CUPID'S BOW. Down In the gloaming, where the river makes a ben There in the lane so narrow, «Cupid is wandering, his bow to mend. And sharpening the point of his arrow. Sing heigho! when he lets it go, Be sure that the mark it will not pass by, For deep in each heart may be found tho dart Which Cupid sent when his bow let fly .Down in the gloaming, when the stars were shining bright, Banishing gloom and sorrow. Cupid straved in a sad and dismal plight, . And longed for the coming morrow. Sing heigho! for his bow he has let go. It has fallen in the grass at his feet: And his thoughts have flown to a love of his own, ‘Whom tomorrow he hopes to meet. Down in he gloaming tripped a merry littio Picked ap the bow and arrow, Pointed it streight and stood in the grass, In a pateh of moonlight narrow. Sing hetgho! when she lets it go, Be sure that the mark it will not pass by: For deep in Ins heart she will send that dart; “(ro straight, i she said, as the bow let fly. Abs little Cupid, methinks the tale is told, You are in for a time of sorrow: He who lays a trap, like the folks of old, Will be caught himself tomorrow. Sing heigho! as your arrows go, But be sure that your heart is safe, you elf, Or the story of old by you will be told, And your bow will be used to shoot your- self —Ida Rowe, in Madame. ++ IN A TUNNEL 44 Ee “Miss Alice! Miss Alice! will ye be afthur comin’ upstairs? An’ sure she’s dead intirely this time!” cried the frightened servant girl, rushing out on the piazza, where Alice Austin stood looking anxiously down the road. Alice hurried upstairs and found her sister-in-law lying still and white on the floor. “Bring me some water and the salts from the bureau, Betty; she has only fainted,” said Alice, kneeling beside the prostrate form. In a few minutes Mrs. Austin opened her eyes and said feebly: “Has Edward come home feel so strangely sick!” “We will send for the doctor pres- ently, Margaret, when we get you to beq. Ned will be home soon, I hope,” and with Betty's assistance Alice lifted the slight form on the bed. Three weeks before Eddie Austin, the two-year-old idol of the house- hold, had disappeared, and all search for him had proved fruitless. "As the days passed on hope gave way to despair, and the heart-broken mother, weighed down by auxiety and the cruel torture caused by false reports of the discovery of her boy, sank into a state of apathy bordering on insan- ity, Daily was the cry heard through the streets of the little village of Fair- field: ‘Child lost! Child lost! Large rewards offered!” till all hearts sick- ened at the sound. Mothers kept their little ones within doors, dreading far less the entrance of the Dark Angel than that fiends in human form should steal their house- hold treasure to gratify a merciless passion of avarice Jetty, you will have to take one of the girls and go for the doctor,’ whispered Alice, in alarm, as ticed a gray pallor, creeping over wan face on the pillow. ‘An’ shure, miss, none of "em be home but mese!f. And oh, Miss Alice, I niver can walk alone to airfield this dark, dark night.” The zirl looked so fri bare prospect of going t after a pause: “Well, Betty, then I s have to go, and you must stay with Mrs. Aus- tin. If Mr. Austin returns before | do, tell hin I have gone by way of the ah “.she added, putting on ler hat and walking jacket. “Phe saints deliver us! For Hiven’s sake, don’t ye be goin’ be the tunnel, Miss Alice!” exclaimed Betty, implor- ingly. “Don’t be Alice, smiling. I yet? she no- the « g hat Alice said, shall frightened,” replied “No train will pass for an hour, and it shortens my walk nearly a mile. It is just 6 o'clock now, and I shall be home a little after 7,” and, giving the girl some parting injunctions about her sister, Alice ran downstairs. Opening her brother's oscritoire in the library, she took from a private drawer a small pocket revolver and, opening the front door, stepped ont into the darkness. It was a damp, cold night in No- vember. The wind moaned drearily through the leafless trees, and heavy clouds chased each other across the heavens, obscuring the moon. Cross- ing the road, Alice walked a short dis- tance and, clambering over a stone wall, found herself in the narrow strip of wood which bordered the railroad cut. Following the narrow, path through the trees, she reached the edge of the ravine, 20 feet above the track. The path continued its windings down the side of the cut, but the way was stony and . in many places dangerous. 'The dark- ness, too, prevented anything like rapid progress. She finally reached the bottom of the ravine and had crossed to the right hand track, when a low sound among the bushes above her caused the cold drops to spring out on her forehead and almost stopped her heart's beating. Quickly crouching down under an overhanging rock she listened. Nothing was heal save the soughing of the wind and the faint ripple of a tiny rill running down among the bushes near her. Sudden- ly the bushes overhead weve stirred, and a stone fell directly in front of her. She scarcely dared to breathe, but crouched under the rock with her hand clasped tightly in her breast. The tunnel was but a few rods beyond her, but she dared not move. ““I’d like to know how much longer yer going to keep up this confounded tramp, Pete Johnson. It's bean nothin’ but marchin’ and couunter- marchin’ this whole cursed day,” said a low, coarse voice among the bushes. “Why did yer enter into tlie bar- gain if yer goin’ to back out so soon?” muttered another man, with an oath. “Well, I'd be satisfied with half the ten thousand, for I'm nigh done up with these three weeks’ work,” said the first one. “An’ I tell ye I'll niver give him up till I git the whole twinty thousand. “The father’s rich, and its twinty thou- soon 15 or beaten- ] i readily | With Eddie rhitened at the | serve her surroundings distinetly. | ter of sand dollars or the mother’ll see her swate darlin’ agin.’ A brutal laugh grated upon the girl's ears; then the first speaker whispered: “I reckon she'll niver know her boy in this little bag of bones, though me arms is wore out wid carryin’ iim the last three hours.” Alice could scarcely teliave her ears had heard. and she nearly fell ledge on which she dawned upon her. Her brother's child, her golden-haired little pet, within her grasp, but two brutal men kept watch over him. As she began to realize the danger of her position, her mind became clearer, and she re- solved, at all hazards, to rescue him. She heard the men step back some distance from the bushes,and then all was still. She waited a few minutes, and then, with the pistol grasped tightly in her hand,she crept stealthily out of her hiding place and struck a narrow path which led tc the top of the bluff. She knew the way, and the darkness favored her ascent. Reach- ing the summit, she looked cautiously around. The clouds had parted, and the faint shimmer of moonlight through the trees enabled her to ob- never what Her brain reeled, from the rocky were the two men stretched out on the ground, their figures partially concealed by the trunks of two large trees and a clump of bushes. Between them Alice saw a little baby form with its golden head pillowed on the cold, damp grass. Creeping along Tel 1ind the bushes she reached one of the trees, and, standing behind it, sha waited for some minut hesitating what to do. The stertorous breathings of the men convinced her that fatigue had steeped their-senses and that they would not awaken. If she should be successful in seizing the child, she conld not return by the way she came. in her arins she never could scale the precipitous side of the cut, followed, as she be, by two relentless pursuers. Again, if she should seek the shel- the tunnel, the down express train would soon pass through,and an up train would follow but 10 or 15 minutes later. She resolved, never- theless, to take the latter course, and, with this decision made she prepared to carry out her plans. Passing swiftly round the i bitshes, she stood before the sleeping group. moon at that instant shone out bright- ly and fell upon the white, pinched face of the child. Not a moment was to be lost. Grasping the pistol more firmly, she glided between the men, and seiz- ing Eddie, she sprang past them, but in so doing struck the foot of one of the ruffians. Darting up, he saw the slight figure running swiftly down the path. He sprang forward, awakening his companion, and, with muttered curses, they followed in hot pursnit. With the child clasped closely to her heart, Alice sped down the rocky pathway. She h&ard the men close behind her; stones were hurled at her, and one struck her shoulder. Terror lent wings to her feet, and she soon reached the track, along which she flew and entered the tunnel. On—on she sped; but her breath came quick and short, for her strength was fail- ing. She heard the heavy pantings of one close behind her. She almost felt his hot breath. Hugging the lit- tle form more tightly to her breast and with a despairing prayer for help, she ran on. A rude hand clutched her shoulder, and, with a shriek that ran through the tunnel, she turned and faced her pursuer like a wounded animal at bay, raised her pistol and fired. With a yell of rage and pain, the man leaped into the air and then fell with a heavy thud on the track beside her. Alice breathed more free- ly and ran on, though with feebler steps, through the darkness. ‘Sudden- ly a low, rumbling sound smote upon her ear,and toward the opening of the tunnel she saw a faint light glimmer in the distance. Nearer aud nearer it came, and then the horrible truth flashed upon her. It was the head- light of a locomotive, and she knew that the 7 o’clock express train was thundering down the track. Faint and bewildered, the horror- stricken girl had lost her reckoning. She knew not on which track she was and stood staring with terror-strained eyes as the thundering mass came fearing down the rail. Its great red eye lit up the black walls of the tunnel with a fearful glare. Still the girl moved not; fright had chained her to the spot. The monster was close upon her; she heard its horrible breath- ings. Was she on the right track? The roar of a Niagara deafened her, and, with a shriek of despair, she fell senseless to the ground. few feet beyond tes, Mrs. Austin fell asleep soon after Alice’s departure. Seven o'clock came, and Betty began to be alarmed. At that instant the bell rang. Rush- [ that way,’ {directly Dana,” | looking { turning to the | from Betty, | We I need not be alarmed.’ word | the tnnnel, | lay sat as the truth | lay a i mass of human flesh | forward, the two men | the tracks. recognized A | one side and raised As he did so, his companion bounded | pain cried out: | She has | has been nrol Wiv > (3 1 | probably would L henra tho tf | of the spark of life still The | the door, hall, ing down stairs she opened and Mr. Austin stepped into the accompanied by a stranger. “How is Mrs. Austin?” asked the former, anxiously, ‘An’ shure she’s asleep, oh, Miss Alice—hiv ye Alice?” “No; Jut, Miss sir, scen where is she?” “‘An’ oh, she wint afthur tho for, sir, and she wint be the tunnel; an’ I’m shure she’s kilt, for the thrain’s jest afther goin’ by!" cried Betty, ex- citedly. “Good heavens! the ‘tunnel!’ ex- claimed Austin, turning white. “Yes, She said it was shorter > sobbed the girl. Get ‘my lantern, Betty, upstairs. I'll be down turning to the fine- had brought with sir, “Hush! while T run man he him. He hurredtohis wife’s room, pressed a kiss upon her white brow and re- hall took the lantern saying: “Don’t leave Mrs. Austin an instant. may be absent some time, but you The two gentlemen did not utter a as they left the house, but fol- lowing the path through the woods clambered down the cut and entered swinging the lantern right and left as they walked on. Snddenly Dana stopped. Directly in his path a dark heap. Throwing the light of the lantern upon 1t, the gentlemen | stooped and then started-back with an was just | for before them mangled, shapeless and bones. “Some poor fellow has gone to his doom,” muttered Dana, striding away from the sickening spectacle. They had walked some distance fur- ther when a deep groan broke the ghastly silence of the tunnel. Fiash- ing the lantern on the other side of the track, Dana discerned another exclamation of horror, bleeding, { man’s form close to the dripping wall. As he was about to raise him, Austin uttered a hoarse cry, and, springing stood over the form of a woman between A pistol lay on the ground her, which Austin instantly as his own. He trembled wolently that Dana pushed him the slight form. prostrate beside SO which joy, blended past him and in a voice in and incredulity were Oh, my: boy, found little my precious boy! my Eddie!” and he caught the form to his heart and fairly sobbed aloud. 20h, Leave: 1, he is dead! Gerald, look at him!” and the father’s eyes burned with anguish as he looked on | the white baby face pillowed upon his J 1 } breast. Dana laid Alice on the ground looked earnestly at the child. “Cheer up, Ned. The little fellow drugeed. Listen; his heart and, putting his ear down, faint flutterings which told remaining in and beats!” the wasted form. “And Alice, is she— “She is in a swoon, and the sooner we get her to the doctor's the better. It is quite evident that she was pur- sued by those scoundrels while rescu- ” i ing your child, and that fellow yonder has somewhere in his body a ball from this pistol,” picking it up as he spoke. Lifting the insensible girl in hig strong arms, Dana strode down the track, followed closely by Austin, who held his boy wrapped warmly under his coat. After some minutes’ walk they were out of the tunnel and reached the depot, where they drove directly to a doctor’s. For an hour Alice lay insensible in the doctor’s office, and when she opened her eyes Austin whispered in alarm: “Why does she look so strangely, doctor?” ‘“I'here has been strain on her nervous fear she may have an attack of brain fever unless a reaction takes place he replied with some anxiety. ‘A good hearty cry would do her more Food than any of my remedies.’ “Let her see the child. That baby’s face ought to be enough to melt a heart of adamant,”’ said Dana, com- passionately. Austin laid Eddie beside her. looked at the littley white, emaciated face with a troubled, sorrowful ex- pression for an instant and then, clasping her ams tightly around the child, burst into a passionate, uncon- trollable flood of tears. By this time the news of the child’s rescue had spread like wildfire through the town. Bells were lighted, and men, women and children rushed to the doctor’s house,crowding the street and sidewalks. The entire village had turned out, and yards, doorways and stoops were alive with an excited populace. The crowd was clamoring to see the little hero of the hour, and cries for ‘‘Eddie Aus- tin”’ filled the air. ‘‘Ned, you will have to take him on the stoop to satisfy them,’ said Dana, as the shouts and. cries were re- doubled. Austin took the child out on the steps, and as the bright light of the torches fell upon them, cheer after cheer rent the air. When the father raised the little inanimate form so that all could see it, the excitement and enthusiasm knew no bounds. Women cried alond for joy, boys shrieked and hurrahed, and many a tear coursed down the hard, weather- beaten cheeks of stalwart men in the crowd. Alice stood beside her brother, leaning on Dana’s arm, but, overcome with agitation, was led back fainting to the sofa. Roused to indignation by the sight, some one shouted out: ‘‘Death to the child-stealer!” In an instant the cry was canght up by the excited thronz: who rushed in frantic haste such a terrible system that I doe- . She | rung, bonfires | | the law into your own hands,” - toward the railroad. Dressing the wounded man from the tunnel, they would have lynched him on the spot had not Dana, with the sheriff Fan one or to others,arrived to preventithem. The wretch was groveling on the ground in an agony of pain and ter- ror. With haggard face and blood- shot eyes he lcoked up and cried aloud for mercy, but he saw no pity in the white, inexorable faces sur- rounding him. A rope was around his neck, he was dragged to a tree, when Dana hurried to the spot. ““Untie that rope!” he demanded, sternly. “We'll string him up to high heav- en first!” answered an angry voice near him. “However deserving the fellow may be of death, it is not for you to take replied { Dana. ! too! | quill pens, | years before | ] 1 ne | i deragia,”’ “The dence take the law and you, What right have you to inter- fere between that man and justice?” said the man,clinching his fists threat- eningly. The excitement had now reached a fever heat. The crowd had quickly aathered around Dana, who stood be- side the wounded man; threats and curses were freely lnorled against both, and the state of aflairs began to look alarming. “If the-man is guilty he has a right to be tried, and I'll shoot the first one of vou who dares to touch him!” said Dana, coolly. His quiet, commanding tone, and still more the menacing gleam of the pistol he made no effort to conceal, quelled the tnmult, and the miserable man was carried to the village jail, followed by au angry, hooting crowd, clamorous for his death. An hour later Eddie Austin was in his mother’s arms. Tor days death hovered over the darkened home, threatening to carry away first one and then the other. But’ when over the little village of Fairfield the sun shone brightly, it smiled, too, upon the happiest home in all the land. For a golden-haired boy, with rosy cheeks, was playing near his mother’s chair, and Margaret looked up with a proud, happy smile to her husband's tace as the little fellow laughed in baby- glee and rolled and tumbled over the good-natured hound who lay stretched on the rng before the blaz- ing wood fire.—New York News. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The Spaish Armada consisted o? | 132 ships, 3165 cannon, 8766 sailors, 38 galley ‘slaves, 21,855 soldiers, 1355 volunteers. The opera of rubies, sapphires valued at £2000. Reed pens, glasses platinum set at the oe like found iu split have been dating Christ. The largest theatré in the world is the Grand Opera House of Paris. It covers more than three acres of ground and cost 63,000,000 francs. Gold ish are of Chinese origin, They were originally found in a large lake near Mount Tsientsing and were first brought to Europe in the seven- teenth century. The first in France came as a present to Mme. de Pompa- dour. tian tombs, Channcey Osborne and his” brother John, aged residents of Nuda, Livings- ton county, are happy in the owner- ship of a sweet-toned violin made by Gaylord Duffio in Italy in 1527. It has been in the possession of their family for 140 years. A man died recently in a town not far from Philadelphia with the remark- able record of having been injured twenty-five times inrailroad accidents. Some of his injuries were very seri- ous, yet he lived to a good old age and died from natural causes. A man who went to do some gas- fitting in a Baptist church in Hones- dale, Pa., fell into the baptismal pool, which had been filled for Sunday,and, not knowing how to swim, would have been drowned ‘had not the sexton heard his cries and rescued hin. It is stated that the most crowded spot on the earth’s surface is the ‘ ‘Man- in the city of Valetta, in Milan. Upon a spot in this place about two and a half acres in extent no fewer than 2574 live. This is at the rate of 536,000 a square mile, or 1017 to an acre. A cultivator in Aubervilliers, France, found a superb Lycoperdon, commonly known as the puff ball. It measured two metres (over six and one-half feet) around. In order to develop it well, its owner covered it with muslin and watered it three times daily. Fresh ! puff balls are eaten cooked. The sugar crop of the world amounts in a normal year to about 8, 000,000 tons, of which the larger part, about 4,500,000 tons, comes from beets, and the remainder, 3,500,000 tons, from sugar cane. Of the latter the largest proportion comes trom the West In- dies, and a large amount from the Island of Java. In the reign of Edward TIT there were at Bristol, England, three broth- ers who were eminent clothiers and woolen weavers, and whose family name was Blanket. They were the first persons whe manufactured that comfortable material, whieh has ever since been called by their name, and which was then used for peasants’ clothing. A Mixed Nationality. The Duke of Manchester, who at tained his majority on March 3,is half English, a “quarte* Gérman and a quarter Spanish. His father, whom he succeeded in 1892, at the age. of fifteen, was English; his grandmother, now Duchess cf Devonshire; is a Ger- man; while his mother is a Cuban Spaniard. . Pi a 4 Talec ag air J o . Princess of Wales has a pai of } of the radish with | and turquoises and | (moistening it | a string Dolly Takes Tea. When Dolly sits down to the table, And ev'rything’s ready, you see— With cookies and water for Mabel, And water and cookies for me. We nibble and chatter with dolly, And offer her ‘“‘tea’ from a spoon, And often our meal is so jolly, It laststhrough the whole afternoqn. Till Mabel jumps up in a hurry And says that she really must go, And TI say, **Oh, truly, I'm sorry. And dolly’s enjoyed it, I know.” Then gaily we clear off the table When dolly has finished her tea, With cookies and water for Mabel, And water and cookies for me. ~Albert Bigelow Paine, in St. Nicholas. Pipeless Soap Bubbles. . Here is an appliance for making soap bubbles that you can carry in the corner of your pocket and have no fear of breaking or harming it, as you might the pipe that is generally used. Take a piece of heavy wire and wind it once around a broom handle: then twist the ends together till a ring is left that is large enough barely to slip on and off the handle. To make bubbles by use of the ring, prepare a solution of soap and water and dip the ring into it, holding the ring by the wire ends that are twisted together. When a film of soapiness has formed across the opening in the ring care- fully lift it in front of the mouth and blow softly through the ving. By this method a bubble will gradually form and will finally cut loose from the ring and float away.—Chicago Yecord. rhe Radish Trick When you are sitting at the break- fast table and somebody asks you to hand him the radishes it is the easiest | thing in the world to take hold of-the plate containing. them and to pass them to your neighbor at table. But if you learn the trick here explained vou can surprise him by taking hold and causing the plate to cleave to the vegetable. It is similar to the old trick of tak- ing a piece of upper leather and with water. Passing through the middle of the sucker knotted on one end it will bear la [ There is this advantage with the I trick —nature own weig radish provided Toth the string and the moisture. All you have to do is to hollow it ont and to deftly substitute it, while you are not observed, for one of the good radishes on the plale. 4 thousand times its has as Fanciful Toothache Cures. of Before the days of dentists and when people generally believed in the value of charms there were ever so many ways of preventing toothache. One of these was to rinse a newly baptized child’s mouth in the sancti- fied water. Another much in vogue was to dressthe right side of the body first—right stocking, right shoe, right sleeve, right glove. A favorite pian in Scotland was to draw a tooth, salt it well and burn it in full view on glowing coals. In Cornwall many save (?) their teeth by biting the first young ferns that appear. The custom of catching a common ground mole, cutting off the paws while the little creature still lives, and wearing them, is traced to Staffordshire, England. Some people who are fond of exercise believe that walking twelve miles, no more, no less—to get a splinter of the toothache tree that grows particularly well in Canada and Virginia will drive away the worst ache and pain that ever tortured a poor tooth. The belief that toothache is caused by a worm at the roots is prevalent in many parts of the world, hence this cure: Reduce several different kinds of herbs—the greater variety the better—to a powder. Put a glowing cinder into this powder and inhale the incense. Afterward breathe into a a cup of water and the worm will be gone forever. The Royal Fern, A legend has been handed down from the time of the Danish invasion of Britain, explanatory of the generic name of Osmunda—an island, covered with large specimens of this fern, figuring prominently ‘in this story. Osmund, the ferryman of Loch Tyne, had a beautiful child, who was the pride of his life and the joy of his heart. In those days, when the merciless Danes were making their terrible descents upon the ccasts of treat Britain, slaughtering the peace- ful inhabitants, and pillaging where- ever they went, no man could say how long he would be free from molesta- tion and outrage. But Osmund, throughout the troublous times, had lived quietly in hiscountry home with his wife and beautiful daughter. The peaceful calm of his life was, however, destined to be broken. One evening the ferryman was sitting with his wife and child, on the margin of the laka, after his day’s work. The setting sun was tingeing with roseate glory the fleecy bauks of clouds, piled up against the horizon, silvering the surface of the rippling lakeand adding a richer hue to the golden locks of Osmund’s darling child. Suddenly the sound of hurrying footsteps startled the quiet group. Men, women ht.’ and children came hastening from the neighboring village, and breathlessly, as they passed.they told the ferryman that the terrible Danes were coming. Quick as thought Osmund sprang to his feet, seized his wife and child and hurried them into his ferryboat. Away he rowed with them—pulling for very life—in the direction of a small island in the loch, densely cov- ered with the tall and stately fronds of the royal fern. He quickly hid his precious charges amongst the cluster- ing fronds, and then rowed rapidly back to his ferry place. He had rightly divined that the Danes needed his assistance, and would not hurt him. For many hours of the ensuing night he worked with might and main to carry the fierce invaders across the ferry.” When they had all disappeared on the opposite bank Osmund re- turned to his trembling wife and child and brought them safely back to his cottage. In commemoration, it is said, of this event, the fair daughter of Osmund gave the great island fern her father’s name. Those who care not to accept this fanciful origin of the name Osmunda, wiil perhaps in- cline to another suggestion which has been made, that the generic name had been derived from an old Saxon word signifying strength, the specific name including its royal or stately habit of growth. The Opossum. This animal inhabits North America, and is hunted with ahnost as much perseverance as the racoon, not, how- ever, for the sake of its fur but of its flesh. When it perceives the hunter, it lies still between the branches, but if disturbed from its hiding place, it attempts to escape by dropping among the herbage and creeping silently away. 5 Its food Coorg egos consists of insects, birds, , ete, and it is very destructive among the hen-roosts. The opossum uses its tail for elimbing and swinging from branch to branch as the spider monkeys use theirs, but the opossum uses its tail in a manner the monkeys have never yet been observed to do, that is, making it a support for voung, who sit on its back and twist their tails round their mother’s in order to prevent them from falling off, Lawson, in a passage quoted in the Musenm of Animated Nature, gives the following quaint account of this “If a cat bas nine lives this for if Pi ts animal: creature surely vou break every bone in their skin and mash their skull, leaving them dead, yon may come an hour after, and they away. or, perha; 3 you may meet them cre eping away. I have for necessity in the wilderness eaten them. Their flesh is very white and ivell-tasted, but their tails put me cut of conceit with that fare.” 1 Audubon’s delight! > eshil iting exactly ne v art of the opos cum: or has snp : tof killing one of his ot ‘owls. His angry fee ings urge him to kick the poor be: st, whie 1, conscions its a bility : to. re ast rolls oft like a ball. The more the farmer rages, the more reluctant is the animal to manifest resistance; at least there it lies, not dead, but ex- hausted, its jaws open, its .eyes dimmed; and there it wonld lie until the bottle-fly should come to deposit its egos, did not its tormentor walk off. ‘Surely,’ says he to himself, ‘the beast must be dead.’ But no, reader, it is only ‘possuming,’ and no sooner has its enemy withdrawn, than it, eradually gets on its legs, and once more makes for the woods.” The length of the opossum is about twenty-two inches, and its height about that of an ordinary cat. When disturbed or alarmed it gives out a very unpleasant odor. has nineteen, for will be quite gone of Sparrows’ “Sparrows build their nests in pe- culiar places,” says aman who has a small fruit stand down at the " Union depot, ‘but the birds who flit about this old building have chosen the odd- est home I ever heard of.” As he spoke he pointed to an elec- tric light that was sputtering and flar- ing under the iron covered roof ot the depot porch, A brood of little spar- rows were flving in circles around the light and suddenly one of them darted toward it, only to disappear into the cone-shaped iron hood which over- hangs the big white china globe. “That's where the birds live,” the man saml. ‘‘lIhey have nests in the top of that iron reflector or hood, whichever it ig called. It must be hot up there, very hot,”’he continued, ‘‘and I can’t understand why the sparrows have selected such a place to build nests in. P= Ruse City Star. Light Housekeeping. Why Cannibals Eat Human Flesh. According to a French writer named Petrie, twenty per cent. of all canni- bals eat the dead in order to glorify them; nineteen per cent. eat great warriors in order that they may in- herit their courage, and eat dead chil- dren in order to renew their youth ; ten per cent. partake of their near relatives from religious motives, either in connection with initiatory rites or to glorify deities, and five per cent feast for hatred in order to avenge themselves upon their enemies. Those who devour human flesh becanse of famine are reckoned as eighteen per cent. In short, deducting all these, there remains only a proportion of twenty-four per cent. who partake of human flesh because they prefer it to other means of alimnentation.—Medi- cal News.