THE AFTERGLOIV, bas hed its cn reac Rich tints to. darkness slowly turn Now night sunset descends o'er all, while flitting past The dainty burn Shrill pi The swallow slow, fire-fly's ' : 1 e the cricket SWeeps The in the woodland hid gleams the west in crimson— afterglow There comes the Love's weary day is done, and fades in pain; Tho’ love has fled, "tis better to forget Letters and broken pledges yet remain, Sorrow, remorse and every late regret. * - - Darkness is o'er my life; yet when As twilight gatl and the shadows = u N at eve, hers ghts of her, my love of yore, I quick again, beats strangely It is Love's afterxl —Lindsley "ny. Fiavel Mines MN THE FAGE OF DEATH BY T. 8. F. ORDWAY, “The horse is mine, and you nor any other man shan't ride him with. out I say so!” ‘And I say the horse is I'll ride him without leave, or anybody else's The two men faced lowering brows when a small, limped forward “Come, ! It1 hear ano 1838! srtrabny 1 15 mustang I'll shoo mine, asking 1 st with. ulle friend } i n at was the « ership of a grand stallion t leading his wild he between the M rado Cl been en 3 the tough hide of the gnawed by a coyote, so when the wild horse plun fore he could thunder away ch held him, horse!" said Finch pped him," said Coll have got away without me, lasso broke,”’ cried Finch: » the quarrel began. At first they spoke laughingly, then till things were said on that neither man thought he cot ever for Meantime the which bad been broken to one day's rough riding, was used none of the prospecting party. As the disputants strode away Clay muttered to himself: Queer what fools men will make of themselves! The idea of two men quarreling about a when the chances are a thousand to one that their scalps will both be fluttering at the end of Apache lances within 24 hours!” The sun was about an hour high, aad He iassoeq ins. both give, black those h ITAS quivered in the heat. North, south, east, west, wherever Clay looked, he saw the cordon of Apaches. Bome sat their ponies llke bronze statues, some were stretched on the ground canon for water, but all waited mnllies, heat, thirst and exhaustion, phould deliver the prospectors ‘nto $heir hands. These were a party of twelve strong men who had started from Taos three weeks earlier under the guidance of John Burt, who same in from no one knew where, he had rediscovered the famous, long lost Canon de Oro of the “Valley of Death'’ in Arizona. He brought with him a nugget of gold as large as a baby's hand to baar out his story: he told how had barely eluded the Apaches, after they had killed all his friends; he swore that the Canon de Oro literally with and the upshot was this prospecting expedition under the leadership of Clay. Two days before this Juh's band of Apaches, out on tho warpath, had a'tacked Clay's party with an over whelming force. Burt and three others had fallen at the first fire, and fighting desperately, had at last succeeded in taking refuge on a mg by some ten feet 1 ia shone gold ; ne rest, fifty feet wide, from the plain. Irregular lines of stone walls, jut- from the ground, and hollow where the roofs of the lower hambers had fallen in, showed it to @ the ruin of one of the ‘pueblos,’ common all through that It furnished a position im- to the of the un- riplined Indians, who had at last settled down to starve the defenders out. The whites had food enough for several days, but no water. This Indians could procure from a branch of the Colorado quita, which ran about l away, but the beseiged had no such recourse. One of their number, Aleck Pike, wounded in the first day's fight, was already delirious from his wounds and from thirst, and the were suffer- ng greatly; two and loss of rest, joined 1 rising ing 1L8, once 8oO dashes five rest inv’ aay s to the & us | What do you presently. how to get if iat Ty . if it sour oniy y liere try?’ and Fine } both springing to ins i 1 the same breath sim f ried Collins. cap,” weight, lay, gravely. ‘‘let’ I'he moon will be down by 9 ¢ stallion ought fort by sun-up. kK, und that bla a man to wait + CE RE Li arty tie a minute when he ind the troops ought y get here by the middle of to-mor- i ¢ ean hold out Tor I think it Kirby'll not hears what + sup V Digut, anyiow; w » better try it asked Finch lie spoke first.” “Just my luck!’ growled Finch, angrily, as he turned away, Coliing smiled triumphantly. IT guess vou do t one of us “Collins. I reckon: aspect of the two men, that the «atisfaction, instead of merely the desperate chance of saving the lives In one of the hollows of the mound, screened from the sight of the Indi- ans, Collins began, an hour before the moon went down, his preparations for his ride. As each ounce of weight would tell in the struggle for life which lay before him, everything aot absolutely essential was discarded. A lariat, looped around the horse's lower jaw, and a saddle blanket strapped tightly on the back, fosned the steed’s outfit. Pantalocns, light moccasing, and a handkerchief around the head to keep his long hair from blowing into his eyes, made up the rider's toilat. “If I get tothe fort I can get a jacket and hat from the soldiers; if I can't get there, there'll be less for old Juh to tote,’ wera Collins’ re- flections Into his pocket he slipped a Der- ringer, saying, ‘lI don’t take any chances on being taken alive.” Strips of blankets were tied deftly the horse's feet, that no chinks of hoof on stone might warn the keen eyed besiegers of his pass. age; and when the moon was fairly set, Collins led his stallion down the slope of the mound, vaulted upon his back, and saying quietly to Clay, “If the troops ain't here by an hour after moonset, to-morrow night may know I am gone under.’ % slowly away in the darkness Those left behind waited, listening with anxious hearts, to hear tho tumult which should announce that their messenger’'s flight had been discovered. Five minutes passed—ten minutes —twenty minutes; Clay had just drawn a long sigh of relief, and was turning away with the remark, ''l reckon he’s safe by this time,” when a flash caught his out on the plain. Another and another suc- ceeded ; and the report of rifles came to their ears. They've seen him! him!’ exe lid the and strain their eyes { dications to the coLrier Would Had he lead, or a | the rey TOU ) toils eve They're after laimed Finch; but vainly beleaguered watchers wr ft fa { as dry 1d what a shout fironts it It sounded “Draw saber! ‘Trot! Then came flash on fl blending with the rumble of Soon a dark for detuched itself f surrounding obscurity and dashed to the foot of the mound. An anxious voice called out “Hello! All safe?” ‘harge! ssh. and loud wild, herce char Craliop! Of ing in ) i tom the iD ‘All safe, thank God !’’ said Clay, reverently. “Show a light, then!”’ Ina moment a fire brush shot up and the | on the bronzed faces and the panting horses of Kirby's troop of dragoons But in the middle of the group, on a black charger, reeled a swaying fig. ure, supported by a trooper on each side. On his bare breast was a crim: | son streak. Rushing down the slope of the mound, Finch reached his side. “Tom, are you hurt?”’ “Killed, I reckon, pard!’’ he said, | faintly, “the redskins have got me this time. Ense me down.”’ They lifted him down tenderly from the horse and laxd him ona blanket on the ground. “Sam,’’ he whispered. “Yes, old pard; what is it?” Finch’'s arm went tenderly under the dying man’s head. Sam -= the mustang’s — yours. Don’ t—=hold it—agin me-that I said «i'd ride him, How dark it is. Say ify OO =" The handeclasp loosened, the head fell back, and the quarrel between Sam Finch and Tom Collins, as to who owned the mustang wre over forever, of dry sage- ght glistened A VEGETABLE PYTHON. The Wild Fig Vine Binds Big Trees With Bands as of Iron. Woe betide the forest giant when he falls into the clutches of the clusia or fig. Jts seeds being provided with fn pulp, which is very pleasant to the taste of a great number of birds, are carried from tree to tree and depos- ited on the Here it ger- minates, the leafy stem rising upward and the roots flowing down the trunk until 80il, At first these aerial roots soft and with apparen no more power for evil streams of pitch semble in their tion downward. branch ! is met with, when th IN branches, delinagte fw lelicat ly 1 50 many Liey re- BiLUWIY owing mo- Here and r if ction either livides to ri especiall changes its ¢ and left Meanwhile peen aeve ght ches have io ped Waici i sil them- selves through the ¢ py above and get ht, where their growth i$ enormously AS tl into the ligh Livin takes place ther s have generally reached to draw to the sustenanc strengthen th comes I'l porti means of duction « snd Iron ther, says Industries and somewhat 8 a8 an assistant afforded by 1 i out by the Societe holm, for ranges of gas bu In addition to its tion to the ordinary fishtail burner, the system is specially the ignition of the Auer cent light Hermes, of Stock- ously lighting simuitane ners by ite working appears to involve a great number of separate batteries when- ever any considerable distance is to be covered, it does not seem prob- able that the system will attain any considerable practical value Elephants Block a Train. A railway train on the Darjeoling line in India was recently stopped by an unusual obstacle—a herd of wild elephants. The beasts would not stir from the rails, disdaining to be frightened by the whistle, and the driver was obliged to pack the train out of their way. When at last they left the passage free, and the traip ran swiftly past, one of the biggest elephants tore after it, trying to charge the carriages. Walking Backward. Walking backward is the latest pedestrian feat for a wager. A young Belgian recently walked from Ant- werp, Belgium, to Brussels in two days, going backward the whole time. Practice made him progress ns rapidly as by the ordinary mode of walking, but he was obliged to woanr special shoes, with a kind of heel underneath the tos. Two Farmers anda Wildcat. “Nate” Bowen and W. O. Curtis farmers, living .just over the State line Pennsylvania, eight miles from Deposit, N. Y__ had an exciting adventure with a w Bowen is u good shot and in the winter does a good deal of hunting. Two wildcat were seen by one day re and he su mule in ideas. aeai dogs run New Way to Make Glass Pipe arge glass tab because y 9% 51 101 ) { the moi f the tube to be made. The pi ig placed at the bottom of the mo molten glass is pours ston is forced upward by essure. Pipes are proce sections are for sewers 12h the p i 3 In used by long and water pij i “The Man That Eats Dog.” unusual case came before the Pittsburg the other Sherman Zimmerly was rosted on the charge of stealing killing and eati the property =f Zimmerly readily admitted that he and his wife had killed and eaten eighteen dogs in the last few months and said that bull pup cutlets An t arts of waen a neighbor B11 pun “41 superior to pork He denied, how. fuestion and offered to prove it by showing the dog meat which he had salted down at home. Zimmerly is known to the whole neighborhood as ‘the man that eats dog.”’ ———— s—— ** Hoar Frost Glass."’ ¥ frost glass, ‘‘verre givre,”’ from the pattern upon it, which resembles the the inside of windows in cold weather, The process of making the glass is simple, Ohio's Daniel Bogne. What Daniel Boone was to Ken- tacky lsaac Williams was to Ohio— a pioneer, a great Indian fighter, a yrerunner of civilization, His fame 18 not 80 widespread as Boone's, but where he is known, his memory is very respectfully regard. His wife, Rebecca, was a gr pioneer too, and lies buried alongsid in Unio et § ie rill ¥ 1 r a knoll overlooking near Will t the Clio Hive lamstown, ha timent about where her grave be that was akin to R. ‘ 4 1 ' s. She declined tl a Ble 1 4 sen- ahold snould steven the Williamstown ¢to be b iried : ghe still lies surrection.’ Mr. Creelman, war nt, who has been exploring in search of material for ri novel which he iting, went to see the becea and Isaac the « reports that the bone pioneers are likely to Marietta, and rebt more Whipple and ury iamses will ch, of course Bame 8¢1 prefer to think I the James 8 Dis centh cont enti cen Lr etta the Will nt wh Will th Lae v 01 take nger trust his female 4 i Fal sud the y Creat Beating the Slot Machine A New York newsboy has succeed. iin peany-in-the-siot machine took a Dutch Guiana cent {rom a customer. He was disgusted; it was worth a deal than a cent. As a these Dutch cents run $00 to our American sliver He tried it in a peany-siot gum machine. it worked United States cent. He and there was Duteh cents mistake he e388 joliar. chewing a real a large investment in money changer did a rattling business and made a profit. The bovs could not afford to buy a dol jarg’ worth at a time, s0 he sold the ine astounding number of Dutch cents found in the boxes of the ma- cliines most patronized by the news. boys led to a discovery of the traffic Bat thers is no help If the machines are willing the boys and lose avery for it trade with He cannot puaish the Cloth of Dawn of Fowl. A new kind of cloth is being made in Lyons from the down of hens, Juecks and geese, Seven hundred and