne months previously, to superinter d pumping i mines, and w in the science superseded, owing of those sirens of the W pered their ¢ luring deliriums my ear. At their behest I laid my professional work and launci into the vortex of lation disastrous results to m ily and my friends. Ti tion of the annihilating taking must to my doxes, the bu day defying tl ism of tl Defeat debt, my Capp sales on En Of sign 2 bi i ouncement, "Latest ymor of a Silver Sire at present vada some vr Lo ’ i est who wils- “ec specu i y sel despair of suffice r‘governor’’ B want 1e od his pr ad to see t was Bn the glanced witl that confused and burnished window advance tending a 3 hand a silver found was t Lie Vers terest. I overheard subservient blandnes “* Thess made horn siren are I 8 Or semaph the latest novelty and used by the ya son at Cowes . He placed ti breathed act was quite croning noise with a pls air with sucl that several paused and determined under one of impulses which seem, somelimes, to nake of us irre sible our own destin I and a few mi ling from my short time, however sure of grave cares, | all about it. I soon began to seek of modifying the distressing condition to which my absence of ion and reliance on chance had brought Fortunately for me a company London whose confidence in my ca- pacity as an engineer had not been shaken by my lack of judgment in the West engaged me to conduct a engineering scheme in mines in Russia in which much capi- tal had been invested I need not say I was giad of the chance this offered me. [| was glad also to get away from London, where I found a subtle condemnation of my nets in even the glances of my friends. tive. and when a man who had al- ways been one of my favorite [riends and relatives ealled out to me from the pier at Calais, in one of those at- tempts at pleasantry which so often contain a sting: ‘I say! Francis, don't go and buy a salt mine in Rus- sin!” I felt that the time had come for me to cancel such speeches by some new line of action I was confident about my mission. Several engineers had failed, it is true, but the many fail, the one succeeds, These mines could not be worked owing to the percolation of wader into them. To check this flow of are hting clubs factors nite watch Some means of BF CRUL 1 inrge some salt or - my task. had made good time. Haste was im- perative for winter was closing upon the heels of autumn and the deep snows would delay my progress. All went well with me as [ crossed those lonely versts, over which there seems ever to dwell p brooding melancholy, My kibitka, or hooded sledge, was very comfortable. It was drawn by sturdy Finn ponies, which were ex- changed at the different stations along the route. When about two days from the end of my journey my yamschik, or driver, fell seriously ill. When these strong and intrepid sons of toil yield to the inflvence of disease the on- as dexterously as I could over the Varika's terrible and fever that the poor My Russian vocabulary was put to the test, as I pulled the ponies up at the door of the station-house. I the sick man was the yamschik and was the passenger. As the Varika all was to draw saw them poor that “0 hi"! moaned the host, as he showed me into the contracted and “() hi, the little More necessary th lad is father's prayers are now for Varika than are dru The poor drive the white horse into t ence of and him his To my g annoyance, I found that 1 could not ure yamschik at that ion to drive me o1 night 1 bold promise radro of to nres os, called | Hue St { reckoning reat another take Varika's { death had for erests of arsLitIous nears mploying uscless ar- ints with a there was the the roo, t i st why [od and 1ouvced USSIAND IOV mysteries on the piains of BR is [ tried to analyze the quality of } i uty The we el : Con. ressive of v the leant © fro 5 eves, Bnd of depths then when home attraction of chased tour rippling would change my ner nevement lips a give to thie note of beauty whie harmony of the wh Thus I watched | count twaddled on mines, and the d yamschik and footmen his excellency pierced the night, every row and then, with their strident Russian cries of en- dearment to the fleet horses that car- ried us swiftly over the snow. Pres. ently the old count began to nod, but wots f * rss about of hi i $ i § i i i i | : H 1 i natural seemed supernatural, and the hush which pervaded all was like palpable incantation breated upon the earth by some mighty spirit of the air, which held the night sub- gervient to her will. We had entered a thick pine forest. | The trees, those voiceless children of | the voods, were held in an icy calm. | If aichitecture be indeed frozen mu- | sie, the brush seemed put in abstract | form before us. The branches and | vertical lines made cathedral and | vista aisles under their moulding of | ice and snow. Sometimes whole pro-| monks seemed to | be lining our route, or spectral arms, i outward frem the gloom beckoned us to the murky mystery of | the duriz {orest. Those soft thuds of | snow which fell when the top of our kibitka touched the of protruding pine branch, fell behind us like ghostly steps trying to escape their thraldom to the midnight by following our lead to life and light But no weird influences of the night seemed to approach the con- of the young { at her that Heine's seemed written for her, “Thou art like y flower!'’ All nd purity seemed separa- $ edge some countess SCIOUSNEss As 1 l wke song a lovel but peace ¢ ted from he Ti { in } gudde 13 uneasily 18 made throug 1 count m The sle f ] lunge, ns the deer horse gave an swaveaq ou Ivan Iva: whom » No, replied Petrovit Almost gave a soc thant man horse down in the cover your hes id heaven shield All the con nity was i ready?’ he said next. “Ready, excellency,”’ ply. The count was the and 1 darkness through the openit Behind movement il sembling dust at “They are exclaimed, and him I heard little stifled = moving eolumn, or = ppeared a sjoud, re- of the sleigh. upon the count fired J imitated the 6 On came that the of filled the air iil countess give ream, and cries o s How they were gaining Ivan Ivanovitch was yelling to horses, and they, @braves creatures, strained every nerve and muscle to obey his commands. A sudden awful thought passed through me. What if there were something really wrong How could on nu i is or long night, Somewhere from the recesses of every now and gon. then, like a sloop at and unse- Russia, that a battue in that it was stated there Russian. violent, the Countess of expressive attack became As my hand it touched the cold er's arm, Instantly it flashed upon me to try tion, reprimands which he did not de- serve, The snow had ceased. It had only Insted long enough to veil the trees and decorate with a soft, ecloud-like delicacy the panoramaol the night The intense stillness recalled to one dreams of a primeval age, The ver, heart-beats of Pan seemed suspended. The sounds which we associate with man’s inheritance of the earth seemed a strange suggestion in that hour. So fur have we become removed from the actua' reserve of natuse that the its piercing sting into the frightened hearts of those wild beasts, The young countess fainted dead away. fear from what they thought was some new terror in pursuit, but, best of all—miracle ns it has over seemed thet pack of angry wolves, with a betlowing howl of fear, tumbled pell- mell into the black depths of the for- est and disappeared like n column of smoke whose force is spent! As they did so, Ivan Ivanoviteh eried out that the lights of Riga were in sight, and we were saved! A year later T was again in Regent gtreet, but not alone nor defeated nor depressed, for Btephanie was there! I was showing her the shop where I had bought the silver siren! “Now take me, dearest, to the place where you bought my wedding ring.’’ she said. “Did yon not say that that was near Bond street?’ “Yes, near Bond, Btephanie,’”’ I began, but this has nothing to do with the story of the silver siren, which has now been told CHIEF OF ARMY SCOUTS. and Shot Sitting Bull. Frank Guard, chief of scouts in the United States nrmy, by the people of Wyoming as more than a rival of Buffalo Bill, Guard comes of mixed French and Kanaka paren— His parents were slain by tl and hands of the manly young Sitting Ball th is esteemed Sioux in crossing the plains, fell into the He was n and he so pleased the chief adopted him and him up. The youth in through the tortu siared i BUve iad rN, 0% went r bir That one the savages Guard was ti killed Sitting Bail, age refused to give up his arms, Bull made ready Guard foster i but Guard, with characteristi ness, shot him dead. W a dangerous duty to be done up nbhout Fort McKinney, Guard i doit. He went after a noted rado with a warrant not and was met with bullet Winchester. Guard dismounted in leisurely fashion, took aim, and sent a bullet through the desperados fore- head. Guard is now forty-four years old, and if his apprehensions are founded he is likely to have a for further distinction. ss ting his gon is the espe long since, fe i irom a well hance He belioves last of its Indian wars, and that That would be accompa nied by uprisings at other agencies deal of trouble. Guard warning his sa- on this bead.—{New York Vegetable Dronsy. Some recent experiments at Cornell University, Ithaca, have aroused much interest on account of the de- velopment of what appears to be a form of plant dropsy. Tomatoes grown in the warm, moist alr of the forcing-houses had leaves that were swollen and semi-transparent. The swelling continued until the veins of the leaves burst and considerable liquid lowed out. This was caused by too much water at the roots and an over-supply in the air. The leaves were not able to give off the water supplied from the roots and stalks, and the congested condition of the leaves and subsequent bursing of the veins wae a true type of a drop sical condition.—{New York Ledger. TRAVELING IN PERSIA. It Moans Much Hard Work and Groat Discomfort. £%e Shah's Empire Is Entirely Without a» Aways, Stoamboats or Good osds— How Wealthy Women Journey from Place to Flace, {Special Ispahan (Persia) Letter.) Tt is difficult for the average Amer- fean to himagine a whole big country en- tirely devoid of railroads, steamers and ail other means of locomotion save those which were already in vogue in Biblical days, i e., on foot or the back of horse, mule, donkey or camel. | That, however, isstillghe actual condi- tion of things in’ Persia, as in some sther oriental countries. Added to this is the further difficulty of the absence of good navigable rivers, of bridges, ete., so that traveling in Per- sin is, indeed, not a pleasure, but a It may it is an absolute on roads, piece of very hard work hard but fact that the roads—or what goes by | that in the Persia of to-day are, i for the greater part, the same whic | were trodden the | Cyrus, of Darius Hj taspis OFS © route be to believe name armed hosts Wer great o« and and otl Limes even taken bv er may, iY 8 30 3 J same ground Liis “*Anasbasis,” but with thisd in his time ’ + More Ie Wer wayfarer fro and LTT 115, there were purling brooks and vilinges ang whereas sway with of the the and the v there ik for asts and rot she ui been he Persian women if 3 ise in their mig) yother's son of them ¥ $1 iia Yiovga } i his diabolical con magive a horse mule fod wy 20 3 its back a sort on the 4 sir could be admitted, this box strapped tightly to the anim The whole kad- for this little box, about two fect high, is a kadjavay nstructed that the woman inmate of it can geither lie down it. nor sit straight wv upright, but is forced to keep her body in a half crouching position, with he manages JOH #0 y de surtains one Sie Ww javay se Wy id her limbs crossed low s escape out of these awful torture chambers comparatively unscathed is a wr iracle. Dut there they sit, snd weeks and months even, ¥ forming journeys of some like graven images, with nota syllabic in +wsation of those who make them andergo this horrible ordeal; and not nly that, but they must, forsooth, be closely veiled as well, and whenever a LLrAnge r draws nigh must pull down ! the curtains of their kadjavay It | must be the foree of inheritance and ' to L8 habit from early youth up, for to me it always scemed as if they must dic paralysis. The chaddar —or Persian veil—is much worse than the Turkish yaushmak, for it falls far down ovef face. bosom ar 3 torso, and is so closely fitting that almost no air reaches the 1aonth and nose of the hapless wearer. The small piece of looser web inserted of light, and barely permits the woar- ers to distinguish the objects outside. brutal outrages which custom allows folk, this, 1 think, is the worst must add that even these restrictions sunning, for 14 happens frequently trigues are arranged by the Persian women while traveling just in this way. | have seen myself—and given them credit for doing it—how at the eritical moment they understand to lift that cumbersome ‘“‘chaddar®™ of theirs, just for a moment. Of course that was because they had to arrange something about it. But that moment was all they needed to tell with their eloquent eyes what thoy wished to say. Perhaps an even more villainous way tor Persian women to travel is by basket. For this donkeys are nearly always used. Two big baskets of - - HES NHI A AANA | even size aro attached to the back of | the patient beast—hanging down one | on either side—and in each of these | baskets is a woman, huddled there in a heap, with just the head protruding | This method 1s in general vogue among the wives and daughters of the peas anise, artisans and all other poorey slanses, | In comparison with these the meth- ods of travel in general ure nme | men are vostly to be preferred, though they, too. are extremely primitive. “lo | ride on the back of a camel, be it only for a couple of days, is anything but & | pleasure, and it isn’t the fastest way, either. Four 'farsalch”™ miles—is considered a good day's jour- ney in Persia, although on a pinch one can get as much as forty milesout of a camel in good and the “racing dromedaries” use in south. ern Persia for the of the srows have even been known to make as much as sixty or seventy miles, but jog trot which at the end of dromedaries ally bred and trained in studs ly of the mg the ~@bout sixteen condition, in business in a sort of abominable all but These racing lands one dead ones trip are especi which are the monopol shah. Only persons authorized by the shah are to own or ride one of these Priests a wie ns il as the pli ca, Rerbelah or shed, must only i 1 * On GOLKeVS, wr the sl i uadrupecs, and considered a Mules are class breed, price, the vhich, therefore by the ladies of in omer than a breed SO6N SOS 500 of omr which a 1ased. common, the “Op ne ol in appearance no ins MITTS O38 CHIEF GERONIMO. The Bloodthirsty Apache Soon to De Lo- cated ss a Farmer . 1 Sam has determined In that =ver wd hi farm adn bra- Own a 3 tied at ‘ th a warlike the southwest tribes, who has been confined Florida and ght years, bas well and has set g example to his little followers who have shared his that the officials of the war department have conciuded that it wil be safe to give themall lands pear some millitary reservations and let them go to raising crops. It is not proposed io the Apache chief back to scene of his early triumphs and turn him loose to enltivate the soil or theart of water, as suits his fancy. He and his followers will be scattered, and ered widely, too, in an unfamiliar country, where the only things to fight will be the seven-year-old locust and the potato-bug and where the govern inent ration of the idle Indian will be o small as not to be worth a trip to {he agency. Some of them will go to Fort Sill, Indian territory, and others to Fort Reno, Oklahoma, while a few of the children will be sent to the In- dian school at Carlisle. Just what will be done with Geronimo has not been decided. At the lust session of congress $15.- 000 was sot aside to defray the cast of fifty houses, barbed fire for fencing, agricultural implements, wagons, seeds, ete. to be used in setting up Geronimo and his band as farmers, and the war department is now loking about for desirable locations. Geronimo possessed all the characters fstic attributes of the Apache—the threwdness, the bloodthirstinegs, the treachery and the dash and daring of the tribe on the warpath. For years he kept some of the best Indian fighters of the United States army hunting his noross the arid plains and in the moun. tain fastnesses of Arizona until he was finally captured and exiled to Fort Marion, St. Augustine, Fla. whence he | was subsequently removed to Mount | Vernon barracks, Alabama. in military in Alabama for nearly ei behaved prisons himself so such a good band « of Aaplivity take the oat USI ANN Mexican Vamming Birds Eggs Immediately after being hatched it is possible to place four living Mexican humming birds in an ordinary thimble. At maturity a dozen of them may be put ina teacup. The eggs are about twice the size of pinheads. Queer Transfer Cosapanies, Transfer companies in England are ready to pay for all the baggage they smash. ABA SHAS RI. Brazilian aborigines eat the flesh oc | the boa constrictor.