"A MIA-NtA! BRIDAL. i -aa a U'" on the mi uulutu lUa. Ml.iT auilehlti, 0r ihH hiil, -Orer 4 unrtrr ih? pfocwooli wMe, Haard I tUa waudtri-jK wind . Moaul ri a ooulii peter pud A place iki I' ui'ilW aludti. 1 wu alO iv 1c " hVMlow flen; i-unwi'" rU gleam I bo m'wn'a iwlllil beam Tba cry o' ibu fm lt unknown den Tbey ha inled Ibe l-im-anm wood, Only to ai'.n luinlliujc; Wu I ailr J, o, tneuf Onoe. In ft darklluR dream, f beard it. lo kuow wherel II I I ha ! Eomethln tlm mug to me. thrilled la me.itirrtd Llls ura t iuew uji u ihc, A ripple of melody, dim and divine; A lar-ulT, (i'nuir word. Cnce. In-a i o ndiy trance, I ew VBM'' A glimmer of white, A wokderof IlKbi, A radlano i of crj atal without a flaw, BUiuiug ibrouKh dim and feru, (tlispilafc aud bidtun, with many a turn, YMOomlug by aomeawtel law; Comlns U me. 0, my brooklet b .ldd ' - Yes. it waelhuu " Part o( me now Coming, wub graoe nf a lunteam, to gild i i..tn mv BfiMta ahadaw deeD: Waked by tbeit laughter itvm sloth aid from ,le, . .j, . That I muat follow, my guldj Mine. 0, my bleaaiDg.my mountain-bora! Out of the gieo. Down amoug men, Wlnaomely leadin me forth, like tbt morn, u..ain fin the mnaical llo. Freab from the welta where lb ho: y atari dip, BouaiDf nie np from atu-coru. fctlll at our tryat on the mountalu.klle Homethtug we keep Hidden too deep Jlver to wbiaper through earth ao wide; Love that we diroly auow Leaves the world freaber wherever we gn, One in our life. O. my brW I Coogieiatuuellit. ' PRIESTLY VESTMENTS. The solemn mass meeting at tba open ing 01 the Bynoa IB lue yuhvo uiiwe v, the Holy Ghost, says the Catholio Ro view. If the terapie ussu is iuij o lesson; what a wealth is there in every, thing fiat iinuio'diatoly surrounds thi altar, priest and sncriiice? All the scrip tare, all the theology, the entire Chris tian tradition, from our own days bud n ). Mnaain n.n.1 ante-Mosaic period when the Messiah was bat a promise, are crystallized in this altar, its priest and its rite. Tho celebrant, boing a bishop outside bis diooose, sits at the epistle side at the foot of the altar on a portable cuair, known as tho faldstool, a well known pnrvival nf the chair of the Roman. is there invested with the mystic dress of his order. Jivory portion oi h, wnat pther in Mosaic tvix or in the necessity of the early Christian days, or in the1 progress of its liturgical science, has now, with its accompanying prayer, a spiritual and allegorical mean mo an ubII an ft historical origin. Attendant on the bishop are an assist v. i ...nr. nn.l Anannn wllA rAlirPAAnl HUH UllCOl UUll ltUUVU n uv - - the law and the prophets, Moses and Elias, that in the mountain oi me trans figuration spoke with Jesus, nis bud rlonnnn ia .Id) in the BiDtiflt. the Dre cursor. The two deacons of honor at- tn,inntnn f.hn eardini'.l are David and AhmVium tn whom the Dromise of the incarnation was mude. They are tb6 twd columns whom the king of peuce has placed before the gate of the vestitulo nf i.htk tr.mnlrt. The vestments if the Christian high priest are to be examined in a uonuie us pect, in ueir reference to Christ, whom the minister represents, as wen as in re lation to the work of the priest himself and these principals animate the church ii rWilinul T.i.i-t.liftiro nointa out. lb every action that the Pontiff performs in making roa.ly for the sacrifice. Preparing to announce the gospel of peace, tue uisuop puts on sanuais ana buskins, types of the incarnation, for onr flesh was as a shoe to the feet of Christ, which He assumed to discharge the functions of his priesthood. The sandals are attached to the buskins, re nnliino-f.lm tiiimnn aonl which serves as the in ermeutary to the divinity to unite itself to onr nesu. As tne nrst sustains the body, so does the divinity govern the vmM and makes all evil its footstool. The sandals further recall the promise of the Holy Scripture: "How Deautuui on the mountuins are the feet of those wh.i nrpnnh t.hn croanfll of ueaoe " The open sandal warns the minister that he who preaches the gospel must be free frnm nvflrv taint of worldlv affection. In this spirit, too, the bishop washes hiB hands, so tuat spiritually lie may do pure. "To eat .without purifying the hands defiles no one. Wnat denio mm am th tliinrrs that come from his mouth and heart bad thoughts, homicides, thefts, impurities, false testimonies,!)? nhnmips." The amict, still called the helmet of salvation, was formorly a covering for the head, and Is even now worn as a cowl by the Dominicans while going from the saoristy to the altar. It is piacea nrst in nr. nn fhfl ripn.l and then on the shoul ders. It represents the strength of good deeds. The etrings that fasten it in front are the intentions which animate onr wnrk Anrl the end to which we direct them, so that there may be no leaven of malice or injustice in tlicm, dui tuai they should be accompanied with the azvme of sinceritv and truth. Work is the mission of the priest. "Labor like a crvnH anlrlinr nf f!hrinl.-" ThA alh t.vniriAii the new life of Christ. "Clothe me, O Lord, with the new man, who, aooording to God, is created in jus- tiA ami rim linlinpfis of truth." Great care is taken in fitting it to the shoulders and to the body, to snow tuat tne mo ui . ." . ii 1 .1 ine priest ongnt to do weu oruereu uu rpt?nlfttn,i. Tu whitenesa expresses pur ity of heart. It is of linen, because linen represents the justice and virtue oi me saints. Still another mystic reason the fiber of tne flax, braised ana torn, re ceived from the bleacher a whiteness that did not belong to it by nature. So the flesh of man, chastised and mortified by penance, receives a grace of purity which it cannot ao-quire- by nature alone. The priest ia bound to chastise bis body and reduce it to subjection, lest he who has E reached to others become a castaway imself. In the Jewish priesthood the alb was straight, because of the spirit of ervitode, which, in. those days, com pelled aouls by fear. Under the new law, lU ample folda indicate the holy liberty ia which are placed the children of adoption. Sometimea the alb is decor ated, and this, too, ha scriptural aignifl eaace. It ia bound up by a cincture to how that the priest mast keep himself chaste, in apite of the stings of the flesh. "Let your loina be girt and your lampa burning." In the Apocalypse the Son of Man carriod "a oincture of aold." It ia the pci feet charity of Jeans ChrUt.wuion surpass all understanding. It ia also justice. "Justice," says Enaiui, "will be the cincture of his loins, and f.titli Lis buckler." The tun'el at the end of the cincture are the natural jtmtioe UnIit by Chriat. "Do not do uuto others what you would not wish them to do to jou." The stole whioh the bishop puts ou his neck, is the obedience and holy service to which the Lord Jenus subjected him self, "who, being in tho form of God, thought it not robbery to lie equal with God, bnt emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, beiug made in the likeness of a man and in habit found as a man, be humbled himself, beonming obe dient unto death, even to the death of the oross." What, then, was a humiliation to the first of our priesthood becomes a stole of glory to all that followed Him, take the yoke, which ii His service is light and makes the burden sweet. The stole, as worn by the bishop, hangs pendant and is not crossed, as by the priests. It thus explains its name, "orarium,'" and indicates its origin, be ing the fringe of a senatorial role. The stele is tied up by the cincture, to indi cate that the virtues should mutually support each other. Two garments of kindred form, one somewhat smaller than tho other, are now put on, the tunio and the dalmatic The tunic, rotainod from the Jewitth priest hood, is the figure of the doctrine of Christ, which is proclaimed by the little bells formerly attaoliod to it. This tunic of Christ was spared by the soldiers who slew him. It was left to hereby to rend the unity of Calholio doctrine. To the pontiff the long tunio further indicates porseverauce, which alone receives the crown. The ample dramatio indicate theabun .aut mercy of Christ. "Blessed are the merciful, for they shull obtain mercy." "Mercy and not sacrifice have I asked " As an epUcopal garment, with auipl. sleeves, it reprosnnts the liberality aud generosity of the cpisoopal order "Share yonr bread with the hungry and receive under your roof the poor and homeless." Those who rocall the charit able work of the deacon, as illustated, fr r example, iu the case of St. Lawrence, need not be told why the dalmatio is the delmatio is the garment of tuedisoonate. The bishop's gloves recall the skius of goats which Rebacca put ou Jacob. "By this skin of kids," says Innocent III, "we must understand the reaemb lance of sin, with which. Rebecca, that is, the disgrace of the Holy Spirit, has clothed the hands of the true Jacob, 'to wit, the exterior work) of Jesus Christ, so that tho new Adam might carry in himself an image of these. Jesus Christ has taken the appearance of sin without since itself (Romans viii, 3; Hebrews iv., 15) in order to conceal from the demon. For, like sinners, He was hungry, He was thursty, He knew grief and sorrow, He slept, Ho labored. For this, after he had fasted forty duys and forty nights, He was hungry, and the tempter, approaching him, tempted Him as he did the first Adam. But this spirit of evil was conquered by the second Adam by tlid same means wuicn gave Him triumph over the first. For bishops the gloves have this les son: They are put on after tho Dalmatio to indicate that cood works are to be done modestly, so that the right hand may not Know wuat tue leit uoes. The cbasublo, or little house (casula) was formerly, as even to day in many rites, a round garment falling from the shoulders to the ground. It was raised at times by the attendant ministers to permit the celebrant to use his arms freely. Of this custom we still have trace in the action of the server at the e evation. and at other times in high masses. But as time advanced the round RMin-nt was cut into its present form It represents the universal church, of which the old was the predecessor and type. One is separated froin the other in the order or of time, by the mystory of the oross. The moral teaching of the chasuble is chanty, which covers a mul titude of sins. It is the nuptial garment The amict is made to touch it to show that every good work must be animated with charity. Tue two parts oi tue cua suble indicate love of Uod and our neign bor. "the whole law and the prophets.' The extent of the chasuble indicates that charity is all embracing, including even our enemies The maniole. forming a kind of nap kin, .is not assumed by the bishop until after the confiteor. It typifies the vigi lauce and labor in the service of the Lord which will produoe the sweat of the brow in which all must eat tneir bread. It is worn on the left arm, to show that Jesus Christ, and every true priest, enjoys the recompense of his labor. "Ibey went weeping, sowing their seed: with joy tbey will return, carrying (manipulos) their arms full of the Juarvcst. The crown of the bishop is his miter, of clorv and honor, it is true, but one which those worthiest of it have alwavs found, on 'this earth at least, a nn,"n of thorns. "With dory and honor Thou hast crowned him and placed Iiim o, th works of mv nanus, un rue nt flm Hebrew priest was the in uiiivi . . . . enable name of God. The miter oi tne Christian bishop represents, "the name i.t iathnveeverv name." and the honor that is due to the humanity of Jesus, be cause of its union with his divinity. The miter signifies the scienoe of the two testaments, its horns representing respectively tne uiu aim ment. and the two posterior bands, the spirit and letter. . The ring is the gift of the Holy Spirit, whn in the Scripture is often called tlie finger of the Most High. The circle d gold indicates the perfection of the gifts of the Holy Ghost, which Christ has re ceived in a measureless aegree. uuu has given Him Mis spirit wkqou, ui- P. ... :i.J nf fliA Hmrit Ure. IBIS pieumuuo .-r -i.-.t a ;.,tnhntA variously to Uia (lis- cipies; to some the gift of Bpeaking with Bcience and knowledge to others he or of enrim? the sick, to others the power to work miracles. These giiu are r , ii. v- l. a tnimatrv Of tne made aensiuio j l- i mu tn tua cuurvu wki deacons and inferior members, each with a power peculiar to hi order. The ring alio is a iign-of the faith which a bishop p edges to his church, his mystio bride, on the dav of bis eapousaia. Were the cardinafcelebraUng the mas. tne pallium, the sign authority. He would also carry the pas toral stall or crosier, the sign of his pas toral charge. This, in fact, he carries while presiding at his inas. Its well known shape is that of a shepherd's crook, pointed at the ml, straight In tue middle, aud curved at the top. It en ables the pastor of soul to punish the lax and retui, to direct thoe needing guidance, and to rest ruin those slipping out of the ranks. It is hardly cam asary to recall the faith of the Irish warrior, who stood next to Patrick at Tara, when preaching the Trinity and baptising in its name. The apontle a staff, pointed at the end, pierced the foot of the Prince, who bore tho aocideutal torture unfliuoh ingly, thinking it was a necessary part of the ceremony. For another reason than that for whioh a bishop, outside of his diocese, does not ordinarily carry the crosier, the Pope does not carry it in Rome. It ia in remembranoe of the fact that St. Peter sent his staff to.Eucharious, the first bishop of Treves, the apostles of the Teutons. The oolor of the vestments of the day was red, red the oolor of tho cross, the color of the snored heart, the color of the martyrs, the coloi of the fire of the holy spirit, the color, as it Beetns, "me judioe," the most beautiful aud inspir ing among all used by the churches. "Who is this that cometh from lidom, with dyed garments from Boars, this beuutiful one in his robe, walking in the greatness of his strength?" "I that epeik justice, and am a defender to save?" "Why, then, ia thy apparel red. and thy garments like their that tread in tho wine press?" "I have trodden the wine press alone." "Red vestments," says Cardinal Lo thaire, "are worn on the feasts of the apostles and martyrs, in memory of the blood which they have spilled for Jesus Christ. For it is of them that it is said: "They have come from the midst of a great allliction, and they have washed and whitened their robes in the robes iu the blood of the lamb." (Apoo. vii., 14.) Red vestmeats appear also on the least of the Holy Cross, upon which Jesus Christ spilled his precious blood for us. 'Why is it,' says the prophet, '(but your garment is red, like that of those who tread the grape iu the wine press? On the day of Pentocost also, to indicate the fervor of tho holy cpirit.who descended upon the apostles iu the form of tongues of tire. It is written in Jero mias: 'Ho has sent from the height of heaven the fire into the marrow of thy bonos.' Red ia used on the day of the mnrtydom -A St. Peter and Paul, but there used white vestments on the feast of (Jie conversion of St. Paul and the chair of St. Peter. Likewise on the na tivity of St. Join, white, aud on the feast of his decolatian. red; that is to say, iu honoring tho feast of him who ie both martyr and virgin, we elevate martyrdom above virginity, as tho sigu of the most perfect charity, according to tho words of Christ, that 'no man bath greater love than this, to give his life for his friends.' " A Buotblurk's Elegy. "Brundy is deadl" So the men said, so the women said, and so the children callod to each other as a piece of news. A drunken, good for notlnog. A so called man. whose brain had become dissolved iu liquor. whote miud was en feebled, and who had disappointed everybodv by not dviug in the guttor, instead of bavin? the roof of a tsnomeut house over his head Why should any ono grieve when such a vazubond passes awav? The world may owe him room for his bones to rest, but nothing further. So in "Brandy's'1 oase men said that he was well out of the way, and women clattered their dishes iu the rooms below, aud care.l not for the Dresence of the dead. When the undertaker came tobear the body away a dozen people crowded into the room, and among them was a boot black. Some said that "Brandy" looked well in a coffin; others spoke lightly about his face haviug at last lust its ruby color, and the dead pauper was no more than a dog in tueir minus, anu wuy shonld he have been? One can be a man or he can be a vagabond. If be becomes a vagabond, let him lose the respect of men. All had a heartless remark except tlm bootblack. He stood at the head of the coffin and looked from face to face, an.l Hilin ! "Brandy was low down, and he died like a benst, and you are all sneering at him. Did anv one among you ever give him a chance? Did he have a home when he was a bey? Did men try to enoourage him and guide him aright? ts there a man in this .room who ever took him by the hand and spoke one kind umnl ? Didn't everybody abuse and ill- treat him ? Didn't everybody look upon him as a dog ? There was no answer. pt Rrandv was low down!" wins pered the bov as he laid his hand upon n, a noiTio. "He was raided and hungry, and poor and homeless, and without one siucle friend. Wuat man among you n.ii.i hava stood out against it any bet ter? Poor old man. They know all about it in heaven. Let me help to carry tiim itAWn." And when the dead had been driven .i . i i. i ,i;..iiimini1i awav. ana tne oujr uu un.iio.i, mn than one man eaid : irw nil e might have made it akuIpf tnr Uia noor old man. I wonder that some of us never sought to make a manof him, iastead oi neiping miu down." M. Quad. Tne Poet of the Sierras. Tnannin Miller. George Alfred Town- send, Joe Howard, old New York Froth ingham, Jennie June Croly, Annie Wake man, Janet Gilder, and a raft of others, m.ba it their business to tell the count less thousands out of Gotham what is go ing on here and a good deal that isn t. Some of them are not. Take the case of a man like Miller-olten an interesting writer of prose, always an attractive talk3r abont the wild life of the extreme in1 ft coat of nature, and gen- erally as full of eccentricity as a locomo tive with a wheel off, Miller out astrik ; A,rni-A wherever he goes. Hia pres- ent occupation is the furnishing of ten rural jonrnala with a weekly letter writ ten in manifold. In addition, h turae , od a random poem now and then.and he makes in all abont $7000 a year. Bif , t..;nr him abont 110 apiece, ao that for actually writing a column and a receives the handsome sum of $1X) a week which ia better pa v in com p rison with the actual work done than any other writer in America receives. I believe the Sierran poet has also had a hand re cently in a new oomedy for Annie Pixley a piece of work in which ho went "cahota" with Archie Gordon, who is c.e of thecloverest and brightest writers in New York. Long ago Miller ceased to reoeive royalties from the D .mites. His contract called for a nightly sum un til the total of 10,000 should be reached. He received the final $H) two years ago, and has never turned out another oohe aive dramatio work, though I believe he is all the time doing something in the dramatic line. Miller's long hair of former days has yielded to the persuasive shears of the barber, and he ia gotting be be slightly bald. But bo wears hia bloude oearu just tne same, and nas never forsakeu his alouched felt hat. Miller and hi lip quivered. "It is all right now ana sale, tie arwtired mo, "What was wrong?" I aked. "Only a stupid fellow who was attaint iug in moving the stores (the powdor) ana wno Had no liuaiucM to have the light there dropped a spark among some baggitig and it was getting into a blsz). But t got there in time to stamp it out; and the captain of the gunner, finished tho business with a wet blan ket." "But how woll you behaved, Miss Prior," he said, forgetting his own con duct and appreciation of the danger. "If you had made a row and detained me, nothing short of a miracle could have saved all on board tho Conqueror from being whirled into eternity." "Even if the accident had got wind. and thrown ns into confusion, there is no aaying bow the matter might have ended. I, who am iu the secret, shall has a flue largo bead and game leg. ' alwaya thank you for all our lives, and tor tuat of my dear old mother s la ice over. Had a whisper of the terrible dangor reached her, with my father ab sent, I am certain t would have cost her her life on the spot. ' he would wear atdl .no ne 3r, h.Tf of Duller with maniold pencil, b. 01 lilB 1UBMUWii He got hi latter adornment, he aavs. through the agency of some Moloo bullets. For a long time he livod in flat in New York, bis only attendant be ing a colored boy who vainly triod to keep the place in order, while Miller did the oookicg, si opt on the floor rollod np in a buffalo robe, broke the nocks from his bottles in preference to nsing a oork screw, and otherwise conducted his daily life in a way vaguely remiuiscent of his former times ou the bordor. The groat' est mistake Miller made was in not stay ing in Jjondon the first time lie wont over, lie was a line on that side of the water, where the quaint freshnoss of his poem struck foroiuly upon the minds of readers unaccustomed to his method. lie came back here, was considerably guyed, aud for some years lived in more or less poverty. But there proved to be more ttuff ia him than he was given oredit for, aud he finally came down to solid, hard work, after giving up the silly notion that he had boen intended by high" heaven to represent the great Americau nation as minister to the court of St. James. Miller is pretty well tlxed at present, and I hardly think he is liko- ly to lose his head again, lie is one of those rarely-found meu who have lived down the animosities of early life, and whose eoceutrioities, if pronounced, are at least innocent. St. Paul Pioneer-Piess, An Ant's Brain. Well may Darwin speak of the brain of an ant as ono of the most wondrous particles of matter in the world. We are apt to think that it is impossible for somiuute a piece of matt toro postals the necessary complexity required lor tne discharge of such elaborate functions. The microscope will no doubt show somo details iu the ant's brain, but these fall hopclesslv short of revealing the re finement which the aut's brain must really have. The microscope is not ade- ?uate to show us the texture of matter, t liss been one of the great discoveries of modern times to enablo us to form some unmerical estimate of the exquisite delioacy of the fabrio which we kuow as inert matter. Water, or air, or iron msy be divided and suli-divided. but the pro cess cannot be carried on indefinitely. Thero is a woll defined limit. We are even able to make some approximation to the number of moleculnB.in a given mass of mattor. Sir W. Thomson has estimated that tho number of atoms in a oubio inch oi air is to oe expressed by the figure 3, followed by uo fewer than twenty ciphers. The brain of the ant doubtless contains mors atoms than an eouiil volumo of air; but even if we suppose them to be the samo, and if we take the sizo of an uut s uraiu to bo a little globe one thousandth oi an iuch in diameter, we are able to form some estimate of the number of atoms it must contain. Tne number is to be cxprtsstul by writing down 0, and fol lowing it by eleven ciphers. We can imagine -the atoms grouped in bo many various ways that Oven the complexity of the ant a Drain may oe intouigioie wueu we have so man v Units to deal with. An illustration will probably make the ar gument clearer. Take a million and a half of littlo black marks, put them in a certain ordor, and we have a wondrous result Darwm a "Descent of iron. This book merely consists of about 1, 500,000 lettors, placed one after the other in a certain order. .Whatever be the complexity of the ant's brain, it is still hard to believe that it could not be fully described in 400,000 volumes, each ai large as Darwin's work. Yet the num ber of molecules in the ant's brain is at least 400.000 times as great as the num ber of letters in the memorable volume in question. Longman's Magazine. Her Self-Control. The power to keep still is very often a valuable one in critical moments. The ladv school teacher in New York who quietly and safely led all her pupils out of a burning school house, before they knew it was on fire .might have pot them into a panic and imperiled many lives if she bad not possessed tue power to con trol hersolf. The following littlo inci dent on board an English man-of-war flog ship no less creditable to the girl - Miss Susie Frlor who appears promt nently in it, because she tolls the story herself in a private letter. After tea I went on dock for the air with Mr. Bill, the oommodores son. As we loaned over the rails admiring the orancre sunset, suddenly I bad a notion that I smelt a singed smoky odor. I turned to Mr. Billy, without think incr anything serious bad occurred. "If T . nn alinra I ahonld Sav that soma careless person bad allowed the chimney to get on fire," aud at the earns time I pointed to a particular spot in the ship. He cried "Nonsense I" but stopped short, and raised his bead as be . too smelt the faint odor of something burn ing. In an instant bis face became stern, and a bard, dogged light came into his "Don't atir, Miss Prior, till I oome back," he said. "If I can I'll be here again in a moment," and be hurried away in the direction I had indicated. Then it flashed npon me that yonder whence the smell of the burning came, lay the powder magazine. I did not stir from the spot where Mr. Billy had bidden me to stay . It was not many seconds, though it seemed an hoar, but the night wind was kind and felt like a cool band, lifting the damp Lair from my temples, and keeping me from falling down in ewoon. Mr. Billy came baek tery quietly and spoke composedly, but hia toice wu lew A Motor that Keely Never 1 bought Of. The Bodio Free Prose says : "It is re potted that Jim Townseud has six, of his arastras running to their full capacity. The remaining four will bo started up next week." The most interesting thing about these arastras thn puwe,r by whioh they are driven is, curiously enough, left unmeutioued by the Free Press. From a millwright who assisted in putting up tho machiuery, we have somo particulars regnrdiug the novel apparatus, which is Mr. TownHeud's own iuventiou. The arastras are placed in a littlo sandy flat, whoro only snilloient water for drinking purposes and to moist en tho ore is to be oMained. The ar astras are actually oporttted by land, which .drivoa a large overshot whael. On fhis wheels and takes the place of water. It was at first Mr. Townsend's intention to run the arastras by means (f a large windmill, or wind wheel, but as this wheel would run too s'ow at times, at othor times bo fast that it would lie liable to tear everything to nieces, and again would not run at all, he bit upon a regulator. This regulator is sand, a great pile of which has been raked up to the works. Tho windmill nuts a bjli contuining a great number of buckets, and these Carry the gaud up to a big tatik, just as grain elevators oarry wheat in a flouring mill. A-stream of sand boing let out on tho overshot wheel, it revolves just as it would under the weight of a stream of water, aud the ar AHtras movo steadily on at their work. When there is much wind, sand is stored up for use whon eahu prevails, so the uraslrasare novor idle. After a suillcient qnautity of sand has beeu accumulated lucre is no more trouble on that score, the same sand beiug used over aud over. Virginia Eutorpnso. Ancient Jaini'stonn. Changes iii the James river have made an island of Jamestown, completely separating it from the mainland, and about all that remains of the first Eng lish settlement of Virginia is the dis mnutlod tower of the old church. It wa here that Pocahontas embraced the Christian faith, and was baptized by the name of Rebecca. The fount used on that occasion now stands in the chancel of Christ church, Williamsburg. Here also Pocahontas was married in 1013 to John Rolf. A low briok wall encloses the ground occtipiod by the ruined tower and foundation of the church; aud tomb' atones, some broken and scattered, some leaning against the wall, and all with in scriptions nearly if not quite illegible, have long since ceased to indicate whero lies the dust of those who bore their names. Two hundred yardB below the ruins and one bundrjd from the river bank is the stately ol I mansion built by John Ambler over a hundred years ago, It is the only residence on the island, is in tin" preservation, and occupied by Col. H. D. B. Clay, formerly of Mew York, who owns Jamostown, which con sists of 1700 acres, and is between two and three miles in length and three quarters of a mile iu width. N. Y. Sun, To Remove Grease Spots. Au excellent mixture to remove grease spots from boys' and tueu'a clothing particularly, ia-tvado oi four parts of al cohol to one of ammonia. Apply the liqnid to the grease spot and then rub diligently with a sponge anu clear, com water. The chemistry of the operation seems to be that the alcohol aud ether dissolve the grease and tho ammonia forms a soap with it which is washed out with, water. The result is much more satisfactory than when something is nsed which only seems to spread the snot and make it fainter, but does not aoluallv remove it. If oil is spilled on a carnet and you immediately scatter oorn meal over it the oil will be ah idrbed by it. Oil may be removed from carpets upon whioh you dare not pnt ether or ammonia by laying thick blot ting paper over it and pressing a hot flatiron on it. Repeat the operation sov era! times, using a clean paper each time. . Her Ears Had Been Bored. "Don't yon think ear-rings woald bo- come you? inquired Kosciusko .Hurphy of Birbie McGee. Kosciuska had b.-cn paving Birdie very assiduous attentions of .. ...... "I don t know, replied uirdie, de murely. , "I an noose the reason you don t wear them is because it ill hurt you so to have your ears bored7 "Ob, not in tne least, saiu uirme, ith animation. "I've bad that done already, quite often, almost every even ingin fact, for the last three weeks. ' Then Kosciusko reached roond to the niano. dragged hia hat off the cover and commenced to fade gradually from the room. He fairly melted away into- ok Bounty, and now a wide chasm separates the gallant Kosciusko and the cbatming Birdie. Texas Sif tings. Instead of establishing his theory to the contrary, the results of Baron Nor denakiold's expedition to Greenland ct n firm the general belief that the interior nf that eountrv is entirely covered with a thiuk sheet of perpetual Ice. IMDIKTRUL 50TEM. v Eternal drumming is the price of buci nea. Morristown, Tenn., has a woman br ber who does a thriving business. The watuen's branches of shoemoker in New York number i;XK) members. rrineetown. Mass., has hanled i about 10,000,000 pounds of cod fish thi year. Eighteen thousand and eighty sbx homesteads have boen entered in Florida do ring the year. Tennessee claims to lie the second state in the nnioo in the in, session of thor oughbred cattle. Farm and Garden aavs an acre will produce flvoorsix times the amount ol straw berries it will wheat. Insurance companies claim to bars) puid out Jii'iO.OOO in Atlauta, Gat, fot UiMes by tire in tho last two years. A tract of 1810 acres of pine land ia Clark eontitv. Wis., was sold to a lumber company in La Crosse for $(!8.0(0. A pasture company recently organize in Diiumilt county, Tex., has 1)0,01) acres of pasturo land and 88 JO.OOO cap tal. It is said that at the present time hi Ueon 05,000 and 70,000 French peopl are engaged in the mauufaoture of clock and watches. Sl'liero aro two or three hundred north ern capitalists in North Carolina who'aere attracted thither by the exhibit of the stale made at the Boston exposition. In Central Nebraska, along tho rail way, the population of some of tho conn lies has increased 100 per cent, the pres ent yeiir, and still the number seeking lands is increasing. There are probably 175,000 people em ployed in the woolen and worstod indus try of France, against 200,000 in Oer iimnv, 170,000 iu tho United Statos, and 310,000 in Great Britain. Georgia has a population of 1,542,180. There are in the state eighty cotton and woolen mills, or nearly half tho nntnher of the entire south, and over 2700 mills of various kiuds. Thn republic of Guatemala has en gagod a Ceylon planter to introdace iuto that country 500,000 Cinohona trees, for obtaining Peruvian bark, from which is distilled the salts known as quinine. The demand for cotton seed oil for a variety of uses is increasing, but produo- tion is increasing faster. Mills are springing up everywhere in tho cotton growing regions. Tho result is a dis couraging outlook for producors. Connecticut boasts that it has built more ships this year than in recent years, bnt the total is only thirteen vessels, with an aggregate tonnage of about 10, 000, and all but ouo of them aro designed tor the coasting trade. - . Pittsburg has an establishment whick makes a business of loaning dross suits. Its charge for a first class spike tail is 82.50 per eveuing, which price ia much, cheaper than paying out from $75 to 8125 for a suit to wear ouce a year or once iu two years. - Tlmd Stevens' (Jeueroslty. It is related of Thaddcus Steveus that shoitly after his removal to Lancaster in 1812 ho heard of the sad prostration of .11 I.: l t V...I. - au OKI iriuuu iu iui, a mnjoi, wuu. pressed hard by necessity, had divert to his own use 8300 duo id- a jMrtau l low client, hoping sooiato rouaiu hit fiuaucial footing and repay ker. Bn "uuiuoroiful disaster followed f.stor,' until the poor fellow's montul distreii was actually killing him. Mr. Stoven hunted .up the client, paid her from Uii own pocket the 8300, obtained, her re ceipt, and went to soe his friend. "Haloi old fellow, he exclaimed, ou enteriu his oiUoe, "you must wake up. Don't be so down-hearted. Bay, don t you sup pose you've really gone and paid that woman and then forgotten all about it?" A despairing shake of the bowed head was the only reply. .'"Well, I boliove you did, and I'm going to look through your papors and see if I can't find tne receipt. Then he pretended to ransack some pigeon-holes, and a momont later exolaimod: "Well, if you're not the big gest fool I evor board of. Look here, old man, what's this?" So saying ho showed the receipt to his astonished friend, who thereupon recovered his spirits, and, happily, bis business fortunes also. Afterward he repaid Mr. Htovene. fehimnk irms. Six widows, utjniegtd uge M0 years, live in a bunch on a country road near New Haven, Conn. Julia A. Moore, the sweet ainger of Michigan has disposod of 4000 volumea of her poems. The widow of Dr. J. G. Holland has presented an organ to the church at Al exandria bay, where she makes her sua mor home. Baroness Btudott Coutts is liberal with ber favors. She has recently give thirty fishing smacks to thfl needy me of y..rmouth. There are thus far only two colore women lawyers in this country Mary. A. S. Cary of Michigan, and Louise Y. Bryant of Colorado. A cortain Boston belle, endowed witk twenty-five dress fans, has fallon into decline. Some thoughtless person re ported to ber that ex Queen "Boss" of England had five more, some of them richly jewelled. A tfBhraska widow with twenty-one i-al.iM Mr) ia ailTArtiainar for a husband. There ia great virtue in printer'a ink; it baa brought fortunes to uom meu a .nn. int a lnn't htdiave a doubia column' advertisement, inserted next i reading matter every day for six monies, ,i.l,l i.rinrr a hnshand to a widow Wlli i.ui.jina Miil.lron unless the IattE are kept in the background, or nndrw- ground, or aoraewnere. " go back on advertising, but the lia mast be drawn somewhere. Returna ehow that the present y will far exceed any previous jor lu,. ... .1 . . . . . C.n.J nl Mali . Anil RllfWI) HUUl UMI.I The total number of cattle shipped, w for which space has been contracted ateamships to the 81st of Dembem! is 55,674; total sheep, 1,137,200. Tut baa been no appearance of diseaseiiti the restriction. Politicians go no the ladder of fTi the roanda of drink.