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Bark the
With the ee*^* e*n» “* ARfj- aorthvwd. ,
Sm her
Spring' ow **•’»
Ltnf ermg, *tfil *° ,rfr
ftgsi w« «BiIa and l-eokoo
At«* tbwnwtiing
Of be* win®.
Orerw dearer, dearer'
Fijin* ever eanri
Cotoee the Spring
Wbat tbo' the dcod-vrile eometame*
Dm, her eyee of aruref
Ah. ibe rarwt pteamre
Tear* may teiag -'
Flowers mark ter prik»*J
Vk-.rte <te»T bioeo.-e.
Blooming eweel sad 7-s'fa
HteaMe^risg
pear srhatae. fairs"
Bosieet and rareet
la tlie shaded wMdlamte
Doth she ding.
Green ttegr*» » growing.
Babbling aroeks are flowing,
faefr rtrareri skacting
ret the Bpring.
Ah. we too forgive her 1
Ah. we too heel
In our thrill of traneport—
-Blaine 9ooiak. ayed efetre.
a FOanfah OASD
“Good morning, Miaa Laura,” said
Mr*. Bender, stopping ato the g*te.
“How are the folks to-day? Bende^” _
“ .411 well, thank yon Mr*.
"I didn’t see any light m the b<*t
parlor last night, Mias Irijra; how’s
that? Any nnpleasantoeBsr weather,surely, laugh
“None in the
ed Lanra. . down to the^sd
"Ah! I'm going
riBee; ahattttookinyonrbox? I snp
one p°". h PSSS2. gxz’piz
a
^Friii^r™,C“te ;"tr wtr ffir- o
„
of «y thing. ------------- u
“.Any thing toB< . „ ^^S5™rri>weTr n.g7 ?_ffie_ asked, „ . 5
herowum^ !'TL. r^^v. Aj^lrwd C J^ k r'Zr^ we.1,1 L
Mi ” „
•he whoawritingto ■ , trudged hoipewer. poetalrerd.
fterona
bat public way, ~ K very body reatl s tn eru,
of coarse; just nsmiicb common ^pr pe: -
Vy aa a poster. Ahem ’ You cau haraiy
read you see evcrvwwd !vrm before yi
J°°" '*■ lion t fad to be at the bill
MnSvtheinfd . 1 J^k’> knowV
7?^' .fe. Prettv
fl m ( i, mt
ought to be told of three g< lugsou, aal ^
Sto^aitSSi allow the young man J*!I to remain reSS in the ^
dark ._ I shall have to manag,- it some
how.
Mrs. Bender left the postal card witti
the servant st Lanra’s door, ami pro
hS 1 mllS^ «„1 Xf, n«v.n.
d ilM*
iim
home stttotoano. into, blaclTSd
neitl r onrl ‘l norrtbbon lTtoto
should be spared to favor her case.
neighbors “ Have von lately seeu ?” she anything asked Mr. of Dov- our
eus at dinner.
tog 11^ wifaTuirttomml^ril^hcr . ‘ ' , , “’he 1
"oLim^uth-'-', ttoothers.de
of toe bouse." Miss Nell was engaged,
and with a h?r man mu-to M’. H wifely Van4n walk and”
“ SX?a8™. .nd m’t
much of eftcli.other ihd
*r
“Oh, don’t we? May I trouble oft~'.. yon
•'-sawsaws r
-■r^ree mimi re*. I’ve
for you, Miss Prue; bnt no more
idea of going into the citv to-morrow
than of going to the moon. '*
“Ob, Iuuderatood that Mi** Laura
was going, and I supposed-! didn't
knowTmt-” V^mmin
“Miss To Z hasn’t mentioned the
excursion Aren’t yon mistaken ?"
—off his guard.
“ Would she be likely me£* to mention it
if partkmlar?^pufi^SrBen^r ni.A muni tmi'iuf *r» aftm/iitenriv b ^ y
P “Law, maf don’t worry Mr^Devens/’
* 4 1 onlv said * sunposinu.’ It is well
to SActr be nrenaral for the worst isn’t it
slruckhim a little oddly that he
should tovo heard nothing of the Boston pro
•jected holiday journey, affair since Laura, a trip which to she
was a to
after. openly dteemaed To be for there weeks had before be«D and Ut
tie sore, dating a
coolness between them, from
the time when he brought her a letter
from the mail, directed m a fine nmscu
- snother “ 4 ,
within the Into, and he had Dot been
near Lanra’s door for three u hole days.
Hadn’t he better step over this evening
and see how she was ondnring it? be
asked bimseli. And afamt l-hi, trip b.
Boston 1 How could she leave her die
trict eonool? It was only some non
sense of Mrs. Bender's, no donht. Bnt
delaying brushhia iu tbe hall hat, on heovorhearilMiss "Wednesday eve
ningto Prae sayiug to her mother: “Ellen
Dow taught I school for Laura Vaughn
to day. wonder wonder the the oommittee committee don’t
complain. It’s «s very very odd odd about atxmther her going
up to Boston. She asked Ellen Dow'
not not to to mention mention it, it too. too. And ana Eilen mien
me not to sav le^ a word about it either
don't you it out to Mr. Devens, ma,
K ius* to tease *K him 1 wonder “t if she
fatoer o/thesly,” appr .ve
him, and so she meets him
pursued Prue, wearing material her hand.
from the meagre in “I
wito tose/ vouwotod < me"°and forbid somebody b!T
then-” thre ’ Mr
Devens entered.
His Laura snspected fIv 1 of If meeting him an
SdtoT nftvA* man ffc y»n ^ <?rvp n
had she onlywaited ne/er occurred his to beck him and call; it
as
that «h© could eoiwple hentelf with
other lover. And who was this Jack
about whom Mire Pnie discoursed so
volubly? t>4r Should reconciliation—he he go to Laura and
for * had
made np his mind to this step before
entering the' hottse—or should he give
hat a lesson ?
“ Did Miss Lanra match your fringe
to-dyr ?” he asked, nonchalantly.
“ I didn’t like to mik her,” said Prne.
“I reckon she-had other fish to fry.”
"When sweetheaif a young goes to the city
to meet a she can't attend to
matchee SSSri of another kind," sain said Mrs. Mrs,
facetiously. Lani ^
” Dii Miss go to meet a
heart, eh ?” be asked, with an air as if
it didn't signify in the least.
"She went by appointment, Mr.
Devens, to meet it a ahonld youn- be man, kept too, I
yon." don’t aee why from
* "Indeed! Did Miss Vaughn tell
aoF’ *
“Hot aha. It’s a dead sswret, bat it
leaked out.”
“So it seems.”
Laota'a something tfl a flirt like the
it Of ns There 'was vdang 'it’s Sample,
theotergyman—in fact, tow
tobeon the” irito thenewtore befbre she's *
off d*'
-
f ib*. BeadM, Ma* VaBghn te
1 *kditwtrikre me
tot we marine toimPMy fanuliar with
a ‘Jackman! young fallow when be signs himself
nothing more Sbonidn’i
yon toy so, Mr. Devesp ? I rimuidn’t
like Free to Ite on in ch terms with any
^• Djv* "Mii' Vangb^^ow already vou caught her
love tetters ?” besskoj,
ia the snare.
“Not muddy,Mr. Devens. But mur
der Will out, you know. I believe my
self that ibis a dangerous innovation to
teach servants reading aaJ writmg, it ah
the Vaughns Tilvww do. No good comes of die
tr^S^M U emerienced ft strange v£Sa
in
the wjk’s of romen of the Bender type.
^antageorth^hffie^quMrelto b L^Sh^‘pl^dfau4 tori
turn a^ccmpliment some'other by bestowing damsel? his
attentions upon
ent of bis tempo™*?
> with him
etched As-grae, with a
her heart and tans in her eyes.
“ Wbat a rZctSl hlessing MroBender. postal cards are, she to
be sure "’ as
hxfijod *t- uie t£Um pair. “Sow il that one
kro. m my teeth, « to
apeak, "Ver he wtnsid have been spooning
at tifL> V»uglins* this very milinte."
5D, Deven’, blinded byThfa look
faiied to percieve that the mtuation
eJ peeuliM; he never guessed whata
inearioo how hieRehavior affiMad any
■»*>»?■>;» sr^S?ii55SS ^aZ
under tlie same roof, said nldlM^s. Good
hue. to.kmg “IriposePrn.Jenceandherma orer her soecUclesi at toe
oosset «pe«toele. him witom into ofhis life; the
an
**y to a man a heart is through toarto
mseh; but yon nnist pamper his
or flatter his vanity, anil the Benders are
eqnal to the occasion, I reckon.
“ft’s propinquity," remarked Miss
BJ U t*, wharttatl mectal feminine pliilosophy culture anti
nove \^ fln j represented left her
i, A Chester. When Laura
“toin and again to the tender mercies of
: liUep Dow, and repeated tor excursions
to Boston, Mr. Deveua never failed of
ring made aware of it. On the third
“cession, indeed, to condewren led to
ifoilow in the amokfng-ear, persuading
himself that he really ought to hunt up
He was rewarded by
seeing Laura meet a handsome young
Tremont street, who tnrned
about and disappeared with her inside
^ studio Bmldiug. Mr. Devens did
not lm «t up his chum that day. Through
>lr«. Bender's application to her
tors'affairs it esme to hm eers whenever
Mire Laura received once<liscoTero<1 a bouquet by bnnch
r, *">* n<lh ® *
rioleU blooming in a glare knew in tor
window, which he well never
to no^nc ."he said,
^ te J »«‘P’
,. Indeed? ■ Folks • seem to under
sra'fiiss.'atts*
wares? hc^asked'hiaself. Waa
Pnifi mintaken, liketbti with rpganl
j« his f~jin«» H»d ^ " «*•
hi« blind solfishneas Waosa ? Ought folks he
' toirty without-k>*»
talked ? As he drew near the
'» the failing light he perceived two
; fl£1 closed the garden gate and
pist
‘ te»*-“?ka» He took, step backward,
still behind the hedge. then” arid the
“To-morrow, tezdei iutonat\oa, mason- 1.
Une voice, ■wrtb
’toUlie the himself proudest, actually happiest— bending
Devens fonnd
all his faculties to hear, bnt the end of
the sentence escaped 1dm. "I should
be glad to invite a hamlfnl of fnends to
wittim* my hucccsb, pursued object. the same
voice. “ if vou do not
“ I object!” said Laura's filver
~v* I* much and
return so little ! .
“Good-by.” ffe!j!a A little silence
«wng atta |
turned sh lwi-.«■ffV-SV hot and cold alternately; his
heart seemed throbbing in his throat;
he glanced toward toe gate.where take her she
still leaned : he longed love, to in
ten arms and claim her m spite
JJ® strange mans audacious kisses.
Then ue remembered Prue, arid what
“ fol ^ s had hahL &d he not put his
1 own happiness beyond his rrech? In
Sk.ThS’ZUSK
>
:
neighborhood, ... That , man-who leftyou just
“ now
S who kiseefi yon-yon—who lum 1” he ts .gasped*** ne ? Ton
are «orott to marry
at he challenged her going going to deny tt. Pro- Pro
“And “ And you yon are are to to many many
deuce nee Bender, Bender, ’ returned returned Lauras Iianra a tense tense
[tones. K.nes, “ Let mo wish yon joy.” the "
band kandt that held hers dropped like lead;
he hunghis head like one wonl. eonvioted, and
walked away without a
' Looking ^ drearily J ont of the cm win
: ^ oa follow ing moroing on her
way to Boston, Lanra’s eyes fell upon
Mr. Devens making hiswsy just toward left the
refreshment-room, having
! °a™- She fancied tost there was some
thing strange in his appearance; waa
. Alt' Could he hare been
' had a haggard, nlrinssed air, as if
had oeen up overnight, and had not
found time to adjust himself to
hour, and he walked unsteadily. Pro
sentl.v the train gave an
lurch Mr. Devens.would lose it, she
tbonght; no, be was coming, qnjckly bei
j'bnt not surely. Hfaf'not.mgylliar,
.upon the step'when it.ymiitoi and (idled
forward, and broke -up snddenlvw.th a
• nonse like the crack of doopi.. ■ It seem
! «i to Laura as if the heavens had rolled
together.,,.. scrofi at that instant; she
^ happened without hear
wor u; she was on her fret gropmg
her wav ont amidst the excited throng,
which seemed to part instinctively that to she let
her pass. She did not know
had -called his name tenderly, m;her wildly,
with the terrible solicitude
which only love lends. She knew noth
ing till she fonnd him lying like white death,
broken beside the track, and
speec-Mess and mutilated. She crouched
beside him there, whispering nnJerstod, tender
Jf he could as if
they two were alone, rod not the spec
tacle of a cunous crowd.
“I was desperate, Laura, at losing
yon,” were his firs! faint words. “1
lielieve—I took something to drink—at
the inn-in C.hester-jnrt to last.” forget
: about it all. The first-and the
There is to this day an unfinished por
I trait, turned ftwe to the wall,- in the
studio of Mr. Raphael Smith. "The
j lady never arrived for bnaband her last would sitting,
heextdains. Her have
purchased it, but the artist declined to
sell an unfinished painting.
’’ I wvamttbe poftisit for a Chrmtmsa
presmit.rieM, to you, "said Mrs. Devens;
“that wm why I went to town so pri-
rately tor mj mttaga—why I nude«ftb
r:jrw
' T °“I I
remember the very day when
received the postal card from Cousin
Jack — but her name sail her ia Jack Jacqueline, for brevity— yon
know, we
teUing mewhat *ryto gonp f« my and first I
Bttmg- M ro Bend» brongM ft,
>
I sncpo4dyou and make would and drop then-aftaward m at any mo
mat up;
—I had engaged the portrait, wmtwsat
«"£«««I «’d JaA a* f gre for withdrewrag- of aeeanag
sdftb srerrioea..
‘An d |WaiiaB ty it gTew mtereriiDg
that with I altaphitfsl heard him at kise your ,’eet. I will the swear gate,
yon at
and row be ffionid be thehappieet-”
So, «r ; he only k;s«d my hand,
ih * P**®!* ®r
te fas
"But pardon, Mrs. Devena, what was
t* 7™°^ for which you
i^aaaLa
after, all,”
^ 1 ? T ' i *?' 2? a:re ^, tafe?u7
1
pt te*ay is, they ndght as well never
Bntit was maaT.gryhaired owing to a postal card that
Mr Parens bnde,
and that Laura Vaughn wedded a enp
PJedJaebft
j Feaal Laws of garages.
The laws of the Caffre tribes Me said
!K7a.i£i us .rfisas
, g.ruSfsa
!Jitsi2s?®LS ,* tbe <■*„,. there appears, it is said,
ssasss^aiSss
j atonement. So the custmi reported bt
from Ashantee manifest a sense the
Ta i ueo , ^ penaltie*. An
, ig a t liberty to kiU his stave, but is
htoed if he kills his wife or child; oulv
awhief can seU his wife or put her to
, dea th for infidelity; whilst a great man
who kills hia eqnal in rank is generally
suffered to die by his own hands. If a
i man brings a frivolous accusation
; against another, he must give an enter
J tainment to the family and friends of
the accused; if he breaks an Aggry
■. bead in a scuffle, he must pay seven
j slaves to toe owner,. A wile who betrays
lafseeret forfeits tor upper lrp, au ear if
she listens to a private conversation of
tor husband. And savage as is the
kingdom is limitelthat of Dahomey, ni arbitrary power
so far sentence of death
1 or slavery, adjudged by an assembly of
i chiefs, can be carried out without oon
flrmationfromthethrone; andeuchasen
i tence “ must to executed in the capital,
and notice given of it by the pnbto
crier in the market” The forma of le
j gal regularity procedure manifest laws themselves. often no less
than the In
,Oongo knees to the toe plaintiff judge, opens who sits his under ease on tree his
j great straw bnt built a
or in a on jiurpose,
S
«««««‘ to.®”
“ SXffi rthfcU,'‘tooTffai^
J an-pjer M»*ormatiuii ftml FJ'onna for
£ ^ alway* hear,! fullv, Vxenlnate and is
ffggg obliged either "“"vrStoT' to commit or ttoXld
; ^Srl/YsZS? fb,
jetting 4titevoive-em his heirs, if nj
; sar-'• « “•
, ----—
Reeoril of Three Months’ h » Failure. **H»re»
Acrorduig to a report just lwmed by
; toe New \ork meroantito wney of
; Dnn, BmIow A Oo., there were very
many more business failnres in tl..
, WWMl
: of 1878 than_.luring_ the corresp nding
periods of 187o and 1877. The moroMte
, in the liabilities is also very marked.
; The number of failures in the Dominion
1877, though greater than in 187h, whuo
the liabilities were greatly in excess of
i «&%
H n, I ‘.
,
. ,
r WWW" n” m" '
' INC. m1 en; ml». ‘ ';
‘ Eutornflhta... manganm 413.. mg.
uwausums...‘ 9w; 33.27%,m_ ma
.taoumsum. mama), sank» '
: WWW” L21&fl.01«;;fl!_.:h as“
' Mama“! WW . 1“=‘W“~‘H* g -, . gar ‘ £16» 1'
.. m
Maw s.ssafoazmégsnfim“; I
Dominio'bnrcw- mww ' 555 09,101“ , f7‘ 573 "Wt. 5- M
.I. ~,
A^Ceurageens i Engineer,
.
While the Erie lightning express train
was sweeping down the v&Uey of the
Delaware a mile below Coohectoo on a
recent afternoon, the engmeer saw a
littlegirl roundings walking the track. He was
I | just shrieked, but within curve. The loeomotive
two seconds the
; child was overtaken and the train passed
the spot where she had stood. The
1 engineer looke.1 behind the rear car,
j : •g«to«to Bnttoe t™J,was fc me. bejmangled -lear He’"topped bmly
upon the gnarfs of the locomotive, and
J saw catcher. theqprl She plastered senseless. against the He cow
wm. op
preached her with care, and succeeded
| m rescuing her as she was about to
to the groaiui, -
. The
■ ^ to toe resi.tenceP® 1 ™'^ h
^ “ “ :
. about elevtnyears old. She A ^‘ wasslightly e ^ ^
cot about the face^bnt escaped wi thont
• J* *
the child waa smiling m the lap of w her
motner. :.. ' - '
-
. .
A I cry Original Poem.
Miss Leila sends the following origi
nal poem to the New York World:
I. As wide as the ocean and as fath
omlcss as the deep; ns true as the stars
in the broad canopy keep; and as faith
ful as the sun to give the*, light totheworia
just so is my love for though “ not a
atom nnfnrled. . -
2. But on aptl on the ^ world roll round
and around, I will burr niy lore; from
deep my lips not hnman a sound. shall I will hide it so
not a know thecanse
of my sorrow that cling to mo so.
8. 1 will always be-joyous or pretend
ever more, as on through thiswilderness
cvm, ev.r go, until death shall
claim me. O then I will he free from
this cold woild, for cold it moet be.
4. For the one that I love most, I
never can claim, for the h ind of another
I know he has gained. So come joy!
Pome eotrow! I will take shall a part in all;
bnt none in this world know the
secret of my fall.
FOR rUS xuv-m Jpw-g
taw mttbm <3&m.
Vm?' p«»p‘ p^p’ pe«P
Sow I U#&k my wintar * ak^>;
Saw i& ciencri win mj way
C'pvird to the light ot day.
Thrown h Um? dri*d yet fragrant
Of tbe Lut year * taegiad graea,
Up, by every random ekme.
Up, by ever? tree o erblown*
H y tb e b rt wby fi <lo —
Where young viokm lark and hide.
O or the earth all brown end bare.'
Beep! peep prejg peep;
Ia tbe bofiow* warm and deep;
On tbe bleak and breezy hill.
Ia the fao-laude damp and ehiU,
Bound old tombstones wore and grey,
Crumbling hke the dead sway;
Where the little children deep,
Softly, tenderly I peep.
By the roadside, freeh and clean,
I, the grate, up springing green—
Coming, coming everywhere,
Making all the br own earth fair.
Peep! peep: pnepl peep! it
Greet me at I
Greet me gladlf. grateiuHr;
Ktodiy to
•ore.
While I whirper sweet of gowere,
Wmle I tell of
And of touted aacnap wu
Greet me gladly, for to me
O’er the earth all brown and hare.
Mole Caleb*.
Three little chick*.» downy and neat,
Went oat to search of something to eat:
Something to eat!
And soon they picked up a straw of wheat
Said one little chick, "That belong* te me!"
Said tho other iittle chick, “ Well see, wall
" Ter-wit, ter-weet!
Uie and eweeV'
Stid number three . “1st as share the treats—
xsssss os srzr
. hwt . ph»«letKo . of tiu. bit of wheat. .......
Ksreer and fiercer the battle grew,
tTonme riraw broke righttn two,
Jmotrenuiecu Aao a. wue chicks
-
7 ^ ,v.r. -„„v„ n *°* hcv.
For a saucy crow hu watched the light.
And laugh*, “H*w, h*w * It serve* y<ra right f”
8obe wakshe* the prize
From before their eyes,
And over too hiil«, and away, b» fliee!
-
———
old mw.
The foUowing curious anecdote is
frem a book about elephants, written JaCoUiot, by
tt French wilt gentleman, let the author names tell his
and “re: we own
s In the autumn of 18761 was living
in the luteribr of Bengal, and I went to
K a p«fd Christmas ThT with bungalow my friend, ’was Major
thetonksof majors Galfges Cawnpore. on
h“ the near /cam,
He Wthcre a quartermaster’s goovl many
being chief of the de
partment Sany at that station, ana had a great
natives, elephants, oommand. bnllock-earts,
and soldiers under his
On toe morning after mv arrival, after
a cup of early tea (oftnt taken before
WfiftSf
flshtog.” said their father.
" my, isn’t Soupramauy ytmr great
I wm, tore, yon
to°». when to had that fight with
eiopijout wb-> ml'toZhlfwtonSLlten w*»at. mad wlule loading a
&he
U ii- if “, al,out i' 7.5', J testop , , him, and i ho
killed . the mahqnt.. The native reflrea
_
toto
' ..nh, «fc nt>
, was a bundr«l yrers oM. He TT„ ^d hwl be®
trametl to Jter> <uid to fight mth the
: rhmooeros, bnt he was too old to ^ hunt
then.
“ And yet," said I, becoming animat
e,11 bythe re^ilecbons tlmt day, ibvhat
: a gallant fight that all stojxl vme! Do yon re
member hnwwe ou thi^ porch
[lest ■ and watched it, not dating to fire a shot
we should hit Old Sonpramany ?
he drew off, afkr fighting an hour and
a half, leaving Ids Adversary dying m
bruised, and wgreat piece broken from
n@ .. vJ"* fa tell’’ «»il ton
j ...TSSret'litehf’JSL’fhre'rere^WH .. *«r little ones than ever. He
n.yqu.^T toAv^ ^L.^ s
ttSTAWCSJCsn
"5B!AS». maasaca'.'&as
eye. watebeit his line e^erly; he waa
no novice in “the gentle 'craft.” He
j waswaiting till it waStlme to draw in
hispnze. At end of the line,
j toe as be drew it
i teueh np, was dangling abundant one in the of Ganges. those golden
so
When Soupramany peroeivetl what a
fine fish lie had caught, he uttered one
; of those long, low gurgling notes of
satisfaction by whioh an elephant
1 presses joy; and he waited patiently,
expecting Jim to take hispriaeoff the
hook and put km, oil some more bait for
him. Bnt the little rascal, some
liked to plague Old Soup He
nodded to us as muchas to say; “ Lmk
ont, And vouH see fun, now!" Tlien
: he took off the fish, 4ere which he threw into
„ and water-jar back placed for the purpose,
went to his place without pnt
any bait on Old Strap’s hook. .The
mteUigcrot ftmmftl finl not affDmTkf *r>
tried to move Jim by low, pleading
r* 9 ' ? *“ to tr to 7 to note give what his tender
rouse.
Seeing that Jim paid no attention to
his balk, but sat and laughed as he
hl * ® ol, P. went
«nd with his trnnk tried to
turn his hea<l m the direction of the
bait-box.' At last, when he fonnd
all he could do would not induce his
willful friend to help him, he tnrned
round as if strnek by a sudden thought,
and, snatching np in his trim* the box
that held the bsit, came and laid it down
at the major’s feet; then picking up his
rod, he held it ont to his master. «
“Wbat do von want mo to do with
this. Old Soup?” said the maior.
The creature lifted one great foot
after the other, and began to
fits plaintive cry. Out of mischief,
I took Jimmy's part, and picking Up
the bait-bov. pretended to run with it.
The elephant was not going to be teased
by we. He dipped his trnnk into the
Ganges, and in an instant'squirted with all
stream of water over me tfce
force th« immense and precision of a of flre-engiira, the children, to •
amusement
The major at once made Soap a sign I
to stop, and, to make my peace with the
fine fellow, 1 baited his h>xk mvsolf,
when it gets with hold jo?'. last <» of » baby plaything
at s
someone has taken from it. Old Soup,
.1
him, before be want back toki* place,
tea enrfc aa it
trembled in tbe rifgak ifey. of tbe river.—
S. NteAohwJkv
;'fc^'ggcia. arawa t&atx&x t
r sassraess -
r
S2SKte fc -• *■
“CM
Nathan get an axe, and I will get
shovel. Let’s be back in fifteen tain
The boys ‘ separated e*>h to go on their
, and wondering of what
wood saws axes shovels
ooold favorite be in with tbe all, play- and they But Charlie tally belidv- wee
a
“Now," eaid he “ WidowMande, is
to ait up with a nek child,
hanksil he*’ mbmi wood Sri to-Jar SVhfii-. rbiI I
heard her lteU him unh
tu saw "I?......-rot »na would
not have anytnmg m > a**ea '
tbe ffiripife ot*wmd wc could
split could make just as easy her as door- we
a snow i on
aKd nri]l Kg» maffnu»h]v tff^Ehcys finniFlfiRfl
the One majority or -two began to appreciate objected, hia fun, bnt
and to experience that inward satisfac¬
tion and Joy that always reunite from
well doing.
It was not a long and and wearisome job
for seven robust healthy boys W to — .,
apht and pile np tire widow’s cord
of wood and to shovel a good path.
And when they had done this, so great
was their of them pleamtre who objected <nd at first, that
one neiirtiS^ pro
Dosed inT«rpente/s thatthevah 'ti’d tro to a
«op where plenty of
shaving* ocmkl be Lad for carrying them
»w»y, and each bring sn armful. The
SmT£^S orooositkui wss readily soeedsd to. sad
to their several
saryc
what wredone. she was pleasantly
prised fwho and afterwards when witorerel a neighbor
had, rfflie unobserved, touf toe
htoora boys) her how it waa
done, her fervent invocation, of itself, -God toev bless
the have toys!” heard it, was, abundant reward if tor could their
labors.
-
Tfc* Di*c«very.
Six hundred years ago there was in
Belgium a poor mail named Honillos.
He waa a blaekmnith, Mid his forge was
at a liffie village that near the Ltege. fellow Charcoal could
cost so much poor
scarfvlymakemouey enougb to give his
wife and c hildren food to ret. Often
times might, it happriied would that, work down aa and to
?>>a the night tlre.1. the oome children
irinnUt^r man hunger, and bit mymg
not a to eat
m A* ton»f- Iw as matters were
when tohadwork to dottov grew
worse when he tod none, fa despair
one day the smith wre M his forge He
had made up his mind that it was of no
nw 5 fo r, “J®. f® r ’
and evil thonghte bad j just • tempted a hum
bijtill himself, when li a veryold *“• man
J 111 *,?. b f^ ? ho P
Houilloa did not hiow tom, nor whenoe
“«'KbnTJlDol.^;
*” the Itore l? hoera»i Ihebegmto my.
^5“ totoTnifato
SK’LESffrii^reBte tottoto^.'" towwa^t'
* *1*
. ^ wenttorLl.totto tno-hf kimna
ter he
and found the black earth jnat as
the man had said. He threw hjrlnhnr ittotohia
SS’ to! he ijW .* ig^ * at
re
ones need starve no more^that he start
a?ssauaarsKass
i fesssfEsarja him still. They it angel who s
say nJ told whs tto an
w, ' rit *° tll<! for 8«' “ l 1001
wb ere to find the treasure.
,
late of a Lest loleny. ___
The lost Norwegian Oreerdarniiabronght colony on the
east coast of. to
mmd by the numerous Aietxc explorations. rapeditiona Orer now
fitting ont for Greenland discover-
1,000 years ago was
ed by adventurous Norsemen, and the
I far the of year the 987. country Two dates flourishing back as
, as
12TAiKas#s,S4is colonies, one from Denmark and the
eighty miles of desert, they had w
; no
’ tron “ e ,! n snataming thomrelves mde
&***»&*** .°* bet & of
f?* 1 ?* 8 *
, of the luxuriant. hills and valleys The being in oedony those
western
1!l ! ?!n°? e fom P^ 18 ^ churphea
oud 110 farm villages, while that on the
a&aasgMjts lareer, hsdtwfl^ towns,
iaSSs^ssa'w’SS SWffBSftSSSW
swsarrasftsr Uiied in. letter from Pope Nicholas V
j to toe Biahwp of IrelamLdatett^ bail *a»r been
which stated that tbe colony
; attadsed by # hostile fleet thirty years
before; and laid waste with fire and
sword; this story, however, In 1822 was not
! , Seoresby generallv erahted. Capt,
discovered houses oontainmg
ihnuting f sils“ apparatus nTfahabtonts, ami honaehold and there aten
bnt is
of to believe tost tbe colony. dwellings Some were
. relics toe iong-lost
jieople are still of opinion that beyond
toe ice fields a remnant of these hardy
Norsemen may yet be found, and an ex- ,
ofBreroftoelW Bfatre Navy gore :
so far as to say that " the (psndret would un
dertakmgof tiiat toe isolated present colony.” age be
I to reach
A Skip Sorresudetl by Hater Spents. ;
A British cruiser was recently Xir snr
->.-^ ».re.Tvn^ '
n9a aionalTy a U j enjoyi yis& fair by weather, violent tearing ia recte
stoma, called-. “ teniadoes' lnckily -of
short^oretten-whioh on^" thTocrerion «re seveSl very danger- ’
On water
snouts formed around the Boxer. The
ship was nndteal! plain sail, when the
weather beaaa to arenme a threatening ;
appearance, and waterspouts revolving were seen and
forafingin all high directions, of speed. One
of traveling at a to rate be coming straight ’
them appealed
for the ship, •<:Band*, shorten sail!
Clear away tbe Very^short bow gnn 1" were the
orders. In a time the little
craft was and.; Iwre poles, and the gnn
ready *355ZSi£JSKfaSF8i with s blank charge; but our S
rp«Lgio “ ve^? water
the base unpleasant 4i»ftohing
manner, and otfc«k was soou seen
with the rendering the fire of the
bow gob whioh tufeowmry, iRSfl a blank sufficient charge •
from have been ;
to too bavebroWy close; ba, happily, waterspouts they all coming passed
A preset calm ensmed, sti'am
was soon got Jn. amidst a perfect deluge
of the ram, littifasbi wfcickiwjteii about aa hear, and *
steamed sway on her
passage.
— ■
Among the tetaftworka thaattraMfonsof Atlanta, Gs„
*7is« aronnd the city
thrown goodfakteof »p the late war. which
are in a preservation. i
SWARMS OF STARS.
H*»> TriM erase
There are numereraa chwters.
The pleiadee are one of this Six
stars can be seen with tbe amuded eve,
and with a good glass aa many as 200.
jtS^ sffrs
w^lSBSffS of unlimited numbers, there teat
the ere never scan*. Then
are nebnbe of various kinds and forma,
single and double, w«4 globular and planet
Bkyi try, iadflof many stent, of otbEM>t are «apoe»l, star matter, of
and atfB many others of natter, matane
nebula in the
a ssm-ssag
seems to uri The prevailing life* among
astronomers la that it « a vast Stellar
universe. _-• and
Another class, called irragulM, below toe belt a
around goodape<^M»*a^i the star Rn m Orwn, eomnwuly
called toe great nebulm in Orto. Sera
with a moqerately ^ood telescope, it is
all overwhelmiag distance f5ight. and vast Its magnitude almost u- is
limitable
overpowering. We can hardly compose
ourselves when viewing it; the mind
seems to expand to the magnitude drs
tbe^jeet, end tods no lMgrmge to
acnbeit. Its nature has been somewhat
vealed detained lines by determine the spectroscope; it to be star its mst- re
tor. conglomerating into form, and be
ssfwwa&asaja
sfal ». illumes e its V»tom ptoets of Jupiter, whichpreb- who
own
»WJ have long sinre rooled down, and
are inhabited otdy^tobed ®toojed when
the gigunti o Juprter itoelf oools ofl.
~ ' '
Fashion r Soto*.
For toe ooiffnre are real butterflies
with ail their varied filigrea tints preserved, gill and
mounted on silver or
White tulle veils dotted with chenille
or with pearls are the novelty shslpe, for with sum
mer Tlioy are in mask a
hem or else pearifringe on the edges.
Another nrettv ornament for the hair
u tbe " 0ree k flU et of silver elastic gilt-a strep, mere
ba ^Sd d „ b rid ^making on bv an velvet
ea these of blaek
**^1!*“Lflta»rfdn«hrere gadded with iet or with gilt nsd-heada.
™bre t lace point- or
°tP _ on ' t ? n NevTfichns ana are ofVrene
edbaek I andfront i
base a re bot deredinth^embroiaCTy Vrieneiennes or m
else English thread .
New j»rg® jolmrs and dre>p cuTO^mo gathered
made of very flnclinen oambrm
aud hyeightortencloae edged with finely , row cnmp«l *.°' Vri*n
are
mennes lace in new desims, or else with
!Te“, X “™oTlllvmm $Z
^t^HSEhandies, j oriole bein^
, 4maU re| ^sger or an
mounted on the hollow stem, in whi^ is
tSfh't^toTtw^'Si^f fsssasfts&aasss to^
**"* ” e * T6ry mammoUi oniqoo, lead-pencil, «> design, repre- or a
bottle ■ d perfume, or a riding-whip.
^ds of (toe round point lace complete
scarfs of sheer linen csmbnctliat are
1- kmtoret to the htfge sailor tie that ia
now worn at the throat. Scarfs that
pass mound tho neck are not used re
moBt collars of dresses are sufficiently
s^ZjrsA‘ssrsgs
»»... re.
noon wear Me made with long prineesse
polonsisee, embroidered wiO. Swiss insertion richly
down every seam. Beige
colored satin ribbons, shaded through
several __ tones, are __ used __ __ in these mdhS _ day
toilettes; toilettes; othMs others have have pink pink and wad cardinri
together, toeotheror other other or else else cardinal cardinal oombiuation o^bi^tiou and and of oTcolirs. green, ereen colors. or
some so m6 queer queer
Wide wide brocutUnl brocaded ribljons riblions to to correspond, correspond,
are ^ used QHei \ ou 1>u other.white othex,white costumes. costumes.
To wear around ... the neck , outside . .. the .,
street wrap modistes have imported black
fgPi?!? J j ] QMi i HniRli^.l T? ltJl «» a p
__ .....
jr *, er ^«f itLScolow.®® g ^ ^ ou £ht to show rose buds
MaSCw£te W befge.^ XJro
either or
again again in iu Spanish Spanish P lace, lace, doand and.will be tied
on the brc »s t or like a flehu.
pale bine fonlard flebns, large enough to
read, to the elbows, have borders and
i ngert ions of white SpauiBh embroidered blonde or of
tbe ne w lace that is on ** gre
—
«^r! Irak’swaass
^sf'kj’^^lfy j-sszr .« vtssn air, threeimg
teldto' show toe young voni2whrin*m whelp up, ^d and
beqmcls alKiutit n ,
Ihe _yonng whelp iimt scarcely
entered the room when Greeley opeB^I
OreeJey-;- What Tare yon warfta qualifies. plseeen
®F are your
tions 1 How tnnoh newspaper work
have yon eveT done ? I
r.fS'.f'Trfte ... ,
“j-h” i"T* ll !r?? lea h?/ !
^ S -1 ‘ i ° < f
'
” re «ia: ““° __A^ ^dS
, L „™LriL do
y on kn ow about journalism ? ;
granger-“I come from l
^reVy^we^fi - don “, ^“fbtTwav aequrintol^rith T aMwilTtl voir
m *y_**T rtT 7 weu / acqaaiptea wnn your (
jr 7ant to kno“ what I think of
“ 1 K.jD mean mean >n! i Good morning - *’ !
Th e y 0 nng man left I believe, with a
^Xistinet impression that his mission was
hotthe revolutionizing 8 of journals. 1 ;
_______
Indian tomerstitloiis. !
^ , l ‘| .. , - lilmS , .
D , ?“ 8 ,
'
. 8 huge bird, back mdfl^
'’ rouses reaRt . ™ the a % thunder a * (some fan, tresem '
'fuce ^fanefast to themyffiologi^b.rdsof “he heavens Me*snre Jove^ ,
They imagine that -he heavens Mesnp.
*V fo ” r la ^ e r e8em b,I ?«
^ trees; thatthe . bl « blr .
^ 8t . ^ » <mly r k-ftw vLtat
commg the fac* rf from ^mr the rtrawataorot "® at - mrijntflity J 1 *™..® j -
wine* .they fern eril »l the the "raejeine Munroirawrifa,. bre.
They Jielievo that it has the idea KwerM, Muf,
rendering them good tero shots the fan
** ueb ;I the -.unagma, of light . of an aurora manner dart in
rays
about in the heavens), and consequently
worship it. Of meteors and falling star*
they haic great dread; > -v believe
Uiat they are sent by the g- warnore
whoaretnUie .‘happy danger. hunting gronmL j
to warn feem.of ;
ass^ssasnKMjs
SL TJrV q. , . *“ ..
xvtsssr ““ “
issffi:
353.
sSk£&s?« a man says “Hoio,” how w anybody 3
tat » blind man to know that he arena
Ohio? One letter reads, “ Bet Feet Rue
^^Ba. de Ague” Sow the biiml man knows
WstCT street, 4ejW' tod tbit there »8p»m* is• Wstar for
street in New Bedford, Massachusetts,
“ JjS""' W *£ CT °°vC h U^nf**
'■ Ioel ” into Iowa, and ** te Pella in
Yomah ” he makes to goto Ohio Fella, in with toe
same State. Nor does get off
: one miss. .Here is one letter that wants
15"— togoto* , is, the State of Ohio, On
fnat to
omnari, Btreet 15. But that i* not all.
Thia other oue wants to reach the same
city; bot it has a bad spell of ano^ier
kind, for its direction runs, M Scitmatr. ”
And then “ Pizzo Barg Messcssip,’ r is
gent matting.” to Vicksburg. * 4 Glass Michigan works Berkshire, is spelled M
“
is^nt to Pittsfield in Berkshire oonnty,
Massachusetts, where there w a glass
fsetory. But toe hsrdret one I rew wss
nddressed to “ John Hemsnn Sebir
men,” in one line, with the wouteful
&m2st&e&%
maun, Sherman P. 0., Chautauqua
county N. Y."
But there are some which even abUnd
man eannotmako out One letter in
rather a good handwriting is very vague-
5 J addressed to
"Msckay, Ewp, Amernne,"
Another reads:
•• Too much of thfr,
“ From your affectionate bod,
“ Aktos HrrMBtraoKB.”
In this owe the close of the letter has
-been did copied understand exactly the by language. some one who In
not
stead of too much of this, there ia really
bttle. But here isa oaso wheretbe
top of the letter has been imperfectly
copied m the same fashion. It reads:
“Tuesday rivemng, I«oid America.
» Tuesday Evening should ree toia
article, he will know that his letter has
< 80116 “•* *&“* to Europe .—Scnbner a
; -
—
Balky Hsrses.
Every balky is'a horse, unless it inherits against
^ habit living witness difflctdty
gome owner or driver The is
nQt # physical but amoral one, anil in
mort acquired by the animal’s
oo«|4^w,andif ihi, remuntfa ex
b?MtSSaS amireutly nncon
sss’S.'sttBsStt. oerned while the load was romg into
frtggSg fnj lojS^mSlLaHy.
that was added to the tST
without waiting startofrt for word at com*
n.and, it would positiofl .brisk pa«,
sbowng by the of its ears, mid
jn other ways, its irnlafcon and dMpteas
nreat what it gewnied / to consider an at
tempted Itfafar^sere^ imposition
cure the habit of balking when once
sarsarsr «uke them uncomfortable stx when dis
obedient and comfortable when they
foolish foolish obey. obev drivers, And And yet yet when when how how often often horse horse do do has has we staked staked see
anvem, a a
' and «nd refused refnsed to to start start for for a a while, while, when when it it
i < d<*» *>«• *tort uteri make make him him uncomfortable mmomforfabto by by
) putting Pn‘«*g whatXy on «• the whip while it is
j , what when when they it it stands, stands, want want iTtodo. it and and to tlo. whipped whipped It It is is whipped whipped when when it ft
i , This This foolish foolish practice practice has haa
i goes. goes. grown grown
f’2SS \*«* : from the foolish ^ «* id.m wh* ‘ * hat ’.at it muaiahment punishment P
j nnietbe and be givooter given for wL. ;ws * been been done done, leani
the horse has no opportunity to
1 that it is better for it to obey than not;
to -i.-ws obey, consequently s&re- it cannot team te
** ow Mushrooms .--r are raised In Japan.
f The Japanese «5to. raisemushrooms onde
' varieties the stomps or logs. Certain
of oak tree when ent down,
f «rnish the moat acceptable mnshrooms.
; InoisionBare eut through toe pater bark
fc he log*, which are made byiiplit
*nwk into quarter*. The logs
»» zr i» the forest to rot, {pr abmt
ss slssstjb a
sSrit±*aS&Ass
'^d%j:?±r*£z£z WBsaai.’ii.w re
^n, ^ beates hardet. Another ,
cultore consists in Burying
th e ghjrao logs. by Tba artiflmal Japanese heat, dry slowly their
mu m8
ojf and carefnlly magnitude applied. and The considerable indnstiy «j
gome a !
portion of toe dried produet^is exported
.isu,
’
A CoUeetor’s Stratagem. :
While oollecting, not long since, Mr.
Johnson had the following experience at
a tine mansion on the west aide:
of' A th“ little girl bS®L%ly resnonded to the ringing to^f ^
inquire as’to Xther
mother was at home, said : “Mamma
says ? for m« to tell yon toe ain't into- i
^Ahf She’sgone reS^he on’”
’ imnertnrbed a^nnscle cir- i
enlator, withont moving of his
countenance, ^^ ^ “please *« go and ask her •:
through iSS&y the ball — toward trained girl rte
a rear room, knoii !
^ere = “ Mamma, he Wants to I
w smothered you havegonafo.”
A evelamation am! a. tereor| blow
followed beard, by a door child's shriek of
was a .wasafterward loudly
slammed, and finally'a very red-faced
woman, bearing fifty cents, dne the !
Post for one quarter, appeared on the ^
scene and deposited tbe money in the
collector’s hands as a peaoe-ofifering. — ’
Pmf .. !
—
Fvnert Divers
revages savaaes of of dhe\mth tho Sonth Itea snd other
,8iami8 ,' «• ?#!» % % ??P«^
" h,eb tb «*. by habit, in ,
~i£L£ . 1Tlt ^
• L-H; jS£Z^i22£!t lD v
- ,f the nse
»f ... tbeu .
«“.*> >n •• •«« «
vi«y are “n^. such expert According divers to t!;at, voy^ers, when a
nail or ojier^ piece of iron was thrown
.
oierbcard, they instantly jumped mto I
the sea, after i., and never faile-i ,o re-:
cover it. Ua tot oocaaion, a
anvil is said to have fallen oveiboard;
;mt being ablehi bring thmup. the
.danders coatrmri to get it ashore by
rollmg dmeendug a jreat till many timro, and.
it over it reached.!!,e land.
sISsaSRASSsc 5 SSi
j^ssasAKraw
SsS33rr€3£ side h
^ «U »g fell 8o m6 of the ^reSterat Russian
filew™bft in Uke
tho i^ m nae 4i,4 place vi.'rtber The writer mumeste
e qaK «Sg»^ it might not be 5
f^rticil or dronDioir quite fire to res^h the
enemy when mti of right hidden
behin ‘ i a w or ridge, me dirianro
. ridge tiiev relied on for protection. The
Gaffing gun appear* capable of ntihaa
tion in this way. There is no reaaon, ft
to fear that ballets will lose. tbeir
iaB Br a tm power at such range*. At
the bullets from the
Peabody rifle used by toe Turks came
with s nc h Force as to bnry
sixteen inches in a bar! clay soil.-Port
jfait Gazette.
Protection 4 Against Msths.
We h ara every spring meny mod
offered of protecting furs and wciolens
^ the destructive. sttsoks of the
otb durina warm weather. We hare
venous preparation, sold for this
wi f h them at Wkderable erpense only
to find out how grisvoualy they have
V ^, D ^sappoint^j. beat protection tried has
The we ever all
^ to tie up in close cotton bags to
furs and woolen, at all convenient to
so treated, after givmg them a thorough
shaking and cleansing, and letting
remain there nntil they are again anywhere want
ed. These bags can be hung moths
ont the way. If there are no
in the articles when tied up there
tainly oan none get in afterward if the
bags are sound. AU can see that. But
when the clothes or articles are too nam
emus to make this convenient or deeir
able, hang up in toe wardrobe after a
good shaking, and place little bags of
camphor In all over the wardrobe, laying a
few tb. bottom. Then about erety
three weeks, take ont the elotoea end
shake them np well No moths will ever
disturb them.-- Germonfomn Tale
grtreA; 1
-------
Black silks are made with the simplest
I postilions and flowing trains, tot with
’most varied arrangements otherwise,
■■ They are always without overskirts, and
none are shown combined with Week
brooade, but many have oolors assoei
gjiteret^ ^
“ i e„ e,;r.,T-- w^U
A few mouths, or even rinca, bsr
Steltem' /"a li S^t’’ aL: Jm^sheTon^lhe
i^rts of all. But ibme %hmng oteaks
«™> “^ncTi g>k SlbWto togTato
^ t , to H s, kinky ai^ , w
oiragh. «akS to. l.et ub appnueh toad iu her ooueh and 5o gently
I :■«.!,.« our own. not
( ^mldortocauae of it. feeble paarionlmsgrere
veins are plainly mapped upon it. anttoe.
gK.sjsa tepwmo rme«. tor enabled s^s» natnr. »U. for
I ! grCiJS^co^h re ™ “mSSStof^Ute farhmntfar^TI«
laud laud digestion, dictation, and aud neuds «mds a a healthy healthy ?SrSle single
| " Ihromfi through cl ‘sf nervous ber her whole whole pcwcrjncre^^toS power teing. being. increased Tbe The tud Mwl blood the i» hivrt ..u
r !-£?“thibtarf 1;' Z! h *■ JriSto^herroiSSrri^ n « f b ’«d>t
onil , V" w vf
~d to .
,
. ! W nj h«r r®qtie«t* we n<\ tompw delivered intbat i
I j»eevi8b, i*s,vi»h. fretful fretful tone tons so so deadening desdeninv toaympathy*' lomnnathv.
j ] 1 gw Her Wly step step retuniug. iAstiU i* still faltering, faJtering. lot u» take tout but Iu“ /trength Oreagtb her opt U m iu r»p- r«j> the
w ttrm ..| ife gjing iundfiy. In a tew tev week «
sbo ^ h w m go without onr aid and be able to join
feel her whole b«iiig Wehangoi-Bobcat “wnrmnd *nd expanded
«*b> l*rf*4 Hfe.” asasaSSa th*t
osfst
be rescued from the grasp of the insidious tie
S^ “m tawed I 7 her. er H< T. I t wfflwfae , «? 0, f n ^' others . llI,i ' OTVf ’ 7
mrem Nerve* u AunlaeMe Bleeriw.
*"> «g ba«’ Jf « r
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diseuieor aome other cm one. hare suffered**
low of nerve power can, by «mtr**t, more
fa«y appreciate the magnitoda of tost losa
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CHEW
The Celebrated
“JtATOHUMl”
Wood Toaaooot------ Tag Flag
Tux Piokx nt Toaaooo Ooaeun,
New Tort. Boston, and Ghksago.
How re Max* MoxsT.-Twenfy-fivecent.’
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f«! out «p«in ? !.v to a coop of fifteen
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De pot. 8 Fleti 84, W. W.
American newspaper Directory
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APRIL EDITION NOW READT.
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