EASTER FLOWERS, Bring ye white lilies With never a stain, Nurtured by sunshine And soft-dripping rain; Hyacinths, heart’s-ease, And hellotrope. Bring ve white blossoms As pure as the flakes That float in the When the winter-storm breaks; The lilac-tree blooms And the jonquils unfold, So bring ye their treasures Of purple and gold. air { Clear fell the sunshine At morning and noon, And dripped the warm rain With a musical croon, Till out of earth's darkness And out of the gloom Came forth the bright buds In the rapture of bloom. The almond-tree blossoms, The world is awake, So sing ye glad anthems Fer sympathy's sake. And every sweet flower In thankfulness bring To bloom on the shrine Of the new-risen King. HATTIE WHITNEY. Eastzr Wooding's Dream. An Easter Story. Who has not heard of Devon County? Devon, bonnie Devon, ith its almost Italian ita hazy of rolling crystal st coast-combes, foam rushes white those deep, winding lanes, almost over- arched with and brier, the delici seemed designed by Cu votees alone. Charles Kingsley cousin of William the around him to th his trusty rovers and Si whose mingled blood s Devonians brave men toous women, Certa:nly John Maddock Wooding fully sustained their native country’s they had ever been since t they hand stone school-house Bideford. And now mate on an Indian Esther had galled away on his age, It Bpring's southern cl uestied in one | Esther felt as @ ~-a strange $anced one Eo “lI know John; but do you kno pressive dread of evil?” “Cheer up, my dearie, for I surely shall, and of this world's goods in Bideford He kissed drew the whole lips and hurried to the to catch the stage to Plymouth. Across the heathery hills he whence had flamed beacon that told of proud Spain's Armada’s defeat But John dreamed that Ea Eve of peace, not war; of life yet when he and should flowery pligrimage together. His ship, conveyed a British regiment to When he reached Plymouth the quaint old streets were filled with a crowd, gathered wo see the redcoats pass to the beach. “A life on the ocean wave, A home on the bounding deep 80 ran the refrain of the band, and the men strode lustily along, their steps and voices keeping time and tune. The vessel sailed away amid wom- en’s sobs and men’s hurrahs, and that Sunday morning they watched her drift until the highest peak faded against an opalescent sky and she dis- appeared below the dip of the sea. The Serapis raced before the wind like a bird past the Gambian Coast and lay in the doldrums in the Gulf of Guinea, while soldiers sweltered and swore and sailors whistled for a breeze. They moved again, and when off Port Nolloth, South Africa. a great Atlantic gale struck her, and for two days they rode at the mercy of the elements. Crash went the foretopmast then the bowsaprit, and afterward a Jury mast rigged by John Maddock and the gallam crew, who toiled in vain to save the ship. The captain stood with John on the poop that night, and heard the distant breakers on the shore. “No hope for her, Maddock.” said he, sadly, with a shake of his grizzly head, ! “We have done ajl-—" The remainder John never heard. Just then she struck. He was thrown | clear off the poop, overboard. He look- | ed around. There reaced the stern al- most perpendicularly. She had run into the jaws of a rock-riven chasm, | which gripped her like a vice. { The mainmast snapped with a crack: | the breakers lashed her sides: and, with a dash, one great wave her waist, Oh, that cry of despair, how it haunt. ed John's ears! He caught a falling spar and floated clear of timbers and cordage, Ww skies, streiches te " ira st TY 2 ita tors, its reams, Its the sea which as carded wool and through +3 1 ale winai honeysu Us ngs pid a Conqueror, drew ow Grenvil, tells ese sequested spots free Norse and lurian wa BETES Saxon S Britons gives 10 ’ : veau- dark their and Esther reputation went, in han and he and met to bi irewell ere Le the Easter sweat hres back again I have an ap you will come w some foreboding come back maybe, with enough i to settle our home her with a sOoui th rods, light dread Maddock love the ster and come, walk ils to Esther the Serapis, India In the rocks, dotted here and there with black figures. They had noth- ing to hold to, and one after another fell into the seething caldron beneath inte full twenty fathoms of foaming until it sprinkled the feathery palms “None can HMHve in such a sea as this,” muttered John to himself, clutch- ing his spar the tighter. On came another braker as the lion leaps upon its prey. The Serapis part- She dived the next wave rolled over hissing surge of triumph. and a it from the deadly embrasure which was the grave of the vessel, How long John Maddock floated that he could not remember, toward the shore neared a small Inlet, ran like a millrace, strewn along the zy cormorants float- in the morning twilight above his head, looking like specter vampires He had the when a voice “Is Ht “Yes was tide and the bodies had set he current were almost reached shore hailed him Mr. Maddock?" replied John, feebly, for he “Who are you?" you, worn out of to all, sir. We on some rigging They're having Three sallors us, ] scramble t for sharks. this Look ou fine time with a groan dragged him with exposure from the chest, and fatigue rather knelt, the four SUrvive yf the wreck of the stood, or Tis “ 8OIITArY Serapis “Men,' when he had re “let us thank God wor with thanks for verance, ith a fervor such men experience can appreciate The day ha aways lawned bury the thelr sodden spent ving dead ind building a fire t«¢ ry ut for a vessel, a signal” sald sand stretch where they ] in shaly rock there, barring And here must leave the four companions to go once more, The weeping on 10 ave glept imbers we t i + ray DACK 10 evor vomen Jef! Ply mouth shores were destined weep he Serapis never reported at utta and hope deferred made ¥ loving he Easter appre came Lae ward-bound ne derelict wreck. He brought the lls summon ul adora Bidefor i lost Many moi and many a heart though } i had sweetheart was hot as the 1a Kindness were recalled with gratitude Meanwhile, pe and tears , sad with un d down to smiling sea though may yield up her il, AR at any lead Oh, had 1 would John! Why I knew evi} le the man of the ACT Pool beent A104 BT wal awoered 388% the rustling red # Lae rusting lidefo rd yu grivin' and way- Maddock gone, sure enow at don’t maze your. with tr'ub tu Tuious “John ie man had al- cessor, did be dare but name him. “I want tu man's home before | peering up into her “Don't talk dying, father, nor of my having to I hope both are equally events,” replied Esther, with her sad eyes looking sur prisediy upon him The man shuffled before that clear, melancholy gaze, and turned to some other subject of discussion. Her womanly instincts had told her that Ralph Colwell loved her, Ralph was rich, and though of middle age, a man of goodly presence and fortune, He had watched Esther's winsome fac and trim figure glide past his office and over the bridge with a sigh of reconciled disappointment. To him the see y'u in some good die,” he added, face, of wo g leave you distant old was, indeed, a tempting one, for he loved her with the quiet, deep, strength of a mature man, who had not hitherto known the love of woman. Now John was lost at sea, as all supposed, and Raiph Colwell's aspira- tions revived. He had been her fath- sumed upon it; and when the Serapis had lain beneath that terrible rock of urged his suit upon Esther, only to be met with refusal. But men of Ralph's temperament are not easily turned aside from their pus- poses, and he couid afford to wait, Her father died in June of 1833, and the house was left unto her desolate, Ralph proved, lover, friend, phisolopher and intruded his rejected suit. His con. stant love by thoughtful won the day without this, sible mine.” = *% [until you can love me in | Esther. Grant me your hand, |shall be the happiest of men.” | She did so, and the wedding and | Easter Sunday followed on the never occurred to her. That jan impossibility, as she thought, unmistakably had the record of | vessel's loss been given, And y | ed | greater | near. The 24th of March came, sleeping own home, She For none would have rest a flerce storm tossed of the trees before her tired to branches win dow, sent was No saw form doomed shore. the distinctly audible her lover’ poop, of rock, the the shutter hurled from and John's white face was distinct floating over bounding she awoke in terror night her depression And, of John again torm had great calm, visible ows, and The next deeper | still, ly han before Bu Artic dreamt the ie she time ceased, Was i the 1 there Goe each whi landed his though signalls When through re safety, and wave ned "parting as sing mornings dewy light .sther arose unreasonably anc ow left her ligh* she dic and She proaches r this some mind, but { In vain N) “Tomorrow ia th murmured, with ashe The never gh distur} her as thought efore, And that ia done | st nig she lay time ghe stood on Plymout? g Drake Hawkins played game he looked, with a crowd, at incoming ship, which fired her gun miuted the This third Quay and anid, from the spot where their bowls, = colors vessel Is that!” asked of the harbor-master ure, Indiaman responded, gallantly doffix [$38 43 » i i i i i or (wo years is my wedding g though r music ceased Oh f v1 irnin , fa he to the to herself stars she stole quietly away borrowed team. to Plymouth Plymouth? Esther did he did not a Wh y to not know, or said able motive power had led hes plighted word And, taat hor a Eure enough, she was on the quay ternoon, not in her dream Now where was John uy t knows nore than Esther did as y vm yet 1 ie L§ 8. watching for some passing ves- hunting, fishing and cheering each words of hope rvivors had need more than one vessel they did not see their fran- ing, with four for own, but of pa- tietice tic signall or, If they did, heeded it not At had the neckerchief which Esther John Maddock's inst thrown around neck was top of bound shortly afterward and took mariners of the Serapis from their sol- itary state, a Jofty palm tree A vessel for Calcutta and John's immediate re. turn on board the first packet leaving for England With this brief Interlude, we can re- the quay at Plymouth. She dreaded being followed, but none had put in an appearance from Bideford as yet. The western glory of the setting sun when a ship sailed in the cove familiar to her, sel she had seen in her dream! ing again? master, glazed hat and all in a low, strained voles, “The Vulture, Indiaman, young lady,” he replied, and touched his hat “Why =hould he not? night.” thought Esther, on that ship.” she said. “John? Who's John?" master. Esther heeded not. She ran alongside the nearing vessel. A bronzed figure stood on the stern. It was John. | “I kmew you would come, she re- |marked, very quietly, five minutes later, land then fainted in his arms. | The next afternoon they were mar- iried. All 3iderford gave them an Bas- {ter welcome; for was not this a resur- (rection of the dead? And Ralph Cold- {well winced, but bore his trouble braves {ly, as he gave the bride away, saying: “She is yours, Johs, but now her {father is dead, I claim the right to place to you both.” Today the aged John and Esther Maddock live In the home left them by Ralph, and this Eastertide their ta. “Then John queried the s f gzandchildren gather to listen to this, | my story, told annually by their ador- I ed grandfather, STRATEGY OF A GRIZZLY. Rakes Corn Near the Barm and Then Pulls Chickens la. Nat Wetzell, a 8t. Louis commission merchant, has a huge grizzly bear, caged behind strong fron bars in the rear part of hig place of business. The bear was sent to him by some friends in the Blerras. Within & few days after the bear was imprisoned on the premises, Wetzell missed one and then another of the chickens he had turned out to fatten on the scraps and refuse and for a time he was at a loss to know what was taking them off. When the number had increased to a point where patience ceases to be a virtue he set a watch for the miscreant, and in time that the big grizzly was devouring them as fast as them. The brut's process of capturing the luckless chicks class due discovered he could lay paws on certain not go credit i of mammals that earth on all fours, discovered how the thing tO do would do about the done, of was he Wetzell had a hearty laugh in rite © Bl his loss Cage AH pe supposed in Brea ared with quantities due regularity, was eng shaggy that bruin immensely fellow i constitu} : upon this craped t thrown into the clos could y po wa arouna paws down hint coud ry chick and be devour med § y x O much as & sg: y a and for this nti the ot discover u 1141 ntered id bruin sitting on his ich apparent » altracted Going back to the cage found that the bear hs good A good bear tender chicks te to sleep piace i the old fellow's off rmination re hi for the - 1 ided been cut and tzel m to Forest ' » * 3a rt Ir en Lepa i i wological have hi the city will m St s Republi Glass Skates. The newest feature of interest in New York ice rinks is the Iw It found ae use of glass better, both for aKates is that skates th g: peed and ease in gliding for ples =a skates with Ass runners are far sur than are the metal run ners, and several pairs are now in one of the metropoiitan ri inventor has succeeded the glass to a hardness that in- an edge which practic aily never becomes blunt. ‘the tempering pr remains a that severe contact with hard ie not {fracture the glass. To look these skates one would not Eup POse were made of anything else metal, for the runners are always ored, inorder to disguise the substs of which they are made + he process Is arbitrary, and 4 case of ladies’ skates are always mad correspond with the colors of the wearers costume. The runners of these skates are attached directly to an edpecially made shoe which laces from the heel up the back. The com- being nks reda ined The in ing sures = Ces secret, but it is a fact e does at RL they than to bination not only gives a skate which is perfectly easy in motion, but the high shoe stiffens the ankle to an ex- tent which greatly aids in the enjoy- ment and adds to the safety of the ex- Lioness Owned the Car. Among the freight placed in the bag- gage car of train No. 6 on the Balti- more and Ohio Rallroad leaving Chi- en cage, shipped by Francis Ferrier and intended for a local show . After the train had left Cayuga, G. L.apham, baggage master, who was crouching on the top of some bag- gage. Looking the animal straight in the other end of the car, and as he threw open the door and rushed out the lioness jumped, but he escaped. When the train arrived at Pittsburg an iron cage was wheeled against the side of the car, the door opened and the lioness driven into the cage. In the eighteen hours she was in posses- sion of the car, the tore open nearly every piece of baggage. a Olive Oil for the Msir. When the hair shows a tendency to fall out the very best thing to stop its corning out and promote growth is the abundant use of genuine olive oil. Sat- urate the hair thoroughly, and keep it saturated for a week, until the dry scalp has absorbed all it will, then wash with pure soap and water. If this operation Is repeated every two or three months, the effect is said to be marvelous. WIT AND HUMOR Comic Papers. THE TIRE Weary Watkins of the papers is agitatin’ the wide- tire ques tion again, for better roads, Hungry Higgins —1 don't much about wide tires, but got a life-long one, QUEATION, I see some know AX IMPOSSIBLE Miss Wabash fully blue this morning. Miss Emerson (of FEELING, Oh, dear ! I feelaw jorton to become cognizant of colors through the sense of touch, A NEW GAME TO HIM. “Jacob, what are you doing ning around the streets should be in school 2” “Well, ma, you told BOWE games which I could piay 3 ia) I'u run when you 3 he vi) out tearing my clothes, so ing a new one called *truant CRICKEN HAD AN ALIBI “Won't you try the asked Mrs, ar 4 oF beyond the soup stag “I have tried it, ms: fig} i the cid THR TEACHER Father—Do yon senses any abil Instructor braneh of drawi: Father {prondly [nstructor Drawi SEEING 18 BELIZ “No, I don't belies world who pe of IArriage “We've got one on our st merry. “Do you believe her “I believed her as soon as I MUCH BLABORATION Vietim (angrily Don’t call me I don't like it. Book Agent Well, nan Vietin 3 I will do some eiatl will giaborate a cad ABBOLUTH Mistress. Y 1say. But Maid Mem Mistress... Wi Mary, Bridget — Maid — It after. That is ginnis before mind ? THE NRCRS ARY Qt Mr, Penn, asked Sailor, ] editorial ‘Ah ‘Do you think, fo write an able article question » COUVLDR 1 Mrs and Maundsley ner ’ {han Mrs {Hq timo I go to to be someth LOWER THE yw think, .y said “that if you would give me a chance I could elevate the stage.’ “Oh,” replied the manager, “‘there’s no need for that expense. The stage if we could BRIGHT, “But are BUT DISTANT support a after apnlica tion for the position of ron-in-law *‘My finances are not a burden to me at present,” was the reply, ““but | prospects beiore me, $1.1 you abie 10 “Oh, I don't doubt that.” rupted the old man, “‘but think you will ever be able up with them ?” inter do you to cateh IN TREXNESSEE. “I've nothing to give you, my poof man, except a piece of pie ” “That'll do, ma'am I kin eata pie. Thanky.” ‘““Have you any occupation #°' “Yes'm. I'm a snow-shoveller.” “You didn’t expect to get any op- portunity to shovel snow in this part of the country, did you 2” ‘Nome, That's w'y I coms dmon here. They was too blamed much of it up in Michigan. "’ SENSIBLE FELLOW, She threw the fellow overboard, And never saw him more, — £he thought he would swim back to her, But instead he swam ashore, THR POET EPIGRAM. “Let who will do the country's righting ! I ask only to stay at home und write the country’s war songs! DIFFERENT, Soulful—~80 you and your sweet: Beart are one at last. Doieful— Well, er, we may be called s married couple. FIDELITY TO THE PATTERN, His Mother ‘profoundly shocked) ~Johnny ! Johnny | You will break my heart! That is the most dreadful language I ever heard a little boy use ! Johnny We're playin’ street cars, ” mamma, I'm the motorman, an’ ben's drivin’ a coal wagon an’ won't get out 0’ my way. A GENTLE INSBINUATION, The Maid—Miss Ethel is sir, but 1'1l tell her you ealled Algy-~Aw- thanks. Tell her right away, please, so you won't forget it, not in, PROOF, Bhe-—A woman is braver than a» man, He What of a monse, Bhe—Yes that same Why, a woman is afraid and a man woman HOw SHE TOOK 17 e¢ looked npon wy face for '* he resolutely declarad on his hat. you going to wil do she iskers 7’ UNFORTUNATE FORTL About L Poor Tales ucky Man New engineer was thorough id He had k inves and was he and the An bun- in the most be shares, the M3, worth was siruck explored found Was unlikely Today t veins face value © rhi jis §1 are £500,000 each aA dd. Wickedest Villain oa Earth. The death of Tai Won Kun, father of the King of Korea, which was made known to the minister of that country vesterday, will simplify politics He was probably the wickedest villain in earth, and for fifty years had been at the bottom or the top of all the mischief that has occurred in the Her- mit Kingdom. He was Regent during the minority of the King, who inherit- ed the throne from a childless uncle, and ruled with the most brutal despot. {sm for a quarter of a century. It was while ke was at the head of affairs that we had our little war with Korea, which resnited in opening the country to foreigners. He was the foe of all forms of progress, and particularly hostile to missionaries and modern im- provements. He murdered thousands of people wlio stood in his way or re- fused to bend to his will, and it took three years for the Government to get rid of him after the King became of age. Twice he was the prime mover in nisis to assassinate Bis own son, and three times attempted the assas- sination of the Queen. The last at- tempt was successful in 1885, The old scoundrel lived in a palace a few miles ouigide the city, surround. ed by a double guard, one of his own, in whom he had confidence, to protect htm against the vengeance of those he had injured, and another provided by the Government to prevent him from leaving the place. He seems to have died a natural death, and it is almost a miracle. "or no other man or earth was 30 viciously hated. its