SOMETHING. A something IIOVIT< in the ai", Ami poises o'er the iiakeil tree. And rides upon the ivnged loud, Yet hath no I'o in the eye can see; But to the deeper, in war I eight. It in a presence • weet and true, That fllln 1110 universe with Joy. And wakes the earth with iinpul new! A something in the forest word, li K-iircely may be uuiued a voice, Vet lettered captives hear i A call. And ill their 1 iitfi-'g heart rejoice:— A subtile whisper ill the breeze Ho soft, it seeius a spirit's in eat h, Yet le flees boughs grow tremulous With ecstasy, at what it saith A something uses with the mora, And lingers with the sun's last ray, Brings rapture to the silen' nig >t. And lu-tre to the sh niug du.v; With yearning, hair of b iss and pain, It swells my heart, and, wondering, I ask.—wha 1 "' can it be? A bird rings at my window—''lt is spring! " —[Zitella Cocke, in Youth's t'ompa iiou. A PECULIAR GIRL BY MRS. WILL.LAM WINTRR. Rachel Landor began life by being peculiar. Instead of the customary and orthodox yell with which the youthful inhabitants of this planet greet their , first sight of it, Rachel remained per- ; feotly quiet, only looking up into the nurse's face with a calm and questioning guze, which greatly disconcerted that ox- . perienced matron —or, to quote her own words, causing her to be "so all struck, of a heap, it was a blessed miracle she hadn't dropped the uncannv little thing then an' there, an' so stopped her from uny chance of making any noise in the 1 world, either then or thereafter." Rut the baby thrived, and as her young life advanced from weeks to months, nud from months to years, she managed to keep up her reputation, so early begun, of being unlike other chil dren. Of course, she heard a great deal of this "peculiar" way of hers, and she liked being made the subject of wonder ing remarks and admiration —though, perhaps, that was not peculiar. Anyway, she soon became imbued with the idea j that everything that happened to her was ; special and unusual; and though na.ur- I ally warm-hearted, and not raoro selfish 1 than the gercrul run of her sex and age, , she certainly developed a remarkable amount of egotism. At eighteen she fell in love, quite con vinced that, though other girls might have imagined themselves in love before her time, there hud never really been any one who thoroughly understo d the heights and depths of that passion till it was exemplified in her. George Murray encouruged her in that belief, and de- , clared that ho responded to it with fervor and intensity which could only bo ex perienced in the unknown recesses of the male heart. There was soon an almost bitter feel- | ing of rivalry between the lovers as to which of them loved the more, and while this feeling was at the height, Amy Uiv- ! ers came home, from boarding-school. I Amy was the kind of girl that men go , mad about. She was small and slender, i with dainty hands, and feet of diminutive size, and a heart of similar dimensions. She bad a mass of fluffy blond hair, u complexion of lilies and roses, and great ohina-bloe eyes, very soft and dewy, and I shaded by long, silky lashes, that gave ' them an expression of deep feeling, such as their owner had never experienced in all her shallow life. For the rest, she I had great taste in the adornment of her charming person, ami her maid faithfully car'iod out hor host idous. Miss Amy Rivers very speedily settled the curious rivalry that had existed be- 1 tweon the lovors. She had not been home a week when George Murry ceased protesting the superior depth of his at tachment to Rachel. Ry the end of the second week he never spoke of his love at all, uiul looked bored when his fiancee spoke of hers. Ry the end of the third week ho had almost ceased visiting Ra chel, uud then only on compulsion; and by the end of the fourth week the whole town was talking of his elopement with Amy Rivers, and wofidoring if Ruche I Lundor —who had fallen like one dead when alio learned of it—would ever rise from the bod on which tlioy laid hor. But Rachel didu't die. As she said, bit terly, that would have been too simple; and, being peculiar, she hud to live for j something much harder to bear. Poor I girl ! It was reully a groat grief, and her suffering was acute; but, after her j custom, she made it worse. There had never been so greut a wrong committed against any woman, and none other had ever felt such so deeply. Having said that, sho closed hor lips on the subject. Year utter year wont by, and many j people had forgotten Rachel Landor; uud those who knew her, sometimes failed to recognize the worn, haggard , woman of twenty-five, who certainly looked ten years older; and when people spoke of her, it wus either with pity or I contempt. "Such a wasted life ! —an only child, worshipedbyhor parents, whoweredying of grief for her selfish grief—a rich j woman, too, who might be doing so much good with her hoarded wealth—and all about a man who had jilted her! It was ; wicked and shameful," said her critics; und likely enough they were right. Rut Rachel did not hear them; and if i she had, she would not have cured, for j in hor own way her life was ordered care fully and methodically, and her money was not hoarded nor wasted; but, being peculiar, us usual she chose to live iu ' her own way, and to do that which she 1 felt she could o, in the manner that best suited her. The poor, the sick and the suffering knew her well. They did not think her life a wasted one. What this poor, em- 1 bittered, disappointed woman felt in the J silent depths or her own reticent, intense nature, she hardly knew herself; for she shrank from formulating hor own thoughts even to her own iniud, but oc casionally something in the outside world ■ seemed to shape them for her. As, for ' instance, one morning when sho sudden- I ly found herself gazing at an old woman J whom she met in her morning walk—a wretched woman, hor face seamed with wrinkles, her hair an unkempt frowzo of gray, straggling locks, her clothes tat tered and torn, though well hidden by an old black shawl that draped her head and iell in folds about her a most painful und unlovely sight in the morning of an early, cold March day. "Shall 1 over look liko that V" thought Rachel. "Old, withered, broken-heartod —poor old woman! Perhaps if 1 could know her story 1 should learn that some J man jilted her in the sweet springtime A. of long ago. Being a poor, gentle fem inine creature, she didn't die, though hor iicart broke, aud as tho burden of life grew too heavy to bear, she began to drink—at first, to forget, and thou to keep warm." The tears that seldom rose to Rachel's eyes for her own woes, overflowed for tho imagined sorrow of this forlorn old wreck J!' humanity. The woman was quick lo see, and instantly stretched forth an imploring hand, in which Rachel placed a liberal donation. It was this incident that paved the way for an unexpected hut far more im portant encounter. As Rachel, walking quickly, and with eyes still wet with tours, and a heart wildly throbbing with IU wly quickened feeling, turned the corner of the street, she rushed directly into the urms of a young mm who was coming toward her. lie was pule and wan, lie stooped under tho weight of that experi ence that is more aging than yours, but Rachel knew him i an instant, and as his arms involuntarily closed about her and held her for one moment to his breast, she cried out, as if he hud thrust a dag ger in her: "George—George Murray.' 14 Rachel," ho said, softly, "forgive mo. 1 did not mean to touch you. It was so sudden —" 44 Yes, yes, I know. It is my fault. I didn't see you. " And she wrenched herself from his ho'd, it was. indeed, from his embrace, to** he clung to her us if ho could not again lot her go. Rut seeing her face, \vhi','h grow like marble at sight of him, his anus dropped away from her. 44 0h, can you forgive me?" he cried. "It was all a wild delirium—a madnes! I never loved but you ! Can you not j forgive me—can you not even try to for- j give me?" "1 cannot even try," she said, and her voice was liko tho knoll of hopo; and, ! with a gesture of unspeakable contempt, ! sho waved hiin aside, and passed on. How she reached home Rachel Landor never knew; but some hours later sho wus aware that she was in hor own room, the door locked, uud all the world shut out. How long she had been there she didn't know, but she remembered thut when she came in she hud sunk upon the sofa half fainting; but now her heart was beating wildly und every pulse thrilled as if with some new life—a feverish, de lirious ecstasy such in sho had never known before. Sho gluncod up and saw the reflection of herself in the long mir ror opposite, und wondering, doubtiug her own eyes, sho rose, wont over close to the looking-gluss and 9tared. Wus that Rachel Landor, that radiaut vision of brilliant, gracious womanhood? The years seemed to have rolled back, sho ! looked ten years younger than she had 1 looked when she went out that morning A joyous excitement glowed in her great, ' deop, dark eyes, her cheeks und lips wore flushed with the hue of the rose, the mass of dark-brown hair, usually worn in a tight knot at the back of her heud, had slipped from its fastening and fell in a disheveled, waving, glossy mass about her neck and shoulders, reaching to hor waist, uud her tall, slender figure in its unconscious poise of triumph, had all tho lissome grace of buoyant girlhood. "Can it ho I?" she murmured, wondor iugly. "Yes, it is, indeed 1, and I am j beautiful. Ah! my day has come—tho day i never even dared to hope for! He loves me,and I am a thousand times more beautiful thuu that pale doll that took him from me! And be —he loves me! ,My hour bus come! It is just, and 1 will use my power. 1 will be revenged—re venged!" And, liko poor old Lear, Rachel deter mined that hor vengeance should be the terrors of the earth —a revenge unique, unusual, peculiar, like herself. From that day Ruchol Landor returned to society. .She soon learned what, had she been accustomed to the gossip of the town, she would huvo known months ago j —that Murray hud returned a broken hearted, ruined man, bitterly disappoint ed in the wife who had squandered his fortune in their brief married life, leav ing him not oven the memory of hor love when he laid her in hor grave, hor shal low, frivolous heart forever stilled, and his life enbittorod with tho mingled poison of self-contempt and remorse. It was very soon as plain to all who , saw him as it wus to Rachel, that his love | had returuod to its first object with a passionate intensity such as he had never before known himself capable of; and, indeed, he only seemed to In o in Ruchel's presence,seeking her whenever she could be found, follwing hor every movement with adoring eyes, breathing, almost, to the souud of her voice. Rut ho never put his love into words, he scarcely dared to speak to her at all, content if ho might only gaze on hor when she moved. ! How Rachel felt about this silent wor ship none could toll—in somo ways she I was more peculiar thuu ever —but it looked, at times, as if she chafed uudcr it. 1 One night Ruchol Landor missed tho figure of George Murray from a largo i party, at which she WAS, as usual, tho brilliant and beautiful attraction. As I hour after hour went by, and still he oatno not, she was uneasy, the people soon bored her. Presently sho coulu endure the crowd no longer, and, with a strange, uueusy tremor, she withdrew quietly, I ordered her carriago, una was driven home. The same thing liupponod tho next night, und tho next. On the fourth : night she hud grown almost haggard with disappointment and—rage, she said to i herself. Rut presently she overheard a remark dropped iu a whisper: "George Murray is ill—dying. The ; doctor gives no hope." And at those words the very beating of her heart seemed to stop. 1 " 4 111 !' 'Dying !' " she repeated, in a sharp, agonized whisper, ' impossible! ;He inust not bo ill! He dare not die!" i Her vengeance was not yet complete, j that revenge for which she lived—on i : which she lived, her very life itself! ! She fled from the plnoo, und hiding i herself within her carriage, bade the eouchman to drive to tho home of George j I Murray. She soon found that his condi- 1 tion had not been exaggerated. A vio lent and deadly form of typhoid bad strickon him, und ho was already raving in delirium. The physician made no pretense of hope, lie told Rachel plain- I ly thut in all human probability her friend was doomed. "There is but tho shadow of achuace iu a hundred thut lie may live." "Rut, doctor, we will tuke that oue shadowy chance, and lot the other ninety nine go," said Rachel, i Doctor Frank looked at her, but said nothing; ho didu't understand her. Like everyone else in tho plucc, he know Rachel's story, and he asked himself: Could it be possible, after all, that she loved this man who had jilted her and i ! broken her heart? Her face told him nothing. She was very pale, and her eyes glowed like live coals—but their meaning wus u mystery to him. On the following morning Rachel took her place iu Murray's room. A capable I nurse was already there, and being a I woman, perhaps she understood Ruchol better than tho doctor, anyway, she made j i no objection to hor presence, and if she had, it would not have made any differ- j ence. Miss Landor was uccustoiued to > having her own way. , Tho days went by and grew into , weeks, and they were slow and tedious to uurso and physician, as such days ' were wont to bo, for they began now to 1 count tlie hours till George Murray's breathing should cease —that breathing that was often so faint that more than 1 once it stunned to have ceased entirely. Hut Rachel kept no reckoning of time. I (hie day in the early summer the win i dows were open, for it was very warm, and the odorous breath of roses and honeysuckle and pirple clematis filled I the room with pertnme. The sick man lav asleep, white as the tall lilies in the window. "He will never come outof this sleep, said the nurse in a hushed voice. Rachel drew a long breath, and took the wasted hand in both her own and held it close, while her very soul soomed to pass into that touch. She bent over him. almost us pale as himself, only that her cheeks burnod and her eyes were fixed on his face with a look that seemed to bathe him in the glow mid fervor of their light. She did not speak, and her gaze never left him. Hours passed. The hand she held lost its deathly chill, and grew warm and moist, a faint, dewy moisture was oil the brow and temples, and the broathing grew stronger, longer and steadier It was evoning when the sleeper stirred slightly, slowly unclosed his eyes and smiled, as ho looked up and recognizod Rachel. It was a weeklaler, and she was again beside him, while Doctor Frank and tho nurse spoke of him in the next room, comparing notes at* to his strange and unexpected recovery. I "They say you have saved me, Ra j ohel," ho said, in a voice still faint and i low. "Yes. I could not let you go, George." "And what are you going to do with I me?" "I um going to be revenged on you." "Ah! Hut how, dear?" ''l am going to marry you—" "Rachel! Do you mean you have for : given me?" I "Yes, dear, 1 'lll afraid so," murmured Kuchel. "You know, George, that I was ! always very peculiar." She bent down and pressed a long, lingering kiss upon his trembling lips. —[New York Lodger. A Country Without Fences. South Carolina is a country without fences, writes a correspondent, and it is a vast improvement in the landscape, as well as a great saving in money. It looks odd ut first on the big, level plain on i which Aiken stands to soe a great stretch of country unbroken by a single 1 fence, and hero and there a bouse or burn without .ny protecting walls ' or fences. The Legislature bus übol * ished fences by declaring that every 1 man is entitled to enjoy bis own land, f , without interference or dumage from his ' neighbors' cattle. T. at is, if I own two * scrubby and hungry pigs and you have a ■ thousand-acre farm next door, i must keep my pigs ut home and not compel 1 you to speu.l half yo jr substance in ' building u fence around your fann. Life, ! liberty, and the keeping of pigs and ' mules are all sacred under the South 1 Carolina Constitution, but the man who 5 owns the pigs or mules or any other ami -1 mals must fence tliern in or otherwise 1 confine them. Jf they run looso or break ; loose and do any damage, their owner must pay for it. I | This is the most sensible solution of " j fence problem that 1 ever seen or beard j of. It is entirely new to me, so I enjoy ' it all the moro, and the more 1 think of ' it the moro sensible it seems. It goes right down to the root of justice, llore you huvo in New York State or in New Jersey a thousand acres of laud or a 1 hundred acres, or any other quantity, j and you are entitled to reap and enjoy j the fruits of your labor on the capital j invested in that land without lot or hindranco. Hut ono of your neighbors 1 may wish to koep a dozen sheep, and another cow, and a third a handful ' i of chickens that probably that will not i ly eggs, (1 speak fiom experience ' hero,) aud for that reason you must put a fonco of a certain loguli/.od height and pattern around your wliolo place, or I else you cannot inako your neighbors pay for any damage their cattle may do your crops. It would bo just as rea sonable to say that no man shall bo convicted of burglary unless the house he breaks into has walls so many ! feet high and so many feet thick. South i Carolina is fifty years in advance of the ' | North in the handling of this fenoo J problem.—[New York Times. t Hydraulic Clocks. A system of hydruuliculiy controlled > . clocks has recently been installed in the t Berlin University by the Urania-Uhren and Saulen Couiinanditgesellschaft(Hros > Inner and l)r. Von Orth). The iustalla -5 tion consists of ail ordinary clock, seven ' secondary clocks and four ringing ar -1 j rangemeuts, all connected by u system > j of water conduits to a centrul apparatus 1 | erected in the vestibule of tho building. 3 I At the end of each complete hour tho I principal clock sends an electrical cur- rent through the electromagnet of the 1 central apparatus, thereby disengaging > an arrangement of wheels and opening u 1 water-cock. The water then Hows through 1 the water-jet pumps and absorbs the air ' ill a network of tubes to which all sec - ondary clocks and ringing arrangements are connected. Laeh of the secondary ! clocks is provided with a bruss casing, which is closed by meuns of a loathor ;■ membrane. As soon as the air in the casing be i comes rarificd tho membrane lifts u bar, ! by means of which the hour finger is made to act at the exact moment of com pleting the hour, and the clock is wound | up to the extent it has run down during ' the hour just completed. Tho ringing arrungoments are also fitted with a sim ilar casing and membrane, whioh, during the rarefaction of the air, lifts the ham- I mer and causes the hell to ring three j times. When the necessary amount of rarefaction of the air has been attained and the work of the apparatus is com pleted, the water-cock in the ceutial ap paratus is automatically closed. Several installations of clocks on this system havo already been made, notably at the Uerliu Exchange and tho Potsdam rail way station. —[Industries. How to Keep Hooks. It is true that books aro better pre seved by being shut up behind glass doors, but they do not yield half their benefits in this way. Even a single shelf of books adds to tho coziness of a room, and the home that is fully organ ized will have such a shelf in the guest chamber, us well as in other rooms A hook is often a great boon to a visitor, who may, perhaps, have risen too early for breakfast, or enjoys a solitary hour with some good reading before retiring for the night, it there are a great num ber of hooks in the house, and there is no library, he sure and ha\o them ar ranged in an open book-case in the parlors. A book-case can he made of pine hoards and stained. With a pretty, straight cover across tho top and hanging over the sides it will he tho most at- , tractive objoct in the room.—[New York * 1 Keoorder. I THE JOKER'S BUDGET. JESTS 1X1) YARNS IIY FUNNY MEN | OF THE PRESS. , A Double Entendre—Very Fly In deed—A Strained Joke—Spring, Dentin Spring—Better Than Notli- i tug, Etc., Etc. A DOUBLE ENTENDRE. "You don't know yet how she feels to- i ward you ? " "No, but I'm going to make her show 1 her hand." "How ?" 1 "1 shall present her with a diamond ring." | VERY FLY INDEED. Wool —Brousoii seems to be as fly as ever he was. Van Pelt—What has he been doing? Wool—Whou I saw hiin last night ho seemed to be trying to walk on tho eeil mg. A STRAINED JOKE. First Anarchist —The members of our , club seem to be ufraid of susponsiou. Second Anarchist—Why should they I be afraid ? First Anarchist—Because it always ends futally.—[The Club. SPRINO, GENTLE SPRING. Come, put away the ulster big, And the seulskin cap we wore, For gentle spring is coming on, We shall not need them more. Pull down the camphorated truuk Forth from the attic high, And pack those winter clothes away, For spring is drawing nigh. Aud when we get them packed away, Up out of sight. Why, then, We'll shiver and we'll shake to find, That cold snap's here again. —[Clothier and Furnisher. BETTER THAN NOTHING. "Am I the man of your choioe ? " ho whispered. "Well, no," was her h.isitating reply, "not exactly; hut 1 guess you'll do." HIS REVENGE IN SIGHT. Jack Hardup (with unwoutod enthusi asm i— By Jove! I see that some fellow is tulking about introducing a hill into the House making it a misdemeanor to send annoying letters to any oue. Very clever idea that. I'll havo my tailor locked up for six months, by Jove!— [T id-Bits. AN EASY ONE. "What is the difference between a col lege student and the man who has college degrees conferred upon him for his eru dition?" "Ono gets his learning by degrees and the other gets degrees by his learning." j THE CONSOLATION OF THE SIX-FOOTER. "Little maiden, tell ine true, What s >rt of man most pleases you?" She blushed and hung her pretty head. " 'Tie Hymen 1 like best," she said. —[Life. NO FINANCIER WANTED. Jess —And you want to bo closer to me than a brother? Dick—Yes, dear. Joss—'Twon't do; he is altogether too close. COULD THERE BE ANY DOUBT OF IT. Acquaintance—Going to be married next Thursday? I congratulate you, old boy! Who is to bo best muu? Fweddy (highly indignant)— Best man? Baw Jove! Me! —[Chicago Tribune. lIALLB AND HAULS. He—lt is so good of you, darling, to accept me. But oven my great wealth, I am afraid, cau't make you forget that my grandfather was a common fisher man. She—Why need I forgot it? I will toll everybody about your "ancestral hauls," and on your iuoomo of SIOO,OOO a year, we will ho as happy as the day is long.— [New York Tribune. THE FAINTING RACKET. First Tramp—"What's the matter wid Mike? He looks as if life wasn't wort' Uvin'." Second Tramp—"That's jist how lie feels. Ye mind two days ago a poor man fainted in front o' that big house over yonder, and the kind lady rushed out wid a bottle o' brandy to rostoro 'iin?" "I mind." "Wull, Mike, ho tried th' faintin' racket there this momin', an' th' 010 lady rushed out th' same as before. But when she seed Mike, she said, 'Poor fel low, his pores is all stopped up so he can't breathe,' says she, an' then slio turned tho hose on 'im."—[Yew York Weekly. SCHEDULE TIME. Hungry Traveler (ut railway dining station) —How soon will tho train start, conductor? Conductor—l'll start on time to-day. I ain't got rnuoh appetite. DEATH AND THE CHICKENS. The festive spring chicken, With death, is alone In rightfully claiming All seasons its own. HER ANSWER. "I guessed you loved mo, sweet," said I, And gazed within her eyes, Like violets shyly raised to mine In maiden's soft surprise. "When first your little hand I hold I guesßod you loved me then." She raised her lovely eyes once more And whispered, "Guess again!" —[New York Herald. TOO CONSCIENTIOUS. First parishioner —I think wo ought to raise Dr. Thirdly's salary. Secoud purishioner f don't. He is such a conscientious man that he would feel bound to preach longer sormons.—• [Kate Field's Washington. ONLY GETTING READY TO GO. "lias that lady who called on your mother gone yet?" "No, and she won't go for another hour." "llow do you know?" "Because sho just got up from her chair and said: 4 Well, I must go—good by.'" A MARKET IDYL. It was her first essay at marketing, but she tackled the work with tho beauti ful huidihood of youth and inexperi ence. "Have you canvas-back ducks?" she inquired of the man in the stall. "Yes, miss, and they aro beauties, and mighty scarce at this time of year. Au' I've got mallards and red-heads, too." "You may cut me off three-quarters of a yard of the canvas back," she said, in her clear, clussic tones; "and cut it diagonally so that it will not ravll," and sho looked about for the yardstick to see that he did not edioat her in measurement. —[Detroit Free Frees. # SURE OP HER GROUND. " I don't wish to influence you, Mabel," said the mother, "in any way that would do violence to your own feelings or in clinations, but does not young Bluuncr maii appear to ho partial to your sooiety of late? Tho queenly young girl bowed. "I thought I had observed an inclina tion on his part," pursued her mother, looking with pride und tenderness ut the beautiful face and figure of her eldest horn, "to pay rather oxclusivo attention to you. lie is a man of excellent habits, well connected, and of good prospects, is he not?" Again the young girl bowed her lovely head. "And ho seems to bo intelligent, well educated aud unassuming, besides being hnndsonio aud of good address." "Yes." "He is not personally objectionable to you, is ho, Mabel?" "110 is not." "Do you think, my dear—you will pardon the question, I am sure—that ho sooks to win your love? Do you think he intends to offer you the highest honor that a high-minded man cantonder to tho maiden who has won his heart's best affections?" "Yo-e-es, mamma," yawned the beauti ful girl. "If I want him he's my pud ding."—[Chicago Daily Tribune. A VITAL DIFFERENCE. Wickars—l don't believe there is much difference between gonius and in sanity. Vickars Oh, yes there is a heap. The lunatic is sure of his board aud clothes.—[lndianapolis Journul. AN HOUR AHEAD. An oldish couplo who had come in by the Erie ltoud were crossing on a Pavonia ferryboat recently, when the wife asked her husband about the time of day. It was about 2 o'clock by the right time, but ho looked at his big silver watch and replied that it was 3. "But they said we'd get here about 2," she protostcd. "Train might have been late." "It wasn't quite 2 by the clock in the depot." He took out his bull's oye again for another look, held it up to his ear to see if it wus going, und then suddenly ex claimed: "Oh, pshaw! I'm an hour ahead! I've had her set for the hired man to g< t up by, aud forgot to turn 'er hack."—[New York Observer. THE AMENDE HONORABLE. She (with some severity)—l have been told that you speak in very compliment ary terms of ine to others. Ido not wish you to do so, for people may got the idea from your praise of mo that there is something between us. That is an im pression that I do not wish should get a broad. He—l'm sorry for what I said. It was only in fun. She—Fun? He—Yes ; when I said you were beau tiful and amiable and all that I did not moun it, upon my word, so plouse for give ino.—[New York Press. A DESIRABLE FREAK. Wiggs—l suppose you know "Fore warned is forearmed?" Futlites—Never heard of him; let's offer him three hundred a week. The First Paper Makers. The wasps wore actual paper makers long before inuu knew how, aud by very much tho same process by which muu manufactures it now. In fact, all the while that people in the olden times were using wood und stone and brass, the hark of trees, und the skins of uuimals, this little insect was making u far better material. Tho wool-fibers used by the wasp are about a tenth of an inch long and finer than a hair. They gather them into a bundle, adding to them us they move from place to place. You would find it very unlike the wood gnawed by other insects. They bruise these fibers into a sort of lint, before using them, with their man dibles or jaws, preferring old and dried wood. After this bruising process they use a sort of glue, which they eject from ' their mouths, to fasten them together; then they kuoad it into a sort of paste, | like pupier inuche, making it into a hull , whioh afterwards they trample into a leaf as thin as tissue paper with their , feet. Tho first thing a wasp does after the paper is ready is to lino the roof of her house with it, using fifteen or sixteen layers, or sheets, ono übovo the other, making a wall often nearly two inches in 1 thickness. These layers aro left with J spaces between, appearing, as you look ut the nest, as if made of so many little shells. After the ceiling is finished, the wasp begins to build the rest of the nost, t which is composed of an immense number of paper shells, and wheudouo looks like u honeycomb, only pehups moro light and elegant, if this were possible. You may think these cells are for honey, but they are not, for the wasps never inako it, but aro solely propured for roaring their young.—[ Detroit Free Press. Digging Powers of the Mole. The Notoryctes burrows obliquely in , the sand, going two or three inches under the ground, und never betraying its passage except by a slight undulation of the soil. In digging it uses its conical nose, which is protected by a horny pluto, and the strong mattock-shaped olaws of its fore feet. The hind feet, which aro widor anil spado-Bhapod, throw the sand back sothut no trace is loft of the tunnel which it hollows. It conies to the surfaoo a few yards farther on, * and then buries itself again, all without making any noise. It is prodigiously • agilo and swift, a property on which Mr. Heiihain, who lived for some time at Idracowra, says: "Everybody here can tell you how soon one of these aniuiuls will get away by digging in the sand. I . had brought a live one to the house and we were tulking of its agility in digging. . Mr. Stokes desired to see it at work. After spading and turning over tho ground near tho house, we set the nni . inal down; I held it in my hands till it was nearly hidden, and then tried to overtuke it by scratching tho ground be hind it, but without success. Another man caino to my help witha-'econd shov el, and also a native woman used to dig ging in the ground with her hands. But ail threo ot us could not find it."— [Popular Science Monthly. FOR thirty years, it is snid, the beard and moustacho of James Hrown, of Ben ningtou, VV. Va., have been untriinmed. With his arms extended ho stretches fully six feet from tip lo tip of his fingers, yet tho ends of his moustache, when held horizontal!v, extend beyond his fingers. He braids his wonderful beard and moustache and tucks them un der his vest. SOMEWHAT STRANGE. ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS OF EVERY-DAY LIFE. Queer Episodes and Thrilling Adven tures Which Show that Truth Is Stranger than Fiction. ONR of the spots which have been se lected for public squaros in Philadelphia is famous us tlio idonticul place where William Ponn made his gruit treaty with the Indians. But even before that time it had u claim to historic attention us the site of Gov. Fuirmun's mansion. Thomas Fairman occupied the laud under the authority of the Duke of York, filing his patent us early as 1084. In the house which ho erected Penn spent the j first winter of his residence in Philadel- I phia. Govs. Markham, llaize, Holme, j Evans, and Palmer also lived in the house. Gov. Pulmer used to keep a ploasure-hargo in whioh ho made jour ney 8 by water to the "city," or the dis trict now included between Vine and South Streets. In front of the mansion rose that old elm under whose' branches the memorable treaty was made. This tree was blown down in 1810. Its girth was 24 feet, and or.e of its branches spread for 150 feet towards the river. Prom the rings in the cut soction of its trunk it was estimated to he 283 years old. Where the tree had stood, a com memorative monument was erected, and a railing was put around it. Vandals have chipped tho shaft and the railing has been broken down, until now only a seamed and broken fragment of inurble remains as a testimony t3 Peun's league of amity. The spot is at present almost invisible amid piles of lumber. Now that a public park is to be luid out, tho monument will probably he restored. The property has passed through many hunds. Tho Fuirmuns owned it until 1715, when it passed into tho hands of Joseph Redman. Redman sold it to Robert Worthington, and the latter sold it to Gov. Palmer in 1730, and Charles Wert became owner in 1738 After several other transfers, William Yard became the owner in 1795, and in 1798 he sold it to Matthew Vunduseu. THE captaiu of A coasting vessel, who arrived atGuayamas, Mexico, a few days ago, tells of a strange discovery made by himself during his last trip. He traded up and down the coast, doing business among the inhabitants of the islands und coast villages between there and San Diego, Cal. A heavy wind drove him far out of his way, und when the storm abated, ho found that he was so far out of his usual path that he hud lost his reckoning. Ho was out of sight of shore, and when he saw land, bore down upon it, and found an island that was not down 011 any of the charts. He sent a boat ashore and the men returned, suying that no one lived there, but thut there were many houses and evidences of the place having at one time been inhabited. The captain then wont ashore himself and found that the island had undoubtedly been swept by a scourgo of some kind. There were numorous huts, but not a living thing was to bo found. An examination revealed the fact that the former residents had died in such numbers that they had not been buried. The skeletons were lying around the isl and where the people were when death overtook them, in one hut were found the remains of seventeen people, whilo in many others were the bones of great numbers. They had been dead for such a time that the bonos wero beginning to decay. There was littlo to bo found to show what kind of people they were, but it is supposed that they belonged to onj of the island tribes which were so abun dant in this part of tho coast fifty years ago. Of course there can only be con jecture as to the probable cause of tho wiping out of an entire tribo, but the knowledge of the fearful sweep of scourges on the island leads to the belief that a pestilence swept oft' the inhabi tants. TUB Japanese Commissioners at Chic ago have beeu fortunate in securing extremely advantageous sites for their country's exhibit. A certain island which has long been coveted by rival applicants is now definitely promised to them, and this favored spot will probably be occupied by a reproduction of the fumous oditico known as llowo-do, one of the finest and best-preserved ex amples of uuciont architecture that the empire contains. It stands in the village of llji, a suburb of Kioto, and was built when the Emperor's first fixed their resi dence in that locality. Its name may be translated "Phoenix Temple," the word "howo" signifying an imaginary creature of the air, credited with attributes akin to those of our fabled cinblcm of immor tality; and its shape is supposed to be suggestive of a huge bird with out stretched wing and spreading tail. The original structure covers 150 tsubos of ground, a tsubo being equal to six feet souurc. It is expected that one result of Japnn's possession of the island above referred to will bo tho exhibition of speoiinens of ship-building, representing dift'eront periods of the nation's maritime development. This feature, if fully carried out, will be a surprise to those who iinagino that the Jupaneso were al ways a homckeeping and isolated people. Three centuiies ago there was not any where a more daring or enterprising race of navigators, and their adventurous expeditious, not only to vurious parts of Asia, but even across tho Pacific Ocean to Amorica, are matters of historical record. FOR genuine grit and presence of mind, J. N. .Sacry, a brukcmun on the Montana I'nion. is entitlod to wear the belt. Sncry is on the run between Hutto and Garrison. One evening recently be loft on bis train for the terminal point, but at Stuart some switching was neces sary, and Sucry got oft' to assist in doing the work. While walking along the track, however, one of his feet became fastened in a switch frog, leaving him exposed to the mercy of the backing train, which was only a few feet away. Heiug unuble to extricute the foot, he threw himsolf on the ground with force enough to broak one of his thigh bones and wrench the foot from the frog just as the trucks of the first oar passed. The unfortunuto man was brought to this city and taken to Murray k Gillespie's Hospital, where his injuries were at tended to. '1 nkiug into consideration that this class of accidents is quite nu merous on railroads, and thut very few persons so cuught escape more serious injury, Saory considers himself quito fortunate in escaping oven at the expense of a broken limb. AN IDOW ABIGAIL HOUGHTON, who lives near Scranton, Penn., has 200 pet spar rows and she has given up one of the rooms in tbo house, where she lives alone entirely to their use. One of NVidow Houghton's geese got into the indiscreet habit of laying in the weeds by the creek on the place, and a crow of the lower clusscs, possessed of a certain degreo of low oanning, "caught on,' as they say iu St. Louis. So he perched himself on a 1 100 near bv, and as soon as the goose left hor nest ho dropped down and Hew away with a fino largo egg. One day a sparrow in citizen's clothing caught the robber in the uct, and, summoning assis tance, punished him so severely that he dropped in the grass from sheer exhaus tion and the Widow lioughton wrung his head off. The sparrows have also de j tailed a force to protect the widow's pond I from the tish hawks, and the chicken hawks now give hor poultry yard a wide I birth. THE New York Tribune tells a story of old man lliruni Potter, of Scranton, Penn., who, it says, has a poor memory. Ten years ugo he lost his teeth, so he wen' to Philadelphia and had the best set that could be found fitted to his mouth. In a little while ho had forgot ten the incident and was wont to brag ( of his sound teeth and rebuke young men for having the toothm ho. Recently ► he was troubled with neuralgia of tho face, and, after suffering sevorul days, ho concluded that ho had the toothache and wont to a dentist. The dentist as sured him that there were a number of his teeth that needed attention and went to work accordingly. After six hours Mr. Potter happened to remember his visit to Philadelphia, and gettiug out of the chair, took out bis teeth and laid them on tho table. Au arg"mnt and a scene followed, in consequence of which Mr. Potter carried his arm in a sling and th ) dentist was not üblo for a while to leave his bed. THE Boston Journal tells a story illus. trating tho power of a strong will- Some forty years ago a Massachusetts good wifo lay in her bed apparently dy ing with consumption. As the family lived four miles from the undertaker and pastor, and as tho roads were badly blocked with snow, tho husband when culled to the villago on business ou a k Tuosday decided—thoughtful man!— to save an extra journey in thut hitter weather by engaging tho minister and undertaker at once, and appointing the funeral for the following Friday. In some way, on Wednesday, the sick woman heard of this, and arousing her self from her supnosed dying condition, declared: "There 11 be no funeral in this house this week!" Tho funeral took pluce on a recent Friday, forty years after it was originally set. The husband is still living at the age of eighty. FOUR adventurous persons, three men and ono woman are übout to leave Scuttle, Washington, for New York, with no other means of conveyance than a wheelbarrow. They are J. F. Cheath am, John Howard, F. W. Caston and Miss Lou Howard. The men will tuko turn übout at pushing the wheelbarrow, and only when the woman gives out from exhaustion will she be ullowed to ride. Only in case of sickness will stops of a * longer duration than twelvo hours h made at any place until Chicago is reached, where it is intended to remit in three days, and then push on for Now York, it is the intention of the quar tet to cover the distance between Seattle and New York in five months. WHILE Frank Moffatt of Caluis, Me., was in tho woods after timber this win ter, his wifo und their two small children lived in one of his camps on the Maguerra wock. While Mrs. Moffatt was outgather ing firewood recently one of the children set fire to tho bod. Tho mother hustened back just in tiino to save the younger child from being burned to death. The cump and its contents wore destroyed, und Mrs. Moffatt and her children had to sturt ou u night journey through the woods to Milltown. It was a terrible journey, for a cold storm came up and the show was knoo deep. Tho truvulers wore obliged to s!on at a play camp, ) which some boys had built in the woods, wht-re thoy remained two days and nights, stormbound and starving. A hunter hupponed along and rescued them. CAPTAIN PITCHIER, of the United States infantry, has been telling a reporter Home curiouH things about a hot spring in Wyoming, near Fort Wushakie. lio said : " it is near our camp and about ten yards in diameter. The perpetual temperature is 110 degrees above zero. Often in the winter 1 have coine home from a cold ride when the thermometer was 15 degrees below zero and taken a swim in the springs. It is not inclosed, and it is a funny sensution to go swim ming in a temperature of 110 degrees abovo, while your heed is exposed to a temperature of 15 degrees below, zero. I have often seen the soldiers take a swim in the spring and follow it up with a roll in the snow. It almost makes a Turkish bath." As example of the cunning of gulls rus observed at Tucomu when several alighted on u hunch of logsthut had been in the water a long time, with tho sub merged sides thick with barnacles. One was a big gray follow, who seemed to bo thecapiuin. lie walked to a particu lar log, stood on oue side of it close to the water, and then uttered poouliar cries. The other gulls came and stood on the same side of the log, whioh uuder their combined weight rolled over several inches. The gulls, step by step, kept tho log rolling until the barnacles showed above the wat r. Tho birds picked ea gerly at this food, and the log was not übaudoncd until every bamucle had been picked. SKVEN years ago Mr. W. E. Mason, of Millsboro, W. Va., went out with $485 in greenbacks in his pocket to feed his hags, lie did not mean to feed the hogs on tho $485. Hut while ho was feeding them sorry nubbin corn tho money fell from his pocket and was promptly ap propriated hy tho biggost financial hog ofthedrovo. Mr. Mason made bis hog ship disgorge, but the mail who printed them wouldn't rocognize them. A bill bus just been introduced in Congress asking Uncle Sam to replace Mr. Mason's money. Will ho do it? Mr. Mason is waiting to see. THRRF. is a man within one milo of Do Kalb, Mo., Mr. Willium Jones, who is 24 years old, G feet high, 52 inches aiound the waist, wears a GO-inch coat (chest measure), wears a Xo. 12 shoe, a No. 10 hat, and weighs 1115 poun Is. He can hold out at arm's length with euse a man weighing IGO pounds. He is a farmer and can do as mncb work as two common-sized men. Mr. Jones is mar ried to a lady that weighs only 92 pounds. IT is said that there is a horse in Chi cago which is so strongly charged with electricity that when warm with oxoroise it will give a powerful shock to whoever touches it, and even vield enough of a spark to light gas. r i he fact was discov ered by accident a few duys since, and the electric horse will soon probably figure as a dime museum curio. We have seen a mule communicate a shook powerful enough to knock out P man's brains and he was not considered a ouri osity, nor was his power attributed to electricity. Alexandria, Egypt, possesses the largest artiticial harbor in the world.