Ml 1 i I il 1 in : Wi ' of!; Hi Ct ' ' it V ic ? c a 1. i. 8 C o i c PRAY FOR ME. frny for me, lov. nt dawn, whit tltie For thoe my prayers arise, riint, hnni In hand, our vinrs mny clltnb The rtoop path through th skips. Trny for m lovs nt eventide; Ho shall tho worts we sny llt In tho mists, and slJe by Mill Hwop up thn lii-atnn way. riint cry tl:n I ktiol for tho Mny my unlmllow"! prnyi-r, Coming in mi-'h good company, Find sweet n'voplnnoo thxre. rail Mull nu-lffot. A BICYCLE CHASE, tr itiis. m. l. nAYxn. ILO WAKRKX wns making n call ou a girl to whom ho fondly attached, nlthough lie h fill never told Lor so. But this wan a case whore ac tion speak loud tr tliuii words, ntiil have n eirl M a J H'"no '"r hnditig YS mil ir a young man ronr.l.s Lit t it!i favor. I'very girl is clsirvoy atit where n flairs of tho heart nro eon-cerm-d. They were talking nlmit thir birthdays, mi I tin; pie isant custom of giving pn M-nti at such a time. "Li t mo see," said Mill), thought fully, "did you say your birthday came in September, Miss Xillie?" "1 did tut my," remarked Miss Xel lie, !uinuri'ly. Thru it wan Iceeiuber, wasn't it? Some lucky follow will lie giving you a diamond, perhaps." "Or a souvenir spoon," laughed Still i; ; "yuu know they ma do j:vel spoons fur birthday pi I tn, liut ail the girls changed their birthdays to De cember. hihI tin' young ii.cu could not Hlunil tho expitise, and thi'U they sent a petition to thu manufacturers, ask ing them to discontinue tho custom, bo tn inure spoons uro iu thu mar Let." "I 1 1 rmlly wish you would tell mo whi'ti your natal iluy arrives. 1 lniht nt ! ait Ht'ij.l you a bunch of tun s, in ri :;ii i!ilraiicu of all tho the happy dilVs WO IlllVO spent together. Is it tins month, Miss XuIIk-V" "You ri'iniul mo of t'ao jinrlor paints, Ts it this? U it that ?' " Miss Xi'Ilic, a:iil tht'ii fouiiriK tlut tho voting whs liecoiuin M-utimciital sho turuoii tho couTcrBiitiou to other feUlljOOtH. lint tho ni-r.t ilay Mi'o Warron dvoppoil cusuiiily iuto tht store where Mi Xollie XoHtoii'a lio.it hrothor win t'uirne.l as houkkeopor, nuil inquired J;,n ,e to itppcur, . that 'young u . i w. oil. I tuku Inni'li with him. "(V rtainly," wni tho lii'iis pii reply from a mouth full of peu, "I'll meet thee at l'hilippi I munu at Hunger & Co.'s-- in mi hour." Ho was there, mill nt the pleasant Hpreail of oo.l tilings provi loil Milo Warren pioiimiuoeil this conutnlrum r "If you like u nirl awfully, lmt haven't toM her so, ainl you th'iik she maylio likes you awfully no, I don't mean that lmt if that irl has a liirtluhiy mi l you want to make her a pren'iit, and she won't toll you when it is the lurthdiiy, you know oh, liatt it all, I'm everlastingly mixed up. Can't you help a fellow out?" Lyimin Newton laid aside his knifo and lurk an I looking Milo iu tho face, asked seriously : "Any insanity in your family, Milo?" "None that 1 ever heard of outside cf my own C!i.-e," was tho depressed i:ier. "llcduein'jr j our heroics to a plain fciatement, then, you want to iivo a Kir! of your aoiiuaintauoe a birthday present ?" "Kxaetly." "Is she lu Old Woman?" "What do you moan?" roared War ron, turning rod, "I'll thauk you to upeak with respect of my friends be Bldes I " "Oh, no harm done ; don't get riled fo easily. I wanted to know if she belonged to the past age or the pres ent. I take it then that phe's a Now Woman?" . "1 understand now. Yes, I believe olio has adviiiu'ed opinions, but alio i-n'totieof those dreadful creatures that n.Ivoc.ito the wearing of bloom ers. Xellie is the soul of womauly viodosty and " "Xel'lioV" lo I know tLia bright particular star?" "Why, of coiirt-o you do I quite forgot she's your owu Ulster !" "Well. 1 like that! Aud you want to make her a birthday pro-cut and don't kuow the day. Sorry, old fol low, but 1 c.in't heli) you out. Nellie would take my head oil' if 1 told." That cuded the lunch, but an un foreseen th my; happened. Just as Milo Warren left his company at the corner l.e saw au urchin he knew. It was the iutlictiou known as Nellie's youngest brother, ae neven, capacity lor mischief, iteveu times ueven, pre cocity unlimited by auy period of time. Milo, with malice prepense, en gaged the dear child iu a surfeit of fcwoets, aud theu asked, us if the idea was not of the least cousequence and had just occurred to him : "tVhen does Sister Xellie have a birthday?" The dear child looked at him for a moment, drew his mouth around un der his car, elevated both eyebrow aud aid iu a coufilinj, lufuntilo voice : "Wbat'll you give to koaw?" Advantageous tortus bein made, the boy puckerod hi mouth. for, a vfhUtle, thought better of it aud gave wi M the following Saturday as bU sister's birthday. "An if yer want to make yourself solid see, just tend her a real stunner of a bike." "What! A bicycle I Docs she ride?" "How kin she? I reckon she kin learn, mister. You just send that biko there ain't nothin' Noll wants wnsn nor that." With this advice, and being sworn to secrecy, tho small terror bowled himself o.T. It gave Milo Warren something to do to pur:hase tnat bicycle and havo it delivered to Miss Nellie on her birthday in an anonymous manner. Ho expected il back "every hour tor about a week, but it did not come, and he felt safe. Tho small brother had not betrayed him after all. 15ut nfter a little he bo?an to wish ho had, for Miss Xellie Lad evidently mounted that bicycle and ridden out of Ins life. He called, but she was out ou her bicycle, no matter what tho hour wns, noon or night, and ho got himself ruu over on tho street and knocked down daily by dashing out from si lewalk corners to see who tha rider was, mid getting hurt for bin pains. When he could staud it n longer, ho camo to a sudden resolvo ho would buy a bieyclo for himself, and perhaps bo ulilo to find Xellie. And now beau an exciting chase for lio and liberty, for nt oao moment the amateur bicyclist was under tho f-etof n trumpliu? horse, tho next he was runuiu over a wrathy pedestrian, and he usually cuded hit experiences by picking i his frisky stood auJ carrying it to tho shop for repairs. And all this time ho never caught n glimpse of Xellie, but he was inclined to tlnuk lie divined the cause. Judg ing from his own experience in learn ing to riito a bicycle, Xellie might be exercising her owu fractious acquisi tion ou some remoto roadway outsido tho city limits or, dreadful thought, might even bo laid up herself for ro pairs. He called on the bookkeeper brother, but foun 1 him busy and noa coiLtuittal. So he waited and tried to posses his oul with pntieaco, and leiirn to ride n bicycle without the zig-zag motion that had endangered the lives of the populace snd nearly caused bis nrrest by tho police. Then ho made the discovery that if ho gave his wheel its head, it would bohave much better than wheu he guide I it carefully, to the cud that it, traversed both sides of the street nt once. After acting like a thiug pos sessed it learned to behave, au 1 ho found himself skimming along like a bird ou the wing, with an exultant nemo of freedom and delight, and ho longed to coo Nellie acd tell her what he 1 1 ii 1 been trying to say for mouths that he loved her I Aud at that moment there whizzed past him a vimou iu bloomers, one of those dreadiul New Womn of whom h- y pard, and now Wav Q sho. He ..uov .6lt '.tnt-H was disloyalty to gentle little Nellie to even look at such an apparition , but somehow she looked fo (iiiaiut in her saucy jacket and baggy trousers, her neatly-gait-ered feet word ho port nud independent, that Milo looked and looked ngaiu, and theu he gave a great whoop, aud took afttr tha llriug wheel like a streak of lightning. His confidence stood him in steal of skill. He went spinning along iu tine style until ho reached a parullol with the girl iu bloomers, thou ho leunel over to speak to her, toppled, and fell iu a heap, but not before ho had gasped "Xellie!" That voting ladv skillfully eluded the wrick, madoa fancy run mi l turn, mid as Milo gathered himself up, said plcastMitly : "Why, Mr. Warren, I didu't Luow that you rode a wheel." "I don't," said tho young man rue fully, fetding of his cloow to detenu in i j whether it was dislocated or merely abraded, "but you, Mids Xel lie, are quite un expert." Miss Xellie murmured something About the wheel being a present Irom her brother, and that she had not cared to ride, but did just to please him. "Hut yon ought to pee my little brother ride," she said, with euthusi asm ; "he rides the wheel when I am not using it, mi I he makes it spin. Why he rides standing up, and I'm so afraid something will happen to him." Milo was walking along, loadiug his wheel, as if he preferred that way, and Miss Mollie gave him scvtral ex hibitions of her skill, nud each moment made a stronger uu I more lasting im pression ou the poor fellow's heart, liut even bicycle courtship comes to au end, mid they were at Nellie's home, and he must leave her, unless he asked fr a glass of water, aud before it was brought he sa; dowu with tho wheel on the sidewalk. It was a sudden aud most effective stroke of art. Xellie cried, and asked if he was killed anywhere; Mrs. New tou brought camphor ; they got him iuto the house, aud then he was able to speak, ami said what was true enough that he had lost his head foi a momeut. The two most expert cyclists ou the avenue are Milo aud Nellie. You will recognize her by her brown bloomer suit, which is much admired, nud he by the glad smile which mantles his cxnressivecountenance. Nellie know now who gave her the wheel, and Milo has had another example of the total depratitv of the .small brother. Nel lie's birthday comes in Jauuary, but to expedite matters the imp changed it to July. However, all's well that ends well. Detroit Free Tress. Oysters Are hcniilivo. It is the belief of oyster ciiohsr that oysters are peculiarly sensitive to sudden tais. . Xua careful oyster man never chops wood ou board, lest he kill the oysters, and he dreads thunderstorm, uuicazo iicooru. WOMAN'S WORLD. PLEASANT LtTEItATt'nK FOIt FEMINISE READEK3. n, CLEVEt.AD 8 EC0X0MT. One of Mrs. Cleveland's virtues which icems hitherto to have escaped the pnblio notice is her economy. It is laid that she spends less than 11009 a year on her wardrobe, and this with all her beautiful now gowns and her faultless and never-failing freshness in every detail of costnmo that bespeak a genius for management. Now Or leans I'icayuno. Titr. TLArnEr noLE. Tho placket-hole is a feature in femi nine ntttro that is deserving of disci pline You rarely ever see one that is quite correct, and when yon do you wou-i r how it happened. There is the belt, the skirt waistband and tho kirt band and placket-hole all light ing with each other to see which can disrupt tho union, if any uuion there be. Fashion allows a silver safety pin, designed after a modest and tin suggestive pattern, and ns nn expe diency this is nliowablo to try to ef fect a reconciliation between these contending forces in nttirc, but rven that sometimes fails. New York World. nrnMKsE ntr.t.3. In every household the d inciter has her appointed work. Iu all but this richi-r merchants' houses tho daughter's duty is to bring tho water from tho well evening aud morning. It is the gossiping place of the village, this well, and ns the suu sets tl (To come running dowu nil the girls of tho village. Aa tljcy till their jars they lean over the curb and talk, and it is here that are told the latest new, the latest flirtation, tho latest marriage, Iho little scandal of the place. Very few men come. Water-carrying is not their duty, and there is a proper lime nud place for flirt ition. So thu girls havo thu well almost to them telves. Almost every girl will weave. In every house thero will be a loom, where tho girls weave their dresses and those of their parent. And very many girls will have tails in the ba zur, but of this I will upeak later. Other duties nre the husking of the rice and the making of cheroots. Of course, iu the rider households there will bo servauts to do nil this; lmt even iu them the daughter will fre quently weave, either for herself or lor her parents. Almost every girl will do soinethin, if It be only to pub the time. Dlaokwood's Magazine TilE AFRICAN PITCH Clint.. Culms, the Hottentot, has brought an iron bucket from the wagon, and at the margin of the well he tills it with m'alvt for theineisje, who already has soap, a towel and a comb. Tak ing off her 6nn bonuet, she washes htr face aud hands; then, unfettering her utout plait of fair brown hair, sho leans forward, and using the calm sur face of tho water ns a mirror, she comhsout the samewhat tangled locks. Again tho brown hair is coiled inn a neat plait, dr.iwu tightly from her temples, nud her toilet is complete 1. As hIic ties on her sun bouuet agsiu tho lioer comes up, pats her broad back and looks admiriugly at tho now lofreshod face. Two htiudre I years of South Africa have little n'terod tho old Hataviau type. The eyes aro blue, but of small brilliancy, the cheeks too hroa I and Hat for Kuglish taste, and tho young liguro is already htid, waistless and heavv. et m this tar-off back coun try women folk are sc ircc aud iu much request, nu I ulrendy, ut eighteen, Anna i-itiiuriniiim has found a mate. Next to her brother's wagon there btauds tho wagon of her betrothed Cornelia Klopper, who is just now away iu the grus plains a little to the north, shooting springboks with the younger Stuurmaus. Ibis wngou is newly repaired, smart nud gaily painted, aud is destined iu another mouth or two, after tho llocks have beeu recruited iu the liushman laud Trekvlodt, to become tho homo of the Boor maiden. The combined families aro to trek to Calvina village, where the marriage will tako place, nud thenceforth Auua becomes mis tress of her own mau ar.d wagon. Dldchwuod's Magazine, WIDOWS MOfKNINO. An authority says wtlows should wear crapo-coverod dresses and a widow's cap a year and a day iu tho I'uglih fashion. The mourning period for w idows lasts two years, aud iu half of the second year tho Henri etta cloth aud grenadine gowns should be worn simply trimmed with crape. The first dress cauuot be made too severe iu style, yet it follows the pros eut fashions very nearly. Box-pleats of crape, a, wide double box-pleat dowu the frout and back, are sutli cient trimruiug in the secoud year. A yoke of crape and a draped or folded collar aud belt are also excellent trimmings. For tall women a deep fold of crape around the foot of the skirt as a border is becoming, as it shortens the apparent height. Smaller and shorter women have a narrow fold of crape dowu each seam of the vol uminous skirt, or else a broad panel of crape down each side breadth, three milliuer's folds of crape around the foot of the skirt are also liked. A feature of mouruiog dress worn only by widows is the turned-over collar nud cull's of white organdie or other transparent white lawn, which they wear ou all occasions during their use of crape. These are about two inches aud a half wide, with an iuoa- wide bom turned up ou the outside. The widow s bonnet is merely a foundation for holding the veil. It is frame fitted to tho head quite closoly, and nestlj covered with crspe. The use of the white crimpo l pn3 called the widow's rnche is a matter of personal choice; it is adopted or discarded by young or elderly women alike. The veil of English crapo is abont three yards long, hanging be low the knees in front and perhaps a trifle shorter in the back. The hems are a third of a yard deep. It requires a skilful milliner to arrange it prop erly on the small frame of the bonnet. The strings are of black gros grain ribbon. Harper's Dazar. rouTtcs in osnuAvr. I'Die Frauenbewegting" is rapidly gaining ground in Germany. Thr hans-frau is laying aside her knitting needles and taking np her pen to write her name upon tho petitions which are rolling in upon the Iloichstag ask ing tint women be nllowel to form themselves into political bodies. They nro now permitted to make speeches, and, it is said, that in addition to the industrial class which has long desirod suffrage, women of a higher rank and stntion are giving thu movement much cucouragement. Women in Oorminy seem to have done less talking than their American sisters, but they havo not been nap ping, for they evidently have out stripped the women of other lands in throwing oil" tho burdens of housework by patronizing tho publio washhotises nu l kitcheus. They seem to do this, too, without getting littlo Johann's knickerbockers on die kleiao Marie or putting their thumbs over tho plums iu their neighbor's pie, as might be expected of nn "otnancipirte fr.iu." H.ironesB Von Oibycki is one of the most prominent women suflragists of (Sormany. Kho is n journalist and is joint editor with Fran Catier of a wo man's paper devoted to suffrage. Ac cording to a writer in tho (jtiuen, she is tall, fair and stately, possesses great literary ability aud originality of thought. (She is ns goo I, as wise and as mo lest ns she is attractive. Xow York J'ress. r.s:i;ov sores. Hlack bice gowns will bo rjliavjj with bright colored bow.s. A youthful hat with a pokn-shapftd brim is covered with loose, soft frills of white lace. A poppy-shaped hat of ro pink straw is trimmed with rose gau.o auJ s.lk roso pink yoppies. A black silk parasol with yollow lsco figures inserto I in it nn 1 a bordor of yellow lace is very much liked. A stylish waist for a crepon gown has a sailor collar aud wi ) box plait of white s:itia edged with poiut-do-Urugcs. A gown for wear at tho seaside is ol navy blue serge with a bluuso waist mounted on a rounded yoke of white borgo striped with blue. Black silk muslin fichus, Tory largo and full, are also worn with linen gowns, aud the frilled ends are usually drawn through the belt. Black silk blouses with enormous sleeves aud sailor coll.tr, briar-stitched with white or pale lilac, are worn with ulteruoou costumes of hlf mourning. For thin materials it is always best to make the skirt separate from the under skirt, as the graceful floating effect is maiuiaiuod, aud moreover it can easily bo prosso I. Black, brightened with any of the popular colors, is iu the height of fashion, and thin black male uu over color is umoug tho most becoming au. I stylish of combustions. Atuoug the simple gowns for youn girls is one of silk cropou for after noon wear, trimmed with au insertion of lace around the full skirt and be tween the box plaits on tho waist. The simplest cotton dresses are ma lo of gingham or of cotton duck, and have a shirt waist with gathered front, voko back, very full gathered sleeves, deep cuffs aud high turn-over collar. A gown of embroidered muslin over shot silk shows tho close-tittiug sleeves, which uro to come later, disguised by lace cipclcts over the shoulders aud tl nit bed with a frill of lace at tho elbow. Whito chiffon waists nro worn with white taffeta, moire and cropou skirts, linking tho daintiest sort of summer gowns for alteruoon wear. A pretty example has a sort of stole collar of white not embroidered with due sequin iu hlack. silver aud pearls. The latest military importation is a framework bonnet with sets of adjust able trimmings. There are jot and iridescent pins and butter.lies, and they adorn it, front, buck aud sides, as the wearer faucies, and the chauge allows it to correspond with auy gown. llomuauts of satiu, white, tiutod and of faucy patterns, are sold for yokes and belts and other accessories. Sometimes the satin is covered with lace or net, aud especially is this mode followed in sleeves which are made with Queen Anno puffs and gathered at the elbow with ruillos overlaid with lace. Alpacoa and mohair fabrics are again in fashion, being worn fur summer traveling dresses. They are absolutely dust resisting, a ad they are light in weight, cool enrugh for hot weather. and yet sufficiently protecting for the cool summer days, lhev come in black, iu gray, and iu changeable eltocts. elvot or satiu ribbon is niuou used as a trimming for theso gown. Skirts are severely plain ai regards trimmings, in spite of attempts made to popularize garments with fan-like insertions aud other patchy arraui; j ments. But if the np-to-dnte jupes are simplicity itself, tuit lack of orna ment is replaoed by the enormous volume of ray lady s petticoat. Nine yards of material double width is the usual quantity of stuff now used I for aa ordinary dxsss. ; BUDOKr OF ruN. VAKIOCS SOfrZCES. f On ft Strlns Kiist to Klnt Out The Klertlon of the Ktilure A fruition (juest, l:to.. lite. 11" tells yo:i whs' a s'r'n; of fi't From out tho wsv tn .lr''ws Cut, sh! Initi'H't of str nnu til n lie doubtless strlorflug vu' Town 'i'jpiej. A rnrtTLRss qriwr. City Boarder "Didn't yon alver ie that yon had plenty of fruit?" I Jerseymau That's right. The old woman's got over a hundred cans of iU" ruck. KASV TO FIND OtT. Wyld "I wonder where Ilighce gets his money?" Mack "I don't know, but I will toon learn. My wife's curiosity is aroused." Harlem Life. TnR r.t.r.rno.v or Titc rrrrns. Candidate -"I can't understand why my support was not greater at thu polls." Manager "I am told a grent msny of the voters had nothing to wear." Town Topics. oMRwriAT rr.toro. ITugsins "Isn't Mibd Basting rather cold?" liissam "Co'd? AU sho r.eds is no mo pemmicau nn 1 a relief expedi tion to be a regular Arctic explora tion.;' Puck. ma roisr ok vtnw. The Sentimentalist "Doosn't Miss Dove look as if sho was very sweet and tender?" The Gourmet "Yc, indeed I As il all sho needed to make her perfect was a few mushrooais." JuJje. AD.7V2 AND BELOW. ITiisband "Wo must bo more eco nomical in the uso of coal." Wife (a Vassar graduate) "There aro untold billions of tons of coal just beneath tho earth's surface, and " Husband "Acd oneor two big cor porations just above." Xcw York Weekly. rnnsminiNo ins own MsmnNr. Irato Party "Young man, havo you mado any provision for your family? Is vour life insured?" Agent "I-r-" Irate Party "Well, it don't make any difference just now. But you'd better get it insured before you call here nain." Puck. BAFEn, TOO. Visitor "How long has this foud continued?" Mountaineer" 'Bout thurty ycahs, sab." Visitor "Why doesn't tho law stop in and settle it?" Mountaineer "Well, sah, it's bet tah to let it run on, sah, till only one gen tleman is left, sah, and theu wo ll haug bin." Chicago llccord. IT .SrilF.ADS HEALTH. "Why was Mr. Pestloso cool to Mr. Wheeler? I thought they were great Irieuds." ".So they were; but Mr. Wheeler bos lately become a bicycle agent, and Mr. Postlo insists that ho has ruiacd his business." "Wh-, is Mr. Portia also a bicycle agent?" "No; hois a druggist." Harper's Bazar. AN rSAITBEflATEn Ht lTOR. ITc "Yoiir-er father nud mother have noticed that I am-er-calliug on vou nuito frequently, haveu't they ?" Sho "They couhtn't very wtdl help it." "Aro they mad?" "Xot a bit." "Truly?" "Certainly. They know it isu't my fault that you como so much." Now York Weekly. A FRANK LOVER. ITo "Carrie, do you know, darling, that yon are tho only girl I ever---" She "There, that will do. Don't tell mo any of your fairy stories." He "But hear me out. You nro the only girl, I say, that I ever thought was fool enough to have me." She "Wuich shows that I was ms.de for you. Yes, Charley, I thiuk you may buy that ring as soou as you like." Boston Transcript. G03O OF A IIU A:t A.NTKS. Mr. Trotter "Loo! here, didn't yo'i guarauteo that you would traiu that kicking hoise ot mine so that I could drive him just as well as you could?" Celebrated Horse Trainer "Cer tainly." Mr. Trotter "Cut ho kicked my buggy to pieces as soon as I got home." Celebrated Horse Trainer "Well he kicked mine to pieces about live minutes before." Frank Leslie's Weekly. IT MADE "HLKEri" NICK AT FIB ART. "Talk about your brotherhood of roan," said Sleepy Ike, the dusty wanderer, to his companion, "there ain't no such thing. I've lost faith iu humau nature." "How's that, Sleepy?" "Just now I went to that big house the other side of tha creek and asked tho mistress if I coulun't eat some grass iu her front yard. She said no, I'd spoil the lawn, but that grass was too long ou the tennis courts, and I might have some there. Such things just break my hoart." New York Tribune. A SHORTHAND JOSC. rawhvr (oxprt shorthand roprri.-J i say, tfamc. tun nor frurg ii port or i nar lecture, is n fii;.-, James (a novice "All lmt . . " seutence iu the middle of j;, 'J can i lor me 1110 ot me make 14, '. . I iu v unit wiiat 16 if. Lawley "O'.i, jnt put in Vroi' plsusc' and let it go." ' ' tfames acts u th surc-.t; n , thf lecture is sent lor pu';i i . ,;l ' .' t ie doctored part readiur: ".'n ,ljt" 1 Will lltttAtn Vlltt Ikttt A fdR. louger. (Uroat applause.)" 'fj ; .V ' j DIAMOND cn PtAW) V! Mr rs. l ou-onby iircH'itts L !,' Madame Valerie, the mo iste, (,, , cut nn error iu the tiiounaieji,,, ; for her summer costume. "Madamewill Lotij that !! on the challis v',nn i c!i r., , eighty-five cents a yar. ; . 1 ribbon on tho surah gown u; ,, . and yet precisely t ti m-u-ribbon was u-el! , it course I" murmurs Mr. l' 1 . . , .. suspiciously sweet tones, a Mn' v tcr in her eye the whih "Ah!" cries mmlamo, . stupid bookkeeper is rnin! (J, c .v it is a mistake, my dear Mr. I'.n by. I ani desolated it sho.il 1 n. I will rectify it nt or.c. 1J , bona should have been chur,:: 1 tt Truth. FAt'LT CF T!F.U SY'T" !. "Bridget, I want a iju I ;' . bag of salt, two oucces of p.p.,.. loaf ot bread and a poun 2 ef l :) ; l)o you think von can reiceta') r t all, or ehail I write them downy "Sure, mate, I kin rumeuih-r tho other. Wiicu I hev lir -.il. 1 ; I want butter, and when I Lavj :. wsct pepperar.il salt." "All ri-ht. Cu, mil long." Bridget was not I-tg. H back in ft very ehcrt time, b-t v; empty basket. "hv, wherj is t'ao Erilget?" "1 couldn't rcmcmlcr w.-.n ; ; mam." "V.'liv, I th'jught you c cii ! r ber each article by tho 1. it." "Faith, mil)', I hil ;, number tuo furst ouj by." il Ba-nr. An Ltrorillittiry I ikuhi ;r, Oouverneir, X. Y., lost a 1 ,, citi.en bv the death of Albert '.V lie was Dora in ;.icri;in::r 1S11, and want to Ciouver'nur the county was iuot!v will,.". ninco bis itoatti tuo lotio'.vii'" 0: document was found auieii L:t vate papers : "I am to-day eighty-four y sr I I have never had a quarr -I with or woman since I arrived nt mm;, t I havo always succeeded iu inrn: way in the world. I never Un.i a dollar in moncv : never Mil 1 1 lar's interest ; never gave cy : never sned a person; never mi never food a lawyer a dollar, nH usually acted 11s my own em tio far as I kuow, I am st pen ' mackind, and if I havecu.'nueiL not who they are. This remarkable retrospect vi ten on April 1! last, and nt legible. Mr. Whito had for wa; enioved the distinction oi l'e.a. - . oldest living graduate of tue 0 ueur esleyau Summary, vi some iliH-iiilcs was a faiuoiii ' - lenruiug. Xew York I'res-. Smallest Homestead Liiildr; u hut is lievori 1 doubt tlk s"-l nru.jiiI:. body of laud ever gruitd! I'uited States as a iinme-te-n I at i, Dad", the extreme soutlicsit't: ri ii-. ty of thu Statu of I iori.la, of a small island iu the unr'.ii Lake Worth. This island b f less thau one-fourth of an .- teut. vet the claim for it wis' in the United States Lsul I'.?0P1TA O.iinesville ; final proof wssdi; and the owucr took popsessiui J. J. Haley, ot Bhodo MuU- j tin f site islaud cost him 9.1. J 1, t i n- fee aud thirtv-sovou ceut land. Tint homestead is b Jt l sandi)it, situate ! about otion f the ocean, whose tide Hew i:f set l lako from an inlet about tint ; from tha isle. Mr. Hs. Hr.n about 8S ) per mouth from li- sr.ANi "'nco.'iihi mont. ns tha isle is hut in t green and loggerhead turtle J iuto the lake from tho oee.a '1 and there ho catches tbeai. -I Freo Press. A King ol Vure r n r v..i-rn u Hurt I pure gold that has never I'1 since 1810. Iu that yer his uot the col I fevor s il' rwirii.: promising to send back t Lie M be found. He chancel tJ J "UW,. .1. . . f.. I .... ... all I it ' I iuu oiieuesnim uud - -- i f.w moiitlm till Dr. XortJlM ljt Tl.i. l.a.l .... U into S A.US4 SS7 t im kUW-W - nrViinli Iia mora eff ' niLii.li ij inn lmt nns-tllir-1 1 I -ill nal size, ibe st-mier, j ' 1 uow President of the Scirtli l of California. Uincium'- Star. (ioo.l t oiiutrj I'1! A Western conteiunortfj ihu mi iirnvMninut of du- ssys: "It is not uecc'.': tase to get better road, necessary is a 'better the taxes levied to-J. TlvepH B.ru many mi.eso.'- not far from this city ' J s ft M sp w tliirtr vetri without tJ 'IV" sional commtiuittes "-1' 1 fullv of such a waste, hat - rare that country ro1" J s - a . l. anrfS "S. a uisgrace vo vui -them. -New York Sua. I'atTi Ai!in; Kuv I tur:i .nn's I I'.' l ai In- i.e.". The ; 11 tns. 4D in If and Lies II . ill In .lirril 1 s tn I tile II jti;l:it:i a.H Ii- I :.in;;m; 1 :n-l, lie ;ii! mill hi!t:le l i'f :i iti.r nJ