RILEY’S LUCK. Riley was a laz fellow, Never worked a bit. All day long in some store corner On a chair he'd sit. Never talked much—too much trouble— Tired his jaws, you see. All of us were making money; “Jest my luck!” says he. Some one offered him ten dollars If he'd work two days; Riley crossed his legs and looked up At the sun's hot rays. Then he leaned back in the shadow, Sadley shook his head ; ¥ Never asked me till hot weather; Jest my luck!” he said. Riley courted Sally Hopkins ‘In his lazy way; When he saw Jim Dodson kiss her ‘Jest my luck!” he’d say. Leap year came, and Mandy Perkins Sought his company; Riley sighed, and married Mandy; “Jest my luck!” says he. Riley took his wife out fishing In a little boat, Storm blew up @nd turned them over; Mandy wouldn't float. Riley sprang into the river, Seized her by the hair, Swam a mile unto the shore, where Friends pulled out the pair. Mandy was so full of water Seemed she'd surely die: Doctors worked with her two hours 'Ere she moved an eye. They told Riley she was better; Doctors were in glee; Riley chewed an old pine splinter: “Jest my luck!’ says he. —Detroit Free Press. 00 VV VTVVGVVl ¢ The Other One. BY VIRGINIA LYNDALL DUNBAR. 0 [Bb = Yo Yo 2 a = 2 =o a a oo J “Every marriage is hazardous, but I can conceive of no greater risk than was taken by that same handsome, mild-mannered woman.” Judge Watson was speaking of a smiling, elegantly-dressed lady, whom ne had just bowed out of his office, and to her carriage. ‘She doesn’t-look to me like one! who had gone through many severe trials in life.” . “I am thinking of the chance she took, and what might ltave been. The story is worth listening to, although, perhaps, T will tell it badly.” ‘““Let’s have it, by all means,’ said, “Very well,” answered the Judge; “take a cigar, and while we are smok- ing, T will try to tell you the story.” “The lady who just left has a twin sister who is now abroad. When they were girls together it was impossible to tell them apart, and when they grew to young womanhood they were literally as much alike as two peas, and their mother was the only one aside from themselves that could tell which was which, when they were abroad in the same attire. They used to play jokes on the young men, for, being so much alike, this was easy to do. ‘They were pretty girls, and had scores of young beaux, ready and willing to have all sorts of pranks played upon them, for just the sake of their companion. “Howard Gleason was especially attentive to Maud, and he admits that he sometimes made the mistake of embracing the wrong sister when he I happened to meet her suddenly in a light: — “The father, old Mr. Wardlow, was rich and proud, and only knew that Howard Gleason was courting one of his daughters. Now, Howard was not blessed with this world’s goods, and old man Wardlow was ambitious for Jhiis daughters; so he very promptly igsned an ultimatum. The goung man could have neither of the daugh- ters, until he had made a fortune, or at any rate, not until he had laid the foundation for one. ‘Maud wept and urged upon her father that he had money enough for both, and though the old man agreed that this was true, he was obdurate, . and refusedtobudge from the position he had taken. ' ‘Howard was proud and plucky, even if he was poor; he wasted neither time nor words. He soothed hissweet- heart, and then went straight to the mining regions of the west, where so many have sought, and found the smiles of fortune. Maud was to wait for him, and she promised to be faith- ful, no matter how long the time of waiting might be. « “The father «had also commanded that there should be mo correspond- ence between the young people, dur- ing thé time of Howard’s absence,and this condition was respected by both. “The months crept by wearily, and to the young man working so hard for the woman he loved, this time seemed interminable. - Day after day, and week after week he toiled uncheered by any message from the woman for whom he toiled. ‘Sometimes he felt tempted to break his pledged word, ~ and write to the girl, imploring her to - send him a few words, if only enough to tell him that she was still: faithful. And then his pride would come to his rescue, and he would Say to himself: * “No, I will not write;gif she can’t be faithful to me better I should know it now than when it is too late.”” So he worked, and toiled, cheered always by the belief that a fair, waiting to welcome him home, and counting the hours just as he was do- in 8 ek was with the young man,and in 1 little more than a year he and his partner had ‘struck it rich,’ and he was half-owner of a mine, that prom- ised to become one of the richest in that country. Then he‘determined to ay eart of his good fortune. He would ‘be his own messenger in carrying the glad news, so without a word, he put his things together and started east. = 40f course, having no correspond- ence with any one in town, no one was aware of Howard’s good fortune, and n he arrived at: his old home he I unheralded. * He took only suffi- eient tigre to! brush up a bik, and then | believed that her sweet girl was. back home and tell ‘the girl of his aw Nene he started for Mr. Wardlow’s. Ar- rived at the house he knew so well,and the afternoon being warm, he found nobody about, save the old gardener, who was looking after the flowers. ‘Where is your mistress?’ Howard asked. ‘“The old man hesitated. : ‘“‘Can’t you understand English?’ Howard said impatiently. ‘Where is your mistress?’ : ‘¢ ‘She’s—she’s in the grov e; sir, a-reading,’ said the old man, bowing obsequiously, and without more ado ‘Howard went to seek her. You can perhaps imagine :the meeting. He came suddenly upon a fair young crea- ture swinging in her hammock under the trees and reading. Coming up quietly behind her he ecanght her to his heart, as he covered her. face with kisses. “Then he held her | length and said: LL ‘“ ‘Maud, my darling!’ “While she answ ered, ‘Howard?’ and hid her face on his breast. ‘Howard had waited sufficiently long for his wife, ard so they were ! | quietly married’ the mext day, and | left at once on their wedding tour.’ { Here the Judge ceased his story, | and sat silent, puffing at his cigar, so | long that the other said: | “Well, I don’t see anything so very ‘risky’ in’ that.” The Judge smiled and then went on: “Wait. It was the ‘other one’ that Howard had marrigd. Maud had suc- cumbered tothe charms of a foreigner, had married and gone away with him. The ‘other one’ loved Howard had al- ways loved him, and when she saw that he mistook her for Maud of course she pitied him. When she found, too, that he had not the slightest notion of off at arm’s | | | | ceived the idea of marrying him her- self, and explaining to him afterward. After much coaxing, and because she daughter’s happi- ness depended upon it, Mrs. Wardlow consented to the plot. When they re- ‘turned from their wedding tour. Howard’s wife told him everything. He’s a sensible fellow and was quick to see that what had happened was all for his happiness. ‘Five years have gone by, and to this day he has never quit thanking his stars’ that he didn’t marry Maud, but married ‘the other one! ”’—St. { Louis Star. BUILT BY 1 THE WINDS. Holland’s Vigorous Battle Against the Advancing Sea. Appreciating the fact that the high chalk cliffsof England are no protec» tion against the sea, the Dutch engi- neers did not attempt to place an arti- ficial vertical wall against the waves and the storm tides, but coaxed the sea to deposit its sands on the shore and so build it up, rather than throw them inland and then, hungry for more, eat into the shore. = They be- lieved it best to satisfy its appetite, but induced it to toy with the sands, which its own flood currents and waves bring from other shores, and from the offing depths. The sand thus depos- ited blows, in the gales, over the in- land country. The engineersinduced it to stop and build a barrier for’them against the sea. One of the heaviest dikes along the coast was built by the winds themselves. The sand formed between the jet- ties becomes dry in sunny weather, and the surface is blown ashore when the wind is in that direction. It was desired to build a strong dike to con- nect with the sand dunes. This was accomplished by setting in the sand, in rows about afoot apart, tufts of the dune sea grass near by. The tufts were placed about a foot apart—sim- -ply little handfulls of grass; the place for each tuft was dug out with the hands, the tuft set into it, and the sand pressed around it. The whole surface of the dry, sandy beach above high tide was covered with this plan- tation, and, just back of it, at the highest point of the existing sandy area, one or two rows of reeds were set into the sand, their tops cut off, and the stalks left standing about fenr feet above the sand. The sand, drift- along over the surface, catches and in one windy day will almost bury the tufts of grass and stand up a foot along the rows of reeds. Thenanother plantation was made, and another, un- til a massive dike was built up to the height of the adjoining dike. In high storm tides the waves will eat into the toe of the slope and pull down the sand, but, by the same process of building, the dike is again restored to its former size.—Engineering Maga- zine. ; The Chief Rascal. Thomas was a gentleman of Celtic origin, and it did not take long for the boys to notice his brogue, and they made all manner of fun about it, often mimicking it to a nicety. Thomas stood the torture as long as any able- bodied man could be expected to, but finally he resorted to punishment for his tormeptors. ‘One day, full of wrath at au exceptional breach on the part of a tow-headed youngster, he strode vengefully to the school. With much noise he climbed the stairway in search of the principal. He was courteously shown to that person, and began to bitterly denounce the actions of the pupils. ‘‘I amy sorry to hear this, ¢laimed his listener; ‘‘and I will PA put an end to it.” “Oi wish you would, sirrub. Oime sorry to trouble ye, but oi’ve been so 29 tell ye, as oi understand ye are the principal of thim. »_Harper’ 8 Round Table. Since the beginning of this dakivy ru %ew er than fifty-two voleanic islands have arisen out of the sea. Nineteen of thatnumber have since" disappeared, and ten are now i } veg the true condition of affairs, she con-’ abused by thim rascals oi thought oi’d: { fine as silk, and is greatly prized hy .it flourishes, THE TARTARIAN LAMB, A Strange Plant That Closely Resembles an Animal, Among the strange stories to be found in the narratives of early travelers, few are stranger than that of the vegetable lamb of Tartary. This story, as believed by 'the reading publie, and even by the naturalists of two centuries ago, is so marvelous,and so obviously absurd, that we wonder how the most credulous could have believed it to be true. The story is that, in "an elevated and cultivated salt plant of great ex- tent, west of the river Volga, there may be found a creature half-animal, half-plant, to which the natives give the name of barometz, meaning ‘little lamb.”’ To obtain it, the Tartars sow in the ground a seed like that of a melon, from which, in due time, rises the stran ge plant, having the figure of a lamb, with the feet, the hoofs, the ears, and the whole head, except the horns, of that animal, distinctly formed. It grows on a stalk about three feet in height, being, according to one version, rooted to the ground by its four feet, while another account raises the whole lamb, feet and all, from the ground on a single stem, on which he is able to turn, and also to bow itself |- downwards to the herbs on which it feeds. It lives as long as there is grass or herbage around ity, but when it has consumed all within its reach, it dies, and withers away. Its skin is covered with a very white down, as the Tartars, who pull 1t off and wear it as a cover for the head. Inside it is comprised of flesh and bones, and when wounded it gives out a liquid resembling blood. Wolves are said to be the only animals that will eat it, and they are very fond of it. Specimens of this remarkable pro- duction were looked upon as the rarest treasures in the collections of the curious in days gone by. Two different specimens have been de- scribed in the ‘‘Philosophical Tran- sactions,’” and a third has its portrait given in an engraving in Darwin’s “Flower Garden,” and its history told in the florid verSe of that work. The ‘‘lamb” is a natural production, greatly helped in the particulars in which it most resembles that creature by the ingenuity of the natives. The | body is a portion of the creeping stem of n spec’ of fern which generally grows as ®rect as a tree. The stem is densely covered with beautiful, jointed silky hairs, of a rich golden color. On the surface next to the ground a few roots are given off, while the leaves—or fronds, as they are called in ferns—spring from the upper surface, The fronds reach a height of 12 or 14 feet, and have a long bare stalk before the leaf is spread out. The Tartar takes a suitable part of this creeping stem for a body, deprives it of the roots, and of all the leaf stalks except four, which are intended for the legs, two short ones for the ears, and a stump for the tail, and then, turning it npside down, trims the stem, and so produces this marvel of the: early ex- plorers. The fern, known to botanists as the cibotium barometz, is a native of Eastern Asia; it has been intro- duced into our conservatories where producing, after a few years’ growth, good specimens of the ‘“‘lamb.”’ The silky hairs of this fern form a favorite remedy among. the Chinese for checking the flow of blood by ap- plying them to a wound, in the game way as felt or cobwebs are used by some people in this country. The, more fibrous and elastic hairs of several species of the same group, natives of the Sandwich Islands, are largely exported from these islands to | California and Australia for stuffing | cushions and*for similar purposes.— Philadelphia Times. {at noon when the luncheon or ' cook :« - The King of the Woods. Very few persons ever visit the | southern portion of the United States and become at "all familiar with its woodland life without being captivated by that princeof singe: s, the mocking bird: Not only as a musician, but in | general ‘‘smartness,” he is far and | away ahead of anything else that | flies. He is the “Yankee” among birds. In vivacity, in cleverness, in! @ quick and dexterous use of his small | but brilliant brain, it would be hard to point out his equal. =~ And when in the springtime the woods resound with his clear, flutelike and exultant notes, even the man, if such there be, “who hath no music in his soul’”’ would find it hard to resist the contagious good humor of his glad and gleeful song. And yet the mocking bird (Mimus polyglottus) is incorrectly named. He is by no means a natural mimic. Half a dozen birds could be mentioned that in this particular surpass him. This may seem a very strange thing to say, in view of the stories current so abun- dantly illustrating and emphasizing this supposed gift. Professor Chandler, in a notable case in a Boston court, once remarked that it was practically impossible for most people to tell the: truth even . if! they tried. Especially is this the case in observing scientific phenomena by persons not trained in that special field. Imagination often plays strange tricks with the recording cameras in such excited brains.—Appleton’s Popu- lar Science Monthly. An Old-fashioned Remedy for Baldness. An-old-time but good" remedy to prevent the hair from falling outisa wash made by steeping three large onions in a quart of rum, or until the strength is drawn from the, vegetable, and applying it to the scalp every second day. The odor of the onion soon passes off, but if found disagree- able, ten drops of lavender-oil and ten|. grains of ambergris will overcome the scent. —Woman’s Home Companion, HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. Mrs, Rorer's Way of Stewing Oysters. « Drain fifty oysters; put the liquor over the fire, boil and skim it. Strain it through two thicknesses of cheese. cloth into a saucepan. Add the oys- ters, bring to a boil, and skim again; add one pint of milk, six whole pep. percorns, half a teaspoonful of whole allspice and a blade of mace. Watch this carefully until it just reaches the boiling point; add a tablespoonful of butter, a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pepper, and ‘serve at once with squares of toast, or oyster crackers. —DLadies’ Home Journal. Crisp Breadcrumbs, “Into dainty cookery breadcrumbs always enter largely, and they are naturally ‘best when made in the best way. To.prepare, cut some slices of bread and dry them crisp and brown in a cool oven. Roll them rolling-pin to crumble. Put some pure,clarified dripping in a fryingpan, let it boil, throw in the crumbs and iry them very quickly. When done remove them at once from the pan and drain from greasiness before the fire. When dry and crisp once more the :rumbs are ready for use. They will keep for quite a week if stored in a Ir y tin box. Wiippea Cream. This much-needed ingredient of fancy sweet dishes is prepared in the following manner: To every pint of cream allow three ounces - of pounded sugar, one glass of sherry, the rind of half a lemon, and the white of one agg. Rub they sugar on -the lemon rind and work it in a mortar till quite smooth. Put the cream into a- large bowl, with the sugar, wine" and egg (beaten to a froth), and begin to whip the whole to a froth. As this rises take it off with a skimmer and place on a sieve to drain. Whipped cream should always be prepared the day be- fore requir ed, and should be kept in a | | cool place. To Prepare Oatmeal for the Table. Where hard coal is used for eooking purposes, oatmeal may be put ove: the fire at six o’clock in the evening, brought to beiling point, and kept at this temperature overnight so that it may be ready to serve in the morning. Where soft coal, wood or gas is used for cooking purposes, it will be neces- sary to put the oatmeal over the fire dinner is.being prepared. Put four heaping tablespoonfuls of "the steel-cut oats into a quart of cold water; add half a i teaspoonful of salt, and put it over the fire in a double boiler; cover, and continously for one or two hours. Then it may be put aside un- til the night meal is being prepared, and cooked again as long as the fire is burning, and then put aside to be re- heated at breakfast time. The kettle should be covered closely, and the oatmeal must not be stirred from the beginning to the end of the cooking, otherwise the grains will be broken. Stirring oatmeal seems to destroy its flavor. —Ladies’ Home Journal. Household Hints. "The hot bath is as harmless as re- THE REALM A Dress Sleeve. Manton, calls for sleeves fairly snug- fitting to a point well above the elbow, but for slight fulness at the shoulders. under a | A NEAT DRESS SLEEVE. The designs shown are one single and the other two-seamed, and so provide for all needs. No. 1 is made of woolen goods, woven in a small check. The fulness at the shoulders may be ar- RRR Ce Re Se 3 BR Ban eee Oe BR 3a 3% The prevailing style, writes Ma» OF FASHION. 3 x DE 39%301 SOREN terial, or tw elve and one-fourth yards of twenty-two-inch goods. SI Spring and Summer Millinery. In Paris flower-trimmed hats and bonnets are already seen, and it is predicted that flowers will ‘have a great season in the spring and sum- mer. Large, fully open roses, made of both velvet and satin, are already much in demand, and are shown in such artificial colors as lavender, several shades of green, dark blue, all shades of yellow, beige and castor. Felt hats and toques are trimmed with them, and they are arranged in half coronets or wreaths without foli- age. A large violet, fanciful in size and shape, is af present popular in Paris. -The flower is a8 large as an overgrown pansy, and two of the petals are long and pointed and hang down over the stem. Velvet of all shades is used in the making, and a gleam of white is seen at the end of each petal. Tt is developed in varions shades of yellow, violet and mauve, Long Coat For a Little Girl. No other coat affords quite the pro- tection against severe weather that does the long one which completely covers the gown. The model shown is of dark green: diagonal cloth trimmed with bands of narrow black braid and large smoked pearl buttons. The back is seamless and is joined to side-backs, the two being laid in un- * derlying plaits below the waist line. The fronts arehalf -fitting and the | { freshing, if taken in the proper way, | merely as a plunge, followed by quick | and thorough rubbing and massage. “elebrated foreign doctors recom | mend marrow as a tonic and strength. ener. Itis spread on hot, dry toast, or served on small pieces of hioet fil: let. Raw beef applied to the afflicted part affords a speedy relief, when se- vere inflammation seems to threaten nppendicitis. This has been. tested recently by a physician. It is claimed that the perfume of flowers adds activity to all our organs, | especially the digestive ones. For this reason, dinner guests in ancient times were crowned with roses. For a blistered heel, scrape a little yellow laundry soap to a paste with a very little water and apply to the spot. As a preventive, thoroughly soap the inside of the heel before starting out on a long tramp. Ink stains may be taken out of white cloth by pouring peroxide of hydrogen oyer the spot, then rinsing with water. New milk is also good, ‘or lemon juice, followed bya thorough | sprinkling with salt. Kitchen odors, penetrating to upper | sick rooms, may be dispelled by burn ing dried lay ender flowers on sheets of brown paper soaked, in saltpeter and then dried. The byrning may be done in the coal scuttle. It is a truth that will bear repeti- | tion that carpets with small figures They can | are the most economical. be mended, patched, ripped and turned to better advantage, and they also increase the apparent size of s room. Oil of peppermint, so widely used in the East, is useful as an externa) Appligatioh for neuralgia or rheuma- tism. When taken internally, much diluted, it is beneficial in gastric troubles, and for coughs and colds. If is also a'good antiseptic for wounds or burns and is really no more pun: gent than ammonia. The system of the average person demands from two to four quarts of water per day, to be thoroughly cleansed. Tne purer the water, the .greater is its power of absorbing effete matter. Nothing can take its place. Pure spring water is the best tonic and blood purifier, to which will often yield liver and kidney troubles, rhen- { matism; local heart affections, indi- gestion and eruptions. As It Was, Jack—So after - you © satisfied her father that you were a stockholder, she consented to be your wife? Mack—Yes. First she viewed my shares and then she shared my views. LADIES’ H — ot either in flat box pleats’ or | shirred, and the wrists are faced with | plain goods in contrasting color and | rolled over to form small caffs. No. 2 | is two-seamed. The fulness at the arm’s-eye 1s also laid in flat box pleats, | but the wrists are left plain, either | pointed or round, and are finished | with bands of passementerie. | To make these sleeves for a woman | of medium size will require one and | 1 and one yard of forty: four-inch material. one-half yards for No. 0 & for No. Tasteful Home Gown. | No woman of refinement, according to May Manton, can afford to be with- | out a comfortable and tasteful home | gown. The model given combines all | essentials and is equally suited to wool stuffs for the present season and to washable fabrics for summer wear. As illustrated, the material takes a medium place and is China silk in a soft shade of blue with trimmings of cream-colored lace. The full fronts are arranged over a fitted lining with single in place: of double bust-darts, and which reaches a point slightly be- low the waist. The yoke of lace is faced onto the back, but made separate at the front as the left side is hooked ‘over invisibly into place. The gown proper consists of a full back and fitting being accomplished by shoulder seams and under-arm gores. The back, which is arranged in a Watteau- like plait at centre of yoke, falls in graceful folds to the floor. The ii ness of the fronts is "collected, gathers and stitched to the lotver om of the yoke, the closing being effected at the left side beneath a jabot-like fall of lace which completes the frill that finishes the lower edge of the square yoke. The sleeves are snug- fitting to the elbow but mousquetaire above and are finished by small puffs at the shoulders which support the epaulettes formed by sccond frills of lace placed beneath those that edge ‘the yoke. A collar of ribbon finishes the neck and a sash, somewhat wider but of the same sort, passes from the yoke at the centre-back under the arms and is bowed at the left side, To make this gown for a lady in the medium size will require six and three- fourths yards of forty-four inch- ma- front joined by side-back gores; the | OME GOWN. right laps well over the left, where the closing ‘is effected. Smooth- fitting under-arm gores connect the back with the fronts and render the fitting easy of accomplishment. The sleeves are two-seamed, the fulness at the shoulders being laid in plaits and sup- port oblong epaulettes, which add oreatly to the effect of the coat. At the neck is a high roll-over collar. The garment, as illustrate, is silk lined," but may be made with facings and sleeve linings only, if preferred. To make this coat for a girl of ten — GIRLS LONG COAT. —n | Years will require two and one-fourth | yards of fifty-four-inch material. Advance Novelties. . Silk nets for sashes and fichus and cross-striped ribbons for pleatings are advance novelties in 1 spring garnitures, It is reported that a scholarship of : $5000 has been given to Mount Holyoke College by Miss Helen Gould.