i - v j B, F. BOHWEIER, THE OON8TITUTION-THE UNION-AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and ProprWtor YOL. XLVU. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 12. 1893 NO. 17. COMFORTING EASTtR BELLS. T HELEN 2VEHT301 SMITE. Ivft is the contort that the chimes An" throbbing dn upon the ear. Id pu'sing brat ul wordless rhvmes I ili-aim death. Human breath, Jov ami palu. Nautili Is vain. For Christ is rlseul Heaven u near I If sorrows conie, they alo go; If Jeivs must fly. they reappear. Mill j.U.i.i.ine bells swing to and fro I.Ue aud death. Hum m breath. Joy and pain. Naught is Talu. For Christ is ris.ii ! Ueaveu Is near! Then ring for ny. ye Eister bells. That l ure Divine has conquered fear! Iimiiortal hope your rhythm tell. Life and Ue.itii, Human breath, and i .iln. Naught is vain. For I'brUi Is risen ! 11. aven is near! Bazar. AN EASTER WEDDING. BY MARGARET SPENCER. VTe wero boarding. Everybody hoarded in Washington in those day,I think, except the President, the Cabi net and the foreign ministers. Our landlady win u nestle, quiet woman, from the West, without the marked characttristcs of the North or South. See nans widow, and with the very tfliciout help of her two daugh ters, (-he made in all happy and com fortable, nnd that for a Washington jOMrdiu-house in the sixties, was miirked praise. V e were a large family. We had all types of v. inter boarders. Senators ana niemuers wiiu lamilies occupying "the fr-t llui.rt;" senators and mem bers without families, in the regubition "larfre front chambers," and so on, to the voting clerk in the ten foot hall room. We had diamonds and "soci ety;" we had plain hur-tworiiing peo ple, and people ho came to enjoy the winter roses and jasmines of our beau tiful capiti.1. Next Sunday would be E ister. Al ready our cliil.lren had packed away in dainty beds of cotton, dozens cf ej.'g8 all tcarlet, and blue and p old, for Easter Monday and the eg rolliug on the Prondent's grounds. But we were to bava u wediling on Ea-ter Sunday! A weddiuij from our own family! "Little Lmilv," we called her, the youngest daughter of onr landlady, had been fi r three jears engaged to Major Davis, of a Western regi ment, but until this winter he had been far from the capital, and in active and dangerous service. In .lannary his rettimeut us ordered to Fairfax Court t House, ouly a short nistance from Washington, anil, in all probability their Gciieia! thoneht, would remain until Jue. Easier t-uuday was to be the wediling day. Emily was t ny.fair, and had "eyes of the sky." Her hair was gold like our little children's an I bhe filled our Louse with gladness aud tunhhine. All. worldly prudence seemed to melt an ay in our love for her; and we has tened the marriage simply because well because of that incomprehensible something, which shadowed the blue eyes sometimes, and gave to little Emily, an added patience and gentle ness, as she went about her work. She had waited long and cheerfully, had borne burdens, and crowded small economies and s If-deniais into years of girlish life; had followed in her heart her brave lover through peril and death, marches and untold hnrd ships, and given to us only sunshine and service. .-he never posed as a I ero ine, but siniply looked duty in the face and loved t e Muster. Saturday our house was transformed into a beautiful bower of stars, wreaths, crosses and crowns in all btages of construction. Senator Wood had tent down from the Congressional garden, boxes of lilies and roses; the "members had ordered palms nnd fernB, while Tom, Joe. and tue younger members of the household contributed violets, and wreaths of green. Nothing conld be too lovely for our little maid, fcniily. The ceremony was to be just at tue close of tne evening service in the church near by. Our palms and lilies had been carried over the great white cross of azaleas and lilies of the val ey, air. ady hung on the gray church wa!l pint behind the pnl pit. .Nothing remained to be done but bang the solt green pine over the pur- lor windows, ami arrange our flowers for Easter morniLT in our rooms. "A telegram lor Mjor Davis." After a little questioning, he road it aloud "We march South at nine on Sunday morning. Heport for duty at Fairfax Court Hous." We looked at one another; the Major put the little slip of paper in his Docket, turned to J- milv and said in a queer, choking way, "Come, we will talk it over. Oi e great wave of color swept over her face, and then went back, till her lips looked white and cold. After they were gone we all talked at oncel "They ought to bo married, any how," sai.l Tom and all the girls. "They must be married on Easter mid day. Look at all onr flowers, and'" "Yes," added the old Senator, "bad luok to postpone a wt ddiug." The Major went to the telegraph office, and little E.mily sa' pale and cold in her room, alone. She wanted to think. She had received a bio. The beautiful Easter day. It was to morrow, and the Sabbath day. All the past week she had been sinking 6oftly to herself the littic English carol: "Bright Easter skies: futr Faster skiesl Our I.o-d I risen, we too f-h til rtee. Green Eater fiel lsl lair Easier Melds) I'luek lillos rare an.i lopes sweet, And threw the pain of Jehus' feet." It had looked so full of joy, and she had been so glad. We sat abont in idle groups. The :lock on the mantel struck eleven. The members came in, after an evening ses sion of Congress. "Just looked in to lee if everything was ready." Sit down, boy,' the Senator said 'The Speaker will soon call the House to order. Ah! here comes the bride; 3on'. dare say no, Emily, "But, father." sai.l Dolly, "it isn't Fraily. Oh dear I I'm just going to throw my Easter bonnet into the fire! No wedding, and all onr waste of time ind money I" "Holly," drily remarked her smiling 'ather, "rather than sacrifice that bon aet, suppose yon drop it into the mis iionary box to-morrow." "What sort of a service to-morrow!" iighcd Tom. "It will take us all d; v :o comfort Emily!" o it won t, Tom! and a sweet, le r voice said, "lou are all invited to dp preseti t at the marriage of -of " Miouts and cheers tilled the house. J hat's good! Hurrah for the Major! ow that is sensible!" The Senator forgot circumspection; e j list lifted little Emil. off the carpet C j anJ kksed ner three times! and that was the result of the "talk," ;HU, -Tnoiner,- the "Major," and uiny. me goo a pastor had agreed, and a "sunrise service" in the ohurob aorois the way. onr wnrlriinw. At daylight we were dressed in onr oun iay Dest. Little Emily stood io the parlor, looking fair and sweet in uer pure wmte gown. Lilies of the valley fattened her veil, and Easter uueswuc their long stems, drooped irom her hands. She joined her lover at the door, and their carriage drove wujr wj mo cuaren. Somehow the story was out and friends were already there. The or ganist was nlavinc Th. ... broke the stillness of the beautiful Sab bath morning. The church bells for eariy service In many churches had be gun to drop their music, here and there, over the city. Little sparrows twittered in the trees and in the old ivy as it clnng to the walls of the church. We thought as we walked along in the morning light, of the lonely woman, who. long years before in Jerusalem sought the sepulchre to see where they had laid Him. The sacred emblems of this glorioni Eater day hang on the walls. Th white lilies stood in a large bowl on th table, and we whispered, "It is like thr blind poet's verses: . lin. n. v gjn en full of lllletl White as Prace and very tallt In your mitst my heart so still Is. it could hear Hie le ist leaf fall.'" The flowers filled the air with frag rance, sweet as the alabaster box ol precious ointment which was poured on the Savior's feet. The little wed ding party walked down the aisle, while the organ played, and the sun rose and the birds sang, np from the eastern skv. The Major looked, somehow, a though the story of years, the secret ol pain and separation, the terrors of buttle and death must be told in thit one grand Easter song: "The Lord i. risen to-day 1" and into His hands we commit our love, onr liven! He looked into the eyes of the minister and re sponded to the service like one in a dream. L ttle Emily rested the bunch of lilies across their clasped hands, and her golden hair grew radient as the sunrise fell across her head; she looked upward toward the white cross of flow ers aud the purple violets before her, aud smiled like one of the Marys whr had seen her riven Lord. As they walked up the aisle, we fol lowed, with our impromptu choir. The sun touched all our lilies with glory, and we went out of Qod's house, "fill. d with peace." An hour we spent at breakfast witl attempts at joytulness. The horses came tramping to the door. The or derly, with bat in hand, awaited his officer's movements. We said good bye, and God go with you, and at the last our little Emily stood in the door way, with her good-byes. No tears.no sigtis she sent her soldier off to battle maybe to death, with such a smile as makes men strong! which steadies the arm, and puts courage in the soul! The Major turned his faoe backward so long as he could see the little figure in the doorway. A shadow fell over our Easter Sun day. We attempted to be heroio! We chose exhilarating topics. Alas, they tell lifeless. The Senator said bravely, "Emily, child, you are a preoious woman!" After which rather foolish speech be mumbled something, took his hat and walked up the street. Our boarding-house was quite still that Sunday. Aud this was in April. Major Davi and his command went Southward fihtiu' all the av. Through all the summer's heat, Emily staid at home watehiug reports of the battles. The Mnjur was wounded, and for three months lay in a hospital in Memphis, lean. His wife went to him, and nursed him back to health. In December, just as we gathered in the old place for another winter, she returned to ns radiant with joy; the .Major was well, and able to join bis regiment. Another year she waited for him, and the war was over. He came home a Colonel, and I won der how many of the good people who are often so beantifnlly entertained by the fair-faced little lady tie Colonel's wife ever knew that to her "the great est thing in the world" was love; how it was crowned and glorified by self sacrifice and pain, oue Easter Sunday long ago! and how the bells rang, and the sunrise came into their he.irts, and th house of Ood blossomed with Easter lilies, and she sent her bnsband into the face of death, with the gladdest of all songs on earth! "Christ, our Lord, is risen to-day." Union Signal. THE EMPIRE HAT. Ner-Stri Hut and Old-Styl. Streamer M:tke a Pleasing Combination. A new stylo of hat with an old style of streamer has come Into lash ion, and it must be conceded that the T IS EMPIRE RAT. velvet streamer and Empire hat har monize. The Empire hat, shown in our illustration, is made of yellow Etruscan straw, with the crown and edge of black chip. The inside of the flaring brim Is covered with black straw lace, which shows a suggestion of yellow beneath. The edge of this brim is finished w ith yellow Etruscan straw in a lancy pattern. Shaded roses in ombre tints nestle against the brim and rest their petals on the hair. Toward the front la a large Alsatian bow of many loops, com posed of wide ombre ribbon, which reveals blended shades of old rose, black, cream and dull blue. Above the loops of ribbon Is a wavy coronet of black ostrich tips. The black velvet streamer starts from be neath the petals of a rose at the left side. It hangs gracefully and Is caught on the dresa with another roae. . -- Lot flayer loses by being tested. COOKINO SCHOOL AT THE FA IK. MISS XTTTjIETTE CORSON WIA CONDUCT IT WHAT BHB HAS AOCOMPLISHBD. The Empire State enjoys the dis tinction of having originated and car ried to the point of success three im portant branches of the eiueation of women, viz: training schools for nurs es, the kitchen garden, which is household aeienoe applied to the kin dergarten system, and the organization of cooking schools and diet kitchens npon a scientific basis. Last Jnne Mrs. Potter Palmer wrote m the few Tork State Board of Wo men Managers of tne World's Colum bian Exposition in regard to the ex hibit whioh would be made at the World's Fair by the Committee on L teratnre and Education, particu larly urging the importance of making an adequate exhibit of the progress and interest of cooking schools and training schools for nnrses. The fol lowing extract from her letter shows her interest in the subject: "Of the two, 1 should much rather have a cooking school than an exhibit f trained nnrses from New York, as that will be shown from many States nd countries probably, but no one so far has undertaken that most practical and useful of all things.-the Cooking School Exhibit." Mrs. J. S. T. St'anaban, second vice president of the lioard, communicated Mrs. Palmer's re quest to Miss Corson, and after dne consultation, the Ex ecutive Comniit'ee of JNew York State in full Board meeting, placed the or ganization and management of the ex hibit under Miss Corson's control, conferring to her full power to act in all matters appertaining to the exhibit. '1 his does not merely consist of a series of lectures on cooking; New York in tends to show the scope and practical nseftilnness of the work, which was originated by Miss Corson. Therefore the exhibit in addition to lectures on cookery. New York State intends to show the ji-ope and practical nsefnlness of this work, which was originated by Miss Corson. Therefore the exhibit, in ad dition to lectures in cookery, includes the practical treatment of general food supplies and sanitary and dietetie specialties for invalids and children. It is also open to the exhibition of any article or substance used by house keepers or suitable for their nse, and as household utensils and fittings, labor saving devices, publications on honsebold ecienoes aud domestic econ omy, household sanitation and sanitary dietetics: in short the exhibit will ocv. r th t entire field of Miss Corson's work in .ii t , ' i i , ?-'L"e!' APpe-rta'ni.n.g """f.!0 I1 bor and the care of the family in health and sickness, as well as the practical training of women and men in all the branches of domestic and sanitary knowledge. New York at first applied for space for the exhibit in the Liberal Arts Building, but abandoned this application at the express desire of Mrs. Potter Palmer to have the exhibit placed in the Women's Building. This exhibit whatever it is it w ill be a matter of pride to New York and satis faction to the entire country, because Miss Corson's work is anything but local. She has lectured and titnght in more than fifty of onr larger cities, not con lining her instructions to cooking alone, bnt treating with practical skill aud common-sense judgment all those problems that confront the wife and mother in her daily life. In 1879 Mr. J. Ormund Wilson, the Superintendent of the public sohools at Washington, D. C, ai ranged for the attendance of the pupils of the Washington Normal Sohool at the les sons on cooking given by Miss Corson in that city. When the question was first mooted of adding instruction in cooking to the subjects pursued in the public schools in 187 J, the Protestant Board of School Commissioners of Montreal, Canada, called Miss Corson to make the practical demontratious whioh shonld decide the feasibility and usefulness of this addition to the work of the pnblie schools. In 1883 a special committee from Oakland, CaL, arranged some demon stration lessons in cookery in the chemistry room of the Oakland High School, andchese workers lroni among the pupils who had no experience in domestic work. Miss f'orson directed the preparation of a numler of funda mental dishes of cookery by the pupils, the object being the practical test of tue usefulness of the insruction and the feasibility of combinding it with their school work. The result of these experimental les sons was reported favorably by the chairman of tue committee, Mr. J. II. Jordan, by the principal of the hih sohool, the city school superintendent and a majority of the Board of Educa tion. The result was a series of les sons subsequently given successfully by a teacher trained by Miss Corson. In 1884, while Miss Cordon was de livering a course of instructions at Baltimore, Md., a committee of the Board -f Education attended in order to decide npon the possibility of intro ducing cooking into the Baltimore sys tem of public instruction. In 1886 the Publio Education Association, a com mittee from the Normal School and several members of the Bord of Educa tion, of Philadelphia, invited Miss Cor son to make a practical cooking dem onstration in the chemistry room of the Normal SchooL Thertsultof sev eral lessons which were given before the committees and other representa tives of Philadelphia educational in terests, was the introduction of cook ery as one of the departments of public instruction. Miss Corson is in New York, busily engaged in preparing for her extensive work at tha Exposition. With all she has thus far accomplished she is not content, bnt with untiring zeal keeps on in the chosen work of her life time. Railroad on Ice. Middle-aged Marylandcrs recall th. fact that the Philadelphia, Wilming ton and Baltimore Railroad crossed the Susquehanna at Havre de Grace on the ice In February, 1852. In those days the river was not bridged at that point, and the old steamboat Maryland carried the trains across on her deck. The river froze very thick In February, 1852, aud tracks were laid upon the ice, upon which trains croased for several davs. Poor Thing! A pet doe, It Is said, recently died it Elkton, Ky., from licking his mis 'ress' cheek. She painted, and the log died of poison. 1. That Alir Paris actresses wear paper lace. Hot milk Is a simple means of com fort, and is most reviving to on who i fatigued by over-exertion. A DEL8ARTEAN PLEA. Dear Mr. CtlHrta, Since you've taught us that art I replace Mother Nature's injunctions. Ana twm u. enew , What we really should do With onr various phy ileal functions. We beg yoa will add ' To the Icons we've had stoat walking, and bretlnt(, and poeinc Othor hints that will make All our dolnes pwtake Of (race more perfection disclosing. We'd be taught. U yon please. How to gracefully sneeze. Bow to snore in symmetrical manner How to get out of bed, Bow to drop when we tread On the cuticle of a banana; How to smell, how to wink. How to chew, how to drink. How snbllmely to .hake an a.h-pifter; How to step on a tack. How to get in a hack Bow to toy wttb a heated stove-lifter) Hew to hiccough with ease. How to irroan. how to wheeze. Bow to spank a lunht-br.wlini! r.hulon In abort, how to mend The ml.takes that our friend, Puma Nature, mixed in our creation. -Koston Courier. NIAGARA IN WINTER BT HELEN EVEBTSON SMITH. No pei son has ever succeeded in so describing the Falls of Niagara that one who has never seen them ean form an adequate idea of either their beanty, their force or their immensity. No pictures, whether painted by the hand of man, or that magic artist, the Sun, convey any conception oi Niagara s "Contented ijo you really thin K so? size and grandeur. Well, 1 want to be, I try to be, and Perhaps one reason for this is tha. also try to extract the best out of my the thnnder of the waters is lost to ns. surroundings. 1 liko to have some Were Niagara silent, perhaps pictures thing pretty to look at from the win- or words might bring it before ns Bat a silent Niagara would be a pitifnl traveety of itself. Like an organ with broken pipes, its soul would have fled. The migLty.nDendini haste, the height and exteut of the vast body of water, would still be impressive: but without the roar of its thnnder.and the tremble of the smitten earth beneath onr feet, Niagara would have loe t more than halt its power to charm, exalt nd sol emnize the beholder. If at any time it is possible for pic tures to convey a fraction of the grandeur of this world-wonder, it must be in a winter like the past, when the silent chains of frost seem to have, in a measure, fettered its colossal might. During the past two months man) thousands of visitors have songht Msg ara to venture out upon the celebrated Ice Bridge, formed across the river be- low the Fails by the gorging there of the immense masses of ice brought down by the river and over, the Falls from Lake Erie. Upon this Ice Bridge jough and broken, but firm fascinated i waicuers stand lor nonrs, unconscious of cold or bodily discomfort, gazing at the steady down pour of millions npon millions of tons of water, never any more, never any less; lighted by the sun into a thonsand brilliant tints of bepe and joy; or shadowed by clouds into a mass of sullen, gigantio discontent; the restless, roaring dis- content of Nature with the bondage ' ellow light of the sunset sky, made a nuder which she has groaned and : picture I can never, and wish never to travailed for uncounted ages before forget. puny mankind came to tease and vex j "Then in the spring I came over to her with their petty schemes and frivc Oakland to live. I had a nice little lous nothingness. cottage, a small garden filled witn roses Tradition tells us of one who wit j and carnations, daisies and pinks, vio known as the "Hermit of the Falls." I leta.mignonette and other sweet things. He came here as any ODe of ns might come a chance visitor to tarry awhile and then go on his way. But the spell of the place fed npon him. He could not leave it. All life, with its endless charm of mystery, henceforth, for him, lay here and here only. Building his lonely but on one of the smsll islands in the river, he watched the Falls noon and night, summer and winter, for years, until at last the water he loved so well took compassion on him and united him with its-elf. It is said that dnrinar his residence here, there was one winter of terrible, frozen beanty, when the Hermit seemed exalted above his usual condi tion of awe-stricken melancholy, and became as one inspired with a solemn delight. Whether by daylight or moon light, he seemed nnable to remain long away from the gorgeous palace erected by the frozen spray. The great sus pension bridge had not then been built, so he could not have seen the view whioh is here presented to onr readers, of the bridge entrance trans formed by the frozen spray; but, if anything, the sight he enjoyed of ranks of stately evergreens, sentineling the banks under their glittering frost armor, must have been even more be wilderincrly beautiful than this. Everyone who has lived in the corn, try and oh! what a loss it is not to have passed there at least one's early years! will remember the falls of wet snow that occasionally come in very still and comparatively moderate spring weather; when Dot merely the house-tops, fences and ."evergre' trees, but every tiny twig of every tree and bush, every wandering vine, even every festhered stalk of last year's golden rod, left belated in the corner of the snake fence, or spear of bearded grass, or dried tuft of moss npon tha low stone wall, becomes a mould and resting place irom the oold whiteness; making an enchanted realm of fanciful creation pure and wonderful! And then that other marvel of the early sprin g an ice storm when the gentle rain freezes as it falls and clings to every thing it touches; and when the rain ceases and the snn comes forth, behold! we are in a palace of jewels, flashing all aronnd ns an unearthly splendor. The frozen spray of Niagara combines these effects. Freezing as it rises, the spray takes all the shapes of the deli cate frost crystals we see sometimes on frost-decorated window-panes" and Mien piles up in masses npon every ob- j ject within its rea-h; as light as sea- , foam, yet as firm as rock; as pnre as snow, yet flashing like the gates of the New Jerusalem. If N iagara is at all seasons a wonder of the world, in a winter like the past, it becomes a marvel, itself. of heaven Nevada has many rivers, bnt only the Home Magazine. The little inci two, the Colorado and the Owyhee, find dent of Mr. Lincoln and his "generous their way to the lea. All the rest : Tad" adds a pathetic touch of tender either sink in the sands and are lost, or I beauty: flow into tome lake which has no ont- I Everybody may have heard of Easter Jet, being itself a sink for river water. Monday in the White House grounds. This peculiarity of the Nevada geogra- i but not every one has seen with their phy leads many scientists to believe j very own eyes, the wonderful picture, that there mnst be many water basins j "Alice in Wonderland" wonld be snr in southern Nevada and Arizona, where prised. It is a sight to make one love artesian wells wonld yield an abundant ; and bless the great Artist who paints, snpply of good water. The Nevada with no visible hand, the ekies and rains and snows all find a subterranean ' crass, and drives ns the children for outlet. This mnst be to the South, and if it can be discovered and tapped the srnds of Arizona may yet blossom as the rose. THK.Bed.8eai.for the most blue. It gets its name from the fact that portions of it are covered by min nte animalcnlra, whioh dye the surface of the water red where they float, The magie lantern was the invention of Roger Bacon in 1260. MY JPBJEND'S WLNDOW. by iMOGEira a. johnsow. 1 never was more impressed with anything than the contentment shown by little Miss Templeton the other day, as I sat in her eozy sitting-room. She has always been poor, and with a limited income, has an artistic soul that longs for beautiful things, but must content Itself with homely ones, 1 sat sipping my tea, and gazing out across the very dull little street where my friend lives. A row of cottages, all alike, Aid painted a dreary grey, was all that conld be seen from the far out windows. "Turn aronnd and look out the back ay." said my friend, "1 like to look out there best. When I first came here to live, I thought I never had been where the outlook was quite so de pressing, with positively nothing to be seen out of the windows in front, ex cept that row of grey houses; and at the back, only those gloomy cypress trees in that old deserted homestead. Bat after a time was able to pick ont bits of beauty, even in those dark, old trees. See how the light on the outer limbs contrast with the dark shadow, . that lurk in the centre. Notice the clear outline of the sphere-like top, 'against the deep blue of the sky, and 'there at that broken limb sending a shoot straight np, just the counter, part of a young cypress. I am told that a broken limb often does that." dows, bnt vou eee, my dear, being poor, 1 can t navo things as I would like, but must be content with things is they are. "Some years ago, when I first came to California, I lived in San Francisco. I had some basement rooms level with the street, and it did seem very; dis mal, and I was almost hopeless for a time, SDd so lonely! in a strange city, tnd in those dingy rooms. ! "Dnt ont of the front window, be tween the fl ghts of steps tbt led to the upper flats, I could see the deep, dark green of the row of cypress that surrounded one of the city parks, and sbove, -the streaming tops of some gum trees. This wall of greenery was a j great comfort to me. At the close of a clear day the scene ' was really beautiful. Out to the west. beyond the park, the steeples of a little sld-fashioned church showed clear-cut gainst the evening glory; the strong ( tradewind bent the tips of the cypress all one wav. and as a erust shook the ' trees, myriads of blackbirds flew out, hovered, circled about, and then set- Ued back amon the swayina branches. to swarm again at the rush of Hie next swift breeze. j "The tree-tops swaying, leaning, bending in the crisp salt wind; the flock of flitting birds, and the half dozen tiny steeples, with as many col Jen j ;-rosses,all silhouetted against the warm. j all shut in by a cypress hedge. What a factor of California gardening , the ."ypressis! I "There were vacant lots on either I side of my home, smelliDg of the sweet, ! dry herbage in summer and gemmed with tiny lilac stars wheD the rains of '. winter 'set the alfllleri to blooming, j There was a vacant square across the I way, and in its one oak a yellow-vested lark sang all the year; on hot, hazv mornings and after winter rains. And away to the north and west 1 could see the foothills. I enjoyed living there very much. I stayed there for three years, and I presume I should have been there yet, if the man who owned the place had not wanted to live there Kimsolf. "When I was obliged to leave that place, I conld find no house within my means that was anything like what I wanted.and finally moved into a dreary little cottage, with nothing to see in front, but a big, vacant tract, bounded by a row of blue gum trees. In the backyard was a large weeping willow, and I did like to see the swing and sweep of the long, green, lithesome brandies. I rather like gum trees an 1 their pungent odor, although some people consider them coarse dear old exiled giants that they arel I like to watch their scimetar-like leaves stream ont on the breeze like pennons. I often find myself going off on long, im aginary journeys into Australia jour neys that I shonld never undertake were it not for the gum trees,and there are several showing over the tops of those cypresses out back of here, you see. How I have chattered! tase an other cup of tea, my dear?" After a little, I went home thinking how true it is that each one of ns makes or unmakes his own happiness. Ont of a few of the dullest and gloom iest of trees my friend drew happiness and inspiration. EGO KOLLING ON MONDAY. EASTER Onr country is not yet old enough to have very many customs peculiar to j itself, so it is possible the egg rolling I of Easter Monday which is now prac j ticod every year in Washington City and in some of the older towns of Maryland and Delaware, may have originally come from old England along with the first settlers. But we have never seen a mention of the ob- servanoe elsewhere, so we will hope that this curious custom is all onr i own. As probably few persons, not living in the places above referred to, are ' familiar with the practice, we quote ;rom a charming account ol it by Mariraret Spencer, which appeared in life, and color, and inspiration. I Just south of the President's house ; the grounds are velvety knolls, with i little valleys between the small hills. iteSi and chestnuts overshadow the pleasant seats, and on the top of the highest knoll. In their scarlet uniforms, onr Marine Band plays twice a week. The i holiday costumes of the people walking I through the grounds are a perpetual J pleasure, clothed in all the colors of the rainbow, rich masses of shining raiment, against the line of sky and trees; while away to the south rises tha great monument of white, overlooking the historic river. Easter Monday following Snnday at the close of Lent, the world of Wash ington, in good weather, tnrong to the President's grounds. The trees, the air, the sunshine, take on the glory of the children's holiday. Fashionable, "semi-fashionable," (as Elizabeth Stu art Phelps calls some one), and the poor actually poverty-stricken little ones, all, in an artistic senae, are as one. Thousands of children with bas kets, boxes, dishes, tin buckets and paier bags, filled with scarlet, bine, yellow and violet-dyed eggs, spend the the day rolling down the beautiful green hill sides, their pretty balls like a tide of splendor in the sun. Fathers and mothers come to watch them, Gayly-turbaced "mammies," with their pretty carriage loads of prettier freight, under handsome robes and richest wraps, a motly group of white and black, pale yellow and bronze, "Jew and Greek," form an endless procession. On the tip-top of the highest hill, they run aud scramble for the "first start." Very tenderly one or more of the precious eggs are laid out of their beds of wool or cot'on, their nests of purple or fine linen, or the commoner ones of excelsior or paper. In trne American, democratic style, down they go, over the velvet grass of the people's iawn. Swift, swifter, till with screams and shouts from their owners, they pro claim the race finished. iVbf through influence nor political favor, nor be cause of papa's great wealth, but from ftirely natural, honorable motives! )o wn they go, plump into the little valley, or the smooth road, or with a pitiful leap into the cobble-stone gutter. But this is not the time nor the place tor jealousies, anger, nor en vyiugs; there are plenty more eggs in the basket! Jane and Joe, Mary and Sue, all brightness, strength and pur pose, fun and good humor, climb the small hill for another roll, undaunted. They have a funny game, too, called "picking eggs." I've watched them for hours, laughing till i cried. They "dare" one another (I mean the eggs "dare.") Harry sends down a beauty, all gold in the sun. Mary ventures a pale violet; they start at the same time from opposite directions; if the gold ie broken by the violet, Harry has both, and rice versa. Sometimes they lose a dozen, or win as many. They spend the day playing games and resting under the trees nntd the afternoon snn gets low in the west. Poor little dilapidated, tired men and women, with battered, empty baskets. Scraps of eggshells on their very best coats and gowns, the sweet red bps of the tiniest a little yellow, as if the eggs were good for lunch; lost pina and flying collars, bnt blissful faces, laughter, the sweetest in all the world, and enr babies, small and great, turn homeward. Abraham Lincoln and "little Tad" lived in the White House when I first went to the egg rolling. It was a privilege to see and know them to gether, the great, sad-eyed man and his idolized, merry little son. One Easter Monday, Tad was unusually excited. He rushed in and out the dining-room at breakfast time, np and down the stairs to the big kitchen, until his mother exclaimed: "Tad, what are you doing? Why don't yon finish your breakfast and let your father alone a minute?" Bare-headed, breathless and eager, he ran in for the last time, shouting: "See, father! See these beau-tiful eggs cook has dyed for mel Ob, bnt they are beauties!" 'In a large, flat, willow basket, on the whitest cotton, lay the most gorgeous treasures. Mr. Lincoln took one of the shining things in his big, brown hand, and said, with a smile: "My son, have you left any for rations? Uncle Sam's chickens will have to be spry this week, I'm afraid. " "But, father, here's only two dozen I one for me and one for Tommy. Yen know the lame boy; he's spending the day with me, and Isaao has carried ont yonr big arm-chair for him to sit in tinder the trees, and you know he can roll his eggs just as well as any boy." Tad's father hod a wonderful smile. All the world talks about it He laid his hand always, when talking, on the head of his 'small boy, with a mute, odd caress in his long fingers, and life of love in his smile of approval. "Oh, Lawd, dar he cum! dar is Mass'r Linkum! May de good Lawd cotch my bref clar away befo I done stop tellin of his goodness to dese yeer people," shonted nncle Dick, who, with crowds of "bredderin" had already gathered by the little railing that separated the steps from the pub lio grounds. They came to see the pretty children roll eggs, and to catch glimpses of ".Mass'r Liuknm," who fol lowed Tad for a moment down the walk "to speak to Tommy and see the start." Tad tugged at his father's a'seve nntil the big chair was reached, and blue-eyed, shining-eyed, happy Tom had received a gentle good-morn-irg, and a cordial hand-shake, "from father." Tommy's father was killed in battle one year before. He came from Illinois, and tne poor young wife with this lit tle lame boy, called to see Mr. Linooln; she was given a position in the Treas ury Department, and Tad, bright, gen erous Tad, became his best friend and comrade. According to promise, Mr. Lincoln leaned from time to time out of his up per window, bowing to the crowds of upturned faces, responding to Tad's shouts and cheers, the waving of Tom my's chrntch in the air, and the dart ing, flashing of the gold and scarlet balls on the mossy hills. The two boys lunched together in stale. Isaao laid a small table on the south piazza, and carried Tommy np the stone stops, and, as the snn was shining a dear benediction over the happy children, the sweet, warm air was growing chill with the setting snn across the strong, bright colors of the sky. Tad shouted np the stairway: "Oh, father! did you ever see such a jolly Easter Monday? Bnch loads of fnn, and Tommy jnst laughed every minute! and his eggs picked all of mine Out three 1" How long ago and both little com rades are "risen with Christ" in Heaven. Both little hearts went home one Easter month, and their fathers welcomed them. Easter lilies, tall and fair, have blossomed for them these many years on earth; bnt our heavenly lilies bloom where they have no need of the sur, for "God is there." Bktck Van Clove and his wife nave bad trouble. Gryce Already! What was the cause? Brvce She, found the picture of another woman la bis watch! Gryce Of course! There's always a woman In the case. A RESURRECTION POEM. BT ELIZABETH BLLL.RD. ASTIR EVE. O world Ivtnz black In the shadow Of the Cross where our Lord was slain. O Syrian land, dark and sinful I What morrow can brine tliee again Peace and light. Or blooming of flowers. Or song, of birds In their bowers To that silent garden's cloom, Where, through the awful night, With its slow-moving hour.. Thy promised King lies dead? By thee HI. life-blood rhedl Peadt In the rock-hewn tombf The Me.slah, promised long, Whose Kingdom was surely to be Of joy and peace, said the song. His blood on thy cuilty head! His dear blood shed for rhee! Oeadt In the rock sealed tomb. Dead I dead I dead! In the hopeless, rock-sealed tomb I Miserere, miserere. Miserere. Domlne! II. EASTER MOKK. What new dawn lights to rubies the rosesf What new song breaks the hush of the hours. When alone, before Mary's coming. Christ walks with the birds and the flowersT Alone In I be blessed gardeu. With His happv. sinless tilings, .waiting the f.iithful one's co ning, Walks the uroml'.ed King of Kingsl Pardon and peace In the garden. Now radiantly abloom ; Life over Death victorious! Love lighting all the gloom! The dawning on earth of the Kingdom. That lu Joy and peace shall be; The Lord of Life has risen I Where. O grave, now thy victory? The living Lord has arisen. And angels guard the tomb. Risen! risen 1 risen! The Flower of the Centuries in bloom I Benedlclte, benediclte. Omnia opera Domini! III. EA9TEB DAT. What new joy thrills thro' griefs of the cen turies Yet unborn, and gilds deathways untrod With the love-light that comforted Mary When she worshipped her lArd aud her (loi. railing prone at His leet in the gaiuen. As she fled Irom the empty tomb. To seek Him. sorrowing and weeping, Noting nauuht of the radiant bloom! Pardon and peace in the garden. Through the perfect atonement made Bv our Load, for nil sinning repented: And "Haill" -Mary!" "lie not alraid!1 hweet greeting through her to the ages. To each faithful and heartbroken one. Gives this King long foretold by the sages. Who relEii now on earth h is begun. Life over Death victorious! Boiled forever away I the stone That would seal us in Death's hopeless prison ! The Lord of Life ha9 arisen Who died our sins to atone! The Living l-otd has arisen. And pleads evermore by the Throne. Living! living! loving! Be pleios for us by the 1 hron! Gloria WW. gloria tlbl. fllorla tibl, Domine! Ilariier'i Bazar . SCIENTIFIC WAIFS Illuminated walking sticks are among the latest applications of eleo tncity. A small incandescent lamp u concealed in the head of a cane, and can be ignited by a spring. The largest barometer yet made has been put in working order at the St. Jacques tower in Paris. It is 41 fee five inches high. The first elect rio telegraph line was laid in Switzerland by Lesage, in 1782; the Morse transmitter was invented in 1837. The popular idea that water is pnri fled by freezing has been again dis proved by recent careful experiments, which show that the average amount of impurity retained by the ice is .14.3 per cent, of organic matter, and 21.2 per cent, of inorganic matter. As or ganic matter is the more objectionable of the two, the case is worse than was formerly supposed. Nickel is a modern metal. It wa. not In nse nor known of till 1715. It has now largely taken the place of sil ver in plated ware, and as an alloy with steel it is superior to any other metal, for it is net only non-corrodible itself, bnt it transfers the same quality to iteel. Experiments made by a Hungariai physician on animals seem to show that permanganate of potash acts as an efficient antidote in acute phosphorus poisoning. The sparks which in cold weather 3j from the fingers when a metallic ob ject is touched are dne to the electric ity produced by the friction between the soles of the shoes and the carpet. The electricity is not formed in the body at all, and has nothing to do with the vital processes. A Pennsylvania Inventor has de vised a pair of eye glasses with a mir ror mounted so as to reflect objects, in the rear of the wearer. According to Dr. Hans-en, the reo in flowers is a single pigment soluble in water and decolorized by alcohol, bnt capable of being restored by the addition of acids. Tie steam printing press was invent ed by Richard Hoe, 1842. The circulation of the blod was dis covered by Harvey in 1617. The inside of poultry, after beine drawn, onght always to be rubbed witE some salt. Women anil Marriage. To most women marriage is a havm of rest where they will be free from worry and care. But there are two cares In matrimony where there Is one In the single life. If the wifeaccepts these gracefully, she is a stimulus to her husband; if she complains and worries, the husband is generally what his wife makes him, nnd there Is nothing that so unfits a man for his business life as a discontented wife at home. Wives should bear this in mind. It costs little to le cheerful, and the gains to be received are far in excess of the actual outlay. A steel-like g-ass from the volcanic slopes of Oran, Algerii, is sld to be so elastic that it can be used in tend of springs in the manufacture of furni ture. Queen Victoria s said to be thb jwner of the largest book in existence. It Is a foot and a half thick ard weighs sixty-three pounds, and contains the aadros-'S of congratulation on the oc casion of her jubilee. Atlanta, Ga., Is to have a new court house and city ball under one roof The cost of the building will bi over 1500,000, and it will be ore of the finest public edifices in the South. Robinson Crusot'i island, Juan Fernandez, is inhabited by about sixty j persons, who attend to the herds or j jat' le that graz? there. I j The violin upon which. It Is claimed, I the wedding march was played ati George Washington's marriage. Is in the possession of a musical society at Bunbury, Fa. Lake RonkoDRoms, od Long Island, j ."Jew York, also another small lake In the Adrlondack region. Increase In I . volume of waiter for a number of years. ' until they are nearly double their aver-1 I age alxe,and then they gradual!; shrink. I The cause la not known. i NEWS IN BRItr'. More than 100,000,000 people speak English. rroressor Herrman has photo graphed the sound of vowels. The unexplored ara of Cara Is one million square miles. It is said that t he yew tree some times attains an age of 2S0) years. A bear weighing 713 pnunds wu Killed recently neiir Hood's Canal, Wash. An Indian girl sti.dent at the Has kell (Kan.) Inst-it'ite U named .Jenny One Feather. Tanning extiact n used to treat railroad ties to prete.'ve them fioiu de cay. A coyote was recently killed while leisurely - walking dovn om of the prii.cip.d streets of Pooille'o i, Oregon. In the Twelfth Century a ht o'i w;-s attached to a too: man's spear to en able him to drag a kiiKht frcm the saddle. Mexicans have been u inga decoj tlon of black spiders as a ou:e for typhus fever. The average w i -ht of thi circu'a cing blood in Uih b sly 's about twenty eight pounds. Tanning is done in thii country In about one quarter of fie time all iwed in Europe. Lord Bacon guvo the world so na excell nt culinary recui't. One of his papers lve nine inelho .'s of making minoe pies. Bacteria jrtow tnot raphlly in thtj warm, sultry con iitl ius which usually precede a thunderstorm. A man may be t! e verv essen e oi virtue aod yet far fioin happy if he have the i lieiiniatis:n. Every uniiiair el unman says she wouldn't stand it, aud every married woman does 8'ntrt it. Whenever the preach' r takes a square aim at sin, every hyprcilte in tue church begins to tlode. An upright judgj needii't be, ashamed of his sentences eveu in the prefe..ce of the ttriOit graiunLtrtaiH. The fir-t ma:i to c.iu to-iiatoe? wai th-j late Harrison W. Cooj e aud they were sold at ."i0 cents ei can. Th s was lu 1818. It is said to be f os .ib'e to cut down a growjn' tree aud make it into paper ready for the printing pre.ss withlu twenty-four hoi ri. In some parts of China a formal in traduction Is piven n these words. "This is my friend. Ir he steals any thing I will be responsible." cemen during the jvi .ter declarer that iLeu could see to read a newspaper through the clear teu-in 'h ice In the Hudson Biver near Pou2hkeepsie, N. Y. Do not think it wasted time to submit yourself to any lnfl lence which may bring upon you any coble feel ing. Act always so that the immediate motives of thy will m ly become a uni versal rule for all intelligent beings. There !s joy in Heaven when a slunei repents, but nothing said on a million aire's monument has any effect. A Maryland woman (ntertalneu three guesU some time aao, Grangers to her and to oue another, named Mrs. Sprinkle, Mrs. Shower, ;nl Mrs Storm. The fan is a Chinese invention, and eras brought to Western Europe by early Orienlal travelers as oi.e of the most interesting products of the land of Cathay. The custom Is universal in Madriu, Spain, of closing one of the two outet doors of the house h n a p.-rsou die. This door Is kept closed for a novei.a, or a ieriod f nine days. What is supposed to be the longest oeard In existence is attached to the chin of the French sculptor, Louis Cou lon of Motitiucon. It measures 7 3 4 feet in length and Is Etiil growing. A discussion Is in progress as tt. whether Enzlish or French ss the mjre economical lauguae to use In convers ing over the London Paris telephone line. In the probate curt of Boston the other day, in a contested will case, or of the counsel presented a ty;e-writt' v hypothetical question 84 pAges long; and which consumed three hours li. readiDg. Among some recently observed interesting results of application ol cold, M. Kaoul Piutet has found that at 15'J dearees all chemical reaction is suppressed. A Brussels dispatch says a new pharmaceutical bottle has recently been Invente i whic'i iiulicatt s the hour at which the medicine is to be taken. A Belgium establishment has secured the sole right to manufacture Uefe titles. A considerable freight buslhess i. being carried on by a.i lech ic railroad in Marj land oiwrating eighteen Hide? of tiack in a farming counlry which If not reached by steam road.". The cart lsed have a capacity of live ton?. The le tiling metalluiMis's In t'ds country and in Europe have for some time been endeavoring to enlist elec tricity into their serv'ce. A mo'st, warm atmo-phere, where, the changes of te n.wraturu are slight, Is the most favorat li for prsous .-uttering from rheuiuat sra. The worst place Is one In wi.ich the air is iv driest and the climate the most change able. The programme of the sanitary ex hiblt to b held in connection with t ie Chicago Exhibition b-pies Its purpose to be to show as ad ipi tta.y as posiibl the position in which the theory a d piactice ot hygiene stand at the present da. Lizard skins come largely from Borneo, &s well as Germanv. it has been shown by Natha-i that the addition of a fm ill pioportioii of nitrogenous material to the "must" i f fruit results iq the formation of more alcohol than usual. The duration of the tlectr'c spark does not exceed the twenty-live thou sandth part of a second, and a bullet in flight has been photozraphed by ni ;.:is of this spaik, a maivelous develoi in -ni of modern science. In the search 1'ght which is t e i experimented whh umn tha World's J"air grounds the candle power of 'he arc light alone is only 150,000 candies, the carbons being twelve it c'lts ;oug and one and three-sixteenth i' ci e in diameter. The fashion of serving the Qsb before meats began In 15C2. 4 f i i I ! 1 I w 1 .. i- -- - .J-iA -li..