hope. Ab, me! what battles I Lave fought! I would I knew the rune that lays The swarming shades of weary days, That take the lonely house of thought! A restless rabble unsubdued; A wild and haggard multidude; Distorted shapes that spring from tears, And torments bora of wedded fears. Sometimes amid the changing rout, A rainbowed figure glides about, And from her brightness, like the day, The whimpling shadows slink away. I know that lyre of seven strings, The seven colors of her wings; The seven blossoms of her crown There violets twine for amethyst; Small lilies white as silkweed down, Those myrtle sprays her locks have kissed, And pansies that are beryl-blue, And varied roses rich of hue, With iridescent dewy eyes Of bud3 that bloom in Paradise. Come often, thou eternal child! Now string thy lyre and sing to me. Thy voice ecstatic, fresh and wild, Enthralls each dark-browed fantasy. Beyond the walls sho bids me peer To see a future dim and dear; Sweet faces shining through the mist Like children waiting to be kissed. A lovely land that knows not pain, Atlantis land beyond life's main, Where we who love may love again; Ah; me! is this beyond the plan Of God's beneficence to man ? Daxske Dajtdeiege. A DUEL BETWEEN HORSES. N 1851, when I saw the Rio Pecos Riv er, which is the right-hand branch of the Rio Grande, the Pecos plains were a favorite grazing ground for vast herds of wild horses. For years later there were plenty of wild po nies on the western plains, but m the days of which I write there were herds of good, big horses, some of them stand ing seventeen hands high and weighing 1,300 or 1,400 pounds. I went into New Mexico with a Government surveying party, which was of semi-military char acter. A survey of that portion of the Rio Pecos lying in New Mexico was to be made, and there was to be a military post located between Pope's Wells and the Benita River. The country ..between was a plain 100 miles long by 200 broad, with many small streams and rich feed ing spots. The herds of horses had been seldom disturbed by white hunters, and whenever the . Indians wanted a supply they selected the ponies in preference, believing that they were the soonest broken and would stand the hardest rid ing. We were well into the plains before we saw any horses, and the first herd we saw came very near bringing about a calami ty. We wrere encamped in a bend of the Pecos, and the surveyors and guards had just come in for dinner. There was a truce between the whites and the Indians of that date, but our party was a strong one, and the surveyors never went out without protection, A truce meant that the redskins would not kill if the other party was the stronger. We had two ambulances, three or four wagons, and from seventy to eighty horses. These last were staked out on the rich feeding ground. With no more warning than that we felt a trembling of the earth-and heard a great clatter, a drove of wild horses numbering at least five hundred came charging around a heavily wooded point directly at our camp. The stream in front of our camp was about was two feet deep and ran over a bed of gravel, and the horses .were probably in the habit of coming here to drink. The herd was led by a sorrel stallion of magnificent look and limb, and was going at such a pace that the leaders were amongour animals before a man ; of us moved. Nothing will rattle a domestic horse like the near presence of his wild brother. A stampede of buffalos simply terrifies him, and in his terror he will act like a fool. The wild horse excites and makes him forget for the moment that he is man's slave, and he will do his very best to throw off the yoke of servitude and join the herd. It was well we were all together. Every man rushed for the horses, yelling and shouting to drive the intruders away, but when they went two of our mules and a horse went with them. The horse was a five-year-old stallion, worth at least $500, and his, flight created in stant dismay in the camp. The mules would not be allowed to "chum" with the herd anyhow, and could be picked up after they had tried their legs a little, but the horse might never be seen again. A score of us mounted in hot haste and set off to recapture him. The herd had gone due west, in which direction a rise of ground hid them after a short run. As we reached this rise, every man of us checked his horse. Be low us was an almost circular valley about half a mile across, and in this val ley the herd had come to a halt. It seemed that the presence of our .horse had aroused the ire of the sorrel leader of the herd, and that the question of championship had come up to be settled at once. The two stallions were between us and the herd, and were already skir mishing. Every one of the horses had his head toward the pair, and was an in terested spectator. At any other time our presence would have put them to flight, but under the circumstances they gave us no attention. Now occurred a combat the like of -which few men have ever witnessed. The horses were pretty evenly matched for size. Our champion had an advan- Mm ',11 StCTil Eg tage in being shod, but to offset this the sorrel was quicker. Their move ments showed the broad disparity be tween wild and domestic life. Our horse was agile and smart, as the terms go, but the sorrel had the suppleness of a panther. As boxers feint for an opening, so these horses skirmished for an advantage. They approached until their noses almost met, and then reared up with shrill neighs, struck at each other, and came down to wheel and kick. The iron shoes of" our horse hit nothing but air, but we heard the double thud of the sorrel's hind feet as he sent them home. They ran off to wheel and: come together again and re- Slim peat the same tactics, and again our horse got the worst of it. He was a headstrong, high strung beast, and his temper was now up. When he wheeled the third time he came back with a rush, screaming out in his anger. The sorrel turned end for end like a flash to use his heels, but our champion dodged the kicks and seized him by the shonlder with his teeth. There was a terrific struggle before the hold was broken, and then they backed into each other, and kicked with all fury for a few sec onds. Every hoof hit something solid, but the iron shoes of our horse scored a point in his favor. When they separ ate we could see that the sorrel had been badly used, especially about the legs. When the horses wheeled for the third time both were bent on mischief. As they came together they reared up like dogs and struck at each other, and for five . minutes they were scarcely off their hind feet. Some hard blows were exchanged, and our horse had the best of the round; Indeed, when the sorrel wheeled and. ran away he had his head down and he seemed to acknowledge defeat. He ran off about twenty rods before wheeling, and as he stood for a moment I looked at him through a field glass which one of the men handed me. His ears lay flat, his eyes looked bloodshot, and there was bloody foam on his lips. He had been severly handled, but was by no means defeated. Indeed, he had run away for the moment to adopt new tactics. When he moved up again he was the picture of ferocity. He came at full speed, reared, and struck right and left, and the second blow knocked our horse flat on the ground. It was a knock-out blow. The victor stood over him for a moment, watching for a movement, but as none was made he joined the herd, and all went off at a gallop. It was five minutes before our horse staggered to his feet, and he wanted no more fighting. He had three bad bites on the shoulders, and his legs were skinned in a dozen places, and it was a week before he got his spirit back. Two or three times during the next ten days I saw lone wild horses, and one of the old hunters with us was asked for an explanation. He said they were "rogues" stallions which had been driven from the herd in disgrace and that they were always considered ugly and dangerous. Ho had known of their attacking a single horseman, but the presence of a large party like ours would of course' frighten them off. Two days after this explanation we were strung out for three miles along the river, on the march and survey. Something was lost by an officer, and one of the troop ers was sent back to recover it. Ten minutes later the article supposed to be lost was found in one of the ambulances, and I was sent back to notify the troop er. He had galloped back to camp, a distance of two miles, and was searching around on foot when I arrived in sight. I was about to fire a shot to attract his attention, when from the cottonwood grove beyond the camp a horse came charging out. He was a "rogue," and bent on mischief. The soldier's horso was grazing, and the soldier had his eyes on the ground, and I was so aston ished by the sudden charge ot the rogue that I made no move to stop him or to warn the trooper. Indeed, a warning could have hardly reached him in time. His back was to the approaching horse, and the rogue seized him in his teeth by a hold between the shoulders and dragged him twenty rods before flinging him to one side. Then he started for the cavalry horse, which stood with head up facing him, and I got out my revolver and spurred forward. I was yet a quarter of a mile away when the rogue reached his second vic tim. He ran at full speed, with his ears back and lips parted to show his teeth, and the sight was too much for the do mestic animal. He was on the point of turning to flv when the other collided with him. It was as if a locomotive had struck him. He went down in a heap and rolled over and over four or five times before he brought up, while the rogue took a half circle to bear down upon the trooper again. The man was on his feet" and limping off; but he would have been 'a goner had I been further away. I rode across the rogue's path and opened fire on him, and after shaking his head in an ugly way he galloped into the grove and disappeared. The trooper's horse did not seem to have suffered any by the shock, but soon after noon lay down and died. The man was actually crying when I rode up to him, although he had taken a hand in several Indian fights and was reputed a brave fellow. The danger had come up on him so suddenlv as to overcome his nerves. The horse's teeth had not bro ken the skin through his thick clothing, and he did not have a bruise to show, but such was the sudden shock that he was on the sick list for two weeks. We were within two days ride on the Bonita, and had been in camp two or three days, when one of the hunters rode in just before dark with some game and announced that a herd of at least 1,500 wild horses were grazing about three miles to the east, of in. This was n tbo opposite side of the Pecos, which jast here spread out over a roc ay leago, unci was 200 feet wide and about a foot deep. Below our camp was an bid grove .with many dead trees in it. It was there we got our wood. In all other directions the ground was open. We had about twelve tents in camp,aside from the wag ons and ambulances. The best feeding .ground was on the west of the camp, and all the animals were staked out there. Outside of the bunch of animals was a guard of two soldiers, and two more were between the animals and the wagons. There was no danger appre hended from the Indians, and the guard was set to keep prowling wolves out of camp and to assist any horse which might get tangled in his lariat. It had been a hot day, with "thunder heads" showing in the sky, but when the sun went down the sky wis perfectly clear and all signs pointed to a quiet night. It was just midnight when the sharp est flash of lightning lever saw, folio wed by such a crash of thunder as made the earth groan, tumbled every sleeper in camp out of his blankets. I say the sharpest flash I ever saw, for I was awake in time to see most of it. It was so fierce that it seemed to burn our eyelids. I was hardly on my feet before there came another flash, followed by another roar. I knew it was going to rain great guns, and I jumped into trousers and boots, and grabbed up the rest of my clothes and made for a wagon only a few feet away. The two wagons were . close to each other, but the forward ends pulled away from each other so that the vehicles formed a V. While the space between the off hind wheel of one and the nigh hind wheel of the other was not over a foot, the space between the tongues was six or eight feet. The sky was black as I rushed out of the tent, and all the camp fires had burned low. I flung my clothes into one of the wag ons, and then hurried back and got my weapons and some other articles, and during this time the heavens seemed aflame and the earth fairly rocked. Men were shouting, horses neighing, and the din was awful, but as 1 reached the wagon the second time there came a sound to drown all others. It was a steady roar like the rush of great waves, and it grew louder all the time. I could not understand it for two or three min utes. The noise came from the west, and I stood upon the wagon so that I could overlook the tents. A flash of lightning was followed by a moment of pitch darkness, and then came a long, tremulous flash, lasting three or four seconds. By its light I caught sight of the herd of wild horses bearing down upon us in a mad mob, and just as the lightning ceased they entered the stream. The splash of the waters had the sound of breakers, and though I shouted a warning at the top of my voice no one could have heard me twenty feet away. Next moment that terror-stricken herd was in camp, while the clouds opened the rain came down in torrents. I scrambled back into the wagon, and what I saw during the next ten minutes can never be forgotten. The frightened horses leaped over the tents, or, ran against them, fell over guy ropes, bump ed against the wagons, and made clean leaps over the ambulances, and all the time each one kept up -a wild neighing. I heard our own animals plunging and rearing and neighing, but knew that we were helpless to prevent a stampede. As the first of the herd got through our camp to the . wagons, two of them entered the V-shaped space and others kept them crowded in there. The lightning was flashing and the thunder roaring again, and the poor beasts were appalled at the situation. There were four or five lassoes and a dozen spare lariats in my wagon, and when I saw that the entrapped horses were making, no move to get out I picked up a noosed' rope, lifted the side caver of the wagon, and had the noose over the head of one in three seconds. . The one behind him tried to turn when I sought to noose him, but hit his heels against something and twisted back toward me until my hand touched his nose as I slipped the noose over. Then I made the other ends fast, got out the lassoes, and, stand ing on the front of the wagon, I noosed three horses inside of nve minutes. It was no trick at all, for they were pressed jjjjlj right up to the wagon by the weight of those behind, and the awful war of the elements tamed them. - The herd was ten minutes wortmg through the camp, and as they cleared it they took away every horse and mule that we had. Every tent was prostrated, much of our provisions and ammunition destroyed, and one ambulance smashed to pieces. One man was killed and three were injured by the rush of horses. As an offset a waggoner had lassoed two, I had five, and two more had hobbled themselves with tent ropes. In the course of a day we got all our animals back but one old mule, and managed to repair damages. Our captives were the finest wild horses ever seen on the plains. Mv lot included three stallions, and I sold one of them right there witii tuo noose around his neck for 200. The others I kept until our return to Texas, taming theni a little every day, and then got 1,000 for the four. The span of stallions went to St. Louis after a bit, and one of them proved himself the fast est trotter of that decade. THE LIME-KILN CLUB. Brother Gardner Send a Man on a Mission. From the Detroit Free Press. When the meeting had been called to order Brother Gardner requested Whale bone Howker to come forward to the desk, and when he had him there he continued: . "Brudder Howker, I ar gwine to send you to Toronto on a mission consarnin de welfar' of dis club. Beio you go I want to speak a few furder words to you." "Yes, 6ah." "In gwine among strangers doan be so dignified dat people will emagine you own half of Detroit, an'yit on de odder hand doan' be so free an easy dat any one will dare poke you in the ribs. Seek fur de happy medium. "Doan' be too fond of talk. De less you say de mo' you will be credited wid knowin'. "Many a man has broken his leg on de sidewalk oekase he was ashamed to take a safe path in de middle of de road. "Treat ebery man like a gentleman. De cost is a mere trifle, an' tickles deir wanity. t . "Keep cl'arof argyment. If a stranger wants to bet on his game turn from him in silent contempt. If de kayrs run off de track trus' in de Eawd. "Be keerful of yer manners at table. Our likin' fur a man kin be killed as dead as a dooh-nail by de way he eats. "De use of cuss-words ar' to be de plored. A man wid a clean mouf will be respected, eben among rascals. If you fall ober a wheel -barrer or saw your neck on a clothes line, devote five min its to expressin' your f eelins. Den stop short off. "Doan' be ashamed to carry yer money in yer shoe.. Many a member of Con gress has come to grief by prancin' around wid his wallet in his pocket. "If you meet a man who says he doan' believe in de f ucher state doan' waste yer breaf to argify de matter. He may be a pusson whom tie Lawd created widout a soul, jist as an experiment." Lee Gong at the Bar. Lee Gong is an illiterate Chinese, but he heartily upholds the traditions of his race. He was before Judge Hornblower yesterday, charged with carrying a con cealed weapon. x "What's your plea, Gong?" asked the clerk. "Me got five dolls, no mole," answered the Mongol, at the same time holding out the money. "No, no, John, this isn't a five dollar court; proceed with tue case," said the Court. ' An officer took the stand and said that he suspected the Chinese had a weapon in his possession, and he went to take it away from him, but the man ran away. The officer followed and arrested him, but found nothing on him. . He after wards found the weapon among " the blankets on Gong's bed. At this point Lee Gong became some what excited, advanced to the bench, and held up his hands and cried: "No guilty; me no sauvee." "What! You plead not guilty after offering me $5? This is disgraceful, sir. You had better take care and not fool me," said the Judge very sternly. "The pistol was not found concealed on his person, your honor," said the prosecuting attorney, "and if he pleads not guilty we have nothing else to do but let him go and lose the 5." This was what was ultimately done, the door was opened and Lee Gong de parted with just a faint smile on his placid countenance. San Francisco Examiner. - The Covr. f 'Does your cow cringe and curl, " asks the New England Farmer, "and appear nervous and fidgety when you sit down to milk her?" Well,; not much she doesn't?' She isn't that kind of a cow. She isn't one of your shy, timid, bashful cows. She just fixes her eyes on vacan cy with a glare that will raise a blister on an oak knot, sticks her tail straight up in the air, stiff as a poker, plants three feet firmly on the ground, and then feels around with the other for the milk-pail, milk-stool, milk maid; finds them; fires them np somewhere into the blue empy rean, and remarking "Ha, ha!" amid the shouting jumps over a six-rail fence and tramples down an acre of young garden. Don't talk about cringing and curling to a cow that has to be milked with a pi pe ine and a pumping station. BurdetU, In order to cure whooping cough in Warwickshire village, Eng., they cut a piece of hair from the nape of the child's neck, chop it very fine, and spread ft on a piece of bread and give it to a dog. CATCHING a PiG Valuable Points From one v-u Performed the Fo;,0llM Amii mere are many things that look coniparativelvej '4' a mai demonstrates calls forV most serious efforts. We ha t5i labored under the impression Vtl pound pig could be grabbed bv t? VA feg and carried off with ease by a man of ordinarv sizo crude idea, however, has loos 3 grip on us during the la&t 'S ? Last Thursday we amble,! ut J Club getting on dec k for a striS reached for his hindW JuTth' had to take a step we had nntirS him to make and the leg was not t? anymore. Several more rearheV made, but they all fell short, and whs the most surprising p:lrt of it pig, which was so absorUsl in its V incr that he never Wl-o.! .... S happened to move just at the riht?3 to be missed. While recardb ;t coincidence (for the animal ail ,.1 even know we were there, we sic1 so quietly,) it was one of those annnt? coincidences that is not easy to f or. If we were writing a treatise on incidence we should give this a pro- nent place. Presently we pot t'e mal in a corner and, in order to he sV fell down on it bodily. Again one"! those infernal chance movements tick place. The pig toot two steps to m&l a potatoe, and we fell flat on the Z where the pig had been. Then h looked round for the first time, and, n ceiving ns lying there, grunted his tonishment and trotted away. He was so astonished at seeing a iua lying there on his stomach, smttzs gravel out of his mouth, that he 2 off and stuck his head in a barrel to cit his brain a rest. Then we slid np qj. ly and by a finely calculated crypto, gramus movement snatched him It &e hind leg. This was probably caused the barrel to rise up snddalj and hit us on the nose. The wrestli match seemed to begin at this pS First we got a collar-and-elbow hold ct the barrel and stood it on its hesi Then the pig got a grapevine lock uj threw us over the barrel. Then we got a Cornish grip on the animal and thxi him, and were in. turn downed by t barrel. Then we got a half Kelsoa, GrsBCO-Koman lock on -the pig's nfck, but it got out with a half turn and m ersault and grabbed us by the mi d the trousers. Claim of foul cUsaIIot by female referee on the front steps, ca the grounds that the pig's tail had also been grabbed in the turn. Then the pig, with a new stylo of wrestling, her tofore unknown to us, turned ut somersault. If a pig blindfolded bj i barrel could play this sort of gas4,i occured to us that there was no tellinc what he might not do with his ha) loose. This idea, and the feeling (Lit he might put his head ojit of the bzxl or the barrel-head out, or get ns out d our head, had a most de moralizing eject Suddenly, by a coup de vvuk act, e stood the barrel on end, with he pig's hindquarters in the air, and thouglt that we had the match won; but the animal wiggled down in the barrel, and as we lowered it on its side to prevent his weight annoying him any fortheiLe made an extraordinary movement He smashed out the barrel-hoad, and, as a had him by the leg, draped us afur him into the barrel. When W go, to prevent the nails in the barrel from tearing our new clothes, we fouaJ ourselves in the barrel and the pig in field about half a mile from the hou. A woman who had been sitting on the steps to act as a referee, gave the match to the pig: A Few Statist A recent speaker says that the negrx in this country have multiplied times in a century. - As they have 000,000 now, in 1980 they will amoK to 192,000,000. If they maintain same relative increase they will. 1"? whites in 10 years by birth and mi gration have increased 30 per cent this rate there will be 800,000,000 and over 200,000,000 negroes-m 1 e billion in the United States m Who believes either of these statrtae By that method one can prove that tw Methodist Episcopal Church vJl g have more communicants than the vo will contain people. Last year it 5 per cent. net... This rate wflldosw its membership every 10urtf'f'rin Hence it 1902 it will have 4,ii00,W. 1916, 8,000,000, in 1930, IC,.'1?. 1934, 32,000,000 in 19SS, ;;; in7(ip mo rvnn aaa tn n0Uiu everv 14- -vAiir? in the vea? less than 200 vears from the p: date, there will be 32,708,000, members of the Methodist EP: Church in the United States Toil on, then, brethren. -Do not j fact that, according to the Wo1"-! U the . speaker quoted above, t"",.- only 6,400,000,000 negroes andl.C 000,000 whites-in all 19,,-', of people in the United Stat . time disturb you. Who cares deficit of 3,168,000.000? Great is tics. Of course every denomicu;wt deluding itself. They think that are increasing, but as'we aregois- elude the whole population, and thousand millions more, they j jf to exist! The only trouble i 4 some of them continue to & . r3 present; the multiplication ucftr& wipe us out in the same way. Advocate. ' Cornelius (forgetting fJZr will be a sister to me! ASIOV this afternoon, a box at the 0 j night,, supper at Delmonico s, cab home! A sister to me? .jjtv what kind of a fool human be"1 take a brother to be? - .1 v