,0OD BY, OLD TKAB, GOOD-BY. be'.U ring slow, in muffled lone, rhilliiif wind rnakettadder tnoan; fluwrn niv dead and all mutt die, (jo.nl-by, idd year, good-by. t i.il.inn iin-umi nin coldly now, ' '.in winter wpiwilli ice-crowned brow, l'2r fumiiKT it irud and you mutt dip, Kir fl tiood-bve, old yew, good-by. you were young, bul now you're old, B'1 y-uth can Leer bo bought wilb gold; tL , Iir youth it a.Mil all youth must die, Ml" or? f liiKKl i'V,i.Mear, goou-oy. ,,' 9r glory rami', your giury gur, ,,l.vfl glory fuilra ti..ie breuthet upon, "tt , it -.,,, Imir mui nriilll ihiill tumlv die. If ti 1 . J, , .. , - . ikKxl-o.i , olil year, gooa-oy. St Vu brougUl ut many glittering Joyt i Tout cloyed and broke like childnm's tnyt. "t'Hir jovt tou bave killed, now you r" liood-bv." old year, rood-by. roust die, ion. Yob brought ut much of galling grie if, Hut, like our joyt, ita tniart wat brief, ,:, If Joy must ave die, then grief mutt die, S a Good-by," old year, good-by, S if ou want a year of a huudred yearn, . tkHif gloriout triumph that eudcart t,,, 0tt, ab! aa the othen, thou muatdie, n f H Oood-by, old year, good-by. t T liough hutk niut die and kernel livot, I : H doth the truth each year e'er give; ij iTliou brought' it utmuch that will not die, flt J J Good- lye.old year, good-by, A KKW IKAB CUOUE. It KA,m niicrht think, who Haw hor life, lint fow people led a loneliur life than , n . . 1- .1,.n wilt. IDil. ma Prentice did. An orphan with keoDinu up her dead arrow means, "ituers nouse, tnere was out juue i'.ible excitement in buoli an existence. . 'el bcrs waa a temperamont that did not 'Viuire excitement, and that found bap-ar!-i,iCH8 where others would not dream of Qj joking for it. ller garden and her 'iiwers were like a household to her; the Ml hat all over the little bill-town afforded 'eri occupation; sho visited aomewhat f'niong a fow wealthy acquaintances; and 11 jr, the rest, if oho had any such day ''"-roams as other young girls are wont to '"odtilge, no one was any wiser for them. Dli Nobody knew that her father's friend, ho wealthy Mr. Barnes, had made her a 'landing offer of marriage any time . ritbin the last three years; nobody knew ,iniifm hor that Bryce Hascom went out 3 a, Mexican ranch because she had no a miles to give him ; nobody knew whether Polaroid Hartley's faoe ever glanced out 'Phe windows of her castle in the air; cfcody knew whether one New Year's sue looked forward to me next witn wonder as to what it niijjht bring her orrow or joy. She was so sweet, so si; bl tie, that people in general Knew no e of ber emotions tuan oi tnose oi statue of some saint in its churchly fet it was only on the lost New Year s no'vfuiug that, if any one had been able wjoou behind her curtains, they would is H e seen her on ber knees be x e the low blaze of her fire, lor; ing as if ber her heart would KT ' ik, burying her faoe in her bands Dp longing for the night when "tuis er called living" should be o?or at "New Tears and New Years!' she bod. "Ah! how can I bear another Ions?" VrhatM Mrs. Hartley, her mothers id intimate, had some faint idea of the jiJje that burned under the crust of snow. Jul Mrs. Hartley was not altogether ini- wftial in ber judgment of the girl, and tf ;Vas her morning and evening prayer s J'jt'Nina should stand in a closer rela c4du to her than she did at present. But e 'ml hat would be impossible without her Harold's intervention, she loft no ),hi unturned to that end. Mrs. j iiii tley thought she knew a great deal t Hitter what was good for her son than he id; and when she bad made up her Dpaiad that he had better marry Nina rentice, it was because she consulted jgiis best welfare possibly without oom e plete regard to Nina's. She knew that Inrold, although so affectionate, bad a 'ligh temper; and that Nina had inex haustible stores of still patience, and . ',Wt that still patience wonld await the ime when he should come back to hor ouger the knight errant, spurred by rtloss nature, but a quiet and digni-Q-d gentleman, ready to take his father's lotiored place in tho community. Her vi t'oauhes on the question were exceed- ngly gentle, yet not so gentlo that they Qjlul not put Harold on his guard, so that ,i waa like the hunted deer snuffing the pile' afar off. ( "Well, mother, I thank goodness," be ,idi with a laugh, on detecting hor that we do not live in France ' iml that you can't go and inquire Nina's . lot and settle the" jj "It's a very good dot, Harold. Just a ,,!' g little income to keep the wolf from ,ho door and satisfy the reusonablo luits; and it would be vastly better for ,.tno huHbaud than launching out on the 'reuaendnns fortune of Miss Barnes, with palaces, so to say, and yachts and racing 1 iorsis." ", "Just give roe a chance to see if it is. yro to Miss Barnes, mother," cried Har 'jldj gayly. "Ask the amount of her lot, and if your scapegrace of a son is orth it. Yachts and racing horses! I the idea." l; "Oh, Harold!" "But Miss Barnes is a beauty, too, . iuuther, and very sweet and gay. The ','oftn that marries her needn't marry for ,'aet money at all. She would have plovers if she hadn't a penny in her own ; right. 'Don't ee marry fur money, but r go wheer money be,"' quoted Harold. 'Excellent advice, that old northern "farmer's. An I'll go 'where money be' to-night," as he drew on his gloves. "Dcn't talk so, Harold. Don't talk ;io, even in jest. Miss Barnes may be " well enough, for all I know, but her liuney wonld destroy you, who were not bora to money. Yon would do nothing, rnd come to nothing. Bat as for Nina : Pivntiee, as I said, she's a saint." ' ".Wouldn't do at all for a wife then, r Wives musn't be too Rood 'for human attire's daily foqtf.' Think of reproving , i saint because the buckwheats were flat, .Or the buttons off. Adios, you manag . Jig mamma," and he was gone. ' ' It was a misty summer night, so thick ; r e could hardly see a star. But those i f.nging steps needed no guiding fl'ar to iroct them; for, to tell the truth, Har i 1 Hartley inspected himself of being H?idj more than half in love with Miss jJaraes. Undoubtedly, there was some I h i in her superb surronndings that i i to her own charms; and she! ed, too, aa entirely at home in them 1 as the flowor that blossoms in the rich moist air of the hot house. That velvet lawn, set with its flaming exotica and beds of flowers with the the lcft.r porches and wide hulls behind it, the dimly lit drawing-rooms, and the diuing-room, with its generous sides-boardall the consciousness of ease 'and comfort and j delight of the senses about the the place, I made vUiung Alias Humes a very pleas ant way of passing time; andthon, more over, as ber father was a prominent man of affairs among the politicians of the country, one met there people who en lurgeil the monUl horizon and made a man think for himself, and think more of himself. To night, however, as he went along, his mother's words gave him a a little thought, and it did occur to him that it wac unwise to let himself become so used to all this luxury and splondor on a ven ture; for, after all, a girl or such wealth and fascination as Mias Barnes had her choico from a crowd of lovers, of whom he was but one, and tho least conspiou- as. Just us these salutary reflections stole through his mind his ear was caught by the crying of a child, and he paused to look into the window of the cottage that he was then passing, and to see a woman hudiiug a little child whose face was bidden in her neck a slender, durkly olad woman, who moved here and there, with the baby on her arm, attending to tht, wants of a number of other children, .while a man sat at the table, with his arms thriibt out before him and bis head fallen between them, in an attitude of abject despair. The woman's back was toward him all the time; but some thing about her reminded him of Miss Nina l'rentice. "Pretty much what I might expect, I suppose," groaned Harold, "if I obeyed my mother. By Goorgo! ' as the wonikn half turned, a sweot, a sad face, and del icate profile of figure; "I believe it is Nina!" . But its sbsurditv destroyed the fancy, and he went on his way, whistling a bar of the "Wanderer," aud would have very shortly have benu with Miss Barnes bad he not bcon detained by a discussion with a friend at a corner, and had not then Hteppod into a pool of water, and been obligod to bunt np a boot-black, tho little wretch afterwards keeping him waiting some time for a trifle of chauge. "I declare," said he to Nina, when at last he reached Miss Barues' parlors "I thought I saw you married to a drunken laborer, as I came along to-night, with a gang of babies around" "What made you think him drunken?" asked Miss Nina, with her swoet serious ness. "Oh! his looks the arms on the table, the fallen head, unkempt, unshorn, yon know, and the rest." "I suppose," said Nina, "that a poor man, whose wife was lying dead in the adjoining apartment, might look very much that way." "1 believed it was you!" rejoined Har old. "Do I look like it?" she asked, lightly. "And have I a dunl existenco, to be here aud there too?" And then, as Harold glanced at her in airy muslius and for-get-me-nota, he smiled at the ittoa; and she seemed all at once as different from that woman, and all other women, as if she had stepped out of another star; yet, for all that a man does not care to marry a woman, different from othor women, simply to oblige his mother. "What are yon two talking about?" asked Miss Barnes, standing before them just then, the picture of a Bacchante, with hor head bound with currant leaves and her clustering curls like grape bunches about her laughing face. "Aro you promising Nina that you will come to Washington this winter? Nina is to bo with me the for the holiday?, you know. If you should, swell my list on New Year's." And then sho went dancinor down the room, for the misty night had driven everybody in doors; and a waiter was just then bringing in a tray of juleps. "When I was a little confirmed drunk ard of the age of ten, I signed the pledge," said Miss Barnes, conveying the waiter to Harold. "But I didn't know how nice juleps were. Now I am totally depraved. Here, Mr. Hartley. Nina. It is quite as immoral to drink lemonade with straws as it is to drink juleps. The sin lies altogether in the straws!' "Itdopends on tho individual whether there is any sin about it, I think," said Niua. "Bat I love lemonade. A lem on seems to me to carry coolness into the tropics." "And you don't know why you should burn your throat that long white throat out with the other? Get thee to nunnery!" As tho gay girl lifted her glowing glass to the wax-lights. Uartly whispered to Nina: "I don't believe the Bachontes used btraws." And he was astonished that Nina did not laugh. But that night the faces of the two girls kept shining npon out of the darkness as he walked home. The one, the self-indulgent, laughing beauty; the other, if not beautiful, yet, certainly a lovely face in its fairness and perfect calm. And the girl, lifting her glass to the glow of the wax-lights, did not seom to him so charming as before. "Do yon know," said Mr. Hartley's mother, one twilight, some time after ward, "I'm afraid I have been doing an injustice to Miss Barnes? She really has a heart. The poorMcNultys! When Mrs. MuNulty died, she used to go down there every evening, and carry a supper, and hear the children's prayers, and put them to bed, and leave a break fast ent for the father in the morning. Just think of that girl doing such things?" "Did she tell you she did, mother ?" asked Harold. "Well, no; that it, not exactly. I heard that one of the Hill ladies was down at the McNnlty's doing these things, and spoke of it incidentally to Miss Barnes; and she asked me to fay nothing about it, and said she only did what she couldn't help doing; and when I said I thought it a great deal f Dr her to leave all her gay life every sunset, and go down there, night after night, and wait on that family, and then hurry home to her household of company, she colored np so prettily, and said we were all stewards, and ii was duty and pleas ure too, to do what she could." "Humph!" said Harold Hartley. He knew very well, sow, who it was that he aaw through the window of the McNalty cottage. Bat, after all, a pretty face covers a multitude of sins. He set about forgetting the deceit; he roaaonod that it was a girlish jest, signifying ii'itliiug; J and be went to WaH!iiin!'"ii , ii tn. 1 same, shortly after the uoit i.i.v scomhi arrived, and presented himself amoug the first New Year's callers at the great doors of Mr, Barnes' fine residence there, "Ah! have you come?" cried Miss Barnes, hurrying to meet him. "We were much afraid you wouldn't. And now, yon know so fow people in town, that you have no calls to make, and I want you to stay the whole day here with us. I've a perfect crowd of pretty firls to help me reoeive, and a dear deaf and dumb old duenna for a chaperon, atd it will be ouo long festival! Will you have some refreshments now? Champagne punch? There's some Madeira, fifty years old. Ah! bora's tho bell; evory man to his post! There are no privates here; but I am a Captain General!" and she danced back to her place, well oontent that Mr. Hartley bhonld see the triumphs of this day. And thete was a triumphal procession the golden youth; loungers, clerks, at taches, members, senators, secretaries, officers in their spleudid uniforms, all swelled tho ranks, swept through tho great bouse, and kept it thronged with groups in the rose drawing room, groups iu the gray parlor, in the iuusio hull, the dining-room and tho conservatory. Aa the day wore on Miss Barnes, with a portion of her attendants, was as much in the dining-room as tho drawing-room, sauntering in with one and out with an other, or standing under the heavy cur tains between the rooms. What a pic turo she made, Harold thought, iu her scarlet satins, with yellow poppies in her hair, against the background of the eit rino colored curtains. There she was now, taking that Venetian gem of a do canter from a servant, and herself pour ing wine for an old senator, who had, perhaps, already too much. Here came a parcel of gold-laced olllceis, tlimlied and gay and handsome. What did sho mean by nrging that old port on the half -tipsy boy among thorn, while the others laughed and jested with her? Harold was not ordinarily troubled with scruples; but this seemed to him to pass the limits of a jest, and he experi enced a sense of relief as he saw a lady approach in the shadow of the curtain, and placing her hand on his arm, lead the boy away. Gowned iu gleaming white aatiu, her shining shape crossod that scarlet blaze like the passing of a moonbeam', and knowing who it was aud followed; but it was only to find Nina alone in the gray parlor, the boy having laughed her onp of bouillon to scorn and left her out of hand, thinking sho might have trouble, Harold "Isn't it too bad?" she said, with a laugh that was half a sigh, after all. "He asked roe if I was a temperance lectnrer, and called this delicious bouillon 'slops.' Will you have it?" "Whore huve yon been all day?" hn Butd, setting dowu the cup. "Oh, I am ou duty on this side. Wt are all stationod by plan of battle; bul most of my batollion have deserted tc the other rooms. Isn't this a lovelj one? It almost unfits a person for quiet life ut home, these gay nights and days. It would at least, if one were quite at rest in it." It was a lovely room. It tempted all Harold's old love of ease and luxury. The gray velvet on the floor, draping the walls, covering the cushioned divans, wearing a frosty bloom undor the silver chandeliers, tho delicate-carved jades, and ivories, aud spars, the one whito winged marblo, it seemed, somehow, as if Nina herself bad taken shape from all these pure, pearly shadows. He looked through the gleaming arches that led from room to room, and saw the scarlet clad and golden-orovned beauty stand ing there, with tho ruby glass susponded in her hand as she offered it to some new guest, ami a strange shudder stole over him. Unjust as it might be, for that single moment the one of the two girls was like a picture of the incarnation of sin and the other of innocence. He remembered the icy morning, a fow weeks ago, when he had seen Nina in her swansdown mantle holding np a sheaf of wheat against the blue sky, and a hundred lit tle belated birds hovering round it, with whirring wings and chirruping cries, and he turned and looked at Nina with a piercing gaze again, before which her soft eyes fell, till the blushes streamed up to meet the lashes; and as he gazed knowledge came slowly swelling up in Harold's heart and soul that, whatever attraction dark aud glowing beauty and lnxurious surroundings had had for his sonsos, it had been for his senses alone, and that Ithe love of his life bad suddenly sprung, full grown and winged for an eternal flight so eternal that now, in the first momeut of its recognition, he could no more tell if it had ever had beginning aud if it would ever have an end. So white, so fair, so sweet, so pure waa it pobsible that he had been blind to it all for years? So white, so fair, so sweet, so pure, was it possible that he could win bet? Would she take the poor remnant he had to give his "jeunesse epuisee." Tor one brief moment Harold Hartley felt pangs of punishment that seemed to have lasted for years, and he felt like a sad old man as he still gazed at her. But he was one not to be long daiinted, either by his own unworthiness or by the cruelty of fate. In a heart beat or two he was himself again, and he plunged in, aware that, even if she weald have none of him now, it gave him the vantage ground of her compassion for the future. "I am glad," bo said, "that you are not at rest in this life. It is a difforeot life that I wish you to share. Nina, is it possible" And then a little hand stole into his, and he led her away into the palm shadows of the conservatory. "Ab! what a fool I have been," he was saying exultantly, as he bent over her. " Why did I never know that I loved you be fore?" "I always felt you did," she was mur muring to reply. "I always knew you would if not here then hereafter. -For I never remember the time when I did not love you I" "And this New Year's day," be said, "is the gateway of a new life for both of ns. Abl with God's Lelp, what a life lies befoie nsl" The captain-general of the Philippines report that, after a severe hurricane the cholera, which was of a bad type, nearly disappeared from Manila. TfD' i COVIT OF SKIT YEAR'. "By the wy." I Mr. Samuel GIohm. "I'vi' U tter Mtle Ted; it's quite a heavy ono, ton sc. , for a chap of ten; but I can't ma'ie nut such a scrawl. Here mamma, you r-.ul it." Before Mrs. Gloss could reach out ber baud Uncle Joe, Mr. Gloss bachelor brother, interfered with: "Let me hive the boy's letter; I al ways did like that young scamp of yours." After smiling at the dowu hill tendency of the supercsription, Uncle Joe soon bo came absorbed over the pages that began in text-hand, continued in spider tracks, aud at last rose to the diguity of hiero glyphics. The Gloss family, tired out after the holiday season, were having a domestic evening in the dining-room. The li brary, artistically hung in old Spauish leather, lacked the embellishments that grow out of daily use, aud oppressed one like a great bronze extiuguisher; the long drawing room, thi conventional parlor, wa too like a mammoth and splendid hearse to admit of even its pro prietors feeliuf home iu it. So about tho diuiug-tabL jere gathered papa ami mamma Glosa,.the Misses Lou and llosio Gloss, Mr. Sorghum, a gentleman of many smiles and compliments, of many suits of flno clothing, of a dog-cart, and gorgeous living generally, and Uncle Joe, unmarried, crusty and rich. There was also a young fellow called Fred. Tremane, but he was only a chap in papa's office at a small salary, though he had six feet of uncommonly good looks, still he was vory modest. "And no won der," as Lou whispered to Rosie, "he ought to be. Twelve hundred a year, in deed." Sorghum remarked, in his sweetest toues, "How seldom a poor dog of a bachelor like me has the chance of en joying a happy family gathering. A stgh, carefully given out for only Ilosie to bear, was a graceful hint of his dissutisfactiou with a bachelor's exist ence. Mamma Gloss clasped her plump hands in a littlo ecstasy, and answered: "No ono can have any idea of tho poace and content of family life." A smile both maternal and encouraging showed that Mr. Sorghum was an approved can didate for the position of son-in-law. Lou, who was clover, and had a lofty bearing, a marble-white skin, and won derful rows of coal black scallops on her pretty forehead, made' a properly inno cent and girlish comment on the baohelor remark ; but llosio, who was a confiding blonde with big gray eyes, said nothing, and kept on with her crochet work. Sorghum used inwardly a warm emolli ent of Wall street invective, and wishod himself the Afghan stripe that could so hold her attention. Just then Charlie Hedge (the young stock brokerage firm was Hedge & Sorghum) dropped in, and nodding familiarly to his partner, joinod the fam ily circle by taking a place at Lou's Bido. Ho exclaimed: "How jolly?" A regular boom in do mestic evenings, eh, Miss Lou? Now Uncle Joe was Bixty at least, tall, grizzled, clean-shaven, heavy-browed, with a cast-iron look that seemed ex pressly made to withstand humbug, and steel-cold, sharp eye that could pierce the neatest coating of sham. Having at last finished his reading, be sat avhile shading his face with his hand; then looked np suddenly) as if he had made np his mind to something, cast a search ing and discomforting glance around the table, and asked: "Who would liko to hear Teddy's let ter?" ''I, said Sorghum, with the liveliest interest. "Ted must be a capital boy. He' your brother." (This last in an aside to Bosie. ) "Fine boy," confirmed Hedge. "Saw him here New Year's. So cheeky. Cheek is business capital. Ted will suc ceed. Let's have the letter." "I think my Teddy is very bright," remarked Mrs. Glose, "and so I always keep him at school, where he has the best advantages." "Yes," answered Uncle Joe, with an inscrutible intonation, "the boarding school is such an advantage to a child of ten." "Oh, yes, undoubtedly," sighed mamma, with a pensive look at the dia monds on her nice fat fingers; "and we mothers sacrifice everything to the good of our dear children. Uncle Joe coughed noisily, and then asked, "Are you all sure you want to hear the letter and that you'll sit still until the md?" Quite an amiable clamor of voices as sented ; so he began the epistle, which, grammatically, and orthographically ran in this wise: "Dkab Father A Mother Professor Whacker gave us a subjeo for our first composition when we come bao after the new Years & put into it all we saw A herd wile we was home at New year time so i roto mino &. yistorday he gave it back onto me with very good marked onto it and he sed for me not to leave it Lyin roun luce So I guess ho thort it was pretty go ail & i guess I will send it to You so as you see I make prog gres i brush my teath very carefull evry cite A I am entirely out of pokit money your iff son "Teddt." A murmur of amused admiration went around, and every one composed him self with a smile, for further listening. "an account of new yeakh "Boys A gurls hav fun at Christmas and get presints in there stockings Ao but new Years tynos is for grown folks christmas eve children has lots of fun so i think Grown folks ort to have fun Ne years eve. i dont want to be mean about nothin so I didunt anser back nothin to my Sister loo wen she called me a trub blesome boy for sittin down in her room after dinner ew years save she was "Skolding a little woman wot was a dressmaker and had brort a long tuiled pink dres home snmhow fixed np wrong and she had her hair all in little iron griddions to make it sknllup nice the next nay. Miss Lou flatbed, then laughed aloud nervously, to show that she enjoyed the joke. Untie Joe, without so much as a quiver of bis busy eyebrows, went on: "Rosy was sitting with her feet karled np under her eting candy and reding a story cook in her room she sed go way Teddy and ma the was in ber room bav' ing a row with Kamil the made about her does and she said go way Teddy too, then I aava were shall I go to, and she says yon may go to the Club and find wnir father. I know where the Fenix (..'lull i-. J .lit ii'it'i' the koruer I n t father w lii.- plnying cards wiili some uicu and he said go iud sit doa n my son. "So I set down A looked at some pic tures thoro was two nicu talking A i guess they didunt know me but they koowed my sister good kause one says Charlie, you go iu for loo if You can stand her tem per A He go in for the bloody theii we will make the old man gloss settil our bills ile brake her temper if I get her says charlie A i will get more capatil for the Firm. "bloudy is meek A will stay at Home A not intcrfcar with me i Guess says the other feller any way we will share the proffots." A funereal silence feel upon the room. Hedgo looked unnaturally child-like and unconscious. Sorghum pulled his runs tacho over a bad imitation of a smile. "thon father he after a good while he cot ui) A out on his Cote to co home A just outside tho door of the club House a man said something to father and father said lots of Swear Words that ain't allowed boys in Professor Whack er's skool A, It was all about a Settil- ment. "And father said be hadunt got the money for it. So i that it was a new- year's presiut that the Muu wanted pa to liuyhim. "then we went home. Mother says to pa the gurls will look ellegant tomorror A they will be sure to ketch something wurth wiloatlast. "Father sys they bed better ketch it pretty quick then for things is cotuin' to an end theu all of a suddiu pa ponnsed on me A sent me to bed. "the uex Day which was nowyears uo boddy et breutfast down stares but me, aud father looked splendid A to did i. we had ou our does A the carriage was ready to tako us calliu. wen ma A the guris came down they were vory butifnl cspeshully loo tho I like Rosy best. "ma says pa what do you think of your chick er Biddys and kissod him. "i'a says humf ! And wo wout (Jut an I ho bunged the front door." Mr. Gloss used every wilo to turn Undo Joe's attention; but he went on mercilessly: "Some of the Ladys we called on was old A some was yuug. the olo ones mosely had no necks iu their Dresses A a good many had oriuiiy pink cheeks a ditty eyes with black Sinudg under them. "but Pa sod the Same thing cvry wheres. "bow charming You Are to Day says pa to all of them A he bowed A bowed. And he kinder laded A Bobbed round A looked Silly then he come out A jumped iu Tho carriiige A says Swear words ageu. "says i is it Fun to mako calls pa. "Says pa its a nuseuso so says I wot makes you do it Pa. "Sosierty says pa thon i asked who So sierty waa A pa says Nusonso ageu then ho tells me to hold my tuug so "then we went to see a ugly old woman with lots of dimons A she wanted to Kiss Me A i wouldunt do it A after Wards pa skolded me A said she was Misses Koopons A I must always kiss such a ltioh ole lady Then I asked pa if he was sick A be sed lie wasnnt and I told Him I herd Misses Koopons say he was a sick Offant. "And father sod more Swear words A made the Coach man drive mo home, ma A the gurls wer in the parlor A so was the two men that talked A Bout loo And rosy at tho dub The big feller with trie nms tash Baid to Rosy she was a crewel darling A rosy She turned her back to him "then ma plusod Uosys arm and said she was a little fool A had no fealing for her family A rosy oryed softly rite down on the Maokaroons i was eting cake all i anted A no boddy notised "charlie forgut all a Bout loo s temper I Guess bekanse he said to her my butiful kween i will be a good abbediunt husband loo laffed A hit him with her fun then lots more came in A they all looked silly like father A all the ole men told ma she looked like rosy's sister, that aint bo bukauBe ma is orful fat." By this time the whole company had risen, and were trying, to interrupt the reading; when Uncle Joe, in a voice of thunder, commanded attention. They all fell back into their seats, and re mained, with many curious changes of countenance, silent to the end. "then Nite oome on A Loo A rosy went Up stares A put more wite powder on there faces A looked at there Baok hair in the Glas A loo said rosy ort to mary mister Sore Gum bekause he was so rich A loo said she was going to mary mis ter hedge bekanse lie was rich All tho ho was a fool A then they went Down Stares. "a big tall yung man come into the liberary were i had bid my kandys A rosy sed out loud i want to show you this Nice room, they was behind the door A he sed haven't you got eny new years for me Rosy A she sed yes frod A gave him a kiss behind the door A be sed o rosy if i was only rich A then ma came to the entree A they ran out A looked Silly two. "then i went to sleep sittin on my bun dil of candyi A when ma woke me up every body had gone away A ma sed she hated new Years A loo sed the men were all monkeys and rosy bad a HeJake. then i went to bed but Some thing had made me orful sick tho i dont beliof it was cake A i went To rosys Room softly. She was cryin A setting on the floor by the fire then i went into mas room A She was cryin too and Pa was say in We are Livin on a Volcaner i tell yon. "i was kinder skared bekause volka neers burn you all up A are verry dangerus. Ma says Samuel i Kant help it the gurls must dress A we must keep np appearances, says i ma why kant we moDve off the volksneer and buy a new House np to Sentril Park. "pa says whore did that yung skamp come from A then the flor jumpt np A hit me A ma sed it was kause i had et two much terrash. "A i was orful sick all nite. The next morning Kamil the made helped me git np and sed 1 was to go rite off to skool Agen and the Coachman was to take Care of me i went to say good By to loo. she was in bed with gridirons in her hair eting lots of brekfast. rosy kiaaed me A her eyes was al red A she sed teddy deer they are braking my hart A I prom ised Her when I grow np I will lick them all. "i like jl-y pretty woll eousidoria she la my hi-lur. pa aud ma waa shut np in the lioeiun fa bud lots of little paper on tin tulicl. . "Ho suiil loifii at them. "dresses, hounita, flnoary, jewelry, I kant pay thorn I tol you we are livin be yond our muues. Uo is evvery boddy aays tuu but the gurls will marry wol, says pa look ut rosy she is in love with that good look in Uusgal on 11 hundrod a year. "She sliart hav him suys ma now don't be a brute uiid out do u expensis per haps jo will help you out my brother jo is a Stiiigeo olo kur says pa. A if ho knws wo aro lied an ears over in det he wuddent levo Ted a cent. "I dont want a sent pa says I fivo scnts aiut much iV one sent aint nothin A nn- kle jo is an ole bare says i. o Send tho boy to skool he makes me Cray Zy says pa A niu kissed me in a hurry A pusht mo Long to tho doro. "pa bad Ins bed burryed in his hands A kept savin 100-ined, rooined. and all for appearances So i um tirod of riting such a long Compersishun and tho coach man took mo bao to Bkool A that is al i know a Bout uew years. Uncle Joe iiutetly folded uu the scrawl aud looked out from under the thatch of his eviilirnu s at Hoilun m-hn - t -- -o I - -i glancing at Lou, and seeing she was dangerous, silently loft tho room and tho house. Sorghum followed, also po litely escorted to tho door by Uncle Joe's steady gaze. Tho method failed with I' red 1 remaine, for the look only sent him aa far as Rosin'a sido, where he sat down with determination. Mrs. Gloss was sobbing hysterically, aud hor hus band scorned inclined to drop down dead. "Well," Undo Joe began; "well. arcutyou a pack of idiois to sacrifice your own comfort and honesty for this wretched show of fashionable life? Now I'vo always disappointed you in the money way, und I'll do it still." Mr. Sum Gloss trembled. "I'll do it still; for yon think I'm going to see you to ruin and I won't. I will look over mat ters with you, Sum, and find out how I can put yon on your legs again. But stop this high pressure living, and give this girl, Kohip, to 1 remaine, who is a good follow, if lie is pour." Rosio anil irod tried to say some words of thanks, but failing to do just ice to their feelings, consoled each othor by clasping humla. "i.bere is worse misery than poverty, Uncle Joe went on, "and Miss Loo had better cast about for some good boy at a thousand-dollar salary, for no more brokers will desire her dowry to mend thoir capital, At for Ted," and Undo Joe rote to go in tho library with his brother "he's an example to all young writers exact, truthful, impartial. I value his roauuscript. I shall keep him in pocket uioocy and make him my heir." Khfl llldn't Dare to. The other day a man and woman came to a sudden halt on Grand River street, and the woman dropped a basket sho was carrying anil called our "I will! I will! I'll not live with you onothor day!" "You'll leave me, will you?" he calmly asked. "Yes, I will!" "When?" "Now right off this minuter' "You'll go away?" "Yes, sirl" "I wouldn't if I were you." "But I will, and I defy yon to pre vent me! I have suffered at your hands as long as I can put no with it!" "Oh. I shan't try to stop yon," he quietly replied. "I'll simply report to the polioe that my wife, has mysteriously disappeared. They will want your de scription, and I shall give it. You wear No. 7 seven shoes; you have an extra large mouth; you walk stiff in your knees; your nose turns up at the end; hair the oolor of terra cotta, the newest in fashion ; eyes rather on the squint, voice partukes of " "Wretch 1 you wouldn't dare do that!" she screamed. "I certainly will, and the description will go into all the papers." They glared at each other for a minute like oats. "Then he walked on. She looked np and down the street, gritted hor teeth togother, and then followed on after. He had what they oall the dead wood on her. Detroit Free Press. Among the new pnblio buildings un der the Treasury Department for which provision is made in this year's estimates is one at Baltimore to oost 8500,000; an othor at Cincinnati to be worth $(!50,- POOO; another at Detroit, $100,000; Phil adelphia, 8420,008; Columbus, O., 10U, 000; Concord, N. II., $100,000; Syracuse, $100,000. Some small cities ask for large buildings, of which the following localities ami amounts are examples: Abingdon, Vu., $2!i,000; Council Bluffs, 850,000; Dallas, 8117.500; Dos Moines, 855,000; Erie, S50.000; Fort Wayne, 850, 000; Leavenworth, Kan., 890,000; Lynoh burg, 850,000; Marquette. ' Mioh., 850, 000; Oxford, Miss., 850,000. If all these aud others aro to be so well provided for, San Francisco ought to have her turn for a new postoffice before long. Artesian Wells. The government artesian well, one hundred miles east of Denver, on which work has been prose ontod for the past year, has proved a complete success. On the 5th of De cember, eight feot of loose gravel, with a sandstone foundation below it, was struck, tapping a submarine stream, which sent up to the surface an inex haustible flow of clear, pure water. This fortunate result of an experiment about which so many people of the West bavo t felt so deep an interest, will greatly en- ' courage private enterprise of this kind in Montana and elaewhere to secure water for irrigating purpose and the re clamation of desert lands. Another year should not pas without the trial of se curing flowing wells in the territory. An Excellent Gravy. Gravy, which is excellent with boiled fish or with pork steak, is made by browning a sliced onion in a little batter, and adding a little at a time some beef stock; thicken with Mour rubbed smooth in a little of the cold stock. Add, if you have it. some chopped parsley or Worcestershire sauce. If served with pork, a table spoonfal of tomato catsup ia good. Bait and pepper.