Between the ttreen Corn and the Cold, Between the green oorn anil the gold, Between the dawning and the noon, love, that at first was pale and cold, Waxed ruddy with the summer moon; And hearts beat high and lips grew bold Between the green oorn and tho gold. The primrose, precious key ot spring, Unlocked the casket ot the year; The flowers flew forth on rainbow wing O'er hill and mead and mere, To woo tho new year like the old, Between the green corn and tho gold. Between the gold corn and the green, Between the midday and tho dawn, The snmmer woods have lost their sheen, The flowers haro withered on the lawn; And love lies dead where love hath Itcen, Between the gold corn and the green. Lovo is not dead; he cannot die, Although his eyes be veiled with pain; The woods shall waken hy-and-bye, The flowers shall blossom once again; And we—shall we not wake, my queen, Between the gold com and thegreonT SAVED BY A RING. Twelve months ago last November I ran down into Warwickdale, England, to spend a few days with my cousin Horace Mason. Immediately after mv arrival I was escorted up to my room, and then down to the drawing-room, where I found Mrs. Patton, Horace's lady housekeeper—his duenna, as he wna wont to call her—and Mr. Fitz patrick, the rector of the parish. Mrs. Patton I knew well. She was a most amusing compound of dignity and jollity, and we were the best friends in the world, though she always declared that I did nothing but make fun of her. Mr. Fitzpatrick I never had seen before; For during my previous visits ho had always happened to be from home. He was a tall, portly, elderly gentleman, with a rather florid complexion, and a magnificent head of perfectly white hair, the effect of which was increased by a pair of bushy and perfectly black eye brows. He greeted me very cordially; and as soon as we were seated at the dinner-table, I discovered that his forte was conversation and his foible mono logue. I have heard some good steady talkers in my time; but I am prepared to back Mr. Fitzpatrick against any of them I had noticed during dinner that, as is the habit of some widowers, he wore a wedding ring, which had piesumably been his wife's; and over this another ring, of the kind usually worn by ladies, in which set three very handsome btii liants. After dinner Mrs. Patton had retired, the conversation somehow or other took a turn in the direction of precious stones, and Horace, who at Inst managed to get in a word or te>o, said aomethijg about the difficulty of distin guishing. in the absence of tests, a true stone from a really well executed imita tion. and took from his waistcoat pocket a manufactured diamond which I cer tainly should have pronounced genuine. For purposes of comparison, Mr. Fitz patrick slipped from his finger the ring of which I have just spoken; and after it had been examined and replaced, he said: "There is a curious story connect ed with that ring, Mr. Mason, I dare say you have heard it?" " I've heard something about it," said Horace, " but I don't know all the par ticulars; and I don't think my cousin has heard anything of it." " Well, then," said Mr. Fitzpatrick. " I may as well tell it to you, if you care to hear it. The story begins and ends a long time ago. It is forty years this very month since I became enraged to be married. I was then a curate, and had not much money to spare; but I had just received a legacy of rather less than a hundred pounds, and, in a fit of extravagance, hardly excusable even in a lover of five-and-twenty, I spent the whole of it and a few pounds more in purchasing a ring for my future wife. We expected the engagement to he a long one; but the rector of his parish died suddenly, and my grrat uncle, in whose gift the living was, presented me to it. The rector's death took place in February. I read myself in on Easter Sunday; and on the first ot June we were married. I suppose every newly married husband and wife think them selves the happiest people in the world; but I honestly believe that we really were so. We had not only each other, but that we had everything else that we oould possibly desire—a larger income tbas we needed, work that was thor oughly congenial to both of us, a few real friends, a number of pleasant ac quaintances, and an utter freedom from all anxiety. "This unalloyed happiness lasted for six months, when my wife's health (ailed in a mysterious manner. She be gan to be subject to strange fits of lan guor, physical depression and drowsi ness, which gradually became longer and more frequent. I bad advice at once; but the doctors seemed completely at sea. The organs, they said, were perfectly sound; and though the action of the heart was not quite so strong as it ought to be. there was absolutely noth ing to account for the symptoms. At all Jsveuts they could pnly recommend tonii s, gentle open air exercise, and an occasional stimulant. In spite of them all, however, my wife grew worse and worse. At last she took to her bed; and she had not been la bed a week when one evonlng I left her, apparently much the same a usual. and went into my study to spend a couple of hours over my next Sunday morning's ser mon. I had been downstairs only about tlnee-qunrters ot an hour, when my wife's sister, who had been sitting with her during my absence, burst into the room and threw herself upon me, exclaiming: 'Oh, Jamest she's deadt Our darling Kate's dead!' " You can imagine the shock she gave me; but it never occurred to mo to im agine that what she said was really true. I thought nothing but that the strain of anxiety had been too much for the poor girl, and that she had temporarily lost her reason. I did my best to calm her; and soon succeeded, for she began to talk ro lucidly that I was compelled not only to listen but to heed. She said that she and one of the servants had been watching my wife, who was appa rently sleeping peacefully, when they hatl both been startled by a peculiar change in her countenance. They listened for the sound of tier breathing, but heard nothing. They had then held a hand-mirror to her mouth, but it remained unclouded. They had felt for the pulsation of her heart, but it had ceased to beat, and her body was deathly cold. The servant had gone to tell one of the men to saddle a horse and ride for the nearest doctor, while she had come to tell the terrible news and be calm. Calm was out of the question. I tore myself away and rushed upstairs. They were idiots—they were demented; nut still there was a haunting fear which I must dispel myself. And yet I was so sure that my wife could not be dead that I summoned sufficient presence of mind to open the door gently and walk softly to the bed. I leaned over it, and said, not loudly, but distinctly: " Kate, darling, are you asleep?" " Hut before I had spoken the last word I was convinced. I had seen death often and was sure that I knew it too well not to recognize it at a glance. I now shrieked instead of whispering, but there was no answer, and I flung myself full length upon the bed in voice less agony. I must have become almost or entirely unconcious, for I never knew of the doctor's presence in tiie room until I felt his hand upon my arm. He said: "My dear Mr. Fitzpatrick, you must try and bear it like a man and a Chris tian, for your wife is dead; she has been dead more than an hour." " How I felt I cannot tell you. I was prostrate with grief; and prostrate I remained for three days. The necessary preparations for the funeral were made by my wife's brother, and I really v.- < unaware of what had been done. On the evening ot the third day I heard stealthy footsteps ascending the stairs, and I felt rather than knew that they were footsteps of the men who had come to close up the coffin. I heard the door open; then for a few minutes there was silence; and then I heard other and lighter footsteps descending, followed by a tap at the study door. I said: 4 Come in,' and when the do r opened I saw at once that it was an old nurse of my wife's, who had come to see her living, and had found her dead. 'lf you please, sir,' she said, giving my wife the old familiar name, 'they can not get the rings off Miss Kate's finger, and they want to know what they must do."' " I had been apathetic; but in a mo ment I was enraged, and I shouted: ' them on!' in tones which uinde the poor woman beat a terrified retreat. I was comp.etely unnerved by what seemed an outrage upon the remains that were so dear and sacred to me; but I could not move to make a more effectual protest, and 1 soon sank into the lethargy from which I had been aroused. The night passed, as the preceding nights had passed, sleeplersly and wearily. I rose at dawn, and sat in the study until noon, when they came to tell me that the time for the funeral had come, and that I must follow my wife to her last homo," "You won't know the rectory well, Mr. Browne," said Mr. Pitzpa-rick, ad dressing himself directly to me; "but you must have passed it. The front door, as you will remember, opens to the turnpike road; but there is also an other door with two glass panels whieb open directly into the churchyard. My wife was in the habit of using this door very frequently; for there ran from it a path which crossed the churchyard and ended in astyle.wbich was just oppo site the gates of the grange, then rented by the liardings, who were her oldest friends. When she had returned ami found the door fastened, which some times happened, she had been used to let me know she was there by a peculiar tap, and I had always gone to let her In. It was out of this door—which some how seemed to belong to her, and out of which she had often tripped so gayiy, that I followed her corpse; and as it was closed gently behind me I think I fully realized for the first time what a changed thing my life must henceforth be. The service was gone through; I henrd the clods fall upon the coffin, and returned to the house that was now so awfully solitary. The vicar of the next pariah, who had performed the last sad oflhxsfor my wife, returned with me, and tried his beat to bring mc to myself, but I refused to be comforted. At last he left me, and I was glad to be alone, for in solitudei could feel my wile was somewhere dear me. "They brought me food; but I oould eat nothing. The hours passed slowly; out I took no note of them, f did not even know it wis even dark until one of the maids came and asked If she should light the lamp. I let iier do it, and then mechnnically took n hook down Imm the shelf and tried to read. It was only a mockery of reading, but it acted as a sort of narcotic, and I had dropped into a doze, when I wo* aroused by a knocking at my door, sharp and decisive, as if the person knocking was not ask ing but demanding entrance. Just as the knock came, the clock struck twelve, and I knew that i must have been sleep ing f< r nearly three hours. 1 got up from my chair, opened the door, and inquired what was wanted of me. Standing in the lighted hail were three indoor ser vants and the old nurse, and the faces of all were absolutely blanched with terror. One of the girls, in an agony of fright, caught hold of my sleeve and pointed out: 'Oh, sir, do come!' "I shook her off somowlmt roughly and,addressingthenurse,said: 'What's the meaning of all thisP' "She was clearly as frightened as ttie others, hut more self-possessed, and she replied: 'lf you please, sir, Jane and Margaret say that their mistress Is standing at the side door, tapping on the gloss; and that they will leave the house if you do not come and see.' "I called them fools and bade them go to bed; but they crowded behind me as I hastily crossed the hall and strode down the short corridor to the side door. I approached the door; and I must con fess that my blood ran cold as I dis tinctly heard the well-known tap, and thought ( saw something white behind the glass panels. I turned my eyes to the bolt, which I drew bock and flung the door wide open. If 1 were to live for a mil'onniuni I could never forget the sight I saw then. There stood my wife, with bright open eyes, a flushed face, disheveled hair, and her night dress stained with large patches of blood "'James,'she said, 'don't be fright ened, it is I.' She may have said more; but this was all I heard. They told me tliat I gasped, 'Kate, my Kate!'and fell down senseless. " When I recovered consciousness I found myself in bed. My wi£c, dressed as she used to be dressed, was sitting by my side; nnd I looked around and won dered whether I had lx*en wakened from some horrible nightmare. At last the reality of the events of the past few days came bark to me—my wife's illness, hor death, her strange return from the world of spirits. When I summoned strength for the task I asked what it all meant, and though she could tell but little, that little was enough to solve the mystery. She said she had felt as if she were being rather roughly awakened from sleep; and that when she became thoroughly aroused, she found she was sitting up in an open coffin at the bottom of a grave, with the blood running quickly from a deep cut in her ring ting'r. The grave was shallow, and she had managed to climb out. when she discovered that she was not twenty yards from the door by which she was accustomed to i enter the house. She made her way to it; and we knew the rest. " It had been a curious case of trance, catalpsy, or whatever name men of science may give to those inexplicable simulations of death in which ail the functions seem to be arrested while the vital principle remains intact. She had been restored to conscious animation by the cut given to her fingpr by the ruffian whose cupidity had tempted him to a deed from wliicli many a hardy scoun drel wouid have shrunk. The perpe trator was of course one of the under taker's men, wtio bed been struck by the glitter of the gems in the diamond ring; and who, to obtain it, did not hrsitate to violate the sanctity of the grave, and even to mutilate a coipse." "Goxl heavens!" I exclaimed, " what nn overpowering story. Was the rascal ever caught!" "No; he disappeared, and nothing was heard of him." " Anu your wife! What effect had it on her !" " Curiously enough.her general health became better from that dreadful day; but I think her nervous system must have received a permanent strain, for she entirely lost the physical courage which she had possessed in an extraordinary degree for a woman, and about two years afterward she became aubject to attacka of asthma, which is. I believe, a complaint that often has its origin in some nervous shock. She lived, how ever, to be over fifty, and was bright nnd cheerful to the lost, though she had been a confirmed invalid for five years before her death." Atlantic Cables. The lengths of the several cables be tween the United States and Europe and their locations arc given as follows: The three Anglo-American cables now in use run from Irelard to Newfound laud, 1.*50 miles, and from Newfound land to Sidney, over 300 miles—a total distanceof about 8,150 miles each; tht Anglo-French rable from Brest to Dux bury, byway of St. Pierre, is about 3,390 miles long; tbo Direct United States cable from Ireland toTorhay, and from Tor hay to Rye Beach. 9,3(10 miles; and the new French cable from Brest to Louisburg, 9.430 miles, from St. Pierre to Cape Cod. BHO miles, and from Brest to Prasance, 151 miles—a total length of about 3,401 miles. Preparations are being made for lay ing two new cables to be operated in connection with the land lines of the American Union Telegraph company. They will connect with the land lines at Cape Breton, about 9,400 miles long. "The best imported gloves made here," wasn't s very bad sign; that is, morally. Mourning Costumes. There are extensive mounting go< d* depnrtmenta in all of the large retail dry g(>ods houses, but it is said that there is not, and lias never been, but one store in New York'that deals exclusively in mourning goods. The filling of orders witli promptness is rendered possible by the keeping in stock of ready-mode suits capable of being altered to suit the measurements that may lie received. Often families at a distance from New York send lor goods, and though their faces are unknown to the dealers, their names are as familiar as the faces of their New York customers. This is particularly the case where the family lias a large kinship. Heady-made suits in stock cost from #19.50 to #IOO apiece. The cost of an entire mourning outfit is frequently as high as #350. Outfits for four ladies in one family, recently filled, were paid for with a check for 91.400. A complete outfit consists of the follow ing articles: A suit, veil, clonk, bon net, handkerchiefs and gloves. Cloaks cost from #5 up to 9100, and bonnets from #5 up to #25. Dresses are trimmed with crape for deep mourning, and sometimes the dress itself is made of crape. Even outside garments such as sacks and dolmans are mode of crape. They are usually made of the same material as the dress is made of. There has been no decided change in styles since last year. The shapes of mourning bonnets have fol lowed the shapes of bonnets in colors. The trimmings are the same in style as they were last year. Ixing crape veils are worn a great deal. They vaiy in length warding to the depth of the mourning. Though some ladies begin to lighten their mourning after the lapse of one year, it is considered the proper thing, dealers say, to wear deep mourn ing two years before the light* ning pro. cess is begun. The family must be poor indeed whose femnlo member* do no. go into some de gree of mourning after death has en tered. The ordinrj-y recourse is to bor row mourning ciothes for the funeral. In a large numer of cases the family has some branch Hint is better to do than itself. On such relatives, no matter what quarrels fiave kept them away be fore, the duty is paramount to lend mourning goods for the funeral. If the dresses cannot be obtained in this way there is a good chance that some of the neighbors will accommodate them. A death, iike a birth, affords an occasion when women put aside nc ighborly quar rels, and a proffer of mourning gar ments is often made by a prsonai enemy. The styles of these garqynta ore such as they may happen to be. After the funeral the clothes are re turned. but they are in many cases bor rowed again for special occasions, as. for example, when the mourners attend rhurch for a Sunday or two after the funeral. As time goes by and new clothing is to be purchased, black is chosen instead of colors. Block is dur nh.e, and therefore cheap. Poor women of middte age, or past it, often continue to wear black beyond the time of mourning for economical reasons ,Viw York Sun. Adilre to Yonng Hntbaad*. The Kov. C. C. Hoss, during a lecture in New York on "The Honeymoon, and How to Perpetuate It,"said: Look out for your habits, voung man. Don't get into the habit of ncgiec ing the little xurtaies of life in your home. Just see the young men in a bobtail horse-car sit forward on the edge of the seat, and when a pretty young woman enters the car they watch for the first chance to put her fare in the box. Why don't you watch just as eagerly to wait on vour wife ! Agatn, my young husband, you and your wife must cultivate mutual confidence. Distrust of each other is the bane of humnn society every where. Of course, yon and your wife ought to hold different opinions. I was forty years old before 1 married my wife, and I knew a thing or two before 1 knew her. When we were married we did not empty out our brains and become fjols. When she comes to vote I want her to vote on the aide opposite to me. because if she votes just as I do what's the use of her voting t She might have ust as well voted through me as we do now. But don't fight. Husbands and wives do fight and bite and claw each and pull each other's I.air, and all about a little thing that they wouid be ashamed of if tney hadn't got heated Cultivate the habit of cooling down. Finally, be honest and upright with your wife, young husband. You ought to be honest in courtship, but if you have bad an outside for your girl to look at, and you have all the time kept a bit and bridle on your paasions only to be a brute after marriage, then you have deceived her. Be as innocent to your wife as though she was a little baby. You wouldn't hurt a baby. Stand up for your wife—if any one says anything against tier, knock him down. Well, I'll take that hack—you can knock him down in your own estimation. Many of the dolls of the period are modeled from portraits of celebrated beauties, and with their wardrotx* complete in a Saratoga trunk, are so costly as to be beyond the reach of but ew lit le folks. The Safe Deposit company of San Fanclsco hss laid down an iron vault weighing 800,000 pou .ids. It is believed to be the largest in the world. White fish eggs from the great lakes I art being shipped to Oermaay. A Modern Samson. It I# hardly yet known that the city of Louisville has for a resident a gentle man who for a lone time has enjoyed the reputation of being the strongest man living, and ccrtninly|if not the strongest, lie is one of the very few called so. ile has for a number of years past been showing some extraordinary feats of strength, particularly in dumb bells and lifting heavy weights, both in this country and in Kurope, and ha* numerous medals as trophies of his feats. In 1K73, at the Academy of Music in New Yorz city, at a hcr herrulcan toornament in which there were competitors of all nations, he won six out of twenty medals offered or competition. At a tournament in )H74at Barnum's hippodrome he won the whole of the five medals which were offered for the best feats in dumb-bell lifting Also later, at Shook & Palmer's hippodrome in New York, in a tourna ment which lasted four days, he won the championship of the world. On the •Jlßt of .July, 1H74, he startled the spec.- I tators at an exhibition given at Wood's gymnasium, in New York, by holding , witli a single hand a monster dumb-bell of 201 pounds weight. In Boston in 1H75, at a performance in the Howard Athe nmuni, lie gave a performance, using j kegs of nails, bars of railroad iron i shafting, and also with the greatest of | ease manipulated the famous lbO-pound dumb-bell made for the celebrated I)r. Winship, but never used by him. He is also a great weight-lifter, having lifted a dead weight with hip hands of 1,500 | pounds. He lias defeated the famous strong men of this country, including I*. Kelly, W. Miller, 11. Joyrfeny (Bar nurn's famous strong man), ('hristol, Iteg inuis and Chicago, bu#to most of the lake cities, and even to New York and Philadelphia. It wouid save a great deal of embtr rasement. says Burdette. and perhaps add to their emoluments. If clergymen generally were to charge a fixed rate for marrying couplet—say $4 for the first offense, 910 for the second. 990 for the thirl, md so on. They might even issue tickets as bey d •in milk fac ories, with a reduction to persons taking a quantity. In order to encourage in . fol wedlock, the job should be done viry cheaply to young couples, hut the clergy should take it out of widowers and old bar j elors. The present custodian of the bouse of Burns was one of the six hundred at Balaklavn, and was n captive in a Pennsylvania regiment during our civil war. Calendar for the Boys. 1 he sport* and games of boyhood one- M need each other in unerring regularity, • although it in difficult to giye nny definite reaaon why. It has orxurred to us that anporting calendar would bo of great service to the boyn: •January: Make nnow fortn. garrinon them with nnow men. siide down hill and get your feet wet. Thin takes up all the month. February: Go akating. fall into the Ak "danger" holes and get ncarjy drowned ; } stay in the house three weeks Jwllh sore throat and fever. March: Fish throngh rotten ice, and run all the risks possible. Get your hawkey sticks in shape. April: FirHt week, play practical jokes till you get some one mad enough to "lick" you; "hawkey" and baseball the rest of the month. May: Paste up a few kites, spilling the paste all over the carpet, and try to fly them; marbles a good deal, hop scotch and " boiler " June: A little croquet, not much; get out your tish poles, go in swimming and worry your mother out of her senses; insist on going barefoot; Sun day-school picnics; play cirer: Clappers, tambourines, | shows in the wood-shed, testing thin ice, n general stuff of turkey, plum pud ding and the natura. consequences. December: Know-bailing the school ma'am, breaking window g.aas. brag ging about " Christmas coming." growi ' ing because it served you no better when it did come. The above is subject to cyclones of lag-piaying, jumping, leap-frog and tornados* of new and brij.iant sports that appear on the surface for a brie time and disappear as suddenly as they rome.— Sew Haven \ The Germun Census. In Germany, as in England, the cen sus is taken in one day. Schedules are i furnished in advance to be Owed by each j male inhabitant, which arc collected by | officers. This fulfillment is injured by making each owner or agent responsible for the occupants of every house com plying with the law. This mtbod is declared by statisticians to 1 '■ the least subject to incorrectness, and it lias been adopted since the cication of the cm- I pire. The last census was taken on ■ I>ecember 1. Though not yet com pleted. comparisons sufficient exist to : show that the popu.ation lias increased 1 to a greater degree than in France, or, in fact, any European nation. In I*7l the whole German empire was found to contain a population of 41,- 058,798. During the next term ol four years the na'ional procnative power was certain to experience a shrinkage corresponding to the adult males in the Franco-German war. For at least two years of the same period t iere was also a great drainage through emigration to America. Nevertheless, in 1W75 the number of inhabitants had reached 42.- 727,360 In the interval between the last , ' and the present enumerations the German bureau of statistics hasjkept a careful redbrd of births and deaths, as well as of emigration, with a view of determining the net gain at the end of v every twelve-montb. It was deducted from these in vesUgntiens that the regular yearly increment of the population is not less than 650 000 souls. This infer ence is confirmed by the last census taken; for although the details are not compiled, the broad result Is known, namely, that the German empire now comprises from forty-five and a half to | forty-six millions of inhabitants. A Little Friendly Name. They had not been married long, so they sat down to play checkers. In the middle of the game shi sid : "Then do I jump the* two men and get a kingP Of course 1 do. Crown me. I've got the first king." and she chuckled hysterically. " No, you ain't, either. I didn't mean that move," said he. "If you can't play A checkers without cackling like a hen m you uad better give it up. Til take that A back and move here; now, so. Now , you can move " " Over hereP" asked the wife. "Certainly. That's very good," and . ber husband gobbled two men. m " I didn't see that- I'd rather put it m here," she remonstrated. "Too late now," said be, pegging away for tbe king row. " You should • study your moves first." Tbe Swiss colony in North Carolina has discovered that the mulberry tree grows with as much luxuriance as the cherry, and that the soil and climate of ibis Slate alike foretell tbe future pro due:ions ol silk under tbe most favorable " conditions. Courtesy suffers from exaggeration. By too much courtesy we beoome dis courteous. and excess of civility makes ■a uncivil. ' r. . a- * ■ . ,1