The Sower's Song. Mow hands to seed-sheet, boys, We step and wo cast; old Time's oil wing; And wonld jre partake of harvest joys, The corn mnst be sown in spring. Fall gently and still, good oorn, Lie warm in thy earthy bed, And stand so yellow some morn That beast and man may be fed. Old Earth is a pleasure to see In sunshiny cloak of red and green ; The furrow lies fresh ; this year will be As the years that aro past have beeu. Fall gently and still, eto. 0!d Mother, receive this corn, The seed of six thousand golden sires ; Alt these on thy kindiy breast were bom; One more thy poor child requires. For gently and still, etc. Now ateady and en re again, And moaettre of step and stroke we koep; Thus up and thus down,wo cast our grain ; How well, and yon gladly reap, Fall gently and still, etc. —Thomas Carlyle. • MOTHER CAREY'S CUSHION." "Now, Octavia," said Mrs. Oland, "dobe a little oaraful to-day. Don't, for pily's sake, let your wild spirits ran away with yon!" Octavia Oland, in her pink muslin dress, tied here and there with jannty little bows of ribbon, and a straw gyp tj hat garlanded with pink poppies, turned around, the very incarnation of radiant glee. "Mamma," said she, "why should you grndge me my little holiday? Don't I work behind Miss Fanshawe's counter all the year like any Afrioan slave ? Don't I lose my very identity in shirs and puffings, and toil my fin gers off in flonnoes and tncks I Do let me play I am a child again just this once 1" Bo this beautiful yonng Enphrosyne danced away, leaving only the sweet echo of her laughter in the gloomy apartment, and Mrs. Oland sighed. "She is so thoughtless," said the mother. "And Dnnoan Ray and Harry Bolton are both going on this sailing party—and somehow I feel as if to-day were going to be the tnrning point of her life. I wish she oonld bring her self to like Danoan—he's a steady, noble-sonled lad, as his father was be fore him, bat there isn't much outside Show about him. And Bolton's a hand- Some, dashing young fellow, jnst the sort to aitraot any girl. Bat somehow I can't qnite believe in him. Octavia Says I haven't any knowledge of the world. Well, perhaps she is right. But I think we qniet, stay-at-home bodies are sometimes gifted with a sort of instinot in these matters." The day was all sparkle and sunshine the excursion steamer, flittering with gay flags and sound of music, glided taajeetioally along; the sea air breathed hew strength into weary lungs and touched fevered brows with achemio power; and all these over tired, over worked sewing girls forgot for a brief while that life was n >thing more than a irea 1 mill to th m. They laughed, they danced, they lang; they flung flowers into the water that floated around the wheel house, they counted the glimmering sails that lamed up against the horizon; and fitmlly w' en the boat landed at White Crags they all scattered in various di rections over the silver shingled beach in merry pursuit of shells, sea we'd and pebbles, as so many niwly liberated school ohildren might have done. And Ootavia Oland, the prettiest girl in all the throng, r-igned as a sort of princess among them. "Mother Carey's Cu-hion?" said she; merrily, echoing the w >rds of an ancient aalt who was mending his nets in a •nnuy spot with an old pipe in hie month, and a piotnresqne long bard blowing übont f n the wind. "Is that what they call yonder rock ?" "That 'ere's what they hails her by, lady-miss," said the old sailor, his dim eyes resting wi h evident approbation on Ootavia's fresh young lilies and roses. "And wall it's knowed here abouts." " But why do they call it so-?" per •is'el the girl. "Bicausc cf the onshion, my lady rait-8," answered tue ti-herrqarj, laying his pipe down on the sand out ot respect rtn oomin'up It's a round rode, near to the top—d'ye see?" pointing his knotty forefinger—"with grass and mosses growin' on it, in a circle, like a cushion. And a back, all of the nateral rock. There's them, my ladr-mias," he added, "as has climbed to the very top and sat on the cushion. I and my sweet heart—as has been dead these thirty years—did once. But we didn't care to stay there long. I tell ye. For the wind howled and the seagulls shrieked, and the tide roared like a hungry shark around as, and it was as much as evei we oonld do to get down again with whole bones." "Why," said Bolton, "itdoesn't loo) rraeb a height." " Mebbe not—mrbbe not I ' said thi old man. "A quarter of a mile makei a (leal o' difference in the look of things. And them as ain't used to distanoea cu't calculate." And he went on with his work while the little group strolled on, bright Oc tavia with her ribbons and ourls float ing, Bolton carrying her shawl and Dunoan Bay walking silently on the other side. And jnst then another gay throng overtook them and there was a dis oussion as to where the site should be for their impromptu banquet; and presently Dunoan Ray looked around. " Where's Octavia ?" he asked. Everybody hud some answer to make. Anriette Hall had seen her not five minutes before ; Helen Ray was quite certain that she was hiding behind the mined boat-honse on the edge of the beach ; Lois Fielding suggested that she Lad probably gone back to the steamer for a scent-bottle or a hand kerchief, or some such trifle. " She'll be here presently," said they. " In the meantime, let ns get the lunoh ready, for there's a dark little edge of olond down in the west that the oap tain says he don't half-like the looksof." And where all this time was Oc tavia Oland f She was springing np the steep and winding ledge of the rook, quicker and lighter than any mountain chamois, her veil floating back like a white wreath of mist, an exquisite scarlet dyeing her cheek. " If other people can climb to Mother Carey's Cushion, so can I," said daunt less Octavia, keeping her faoe reso lutely away from the furious waves that boiled and raged below, lest, per obanoe, it sbonld render her giddy. " And how astonished they will be when tbey see me waving my hand kerchief to them from that dizzy peak 1" Long before the cold fowls, chicken salad and sandwiches were spread upon the grass the captain came np from the steamer. "Ladies and gentlemen," said he, " Fm sorry to spoil sport, bnt there's a sqnall brewin', if ever there was one, and we'll all be safer well ont at sea than on these ragged points of rook> especially as the tide is oomin' in a deaf faster than we'd calculated on. So il you'll all step lively I shall be partic ularly obliged." The ladies began hurriedly to pack the as yet incomplete repast, and to gather up their hats, veils, parasols and gloves—the gentlemen looked around for shawl-straps, books and baskets; a nd once again ran the question: " But. Octavia 1 Where is Ootavia?" And Dorsey Wheeler, straining his eyes through the gray mist whioh was already beginning to gather over the landscape, exolaimed: "Who has an opera-glass T I see something on that tall rock that seems to lean toward the water— BO in e thing, I am quite certain, whioh moves 1!' The oaptain produced his glass. "Though, to be sure," said hfe, " glasses ain't much use in a plaguey Bootch mist as this. But I de clare, there is something up there flut tering in the wind, like some one waving a signal of distress I" Bolton snatched the glass from the veteran's band and hurriedly adjusted it to his own eyes. "It is Ootavia's veil," he said. " I can see the pink flowers like little dots of oolor on her head. Good heavens I and she has been mad enough to climb that rock, all for a spirit of crazy ad venture 1" '• It's a bad job for her, then," said the old fisherman, who, having left his nets to take care of themselves, had mingled, black pipe and all, in the gen eral confusion. " For now the tide is in, there ain't nobody nor nothin' can get near Mother Carey's Bocks; and if the wind rises, as it's goin' to do, she'll be bio wed into kingdom come at the very first puff I' " Oan nobody help her ?" oriel the horrified group. Tae ol I sab. shook his head. "You'd only come to ycur own death," said he, "without helpin* her a mite. There wa-> a man killed there twenty one year ago oome October. He—" "We are losing time," said the cap tain, impatiently. "There's a blaok squall driving np on the wind,' and I d nut give mnob for onr lives if we don't get clear of them ocnfotnded rooks. Of course we're all sorry for the yonng lady ; bnt so far as I can see she'll have to take the consequences of her own folly. It's impossible to risk a whole barge-load for her. Ladies and gen tlemen, all forward now, if yon pleaset' Bat Dancan Ray stepped oat from the ranks. , Bolton 1" said he. "McDowell I Ohri -tiau men, all of yon 1 Are yon 1 going deliberately off to leave the sweetest and most precious of oar number to perish in the winds and : waves?' I—l don't see that we can do any -1 thing!" sUmmered Bolton. "This' good man says that we should not ritk - eur own lives to no purpose." "And you must see, yourself," added B Mr. Ltuncelot McDowell, "that ft 1 Would he oerUin death to try to cross the water, now that the tide is rising so > fasti* "There's no time to parley I" said • the oaptain, impatiently. " The bell will ring direotly, and whoever isn't on board then isn't on board at all I Eh ! Where are yon going, Mr. Ray ?" "To the top of yonder cliff," said Dnncan, palling his bat resolutely over his brows. "To resjue that girl or to die in the attempt 1" Bat at the same moment a slender figure, with a zephyr shawl drawn lightly over its head, stepped out from behind the old bulkhead—Ootavia Oland herself. "Do not risk your life, Dnnoan Ray!'' she said, in a sweet, olear voice. " I am qnite safe. My veil and hat blew off, and I conld not disentangle them from the sharp recks. Rnt I, myself, was fortunate enongh to make good my retreat before the dreadful wind got too high. And I came np behind yon all, and heard your talk, and—and— Oh, Dnncan, I can't bear to think of it all 1 Let ns go back to the steamer as fast as we can, and get out of this frightful place I" She covered her eyes with one hand as she spoke, while with the other she olnng to Dnncan Ray's arm, as if it were a refuge beyond all computation. Bat all the way baok to New York she never once condescended to speak to Harry Bolton or Mr. McDowell; and when she returned home that evening she was engaged to Dnncan Ray. " For I know now," she said, with a little tremor in her voice, "who, and who alone, wonld have risked his life for such a silly ohild as 11" And Harry Bolton and Mr. McDowell felt like recreant kDights, indeed I "Deoidedly awkward I" said the former. " Yes," assented the latter. "Pats one—ahem!—in such an awkward posi tion.—Helen Forrcnt Graves. A Girl's Experiment With Her Lovers. The presence of a big black bear in the neighborhood of Enller, Georgia, recently, has given occasion for several local scares and a number of newspaper articles. Miss Mary L. Groat, a young woman who lives in that vioinity, near Reynolds, deoided to make use of the bear in order that she might test the oonrage and devotion of two rivals far her hand. She planned that her brother, disguised in a buffalo robe, should appear suddenly in a certain grove during twi light that evening and that both lovers should be with ber at the time. The young men were glad of the opportunity to be with Miss Groat, neither suspect ing that they were to pass through the crucible and come out refined gold or "306" medal metal. Sammy Groat, the bear, was delighted with the soheme, feeling that he could roar her 'as gently as a sucking dove" or as thunderously as a cyclone in the wild West. When the sister saw the disguised brother poke the bear's head over some bushes she screamed and pointed toward the object. Both lovers looked and saw the masquerad ing-youth. To Miss Groat's surprise* however, each made for the animal and the discharge of three or four revolver sbots added to the surprise. The bear took to its heals and the young woman frantioally appealed to her lovers not to shoot. Bam my got home without a soratch and shortly afterward the ro mantic girl, with an admirer at each hand, also returned, all considerably excited by the incident. A City of Perfumes. The Tunisian Arabs have a passion for flowers, and as soon as their spring commeno: s even the poorest and rag gedest may be seen with a delicately scented blossom stuck ab~>ve the ear. The perfumes dis'illed at Tunis have been famous from time immemorial. There is one very large, rather pale rose in particular, from whioh the famous attar is extracted, whioh exhales an odor so powerful and yet so delicate that it scarcely reems a figure of speech to speak of "odors of paradise," and one can understand that the Mohamme dan's heaven would hardly be oom nlete without it. But at Tunis it is not only the rose which is made to yield up its sweet brrath, to be after ward imprisoned in ounning little oas kets and sparkling crystal fla-ks en riched with gilding; the odors of ihe violet, tli9 jasmine, the orange flower, and many others, are extract* d with equal skill, and in the bazaars mingle their scents with tho perfume of san dal wood and other sweet smelling woods, and- with that of the curious most odoriferous dark substance which the natives call amber. If yon go to 1 buy perfumes the vender wi II perhaps offer yon a little ivory box or poroelajn 1 vase containing a scented ungent for. the hair, or may be a string of beads to ■ hang ronnd yonr neck, apparently think i ing it of small oonseq tencein what way t you perfume your person so that the de sired odor is oonveyed to the senses, i In Arab households inoense and sandal t wood are frequently burned on oharooel si brasners.—CAnstuw* Bmiakr. THEIII IIAIK TURNED WHITE. Cnsoa In Wlil'-H Person*' Hair Tamed (Suddenly Wbl'e Through irlulit. Instances have not been wanting of the hair being deprived of its color in a few minutes. The home-coming of the king of Naples after the congress of Laybach was oelebrated with much public rejoicing. To do the occasion honor, the manager of the San Carlo theatre produced a grand mythological pageant, in which an afterward well known opera singer m-ule his debut in the character of Jupiter. The stage thunder rolled, the stage-lightning flashed, us the Olympian monarch de manded on his cloud-eupportod throne Suddenly screams of horror ran through the house ; the queen fainted, and all was uproar and consternation, until the voice of the king was heard above the din, ory ing, "If any one person shonts or screams again I'll have that person shot!" Sjmething bad gone wrong with the machinery before the clouds had de scended ten feet, and Jupiter had fallen through. Fortunately a strong iron wire or rope oaught his cloak,[and, uncoiling with his weight, let him down by de grees. But a workman falling with him was impaled upon a strong iron spike upporting the soeaery. In ten minutes or so they reached the ground, the workman dead, the singer dazed, but able to thank heaven on his knees for his escape; and then the awe-stricken people saw that the blaek -haired deity l a 1 beoome into a white haired mortal, whose youthful features formed a strange contrast to their ven erable-looking crown. Believing that a fortune might be easily won in the oil conntry, a young Bostonian went there to enrich himself One stormy night a glare in the sky told him that an oil tank was on Are a few miles off; and, knowing that after a time the oil would boil up aud flow over the side of the tank, he made for a hill to witness the spectacle. " She's com ing," a man shouted. There was a rum bling sound, and then the burning oil shot up from the tank, boiled over its sides and floated down the creek, de stroying everything in its way and set ting fire to a seoond tank. Ouriosity getting the better of discretion, he ran to the ground in the rear of the tanks to get a better view, and in trying to avoid a pool of burning oil fell into a mud hole and Rtuck fast. Struggling till he could struggle no longer, he lay back exhausted, watching the billows of smoke surging upward and floating away into spies. Suddenly his ears j were startled by the sound of cannon firing ; a oolumn of flame aud amoke shot up from one of the tanks, and he was stricken almost senseless with the knowledge that the "pipe line men" were cannonading the first tank, to draw off the oil, and so prevent another oveiflow. He tried to shout, but the words would not come. A little stream of burning oil ran slowly but surely to ward bim. He watched it creeping on until it was almost upon him; then in a moment all was dark. When he came back to conscious ness, he found himself in his own room, surrounded by "the boys," who had seen him just in time to save him. It was a weary while before he was himself again, and then he was inclined to doubt if he was himself, for his onoe dark bair was perfectly white. Staff Sorgeon Parry, while seiving in India, during the mutiny, saw a strange sight. Among the prisoners taken in a skirmish at Obarada was a sepoy of the Bengal army. He was brought before the authorities, aud put to the question. Fully alive to his position, the Bengalee stood almost stupefied with fear, trembling greatly, with horror and despair plainly depioted on his countenanoe. While the examination was pi ooeeding the by standers were startled by the sergeant in charge of the prisoner exclaiming, "He is turning gray 1" All eyes were turned on th# unfortunate man, watch ing with wondering interest the change comiug upon his splendid glossy Jet black locks. In half an hour they were of a uniform grayish hue. Some years ago a young lady who was anxionnly awaiting the coming of her husband eleot received a letter oon. veving the sad tidings of his ship wreok and death. Bbe instantly fell to the ground insensible, and so remained five hours. On the following morning her sister saw that her hair, whioh had been previously of a rioh brown color, bad beoome as wLitoas a cambric hand kerchief, her eyebrows and eyelashes J retaining their natural oolor. After a while the whitened hair fell off, and was succeeded by a new growth of gray. This case coming nn dw five miles per honr. A hurricane moves eighty miles per honr. Arifle-bal moves one thonsand miles per honr. Rapid rivers flow seven miles per honr. A hand (horse measure) is four inches. Electricity moves two hnndred and eighty-eight thonsand miles per hour. The first lnoifer match was made in 1829. Gold was disoovered in California in 1848. A mile is five thousand two hnndred and eighty feet, or one thousand seven hundred and titty yards in length. A moderate wind blows seven miles per hour. The first use of a locomotive in America was in 182a The first steam engine on the oontinent of America was brought from England in 1753. Until 1776, ootton spinning was performed by the hand spinning wheel. A Yalnable Button. It is probable that Mr. Fritsoh, of New York, will be the first man in America to offer a reward for a button. He was presented last season with a set of twelve large buttons for his coach ing club top coat. Thoy were sent from across tho ocean, hand-made, and entirely unique. Each button bears a miniature punting of some coaching scene—the stables, the start, on the road, reaching home, and so on. With out any of these buttons the set is in complete, and its beauty is spoiled. One of them ha* mysteriously disap peared since the spring parade. Whether it is lost, strayed, or stolen, nobody knows. And it would not be well for the thief, if it is stolen, to let some of the muscular members of the coaohing club lay hands on him, tor the buttons are the club's pets. About $25,000,000 are now given to foreign missions where but $1,000,000 was given aixty yeers ago. "KOUMISS." An Ailatlr SrTtrngt thnr fl.rmne H#tf4 During UilU' Illnrna-fta Allege* Virtue*. " The nee of koumiss has grown very much in this country," said a physician. " since it was used by the doct >rs in the case of President Garfield, when he could not take other food. It promises to be a popular drink all through this.j country, and it is now habitatlly ueejS in many private families, and, I believe, ' can be obtained at some bars and drug stores." " What is koumiss ?" J "It is a beverage which has been used for centuries by the nomadic tribes of Asia, and was discovered in Tartary by a traveler. It is made by the Tartars of mare's milk, and a liquor was fer mented from it which was most palata ble. It is, however, now made of pore cows' milk, with the addition of a little sugar, thus making it chemically equal to mare's milk. It is now regarded as a great cure for dyspepsia. At Ananieff. on the Volga river, near Samara, RUB, is, there has been eetablishel a Koum iss cure, to whioh thousands of invalids, some from this oountry, go. The foundation of the oourse of treatment given here is the milk diet. The ad vantage of koumiss is that the first process of digestion, namely, fermenta tion, occurs before it is taken, and the generation of a small percentage of aloohol relieves the stomach of car bonic acid gas, one of the most dis tressing symptoms of dyspepsia. The koumiss assimilates most perfectly with the organs of digestion without taxing them, and it goes, as the saying is, to the right spot. The best thing about* this delicious drink is that it can be made at home and at a cost of about fifteen cents a quart." " How is it made ?" " The best formula is furnished by Dr. John G. Johnson, of Brooklyn, and it is as follows : " Fill a quart bottle up to the neck with pure milk; add two tablespoonfuls of white sngar, after dissolving the same in a little water over a hot fire; add also a quarter of a two-cent cake of compressed yeast Then tie the oork on the bottle securely, and shake thai mixture well; place it in a room of the* temperature of 50** to 95" Fahrenheit for six hours, and finally in the ice boa( over night Drink in such quantities as the stomach may require. It will be well to observe several important in junctions in preparing the koumiss, and they are: First, to be sure that the milk is pnre ; second, that the bottle is sound; third, that the yeast is fresh; fourth, to open the mixtnre in the morn- > ing with great care, en account of iM effervescent properties; fifth, not toi drink it at all if there is any curdle orj thickened part resembling oheese, aaj this indicates that the fermentation has been prolonged beyond the proper time. " The American habit is to make the koumiss as it is need, bnt under oertain conditions the beverage will keep for , some time, and age will improve its j flavor and strength as it does elooholie liquors. It is transported in akin bottles in Tartary." •'Bow dees it taste 7* "It has a delicious and pungent taste, nnlike any other beverage, and, while it stimnlatee and refreshes, there is no enervation or prostration following it. The medical faculty has long been seeking a beverage that wonld nourish and sustain as well as give strength for the moment, and it is believed that konmiss supplies the want. As dyspep sia is a sort of a national disease with ns, this enre ahoald be a national bless ing. Glever yonng women on the farms of onr country could not give more cheer to the evening meal than by supplying the tired men with konmiss. It is a beverage for colleges and boarding schools, and I think it may care dip somania. I repeat, it shonld bo made at home and with care, and only pnre milk shonld be used."—Vets Fori Sun. A Chicken Trade. Captain Faraow, of laleboro, Me., tells a good story at his own expense. The oaptain was trading in a small Tas sel along the ooast, and at Tampa bay he parohased twenty dosen chickens, pay ing Sla dosen for them. They were of all ages and sixes, some being ready for the pot and others soatoely done with their shells. At Key West a hotel keeper came along side and asked the prioe of the ohiokens. Ths oaptain an swered: "If yon piok them ont I shall oharge yon $6 a dosen; bnt if yon will, let me pick them ont yon can htvetheni for $3 a dosen." "All right," said the' hotel man, "yon piok them ont." The; oaptain seleoted several dosens of the flsdglings, expecting [every moment to hoar the pnrohaaer cry "enough." Bq| stdl hsaid "go on." The oaptain saw the point at last, bnt he stnok to hi* bargain and "seleoted ' the entire lot, st a net loss to himself of S2O. Lightning struck the barn of Dr. P. M. Stanbrongh, near Newburg, N. Y., killing a horse and severely injuring his son Clarence, yet w thont doing the 1 least damage to tho building.