LIFE, I.lfe I a lxok Of "?ivir, white w. Riven us at birth, Wherein to writs ths reeor l of our lives Tlierecnrl st'di.h boyoiel us ttlll survives, Tlio story of our plltrritnug j on earlli. Our ev"ry dee.l r. i'i day wo Ink" thn pnnll nn I Indite On it ni-w jne our wlilio.", hopes and fe.ir, For uoo I or 111. An I so o-i thro' tli ynnrj Tim record t-row. ot every day nn ! nljlit. W mny not look At wlnt w on"o liiv.i li r l ri written, Imt Thro' mniiory i nor mny ws e'er itw A dlintlo thing llmt In tlier has Its place, Till nil is llni'lii'd, and our hook is shut. O soul, tnkn hoed lift's hook naught That in this shall o'er '.IT. ii I ; H i vi thou n raw shout tlilne every a"t. That thy I ool.'g lii' iuty may appear Intial, Nor Hot, imr hlotnlsh mar It to tlio en it W. II. time, in Chicago Trlhans. Ail Old Man's Romance CtfAW. you never IIOI'll III IOV" .' said tin) chili1, gravely. "No," re- plied the man ; ntnl a la i nt smile crossed his face n, till' memory of the hundred nuil it i ik V tV' ' ' ; f a ,MI" luminous f-'Cr iiH'ncri'n ni tin- trv' 7-j. ? lerelit- lerents dates I H H ll 1 M "Oli, lnr yja :j-isi IistoUwu, :.. tinned tin? ch'1'1, earneitiy. "Every body fslls ia love tn-vcrsl times before they mari'y, mamma niivu. Mamma totys that 1 thai! be ia iovo sevtral tunes before I marry ; Imt that is nothing at all, aLl theu I shall marry and settle down. " "When ilo you intend to marry ?" paid tlio man, scrutinizing the pretty chilil more closely. "Wm are scarce ly ohl enough yet, are you?" "Oh, yes," she said, eugorly. "One of tho princesses was married when tdio wns just sixteen, mamma nays, unci I am ui nrly MXtecn." "Iiiih'uil. I'erhups you are cu ga,eil nlreiiily V" "Well, tint exactly. You see, ho wants mu to marry him in two yearn, Imt wo are not exactly er.pio'0il. Ma-iima woiihln't hear of it, lieo:u-io lie hasn't left ocliool yet, uli-l I hnveti t njt u him siuce; Imt if he n-kn nn n.L'uin at th enil of two years we bhull be ctmagcil jnojierly." "l)o you wunt to marry him eo very rutirh?" "-V o." After a moment's thought. 'Not very much. I haven't thought shout it. It tukes so much time to "Oil BOO. Uuo woulil b al)W to put oue'a hair up regularly if one were iUKngf.t.1, I should think." Tho man glancotl at tho tawnv nmno which nho t.usheil imnntieiitly buck ever her HhoiihUrs ns hho fpoko. Jt woul.l bo a pity, he thought, to antici mte, even by a ilay, thu moment when those glorious tresses wniilil bo ileliv ereil over to the ill-treatment uml celijiso of hairjins. "if 1 Were en,n.,'e,l to yon," he mi;!, "I nhoul.1 iihk ymi to keeji your Luir ilown km U,n uspossililc." "Then I won't be en-u-e.l to vim," Tejilieil tho girl, naively. "15.,-si'les. 1 ilou't even know your mime. 1 lion't believe thut it is r. ally Urooks of S!n-f-tiel.l I huvo hpelt rihelllehl with two l'sjis that right? hcciiiisu I hear.l null lauy, tlio otio with very vellow liuir, call you Miniething else. Vhnt is your real name? You mu.-t write it Uown hero." Sliu wus enga-eil in selling tickets for a ratllo ut a country huzinr, an 1 he in.licateil to tho man tli.' hhect of 1'iil'er whereon hli hu.l written the names of the ticket hoMcrs. The eeventecnth hhi,m on the list wm in Bcriho.l with tho wor.ls "jJrooks ol .Shelllelil." Tho claimant of that j'NouiIonym took tho pencil which sho Jiel.l out to him. uu.l sigue I himself ".Stanton llitreourt." "Anil now you ouyht to tell mc yoiirnuine," ho saiil. "-My tiaino is Kohie liOMnliinl Alice I-iiiio Devine -uuil wo livo in Wey briilgo. Do you know Weybri l-e ? It is in the pin t culled America. J imi laying iu.ro wiih the llarlunils. you live here?" "Sn; I am just iiown for tho f-layiiig with that lady, tho i.no the v ry yellow hair." "1 see, I hiij.pose you nr.; in Jo day, wall love Villi Her? .Not? Well, I am W....I.I . . . glad I " i'.iiu j mi miii. I iiiuiiix euro this for mo while I go a;ur that man?" Mio Kept on coming an I going the course ot the afternoon. Jt was evi dent that sho hud privately c.-.tab-li'ho 1 Stanton Harcourt as u sympa thetic friend who might ho honored v ith tho duty of buying tickets lor her r.ililos, and a safe depot where valua ble property might bo left with fcecurity. Sho talked to him in her queer way now and then; but sho had a very keeu eyo to business, and was con tinually darting oil tow urd so o new fueo with an appeal for her rullle. Stanton Jluroourt, moreover, ce mented this friendship of a day bv presenting her with u largo pointed hereon which ho wu "lucky" enough to w in in uuo of her ruluV. "I am sorry you don't live at Wey bridge!" were almost her last words to him. "Jt would be so ui,.0. lv-r-Laos you may come there, though?" Shortly ufter that Stautou JIurcoiirt went to Norway for about six weeks and enjoyed all tho pleasures of roughing it, including horriblo food. After that he joiuod a yacht uud start ed urouud the world iu a slow and luxurious fubhiou. One way sud su- ffml other it wan not until three jfnr after that country bazar that ha fonn.l himself once more settled himself in London for the season. "Who ia thn beauty of theiyear?" he said to a friend at Lady (ilenly don's ball." ,' j "Lady Hose Verrten. fcplrd the other, "Lord Salterton'a daurhter presented at tho May Drawing Room." "Is she here." j "Yes. I'll potnt her ont lo yon; introduce you if you like. Do you aee that tall girl in blue, the one sritli tho bcsutiful hair passing ua bow?!' Stuntou Harcourt gazed in the direction indicated, and onad to himself that the opinion of aociety had not erred. Ho aw befor him s bill, beautiful, fair girl, whovl height overtopped that of most of the men, while her figure was so gracefully pro portioned tlia. it wns ..tnpossible to demur to an iael of hrr itatur. Her face was a fair i s a flo.rer, snd tho heavy coil of hai." suggested tresses that would clothe her like a mautle werethov onco unloosed. "Introduce me." he said ; and so, in time, Sir Stanton Harcourt was in troduced to Lady KosoVerden. She turned a pnir oi the loveliest blue eyes upon him and injected him not without curiosity. Then sho smiled, disclosing two rowa of pearly white teeth. Stanton Harcotrt con versed with her for a few moments. Then sho said, suddenly ; ".So you have forgotten nw alto gether ! Or is it that I am s much changed? I should have kuf wn you anywhere. Don't you rcraemlcr that banr at Kirtletou three yenrs ago, and how you tol.l me that your name was llrooka of Sheffield, and I told von that I lived at 'Weybndge? I did . -j . And you gave me s serein." "I remember now," replied Stauton ITarconrt iu amazement. "Bit but I ought to have recognized ;ou, of covrse; but I am sure I have in ex cellent reason for not doing so. You were a pretty child then, but now you have grown into a--" "Now, you of all people muit not flatter. Keiuciuhcr, I regard "on as an old friend, whom I can trust. Don't you remember how I -rusted you with my things at thobazmr? I got such a scolding at tho cud f tho day for it. They said I was too for ward. Did you think me to) for ward V" 'Tin! only thing that I cann-t nn der.it 'ind." replied Stanton Haicourt, evading this somewhat dclicatl sub ject, "is tiliotit your name. Y)U told mo, if I renn-mber right, tint you wero Miss r.osio Di vine. Was that a joke, like nir stupid olio of Mrooks of Sheliield?"' "lii pa hud not Hiicceedod to tie title then," replied the beauty. "Ii fact we wero very far away lrom it and very poor; but, as 1 dnrcBiij you know, our cousin and his two soisand grandson were all drowned toother, i.inr i!niis ..when- JI A. lowu m h M.i btorm i f tho north coast of Ir nnd my father was tho next LeiYi.'W-oughLiituother. Tho title is one v thosu v.rv old onen title is one v those v w hich go to w.M. u as v You know wht meat, took the iiimi-i"- trdei, voll as men. Then we tho old Sul- tertoii name, f;, , ; Hs inr own." "I see ; Sand Shorlaul clipped tho niuueaii l told mo niuely that you were L:i ly K.iso Ver lei." At th it momuut a iall, hnndsomo young man came up Hid claimed Lady llo.se tor the next daico. He was u very good looking mm, thought Stan ton Harcourt, mid seimed to know it. Mis big black inoustiche was curled till the ends pointe' lto hi-i enr. ; the expression f his really line eyes seemed to s:iy : ".S.'o how irresistible 1 am, and worship it tho shrine." Involuntarily Stanton Harcourt turned toward Lnc'y lioso to see how she was elVected b- the arriv.il of the new comer, and whether sho would obey tho mandate of his orbs. "Who is that young man?" he unid to Lady (ileniyn Ion, "who is dancing with Laly H.iso Verdon?" "Oh! that's Count Karl Chirafoti Charat'uu, the son of the prince, you know. He's nttmlicd to the Austrian Kmlms.sy, and J also think he'a at tached m Kosie Verdon. What a beau tiful girl sho is ! 1 shouldn't be tur pi ised if there wero un engagement in that family soon." This suggestion undo Stanton Har court feel that ho almost disliked Count Karl. "I tiling it is a great mistake for I'uglish girls to marry foreigners," he u:d. "Don'i you?" " "Well. I don't know." r..nlin.l T.a.lw lili nlviidon, whose tirt husband had been lar from hii angel. ".Some Eug-In-hmen aro just us bad as auy for eigner, and some foreigners aro just in nice us any lhiglishui.in. JJesides, this man comes of a very old family and will bo enormously rich. And Lord Sultcrtoti is by no meaus a mill ionaire. Tho estates are not large; tho widows got most of tho real per Foualty ami ho has two joiuture to I'ay." ( It was then that Stanton Harcourt for tho tlrt time iu his life thauked 1'rovideuce that ho wus wealthy. : "I am tweutv-tivo ytars older toan her," ho owned to himself, "flut, after all, what does that matter if the loves me?" At the end of a month he came to the conclusion thut she did love hun. Certainiy she had cuuouruged hitu to think so. She had introduced him. to her parents, and asked him to cull. Ho had arranged vurious parties 1 to tho thoutre, to dine at lUuclagh, to Sundown and to tho opera, to all of which bIio and her mother hod gra ciously consented to come. It was alio trtio that at the meet of tho l-'our-in-IIand Club Lady Hose had appeared on the box seat of Count Karl's couch. Imt then Stanton U couut contrasted her manner t "-d him with her behavior tows ne Couut. With him tho was al at her ease, always brimming over witb liveliness and good spirits. With the Count, however, she was often tongue tied and dull, seemingly nnable to carry on much conversation, and ready to turn to auy one who ad dressed her. "The Count bores her," thought Rtsntou Harcourt. "He is all very well ss s dancing partner, but his eternal brag and sentiment are get ting wearisome to her." tie waited his opportnity: and ho had to wait some time, for it wns tho most di.Ticult thing in the world to so cure a quiet tcto-a-tete with her. Sho was in much request, having so many friends, and living in a perpetual whirl of gayety. Hesides, people had ah solutely no sense of discernment. Often and often, when he thought tho right moment had como at lst, some loud voiced boy broko in on the quiet corner and dragged her away or dis tracted her attention. At Inst, in despair, ho wrote to her for a private interview, ns he had a matter of tho utmost importance to reveal to her. To this letter sho sent no answer, but, meeting him in tho evening at a jinrty, told him, with a smile, that tho whole thing was Very improper, but if ho would call on the Friday at 4 o'clock well, she could not promise, but it was possible. He walked home in a state of such ecstuey that ho was almost oblivions of his surroundings. Tho resnlt was that at the corner of Hertford street he was knocked down by a furious hansom, stunned, and so severely in jured that no was taken up for dead. Ho was not dead, however, though ho hovered for a long time between life and death. His constitution tri umphed at last, and he began to get well. His first thought when his mind recovered its equilibrium was that ho must make haste iu order to make up tho lost time. As ho became convalescent, friends were allowed to (eo him. He inquired eagerly after the Saltertous. "Oh, they are in Scotlaud. You see, since Lady loose's wedding " 'Lady ltoso's wedding, almost screamed Stanton Harcourt. "Which Lady Hose do you mean?" "Why, tho daughter, of course tho beauty. She married that Aus trian fellow, Count Our ChirafoU Charafau. Of course, you've been ill so long, poor chap! Don't you re member a tall, dark iiiuu with a mus tache, who was always very much iu nttondiwo?" Stanton Harcoitrt'a brain ssemo l to reel as if again under tho indueuco of delirium. Hose married to th f Aus trian! Why, she loved him! And if she loved him, why had she married another? "A capital match, of course," con tinued the unconscious friend. "And entre nous, I am told that it is a very good thing for Lord Salterton, who might have had some difficulty iu Ueetrng bis creditors if his son-in- law hnd not proved obliging." Iu a Hash Stanton If ireourt saw it all his adored was a victim, a pale sacrifice on the altar of tilial infection. While ho was lying helpless and sense less', unable to spenk an 1 declare his love, tho pressure of tho inevitable had come upon Lord Salterton, and tho heartless father had commanded his daughter to save her family nt the price of herself. No doubt ho ha I urged that tho limn she loved was at tho point of death, would nover rise from his couch again. In the mean time, here was this Austrian, rich, generous, devotedly attached t ) ..or. Why shouldn't she save her lath-r's honor and provide for herself! She could not wear the willow forever for a man to whom she was not even en gaged. Stanton Harcourt nearly fretted himself into a fever at the thought, and so great was his meutal anguish at the picture which he conjured up that it seriously delayed his recovery. It wus a year before Stunt ou Har court met the Countess Chirafoti C'harafau, and he was spell-bound at tho sight of her. Sho was then nt tho height of her loveliness, and her charms were enhanced by the mag nificent tiara of diamonds .which crowned her hnir. Sue showed no traud of sorrow and, true to the law which forbids a woman to show her feelings, she received him with .noao but the most ordinary emotion, Stanton Harcourt, on the other baud, was pale and haggard troni tho o'Vects of his illness and excitement. When tho Couutoss expresse 1 her sor row for his neci. lent he almost broko down. It seemed to him thut ho must throw himself at her feet or die. i'or tuuately he resistud this impulse, and limited himself to in piii ing when he could call. Then his hour would have cunie. Ho would not reproach net. Sho must have sud'. red enough with out that. But there should bo UO louger any aeurets between them. L.iter in tho eviitiiug he heard the Countess' voico and his owu uamo. "1'oor Sir Stanton," she was sty mg. "I was quite shocked to see him. Of course, I have ulwavs known that ho was old enough to be my father, or older. He was quite old when I was a child, liut now his illness has Bged him so terribly that I hardly kuew him, and his beard is quite white." Sir Stanton Haroourl did not go to see the Countess ou the day nuuied. On the contrary, he weut to the sea side to brace up his streugth and re cover from his crushiuj disillusion., tnout. Loudon World. Female Cats Are lilomles. An authority ou cuU says that yel low hairs, no odds how few iu num ber, always indicate that the wearer is a female. He further udds; N male cat was ever kuowu to have the slightest tint of yellow. Chioago lleruld. ATLANTA'S FAIR. Did COTTON STATES' AND IN TEKNATIONAL EXPOSITION. Wilt lie Held In lH95-Natlonnt Gov ernment to Make an Interesting Display-Plans of the Main Ilulldlngs. I J HE preat Fair of 1893 will be I the Cotton States' and Inter JL national Exposition, to bo ( held in Atlanta, Gs., next September. Its success on an elabor ate scale is assured by the fact that Congress appropriated S200,O()0 for tho removal of tho immenso fJovern ment Building from tho World's Fair grounds in Chicago to the grounds of the Cotton States' Exposition in At lanta, thus giving tho exposition a Governmental indorsemcnt,which will prove of great volue. In addition to this the business men of Atlanta have subscribed 8200,000, tho city of At lanta gives $7",0()0, and tho State of Georgia is expected to oppropriato 8100,000. TheCotton States' and International Exposition will exceed in scopo sev eral times over tho Cotton Exjiosition of 1381. Atlanta 1ms grown steadily and is abler both iu experience aud iu wealth to handle such an enterprise, and hns gone at it with an energy that nukes success certain. There will bo six principal build ings. Five of those wero designed by Bradford L. Gilbert, of New York, and oue by Walter T. Downing, of Atlanta. They will bo erected ou tho Piedmont Exposition grounds, of which Mr. Gilbert says: "I do not hesitate to say that I con sider the possibilities of development for exposition purposes beyond thoso of any other exposition grounds which I hnvo seen. It is tended to retain, so farms possible, tho natural contour of tho ground, and that is wise, for I am suro they can bo made very beau tiful. When the buildings are erected and tho decorations of tho grounds are developed Atlanta will have one of tho most attractive exposition grounds that this country has ever teen." The Administration Building, de signed by Mr. Downing, will bo one of the striking features ol architec ture iu the grounds. It carries tho idea of the Southern homes of ante bellum days in the immense pillars ut its front aud is iutcuscly Southern throughout. The central portion is of double-story height, but it is de signed to be a great central hall for iisensnunrt gallery if tho Hoard bo desires. At either side are tho rooms for the ofllcers and for the press. Tho lending idea throughout tho other buildings is Romanesque. They are designed with an idea of stability and simplicity of construction. Take the Machinery Building, foi Instance; This is in its interior construction a simple cube so designed as to give a great deal of space insido and with its exterior finish having a touch of tho HenaisMiucc. On each end, nt the sides nn I in tho center there are largo por.icoes with immenso jiillars, which will give to tho entire buildings state ly elVect. It will bo sixty-live feet high. The Manufactures Building curries out the same Romanesque idea, imt is considerably moro elaborate. In tho Agriculture Building the same idea is carried out iu n sort of pyra midal shape, and so, too, iu tho Elec tricity Ibiilding. Tho "latter has tow ers nod arches, which can bo brill iantly illuminated, and, located as it will Le ut the foot of a lake, a great light can be secured. The towers ut the corners of the Manufactures Build ing are very lurgc, nud can be used for restaurant purposes, or anythiug of tho sort. The broad outside corri dor on tho second story of this build ing ciin also bo used to magnificent odvantiige for restaurant purposes. The dimensions of tho buildings aro given as follows : The Manufactures Building is 370 by iilO, is GO feet high, with a tower reaching 100 foet from tho ground, and will bo tho largest build ing ou tho grouuds, second only, of course, to tho great Government Building. Tho Mauchiucry Building is 100 by COO, and iH C.j feet high. The Agriculture Building is 300 by 130, is 00 feet high aud hus a 100-foot tower. Tho Minerals and Forestry is 80 by 320; the t-levatiou is 35 feet, tho central octagonal towel is o feet. The Electricity Building is 5)1 by 250, GO feet high with a 100-foot tower. The Administration Building has a central hall .10 by 100, nnd two Hide wiugs, 50 by 100. It has uu elevation of GO feet. The Government Building is to bo ou a high hi!l above tho building of tho Driving Club. Beyond it and above tho famous cottou patch of Piedmont Exposition days is tho site of tho main building, a beautiful hill, where it will have one of tho most jironiinout sites on the grounds. The Agricultural Building, which from its architectural structure is designed to bo kept per manent, with the idea of making it un auditorium, is to be located on the hill south of tho main entrauce to tho grouuds. Tho Electricity Building is to be near the Pieduiout Exposition maiu buildiug, nt the foot of a lake, and at the head of tho lake is to bo the Machinery Building. The Minerals and Forestry are to bo along tho lake between the Machinery Buildiug ami tho Electricity Building. - Tho Ad ministration Building is to bo between tho Government Building uud the Manufactures Building, and will occupy ouo of tho most attractive points ou thu grouuds. In the construction of these various buildings the architects have, of course, taken into consideration the elevation of tie site on which each building is to rst, and it is the aim, of course, to mak each building stand out for it self. These six buildings will be sup plemented later i ky a Woman's Build ing, an amusement pavilion, and, per haps, by s number of Ststo' buildings. Now that the Atlanta Exposition hss secured sn appropriation of 8200,000 from the United States, arplicntions for ipacn are coming in rapidly from foreign couutries. The exposition is alretdy assuming sn international as pect, and is sure to attract thousands of people from alt over the United Staffs and Europe. 0e of the interesting features of the exposition will be an exhibit by the colored people. It will bo tho first of it kind which has ever been made, nud ;t wilt bo an education to tho out side world in showing what the colored people of the South have accomplished right at their homes since they wero gives their freedom. It will bo very attra'tivo, not only to tho colored peo ple themselves but to the pooplo of the entire couutry, and it is doubtful if any other one feature will bring ss many people to sco the exposition ss does :his colored exhibit. Atlanta, the city of the exposition of 18l5, is s very pretty plaeo of 90, 000 population. Tho houses are now, and ire like those of s progressive Northern or Western city rather than like those of an old Southern town. Tho streets are bustling and active. The adjacent country is hilly. The city ii 1080 feet above sea level, rest ing at s point where the topography changes from the mountainous regions of the Bine Ridge to the rolling and finally level pino lands of Southern Goorfia. Tho sir is fresh and brac ing, coming, ss it does, in stiff breezes from the nearby mountains, and, in fact, the place is so like s Northern city in the style of its streets snd housts, its climate and its activity, that pooplo from Massachusetts feel ss mich st homo hero ss docs the man who comes from Savauuah or New Orleans. Every foot of ground around the city is of historic interest, snd sit iu all there is not s Southern city that could be more attractive to a visitor from other sections of tho country.- New York Advertiser. Slaughter ot Tree. It ia estimated that 8,000,000 seres ot forest land aro cleared every year, atd that in the ten years previous to 1$7G 12,000,000 acres were burned over simply to clear tho land. Ten yturs ago it was estimated that t'.io timber of Now York was disipjicaring nt the rate of 150,000 acres s year. Since then laws havo been passed which hnvo restrained to porno extent tho woodman's ax, but it is still wielded far too freely, says tho Boston Trau script. The forests are tho natural friends snd protectors of the earth sud of 5...n. Tltej Ji.ot pnljjuinister ia the Ksthotio part of man's nature by Vuin ulating and feeding his sense ot beau ty, but they also have practical uses sud values which may not bo safely ignorod. Soma of the direst calami ties that havo befallen the countries of the Old World may be tmcol to the destruction of forests, and many dis eases that have 8wejt away great mul titudes of human beings, and that wero accounted "ditino visitations," may doubtless be traced to tho same came. The warning given this country by George P. Marsh many years ago, in his work cutitled ".Man and Nature," and by others who have given car fill Btudy to this subject, has not been wholly iu vaiu. A reactionary move ment hai already begun, nnd its good results are visiblo iu many quarters. Perhaps it is not too much to hope that our friends and protectors, the trees of the forest, which have for us so many precious uses keeping full the streams aud rivers, lessening tho heat of summer and the cold of winter, guarding tho fields against ruiuous floods aud freshets, offering a shelter and a pleasure ground to tho well snd a perfect sanitarium to tho Mick will be preserved from further ruthless de struction for tho joy aud blessing of this snd future generations. Ituhliel ol Iter Horns. One thing which has changed tho appearance of the country greatly in the duiryiug regiou is the practice, now very prevalent, of "dehorning" cattle. The farmers of northern New England seem to have made tho sud den discovery that horns on cows wero s gigautio mistake of the Crea tor, to bo remedied ralically sud at onco. They say that tho cows, il homed, hook each other dreadfully when thoy nro wutering, and rattle their horns together iu the stanchions, and otherwise misconduct themselves, So they get a " dehoruing machine," and fasten tho poor cow's nock in it, and with oue twoop deprive her of her chief ornaments aud her uatural protection, aud leave her a wretched, shorn creature, thut no urtist would tniuk of painting. The loss of her horns seems to turn the cow into a kind of a sheepish and furtive being; she has not the confident aud self-satisfied air that usually marks her kind. One bus no idea of the difference which horns make iu tho expression of cuttle until he sees a herd of these de horned aud deformed animals. Bos ton Transcript. A Poet's .Memorial Mub, The English roso and the Florentine lily will each huve s place ou thu memorial slab thut is to cover tho grave of Robert Browning iu West minster Abbey. The blab, which is nearly completed, is very simple iu decoration uud beurs as inscription only the nume and date, but the stone upon which these ure carved is of orieutal porphyry (sot in a frame of Sienna marble. The work has been done in Yeuice. Chicago Herald, WORDS OP WISDOJT. (Strength comes with exercise,' Intolerance is never argument.' Keep your troubles to yourself. Don't keep good news to yourself, A pleased man is easily convinced. Victory is often s question of hold, ing on. Morality never looks well on dresi parade. Genius snd originality are blood rotations. A waitinggame is one which two can seldom play. Every reform that comes snJ 1 stayi begins in the heart. "Follow your leader" is s dangerous game even for boys. Rome parents need an introduction to their own children. Some men never win because they never expect to win. There is liablo to be much base alloy in coined words. Most folks get savago when they mean only to be severe. When all men know little, how can any ouo man know it all? How little anything costs that is to be paid for in tho future. He that smiles and says nothing often slanders and lies most. The man who is always thinking ot evil things will most likely bo s suflerer from his thoughts. To make s well-rounded citizen tho moral sensibilities must bo oue with the mental faculties. The best stimulant toward right political action is s healthy interest iu what is to be done. A man who is always boasting what he has done is not si ways the boldest in the hour of danger. It is not always tho damago of sn injury that is galling, but the spirit iu which it is prompted. ' Don't try to add to tho mystery of sn unknown subject something of s dcoper mystery, s more uuknowu. The Only Fivc-Masteil Schooner. Tho schooner Governor Ames, the largest fore-and-after in the world and the only livo-mastcd schooner, arrived iu Providence tho other day with 225 tons of coal. Sho has recently been engaged iu carrying lumber from the racilio ports to Australia. Sho is 2iij feet long overall, 232 feet long on her keel, fifty feet beam, twenty-one feet deep, uud her tounsge register is 1708.77. Sic can carry 3000 tons of coal on a draft of twenty foet. She has aceutcrlioard of the best quality of whito oak thirty-three feet Ion?, fifteen feet deep, and niue inches thick, and uino hatchways, each twenty-four feet cross decks and eight feet fore aud aft. Her outside plauking, t,;u heaviest ever put on s schooner, is inches' thick, sud at the gunwale se jn inches. The live lower masts are cal led foremast, mainmast, mizzeumast, jig gcrinast, and spaukermust, and are each 115 feet in length, tho topmasts being eneh lil'ty-six feet long. The jibboom is soveuiy-nve feet long, and tho bchooner spreads 7000 feet of cuu vas. She has two nnchors weighing G500 pounds each, w ith eighty futhouu 2-ineh chain, besides a steam anchor ot 1350 pounds and a kedge of lOUi) pounds. The sails nro hoisted with a donkey engine of thirty horse-powi-r, and sho has a largo steam capstan nu l a No. 11 windlass, tho largest made. It cost $75,000 to build the Governor Ames. Her muster, Captain Cornelian A. Davis, of Somerset, Mass., is one of five brothers, all of whom are or have beeu sea captaius, as was their father before them. Detroit I'm Press. A Young I'iliuinal's LmjdoyiiiPiit. "The youngest criminal I ever heard of being sentenced to hard labor ia State's prison," said G. D. Morrison, of Mobile, at the Lucie. lo last night, "was a little colored lad I saw, wbj was arrested for stealing a horse. J lo was not large enough to mount the auim-il, and was caught in tho act ot leading it oway by the halter, foi which lie was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment. The warden ol tho penitentiary wus at first puz.luJ to know what to do with so small s c-onvict, but finally invented a task that reflects credit upon his ingenuity. He placed two bricks at each end ( tho prison yurd. nnd giving tho litt'o rascal two more', ordered him to currjf them to one of the piles, lay tlu-m down, pick up the otlur two, which in turn were to be carried to the further cud, exchanged ugain, and so ou, bai'k and forth all day loug, always carry iug two bricks. He was warned that he would be punished if he fuilcd tu pile thu bricks neatly or broke any of them. He was kept at this tusk until BiilHeiently growu to engage iu mamul labor, uud the constant abrasion ol picking up sud laying dowu wore ont six sets ot bricks before he was placed at other labor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Electrified by Water, From niauy observations and ex periments M. Ph. Leuard rinds "that drops of water falling upon water or wet bodies geueruto electricity, the wator becoming electrified positively, sn I the gas escupiug negatively tlec trilled from tho force of the full, and light impurities iu the water dimiui.-u the effect considerably. The esseutml conditions of electrification ure the concussions among tho drops of them selves sud agsinst the wet rock, ne effect be iug due to the water's full through thu air and its dispersion lJ it. A jet of water fulling from un in sulated tank to sn insulated pail elec trified the latter positively, while tin negative electrification of the sur rounding sir grew to several liundr tolts." Chicago Herald. ll