NOT AS I WILL. Blindfolded and alone I stand, With unknown thresholds on each hand, The darkness deepens as 1 grope, Afraid to fear, afraid to hope; Yet this one thing I learn to know Each day more surely as I go, That doors are opened, wajs are made, Burdens are lifted or are laid, By some great law unseen and still, UnfatliomtHl purpose to fulfil!, 'Not as I will." Blindfolded and alone I wait; Loss seems too hitter, gain too late; . Too heavy burdens in the load, And too few helpers on the road; And joy is WeaJi and grief is st rong. And j cars and days so long, so long! Yet this one thing 1 learn to know Each day more surely as I go, 4 That I am glad the good and ill By changeless law are ordered still 'Not as 1 will." "Not as I will the sound grows sweet Each time my lips the words repeat. "Not as 1 will!" The darkness feels More safe than light when this thought steals Lake whispered voice to calm and bless All unrest and all loneliness. "Not as I will, because the One Who loved us first and best has gone Before us on the road, and still For us must all his lore fulfill, "Not as 1 will." Iklm Hunt Jackson. Mystery of Cecil Dacre. ECIL DACRE was an artist. He was desperately poor, undeniably good looking, and he stood six feet in his stockings. Young Dacre was an Englishman, and he lived with another artist, a young American as poor as himself, just behind the Curch of San Martino, in one of the oldest houses of old Naples. So poor were they that they could hardly ever afford a model, so they used to take it in turns to sit to each other. Cecil Dacre and his friend Orlando P. Jons were both rival artists, but Dacre had an additional talent he was a farceur of the first water. He hadn't been six months in- Naples before he attended before the committee of Monte di Miseri cordia and suggested that they should pay his debts. "Iam poor," he said, "I am persevering, and I am deeply in debt so deeply that I can get no more credit. Pay my debts, give me a little cash to go on' with, and you, gentlemen, will be doing your duty. That is your raison d'etre." I But the committee laughed and bowed Mr. Dacre out, declining to accede to this very modest proposition. On an other occasion Dacre, becoming indig nant at the pertinacious way in which his movements were watched by one of his neighbors, who was accustomed to stare at him from his balcony opposite, drove up to his door late one evening in a street cab. The cabman got down from his box, and a female figure wrapped in a cloak was carried carefully into the house by the "artist and the cabman; the two men reappeared in the street, the artist mysteriously placed his fingers to his lips, paid the cab-driver, and the man drove off. The little drama was well lighted by the solitary gas lamp that stood in front of the artist's lodg ings. The inquisitive neighbor was at his post and -carefully noted all the de tails of the mysterious affair. At noon the. next day four officers, ac companied by the neighbor, presented themselves at Dacre 's room door nnd knocked loudly for admission in the name of the law. Only at the third and very impera tive summons was the door opened by Orlando P. Jones. The supposed crim inal was discovered seated at his little table, on which lay a blood-stained dagger : his face was buried in his hands. ! "Signor Dacre," said the chief of po lice, "I call upon you to surrender, and I demand to search your apartments. This eentleinan." said he. nointincr to ' f r . fy the informer, "detected you last night conveying the body of a dead or insensi ble female into this house.' "The informer, being an Italian, im mediately struck an attitude. . yield," said Dacre in a broken voice; the proofs of my crime you will find in the next room." Two of the agents advanced and seized the supposed murderer by the arms. "I should recognize her at once," cried the informer. "The poor creature wore a dress of bright blue color: I saw the edge of it frpm under the cloak in which she was enveloped. " The bedroom door was firmer nnsn bv the leader of the little partv. In theJ center of the room was a. lay figure in a bright blue dress; it was standing on its head. The police instantly released their prisoner. "Let this be a lesson to you. sir," said Dacre to his too curious victim in a voice of thunder, "when you dare to in trude upon the privacy of gentlemen and men of honor." And then Messrs. Dacre and Jones executed a very ferocious pas de tri omphe. A less sublime but equally ridiculous 1 i "1 1 "TV OKe was perpetrated oy uacre upon an unfortunate old lady who had the mis fortune to dwell upon the second floor of the great house of which the comrades occupied the sky parlors. She was a devotee, her one barm less amusement being the keeping of two immense gold fish in a big glass globe on her balcony. "With diabolical ingenuity Dacre, by means of a piece of string, a bent pin and a small piece of meat, angled for the two finny monsters who formed the joy of the old lady's life, caught them, fried them in egg and bread crumbs, and then restored them to their once happy, and transparent home. In the Cafe Verdi, Cecil Dacre once calmly declared, after a rather hilarious breakfast, that he would cause twenty innocent citizens of Naples to be arrest ed within the hour. The Cafe Verdi is, as we know, situated in the Piazza del Martiri. Dacre went out and purchased a large ball of string; he made a loop in the end of it, and then he took a mean advantage of the urbane noliteness of the Italians. Producing a huge note book, he courteously raised his hat to the first respectable bystander. "Signor," said he, "will you greatly oblige me by holding this piece of string while I take a few measurements? Thank you so much." And then with strides he commenced to pace the piazza. Of ourse a little crowd collected at once. Dacre selected another victim with the same result. "Keep it quite taut, if you please," and he bowed politely. Within five minutes thirty individuals were holding the tightly stretched string, an immense crowd had assembled, Dacre had finished his pacings, his string and the careful notes he had appeared to be making. "Be patient, gentlemen," he said, "I shall not detain you long." Then he disappeared, only to re-enter the Cafe Verdi by the back door to watch the re sult. He had chosen his time with considerable ingenuity, for he knew that the police patrol always arrived on the Piazza del Martiri punctually at noon. It wanted two minutes of the hour. J ust at that time the peace of Naples was much disturbed by political demonstrations, which were severely put down by the authorities. The hour struck. Twenty policemen, headed by a sergeant, appeared upon the scene; of course they proceeded at once to arrest the thirty mysterious conspirators who were still innocently engaged in holding Dacre's string, Dacre and his friends watching the whole scene from the win dows of the Cafe Verdi with delighted merriment. But the master stroke of Dacre's in genuity was the artfully arranged plan by which he obtained feloniously a sum of five pounds five sterling from Mr. Donald MacTaggart, of Leith. Mac Taggart was an ambitions young fellow of small talent, who had recently ar rived in Naples to study art. MacTaggart was well-to-do, excessive ly stingy, preternaturally ugly and pre posterously short. He was one of the "unco guid;" he wouldn't foregather with the other students, his ways were not their ways, and young Mr. Mac Taggart, of Leith, was shunned when he was not made a butt of. MacTaggart had one grievance against Providence upon which he constantly harped, it was his want of stature. It was this weakness of the young Scotch man's that the wily Cecil Dacre deter mined to take advantage of, and at the same time gratify his taste for practical joking. Cecil Dacre was in the want of 5 very badly indeed. He was always in want of 5, but the want at this particu lar time was more than usually urgent. One day the three young men met by accident in the Cafe Verdi. "That American doctor's a wonderful fellow," said Dacre, in a loud voice to his friend, Orlando P. Jones. "I won der whether he is a humbug?" Now MacTaggart was sitting at the table consuming a dish of macaroni with great gusto. "No 1 don t think he's a humbug," said Jones; "they say he really does possess the secret of per manently diminishing or increasing the stature at will. I've noticed people v ho have been to him two or three times, and there was always ah extraordinary difference in their height. It's very marvellous." McTaggart, who had drunk in the the conversation with greedy ear, now joined in with manifest interest. The two young fellows gave him a host of cir cumstancial details. You ought to try him, McTaggart, at any rate," said the crafty Dacre. "Any change in your appearance, my Caledonian Apollo, would be a ben efit." "1 am thinking it would be very ex pensive, and I object to extravagance on principle," said the Scotchman. "Well, you could beat him down; now, at all events you could try," said Dacre. "Without a doot. I'll sleep on it," said McTaggart, and he paid for his breakfast and departed. 1 It took the Scotchman a whole week to make up his frugal mind, and then he screwed up his courage to the stick ing point and informed Dacre that he should visit the American physician the next day. "D'ye ken where he lives. Mr. Dacre?" "Well, he lives in the same house as I do, on the first floor. He's a benevo lent old boy; you're sure to like him. Jones here knows him very well; the Yankees are almost as clannish as the Scotch, yon know. You are sure to find him there at 3," and they parted. No sooner had the unfortunate Mc Taggart turned the corner than Cecil Dacre triumphantly executed a cellar flap breakdown, to the astonishment of the little crowd of Neapolitan bystand ers; then he bowedto bis little audience, kissed his fingers to them, and started off as fast as his legs would carry him to his lodging. The next .day Cecil Dacro obtained the loan of his landlord's first floor for the day, and then he began to busy himself in a very extraordinary manner. He secured the services of the porter's wife and daughter, the black- eyed Pippa; they dusted, they arranged, j and rearranged the big dismal reception 1 room on the first floor. Dacre rushed J out and borrowed a screen and pur chased a small bottle of turpentine; and ; then, in the bathroom, which opened j from a little passage which was built in the corner where he laid the screen, : he laid out at least half a dozen towels. Then he ran over to the costumer's across the street and came back with a fur robe de chambre, a long gray beard, and a close cap of black velvet, and a pair of big green spectacles exactly similar to those worn by the celebrated Dr. Faust in the first act of Gounod's opera. Pippa, her mother, and Dacre worked with a will, and the two women, with many gestures of astonishment from Pippa herself, took their departure, promising that everything should be ready punc tually at 3. Dacre ran up to the rooms of the medical student on the third floor and borrowed several of his largest and most professional looking books, which he placed in a row upon the writing table. Two gruesome looking anatomi cal preparations in spirit he also ob tained irom the Italian Bob Sawyer; with these and a human skull, procured, from the same source, he decorated the mantel piece. Then he put Qn the dress ing gown, the long gray beard, the velvet cap and the spectacles, and he looked a very tremendous specimen of a quack doctor. When the travestiment was complete, he went to the window and waited patiently for young Mr. MacTag gart. He was not kept long in suspense. The great bell of San Giovanni struck three, and punctual to the hour Mac Taggart appeared on the other side of the street. In the meantime Orlando P. Jones on his part had not been idle, for he called upon at least a dozen of MacTaggart's friends and acquaintances, had a short interview with each, and he took his leave with each of the-people he had so honored with a visit, laid his forefinger to the side of his nose and appeared considerably amused. As has been said, the bell of San Giovanni struck three. A rather timid knock sounded -upon the outer door of tho first floor . where Dacre was ly ing in wait. Dacre allowed it to be repeated, then he flung the door open suddenly. There stood MacTaggart. "Have I the honor of addressing the newly-arrived American physician?" "he said. "Enter, my young friend," said he of the gray beard and green spectacles, in a loud but drawling voice. "Take a seat, inquiring stranger," he continued, "and let me hear in what way I can be of use to you. You see before you," he added, "the celebrated old Dr. Jacob Townsend, a physician of world-wide celebrity a man, sir," he went on, "who has devoted a long life, prolonged by his own skill far beyond the ordinary human span, to the amelioration of the condition of the human race." 'I'm afraid I have come to you on a fool's errand," said the patient uneasily. "No man who consults me," said the doctor, "is guilty of an unwise act. I read your thoughts, young man," he continued severely; "my eagle, eye de tects the working of your puny brain. You are discontented with your stature. Say, is it not so?" The patient nodded. "Are you ready to submit to the treat ment, young man? Have you every confidence in me?" I've every confidence, doctor," replied MacTaggart uneasily, "but I heard that your fees were high, and I thought, per haps, as Pm only an art student, you might consent to make a little reduc tion." 'Young man," said the physician in an indignant tone, "do not trifle. The paltry honorarium I exact is but to cover the cost of the balsamic drugs used in the treatment of such cases; they have been procured from the deserts of Cen tral Asia, after the expenditure of much time, blood and treasure, but be assured, young man, that the trifle wrung from your parsimonious clutch will be im mediately distributed by me to the deserving poor." "And you won't take any less?" said MacTaggart, as he stretched out his re luctant hand and deposited five guineas upon the physician's table. "Is the pro cess very painful, doctor?" he said. "There are two means of achieving the object," said the physician, who took no notice of the fee. "The one is pure ly mechanical; it is gradual extension; considerable physical pain has naturally to be endured. The other course, which is equally efficacious and quite painless, is by means of a medicated bath, but no more than four inches increase in height can be obtained." "I shall be perfectly satisfied, doctor, with four inches." "Very good, young man, very good. You know your own business best. Re tire behind that screen, divest yourself of your apparel; in a few moments all will be prepared. So powerful are the effects of the drugs, your clothing, were it exposed to the potent vapors, would be utterly destroyed. Strip, young man," said the doctor emphatically, and he pointed to the screen. Mr. MacTaggart retired behind the screen, and did as he was bid. and the venerable benefactor of the human race disappeared into the bathroom. The first thing that Dacre did was to empty his bottle of turpentine into the bath, and then he turned oh the hot water till the bath was nearly full. "Are yon prepared, young- man t be cried in a loud voice, as he re-entered the reception room. r "Pm quite ready, sir," said Mr. Mac Taggart, from behind the screen. "I can smell the potent odors of the drugs, even here." -. "Don't trifle, boy," cried the Ameri can physician; "take your watch with vou, and proceed to the bath. You will find it very hot, and the odor of the East ern balsams is pungent; but do not let that deter you; enter it as speedily as possible, for the hotter the bath the more rapid is the osseons change. "Re main extended in that bath and perfect ly still, and every five minutes by your watch, and not more frequently on any account, let your head disappear be neath the balsamic film with which the surface of the water is covered. Do not speak, and breathe only through your nose. I will warn youfvheri the process is complete." Mr. MacTaggart entered the bath room, with watch in hand. The odor of the Oriental balsams made him sneeze violently, the water was evidently very hot, and was covered by a thick oleagin ous film. But Mr. MacTaggart had paid his five guineas, and he was deter mined to have his money's worth. After a little time he entered the bath. Every five minutes his head disap peared beneath the steaming, oily sur face. In the meantime Cecil Dacre was not idle. He rang the bell; Pippa and her mother appeared; the one carried a lit tle charcoal brazier and a flat-iron", the other a very small work-bag and a big pair of scissors. They laughed immod erately as they set to work upon the clothes of the young Scotchman. Three inches were cut off from the trousers legs, the sleeves of the coat and of the shirt; Pippa's mother worked with a will with her needles to refashion the extrem ities of the garments, and as she finish ed each, Pippa herself carefully pressed the newly made seems with the hot flat iron. Then the physician dismissed his two assistants, flung open the bathroom door and addressed the bather. "Come forth, young man," he said. "You entered that bath a miserable and puny specimen of humanity; you will leave it in all human probability, a well grown youth, of prepossessing appear ance." Mr. MacTaggart did as he was bid. He dried himself to the best of his ability, but the balmy odors of . the bal sams of the East still clung to his hair. No sooner was he dressed and had emerged from behind the screen than the mock doctor addressed him. "Young man," said he, and his voice" was apparently momentarily choked by emotion, "behold the result of the won drous bath of Bokhara.' There is a con siderable change, I think," he said solemnly. Mr. MacTaggart had evidenly grown out of his clothes;1 his arms and legs pro truded in a portentous manner. "Don't thank me," continued the American physician hurriedly; "don't thank me, but hasten home to bed to sleep of the effects of my potent medica ments." Mr. MacTaggart bowed as gracefully as he could, and left the premises. The very first person he met in the street was his acquaintance, Orlando P. Jones. MacTaggart's appearance was sufficiently striking. His ordinary straight red hair was curly and extreme-' ly odoriferous from the effects of the turpentine. His face and hands were the color of a boiled lobster, and his eyes were bloodshot from the same cause. "Goodness me," said Jones, "I shouldn't have known you. What have you being doing to yourself ?" "Don't ak me," said MacTaggart; "my happiness is too great for words," and his scarlet face was illuminated by a smile of celestial beatitude. Before he reached his own honse he had at least met twenty of 'his acquaint ances. Each one interviewed him with a similar result. But the cup of happiness was rudely dashed from his lips when his extremely i plain and elderly sister, Miss Flora MacTaggart, on her arrival, addressed him in these indignant words: "Eh! Donald, man, is it fou ye are! or simply fatuous ? that ye have been making a Merry Andrew of yerself by cutting doan yer claithes." In vain the brother explained big visit to the doctor. Then the secret came out, and Mr. MacTaggart and his sister left Naples for Rome within the twenty-four hours. Belgratia. "Oh, I'm so glad!" exclaimed Miss Gushington, looking up from the paper; "they are going to appropriate, oh, ever so much money on coast defenses. You remember the last time we went tobog ganing I tore my costume into ribbons by running off the slide." Boston Tran script. , Trapped by lhe Old Ua, J "Mr. Kajordan." v nity into the narloT , P?8 A: man sat waiting. "I'm e Jem?, I 11 Irene is confined to W , ft indisposition rooabv.'' and this evening! And she sat down anil , youth steadily but not unWi1 the presence of this elderlvi I' V mother of his Irene, Bardolpn Kfi J was conscious that he loomed? disadvantage.- Ho was opprJJ? sense of immaturity, obtrusive W 4 unmanageable hands, and yet h? being was pervaded with a xl?- anxiety to please. Jann "I trust," said he, huskilv "that -4-nothing serious." "You are kind," replied, the "By the way Mr. KOjorSan, me for asking the question, but aW eveT removinS a mote from "With rapidly-rising coura29 &ni heart-throb of exultation at thetwL bility that the indisposition of the Irene was one that he might have t? happiness of removing, he exclaimed- "Without presumption, Mrs. Pii I may say that I am. I have J great deal of practice at htUejobs,i that kind and am nearly always LZ. ful. Of late I have tried then? of doing it and have f ound it to oX perfectly. If a cinder or other gnuli particle has lodged in one eye I rab ft other one, and it always brines it S? If Miss Irene"- u out ' 'Thank you, Mr. Kil jordan. For the last day or two I have been troubled with a speck 'of some kind in my left eye. If not too much trouble to vou I will ask you to see if you Wwtit out." And for the next half hour the haples young man rubbed that old lady's off eye and groaned inwardly in wretched ness of spirit. Chicago Tribune Effectively Made Up. I heard a good story the other day of 1 member of the Societe de Precieuse Rid icule, which, during the season, gives fortnightly receptions, upon which 00. carions some sparkling little play for the entertainment of the friends of the club is given. Upon one occasion the plar selected numbered among the dramata persona? a maid of all work of the stvle of the little Marchioness. This role vai assumed by a young lady who hvesin t handsome house in a fashionable quarter of the city, and who had extended invi tations to a number of her friends for t terrapin supper after the play. The cur tain having fallen upon the closing scene the. young lady, without waiting to change her attire, jumped into the car riage and drove rapidly home, leaving the guests to follow more leisurely w& her mother. Arriving at her own door, unmindful of the fact that she was still attired 13 the theatrical maid of all work, in ti ters and smudges, she hastily entered the dining room, to see that everr prep aration for the snpper, which had been given in charge of a fashionable caterer, was complete. Hearing the door open the head waiter turned and for a moment, stood aghast at the apparition thick greeted him, then with a decided man ner he advanced, reopened the door, and catching the young lady by the arm sum marily ejected her from the apartment with the injunction, forcibly uttered, that she at once return to the kitchen, and under no circumstances again dare to put in appearance. Yalued at a High Figure. The Portland Oregonian says. A middle-aged lady, a new-comer, called at real estate agency to inquire abont some land. She was somewhat of an eques trienne, which the agent soon learned, and he tried to effect a sale in this direc tion. After the usual questions alout the gentle proclivities of the animal lor sale, the agent relapsed into deep thought for a moment, as if considering some political issue, and finally said ia a generous breath: "Madame, if yon aw injured in any way by that animal Iw pay you one , yes, I will guarantee w pay you $1,000," and then he marted the figures down in big black letters. "Only a thousand, sir?" exclaim1 - lady. "I don't consider myself a enoj nor one of the Muses, but I reaUv UW I am worth more than S1000. to times some slaves sold for $2,WV J know. Now, considering that it w wr year, couldn't you guarantee to pa. 1-e-e-t-l-e more?" The Boy. Papa had visitors and sent the old to bed. The child disapproval this and had no hesitancy toshoicg When he went up stairs be let.tbe,fa, lor door open. Papa prides himseii his method of disciplining children, called him down again. T "I just want to show you age a boy," he said turning to ors. "There's nothing like gas light way about it to make a boy Slowly and sulkily Hit) w; down. . "What are doors made for, sirr The child looked at turn, -ors, at the door, and said: nsri "To open. 0' course."-W CalL Thb "lifts" of the Hotel 3fcW companies, of which a noxnJjf ' ttf tablished in England. By the under pressure is earned vev . tt vx one 01 mo uj . streets and delivered to ci re fixed rates. After doing tbe i0 VJ quired of it the water is return central stations of the company to be used over again. I