TYhm Daylight Die. Vbm daylight dlei how ead the aummef ' lew, tthea aaumoira falil the fields' most lovely I And datkneas Tel It the arching skies, And di.r no longer night defies, Hntah4wa her saldenel eyes to you. When tttrt tre dlatant and tbclr rayi are few, Worst light teems ever to have wild a J leu. i Toe bluebird now no longer flies, ' When daylight die. Bnt Bve in hope, faint heart, nor woo Dark Letbc'e (Cream, but kiss the dew And feel that tho' the daylight dies Bnyor.d are atill the lummer aklea And other cays will dawn (or you When daylight die. litrnard Emery, In Terpsh-hnre. THAT OAT. iy John p. joLAXi):;it. "That cat Is what koepi them part," wis tho general verdict. Everybody know everybody's bus!. sseet on Magnolia Creek, and it wus sto secret that Junto Brownlow and Mark Peters had fallen out about the Utter cat, just as tho were about to get married. The Drown low and Paters home steads were adjoining, a brush fence only separating thetn. The houses primitive log structures, wcra not mora than a hundred yards npui-t, for Cite builders of them had been friends, end had moved to Mngnolia Creek to gether. They Imd brought their young wive with thorn, and had begun the battle in the wilderness bravely, de termined towln hornet there for them selvc and tliolr loved ones. When Janlo and Mark were about one year old, tho war between the tales bioko out. Pelers and Brown, low went into the thick of it and never returned, loaving two widows nd two orphans behind them to fight the battle of llfo as best they could. The two women niado a living some how, and raised their children to manhood and womanhood. Then they laid down tholr cores forever to take eternal rest. Up till tho tlmo Mark and Janle ' were completely orphaned, it is doubt ful if love or marriage had ever been (bought of botwecn them ; bnt then onio a time when they were in a manner dependent upon each other. Ia the couno of a year they saw that it would bo best for both of them that ihey innko their future one, and everything was sottlod botwocn them fa a sort of matter of fact way, alto gether unlike tho courtships described la hooks. But one morning tho storm broke loose, end reared an apparently insur mountable wall between them. 51 ark had a fondness for cats, n masculine truit of character not often met with, and ho took an ill deed done hi eat as au offence committed against 'himself. Janlo, on the other hand, rather disliked cats, but kept a good .dog instead, who followed her about .constantly, cvor ready and willing to td her bidding. 7 One morning Janio fouud Mark's eat among her chicks in tho yard, and au aoino of thorn had been missing for eereral days, Thomas was looked npon with suspicion as a thief. Now, when ho was detected almost iu tho act, Jaule's anger was arouaed,audslio called Dover to hor side. Catch the plagued col," she cried. -"Catch him I catch him, Rover I" ' With Rovor to hear was to obey, and (he cat and dog had a close race to see which would reach the brash fence llrac Thomas won by the length of hie tail. Theu commenced a fight iu which Rover was at a disadvantage, for evory time he poked his nose into cbe brush the cot spit, scratched and clawed him until his yolps of pain Iwwught his mistress to his assistance, i Jaule had no more than mado her Appearance upou tho scone before Mark arrived also. Their glances met mi1 anger flashed out of their eyes. "Call off your dog I" Mark de manded. Shan't do it," retortod Janlo, I "If you aou't call that yelping cur way, I'll kill him." i "I'd like to see you do it I set him thai thieving cat of yours, and you'll havo to kill ine first before you kill my dog." ' Just then the cat made tbe dog yelp tnoat pitifully, and Janle rau to his eeUtuiice. She picked up a stick and aUtetnpted to throw it at tho cat, but, with' the proverbial marksmanship of her sex, she missed, and bit Mark In lead. - Then Mark lost hit temper com pletely. He sprang over the fence, avad with the first thing that came to tend, which happened to be a stout pole, he began to belabor the dog most nmerolfully. . It wa a disgraceful affair, and It si whispered aroond la the neigh borhood that Janlo even went to far at to pull Mark's hair. The eat finally made hit escape and ran toward hit home. Rover would have given chase, but he wat too busy just then keeping out of reach of the pole in Mark's hand, and iu a short time even he made good hit retreat, leaving Janle and Mark sole combat ants in the field. "You're a bruto, Mark Toters, and I'm glad of this chauce to tell you sol" cried Jitnie. That's all right, Janle. I'm glad I found out your temper before it was too late." "You was, ch? Didn't know be fore that I could tako coro of myeelf, did you? Well, that just shows that you ain't as bright a you should be, having known uie all your life." "Oh, that's all right." "That's Just what it Is, and it will always bo so, too, for I wouldn't marry you 'now, not if you was tho lut man on earth." "I reckon 1 gave you the first chance, and I am thinking it will be your last one, too," Mark retorted. "Never you mind. You go and take care of your cat." "Yon go and keep compauy with your dog." "I will. Between Mark Peters and Rover, I had rather have Rover for steady company." By that tlmo both were retreating toward their respective homes, mid tholr words grew to bo mere mutter ing. From that day Mark ".ud Janle shunned each other, and though they were such close neighbors, lived like total stt angers. It is only natural that, after a while, both were sorry in a manner that the quarrel had occurred, but neither would acknowledge it openly. On tho contrary, when somo good neigh bor offered to step in and bring about a reconciliation, the offer was rejected on both sides with so much scorn, that the experiment was never tried again by tho same person. The neighbors woro about equally divided in taking sides with Mark and Junle, but on one thing there was only one opinio , which was, that tho cat was to blame for It ail. Murk too seemed to acknowledge that much, to himself at least, for there wcio times when he would chase his pet out of tho home, and shut him outsido for hours at a time. On such occasions the cat would climb to the roof of the house, and give volco to his sorrow in long and dismal wails. "Oh, plagno tako your picture,' Mark would mutter, "now yon know how it feels yourself. I took up your quarrel, and I am shut out, too. If I was a cat, I would climb up on a roof and howl, too, but I am a human being and daro not do It." It was in the latter port of the win ter, and Mark was sick at heart with the pain porting with Janlo gavo him. The evening was cold and damp, and he was sitting before the fire in the lingo chimney, watching tho logs burn dowu slowly nn i crumble to ashes. Ills thoughts we 10 of Janio, and he was debuting with himself for the ten thousandth time whether it would not ho boat, aftor all, to go to her and beg to bo reinstated in her heart and oflectlon once more. IIo had almost decided to give In, wheu the cat, as was his habit, jumped up ou hit kuee, purring softly. Mark was startled. For tho time being he had entirely forgotten the cat. The cat must have felt it, and thought it was time to receive tome recognition. But for once the cat's judgment was at fault, for Instead of being petted and stroked, he was picked up and flung oat of doort. In a few minutes tho cat was on the roof of the house, bewailing the cruel troatment he had just received at the hands of his master. Mark, however, only gritted his teeth, stirred up the fire, and sat down before it, deter mined to lot the cat ttay outside for tho rest of the night. And to the hours passed away one after the other, and Mark still sat be fore the fire. The only movement he mado was to ttir up the fire occasion ally. The cat had been quiet for a long whllo, and Mark bad sank Into a reverie again wherein Jaule wat up. permost in his flitting thoughts. "That quarrel must have been the work of Old Nick," he muttered. "I shouldn't wonder If he hasn't taken up permanent abode here with me, for I am just about suitable company for him." Just then something came tumbling down the chimuey, scattering lire and brands and ashet all over the room. Then an uueartbly scream, inch as Mark bad never heard before, rang in hit eart; at the tame lime tomethiug, looking like a ball of fire, sprang out of the fireplace Into the room. The devil," screamed Mark, and fell to the floor. It wat several days after when Mark regained consciousness and found himself In bed. lie was in total darkness, and wondered where he was. lie pat hit hands up to bit face to rub hit eye, when he found there was a bandage over them, and that he was blindfolded. lie wat about to tear tho bandage away wheu Janlo' a gentle voice spoke to htm. "Don't, Mark," the said. "The doctor said not to remove the cloth until he came back. lie will be here again shortly." What it the matter, Jonie? What hat happened?" "Your house burned down the other night, and It was only through a miraclo that I got you out of It alive." "Yes, I remombor now. Satan came down the chimney, and kicked tho fire all over the flaor. It tnut have sot tho house on fire; but I can't remember anything more about it" Mark got we'l In time, and mar rled Jaule. The cat, it was supposed, must have porlsho 1 in the burning house, for ho was never scon ogaiu after tho fire. Janle often laughs softly when her husband insists that satan burned him out of his house that night. "But," she says to herself, "I but it was the cat." Yankee Blade. Stringed Instrument. Tho violin has for many yoars held the lending placo among stringed in stniiuoiits. With scarcely any modifi cations, the same instrument exists to day that charmed the sonsos of hearers centuries ago. From tho early part of the sixteenth century to tho ending of the eighteenth the forests of South ern Tyrol were ransacked for trees, which were cut down lute In the sum mer, carried down tho (janlo and then down tho Mlncio to Mantua. From Como they woro brought to Milan, from Lake Maggloro down the Ticlno and Po to Cremona. Tho Brcsciou makers preferred the pine and ash, while the Cremona artisans preferred the moplo and sycamore. With rare skill dealors would roicrve pieces for this or that leading artisan, who In slated on choosing ouly the best. Since tholr day violin makers have followed their methods of construc tion, copying as best they may the lines of a Stradlvorlus, an Ainati, a Guurnerlus or a Bergonzi. It Is Iruo that the violins of today are, through out, precisely tho same as tho violins of three centuries ago. Tho sound bars havo been modified to stand the strain of modern pitch and now necks have been devised to meet tbo de mauds of artists skilled in technique and intrluato execution. But, after all, the swell of the body, the princi ple and arrangemont of the sound post, remain what they were eveu to this day.- Public Opinion. Llfo Among Hlrds. The distinguished German biologist, Welsinaun, has pointed out t'.iut thete is leas exact knowledge on this sub subject than might be expected, con sidering how many lit number aro the ornithologists and the ornithologi cal socio ties. Small tinging birds live from eight to eighieeu years. Ravous havo lived for almost one hundred years iu captivity, and par rots longer than that. Fowls live from ton to twonty years. Tho wild gooso lives upwards of one hundred yoars, and swans aro said to huvo attained the ago of 300. The long lifo of birds has been in terpreted as compensation for their feeble fertility and for tho great mor tality of tholr young. From the email island of St. Kilda, off Scotland, twenty thousand young gauuett and an immense uutnber of eggs aro annually collected; and al though this bird lays ouly one egg per annum, aud it four years In attaining maturity, itt numbort do not diminish. Obviously, as Weismann observes, such blrda mutt roach a great age, or they long ago would have been ex terminated. Suientifio American. Poisonous Honey and Wax. There aro certain plants which pro duce flowers which make not ouly poisonous houey, but also poisonout wax. Caset often occur of person! being made ill after eating houey, aud the cause it sometimes attributed to mdlgostlon, but more frequently the reason is fouud la the honey Itself, the bees having fed upon poison out flowers. In tome partt of South America there are flowers which pro duce honey and wax of a bluish green color, and It it tald that both houey and wax are more poisonous than the tame quantity of arsenlo. No auon poisonout honey It produced la tho United States, though it It known that the quality of honey it frequently greatly impaired by tbo flowers of certalu treat on which the bset greed lly feed. Boston Trautorlpt. FOB FARM AND GARDES. BEAKS VOH HOMES. There it no better food for horses than beam. They contain more nonr Ishment than oats; and in Spain, Italy and In tome partt of Austria horses are fod on beans regularly, as wo feed our stock on corn. The use of beans for horses and cattle produces a beau liful, toft, tleek coat; the animals like the beans better than they do any other form of dloi, can do more work and gain more fleth while doing It than If fed on any other sort of food. SL Louis Globe-Democrat. Tl'RKKT K(HJS UNDER HKNS. Turkeys should not ho allowed to brood the first littor. Tholr eggs aro too valuable early in tho season to stop their production by Incubation. If kept from sotting the hen turker will, after a few days, lay a second litter, and the process may with old hen turkeys reach a third setting. If sot under hens nine eggs are enough, as the egg is larger than a hen's egg, aud tho young In it are easily killed by a little exposure to the cold. Com mon hens make better mothers for young turkeys than those of their own kind. The latter wander too far and do not keep quiet while tho dew is on the grass, thus draggling their young and soon killing most of them. Boston Cultivator. ItAKM.IXO KltllT. Fruit, when in its natural a I a to on tho treo or vine, writes A. P. Reed, is always kept at a comparatively cool temperature, In ever so hot weather. This result is brought ubput by evapo ration, not only from the surface of tho fruit but from tho leaf surface to which tho moisture comes from tho roots. As soon as tho fruit leaves tho tree or vine, or as soon as it is doad ripe. It no longer receive! this supply, but takes the tcmperaturo of the atmosphore, and ripens or decays according to itt condition, at onco. Reasoning from this understanding of tho case, I would suggest that cold storage it demanded immediately for all fruits plucked when the atmos. phcre Is wurro, which it is desirable to keep any length of time. A hot sun should siriko It hs little as possible if wc would havo it reach mnrkot in the best condition, or iu a condition to please. Fruit plucked when but half grown may often bo rlpcnod in a a worm place, bnt the tame fruit could bo kept unchanged In cold stor age a great longth of tlmo. Masco, chusetu Ploughman. HOW A UOOI) COW LOOKS. A writer in Hoard's Dairyman de scribes a good buttor cow as follows: She it of a modium slzo, hot a long face, brood muzzle and strong jaws, a slim, even neck, thin, sloping shoulders, large girth and immciiso abdomen. Sho has a sharp, high backbone, thin hams, giving room for her lnrgo ud der, which runs well forward as well at bock. Sho It n voracious cater, gives a good quantity of rich milk, which never makes lest than soveii pounds of butter to tho 100, and sometimes considerably moro. She has a general looso, relaxed and bony appearance. Sho never had, and I do not believe ever will liovo, an ounco of surplus llosh on her. She is very sensi tlvo to cold, cannot bear rough treat mentor exposure of storms or inclein ont weather. Sho is so fur frorn boing hardy enough to withstand the fare that tome farmers give their cows that she would probably dioon it, whllo tho scrub eow would teotn to do fairly well. But tbo has got the kind of hardiness thot will enublo hor with right feodlng and care to produce three pounds of butler per day. That is the kind of hardiness that pays. It may intorest our roadeit to note the difference as shown by a modern at agatntt an ancient writer on thit tuiject. Columolla, a Roman author, who lived several centuriot before the Christian era, describes a good milch cow in the following way: "A tall make, long, with very large barrel, very broad head, eyes black and open, horns graceful, smooth and black, ears heavy, jaws ttraighi, dowlap and tall very large, hoofs aud logs moder ato." rilUNISO THE PEAR. Orchard troet vary greatly In the bonofltt or injurious clluatg oeaasionod by pruning, advises a Morgan county (Ohio) orchard itt. In the case of tbe apple occasional pranlngs are indie pensable for keeping the tree In good shape and for the production of a good quality of fruit through the removal of superfluous tproutt and branohet. On the contrary, the pear require! very llttlo pruning, and no tret It more liable to be Injured by too rnuob. of lt At tot tlmt of transplanting there will usually b tome pruning required to preserve a proper balance botwecn the branchet and the roott. I would alwayt make thlt at little at posslblo by great care In taking up the young trees and making the lost of roott to small that a very severe prun ing of tho top would not be re quirod. The pruning back at planting should bo made with reference to a symmetrical, well balanced tree, and the after pruning should not be frequent or excessive. Where it is desired to prune to pyramidal form or shape to please the fancy, cutting back or shortening the yearly growths will be necessary; bat for fruit production I would avoid that kind of pruning. In the case of interfering branches the one least promising should be the one to bo removed, but after tho tree has becomo well established the less prun ing the butter. Iu the present condition of pear blight, enforced pruning or cutting oil of diseased bronchos often must be resorted to, no matter what the effect may be on the symmetry or productlvoucss of the tree. TNow York llurald. pkas as sheep food. Thero Is ne better sheep food than peas, and as about as many peas cau be grown ou an acre, if mixed so as to be half oats as when grown aloiio, and as tho oats will, In ordinary years, hold the peas np so they can be cut with a mower, it is better to mix them in tho proportion of two bushels of the small Canada field pea to ouo bushel of oats, choosing a kind of oats with pretty stiff straw, Tho best way to prepare the ground and sow the peas Is to uso good land. Corn stubble, if one has It, is best, but if sod ground is used hove it fall plowed, or plowed as early iu spring as possIbIe,and, as soon at itla In good working order barrow lightly and tow two bushels of peas per acre; Im mediately plow from four to six inches, to as to cover tho peas at least four Inches deep. Wait a wock and sow one bushel per ucro of oats, and glvo a thorough harrowing. This will leave tho peas deep in tho soil and tho oats near the surface, Just as they should be; It will not injure the peat, will kill all weedt that have started and will give each an even send-off to In sure tho largest yield. It is a good plan to roll the ground after the oats aro harrowed, as It will leave it smoother for the harvesting." Soon after tbo peas get beyond tho eating stage, and whilo still green enough so that tho pods will dry down holding peo, cut the crop with a mower, and whoa cured, so they will not mold, but not enough so as to loso tho leaves, put them Into cocks of 200 or 300 pounds, and aftor a wcok of good curing weather they con bo simply aired out and put Into mows; or they can bo put into good. sized stacks without cocking, but tho slacks should bo topped, or capped, with any cheap hay or swamp gruss, put on when no' moro than half cured; othorwlso, they will wet half through, and much will be spoiled. This crop may bo threshed with a machine, but for sheep feeding it will be bettor to feed without, as tho sheep will eat everything clean ; and the farmor can foed according to his judg mont, and the haulm will not be broken. American Agricultu rist. FA KM AND GARDEN NOTES. Ducks and turkeys should rurely bo tamed out uutll thoy are at least two weeks old. ' If duck eggs aro set nnder the hens from this time on it will be best to make the uest on the ground. Whenever there Is a considerable number of young chickens it will pay to provldo a separate place for them to roost. At the weather gett warmer lice will begin to be more troublesome. Unless kept down the chickens will not make a thrifty growth. It shows tho Ignorance of honey buyers that ' they prefer tbe whito comb to tho darker, but honey-sollort have to humor tholr Ignorance. Nobody yot seomi to have found out exactly the right temperature for a cellar in which hives are wintered. The best rule yetgiveu is that tempera, ture it boat In which tho beet teem quietest. . Pigmy Hogg. Specimens of the smallest known tperlot of hogs are now quartered at the London Zoological gardens. They eame from tbe southern part of Aus tralia, and aro knowu a ''.he pigmy hogt of the antipodes." They are well formod, frisky, and about the site of a inuskrat. They art real bogs, aud not to be confounded with gulueaplgt, which are specie! of rodtnt. Chicago Timet. FOB THE HOt SE WirK. mtCASHCBD TBire. Cut a' pound of tripe la narrow etrlps, pot a tmall cap of water or milk to it, add a kit of batter the elM of au egg, dredge In a large teaspoon ful of flour, or work It with the buttor; teason whh pepper and salt, let it simmer gently for half an hour, terve hot. A bunch of parsley cat tmall and put with It is au Improve snout. Boston Cultivator, A MOUNTAIN RKKAKFAST niSIt. In that delightful middle-aged book, "Quits," which the Passion Play set everybody to hunting up and reading, travelers in tho Tyrol are often re galed with schmarn. Some readers wanted quite as much to know what schmarn Is as to know about the wood carvers, so hero it Is: Tako a half pound of flour, the yolks of four eggs, a little salt, a teacupf ul of sugar, cither nutmeg or grated lemon, with cream or tullk enough to make a rather thick battor. Tho hotter must be light and smoothly mixed. Lastly, add the whiles of the eggs whUked to a snow. Melt a toblespoonful of but ter In a stewpan, place it over' a brisk flro and Into it pour tho batter. Cover tho pan and let It stay over the fire until a nico brown crust hat formed at tho bottom. As toon at this Is done,brcok up the schmarn with a lltt'.o iron apotula or fork, and let it let and brown again ; then break ap Mimllor by tearing it lightly apart, and serve It without delay. Farm aud Gordon. GENUINE NANTUCKET CHOWDER. A celebrated Now England dish it tho genuino Nantucket chowder. The dish usually served under thot name, a mixture of potatoes, crackers, etc., it more properly a ttcw or fish fiicatto, a palatable compound, but not chow dor. This is tho genuino article. Got a codfish, fresh caught and weigh ing about five pounds.' Don't buy It unless its eyes am bright and its gills a bright red. Have it cleaned as for boiling, leaving tho head on. Cut it into five pieces, tho head forming ono; wa h clean and leave tho pieces iu cold water slightly saltod. Take throe quarters of a pound of cleau, fat salt pork, cut this up Into flue dice, the finer the hotter, mid put Into a pot over a slow flro. Whllo it it slowly frying out cut nn onion very fiuo, and when tho pork is a rich brown turn in tho onion, stirring it frequently, and after the onion is cooked lay the fish on it and cover with boiling water. Wet two tnblospoonsf ul of corn starch in half a pint of milk and add salt and peppsr to taste. Wheu the fish hot bollod fifteen mlnutos add tho thick ened milk. Boil five minutes and serve with pickles, olives or colcry. Washington Star. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. To purify water, hong a small bag of charcoal in iu Vinegar bottles may bo cleaned with crushed ogg-sholls in a llttlo water. For toothache, try oil of sassafras, and apply it frequently, if necessary. Scorchod spots moy be removed from cotton or linen by rubbing well with chlorine woter. If tho color has been taken out of silks by fruit stains, ammouio will usually restoro the color. A good liniment for Inflammation, rhoumatlsm, swellings, etc., is olive oil well saturated with camphor. To brighten cirpets, wipe them with warm water In which has boo a poured a few drops of ammonia, i Acids, wino or fruits may be ex. traded by first being moistened wlta ammonia, then washed iu chloriuo water. To clean ttrow matting boll three quarts of bran in one gallon of water, aud wash the mattiug with the water, drying it well. To remove brown spots from black fabrics, poar spirits of ammonia on tbe spot, drop by drop, aud rub gent ly rouud and round with the fiuger. Onions should not bo cooked In an Iron pan; if they are very strong, boil a turulp with them. They ore alwaya best scalded before choppiug for gravies or sauce. ' All vegetables are improved by lay ing thorn iu a pau of eold water be fore cooking. Tboy should be put to cook in boiling water, and quick boil ing In an uncovered pau will preserve their color. Never allow thetu to stand in the water after they are done. For soft frosting, use "ten teaspoon full of powdered tugar with one egg; beat thirty minutes. Lay the frosting on with a kuife, whloh If frequently dipped Into ooid water, will give the Icing a gloss. A little cream of Urtw will hasten tht hardening.