Whistle, Whistle, Loving Daughter. " Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, and you shall havo a cow." " I never whistled, mother, and neither can I now— It puckers up my mouth so I" •' Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, ami you shall havo a horse." •• 1 never whistled, mother, and 1 canuot now, of eourso— It puckers up my mouth so!" •'Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, and yon shall have a sheep." "I never whistled, mother, neither will I yet— It puckers up my mouth sol " Whistle, whistle, loving daughter, and you shall have a man!" " I never whistled, mother, but I Wttow very well I csn." And the whistling soon l>egan. Old Song. "THAT SWORD-CANE." "Confound the thing I" said Mr. Lin ton. The hour was 9. P. M., the place was the Dalston station of the North London railway, and in a compartment of a second-class carriage Mr. Linton sat alone. " Confound the thing 1" he repeated, glancing nervously toward the door. " One comfort, this is a through train, and if no one gets in here I shall be safe till we reach Broad street," and as he spoke ho made an ellort, but an in effectual one, to replace in its sheath the long steel blade of a sword-cane. "Ah, we're starting," ho muttered, with a sigh of relief, and was just al>out to place the cause of his annoyance quietly in a corner, when there came a sharp voice: " Step in, please.'' The door opened hastily, then shut, the whistle sounded, and the train moved on. Mr. Linton clutched his cane, and looked furtively at the new comers. They were two ladies —one stont and elderly, the other evidently quite young. As they scarcely glanced at him, but entered at once into earnest conversation, he thongbt he might pos sibly be able to overcome his difficulty unperceived. He was nnwilling to leave his cane behind him at the end of the journey; but the prospect of step ping on the platform at Broad street with two feet of steel in his hand was one from which he recoiled, being a nervous man. So, becoming desperate, he renewed his attempt; but the carriage at the moment gave a sudden jerk, and the stick fell with a clatter to tho floor, leaving him firmly grasping tho long, bine blade, glittering wickedly in the lamplight. His fellow-passengers started and looked ronnd. " Mercy on ns, what's that ?" ex claimed the elder lady. Bat, as she looked more intently at their traveling companion, she rose hur riedly. " Why 1 what ! we shall be robbed and murdered. Here, guard ! guard I" But the noise of the train drowned her voice. " My dear madam," legan Mr. Linton, as suavely as possible, forgetting, in his anxiety to explain, that he wss bran dishing the sword-blade in a manner which, though no donbt graceful, was to an entire stranger somewhat threat ening. "My dear madam, I assure you —" " Keep off, sir, keep off!" ejaculated the lady, in a tone half-terrified, half defiant. But here her young companion inter posed. She had maintained her com posure, though, as her eyes fell upon the weapon, she had grown a shade pal e.r. " Perhaps, aunt, we are mistaken. This gentleman " Gentleman, indeed," returned her relative, excitedly; " a pretty gentle man to le in a public carriage with a thing like that iu bis hand. Don't tell me, Ethel." In the interim Mr. Linton, thinking it beat to remain quiet, and trust to the storm blowing over, had picked up the sheath of the offending weapon, and once more endeavored to readjust it, but in vain. It fitted in only one way, and could not be sheathed except by pressure upon a concealed spring, the position of which he bad for the mo ment forgotten. Finding that he remained silent, and uttered no threats of robbery or mur der, the elder lady began to regain ber courage, and by one of thoee rapid transitions not nnusual in the feminine mind, now became as indignant as be fore she had been alarmed, and with as much reason. " I'll give you in charge, sir, aa soon as we reach Broad street," she continued. " A pretty state of things, indeed." " Bat, sunt," repeated her niece, "don't you see it's only a sword-cane the gentleman has. Jack has one something like it." Mr. Linton looked at the fair speaker, and met the glance of aa bewitching a pair of eyes as ever led poor, helpless man a captive. There was a slight smile on Miss Ethel's rosy lips, half saucy, half de~ mure, and tho thick curling tresses shaded u face l>ot described by one word, " winsome" —a face that owed its beauty as much to expression as to regu larity of feature, and. gazing at it, Mr. Linton utterly forgot tho awkwardiioss of his position. But ho was speedily recalled to himself by the shrill whistle and slackening of speed of the train as it neared Broad street. One or two re marks, with which tho other lady had favored him, ho had allowed to pass en tirely unheeded, and this only added fuel to her wrath. Scarcely had the train stopped, than she flnng open tho door. "Guard, I say, guard." The wondering olllcial appeared close at hand. "Here, guaid," she continued, em boldened now by a sense of security, and, stepping on tho platform, she mo tiouod toward the carriage with tho air of a tragedy queen. " I give that man into custody." By this time Miss Ethel had joined her excited relative, and Mr. I.intom now the solo occupant of the compart ment, in his turn, apperaed at the door. As he emerged, the guard discreetly stepped back a pace or two. Ho was not wanting in courage, but he had a wife and family at home, and the long blue blade in the passenger's hand had an ominous look. But ho recovered him self in a moment and beckoned to a col • league. " Here, Bob I And what's the charge, mum ?" he went on, turning to the lady, while, much to Mr. Linton's annoyance and disgust, a little crowd slowly gath ered round. "Yes. mum." repeated the guard. " What's tbo charge?" But tho lady was somewhat nonplussed nt the question, and Miss E bel seized tho opportunity. " Onr name is Gray. This lady is my j aunt, and she has been alarmed by this —this gentleman"—Mr. Linton bowed "carrying an unsheathed sword blade." "All," said the official, reflectively; then, as having made np his mind, •'name and address, sir, please." Mr. Linton gave them readily enough, and his explanation with them. He had bought the cane only that evening, and had not noticed with sufficient ac curacy the position of the spring which held together handle and stick. In stepping hastily into the carriage he had struck the canc in some way. The blow, be supposed, had loosened the spring, the sheath had fallen off, and he had hitherto been unable to replace it. For tho annoyanco and alarm which he had inadvertently caused, ho bogged to a|K)logize. As ho spoke, he once more endeavored to replace tho offending weapon, and, as if in mockery of his former futile efforts, sheath and blade slid smoothly into their respective posi tions, there was a sharp click, the bright steel vanished, and a light bandy cane alone was visible. The guard and his at each other. " You see how it is, mum," said the former to tho still irate old lady. "You see how it is, all a mistake." "Don'ttell me, man ; all a mistake, indeed," she retorted. "Isheto be al lowed to go at large, and alarm respect, able people by carrying a dreadful thing like that alKiut?" " Well, mum," said the guard, imper tnrbably, " all I can say is, what do you charge him with ?' " The old lady's been scared al>ont nothin'," said one bystander, while an other opined that the gentleman was "a hactor, and 'ad lecn a goin' through 'is part." But the official now lost patience, and saying to his colleague, "Come on, Bob, we've no time to stand here foolin'," went off to his van. heedless of Mrs. Gray's threats to report him to the company. The little gronp round them, seeing no farther prospect of amusement, slowly melted away and left Mr Linton alone with the ladies. He would have recom menced his explanation and apol ogies, but Mrs. Gray cnt him short by demanding, in icy tones, to be favored once more with his name and address. These given, she vonohsafed no further word, but sailed majestically away, Miss Ethel dutifully following. Mr. Linton's glance pursued the graceful form till it disappeared down the steps; then recollecting himself, he hurriedly took the same direction. But | the two or three minutes he had delayed had enabled the ladies to reach the street, and when he gained the door they bad disappeared from view. There was nothing left for him to make the best of his way home ward, carrying with him the unfortun ate cause of bis contretemps, and in fluenced by mingled feelings to which he hitherto had been a stranger. Miss Ethel's bright eyes had done more mis chief than that young lady perhaps sus pected, and despite all his effort* his mind continually reverted to the recol lection of the sweet fece he had seen, to the otter detriment of hisordinary pur suits. There was one question that haunted him: " Who waa Jack?" and for this he could find no aatisfactory answer. The next thing was, how and where to meet her again? The task seemed hopeless, and ho could think only of ono chance. 8o he began to haunt the Dalston station with such pertinacity that an official of a facetious turn, who biul road " Mtigby Junction," dubbed him "tho gentleman for no where." Time went on, and lub patience was long unrewarded. But "all things come to him who will but wait," and one fine summer evening, as ho took his usual post, he saw at a littlo dis tance the face and form that, thongh only soon once, ho hod never forgotten. Bhe passed him unnoticed, and, enter ing the station, booked for Broad street, and for Broad street Mr. Linton, who had followed closely, also took a ticket. A train was waiting. The young lady stepped into a carriage, fortunately an empty one. ■ lie waited a moment till the train was about to start, then sprang in and closed the door. As ho took his scat their eyes met, and ho saw that he was recognized. He raised his hat ; the lady bowed and smiled; aud thus en couraged, ho begau a conversation. It so happened that ho had with him the very cane that had lieon the cause of the former unpleasantness. And he now made it serve his purpose, and, en tering npon a full explanation, con trived to put tho matter in such a light that Miss Ethel, who had evidently a keen sense of t'lo ridiculous, could not fail to be amnsed. Then ho went on to ask after her relative. "Thanks, aunt is very well." " I should much like"—this as a stroke of diplomacy—"'to have tho op portunity of giving her a satisfactory account of tho matter." His companion was about to answer, but the train drew up at the platform, and she had opened tho door and alighted before Mr. Linton, who was never anything of a ladies' man, and who, moreover, was §o proocenpied as to notice nothing just then, had realized that tho journey was ended. There was nothing then but to fol low her, and as they reached the barrier together, a lady eitno toward thom with a smile, evidently intended for Miss Ethel only, bnt as her eyes fell npon Mr. Linton, she exclaimed : " Why! what! that's the -" Bhe stopped suddenly, and ho com pleted the sentence. "The person who so unintentionally caused you so much annoyance at our last meeting, l'ray let mo apologize once more." " Yonr name, sir, is, I think, Linton," said Mrs. Grey, who was evidently in a very affablo mood. Mr. L. bowed. "And I have reason to believe that you are the son of an ol 1 friend of mine. After yon had left us, I could not for some timo remember whom it was, am >ng my acquaintances, that you so closely resembled. Then the similarity of name gave me a < lew, and —well, I think now it is I who should apolo gize." "I'ray do not mention it," said tho yonng man, now in tho seventh heaven of delight at the unexpected turn in events. " l'ray do not mention it," he repeated. " I have often heard my mother speak of her friend Mrs. Grey, bnt I did not anticipate that wc should meet nnder such circc instances." "Btranger things happen jin life," said the old lady, sentontionsly, and Mr. Linton expressed his entire con currence. But, in his present state of mind, hn would have agreed with anything that she said. Btill, there was tho old ques tion, oddly enough, cropping up in his mind. "Who was Jack?" And For tune, as if in amends for her former treatment, solved the problem for him. "Wo have been out of town," aaid Mrs. Grey, "or I dare say I should have met yon before this, Mr. Linton. But you must call on us. and I am snro Jack—my nephew—will be please 1 to make your acquaintance." Her nephew. Then ho was Ethel's brother, of course. Mr. Linton was walking on air. But, too wiso to in trude further, he contented himself with seeing the ladies into a cab, Mrs. Grey, remarking as they left him: "I see you still have that—" " That dreadful sword-cane," pat in Miss Ethel, with a roguish smile at her annt. The latter laughed good-humnredly, nodded to the young man, and the cab drove away. As soon as politeness permitted he called at tbeir house, sod made so favorable an impression on the old lady that ho speedily became a constant visitor, and—well, the story is ever old and ever new, and snoh stories should have but one ending. • • • • • In Mr. Linton's hall is s choice col lection of walking-sticks. Every man has a hobby, and that is one of his. There is a long, black, sedately-re speoUble stick, fit for parson; the heavy, stout stick, suitable for a country gentleman whose walks are over hill and dale; there ia the light bamboo, the poliabed Malacca, the pliant awitch. Each and all are at the service of any intimate friend who may be on a visit, and, before taking a stroll, isdisp/rud to suit himself from among them. M 'v ! But there in ono Htick in jmrticnlar, which is kept carefully apart from the I rest in Mr. L.'h own private room. To i that no friend, however intimate, lays claim, or ventures to borrow. " I will never lend it," says Mr. Lin ton, "to any one; for I should have been a lonely, miserable bachelor to the end of my days, if it had not been for that dreadful sword-cane." I'FARI.S OF TIIOI'OIIT. Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without. Choose such pleasures as recreate much and cost little. Zeal without knowledge is a steam ship without a rudder. Bmall faults indulged are little thieves that let in greater. Trouble is easily born when every body gives it a lift for you. Oust your nets in the right water, and they may hike fish while you are sleep ing. A good deed is never lost; he who sows courtesy naps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love. Men aro never so ridiculous from the qualities which really belong to them, as from those which they pretend to have. Healthy, beauty, vigor, riches and all tho other things called goods, operate equally as evils to tho vicious and unjust us they do us benefits to the just. We are all of us more or less echoes, repeating involuntarily the virtues, the defects, the movements and the char acters of those among whom wo live. Itonud dealing is the honor of man's nature; and a mixture of falsehood is like alloy in gold and silver, which may make the metal work the letter, but it cmbaseth it. It will afford sweeter happiness in the hour of death to have wiped away one tear from one cheek of sorrow than to hnvo ruled an empire, to have con quered millions or enslaved the world. Strength of resolution is in itself do minion and ability, and there is a seed of sovereignty in tho barrenness of un fliucbing determination. I'liselfisb and noble acts are tbo most radiant sparks in the biography of souls. When wrought in earliest youth they lie in the memory of ago like the coral islands, green and sunny amid the melancholy wade of ocean. ~~ A Bunko Man Surprised. A New York paper tells this story: A stocky man with square shoulders, rotund vest, and close-clipped sandy beard, hurried out of the mam entrance of the Fifth Avenue hotel the other morning and started along Twenty third street toward the elevated railwny station. Two bunko men stood in the shadow of a mournful cab horse and watched tho atocky man with the close clipjHHl sandy InsArd. Tho habits of bnnko men arc well defined. When their victim approaches, No. 1 rushes tip, and grasping him warmly by tho hand, says: " Mr. .Tones, of Bkeneateles. bow aro yon 7' Tbo intended victim, who is possibly Smith, of Pcnn Yan, tells his name and address to No. 1, who retires with diffidence and blushes, and confides it to No. '2. A littlo laterNNto t 2 rnns np and exclaims " Why, Smith, of Fenn Yan, *ow are yer?*' whereupon Smith promptly affirms that he is en - joying good health, and lietrays his mental condition by immediately ac companying No. 2 into a Iwrroom and losing 9150 on the two spot. On tho bright morning referred to the short and stocky man hurried along, his bristly sandy Imard cutting tho air sturdily. Btinko man No. 1 jumped from behind a hack, gazed at him for an instant, and then cried, as his face airly blazed with joy: "Mr. Partington, of Hornellsville.how are you 7" With this he seized tho hand of tho stocky man and wrung it as though it were his long lost brother's. The stocky man ahook him off and said: " G'wsy, g'way. I don't know yon 1" " What, are you not Mr. Farlington, of Horn—" " No, I ain't I" "Well, this is the most astonishing resemblance. May 1 ask who yon aro 7" " Yea, you may." " Well, who are yon?" " I'm General Ulysses 8. Grant." i— -- Anecdote of Bismarck. I'rinee Bismarck, it is said, has be come so stout of late years that he oan no longer oocupy an ordinary dining chair and sits accordingly on a low sofa, with his famous dog lying at his feet. He likes to exhibit his accomplishments to visitors, and it is related that one day on receiving a visit from Signor Man lini, the present Italian minister of for eign affairs, he sat down at the piano and played a composition of bis own, remarking in an off-hand manner that "in Prussia politicians found time to cultivate the arts, "8o they do in Italy," replied the Italian, and goiug to the piano he played over from begin ning to end, and entirely from metnoty, the piece which he bad just heard Prince Bismarck play for ths first time. BCTEJITIFIC M'KIPM. Ordinary combustible substances rnav be set on fire by nitric acid. Coagulation servos in nature the pur pose of stopping wounds. Halt pre vents it. Tho temperature of the blood depends on the rapidity with wliich it is oxi dized. A muscle develops less heat when doing work than in contracting without doing it, A new celluloid is said to be obtained from well peeled potatoes, treated with a solution of sulphuric acid. Defective color vision is chiefly mani fested in the inability to see the differ ence between red and green. Tho raw materials of which dynamite is made are snlphurie arid, sultpeter, glycerine and infusorial earth. Glucose is used for manufacturing table syrups, candies, food for bees, artificial honey and in brewing. It has been suggested that noxious insects may be driven away by cultivat ing the fungi that are destructive to them. Tho raising of pvrethnim, from which insect powder is made, is carried on in California and various parts of the country. Grape sugar possesses the property of fermenting or breaking up into alco liolic and carbonic acid, on the addition of yeast. German wrientists are making a study of tho relative distribution of blondes and brunettes, in aid of tbeir investiga tions of the origin of the German peo ple. It is reported that a thick vein of a substance yielding fifty per cent, of pure paraffino has been discovered at Hawkes Bay, New Zealand The deposit is said to lie of great extent and to be worth about 9200 a ton. A French chemist lias obtained a very valuable oil from the kernel of the grape—the refuse left after distilling brandy, or making verdigris, being dried and gronnd fine in an ordinary mill, and the yield of cil is in direct proportion to the fineness of the grinding. The oil is sweeter than nut oil, and remains fluid at a lower temperature. When burned in lamps It gives a bright, smoke less, odorless and agreeable flame. Kstc Shell 'j'* Brave ITced. The newspapers have been filled with tho story of the brave deed of Kate Shelley, aged fifteen, living with her mother in a little shanty on the east bank of the l)es Moines river, in lowa, uexrthe track of the Northwestern railway. One night during the autninr there was a fearfnl storm. The mother and daughter heard a crash, not unlike the sound of lightning splitting a tree. The girl, recollecting that her father, a railroad employe, had been killed by an accident, lighted a lantern, and went out in the wind and rain to see if aught was the matter. Her light was blown out, bnt ahe soon found a wrecked tra in, and all but one man had shared the fate of her father. She knew that another train would lie along in I about half an hour, and was liable to : run on to the debria of the first. The nearest telegraph station was one mile ' distant and over a bridge 400 feet in . length. Another station was four miles ;in the opposite direction. The only hope of averting a second disaster was to give notice at the station over the bridge. On her hands am! knees a great part of the railway bridge was crossed, and with wet clothes and blooding limbs she was liable at any moment to fall through into the torrent lielow, or be too late to avert a second railway wreck. Bbo reached the station in time to telegraph and atop the coming train, bnt from exposure and fright she fainted then and there. The Northwestern railway, of course, could spore a trifle from a good divi dend, as some recompense to this poor girl. The public, of course, would lie grateful; she bad saved so many lives. It would be a reflection on all if the little heroine was forgotten. She is still in abject poverty with her mother, on the lianka of the Des Moiuea river, in Boone county, lowa, unappreciated, neglected, forgotten.—' 'Aioojpo Erprm*. A llailroad in the Tree* Top. It may not be known outside of the neighborhood where it is situated, but it is nevertheless a fact that, in Sonoma county, Cel., there ia an original and successful piece of railroad engineering and building that ia not to be found in the books. In the npper part of thia connty, near the coast, may be seen an actual road-bed in the tree-tops. Be tween the Clipper Mills and Stuart's Point, where the road crosses a deep ravine, the trees are sawed off on a level aud the timber and ties laid on the stump*. In the center of the ravine mentioned two huge trees, standing aids by aide, form a substantial support, and tbey are eat off seventy-five feet above the ground, and ears loaded with heavy saw logs pass over them with as saao h security as if it wore framed in the most """"" °"°" i ' 4 CLII'I'IMK FOR THK (TKIOI'H. Oold wire first made in Italy in 1350. The first botanical g-rden wan at Padua, in 1583. There are forty *ix species of the Eng lish cuckoo. Black lead pcncilw were known to the ancient Romans. Lusters were at first made of the tails of oxen or foxes. Coral was anciently deemed an excel lent antidote against poison. Qneen Elizabeth lefts,ooo changes of drees in the royal wardrobe. Egyptian sieves were made of papyrus, or rushes; tliose of horse-huir were first used by the Gauls. The early sheriffs of London liad be fore their door two posts, upon which were exhibited edict*. In Donmark a diet of bread and water for a month was formerly considered equivalent to u punishment of death. The paper for the Bank of England notes has been made in the same mill in Lanerstoke, Hampshire, since 171' J. The Persians swore by the sun; the Scythians by the a.r and their scime tars: the Greek* and Romans by their gods. The next use of the Mayflower, after her memorable voyage to America, was to carry a cargo of slaves to the West Indies. Ginck composed in a garden quaffing champagne, borti ir. a dark room and Hacchini with a favorite cat perched on each shoulder. A kind of portable chaffing dish, upon which perfumes were burnt, was car ried as an ensign of honor !*?fore the Roman magistrates. Flints are found in the tombs of the Northern nations, they baring been sup jxisod to be efficacious in confining the dead to their habitations. I roissart mentions a person who, hav ing his chin cut off in a riot, replaced it by one of silver, which he tied by a silken cord around his head. The office of marquis was formerly to guard the frontiers and limits of the kingdom, which were called the marches, from the Teutonic word ni'tTih'—a limit. Office llulldlogs in New York. Y'on can imagine, says a New York gentleman, how great the investment is to put a large office building up in New Y'ork city wbeu you compute the rents of the officos in the Mills building, which have to be thrown away for a pe riod of one year while the building is living constructed. At the corner of Broad street and Exchange was a plain brick bmlJing of a shackely | character, crowed with offices. let the amalleat office brought from $lOO to $5OO a year. Probably the combined | offices in the different small buildings j which Mr. Mills is supplanting with his one huge building produce a rental of $<5,000 a year. This is one item in the | cost of putting up a great building in | the business quarter of New Y'ork. lie had to tear down from the corner to the quicksand, evacuate all his rents, pur chase additional property at a tremen dous figure, and then bring in pile drivers, as if he was building out in the sea, and ram the quicksand, if there were any, level, and then put in his cement and beton. Not until next spring, as I understand, will this great edifice be finished, and it will, pcrhapa, coat with the ground 82,500,000. Of o nurse those who take offices afterward will have to pay the back rent insen j sibly. Another enormous building is I going up opposite the Bowling Green, at the foot of Broadway, for the com bined produce, grain and cotton ex changes. This will be the prim ipal , edifice of its kind in the world. A Ouecr Super*tit lon. I observed a broad silver ring on the middle finger of the left hand of a man. formerly of Cbudleigh, now of | Torquay, a printer by trade, who waa working at my house at the time. In reply to my questions he stated that he was twenty-seven year* of age, and had worn the ring about seven years for the purpose of protecting himself from fits, to which he hsd long been subject. The ring, he said, was made of nine six pences, given to him for the purjuse by niue unmarried females, all, as was nec essary, of the parish of Cbudleigh, where he resided at the time. The sixpences were given in re sponse to his question: "Will you give me a sixpence T he being careful not to say, "Will yon please to give mo * six )>ence f* and careful also to avoid say ing •' Thank you," on the receipt of the coin - either of which would have viti ated the charm. Re took the nine coins to an ordinary jeweler, who made them into a ring, but it was neoesaary for the success of the charm that he should re ceive nothing for his labor. The givers sod the reeeiver of the sixpence* Bast be of different sexes, sod the ring must be worn on the middle finger of the left hand. It had not quite kept away the fits, hari been much lass Mib'nt he wore