(Ll)c Cljatljam Uccorir II. Jl. ioisio:, ED1TOK AND PKOPMETOK. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, Oik- copy, mic yenr One copy, six months , One rupv. three months $ 2. CO 1.00 SO Two Pictures. J. With dimpled hands folded on heaving Nlio is lying n sleep. I'lvunins of pleasures and lov mil R"M. Cureless nf sorrows tint l.foiniy hold Willi sweet lips smiling in pel tis-t rest, Sim is lying nsl ep. II With l.i. led li'inds fol-.. i n quid In-east She i- I villi a hep. I'.oastires mi'l love anil joy nil "it, Sorrow sol hfo over at hist Willi pale hps close I in eternal rest, Kir- is 1 yn g nsl -op. -t'HAs. R Si itt in tli Current. A LOST OPPORTUNITY. ItV M lis HWIHKTT. A solitary figure, with few lines of coiiiilitu-ss or gr:ua, John llollaway sat upon tlic meadow gate, looking off into the distance, lit- was whispering softly, yet he si cmi'il to bo in a deep reverie, for his tjio.it, ten ler eyes h:tl n far-awny expression in their brown depths ns be gazed out over the sunlit meadows where the blo.nl-red elover ami the golden buttercups swayed umlor the soft, caressing bree.e. Su blenly nil imperious voire broke the silence: ".Mr. llollaway, pleas.: let mo take down the b.ir-. Tin i:i a hurry, on.l onme liie -l.m tc-t way.'' Tin: young in hi si.nt,..; ),,. had not heard her approach, ainl thorn beside . him stood the very object of his thoughts. ' j Ah, clover blooms ami buttercups, paled were your charms now! A little, graceful figure in the daintiest of cam- ' brie dresses, and underneath tho wide' hat n sweet, girlish fare with velvety, ' pcaeli-tintcd ch"eks, and cyei as bin: as freshly gathered violets, :!i w is Lily biwrenee, the prettiest gill so the pup. iiiiir verdict i an -in all tlu country , rou i. A flu ill rose to John's sun- 1'Il .. ned fare as ho quii kly tos: and -began to take down the bars. i "Out for a walk, Miss Lilyi" "Yes," very briefly. "Ss you are foul i f quiet strolls? I mi, too." Lily drew herself up, and looked Ht the presumptuous speaker. "Iteally, Mr. Ib.llaway, 1 dot, i sec what it is to you '' Then she stopped. Mio did not mean . to bo rude, but truly, she thought to herself, it was high time she should ' show this young man th.it his openly! expressed iidniir.i'ioti was exceedingly distasteful to ln-r. Il ha I been going on for some time, and i-verve ne, even Lily herself, hud come to s o that the sun roso and get for John Holl.iwny ' where she w as. "Ho must bo intensely stupid not to know how utterly indifferent 1 am to him," she thought. Hut John was not stupid. He under stood the untinislie I sen ti ne , and as he drew back without another word to let her pass, Li'y saw that he did, mid a slmmc-faced, compiler! ions look sto'e into her eyes. For, from the richest to the poorest, everyone acknowledged John llollaway 's noble sterling charac ter. Lily walked slowly nlong the r.md, half determined to turn back and apolo gize for her rudeness, until a turn brought Iter face to fa -o with someone whoso handsoiiK' eyes m.'t her own w th such a glad i'(..iik that all other thoughts were for the time driven com pletely away. It was li chard Rake, the most ad mired mi l chip ted young man in the village. "Ah, good aftei un i:i, Miss , iwi on ee ; 1 was hopin I would in-ei .m." And the w ivy black locks were bare. I to the breeze as K chard courteously lifted his hat and w a k 1 on In-side her. What, n contra-l to John llollaway! And the contrast . gnat in many other ways than I. iy thought. Hut the j girl was but young to n-a 1 character, 1 nil 1 that I! i li ir I Hi ike was wry hand -some and wry elegant none ,.i . ib-nv, a lover of whom anyone might be justly prou 1. When Lily's- Mini- w.-is rcauhoJ, and with another graceful bow li eh aid had kit her, she did not go directly into Mi -houe, but lingered awhile .-Huong t! e flowers that tiled their little garden. Her thought were very busy. S!i ; thought that she had behaved very unkind to her old lien!, and her memory went back to the first time she hud met him. It was at n picnic, mid she hud fallen and sprained her iinkle. ; She, remembered how the great f. How, : so much stronger than his mates, had persisted in carrying her all the long distune;: bark to her home. Since then j he had show . in n hundred ways wha". i she was to him, and knowing his noble ; nature, perhaps her heart won d have ' gone out to him before this if liichard H ake had not coma back from college. Hut he had, nnd Lily fancied his gay, j debonair manners, and his entertaining i conversation, nnd like many another young girl, had begun to take for true, 1 heart del p love that liking which we ad i have for things pleasant to the sight. 1 And so she shook oil her reproachful ' feelingr, nnd went into the house. "Why, mother, dear, what is the mut ter Ciying, and I out enjoying my ' eilf Tell ni'. what il it, deal I.t me )ire your trouble," VOL. IX. Mis. Liwrcucc lifted ft face, smiling through her tears. "Yes, crtin-;. Lily ilnrbncr. but not : from grief. Sit down hero beside me, an I let tile show you what a load has j been lifted from my mind this morning. Lily, I did not tell you, but numo time ago Mr, H ilton, the lawyer, cmnc to mo and infoi mod me that the holder of ; i he inortgago on our home was in need ! of money nnd intended to foreclose, un less the mortgage was paid in full when he should demand it. X iw, child, you ; know what n trouble has been weighing j upon uie, for I kie w tli.it it would be ; impossible foi me to ruiso tho sum ' iiccessuiy, mid that we must leave the dear old home that wc hal loved so 1 well. Aud now, this very morning, Mr. ; Hurton came and told me that a kind Mi nd, hearing of the intended fore i closure, lias paid the amount in full." "Who is it that has helped you, mother?" "That's tho strangest part of it Lily. Mr. Hurton said lie had strictly prom : ised not to tell me tin- name of my bene -, fnctor.nnd as to who it can be I haw no idea." Hut though she did not say so, Lily i had; nn-l when later, in her u-uil im ! puls.ve way, she told John I'ollnway how soiry she was that she had been so 1 ru le to him, uud then ii'ked him frankly whether he was not the kind friend who had come so opportunely to her mother's ! re i iff, his manner continue 1 her su-pi-j cions. It is said that "gratitude is neighbor to love,'' and whether that hi trie: or not, it is (rtain that from that time the ! manly young farmer was often in Lily's thoughts, while l chard H ake was ju-1 as steadily losing groun I. Hut John, of course, did not know it. lie was not one to wear his lieiut upon his sleeve, and at length, i.ftera liar I .-I niggle, had ihcid -rd to abandon his hopr!c-s suit and leave the field to that rival who evident ly was the favored one. I. ly appeared to notice the diuVreiice; but, woman like, she did not appear to rare, mid so the months went much the same, until at length tho Cli-is came. The village in which our le-roine lived was just on the shores of a little bay, and many were the pleasure parties that en joyed a trip over its limpid waters. One afternoon, It char I Hake, obtain ing Mrs. Lawn lice's consent, invited Lily to take a sail. When they rer.rhe I the beach, who should be waiting in rend in ess to manage the boat but John Ib-llaway. "Hallo, llollaway, are you turning into bunt man.''' ivlaimcd Hlake, in as tonishment. Lifting his cap to Lily, John answered, 'Not exactly; but Joe came, to me in great distress, saying be did not feel well enou;h t i go i in, but had pu tni-ed not to disappoint you, a-i I knowing 1 could manage a boat, he a-ke 1 nie to take his place. Joe h is done r many a g. ii n turn, and so I c ul 1 not refuse him," ho lidded, wrongfully interpreting the little lla-li that had risen in L'ly's face us she li-teii -d ; "and he said, too, that it was your sister w!i- was to be ' your companion. K.se I should not have come; I w. ul I not for the world lie a m r-port." The l i' ti rne.s in his (oiv touched a like chord ill Lily's h'-iif. I'.ir some' little time back she had b.en slowly but surely learning a les-on, the d IT -rence between real worth an I mere giitt. r; aud now Ir r heart sank as she saw, or thought she saw, how complcteiy her conduct had driv. n a l affection towards lu r from John's mind, and thct she had foolishly thrown away her own happ' ness. "Well, llollaway, I'm sure I'm minh oblig -d. It's very kind of you," was 1 Hlake's reply. And the two young men -non had the . little craft in readiness for ils fair j freight. Hlukc, ha seen John's, liking for Lily, but his vanity lull not been alarmi-d; he knew by rxp. nee.c the powei of his dark eves, nnd I. Iy Liwrem e was like any other young lady if she were ten times pi el tier. So he reasoned. They floated lightly over the blue j water, anchoring after n while under a j bluff, and dropping their lines to fish. I. ly chatted gaily in her . wu fasci nating way, and never had she seemed more lovely in Ibihaid Hlake's eyes, : while poor John, who had thought of ! late that he had driven her image from j his inind, feit the old charm creeping over him ngnin stronger than ever be- fore; bir he hid his pain manfully and j kept his part in the lively conversation, j Time crept on, an I just as (hey decided j on returning, to their sudden dismay the heavens suddenly clou led over, and a peel of thunder suddenly brought them to their feet iu alarm. Siptalls were not common upon the bay, but one was evidently now upon them, and John saw the great d inger. A moment, nnd i they were dashing at a mini rate over th waves, while oveihead the awful darkness galhere 1 more ominously nil the while, and every now and then vivid tl ishcs of flame seemed to envelope them on ail sides. Su blenly there was a blinding glar1, then n terrific crash, and liaif the mast dripped over the bows, w Idle the s-ids were diag.'iug in the seething wa'er , F"f mi. in t.mt John Minn"! 'iii)!i'l; t ::t fin tirt Ctettam IMTTSliOliO, CHATHAM CO., N. thought was I'ly. Whero was she A s coin! more and lie caught the gleam of yellow i nils in the cruel waves among the tattered sails; the ropes had twiated i about her light figure and dragged her ! over tho bow. I Ho sprang to H'.akn's side. j "If she is lo be yours, it is yoU who . ought to savo her. t), lick ! or it will be too Into. Your chance will be gone !'' I Hut Hlake still cowered tremblingly where, he was, unheeding tho p:ril of j the one he professed to love. Another instant John was struggling among the sails, a few seconds of awful while the waves were tug savagely nthiin, then weak, almost f . i. i...i, ;.... ti. 1.....1 with Lily's insensible form clasped ved eiosu 10 ins inavc, ucarr. 110 nan saveu j her. I Then, still in imminent danger, they 1 remained clinging to the dismantled i ; boat, until, as suddenly as it hud fallen, j the sipi alt lifted, and a welcome hail from the shore proclaimed that help was near at hand. Lily came to herself at last, to And that John was holding her fast, with her 1 face closo to his own. 1 In an i.istaut the memory of what had ! passed came bark to Ir'r. She did not draw away, but raised her lustrum eyes : to his as if to read his inmost thoughts; the cold (lis-k pressed itself closer against bis own, while her arms wound theinsi 1 ,es softly atound his luck. "John- -dear John!" was all she said. And J ihn knew that with the greatest peril tiie greatest blessing of his life hud e in to him; while Kicliard H'ake, look ing on with pale, seowling face, com prehended clearly that John's words hud been prophetic w hen he had said, "Your chain will be gone." Meaning of "Stihlinm Porlc,' A phrase often seen in despatches from Constantinople is thus 1 xplaincd by M. .billiard in his article on ' Life II neiith the Crescent" in the O.i-mopolitati : The building of the porlc, called sub lime, is, or was, a kind of long, low i barracks, without style and without beauty. A lire destroyed part of it three, years ago. The phrase "sublime potte" applied to both the buildii g an 1 the rtdininis- trillion, two things that are important, hut neither the one nor the other is sublim?. This word ha, however, .1 very ancient origin. When the Turks, long before the compiest, were only hordes of Tar tars and nomads, their chiefs or sultans were iu the habit of dispensing justice at the door of lhc;r tent. There tho cadis assembled an I heard the com plaint and then the defense. The sultan npp vr-d up 111 the spot only at the con-c:!ii-ion of the trial to get the opinions of the j nlges and to render his decision. To go to the poite was for the Turks the equivalent of seeking justice at the hands of the sultan and his counselors. As to the pompous epithet "sublime," coupled with this poor poite, it is ono of those Oriental speec'ies that the flattery of the weak has bestowed voluntarily upon the tyranny of the strong. The Turkish language abounds in thes : ipi ililicativcs -highness, excellence, divine, celestial, sublime- which in our day and in th) Vct offend the dignity of those that receive them, ami of thoe that bestow them, but which one in the K 1st can freely bestow upm high personages w ithout laughing or making them laugh. (iotientl Lee's Hen. 1 In Long's life of lieu. Lee an interesting j story of a hen is told. A few chickens j were once piv-entc-l to the genera!. In j the lot was a laying In n whose life was j spare I. The hen accompanied the nrmy to 1 lettyshurg, riding in the bnggao I wagon, and after that battle was with the t'.itife ler.it'-s for lie irlv a year. At last the hen grew fat and lazy, ami ono d;n the steward, I'm ling his supplies very low, ami knowing that the general expected a ilislingui-le guest at dinner, killed the hen, and she was served up on the altar of hospitality. tieii. I, e was surprised to see so line a fowl set before U i 111, but he little dre. line I that his pet hen had been s'nughtcied. When tho hen was missed, however, the steward had to confess that ho had been placed in a position like unto that of the boy who had to capture the ground hog. There was coin puny for dinner and no meat. Kights or llio blind hi Streets. Tiie full bench of I lie Supreme Court has just salt down a rescript in the case of J. W. Smith vs. Wildes et al. The plaintiff, a blind mint, was walking down Hromlield street and fell down a hatch way left open by defendants. He brought suit and recovered damages. The defen dants excepted, but the exceptions have now been overruled on the ground that it can't be laid down as a universal rule that it would be negligence for a blind man to walk the streets of Hoston limit- , tcmic'i. tiiston traveller. A Timely Suggestion. i "Hello, Rein-lieu! You don't call on Miss Dilby any more- -something up?"' j "Yes, Arthur, I confess it there isl Why, don't ym know I stayed a littlo j late the other night, nnd dash me if she ' didn't get up and wiul tint ilotk!" Detroit Kn.1.1 ('ie, i OIILDKLYS COLUMN. A I. .rue Fnnllls, "Mnninin," tniil little I'aisy As she. gnz-d af the stars so mild, "You tliink I'm a lot of trouble, And you say I drivoyou wild: Hut think of the Mniimn Mmm." Said impassive little liaise, "Wliat n lot of babies she has, 1 shoii'd think she would go eray. llaip. i-'s llaiir. Sirnll iuil mill the Thistle. It is hai 1 to te!! ' ow tin- thi-tle came to be the badge of Scotland, but 1 find the following tradition of its origin. ' When the Danes invaded the country, a I "'P"se wns linkup,, . . on.er Hie more completely to hide their ad- vanee from the Scots,' the Punish sol J ''',TS walked barefoot. For a while nil went well, till one of the Panes Imp. pened to tread on a thistle. The pain caused by the prick u s made linn cry out, tui'l his cry ili-c'.oscd the fact of the intended assault. The Seots nt once took their arms, and fell on the invaders w ith such vigor that tle y routed them. The thistle thereafter became the national emblem, nnd its Latin legend ' Xeino me iinpune lace-sil,'' which bin been freely translate I, "Ye daurua med dle wi' me" denoted tin; pugnacity of the Sent.-.--; Little folks. .1I.V H11.1 .lurk. One of the ollleers ol the post had tm or a do. en large greyhounds, X itwith standing its si.-, the greyhound, when alone, is an arrant e.jward, unless cor nered ; then it 1-econiis a dangerous nil-t:lgoui-t. .lack was a coward, loo, but he knew by instim t that a single greyhound was even a greater cow ar I than himself; uud whi n on" of the hounds would stroll along by the house, n was ludicrous to see the little si amp Pl-h out ipiivering with 1 i itcinent, an 1 balking as if he would cat Mr. t lieyliouiid. Invariably, the greyhound would 111:11 tail and run; .I n k would follow a few steps nud then return with a look iu his face which plainly said, ' P.d you ever see such a coe.-aid .''' H it one d n y .I n k w as taking a w alk with lie- on the pain le-grouild down to ward the lake, aud some distance from the house, Ail al oi.ee the whole puck of hounds, as if urged by one common impul-e to get even w ith him for the in dignities be hid heaped upon tin in singly, .started in a body for Jack. At lir-t he did In ( ietiie tin ill, but when he did, instead ol c nuing to me for protection, he turned and stiuek out f r home iu tin-usual manner, withhb tail between his legs and with the Usual accompaniment of howls, How hu did run! He w is running this time for his life, and In- knew it, lie looked like n liny yellow vp, , ,(, ,r 1 1 j - r,-1 toward the hoii-i . T a- j ai k of hounds keep ing we'd to;.e h r, ga i;e I n him ir. every jump. T i h e I thou-.-ht lln-y had ft i 111, and hall ti, rued aw.i. my In ad, bl.t, no! hedoubbd oil them 110I fairly fit-will another d irection. T.i hounds coiilii : not turn as quickly as In- could, and fell over one another in the r attempts to do so. As Jack reached the b rrace i l front of the ipi u ter-, he ll w into the lioii-c through the open door, safe! '1' .0 door was closed by my w ife - w'o . had been watching the desOiiat-- raec just as the hounds met iu a body over n boy's straw hat that was lying upm the rnss before the door. Iu about two seconds the-e was nothing lett 1 I that hat; it 1 was torn into ribbons before they found i out it wasn't Jack, after aii! Hut from I tint ,jm,. ,;11c w..s .., ,,, M,....k : ; t,.rms wi,, ,Hiy (f ti,,, hounds. t. ' Nicholas. (.'real l'iissihiliti s iu I'liolngriipliy. It seems that there i- tm end to the pos.-ihilitit s of instantaneous pho tography. The artists in this line have already photographed trains going a mile a minute, hor-is tiotiingn 2.2 gait, base balls in mid aii, and other flying things. Why should they 1. -t give lis photographs of bir. Is iu flight, thereby aiding a ial experimenter in constructing air li pi modeled upon the flying iiiecliaiii-m of Miner's inhnl ilants.' Perhaps they w Ml al-o show us nega tives of lui 1-ts and cannon balls in flight, nnd, to return to bae ball, id great pitchers' puzzling curves. Dia gram! of some ol tin s-: curves would be worth looking at. Till i reminds me that Douglass, the pho'o graphic supply man has const 1 noted an eccentric lamp, having its ow n reservoir of electric ener gy, by which iiista:itaii"nus photographs of nil sorts of things and places may bo taken after night. It is his .del that ilctoitives and the police wa uid find such an instrument of service in preserv ing a likeness id the scenes of night crimes and such things, and has aski- 1 Police Photograph 1 Lvans and D'-tcc tive Shea to give the nppiratiii a trial. Orr, the 1 ountrv genius, ha.mide sev eral very good street scenes by moon light. The tine- of exposure was 20 -i " N'eitliei One Meant Anj thing. Jocular passengi r lo matter if-!':iot conductor- "Knocking down much to day The conductor 111 ulestly but firmly knocks him down. "Siy !" (picking himself up a a hVr nnd a sore 1 man ien,'t y hi tike .1 joki J I did u'l HI' a'l ill 1 lii'lg," "I 'lillll't, ' illn i, IfUrorfc C., AI'IML 7. ISS7, STAMMERING. V'lint. Rii Elocution':!. Says A bout D foittsi in Speeeh. ntnmiieriug; (liirp;l Tlironjll the M'iral a Well ks th) Physical N itnrtt. "tstamnieriiig, stuttering and hesita tion, '' it lady teacher of eh i-ution w ho has had utidir ln-r ctut many young ladies aud gentlemen suffering with such defects of speech, said to a Wash ington Star reporter, "tin: due to th" improper use of the vocal organs. Some time these three defects are found to gether. Stammering is the worst d lli inlty. Sometimes stammering appears iu one lonn and somi-tiiii -s in another; in fart no two cases are precisely alike. The wor-t prevalent infirmity it is really an infirmity- -is the wrong Use of the lip, too null h lipy 11 may say. You see a face that might otherwise be hand some, dbligurcd by a habit of lifting i:p tin: upper lip on on- side so i.s to show tho canine tooth. Another infirmity is lack of proper control over the move ments of the tongue. Xo, not too loose n tongu-. The trouble is that the tongue is not loose enough, 11 lit flexible enough, Yeiy lew, even among educated people, sp ak correctly, that is, articulate Eng lish sounds correctly and speak pure iviglish, an 1 yet th" people in this coun try speak belter lvigli-h than i spoken iu Knglniid. "Whenever any one announces that he will cure shimmering and stuttering by means of aitilieial appliances, or by some secret remedy, or by dings of any kin I," said the lady, "you 1 an set him down as a ipiack. Dings will no more euro stammering than they will set a limb, for really the cure of stammering comes wry near being 11 surgical operation, in a sense, because it is the restoration of the vocal organs to their proper functions. The troub'e is with the tongu! and the iips and the dosing of tin: tln at. These organs become denaturalized in their use. I never take a case without having a responsible physician first examine the throat. After he pronounces the organs normal and in proper condition for me to work, I undertake the case. I have K-ldom had a case in which there was not some work for tin: physician to do, for the reason tli.it the wrong use of the vocal organs caii-os them to he diseased. Bronchitis ami tlirmt ili-ea-es are iu many eases dm to tin wrong us-i of the organs. "The cure," she w.-m on, "is within the person's se.f, and depends upon his tn th I lis well as 1 hysirtil nature. You must lift up his moral nature. Most of those who snff r from tin se defects you will notice are !oo-e-k need and walk with shambling g it, with heads down, all the ill it of thi-i . 11 tii-. 1 lit v. Tin- first thing I try to do i. to lift the pcison up, to make him free, for his tnoial nature dominates his physic. I. My system is simple, philosophical nnd highly moral in its natuie. No youth cm possibly pass through it w.ihoiit having his moral as well as physii nl self benefited. All sufferers from these defects are exceed ingly sensitive, one of the r suits of their infirmity. Ton per-011 of culture and ie liueineiit such tin infirmity is m ire ter rible. H is alnn-t impossible to know what Causes the defects. I a-k parents always when lln-y bring cises t in-, if they can tell what c iuse I it. Sun-say that it cam from few an I a variety of sup posed i-ins s are giv -n. Sometimes it is the 1 lb-i t of iinitatioa. It is frequent ly known to cist in families for several generations. D feitsnf this charaet r when inhcritc 1 are harder to cure, and when inherited from th: inilh-r, the bar h si ol ail. The most ditli.-ult case 1 ever had was one f this kind. It is thought by many who have not iu formed themselves that stammering is caused by nervousness. If tint were true nearly nil wom- n and a 'great many men and childre 1 w ei d stun n r. Hi t'i-: contrary, how. v. r, it is proved ideally that the slamnii r'ng or defect in sp h Causes tin- Her voti sii" s, J n,n ,,f (. opinion fio.n obs rv.itioii th it th - hab.t is vciy inl'reipieiilly i-oiit r.-.c!i-I by imita tion, f r the re isiei that often on- child in a f -1111 i 1 y will staaini -r and th- other! will not. The older brother perhaps will have the defect an 1 not one of the other children will stammer, though thcyhiivebe.il together always. What ever the railse, when a cure is once cs tablishe I there is no more danger of a retui ii of the defect 1 r h il it, than th'-iv is of ils occurrence in a pi t. ou who never stammered at all. " A Hunter's I'ai iilisi-. Five hours rut from l.o, Angelos and wc hitch on i n extra engine and be gin to groan and puff and snort up a tortuous track and rut of the little river bed to the mountain top. We see thousands ol rabbits, hares and squirrels. We hear and s-e long lines of geese, cranes, brant, swan and all sorts of sea birds nnd fresh water birls in the air. We are in the hunters' para dise here by the Pacific sea. The Cali fornia quail are o abundnit that ; on car. see fln-m feeding in the gras along the rai.io.el tl k lit-.- bainv.iid few is about llio !oiii-'s :, jjn. Ijll'll Mill'!, NO. .2. The Hark Side or Dakota. "Xo market, nofii.d, no water, no fruit, no demand for labor." These are 1 11 11 mora ted by 11 Kimball (Dik.) corres pondent of Kami and 1'iioside as disad vantages nf that part of the Territory, which land-agents and rahroa 1 specula- i tors have laillcd to the ib-t ri iiient ' j III my restless people who were indiiei d I 10 leave comparatively comfortable j homes at the K 1st . "A four years' ivsi : deuce hen has enali'cd mu to speak a l-vis-illy, mid when I said that not one j who came lu re and depended on farm ing for nit iucoim but has gone down hi 1, I speak the simple truth; thus1! who came full-'iornd 0 1 and lo.iiv.-l their money, or invested it in stock, or went link to some reservation or isolated p'ae? and escaped taxation, have made money. Crops an-short and prices low. Wheat, live to fifto'li bushels per acre, ID to tsl rents; oats, fifteen to thirty live bushels, lo to IS! rents; corn of pre vious years fair, hit", most of it frost bitten; Il i, four to ten bushels per acre, sit to !l ) cents pur bushel; tniik, no sale; butter, II cents per pound; eggs, .1 cents per dozen; live stock, 112 to 2 1-2 cents per pound. Xow look on the oilier side: S dt coal, per ton: hard, $:i; dried Iruits, '.I to 2D cents per pound, owing to quality and kind. T in high price of fit-l has driven even weli-to-do people to the use of hay, corn-stalks, llixstraw, nnd through the summer season almost all res iling in the niral districts have use 1 cow-chips, which is a polite name for dry cow dung, for fuel. Add to this a third of a man's time for hauling water, mi I your readers will have soiu 'tbing of .1 lorrect idea of the ini-ouveiii in- -s and cxpcns-s of livingin a new country. I might aid that, with rare oveptiotis, it is impossible f'-r a laboring man to get employment."' Prosperous Seal Islanders. I 111 the Island of Si. lieorge where Jj, 01111 seals are annually taken,, tfin.Dui) is dividad among the natives each sea son. A lirst-ches share, last season amounted to .-V.' V When it is taken into consideration t hat besides thisiash paid for services renderi d by each sealer every native family mi the island hai a comfortable hone-, with fuel, lights, medical attindano: and schooling free of charge, it will not seem an exaggera tion to claim for these hyperboreans state of life which it would be hard if not impossible to improve. With such advantages over Ms fellow Aleuts it is linrdlyto be wondered at that the seal islander should consider himself a trifle better than his poorer cousins, (in-at is the flutter ill the social circles of Ooiia laska when a dusky hero from the bloody fields of St. i! i-rge or S Paul arrives ion one of the company's steamers in search of a wif-. In affairs of this kind ; tin' priest of the parish h is great i;-hi once, and it has I- m whispered that ! these good ni'-tl III mag- to hind back I the clinic -st articles in ill - way of in ir I liiigeabie damsels until less dc.irab'.c ! stock has be. 11 ll ated, thus preserving I a hi ulthv tone to the market. However i this may be, marriages are always occa : sioiisof geiiir.il and profuse enjoyment : and everybody seems b.ippy. --- Sin Krancisco Caronii lc. Heal Complim -nl. Wh'-le travelling through N-brisk:, ; Mu-m, the virtuos , lounged into the smoking car to k II a f. w ol the heavy moments incident to a 1 Miruey act ess the ! plains, lie found a 1 'iititryinan scraping a polka 1 IT the stri igs ,,r a ti Idle. ,. played w.ih tl-.e prou I eoiisi ioii-ii' ss of a man who is master of his art. "L-'t nie play y 11 something," said Miisin. Without a word, the tiddler handed the virtu 'so bis instrument. Putting the thing into :it least .1 suggestion nf tune, M'isin played a touching cavatina, and then the ' t aruiv il ol Venice," as arranged by I'aganini. The player of (in- p ilk. 1 an I s.;narc dance music open,- I his mouth an I ab sorbc I every not.-. When Miisin had ti i-liod he hau b-.l the ti .,. ,- k to its speliboun 1 owner. Tin- countryman shook bis head. 'I'hc brilliant notes nf the "C.ruiv.i." were still chasing each oiler in a ill ad dance through his head. "I d'-n'l want it," he -en), h.conii il- Tin- I'i'ii-aut ainl the Koli'ier. A peasant who was growing a fine crop of barley awoke om- morning to tin 1 that the ll md had ent red his field and desfoye I every stalk of his gtain. Ti:ereii;i -tl he began to tear his Inir and lam -nt. but a stranger who r ime along tapped him on Mn- should- r an I said: ''llillkee, my friell I, but you do not know of what on complain. Had your barley come to maturity and bc-n sent toinaikct, I should have waylaid and robbed you of every dollar of the pro. reeds." Whatever li ippcns is for the bi st, even w hen the neighbor's cow eats up our cabbages. H-ir.iit free Press. A Koirninner at Disaster. A bright bulking young w un in in ono of the fashionable dry goods stores told me she never, if she coii'd possibly help it, sells an ar'ii Ie to a person who ha 1 lo-t a front tooth, as it i.s always a fore runner of disaster to her. "I always get some ol Mn' oih r ei- who are not up A ll! U'l s'e, pe p. f" )1V -.I. - IV Jo'Hui'i. $I)C I)atlam ttecorfc KATIES ADVERTISING .One squiiru, one insorlion One s , mi re, two insertions One sqiiufe, one inotilli - 1.0 1.50 2.00 For liiriri'r ndvcitisrinriits liberal cot Inlets will be nmiie. I Am (irepJ iiml Von are Smnll. A s in now- swinging on a branch 1 luce en light a passing tl y ; ''(III let me live;" the iiisoot prnye.1, Willi trembling, pit.-oiis cry. '-.No " s-i il tin sparrow, '-oii um:.i (all, J-"oi- 1 mnii-at nntl you are mhuII." The bn-.l bail s.-are begun his t'ea-t before 11 Lawk e one by: Tiie -nine w as i-.-ciht. Pray ie' inn live". W'a- now the san.i ej-y. "No, '.-aid the capita-, -'you must tall, for I .1111 gi-ea' ami you are small " An eagle saw- the rogun riie! swooped I "pon liim fnuii on high; "I'rnv let mi live; why slioald you kill So iim!l a bird n I:" "Uli," said th-eagle. -.01 lulls' fall, Kor I um great and you are -malt." Hut while li" nt -, th lui iter came: lb: let his arrow tU "Tyrant !" the eagle sl,,-ii.;et. "you havn No right to inak" me 'lie."' "Ah," said the huii'i-r, "you must fall, Kor I um gi eat an I you ar.-Muail.'' I I'ro n th-' litirmiu. 11 r io i;tn s. The sur .t way to raise pigs is by tho tails. Speaking of anion Is, what, does tho catamount to? The pngiiist i.s tie: 1110 b.-i 11 Shylock. Ho is always seek lug a pound of Ilosh. Although not talkative at all, the ovs ter is a very pleasant companion at din ner. Scientist-, believe it impossible for f nan to have a double. If this is so Lov can a man "no b-side himself ,' Merchant to his clerk I am sorry I cannot let you have your la-t month's salary to-day. but -i:io, its you very wa ll know, tiii'e i money, I will give, you a month's v:e it ion. Hungry tiit-st ; li -w is thU? I or dered :i steak ami a poached egg. 1 sec the egg, but when- is the steak'" Tablf attendant. "Dn's a'l right sail. l)t steak am under do egg."' Il is astonishing how iu.n l: -. en, in dignation an I - 'ti I t-iii j it a '.v. 'iiui; c in pill into two words. II you do not be heve it jii-t list :i while Mm speaks of s llio ijne .she dislikes as "that man," "D 1 y ii have dump sheet-. ' said tho fussy old 111:111 ;it the hole!, securing n room, "No," said th- ib rlv, who want ed to be obliging, "but we call sprinkle 'em for 011 if y. .. .ike 'hem that way." "Conie in, inv poor in in." said a be nevolent lady In .1 ragged tramp, "ami will get you something to rat.'' "Thanky, mum; don't care if I do."' ". suppose," continued tie- lady, .setting 11 a square meal before Mm, "your life Me been lull 1 f trials?" "Vi-, mum, an' t 1 if W'l-t of it wu ', I alius g..t convicted." All l.lcctt iiiil I! ilon. I. ' e ling a ch"His by 1 tin-.d ap p iral u- ha bi 1 ,. ; '. .e I'ai is. Th( current i- n-cl it- ' 1" : I tine Mr t In" chon.s ol an "pe: a con p u.v while the singers ai'- N l.i 1 I '.in 1 lies. Al electrical hato:-., btc: gin a 1 oiispicuou' place, is cuiiti-olle I by th" foot cf till leader i'f the on !, 1 -M a, who has aNo ill front of him a-tc.ai! duplicate, by whicl lie can see whether his I iot is beatlio; cor P ct time. The rlcctrti ai baton does not 1 actually move in space, but it presents the api'i-arauc of -lolag ... There are, in fart, two batoi.-, 10 upyiug d:lT rent n 'sitloU", which 0:1 l" i:ij, lev. lived by 1 the action of cnitr. magnets, present whiti-nndbl.u k fa- s aiti innti ly on th back groun I. A 1 optical ii!usio-i is tlcis pio iuccii ca. t'y 1 ijptvnlcnt to the llioveineiit of 11 s'.'lgle white baton in tiie hands of a leader. It i . said that much gn ati r precision ' obtained by thisdivlc - than w Ir re ll,.- time is beaten for the cIiitiis by a s. ,oir ;, ;.,. v behind the sccn-s. Ilo.iej in M ,nl. "You will le v -r have i-.ea 1 :r.'i':-. in America," -ai 1 an Itab-ui gentleman in the Colonna b hot' I vester lay, "as long asyou throw aw iy the ,lai. a Italy the cleaning of the s'l-'etsis sold to the high' st bidder at 1 nb ie aueii-M-, and the 111 1 11 who go's -in- e i.tiaci tairly crapes the street-, t. , . ; ail t dirl he c in. is th- i' : ik 1: to ,- lai tory, whi-re it is press.- 1 i -1 ! , , bi ikswilicll nr ' then sold f.-i- f;-i t i.iz-ng purposes. You i Americans do no s . in 1.1 know- Mint i-our strei t dii; i- v i '; .h o. J Miiuk if VOII WOllld lldvefisi- .,1 .vouid find .01110 smart man wli ivo.;l I be glad to 'like II ten Vl-ars o-.tr.irl to chilli vcur I 'tieits for nothing. II would got very -ich." -- I'liiia b iphi ; t ' 1 I. A Slrnnge llvpcriiiiciit. King J lines I V . s -ot iaud i- Siiid to aavo ordered an experiment lobe carried Mil which 11111-1 In- regard.' I as one of the strange-.; ever icoud- I. With a view to learn what was the original hu man language, ii- had .lamb woman .edged on the Nie of Inciikeith, in the Krith i f Forth, an I two infants entrust d to ln-r car-'. Old y enough, the result was consider.. I satislaetoiy, for ill iue course it was fmiu-l that they spoke "very go -I lb-brow!" -' lttle Polks. The Mni L n's Prayer. "P:d you ev.-i h- ;ic "The Maiden' Pi.iyor," a.sk'd n trawiing man of an il l in -nhant who had live daughters, "Did I -v.-i ' ) -i bet. I have, with ill tie v 1 i 1 1 i 1 s h an tiialei -e ticket.) c se-.sk... ..... ,. ' , Mi I. i. i; ,ivf.,.r