Boston's new park system ia said to t anporb; the boat in the world rery likely." A Chicngo paper thinks that "the beat way to perpetuate the bloomer ia to preach and write editorials against it" An Englishman in Japan com plains of the "perpetual feast of green tea and anails, with nothing but rice and raw fish for a change." The English Kennel Club lms passed rulo that no crop-cared dog, born since March 31, can win a prizo at a ibenoh ahow. Not long ago a man and woman were aontenced to imprison ment at hard labor for a month for cropping a dog'a ears. Not long ago tho two-year-old child of a Berlin day laborer died of star vation. The frenzied father, to nave his darling from tho potter's field, took the body in his arms and went begging wherewith to give, it a decent burial. He was arrested as a mendi cant, according to law, they said. Science is spreading the knowledge that an easy way to commit murder would be by tlio use of disease germs. Concerning the proper method of prorogating the germs, however, in formation is as yet withheld. Mean while, cjucnlatcs the San Francisco Examincr.tho simple layman of homi cidal tendency seems to find tho old methods availablo and snft Professor Moore, the new head of tho weather bureau, thinks that cap live balloons can be of great use in Solleoting meteorological data, states the Louisville Courier-Journal. A north polo expedition by means ol balloons has been projected, and in von tors are constantly struggling with flying machines. The possibilities of ballooning are just as attractive to scientists now as they were a hundred years ago, when Benjamin Franklin was foremost in producing results, but little of much value, has buou accom plished. "It has boen estimated," says tho "Elcotrioal Review, "that electric rail ways have displaced in tho United States no less than 275,000 horses, tad the movement has not yet stopped. It ia estimated by a Topeka paper that that many horsca wonld require about 125,000 bushols of corn or oats a day. K deorease of 125,000 bushels a day in corn and oats consumption is enough to appreciably affect prices of those grains, it amounts to 4j,()im,i)Ul) bushels a year. Furthermore, the loss of this commercial demand for these oonrse grains in the cities means n enormous loss of tonnage for the railroads about 62,500 carloads." Argentina ia now pictured aa the paradise for the foreigners, and large numbers aro going there from every country in Europe. Most of the countries in Central and South Amer ica are desirous of securing immigrants and are taking mean to secure them. No difficulty ia experienced in obtain ing laud in all those countries, and coffee raising in them has lately be come ono of the most profitable in dustries in the world. History shows that the routes of migration change ivory few decades and that the cur rent once formed draws humanity into '.t. This ootintry for many years re ceived the overflow of Europo.bat the lime"may soon oome whon the tide of Dopnlation may flow in auother direc tion. The death of the Princess of Bat- tenburg recalls temporary attention ' to one of the most romantic family histories of modern times, reminds the New York Times. It ia said now that she was of Polish noble descent, but hor father, Count Huucko, was first who ever bore the title. Hia father was a teacher in Warsaw, of Hebrew blood, who, being a man of great cleverness and personal attrac tions, got for pupils the pick of the iaughtora of the Polish nobility, and mvmn nrinneflsoa from the German sourt. He married the beautiful Al 1 saoian governesa of one of the Ilea nan families, and this olever couple, through the interest of their influen tial girl pupils, secured for their three ton fat places at the Russian Court or army, and importunt marriages. Now two of their descendants aro hus bands respectively of a daughter und granddaughter of the queen of Eug tand.and a third oouupied a European throue and came within an aoe of marrying a sister of the Gormau Em- poror before he died. With the soli ., tary exoeptionof the Bonapartos,thoro is no parallel to such swift advance ment of a family in the whole Alinau' oh de Gatha,nnd even there the prog eny of the Hebrew tutor is much more aueurely placed than that of the great Corsiean'a brother and sisters. The Harvest. Tis a blessed toll from the teeming ioR To garner a nation's bread. Let the farmers sing at their harvesting, For by them the world Is (od. Though banks may fall, and In ruin's gale Every speculator reel, Tho fruitful and Is the bank of God. And Its wealth no knave can steal. When the rain and snn tlmlr good work have done In the grain-fields far and wldo, I.o! tho reaper bands, with armed hands, Through the toppling harvests glide. And the swaths of gold from the "cradles" rolled (111. I the toll by tho scythes laid bare. As a ridge of mist, by the sunlight kissed, Olid tho broader Holds of air. The blndnrs lithe who follow the seytlw For the treasures It erops and leaves. As with laugh and song fhey hurry along, Leave a wako of yellow sheaves. But the happiest scene Is tho last, I ween, When over tho yielding loam Tho last load Is borne from the fields close shorn, For then Is tho "Harvest Homo." O were I tho lore of aeres broad, With tho strength my Inml to till, I'd follow tho plow with a beaded brow, And renounee tho "gray gooso-culll," ' For of fields of thoughts, though with tleneo wrought, Tho harvest oft is spurned, Hut tho soeiled field, with a solid yield, Tav for every furrow turned. W. It. Dahdku, in tho Ledger. pa- LONE HAND DIOR', BY OWEN It ALU lie was a queer, lonely chap, was Dick, though he was neither old nor ugly. Many a fellow , among us at Lulu flat would liavo been glad enough to chum with Dick, for he was as steady as a file and ns hardworking as they mako 'em, but somehow nobody ever proposed it. Thoro was some thing, I don't know what, about him thnt Bort of cliokod yon oil' before you could get alongside to do busi ness. He went by the name of '-Lone Hand Dick" not that his name was Dick particularly, bnt, bless you ! that don't matter on tho flat. Some body called him "Lono Hand" be cause ho workod by himself and said nothing, and I reckon somebody else called him Dick because you can't go on acoiug a man every day aud not call htm something. Dick waa ono of tho first, if he wasn't the very first, on tho fiat. When I got thero he was fossicking about in a corner all by himsolf, and there were not half a dozen more within five miles. He waa friendly enough, too, for the matter of that, Dick was always friendly. It was Dick that showed me where to got water, nod laid me on to the run of the stuff when I asked him, but out aide of that he wouldn't go. He was a young follow, not more than thirty anyhow ; tall, active and middling strong, too. There was something about his faoe yon couldn't help liking whon you got to know it. None of your laughing, touch-and-go faces, that don't mean anything when you do know them ; no, nor yet, your soowling, yellow-dog faces that mean no good, but a quiet face real quiet a face with a lot of meaning kind of drainod out of it. The flat wasn't to aay rich, not at first anyhow, till Jim Stokes dropped on to tho deep lead, but thoro was always tucker and more in it So far as I could guess, Dick had about hia share and no more. If he hud picked up a fortuno, mind you ho wouldn't have said anything with out ho was asked, but I don't think ho did. Stokes struck the deep lead on Fri day, and by tho middle, of the next week Lulu flat waa a gold Sold. Whero they sprung from I'm blest if I know, but come they did, wagons full of them, traps, conches, bullock drays, horsca and donkeys, and one or two, though they didn't hardly count, be ing off color, on camels. In a week tbo flat was like a town ; in a month we hud two backs and were talking about a town hall and a member of Parliament. It didn't suit Dick, Long before the end of the first week he had struck his tent an unoommon one- horse tent it waa, too, at that aud made tracks. After a day or two I missed him. He hadn't gone very far, though, and after a bit I came aoroaa a man that had soeu him work iug by himself in a little corner of i gully just about big onough for one over tho nearest range. It wasn't more than a week or two after that ono day, just aa I had knockod off work, a young chap cornea up to me a quill driving lookiug chap at that and, says he: "Mute, do yon happon to kuow a chap by the came of For reater? They say he was on the flat from the first." "Can't say as I do, mute," says "What's he like?" "Like? Well, he ought to be like that," and ha palls out a photograph and passes it along to me. I looks at it "Dick," says L "Yon know him, mate?" he says, looking at me sharp like. "Well, mate, and suppose I did I what o' that?" for it comes into my mind about the trouble as we thought Dick might have been in. What of that, stranger?" says I. "Come along up to the bnnk. We wan' to find him." "Ob ye do," says L "Got a for tune for him, mate?" "Well, no, not thnt I know of.nny how, but there's a party come in that wonts to see him wants to sec him bad, too." I looks at him. "What for?" says I, taking a draw of my pipe. "What for, mate?" "Ob, you needn't be auspicious, it's a gentleman and a lady," a.iya he. "Why didn't you any there was a lady before?" I says, "I might know the party, and again I mightn't, bnt Indies ain't common. I'll see the lady, mnto, anyhow." I went along with him, though after nil I wasn't sure. It was Dick in the picture right enough, bnt wasn't our Dick ; the picture wasn't to say a "Hhevvy devry" como to that, but it had boen meant for Dick once. It was after bank hours and the door was shut, but he took me rouud by the aide into tho manager's office. Thero was a man thore and a girl yea, alio was only a girl, I could see thnt, although she hud a thick veil over her face. The man was a swell. 'Di) you know Mr. Forrester, my man?" Bays he. "Not much," says I short Ho turns round on the clerk angrily. "He doesn't know him by that namo, but ho seemed to know the photograph you gave me, air," the clerk said. The girl stirred uneasily in her seat; tho man turned to mo hastily. "Von know somebody like the picture?" he said. I looked at the girl ; she seemod to bo listening eagorly. "Well," I aaid, 'I hnve aeen somebody it might have beon ment for ouce. " "We want to soe him." "Yes," says I. "What fo.-?" The man lookod at ma angrily. 'What for, my man, aud how docs that concern you?" 'Well," aaya I, "I don't rightly know, nor I don't know how it con cerns you to see him." The man lookod at mo as fierce aa a Goanuer in a tight placo, but he didn't apeak. And with that tho girl rose aud took a stop forward. "Oh, Bir," she said, in a soft, low voice that shiv ered a bit as she spoke. "Oh, air, you will tell us, I'm Hiiro. I must know; I must aeo him!" She had claspod her two hands togotlior; they were small hands and vory white, and they shook aa she spoko. It waa for no harm, anyway, I could have sworn that much. "Yes, miss," guys L "It might be the party, or again it mightn't, for he's changed if it is, but I'll find him for yon in the morning." It waa a lonely spot where we found Dick, and not anotbor soul was in Bight. Ho was working in the bot tom, the same steady, dogged, hope lees work thut hu'd always douo. "Thore," I said, stopping short and pointiug to him, "is thnt tho man your looking for, miss ?" We wore standing at tho odgo of the trees, and dick was below ns, and it might be thirty yards away. She had suid nothing us we came along, but she had trembled so much thut tho mun had given her his arm to help ber. Now she seemed to pull herself together all in a moment as she threw buck the veil to look. I looked at her then, aud I tell you I could have gone on looking. Ab, that was some thing like a face a face to think on in the dark, that was. She just gave ono look and then a sob. "Stay here," she said, motioniug the man back with hor hand. "Stay here. Oh, George 1" Then she went down the slope, and with a quick, smooth sort of walk, She didn't seem rightly to walk, only to go, aud to go quick at that In minute she was close to Diok. "George," she said ouly the one word, "George 1" The word came up to where we were standing, and I tell you it sounded sweeter than music. Dick lifted himself from his work and stared stupidly rouud, as if he didn't rightly know what it waa. Then he sues her, and with that he falls back a step, like a man dazed. "Oh, George!" and she held out both of her bauds to him aorosa the heap of white cluy. "Come back George, Come b ick. It ia all fouud out They all believe you now, You're cleared at lust cleared at last. Come back, George back to mo." He stood for u moment or two like a inuu thut had been turned to stone. "Cleared 1" he exclaimed, hoarsely, "Cleared I Oh, my God!" then he clutched wildly at his throat, stag' gered aud full fell at ber very feet seusleaa. She waa on her knees at his side. I started to run down the slope, and I was at her aide in half a minute, but she didn't want me. She had raised his head and leaned it against her breast, and she would let nobody touch him but herself. And thero she knelt among the wet clay, holding Dick in her arms, the tears running down hor face and fulling on his. I got a littlo water and poured it on his head, and at last he began to come to. I lays my hand on the man's arm. "I reckon, mate, you and mo'i not wanted here, not much," I saya, aud I pulls him away. We got a cart and we moved Dick to the bank, but it was another week afore they could move him any further. Then they left It might hnve been a couplo of mouths later that I got a Melbourne paper through the post. There was a mark at one aide, and opposite to thnt au advertisement "At St. Mark's Church, Toorak, on December 1, by the Right Rovcrond tho Bishop of Melbourne, Mary, ouly laughter of tho Hon. John Lester, of Toornk and Dnngalln Station, to Oeorgo Wingfield Forrester, eldest on of Albert Forrester, M. V.. of Wingfield Hall, Herefordshire, Eng land." By nnd by I came ncross another paragraph. "The fashionable wed- ing that took place yesterday nt Toorak had all the special intercut which attaches to the last act in a voiy sensational drama. The circumstan ces of tho celebrated Dungnlla murder trial, although now two years old are still fresh in the memory of the public. The confession of tho real criminal, while it happily restores Mr. Forrest er to his friends aud to society, affords remarkable instance of the unreli" ability of even the strongest cirenm stautinl evidence. The refusal of tho nry to agree upon what seemed un questionable evidence of guilt appeared to ua at the timo.we confess, a lament able failure of justice, and wo said so. It affords us great pleasure now that we are able to offer both to Mr. For rester and tho publio our hearty con gratulations. A Queer dork. Among tho effects of the late J, F. Davios, which are to be sold by J. S. Pitt next month, is a curtotia form of night clock, which ia not described in any of tho histories of clockmaking, and is believed to be altogether unique. Witter clocks and sand clocks are known to have proooded more me chanical timepieces, and Asser attrib utes to king Alfred the Great the adoption of candle clocks, with wax candles twelve inches long, which burned all day at tho rate of an inch in twenty minutos, aud were put in horn lanterns to provent draught. This clock ia more modern render ing of tho aaino idea. It consists of a light stand oast iu lead in tho form of acandlcatick on the top of a glass cylinder usod as a reservoir tor tho oil, tho wick being placed in a littlo projection at the bottom, vory muoh like the Isobath inkstands which are now in use, and, of course approxi mating to tho very earliost form of oil lamp. Passing vertically over tho oil reservoir, immediately behind tho wick, so as to bo lighted by it, ia a band of metal, on which are marked tho hours from four to twelve, and then on to five, presumably with the idea thut it does not got dark before four, aud that by five everybody ought to bo up and about. Tho stock of oil was no doubt calculatud to last the requisite number of hours. The relic, presumed by tho British Museum authorities to belong to the lust cou- tury, ia quite perfect end is likely to excite a good dual of interest among antiquaries. Bristol, England, Mer cury. A Text of Love. This tale is told iu the Orient: A lady one day found a man following hor, aud she asked him why he did so. His reply was, "You are very beautl ful, and I am in love with you." ''Oh, you think me beautiful, do you? There is my bister over there. You will find ber much more beautiful than I am. Go and make love to hor." On hearing this the man went to see the sister, but found she was vory ugly, so he came baok in an angry mood and asked the lady why she bad told him a falsehood. She then an swered, "Why did you toll me a false hood?" The man was surprised at this accusation aud asked when bo had done so. Her answer was : "You said you loved me. If that had boon true, you would not have gone to make love to another woman," Sun Fruucisoo Argonaut "Admiral Dot," the well-known dwarf, now runs a hotel at White riains, N. Y. LADIES' DEPARTMENT snn scclpm. Mrs. Theodore Alice Buggies Kit son, wife of H. H. Kitson, tho well known Boston scuIptor,hss completed with hor own hands a number of stattios, statttottes and busts, several of which have been exhibited in Eu ropean aalons with great credit She is undor twenty-flvo years old and first oxhibilod her works in the Paris salon of 1888. New York Tribune. WOMEN AMD THE LAW. It cannot perhaps be said with truth that wheclwomen on the publio roads take rather too much advantage of tho privileges r their sex. Of course, it goos without saying that no decent man will run down a woman if ho can help himself, but if tho woman is on tho wrong side of tho road and going as fast as sho can the decont man's best way of helping himself is not always clear. Both for her own safety nnd tho conveuiunce of nil con- ! eerned wo ndvico every woman rider id learn ine inw ol tno roaii and tbou live up to it precisoty as sho would be expected to do wcro sho a man. American Cyclist A GLOVE INNOVATION. Tho women of this country are the only ones who iusist on having thuir hands tightly bound in thuir gloves, for English and French women all wear looso ono. Fronch gloves lit ruly without a wrinkle, but thnt is because they aro perfectly cut and oose. When a hand so incased is ukon it can bo felt ; whon an Ameri can woman's hand, trussed up in tight kid, is grasped, it feels more like a ittlo foot in a shoo then n hand. The English glove docs wrinkle and the English woman hns large hands, too. It doea seem aa if tho American woman might submit to the two ex-. amples, nnd dealers aro going to try her. New York World. MR "NEW OIRL" AS) LITIGANT. A bright specimen of tho "now girl" made her appoaranco beforo a magistrate rooeutly. The top of hor head, Bays tho L mdon Telegraph, was' just on a revel with the rail of the witness-box, and Mr. Dickinson was considerably surprised to hoar a small piping voice issue from somo one he could uot see, and say : "Please, air I want n summons for abuse." "What's that?" asked the learned goutluiuuu. 'Stand up!" cried the usher of tlyi court. The applicant stood on her tiptoes, which enublod tho magistrate to aeo her eyes and half her noso.and repeated: "Please sir 1 want a sum mons of abuse." "Certaiuly not," re plied Mr. Dickiuaon promptly. "If grown-up peoplo are foolish enough to take out summonses for more vul gar abuse, I iioi not going to enoour ago children to do tho same. Ge away home." Tho litigious girl frowned and wout away. THE CZARINA A NEW WOMAN. The ranks of now womanhood hnve boon rcoruitod from tho roost uuex pectud quarter, namely, the Czarina of Russia. So, ntloust, writoa a Vien nese correspondent from St. Peter burg. It uppears that the Empress has beon interested iu the woman question for some time, and, bearing thnt a mimbor of women wuro iu tho habit of mooting in St Petersburg for tho discussion of their rights, she wus anxious to kuow what they said aud did. Sho made inquiries among tho Court officials, but no ouu was ablo to give ii uy information at least, so they said. Which, by tho way docs not tally with the stories of tho vigilance of tho Russian police. The Czar at once commanded that a full report of all such meutings should bo prepared for the perusal of the Empress. Sinoe than one of tho Czar's secretaries has attended o very debate in tho capucity of reporter and takes down every word in shorthand. It must certuinly be very fluttering to these woinon to have the Empress so interested in their efforts at reformation. Now York World. NOVELTIES IN. SILKS, Tho newest silks show a blending of many bright colors in brilliaut brocad' ed and chine effects upon chumeleon grounds. Tuffutaa are handsomer and iu butter quality than heretofore, be ing heavier but not so stiff as those o lust sousoii. A pattern produced in inuny colorings shows a ground of oruugo and bluok, with half-inch stripes of black satin at wido iuter vulu, over which are thrown clusters of ohiuu flowers iu all tho ruiubow oolors, so subdued by the changeable background, which ahimmers aud shades with every movement, that not a pore color nor a flower form la distiuot, and the whole effect, though showy, is not gandv. A great deal of green is mingled with blue and with - purplo, and there are many fancy brocaded stripes in which the atripe is formed by conventionalized flower and leaf designs; thus a vine of white satin loaves runs over a changeable ground of red and green which is Htrown with seed-like dots of green and yellow. Grounds of rich peau de soics are cross-hatched by flnegeomet- ical lines of broe ide in the ground color, while a contrasting color pat tern is thrown over all. Demorest Magazine. Maine's feminine miller. In a littlo hollow, just below Maple atreot, iu Monmouth village, Me., and pon tho best water power that the Cochnewngan stream affords, is one of tho oldest buildings in the county. And, although doubtless it has had many and varied repairs, it ia undis puted that this old structure, erected before 1792 by such early settlers at General Henry Dearborn, John Welab and Captain James Blossom, for a grist mill, and ever sinoe used as such, is olio of the oldest, if not, indeed, the oldest mill in the Keuneboo val ley. For over half a contury the mill property has romainod the property of no family the Metcalfs and is now managed by Editor Loreltus S. Mot calf of the Jacksonville (Flo.) Citizen, formerly editor of the Forum and North American Review. Thirty-seven years ago Oscar F. Frost egau his duties hero as a miller, and ho has beon in attendance ever since. For more thnu thirty years, says the Boston Globe, Mr. Frost's wifo has more or less assisted her husband in his duties about the mill. Naturally observant nnd invent ive gonitis, it was not long bofore she . had fully mnstored the details of the mill and could operato all the macbin- ry ns skillfully and as snfoly as her husband, who, many times a weok, caves her in solo charge. Left to herself, she studied the machinery. There is a flour mill at tached and ia ono of tho best cornoob mills iu the state. The prosent capac ity of tho plant is about a carload of corn per weok, while tbo amonnt of daily custom grinding is nor far from 100 bushuls per day. It is to this mill that the buckwheat, barley, corn aud oata of the western Kecnuhoo valloy find their way, and for many days at a time it is entiroly under the direct charge of probably the ouly woman miller iu the country. FASHION NOTES. Many of the rough cloth jackets are nadu in reefer shape. Some of the new fur capos are fin ished with vesta of contrasting fur. The smart white mohair gowns of the summer servo admirably as demi Bnison dinner toilets. New bolts are of soft gay plaid silk, knotted undur a metal olusp at one side, and aro suggestively named tor eador. Among tho novelties for cool wetbor wour ure fur Bailor collars finished around the entire edge and long pointed frouts with n doen frince of sable tails. All browns with a reddish tingo are in especial favor for the coming cool soaaon, though no wardrobe will be complete without ono good bluck gown for the street Many groeu and blaok-and-red and black color-mixtures appear among autumn dress goods aud uurrow striped tailor mixtures in li'oathor colore are used for full traveling uud shopping costumes. The long feather boa is appearing again, aud is being worn this soaaon in very striking oolors pale blue, red, amber browu, green and deep yollow. These are startling and unoommon, but in very questionable taste. The women who came baok to town with blaok mohair gowns lined in colored silk to mutch tho bodioe worn with them need only a small, full cape of bluck velvet, trimmed with jut Vandykes, to have haudsome early toilets. Nothing takes the pluoe of rich pat terns in cut jut where a blaok color note is demundod on wraps and gowns and with the advent of full and win ter costumes trimmed with velvot or silk comes the call for a finish to these accessories, which is only to be found iu jut, pussamenturius aud edgings. Among tho new fabrics are silk figured Frenoh crepous, Jaoquard, Sioiliun, lustre Mutulusso, shadow figured mohair, novel golf suitiqgs, silk-warp blaok moreens for outside aa well as underskirts, and rope diag onal a silk and wool muterial in which silky mohair is brought to tba surtaee in rope-like ridges that im part a novel effeot to the goods,