i r 6 MORNING SONG. 8rectbenrt, tlio night is over, tho mists hurt shrunk away: Tho niornlutc lenms nro gathering dew Uro; from the nprny, And every leaf Villi n rnnlnrn UL-n to crlcf Is a quiver with tlio kisses of the summd wlndl at play. Forth let us strny, dear, while 'tis summer time; All tho world la gay, dear, nt for love anu rnyme. Sweetheart, como. let us andcr j tho patlis are blossom strewn: There arc. daisies for your tresses, tbero aro pop- pies for your shoon. Let their beauty and their glee Make a tender thought for mo Ere tbo Rummer day lias floated to tho golden gates of noon, "IVhy should we part, love! when true lovers wed Summer s In tlio Heart, love, wnen meir uioom is dead. Bauiuel Mlnturn Peck In Homo Journal, TIIEJHMLEYS. I found myself, ono Septamlicr morning, ftandliig by tlio slioro of n beautiful llltlo sheet of wnter among tlio Susox bills, Jn tbo northern port of Now Jorsey, In n sort or Hip Van Wlnklo study. Tbo metamorphosis had lieen sudden and completo in my sur roundings. An hour or tw o ago I bad been la tbo whirl mid bustlo of netivo city lifo. Now I wns in tho midst of penco mid (pilot, among rami scenery that was restful to tho eye, heart and brain. Tlio sheet of water nt whoso edgo I was landing was dignified by tho nnmo of Lake Wnnnynndn an Indian uppcllallon, as I nf terwniil learned and was a dimluulivo picto to bear tho liiiiuo of lake. But it was very beautiful, as I recall it, on that blight September morning, nestled among tho lowering bills nud framed by tbo foliage of tho trees, mid vrith a margin of green formed by tho low growing bushes and grasses. It wus early in tho day, and the first rays of tho sun had begun to look over tbo ragged tops of tho unoven ridgo to tho eastward, iukI with n blnzo of glory thoy presently Hooded tho bosom of tbo crystal Jako lying in peaco boforo mo. Ilocks cropped out from tbo surfaco of tho ground everywhere, and loose bowldors lay on tho siilo of tbo precipitous hill whoso feet were laved by tho clear waters of tho little lako. Theso bowlders, by their precarious touuro of tho ground, suggested to mu tho idea that Sisyphus of old had lieen cngnged bore, mid that tho bugo stones, seemingly ready to topple down into tho lake, wero evi dences of his herculean andinconipleted task. Theso vorduru clothed foothills, immedi ately surrounding the sheet of water, were but Liliputinu pickets, thrown out in ad vanco of tho towering mountain ridgo, mid contributed pleasingly toward tho pretty and imposing landscape. As I returned to tho littlo red farm house, about 100 yards from tho lake, I saw for tho first timo Kuto Bliulcy, tlio pretty blonde daughter of my host. She seemed n girl of about 18, with n rather sail expression upon her attractive face. As 1 raised my but to salute her she gave mo n nod mid a smile, but that smilo was a forced one, mid there was no soiitaueity in her greeting. It was not dillldeiiee that checked her attempt nt a courteous anil friendly return of mi' civility. There was evldei.tly n cloud over her ynung lifo which she was trying to illiimliio by u forced ray of pleasantry that it might not be noticed by u stranger. Sho was a pleasing contrast In her plain, neatly lilting gown to the maidens 1 had been accustomed to see nt tlio fashionable re sorts. It was beuuly utmdoruod; purity and simplicity combined; a picture of innocence that would have been so very bright but for tlio sadness that tinged ,her face. After breakfast 1 went out in quest of amusement of some kind to while nwny the hours that would prove tedious without some bort of activity. Strolling over toward tlio bugo barn, I notlrod two figures Hitting on the immense Hut rod; in front of (he great doors. One was John lllmley, my host, and tho other was his brother-in-law, Tom K.klns. Ulniley sat moodily watching tint other man, who scouted engaged in chiseling souiu initials In the hard traprock. This rock was flat and smooth, mill was on a level with tho ground surrounding it. It was, )ierlias, n square of about leu feet, and formed n natural pavement in front of the lingo barn. The two men wero conversing as I sauntered up, and, utter acknowledging my presence with a nod, they seeuii-d no way loth to con tinue their conversation. "Tom, you've got your Initials cut on that corner, now cut my iiiimo In full in the center of this stone," said Bliulcy, Tom looked nt lilm for n moment sharply, and seemed to discover something in the man's tones or looks. "Pshaw I what do you want to advertise, yourself in that way fori" "All right; if you don't do it I'll got somo ono else to cut I hem for me," replied Blmley, in an unsteady voice. Just then Kate passed tbo barn on her way to the spring, casting an anxious look at bor father as she passed, "God pity that poor motherless girl when I'm gonot" lllmley uttered these words in u low tono, half to himself; but I caught them, though I think Tom did not, as bo was busily pounding away in tho finishing touches to his engraving a little farther off. Hut Tom bail evidently been thinking of Bltnloy's request and the probable motive. Ho ceased bis work, and, facing his brother-in-law, said: "See hero, John, I'll cut your nnmo for you on ouo condition, and that is that you will stop moping and brooding." "Agreed," said the elder man, but I detected n cynical smile on bis face that contracted his assenting mood. Having nothing clso to busy himself with, Tom proceeded to mark out tho design for this memorial tablet at once, and his skill surprised me when I examined Ids lesser work tn the corner, now completed. lllmley, iipKivutly satisfied that ho bad gained bis lut, went olT toward the lake in a listless, moody sort of way. Kate suddenly nppeaml around an anglo of the barn and snldt "Uncle Tom, don't put tho name on tho rocUl Don't please!" There was real terror in her tones that startled Tom into examining her face. It wns hltiuchcd, and her lip quivered on she stood there with ouo deprecating hand raised. "Why notl' demanded Tom, surprised. "Oh I I can't tell you. Hut please don't cut tlio nnnio there!" "But I'vo promised I would, and Joan w ill bo furious if 1 refuse now." "Well," Mid the glrl.Kidly turning away, "perlinjw you're right, From Tom I now learned tho cause of Blm ley's depression. It seems ho wn soon to leave hi farm driven out by tho inexorable mortgage, Failure to meet his payments of in teres', short croju and n combination of misfortune bad culminated in tho less of the proprty. My heart ached as I looked after tub inotlierloi girl, left not only destitute by the withdrawal of n mother' loving care, but left ulso with the fearful burden of a father's living, double sorrow pmslng very heavily upon her ouiiB shouldors, and veiling hei youthful luce will, prematura sadness. llish up on one ot tho venduro clad foot- Llllsl saw tho lwwed figure of John Blmley moving slowly toward tho summit. He paused at tho top, and, looking back with ono earchlng glance, ho disappeared down tho further sldo. I wns about turning my atten tion to tho carver's work near mo, when I saw tho form of Knto pass swiftly mid noise lessly out of the undergrowth at tho top of the bill and also pass out of sight down the other side. "John's guardian angel," said Tom Ell.ins, without Mopping the thuds of bis mallet, in reply, apparently, to my questioning look, turned upon him. "John's terribly down In tho mnutli slnco Mary died," ho continued, aiming some heavy blows at tho bright steel chisel for a deeper cut. "I think he takes on more about Mary thuu ho does about the farm." It was clear enough now. The girl's ropug nauco to having her father's name cut in the rock; her constant sohcitudo about Mm; her itealthy pursuit of him over tho hill. Shu rend more in his oye mid his silence than Tom Hlkins did in his short sentences. Life was a burden to him. mid not even the strong cord jf Knto s lovo would bo nblo to bind him to .arth for long. That samo nftcrnoon John Blmley viewed Tom's nearly completed work in the center of the flat rock. He smiled sndlv ns ho said: "Tom, put tho dato underneath it." It teemed to dawn on Tom's mind that his arother-lndnw meant this work to be n posthumous tablet a gravestone. "See hero, John," ho said, jumping up and nylng n hand on his arm, "you liavo no call X be brooding about your grave yet. I'd chip )ut tho whole business if I thought" "No, no, I don't do thntl"snid lllmlev, forc ing a laugh. "I was joking. Say. Tom," said le, suddenly changing in tone and looks, "if inythiug ever should happen to mo you mow whnt I mean I want you to tnko care f my girl." His voice was broken and mireely audible, and his baud trembled vio ently as he grnstied tbo ono extended to him y Tom Elkius. "Now promise me that," ho nliled, witli Ills whole soul in the words. "So hell) mo heaven, 1 swear it!" said Tom. jrrlnging the hand ho held. "Don't you worry wont u mi, joim." At the near nnglo of tho great barn, toward .iiich tho men's backs wero turned, I caught )ut ono glimpso of a fair w hiio face, and I ihought I heard a stilled sob as Kate quickly irow tincjc into concealment. '1 his sort of thing was getting too painful Hid somber for me, mid yet I wns held to tho ilaco irresistibly. I could not liear to leavo iho girl with no other comforter and pro- fcctor than this good naturcd but unobservant I'om I-'Iklus, with the sword of Damocles sus X'lided over her young life. I wished to got nwny from tho gloom that Blmley wns creating in this qulot, rural re lent, anil yet I longed to lo near, and, If josslble, avert tho blow from Kate's head: or. 'ailing in that, I, perhaps selfishly, thought I night find a plnco in onocornorof that gentle lenrt, and cheer and comfort her in her great nlscry. Notwithstanding her sollcitudo and such onstnnt watchfulness, I had several times in luced this girl to accompany mo on short listi ng excursions out on the lake. V rowed nit nearly to the bank farthest from Unnley's .'arm, where tho pickerel wero always abuud int and hungry. Kate, before leaving her 'uther, would Insist that Tom Klklus should villain close by him, mid, in n vicarious way, uko her place as guardian angel. Uno day, however, as her father was asleep, ixhnusted and tired from having sat up all Jio night before, sho consented to permit foiii to accompany us, somewhat against her w ishes, and very much against niino. I had, n our excursions together, mado no littlo )rogreSs, I flattered myself, in tho task of lispossessing her troubled mind of the idea ihat her father meditated any harm to him- iclf. I had succeeded, I admit, in this work )y adopting methods that seemed best mid jleasantest to myself; methods that wero im- uensoly self satisfying to tho comforter. llenco 1 was nvorso to the presence of a third arty; but I could not help myself, so X fielded gracefully. Wo were having mi exceptionally good atch this day, and Knto's fuce wore n, flush )f excitement, and her eyes wero brighter linn usual. I sat watching her nuimated mid pretty fueo while Tom was unhooking a lino pickerel from her line. It was n very pretty picture, and I was revolving in my mind iouie expedient for gutting oil' with her next ;ime, unknown to Tom Klklus, that I might bave mi opportunity of speaking about some thing closer in my heart than sjduy, scaly llsh. "Dang! bangl" came two sharp (reports of pistol, which tho tall, rocky mountain's tace replicated with so distinct intervals that they seemed like four shots. "Merciful tlo.ll" screamed tho girl, at tempting to leap from the boat in the direc tion of the lllmley home. 1 ceued her as 1 om seized tho oars, and os wo ilow over the still water ICato clung to mo u it terror that mado her unconscious of her lotions. She did not faint. Her eyes Wire riveted to mine us the boat skimmed toward tho shore. 1 saw then what made mo happy iven in that tragic hour. I read In her gaze x look of love. Not that floating, nlry bliss 9f happiness that comes to lovers under more uispleloiiH circumstances, but a deep, appeal ing, clinging love; a helpless lovo that lw- leeches mi echo to its sadness, a imrtnker of It pain. I pressed her more closely. Tom would btippoio, if ho supposed anything about it, that 1 was trying to keep her from flinging herself into the lake. Wo wore soon flying up the slope toward the house. Wo rushed in together. Not a toul was there. Out we went mid toward tho barn. A wild cry of pain from Kate, who oad outstripiKsl us In her great haste, told tho dory of the rash deed. Two forms were lying prono upon tho Hat rook in front of tho great barn doors. Ono was Biiuley's, tho other was that of his guar dian angel. His guardian angel had relaxed tier vigilance just long enough to eriuit tho consummation of this deadly deed. Two ghastly holes In lliuiley s liody revealed the outlet of his tired life. l'oor Kate, orphaned, shocked, senseless, clasped the nerveless hand ot her father. Wo took her up tenderly and carried her Into tho house, where sho soon uncovered. A low moan was the only reply sho mado to my comforting words. On the flat rock I road theso words graven there. John Blmley had scratched the dato with an old knife: "John lliuiley, September 17. 18S0." Tho sun was going down liehlnd tho ragged ridgo of tho mountains, just tinging tho lake witli its departing glories. Wo three stood by the edge of tho lake talking over tlio phuu for tho future, "You will go with mo, Kate, and you shall have a homo as long us I have one," said Tom Klklus, heartily, ICato glanced from Tom to vo, ami lack. "I don't know, Undo Tom," sho answered almost in a whlKT, Kate and 1 had a short conference, unknown to Klklus. Whut!"sald the latter, fixing his eyes In tently on her. "Don't knowp I don't think sho will accept your kind oillces, Mr. Klkliw," I interposed. "Kate has Clven mo tho right to put in a much Itcttcr claim than yours, It you are her uncle, to taut rate of John Hlmloy's girl now," Kate coi rolKjruted this statement by put ting her Laud iu luiuo. - -m . THE COTTON PLANT. ITS NATURAL HOME IN ASIATIC TROPICAL REGIONS. India Said to be tlm Mont Ancient Cot ton Growing Country Cotton round on tlio Wrstnrn Coiitlin-nt Tlio l'lrst Sen Island Cotton. Tho cotton plant is a child of tho sun. Its natural habitation is in tlio tropical regions of Asia, Africa and America, but it has been acclimated and successfully cultivated o.s far north as tho thirty-sixth degree of north lati tude Its cultivation covers a verv largo Kr tion of our globe. In tho eastern hemisphere tho rnngo of its cultivation extends from southern Kurojio on tho north to tho Cajio of Good Hokj on tho south; iu tho western hemisphere from Virginia to southern Brazil. It has Ijeen most successfully cultivated, how over, between tho thirtieth mid thirty-fifth degreos north latitude. Humboldt found it growing in tho Andes at an elovntion of !,000 feet, and in .Mexico at (5,500 feet. Boylo re ports it cultivated at an elevation of -i,000 feet iu the Himalaya. Such elevations, how ever, nro not favorablo to Its best develop ment. Botanlcally, cotton belongs to tho natural order malvaceiu, genus gossypimn. Botanists differ ns to its proper classification into species; some enumerating as many ns ten siecies, others seven, mid others only three, as necessary to a clear discrimination between tho ilistiuclive hnrneterlslies recog nizable, after mnkingdue allowance for differ ences resulting from soil mid climatic in fluences. ANCIENT COTTON OllOWINO COUNTItV. Tho history of the cotton plant antedates In its beginnings tho commercial annals of tlio human family. India seems to lmvo leen tho most ancient cotton growing country. Kor five centuries before the Christian era her inhabitants were clothed in cotton goods of domestic ufncturo from tho liber grown upon s m soil by her own crude methods. Notwithstanding uld proximity of China to India, it was not until tho Eleventh century that tho cotton plant lecmno an object of common culture iu China. Tho flint mention mado of cotton iu the records wns 200 year. before the Christian era. From that time down to tho Seventh century it is mentioned not as nn object of industry, but ono of inter est and curiosity; mi occupant of the (lower garden, tho beauty of its flowers being cele brated iu poetry. In tho Eleventh centurv field culturo of cotton commenced in China, but owing to tho opposition of tho jieople, es pecially those engaged iu growing mid manu facturing wool and Max, it was not until l'MS that tho cultivation mid manufacture of cot ton wei-o well established. Central and South America mid tho West Indies grow and manufactured cotton long before their discovery by Columbus, who found the plnnt under cultivation, and the peoplo using fabrics made from tho stnplo. At tho conquest of Mexico by Cortes, iu 1511), ho found that tho clothing of the Mexicans consisted principally of cotton goods; the na tives of Yucatan presented him with cotton garments and cloths for coverings for hi., huts, while Montezuma presented him with "curtains, coverlets ami robes of cotton, flue os silk, of rich mid vnrious dyes, interwoven witli feather work, that rivaled the delicacy of painting." FLAX INSTEAD OK COTTON. Egypt seems not to have either cultivated cotton or used its fabrics at a very early date, since the cloths in which tho mummies were enveloped wero of flax instead of cotton. In deed, it appears Hint those nations which were early celebrated for their manufacture of line linen wero slow to substitute the cotton for tho llax. Spain was first of tlio European states to grow cotton. It was introduced hero by tho Moors in the Tenth century. The first cotton was planted in the United States in KWI. "Carroll's Historical Collections of South Carolina" mentions tho growth of tho cot ton plant iu that province in Hit!). Iu 17,iil it wns planted iu gardens iu Talbot county, Md., latitude north. At the commence ment of the revolutionary war Gen. Delagal) was said to have had thirty acres planted in cotton near Savannah, Ga. In is stated that in 17-1S, among tho exports of Charleston, S. C. were seven bags i cotton w ool, valued nt I'll 1 Is. 6d. a bag. iJSother small shipment was made iu 175-1, and In 1770 three more, amounting to ten bales. In 171 eight bales shipped to England wero seized on the ground that so much cotton could not bo produced in tho United States. Tho first Sen Island cotton was grown on tho coast of Georgia in 1780, mid its exporta tion commenced in 1788, by Alexander Bis sol, of St, Simons Island. Iu 1791 tho cotton crop of tho United States wns ,000,000 pounds, of which three-fourths was grown in South Carolina and one-fourth in Georgia. Ten years later, 1801, -IS.OOO.OOO pounds wero produced i.),000,000 jwunds of which was exported. Professor J. S. Nowman In Ameri can Agriculturist. Tho Lives of Longshoremen, But, however much of adventurous inter est there may lx among these more wehxl forms and expressions of Now York harbor life, the truer interest centers iu the thou sands of toilers whoso lives are pax-ed on tho docks and in tho holds of vesels where tho countless products of labor and nrt leavo us for tho old world, or are first set down for tho new. These, nro the longshoremen; and there nro 18,000 to "0,000 of thein necessary to handle the outgoing and Incoming freight of tho harbor. That is n largo number of icu. l)eK'ndent upon these alone are nearly enough human lieiugs to populato a large city. Their yearly earnings are from $10, 000,000 to $12,000,000. They ure rough, haul mid uncouth, hit nro marked by such a geniality of uaUire that the key to it is diffi cult to discovei when the soverity of their labor is cgnsidciod. Their vocation is not a tmde; but you will seldom find any class" of men requiring any more actual animal strength, constant dexterity and downright skill. As a rule thoy are uneducated men, tho Irish nice largely predominating, but if you will for ono day watch the loading or un loading of any great steamer, the nmrwlous endurance, alertness, and brightness you will discover thorn pos.scs.stHl of will give you a better judgment of the iniiHirtmieo they hold to tho intricate mid largo affairs of any great seaboard city, while you will bo filled with a genuine resjtect for tho sturdj accomplish ment iu their unregarded calling. Nor would it bo an unoctio esitorionco. For every Hag ot every nation is nlove these vessels as thoy are taking mid giving, Every raw may lie studied in swarthy seamen. Every object that tho mind can recall or understand is taking its place for the hither or farther destination. And the fancy easily courves all seas, and lands with tho going nnd coming, tho gainings that uiv involved, and tin. pleas ures of the human lives that are rukcu in theso mighty outivachiugt of tho purposes ot men. New York Cor. Globe-Democrat. Tho die was destroyed after .1,000 of tho Jubilee 5 gold pieces had Uvu coined, ami they are now selling at u premium. Oiw ot them brought (10 in Londou recently. All Hlght, Do Soto. Ono day last week on old man with a bald head, and obviously with a drink or two stowed away in tho placo whero a drink does nn old man tho most good, boarded a Van Buren streetcar and looked around for a 6cat. Of courso ho found none, and, on ap pealing to tho conductor, was told that he would Ihj ablo to find him ono by tho timo tho car reached Western avenuo. "All right, Di Soto," replied tho aged pas senger. Tlio conductor finished his faro taking and resumed his jwrch o:i tho rear brake, but the old man's wordi kept ringing in his ears. " 'All right, Do Soto! All right, Do Sotol' What the thunder did ho mean by that?'1 tho conductor asked himself, and ho finally beenmo so worked up about it that ho went in nnd asked tho old man whnt it was ho had been giving him. "Oh," said tho delighted old party, with n chucklo, "in 1658, when tho first Atlantic cable was laid, they got a fow words across, you rememlier. Ono of tbo messages which came from Vulenein, Ireland, iu responso to nn inquiry how tho wire was working, was; 'All right, Do Soto.' Do Soto was tho opera tor's name, you know, nnd, by gosh, that was tho last word they did get through that old cable lieforosho went back on 'in complotcly. For months that was nil you could hear in this country. It was in every man's mouth. Whenever wo wanted to say that a thing was p nil right, when in fact it was nil wrong, we'd say, 'All right, Do Soto, seof That wns what I nioant when you told mo I'd got a scat nt Western avenue. I know that this car doesn't run any further, mid so do you, you young scoundrel" Chicago Herald. "King Out" nil tho Orowlers. A miller sat in a chestnut tree, And cracked nomo ancient nuts for mo. Ho said that Hour w as as cheap as dirt, That his bank account was badly hurt lly tho profitless trade of the dying year; That Hour va3 low and wheat was dear. King out, my merry chestnut bell, King sharp and clear, and to him tell That thlj same tale he told before, And hid him tell it nevermore, Tho builder of mills, in his easy chair, To mo doth often sadly swear That business to tho dogs must gj, If prices keep so very low; Tlmt things look darkly blue nnd drear, And says, "Oh, shoot tho glad New Yearl" King out, oh, trusty chestnut bell. King sharp nnd clear, and to him tell That this samo tale he's told licfore, Aud bid him tell it nevermore. Now let mo sit In mine office chair, With my good big pen nnd my frowsy hair, And lot mo writo that "In eighty-se? en Uoth millers nnd furnishers llnd their heaven) For prices will rise and profits will grow," And then I can say, "I toil you so." Hut hark I do I hear a chestnut bell! No, 'tis only a card, with words that tell, As I lay it. away on my dusty shelt, "Somewhat of a liar 1 am myself." Northwestern Miller. Gamester. I watched the smile on her rosy lips As I hunched tho cards and sho stacked tko chips; "Olvo me IhB pack, my deal," A tlourish, a flash, tho shutlling done, Sho dealt me n hand, and I said In fun: "This time tho 'pot' I'll steal." An nee, two treys, a queen, a jack, Hut the card I wanted wns In the pack A "bob tailed Hush" 1 saw. "One card," I said, when tho beta were mado; I split tho treys nnd drew a spade 'Twivs a club I held before. With her card alio tapped her snowy chin, And laughingly paid : " I nlways win, Come, I'll bet you nil I've got." " I'll take you," said I anil I saw her start " I'll 'raise' you one and bet my heart " Sho " called " mo nnd lost tho " pot." Tid Kits.' A lljronlo .Toko. John Taylor, in his reminiscences, tells us Mint ho was much in tho habit of visiting the green room of Drury Inno theatre in order to cultivnto an acquaintanceship with Lord Byron. "Ho nlways." says Taylor, "received me with great kindness, nnd particularly one night when 1 hnd returned from a public dinner nnd met him in tho green room. 1 had by no means drunk much wine, yet ns I seemed to him to lw somowhat heated and appeared to be thirst, ho handed mo a tum bler of water, as ho said, to 'diluto' me." Detroit Free 1'iess. Ho Knew Where They Mad llccii, Do Hang Have you seen anything of my slippers, Johnny i Johnny No, sir. Mrs. Do Hang John nonry, mind what you say. Johnny I ain't soon 'm pop, honest. Mnmnia kep' my head downf a low I couldn't soo a blamed thing. I ain't sayin' nothin' nbout feeliu' 'm, though. Tid Bits. A Dismal Failure. Sweet Girl And so you havo been on tho plains for ten years? Handsomo Cowboy Yes, this Is tho first timo I've leen back into real civilization. "Now please tell mo, in Mint lonely life, so far removed from tho refining influences of civilization, you know, what did you miss mostl" "Oysters." Omaha World. Short Smiles. "I will now quit fooling," said tho phy sician us ho wrote out a prescription, "and proceed to business." Then ho mado out his bill. Philadelphia Call. Colored Hunter Hold on dar, Alio I You'll strain dat gun fus' thing you knows, tryin tcr shoot dat duck so fur ofT, an' do weepon nebber will bo no mo' 'count. Texas Sitt ings. When a man becomes firmly convinced Mint ho is a genius, it is then that the fringe slowly begins to form on tho bottom ot his trousers leg. Life. "There is always sunshino somowhere," says an exchange. If it wero not for such littlo bits of information as this how stale, tint and unprofitable this world would bo I Bos ton Courier. Lawyer Now, you say you've known this couplo for years. Witness Yes, sir. Ever soon them quarrel! Nover. Thoy'vo always lived together in unity, ehf No, sir; in Swanipsvillo; that's about four miles from Unity. Judge, A clergyman relates that on ono occasion, after marrying a couple, an envelope wns banded tohim, which be supposed, ot course, contained tlio nmrringo fee. On owning it bo found n slip of jvipor on which was writ ten, "Wo desire your prayers." Now York Daily News. Tommy was taken very sick, nis mother discovered that bo bad been cnUng too much preserved stuff, nnd while awaiting tho doc tor's visit, implored him to tell her tho causi of it. "Mother," ho said, finally "Mother, Mame Duffy rejected my suit, aiul," hoai-soly, "it drove nu to jam,'' id Bits. Pittsburgh Tramp Madam, if you'll fill mo up with n good dinner I'll saw somo wood. I'm willin' to toork. Woman (.hortly) You know very well wo bum nothing but natural gas. Pittsburgh Tramp Well, gimme suthln' to eat, an1 I'll turn on tho gw for you. Har per's Bazar, M ALLIGATOR MARKET. A DESCRIPTION OF A NEW OR LEANS SAURIAN EMPORIUM. Trices Itnngo from Fifty Cent to 8300. Ilow They Aro Hunted led Twlco n Week Sent to Kurnpe ns Curiosities. An Old 1'ellow. "How do you sell tho lionst, madam P asked tho Inquisitive reporter of a quiet look ing woman, wfio was tho ono jicacefiil object iu tho screaming, noisy world nbout her. "Well, I hardly know how to nnswer that question," sho responded, her voice pitched hlh .enough to penetrato tho chirping, squeaking, cawing and crowing of tho con gregation of feathered folk fluttering nbout. "You see, they como nt most any price, and when f tell you wo get ull tho way from fifty cents to $200 apiece, you can understand how prices vary." As is well known, sugar, oranges nnd nlligators form three staples in Louisiana exports nud internal revenue, nud it wns to discover the exact condition of tho crocodilo mnrket, mid whether the spring catch had been good, that a visit was paid yesterday to tho big tanks on Churtrcs street. There is n lavish liberality nnd n free, un stinted prodigality in tho wny ono of theso reptiles Jays eggs that would discourage any thing short of n patent incubator. Why, without half putting her mind to it, and iu u poor season nt that, she will fill her nest with soventy-fivo eggs nnd crawl nwny, com fortably assured every last ono will produco a healthy littlo yellow mid black wriggler. Just hero it is that tbo ex- ert hunter comes iu for n soft thing. He knows tho favorite laying grounds of tho alligator hens as thor oughly as Johnny doc? his bantam's nest in tho barn, and when the timo comes for tho exhausted mother to conso from her labors, ho simply paddles out, fills his ennoo witli tho thick skinned, ponrly globes, and feels suro of a flue return later on. Alligators aro brought into town in every stage, from nn embryo state in tho egg to great, angry monsters n dozen feet long, tip ping tho scales hundreds of pounds. Mn:i hunt their hideous gntfto after dark, stalking tho swamps, dragging lagoons and wailing through low, ooay marshes, whero vast num bers of nlligators) abide. Several methods of capturing them are resorted to. Those caught with hooks are only fit for immediate killing, ns thoy sicken and dio in short order. Tho big ones nro lassoed nnd smaller fry snared in a heavy seino mndo for this pur pose. Tho hunter realizes ho is after danger ous game, with lots of vicious habits, mid so besides blinding their stupid eyes by a lnmj worn in his cap, ho is prepared to send a soothing bullet whenever necessary. After bringing in his find of eggs, tho croc odile farmer heaps them iu boxes and simply deponds on timo.to do its perfect work. In tho course of weeks the infant gnaws and claws nt tho hard shell until ho finally squirms his way into the world. There is as much dilTeronco in the skin of the young nnd old ones ns iu n babv's complexion as compared with a grown person's. Their hido is ns nril Hant as if polished, n bright black and yellow, which grows dingier mid rustler every year thoy live. Passing through tho big bird store tho alli gator region is rciched. It Is a pretty, gar den like place, with tender, lacy vines trained In delicato festoons up tho lattice against the dark brick wall. Great red pots hold rich foliage plants that lend a tropical nir to tho spot, fitting tho inhabitants of tlio long cemented tanks. Theso troughs nro built six iu n row, the occupants being care fully graded according to size. There is very littlo family nll'ection among them, parents rnrely hesitating to sacrifice their ofTspriugon tho altar of a healthy appetite. Survival of the biggest is an unanswerable law to which all must succumb; consequently they nro elassi fled into two nnd three year olds. Twice n week the water must bo changed for tho Falu brity of tho ntmospbTo. Thero is a notorious untamable odor about an alligator that must bo regarded. It is tlio perfumo ho brought from his wild, freo lifo iu tho forest, and hangs about him with unvarying steadfast ness. Twice a week refreshments aro handed round, beef lights as a rule, a delicacy for which alligators havo a very pronounced pen chant. Tho half grown variety eat from flvo to six at a meal, distending their uncomely, shapeless stomachs until tho receptacles rcfuso to hold another particle. Thoy feed only at intervals, but hnvo voracious appetites then. They are very ugly creatures, with wretched dispositions, as tho reporter had a fair oppor tunity of discovering. Hanging over tho sido of tho tank in playful, almost intimate, rela tions with tho beast, his sheltering umbrella gave a tip too far and touched tho extreme point cf tho thing's snout. It wns enough; with n terrifying bellow and blowing oil of steam tho infuriated being rose two inches out of tho wnter and sent his observer exactly three feet in tho air. It was a severe shock, and has generated respect, if not admiration, for tho alligator's sensitiveness. Lying in tlio sunshine, o very grizzly feature is accentuated. Their great shovel beads float on the water with stupid, evil eyes that blink like yellow excrescences on a mud colored surface. A tiny, minute slit in the snout admits enough nir to enable them to muko a sound frightful enough to scare tho stoutest hearted. The keeper of tho tanks said hundreds were sold yearly to traveling showmen, numbers being sent to Kuropo as curiosities, besides many that were bought by northern visitors. Saloon owners buy them constantly to keep on their counters as an attraction to jwssssj, Chicago aud St. Louis being uoticablo among the number. An artist hero iu town sts them up with nil sorts of comical devices. Ho stuff' them up with cotton, nnd fashions preachers, lawyers, gamblers, organ grinders, cotton handlers and duelists out ot the ridicu lous littlo figures. One, u burlesque sceno iu court, was very particularly amusing. These are sold very cheaply and a pretty fair trade is driven. Tho saurian merchant has a perfect treas ure that ho keeps in closoqunrtersnud guards as the fairest jiwcl of his entire collection of beauties. It is a huge, evil smelling, sluggish reptile, measuring twelve feet, whoso ago is calculated at 150 yevrs. Ho lies sprawled out on tho floor of his trough iu a state of torpid stupidity. Tho creature looks bored to death, and with enough impotent malignity in bis depraved yellow eyes to devour every visitor who studied his uuhandsomo proportions. Tho tropical beast is entirely out of placo surrounded with fresh air mid tho perfumo of flowers. One fancies him crawling slowly from the beat and sluuo of somo low lagoon, lying iu wait for prey that has no chauco bo t ween those weighty jaws. Littlo niggers and crocodiles are iudiasolubly connected iu the ordinary imagination, and ouo instinctively looks round for the black juicy morsel to gratify his hungry, homesick heart. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Origin or the lluitle. Women will l interested to know that tho bustlo is of Persian origin. Nott, in his notes on tho "Odes of Haflz,H defines the "refaight" as a kind ot bolster which the ladies fix to tho under garment to produco o, certain roundness, thought by them to bo becoming. Chicago Tribune, OUR OWN. Tho littlo child that sits besldo our feet May rob us of our strength and rest so sweet, Aud causo our way with cares to bo thick strewn; Ami yet wo love our own. Thero may bo fairer lands and brighter skies, There may bo friends more faithful or more wise. Than any we havo ever seen or known; But each will lovo Ills own. .Mrs. Clara B. Ileath. RICE THROWING AT WEDDINGS. Origin of the Custom ns Olven by tho Chinese Tho Wlso Sorceress. Ill the days of the Shang dynasty, somo 1,500 years before- Christ, thero lived in tho provinco of Shniisl a most famous sorcerer called Chao. It happened one day that n Mr. P'ang camo to consult to oracle, and Chao, having divined by menus of tho tortoise dia gram, informed tho trembling P'ang Mint ho had but six days to live. Now, however much we may trust the sagacity and skill of our family physician, wo may be excused if, iu a matter of life nud death, we cull iu n second doctor for a consultation, nnd in such a straif.it is not to Iks wondered nt Mint P'nng should repair to another source, to make suro thero was no mistake. To tho fair Peach blossom he went, n young lady who had ac quired some reputation us a sorceress, and to tho tender feminine heart unfolded tho story of his woe. Her divination yielded tho samo as Chan's; in six days P'ang should die, un less by tlio exercie of her magical powers, she could avert the catastrophe. Her efforts wero successful, nnd on tho seventh day great wns Chao's astonishment, and still greater his mortification nnd rage, when ho met P'ang taking his evening stroll mid loanied that there lived a greater magician than he. Tho story would soon get nbout and unless ho could quickly put nn end to his fair rival's existence his reputation would be ruined. And this was how Chao plotted ngninst tho Ilfo of Peachblo-som. Ho sent n go-between to PenchblosMim'.s parents to inquire if their daughter wns still unmnrried, nnd receiving a reply iu the nfllnnatlvo, he befooled tho simple parents into behoving that ho had a son who was seeking a wife, nud ultimately ho induced them to engugo Penchblossom to him iu marriage. Tho marriage cards wero duly interchanged; but. tho crafty Chao had chosen tho most unlucky day ho could select for tho wedding, the day when the "Golden Pheas ant" wns in tho nscendnnt. Surely as tho bride entered the red chair tho spirit bird would, destroy her with his powerful Jieak. But the wise Peachblossoni knew nil theso things, mid feared not. "I will go," sho said; "I will fight nnd defeat him." When tho wed ding morning came, sho gavo directions to havo rice thrown out nt tho door, which tho spirit bird seeing mado haste to devour, nnd while his nttcntion was thus occupied, Peach b!osom stepped into tlio bridal chair and passed on her way unharmed. And now tho ingenuous reader knows why ho throws rice nfter tho bride. If nny interest has been engendered iu his breast by this tale of the fair Peachblossoni, let him listen to what bo fell her at the house of tlio magician. Arrived nt Chao's house, no bridegroom wns there, but an att5iidant was given her, and tho two girls prepared to pass tho night in tlio room assigned to them. Peachblossoni was wako ful, for sho know that, when tho night passed, tho "Golden Phensaut" would lie succeeded by the evil star of tho "Whito Tiger," whoso power nnd ferocity who can telll "Go you to bed first," she said to tlio maid. The girl was soon asleep, nnd still her mistress slept not, but continued to pneo the room, and at mid night the tiger spirit came, aud tlio morning light showed Peachblo-som still pacing tho room, while on the bed lay tho lifeless body of tho little maid. Thus wero tho mugic bat tles of Peachblossoni and Chao, mid many more wero there, until they took their flight to heaven, where now they reign as gods. And on earth tlio actors havo not idols more prized than those of Penchblossom and Chao Ivung. Chinese Times. Tho I'rlnee of Wale' Ilnlr. in everything except tlio iudispcnsnblo tawny beard that falls likoa roll,of dead gold silk to the extremity of a massive chest, Prince Albert Victor, tho eldest son of tho Princo of Wnle, models himself on Ouida's heroes. Ho is as fond of knickknacks ns a lady. His private apartments aro tho near est approach to tho talented hut vulgar au thoress' ideal of n young guardsman's rooms. Ho would not brush his hair otherwise Minn with an ivorybneked brush to save his life. Eau do Cologne and other perfumes havo their place in his bath. To writo a note on paper that was not the triumph of Mm per fumer's art would in his own imagination bo unworthy of his tastes nud position. Ho has started in life iu fact as nn exquisite of tho George IV typo; but luckily for himself and for the nation lie is preserved from some of tho most objectionable traits of tho "First Gentleman's" character by tho .sensitive shy ness of his disposition. Ho differs again from most exquisites in having n praisoworthy desire to pay prompt ly for tho luxuries in which ho indulges. In deed ho worries his attendants to worry his tradespeople to send In thoir bills shurp. and frets ninl fumes if tho nstuto shopkeepers ulive to tlio vnluo of having tho future king of England upon their books within decent limits delay in delivering their nccounts. Like his father ho gets his clothes aud plenty of them from Poole. Prince Albert Victor's idea of dignified mufti is a frock coat and lavender or gray trousers. Ho seldom wears a cutaway coat, and even when traveling hardly ever appears iu a suit of dittoes. On tho whole ho mny bo described as a very stately and solemn young man. London Letter. The Life of n Grasshopper. As every one knows, it is a rule of nature every winged insect shall dio within tho year (tho occasional individuals thut survivo tlio twelvemonth only proving tho rule), for tho stage of wings is tho last third of tho crea ture's life. After all, it would bo very absurd if wo did not rocognizj among ourselves Uia stages of childhood, youth, middle ago and old nge, which together cover tho span of our "threescore years and ten." Au insect's stages proceed iu a far smaller compass, and tho winged one is tho lost. It is really tho old age of tho caterpillar or grub. Thus a grasshopjier may to two or threo years a grub, for another six mouths a hob bledehoy that is, a wingless thing, half grub, half grassbopjier and then for n further spaco a winged grasshopjier. fn tho lost stago it marries, nnd Micro is an end of its purp'e. Nature lias no further need for it and does not care whether it dies or not. Tho slender fragility of the insect's npjearanro may have suggested a feeble hold of lifo; some grnsshoppoi-j look hko the mere specters of insects. About others, too, there is n vege table, perUhnble look, as of thin grass blades that a frost would kill or heat shrivel up; a suspicion uliout their sero and faded edges that they are already beg-uning to wither. But the grasshopper has nothing to complain of as to its length of lifo. It sings the sum mer in nud the autumn out, aud goes to sleep with the year. Gentleman's Magazine. The oldest general of the United States army is William Selby Harney. Ho was born near Nashville, Tenn., in 18)0, ami entered tho army in ISIS. He was bruvetted major general on March 13, 16Ci I