y i - HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. KlL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. r VOL. XI. Sonif ol the Steam. Harness uio down with your iron bands; Be suro of your curb and rein; For I scorn the power of your puny hands, As the tempest scorns a chain. How I laughed as I lay concealed from sight For many a conntlosa hour, At the childish boast of human might, And the prido of human power. When I saw an army upon the land, A navy upon the seas, Creeping along, a snail-like band, Or waiting the wnywaul breeze; When I marked the peasant fairly reel With the toil which ho daily boro, As ho feebly turned the tardy wheel. Or tugged at tlio weary oar. When t measured the panting courser's speed, The flight of the carrier dove, - -.. As Uuy boro the law a lung decreed, Or the lint s of impatient love, I could not but think how the world would feel, As these were outstripped afar, When I should be bound to the rushing keel, Or chained to the flying car. II I ha ! ha ! they found me at last, They invited me fulfil at length; And I rushed to my throne with a thunder blast, And laughed in my iron st length. Oh, then ho saw a wondrous change On the earth and the ocean wide, Where now my firry armies range, Nor wait for wind or tide. Hurrah ! Hurrah I the waters o'er The mountain's steep decline; Time space have yielded to my power; The world ! the world is mine I The rivers the sun hath earliest blest, Or those his beams decline. Tlio giant stream of the queenly west, Or the Orient floods divine 1 The ocean pales where'er I sweep'; I hear my strength rejoieo; And the monsters of the. briny deep Cower, trembling, at my voice. I carry the wealth and the lord of earth, The thought of his god-like mind; The wind lags after my going forth, Tho lightning is left behind. n tho darksome depths of the fathomless mine Jly tireless arm doth play; Where the rocks never seo the sun decline, Or the dawn of the glorious day. I bring earth's glittering jewels up From the hidden caves below, And t make the fountain's granite cup With a crystal gush o'erllow. I blow the beilows, I forgo the steel, In all tho shops of trade; I hammer the ore and turn the wheel Where my arms of strength are made; I manage tho furnace, the mill, the mint; I carry, I spin, I weave, And all my doings I put into print On every .Saturday eve. I've no muscle to weary, no breast to decay, No bones to be " laid on the shelf," And soon I intend yon may "go and play," While I manage this world myself. Not harness me down with your iron bands, lie sure of your curb nu l rein; For I scorn the ttrviig.ii of your puny hand--, As the tempest scorns a chain. lltomas W. Cutttr. The Victim of a Forlorn Hope One morning Mark Devine found n note waiting for luru on Lis office desk a note without a crest, or monogram, or paimi-u u.evice ; the paper pure wnir.e, iiiicK, sarin smootn, Jaintly and curiously perfumed, with the mingled odor of violets and frankincense. The handwriting was easy, with the ease of constant, yet careless practice, and the signature that of a woman rising rapidly to fame and wealth upon the ladder of ner splendid raind ana arduous, well directed labor. He had known her well three years before, when she had comp. alone and unaided, to pursue her career in the busy city. They had met at a pleasant boarding-house, where there was really a home element, which called forth the kindly feelings of its inmates in their intercourse, lie had found her always bright, agreeable, ready of speech, full of resource a companiou much to be desired in the enforced inti macy of a transient abode. When she had found her level and taken hold, she sent for her mother, and went to her own house, und, gradually, they had drifted opart. He had heard of her late, more and more frequently, and had partly resolved to seek her out and renew their friendship. Struggles and success had separated them, but with her, as with him, he felt sure the memory of the old days was a pleasant one, and a return to them full of pleasant hopes. Now, she sent for him. The few lines of the note ran thus : May I ask you, Mr. Devine, to call on me at my house on Wednesday or Thursday even ing of this week ? I will not detain you long and you will find, before von leave, that vou have greatly obliged KliLMA. U. 15JKNEY. ' Mr. Devine sat a moment balancing the note on his finger. Then he dashed off an answer, and sent it by the boy. On Wednesday evening in June arid perfect ! he was shown into the dimly lighted, exquisitely appointed parlor of a house far removed from the tiny abode in which ho had seen her last. A strange sense of unreal yet familiar surroundings came ever him. It was like a confused dream. The beauty, the luxury, the quiet elegance were hitherto unknown in any thought he ever had of her, yet, at once and forever, they became a part of hei to him. "It is ridiculous 1" he exclaimed, standing before the mantel mirror in its carved and massive frame, and looking at himself with a puzzled air. "But I could swear I would have known the room for hers unywhere." He started. She had come noiselessly in, and he saw reflected, her pale face, and fine, clear, dark eyes over his shoulder. She was not smiling, but an expression of infinite, sweet still joy struck him as he turned to her. "You are very good, Mr. Devine." die said, holding out her hand. "Ee membering your habits of old, I scarcely expected you would be at liberty upon the instant. Had yon really no engage ment for this evening f He laughed, and flushed. 'The old days, Miss Birney, were long ago. I am not quite bo eager in the pursuit of pleasure, shall I say ?" xi were truer, remaps, to call it by another name," she said, "since the sport was often very like the bovs and tiie irogs, ana tne pleasure ail on one side. Sit down, and tell me, to begin with, what became of the dark little beauty I left you raving about ?" "She " Mark paused, looked doubt ful, caught her eye, with its subtle gleam of mirth and answered, hurriedly, "She is married, I think. Yes, I am quite sure of it. But I have not heard of her for a year." "Yet I thought that really, the 'love of Tnim lift Unn I A i 1 . mo. Axua ib uui iuuuu you yvi r Vr t i . . . . - inoi as lie shook ins Head in comical depression. "But I must spare you. How easily one . falls into old habits, niiu iukos up auouier s 1110 wnera on laid it down I Tell me all about yourself before I enter upon the object of our meeting. Tell me everything, as you useu. She asked it easily enough, but he found it impossible to comply. The pale face and the dark eyes, the Bmne white hand and its dull' heavy ring of barbaric gold were the same he had studied in his hours of idle chatter and half-romance, half-confidence. But there was something more here than of old. The self-possession, tho sense of power exerted and acknowledged, the gi'flceiui poise ol the stately little figure, the perfect yet unique, taste of the simple, yet costly toilet, were new to the Selma Birney he had known and counted a "first rate friend." He was used to women, spoiled and petted by them as he had ever been, but to-night there was an unknown field before him, and he knew it. To pour out as he used ail sorts of confidences, rhapsodies, con fessions and excuses, was a thing impos sible, indeed. There was in his hostess a hidden power that moved him to strange new desires and aspirations, that appealed at once to the higher na ture he had almost ceased to think of as his ; that awoke him to earnestness and self-respect in a way that thrilled him. In the conversation that followed he was at his best. Skillfully, steadily, she led him on from one topic to another, never directly touching upon his own life, but draw ing out his opinions, flash ing light into his thoughts, putting iut j words half-formed resolves rendering clearer and clearer fair, yet stern, aspects ui uuijf uguinsi mica ue naa oiten closed his eyes. And always, it was himself, not his companion, who, ap parently prompted speech and ennobled thought. An exhilaration of mind, such as he had not known for years, pme and exalted, grew upon him, and was evident in his sparkling, fearless eye, his animated words, his Ml soft resonant voice. Miss Birney sank into the em brace of her bamboo chaise-lounge and watched him eagerly, breathlessly, de spairingly, with glowing eyes and quiver ing lips. When he ceased there was silence. Miss Birney roused herself and sat upright. "I pronv'sed not to detain you," she said, in a slow, clear voice, that ht knew must be the result of an effort for self-control, and at which he wondered. "I must keep my word and proceed to explain my motives for requesting this interview. You do not know them, anc you will, doubtless, find them a surprise and shock. I intend to be perfectly frank with you. Let me ask one favor of you. Do not speak to me until I have told you all. Promise me that !" "I promise," said he, gravely and briefly, awed by her manner, her pallor, and the pathetic sadness of her eyes. She bent her head a momenton her hand and he saw it trembled. Then she raised it suddenly, looked him full in the eyes, and said : "In less than three months I shall be m my grave. Unless I am restored to health by a miracle ; there is no hope of escape, no hope of reprieve. I have known it now three months and two weeks, and am used to the thought al most ! I have made all arrangements as fur as is possible. I am gathering up the loo-o ends and fraved-out purposes day by day, in the effort to leave inv lite-work perfected as far as it has gone. rn.rt.. i 1. i. . . . i.u.-id in uui juuiMi in retrrei in tnKinof leave of all. Except for the happiness I never had. I cannot mourn." She paused, as thoueh ehoosincr the words wherewith to proceed. Mindful of his promise ho sat silent and horror- struck studying her face. Her eyes had fallen, and he saw a sudden faint, swift color flash into her pallor as she thought. "Iho happiness I never had!" she repeated, softly. "Mine has been the saddest lifo possible for a nature such as mine. 1 have stood alwavs at the gate cf Paradise, dumb and chained. while others passed in before my eyes to waste the fruits for w hich I hungered and thirsted, to trample on the beauty that mocked for ever my longing eyes, to destroy wantonly the temple upon which I prayed night and day to be al lowed to labor in its building up. I have been poor vilely poor so poor, I wanted the plainest necessaries of life. and yet my tastes and my desires could only have been satisfied by the most perfect, the most refined, the daintiest of art's productions. That was mortifi cation of flesh and spirit. It was a long drawn agony. And it is only ended when it is too late. I have been ill and in pain so many years, that I forget the very sensation of rest and ease : and all the time I have been sternly, unflinch ingly, rigidly forbidden the quiet and the absence of toil that would have made my burden lighter. I have the fondest nature, the most passionately tender heart, and it has never known one thrill of liappv love. Maddened, agonizing, defiant, I have reached the very verge of that world, respect for which, or, rather, the proud determina tion that it should respect me, would have kept me silent as long as I held any part or lot in it. There is nothing now to hold me back from asking for the one thing on earth precious to me be yond all words I mean your presence." Asilonce, dumb as the stars of heaven, fell upon them. To neither of them, confused and palpitating with hope, fear, surprise, passion, :,s it a dark and hopeless moment. There was in its mysterious shadow faint glimmers and sparkles of life that meant one knew not what, Mark bent forward, and laid BIDGrWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUESDAY, JULY 14, his hand on hers firmly, tenderly, yet gently.in its strength. She lifted it to her cheek like a child. "You always said yon would like to hold my hand," she said, brokenly. "I know you liked me, and I thought I thought you were so kind you would not mind doing such a little thing for me. I do not ask much, do I ?" "I will do anything I can for you anything! I am truly grieved I am more sorry for this than I can tell you." "Thank you," she said, simply, "It will soon be over, and I do not care, if you will only come to me now and then when no one else has a claim on you." "I will come as often as you say. There is no one who can have a stronger claim. They are all newer friends than you are." The happy nature, crushed, wearied, breaking down under the lot she had not depicted darkly enough, rose blithely to a gleam of sunshine. There was something inexpressibly arch in the flash of her eye as she repeated, in a tone of infinite expression : "All I and still their name is legion f" "Yes," he said, gravely ; "and I thank God, Selma, no nearer, no. more limited bond than a legion of light co quetries binds me now. I am free, dear and honored friend, to do your will." "Oh, Mark I" she said, "and I thank God ycu meet me thus. Come to mo, when you can ; I have two months yet before the end begins. After that" she paused and shuddered "after that I will have done with all but the pains of death. You will never regret that you helped me to meet them by all the strength that only happy hours can give us." The tiny clock on the mantel chimed the hour. "I must not keep you longer," she said, "or you will count my promise as nothing. But I could not help it, and I trust you have not been very much bored." "I have had a most strangely sad and happy evening," he answered, as he rose. "I do not know why, but I feel another man from the Mark Devine of two hours ago." "Tell me one thing. Are you are you sorry you came ?" "I am not," he replied, decisively, holding in his both her trembling hands, and looking down into her uplilted eyes until they sank beneath his gaze. "Good-night," she said, "and como soon again." "Good-night," he answered, "and I will be hero to-morrow ?" "If you care to come." "Then it will be to-morrow." An J it was. Mark Devine went home in a whirl of emotions. What had hap pened to him ? What change had come over Lor? Was it pity that moved him to such infinite tenderness for her? How dreadful tho thought of death taking her out of his life ! Two months and two weeks beforo those wonderful sweet eyes should be closed for ever ! What a voice she had 1 He could hear it when he chose, dwelling with such pathos on those words : "The happiness I never had." Then the shuddering horror of that sentence. "It was a Ion;-, drawn agony"; the pitiful regret of "And it is only ended when it is too late"; or, most sweet remembrance of all the sinking and tremor of the pas sion stirred defiance into, "The one thing on earth precious to me beyond all w ords I mean your presence." He started as he said it over to himself. Could it could it mean all it was calla ble of expressing from her lips? Had she loved him all this time with a love sufficient to prompt this action on her part? "As I live! he exclaimed, "it never struck me in that light when she spoke. What did I think ? That she still liked me, as she used to say, better than any man she knew ; that, in the fear ami sinTnoss of her past and her future, she thought of what she used to call rav sunshiny nature, and found relief in it ; mat our oia friendship had simply crown deeper ana less lnvolous as -n learned to think higher thoughts. But, how much more she might mean by tho same words. Her love would be a won derful thing I There was a man who had it once, and 1 thought always he wouia never iose it. lint if lie has " Over and over he recalled their past, weighing each word and look and tone of the years gone by against the ever moving memory of the hours just ended. It was wonderful how many things he could bring forth from the shadows to confront the light. Sometimes he thought he grasped a new meaning in sentences spoken, and forgotten by him at the time. Sometimes he recalled words and careless actions of hers that turned such fancies into irritations at his own folly. But. make what he would of it, he could think of nothing else than Selma Birney until he presented himself before her at the earliest per missible hour of the next evening. This time he watched the door eagerly, and saw her come floating down the long staircase ana tnrougn the curtained arch all in white, and scarce less colorless. She met him with a timid air in spite of her cordial greeting, and during the whole visit was so far removed, in her pleasant grace and cheerfulness, from the agitated woman of the previous evening, that he could not recur to the thoughts he had nervously combatted all the day. She was certainly charm ing. Her conversational powers had always been fine, and study, practice, the desire to please those superior to herself in years and honors, had so im proved them as to render her the rival of the much-vaunted "talkers" of his tory. There was about her, moreover, that witchery of personal attraction some women possess to the never-ending confusion and ruin of men, and others a gifted and glorious exception, few in number make use of to lead them on to the best of which they are capable. To be near her was pleasant in itself, Mark felt. He left her, pleased with himself and her ; elated, he knew not why, and hoping, he knew not what. It would be a needless task to track Mark Devine through the slow advance of the two months he counted, at last, hour by hour. Daily he grew in strength and tenderness, in nobleness of thought and pure ambition as the wonderful nature of this woman opened before him. ! In one of their earliest interviews she had begged that nothing might be said of the future. "I have eaid all I need to make you understand. Let me be something more than a charnel-house memory when all is over for us. There is another side to death, Mark 1 That will fit itself naturally to the best life we can live here." From that time no direct allusion to her approaching death was ever made, but in a thousand and one nameless ways he was aware that tne thought of it was never absent from her mind, and that she constantly lauorea ana piannea witn it in vain. let she seemed very, very happy. A quiet look of sweetness and voice and manner grew upon her, a charm that everyone felt lighted her eye and rested on her lip with each smile. And Mark Devine loved her with a very agony of love. It tore his gay, proud heart with storms of passionate sorrow when away from her, and sent him hungering and despahing to learn the joy of her dear presence anew, ana add yet keener pangs to the consciousness of his ap proaching wreck. The last day of the two months came and passed. The last day of the two weeks that were to have seen the end was over. The full three months had drifted into the abyss of time, and still eima iiirney uvea. More than that, the color had come into her soft cheeks, and strength she had not known for years into her fair round limbs. Mark. trembling in hope, was shocked to find a shadow of another sort falling upon his path. Unmistakably she had changed toward him. Their close and happy intercourse was sadly marred by reserve he strove in vain to surmount. At last, in a passion of hurt feelings. disappointed hopes and vague tortures, ne uurst out one evening : "Selma, I can bear it no longer. must speak in spite of your wish. What has happened ? Now that I almost dare to hope, now that you have been spared to me even a little longer, oh, my tiariing, wnat has turned our friendship into pain to vou ?" She did not speak, but he saw her knit her fingers in a close clasp, and ho felt her tremble as he leaned upon her chair. "Listen to me, tfiea, since you will not speak out!" he cried, almost angrily. "In these mouths I have come to love you as never a man loved woman yes! I am sure of it, for never did man learn the sweetest of lessons with such a fate lmpendincr and unavoidable. I have not dared to tell you lest I dis turb your so much-needed calmness, but I cannot, I cannot bear it in silence. omess yon naie me it cannot pain you to know I love vou. And. oh. Selma. you do not, you surely do not hate me you must love me a little ? ' Then she rose up auieklv. and turned toward him flushing, paling, trembling m tears ana xaugnter, ana cryin softly: "Oh, Mark, Mark, why did you not tell me sooner ? How could you help it ? How could you keep it ? For I love you I love you with my whole heart, and and I am not to die, after all." There is a goodly number of people in this world who will conjecture at once what was done upon such an avowal. There is no one out of heaven, perhaps, who can realize what was felt. When Mark Devine folded her to his passionate, so long-tortured heart, when lie looked into her sweet face, with no keen arrow of rankling fear tearing the depths of his love, there were no words to tell his happiness. For her, she gave one long bigh of perfect content and rested. "You do not ask me what has taken away my certainty of death," she said, looking at him with the fondest eyes ho ever imagined. "Love, it is gone. I care for nothing besides," he answered, stooping to kiss tho soft white lids. "You are mine, and i am content. "Yes, that is like you. But, for my own sake, if not now, then in the future, I wish you to go to Doctor Henson, and ho wilf tell you the truth." "Very well, I will go. To-night, let me think only of the future." Doctor Henson listened to his request next day with a gi'im smile. He was a stern old man, whose fiat no one ever disputed, and he at once admitted he had told Miss Birney six months before that, according to the judgment of man, her days were numbered. "Miss Birney, sir, has been my pa tient for years. Hers is a peculiar or ganization, highly susceptible and ner vous in the extreme. For some time she has been bearing a burden of some description entirely too heavy for her powers. Latent disease of the nerves nothing else came to the surface, and I could see her dying by inches, with no power to save her. I probed the wound in vain. One day she came to me, and asked me in all seriousness and earnestness to tell her the exact truth with regard to herself. She assured me, in her own inimitable manner, that her happiness for time and eternity de pended upon it. Sir, I told the truth, talked plainly to her, and expressed my firm conviction that nothing short of a miracle could save her. That miracle you have wrought. What the difficulty was between you, you know and I do not don't want to know. Returning happiness, with a nature such as hers, means health and life. I see now no reason to apprehend an earlier death than the average. She will always be a frail casket of a strong soul. Take care of her, sir. She is worth it. Good morning." Mark bowed himself out and went to Selma. His questions were answered now. She had loved him "all this time." With tenderness inexpressible. with gratitude, and what evidences of his own love he told her all he knew, and thanked God for it, and for her courage in sending for him. "Mark, I could not help it! And everything else seemed so worthless, so beneath my notice I I could not die without one sight of your dear face at least. But when I came into the room that night, I had not made up my mind to ask you. I feared to do it, and I had another trifling reason ready to cover my request. It was only when you came out in your true colors, dearest and best of men, that I felt I would rather risk and Jose all than let you pass away from me when I might hold yon. When I found I was to live, I suffered! That made me seem cold. I did not know you felt more than pity for me, and I dreaded your thinking oh, I don't know what some sort of ma neuvering ; and that I am incapable of, I am sure." "It was the desperation of a forlorn hope, my darling, and it met with its reward. Purity, truth, sincerity such as yours, could not but win when tho outer barriers of conventionalities were surmounted. But for your courage I would never have known the depths of my own heart, or the priceless sweet ness of yours. If women risked more fearlessly they would gain more, and men would have cause to bless them as I do you." He was wrong. Let no woman trv Selma Birney's plan who has not her magic power. There must be purity unshadowed, truth unvailcd, sincerity unflinching, added to grace of mind, strength of passion, and the higher arts of a cultivated manner, and perfect toilets, to carry one successfully through such an ordeal. But any woman may labor to acquire these things, which are the basis of conquest, and in proportion as she labors will she find her full and sweet reward. Tlio Levers of Hie Mississippi. In Louisiana the levee system is of comparative antiquity, having had its beginning in the earlier years of the eighteenth century, and the embank ments long ago came under the juris diction of local and State government and assumed the dignity of public works. In Mississippi and Arkansas, however, the reclamation of the swamp was an enterprise of much more modern date, having its origin almost within memory of persons now living, and at first and, indeed, for a long time it was exploited solely by individual effort. The earlier settlements on the river between Memphis and Yicksburg generally wood-yards with small appur tenant corn-fields were made upon un usually high spots, which, although really formed by antecedent inundation, obtained, absurdly enough, the reputa tion of being "above overflow," because, for a number of years, they had not been actually submerged. They were prized accordingly, and the corn-fields of the wood-choppers were gradually trans formed into cotton plantations, at first, of course, of very limited dimensions. Similar elevated spots were sought out and subjected to culture, and, before any leveeing operations had been at tempted, the river bank on both sides was dotted with settlements of pioneer planters, who sought to utilize the fertile soil by cultivation. A very few years, however, sufficed to demonstrate the fallacy of the "above-overflow" pretension; the planter's mind relin quished the delusion that land should be high, it was sufficient that it should bo dry, and the proprietors deemed it expedient to fortify against their com mon enemy. The water-marks left by tho flood upon trees, stumps, and fence's were as plain as paint ; these indicated tho level of the water and supplied the want of engineering science." A make shift levee of primitive style was con structed, very near the river bank, bo cause less land was thereby thrown out, and because the cround is always highest upon the marcin of the river. sloping thence inland. As the planta tions increased in number and approxi mated each other, the principle of co operation appeared ; levees were built across unoccupied lands until there were disconnected strings ten, twelve, or fifteen miles long. The construction of these was far from satisfactory. The operatives were generally the plantation negroes. At that time the Irish ditchers and levee builders had scarcely made their appearance in the country. The colored people are not usually distin guished for their skill in the use of the spade, and cannot at all compete with the Hibernian. Some years there was high water, carrying dismay to the planter's heart ; some vears there was low water, inspiring confidence and security ; occasionally there was no "water" at all the river did not etet out of its banks, and was therefore held in contempt. In 1844, however, the Mis sissippi, having apparently lost all patience with this persistent intrusion upon its domains, "spread itself," to uso a vulgarism singularly descriptive of the operation, and treated its unbidden guests to a first-class "big overflow," the like of which had not been seen since 1828. The river rose eaily and went down late : it overflowed the w hole country, and filled up the entire swamp ; ruined all the levees, great and small ; remained at or near high-water mark week after week and month after month until late in July, and did not finally retire within its banks until nearly the middle of August. Scribnei-'s Magazine. Wolves, I have seen wolves show more bold ness in the pursuit of dogs their favorite food, according to my experience than on any other occasion. Setters and retrievers are Lequently snapped up within a hundred yards of the sportsman, and in broad daylight, when shooting in thick forest; and wolves will prowl round the villages at night, and come right into small towns after howling puppies. The peasants seldom show fear of them, and an old woman I knew ran out once, in the lightest of garments, on a bitterly cold night, only armed with a piece of tin and a stick with which she struck it, shouting loudly to drive off three marau ders who howled under her window, whither they'had come in the hopes of finding her dogs outside. Some watch dogs, however, know their enemies, and defend themselves most bravely ; and I saw a big mongrel Newfoundland that showed honorable scars gained in sangui narylfights with wolves. One fine morn ing I met a young wolf trotting down the high road in suoh a peaceful, inoffen sive manner that 1 took him for a large dog, and so lost my chance of a shot by not getting behind coveit in time. As between a toy pistol and a Gat ling gun, give us the Gatling gua It is the safest as a parlor ornament. New Havm Register, 1881. for the ladies. A Sultnna'a IHnrrlngr. The following description of the re cent marriage of Naile sultana, ono of the two imperial brides, was furnished to the London Standard by an English lady who was an invited guest; On our arrival at the house, a largo building situated up a steep, narrow street not far from Dolma Baghtcho palace, we were ushered by half u dozen eunuchs through an ants-room in which lounged a few atterdants, into a fine apartment crowded with slaves. There we were requested to wait, ns tho Sultana had not yet completed her toilet, coffee and cigarettes being placed before us to while away the time. We were just be ginning to tire of watching the throng, when the stir without proclaimed the coming of the bridegroom, a man of twenty-four years of age, short and in clined to stoutness, but not wanting in a certain comeliness. Naile Sultana had herself chosen him at the Friday's sclamlik. This power of selecting a husband, by inspection, as it were, is a privilege of princesses of the house of Othman, and is carried to such on ex tent that even if the favored gentleman already posseses a wife he must divorce her and w ed the sultana. Cases of this kind are rare; but one at least has oc curred during the latter half of the present century, when an officer was compelled, much against his will, to comply w ith the custom. Being rich, however, he sought consolation in keep ing his discarded love m a separate es tablishment, a proceeding which is sup posed never to have reached the ears of his royal partner. In the present in stance, on tho contrary, Mehemet Bey was quite ready to embrace the chance which fortune offered Lim. Toor and without interest, a simple aide-de-camp uncertain of promotion, ho suddenly finds himself the husband of his sov ereign's sister, a general and highnets to boot. His appearance was the signal for a frantic rush, to which he re sponded by scattering quantities of sil ver piasters (in olden days they won!d have been golden liras) among tho slaves. The bridegroom having passed into the sultana's presence tho ceremony of marriage was immediately performed, but only witnessed by the sultana's mother. It merely consisted in the Imam tying th'c-ra together with a ropn atid declaring tliem man and wife. Directly this was over, Mehemet Pacha escapod by a side entrance to avoid being mobbed and buffeted, according to tht com-uon practice of the slaves, who must have been appeased by unlimited bucksheesh. As soon as the doors were thrown open the whole mob poured belter skelter into the inner chamber, where the bride was sitting in state, with a sister by her side. All tho slaves, and also the few Armenian ladies who had been invited, bent humbly down and kissed tho hem of her garment, but with us she shook hands without rising, and motioned us to chairs very near her. A fail", sweet faced woman of some twenty-two sum mers is Naile Sultana. She was dressed iu a loose-fitting Turkish robe of rose colored silk, slashed with gold, while a long white gauze vail, likewise em broidered with gold, drooped down from behind the little cap that sur mounted her tightly drawn -up hair. On her hands and bosom sparkled mag nificent diamonds, ner single-bultcn gloves had burst in fusteninir. and alto gether her toilet was far less perfect and rich than we had expected. Through out there have been no amusements be yond a band playing European music in the court-yard. The whole affair wu a confession of the economy now neces sarily reigning at the palace. Fashion Notes. Dresses of tinted mull, over v.vini'f.siuo slips of palo pink, light blup, or crcain wniie uuusip, aie sryiisu ana uccoming. A sunshade entirelv covered with feathers is tho In tost. fnnv. T.IHi.m- unn. cock or canary plumage is" used to make When little girls serve as bridemaida there is a pretty English fashion of al lowing them to carry an armful of flow ers instead of a set bouqutt. A pretty way of trimminur a child's dress is to have a cascade of laco and ribbon running from the left shoulder to the right side of the skirt, ending there in a large bow. Jersey bodices of ciel-blue, rose color or mauve-tinted silk stockinet, are worn with white surah skirts trimmed with tinted Spanish lace, corresponding with the color of the Jersey. When lace shawls are used for over- skirts this season they are bordered with a rather scant lace ruille, an.l are draped in the back with loops of the stuff composing the dress skirt, the point falling in front to make an apron. A new shape in morning caps is in the exactt style of the headdresses worn by the Neapolitan peasant girls, and another shape called the "Kussian" cap, is made of white surah, with bayadere stripes across the fabric in bright colors of green, gold and scarlet. Stylish and inexpensive walking dresses are made by adding a plain i'-'toJ ikirt of black satin to a Jersey bodice. A simple scarf of the satin ii uruped over the skirt, and a bhoulder cape of the same fabric, relieves the plain appearance of the bodice. Ombre weddings are actually in order: that is, the bride wears of course the whitest of loses ; arid then, out of six bridemaids, the smallest or the young est wears pale pink rosebuds, and the tallest or the eldest wears the deepest crimson roses, while the four interme diates shade upward. This novel effect is repeated in flowers of other color and loriu. Skirt drapery has become a matter of exceeding complication, and requires almost as much adjustment after it is put on as it receives before leaving the dressmakers hands. In theory one has only to fasten the skirt belt and walk forth with each puff and loop hanging as it should, but the woman w ho enter tains this theory is not a spectacle for the contemplation of Hose on pleasure bent.- , f NO. 21. Advertise, Ye men of business, step this way, Please notice what I have to sayj 'Tis Bimply this I would advise: Do not forget to advertise. The efforts of an honest man, When mado according to this plan, Can scarcely fail success to bring, And wealth will be a cortain tiling. flow is it with tho stingy knave I Desirous all his cash to save; Ho gains no wealth, and wins no prias, Because ho does not advertise f Suppose the cost seems rather high, -Twill surely pay you by and by, And all tho world w ill soon despise Tlio man who does not advertise. Why should you wait ? It will not pay j So send your orders right away Straight to this sheet, where friendly eyes Await to see you advertise. This sheet, my friends, is just the thing; Success it cannot fail to bring. If yon would be admitted wise, Iu this sheet's columns advertise 1 HUMOROUS. Spell pea soup wi'h three letters S-O-U pea soup. Boston Transcript According to tho Waterloo Observer love is so heavy that it sometimes break down the gate. At this season of the year most every man on his way to the barber shop is looking for a short cut. "'Tis the last rows cf summer," as the farmer said, when he finished plow ing his corn. New York Dispatch. Astronomer Proctor says the world will last 60,000,000 years yet. That will do. Any man w ho demands more is a hog. Medical men say no benefit is derived from seasickness. It will continue to bo fashionable, however. New Orleans Picayune. Two or three hairs properly arranged on a plate of butter will save it longer and make it go farther than eight pounds of oleomargarine. Binghamlon Repub lican. It takes 800 full-blown roses to make a tablcspoonful of perfume, while ten cents' worth of cooked onions will scent a whole neighborhood. Detroit Free Press. " I think the goose has the advantage of you," said the landlady to an inex pert boarder who w as carving. " Guiss ho has mum ia tge," was the wither ing retort. The little ones v ill keep on saying things. Six-year-old Mabel is industri ously engaged in "cleaning out" a pre serve jar which her mother had just emptied. Four-year-old Bobby looks at her for a while and then blurts out: " Say, sis don't you wish you could turn it inside out, so's ; ou could lick it?" "You sit cn your horse like a butcher," said a pert young officer, who happened to be of royal blood, to a veteran general, who was somewhat bent from age. " It is highly probable," responded the old warrior, with a grim smile, "it is because all my life I've been leading young calves to the slaughter." Now whoa ! my gallant bicyclo ! 3Iy nk-Ulc-platcd steed ! Thou'rt cleaner than an icicle, Thou art of noblo breed ! They talk of Foxhall, Iroquois, And Luke, the Blackburn nag; It's stalo and ancient still!, my boy, A jockey's maudlin gag. Now fly, my galliint fjlitterer! No spoke ol thine be seen ! Weil see who shall be twitti rer When halts my courser keen ! LuuinciUt L'ottriir-Journal. Xo Xecd to Drown. Dr. Henry MacCormac, of Belfast, Ire land, writes that it is not at all neces sary or ineitable that a person knowing nothing of the art of swimming should bo drowned if ho depends simply and entirely on tho powers for self-preservation with which nature has endowed him. The pith of the Doctor's remarks is contained in the following paragraph : "When one of tho inferior animals takes the water, falls, or is thrown in, it in stantly begins to walk as it does when out of the water. But when a man who cannot "swim" falls into the water, he makes a few spasmodic struggles, throws up his arms, and drowns. The brute, on the other hand, treads water, remains on the surface, and is virtually insub mergeable. In order then to escape drowning it is only necessary to do as the brute does, and that is to tread or walk the water. The brute has no ad vantage in regard of his relative weight, in respect of the water, over man ; and yet the man perishes while the brute lives. Nevertheless, any man, any wo man, any child, who can walk on the land may also walk in the water just as readily as the animal does, and that without any prior instructions or drill ing whatever. Throw a dog into the water, and he treads or walks the water instantly, and there is no imaginable reason why a human being under like circumstances should not do as the dog does. The brute, indeed, walks in the water instinctively, whereas man has to bo told." Durability of 'Umber. As showing the durability of timber, the fact is cited that the piles of a bridge built by Trojan were found, af ter having been driven some sixteen hundred years, to be petrified four inches, the rest of the wood being in its ordinary condition. The elm piles under the piers of London bridge have been in use more than seven hundred years, and are not yet materially de cayed, and, beneath tho foundation of Savoy Place, Loudon, oak, elm, beech and chestnut piles and planks were found in a state of perfect preservation, after having been there for six hundred and fifty years. Again, while taking down the walls of Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England, there was found in the middle of a thick stone wall a timber curb which had been inclosed for seven hundred years ; and some timber on a old bridge was discovered while digging for the foundations of a house at Wind sor which must have been placed there prior to the year 1396,