as the od the 3 class ingre- ined — n with ‘ormer Paris, e and en ex- award- high- he ex- owder, chief Jepart- ‘chem- of the de for sining eavan- e 160 ounce tartar e next tained g gas. rage of s found vening etitor, re the Its wever, es as esome- oy fig- wn and » coun- , have Baking to ex- } powe ly of great n the n his ought same hed a amid robert f the en his a and de by vard for ared by do, O. . J. Che- im per- sactions obliga~- Toledo, holesale lly, act OUs SUTr= le. Sold 1 “you it of a rtaker d-line: do the ne this Tes for roubles. ry Ward inches echa™'s ‘a box. eggs in costs no renee. d y distin I took nd gave 0 give la ately re. health.” liou-ness i i : rE TA ERR 4) rE _— Ga . WOMAN'S WORLD. PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR FEMININE READERS. HAIR DRYING STOVES. In the hair-dressing parlors of New York where women pay fifty cents for a shampoo and seventy-five rents for a shampoo with whipped egg trimmings, the tresses are dried over a small sheet-iron stove. The attendant mops the wig with a towel, and then wheels the tabled-stove up to the customer’s back, lets the hair hang down a tin spout, turns on the gas, gives her a fashion paper to read and goes off for twenty or thirty minutes to shampoo or curl another customer. —New York World. TELL-TALE CURTAINS, An observant woman says that people conspicuously advertise their good or bad taste by the character of the curtains with which they dress their front windows. Having occasion to look up a family whom she knew to be dainty in house-furnishings, she de- cided on reaching the street in which they lived, that she conld identify the house by the character of the curtains. The house that she had supposed to be the one she decided against solely be- cause of its ugly curtains, and she con- fidently rang the bell of another be- cause it was tastefully curtained. It proved to be the right house.— New York Witness. FASHION'S CONSTANT CHANGES. The constant changes of fashion in relation to out-of-door garments are quite a serious consideration to those who formerly made their handsome coats last two or three seasons, and even then did not find themselves very much behind the time. Now, nearly every year one is compelled to recog- nize the fact that the fashions of a typical yesterday are emphatically not the fashions of to-day. Certain lead- ing striking features are introduced every season, even when the old lines are to a great extent followed, but the former serve to date the garment more effectively. A fashionable gown, if not too pronounced in style and fabric, may be brought up to date by certain additions and alterations, but it is much more difficult, and often quite impossible, to produce the same result where out-of-door garments are con- cerned. Cloth is more impracticable to deal with than silk or stuff goods, and there is not the same latitude. — New York Post. LO BENGULA AND THE PRINCESS. Some three or four years ago the dusky South African potentate, with whom Great Britain is now at war, sent his Indunas to England with a message to Queen Victoria. They ful. filled their mission and returned home. It now transpires that in making their report to Lo Bengula they descanted in giowing terms upon the beauty and virtues of Princess Beatrice, whose portrait they carried back with them, pointing out to him that as a stroke of diplomacy he could not do better than take her as one of his many wives and thus secure for himself and his people the everlasting good will and friend- ship of the British nation. Struck with the common sense view of this suggestion the dusky monarch at once communicated with the British Foreign Office and offered to Queen Victoria's pet daughter an unprecedented dowry of 10,000 bullocks. The Princess and her mother were much amused when the offer was in due course officially reported. Lo Bengula completely ignored Prince Henry of Battenberg, whose wife Beatrice is. WOMEN IN MANY FIELDS. It is stated that there is only one woman journalist of reputation and influence in France. This is Mme. Severine, and it is alleged that she makes from $12,000 to $15,000 a year by her writings. The author of this misinformation, now going the rounds of the American press, should feel ashamed of himself, or herself, as the case may be. First of all there are a good many women employed to do odds and ends of work on the French newspapers, and these might be called journalists for the use of a better term and also because the word journalist rolls off the tongue in an easy and graceful way. None of these women make from $12,000 to $15,000 a year. Neither does Mme. Severine make this amount out of her newspaper writings. She does make quite a comfortable in- come from her feuilletons, her stories, and her magazine work. But no women engaged in journalism any- where in the world are paid so well for their labors as the American women. And of all those engaged in journalism * directly, I doubt if there is one whose income from her newspaper writings alone will average $5000 a year. Per- haps I should except Mrs. Margaret J. Sullivan from this list. There is hardly a newspaper.of importance in America that has not from one to five women on its staff, but in no case that I know of is their pay over $50 a week. Many of these women are very talented and readily earn a snug sum from magazine “writing and other special work. But the woman who earns $100 a week by her pen, even in these golden days of woman's usefulness, is very rare, in- deed.—New York Advertiser. THE STORY OF ‘‘THE LADIES.” In Llangollen, Wales, the good folk speak of ‘‘the Ladies,” and visitors by the score make pilgrimage to the little town to see the cottage where ‘‘the Ladies” lived. They were a pair of friends who forsook their {amilies and forswore marriage, in order that their days might be spent together. Lady Eleanor Butler was the older and the richer of the two who in 1778 lished themselves at Plas Newydd, and Miss Ponsonby was the younger. With them fled Lady Eleanor’s maid, Mary Caryll, who lived with them until her death. For fifty years they lived to- ‘| gether in the little house that stood among the most peaceful and beauti- ful surroundings. There were valleys in sight and mountains with strange Welsh names; there was a mountain stream dashing down in miniature cas- cades. Within the house were carved oak panellings, window-doors and crossbeams, and an ideal combination of luxury and simplicity. As the vears passed on and the peo- ple began to see that it was no whim or passing affection that had bound the two together they became universally respected and beloved. They were the Ladies Bountiful of the town. Their Hermitage, as they called it, was noted for its hospitality, and great person- ages were proud to be the Ladies’ guests. The Duke of Wellington was one who came to see them. Lord Edward Yitzgerald met his wife there, and was afterwards kept in hid- ing at the time of the famous riots. The Ladies never altered their styles from the time of their coming to Llan- gollen. Their hair was worn shortand unpowdered. They wore very full gowns of cloth and white neckerchiefs. In 1829 Lady Eleanor died at the age of ninety and two years later Miss Ponsonby died at the age of seventy- six. The two faithful friends and their loyal servant, Mary Caryll, all lie buried in one grave.—New York World. FASHION NOTES. Meany of the new costumes show ths pointed apron overskirt. ~~ (lass cracker jars with waving rings and silver covers are new. The use of olivines in foliage wreath brooches is very good. Receptacles of silver, net-purse- shaped, are made to carry the hand- kerchief in. Fancy woven moose cloth comes up among the handsome novelties in win- ter dress fabrics. : The marquise rings are longer than ever and so slender that they might be used as weapons of offense. Evening shades in faille, armure silk, and fancy satins are sold at less than half their former prices. There is no end to the enameled salt cellars in silver gilt and the tea strainers with enameled borders. The cape in plush velvet or fur is again a favorite garment, not so much for the street, but for the theatre. There is no between this season. Either one’s coat must be short to the waist line like the zouave or long to knee. Many fancy pieces in capes and col- lars are seen in the shops, and are sure to be extremely popular with a plain outdoor coat. A new brooch of pink shell, convolv- ulous-shaped, was wreathed in diamond foliage with a tiny gold Cupid crawl- ing from out it depths. The newest bedroom silver candle- sticks are low with square bases. These are upturned at the edges and have perforated diamond-shaped or- naments at the angles. Heavy woolen dress materials hav- ing a chine or clouded ground with bright dashes of color here and there, aremade up with moire bodice trim- mings the shade of the gay color. A pretty Persian lamb neckpiece is made with a pointed cape in the back, coming over the shoulders and extend- ing down into two long tabs, which reach to the knees. Ithas a very high Medici collar. The newest floral jewelry has the petals trimmed either with small dia- monds or with gold or colored mark- ings. This is much better. A new mourning brooch has crumpled petals as in a carnation. Bear in boas and muffs is always popular. A boa is the prettiest and most graceful finish to a street toilet. The mink tippet is also pretty, but a long fur boa is apt to entwine a heart in its graceful lines. Among the pretty costumes for slender youthful wearers are those having skirts of either crimson benga- line or richly plaided silk and satin mixtures, with skirted Russian blouse or black velvet trimmed with jetted collar and girdle. The sleeves are ex- tra full and the blouse and skirts lined with shot silk. The skirt of plain bengaline or plaid is made in full circular form, with a velvet ruche three inches wide as a finish. The two-toned felt hats of the sea- gon have found much favor, especially in the plateau and sailor shapes, and in the novelties narrow behind and with raised sides. Good combinations are tobacco and moss green, golden brown and tan, blue and red, gray and reseda. Black and white two- toned felts in plateau shape are in constant demand. These are trimmed with ribbon loops, stiff wings, jet aigrettes and buckles. in ied Pens of All Ages. The patent office at Washington has a collection of pens that illustrates the difficulties with which men had to con- tend before they found a suitable in- strument with which to write. There are the styluses usad by the ancient; the instruments for writing on wax tablets, one end sharp like an awl, the other flat like a paper cutter. There are the brushes used by the Japanese and Chinese of the present day, and quills of every variety, together with an infinite number of steel pens. But the mosé curious are some quill pens with steel points. They were madein an effort to do away with the constant necessity for the mending of the pen, a process that few could perform properly and that everybody hated. The effort was very ingenious, but un- successful, because the points could fled from their Irish homes and es*zb- | pot be made to stay. —Chicago Herald. POPULAR SCIENCE. People in the United States consume nearly 600 tons of nux vomica yearly. The North and South Poles are exactly 12,000 miles apart from each other. So minute are the pores of the skin that a grain of fine sand will cover 308 of them. Edison conceived his idea of the phonograph from a close inspection of indentations on the tape of a Morse re- corder. The Lighthouse Board has demon- strated that telephone communication may be established from the shore to vessels near shore. The method will be put into practical operation as soon as funds are available for the purpose. Taking the earth as the centre of the universe and the polar star as the limit of our vision, the visible universe em- braces an aerial space with a diameter of 420,000,000,000 miles, and a cir- cumference of 1,329,742,000,000 miles. The assayer who examined the sro- lite that fell on the farm of Lawrence Freeman, near Bath, South Dakota, on the afternoon of August 29, 1892, reports that the principal minerals it contains are gold, silver, nickel and cobalt. The fastest mechaniem, artificial or natural, made to penetrate water for any considerable distance is, accord- ing to Jeremiah Head, Thornycroft’s torpedo boat Ariete, which, on trial, made 30.16 miles per hour. Aerial mechanisms are capable of very much greater speed. The prevalence of crimson colors in cértain fishes on our New England coast on portions of which scarlet and crimson seaweeds abound is explained by Professor J. Brown Goode by the red pigment derived by the crustaceans from the seaweeds they devour, and which in turn form the food of the fishes. Explorers have recently visited the wild Olympic mountains in Western Washington. They report that the timber line disappears at about six thousand feet, and at the base of the highest peak, on the 5000 and 6000- foot level, is a system of meadows and lakes, where grass and flowers grow in great luxuriance. Some writers think the process of turning white among arctic animals is in some way connected with a decrease of vital energy; and in his notes on recent science, in the Nineteenth Cen- tury, Prince Krapotkin brings forward as an example the alleged permanent white colors 6f domesticated animals in sub-arctic reglors, such as the Yakutsk horse. Scientists are exuberant at the dis- covery of what is supposed to be a new metal, or at least a new combination of old metals. The scene of the de- posit is in Albiquin, New Mexico. In a large morass are several thousand logs of timber petrified into copper ore, averaging sixty per cent. of cop- per and from thirty to forty ounces of silver to the ton. An experienced whaler is authority for the statement that the Greenland whale never has more than one set of teeth. These teeth are milk teeth, and when the young whale is weaned they do not fall out likea baby’s milk teeth, but disappear by absortion in the jaw, and instead of being replaced by per- manent teeth plates of baleen or whale- bone are substituted for them. i a Preservation of Pictures, The preservation of pictures has now become in London, it would seem, as the result of some very ingenious ex- periments, aregular scientific proceed- ing, if the accounts given are to be re- lied upon. It is simply placing the surface of the picture, be it of canvas or paper, in a vacuum, thus protecting it from the usual atmospheric action, which is so deteriorating. In carrying out this plan the picture is enclosed in a metal frame or vase, covering the back and sides, and projecting from the sides like an ordinary frame. In the edges of this case a plate of glass is inserted, just as in an ordinary frame, and hermetically sealed to the metal. The air is then withdrawn from between the surface of the pict- ure and the glass, and thusthe picture is in a vacuum. It is asserted that the effect of this plan isto completely pro- tect pictures from the action of damp- ness, air, gases and other causes that operate to destroy paintings exposed or framed in the ordinary way.—Bos- ton Cultivator. On A Story of the King of Spain. The characteristic passion of the lit- tle King of Spain is for soldiers. Everything about the army interests him, ‘and he will listen to stories about battles for any length of time. He was once taken by the Queen to the Convent of the Assumption. About sixty or seventy of the white-robed pupils were sent into the gardens to see the King and sisters, whereupon His Majesty, seeing an unrivalled op- portunity for exercising his favorite talent, immediately organized the grave but amused girls into companies. He then appointed the Infanta second in command, and giving the word “march,” placed himself at the head of his charming army. On meeting the Queen, who was walking about with several of the nuns and coumrt ladies he ordered ‘‘halt” and ‘‘pre- sented arms,” following up his com- mand by a chanting of the ‘Marcha Real,” which was at once taken up by the girlish voices. —St. James Gazette, os A Pretty Big Eagle. John Hazelton and Edward Me- Queen, two fourteen-year-old boys, while out hunting near Oakland, Ill, killed and took into town an eagle that measured seven feet from tip to tip of its wings. The eagle had at- tacked their dog and when they inter- fered attacked them, and one of the boys’ shoes was torn off in the encoun- ter. — St. Louis Republic. FAMOUS BULBS. HYACINTHS AND TULIPS FROM THE OLD TOWN OF HAARLEM. How a Region of Sterile Sand Has Been Converted Into a Vast Flower Garden—Triumphs of Dutch Industry. F you happened to be down at the docks in the fall of the year and watched the unloading of a newly arrived steamship your curiosity might be aroused by the large number of boxes of a certain size and shape which were being hoisted from the hold ofhe vessel. pon inquiry you would find that the boxes contained bulbs, and as each box contains some thousands you would probably wonder where they were all going to be used. The bulbs are the fruit of an indus- try, the establishment of which is one of the most remarkable instances of perseverance in the history of mankind. The old town of Haarlem, where these bulbs come from, has seen many a bloody combat waged betoreits ancient walls, but it is doubtful if all those warlike operations combined demand- ed from the combatants such an ex- penditure of energy and toil as did the great struggle with the forces of na- ture whick the men of Haarlem waged for many a long year in the face of difficulties which, perhaps, any other people would have deemed insur- mountable when they began to form the gardens where these bulbs grow. But the Dutchman is nothing if not perservering, and truly these sweet smelling gardens in the vicinity of the old town are a standing monument to his patience and sturdiness. They have been actually wrested from a desert as barren as the shores of the Dead Sea. The original site was noth- ing but sand, deposited during many centuries by the wind blowing inland, and not a solitary green thing would grow on it. But the patient toiler dug and drained and fertilized until he ob- tained a soil which is absolutely per- fect for the purpose for which it is used—so perfect, indeed, that the grower can defy competition and en- joy practically a monopoly of the in- dustry. They have indeed ‘‘made the wil- derness to blossom as a rose,” and the beauty of these gardens in the spring months is marvelous beyond descrip- tion. Imagine miles of gorgeous flowers, of every conceivable tint and variety of form, grown in patches, each sort by itself, and filling the air with sweet perfume, and you can form some idea of the splendid reality. The gardens have small canals cut through them, and at intervals hedges are planted; indeed, these last are very necessary, as without them the sandy beds would be actually blown away. The varieties of bulbs culti- vated are very numerous, reaching in- to the thousands, but the most im- portant and the most cultivated are hyacinths and tulips. The propagation of the bulbs is a slow and tedious process, and the growers have need of a good deal of the patience of their ancestors to suc- cessfully prosecute the business. The hyacinth bulb as we purchase it in the stores is already from three to five years old, and can be planted and will bloom year after year for five or six years; in the soil around Haarlem it will bloom thirteen times. It then generally decays. The method of propagating the hya- cinth will serve as an illustration for all, although some of the others do not take so long a time. About the middle of July, when the flowers and leaves are faded, the bulbs are taken out of the ground, placed in a sunny spot, covered slightly with earth and left there for about three weeks, when they become dry and hard. The bulb is then cut under- neath with three cross cuts, or is scooped out to about half its thickness, and in November following it is plant- ed with the cut side downward. At the end of that season they are lifted, andit is found that from forty to fifty infant bulbs have grown where the cuts were made. These are separated from the parent bulb and planted out year after year, becoming larger each year, for four or | five years, before they are of a sufi- | cient size for the market. All new varieties have to be raised from seed, | which is a longer and more tedious | process still. The perfected bulb is | then stored on shelves in warehouses | to await shipment. As Haarlem is the world’s prineipal source of supply it may be imagined | | that the business is enormous. The | | greater portion of the bulbs produced | are sold in Europe, but America has | come to the front in recent years and | | now purchases an enormous quantity annually. The demand for them is rapidly increasing as the beauty and value of bulbous plants become more | generally known and appreciated.— | New York Herald. Useless Q. The letter Q is a superfluous alpha- | betic character —a nondescript of the | worst sort and of no more real value in expressing or helping to expressour | thoughts in writing than one of the | Chinese word signs would be. It never ends an English word and can not be- gin one without the aid of the letter | u, being invariably followed by the last mentioned letter in all words be- | longing to our language. The man | doesn’t live that can tell the ‘‘why” of | the peculiar relation of the letters q | and u, or why the former was given | its curious name. Some argue that its | name was applied because of the tail or cue at the bottom of the letter, but | the original q, when sounded just as | it is to-day, was made without the cue, the character mich resembling the | | English sign for pounds.—Boston | Transcript. | i Cheap Meals. Mr. J. C. Monoghan, United States Consul at Chemnitz, has made an in- teresting report to the State Depart ment on the subject of cheap eating houses in German cities, from which it appears that American cities have much to learn in that respect. ‘Ta | minimize begging and to remove the shame that no man feels more than the honest poor of accepting food in charity,” says the Consul, ‘‘cities in Germany have established eating houses where substantial foods are sold very cheaply.” He says he visited one of these establishments in Chem- nitz and found nothing to condemn and very much to commend. He adds: ‘The food is substantial. To a hard working man, with an appetite sharpened by exercise, the dinner ie excellent. The meats, vegetables, etc., are properly cleaned and pre- pared before they are cooked. Every- thing is kept clean and smells sweet and wholesome. The people, who look hearty and healthful, gather in large rooms on benches placed by long tables. Besides the dinner, or midday meal, supperis served to those who wish it. Inasmuch as the dinner is for the most part enjoyed by those men whose wives work, or by men and women who are far from their homes and by those who prepare their own evening meal, the suppers of the city eating house play a very small part in the annual account. Af these suppers, however, one can get pickled herrings with potatoes for 31 centseach person; salt herrings and potatoes, 3 cents; potatoes with curds of buttermilk, 2} cenis; warm beer, 2} cents per cup; different kinds of soup, 2: cents for three-quarters of a liter (very nearly a quart); coffee, 1} cents per cup (a little over half a pint) ; bread, of which there are two kinds—the so-called black or rye bread and wheat bread— 11 cents and three-fourths of a cent for a portion. There were sold last year 435,760 dinners. At 33,294 of these bread was bought for 1 cents a portion. The year’s expenditures were $15,557, the income $17,501, leaving a balance in favor of the city of $1944. The Consul gives alist of thearticles served, from which it appears that beef, pork, saussge, potatoes, peas, beans, lentils, bread, fruits and vegetables of all kinds form the main part of the meals. ‘‘These dinners,” says the Consul, ‘never cost more than 10 cents. They do away with the death and dyspepsia dealing din- ner pail. They blot out the shame of begging. They are nutritious and wholesome. Besides, they are self- supporting.” —Washington Star. LL Sag Caring For the Hair. As no one medicine has been found which will benefit all persons, so no remedy has yet come to light which will make hair grow on bald heads, or even prevent it from falling out. The roots of the hair must be treated with the same consideration we show the roots of flowers. [Epithelial scales grow in several layers upon the entire body. Ome is always forming to re- place the scuriskin which falls off naturally or is washed off in the bath. From the head, seldom subjected to water, they do not fall so easily as from other portions of the body, and encircling the roots of the hair are apt to remain until they fall naturally or are violently dislodged by the comb. If these scales of dandruff are allowed to mature and fall away they do little harm, but if they are scraped off they quickly reform. The hair should be washed twice a month in warm water with some odor- less soap, and occasionally a pinch of salt may be added. The scalp should be gently manipulated with fingers until the dandruff is =all loosened and can easily be washed out, Into the rinsing water put a little bay rum. Wipe the head and hair as dry as possible, then sit in the sun’s rays or glow of the fire until it is quite dry. It should be the duty of every mother to see that from infancy her children’s hair is faithfully cared for. The young hair should be brushed several times a day with a soft brush, and the scalp gently rubbed all over with the fingers. This will stimulate the roots. Hair dyes of all kinds are objectionable, but if one must be used, let it be the simplest thing possible. A receipt which is practically harmless is as follows: To a pint of white vinegar add two ounces of iron filling and one ounce of | Boil until reduced | bruised gall-nuts. one-half, strain and bottle for use. Brown hair may be made to take ona sunny tinge by wetting it with saffron steeped in tincture of rosemary. handful of saffron to a pint of the | tincture is the right proportion. This, too, is said to be harmless, but, grant- ing as much, it is far better taste for a woman to retain the color nature de- signed to match her eyes and com- plexion. Oily hair on man or woman 1s an abomination. The natural gloss is distinctive. Soap and water, sun shine and care are the best hair tonies, — Ladies’ Home Journal. — Varieties of Buck Boards. The buck board as seen in north. | eastern New York, where it is in gen. eral use, is a vastly different vehicle from the buck board of the suburban region. The latter is a stanch-look- ing, open vehicle, usually painted to resemble polished oak, while former is often an unpainted wagon, | the | the | with & perilous sag in the middle, sug- | gestive to the stranger of the historic | ‘‘one-horse shay” and its sudden dis- solution. —New York Sun. ei English is spoken by 90,000,000 of people ; Russian, by 75,000.000; Ger- man, 56,000,000; French, 49,000,000; Spanish, 38,000,000; Italian, 20,000,- 000; Portuguese, 14,000,000, Scandinavian, 9,000,000. and | SOLDIERS COLUMN SOLDIERS’ LYRICS. Extracts of Poetical Letters Sent Home During 1861-85. DURING the war of 1861-435 ae mails reaching New York city from the South and the West were unusually heavy. The soldiers who comprised our various armies when not en- gaged with the E enemy or mak- had many weary ing long marches, and lonely hours, To pass this time pleasantly and profitably, many of them devoted their leisure moments to writing long letters to their various relaticns and [riends at home. Very many of the soldiers’ letters during this period bore rhymed ad- dresses, some of which were quaint and witty, while others were sentimen- tal in character and expressed the writer's feelings with a greater or less- er degree of accuracy; and though sometimes there was a struggle to make the address “fit in’’ neverthelesa it was seldom they failed to make it clear enough to finally reach its dea- tination. The writer was connected with the New York general post-office during the above period, and at odd moments collected a number of these poetical addresses—good, bad and inditferent. A selection of a few of these may re- call “old times’ to the veterans and afford entertainment to your younger readers, giving them an 1dea of how some of the soldiers amused themselves and their friends at home, In order that the younger readera may more clearly understand some of these “‘adaresses” it should be stated that the soldiers were permitted to send their letters without prepayment of postage, and lack of funds often compelled the acceptance of this priv- ilege, However it was necessary that the letter should bear the endorse- ment of some regimental officer and it was then duly for- warded, double postage being collect- ed from the receipent, who of course cheerfully paid the “fine.” It was a well known fact that the soldicis did not receive their pay very promptly, small as it was; consequent- ly when they were paid the friendly sutler claimed the “lion's share” to cancel the uccount he hadso kindly (?) permitted them to “hang up” and fre- quently the insignificant balance wag soon quandered in the same direction, Theretore we need not wonder that the boys were proverbially “dead broke” and the following extracts will show the almost chrcnie financial condition in which many found themselves: A soldier, down in I'lorida swamps, Having spent all his money and used ail his stamp, Requesis that this letter may he through, While he tizhts for the honor of ‘Red. ‘nite and Blue.” Soldier's letter. ‘‘Nary red,” Hardtac« in-tead of bread; Postmaster, put tuis through, Mary stamp, but nine months duet Uacie Sam's to me a debtor, That'sthe reason [ “‘frank’’thisle!ter. 1t be would pay my lawful due 1 then world stamp this letier thro’. To be “strapped” in camp or else- vhere is a sufliciently disagreeable condition ofaffairs, even when you daily expect the paymaster; but when all hope is goue, as in the case olthis poor comrade, he surely merits our sympathies. Listen to Dis lamenta- tion: “Now is the hour of our discontent” The payvmaster's sloped, A d we've got not accent! It was often remarked, during thi period, that the armies contained a wonderful array of professional talent and also all the trades were numerous- ly represented. Small wonder, then, that we find a “naturalist,” who ap- pears to have been roving about, and, attracted by some charming music, tells the stury: To Clara Redfield. Madison, New Haven county, state of Conn., Who wien she pours her music forth (The sweetest tones of all the earth), The nightingale, that bird of fame, Stops short its own,and sinks in shame Again, we have a fair example of the class of pnzzles called anagrams: To Hiram Allen, Oswego. Transpose l it readeth,, We-go so, Transposed again, and you will see That thus it runneth, So-zo-we. Transposed once more, and it will show A common adage—So-we-go! Once more, in a similar vein,we find an effort to puzzle mail clerks: I wish Iwasa lU. T. K., Where once I used 2 B., For there resides Miss K. T. J., And her I wish 2 (. Surely. it needs no demonstration to show that the loved ones at home very anxiously and unceasingly awaited the arrival ofeletters from the dear ab- sent ones, and this feeling is somewhat graphically expressed in our closing selection of verses, written by a sol- dier who, for awhile, was stationed at Fort Schuyler, New York. They are entitled put THE MAIL. Oh! what a world of destinies Is compassed by thy hand, Thou bearer of the tidings From the loved of every land! And vetthou hast no sympathies, While speeding on the way. For those who pine and long for thee, With each returning day. What care hast thou for those who stand With half suspended breath, To read the missives borne by three Of love, of lite, or death? Of those who watch and wait for thee, Till minutes seem like years. Till cheeks grow pale and eyes grow dim, With bitter, heart sick tears Who hear thy dismal signal notes, Half wild with each delay, Then meet the careless, rapid words, “No mail for thee to-day.” —I S. BROWNE in Blue and Gray.