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Bdt.te aiUtt /uin (of Viutrir * ! w-, .u.i ... for
rtuimir « l»rft
Ctkmm 'Hi itiiwta in I RdiniuIm (ion nt Imkiui'i
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And ifuwiHtd tt l*4<N Uty htuulA 9 gr»<» an i raVti
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Ti :i, a*»<1 flue.
With -Uitrti Nikitin i* flftf n.*VU, nii | fwilirt frjl! if
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I want % nuA a rujr tlw'b.n^ t-. Nur
rt<«fii1,
A fhn- tkjit J ac*v*r (ItlfM 11m utark ') wiffi w*w* ntj
triiuji* dn| r<mn<l,
W!>■’.« tl >fk» ih»j fittK'' 1 Hid Mm I* way l<*w, *’:d
> da ftiid IvmliAiiMi jt'ajr,
Atdfl *t an J fruit (ANiit'iiitgUvl #row ~*t! fvton
’o ill j,?N>.
* »-■ ’■ ■ 1 .Mum n fnaauc f. i..„ i wnmontrips
hot 'ri-w,
A ff *r htti tu«f dtf't wall*, for cofutort ant! fr*r
<Ph«M
»*.♦ »v \ *mi it pam % In r*lht*r w*it», and aor-wt raUi.tr
Mj ii ii town I otiljr want to ‘I'f • fV|-t*ra
;w«it. ,«.<!*■, ««,anun. fwt.
*•.;:i-• -...................................
"* l 'cr;r::,\£:ZZr. ia ^
A t . prif'bw >•! in lil.*, «*<>1ft» aud
A J»r fur |*i i vato itnn <»f lh ‘>f*Ai>4
• '*» 1 '■« amt in turn h'.m nritl nId-'In, wr»t na, un iKV»,
t> ' ■ t, l*M -1 h,
AmiBi .<• l«i*4 oh dirAi thiii d««lli in NtdiUtdo or
K Vl/i i tt bni futiiutil ;•!*/** if Nil*or tll i of
r .. u vwsuilf jkmhhIm iii wiurflil, with .tt ii* t*
9hUu « 11 ilWril Ml All,
i with h.iKhri, fn *tif| UnifiM, |» «to-*, 4i*liM,
• ' • "Jl
,
An- jf («lll AtUl tint H 4 IDH4 8i*M'M An
An»l I
in v» u f»ir n’fHiuj n(%iu mu -tt form my ctiAm
Am\ r vt • -t llltt Wflton ijivn kUUNt ot>vcf all my
fl ritfi t
Ms »*!• >•*<!» U*HMtrjr Uril.i. h.'.i uniat i lie out
A«*5te*. tiMi .ftHiUu* ituiNi Jip.»ti*ft tlifi ootofN from
Iltri NMia.
A»4 M 4 $w mn A U«a tNi,{w*t pt»e from V*li(o« iuti*t
!*• ■> * M * Ml |*l11.^
Aarl >t« i (ii v t.|r| i• • • I !*Niiito**i euiflt fur nh<|
WM Hi ti ni|*lt( ;
On., > 'a ni|.i ijt.okivii flkMtkit »f 1»r'*u/,o
!*'« ’tUft l (
Aud nt \4 h •fif i*id U»t intiito t!ia tiraittf tr'«
lllhil,
I *r*ut Hiii wNtitT) a wlfN airmU.tiutU* aud
fmr
TD m ?!*.«! all Ltort w,*oa uf h«n i lu | ^|, ,t« j,ty« to
mnm;
Ot lsui|«> ,. 1 ,^, ,J yl«l.lli.« Will, ..I tirm <s oUnlJ
%T»Ut luillil,
Nil ••!* iNtilto to !<♦*« ms nU", with HMHttuuml
r'Aitwl.
»m riiiflt'u oar lu> nun a l l Fortuni t\!l«
I waJil U» rioll “•S
. u l.mjjlitot« auU *1 imm l> h«if a
1 Kf'Oftl,
WNJ' (air ')M< luotiai Urri |»Ua« on f^rxU to
*Mtti«t»iMti«ilMriuM4*Mia « I nv */)
is r -i.. i' i .sit him
•jdI ttiavri.
4 kAi wim** ntf iNnt xii i «lja» Itii.r wttu ui'...t r
AwUi diruifl)
I ZX* 1 ..UM ........ ' .. .
A ptsii.i i»i|MtsiMv wi-isi«ht ms.i si.n .la,,.]
Th .1 2““ro» iiMMisi.m inky lu Uu-e 1 „ ,| U t/
M) » i ... j i.<. t! >.isr« win ,|.,.i.rHfi »',.,.mit tram
|w}t i ’tm****,
OMUV*(<> ;< t •• ,ln "i" 1 isiiiUrs »n i kttitt. iki
UbOkltll.
TTb» nIm!} di<«|Mfi i<i ami ti iui u r»* t
HNi 1,4 \
Goingii* mvti-n (Ik i) Muri.p .h ,
l*i*i !•••« *«
ijuiwi.- *** .***• ii. "■*' ii, " ' **
A «|>U! m*ft h'lmlMT h>»hlii ui * I*«n| f<.« nitfiMi ..ft
««•{*>»•• f
Will* birMiNcLiq **,«•« MtArfMUiri a fill aho<*t, mati .%a, « t j
tovl m |.i*h,
4Ad t\*ml iitaAbm for my f**t, •>.,( piiV. W a for u\>
Cr"*i»
I*ra.Ua lYtnu Mi<l foiMiitil fi'oiut l% .>l*,usr ih<* mJ
WbD %•»'<*.* limit,
•»*'*, ii n »iu*ry will tltvKMAiiil, *i *y U*n-1 ■‘ht»
tn j*. «\i
A frtoii i t . ii* I •«ri wto-ft I'm <» i - ■ •
to
And tt« if itii i* i ii l hiji |ir*t*M ■*< It hi ,
lit • * N HV
« w».i.M..I .«* nwtisr k.-«» rsr *«.«••. t.v
,
a .-..i..«ii.»o»». ,t*ri »,„i n.,.n»o«,i
ta l» t o »,
fw Iwar rod, and, ut ntiUitff tt»
fltot'fti my jdan, t»f tiftviH
•< v, >w t»» tJi«‘ will tl'ul ait-l t«* nun.
1 armi’t a l(*n, flt*«*fVU*K '*yr». ati t*v<?n \*' 1; **’
The truth ii*. ntrJt all iltartumn to *{»>» i t
%«h. Vi t . It ur ,
Ate*mu<« i * .wnwI. at tlrifii' 1 * t <m. 1 i.* "**. -it'« t»ul**
till. >*< id; tilt,
AjbuI lijH tJU** sips> *4 mait i t tint u »vri j
iu
1 wfiii' iiiHrimi tijttoJ * *.*4 * t» »*r I
An>! -4 *«*•»> *» tidwr fatft't • tr-aaH j ‘ * «* «> *r u ,
vi.l ,
VtfiWlifi . •• ll • Al, (t ' -
9*1 no i**Jj* f M* tlq lit <Ut ’<* *i *1 a • "•
Will tty'll V»*i
1 w»:it t?i«i to Wti'V4vi\ U atu t * utt
X>r*«tina fo!«,
llip ridi .HiH to lYritno* % top vir(no«a to u;>
lavrnUi'it hm, C'*»*to»*n^
|*t»«rar, wkill, » jh'rM'*Drairf
atni.
Of hutn»n U««MtN to hi.* ul Uk' witi. and roa.'h tn'm
JbtkO aO
F t»»nt ‘ii a ftt-ata rt ;* ***f,Nr anil *» tliu **d ^ ;« »>f
vtimumait,
Ch»- * vt i« v tin* uni*.i'd«*h1 >ra>p » f 41.* » >tf
fi '*il i'r* ItW’tl ;
'Hwr rr »w«t v» *r pftpg flar wv»u *l 1 Uvii i ■ hd n*y
<H* inU-yN» will
Hy <’.A' a l»y to |»'v tha lank, h# - ' f *• ■»* ’ >
au.
I «rsfit tfafl vilflfi * i n <*■ *•* * i t* m# i**
A»1 bnnt, iM to,. f iay t 1 'f
to *j*t»V i« . . » * t -** ■■■«’»
Id »hw l nt I
Thai Afto* . liwi fkv . . • ;ft,t * 'rOdMm
I# cliAr*l m** *»* to to* ># m ' *- niy
fttem NTri Utri vTNi t*t »» '»• * * m*-i. 'a’ati w*ut
Ut AWt
For lr»A '«***♦< d Ipii» .«‘.v «f* f i'lltif *- ton. a '•*•*
■ j IiMt w( vr>»t ( A •*»% iluflfl *U, \ v*to
thv' Iwrtl, to* 4
jAstii **•*;nm ■*! .1 * • uv • »' w'*» N *• w?
vKul
DttBA S Tum.
DoJair fo» a mi.ins.it iv u Uo*
m A. .-L' .t.'ili
you could nee voor way cl ear *o marry,
ing Both Ha!let. He wants you the
worst kind, and he’ll be such a good pro¬
vider."
“ But I don't like him wed! enough,
F? tidy ; and 1 w;.ot something beside
meat and drink and two i-alico ilreMt a
Mi . Pmdcfjc- Hall had Aurahvi U r
ankle, axel waa forc< 1 * »r-ly
;,f ■ • *
clumber, with a terrible _ consciousness
that lapsing everything chaos about and the farm was re
into old night for
want of her overnight. Her pretty sis
t#*r Dora had come to stay with her; but
*»■-■** “«•»?' • cliild, vou know.”
“There are two kind* of lore in this
world,” naiil Mr*. Hall, after a pause, in
wl'icl* <ibe had been fcikiug counsel with
heraclf whether Ihira wa>- old enough tf»
be talked to on such matter* at all, and
H flashed ii[wn her that “ the child " whs
nearly well ‘20 years old, “ l’erliaiw you like
Beth enough to marry him, only
you don’t know it.”
“Tell m« about the two kinds of
love,” said Dora, innocently. I thought
love was love the world over.”
“ I have never known but one kind, f
think, iHira. When I married David
Hall he was the most well-to-do youug
man in these parts, ami we never had a
quairel while he live*!. He was a g«KMl
practical sort of a man, aud never asked
mo to uo »nything heU d1 iinivftHoiial hi ilo.*'
“ 1>,r *’
j' ^ t
I thit . l i vi 'tll Vi
lov ic mat will d ilraw wiunui through Are
: v prov.b. on Zw” Shdth tlu'iir Xn Zr th ■;
will never' f..r t -h
children and T they knov it it .s w. !l ^ ils
a v ,i • 1 • iVnZ.Z'hZ '
wonder to me why such
ing should ever have been created.”
low over her work to
Wd^gi? »'!•»« , »«*r rogutah «J'Z smile* at her water’s
’
• Neat to never,"«a«d Prudence, , with
preat decision. “ Wo ain’t made to la,
hanpv. and anvthimr *ta'u-in that’s too theZimdh o.hhI nl
ways leaves a Imd \n ,1Z
Comfort is a bird in u! the lc ' tt
£ don't wain mvthin,, 13«Zs. C ” l. tu, ,,g “ tb , '
“ Did yon over any one about
hero, Prudence, that threw herself awav
for look love ? It seems unless to he me lias they house won’t aud
at a man a
farm “That's all ready where for them.” they’re right,”
said
l'rmlenoe. “You are rather given to
high-llyiug notions, bread and don’t it’s time
t. und out that grow ready
buttered. Yes, f did know one girl,
who was pretty and smart and bad no
eud of chances to get married (I think
my David courted her a spell, but ho
never would own it), and she would have
that shiftless critter Joe Baymoud, who
never could make one hand wash the
other, liven wlien she was a-dyiug she
pretended wouldn’t have that she had l*«eu happy and
done no otlier wav if she
had it do again.” ‘
to over
“ Was she <iur Joe’s mother? ” asked
Dora quickly.
*• Yes. to hu sure ; and when she died
we took him to bring up and work on
tie* boiu. II - more than (slid bis
why; hut he a a rolling stone like hts
bit!.! r, ami won't never come to any
tliw.ir l forgot to tell-you—he's going
to-morrow,’
“ (hiing to-uiorrow 1 ” cried Dora, with
* .-at start. “ I thought his time
wasn't out for another mouth.”
‘ Well, it ain’t out rightly till he's 21;
but he was in such a hurry to bo off that
1 gave bun the last mouth.”
y|e" sileuce fell ills»n tlieui.
I'inse two women had tin same father
ami mother, though a score of years lay
hetweeii tluiu. PrmVence had lieeli hern
in <vh< the they ••ally msrried life of her parents,
New n England were struggliug with a stonv work
farm mid there was
L»r cv»!j billy lianda. The lilies of duty
* u '* !•>»*»••*•*'•* w. re d. op-gmved in her
f 11 * 5 ?,' 1 ' h* 00 ’ " ll10 '' .V‘‘ l Vvmned with a
7«»* «• "?’• Hut Dura had
«-»'» to her mother late in li?*, as an..1,1
tree Hometiiues blossoms into loveliness
after every on» has (orgott.m it. Her
little feet bad walked in easy paths and
Piuilence yearned over her like a mother.
She sat now by the ojk ii tire, 1 tending
h<f graceful head over sons,- delicate
work that Prudence would sever have
I auiil i ini,, f..v; lmi reu dnss and the
flickering firelight made her a picture
too lovely tor that dull room. "Pru
b '"'Tiast . a hist ^uiJlT night, lt£'lte I thuik 111 go “ down V * and '1
say good-hy to linn.
: You might call him up here.”
: No; I think 1 will go myself.”
: I Mievo 1 haven’t ever told vou,
Dora, how much von pleased me hy
mg up Unit olnhk-h way ot going ,m
w .th Inn, that you iwsl to ha«•. 1. did
v»m \ M for vou to U' foml of oHch
other when >«« were little, but of course
it IS out ofthe question now. ’
It might have been tho ont dnwt and
the tiro light that brought such a vivid
rrA-r 4 .........
\ . o,n\.. niAn -Sit i*\the '.a.,; mo, look
; U,,1 ; U,g ‘‘{P"
h-stSSitZ fir bin te tUoiurhfc £ g r
He was too intent on h» own
to ! ot e her anil, i’ll die w, at swiftly iuto s
the risun, taking Ids head between
her soft hands, turu«Hl hi* face up tc
j,,.,. o,j, h . | )n .) u n W( , r ,. voiiinamr k k
without -
•twav let Mug me know ?”
T iic liarvl hues of hi» face softened and
brighteuevl under her guae till one would
not have known him for the same man.
“I thought I should not see you ' to
night, he said.
•• You know 1 letter; vou know I would
have crept through the kev-hote for one
last little minute long will with you."
“How vou wait for mo,
' '
Dora ?”
“ Till you come ba -k.”
U,J ..tf wUl vpars think how
•N t tiki l bc ’ » . -ou
rougli it together.”
“ N< b bride P :i t that is not my kind
of love ; my mother tried that ami she
livnl a slave’s life.”
" 1 -SKraatsShS!!
I). tl U, as
tliat wonlil not give way. “If 1 liv i'
with' ti? \t>n U*r st veu year* i Ahull Im- -
let ■ B*aifl f H!itl you will Id t
t ui: tue f- r waitiii" for
Ih puther away then and Jc**k* I at
l,t*r etmooalv, as if he had never thought
i Itei prettuieK before, 11 Do you kcow
a hat your unine means?** he aeked,
uric Theodora stly. * “ I saw it in the jailer that
‘ means ‘Gift of God;’ and
you have been just that to im. If I had
never seen you, I should never have had
a notkm ahore <la . . .
night’* aieeu. I will writ.- t i
| 1H vc anv Suck and eome t„. r . \
Yenr’a eve, when I do eoine • mid if you
wear this red dress 1 shall know L-t L V jou
have waited tor me.”
« [ tliink I shall live to we .r it wl.en
vr«i crane ;t u times . sev
‘ ’ •
en years, Joe ; for women are very hard
n> kill, ” Baid Dora, slowly disspi tea ring
from Hie kitchen.
“ What have you been doing all this
time? ” said Prudence, severely.
“ I was only giving Joe some good
advice.”
“ Well, I hope he’ll profit by it.”
“ Bo do I,” said Dora, heartily.
’Tis as easy to say seven yearn as one,
und wo road ot Jacob's hovoii vo^tTs*scrv
iw * or 1L ' loh '’ 1 . «'Dioh seemed but as
nnoday llachei’s for the h.vc tind he Imre her.
to he mentioned teeliugs are not thoiiglit worthy
‘" in holy writ- d-'v lsit if ntl her
V,! ,ik ‘- »<«•*. -v -
* :v '" And here, in a nutshell,
'' tke ‘Hfferonce between a man’s love
and i a woman’s.
Jacob bail the sh.s-p to mind, and he
did mind them uncommonly well; Joe
went to seek bis fortune in ‘new scenes,
and only thought of Dora when he had
hefe^'iZZ Jt
J but 1 it wtdri i* i,ZZn^bl7!mX ^ to W Hilo
‘ ( !
thi AUl “* u r r , '°' ovcr cr went w „ nt away n, Dora had
™ «»«** * ** herself whether she
^ ■‘-•Imd cr a woman. Sunshine had
bicu P^nty with her, and she had easily
sugared f«nn life and off gild,! red h, the plain thiiigethat *
r.
Before the first rear came to an end
»he felt that she should soon arrive at a
patriarchal ago if she did not do some
.long to kill the time that died so hard
on her hands.
“Teach school! I guess not,” said
her father, when she first broached her
plan to him. “ You ain’t starvin’, yet;
and if you wnut some new farlioloW you
just say so, and not come at it siantiu’
ways like that.”
“ 1 don’t want anything, father; hut
there is so little for me to do at home.”
“ Nonsenso ! Iii my time, gals were
alw ays lull of business, Ciui’t you make
"'‘eets and pillow-cases and get ready to
he married? Who knows but some
body’ll ask ye ono of these days ?”
“ l ’d rather teach school, father.”
“ Waul, waal, folks can't always ‘ have
their ’dratliors in this world. I ain’t
willin , and that s the end on t. ,
But this was not, tlia et:d ont, and
Dora easily obtained a school. She de¬
vehqied a governing talent which
charmed the committeemen, und the
congenial labor iu the company of little
children took her ont of herself and in
hired new life into her hope deferred,
Every week she walked to tho post
office, three miles away, to ask for a
letter, goring in with a bright flush in
ritlow click, Hisl coming ,mt ,sde and
dull-eyeil after the stab of disappoint- ‘m
meet. I wouA-r that people the
country ara so anxious to 1 h> Postmas
tin's; ii’ they only knew it, they are net
«rs in more tr u/’ un.Jins eric-I Hum n..e ml „■
„f the ii ■tru . mo \r, »i/mp .1
Kt vtl. d g,{,{ u.Mir. s ivwst-s tlir in* k
j mu ,| s . t| ie v have to rtdusr many u
“Mariana in the Moated tlranve”___
w ,. nrY Wl unen who roach L h hand out of
(luU Uwa f„ r „ Vt l4W and d~w V it
,,. lrk ,
*
l ' was fur into the second year before
, frttci eiune. It was surely
a
I:,n \' (l ' 1 8 » li <limg for a sch.s.l
u> ,H frvss to do, but IX.ya earned it to
•»” own little room and put on tls* red
dress liefoie she read Joe s letter.
Joe was working iu the anucs in Pel,.
la,in. His hick had not yet come, in
>”dvr nuggets at least, but hard work and
n.b living wer,-.douly the other giving hit, the
uitageover miners. He was
never so well, aud he loved her belter
th . ui! the world,
Dora lived on this letter for mauv
weeks, and ski. set “Colorado” fora
so often to her scholars that they
w iU w rite that word letter than anv other
to their dying day. '
Letters oauitn uftanor it^Tears fIjpw world,’ on
acmetime* Joe was up. in tho
sometimes down; once his .arefully
hoarded was stoloa from huu, and
he Imd to begin all over again; hut this
a-,a?r^....................... New Year’s day
was she bardisit of all
^
‘ S " U 80 ‘ k ’"' uoutiwl ^* bl8h n»o*t
travel wh*>n he should come home. Tlie
next nwwuing she fiittsl her shoulders
b* the lumlon of another year.
his >'•>«> young te the farmer old farm-house after another found
way on Bnn
«Uy evenings, ami Dora pushed them
meat ao gently that they scarcely knew
whether they had meant to court her or
not. It was not the least of her trials to
meet the entreaties of her mother and
the rough arguments of her tether when
one or two more persistent snitoi-would
take nothin; less than “ uo” for their
answer.
Dora could give no reason for re
lieatod refusals to marry, only she loved
no one well enough, a reason which
w « lld be all-sufficient if parents re
»*»"? imuioitnlly yonng. Mu i, U».
had mentioned seven years, as if he
meant to come home tin a at any rate,
She wore out the fir-t day of the “glad
New Year” with busy cares till lute in
\ &
self in tlwi tifm-lustne kitchen. I ru
flense ix-stiried m-rvdf t«> give liiiu a
hearts wmh he was
wariHHt ;u;d I’ .i. Id- i, _ t » talk of ins
He ha i l**b U> h« furtniw
aH ovt r the'Vr-st, a:id f !i*/v .*r hntliiig it,
“ ® 1 “®
m^nUomct ( .. . a.»d Denver, ami
*ia* i*
when Uora hr tnd ;* r . it al *ae with him
lot a in t. *n. —a i, •• Jhd you ever
**eJ'**i>h Itymomim Denver'
biymond. On yes . knew, him
well; hmi «th him mgi, on to* month.
His wife wjs i.t r al g»>o i cook .^eouldn t
^ nowhere ui th-ra parts.
Tn^^.r** Io la-niire . *3 W right smait feher, , v
and mighty mud of uu «ne. Women
^ ecartx out thcie.
Prudence came in, and the old man
went on his way all unconscious of the
great stone he had east iuto the at ill
waters of Dora’s heart.
“ Vt’hat’s the matter?” said Pru
dence ; “ you re as white as a ghost.”
* " n, J, answer was to dart ont of
„ the house and run, as for her life, down
thefrozen orchard-path by which she
could gam upon and overtake this tor
nble man. She might have said, with
“ hol . v Herlieri ’ —
tbouabi# arc »h a gm* of kuive*,
w 'm fatten tmin
only Hze into misery must Imv,, rime to crystal
memory Udoiv it t..k.-s the
form o^.Z'ZiZtunnu^iZ.Sd of poetry She st.Hi i u-fore the ‘Ini
breathless. How did the Joe Hay
mood look that you lived with ? " gasped 81
Dora,
" 1 *{ evt ' r 8111,1 ‘. J V? I! '.voiond,’” said
,AA ““ £T V18 I ' ,V • 1 ,<*«»
^ foZ hJ^ld'finJhMs^ wh«Z” but* T, or, . . w' , ^‘ V
Si 0f HSJZ^TfuUw Her leering of grateful awe 0 ^ as
! f ! * u f en ^
kept her from mourning much over the
,,,ssing J,«’s away departure of this seventh anniverso
ry of with no sign of hU
return.
His letters had wholly ccp-ed, and
there was her nothing left for Dora but to
l* 08 *’ 8 * soul with patienec. When
«n..tl,er new vear dawned upon her, she
ll’a,,'"! ^ «»«* ,?.m °snv plZr,!f' , 'b,' ’“f' U
the
glass. Iu the twilight she walked slow
l.v do a u the orchard-,,nth into and leaned on
the gate that opened the road.
1 1 III , out . from . , lie
hind the ^'‘''sloni, my gift ot
1-T* ' P r: sa " m,,rk ’ ® nt ° J Dora, l J*° li Tu though W A l ” } she m}
.- ; *■' Issfore, felt that no
Iim , that pass-word, and suffered
cse • f to res si e«, ly ,n lua arms in the
waiting' waiting. ' COmeS ' g
When Joe aud Dora went into . the
house and she looked at bun by candle
hgbt, her hear almost misgave her; Ins
luxuriant U-ard and the manly assurance
of h» manners were not at all like her
Joe of b, loved memory, and a teiribie
barrier seenu-d to rise np between them,
whde rrmlenee remained in the room
w,tl, her company manners, which sat
more awkwardly u,kh, her than her Sun
(hiv gowi)
VVlien Dora tiptoe.1 softly ... , by . her sis
ter s door at. a very Jute hour that night
Pnnl. nec tell was lying awake for her.
“ Don t me, she said, “that you vo
np|‘it waiting for tlrnt Joe Rayniiam* all
tins time!
i « « »u ( te ll yon it you don t want to
hear it,” said Dora.
“ Do you know whether he came Inane
anv 1 letter off than when he went ask away?”
said “ I Ikira, really eareh-aaly. haven’t thought Prudence to groaned him,”
and her face to the wall.
Joe waited only till the next day to
tell Mm. Hall the story of his sm-tvss,
whirl, seemed very iu. derate in histrav
“led eves l.nt seemed a noble fortune to
her homelv Mena.
“I never thought before,’’said Dora’s
father at the wedding, “that a woman
wnM keep a secret; andlgwss it ain’t
u oommon thaH sm)W , lo g „.
,
A . , , lwv( , if -
for me IT whispered jJe in Dorn's ear.
“ Forever,” said Doio, solemnly.
And Mrs. Prudemv Hall, as she over
heard the word, thanked her stars that
Dora’s foolish notions had not wrecked
her at Iasi, on a iMvserty-stricken mar
,ja"e.
■
How Joliann Stranss Writes his Waltzes.
Strauss and his wife were Scfeonku enjoying a
fL.tte- m ,, wa lk in the park at re
when suiUImiIv the LeTJ/L composer ex
“ Mvi
lettel w u w i . 'al nu» tl»** down'. of
or envelope to write it
liefore I forget it.” Alas! after much
rummaging ot pockets it wa» discovered
that neither of them had a letter about
ks at^sx-iWs^ heart-rending. At last
His sii^w^ii^cSrrd despair was
MB.‘ 1 TlZ'ffs' mate W sh,mHl' 1 the ^same
b «‘e then Fran Strauss collar, then not
»iw‘»iei *a-iap of standied lim n mi wl.icli
{? l ‘ ouollu1 "^olmni' « tl,e ‘TZffdte' -f t m*
here bec ' ime iZiug frudie He was
™ _ n tb (or L~ u Ivon ab >wed
to write : three-quarter ,, of f ,, t „ Tf ,,
.
»
^
stmilS8 . she ^
band b q 0 a capacious pocket, fished out
a purse opened it aud displayed, to his
delighted gaze a bran new hundred
gulden note Hurrah t The entire fiuale
wa s written on the bank-note, and then
.To!;ami Strauss relaiwed into his usual
.Jaciditv, *
i -----:— lSS gold .
" E SSv X ot i- now
. le! ? ,h * n SI >30,000 000, and its foreign
. practically suspended. In the
”"* 3,£5,5.5 * 'm'm'ST.
«*.•**»*»■
A max in a New York restaurant
opened 7,000 oysters in twelve hours.
From Poverty to Eminence.
In an address liefore the medical
[ £r^ss,i has ,, s?rs=sf^ in the rid,
student tor success w
the emiueut surgeon. l)r. D. Hures
Agnew. sai«l: L«t m* 1 repeat to Ton
that the success you H.-k lies wholly l
within the pale of the law, and if were
to lay It* fore you what I l*lit:ve to W
&e anditiotH which regu •- . Nraaee*
mentor distinction in this life, I should
sav first that the subject which is and tocom
mand the service of your hand miud
must be intrinsically worthy, and here
j,. t me that I have never known a
me.lie.1 man, the governing principle reach dis- of
whose life was mercenary, to
tiugiiisbed success. The purer and more
ennobling the subject whfch
t|„. attention of the student the more
WJ j] !,is mind he elevated, his feelings
rejiued, and the whole man be lifted out
of the environment of his lower nature
into au unclouded atmosphere of thought
aud “There°is feeliii".”
an opinion much too pre¬
valent in the world that the posts and
places in life depend largely on ati
undefined and unregulated force, which
makes man the passive creature of a for
tuitous play of circumstances. Wealth,
family, into‘notice genius, have all been nr.-ssed
as constituting important
factors in the race for distinction. How
mauv and‘in ha.Tc fought their wav to tlio frout
spite iiigh of poverty have al length
4, ie seats of liamiug and
P'*v.rty did hot prevent Sam
n<d Johnson rising to literary eminence,
V*? P^utologlstof 4 P rev ^? lt Innii.eus Ins tune, heepujing lovertydid lllns
tiums. Heyne, of Gottinged, the son of
“JXut SgieZS-r thinT veZs
v i li extreme -.vcrty d2iS yet fin ^SarZhfa v iavame
t ““°- Vflpeati, the grwit figure iu French
^‘“wioligcd
fat ftom the dfa-ecling table vZyhanm over whieh
e wrought n Ldn 1 th
^ns . , ator of , the works ot Hipixa-rates,
.so Iron, the most abject poverty.
i)r - Agnew paused an instant, and his
Tr^T^T *™“J ^
tlu “i £t lu-dinglrisiVa 1 parient .7,1 he evV^iad / 0
, V!1H
'>'>y whose poverty thirst did place not fu prevent him
to a nation’s
’’i** “f 1 l8e Ancestral Woo valueless l, divorced from
* ’ a posses
a,, tl so “° of tlle «"»*«* ju
hiRtory have , been those whom the world
rec -guiz d as men of g-nius, or, as Car
digious ly| e would term them, men with a pro
Tnnuug capacity of earn the ing troubles.
** now to medical profes
siou, does it come short of the conditions
which have been designated as essential
,„ M Jjfe It has always remained
fession «*n whose uusolvable members paradox'that a pro
do so much to
rpUeve humun .suffering iu ail walks of
)jfe aud ^ m wim fl>1 . Q
,^ ncflt of other u profession whose
U1(!in , 1( . rs or ,li nftril y devote one-fourtli of
their their lives to the'gratuitous dispensing *
o{ ^rvices, and so few ..f whom a
cumulate a competency of this world’s
^khIh sufficient to keep the w tdf from the
door or at be8t to remove tlie anxieties
of advanciug year ,-I say it is puzzling
to explain iu the face of such a record
, vhv BO littW sympathy exists between
thr 'question VM( . ilin a)ld tlle ^ lhlic Only let
^me of general im^.rtance
wiae in wbich the character or pro
fens ion al reputation of a imnlical man is
involved, and, ten to one, the public will
range tor." tliemsekes over against tiie doc-
* ucifsenMn Keeipe.
In the information . column of some, of
our that exchanges, the startling assertion
a watermelon may be vanished and
mil keep till Christmas, u» atill
sr ‘,!’,! n<4 ‘
watermelon . » . onf favorite ., fruit , .
«'« l ^ thil tb «‘ «e would
fhnstmas. V 1 ’ 8 a,ul 1 8, he ' v P surprise r,sl> '»'* was fneu all ^ nglit with
, *»«* th « wasnt «>**\ *« r m »ch.
Att f? 'he turkey ami , cranberry sauce
bad been demolished, we remarked as we
sharpened the carving knife on onr boot
Jog, fn “l. that we would now deal ont the
" l,e , - .. .... - . 'Z® .
,. Enough “ the .T® vanushed , V 1 shed * Tw of o tin-water- 8
IUl hui, aliout a quartol melon juice m a
1 1 '‘' p and stopped tht flow of
conversation.
\ es, you ean varnish a watermelon and
^ '*"* uex * ' lll > ” nf w * l ‘“ n yon hold
Z.r'l £ but ‘the r e ™‘
T th ^M * \ •) ' le ve „ r leiuemb ^“ em ,, , r rZm" Uiat , n itTen’t v \ ent . to to .
l ‘^Z . ‘Za barn'' , 1 . ^
" ‘'' V!J
^£.sn’t rim rid,
‘ always bet on these reoine
v< m lVJU \ ij, the mwier* We re
mem be >’ once of reading tlmt r oertiiu
.......- *»
\Ye tried it
' ’ihe'flmilv iZl to move nut an a ranch
tIil tll , ^ ha d blown ov.r. And while
we were gone, the coroner brake iuto the
‘ ' s >e ' v,l ° hf ’ d ' 08,1 k,llei1 an<1
" P tbere ln order con ‘ !l ‘ al
B*imr I”' of , these o editors r , who l compile
v«-cq> ^ for housekeepers ^ don’t know a
^ from * tl)1 Ih.ooue
is that which . three feet but
u.vr nas
«-> legs, is all body hat no limbs, has no
toes on the feet, no head, nr ores a great
deal but uev-r uses its feet for that pur
pose, has one foot at each end and on«
the center of the body? This is a
queer creature in some respects, and it
v. ry popular among the ladies and soma
gentlemen. It never walk* out, buk
goes fie. with one foot where the head might
drugging the otlier foot behind,
Pf "f “?*' >”*, “ ><?■' »»
TheRE are 60,000 boatmen employed
on the “ raging canawl ” known as the
" “
Erie.
FOPILIB SCIENCE.
-
jr™ OT, * i “ -*
There are 174,*)00,000 air cells iu tlie
’
The . cloud to tue earth
nearer a rain is
larger the drupe,
Soda put into sea water makes it fit
fer Tiwhing flnthia
Glacbeb salt is the sulphate* of soda
pf m<*lern chemists.
Meat immersed in molasses has been
preserved for months.
JeSSS rvrrv irfr inclines are said tn Vu, o
The distilled juice of the cocoa tree
forms the well-kuovvu arrak.
Uxpeb-shot wheels require a mueh
larger body of water than overshot
The diamond is rather more than
three and one-half times heavier than
water,
Etkek is so volatile that it cannot be
jxmred from one ve-sel to another with¬
out loss.
a T a white Xh beat cornier nassea off into
.reeu’flome v
Vrums .\, s ldood , is . a resinwhieh . ... ei
)^ les ^’ an ? ,is trees ‘ 11 is so called
fronj lts retl color '
Leeches may be indaeetl to bite more
readily by bathing the surface to which
th *7 ^ applied with milk
Ostoes to the amount of five per
cent, of tlie quantity inhaled disapjr arH
at ^ h '^
The p.irUidity or autlpari.y to e.rl.uti
odors is unaccouptablc. The Italian lu
dies who dread the rose delight in rue.
XLVErl TWO iu a 1 ,u !i ' lrcJ '*
^'T ^ , J ’ “TS* - . 8 <% .
t *«»**"»"* r butter ;i!ifl
Z i i li t,
cax^ot determine the sound of
a string which makes less than thirty vi
bmtions per second, nor of one which
mon. , v „. v „ thrni 7,5o- rr-i
The icebergs of the Southern hemis
pheres are much larger than those of
^ Ue *R Ut of l m ,wt “
’
I’Afiut can lie made transparent hy
spreading over it, with a feather, a very
applied thin layer of resiu sides. dissolved in alcohol,
to both
Bai.t— or better still—saltpetre, finely
powdered, will placed about the wick of a
candle, prevent it from guttering
aud eause it to burn slowly.
An essential oil is obtained from
cloves hy repeated distdlations. It is a
common trick to mix cloves thus de¬
prived of their oil with others.
When a glass tube containing a crys¬
tallizing liquid is scratched with a glare
rod the crystals deposit themselves on
the scratches in preference.
I r is said that in the intestines of flies
and other insects are blood-vessels, the
smallest branches whereof are 200,0"0i
times less than o hair in size.
The annual cotton plant as cultivated
in America, attains though its growth during
four months, it continues to de¬
velop® seed and liber for'a longer period.
Case-hardening is a process hv which
a thin co.it of st.-el is given to iron
The steel can lie hardened to that
particular depth, leaving the iron soft.
Silk articles of delicate shades should
not be folded in white paper, as th.
chloride will of probably lime used impair in bleaching the
paper the color of
the silk.
Dissolving tiro of „ nitric , A . and
ounces
Hie same quantity sal-ammoniac, finely
powdered, in nineteen heat ounces of water,
will reduce the of the liquid forty
degier-s.
--
The Luxury of Living- iu Tari*.
I live in a garret, but I live as I please.
Eight dollars per week pays all expenses
tickets —rent, fuel, food, wine, washing, car
and the theater. 1 can here go
„ nt with a basket on my arm, buy my
dinner, bring it home and eat it. lean
go out in a pair ot old slippers and au
old coat. This is luxury. Borne dinners
are bought at the cook shop around the
comer—cold meats of many sorts ve-e
tables and many kinds of salads, cooked
turkey, m1 chicken, go. se, duck, laief, veal
* * Hr ,rk > or hot {ripa ,iua potatoes,
Fifteen minutes and fifty cents will put
half a dozen dishes and relishes on my
^bJa, incluiiing a bottle ot nine. The
etiquette of the house allows me to ask
, Mademoiselle Celestiue to dine with me.
! She sews for a living twelve hours out
j of twenty-four. Lives in a hit of a
^ wit ^ out frc, “, vea, ' s 811,1 to
<*«- Earns .
i **** lrt Has titty cents per
i ‘ . v - a cough and pam m her side,
1 the t ?“ ! « ai « hand flt 1
! m eTemug. carrvingm one
| chareoul, an.l in' the other a few
‘ ft ot .“ r<m, ” llt of «' b *‘-h she
^ ^ .^f >
0ps r v!! m , her table
el ’ my
relis't/lier e'lnrot^ f xv'ev ° V S ie * ? e ?
iHSSsSS
1 tue is its own reward CetestinVis bid
andli. wZina lames te£ewZL‘^consumptiZ help fill
j r up thoeatacomhs
and add their mite to the subterranean
sepulchral curiosities of Paris. Hard
work, poor fare ai«l a room permanently
whhout hre will kfll her. On Buntlay
she serous her den. It* furniture can
becartedoffinawheol-barrow.—Pren
tin ,n .San FraueUco Chron
’*■
Cure for Snake Ritev.
An . oh, ,, mountaineer mv ......
irgimagiyea
“* c ” r8 wi rat ttesnaa.* Dites asfoitows:
P nt the niontn or a nottle tilled
J izen will ilror w* on. Z audmakt , f, "ZTAV** the turpem- 1
tm % green- home, however, kill the
a pi 'T !l
, trt,c »t <J»rs f1 the Lus
e^jns : male pucen out.
. what pickmckers cany m
<“ «“ ".*«
are so fearful of woundiega wom
an’s vanity that they rarely remember
she grain may, by some pi'issfoilirv, possess a
( of common sense.