A DREAMER, He is a dreamer, let him He roads the writing in His seeing soul in rapture Beyond the beauty of the rose He is a dreamer, To the. furthe cle His are calm, maje He is a dreamer, let him FOOR and doth Know sound days He iz a the day Blest visions find him on his Past the far and the Beyomd the darkness and the He is a dreamer: God! to be Apostle of Infinity, And mirror tr dreamer, dreamer, all SUnsed t lucent gleam: him uth's He is a dream. He §8 a dreamer, for all time His mind is married unto rhyme, Light that ne'er was on Hath blushed to him in poetry. He is h caught Close to his heart a hope, a thoug A hope of He Is a dre land or se; a dreamer, and hat immortality; uner, let him be. with thee weep in sympathy; reamer, and doth orld with happy in & breath and death and He is a dreamer lo! His soul does He is a dr To glad the w He is a dreamer; He dreams of love, and life Oh, Oh, wn, lad He is a dreamer, lot him pass London THE MAN-EATER Some y long SONg. man lass, wom Sun. exampie reinainaer i AR turning his who buggy, si SYOe, An 4 f 1I8E noticed a Towards drove at horse, while behind thun the iron suer Once the sound standing up, I looked over th the buggy to see if he had le But he had only encountered a eo too young to know its danger cape it, and when | them, the the poor littie object in its mouth 88 a dog Oes a rat. moment and he had dro was again in pu maotit 8 pause, however, his prey, just as he overtake us, we turned closure, my friend le gy, slammed the gates, heavy bolt securing them. As he did so the man-eater arrived and burled himself against the gates with a shock that must have shattered tkem had they been of wood. dered hoofs caught savage Least was ped i hat lost stilt of rsuil of us. i LOT wed from the bug 2 anda shot nying and snorting the horse we had if at the roar of a lion. For a few moments the man-eater heizht of the fence, and raining a yerfect battery of blows from his iron lhieels upon the gates. At last, how- other, and upon this arch a number 01 troopers stcod awaiting the opportu nity now presented, for, as the horse, with head ard tail erect, and wildly glaring eycs, searching beneath the arch, a rope shil'uuy thrown settled upon his neck, choked and threw him. The next day the king ordered the man-eater to be turned into the arena with Burrhea, his finest Bengal tiger. The arena was a courtyard about 64 yards square, surrounded by buildings, with a veranda below and a gallery above. 1 The front of this veranda was closed hind it, in a the ladies of the tled In Hindnos litreally hed from’ the balcony, 'Y are « Ci th-beebos, meaning ladies, as distinguis to peep as they could at the combat. he man ean enticed , to whom he m y, but scemed indulge: gard with y ndeed, of his own kind a creatnre not, | but sufficiently Cnnts mpious near it to ous attacks he rese man. Fy race called ported 18 brought ite the point opp whore Ing and his conrt we W seated door in the bamboo ral throws open, and the front of Burrhea, for J at ond to the middle of lashing his sides with and gla furiously while his glossy and riped ccat shone like trasting st with the of the tat tive yard, OE railing and menacing the iger his fist. The trembling attendants hastened to raise the the railing and cage, and the tiger bounded in ‘vith infinitely more alacrity than he thown in coming out. There was a brief pause, the attendant at the the keeper of the lions, who begged an audience of the king. “Bring him in!" ordered his majesty, The lion-master trembling advanced, prostrating himself, with roors of them being sick, fu'rhing an unusually large repast. By the beard of my tather, but you shall replace them yourself, wallah'" growled the king, whose {ll-humor had reached its height. ‘Arm yourself with a tulwar and go in and fight the man- eater. anual him, or he shall kill you. A profound silence followed this command, which all who heard it un- derstood as a sentence of death agains: the unfortunate man whose only de- fe nse consisted in having been too in- dulgent to the arimals under his charge, But in Oude to hear was to obey, ever more blindly than in the East generally, and the lion keeper, with his face blancued and his eyes rolling wildly, salaamed to the ground ana aero. tha ingiant no heard In the woman's gall love and she sou lite at the cost ww hier i ion of and an express terror ci face, but immediately faction, e, Numah,” dame gave way OClous satis shonte \, {(Anawa ater origi inter origin, beginning of the utilized the back century dating present principle, nicating oil chambers, In one of in the other was sus- dial, and a small pulley. The latter was mount. ed on a horizontal axis ending The float, the oil was descended as consumed, as in the case already cite... At their best, these timepieces could have had only an indifferent degree of accuracy, well, and certainly are interesting at the present time as illustrating some of the expedients adopted by mechan- fcians of an earlier period. Commer: cial Advertiser, General Miles, commanding United States army, annual report that strength of the regular army be made and kept at the ratio of one soldier to every two thousand inhabitants of the republic. the Something called astrakhan lace seems quite a novelty, and it is made of silk, very airy and light like old: fashioned Honiton, with a pattern CUBA'S QUEER FORTS. Delansive Buildings with Which Spanish Have Dotted the Island, The forte of the Spaniard is pullding the varied endea Cuba is BEroatest that art and most Wal the arriving steamer passes frowning front of moult the Havana harbor par from the isl out of sight of some kind of a The Spanish much fighting in this perhas has not been be to bring the insurgents to but these 1it among the P amazing mduoatrs h of ture and, one is fortifi cation, army has done cau lows from tl} yrenne t OREPICUONS pas un exclaimed ivacions little after the punter had so into his | pocket the had won in a single coup, “c'est une machine” And that those standing around felt as she did was evinced by their approving laugh- ter. homme, a French phiegmatic 20.000 francs he lady, cally put An Unextinguishable Light. The remarkable light which has been brought forward in Germany, and known as the Durr light, is declared to be equally capable of use for inte- rior illumination. It is originated by of the vapors from ordinary lamp pe- troleum; the vapors being converted from 3,500 to 14,000 candle power. The apparatus consists of a tank containing the supply of petroleum, which is removed sufficiently from the burner to avoid all danger of i, from the flame. The oil is conducted by drops into a burner of special con- struction, after heated for about five minutes by means of oll which is burned in small heat- ing pans furnished with the apparatus, Behind the burner from which the flame issues there is a second burner, which, after the heating of the pans has been remcved. continually pro- duces the vapors and heats them to a high temperature, at the same time completely surrounding the first burn- er with a strong flame. This arrange- mant is said to make the extinction of 1 i Coal 0 sumption { which is about three Off fourths 100 power, A Lega: Problem, we rious little law came up for the Penn, A practicing tered, as A « problem in solution rested thero for without hs: 12 been regis and confessed hi law of and adn that he was well ac approved iolate and lo that he y medical scl evidence from the ersburg 1 the Huss therefore fan capital for He was quite eligible istration in thi ng Hazleton he had and without friends and his three The Privilege of Peers. id not believe that arrested him The Green peer, and inaagverience, ‘Feminine Milkmen.” the Holland's The sale of milk in the Hol rather a ped streets of conducted in the milk is in wre placed in a the large mas- gerviceable Copper cans cart drawn by { tiffs, which made so in that country. Two women in the regulation out-of-door costume of ser- vanis, usually accompany each cart. The dog looks well cared for, the cart is clean, and though the cans may be battered and dented by years of usage, re always shining bright and the one © are Don't Eat Too Rapidly, Moderation in manner of eating and choice of food has not always charac- terized men of history. Both Napo- leon 1. and Carlyle are said to have ruined their digestions and tempers by rapid eating. On the other hand, the care with which Gladstone partakes of the viands set before him has been acknowledged over and over again as one of the greatest factors which has worked to prolong his life, Worth Their Weight in Cold, Many a bride has been presented with marriage portions far exceeding their weight in stendard gold. The average weight of a bride will not ex- ceed 130 pounds, or 2,080 ounces, This. at about $20 an ounce, is only in round numbers, $40,000. ‘The marriage por- tion of Miss Pauline Whitney, daugh- ter of Secretary Whitney, was $1,000,- 000, or more than twenty-four times her weight in gold. Stili greater waa the marriage portion of Miss Mackay, now Princess of Colona, which wma three hundred times her weight, or about $12.000 000, No human life would be possible if there were not forces in and around perpetually tending repair to the wounds and breaches that he mimself makes, ssa A —— Listen not to the tale-bearer or slanderer, for he tells thee nothing out of good will; but as he discovereth of tho secrets of others, so he will of thine in turn. — I —— Wanath for Comfort, An old eat loves a susoy corner and a long Bap, this is natural and wise, The genial warmth of the sua lulls to rest, and may be curative to the cat's [88 COMMS and while asleep, it few aliments, Boreness and stiff upon us suddenly and put the machinery of the body out of gear, Br. Jacobs Oil goes sudusnly to work upon the trouble, and with ite warmth, like warmth to the old cat, it lulls the pain to slesp, drives out the cold, soitens the stiffened muscles, lubricstes the machinery, and in & short time puis the whole body in good workiug order, Hore ness and stiffvess are not much 10 cure by the use of Bt. Jacobs Oil, but, if nexlected, they tako the form of rheumatism, which gives a great deal wore pain, Hea is a fool who can not be but he i A Wise man who will not, BUgry A Bed Handed Murderer. Tetterine kills the gor: I ait Kheumn, Ring ct of Then Vezems, eT fend ts No.To« Over 40.00 cured Why not 1 s Or tac for Fifty Cents, A An ex. iMicted many eriaking he was Mus Etema s 1 Honeoye, New York, Hood's Is t hebest Hood's Pills = og Soran _parilia fart the Ong Prey ri for ———————— Monkey as an Imitator. At Cheltenham, England. ti lives 6 retired Admiral and his wife. who IBY re- ere ently the lady, hearin a strange iin to ch met nied iral’s the was 2 : i ) 5 the pen newspaj which he shook and patted, while he at gestie- ilated with great emphasis at the cat, earth rug. a clever v stodied of the A imiral’s tone and manner whet wading to his SOME PASEAZOS the news- paper which excited wrath or im- tion, which lay blinking It was imitation nis dignsa A HEALTHY Ys iF IV Is a Husband's Inspiration. i-and-alive woman, ther of & IVOUSDOsSe A sickly inlly when she is the me is a damper the patience of some hus bands Ifawoman finds that her energies are flagging and that everything fires he . her sleep pis =~ disturbed by horrible dreams, and that she often wakes sud. denly in the night witha feeling of suffocation and alarm, she must at once regain her strength, It matters not where she lives, she can write a letter. Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass, will reply promptly and without charge. The following shows the power of Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, accom- panied with a letter of advice “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —1 have suf. fered for over two years with falling, enlargement and unleeration of the’ womb, and this spring, being in sucha weakened condition, caused me to flow for nearly six months. Some time ago, urged by friends, 1 wrote to yon it do ales vager. not when there is one so kind and willing to aid you,"—Mns. F. 8. Bexxerr, West» whalia, Kaos, -