TO HIM WHO WAITS. f bim who walta mid the world's applause Kin ju-mm, wuit vmj uj urn J, jl unwcs "I'1 cod)" now '"10 nd rar (va To him who walla. To him rs'u b,"TonJ Uie darkneas drear jl sioniuur Cometh with refulgent lirlit, juiBjuf "suranee of day mum bright To blin who wait, fo blm who walta, though tears may often f, And knees ue uuww, m wrivw sou in prayer, -U p-ief will end. and everything- be fair To him who salt. fu blm who walta, and rcactiea out bia hands eg aid a toller up Ufe'a beetling craga, gunvaae will come from every 111 that Daft To him who walta. To blm who walu, and strugirles not In ruin T overcome the evils that alxnmd nutilD hit bream, aweet will the victory mund To blm wno walta T, blm ho walu there cornea a wily tliron.r. wiio sneer and acoff and look with baleful eve. But a bat of themf They are but gnats aud flies To win wuo waus. To blm who walu there must be rerompent! for useful work, whatever may betide, 1 compenution reaching fur and wide To blm who waits. To bim who walu the stars are alwaya friends, Tlie rwtli'M ocean and the azure aky, ill thing In nature apeak and prophesy To blm who walu. To blm who walta true love will some day come. And by an orranng at nil Diamttles shrine; LifB will b love, aud love will be divine, To blm who walta. To bim who walta the world will aome day cheer. And slog 111 praises, rame a mysterious galea R ill open for blm; heaven seem more Dear, To bim who wait. Boston Clolie Mil BARNES' NEW WIFE. "I declare she's the han'somest wo nian 't walks into the Ransom mcet'n bouse. Barnes must of had his eye open when he picked her out." It was Mr. Wliiting who expressed this opinion, lie ana ins who were picking early peas in their "nigh gar don," iw they called the patch nearest the houso. Mm. Whiting did not reply linmedi Atoly, but she went on with her work with such energy that the ea vine itiffercd nt her hands. When her hits band repeated with unction "the hitn' mmest woman" she exclaimed : "I heard ye plain 'nough, Zenaa You're Jest like the rest of the men. Tliey nil think they never seen notliin' like her. she does look well, 1 ain't disnutin' of that." "'X' herfiggcr!" unwisely went on Mr. Whiting, us he dropped a handful of pea pods into the pan ; " 'n' her walk, We ain't seen no such in Ransom seuce that woman from rew uneans was boarding down to tho Hunkses. Where did you say he found her;'" "Over beyond Bcllin'hnm, Sarah Rip- Icy said. She knows of her folks," was the uncnthusinst! j reply. After awhile Mr. Whiting brought another handful of pods, and said that "women was odd. He didn't see, for his part, why they couldn't own up hen they seen a face 'n' Agger like Barnes' new wife, 'Twouldn't hurt 'em none." Mrs. Whiting straightened herself up frqui the vines. She looked intently at the currant bushes, and apparently ad dressed her remarks to them : " 'Tain't no use to try to make men know anything," she said. Then glanc ing down at her husband, who was sit ting on his heels and very busy, she continued: "I'm thinkin' of his first wiio. Poor Marshy I It's Jest thirt-cn montlis V ii days sonce she died, V a blessed re lease to herl I hope she's with her son Barney. If there's any Justice in God's laws site's a-resting with her son." The woman spoke with almost tear fill earnestness. She turned and lookod toward the tall wliite house that stood behind its elms and lilacs a short dis tance down the road. "I tell you, Zenas, 'f I know any thing 'bout folks by their faces Sam Barnes 'U have a dif runt tune with his eoond wife from what he did with his Irst I hope he will, V I shall see it It'll do me a sight of good to have him "tan roun'. Let him take his turn, 1 jr. He's had most thirty year bein' boss." " TP yet Barnes Is a good, fair 'n' square niau to deal with, V a regular member of the church," said Mr. Whit tig. "1 know all that," responded Mrs. Whiting, "but you ain't never ben his wife." "No more ain't you," said Zenas, ith his comfortable laugh. "Thank the Lord for that I" was the fervent answer. Then the two glanced at each other, Bji in their eyes was something which jj"ht have led an observer to believe ""t after all marriage was not always failure. When both were steadily and si "jtly at work again there was heard a Te from the other side of the wall wre the road lay. 1 'I didn't mean to begin to borrow ooo, Mrs. Whiting, but will you me a nutmeg? I want to make J0" dried apple pie, Mr. Barnes is of hot pie for supper." The raan and woman in the garden up suddenly, k&ning on the wall in an Indolent titude was a tall woman whose figure W somewhat at redundunce, but uose corset confined her waist so that Jet the hint was not too pro-"1- The dark, thin gown was 7 Plain, but fitted with a perfection jfer seeti in Ransom, except perhaps " the case of that "lady from New Weans." The people in this town not in the habit of seeing a wo 7 ahoulders and hips accentuated toiM 8y' to tlje femilline rura' there almost seemed something odest in g0wn like that "It dif runt you know." But they help admiring the effect and "vying. f. Whiting recovered her powers Pwch m that she could bid the ''come right in," for she had a.-, --"Mtga, Will DUO aVitX Y AAc Pies were mighty flat good deal of nrirw things Barnes went round to the back "d sauntered down tlie path, popped and spoke to Minting and &t j"w. She was one of those facial weetneM for men. Without distinctly formulate belief, act il 0 ti B J men .night be -worth w'hUebu that women n(v,r were." Her eve. Were ,llrKL nnu dark. ,l Iwitl. i. . . thuy were ..... nn.nnavoiuptuon.. Hor mouth very expri.sVe, Mr. Whiting. r,-,.lyi,1(f ,0 L,.r W)iri, Pwrwl In the )lw. wW rf follow hor.but he kept with ,,,, i'ia luinwif that 8am uitrties was & thm.,i a thlltl(lriii ln..lf. and he wondered If tl, if. h!uH0,"en ,",d b0'0n1 n,'lli"'- A few day. lutor Saruh Rip,.v an noiinced that not only had the ''new Mis Barnes" Iwen inarriwl b.-f..re, but that she had Ixvii marriml twice U tore. Hor first husband had died and was buried. The hlxtnrv ,vf i. i husband was n..t, however. o straight forwanl. He had negl.vted to die and bo buried, and was raiiinlii nf i t the world. He had run Att'nv fmni imi It wivftuid that ho hud rifVlliPOi-l lwrM disftppearing that "if Charlotte wasn't tho devil she was Jest as good as the devil." This was strong laiiLnnim. mid nr. wonder tho man had not rotiirnn.1 nftne having made use of it. Sarah Ripley paid a visit to that re mote town whence Mr. Barnes had brought his wife, and when Sarah re turned she was much sought after by the wholo feminine neighborhood. She was not reticent in regard to the In formation she had cleaned. Sheiuii.l that Mr. Fickett, the second husband, had been heard of "out west some where;" that Mr. Barnes had spent a pile of money In getting a divorce from him for Charlotte, so that he. Barnes. could wed Charlotte, for ho was rcgu- lariy Dewitclied with her. "There had never been no man so bewitched be fore," Sarah said confidentially to each person to whom she related the tide. "Folks did sav he vim irr. lik-n a man run crazy. He had been heard to declare by threo difnint people that he'd spend every cent he'd got but what Charlotte should have that bill and bo free to marry. 'X' Fickett'd ben jest so 'fore he got her. I d' know what there is 'bout her. but some women be so." mi .1 r n K. . i nussam at isg saran tuple v, concern ing whom no man, in all her 40 years of lite, Had ever "run crazy." For two or three montlis Mr. Barnes went around like a man iu a state of beatitude. He even sold his nhrsat less than the market price, having for the first time in Ins life neglected to in form himself what the "goin' price" really was. Worse than that, when in formed that the trader had taken ad vantage of his ignorance he had smiled happily and had replied that "he guessed it didn't mnke no odds." Sev eral neighbors were sharp enough to improve this lapse and to get a few 'good bargains out of Sam Barnes." There were changes in tlie house, too: It was painted and papered and refur nished. It was opened also. Tho sa cred "south parlor" was a sight to see, with its plush chairs hi place of the horsehair, and with its ox-n doors and blinds. Mrs. Barnes said she didn't like to do heavy housework, and they had a lured girl who kept tho neighbor hood informed as to tho progress of Sam's infatuation. There were visit ors, too, and brisk talk and laughter were heard from among those clumps of lilac. Mrs. Whiting watched all these pro ceedings with unfailing Intensity of interest. She said she wanted to see tnem loiks over tnere gic to the end of their rope. They'd git to it, and she thought it would be sooner ruther than later. When Sam Barnes got over his blindness he'd Just put his foot down agin, 'n folks would stop gigglin' there." In the course of the summer it was rumored that Mr. Barnes had "mog- gidged his house." On the very some day at a Baptist picnie there ran a whisper all through the company that 'Mis' Barnes went to bed every night with her face tied up in a raw beef steak." "Porterhouse?" questioned the min ister when this news was told to him. But whether the steak were porter house or plebeian "round" was never really ascertained, owing to the remiss ness of the hired girl. In those days Mrs. Whiting returned, after some fluctuations, to her beuel that after all Mrs. Barnes would be too much for her husband and he could never resume his sway again. She was crowing thin and he had now lost lus beatified expression. When he went to meetin' with his wife it was generally noticed that he no longer sat so close to her in the pew and he did not look at her so often, but her sniilo seemed ust as sweet and she was often bestow ing that smile upon hor husband. I guess tilings is kinder settnn aown over ter Barnes'," said, air. muting, 'but he never'U be the same man ag in. Whose buggy's thatl' He steDDed out from the back door that he might see more plainly a dash ing black borne and glittering Duggy which were stopping at his gate. Mrs. Whiting ran to the front entry ana peeped out. She saw a man alight frn the buggy and carefully hitch the horse to the post. He was smoKing a very long, thick cigar, lie naa on yei low cloves with broad black stitching on the backs; also a tall silk hat. so glossy that it seemed to radiate back light; also dove colored trousers and a white waistcoat; across the latter was arapea mod deal of chain wlucn new suura tI dangling things known as charms. ;as fat; he had a long musutci.o .... mid "goatee" so visibly ayea as v r rear to be ready to soil anything with which his face should come in contact He walked up the path to the ironi i-viF una knocked. Mrs. Whiting naa h, nponhiir tlirouch the side lights, and she now opened the door with nn- xpeeted promptness, so tnat sue n .' . , ! - w .Hmntlv In her ceived a wnin oi , face and was seized with a fit of cough ing The stranger threw his cigar away and took off his hat with a large flour ish, which revealed a bald bead. By this time Mr. Whiting had made his way round to the front of his house, and was sUndinf close to the jtsp- (he always t in '. tillud with eurioeity. but deter inm-.i imt to fpeak f!p:t. "My n unc U Ficketr-Iandt r Flck H!," Ntid tin. man, . if e were eon fi'irinr a favor. Mr. Wliitin- maided, mid Mr. WhJt ii'g tri.-d l.'.mtel to t.i euiighing tiint she might hear Ix-tter. I win told." wt-iit on htmuger ui a way H-rfeetly in ks-piiig with hii trousers mi.? hi cmj tlm ,,, KOVPt "that Mr. Samuel Karnes resided here, lie you him!" looking ot Mr. Whiting, who said slowlr: "No, I ain't him, V he don't reside here. "From that minute." wild Mr. Whit ing. iu relating the incident afterward. "from that minute I knew something was up 'bout that woman." That woman meaning Mr. Karnes' second w jo. "Can you tell me where Mr. Barnes does reside? was the next question. 1 can, wa the answer. But be fore giving the Information Zenai thought he would ask a question: "Who be youf" "I told you Leander Fickett. " The two who heard him sav this were trv lug in vain to recall when they had bo- lore heard that name. "Yes, but who be your retorted Mr. Whiting. "I am," said Mr. Fickett In his larce way, "I am Mr. Samuel Karnes wife's husband." Mr. Whiting whistled. He looked at his helpmeet, who actually gasped as she returned his glance. "Can't ye come In?" she Inquired In a voice which curiosity made cordial. Now Leander Fickett was a man who would rather talk about himself than do anything else. He knew he was well worth talking about. His visit at the residence of Mrs. Barnes could wait. He accepted the Invitation, and was soon sitting on the best liaircloth chair in tlie Whiting parlor. The chair creaked, but it bore up. The first thing Mr. I'ickett told his companions was that ho was worth more than $1,000,000, ami that in two years more he should be worth double that sum all out of the Lending Stur mine. He had come back after his wifo. "He guessed them divorce papers uidn t amount to much.' He guessed he W Mr. Humes could arrange it Charlotte always did like to handle money. He'd had some trouble with Charlotte, but he kinder hankered to givo her the handlin' of some of that money. He didn't reckon there'd be much difficulty. He considered that he could make it all straight with Mr. Barnes. Folks wasn't so partickler 'Innit such things out where he'd ben. He was willin' to do the fair thing, but he guessed he'd take Charlotte back with him; ho guessed she'd go." He was right in his surmises. Char lotto did go. On this particular day Mr. Barnes was absent until nightfall. When he returned there was only tho hired girl in the house. She told' him that "Mis' Barnes 'd gono off to ride with a geu ,tleman, 'n' didn't say when she should come back." She did not come back. Tho next clay Mr. Barnes received a letter signed "Charlotte Fickett." The letter ex plained that she, the writer, had always felt compunctions about marrying an other man w hile her husband was still living, but that her love for Mr. Barnes had overruled her conscience. Now, however, her conscience had been too much for her and she could go against it no longer. She obeyed the voice of duty, and at the same time the voice of Leander Fickett Mr. Barnes turned off his hired girl. He lives alone and does his own house work us well as his farm work. He looks 70. People say ho "ain't so sharp in a bargain 's lie used to be," and naturally they think he has "soft'nin' of the brain." Mrs. Whiting asserts that if 'twas soft'nin' of the heart she would have some hopes of him. New York Trib- Carefully Accurate. A student of ancient history, seeing the statement that a certain famous character in history had died 1030 A. M. (anno mundi, or the year of the world), remarked to his professor with some surprise, "How exceedingly care ful those ancients were about noting little circumstances. "What do you mean?" the professor asked. "Whv. thev even tell the time of day that a great man dies. We don't do that now." "I think you are mistaken," replied tlie teacher. "No, I am not; here It is: 'His death occurred at 10:30 a. m.'"-Youth's Companion. About hliarprnlng Knife. It is a good deal easier to spoil a knife than to sharpen it. To begin with, a rough stono is used too freely. Unless a knife has a very round or ragged edge it docs not want any grinding at all, and it can be brought into shape far more rapidly and surely by the aid of a whetstone and a little oil. It is no use laying the blade flat on the stone and rubbing hard; hold the back of tlie knife well up and sharpen the edge of the blade only. II you know how to use it, the back of a knife mukes an excellent steel or fharpencr, but the secret Is hard to ac quire. Exchange. Expensive Hoomi Cleaning. It costs H0, 000 merely for the "spring cleaning" of a gn-.-it hotel like the Fifth Avenue. To tr.Kr up the carpet, cleanse and repair tlwm. and put thein down again ; to wash the paint, repaint, repaper. and oil the thousand and one things which a gn iit howe needs with each new year, cost tlie proprietor of therifth Avenue flO.nw. New York Star. Tlie largest and heaviest building stone ever quarried in England was taken from the 1'lankington quarry, near Norwich, in February, 1888; It was in one piece, without eraek or flaw, and weighed over thirty-five tons; it was 15 feet long, 6 feet high and I feet wide STROKE OF FEMININE CENIU3. Simple, but Effective, Dan to Prevent Harking One's Shin. The m ui who says that women have not orighuility not only speaks untruth but deceives himself. Every one has had invasion to go through a room in tho dark on more or less frequent nightly occasions when locking the back door had been for gotten or the pitcher of ice water omitted from the nightly preparations lor slumber, and every one knows how each individual piece of furniture in each dark room traversed, including tlie piano s sharp corners and tho rock ing chair's twin projections, Is collided with. And (til these hard knocks are sus tained by the stretch of bone from the knee to the ankle that is commonly called "shin, and is particularly sensi tive because It has no layer of musclo, merely a coat of sensitive skin to pro tect it. When open doors ore run against the none sulTers. Now theie is a young Mr. IX, whose blue eyed baby Is a year and a half old, and not Infrequently does Mrs. 1). have to get up of a nlfjht, go down stairs to tho refrigerator and get milk for baby. Sho does not say how often or how seriously she was hurt before her genius suggested the brilliant plan which she now has for avoiding these petty noc turnal Injuries, but she Is really proud of her plan for getting unscathed through a room In the dark, and has Imparted It to her lady neighbors. It Is too clever an idea to le lost, and its great merit is in its simplicity. The scheme is merely to walk backward. In the dark ono can see as well going backward ns forward, of course. The lower limbs are, when going backward, well protected from slight nips by tho more or less liberal pad of musclo at the calf, and heels are less sensitive than toes. And if one Is to run into a door the blow can be better Inirne on the back of the head than on the face. Mrs. I), is a genius. Washington Post- An Independent Home. hi tho business portions of our eity there are a good many horses belong ing to firms or to private individuals which stand "on coll," as it were, often times for hours, In, front of theirowner's pluco of business. These horses come to be well known in their neighbor hoods, and acquaintance with them shows hi them habits and idiosyncra sies which are most interesting. One of the equities, with an individuality all his own, is a gray horse belonging to a firm in Winthrop square, he stands In front of his owner's store apparently pondering upon the ups and downs of life, tho hat trade and tho weather, and occasionally he starts oil for an in dependent tour round tho square, af- forduig much amusement, sometimes consternation, to people who are unac quainted with his ways of doing things. Should It occur to him that he is thirsty or that to take a drink would be a diversion in tlie monotony of his afternoon he walks over to tho drink ing fountain in tho square, politely awaits his turn, quenches his thirst, turns around aud marches back, like Bo Peep's sheep, so that his owner having left him facing In one direction is quite nt to Hud him facing in an other. Tho old gray horse is an Inde pendent character, they will toll you, in Winthrop square. Boston Herald. Man Traps and Spring Cuna Set Here." Man traps were mado In South Staf fordshire, chiefly at West Bromwich, ten years ago, and are probably still to be bought The pattern books of sev eral manufacturers had and probably still have an octavo page engraving, showing a poacher gripped by the leg and dropping the hares he had picked up. Those modern man traps were, however, "human man traps," with plain bar Jaws, and not the saw tooth grips, which would mangle a limb and probably break the leg bone. Similar tiger traps ore also mado In the Black Country, and are formidable and crushing devices. Spring guns are made In Birmingham, but these are only alarm guns, to make a loud report and frighten a poacher or bird stealer by noise, without shot; but the older forms swung the small cannon around and fired a volley of shot in the direc tion of the wire trodden upon. Notes and Queries. i : Too Recent. Juliette, a little girl who was making what her parents regarded as remarka ble progress at school, was asked one day by her Uncle George: "Well, Juliette, what study do you like bestr "Oh,j history, Uncle George. I'm getting along splendidly In tliat." "Yes,' said her mother. "Just ask her a question, and see how much she knows.? ' "Well," said Uncle George, "tell me the story of Adam." Juliette looked up with surprise. "Adamr she said. "Why, I haven't got as far as that yet!" Youth's Com panion. The Parson' lllble. Rev. E. II. Lawrence, of Wisconsin, was presented with a Bible many years ago wlil h he carried through the war. He always carried it in his coat pocket. At the battle of Kennesaw Mountain a bullet struck Rev. Mr. Lawrence on Ids lef j side, penetrating his coat and shirt, then into his Bible, stopping at . Isaiah ti., 7. Strange to say the Bible saved lis life, and he preserved the I book ith the bullet in it until his death. The first sermon he ever preacl d he took the verse at which the b llet stopped for his text and preacl ed the sermon at Antioch church, Morgah county. Chicago Herald. I A "Caae." Levir Phvsician I think the shade of h! complexion is more harmonious ; today and the tint of his tongue mora delica e. Just cut this piaster on the ' bias a id arrange it artistically on hi foreh id. Intermix this powder with ! water, and let bim introduce it into bia lnterioi at Intervals of one hour each. -MurLy'i Weekly. AMONG THE DUTCH BOERS. tomeTery Queer CostumesMedicine and ijuackery Dancing. Tlie traveler (I sieak of one who i.i supposed to understand Ikwr soech and iiaiuis) amves at a rami houxe In. sav. the Orange Free Male. A farm house may have one Held of forage and a stone kratili otherwise tho farm is own coun try. He will not olT saddle liia hoi without receiving tieruiMon: this havin hecti asked for and grained, the farmer leads liim through the half doors Into tlie main nirtnieiL There is home made furniture, numerous pink and wluto Kier flowirs, and tiaiuted on the walls rases of fruit like those seen depicted on tho London tutvements. The visitor will proceed to shake hands, commencing with tho stout vrauw and ending with tho Iialiy in arms. This is inn me r.ngiisn imiuisiiaue, " but a resting of palm within palm. Tho collee. which is uiale from sunrise to sunset, is then brought in in bowls, tobacco pouenra are exchanged, and conversa tion, which seldom variis, commences. Tlie visitor and tho farmer answer or re ply pretty much as follows: "Tlie veld is green. The clouds are heavy; there will be a thunderstorm to-morrow. I have a very fine red horse running. Nachtmaal (communion) will bo next month. My vrauw has a cold. The president Is a fine man, Japiu do Yilliers (pronounced Yilje, and minus the prefix) has had a ram born with five heads. Tho English are thieves." The handshaking cere mony is then repeated, tho horn, fed and rested, is brought round; the trav eler mounts, smacks his sjambock, showi oil his steed and proceeds on his journey. ineiarmers have trained pomes to a special ace called a "tripple," and a good "trippler" is always prized. With this paco no "porting" of tlie saddle is required, ami on a long journey tho trip- uer win arrive each night without turn ug a hair, while tho trotting horse, his couqvuiion, may Ih done up. Distance Is reckoned by time six miles to tho hour. If an Englishman near the hour of sunset asks a Dutchman where such a villago lies, ho will be answered bv a raised hand and "a little way over that lull. ' lou then ride ten miles and sleep out in a thunder storm, perhaps. You reach the villago the following middav. Superstition and fear of contagious dis eases are great among tins people. lhe much are accomplished, herbal ists, doubtless obtaining the knowledge f the Hottentots and Bushmen; they nave hero brandies tor colics and plants for sores. They ore often the prey of quack doctors; the more as genuine prac titioners, wno have, to go long distances. charge heavily. A Dutchman is satisfied with the treatment so long as his medical adviser brings to tho houso a quart bottle of physic; if lie present him with a small vial lie doubts his skill and sends for an other raan. The dead are buried on the farms, und over them traveling masons erect mausoleums of brick, hutch wo men are enormous in size, good cooks in their style, gobble sweets und cakes all day and tako little exercise. But now and tlien a Imtch wife and her daughters may be seen kraal ing tho sheep at even ing. A Boer likes bis wife's company, and will leave passengers by his wagon stuck in the mud and half starved while he tracks olT fifty miles with another vehicle to pay a visit to the vrauw. Feather beds are greatly prized by this people; they generally carry their beds with them on journeys. lhe trckktugs of tho Boers are re markable. Annually the farmhouse on the "low veld'' is shut up, and the sheep and cattle are taken scores of miles up to the "high veld' lor mountain pos ture. Beside soino rushing stream the wagons are camped, pcrluips tents are pitched, and domestic life goes on as usual. Fowls cluck among the wild grasses, and tlie cows ore milked beneath the shadow of mighty mountain. The general belief in the excellence of Boer shooting is no delusion. The people are excessively fond of music and dancing; concertina, harmo nium und fiddle ure their delight A withered Hottentot dwarf will draw a strain from the sole of an old shoe strung with sinew, and meu und maidens will vigorously dance to it for hours. For dancing there is no touching the English Afrikander, and his measures seem quite original. The Boers have a bad cluuucter for pilfering. When the men and the women enter an up country store they are allowed to carry oil small goods like sweets or rib bons, which they unconsciously pay for in the bill. Tho farmers are not often rich in money, their wool crojis. being mortgaged sometimes to the stores for two seasons nhcad. ''Young bloods' are impudent aud wild. A smart curveting horse und hut with white ostrich plume usually denote tliis species. When a Boer drinks he is an entire fool. In order to keep a firm hand over the young men riding transport, the elders of the free state recently passed a bill prohibit ing the sale of liquor at wayside can teens, and thereby lost a large revenue. However, there are smugglers, The Boers are great religious formalists and at certain times they and their fam ilies ride into the villages from great dis tances to celebrate the Nachtmoul (night meal or communion), their wagons loaded with nrodm: presents for the carsons. At tliis time business is brhk and the ' streets are like a fair. Yet where natives 1 and land are concerned, the Doer's con- ' slant violation of the Commandments , does not need pointing out The Boers ' are by no means modest, and their family conversations are at times boisterously kidfccnt. Household erraiigements, save on rich larnis, are uecersoriiy meager, and the traveler must be prepared to sleep on the floor in the midst of four or five sisters and tueir three or four brothers, all grown up, while the head couple snore on an elevated and ponderous feather bed in a curtained corner of the room. When sleeping at a superior Transvaal farm house, it is well to esamine the mattress: if it rests on eheeivkins, throw the skin out St. James' Oszctte. JSmrj of Journatlerj. 1 There are five Marys potent in New York types: Ilia Hary L. Booth, editor of Harper's Bazar; Mary Ma pes Dodge, editor of St Nicholas; llzry J, Lcmb, j editor of The Magazine of American Ills- . tory: Marv Kyle Dallas, of The New York Ledger, and Mary E. Bryan, of George Monroe's Fashion Eezar. Wil liam II. Ballou iu The Journalist. The Pleaenra of flatting. There is no rational ground for the common notion that the pleasure of eat ing depends mainly upon what is eaten; it depends upon tlie eater, tlie vigor of digestion end the condition of the nerves. If all these ere sound and true, the pre cise kinds of food and drink are matters Ot little consequence. But and this is a very, very large but if you will keep them sound and true they must not bit abused by overwork, or by having work forced upon them for which they were sever Intended. "The Man in theUooa" aOood Housekeeping. TOO BIO A HURRY. Advice to City rvople-Tlie Ores far lUip'd Transit. Rapid transit! 8o that U what you want? Well, you don't want anything of the kind, tuUit) want to iin-un need, as proK'ily it does. What you mean to say is that you desire rapid transit. Very well; you ore a very foolish er sou; that's nil. You desire rapid transit as children desire things not good for them. Why do you pine for rapid tran sit? What are yon in a hurry about? To get to business; Then start ten minutes earlier and take your time; you will do your work belter and more easily if you take it up with unshaken nerves. To get homef Home will be "there" at 5:!13 p. m. just as surely as at 5:23; "the kids'' children, if you are too pro per a person to accept tho classic slang and their mother had rather see you come home in a placid than in a milled state of mind. Whut are you in a hurry aUmt, anyhow I For every beating pulse we tell L-aves but the nuuilier lea. So sung a very pious and truthful ver sifier of tho lust century. Why do you desire to double the n umber of pulse beuts ly the uncomrortahlu excitement of "rapid transit I" "The numberless" hi accomplished rapidly enough by the slowest process. "Soon shall thou forget all things; soon by nil things shaltthou lie forgotten, said Marcus Aureliits some 2,000 years ago. Why do you desire to quicken tho trot of the procession toward the Inevitable chasm cf oblivion? A hat you need no matter what you desire is comfortable transit. Transit that jars no nerve !v ruuibline cable. jolting spring, clatter of hoof on stony pavement, tiirerui groan or laboring en gine, more direful shriek of steam whistle or most direful jangle of brass bells out of tune. You don't want to bo packed in a sintt ce traveling enr of any sort; you don't w ant your nerves to quiver with ap prehension for tho fate of the reckless newsboy too often ncwgchild who ex xwos himself to more danger while "hopping cars" for tin hour than many a buttle field disclosed in a day. And you don't want to bo hoisted into an enlarged edition of a cash and purccls basket, aud whirled by steam or electricity ut an elevation too high for safety, too low for comfort. High enough to insure disaster in case of acci dent, low enough to catch the smoke of household chtmnevs. and the odors of household cooking. Still less do you want to lie shot through the lioweis of the earth by atmospheric or other force. As has been said, you will explore the subterranean regions soon enough. "Jam te premet nox, fubiilicque manes," said Horace. They were too wise to hanker after underground railways in his day. imt the more coinf""!-.' transit, how are you going to i;. t that? Easily, if you have a talented air of legs; other wise, with ihlllculty or not at all. And even the most gifted legs will suffer dis quiet at tho bridges and crossings of the most crowded streets. Comfortable transit is as yet afar off from you. Your grandfather hud it; your uncle who lives in the oouutrv has it. But your grandfather was never in a hurry, and your uncle never is. Therefore your grandfather's nerves wero mid your un cle's are as of steel. Tho fierce jolt and hideous rumble of tho thimble skein farm wagon are and were to them luxurious aud musical, You huvo hurried your nerves into a jumble of sensitive mucus. For you comfort means quiet. It will be so "only more so" with your unfor tunate, children. Science and humanity will provide for them; they can hardly be expected to help you, who are the original sinful harrier. The coming man niuy cease from being in a hurry, or humanity may decree that every other street be reserved for passenger tratlio and foot travel only ; or some large and strong tamable birds, graceful as - the swans of LccJa, may be discovered, upon whose bad:, or drawn by whom in aerial cars, the tired and nervous may be home quietly, and quickly, too, to and from badness; or hullixins may convey people ut salubrious heights through the calm of air, or chloroform may be ad ministered to each street car passenger by the conductor in such quantities as to render him or her oblivious to the perils and discomforts of travel. This hitter experiment might well be essayed under the existing condition of street transit which is neither comfortable nor rapid. Chicago Inter Ocean, Th Farms of New Ilrunswlck. In extended travels over the New Brunswick and Intercolonial railways one lias practical opportunity for observation of country and study of those who are sustained by it, and any one with half a disposition to fairness must admit tliat our own country cannot anywhere show finer farms or more bright and prosper ous villages. The manner, motive, con versation and characteristics of native passengers traveling between Ulterior settlements and towns tell as much as statistics. The face ot this fine province, as a whole, is filled with interesting pic tures ot thrift amplitude, content. Eng lishmen, Scotchmen and Irishmen seem to have assimilated and merged into another race, retaining the best qualities of each. The farming )opulution as a class average as well as, or better than, our own in point of intelligence and a certain admirable quality of not unpleas ant assertiveness aud self reliance, and in many sections, like tho central, western, southern and southeastern valleys, the beauty of villages, shaded highways aud outlying farms cannot be surpassed in the states or in any part of garden like England. Edgar L Wakeman's Letter. Don't Write 'Told HW." Noticing a recipe for 'Kauldslaugh," it occurred to mo that I might enlighten readers as to the mcaiiin;; nnd original spelling of that word. It is comixwed of two Dutch (Holland) words aud signifies a salad made of cabln-e; kool (pro nounced cole) means cabbage; ala (pro nounced slaw) means a salad, and the roper name in Dutch is "koolsla." It s simply prepared; the ciibbago is shaved fine, seasoned with pepper nnd salt and then with a litila vinegar is heated in a pan until the cabbage is wilted. I have seen it written In rvJpe books as "Cold Slaw," the word cold Being used as the opposite of hot, and in that sense must have been taken from the sound end not the meaning of the word. ("or. QocA Housekeeping. When Saddle Were r'lrst feed. It Is supposed that the saddle was in vented about the middle of the Fourth century, but the fact, in the opinion of some, has not been positively proven. Zonaras, the historian, tells us that Constantine the younger was killed In the year 310, when he fell from his sad dle. The word translated into saddle also means, however, the back of the horse, or tlie place where the rider sat It is true, nevertheless, that Sidonius Apollinaris used the word that unmis takably refers to the saddletree.- De troit Free Press. A REMARKABLE PHENOMENON. .1 r.t.r So rnnetnieied That ft Cam Locate Ore as Divining llod Does Water. Th .i miignetie needle lias long been ?ou :ideivd a reliable medium for divin ing tho location of vein containing ironstone, or other similnr deposits, and in tho eoiirsa of some experiments con lucted by InfciiNm Uucker and riiorpo, und other eminent men of eel once, some remarkable confirmations of Slid additions to the theories hitherto held on the subject wero uchleved. It was found that on approaching an area beneath which Ironstone was deposited the needle became deflected. In cases where the Iron was near to the surface the deflection was most acute, and where It was hidden far below the sur face tho degree of dcllcction was ac cordingly diminished, so that by care- In Uy noting the movement of the nee dle it was possible not only to Oi the exact locality whore Iron was to be found, but also, according to the de gree of deflection, to fix with tolerable accuracy tho depth at wldch the vein would be met with. Another mode of discovering the locution of minerals Is to use the "diviner," us a person gifted with, "magnctio powers" is called. There la now In England a remarkable boy who Is regularly employed for this purpose by n mining company in tho north of tho country. The manager of tho com pany, iu describing this boy, says: "Mineral veins and water have very strong magnetic attraction for tho boy, who Is 13 years of age and of ordinary weight. If he stand In a small quan tity of water it takes a very strongman to lift him. It is not at all necessary for him to carry a stick. All he re quires to do Is to walk over the ground with his hands clasiicd, and ho can im mediately tell you if ho steps upon a vein. He con give the direction of the vein, and say whether it is weak or strong. Ho can also, by simply walk ing over It, say whether another vein crosses Into It. "When ho enmo hero we were all skep tical, so wo took him on a portion of a hill where wo knew veins to exist, but where no outside traces were visible, and he correctly gave us tho direction ot each. In his researches ho came upon a very large and strong vein, which was quito uiiknowu to us. He gave us its direction and strength, and as wo have since put a shaft down Into this vein wo have proved that he was exactly right as to Its position. Ho does not profess to tell whether the vein car ries lead ore or not; till ho can do is to find tho vein for you and say what size and strength it is. In the vein he found for us w o have not yet como upon load ore, but it carries rich mineral soil and promises well." This boy is accompa nied by a luedicol man, whose services are frequently required as the work of discovery proceeds in consequence of repeated magnetic shocks which he re ceives from contact with minerals or water. New York Commercial Adver tiser. Freaks of College Life. Collego students have peculiar cus toms, some of which certainly could not bo adopted by outsiders to advan tage. In a certain New England col lege, for Instance, a favorite gala cos tume somo years ago was a linen duster, a tall white hat and a pair of top boots, a rig calculated neither for wet nor dry weather, neither for heat nor cold. In the same Institution of learning, Immediately upon the ringing of an alarm of fire, It waa Incumbent upon every able bodied student to throw open his window, thrust forth a tin horn, nnd blow as If the fire fiend was known to be as averse to the sound of a fish horn as were the college faculty themselves. Signs and door plates, numbers from street doors and the gilded wooden keys, boots and watches customarily displayed before shops were all looked upon as most desirublo adornments for a "student's" sitting room. .Happily these and similar freaks of student life are being weeded out, and the day is at hand when even a collegian will not be ashamed to behave like a gentle man, and learn to possess his soul in patience, even though some callow freshman dares to carry a cone and to "sport" (tho proper technical term) a stovepipe hat, Harper's Young People. Outwitting the Dean. I was talking recently with an En glish clergyman of the Episcopal church Who gained his B. A. at Oxford nearly halt a century ago. The conversation turned to Harvard college and the dec oration ot its founder's statue. The reverend gentleman said that his rec ollection ot his Oxford days contained plenty of episodes of a like nature and ho accordingly related several Upon tho great quadrangle of the Christ Church college a number ot the halls front and upward of fifty doors open. One fine moming every one of these doors, which were of oak, was painted a bright crimson. Ot course there was great agitation, but tlie identity of the artist was never disclosed. The dean, In order to prevent a recurrence of the deed, stationed a ' watchman In the quadrangle, and so well did that func tionary perform his duties that the) doors wero not touched. But the stu dents resolved to circumvent the deaa and outwit the sentinel. One evening a big undergraduate, who had possessed himself of a flowing gown and wig, personating the dean, entered the "quad mag," as the court is affectionately termed, and approach ed the watchman. "Ahum I ahum!" he began in a deep pitched voice, "I am glad, my man, to find yon attend ing to your duty so well Now yon go to my kitchen and my cook will give you a good supper and plenty of ale. I will keep watch while you are gone." Flattered and pleased the man accepted the Invitation and went He was gone fifteen minutes. In the meantime each one of the fifty doors was painted a sunset red. Boston Advertiset Where Air la rarest. Tlie popular belief that occupants ot the highest floors in a city house live In the purest air seems to be upset by tests made of the atmosphere ot London, which showed that the purest air was obtained between thirty and forty feet shove the streets. New York Times.