Bfy Loss. Day alter day, while at my window sitting, I see the children at their play near by; Like butterflies in summer gardens flitting, They hover round beneath my watchful eye. Hie little girls, with flushed and merry laces, Ulance at mo shyly for my answering smile, And tempt me with their most alluring graces To put sad thoughts away whilo they be guile. Blonde hair and brown in solt oonlusion blend ing. Black eyes and blue upturned to meet my gaze, Koees both white and pinx their contrast lendiag, To add new beauty to the 'wildoring mazo. But when they one by one, tired out with playing, Steal slowly homeward through the sunset light, iioraory goes back beyond ths dark years, straying AmoDg the days of yore that seem so bright. I turn my head, s radiant, golden splendor Shines from the west across the pictured wall, And glorifies a face divinely tender, With bronze-brown hair waved round it fall on fall; With violet eyw so winsome in thoir sweet ness, That mine grow smiling spite of griel and pain, With curved lips, tlio seal of love's complete ness; Oh, Heaven' eould I but press them once sgaiu. In vain I watch and' wait, she will come only When night has cast her spell 011 sea and shore; Then when I sleep and dream, no longer lonely, She comes to feed my hungry heait once more. Tis then and only then that 1 behold her; Her dear voice floats around me soft and low; 'Tis then, and only then, my arms enfold her, The little girl I lost so long ago. —Botton Transcript. ALMOST TOO LATE. " I am going now, en." Charles Archer stood at the door of the one room hiph up in a noisy tene ment-house in Hew York, which lie called " home." It •vas not the wedded home he had dreamed of twelve vears before, when he uttered the " Valedic tory" at Yale, when Helen Gordon blushed and smiled at the applause that greeted his appearance on the stage. Nor was that crouching figure beside tlie window, in the untidy print dress, with the pretty sullen face, and the uncombed golden hair, much like the graceful belle, of whose company he had been so proud, so happy to monopolize, upon that golden day. His wife looked up and caught the ex- ' pression of pitying regret apon his dark and handsome face, tier heart was full of angry rebellion against her fate, agninst herself, against him —almost against God! " Wliv do you look at me like that?" | she said, peevishly. " I know that the room lias not been swept, and that I have not made my toilet for the day. rfy toilet,"she laughed bitterly. "When shall I make a toilet again. I wonder? I once set the fashion in New Haven! Who would believe it now! And, oh, ithink—only to think what my life uight have been, if I had been wise." Her husband's face darkened all over. "I understand!" lie exclaimed. " You mean if you bad married Paul Hayden instead of me." " How can I help such thoughts? I saw his wife early yesterday morning when I was out. She was driving to the railway station on her way to their country house for the summer. I heard the footman say so to some one when lie went to bny the tickets for her. And, •h, what a difference there was be tween us two! No wonder she has kept her beauty. No wonder I have lost mine! Beauty and health, and youth and happiness, they are all going away from me, because we arc so poor!" "Belter days may be coming, love," •aid the husband, after a pause. " I have heard of a good situation this time, you know, ft I get it, it will be a stepping-stone to other things of more consequence. And when I am rich, you know well, my darling, that I shall refuse you nothing." "You have thought so many times that better days were close at hand. And every time you have been disap pointed, and we have lived on the same norrible life," was the discouraging re ply. "I know, my dearest; but this is really good news, I trust ard hope. If you wi!l only kiss me and wish me good luek, I have faith that it will come."_ He bintdown. his dark eyes wistfully searching hers for one glance of love, sucli as lie lind so often seen there in the happy days of courtship. But love, so far as site wns concerned, he sometimes feared, had flown out of the window of this home when poverty entered. The heat, the dust, the discordant street cries without, the shabby, disordered room within, the general sense of her own untidiness, and the galling memory of the freshly beautiful summer costume . worn by the wife of Paul Hayden, as she lounged in her carriage on the pre vious day—all these things combined to Swish the affectionate glance for which he husband's besrt so vainly hungered, and to make the wife's parting kiss so oold and formal that it lingered like ice upon the young man's lips a* he turned •way, He said nothing. But the deep sigh, that seemed to com'- from the very depths of a tried and overladen heart, silently reproached her. She caught a last glimpse of his face as he closed the door. It wore a look of repressed sorrow that would haunt her Us her dying day. What evil spirit hod tempt* a her to try him so? Was it his fault that, by the sudden failure of a bank in the great" panic." the savings of years of steady toil had been lost in a msment? Had he not 1 abored faithfully ever since for her support? For her ungratcfhl Hake, had he not stooped even to menial toil,when no other employment could bo procured. And now she had sent him from her, unohcered by a look or word of fondness. What if some accident should happen to the train by which he was to travel? What if he should never return P For a moment she sat dumb, almost paralyzed by the shock of that idea. Then she sprang from her chair and rushed to the door. She would call him back, and ask him to forgive that care less, cruel parting. She was too laic. He was already in the street. A moment later she heard the shrill whistle of the train. He was gone. The day passed on sadly enough. Thought after thought came crowding into her mind to unsettle and reprove her. They bore their fruit. In less than an hour niter Charles Archer's departure his home wore a very different aspect. By nightfall the one room was trim and clean as willing hands could make it. Before the clean windows a pair of snowy muslin cur tains weredrawn. The stove shone like a mirror, and from its open front a bright welcome to the absent master Hashed out, flooding the very walls with warmth and light. And summer evening though it was. both light and warmth were needed. At sunset angry clouds rose in the south and the rain came sharply down, with an accompanying wind that knew little of its own mind, and veered sharply round continually from south to east. Amid the wailing wind and dropping rain Helen Archer worked steadily on. At nine o'clock the train which was to bring her husband home was due. i Her last task wns finished, when she dished up his favorite viands ar.d set them, covered over with a basin, upon the hearth to keep warm. She leaned from the window, looking out, through wind and rnin, for some sign of his home-coming. She wore the dress he liked best. Her hair was ar ranged in his favorite fashion of braids 1 and curls. She had kissed him coldly j as lie left her, but now, with her heart upon her lips, she waited to welcome I him back, even if lie returned as unsuc ' ccssfulas he went. What did that mat- I ter, she thought, as she glauced at the window of her opposite neighbor, who had been left a widow only onif short month ago. "Only let him return to me safely, and I will make amends for all," she half thought, half prayed, as memory recalled the countless times in which she had grieved him during the past half year. Nine o'clock came and passed, yet she did not hear the usuai whistle of the in coming train. Half-past nine and yet no footstep on the stairs! Her heart lay like a leaden weight in her bosom. The color failed from her lips and cheeks, and her blue eyes grew wild with silent dread. At ten o'clock she could bear the suspenso no longer. She left her room and ran down the stairs, with a lialf-formed purpose in her mind of inquiring nt the neighbor ing station about the laggard train. Dimly, in the darkness, she saw a crowd of people gathered at the outer door of the tenement-house. They were all talking confusedly, but now and then some Words broke pla nly through the medley of sound. "His poor wife!" said one voice, " how is she going to bear it, I wonder. It is well for lier that he lias no little ones to look after. She is nothing more than a child herself, anyway." "Make way there!" said some one outside. "We must carry the body up stairs. Which room is it! And some woman ougiit to go up before us and tell the wife." The crowd surged and parted. Be tween the ranks, six men came steadily onward, following a policeman. Helen knew him well, and when lie looked up the staircase, and saw the slight figure bending forward, and the pale face full of a fixed and settled horror, he turned again to thcerriwd, and called out: "One cf you women come up here to break the news. And take tier away," he added, in a lower voice; "it is no sight for her." Good-natured Bridget McCarthy came forward, and ran up the stairs to where Helen stood. " You'll come back inu> your room wid me, my darlint," she said, putting her strong arms around Helen's slender waist. "Sure it'll destroy yon intirely o look on at the likes of that!" " Bridget, is be dead?" asked the pale lips, pitifully. " Sorry lam to say that he is! It was I the train, my dear. Oil the truck, they say ; and ten strong men killed outright licsidc him that they are bringing up from below. Helen fell senseless at the Irish woman's feet. Htflf.an hour later she struggled slowly hack to life and loneliness again. She opened her eyes to find herself lying on her own bed, with the kind old doctor of the neighborhood bending over her with rather an anxious face. " We shall do nicely now," he said, making a warninggosture to so me one in the background. ' Helen gave a great sigh as he took her hand. "Oh. why did you bring me back, doctor? I have driven my husband away to his death, and I honed I could die, too. I blamed him because we were so poor, doctor, and I would scarcely kiss him when he went away this morning to look for another place. Oh, I have been so cruel to him! And now, just when I was sorry for it, and wiien I had resolved to try to be a bet ter wife, God has taken him away from me, and he will never know how bit terly I repented." "flow do you know that he is dead, mydw?" asked the doctor. "Oh, I saw them bringing him up the stairs. And I heard them talking about me." " Not about you, my dear, but about poor little Mrs. Gray, who lives in the room at the back. Her husband wns badly hurt on the train when It ran off the track this evening. We thought he was dead at first. Hut since then he lias revived, and I feel sure that, by God's mercy, be will recover before long." "But where is my husband, tnenf cried Helen, starting op. " God has been very good to you, too, my dear," said the old physician. "Is healive? Where is he? Oh, tell me!" her every gesture struggling be tween hope and fear. " Here!" The doctor stepped back. From a dark corner of the room a tall figure nulled forward and clasped the wonder ing. weeping wife in a close embrace. "Is It you? Oh, is it really you?" she exclaimed, bursting into tears. "Oh, Charles, I have been so miserable jnoe yea went away! How could I treat you so? You never, never can forgive me or love me again!" "As if I could help loving you as long as I live, Helen! And you shall be so linppy after this. I have found a good place, I shall have a good salary, and to-morrow, If you are well enough, we will take a trip into the country to gether and linn some pretty little cot tage, where you can amuse yourself all through this beautiful summer among the birds and flowers." " I don't want a cottage. I want nothing Charles, and now Cod has given you back to me, that will be enough to inako mo happysaid his wife, giving him the tender kiss which she had refused him that morning. Nevertheless the cottage was taken, and the summer was as happy a time as mortals may ever hope to eiyoy this side of Paradise. Once, on their journey thither, after a shopping excursion in tlie city, they chanced to he overtaken by the magnifi cent carriage of Paul Hayden, million aire. Mrs. Hayden, resplendent in a toilet fresh from the atelier of Worth, sat tliorein. She was brown-eyed and pink-ohneked and very handsome. Yet tier face looked worn and wearied. It lacked the look of true and perfect hap piness that Helen's wore. Helen caught the somewhat anxious look that her husband turned upon her, as the great lady drove slowly by. She smiled. Under cover of her pretty silken shawl her hand stole into Never for ono moment had she for gotten the lesson of that long-past sum mer's day! Never liad she ceased from thanking Cod that it had been given, altliougti it came " Almost too Late." Longevity Notes. John Battle died in Montreal the other day, aged 119. Robert Kidd. 105 years old, is the oldest man in Texas. Mary Fernay died in Little Valley, N. Y., at the age of 105. - Samuel Iosey recently died in Pike township. Pa., aged 107. Maijgan t MeMnhon died in Durham, England, in her 113 th year. Aunt Sarah Hicks, in the county hos pital in Flat hush, L 1., is 104. Clara Clairs, of Now Orleans, was burned to death at the age of 103. Luke Courville, 102 years old, hanged himself in a pig-pen on a poor farm. Thurlow Weed saw the first steam boat ami rode in the first steam railway train. A pupil in the Carsonville (Ca.) school is eighty-two years old. She is a negress. After living more than a century, a Michigan man committed suicide by hanging. Andrew Jung, ninety-throe years old, of Columbia, I'a., served under tlie first Napoleon. Lucy Kurney, of I*tnsing, Mich., was fifty-five years a slave and over sixty years free. Itouns Kemp, niu'My-six years old, of Calloway, Ky., married Mary Bridges, aged sixteen. Over a century ago Ann Collins, of Paris, Ky., was born. She remembers Washington. Diana Dorsey *of Springfield, Florida, was supposed to be 115 year* of age when she died. Mary Donohue, whoso grandfather died in hi* I2lst year, recently died in Ne* York aged 112. l'eleg Spragtie, of Maine, is ninety years old, and blind. He was a United States Senator in 1M29. James Smith, of Somerset sounty, N. J., now 10!) years old. was sold as a slave thirty years ago for fifty cents. Thomas Howe, of Barrington. N. H., lately made a marriage proposal to a lady eighty-fire years old and fifteen years his junior. A negro died not long aga in New Haven, Conn., leaving a family ol orphans from sixty to eighty years eld. The father was 108. The eleven daughters of the late Robert Johnson, of Middletown. Conn., are alive, the youngest over fifty years old, the oldest over eighty. Armstrong Porter, of Luzerne, Pa., died last month aged ninety-eight. He voted lor Thomas Jefferson for Presi dent, and for Samuel J. Tilden for the same office. Although 103 years of age, Jane Gil bert. who is living at 26 Vine street. Baltimore, is in excellent health. She remembers the bombardment of Fort McHenry, and saw George Washington once. A North Carolina couple, who are each over ninety years of age, desire to die at tlie same hour. They have com pleted their funeral outfit even to their tombstones. They live in Iredell county. ChocalaUt Tlio (cacao) tree is about as long in attaining its growth as the orange tree; it may produce in the third year from the sW, hut does not reach its full bearing period until at tlie age of seven or eight. It is a tender plant during the first stages of its growth, and, like tlie coffee, must be shaded by some broad leaved-plant like the plantain or banana, which, of quicker growth, are set out near the seed at time ol planting, Heat and moisture are Indispensable to its existence, but one without the other proves fatal toitssrowlh. Once started in life with an acre or so of cacao trees, the negro asks for nothing more; his wife and children gather the harvest, and he enjoys an idlfe existence. The fruit of tlie cacao resemble* somewhat an overripe cucumber about six inches in length, oval mid pointed. Many of the pods grow right out of the trunk o the tree, hanging by short stems, and remind ore of tailless rats. Some are green, some yellow, crimson or purple, some variegated by veins of different colors. Each pod is divided into five longitudinal cells, containing a sweetish. agreeaWle pulp, in which are enveloped the seeds, from twenty to thirty in number—a white, pulpy substance, in a thin shell. When the fruit is mature it is gathered, and the seeds removed nnd dried. Sometimes they are buried in sand or dry earth, for the purpose of absorbing tlie moisture and pulp. Croat care Is necessary in curing them, a* they mold easily, and the planter* gen erally provide large platforms on wheels on which the seed* are spread, which, they run out from under a shelter on sunshiny days. • • • The native method of preparing chocolate from the seeds is to roost them and grind finely on a warm smooth stone. When well kneaded it forms a tenacious paste which, with the addition of a little sugar, is mnde into small roils or sticks. —Oamptinth* Oaribbee*. 1 KDIHON'N LIFE. Hketeh of Iki Hoatlaa lobar of the Ureal Inventor. There are probably but few pontons In the world outside tlie crowned heads whose probable length of life is can vassed by the public at large with more interest than that of Thomas Alva Edi son. And'the interest is not without foundation when it is remembered that although only in his thirty-second year lie lias made more inventions than any man living. In the patent office at Washington is a department marked " Edison," where his numerous inven tions are placed side by side, forming not the least of the curiosities ol that insti tution. Nearly 250 patents are placed to his credit, making exceedingly apro pos the description given of him by a late commissioner of patents, who sty led him "the young American who made the patent office hot with iiis steps." It is no wonder, then, tiiat the frequent exclamation is made by those who re- Hecton the tremendous amount of labor involved in sucli a record, "Oh, Edison can't last much longer; he is working himself to death 1" Tiie prophecy is not a little strengthened, too, by the in inventor's well-known disregard of nature's requirements. Napoleon, it is related, diu not avernge four hours' Bleep out of the twenty-four. liis energy was untiring and iiis perseverance un conquerable. His rest was in tlie saddle, and his recrextion in the battle field. The same is true of Edison in his sphere of life. His only pleasure is in the laboratory, where lie can lie found day and night from one end of tlie year to the other, with scarcely an intermission. He seldom seeks rest in bed. A bench or Cot among his chemicals and ma chinery form his couch six nights out of the seven. Not that there is any real necessity, perhaps, for such self-inflicted hardship, but " roughing it" is iiis de light. Life in the Menlo Park laboratory partakes more of the character of a camn pitched near the battlefield than ot anything else. An daily routine lof the scientist, beginning at a time i when he has actually ceased work and is . at home is as follows: At 10 a. M. he starts for his office, | where for about tws hours he is in tensely occupied in attending with his secretary to the mass of correspondence piling in upon him at the rate oftentimes |of over 200 lettersn day. After disposing i of his correspondence he devotes his j ime to a perusal of the numerous papers, pamphlets, documents and i hooks scientific and otherwise, that 1 come to him from all parts of tlie world. He rends with great rapidity and yet with astonishing thoroughness, as days afterward ho readily recalls what lie ; has been over. By 2r.m.he is in bis ; laboratory reviewing the results of tlie experiments and work of bis assistants performed in his absence. Consultations with Mr. Batchelor, iiis chief assistant, next occupy him for a considerable time. After this is over lie may l>c said to be : fairly in tlie midstofliislaliorof love. A reci nl of the experiments he dailv tries, the plans he devises and the suggestions he offers would seem exaggerated wen* it not that hundreds of record books in his laboratory bearing the marks of his labor attest* the same with unimpcachn hie accuracy. The nnyority of days his meal* are served him at his work. "The hard labor of tlie inventor, however, begins after dark. The work of tiie day is moreofa preliminary character— a getting r-ady for the herculean < fforts that one by one grow and develop, until they finally reach as a whole a perfect invention. The midnight lunch is a striking feature of the laboratory life. At twelve o'clock everv night two men and a dog enter the laboratory laden down with baskets of edibles from a neighboring caterer. Tiie dog, a huge New found land, plays as important a part in tiie per formance as his hiped companions. for witii a lighted lon tern hanging from iiis mouth lie lead* tlie way from over tlie railroad track and across tlie fields to the abode of the Wizard. He also as sist* at times by having strapped to liis back a basket or can i-ontaining some of tlie lunch. The repast without the dog to participate would be barren. He seems to know his standing, and lie is always to be found at bis post of duty. Around the lunch table gather the in ventor and iiis assistants, and as the food things disappear tliev discuss the ay's work, tell stories and gossip gen erally. A freer or gayer set could scarcely be found. The jovial good nature of the chief spreads to all, and fun and fancy reign supreme. After lunch once more begins the work of i ML and emit inuesuntil, one by one, tlie assistants drop ofl to sleep. A few retire to their homes; tlie larger num ber, however, follow the plan of the leader and ntilizc their tenches tor beds. Edison himself gives in generally about 4 A. M, selecting some unoccupied spot, where, witii hi* coat for a pillow, he sleeps soundly sometimes until ten o'clock, other time* until *ix. for his time of rising varies. This mode of life continually re pen led, while calculated to wear out most inen, seems to cause Edison to thrive. At tiie present time he is the picture of good health. His height is five feet ten Indies, and his weight IHS pounds.— New York Herald. She Renewed. One wf the sanitary police was the other day wandering over a box full of dead cats in an alley off Seventh street, when he heard yeila and the sounds of conflict in a house near by. As lie en tered tlie yard a man and woman burst open the side door and rolled down the steps In n heap, kicking ami clawing with right good will. "What is the trouble here?" asked the officer a* lie pulled them apart. " There, I'm glod you happened along!"exclaimed the man a* he jumped up. " The old woman and me have liad a dispu e for the last ten ar fifteen years as to when Christopher Columbus dis covered America. Maybe you know?" "It was In 1492," replied the officer. ".lust what I said—just the date I had!" cried the husband as he danced around. " Now then, old woman, will you give up?" " Never r " Tou won't?" " Not an inch! I said 1490. and I Lad your neck across the edge ot the step. We agreed not to bite nor scratch, and I prefer to renew the conflict rather than take a stranger's figures! Come into the house!" The officer waited kt the gate until he . heard two chairs smashed down and a dozen yells, and he resumed his rounds with a growing conviction that Colum bus would ultimately be two years ahead in that house.— Detroit Free Pre**. Texas has 7,W0 schools, and •- school fund la apportioned equally among the children of seholnstie age, regard loss of oolor. AN EXCITING MOUNTAIN BIDE. A Woman's Ksporlsnrs In (he Hookr MosnUlsa. Wo extract the following from a " Lady's Life it) the Rocky Mountnins;" The next wonderful adventure of the dashing rider was to take part in a grand cattle hunt, in which Evans hail begged her to lend a hand. The cattle were to be driven fifteen miles at n height of 0,500 feet. On all sides moun tains rose to an altitude ol from 11 ,r00 to 15.000 feet, their skirts shaggy with witch-pine forests, and scarrea by deep tanyons wooded and boulder strewn. Two thousand head of half wild Texan cattle were scattered in herds through out the canyon, living on more or less suspicious terms witli the other inhabi tants of the lonely nnd romantic region. On this occasion the herds were driven down in a body fsr a muster, and for the purpose of branding the calves. After a 6.30 breakfast this morning, we started, the party being composed of my host, a hunter from the snowy range, two stockmen from the plains, one of whom rode a violent buck-jumper, and i was said by his comrade to oe the " best | rider in North Americny," and myself. We were all mounted on Mexican sad dles, rode, as the custom is, with light snaffle bridles, leather guards over jour feet, and broad wooden stirrups, and each carried his lunch in a pouch siung on the lassoing horn of his saddle. Four big, badly trained dogs accompanied us. It was a ride of nearly thirty miles, and of many hours, one of the most splendid I ever took. We never got ofTour horses except to tighten the girths, we ate our lunch with our bridles knotted over our j saddleliorns, started over the level at a ! full gallop, leapt over trunks of trees, dashed madly down hillsides rugged with rocks or strewn witli great stones, I forded deep, rapid streams, saw lovely \ lakes and views of surpassing magnifi cence, started witli uncouth heads and monstrous antlers, and in the I chase, which for some distance was un -u < <-ssful, rode to the very base o- Ising's I'cak, over 14,000 feet high, where the bright waters of one ef the affluents of toe I'latto burst from the eternal snows through a canyon of inde, scribable majesty. The sun was hot, but at a height of over eight thousand feet the air was crisp and frosty, and the enjoyment of riding a pood horse i under such exhilarating circumstances j was extreme. In one wild part of the ride wethadto come down a steep hill, thickly wooded witli pitch pines, lo leap over the fallen timber, and steer be tween the dead and living trees *.-> avoid being " snagg< d," or bringing down a heavy dead branch by an unwary touch. Emerging from this, we caught sight ■ of a thousand Texan cattle feedirg in a valley helow. The leaders scented us. and, taking fright, began to move off in t lie direction of the open "park." while we were about a mile from and aliove : them. "Head them off. boys!" our leader shouted; "all aboard, hark away!" and w'tli something•( the "High, tally-ho in the morning!" away we all went at a hand-gallop down hill. I could not hold ray exciti-d animal; down liiii, up hill, leaping over rocks and timber, faster every moment the paee grew, and still the leader shouted, "Go it, boys!" and the horses dashed on at a racing i speed, passing and repassing eaclifotlicr, till my small hut beautiful bay was keening pace with the immense strides of the great buck-jumper ridden by the " fine.-t rider in North Americny," and I was dizzied and breathless by the pare at whioh we were going. A shorter time than it takes to tell it brought us | close to and abreast of the surge of cat tie. The bovine waves were a grand I sight; huge bulls, shaped like buffaloes, j IMU lowed and roared, and with great oxen and cows with yearling calves, galloped like racers, and we galloped alongside of them, and shortly headed them, nad in no time were placed as sentinels aeros the mouth of the valley. It seemed like infantry awaiting the shock of cavalry, as we stood as still as our excited horses would allow, almost quailed .as the surge came on, but when it got close to us my comrades hooted fearfully, and we dashed forward with the dogs, and. with bellowing, roaring and thunder of h- ofs, the wave receded as it came. I rode up to our leader, who received me with much laughter. He said I was a good "cattle man," and that lie had forgotten tliat a lady was of the party until he saw tne "come leaping over the timber and driving with the others." It was not for two hours after this that tiic real business of driving began, and I was obliged to change my thor oughbred for a well-trained cattle horse, a broncho, which could double like a hare, and go over ar.y ground. I had not expected to work like a vahncro. but so it was. and my Hawaiian experience was very useful We hunted the vari ous canyons and known "camps," driv ing the herds out of them; and. until we had secured 850 head in the corral some hours afterward, we scarcely saw each other to speak to. Our first diffi culty was witli a herd which got into some swampy ground, when a cow, wnich.afterward gave me an infinity of trouble, remained at bay for nearly an hour, tossing the dog three times, and resisting all efforts to dislodge. Bhe had a large yearling calf with her. and Evtfnstold me that thv attachment of a cow to her first calf is sometimes so great that site will kill lier second that the first may have her milk. I got a herd of over a hundred out of the canyon by myself, mid drove them down to the river with the aid of one badly-broken dog, which gave me more trouble than the cattle. The getting over wa most troublesome; a few took to Ihc water readily and went across, but others smelt it. and th-u, doubling back ran in various directions; while some attacked the flog as he was swimming, and others after crossing headed hack in search of some favorite companion which had been left behind, and one specially vicious cow attacked my horse over and over ngaln. It took an liour and a half of tlm* and much patience to gather them all on the other side. It was growing late in the day. and a snow storm was impending, before I was joined by the other drivers and herds, and as the former had diminished to three, it was very diffi cult to keep the cattle together. You drive them as gently as possible, so as not to frighten them, riding first on one side and then on the other to guide them; and, if they deliberately go in a wrong direction, you gallop in front and head them off. The great dkc.itcment is when one breaks away from the herd and gallops madly up nnd down hill, and you gallop after him anywhere, over and among rocks and trees, doub les when he d üblea, and heading him till you (jet back again. The bulls were qaite easily managed, but the cows with oalfs. old and young, were moat trouble some. Bv accident I rode between cow and her calf in a narrow place the row rushed at me and wan just irT ting het big horn* under the home whi he retired, and sprung dextrously aeid? k JJ?. d ot lUtnll Wpened continul ally. There was one very handsome red cow which became quite mad. fit,, had a calf with her nearly her own *>. and thought every one it* ~n , .r n y. and though its horns were well developed and it WIIH quite able to take t are <\ iUelf, shei Insisted on protecting it from all fancied dan gent. One of the doc. a young foolish thing, seeing that tlj cow was excited, took a foolish pleaiiure in barking at lier, and she wan evidentl* quite infuriated. She turn<-d to U forty times at least; tore up the ground with her horns, tossed the great hunting dogs, tossed and killed the calves of two other cows, and finally became h0 dan. serous to the rest of the herd that just a* the drive was ending. Evans drew hi. revolver and shot her, and the calf tor which she had fought as blindly men ted her pibeously. She rushed at me several tunes, mid with rage hut these trained cattle horses keep perfect y cool, and nearly without will on rxiy part, mine jumped aside at the r jh moment, and foiled the assailant. .Just at dusk we reached the corral—an acre of grass enclosed hy stout post and rail fences seven feet high, and by much patience and some subtlety, lodged tht whole herd within its shelter without a blow, a shout, or even a era' k of a whip i wild as the cattle were. It was fearfu 'y | cold. We galloped the last mile and a half in four and a half minutes, reached | the cabin just as snow began to fall, and ! found strong, hot tea ready. The Smart Turile. One damp afternoon the turtle earn* waddling out into the big room to Ur j row a little sand to lay his eggs in. "My friend," the elephant said, "your- is a i very hard case." "Yes." replied the turtle, " but whi> there's life there's soup." The elephant was greatly astonished, for he didn't know the turtle was given to that sort of thing at ail, and all the ! other animals grinn< d, because, you see! it wasn't ofu-n the elephant met any* J body in the menagerie who could ta.k : to him. " Well," said he, after a pause. " it's a good tiling your back is so broad." " Yes, it is," replied the turtle, "be cause there's no telling what make ! oombof it." | The animals cheered softly and lhee>. pliant looked amazed. •' Well, old go-os-you-pleast ," he said, presently. " you pay as you go. don't you?" "Oh. yes," the turtle said, "I bar j toshcuouteveryoneeinawliile. How'. | hides?" he asked, cheerfully. "Oil. they're easy," the elephant Mid. i "a little loose, may be, hut nothing to worry over. House-moving buine keeps up, I reckon?" "Yes, sir," the turtle said. " nothing • rushing particularly, but I'm in and out all day. Nothing unusual in shawl straps, is there?" The animals cheered at this delicate allusion to the trunk bu-im -s. and for j the first time in his life the elephant ; looked as though he was going to I lose hi* temper, but he rallied and f said: "Oh. no; much the same as UfU* : iust a kind of hand to mouth husincw Jy the way, didn't I see your father'! J old oven-oat up in front of the restaurs*: ; yesterday?" "I guess you did," said the turt.t '* he wasn't the kind of a man to dieatd make no sign. Going down into tlif billiard room pretty soon?" The elephant said : "No, they'd hao to excuse him. but if they'd wait till the hyena came along he'd have some native whine with them." And then the tur tle said: "Ail rigkt.he'd drop in about tusk." And the n-. n agerie went to supper that night with the greatest enthusiasm. But the elephant was very quiet and only spoke once, and that was to ask the ostrich where he supposed the turt.< grew to be so cute? And the foolish bird of the desert tossed an iron bolt head down its throat and replied: " Picked it up, I rpekon." And then, children, the elephant grinned and said there seemed to 1* an epidemic in the menagerie. and he caned up against the center-pole and went to bed.— Burlington Bfuoiu yr . Washington's Market Carl. On the twentieth of April Braddoek left Alexandria. On the ninth of July he fell. Washington filled the moun tain passes with troops, and kept off the French and Indians from the town that trembled and grew. When the French power in Virginia was broken, he mar ried, and "society " was chagrined at iu early experiences of his marrh-d life I'arson Weems tell us that " A lexandria though small, was lovely, hut had no charms for the palate. By tobacco its neighbors had made money. They be gan to look down on the poorer sort and to talk about families. Of course such great people- could not run market carts. Hence the Belhavenites often sat down to eat salt meat and jobnnycak*. But when Washington brought the wealthy widow Guslis to Mount Vw non, a market cart was constructed, and twice n week sent to Belhaven with fat tilings that araaaed ths lean market Country gentleman dining in town won dered at the change of fare, and thus it was discovered, to the mortification of some of the little great ones. I hat Colons! Washington ran a market oart." "So ciety " then, if proud, was often plain; for Washington writes in his diary of s hull in Alexandria in 17(10 where pocket handkerchiefs served as table-ckitha and bread and butter with tea, " which the drinkers couid not distinguish from hot water sweetened," made the bill of fare, and in his disgust he writes itdown " a bread-and-butter ball."— Harper f Magazine. Words of Wisdom. Hope is such a bait, it covers any hook. Conscience is the voioe of the soul; the passions are the voice of the body. All other knowledge is hurtful to him who iuu not honesty and good nature. Hatred is so durable and obstinate that reconciliation on a tick bed Ist sign of death. A merry heart doeth good like * medicine; but a broken spirit drieth the bones. Circumstances form the character; but, like petrifying matters, they hai den while they form. When one ha* no design but to speak plain truth, he may say a great deal in a very narrow compass-