A GLOVE. Jamea Berry BeiuoL Ah. yBtrtonlar I found glova ' ; Grown shabby, luU of liny-rlpt, f But: dear t!ie becaus my love . a Of cj tlmjt,throiujl it bfr flngerllna, A glove one would not oar to oe ' Cim bi ann in public rtroet; ' Yet here I own there ia for ma ' No relic in the world more aweot A faint, far acrnt of lavendor Hteala from it, aa the clover amelt When through the fluids I waited with her And plucked Uie bloteoms for bar belt. Faith I but I loved the little hand That lined to wear thin tinie-ctained thing 1 It MiKhtoat gwture of command Would ut my glad heart fluttering. a Or if it touched my finger, ao, Or fmootlmi my hair why ihould I apeak Of thwe old dnya! It make, you know, The tean briin over on my cheek. Poor atained, worn-out, long-wristed glovel I think it almotit unilerxtawli That reverently and with love 1 bold it in iny trembling han.U. And that It ia so dear to me, With Ita old fragrance, far and faint, Because my mother wore it, she On earth my love, in heaven my saint, THE ARMIES OF THE FUTURE. What Pruaalaa major end a French Colonel Have to Bay. Chicago News. Two noteworthy boots have just ap peared in continental Europe. One is the "Nation Armies." ty M. de Goltz, a Prussian major. On the boels of it come a book called "l'Europe Sons lea Armec," by CoL Uenncbert, the formor professor of the military school at tit. C'yr, Franco. . Both these works, from directly oppo site political standpoints, agree in one thing, which is that tho first European nation which relaxes ita vigilance will infallibly lose its military position and firestige and be the victim of every col ision which might ensue.- Tho Prussian major says that if war is to be avoided a nation can only escape it by being so prepared that no other nation will dare to bo its aggressor; in other words, na tions unwilling to perish by the sword must become bankrupt in peace; they have simply a choice between two evils national subjugation or national insol vency. While the French colonel is not so bru tally frank aa the Prussian major, in his Gallican courtosy of speech, his postiion amounts to about tho same thing, white hot h agree with Vou Moltko that "the empire of the world is obtained only by war and by war alone can bo main tained., Further than this tho Prussian major contends with his late chief now on tho ' retired list in effect that1 tho scientilio war method now adopted by Gonnany is inseparable from an offensive brutality; that Ger man tactics are to strike crushing blows on tho field of battlo; but, abovo ml, that tho foo must be paralyzed by the employment of gigantic masses, whilo tho conqueror says, with Murk Antony: "Happen what mayl misfortune is un chained, let it go w hither it will." On his sido, the French colonel, with tho idea of waking up and warning France, which country he asserts is wholly unprepared, shows that not more armies but armed nations are hereafter to meet on tho battle-field. Deducting everything, the ml number of trams available in the field in 'Europo now is: .Germany, 8,800,000; Biissia, 2,1500,000; Austria, 1,2115,000; Italy, 2,570,000. This would give the triple 7, .100,000, aud the quadrupio alliance 10,000,000 com batants, with 1,000 batteries of field guns. The same destructive emulation is apparent in naval matters. When Italy constructed 100-ton guns, England im mediately produced a monster cannon of 200 tons, tlirowing a projectile of 0,000 pounds, piercing armor three feet thick. For the last twelve years Woolwich ar senal has turned out a Held buttery daily, whilo England, Belgium, Italy, Ger many, Russia, France and Austria aro expending millions yearly in defensive and other fortifications. ' ' But Col. llennebert points out that it is chiefly in Germany that offensive arm aments are being created and offensivo works constructed; that these point in two directions, toward . Franco on . tho west and Russia on theeoat; whilo, even at the moment of urilrug, in the in trenched camp at'Strassburg, railroad trains stand filled with supplies of all kinds prepared to start in any dirctiou on receipt of a telegram from Berlin. Tho conclusion of both writers is that the next war must be of a destructive violence which has been unknown up to tho present day: that on both tddos will Ih) displayed, in this struggle to tho death, all moral and material forces noa Kihle tor tho work of mutual annihila tion. . ' i; ,1 ' - The Atmosphere; of the Interior, Clara' llollc'a Letter. J ' , Permit urn to instruct you in. tho mat ter of furnishing your summer homes, in case you are going to have any haud in it. Carpets should be chowm with a view to their being a background to the furniture of a room, while thov wall papers must be selected with an eve to their forming what may bo termed" the atmosphere of tho picture inado by tho interior. This is the foundation of tho new art ideas in furnishing houses cither in the country or city. , Walls, therefore, should be papered or paiutod in a manner that will not make- t'.iem more conspicuous than the fumituro of tho room, and this dogma must rule with regard to the decorations on the walls. Therefore, whether paint, par or calcimine bo put upon tho walls, it should bo in neutral tints aud tertiary colors. (.'Loose, therefore, for your country houses what are called quiet colors for paH'i', paint and calcimine; but for tho friezes and dodos let a more decided taste rule, giving freedom and boldness in tho figures or lowers for these decorative jxirts of your apart ments. If you decide to tmpor your walls, li t tho grounds le of an agree able, soft color, and tho figures as small as tho size of tho apartment will permit, and put on in vanishing effects, rather, than staring or striking; in a inanucr, to to speak, as to give one a blow in tho eye. "Wilkins' Star Proverbs: A small soul baa plenty of elbow room ia narrow minded man. . - - A PARTRIDGE'S STORY. ! i Afphonas Paudet You know thatjaftrldges go in co' ana miija tuoir. ncsw i ig;iuer m hollow of the furrow so that they -. 1..o.a i..nf tiinH in ili liko crain from the: hand of the bowci Our ow n company is numerous and gay, established on a plain at the edge ol a large wood, with good pickings and fine covers on both sides. Thus, hilice I first knew how to run, well feathered, well l fruin1 mv lifo a Imnnv one. Nevertheless, one thing disturbed ,me1 lime, iv was una 'i "'a tho bunting , season, .. of which our., mothers began to' talk softly among themselves. ' One old member of our company always said to me at such times: . , '-': "Have no fear, nougct," they call me liougct on account of my beak and, claws, the color of service berries "have no fear, Kouget, I will take you with me on the opening day, and I am sure that nothing will happen to you." This is an old cock, very cunning and still active, although he already has a horseshoe marked on his breast, and white feathers here and there. While still young he received a shot in his wing, and as that made him a little heavy ho looks twice before flying, takes his time and always comes safely through. He often took mo with him as far us the entrance to the woods. There stands a curious little, house nestled among the chestnut trees,' silent as an empty kennel and always dosed. "Look carefully at this Louse, littlo ono," the old fellow said to mo; "when you Bee Biuoke rising from the roof and tho door and the shutters open, things will bo going badly for us." , And I had confidence in him, knowing well that this was not his first season. In fact, tho next morning at break of day, I heard some ono willing softly in tho furrow: "Kouget, Kougetl" - It was the old cock. Ilia . eyes were wonderful to behold. "Como quickly," said, "and do as I do." . - ,1. I followed him, half asleep, running between tho clods of earth without flying, almost without Jumping, like a mouse. Wo went toward the wood, and I saw in passing that smoke camo from the chim ney of the little house, the windows were open to the day, and before the wido open door wero huntsmen, ready equipped, surrounded by leaping dogs. As we passed one of the huntsmen cried: "Let us try tho fiold this morning; we will go to tho woods after breakfast." Then I understood why my old com panion took us first, to the forest. Nevertheless, my heart beat, above all, when 1 thought of our poor friends. Huddonly, just as we reached tho edge of tho wotid, we saw the dogs running in our direction. "Lie down, lio down," said the old fel low, crouching.' At the samo timo ten paces from us, a frightened quail opened wido his wings and his beak, and Hew up with a cry of terror. I hoard a fearful noise, and we wero enveloped by a strango smelling dust, all white anil warm, although tho Bun had scarcely risen. I was so fright ened that I could run no further. Luckily, wo hod entered tho wood. My comrade squatted behind a littlo oak, I placed myself near him, and we re mained hidden . there, looking out be tween tho leaves. ' In tho fields thcro was a terrible noise of gutis. At each report I shut my eyes, completely stunned; thon, when 1 decided to open them, I saw tho plain, !... (iii.l Imt'i. at.il fl.tru riitit.iniT ui.i.rf.ti. ing in tho blades of grass, in tho littlo bundles of groin, turning ou their tracks liko mad creatures, liehina them tue huntsmen . swore, snouted; tho guns shone in the sun. At ono moment, in a little cloud of smoke, I thought 1 saw, Lai thouL'h there was no tree noar, somo- innv' uy like falling leaves. . But the old cock told mo it wus feathers; and, in fact, a hundred paces in front of us a superb gray partridgo fell in tho furrow, turning up his bloody head. ' ' Wbou tne suu became very hot, very high, the shooting suddenly stopped. Tho huntsmen returned toward tho littlo house, where could be heard tho crack ling of a big fire of vino branches. They chatted toiwther. eiin on shoulder, and discussed the shots, while ' their dogs' camo behind them, tired, with ' lolling tongue. ..'! -t . '.'They are going to breakfast," said my companion, "let us do like them." , "And wo entered a field of buckwheat, which is near tho wood a great big white and black field, in flower and in grain, with a smell of alnxjuds.' Hand some pheasants with golden-brown plumage wero. feeding there also, lower ing thoir mi crests for four of being seen. Ah! they were, Ie.ss, haughty than usual. While eating they asked us for nows, and if auy of their "number had fallen. During .this timo tho breakfast of the huntsraeu, at first, quiet, becamo more and moro noisy; wo heard tho glasses clink and the corks of the bottles ily.' My guide considered it time to ro turn to shelter. At that hour tho woods scorned asleep. TIip littlo pools, where the doer camo to drink, wero troubled by no lapping tongue; uot tho muzzle of a rabbit in tho wild thymo of tho warren. ' But a mys terious" trembling was to bo felt, as if each bliulo of gross sheltered a meunneed lifo. Those wild creatures of tho forest have so many hiding places tho bur rows, the thickets, tho wood-piles, tho brambles, the ditches those littlo wood ditches whioh retain the water So long after it has rained. 1 confess that I would have liked to be at tho bottom (if ono of these holes, but my companion preferred to remain in tho open, to have room, to sec about him, aud to feel the free air before him. It wits well fof'UR that ho did m, for tho huntsmen camo into tho woods. Ohl .that first shot in the forest that shot which tore holes in tho leaves liko an April hail, and scored the bark never shall I forget it. A rabbit mado olT cross the road, tearing up tufts of grass with his extended claws. A squir rel ran down a chestnut tree knocking off the green burs. There wero two or three heavy flights of big pheaianta, and a tumult among tho branches and tho dry leaves at tho wind of this shot, which agitated, awakencS, 1 frightened everything that lived in the wood. The field mice ran to tho bottom of their holes. A horn-beetle come 'out ot a I J! crack in the tree . against which we were squatting, and rolled his' big,, stupidities, 'filled with terror. t And then blue dragon-flies, drones,); butterflies, poor insects flying wildly frbm all Scales, eve lo a little beetle kifh scafloLif ings, who placed himself ckwe to ihy Beak; bo'Iwas too frightened myself to tako advantage of bis fear. -The old -cock remained calm. Very attentive to the, barking and the sounds of the guns, when they approached, he mado me a sign, and we went a little further, beyond the reach of' the dogs andwell hidden by the foliago; -;Nevee-tholesa, I thought atone time we 'wftre lost, . Ite path which we had to cross was guarded at each end by a sportsman in ambush. On one sido was a big jolly fellowvith black whiskers, who mode a whole arseiml jingle at each, movoment, hunting-knife, cartridge-box,' powder flask, without countitig gaiters buckled to the knee, which mado him look still taller; at the other end a little old man leaned ngainHt tho tree, Bmokedhia pipe tranquilly, winking his eyes as if sleep ing. Of' tho latter I was not afraid; but the big follow beyond. . "Vou know nothing, Rougct," said my comrade laughing; and fearlessly, with his wings spred out, he flew almost against tho legs of tho terrible whiskored huntsman. . ' . And the truth is that the poor man was so entangled in all his hunting ap parel, so occupied in admiring liimsolf from bead to foot, that when he got his gun to his shoulder we wero already out of shot Ahl if sportsmon knew, when they believed themselves alone in somo comer of the woods, how many steady little eyes watch them from tho thicket, how many restrain a laugh at their awk wardness. We kopt moving, always moving. ' Be ing able to do nothing better than follow my ancient companion, my wings kopt stroke with his, in order to fold them solves motionless as soon as ho stopod. I have still before my eyes all tha places which we passed; the warren pink r with heather, full of burrows at tho foot of yollow trees, with a groon curtain of oaks, where 1 seemed to see death hidden everywhere; the little green path where my mother partridge had so many times taken hor brood to wajk in the May sun, wburo we all hopped about, pocking at tho red ants which swarmed on our claws, where we met conceited littlo pheasante, heavy aa chickens, that would not play with us. . I saw it as in a dream, my little path way just as a hind crossed it, high on her slender hoofs, hor great eyes wide open and ready for a leap. Thon the pool where they go in parties of fifteen or thirty, idl of the eamo cover, rising together from the plain to drink water from the spring and splatter about the little drops which roll over thoir lus trous plumes. In the midst of this pool there was a clump of bushy alders; it was on this islet that we took refugo. The dogs would have needed a famous noso to seek us there. We had been there for a moment when a roo-buck ar rived, dragging himself on throo feet and leaving a rod track on tho mosses behind him. It was so sad to see that I bid ' my head under tho leaves, but I heard the wounded animal drink at the pool, panting, burning with fever.' Tho day declined. Tho reports of tho guns wero more distant, became ; rarer. Thon all was still. It was finished We returned slowly toward tho plain to got news of our companions. Passing the littlo house in tho woods I saw some thing horrible. Ou tho edgo of a ditch hares with red ur and littlo gray rabbita with white tuils lay sido by sido. Here were little paws joined by death, which looked as if begging for mercy, and closed eyes which seemed to weep; then red part ridges, grey partridges, which had tho horseshoe like my comrade, and young ones of this year's brood, which, like me still had down under their feathers. Do you know anything sadder than a dead bird? Wings are bo full of life! To see them folded and cold makes ono shud der. A great deer, stately and still, appeared asleep, his littlo pink tongue hanging out of bis mouth as if to lap once moro. c ' And thb huntsmen wero, bent over this slaughter, counting and drawing toward their gamo-bags the bloody paws, "theninngled wings, careless of all those fresh-mado wounds. The dogs, coupled for tho journey, wrinkled their lips and jHiintod, as if making ready to throw themselves anew iuto tho underbrush. OM while tho great sun sank and they all departed, weary, their shadows grow ing long over tho hillocks of arth, and the pathways damp with evening dew, how t detested them, men tu'd beasts, tho whole troop! Neither my companion nor I had courage to thiw; ns usual a little "farewell iioto to this day as. it endod.' ' ' . .' l- . On our way we met unfortunnto little creatures, struck by a chance shot, and lying there, abandoned to the ants and field-mice, their' muzzlos full of dust; magpies, swallows, lightning struck in thoir flight, lying on their backs aud stretching their little stiff claws' toward tho night, which descended quickly, as it always does in 'the autumn, clear, cold and damp. But tho most grievous of all was to hear, along the' woodside, at the edge of the meadow, and below in the willow Ihiekeul.by tho river, 'anxious,' tod, scattered urios, to which thcro w noaiwwcr.! .. . . " " Education In Scotland. . Chicago News. An intelligent writer sets forth that tho progress of education in tcntland pince tho passage of tho educational act of; 1872 h:is been very remarkable. Out 'era . school population, ot 012,000 no loss tlan 500,009 aro enrolled, aml 85 ) r cent, of Ithexe ar4 in actual attend unco, which is double tho number at school previous to tho operation of this act. With this great influx of pupils, ruOstlyrtf course, in tho lower '.grades, tho scholarship has improved, ami tho number now examined in Latin, Greek, and mathematics ia almost four time greater than formerly. , Femalo vaccinators have boon intro duced into Madras, so that native women need not havo their prejudices shocked by being treated by medical men.. , A Tcry violent poison has been iso lated from decomposing animal fiohh by Fro ItfgSft o lief un. c j A PUZZLE IN BOSTON. Tba "Japaneaa Crrat!, mirror ot ' 1 Hcoond Bight, . f ttilian Whiting In Inter Ooaan.1 nVti have been having a little private sensation of out own here at Hotel Vcn- I dome. I believe the raid-summer days and this will give you a "variation from jhe annual soa-aerpent. . This little sen sation of ours is a Japanese crystal. He who has not looked into its depths has yet one sensation of life, at least, in re serve, and if he be curious in the tricks and trances of demonology, be has yet something "to live for. Tho Japanese crystal is not common. It is cut in the round, oval and ' egg sliapo, "and varies in its size. Tho egg shape is held to be the best . 'for experiment, and it must be wrapped, or rather held, in' a piece of .black cloth so that only the fide upper-most sliall be presented to the eye. Black silk cannot be used as it is non conductor, but black woolen of any kind will serve tho purpose. Tho Jap anese crystal is said to servo as a mirror of the spiritual light in the hands of one who has the mediumistic temperament Faces of those long since passed beyond the ehadowy porUU ot the silent land, scenes that are. recorded in the book of fate to -be sometime enacted; 'the, faces of people still unmet who will have to do With our lives. All these, and jnore, are said to bo, rcvcalod in this . stone, to him who has the temperament through which its revelations may come. A party of people was grouped lost evening in a parlor on the fifth floor of Hotel Vendome, bo high that no re flections from the street were possible, and it was suggested that the Japanese crystal be examined. In the hands of One of tho party curious visions appeared 'in it. The lady holding it had chanced never to have seen the stone before, and she looked incredulously as a face ap peared to her in it. The first picture washer own forma .natural reflection, she thought, as she was looking into it), but beside her own appeared the face of a stranger whom sho had never seen, and, as has been said, tho height of tho room from the street utterly precluded tho possibility of a reflection from with out, and as sue sat with her back to the window thcro was tho samo impossibility for any one or any picture in tho room to be reflected there. These two pictures were succeeded by thoso of strangors to the gazer, but when de scribed wore recognized by others in the room and verified by photographs to the lady who saw first those unknown faces in the stone.. ' Then came a scrioB of pictures. Tliore was a suspension bridge over a great rivof, and apparently an accident tda train; this vanished, and there again appeared the 'bridge 'with numbers of pooplo seeming to climb tho trestle work, as if to escape from drowning in the water below; and with this a profound impression that the sebno was some months distant in the future. Space would foil to relut? the various tableaux that appeared in that stone, ' and . many of the most singular circumstances and coincidences and related associations can not bo narrated. Among othor faces appeared that of Emerson by the side of a beautiful young woman, whom no one in the room could recognize. The prop erties of tho Japanese crystal aro very singular, aud in tho hands of somo per sons even extraordinary. - n An bh(lluman'a Vlewa. Georgo Alfred Townsend. A British gentleman said to me dur ing the week: "I wish we had force of character and public opinion enough in London to have such railroads as these elevated ones of yours." Said I:'"ls it possible that I see, an Englishman who concedes anything' "Why," said he, "almost every Englishman who goes home exclaims against our underground railroads. They are dingy, damp, sub terranean, and here you ride to business with not a shadow falling ou your news paper,, reading as you go, and every handsome woman's face receives all the bonotit of the sunlight, and you can look from one end of the car to the other and recognize your friends." Said I: ,'.'We gave up npble streets for such a benefit." J'Ves,"aid he, "and that is where you aro really a young, strong nation; you recognize tho greater neces sities in spite of the littlo decencies. You give your streets up for the benefit of the many instead of hesitating at the discomfiture of the few who may not liko tho noise." In Spain. Foreign Letter. J Hero, if you ask a man for a light, the chnnces are ten to ono that he will pull out a handful ot brimstone matches and offer you one, but that is never dona anywhere eUvrJn Spain .they. make rmile-n formal matter of rsking tcr iv light. Tho gentleman who wislu-s tlint accommodation approaches the smoker, removes his hnt, and says: "Will you favor me with a light from your einarf" or words lo that eil'ect. The jjentleiiiau addressed idv removes his bat, thou carefully' bnisbea tho 'ashes 'froia his cigurtanfl presents it wit Ij a bow. The other! ninn; accepts it with an equally ofalmrato' nbVisanee, lights,' 'returns the weed, then both bow again, wish each other good day and depart. ,' ' . - Potato Growing la Alanka. The nofjito can le irrown in Alaska in favorable scison only. The ground is dug up"nnd M'veed with a law 6f. kelp, and fttter this foTtHixT hat. oeen exposed to tho air for a week or two it is dug umkrrand the- sod-auttpod into high, narrow bids, and planted in shallow drilla. The sun's heatalbrt&is depended niKin, aad evm-opportunity givcu ;t to pemitrate thoVlUIVl, ,which if that frigid votmtry .iiot tidy grves out no warmth of ts pwn, Jfcu frequently re mains nrrn thrtiwghouf-'t'lio year-at H depth bejbnd tho influence of the sun's rays. , Kind Editorial Conalderatlon. . San Francisco Post Tho officers of a British man-of-war in tho harbor gallantly fired a salute as the Jersey Lily arrived iittonn last' woei-J-Langtry bangs, as it were. There is no British man-of-war in the harbor, but rather than spoil Mr. Todd's joke, we let it go. Ed. Post. , r e In Sweden a man who has boetf drunk three times loses the right of suffrago. Letting OuT tho Strain. Trot Blackio In CaaU' Magazine. . There are more interesting cases by far in which excitable persons, know ing their own weakneases, have pro dded themselves with' some mode of axercise on purpose' to divert their ex citement from a hurtful to an innocent olmnncl. An instance of this we find in .the life of Oberlui, pastor of Ban debt Koche in the High Alps, in ino soum oi France. Oberlin was one of the beat of men, and endeared himself to his peo ple almost beyond example Besides tain. an earnest mi! or. he was a maker of roads, a builder of bridges, a reformer aud philanthropist generally, wno transformed bis parish from a chaos of desolation into a beautiful abode ..of Christianity, civilization, and comfort. It was not to bo -wondered at that a rnun with an ' manv irons in the fire should be somewhat impatient and have a littlo trouble witn ins temper. At such times Oberlin used to run back ward and forward in his room, beating his hands together rapidly with a re sounding noise, until his temper re gained composure. Those who are familiar with the his tory of the Brontes will remember what is told of their father, the eccentrio and AYf.ir.nhlA irwnimhcnt of Haworth. Even 'during his wife's lifetime he formed tho habit of taking his meal alone; ne con stantly carried loaded pistols in his pockets, and; when excited would fire these at the door of the outhouses, so that the villagers were quite accustomed to tho sound of pistols at any hour of the day in their pastor's house. If we are not-mistaken, ne had another outlet for his emotion, setting up a bolster and boxing it when he was angry; but ot this we are not so sure. . A LWe Poultry Car. Chicago Journal. i . i An invention of an extensive poultry shipper in Indiana is so designed and con srructed as to enable the shipping of live fowls any distanoe by rail without any of the drawbacks attending the handling of "crates" and "baskets, which are tho bane of the express agent everywhere. The car is not unlike a stock car m gen eral appearance, having .four or five decks or floors far enough apart ' to ac commodate , standing poultry. . Each deck may be separated by portable par titions into coinpartments, or the length of the car may be thrown together, Each compartment is provided with a main door, which locks aa hereafter de scribed, and each door has a sliding door, which locks independently, for use in transfer. A simplo contrivance of rods and staples locks with" a lever crank every door at once, and a storm curtain protects the fowls in bad weather. A food and watcrroughj which Jiolds feed and water for a trip to the seuboard, and will not' allow the latter to splash out, tops off the completeness of the inven tion. Delta ITIetal. Scientific Journal. It is well known that vessels built of thin steol will rust , through rapidly if not kept constantly painted. This is found to be the ease to a remarkable extent in such vessels when navigating the rivers draining from the interior of the African continent, the aters of which possess the power of corroding and eating through steel plates very rapidly. In view of this, it has oc curred to Mr. A. Dick, of London, the inventor of the now alloy known as "delta metal," to apply it -to ship building purposes, as it successfully re sists corrosive action. A steam-launch called the Delta has, therefore, been built entirely of this metal and is for tho preseut at the Crystal palace inter national exhibition. Delta metal (which is an alloy of copper, zino and iron) having been proved by repeated exper iments to be equal in strength, duc tity and toughness to mild steel, the plates and ongle-pieces are of the samo thickness as they would bo if steel were used. The Drlnkera ot Blood. Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette. !"' They haunt the abattoir every week and drink the warm beef blood by the cupful. It ia caught as it flows from the animal's throat. ! It benefits thi blooded persons. Somo time sinco a woman came to the stock-yards who said her physician hod told her she must drink beef blood. '' - - "But I never can do it, never !'r said she, shuddering. ' ; "But it tastes just like milk," said tho gentleman appealed to. "Come, I'll blindfold you und give you, a glass of milk. Then I'll givo you some more milk, or a glass of blood, then a taste of milk until you get them mixed up, and yon won't know which is which.". ; She' consented, und drank the plass first given her with.a relish... "Ah! that was the milk;-' Now 1; think can try tiie blood," she told him. ' "But madam, you havo drink jtj al ready," said the gentleman. A DUireasliiK Accident. (t'hiengo Tribiuio.J" It is not gquernlly kpowi that the popular .Mother Hubbard" clbak was an! accident.: Mr.' Worth,! having somo yards of. nn unsaleable; fabric on hand, gathered it up into a sort of bag, cut slits for sleeves, and trimmed tho bot tom with' flounces. - , It is doubtful if he himself knew w hat he meant to do with this "gathered bag. V , Oneday Jady saw it. - -"Oh! what a queer thingl'1 she cried. . "I shall never wear that." The next day she tried ft ou, the third she bought it, And in throo seawns' time"' every woman in Paris wore a "Mother HublMird.' Romance of a Loat Diamond. La Lanterne has a remarkaWe story of tb diamond Sunbeam," i valued at 60ii, 000, the property of -Queen Vic loriii, wheentrustod it to. a Bond street jewelerlo be sot, and from whom it was stolen in 1S&67 in M"ay thefe'died in a miserable lodging in Strasburg a man of 70, in w hose pocket was found the dia mond wrapped in a letter proclaiming himself the thief. The diamond Was so well known that he dared not sell it - ,-, Draad AJruulr Sliced. ' A novelty in the baking trade is a loaf of bread that docs not require cutting after it is bakod. It i3 shaped like Vienna bread, and so mado;ns1lo form Uycra tr ' slices of 'uniform thickness, whioh by plurilf lfcntlf detached, thus avoiding the use of the knife. : DETAILS OF THE 8TORT Of the Man Who Had HIa Faea Torn J, t j OCThf a'Hhall, I . I ' Lfidentiflo Journal ' y It is almost impossible, lot the un scientific reader to believe what is re lated of Jean Moreno, a French artillery man: wopndod ; in athe Franco-German war, whoso story is told - by Gen. Am bert in the second volume of his 'Sou venirs Mflitaires,'hlch is shortly to be published in Paris. A brief outline of the case, from The London Globe, has been going - the rounds of the press, but the following details are so extraordinary irt(ti'ar character that they are given in full: "'Moreau' entered the service-in 1870, and the 3d of January, 1871, was en gaged in the affair at Bapaume. To wards 8 o'clock in the afternoon, while he was loading a cannon, he was struck down by a shell, which, bursting across his face, tore away his nose, eyes, the upper jaw. and a portion of the: lower. He was left for dead on the field, but after a time recovered his senses, and by chance staggered, falling at almost every step, on the road to the village of Ervil liers. , The colonel of the Twenty-fourth regiment sent him from this place by carriage to Arras tho next morning, where he stayed till the 4th of Octo ber following. Ho was transferred to the military hospital of the Val de Grace at Paris a fortnight later, and re mained i there till -tho 26th of , March, 1872, when cicatrization' was hearty complete. All the soft portions of .the forepart of the head having diaappeared, and the bony-frame work being crushed in various places, the unfortunate mAn resented the appearance of a veritable eath's head, with two cavities for the eyes, one for the nose, and a large open ing for the mouth. ' However, by ingenuity and patience a ,wax reomblauee of a face was invented, and fitted -with the utmost exactitude to- thehealthy-, portions .of. Jheflcsh which still 'Surrounded, the immense cicatrix. The adhesion, which is almost hormotioi was completed, by, a .natural cushion of skin, w.hi(jh thus, as it"ere, keeps the borAyL f the mask in a groove. The fnner cavity has also been utilized, one of its use being by means of lint, to guard. Uie patient against the effect of sudden alternation of hoot and cold, whilcTtae Upper jaw' and the palate are protected by opiate to whioh are attached a row .of false t-jth, and mastication of the hardest kinds of food is successfully performed. "Thanks to the disposition of the nat ural parts and to the ingenious shaping of the mask, and particularly that of the false nose, respiration is rendered possi ble through its nostrils, and indeed has regained the normal direction, from bo low to above. Tho system of aeration it assisted by two Bmall holos toward the inner angle of the eye, creating a cur rent of air, the eyes themselves of oouree being closed, . ,The sense of; smell, strange to say, has . been regained, whilo U voice possesses its natural tone and clearness.' Thus Morean who when he removes T hi --mask, it is - needless to t say ,t .presents J ai most hid eous aspect in consequence of the 'disappearance of a great part of the bony portion as well as the muscles which should cover them, and of whose head there literally remains only, the brain and the cranium is enabled by the wonderful exercise of medical Bkill and constructive talent to breathe, eat, speak, smell, and even, so it is said, to play tho flute. The mutilated soldier, who is fond of chatting .about his cam paigns, possesses that resigned air com mon to blind men, and his sense of touch, moreover, bos excessively devel oped. He lives at Favril, Landrecies, in the Nord department, and , ekes out his pension by the sale of a pam phlet recounting the facts of his won drous cure. 'Perhaps,' says Gen. Am bert,' 'it would have been well to have kept Bilcnce about this1 poor fellow; but it is not sufficient to onlyjshojr the glories of war; every one should know the sacrifices of the. soldier. I This one has given more than his life, for each day which passes is a martyrdom.' But Moreau, never complains. He is held in great respect by those who know" him; and feels a genuine pride in showing the Cross of the Legion of Honor on bis breat to the. many ctfrious travelers who turn "out of their' way to see the "homnfe a la tote de ire.' " .-,. r k . ' ' Pbotosraphln Rogjuea. fChicaeo News. The procesnised is the dry-plato pro cess, and tho picturo is taken instanta neously. It was found bost to intro duce this method, as it successfully over comes any attempt on the part of the sitter to spod tho effect of the picture by making faces at his captors. While he is umonscioualy looking,; at Jth camera the operator quietly squeezes a littlo rub ber ball like that on a syringo, ..two.-itin slides fly open, and instantly the "phiz" of the criminal is on the plato to stay. The detectives say it works to a charm, and they have not nearly the wear and tear of muscle and wind in making a . recalcitrant roguo sty still as formorly. Meilco'a Population. ' '' ; Chicac Timea Tho census of Mexico gives tho popn lation at 9,0fc!0,777. ; No state has 1,000, OOOtTvo states- have loss than 100,000, and several states have lew' than 800,000 inhabitants. But Senor Romero thinks that the population is really not far from 19,000,000. Eighty-two per cent, of tho population lies south of the paral lel t Tampjeoi jMorrt.'-tjhan h1f5 the wealth of the republic lies sohth or tha northern boundcry of the federal dis trict in which Mexico City is situated. Gardening; for the Inaane. Inter Owan.1 New York Ls arranging to try a new method of treating the insane. Under the idea that occupation is good for the diseased mind, the state haspurchoRod a 1,000-acre farm on Long Island,,, about thirty miles from New, Fork oity. AH kinds of useful and fancy gardening will give occupation to patients who can be trusted. The experiment will be care fully noted by other state. . Withont doubt the step is in the right direction. Philadelphia Call: A dimplo is a be witching depression in k ladyH cheek which makes an impression hard of sup pression and ends in oppression. New York Journal: , Strawberries are nature's sweet blushes materialized. h . . . . it ,1 1 4 : " V :