; . " - ...... '..,.; . '''.' ' i 7T" : .... i - - k : j i ; f - ' 7. ' - a"sw .ml f..M i u. :q . y "w!.8"s xii.; - r - ; -graham;' n: c, .Thursday,; September 30,-i 886: - - i;t;;;mh no. 34 1 L)ft.-. y,-s"T,fr11 CINKAOX liUSES, J otta5- honAs had .been laintwi Vhlto, but tb paint, now- was only a iy tpaoroe plac -One could se tlia , ,, i . - . faient had a' wnwallV fleclininii look: -the ."' ' ' MihigTea were staling from the roof, the ( ', . . heis and martnws about it was tlia ' ' IVemt door. That was titWtea' a bright bl?e. , ,;, , ) : -.v - -, .i'.'(t."Cnmm -loiwiuHA''' crraw.'. in . '. quao front yard.'- 'They Vei full of .(,- , i 1hmr little sft-eet raJ ro now.-iWith 'nil j i -tbrft Uent.. lowly peMutentyi hey had ;!(.- i OTrnwthe whole. yaftL " T)ier was jjo t J ,.. - , . . teppHifr-room between thohv. , They - formed a trreen bauk: against the house' ' , walls; their hraucites roaclied droorngly. -; ' f r aftross the,; front walk, : and , pushed ',!,. t i thrtush the-.fence. ' Children on , the : .vf!.- aldowalk conMpteb the toses. ' A SWnr men eoniinn m tlie street with a - ' ; i ; ' Hisinew air- looked besitatini;ly at this ,' Tose-cruwJed ' front' "yard when Jthey , ..- '- beared it. - ' : , "'.' '.- Tha'r ain't no use goin in thar into that mess of prickly roses," said one a . . ' forge man 'ith a happy smile and swag ' tser- . . "We are oblijpd"by a,yf to have the Bale on the premises," remarked another, blandly and authoritatively. - He was a light-whiskered young fellow, wlu woro 'better clothes' than the other, and held a large roll of papers ostentatiously, , . t . (rt v " fOh dear!" Uiey heard distinctly. In a . I : nhili, weak," womanish -voice, with an - unnatural strain on it "oh dear! oh dear ' - i me! dear mil!" Tlien followed loud hys .' 1 terieal sobs; theft the voice kept on: "Oh, i ., ! i'. father, what made you leave me? what , i ":- ' '1 ' tnade you die an' leave, me? - I wa'n't fit ' ;l ' . to bo left alone. - Oh, f atlter! oh, mother! ::,-. oh: Lucinvl I "ain't o-ot nnvhrj.lv T . j . . - - , " - F,-- " J J ' 'pin't, not anybody.' Oh dear! oh lear - Hniildear me!" v;; " 1 :'' "I heard she took on awfully .'bout it," ' "...' - aid tlie auctioneer. ; . ..,,:; i .'.!..,:":? fWell, you might asi well go on," said ' . s i V?' tl lawyer; duty has to be performed, . . uo matter how unpleasant." ...,.:..;''.s' : ' ' i i The auctioneer commenced his readr ..!, ing of the statement of the condition of i i" -the sale., then tbe&idding beijait !,That , ', ;,.' ( was soon otr, since there were only two .,- i, 'i ! bidders. The ld rhan, . who held the 'V mortgaKO,',which: ha'd'b(n fc'iwlosed, " bid with norvous promptness the exact ' ' ' mnoiuit of his claim. Then a man at '3 ; :' '" ..the cherry tree made a bid of a few dol " ' . 'lara more, and he ''w pronounced the ."" purclraser. 's Z - -.; i "Going, going (fonal" said Ue auction ' i .' V-' ner, "to William Havers." - ! f . ' ,..-fr- 1 William Havers luigereda5out his new ..-I,' k A : s ; eatate until the others hod dc-parted, - j:;,'.,! wbjeh the did s soon as the -aecessary. j ; ( i , ' ' -' orraligeinents had been completed. They . . wanted to.be out of hearing of those sad ..- cries and complaints. llavor strolled' out to" the roa .' " tlieili. When he saw theih i airly started, - - -1 be went swiftly 1 back to the hou?o,'to 7. : ';the side door. ; t He knocked cautiously. . Directly -the cries broke ont 'louiler and shriller. . vTTheyVeoorrie t order me but ' Oh ' "':'!) f't at '.,;,. ...dear! oh dear! dear! dear! Ttiey'wcnpie ' . . to-order me' but they liev, thgr--herl",-?- .'fj otcps approached-the rloor swiftly; 'it '. '... .i'Ofwl, anda jWomanappeanKi. Slie ,i n ..J.-'lopfcjcd pale, and troubled,"; hut she wae not. tlie one in suoh bitter distress, fqjr , theicrifs tiliii sounded 'from Jtht) iuteiiitf. . i '.! s i, of lhe house. i i; '- tuJ'-.i .ii Allow do you 'ior Mr,' Ilaretjif : ,ir i Hie rnm.nn.j with Brave-fflrmalllv' "j . ."Can J (tee Jier niinyte? he gseJ, .- hoarsely. .' . , , ' i : Elsii? 1 dont knew. Sfte'S taklr ,t cn drajidfvllyn Sue ain't fit to see any body. I'm afraid she wouldn't." .. r-. i.. v . jj ghe'd only see me a minute. I've n' t something .1- want to say particu- " V.r ""' .- . -t i '.' I ni f- I ' ' ... . . "Well, I'll see." .. , , ; She disappeared, and,-. directly-' the . yojco, which had been a little mure subr B, ; j diiel, waxediouder, tt - M "No, I won't , see . him; I wqu'tj I can't. I won't see "anybody. I nver brolfier's wife. "Shell be -ashamed of borself tomorrow. But shVs comin' to live with Silas an me. She's Welcomo to a home with' us jest as i long , as .'she Uvea., She aren't fit to ,Jive alone any way. We knew whn her father , died he'd run the place out in no time. Well,; she's takiu pn ao, I shell have . .to go in. Idon,'t like to leave her a minute. t Don't yon mind anything sho said." , , -'-Contrary,'tt Mw. Wing's expectations. .Elsie lOilt was not disposed to retract Jier words. . .The nest day, when she. was pecoafully ' domiciled in her brotbev'i house and seemed a little calmety Her aUter-ih-iaw opeuea on tliO subject. -u; -- - "What in creation made yon talk so-to William Havers last nigliir said he "Not one man Jh a hundred would have made you tliq,piler tlat-hedtd after he'd bought aiplace. ; ' ;'!' l"1:"'1- '!.-4' ' Elsie fired up: at "once. ',"1 guesB 1 know why, "'said shet. "Jjiciny gav him the mitten once that's whyr-He's doin' it to show out." ' ' "Why; Elsie Mills', are you in youi right mind?" .. . . "Yes, I am. Ho acted - awful , cut up. He never got over it. He always meant to pay us back. Now he's bought the place an' invited me to- live n JUim, he'll feel better." , :," "W..1I T novovl" ... . -ilfa. Witlg repeated the conversation to her husband, and told him , that alia was really scared about Elsie: slie did not act with' any reason, . : ;.: Silas ', Wing - laughed. "Don't you worry, Maria," said he. "Elsie always had that notion. I never really believed that Luciny give Havers the mitten my self, but she did. an' she always went on the notion that he. was dreadful upset over. it. Elsie queer. Bue mighty meek an' yieldin'' generally; she seems to be kinder coin' sideways " at things fur tlio most part; but if she ever does gi i,'inf.ul 'io'IK ' nt- nn.-fl,a', "fl, oi,.7'" no turnin' her." . ., . ( "Do you remember anything about William Havers waitin' on liuciny?". ; "Yes. He, was round some two years before she died. I didn't ' think much about -'it.' Luciny was always bavin' beaux. An' ' no Wonder; thar : wa'n't many girls, like ' her, Lonll I kin see her nou, jest how site used to look. .Poor Elsie wa'n't much beside her. but I don't believe-sho ever give that a thought. She thought Luciny was beautiful, an' thar wa'n't anything too good fur her. ' She'd slave herself 'most to death td save her. No; don't you worry, Maria."' Elsie's al wa3s run on that notion." "' ' Bilaa Wing was Elsie Mills half brothrr; the' dead Xiucina had been her own sister. - The house which had just' -been sold, was her inheritance, from lior father,- , '; - "'- ",.; : Silas Wjn'g.., was an easy, prosperous man, with a shrewd streak in,,. his pliar acteri His sister's property 'was adly ! , I dcterioratud, and , a popr investment. with ! 116 liacl no iaea ot "inKing money 10 secure it lor ner, but lie was penectly willing 'to provide for her and gave Iter a most cordial invitation to his home.-.f-He gave her a front chamber- in - his large square, white-housov and furnished it with Jier own thing, to make it seem like home, '.'.;f'l-.,t! :.. Thar ain't any ' reason why" EUIo sliouliiirt be as Jiappy as a queen here as lou aa she lives," lie told his wife.' L JThar ain't many women fare any bet-i tor. VSlie am t much over forty. She d hev to work liar J if she was m some ( r w i places,; an' she ain't -fit ' to. '"ow she'll tJh'fiwil hev foJielp you: round a little, an,' ..'':- ; m - .lire jest aa eoiiitortablo as Can be." . -ElMe'S cramBefownnianded a good viewuHier tJlUriitJuie, widen nasuu Eli opposite- side of tlie street, a little further down. She could see the yard full of cinnamon roses, and the bluo front door, which stood -out .bravely. That blue door was due to her;' she had painted it herself. Silas had some blue paint left after painting his farm wagon, and she had bugged.it. Then she had stood on a chnir a small, lean figure in ' clinging calico-and plastered the brilliant blue thickly over the front door, wielding the brush stiffly In bet ' little knottv hand, w.wnt to., see anybody again a Jong a Irech!n J""8? UP ,' lor slight, long i.'u:t - j livei. Oh aearl-aearr" . .. i "It ain't any use," said the wonran, ;n: ui . . coming back. "She ain't fty to. see any - body; she's most crazy. She don't know -T--; t-sv-iwfrshe'ssayra', anj-how." : 1 k -rhen yoli ten her you go Mght in an tell her now she kin stay here. .. It don't. - make any odds about my burin' the , I , . plncr; J won't" live Jieoe. Sh kin keep ? . 1 " stay in' here jest the wne.' i . ' i . . door opened suddenly, and another woman appeared. She was a pitiful Kk17- ' ; sight. She had. a little slim bony timtre 4 w.'vjaidl seemed to tremWe in every joint. Every line in her small face wavered and . , -qniveml; her blue eyes were watery and ' .' 1' ; i," Uodhe4 he ' akin- all blotched and stained with tears. She was so disSgured f - f ' ' by grief that it was impossible to judge , of her natural appearance. She would have been hideons had not her smallness '- andfraiHy in her distress made her pite ' Mr .- ooay - - ' 1' ' . Now, however, something besides sor ."'. ' row seemed to. move her. She was all alive -with a strange impotent wrath, -which 'was directed against William V , . Havers. ' . , r- , She clinched her red, bony hamls; her poor eyes flashed with ifidignation. thonch the force' of it was lost through their tearful weakness. ., :j "I gueea I won't Veep on stayin' here," - ahe snapped, in" her thin, hoarse voice. ' "I guess I wont. You needn't offer me a .' borne. I've got one pervided. I ain't , . quite destitute yet.. You needn't think - you're go in' to ceme roun now an' smooth matters over. I know why you'va r ' done it You can't blind me. You'va been watchin all the time for a chance ' -to pay os back."- "I dont know what she means," said Havers, helplessly, to the other women. rv--Lor, she don't know Herself.' She' T ret ktad of a notion that yon'reto blame ' for boy in' the place. She'll know better to-morrow. . ... ...til a good dnl better or me to buy ft than Steadmsn." said Harare, wita a 'troubled look. 1 shell let her keep right oo hmu To tell the truth, I bought the .. iiisce more fur . - - : - -1 - - , - -Ton'-r a real rood nsan. eaid Ura. 1 -Wing, warmly. She was EUu Mills' L'liiljsk. v' One svening Elsie, at her open cham ber window, overheard, a conversation between her brother and his wife. They were sitting on the doorstep. " "Havers came over to-night," said Si lus. "I see him out at the gate as I come along. He's goin' to let his other house and live here, he says. I declare I'd hoiiUy ttuafc .nsJ-want to, this is so much further from town. But tlie other'U let better, I s'pose. Hackon, that's the reason." . ' ' v .. "Is he goln' to fix this ono upr askod Mrs. Wing. ' . ,-1 . "Yes; he's' goih' to paint it up some," - an' - hev - tlie roof shingled. : He was kinder langhin' .about that blue door, but be didn't seem to think) he'd hev it al tered afterward. I toki him how poor Elsie painted it herself. - . - "Lord I I shouldn't think hed'd wont to keep that blue door." ' "He seemed to think it wouldn't look bad if the house was painted new to go with it. He's goin' to cut down all them cinnamon roses in tlie front yard to-morrow. He's brought over bis sickle to nhrhL" ; ' . ' v ' -That was all Ehue heard. She did not know how long they talked aYterthat. He was going to cut down Luc-'na's cin ainon rose! Slie kept aaying it over to herself, as if it were a task she had to learn, and she could not easily understand. "Lticina'i i cinnamon roses. He's goin' to cut down all Luciny cinnamon roses to-morrow." It was 13 o'clock that night when Elsie crept down the stairs and out the- froni door. There was no sound in the boose rs cept her brother's heavy breathing. H and his wife had been asleep three hours. Elsie sidled oat of the yard, keeping oo the grass, then sped across the road and down it a little way to her old home. There war only these t o honsra for km way? there was not alight visible la either. No' ooe Would be passing at this time of aiscbt; there waa no danger of bee being observed; saorsover. ahe could not have been very'easiry. , Great elms grew on both side)' of lb jtreet.and tiiry east broad, flickering shadows. Eine, keeping close with the sliadows, at if thef ' were friends, , and progressing with soft starts aftor'1'ttle pauses to, nsten and peer, might shadow herself.'.' She stopped for a minute at the corner of, the yard, and stared fearfully, over at the periled roses, The moon was coming up, and ahe could see them distinctly, She fell to -remembering. TO this inno cent, simple-hearted creature, clinging so closely to i old- holy loves and loyalties that eha meditated - what to her was a desperate deed In defence of them, that fair dead Lncina became visible - among bs cinnamon roses, r , ""Elsie for a minut;. as she stood there. was all memory; the post seemed to come back In pity for her agony of regret and overshino tlie present. ' I '- i ': Tbelight'of an old morning lay on those roses, and young Lucina stood among them, lovely and triumphant; She had just sot them in tlie earth with her own hands. ' . ' . . . . ', When Elsie moved again sho was ready for any thing. . - , . . ,.:' - Oh," those cinnamon roses! tho only traces which that beautiful,' , beloved maiden had left of her presence in the world! Oh, those cinnamon roses! the one little legacy of grace which she had been able to bequeath- to it! u,.': '-,',- " When Elsie came out on the road again she had something covered by her apron, lest the moon should make it glitter. She ran home faster than she had come, with no watchful pauses now. But she had to make another cautious journey to the Wing barn before she returned to her room. Finally she gained it success fully: no one had heard her. ' ' . The next morning some .one knocked while the family were at the breakfast tabic. Silas answered it. ' ."The queerest thing be said, when he returned. "Havers has lost his sickle, the one he brought over last night, an he wants to borrow mine, an' I can't find that high or low. -1 would ha' sworn it was hongin' on the hook in the barn. He wants to get them cinnamon roses cut" ' . .v - . ( . , "Weil, I should think it was queer!" said his wife,' "I know I saw it out there yesterday. Are you sure its goner" ' "Course I am. Don't you s'pose I've got eyes?" .". 'n ' "" Elsie said nothing. Sho bent her head over her plate and, tried to eat T''y did not notice how white sho was. ' She kept a sharp watch all day; she Btnrted every -time any one spoke; she kept close to the others; she dreaded to hear what might be said, but she dreaded more not to hear, . , "Has Mr. Havers found-his sickle yet?" Mrs. Wing - asked, when her husband came home at sight... He had been over to tlie village "I see you ridiu' home with him." 1 . ' . " "No; he ain't He's gono and bought a new one. Says he's bound to hev them roses cut down to-morrow. 'Ain't seen anything of ourn yet, hev ye?" - "No; I've been out myself an' looked." : :' ."Well, it beats everything two sickles right in tho neighborhood! 1 rather think some one must ha' took 'em." . "Land! . Silos, nobody's took 'cm.' I know all about you. I've know n you to hev. things stole, before, an' it always turned out you was the thief. When you lose a thing, it's always stole." Elsie found it harder to start out to night; a little of the first impetus was wasted- . Still, she 'did not hesitate. When the house was quiet she crept out again, and went over to the old place. , - 6ne did not stop to 'reflect over the rosea to-night ; Slie was braoed up to' do jlgr endjJiHtJ t Tnnat ha jjauieVh or she would give way. . She went straight around the house to the wood-, shed, where slie had found the sickle the night before. As she came close to the open arch which served as entrance there was a swift rush, and William Havers stood beside her holding her arm. ' "Oh!" slie said, "then began feebly L gasping for breath. ... , ? " ' ' . "Elsie Mills! what in the world aro you doin' here?" -. -; -, , , She looked up in his taBts, but did not speak. i. . "Why, Elsie, what is it? Don't you be afraid, you poor little thing. , What was it you wanted? Tell me?" - ."Let me go!" ' "Of course I will, but I think you'd better tell me what yon wanted, an' let me get it. - I'd be glad enough - to. I Hon to that I wanted yon to keep on livin' here. When' you acted as mad it fojro 'passed for aj 'cause I Spoke about it I didn't, dare to V :-' " ' "' j say anything more. But I wish, you'd didn't mean to scare you. I suspected I bed a sickle stole.an'I was kinder keepin' a lookout When I jumped out I didn't see who twas." "I stole your sickle, 'an' 111 steal it again if you offer to tech Lueiny's roses." "You stofe my sickle I offer to tech Lueiny's roses! I guess I don't know what you mean, Elsie." - "I mean jest what I say. I'll steal your sickle every time you oiler to cut down Lueiny's rosea."- . "You mean them roses out in the front yardi" "Course I do. Didn't she set them ontT "Lord! I didn't know. I didn't know Dothin' about it I hadn't no notion of your feelin' bad. If I had, I guess Why, didn't you toll me? Why didn't you come right overt I'd hev mown off my own fingers before I'd offered to tech them roses if I'd known. " "Do yon s'pose I wss goin to com over ben an ask you not knew yon waa jest doin U for spite 'cause Luciny wouldn t bev you.-" ' 'Cause Luciny wouldn't bev me?" ' "Yes, canse Luciny wouldn't bev yon." , v ...'.-', "I didn't never ask lur to her me, El- come now. , Won t you? . I ll go back to my old home; twont put me-ont a mite. An' I shan't do it because I've got any spite, nor . want to show out It 11 be because I've always liked you better'n anybody else, an' wanted to do some thing ffcr you." , . H-.ft-s'-' f V Elsie was , crying. "Tve got to get used to thinkin of it," she sobbed. iUsie Mills and WUUam- Havers were married at the . bride's brother'. Wlien the bridal couple went to their own home they did not enter at ' the , front door, They passed around to the side, one, be cause the front yard was so full of cin namon roses Mary E. Wilkins, in IlaiV per s Bazar. ' -. ' '" ' ' - - -f ,. ; - "' A Dlnlnsj-Kooltt II th KfiaC The roofs of New York are very inter esting. - - Much that would never be sus pected by a stranger in tho streets goes on upon these aerial platforms above the heads of tho masses. From the Brook lyn bridge ' I have seen that topmost stratum of the city fairly alive with peo ple on a tine autumn evening. - Un one roof were to bo seen some shop girls waltzing to the music of a concertina in1 the hands of a young man seated on the raised wall-top between that house and the next On another was n merry party of children filling the upper air with the melody of their singing. Over yondor were two lovers, hand in hand, talking earnestly; and so in one , place after an other were to be seen persons wiser than their fellows, seeking the quiet and com paratively pure air above tlie uproar and stagnant atmosphere of tlia lower stories and the streets. - A year or two ago. being invited to dine with some Cubans I had met in their own-land, I went to their address in the neighborhood of the Central park,. and was shown up by the servant where do you suppose? To the roof. Tlie Cubans understand the science of taking every advantage of the open air. If they dil not do so on their native isle they would all cook, like so many loaves in a-baker's oven. I founa the roof where this family hod gathered a place unique among the house-toiis of New York.' An iron framework enclosed the great sheet ' of tin, and from its posts was hung a pretty awning of blue and white striped can vas. In hanging baskets and in great xU were broad-leaved tropic plants, and two or three birds in pretty cages swung among the flowers. A complete set of furniture, all of cane or wicker work, except tlie table, completed the appoint ments. There were rockers , and easy chairs and settees of split enno In. which to loll and lounge and read, ami sew. There, M a delightful breeze , that kept: the ribbons of the ladies all a-fluttering, we ato a dinner that I would not have exchanged for any , that was served in any hot and study dining-room in the city on that night Providence Journal. Carious Fuel About ill Male,' It i said that a mule can not bray if you tie a weiirht to his toil and hold it down. " This was tuchiiigly' illustrated in the cavalry movements that preceded the second battle ot Mann.ua. Gen. Stuart, with large, force of ' cavalry manoeuvring around the retreating army of I'uik;. got fctught between two-columns .of tlio Union troops, and was obligod to conceal himself in a dense wood between two parallel roads along which the enemy were retreating; H-J hod to lib low all night until thej columns-passed tjj- Mewiigeis that Um UniUll J0nerali sent to each other through . the woods were captured and held with as little noise as possible. ' ' ' One great difficulty was to keep the mules in tlie ordnance and commissary wagons from braying and thus calling tho attention of the foe. For this pur. pose Stuart ordered a man to be detained to stand by each mule and whack him With a stick as soon as be Offered to bray; for a mule, like an orator, requires a certain preparation before beginning his neat and appropriate vocal exercises. There is a preliminary protest mado with the ears, and certain solemnities of the nostrils, an expression of sorrow over spreads the countenance, then the tail is lifted. 41 bray does not break forth from the mule. It begins way back in the abdoni'nnl viscera and comes gradually tip. Now, as bo-m as the cavalry mules began to prepare for a bray, whack! whack! would go the sticks," and the bray would be suppressed and thus aH nlzht. It was said that -this was need less severity, for it would have sufficed to tie a brickbat to the tail of each mule. Maj. Randolph in Baltimore American. Forty KaoU aa Hour. Tlie idea that it is impossible to propel ships at the rate of forty knots an hour is being discussed in Europe. Professor Thurston, of London, has recently taken up the subject, and concludes that it is possible. The ship that he proposes is to be 000 feet long. 60 feet beam, and 23 feet draught, with a displacement of about 38,000 tons. Hn estimaus the power required to propel her at 250,000 norm. He catcokiles - that hrr may chincry and boilers will weigh only sixty pounds per horse power, or 7,300 tons in all. She would bum about 173 tons of to, when I ' coal an hour, 8.500 tons a day, and 10.500 1 i PLEASURES Of THb STEERAGE.,' .."What?" ' , "I didn't never ak her." "I don't see what yon mean by that" . "Why, I, mean I didn't" "What was you hangin' round her se for, then? An' what made you act so awful cot Bpf "Didn't ' yon never know 'twas yon, Eijur ' "XleT "Yes, you. T bought this place jest on yon account when I heard the mort gage was goin to be foreclosed. I didnl reely s'poee yau'd be willin' to marry me, yam treated ma so indifferent in Lo ciry's day; but I didnl pay so si ten- tons for a voyage from Liverpool to New York. Hie total weight of fuel and ma chinery would be about 18,000 tons, leaving 20,000 tons for tlie ship and anno. For tho hull be allows 12,000 tons, leaving J.000 tons for crew, pass engers and cargo. Brooklyn Eagle. -.- Argmm.at tor Um lirmUUM n superstitious will make a note of the unpleasant fact that one of the offi cr on duty at flaHW Ur tomb commit ted suicide, and ! of tiie soldiers went mad. and Will in sumo way connect these occurrence with ' (initeau's curse. The matter-of-fact people will empliaaize the rircumntanors . that the suicide oc curred hundreds ot miles from Garfield's tomb, and that the nnfortumte officer . bad been a sufferer fnrn chronic neoraJ- Experisaees of -TwerToaas; Men' ipn aa ! Oeaaa -fttearaor-tsSMs)Ins;' Foatk '' "' ."Tlie rates for. a llrst-elasa ' passage tc Europe and bock have fallen so low that I would forego the pleasure of crossing In the steerage again, said a' friend to a reporter -the other day; t i "?' ' """Did you come as a,, steerage passen ger?" asked the reporter, "j ! ,, , ' 7 , ; . "Yes; I was hard ap lost summer, arid I had to either try tiro steerage or swim. My friend Jim U. was with me, and we are hot likely to forget our experience, "Wo, boarded the, brto'sA Ifavre with a fine crowd of Italians; French, Germans, Swiss, and representatives of -every other nation 'under the sun. Our bedroom was below decks, fifty by twenty feet in size, - containing , some, , 203 bunks in double tiers, ono above - the btlier, and separted bunk from bunk by a stat A few hours after leaving port, when we began to think of our supper and to wonder what the bill of fare might be, a belt was heard. We rushed down the gangway in good spirits, but no signs of tho feast were yisibla. A bare pine table -Was in the center of our bunk room. Twenty-four of us surrounded it. The The remaining 273 sat perched upon the bunks like hunry vultures. Tho steward now showed hinnelf, with boll in hand, and invited u to ho seated. Wo finally learned we . would have to divide into squads according to the location of our bunks. To a sqitnd woro given two tickets ouo for wine and colTee, tlie other for meat and soup each ticket j bearing the number of' persons in the party. , Wa were also allowed two pans, one deep and the other; BhaHeinr.and- with these two of us were told to tret iroru tlie kitchen rations for tho squad. Jim and I failed to grab a tin cup, iron fork and spoon when we liad a chance, and as these articles were scarce . were compelled to eat with our pocket knives and from a snuocpan In common with a rat Uurman until we hooked thest) luxu ries from 'our neighbors. ' : , , "The delegates sent to the kitchen for our first meal, after waiting for an hour were sent nway ' rejoicing with n -stew composed of odds and ends of meats and vegetables, immersed in a thick, brown, uninviting gravy. You can. imagine that tho menu was not very appetizing to a dellcato stomach. I really envied the two comely girls at our table, for the first mate took such a fancy to thciq that not only their lodging places but their food was very much improved. For the next few days we, woro too sick to use what we got - After that Jim and I lost considerable flush, until a couplo of Eng lish rascals taught us to help ourselves to tiie cook's, or baker's sujiplies, when we formed quite a successful confed eracy. A way of , loafing around the kitchen resulted in' nninorons gains of boiled potatoes. A largo leg of mutton was one duy's booty; a ooopUjof broiled lamb chops and maimed potatoes were andtlier's. Of course it was necessary to make" some very quick and" stealthy grabs. Tho pastry cook once , lost three large round cakes at three separate raids within half an hour. -Tiie List two days were good for this snort, as tlio pastry cook was then some distance from his room busy stirring ice cream. Just op posite this pastry-room was the bread cook's room, at the .window of which that official usually stood. Xn order to divert his attention from tho real game, tlio rape of tlio cake opposite, Jim at one time protended to grah some bn-ad while ftUHtligr of cur hitnd mrriml tT tli? j-i- we were after. So much running around after food and only getting half enough then made us somewhat weak, and we were lad to lie. down upon any con venient spot regardless of the dirt of the deck. 1 ' ' . . ' "For six nights of our voyage I slept on duck, as I objected to a bed already filled with life. : "I must say a word about our compagn ons do voyoge. Werner, rnler of tlio so-called ' Werner gang was in charge of a party from the Itomaitsch valleys of Switzerland. His subjects took his lordly manner very meekly. At meal time their ruler presided over the gang's meat and soup dish and dealt out the portions according to his own pleasure. Though ho was rough and could swear roundly at them, he was very just. He was a particular favorite with tho women, old ' and young. Good looks aided him here; ft bright eye, a jolly laughi curly brown liair, rosy chucks mid ft powerful frame. "Among tlie" English gang were: 'Harry.' familiarity calbsi the 'Bloody Joker,' a younger son of a lord, likely enough, but who had gone to the devil; Pat,' a representative son of Ireland, and 'Greenhorn Jack,' a fellow of 23 years, trying his luck in a foreign hind, who waa the' funniest looking fellow I ever saw. His ryes were mere peep holes, his nose was tipped np so much that the bridge was lust sight of, his month constantly stretched wilh'ft grin, displaying teeth of only half the ordin ary lengtli. A brown, stubby chin beard did not mcreose his good looks. A hat of style several years back was ft target for the playful and rough wit of bis messmates. The poor fellow merely grinned at the rough jokes played on him. He was rather quiet, probably homesick, for bo had little money no friends." IstomMtMs; aceamas mt. ft rmnUIar Klaw Am ArtUt's Aural lUalUm. Concerning1 tlie awfol realism of Titian's anatomical drawing and color ing this story is told: When lie first painted his "John the Baptist" ths Turk ish ambassador urged him to go to Con stantinople to sell it He followed that advice. The sultan admired bis - work. - and declared tlie neck of the decapitated apontJe was not correctly represented. "Now," said the suIUn, "I will show you." Calling a slave tlie royal despot drew hit own blade and severed tlie vas sal's head fro a bis body. Over bis ghastly remains the sultan argued the justice of his crlUristn. Titian is said to bsrve profited by this horrible experience and thereafter depicted the drawn miu- ria. and tiiot the mad soldier had nmi- eU and severed arteries with frightful tested signs of insanity long before be , intensity in the cojHes rT kia origin) went to Cleveland Buatoa Transcript. study, Oucago News. Tho peasants of Tuscany are better off than those of any other part of Italy, and this is" said to be due largely to wba is - known . as . tbs ; i fumiry colour system. This system is , voluntary, has1 never been recognized by tlie state or; by : the law of the country, ' and has grown out of a general condition. In TuscanyJ the land-owners provide tuo land, tne peasant furnishes the labor, and tlie ex-f penses and profits of farming are equally divided between the two, tlie agreement boing terminable on due notice by either party. These peculiar relations are gen erally cordial and lasting, and it is said that there are instances in which the same family have occupied a form for hundreds' of years. , , ' Under both law and custom property is equally divided among all the children of a deceased father. . If a peasant has four sons, for instance, nil of whom have been laboring . with him, he will generally leave, in addition to tho capi tal invested in the farm, a small nmount of ready money. By a mutual ayange mrnt the eldest brother takes the farm in his home and 'becomes the head of the family. He manages tlie business, and, in case any of tlie younger brothers wish to withdraw, pays his portion in ready money; the old home is kept op, the brothers and sistort take their meals together, and the household expenses are provided from a common fund. Gen erally speaking, such an association as this would be broken up by marriage, but in Tuscany it has proved otherwise.' The daughters on marriage receive their1 'portions and exchange their ancestral home for those of their husbands. When one of the sons wishes to marry be consults the head of the family, and is largely influenced by his decision. In most cases assent- is given, and the wife received into tlie association to share the labor and tho profit. . Tho dowry which she brings her husband remains their private - property,, but' custom re quires that it shall be i reserved for the use of their cliildren. . When money Is needed for any purpose, the elaer brother is applied to, but he takes caro that the sums thus supplied to the various mem bers of tliu association shall bo equal in amount. The children ato brought up at tho common expanse, and.as .tliu prin-. cipal crops require constant watchful ness,' cliildren aro of grout service in the -vineyards- and .olive .pardon. When there are too many hands for tlie original holding, Another farm Is' taken, and the pld lifo continued.) In isdmo 1 eases' the rider members go elscwhnre ' and organ-' ize a new colony. 1. ho 'J itscau, peasants have grown so accustomed ' to this kind of life that -they prefer tlilH common home and table to the isolation of separ ate houses The Saturday Review. , Some Old Kt TAk niiurilM.7 Tlie genealogical record of some of the first families is threatened by an ex posure which may make sciine wince, but no true Americnn will lie a -d mmed of a humble origin. . In fart there is ' but 1 little room for liooNtin'r among the New York millionaires. Peter Gilsey buran as a journeyman pianoforte maker, and the founder of Cooper institute1 first ap pears in the directory as "l'eler Cooper, machinist" The Brevoort were market gsnlcners. AMorman Carman; who left, a round million, was n .linuso. cnrpeiiter, A. T. Stewart began' by teaching a small, school. Thd niillioniiiro VVrmilve were: church. Cyrus W.Tield, first p-pnud trade as a dealer in rags. Lawyer Hum niel began as an errand boy in the same office in which he is now partner. . Wil liam Libbcy, formerly of A. T, Stewart & Co., and now a retired millionaire, was the son of ft Newburg carpenter. . The first Astor that came to America was a butcher and bad a stall in Fly market. Rufus Story, who is now the millionaire veteran of - Front street, be gan here as a hard-worked boy in a cheap grocery. Jay Gould was imenfly life a clerk in a country store, - and felt that he was doing remarkably well when he peddled maps in Delaware county. Uoadvr, it will not do to dispute the day of small-things.: - Why, even tho Spof fords wers shoemakers, the Steven e kept tavern, 1 and the Wolfe can be traced back to a gin-mllL Let the genea logical fiend do his Worst,'' be ill still find that wealth, like charity, covers a multitude of sins. New York cor, . Cin cinnati Enquirer. THE tfrflJLEBSl. CUESf. 6, hejgbt.sVr.cue.bttans.&irt not tfWf? . Why flees lay bseomnS; cairn aa I draw ' nhth . -To yon remoter height, where earth anf i-Cpmniivrlif gbsbadjanaT, make the seeae . so rairj,.. It breathes an Insplratlrm and a pf aver I li rne,it4okIie'jt ih wistful eyr Why am 'I baffid thus when'er I try The distant mountain height to reach and! '' sbnref iT jiot O! take it fondly, home to thee, dear heart ' ft ever" has been so since time began, And ever will be; not alone thon arc, ' 8rirlhgtovio-wht never can bedooey For even the angeli oa ly know In psrti . - Heaven were trot heaven could Its Luff heights be won, . . U Carlton in Pioneer Press. DRINKERS DISEASES. - TEA: 1.: .- blsovUersWell Knran U the Doetan ' Prvdomlnanee of Kerroas Symptoms. ' It is not ft little curious that the dhv -eases arising from the wrong use of tMs should be met with in greater frequency in countries foreign to its growth. It might haye been . supposed that where production wont" on, ..then), would be1 found those- evils that attend the con' sumption of tea in their greatest extent; but such does not appear to bo-the case The diseases due to (eft are well known v to doctors,- 'but tits' -public seem to be? strangely indifferent to the teachings of their medical advisers In these matters . i Becently, bl France, M. Eloy has re minded medical men how vast is the? number of diseases owing ah allegiance to the dominion of Queen Tea. The list? of headings in M. Eioy's paper U well - calculated to arouse attention, and, we" hope, to lead to some abatement of this Widespread disorder. America ami England are the two countries that arer afflicted most with tho malady arising; from the excessive consumption of tea. Individuals may suffer in a variety of wars. . It is customary to sneak of acutev subacute ftnd clrronio "tire ism" a form that has no connection with theological matters.' , It is ppsaiblo to be ft "thelo"' by profession or1 a "theic" by passion. , The predominance of nervous syrap tonis is a characteristic of theism; gen-' era! excitation -of' the functions of the nervous system may be observed; or the weakness may be noted more especial! in the brain 'as distinguished from the spfnaT cor J. PerverBlonof tho sense of bearing is not at all an' uncommon symp--torn pa.tiepta, hearing voices that have" ' no real or objective existence. The irri tability that overtakes "Voincn so fre fluently may sometimes, baclearly traced! to, an excessive indulgence in afternoon tea. It is a mistake to suppose that it la the poor seariis'tresB Who il the chief suf ferer froih theism.'.' No doubt tlie tafmin which ten (liat has,,beon standing long; contains dpes a great amount Of mischief, but tlie darangomeuttUet it causes hardly belongs .to that class of diseases will which we ore ' at ' present concerned. ' Bather does theism belong to that genus of.disease in whicjinorujnisin,caffeiin and vanillism ore found. "Tlie habit of tea drinking' is one (hat grows on its victims 'like tho similar ones' of , opium or(. aVoboJ. ! Tijken in strict moderation, and, with flue precautious in the mode of preparation, tea is, like alco hoi, a valuable-stimulus m Ha abuse-there-) also a certnin analogy. There is hardly a morbid 'symptnin which may not be traceablf to Jc'ii an its cause. This Is ft facf tlia( general practitioners often use to tlieir own sutisfuction and to tiieir-IMifnlTiaT1??--?? iinp?nz:tuT5B' that kind of pntient who does not object to piake some caqriiice iu-ijrJor to be rid of troubles. Lancet ' A rtallr rrlrt at Llssl. There is only one portrait of Abbs Liszt with which he is pleased, and It came to be made by accident One even ing, in I tome. Liszt was performing one of his compositions with unusual bn petuosity and power. The piano, ' says an eyo-witness,sang and wept alternately under his charmed hand. ,.When fas finished, the audience burst into a rap turous shout of Lncore! At this Liszt, pale and looking inspired, brusquely leaped from his seat, .turned around to the audience, with . his back leaning against the piano, his arms crossed on his breast, and his bead thrown slightly back, and eased at tlwtn unmoved for a moment with stem severity. It was while Um master was ia this superb at titude that Layraud, who chanced to be present, seized kis pencil and caught tlie r-tura before him. When Liszt saw H af lerwards he was delighted nd ke re peated the pose, though he could not re peat theJook in the artist's studio next week. Paris Letter. A Tmw Yery rtala TiMagats. - Borne of our eastern literature makes me siok. It is so ovemlos it is nasty. Do yon know, the English have added sixty new skin disease to the catalogue of cutaneous diseases through excessive bathing? That reminds one of the state ment of the philosopher, that he bashed twice a year Xf he needed it Dona Piatt In Tlie Current. ' Taas af Etaaafattve rncmawta. The LnovTv-at Paris has lately received forty toss of decorative f ragmen ta from tkpalaces of Artaxerxes and - DArius txT contemporaneoaa - art FbHadsJe pburress. . ,' rsaelaatlBs; aiftkto a ChllilhtHxt As ws pass away f rota lie period of childhood, most of its wonderful sights' lose their fascination. Que of these l tho elephant, leading; the circus procew sion through the village afreet I never could see it enough, that huge, unearthly shape. I used to think it strange that people who were rich enough should not have one always pacing about their own back yards. . .,;.. f Another of . these spectacle cf chQd- hood that keeps lis charm from me is the locomotive at full 'irpfced, Women turn , is : but -a i warn iu a book, except when I stand as near as I dare io the clattering rails, and take the 'fearful joy of seeing hearing, feeling, touching, so to speak, with tiie trembling antenu of my mind the thunderous . rush of the iron mass as it readies met and is gona, A different and calmer pleasure is to watch the train f roin a half milo'a Uis tanca across tlie fields .how stick in its) slipping along, "without baste, without rest," as if independently of sny pro pelting force; for it is the train that' sp pears to run the driving-wheels, not the driving-wheels the train, . It is not mo mentum now, but the iniretia of motion; not a missile or projectile, ' burled front behind or drawn front before, but ft thing whose state of speed is as natuml and immutable aa to -other things the state of rest The Atlantic. - sMplemaar f Ctiiaasa- Stataamaa. Prince Bismarck complained not Ions; ago of the way our foreign office inun dated him' with diapatcbes, but even ti.e writing powers of ItXnrning street wo.iij not be a patch apon those of CblTteaa statewiM-e. A masterly policy of inac tion la there studied to perfection, and ii is rare that any case is settled until reams of paper have been covered in thrashing cat every detail. A Chinese dispatch must be written in a eertsi stereotyped form, and in acksnwlertrin a dispatch you snust first begin by quot ing in cxteBse all tke dorumrots to which yon are replying.. TThis system of reproducing ail the previous or i poo dence proves very . cumbersome as the ease gradually develops. Like ledy'e lettockoweveiv the pith of ft Chinese communication generally lies In the pest- script,' and a practiced hand will gras? the meaning at ft glaaee. '. The viceriy of Chinese province peruses sons hun dreds of these documents every -day. aa1 sttacbes a minhto to .eaoh in a basicixa- like style; which is not excelled by ant best organised departments at Nineteenth Century.