Published by Roanoke Publishing Co. fc,F0R GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH.' W. FLETCHER AU8BOF, EDITOR.. C. V, W. AU8BON, BUSINESS MAHAOEB. VOL.111. PLYMOUTH, 0., FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1892. NO. 42. Ought we not to be profoundly grate ful to Mexico, isks the New York Press, for solving the Mormon ' problem for us by offering inducements to the men of many wives to emigrate to that country? The Civil Service records of the past three years show that out of the number of men applicants examined for Govern nent offices only a little over one-halt passed, Vbije four-fifths of the women applicants passed. . - lieutenant. G. L. Carden says the recently accomplished voyage ' of .- the United States revenue cutter. Morrill ithrough inland waters from Charleston, S. C, to Fernandina, Flo., is of an im portance not easily to be estimated from , fi military point of view. , He thinks it y Remonstrates the ability of a war vessel i-'drawing not? over tea feet of water to ' communicate along 155 miles at least of cne Atlantic coast oetween tor pea o nests and gunboats guarding against a block ade. Lieutenant Carden doesn't say so, jnddstbe New York World, but there brief period, by means of the Chesapeake ana Delaware Canal and other water ways, such communication can be estab lished and maintained inside the bar and breaker lines between the National Cap ital and the ports of the whole South Atlantic coast. . There never was a more hopeful sig than the report of the recent Agricultural Department which makes the aggregate cereal crop for the last year 1,000,000, T)00 bushels bigger than the previous year. The figures for three years past in thousands, 000s omitted, are : I JWoI Btuh. 'BUfh. . J9u. - Production. 1891. 1890. . 18S9. -Corn 3,060,154 1.4S9.970 : : 2,112,832 y ueab. nil, o j 899,23 490,583 623,361 " 73LM8 Oats,;.... 733,391 Total.... 3,410,328 2,412,553 8,354,931 I The cotton crop last year was 8,655,518 bales, or 1,311,792 bales larger than the year before. The production of anthra cite was 5,000,000 tons more than the year before, and of bituminous at least 10,000,000 tons more. " The run of pe troleum was 5,000,000 barrels more in 1891 than 1S90. The output of copper .was 30,000,000 pounds mote; of lead, St9 AAA a . m SV rti a . o,uuu tons more; oi zinc, xu,uuu tons more, and of silver, 4,000,000 ounces more. . With the exception of. pig iron, estimated at 8.976,000 tons in 1891, against 10,307,028 tons in 1890, the en -rtire production of the countiy took a great step forward in 1891. This means Ugher prices sooner or latter. i M. de Variffnv crives in the Baris JRevue des deux Mondes a clear, succinct account of the events of the Chilean war, .which the conflicting reports of news, rpaper correspondents have left vague in most minds, While he blames the con ' duct of Balmaceda, he regards much of " .what has happened as the almost in evitable outcome of the opposition of JSnglisn ana American laeas ana in fluence, which, working as they have worked together in the evolution of the Chilean Republic,had created a condition of things under' which it was impossible for a people so jnaturally vigorous to con-1 tinue. - Chilean parliamentary - institu-' tions are impregnated, according to M. ! de Varigny, wtyh. the monarchical spirit 'of England, from Which country they .were copied. jSut this monarchical sys tem' has for its wn;-crown an autocratic President, whose powers were gi anted in him nndp Amnrican influence, end .whose position' in the' Constitution was copied from th't of' the President of the United ' State.' The two institutons followed in his unconstitutional prac tices the ''deplorable deviations" of all bis predecessors, and' one of the results of the war is likely to be a revision of machinery of Government which may bring fhe powers of the President and the Parliament into a more logical re lation to each other. The Chilean war, in fact, has been, in M. Varigny's read ing of it, a war between the force which made for ; ploser union with the United States and those which mado .for the supremacy j of English influence ; the English forces have won, and with their victory the dreams of the three Americas united against the world loses all chance of realization. The indignation of . Chile, 'he continues,' has been stirred against, the United States, and too deeply for the breach to be easily healed, and the ambition of the Republic will for the future be to maintain its independ ence until it takea, in the southern con tinent, the position of supremacy which (be United State i hold? fa the north. at lrwvrf. " Each leaf, another wakening, sigh , "Sweet sister, it ig day! . . The last night-blooming glory die?, And whereFoa'er a petal lie, Tho east grows warm and gray, "The birJs are still asleep; and jet, Amid the silent throng, Like dusky vapors that beget The dew, dream-winged shades have set ' Tho germs of heavenly sonp." ; John B. Tabb, in Lippincott A HILL COlTNTRr"ll)YL, BIT THOMAS DCKN EKOLtSn. 1TTY M'KISSEM looked at her broth er and sighed, and the Bigh was ac compamea by a glance of admira tion. Hugh M'Kissen was certainly a fine specimen of young mountain manhood. Tall and muscular, with a lithe and sin ewy form, whose graceful proportions even the half-ccat, b&lf-sack, tailed "a huntin g-shirf," Could not disguise; a frank and pleasant expression,' and a voice that, in spite of a rather nasal tone when its owner was excited,was full and musical Hugh was worthy of feminine admiration. He was singularly ignorant of hif"attractions, and, though bold in pv-il, fearing neither man, bear nor catamount in single fight, was timid in the presence of women, bis mother and his sister ex cepted. " The owner, subject to his mother's life-right, of a thousand acres of mountain land, of which one-third was rich "bottom," or level land, with horses in stall, cattle in meadow and steers on the hill-range, he was at seven-and-twenty A bachelor, while his fellows were heads of families by the time they had come to manhood. He loved his mother and sister, who worshiped him, and he was content. Kitty M'Kissen was not his sister, how ever, nor was she his kinswoman. Eigh teen years before, John Markham came there from the East, and bought a little bottom-patch" of sixty acres, and set tled on it with his wife. He built a log cabin, set to work awkwardly to culti--vate a few girdled acres, and tried to ac commodate himself to an unusual - posi tion. Folk around, naturally suspicious of strangers, thought he must have done something wrong to make him leave horccv He brought books, not over a hundred in number, which the neighbors deemed to be a great library. His house was neat, owing to his young wife's taste,. The neighbors said : "It's stuck roun' with thing-a-majigs till it's a plom sight!" - . Markham worked hard, and so did his wife, and, soon after their coming Kitty was born. - She was christened Cath arine .Burnett. Three months after her birth' her mother died, and Mrs. M'Kissen, who had just lost a child of nearly the same age, offered to nurse Kitty an offer thankfully accepted. But John Alarkham caught cold by ex posure, it settled upon has lungs, and in less than a year he died, leaving his little possessions to his child. Kitty thrived and soon became known as a M'Kissen, the circuit-rider '8 baptismal certificate to the contrary notwithstanding. She and Hugh,who'was a nine-year-old boy when she came, had been brought up together. When she was half-grown, Peter M'Kissen was killed by "the fall of a girdled tree, and Kitty became the main stay of the house, for old Mrs. M'Kissen, who was ten years 6eniof to ner hus band, bad been half paralytic for years, and passed her time in hobbling between her bed, the kitchen-table and the ..fire side. . - ' , Frank and good-natured, as well as athletic, Hugh was a popular young man his fellows accepting his lead and young wort en receiving .his attentions courteously.' But he never threw the handkerchief at any particular fair one, treating all with a shy deference. They did nqt . come up to the standing of Kitty, who had inherited some of the re finement of her mother; and who, hav ing read her father's books over and over again, was credited with a vast amount of learning. That kind of knowledge did not interfere with her housewifely qualities, for she was known to be the best cook and baker as well as the best buttcrmaker and neatest housekeeper in the county. Huge measured all other girls by her Procrustean standard. ! Be side, Hugh was not matrimonially in clined. His home was too comfortable, and he was in no hurry to bring a strange woman there. '.;', But Mrs. 31 'Kis6en thought it high time for her wn to marry, and spoke to him about it. ' ' ' . "What's the need, mother?" ho re sponded. "I'm comfortable, and so are you. Why should I bring a strange girl here one that ain't used to us and our ways, upsetting things?" "You needn't do that neither," said his mother. 1 But Hugh was too obtuse to take the hint and went out to salt the cattle. '.But he communed with himself as he went. "I might spark Lucy Campbell," he thought. "She's been East to school, and she's a sort of higa-flyer, but she's pretty. Old Jim Campbell's well off,' and he has only young Jim and Lucy. I dunno. I'll speak to Kitty about it. Aq4 there she is at the cow, now," til Kitty was there with her milk pails, and Hugh broached the Subject At once. She looked Up, blushed a little and then looked down, and listened. "Lucy Campbelll" she Cried. "So, Boss! Why don't the cre'tur keep still? Lucy Campbell's a nice girl; a little sharp-tempered, but you're not; and she never turns a hand to anything around the house; but you're not look ing for a housekeeper. Give down, Boss!" ;- ; ? ' "Well, there's Nancy Stallins. Nancy's peoDle are not so well off as Lucy Camp bell's ; but they do say that Nancy is the most industrious girl in the neghh rd. "Ye?," said Kitty; ; "yes, she's a worker. She never cleans up her dirt, though; and she she chews snuff. You don't like tobacco in that way, do you, Hugh?" - - "M-mphl" ejaculated Hugh. "Well, I dunno what to do. Mother, she's at me to marry, and I declare, except the two, I can't think of a girl I'd like to have, unless well, there ain't one." "You stupid!" said Kitty, pettishlv. "Eh?" ,.V; . "This Boss is the most stupid cow I ever saw. Now, Bull face!" And Kitty stooped ft her pail, and began a fresh milking. "See here," said Hugh: "Did you ever see such an uncertain chap as that Si Doss? ". He's been here four times this week about buyin' a cow, stays around hours at a time, aud ain't made up his mind yet; 'Pears to me he don't know a good thing when be sees it." "There are a good many young men in tho same fix, I allow," said Kitty. 'Si Doss appears to me not to be one of that kind. . He knows what he wants,' I fancy." -. And then, with her filled pail, Kitty moved off to the spring-house. Hugh stood a minute, salt-bag in hand, forgetful ' of his cattle,' when he saw Si Doss riding up and then dis mounting. Si tethered his horse to the pendant limb of a beech tree, and then strode forward. He had the reputation of being the most forward young man in the country; but he had nexy em barrassed air now. "Howdy, Hugh." "Howdy, Si." "Folks all well?" "Yes. Your'n?". "Fus'-rate, thank y.' Our best brood, sow's sort o' limpish. I allow she's been eatin' somethin' afore we brought her outen the woods." "Likely." And-then ' the two stood like ex hausted receiveis. At last Doss broke out;' - ' . : . "I've been allowin to git married." "Yes?" . ' "I'd. -like you to put in a word for me.'v - v - "Me? Who's the girll" "Kitty M'Kissen." "Not our -Kitty!" "Yes. I'm not quite sure whether she favors me or not. I've been aroun' some, but someho -v I ain't got the' nerve to speak out. Couldn't you soun' her an' find out?" Our Kitty ! Why, Si, she's 'a little girl. She's too young." "She's eighteen year old. I hearn Miss M'Kissen say so. You know, though, I'm tol'rable well-to-do, an' don't owe no man a dollar. I love the very ground she walks on." "Well," said Hugh, after a pause, "we'll see about it. Anything new?" . "There just is. There's a fellow down ! to the town a f urriner from the East got up in store clothe an' mighty sassy lookin', an' he's been inquirin' about j John Markham's folks. Sez he's a kin to 'em an 's gwine to come and hunt up Kitty." "No! - What's his name?" "Calvin - Burnett. He's a lawyer where he lives;? . j . "Burnett? Must be kin to Kittys mother. You told him whar she is?" "Yes; and thar he comes now, on Sol Dingess's clayband tnar.'." It was a sprucely dressed stranger who rode up, and, leading bis mare, came to ward them. It was not necessary to tell his kinship, for he "favored" Kitty, as they say in the hills. The same eyes and forehead, but he had a square chin. He explained his business. . "Come into the house, Mr. Burnett,"'! said - Hugh. "Kitty will be back from the spring house, presently." Doss was anxious to learn everything, but as no one asked him to remain,' went off reluct sntly. Presently Kitty came in, and the newcomer introduced himself as her first cousin, the son of her mother's brother. ' "Of course,' said Burnett, "I am very glad to know a near relative, espec ially when she's a pretty girl; but I did not come for that. . I am here on busi ness. - Do you know anything of. your father's history?" " .. "No, sir." "Oh, ; don't 'sir me, Kitty; we are own .cousins. Call me 'Cousin Cal.' Your father ran off with my aunt, having married her against grandfather's com mand. Grandfather disowned her, and was very bitter. But when he died, ho left one-half of his property to father absolutely, and the other half in trust. The naturo of the trust was explained in a sealed paper, not to be opened until after father's death, and to be carried out by his executor. I believe father knew its nature. The trust money in creased under my father's prudent man agement, and that share of the estate amounts to more than what I inherit. It is nearly twice as much. I opened the paper, and the instructions are that I am to pay it over to the heir or heirs of Catherine Markham. Iam satisfied from inquiry, . that you are' tho heir, Kitty, and Iam ready to transfer to you, under tho proper legal form, , nearly ninety thousand dollars. I congratulate you. Kitty. You will be able to live East, as comfortably as possible, on an income sufficient, 1 suppose, for a single, gentle woman." Ninety thousand dollars! The amount dazed Kitty,' and struck the M'Kissens dumb. ! It was a fairy tale, and the young lawyer looked like an, enchanter. HugV was considered rich there, with less than a fifth of tho sum; but ninety thousand dollars 1 At last Kitty asked : ' . "Mr. Burnett Cousin Calvin must I live there to get the money?" ' "No.' " Y6u can' live where you like; but if you want to enjoy life, the East is thej)lace for you. You are your own mistress, or, at least, will be at twenty-one. In the meanwhile, the court here will probably let you name your own guardian and trustee." "Thank you, cousia. I am glad to know you glad to have this unexpected fortune, and would be glad to see a place that I have heard so much of, . But the only kin I ever knew, though not of my blood, are dear to me. This is my only home. I may visit the East, but I could not stay there." . The news of Kitty's wonderful inherit ance soon spread. Rumor increased it by an additional cipher. It was heard of with a thrill of awe and envy. It was said that the dashing "f urriner". was to marry Kitty, and take her away immedi ately; and Josiah Doss was in the gulf of despair. Hugh knew better, so far as Kitty's views went, but he felt a sinking at the heart. Kitty, would stay, but with such a fortune in possession she seemed out of the common sphere. . Burnett, while thelegal forms going on, amused himself by studying this cousin, who was so readily accommodating her self to circumstances and the M'Kissens, especially Hugh. It required no pene tration to see that the latter was in love with Kitty, but seemed not to quite re alize his own feelings; and that Kitty loved Hugh and knew it. "That young man is bright enough in some things, but very stupid in this," said the lawyer to himself. 1 'Til play the good genius,- for tho fun of ' the thing." . ' ' The court at Kitty's instance, appointed Hugh' M'Kissen her guardian and trus tee, to the scandal of the young folk, who thought . she should have chosen some older man. Hugh and Burnett had divers conferences, before affairs were over. At one of these the lawyer said: V "What a very pretty girj Cousin Kitty is! Don't you think so Mr. M'Kissen?" . X "Ye-es." f "She'll make a figure when she gets into society, too. She is one of the rough gems that take to polish kindly." ",M-m." , I'The fact is, I admire her the more the more I know her. -1 must try and persuade her to leave the mountains. " "Kitty M'Kissen " isn't one of that kind," said Hugh. "You heard her say that she would stay here, and she is the one to keep her word." . ' "I beg your pardon, Mr. M Ktssen, said Burnett. "Her proper name is Catherine Markham, and she is not like ly to change it in this place. No offense to you; but the name is a good one, and sounds well; but it would sound better if it were changed to Bur nett, in my judgment." And then Burnett walked off, to take a stroll through the bills, leaving Hugh confused and indignant. "Confound his impudence I", cried Hugh. "Mrs. Burnett! He's after Kitty's money. Kitty marry him !" - Hugh walked out to cool himself and met Kitty coming .' from the spring- house; lor Kitty was born to love cows and chickens, and her money had not changed her ways. She nodded. Hugh kept at her side, and as she reached the porch he said : "I L want to nave a tats witn you, Kitty." . .-. . "All right. Sit down ' on the porch, then, and I'll listen." "Kitty I the fact is "" "Yes?" : - "The fact is You don't care for Burnett do you?" . ... . "Care for him? Of course I do. He brought me good fortune; he's my own cousin, you know, and he's a very nice man; too." k. - "Are you going to marry with him?" , - "What a question! I suppose - you can ask it ' as you're .my guardian. I don't see how I couM; he's not a Mor mora, and he has a wifo already." "Ob, Kitty, you know I " ' ? "Well, I don't know,:ti!l I know what it is I know." "Kitty, I love you." v "Of course you do; we were brought up together." , - " ' "It's not that, Kitty; but why can't we marry?"' : f "IVU iieicI WUSU UIO, AiUU. ; Hugh asked then witn a vengeance. He poured out his feeling's fn a flood of words. Kitty didn't interrupt him. She liked it. ' But when he paused for sheer want of breath, she quietly .put her hand in his, and said: " ' .', "You ought to have known that I loved you, Hugh." When Burnett came back he divined the state of affairs at once, v 'Mr. M'Kissen," he said, dryly, "I cresuice IV.zs urnett will haje the ap- proval of her guardian in this matter." Kitty did go to the East, but it was as Kitty M'Kissen, and wi(h her husband. After their return there was a house put up on the M'Kissen place which was the wonder of the neighborhood, bcth of itself and furnishings. "Such doings!" said Nancy Stallins to a gossip. "You know the house, built outer bricks and rocks a sorter cross atwix' a co't-house an' a meetin' house; an enough rooms in it for a tavern. But I was inside ; six wagon loads o' things was put in ; the floors are kivered all over. Yes!" continued Nancy, with the : bitterest climax, "kivered with kiverlids!' The Ledger. SELECT SIFTINGS. Oregon has a fifteen pound turnip, vv The latest location for a watch is in a door handle. . The largest quadruped of California is the grizzly bear. A Texas man has three buttons worn by Lord Corn wallis at Yorktown, Ya. Willam Hanks, of Los Oros, New Mexico, has three well defined tongues. There are 208 students from North America at the Berlin (Germany) Univer-. sity. A Texan's pony found the watch his master had lost and brought it to him in his mouth. ' A novel Yiking ship, supposed to be one thousand years old, was unearthed recently from a mound in Sweden, An Oil City (Penn.) snake's eyes, on being photographed, showed an exact reproduction of the face of the farmer who had killed it. A Calif ornian is going to start an ele phant ranch. He intends to train the elephants to pick oranges and hire them out to orange growers. ' The flat pieces of iron shaped like the letter S which are frequently seen on the is m -t -i a? e At wans ox oia oncic Dunamgs is me an cient symbol of the sun. O The savant Tremer has asserted his be lief that the celebrated library pf Ivan the Terrible was not destroyed in the burning of Moscow, Russia. The women in Bridge ton, Penn., have formally petitioned the - Mayor for per mission to carry red pepper with them when they go out after dark. The month of February, 1886, . was known among the lovers of the rare and curious in nature as the "moonless month" from the fact of it having no full moon.' This can only occur eight times in a century. The finest white pearls are from India, the Persian Gulf and Panama; the finest black and gray pearls from the coast of Lower California. Beautiful pink and red pearls are often secreted by the com mon creek mussels. :''-"..-.-.', The deepest trustworthy sea-sounding ever made was 2G,850 feet, this ; depth being found twenty-three miles due north of New Guinea. Deeper soundings have been reported, but geographers do not consider them reliable. - Albinus, one who contended with Sev erus for the . Roman Empire, we the greatest glutton of antiquity. ; For one breakfast he ate 500 figs, 100 peaches, ten melons, twenty bunches of grapes,; 100 small birds and 400 oysters. Parting the Hair In tho Middle. The number of men who part their hair in the middle i3 increasing every day. The fashion has grown in the mat ter of dressing hair so rapidly that it would not be out of the way to say that fully one-half the men who formerly de rided this once much-condemned fashion are gradually getting around to it. "They begin," said a well known bar ber yesterday, "by parting the hair a little higher up on the head by degrees, .until they finally get it exactly , in the centre. I remember very well when it was a very rare thing for a man to part his hair directly over his nose, but all of the contempt' and fun which such a proceeding evoked are now replaced by indifference as far as the public is con cerned. Twenty years ago a politician who parted his hair in the middlo courted disaster at the polls. Now no end of statesmen, prominent or other wise, wear their hair in a dandified fash ion and it does not even call for a re mark. The only thing that the rank and file strenuously and positively object to is a masculine bang. They won't have that at any price." National Bar ber. ' i 1 Manufacture of Dyestuffs. Few instances of modern industrial growth in any one specialty are more surprising than that of the manufacture of artificial dyestuixs. in j cngiana, France, Germany' and some other countries, but especially in Germany, this industry has attained such prodigidus growth that in some cases the extensive works resemble a small town or village. This appears from the published statistics that one of these plants that of the Farowerke, at Hoechst-on-Nain, where are employed some 1900 workmen, fifty foremen, nine engineers, besides eighty six clerks and fitty-seven chemists. The works cover an area of 726,000 square yards, and from one end of the works to the other the distance is 3300 feet. Be sides a great Variety of dyestuffs, the acids employed in their production are also manufactured amounting in one year to 23,108,000 kilegrams of sulphuric acid, 12,800,000 of other acids, and 3,624,000 of coal-tar products, New York Telegram, TEACHING BIRDS TO SMG JDrLA-RGns-C nrATTJRE'3 GIFT TO THE FEATHERED FOLK. - Canaries May be Taaght a Variety of Notes Best Methods of Teaching Them to Sing. ' : To think of music lessens for a bird seems rather odd, for song is nature's gift to the feathered folk. Undoubt edly, says Olive Thome Miller in ' the New York Recorder, a bird hatched in solitude, and never allowed to hear the voices of , his kind, would express his pmntinn in unmfi unrt fit musir.al fnahfnn. ' But, as a matter of fact, many,' perhaps all, birds are taught to sing. I have my self beard several birds at what I believe to be their singing lessons, notably the American robin and the whip-poor-will. In both these cases the old bird sang hii full song and waited while the little one with more or -less success imitated it. Over and over the parent repeated the notes and the infant tried . to copy them. : V -' These are the native teachers, bul birds destined to the life of parlor mu sicians, as the bullfinch and some others, have human teachers, when their ' music lessons are as regular and their instruc tors as painstaking as the professors who teach our daughters. , ; The canary, our most familiar house companion, is usually imitative and in telligent, and a wonderful capacity for song dwells within his tiny frame. I may say hers also, for his pretty little mate can sing, though not everyone knows this. There are three distinct ways in which a bird may receive a musical education.' He may be taught to sing our lunes, opera airs or negro melodies, as is gener- -ally done with the bullfinch; or, second, he may be instructed in the notes of another bird, as a lark or a rob bin; or, thirdly, his capacity may, be developed, his powers o' voice cultivated and his song remain, the canary song through all. A seed diet gives the muscles compact cess, therefore, according to this system, seeds shdu! Tnot be the principal diet until he "g oates," but a soft food of hard-boiled egg grated with cracker or bread, and boiled in . milk to the - con sistency of stiff paste. ', Some, seed may be added, and this may be varied by bread and crackers in milk, and grated egg, or a little , lean beef chopped very fine. He should have variety of food . and plenty of it, for he is growing and must be well nourished. : It is good also to let him fly about, for this helps to ex pand the chest. Now to teach him. If he is to sing . "Annie Laurie or "The Last Rose of Summer," he must bo placed in a quief room, with the cage covered. Then a few notes of the chosen air should be whistled, or played on some instrument, flute, bird organ or piano. They must be played slowly and distinctly, in cor rect; time, and over and over till tho bird begins to try it himself. He must sot see the teacher, nor hear the least noise to distract his attention from the notes so constantly repeated. The in- . structor may have to spend hours, it may be twelve, before the bird learns bis lesson, but be must persist in reiterating: those few notes and no others till tho : pupil repeats tbem. When he sings his notes he should be rewarded with some thing he likes, for one a bit of food, for another a little praise. . , No matter how well the bird has learned his artificial song, he will forcret it the first time he moults, unless it ia carefully repeated to him every day while moulting. ( . . ' If the bird's owner wishes her canary to sing like a lark or robin, she must put him under native instruction. He is to be placed, with his cage covered closely, in a room alone with his teacher, whose cage is in a light,' sunny window, .The lark sings for bis own pleasure, and the canary, in his darkened cage, forced to pay attention to it, learns to imitate it. One man, who kept a large number of canaries, tells of having one of them trained by a wild English robin. Hei cage for it was a female, a year old hung alone near the window, outside which was the robin's favorite singing perch. The cage was uncovered, for ho never thought of training her, and for weeks she uttered no sound, but listened . and looked at the singing bird, and one day she surprised her master by giving the robin song perfectly. Treated in the way described, a canary will learn to imitate almost any bird song. . The third method, and the most natu ral, is to have the young bird trained by a fine singer of his own family a can ary and all that is needed to do this is to keep the young one during the learn ing period in the room with the fine singer alone, when he : will follow his copy so far as his powers allow. The things to remember are that he should not be disturbed by other sounds, especially other singing, and that be learns more quickly if his cage is cov ered, so that his attention may not bo distracted by seeing anything. One caution should be heeded How ever annoying or untimely a bird's' son5 may be he should never be stopped by violence, throwing something at him, scolding or shaking the cage. These little creatures are exceedingly sensitive, and they are by terror sometimes thrown into an epileptic fit, and ' occasionally killed. If too noisy, his cage should 1x3 quickly covered, while a kind word is spoken to sweeten the imprisonment ia darkness which he must suffer that his mistress may talk, ' , '