THE PAST. BT MRS. NAI'nr.KIJN B. MORANGE. IJke mißt upon tae mountains far. Like mooulifc'iit on a sleeping stream, Or, like some pale and distant Btnr, Our jiast lives seem. Their memories elude our grasp, Their events perish like the flowers; In vnin wo stretch our hands to clasp Those Uvee of ours. The Paßt 1 how vague and shadowy ail I Did we those misty pathways tread? And they who answer not our call, Tho silent Dead, Were they once with us as we deem? Their images are fading fast, Or is it but a;cherished dream, This phantom Past? Comes there from that shadow-land Aught else but shapes as in a dream? We greet no actual kindred band , We catch a gleam. 'Tis true, of what we call our Past; A visionary glimpse we get, As of a twilight waning fast, And then—forget. NEW YORK Crrx. IN A WILD COUNTRY. Where Feuds Do Most Prevail. mountaineers • I who live along jßys B the Big Handy river,which forms ue tucky, and their ff Yi neighbors of |I9 Northeast orn M I Kentucky, who Q lll have been so aiiLif prominent for many years in ! jfflwCThriftflj ft feuds, vendettas, a bloody bat- A —rfcvW "F ties, are a most i peculiar people with a history running away back into the '3o's, MO's and 'so's and generations preceding, which, if published, would throw into the shade the best efforts of tbe Texas frontier in tbe days of its greatest notoriety. The Big-Sandians proper, tbe men who compose tbe corps of the Hatfields And McCoys, owe their peculiar char acteristics, their vengeful disposition, knd their undaunted bravery to an an cestry dating back to the time when the foothills of the Cumberland moun tains, the streams and valleys tributary to the Handy were first settted by a race of intrepid Indian hunters and trappers, followers of Boone, Kenton, Arbuckle, and other leading spirits. Many of these men married Indian Squaws captured in raids, or purchased from the different warlike tribes that then inhabited this region, and tho blood of these feminine branches of the kingliest Indians (for tradition and documents still in existence show that the white hunter of that day was still something of an aristocrat, and seldom condescended to mate with the com moner members of the tribes) is at this late day plainly apparent iu the tall, straight forms, the keen eyes, and long, black hair of many of the older families. To this fact is also attributed many of tho peculiarities of tempera ment and disposition so anomalous in this age of intelligence. Around these people, as a nucleus, hack in the '3o's and '4o's of the present generation, all the wild spirits of this part of the country, who were either driven from the large centers of population by vio lation of some statute or by choice, seem to have been attracted by some occult magnetism, until the Big' Handy country became known throughout the country as tho home and hiding-place of hundreds of the wildest c haracters. The Big Sandy raftsmen became known throughout tho country as the wildest, most dangerous class of men on the Ohio River. Their carouses, their love of fighting or anything which partook of desperation and dev iltry is still a familiar tliemo from Pittsburg to Cincinnati. Hundreds of stories of their dare-devil scrapes are Still told along the river, and it was Hot an uncommon thing when several hundred of them had sold their tim ber, which they had floated down to Cincinnati in immense rafts and fleets, for them to got on hoard one of tho largest boats which at that day plied the river, on their up trip, and take the captain, pilots, engineers, and otli -6r officers prisoners, and then run the boat to suit themselves. On such oc casions a steamboat would become a pandemonium, with several hundred gigantic devils whooping, yelling, spitting tobacco juice against the bulk heads, mirrors, or furniture, while other disported themselves with cards and played "old sledge" or "stud poker" until one or other participant got up dead broko or tbe affair ended in a general fight. Upon the hurri cane deck some leading spirit would stand in command of the vessel, while another covered the pilot with a pistol pr ritlo and compelled him to Steer the craft subject to the whim of the biggest devil, who was in command. Below one or two sat around the engine room and "persuaded" the engineer and stokers into submission. On these occasions tho amount of steam was most frequently controlled by the ca pacity of the boilers, as the boat fairly flew through the water. Every other craft in tho legitimate trade gave tlio "pirate" as wide a berth as possible, running into the bank if necessary to get out of the way. When a town or landing was approached tho hell was kept clanging as fast as stalwart arms could pull tho rope, while the whistle was blown loud and long enough to awaken tho seven sleepers. The citi zens of the town seemed to know by intuition that the raftsmen had taken possession of the boat long before slio came in sight, and crowds of them would congregate along the bank to witness the strange scene. There was no use to resist, as steamboatmen soon learned, and the only way to save the boat and property was to effect some sort of a compromise, which generally ended in the dare-devils running the steamer half a day or such a matter, when they turned her over to her proper owners. Although these men were known to be dare-devils and fond of a fight or anything which partook of excitement, they were not all bad by any means. Still, as tho Big Sandy country was known to be tho hiding place of hun dreds of desperadoes, it got a wide spread notoriety. Along in the '4o's and 'so's tlio conn try for hundreds of miles above and below was filled with counterfeits principally silver dollars. The Gov ernment of tlio United States sent out a number of its best detectives, and after a long time they located their manufacture at Handy, but tho manu facture was not suppressed until a long time after everybody knew as well as the officers themselves that the coun terfeit was manufactured somewhere up tho stream. The "Big Handy dol- Jar," as the counterfeit wn denomiria tett; was as common as iFs more legiti mate brother from the mint at Wash ington or New Orleans along the Ohio valley, and it was claimed openly, and I believe frequently admitted to this day by the older people, that the "Big Sandy dollar" contained as much sil ver and was as handsome a piece of money as the genuine. Even long after the discovery of the coniackers' den in the mountain the bogus dollar re mained in circulation. To account for this the writer has been often told that the counterfeiters had discovered a vein or mine of silver in tho mountain, and that they were "using pure silver and more of it" than was contained in the genuine. Be that as it may, the tra dition still exists that a silver mind existed and was long worked at some point on the Sandy. I believe none of the counterfeiters were ever arrested, and the reason given is that there was a code of ethics among the inhabitants which granted every one the privilege of using his raw material as he saw fit. Tho same code prevails to this day in another branch of illegal trade —that of moon shining, or making illicit whisky—for it is a well known fact that although the article can be gotten at almost every hamlet no one lias yet been fool hardy enough to betray the maker and then remain in the country. The traveler, if ho is not a spy or marshal, has no difficulty in getting as much of tho clear, limpid, but terribly strong stuff called "pinotop" or,"moon shine" as he wants. It would be little or no use, certainly very unsafe, to un dertake to hunt down and capture the moonshiner, for every tree, or gulch, or mountain side would bo very apt to bo the hiding place of a sharpshooter, and these men can shoot, and that they are overly and uncomfortably fond ol it the recent terrible vendettas fully prove. With all these strange characteristics and backed by a pedigree somewhat unsavory these people are kind and hospitable in the extreme to any one who may come among them. The writer at one time, and that during one of their bloodiest wars, spent sev eral weeks in tho mountains and val leys, ato and drank, rode and walked, and slept with them and he never met with an unkind word, until after the expiration of several weeks' time which lie and his guides had Bpent alternately | betweon the factions some one started 1 NOT ANY TOO SOON. a report that we were spies. Fortu-' nately we got wind of the fact that a "crowd" was coming after us. Three horses were never saddled more quickly and three men never made better time for over forty miles than did we, and we made it none too soon, as a couple of bullet-holes through the overcoat of the man in the rear as we flew down the mountain told us that Big Sandy sharpshooters with Winchesters at 800 yards were dangerous creatures when riled. Across the State of Kentucky, through the northwestern part, is a long range of mountainous country filled with forests and lined by a dense growth of underbrush. Through this dense forest there are passes which are known like every trail and road to its citizens. Many of these passes are narrow defiles, where two or three men with Winchesters can keep back a regiment, and it is through these passes that the many escapes from the officers are made. It "is a well-known fact that for many years a large band of horse-thieves has preyed upon the people of Kentucky, Indiana. Tennes see, and even Illinois, and that they have been trailed to the mountains of Kentucky and into the neighborhood of 'some one or more of these passes— say "Cracker's Neck," near the West Virginia line—but very few of the [thieves were ever captured, or tho stock recovered. After the band suc ceeds in getting through into the [mountains, it considers itself safe from } 'pursuit. Crackei's Neck is a fair sample ol . many of these mountain passes. It is a narrow defile between the overhang ing rocks of a mountain, which by some convulsion of nature must have split iu twain, (ircat, rough stones, covered and wreathed with laurel from the bottom of the pass to the apex, \ afford impenetrable liidiugplaces from which the riders can bo plainly seen, while the bushwhacker is as much out of sight as though he had never ex isted. I,and speculators at one time some years ago were as badly liatcd as were the officers of the law, and they fared roughly when caught, although that fact has changed considerably of late. Home years ago a land specula tor, whom I will call Brown, as the story is still a reminiscence to that gentle man, and a Baptist preacher started through the mountains toward Cum berland Clap. They were riding splen : did horses, and, of course, carried the old-time saddle-bags with them. They | had not gotten into Cracker's Neck fifty yards before they were halted by sev eral armed men, whom they did not see at all until the guns were stuck almost in their faces. They were dismounted in jid'y, and while one of the men went through their clothing and saddle begs the others stood guard over them. I he speculator's papers soon betrayed h:s business, but tho documents car ried by the preacher were a puzzle. | I hey were sermons. The speculator [ was tied to a tree and whipped with J wythes most unmercifully, after which [ his hands were tied and ho was seated on a log while the gang tried to disen tangle the preacher's documents. They I were written in a miserable hand at ! best, as the preacher afterward admit i ted. Tho only thing either of the gang | could make out was the title to one of the sermons, "Saved from the Wreck." I After poring over it for some time 'he leader said to the preacher: ".Nay, mister, was it a steamboat or ,!,? s' ou was blowed up on ?" "he preacher then told the men that he was u man of God and that he was B°ing through the mountains to North Carolina, where he was going to take charge of a church. After talking tne matter over for some time they gave the preacher his horse and other prop erty and told him he might go on, but advised him to go back, as he would be more apt to find the devil than God in these mountains. The speculator was cleaned out and started back afoot and advised never to attempt to come into that country again, and I don't be lieve he ever did. This is the character of the country —wild, mountainous and almost im penetrable, and thinly populated by a people who are a hundred years be hind the times and who to-day are liv ing over again in a somewhat modified form the lives of their ancestors of a century ago. Is it any wonder, then, that the Hatfields and MeCovs, the Tollivers, Underwoods, and others of like ilk can and do defy the laws and laugh at the efforts of courts, backed as they often are by companies of sol diers and even batteries of artillery? Nothing but a greater civilization can or will remedy these troubles, but that seems now in a fair M*av of accomplish ment, as several railroads are projected and more than one commenced through the hills and valleys of this rich but at present almost valueless country. STREET MASHING [N (JO Till AM. Tho Perils that llcsot Young: Women. fWELL women of New York nre just now discussing the question whether it is not more dan gerous for a pretty woman to go on the streets aloue dur ing the day timo From personal ob servations, one matron declared that the time will come ere long when New York parents will adopt the rule of the French, and nevei permit a young woman to go on the street alone without an attend ant. I do not know whether the ad vent of so many foreigners here . y has brought about * the present repre hensible system of street mashing, but certain it is that ladies while walking are now exposed to more rudeness than evei before. Several mashers have been com- : plained of to the police lately, and a few arrests have been made. It is a fact that those arrested have all been foreigners. A very shrewd girl Mas disposed to rate her own sex for the increase of the petty depravity. "I believe," said she, "that this city has its full share of good and dignified men and women, but I also know that there are thousands of women who influence badly tho habits of tho street. As our careless men go out they find at every turn some woman who encourages them to be insulting. The light-weights among them gradually grow to consider the entire female sex from one point of view, and end by being impudent to any woman that at all attracts their fancies. And that is why you see men sidle up alongside of a pretty girl when she stops to look in at a shop window, or crowd unnecessarily close to her in a street car. She may despise their advances, but she is compelled to suffer an infliction reared by her own sex. Those insulting men have on more than one oocasion been met with encouragement, aud, not being philosophers, have taken the contemptible smiles of unworthy women as signs of the best feminine preference. I certainly do blame my own sex for the increase of masculine brutality. There will surely be wholly admirable men in a city like New York, but beastliness must havo something to feed upon, and can do no more than exist in a passive state if it finds no means of sustenance." I found considerable truth in these words when next day my attention was attracted to a truly royal example of the female sex walking nlone on Fifth ave nue. She was a young, tall, golden haired girl, a porfoct beauty, and her features were as delicate and high-bred as those of an ideal princess. As she moved grandly along, a man with black, ugly eyes, a short, pointed beard, and an air of inexpressible conceit, came up swiftly from behind and passed her. As he did so ho deliberately turned and stared at her face, for an instant merely, bnt protractedly and insolently, in the unmistakable manner of the professional masher. The lovely girl was an honor to her sex at that moment. She held her head at the samo angle as before, gazed proudly straight ahead, and never gave the slightest sign that the staring brute was in the world. Within a half minute the masher dropped bohind and gave up tho game. It was easy to see then that if all young women were as safe in their own pride as that fair girl, street mashing would bo a starvation employment in very short order. A beau took a letter from his pocket in order to read something from it to a fair cousin who sat by his side. "Ah! she mailed you a kiss," the girl remarked. "Not that I know of," was the fellow's re p'y. , , Look there," and she d oiuted to a crinkled place, down at the corner of the sheet, such as a damp spot might havo left. "Haven't you lournod the latest Boutimental thing? A girl pressos tho paper to her lips, leaving a mark like that, and so incloses a kiss without writ ing a word of confession. That's what Jennie did, and you, goose that you are, never noticed it. The next thing the stationers turn ont may be ready-kissed paper, with a faint tint of red lips and a delicious scent of fragrant breath pertaining thereto. Art is ever quick to beat nature. JENNIE DEAN. The Biggest Ship Afloat. recently gg: Me., at a cost of $125,000, is the larg yis est wooden vessel j3£jPj ever launched. Her dimensions are 287 feet long, 481 feet ' beam, and her total tonnage 3,053 net. In the construction of this big ship 700 tons of Virginia oak and 1,200,000 feet of Virginia pine timber were used. The frame is of oak and well seasoned when put up, and the first quality of Georgia pine was used in the ceiling, deck frames and planking. The Rappahannock is the heaviest sparred ship that ever floated tho stars and stripes. Her mainmast is 89 feot long and 38i inches in diam eter; the foremast is 38 feet long and 38 inches in diameter; the main lop mast, 58 feet; main-top-gallant-mast, 71 feet; main yard, 95 feet; fore yard, 95 feet; lower main-top-sail-yard, 87 feet; upper main-top-sail-yard,B7 feot; lower main-top gallant-yard, 70 feet; upper main-top-gallant-yard, 64 feot; main royal-yard, 53 feot; main sky , sail-yard, 43 feet. Tho lower masts | are of Georgia [line and the other spars I of Oregon pine. Her spread of canvas |is 15,000 yards. When loaded she j draws twenty-eight feet of water. Tho Kappaliannock took on her first cargo at Philadelphia, consisting of 1,200,000 gallons of oil in eases for Japan, tho , largest cargo of the kind ever ex ported. DOGS OF HIGH DEGREE. £XHIBITB AT THE RECENT NEW YORK BENCH SHOW. Soma Canine Beauties—A Lady Acted as Judge of the St. Bernards—lmported and Native-Bred Champions A lamou* # 10.000 Do K- York, a few days ago, such a yelping, howling, growling and barking surely never was heard before. It was the largest bench show ever given in America, and, with the exception of the English Kennel Club's jubilee show, the largest in the world. It presented, in addition to a remarkably fine canine display, at least one novelty never before heard of in connection with dog shows in this country. For the first time a lady was selected as AUGUST BEI.MONT, JB.'s FOX TERRIER CHAMPION "RACHEL." one of the judges. She did not pass upon the merits of the pretty canine pets like the black-and-tans, the pugs, or the spaniels. Miss Whitney was surrounded by the great big, smooth coated St. Bernards, and decided as tc the respective merits of such famous canine heavy-w eights as Nevfs, Nigel, Beauchamp and Hector. But while lovers of the dog were no doubt interested in this little impro vised tableau of "Beauty and the Beast," there were many other features of the show that were specially attrac tive. All the leading kennels of the country were represented, a majority of them by larger exhibits than in for mer years. Prominent among the en tries were the Sears kennel of Melrose, Mass.; the Belmont kennels of Hemp stead, L. I.; the Ermiuie kennels of Mt. Vernon, N. Y.; and those at Con tocook, N. J.; South Framingham, Mass.; Arlington, N. J.; Whitestone, L. I.; Englewood, N. J.; Lancaster, Mass.; Lexington, Ky.; Philadelphia; the Elm kennels at Forest Lake, Minn.; Kildare kennels at Pittsburgh, Pa.; Item kennels at Bethlehem, Pa.; the Retuor kennels, New York; the Rochello kennels, New York, and the Eberhart pug kennels of Cincinnati, Ohio. Foremost among the features of in terest at the bench show was the dis play of setters and pointers. Among the notable prize-winners was Monk, of Furness; a famous English setter, by Sir Allister, out of Belle of Fur ness. In pointers the Westminster—the principal kennol club in the United States—led. Among the St. Bernards the most notable entries were Plinlimmon, Jr., and Lady Wellington, both from the MISS WHITNEY AND THE ST. BERNARDS. Sears kennel, at Melrose, Mass., and champion Hesper, Prince Regent and Hector—the four latter being all im ported stock, with flue markings. Beaufort, the champion mastiff of En gland, who has won all tlio honors on the bench in that country that he very well could, was a great attraction. He is a noble animal, valued at $5,000. His owners, Messrs. Taunton aud Winohell, took the first prize of the open class with him. Hesper is a magnificent specimen of the canine race, and is valued at SIO,OOO. He is I MR. CHAS. HEATH'S POINTER "REVEL III." a rougli-coated St. Bernard, and weighs over two hundred pounds. His coat is a deep orange, rich and tawny, and he is beautifully marked. He was born in 1885. He was shown four times in England last year—at the Olympic Kennel Club shows and at Manchester, Colchester and Alexandra I'alaco Kennel Club shows—and won first prize at all. A dog that attracted a great deal ol attention was the wolf-hound Bival, bred by the late Emperor William, and his favorite dog, the one seen often in the pictures of the Kaiser. He is a little bigger than a greyhound, and covered with the most beautiful silkv white hair. He is a haughty animal, and does not allow any liberties taken with him. Probably tho smallest dog among the fourteen hundred on exhi bition was a toy terrier nnmed Mousey, and not much bigger than the creature from which it is nnmed. A hairless Chinese dog received a ■wi7 for being the very ugliest pun at tnc sliow. One cannot fancy a" more hideous-looking animal thau the poor, shivering creature, whose eyes are un like and whose spots are most nasty to look upon. Ivan Komanoff, a superb Siberian wolf-hound, was one of the features of the show. He was bred by the Czar of Russia. He is the first of the breed exhibited in this country. E. H. Moore's champion Ben Lo- CHAMPION JOHNNY. mon, a son of Plinlimmon, the famous $5,000 St. Bernard, Saffron and Lady Miles (also from Mr. Moore's kennel) were among the entries. In the mas tiff classes there were several famous entries. In Newfoundlands the native show ing was notably weak. Indeed, it was probably the weakest point in the en tire exhibition. The finest collie kennel in the world is that of Mr. Hanson, of Philadelphia, and the showing in this class was large and attractive. In fox-terriers the Belmont kennels at Hempstead, L. 1., made the largest showing, including such unequaled dogs as Rachel, Lucifer and Bacchanal. In a bench show a good deal of in terest always attaches to the bull-dogs. This year there was a capital showing of these thick-set, ferocious-looking canines. Foremost among them in all the qualities that experts admire were Portswood Tiger aud Britomartis in the challenge class, and Monarch VI. in the open class. All three are beau ties, as bull-dogs go, and have a front that would inspire terror in the breast of the boldest burglar. The showing of field and cocker span iels was somewhat slender. There were FIELD SPANIEL "GLENCAIRN." many good ones entered in the spaniel classes. There was a perfect swarm of black and-tan terriers aud funny-looking lit tle pugs to challenge the endearments of the ladies, who never fail to hover around them at a bench show. Many women sat before their pets' cages and at intervals brought them forth and combed and brushed their Bilky locks. Wonderful Inventions. Even the simplest of our necessary implements, which are such a matter of course to us that it seems as if they would be self-evident to any one, re quired years of experience and thought to bring about their present efficacy, says the Portland Transcript. This fact is exemplified in the development of the screw and the nail. Forty years ago, as we are informed by an elderly carpenter, all screws were blunt at the end, like a bolt, and for their entrance into the wood it was as necessary to provide a hole of the proper size and depth as as it is to dig one in tho ground for tho entrance of a post. Gimlets of as varied sizes as the screws aided the screw-driver, and were just as necessary. The "gimlet-pointed" screw, which has been in use for the past forty years, was not even thought of then, and so the carponters bored a hole for every screw, till some one hap pened to think of combining the screw and the gimlet, to the lasting benefit of builders. We read of the wrouglit iron nails of our ancestors, which split the wood like a wedge, and which re quired a previously prepared hole as much as the blunt screw. The square point of the present nail must be placed in proper relations with the grain to prevent splitting the wood; and it is only recently, after all these years of building, that a nail has been perfected that won't split any thing. It is the smooth, round, sharp pointed nail, so extensively used now in the making of boxes, fruit crates, etc., the narrow edges of which it pen etrates with impunity. Slip Dliln't Hun the TOWII NO matter what may be a man's per sonal convictions on the temperance question, he is bound to respect those of his wife. The venerable Senator Tliurman was never considered rabid on that issue, but his wife, for reasons of her own, was fully imbrued with the "touch not, taste not, handle not" prin ciple. It is related that upon one oc casion Senator Thurman's friends vis ited his house to apprise him that a new political honor had been conferred upon him. He was pleased, but after they had been seated a few moments the conversation lagged, and the old Boman seemed to be ill at ease. His wife tried her best to entertain the campaigners, and tlio Senator excused himself. He presently appeared with his boots and top-coat on. "Gentlemen," said he, "we will now go out and get something to smoke. My wife is the boss here, and we never have anything to drink in the house." Mrs. Thurman looked pleased as she closed the door after them. "As I was saying," added the Sena tor, "she runs the house; but, thank God! she doesn't run the town."— New York Herald. The AppTe niiOllie First Pair. Pater—l don't like the way you are going around with Miss Poor. She won't make you a good wife, for she's not the right sort of gill for you. Son (rapturously)—O, father, I love her! She is the apple of my eye! Pater—Pes, of course. But you must remember that man's downfall was caused by an apple.— Lawrence American. Grace Before Meat. Yeast—Do you say grace at the table at your boarding house? Crimsonbeak—Oh, yes. "Before or after eating?" "Oh, before, of course." "Why of course?" "Well, if wo waited until the close of the meal no one would be willing to give thanks."— Yonkers Statesman. AN ADVENTURE WITH WOLVES. A True Sketch of Border I-lfe. when I was a child °* twelve, m y P ar " y en * R moved to a \ P °* le ItfflyW i ®°cky Mountains Jb' ora(^°- for table house i!i Tg7r Qn e mountain . . . side, in the midst of a large pine forest. It wag fifteen miles to the nearest town, and ten to the nearest settlement. There had been, a year or so previous to our locat ing there, a saw-mill two miles far ther up the mountains. An old house was yet standing there, aud a beauti ful spring bubbled out of a bank about thirty yards away. Above this spring grew the finest wild cherries I ever saw. One morning, about the time these cherries were fairly bursting with ripe juice, my brother Frank, three years younger than myself, and I asked our mother to permit us to take our basket and go to this spring to gather some of the fruit. We knew that children accustomed to walking as we were could walk the few miles, gather our cherries, and return by dinner-time. Mother, being very in dulgent, soon gave us permission to go. So, taking our basket, we start ed, followed by our little (log, Pansy. A brisk walk soon brought us to the spring. We had nearly tilled our bas ket with cherries when we hoard Pansy give a low whine of fear, as she came scampering toward us. Frank cried out: "Why, Pansy, what's the " and then stopped, for we both saw coming through the bush toward us two large, lank wolves, of a species known as the great dusky wolf. They were not fifty steps from us, and were coming on at a languid pace, for they had not yet seen us. "Quick, Frank," I cried, "let us get into the house!" "Oh, but the doors are shut and fast!" he panted, shaking from head to foot. "Yes, but the window! the open window!" We started for the house as fast as we could go, but the wolves, who had by this time discovered us, now came for us, with loud howls of hunger. On we ran, scarcely knowing what we did. Just as we reached the window we heard poor Pansy give a yell of pain —only one—and then—l was inside, and vainly trying to pull frightened Frank in. At last, with a scramble, he tumbled in. Now, this window was only a half window, and had been fas tened with a heavy wooden shutter and sliding fastenings. The fastenings had Blid, letting the shutter fall inward on the floor. As Frank scrambled to his feet I grasped the shutter and was lift ing it to its place, when Frank cried out: "Oh, poor Pansy! poor Pansy! Let her in; don't shut her out!" I knew our perilous position better than he did, and did not stop to an swer, but placed the shutter in its plaoe, and slid the heavy fastenings against it—not any too soon, for at that moment the howling, hungry wolves dashed against it with such force as to make it orack and spring inward. I had presence of mind enough to throw my weight against it, to hold it in place for the time being, but it was fortunate that the varmints did not prolong the attack, or the rotten old shutter would have surely yielded to the pressure of their wild leaps. They soon abandoned this, and went howl ing about the old house, as if in search of some way to get at us. "What do you think has become of Pansy ? Do you Hupposo they caught her when we heard her yell ?" asked Frank. "Of course they did,"l replied, "and if they hadn't stopped to eat her they would have caught us," which would certainly have been the case. "Oh, I wish they'd go away,"moaned poor Frank. "If mother gets uneasy she may come after us, and then " We heard two loud reports of fire arms, quickly followed by another. Running to a crevice in the wall we were rejoiced at beholding our father and two hunters coming toward the house. They had been following these same wolves all the morning. Father was as badly frightened when we showed ourselves as we were. I don't know which of us was the worst fright ened, Frank or I, but I do know that I never could eat wild cherries after ward, and Frank says they never tasted as good to him.— Chicago Led ger. Children's Parties. . _ GT only in win- JAY - I'ter, 1 'ter, but nt all \\ seasons, the /jl'f \ Aj amusements of \MIIU |\ young children KajWffS 1 \ ought to be sim- LA U pic, unexciting, and as free as possible from the characteristics of /TTfl luOvY-m " le "pleasures" Ail \|U"VyJ 'ate years. Fho so - called I \VV "pleasure" of a w yi. children's party Jfk involves a very VSr" ■""" large measure ol excitement, both before and after the event; so that, apart from the expos ure to the chances of "chill," and im proper food and drink on the occasion, there is an amount of wear and teai and waste attending these parties which ought to be estimated, and the estimate can scarcely he a low one. It may seem ungracious to strive to put a limit on the pleasures of the young, but it must not be forgotten that early youth is the period of growth and development, and that anything and everything that causes special waste of organized material, without a compensatory stimulus to nutrition, ought to be avoided. We turn from these to the mental and nerve injuries inflicted on the growing organism. Thoy are certainly not to bo disregard ed. A perfect storm of excitement' rages in the little brain from the mo ment the invitation has been received, aud the affair is talked about in the! nursery until after the evening. Sleep l is disturbed by dreams, or, In some cases, prevented, by thinking of the occasion, and afterward the excitement does not subside until days have elapsed, perhaps not before another invitation is received. AN inventor of Belfast, Ireland, has .made a pneumatic tiro for bicycles that lis claimed to destroy all vibration. It is about two and one-half inches in di ameter, and consists of an outer cover ing of rubber inclosing an inner air tnbe. Air is pumped in by a foot blower, and a valve prevents Its re turn. DINNER DISCUSSION. The Uncle duuiition Practically Worked Out. A few days ago Mr. Grumbledorf came home promptly to his six o'clock dinner with the laudable desire upper most in his breast to be pleasant with his wife. They had a little tilt at break last about the proper way to serve buck wheat. cakes, and both were a little ashamed of fussing over such a trifling matter. (irumbledorf earnestly resolved to make amends for his quarrelsomeness, if he possiblv could. He thought he would begin by not alluding in the least to their unpleasantness at breakfast, and to be very genial at dinner and not touch on any subject upon which dis pute could possibly arise. As Grumbledorf seated himself at the table, his wife said: "Willie, dear, will you carve the duck ? It looks so nice and tender, I am sure you would rather serve it in that way than have the girl cut it up in the kitchen." Grumbledorf couldn't hell) but think this a little oovert fling on his wife's part at their morning's trouble, but he put on his blandest smile and replied: Certainly, pet j I would rather carve it than not; but you mistake the name of the bird. This is not a duck, but a canvas-back." "Well," said his wife, color ing a lit tle, "isn't a canvas-back duck a duck V" "No," replied Grumbledorf, quite blandly; "a canvas-back duck is a can vas-back duck, but a duck is quite a different thing. A duck runs around in the back yards and is killed with an ax." "Oh, you're talking about tame ducks," said his wife, with a least bit of sarcasm. "I would like to know, if a eanvasback is not a duck, why a tame duck is a duck, either ? If you weren't as stubborn as a mule you would see it, too.' "No, my dear," said Grumbledorf, struggling to appear calm; "I have in vestigated this subject very thoroughly, and know what lam talking about. If you have any conception of reason, please listen to me. A tame duck is simply called a duck, whereas this here," stabbing the bird with this fork, "iR called a canvas-back duck to distin guish it from the other kind of ducks; the same " "There," cried Mrs. Grumbledorf, in ternpting, "you admit that it is a duck yourself. You say the prefix 'canvas back' distinguishes it from the other kind of ducks. Doesn't the word other prove I am right, Mr. Grumbledorf '!' If 'can vas-back distinguishes this from the other kind of duck doesn't that prove this is one kind of duck ? And if it is a kind of duck, haven't I a right to call it duck just as much as you have to call a tame duck a duck ? You know you are wrong, like you always are, and if you weren't a great big, obtuse, headstrong man, talking to a poor, weak woman, you'd admit it." And Mrs. Grumble dorf began to get ready to cry. "Listen, my love," said Grumbledorf, trying to talk an blandly as possible, "you have a false conception of this matter. I am sure if you would only listen to reason you would agree with me. For instance, a dog is a dog, isn't it ? Yet, if you had a prairie dog here on the table would you ask me to carve the dog ? But if you shut up I will carve this canvas-back or die in the at tempt. There, I've met you half way, any how." "But you might have called it 'duck' while you were about it." "Mrs. Grumbledorf, you are the most unreasonable woman I ever had any dealings with. What in the (jab with the fork) world do you expect! slash with the knife) of a man, anyway. What hum bling (jab-slash-slash) concessions do you want (jab-slash-slash) me to make and still (jab-slash-slash) preserve my self-respect? (Jab-slashety-slash.) If I ever get enough off this duck—do you hear that?—duck to jabety-jab-slash) stave off starvation, I suppose I ought to be thank—(jabety-slasliety-slash). Confound it! What are you standing there grinning for like a weather-beaten idiot? Call in the girl! There's your canvas-back 011 the floor!" "The what?" asked Mrs. Grumble dorf. "The duck," replied Mr. Grumble dorf, sheepishly, as he went to look for the benzine to clean out the grease splashes all over his coat and vest. But Mrs. Grumbledorf was smiling. She had carried her point. A Long-Delayed Wedding Fee- Three years ago, said a well-known San Francisco journalistic clergyman to our reporter, I was called on to unite a young couple in marriage. I received no fee at the time, but the groom, with whom I was acquainted, promised that he would not forget me. I saw him several times afterward, but he never recurred to the subject of the fee, and the matter passed from my mind, but this week I received a $lO bill from him, with this brief but sig nificant explanation: "DEAR Slß —During the three years of my married life the extravagance and wastefulness of my wife, to whom you so kindly united me, was such that I was kept constantly in debt. A mouth ago I obtained a divorce from her, and am now able for the first time to fulfill my promise regarding the wedding fee. With thanks and excuses, I remain faithfully yours, It Was Charily. Mr. Isaacstein—l sells you dot coat, my front, for sayventeen shilling; you dake him along. Customer I thought, Isaacstein, that you didn't do business on Satur day. Isn't this your Sunday ? Mr. Isaacstein (in a low reverent tone of voice) —My frent, to sell a coat like dot for sayventeon shilling vas not peesness, dot vas sharitv.— London I'ick-Me- Up. He Didn't Know It All, After All. Ycllowly—Whitely i 3 a very intelli gent fellow, isn't he ? Brownly—He pretends to be. Y.—He knows lots. B.—There's one thing ho doesn't know. Y.—What is that? B.—Ho doesn't know that he doesn't know everything. A Weather Prophet. Scientist—So you have followed the sea all your life! I presume you are a thorough meteorological prognosticator by this time. Jack Tarre —A which? "A —X mean you can easily forotell a gale, can't you ?" "Easy 'nough, sir. When you see the captain daucin' around an' yellin' out forty orders at onct, you kiu jest make up y'r mind thet "it's goin' ter blow."— New York Weekly.