" Perhaps." In woodland ways now strangled with the snow The blue, ewoet violets will soon be spring ing, The golden-headod aconites will blow, And in the meadows robins will be singiug . Then from the streets into the fields I'll go; And my heart answered me. " Perhaps !" • Or, if not then, whon strawlierrios are rod, And flag flowers stand among the blowing rushes, When roses bloom, and iu the trees o'orhead There is a dreamy melody oi thrushes, My loet again the mossy turl shall tread; And my heurt answered mo, " Perhaps! ' Or, better still, I'll sail the windy sea, Full of largo music, billow to billow sing ing, And lie 'mid broken lights, and sea-drilt tree, Hearing in dreams ol land tiro ship I Kills ringing- Yes, oceanward, when summer comes, I'll flee; And my heart answered me, " Perhaps!" Oh, heart, I said, thine is the weariest way; Why Wilt tliou over disenchant to-morrow T Time is so niggardly with each to-day, Surely 'tis well from future days to borrow. Art thou afraid such droits will be to pay ? And my heart answered me, " Perhaps!" Then 'mid man's fretful dwellings, dim and low, ril dream ol peace, eternal flowers un lading, And of that tidelcss sea whose happy flow Keeps not a note ol sorrow or upbraiding, tome day I'll And that happy land, 1 know; And my heart answered, " Thou shalt go!" —Harper'i Weekly. ADRIENNE'S STORY, I was never happy at Aunt Browne's, but there seemed no prospect that I should ever leave her. I had come out, BO to speak, as far as any one so repressed could come out, but I might as well have staid in. I only sat in corners, talked with the chaperons, or listened to some garrulous octogenarian Aunt Browne's interest in me, such as it was, died a natural death after my first sea son—it had always been weakly—and the result was a sad deficiency in my wardrobe. She had married "off two daughters without difficulty, but a niece, it seemed, stuck closer than a burr. However, it was not my fault that I remained unmarried. I had done my best to be fascinating. Though I hated the idea of marrying for home or position, yet I was sure I should not find it bard to love one who was kind to me, if only on account of the novelty. I was thirty now, and not unused to hearing the changes rung upon the old maid, and the beggars who shouldn't be choosers, by my younger cousins, Susette and Anne. But I had had one opportunity to change for better or worse of which they had never dreamed. The son of Aunt Browne's second hus band, Cedric Browne, had asked me to marry him, three years before, as we rowed up the river in Juno for the rosy laurel blooms to decorate the house and niazzas for Susette's birthday fete. I sometimes wondered what Aunt Browne would have thought of the proceeding, as she had set her heart upon marrying Susette to Cedric. Perhaps I refused bim because I was taken unawares, be cause I was not enougli interested to care about frustrating Aunt Browne's plans; perhaps I did hot expect to be taken at my word, but imagined it the proper way to decline, in order to be importuned. I believe all my favorite heroines had conducted in this wise. However, we rowed home through the sunset, our boat heaped with the pink flowers, in silence. " You look as If yon wore laden with sunset clouds," said Susette, who was watching for us on the shore; but I am certain that Cidric looked like a thun der-cloud. The next day was the fete. Every- Itody brought presents for Susette. Cwlric gave her an antique necklace of turquoises: I was sure h' had meant it forme. We had supper out of doors, under the great pine-trees, and dancing by moonlight. That day I began to re gard Cedric Browne attentively. I had mown him under the same roof tor weeks at a time; I had laughed and talked with him, believing him fore ordained to minister to Susette's hap piness, "as inaccessible as a star in heaven," so far as I was concerned. He had helped me with Adele's children, who had come to live at Aunt Browne's when their mother died. But that he should regard me with any tender emo tions I had never even dared to wish. In fact. I had thought little about him LKI to-day. I had never observed till to-day tliat his eyes weve as tender as stars, that his face was like that radiant countenance of Mozart in the musio room, that his smile was simply en chantment. It was rather late to make these discoveries. He did not leave us at once; it seemed as if he staid Just long enough for me to know all I had lost. Since then lie i..id been with us once again for a whole month; but little Walter was ill with a spinal affection tiiat kept him on his back, and me by his side; and though Odric used to relieve me often by day and by night, I could see from my win dow, ami from occasional glimpses into ! > ? drawing-room, that the balance of iiis time was spent in Susette's com ply- "Aunt Susette's beau is going to make me a kite," Teddy confided to Walter one day. " Who's be?" asked Walter from his bti. " Why, Cedric, ol course—Cedric Browne. Bridget says so herse ! f," as if • that put the matter beyond dispute. Hie next day, when Cedrio came np to amuse Walter wjili the affairs down stairs. that youth dlmanded: "I say, are you really Aunt Susette's beau, Cedric? Adrienne's ever so nioer. When I'm a map I'll marry Adrienne." " Then you 11 be luckier than I." said Cedric, winding up a top. and spinning it on his palm. It was a year since then. Ino longer went out; I was fairly pnssee. Aunt Browne had abandoned all hopea of mr. I was a good nurserymaid, a cheap fiovernesa, an inexpensive companion, n the family. In the meantime I could have tw rrb d any day, if I had chosen to accept the Rev. Abel Amherst, i.nd transfer my labors to the parsonage. To be sure, this wouldnot have proved the brilliant marriage my sunt had ex pected of me, nor the romantic one I had dreamed of myself, and it was not till I caiue into postM-siion of a certain family secret that I began to revolve the possibility In my mind. It seems that when my aunt married her Becond husband, Mr. Browne—Susette and Anne were both liowclls—they had sub sisted upon the patrimony left to Cedrle by his mother, and that alter his father's death. Cedric' had turned in the same yearly income from the estate for the family use, and that I, Adriennc Lennox, owed my daily bread to the men whom I had refused, and who hod forgotten me. Earning my own livelihood was out of the question, drudgery was my only vocation, and that was too badly Said to he encouraging. I looked at the iev. Abel Amherst often at this period, with a view to installing him in Cedric's place, if Cedrie would only vacate. Oddly enough, Mr. Amherst renewed las suit at this time, and pressed it with the eiyorness of a lover, and for the first time I began to hesitate. " The woman who hesitates is lost," said Susette. I had been out on the hills one day trying to make up my mind to forget Cedric, and marry Mr. Amherst; but whenever I began to think with some interest of going to paristi meetings, be coming the president of Dakota'leagues and sewing circles, visiting the poor, and drinking tea opposite the Rev. Mr. Amherst all the rest of my days, somo how or other Cedric's face would slip into the picture uninvited, nnd blot out his rival s, as strong sunlight fades a negative photograph. "There is a letter for you, Adrienne," said Aunt Browne, when I entered the house, " in the music room, on the top of the dado, under Mozart's picture." I went into the music room, but there was no letter to be seen. " Perhaps one of the girls has re moved it." she suggested. ~ But no one had meddled with it. "Grandma cooked a letter over the tea-kettle," said little Teddy, reflec tively. "Yes," said grandma, "I wrote a letter to your pa, child. I hadn't any blotting paper, but the fiic answers the purpose quite as well." At that time I had never heard of opening letters by steam. Well,we ran sacked the house for that truant letter, but in vain. "Who was it from, auntP" I asked. " How should I know, child?" " But the handwriting the post mark ?" " The postmark was blurred." "Had it a foreign stamp?" I asked, with sudden eagerness. Ccdriu had gone abroad some months before, and I had not heard of his return. "A foreign stamp! No. Were you expecting a foreign letter?" "N-o: but it is the unexpected that always happens, you know." "It's awfully provoking," said Su sette. " Perhaps it was only the recipes Mrs. Clark was going to send you." "Nothing more likely: hut what has become of it? It's a prolonged game of hunt the thimble." "And supposing it's a letter notifying you of the existence of a first Mrs. Am herst." put in Anne, " or of a legacy left by your forty-fifth cousin in Austra lia—" And then the door-bell rang. Welt, after that I suppose I must have •accepted Mr. Amherst. Everybody be haved as if I had. I received congratu lations and a ring, and the parish begun repairs upon the parsonage, before I could muster courage to tell Mr. Am herst all about Cedric and my mistake, and how I wasn't at all sure I could ever get over it, and care for anybody else, but that I would do my best. And he smiled in a sort of absent way when I told him, but seemed content to take me as I was, for better or worse; only it did strike me sometimes that lie was the most undemonstrative lover in Christendom: but I hadn't much ex perience in lovers, and perhaps they weren't a* gushing in real life as novels pictured. Housed to kiss my hand when we parted; that was all. lie was very gentle, but a little sad, I fancied, wi.h a look which might mean that he was afraid of ko much happiness, or that to marry the woman he loved wasn't all fancy had painted it; and often I thought I had perhaps done wrong to tell him everything about Cedric so unreserv edly ; yet I had only meant to be honest. But the day was appointed, and sud denly Cedric appeared among us. when I thought he was at the world's end, and he and the girls decorated the little church with white field daisies and grosses for the occasion. You may be lieve that I avoided the sight of Cedric in the interval before the wedding as much as possible, but somehow I was always stumblingupon him; lie seemed to le perpetually at my elbow ; he sur prised me mote than once witli traces of tears upon my face; the sound of his voice made my heart turn and quiver within me. If I had dared to witlidrnw at this juncture, I'm nfrnid I should have done so; but it was too late; and though I felt like a hypocrite whenever Mr. Amherst appeared, his looks of sober satisfaction, which reminded me of those lines of Mntthcw Hoyden on Sir Philip Sidney, " A lull assurance given hy looks, Continual comfort in a face, The lineament* ol gospel books," might have taught me that all was well with him. "Yon JUT the oddest sweethearts I ever saw." gossiped Susette. "I wouldn't give s straw for such a lover; and as for you. Adrienne, you resemble a ghost more than a bride.'' In short, a thousand years of purga tory would ill tcprcsent my sufferings during those last weeks before my wed ding. Well, to crown the whole, Aunt Browne said Cedric most give me away; he was the only male relative, the head of the family, so to speak, ana he could do it so admirable. "We shall see, said he. "I'm afraid I bould make a poor figure at giving Adrienne away;" and he stroked his irirte mustache ss he spoke, and looked at me just as be looked that day when we gathered the laurel for Busette's fete —I could have sworn he did. I didn't answer, for fear my voice would be husky, and the tears would start. The wedding was to be auite private —only relatives. Aunt Browne ar ranged everything to suit herself and the proirietles: it didn't become a clergyman's bride to mnkc a great parade. At the church, I remember, my veil caught In the carriage door, and an orange blossom tumbled from my wreath, which Cedric picked up, and Wore in his button-bole. Then he drew my half-lifeless arm within bis, and directly the wedding march pealed forth in great resounding waves of melody. My grandmother's India mus lin blew out in abundant creamy folds behind me, and Cedric and I were stand ing be fort the altar, and Mr. Amherst was rending the martinge service! I believe that Aunt Browne fainted, or she would have forbidden the banns. " You see. it was impossible for me to give you away, Adrienne," said Ce dric, Inter, when wo were steaming out of town. "Amherst is a trump; and may he find a wife as sweet as Mrs. Browne! If it hadn't been for him, I should have been of all men the most miserable to day. What do you think ho did? Wiiy, he wrote mo all that sad little story you thought right to tell him, and added that no would not deny he was making a sacrifice; that iu renoun cing you he renounced all that made life lovely to him, except his work; yet lie felt it was.better one should fail of a heaven on earth than two should suffer; and that if I loved you. as I had once said, would I take his place at the mar riage, ami allow him to solemnize it? It was a whim of his to have it so, ' to avoid explanations,' he said. I couldn't believe in my luck, you know, Adriennc. We bandied letters to and; fro, canvass ing the Huhject. I feared ho had made a mistake, as T had renewed my offer some little while before, but had re ceived no reply; still a dozen tilings happen to letters every day." "Yes, and something happened to yours," I said. Years after, when Susette and Anne were married, when Adele's husband had taken the children home to a new mamma, and Aunt Browne had gone to " the land of the hereafter," whenCedric was repairing the old house for u sum mer residence, in ripping away th an cient dado in the music-room, which had always warped awny from the wall in warm "weather, leaving a little crack, the carpenters unearthed my lost letter. Had it slipped down there, or had Aunt Browne given it a push? We give her the benefit of the doubt.— Harper's Bazar. ____________ A Lively Hermit. Living on the edge of a'pieceof tim ber land near I'lum creek. Plum town ship, Allegheny county, Pa is an odd character who has by his eccentric ways made himself a subject of curi osity to the inhabitants of that Bection. A gentleman related tiie following in rcgnrd to the man to a Pittsburg THa \ patch reporter. We have the man's real name at hand, but for good reasons do not think it advisable to give publiuity to it at this time; at any rate we will name him Jones in order to get at our story better. Seven or eight years ago Jones was considered a very wealthy man. He was frugal in his habits and accumulated money rapidly and hoarded it up. But the waves of mis-' fortune overtook him when he was in the zenith of his prosperity, and in a short time lie was left penniless. What hastened his sudden breaking up, our informant was unable to state. From that day to this Jones has never been considered his former self; the blow was more than he could stand, and Ids i mind became slightly deranged. He would go about from place to place, never noticing anybody or anything, and ns silent as a sphinx. He was and is yet very proud, and a proffer of as sistance is sure to bring a look or a word that plainly indicates that Jones' pride rebels against his accepting charity. He is now over sixty years of age and almost biind. Some time since he erected a little shanty, ten bv twelve, out of rough lumber, on the edge of the woods una far apart from any other habitation, and with the idea evidently of making his presence known to the outside world as little as possible. About a year ago he started in the book peddling business, but Ills eyesight got so poor tliat be had to give up the work and at once retired to the seclusion oi Ids little shanty, and entered upon the life of a hermit. The room is devoid of Iv. n the commonest articles of furni • ture. and its condition, were it in the city, would likely call for an investiga tion from one of the city " smellers," as they are sometimes termed. His bed is an old bench, with a lot of dirty look ing pieces of cloth for a covering. He has a fireplace, where he docs his cook ing, whenever there is anything about the place to oiok. and that is very sel dom. The floor is bare. A visit to bis Erison at any time during the day will nd him sitting almost on top of the fire, with his head between his hands and ns dumb as the live coals that cast a weird glare about the dark, dingy apartment, and give a coloring to his appearance that mnkes him look like old "Hip" himself. A year ago the neigh bors made up a purse and liought him a suit of clothes. They had the greatest difficulty in inducing him to accept the gift and to convince : him that he was not lowering his pride Jby doing so. The clothes are rags now. 1 and hang to his ghost-like frame in tatters but he will accept of no offers to replace the rags with garments more ; becoming this season of the year. He is supplied with eatables by the farmers in the vicinity, and has been tor a good while baric. Were it not for this fact, the old man would have " passed in his ohecks"long ere this. He would not visit any of their houses and ask for food if he was starving, and his proud, independent spirit says. " No, air. I will not," to all suggestions that he be placed in some charitable institution where he can be properly cared for. He is said to have relatives in this city who are in good circumstances, ana who could take care of the old man if he would consent, but his answer to all sucli propositions is generally an em phatic " Not" and there he is to-day in his little dinfnr hamlet, apart from the world, awaiting the time when his old tired frame shall be laid low with dis ease and oil age, and grim death shall step in and claim him for his own. Cost or Koine In Parliament. The British laws require every candi date for parliament to make a return ol his election expense*, and, although the direction of the law is not so implicitly followed as to result in anything like a complete exhibit, it affords some indi cation of the large outlay necessitated by such a contest as that which is now pending. The total expenditure by candidates at the last general election in 1874 amounted to $5,835,007. For the 65-1 seats in the house of commons there were 1,081 candidates. than one-Uiird ol the whole number, 187 were elected without opposition. The 659 successful candidates expended 93,- 195,000, and the 490 unsuccessful ones spent $8,040,000. The average outlay was largest among the Conservative candidates, 96,450, and the smallest among the home rulers, 91,975. In the English and Welsh counties the ex penditure was on a larger scale than in the average constituencies, reaching 910,800 lor each liberal, and 97,000 for each conservative candidate. In the contested elections In these counties the expenses of the conservatives averaged 915.010, and those of the liberals, 913,- 980. The largest sum spent in any one county election was in tlieraseof North Durham, where the four candidates spent altogether 914IOIO; and the largest sum in any borough or city ele tion was in the city of London, where six candidates spent 977 855. TIMELY TOPIC*. Cetywayo, the dethroned Zulu mon arch, according to a South Africa paper, is engaged in making mental notes. He lias calculated that each charge tired by the foreign men-of-war in Table hav in snluting the fort was of the value of an ox. He also concludes that it Ib more expensive to keep up armaments in Europe than in Zululand. His majesty also rcfmrds the queen's conduit in not answering his message of contrition as showing a great lack of courtesy. The island of Rotumah, which ha* been provisionally annexed to the Brit ish empire at-the request of a deputation of the two hostile factions which inhabit it, is situated a little to the north and east of the Figi archipelago, and was discovered by Captain Edwards during liia search for the mutineers of the Bounty in 1791. The island is only five miles long and half as wide, but it has a numerous population, the shore being covered with villages, which touch ana join one another. The soil is very fer tile, and vessels often stop at the island for supplies, while the inhabitants make , good sailors. According to the German imperial statistics for 187* of births, deaths and marriages, just published, the estimated population being 44,9(¥),0(>0, the mar riages numbered 340,000, the births 1,785,000, and the deaths 1,398,000. In France, the number of births was 936,- 000, and of deaths 839,000, so that the births exceeded the deaths by 97,000. In Germany the excess cf births was 557,000 —that is to say, that while in France the population increased in 1878 at the rate of .'27 per cent., it increased iu Germany at the rate of 1.'25 per cent. The number of marriages in Germany line greatly fallen off since 1873, when 423,900 were registered. A new stylo of barrel has been do vised—one intended for the shipment of produce, and which shall be capable of transformation after the said produce is delivered, so as to occupy a compara tively small space, and be returned to the sender at the rates of solid freight and at a comparatively trifling cost. The arrangement consists in a series of staves, connected by hoops having specially adapted fastenings, which en able the staves to be disposed flat for re turn transportation, or rolled up and fastened to form a barrel. The sides of the barrel are straight, and the heads are held in place by lugs, alternating when the barrel is set up on opposite sides of the head. The heads are thus of less diameter than the inside of the barrel, so that the latter.when returned, may be packed full at heads, and tie rest of the barrel sides packed flatly to gether. The far W< st seems already tolerably well supplied with means of livelihd for the scores of millions that will soon dwell there, but a new one lias reccntlv been mentioned in the California Acad emy of Science. The gum which ex udes from the creosote plant is known to commerce as shellac,, from which are made sealing-wax, varnish, and the scarlet lac dye used for dyeing the Brit ish red military coats. The plant is as plenty as sage brush, from Southern Utah to New Mexico, and from the Colorado desert to Western Texas, but chiefly plenty on the Mryavc and Colo rado deserts. Calcutta exports f5,000,- 000 worth of shellac a year, which brings from twenty-five to thirty-five cents a pound, and almost as much of lac dvc, selling still higher. The United States have imported in some years 700,000 pounds of shellac alone. Yet it is all over the West, and can be so < asily collected that boys could carry on the business of gathering it. Proba bly this product will now receive atten tion in commerce. Mr. Watberston, Rn eminent lnn jeweler, gave an intone ting lecture lately cm gem* ruul precious stones. HP Hrttl that, with the exception of the dia mond in the glass cutter's hand, they are intrinsically worthless, their high esti mation In olden times having been due to their use as magical charms against evil, while in later times they have been prixed as concentrated expressions of wealth and splendor. He said that the Itraganxa, belonging U> the crown of Portugal, and still in the rough, is the largest diamond. It weighs 1,680, and the Koh-i-noor, before being cut, weighed 787 carets. There are cruel al legations against the Riaganxa, to the effect that it is only n white topax. In this case a diamond be'enring to the Kajab of Matan ceres to the top. A governor of Ratavia offered $2,500,000 for it, but the rajah refused the offer, saying that his diamond was a talisman upon whose possession depended not only his own happiness and success, but that ofhis whole family; Of rubies scarcely more than two can be deemed historical. The first and moat famous is that in Victoria's cress. It is believed, on tol erably good authority, to have been worn In front of the helmet of Henry V. at Agincourt. A thorough Investigation of evenr por tion of the Winter pnlacc, in St. Peters burg. having at length been completed, and the police authorities having satis fled themselves that no danger of another attempt upon the exar's luc within the walls of his town residence is at present to be apprehended, he now resides in the palace again, sleeping, however, in a Hfferrnt apartment every night. The life actually led by the Russian emperor in his magnificent abode is pitiably dis mal. No nourishment, either solid or liquid, that has not been tasted in bis prassiiex l> s une official personage ever passes his hps. His bath is examined every morning by the medical officers of his household before he ventures to use it, nd he seldom approaches a stove or a fireplace, lest some explosive material, concealed among the fbel, should have been secretly introduced into It. Before he retires to rest, his bedroom and dress ing room, as well as the apartments contiguous to them on the upper and lower floors, are submitted to a rigorous inspection. His majtwty appears ex tremely nervous, takes no interest In state business, and exhibits indifference to the military details which heretofore constituted bis favorite occupation. There is hut one state executioner in Russia and he is a pardoned malefactor named Froloff. who committed three successive murders, and was condemned to penal servitude for life. When, however, revolutionary more sees ren der Win services of an imperial hang man indispensable to the ministry of justice, Froloff volunteered for the office on condition that an amnesty for his past misdeeds should be granted to hitft. His offcr was accepted, and for some time past he bss been a busy man. For every " function " he receive* forty ■liver rubles—about (30— from the RuHHian exchequer; but that official fee by no mean* represent* bis total emolument, for be is permitted to trade upon the superstition still current in Russian society respecting the luck con ferred upon gamesters by the possession of a morsel of rope with which a human being has been strangled, either by the band of justice or by his own. Imme diately after young Mladctzky, a Nihil ist, had been hanged, Froloff wu sur rounded by Russian gamblers eager to purchase serans of the fatal noose; and he disposed of several down such talis mans at from three to live rubles a piece, observing, with cynical complac ency, when he had sold his last rem nant. that "he hoped the Nihilists would yet bring him in plenty of money." Here is a scene from Loitrim county, Ireland, as described by the correspon dent of the Mansion House committee: On visiting the sick a few days since I entered the cabin of a poor old man, who, I believe, is bordering on eighty years old. I was grieved to see him in the miserable plight he was in—hanging over a fi w sods of turf, without shoe or stocking to ward off the cold from a damp floor. His hollowed cheeks, pene trating looks and emaciated visage evi dently tell a sad tale. I reached another house on the same day: the inmates of this comprised four individuals—the father, an old man, unable to leave his bed unless carried; the son, the only support of the old father, and two sickly sisters, one of whom is now far advanced In dropsy, and I believe, is dying. Hav ing asked the son why it was that one oi the girls did not look for employment, even if she were only to get her support, bis answer was: "No one wants her." In Honniconlan, county Mayo, two hun dred families are destitute in a single parish. They are in great distress—the most of tlicm in absolute want. They have nothing now to live on but Indian meal, and not enough of that; some of them without a drop of milk, without fuel, and all without credit, having their clothes pawned and their children half naked. Chewing Gum. Chewing gum is a substance well know to the youthful part of the com munity. The qualities which it pos sesses at the time that it comes from the confectioner arc all familiar to the youngest of us. It certainly seems to be a very attractive edible. The reason for this is not so hard to find. Think how much eating there is in it in pro portion to actual weight and cash value. But there is more in chewing gum than is dreamed of in juvenile phiioso phy. One can easily comprehend the main ingredients of candy, but who, without being told, would suspect that chewing gum is often only a refined pro duct of petroleum? The lime was when the fragrant spruce furnished the most common material for that purpose. But this is no longer the ease. The reader familiar with the processes of re fining coal oil is aware that the thick brown liquid which comes from the earth at one stage of its manufacture is strained through heavy linen cloths. The residuum left after this operation is a dirty, brownish-yellow wax, that smells abominably. That unpromising substance, melted, bleached, deodor ised and prepared lor commerce ap pears in masses that weigh about 100 pounds, resembling oblong blocks of clouded ice. It has noodor and no taste except what belongs to any wax in its purest state. It may be used for many purposes, but it is not necessary to de scribe them now. The manufacturer of chewing gum purchases these blocks ready-made to liis band and at once melts them. To 200 pounds of wax he adds about thirty pounds of sugar, and gives the mix ture a flavor by the use of some essen tial oil, as lemon or vanilla, and per haps adds some coloring matter. The meitcd mass is poured out upon a clean marble slab, and cut in the various shapes known to the masticators. The youthful epicure rarely becomes so luxurious as to demand balsam of tolu; but if so the manufacturer is ready for him. This resin, which is obtained from South America, is at first in an al most fluid condition. It is the product of a tree known as—now hold your jaw, for the name is worse than a whole box of chewing gum-myraspprmum tolu ferum. This balsam is boiled by the manu facturer until finally it is brought to such n consistency that it can be ran through rollers. It out in'the shape of a little, slender rod, of a brownish-yellow coior. which is cut into pieces, each about two or two and a half inches long. The bala-m may sometimes be mixed with a less costly wax, since its flavor is very marked. The balsam of the "chicle" tree, from Central America, is used in making what is known as snapping-gtim. It is very duevile when worked and moist ened. and Uie process of making is simi lar to that of pulling Uffy. The original gum exudes from the tree and forms in a mnas sometimes several pounds in weight. Even in this natural state it would be a very satisfactory substance to keep the teet hat work It cannot be worn out. — Cincinnati C.mmcreial. On.- Piano Silenced. Professor Weyse, the eminent Danish musical composer, had been for some time past painfully exercised by the mournful tinkling of a superannuated piano, the properly of a family resident upon a floor immediately beneath his apartments Morning, noon nnd night Ills ears had been distracted by melan choly strumming*. The other evening, ■s he sat in his study, deeply excogitat ing a "Leit-Motive" for the second movement of his new symphony, a burst of discordant sounds from the instru ment below r ..>mptcd him to desperate enterprise. Attired as he was, in dress ing gown and slippers, he hurried down stairs and rang his persecutor's doof bell. Admitted to the torment chamber containing the abominable apparatus which had wrought him woe, lie saw there assembled a goodly nud joyous company, which wsfoomed him wtUi efftiskra, despite his unconventional costume. After bowing gravely to Ills host and hostess, lie sat down bfore the open piano without uttering a wonl, and played one of Ills own fantasia*, a particular favorite of the Copenhagen public. As soon as he had concluded, he shut til* piano, locked it, pot the key In bin pocked, and, again bowing to the master and mistress of the bouse with a sardonic smile, departed, as he had come, in prof and silence. For! the remainder of that night, at least, the engine of his discomfiture was mule. * Words Upon Dying Lips Queen Elizabeth, at the end of a most prosperous reign,begun arnid danger r,rt difficulties that were overcome by i*, h measures and prudent councils, died ex claiming: Ah, my possesions for i moment of time." a George IV. met death with almost jest upon hi„ lips. Turning to Sir Waf tern Waller, on whose arm he he said: ' Whatty. what is this? !t jl death, my boy. and they have do Vivid U*. The Danish sovereign, Frederick V greatly beloved by bis subjects, crW "There is not a drop of blood %n rny hands," as be passed away. Henry VIII., who altered the whole course of monastic life in England o* claims: " Monks! monks! monks' Edward VI., the wan boy king with hi* fading eyes, commended his *ou] y God, "Lord take my spirit;" and Cro mwell, as he listened to the discount of those about him, said: "Then ] -mi safe," and was silent forever. The last word of Charieg I„ on the scaffold to Archbishop Juxson was " Remember," referring to big desire that his son Charles should forgive ! i fathcr's murderers. Arne Bolcyn. in the game tcrrlb < situation, clasped her fair neck, saying "It is small, very small:" and Sir Thomas Morp, as he yielded himself u> the executioner, said. " For my coming down let nie shift for myself." Joan of Arc, at the stake, endod her eventful, stomy life with our Savior's name upon her lips, as brave as Genera] Wolfe, who, dying in the midst of vie. lory on the battlefield, and hearingfol the enemy's retreat, cried, " What' do they run already? Then I die happy" or Sir Philip Sidney, after he had reiin quished the draught of water to an iiuml >ler comrade, though pan bed with thirst, turned him round to die, saying, " I..et me behold the end of this world with ali its vanities." Mirabeau desired to die while de.j. cious strains of music floated on the air | hut his last utterance was a demand for | Laudanum to drown pain and conscious- I ness. Mozart's last words were: "Let m< j hear once more those notes so long my , solace and delight:" but Haydn, forget ful of his art, cried, "God preserve mv Emperor." A lfieri's sympathetic nature displayed itself in "Clasp my hand, dear friend, I die." Goethe cries, "Light, more light;" i Byron, "Come, come, no weakness; let's be a man to the last ; I must sieep ! now." And those who saw his em j halmed body in when brought to England from Miasolonghi, in the Flor | ida, and removed to Sir Edward Knatch bull's house in Great George street, where the coffin was msiiif describe the face as of marble whiteness, the ex. pression that of stern quietude, lying wrapped in his blue cloth cioak, the throat and head uncovered, crisp, curl ing locks, slightly streaked with gray, clustering over the temples, tie pre the of exceeding beauty. Boileau congratulated himself, ah' I nosed his eves upon this world, uj-on j the purity of bis works, saying: " It is a I great consolation to a poet about to dk ' that he has never written anything in j jurious to virtue:" and Sir Walter I Scott, little thinking his end so near, said, " I feel a? if I were myself again." Dr. Johnson, the rough," kind heart, who loved a good hater, died as he said to Miss Morris. "God bless you, my dear." Washington, at Mount Vernon, cried, " It is well." Franklin's last words were: " A dy ing man can do nothing easily." Slme. do Staci. whose trial was her | enforced absence from her native land, i died saying: "I have loved my God. mv father, and my liberty." llanuah More's last words were, j" Patty—joyGrotius, "Be serious f | Haller, "The artery ceases to | Adams. "Independence forever:" Jef ferson, " I resign my soul to God. my daughter to my country;" l>ocke, to I Ally Masham. who was reading the Psalms. "Cease now;" and poor Lamb, alter the most seif-saerifieine existence, wrote his last words to a friend, "sir bedfellows are cramr and rough W three sleep in a bed." Bishop Bmughton's last words were; " Let the earth be filled with His glory:' Archbishop Sharpe. " I shall be happy:' Bishop Ken. "God's will be done; Farr, Cranmor, Hooper and George Her : bert, "Lord, receive my spirit!" ate these are but few of many such. The prince consort confirmed the im pression that prevails that the* dying have sometimes a foretaste of coming happiness " I have such sw eel thought*," were his last words.—Lon don Qfobt. Wasn't Feeling Tery Well. W are told that the glory of a yount man is bis strength, and in these derm erate days the statement is emphat ically true. laist evening a number of young men whose glory is their strength were in Whetstone's drug store expanding and sprading tnem selves with the kindly aid of a lung teste: The utmost ltmil to which any one could force the lung-tester was 240. Several others were just a little below this, and with all Uie pride of strength the 940 man stood triumphant. Wbik the contestants stood about filed with raarvelings and envy, a young man from the Aniish sett.ement step ped into the store. lie was a strong, healthy young man. Tlicy invited him to try Uie lung-tester, md see if he could not rival tlie two hundred and forty man. He was willing to try. sad at onec began operations although lie re marked that be was not feeling very 1 well. However, be took a long breath and began to blow. At once that lung : tetter began to act as though struck by an equinoctial storm. It expanded ' and swelled like a balloon at ! county fair. Before the start led crowd knew what had happened, tw 1 thing registered two hundred and forty and Uie young man wa> blowing w:Ui terrific force. Fifty, sixty, seventy, eighty—away it went an ! in a moment ! had ranted three hundred and wis I jumping into tl tens and twenty as though operated upon by the bellows of a church organ kinsi v the young man stopped when he hw grown quite red in the fsoe and the tester registered three hundred *w sixty-two! As he went out he remarked again that he was not feeling very well, but ho would like to try the thing some day when he was feeling bright and cljpper.— iotnt (Vty Htpubiicam San Francisco has become interested in Uie organisation of a boys' and girls cigar manufacturing company. It • proposed to furnish employment for t.OCO boys and girls within a month, I and ultimately for 6.000.