POOR UNCLE SANDY. How He Kruitrilril thn Kln.lno.. or Ills (piiitoim Itpneriictor. It was when winter was just closing in, nml tho frost was making "Yio planks crack and snap, that I niet Uncle Sandy. Ho was of real old African stock, with a smile always cov- , ering his face, and ho laughed heartily Vas lie stopped mo and said: . "Cvns jist a-finkln'! I was jist m1' (lat if 1 snoultl mcct du nn"el jj)'r el, an' he should ax me to walk wid him, an' de&o yero butes should frow me down, how 'shamed doole man would be of hissolf yah! ha! ha!" Ho held up one foot and then the oth er. I could seo his black toes peeping through tho holes. I gavo him some money to get repairs made, and it was three months before I ran across him again. Then I met him ono biting cold day. Liu was without an overcoat. Ho ' remembered me, and ho burst out laugh ing as ho said: "Got dem butes all llxed, but Gabr'el didn't dun cum along yit." "You couldn't walk far with him without an overcoat." "Dat's so, inns' r. If Gabr'el should cum I'd hov to take him whar' dar' was afiah yah! ha! ha!" Between Uncle Sandy and myself and a second-hand dealer the old fellow got in overcoat tho first ho over had. if you give to charity you like to givo to those who neither demand it nor seem to expect it. That gives you a chanco to surprise them, and a word or two of gratitude is nmplo recompense. When spring came I mot Undo Sandy for tho third time. It was slushy and Lsloppy, and tho old boots woro rent and 'worn. There is an wuV even to an .old boot. You may peg and patch and cob ble, but tho day comes when tho leather loses its life. "Looking for Gabriol?" I asked as ho was about to pass by. "Oh! dat's you. is it? Yah! ha! ha! No, I isn't lookin'. I'm jist hopin' ho won't cum. Deso vero olo butes hov gono at last. Doan' want to make Gabr'el 'shamed of me, you know!'1 Ho was fixed up for boots, and ono day, two months later, a boy came aftor mo and I went with him to find Uncle Sandy on his dying bed. "Gabr'el ar' a cummin' purty soon!" he said, as ho gripped my hand. "And aro tho boots out of repair?" I asked. "'Tain't do butos dis time, mas'r. It ar' do soul! Izo ready to seo him an' to walk wid him 'long do dark road, neel down yore. Izo olo an' poro an' vlyin' an' dar's only ono way 1 kin pay ye for what ye hov dun fur me." And ho put his black hand on my head and prayed: "Oh! Gabr'el, dis yero white man shod mo an' c'.othed mo an' fixed me up, dat I might walk wid yo if yo hap pened dis yero way. 'Sense his faults, forgivo his sins, an' when do' ho'n blows an' ho cams up to walk in at do gate, doan't stop him. I'll bo dar to guide him in, an' I'll tell de Lord all about it, an' pleaso doan' mako no mistako amen!" Detroit Free Press. Not Very Particular. Mrs. Shopper Let mo seo something in dres.- goods. Mr. Tape Yes' in; what kind can 1 show you? Mrs. Shopper Oh, I'm not particular nt all. It's only for a kind of knock ' .about dress that I want it. Most any thing will do. lint, of course, I don't want it too light or too dark, something about medium. No, 1 don't want a stripe, I never wear stripe. Something in No, 1 don't think I'd caro for a pluid, and tho checked pieco is of rather better quality than I'd like for such a dress. I'd like something at from fifty to sixty, or, perhaps, sixty-five cents a yard. No, 1 don't want any thing with polka dot in it. nor a tricot, nor "sot go, nor cashmere. I'd rather not have a solid color at all. No, that piece is hardly as good as I'd like, al though I'm really not at all particular about it, as it is to be worn for common; still, I think I'll just run over to Hibhotv & Satten's and seo what they have. Detroit Free Prcsi. X The Music of the Ancients. Tho Kgyptian fluto was only a cow's horn with three or four holes in it, and their harp or lyro had only three strings; tlio Grecian lyro had only seven strings and was very small, being held in ono hand; tho Jowish trumpets that imulo the walls of Jericho fall down, were only ram's horns; their tluto was tho samo as tho Kgyptian; they had no instrumental music but by percussion, ,rf which tho trreatest boast mado was the psaltorv, a small triangular harp or lyre with wiro strings, anu sirueK wun an iron needlo or stick; their sncbut was something like a bngpipo; tho tim brel was a tambourine, anu mo uuiei jner was a horizontal harp, with wiro .strings, and struck vith a stick likotho psaltery. They had no written music; ihad scarcely a vowel in their language, and yet, according to Josophus, thoy had 200,000 musicians playing at the dedication of tho Templo of Solomon. Mozart would havo died at such a eon cort in tho greatest of agony. London Xeics. In trying to obtain a jury for a .murder trial at Hudson, N.Y., thoother day, tho district nttornoy asked an Irishman if ho would hang a man if he ithoutfit ho wiis guilty of murder. Sh'.) it wouldn't bo mo that would hang him, It wol1 bo tho sheriff," was tho answer. A turkey gobbler at Darlington, S. C., cut Pon somo ulnea fowl eggs, 1 Latched a brood or cmcKonu, unu wu PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. "Old Simpson" is an odd character at Wukeflolfc, Mass.. who is worth f 1,000,000, but lives tho Ufo of a pau per. Sir Morell Mackenzie was im pelled to study medicine and surgery by tho earnest advice of his widowed mother. Tho best-paid drummers traveling for Chicago houses aro live men in tho grocery trade, who receive salaries of from $8,000 to $10,000 a year. Emperor William is said to bo an inveterate smoker of cigarette, smok ing even at meals between the courses. He eats but little and seldom drinks wine, but takes quantities of tea. A generous patron was a lady who contributed to a fair held tho other day. She brought a largo number of useful and fancy articles to assist in the adornment of tho tables, and after they had been accepted purchased them all herself. The lady who is roputed to bo tho most beautiful woman in San Francisco Is tho mother of two children, and al though thirty looks like a girl of eight een. She indulges In a spongo buh every morning and takes a brisk four mile walk after lunch. O. J. Hrown, an old-time stago drlver, celebrated his eightieth birth day anniversary by driving eight horses, attached to a Concord conch, from his homo in Claremont, N. H., over to Windsor, Vt., with seventeen of his oldest friends and neighbors as passengers. A Springfield (111.) business man whose check is good lor a quarter of a million has never been able to read, and all his business transactions that involve figuring are carried on in his head. Yet ho is not an illiterate man, for ho tnlks well and few persons who moot him suspect his lack of tho rudiments of education. Master Melbourno Grubb, who lives near Wytheville, Va., is thought by his parents to be tho largest boy in America. Ho measures forty-soven inches around tho waist, forty-four around tho chest, twenty-four around the thigh and thirteen around tho muscles of tho arm, Ho is five feot two Inches high and weighs two hun dred and ten pounds and was ton years on July 3, 1888. A man living in an outlying dis trict near Concord, N. 11., recently opened a bank account in that city, depositing .H00. Ho was given a liboral quantity of checks, which ho used so ignorantly that ho was soon brought u j) and told that he had over drawn. When asked to settle, with great indignation ho mado ho charac teristic reply: "Didn't you givo mo all these cheeks, which are not half used? If I owe you any thing I will draw a check and pay you." "A LITTLE NONSENSE." Miss Dollio Footlite, who mado a complete mash on the trombone player, refers to him as tho "great horn spoon." Terre Haute Express. A man who formerly acted as fire man to a locomotive rofors to his rec ollections of that time as tender reminiscences. Merchant 'Traveler. "After I finish breakfast at Mrs. Sllnidiot's," romarkod Chumley, "I feel like a martyr." "I see," observed Duniley; "you havo suffered at tho steak." America. First dudo "Why do you hang two thermometers in tho window?" Second dudo "My deah fellah, ono is for tho heat and tho other is for the cold, you know. You ain't as well up in astronomy as I thought you was." Texas Sifting$. "Ah, really, doctor, do you think a ship a good place for detectives to go in an etnorgoncy?" "Certainly, Mr. Fatwlt; the very best." "Why so?" "Becauso detectives aro always searching for clews and thoy can find moro clews on a ship than any other place that I know of." Ocean. Jawkins "Want Softloigh to join our literary club? Why, I don't be lieve ho ever rend any thing but Mother Goose and tho book of eti quette in his life." Hogg "Ah, but then ho has such a high 'forehead, you know, and wears his eyeglass with such a very intellectual air!" Judge. "I've brought back that ring I took yesterday on approval," ho said to tho jeweler. "What was the trouble; didn't it fit?" "No," ho said, sadly. "I thought well, that is woll, you soo, bought it for a certain tingor, but sho wouldn't wear it on that, so I'vo comoback with it." Jeicclers' Weekly. Not an Expert First tramp "You look right respectable this morn ing. Joe." Second tramp "Woll. I ought to. I paid ten conts for a shavo and clean up." First tramp "Can you got cleaned three times for a quar ter?" Second tramp (indignantly) "How do 1 know? I never got cleaned three times, yit." Drake's Magazine. Newspaper man "Did you seo that clover little pull I gavo you this morning about your recent success in business, and how well you aro doing?" Potts (gloomily) "Yes, I saw it." Newspaper man "Woll, woron't you pleased?" Potts (earnestly) "Shears, there were seven creditors at my houso this morning before breakfast!" 'Texas Si f Unas. In Zanzibar not long ago the was a race botwyen a zebra and an ostrich. Tho riders were cruel in tho extremo, mid it was painful to seo tho stripes Hint tho zebra was compelled to carry. Tho ostrich wns in high feather at Qrst, but when tho zobra camo out khead, it went and buried its head in the sand, though perhaps if it had had sore sand it might have won tho race. Texiu Sittings. OF GENERAL INTEREST. Tho amount of strength exor cised in an 'ordinary hand-shako is eleven pounds. Tho loftiest mountain is Mount Everest, or Guarisauker, of tho Him alaya range, having an elevation ot 29,002 feet above tho sea level. A Georgia lover, when refused by his adored, whipped out a razor and sliced off one of her ears. Aftor this little evidence of atl'ection she con cluded sho would havo him. Hero is a now field open for tho industry of woman. A lady in Min neapolis makes a good living by teach ing whist, and a lady at Camos, Idaho Territory, is a practical shoemaker. Moro sheep and lambs are killed in New York than in any other city in tho world, over two million head being slaughtered annually, and. with tho increasing demand for mutton and lamb, the chances aro that sho will continue to hold first place for some time to come. A man in Lonvale, Ga.. drovo a piece of steel filing into his eyeball and a surgeon spent some time in vain en deavors to extract it. Finally ho brought a powerful oleetro-niagnot to his aid, by means of which tho of fensive particle was at once removed. It was over a quarter of an inch long and its entire length had been im bedded in tho eyeball. A popular young Kansas City, woman committed suicide becauso sho fancied herself too homely to live. Her ago was twenty-six. A few yenrs ago sho becanio imbued with a crushing sonso of her homeliness and refused several offers of marriago becauso, as sho said, she could not inflict herself upon any man. Tho peculiar phaso of tho matter is that sho was far from being homely and was woll to do In her own right. Twenty years ago, Mr. Jackson, of Kentucky, by somo hocus-pocus, mado his partner Taliaferro loso a good bit of money. Then tho two sep arated, and in tho course of time Talia ferro died. Very lately his wifo re ceived from Jackson tho full amount of her husband's loss with logal intor est theroon along with tho statement that tho wicked partner had gono to Australia, and grown and flourished to equal its famous gum trees, but could not rest easy until ho had re stored what was lost by reason of him. Tho question as to what a "vog otarian" actually is having arisen in a discussion of vegetarianism in London, an expert gives tho following defini tion: "A vegetarian is ono who, for any reason, abstains from allfoods and food adjuncts which aro obtained only by tho destruction or loss of animal lifo i. e., tho flesh of animals (fish, flesh and Howl), and tho products of such llesh (dripping, gravy, lard, suet, animal and lish oils, etc.), and who may uso, at his or her option, such an imal products alone as aro yielded by tho animal kingdom without loss of lifo i. o., milk and its products, eggs, honoy, etc., in addition to tho food products of the vegetable and mineral kingdoms." Tho block system as It is now tirmed in railroad narlanco, is simply tho division of a railway into certain numbers of what aro called tolegraph districts, tho distance botweon which is determined by tho amount of traffic, and each block station has signaling instruments by which tho signal man communicates with tho box at oach side of him. Now when a train enters any block a somaphoro signal is lowered, and no train is allowod to follow until tho one in front has reached tho end of tho block, whon tho signal is raised and at tho samo time lowered for tho block ahead, etc., Tho block system in uso in Europe and in this country generally employ mechanical devices for lowering nnd raising tho outdoor signal, but theso, it is thought, will oventually bo re placed by automutic devices. Libel Suits Against Newspapers. Every nowspapor in tho country which is, as tho phraso goes, "worth a libel suit." knows by long experience that as tho laws now stnnd in most ot tho States no mattor how carefully a journal is edited it will havo libel suits brought against it. Tho Herald tries its best to draw tho lino betweon ex posure of public wrongs, which is tho highest duty of a newspaper, and at tacks on private character, which aro inexcusable; and yot there is no year in which wo aro not threatened with ton or a dozen libol suits. Thoro is a class of "shyster" lawyers who make it their business to annoy respectable newspapers in this way. Thoy read tho journals and where thoy imagine that a suit for libel will lie thoy run to tho person concerned, magnify his wrong and urgo his suit, offering to prosecute It for a share of tho plunder. Of course In a great majority of cases such suits como to nothing. Thoy havo no justifying cause. Hut tho shyster lawyer gets somo money from his client, ho annoys tho nowspapor and ho makes his living. A'. V. Her ald. m At the Church Fair. "Do you menn to tell mo.MIss Gush away, that you poppod ull this corn yourself?" "I did, Mr. Spoonamoro. Tho work was done in a good causo. Besides, 1 really enjoyed it." (Tenderly) "Tho sound of popping is is not disagrceablo to you, Miss GuBhaway?" (With cold, business-llko manner) "Not whon it comes from popcorn. How many bags will you have, Mr. Spqoiuuaora?" Chicago Tribune. KNOWING PARROTS. One Ktirw Hon- to Meditate nml tlir Other rrophelel UN Dentil. Jim, who camo from Mexico, is a wise bird. Just across the street lives a dignified brown spaniel, who rejoices in the name of "Curler," To vary tho monotony of a long summer day, Jim will "lay himself out" to entrap tho dog. First, he will whistle, using all the varying inflections usually held out to the dog kind. If this falls, ho will call "Curlee. Curlee, Curlee!" in his most dulcet tones, which usually fetches tho unwary animal. Tho meditative attitude which .Jim assumes, as the panting dog rushes Into sight, is equaled only by the in quiring innocence of his expression. Presently, catching sight of tho "green bird that talks," Curly slinks disconsolately homeward, devoutly hoping that no one has seen him. A well-known professor of biology. Dr. Steore. of Michigan University, has been spending tho summer at the Sandwich Islands for tho purpose of collecting rare specimens. Shortly before his return, ho was presented with a tino young parrot, that had learned only a few English expressions, and those mostly current slang picked up from sailors. On the homo voyago ho entrusted the bird to tho caro of a boy, who promised to see it well cared for. Like most other boys, his intentions woro good but his judgment was at fault; for ho hung tho bird in a small, close room near tho ongine, "to keep it warm." Tho next day tho professor thought ho would take a look at tho parrot, nnd, accordingly, ho was guided to tho cage. What was his alarm and indig nation to find tho poor creature nearly dead with tho heat. Ho took it to his state-room and mado all tho effort In his power to savo it. Aftor ho had worked over tho suffering bird for a few momenta it slowly raised its head, looked at him solemnly and gasped: "I'd soil myself for a cont." A moment lntor and poor Poll, who had, pathetically enough, valued his condition aright, was dead. Detroit Free Press. CHINESE CREMATION. A Sickening Speil aele Seen on the. Konit Hide. ty it Trawler. Tho other day when riding into the city from the country I saw a strange sight indeed lot us call it cremation as practiced by tho Chinese. On tho occasion referred to, in the midst of so much that was beautiful, appeared a sight most horrid and re volting. On a slight mound between tho path and the lako lay a man upon his back. Hound his head and tho up per part of his body a little wood and straw wore placed, which, when I rode up, woro already in a blazo. The burning was being superintended by ono man only, whoso courage I was told was "very great." Although there were many passors-by, no ono seemed to think much of what was going on. I rodo noarer to mako inquiries. The man, thoy said, was a Tartar, and he had only died tho day before. Judg ing by tho appearance of what was loft of him I should think ho was betweon twenty and thirty years ol age. It was truly an awful sight. Beginning at his head, tho intontion evi dently was to burn him inch by inch to his toes. Hut, worst of all, tho heat of the fire, combined, with tho intense heat of a noontide August sun, had caused his body to swell. Even from the path tho dreadful ntato of tho man's body could bo dis tinctly seen. Tho only persons looking on in addition to tho man, who, truly with "groat courage," was stirring up tho lire, were two men and a boy, who, holding their noses, survoyed the Hceno from a distance. I ought to have mentioned that tho man lay upon his back, with ono arm raised, pointing tc tho clear, blue sky. I am told thai whon tho3o so lately dead aro oxposed to the heat of tho llro their muscles contract and their bodies assume all kinds of strange attitudes. Sometimes a man will be raised to almost a sitting posture. As tho cremations aro very frequent and generally on tho same spot thoro would bo littlo difficulty in bringing somo of tho offendors to justice and thus put an end to theso in human and barbarous spectacles. Hang Chow Cor. Norlli China New,. m m At a Boston hotel tho head waiter camo out of thoofllco nnd informed the learned and cultured cleric that a man was raising a disturbance becauso he could not havo his accustomed seat at tho table. "Go in again," said tho clerk, "and propitiate him In some way I leave it to you." Hack went tho waiter to tho dissatisfied boarder and said: If you don't llko tho way things is dono hero, you can got right out, or I'll propitiate you protty quick." m Amorlcans will not fool sensitive becauso thoy aro charged in a now En glish book on America with "eccen tricities of diet, excess in smoking, unhealthful heating of their houses and excessive shaving." Tho time has passed when any foreign criticism In flames tho country with rapture or in dignation. Two farmers woro bargaining ovor a horsoj Said tho ono to tho other "It's a guld horso, I'll say that, but I maun tell yo it has got no woo bit faut; it's gl'on to rinnln' awa' wl' yo." "Ah, wool," said tho other, "If that's a', it'll diuj fine. Man, tho Inst horso I had was gl'en to rlunlu' awa1 withoot mo." A visiting Englishman describes our Presidential elections as a quad rennial contest to decldo the question who shall bo the National Private TEACHING GOOD MANNERS". The Mint llpele Tak Which Mortal Man Out Undertake. Hut tine manners no code can teach. If they aro conscious they become ar tificial, and aro line no longer. A man indeed may bo taught to avoid gross ness and impudence, nnd not to mis tako them for ease. Tho youth who puffs a cigarette when ho is walking with a lady, who is free and easy in stead of scrupulously courteous In his address Mid tone, may bo told that he is merely ungentlemanly vulgar: and if ho chooso ho may correct his be havior; certainly ho would correct it if the lady showed him that she re quired the correction. Tho impudence of young men generally reflects the weakness of young women. If they required courtesy thoro would bo lit tlo Insolent freedom of behavior upon the part of their cavaliers. What may be learned in tho cultiva tion of good manners must be acquired in the school of experience. It is, ol course, a superficial and external knowledge which is so acquired, and Its extent depends upon tho power ol accurate observation. Is it not Goethe's Connoisseur who asks to see tho best pictures? Hut what deter mines the best? Is it tho state of the owner, or their degieo and kind ol reputation? Tho manners which strike Daisy Miller as line, and which she will emulate, are not those which would attract another. Tho manual, indeed, is tho result of observation. It is a lesson drawn from experience, and its value depends, therefore, upon the fact that It is drawn by Daisy Mlllor or by another. Tho bettor rule is the moro general one not to think always how you aro behaving, but always so cultivate that kindliness of feeling, that generous sympathy and friendly understanding, which will uncon sciously regulate behavior. Tho lovely lady of whom wo wore speaking, whoso sweet smile nnd good morning children crossed tho street to seo nnd hear, had studied no manual, but was taught by her own kind heart. Had sho been cold, solllsh, haughty, supercilious, her mannor, howovor dazzling, would havo been icy. The manual will do no harm if you uso it to correct obvious faults of behavior. Hut good manners spring from a good heart. Thoy may bo imitated, Indeed. Tho manners of Aaron Hurr weru called fascinating. Hut they woro chronio manners, tho ingenious mim icry of deep and tender color. Gild ing And plating there will always bo. Hut wo must remember that gold and silver are still tho only precious metals. George HI Curtis, in Harper's Magazine. H COUNTRY HOMES. A Contrail In Itiirnl Family Life. That la Xotleealile livery whore. It has been my privilege to visit a great many rural homos. In somo it seems no wonder that children grow up tired of tho humdrum; for from morning till night tho samo routlno prevailed day aftor day. Thoy must do this and do that, and if a littlo tardy thoro was scolding, and whon thoy did as directed thoro was never so much as a "thank you." Of ton 1 grieved for many a boy and girl just Hearing manhood or womanhood, knowing that their hoarts and minds woro starved. Seo thorn como into thu sottlng-rooni at ovoning-tlmo, aftor tho day's work on tho farm, or in the kitchen, and seo them sit down su weary and spiritless, with nothing ta interest them no nice books or papers; no innocent games to quicken thought; no confidential talk with father or mother, porchnnco about somo farm product which was to bo raised or sold; no bright rooms to mako homo attractive. It was work, work, with no thought boyond "saving money"; tho parents seemed to cure only for what tho children could help thorn "mako"; and no part of tho pro ceeds, however small, wiu? given to the children, to oncourago thorn to work, or to buy something which would gladden their lives. Other homos woro almost Ideal. Bright rooms; books and papers; in telligent conversation; a general air ot refinement; loving words botweon parents and children; jiurfcct trust ol tho ontlro family. For each act, how ovor trivial, the kind "thank you" was given, and a requost was accompanied with an "If you pleaso.1' No harsh words, hardonlng tho tompor of tho young; and tho day's toll was pleasure becauso tho labor was appreciated. Tho heads of such families are re worded by tholr children's lovo for them and of homo, and thoro will, be no need, or desire, to go to tho homos of others, or to tho streets for amuse ment; thoy will prefer tholr own homos. Most children havo tasto for tho beautiful; givo them somo thing of beauty for tholr own a picture, u book, an animal to pot, or whatever thoy Incline to, and then witness tho pleasure It will bring to them. En courage tho children in ull that tends to ennoble; and In old ago you can look upon sons and daughters refined, intelligent and a blessing. Alice, inN. Y. 'Tribune. Two Charming Girls. Sho Do you not think, Mr. Horsoy, that Clara llondrlx Is a very charming girl? Mr. Horsoy (with groat delicacy) Well, yes, Miss Phoebus, but you can give her ton pounds and bout herhuuds down. N. V. Bun. Oats make tho best grain food for young stock, and especially for calves und colts. If ground and fed with turnips (cooked) tho young Btook will thrive on such diet and grow rapidly. JAPAN'S SACRED DANCE. A I'lrtiirpqnr Ceremony Conducted Wjr YontiK l'rlrteie. From Kasuga gato tho upper avonuo of lanterns leads tho way to tho Wa- kamlya shrine, dedicated to tho early, gods- of the Shinto religion. Hero tho? old custom of the sacred danco Is kopti up, and it group of young priestesses5 aro waiting to repeat tho measures danced by Uzumo before tho sun god dess' cave in prehistoric times. Tho littl priestesses are all between tho ages of nine nnd twelve, as timid, gen tle nmd harmless littlo things as tho deer that often stray in and watch, them. Their dress is tho old, old costume-of tho imierial court, a picturesque-lower garment or divided skirt of the brightest cardinal red silk, that half covers the white kimono, with square sleeves and pointed neck, filled up high with alternate folds of red and white. When they danco thoy wear over tills loose kimonos of white gauze-, painted with tho wistaria crost of the- Kasuga temple, tho front of tho gauzy garment half covoring tho red' skirt, nnd tho back pieces trailing on tho matt. Tholr faces aro plastered po thickly with white paint that thoy lose all expression, and, following tho old fashion, their eyebrows aro shaved and two tiny black dots high up in tho middle of tholr forehoads tako tholr place. With Hps heavily rouged' the countenance is more a mask than any thing human. Tho hair is gathered together at tho back of thu neck and tied with loops of gold paper, and then folded In soft whlto paper, allowed to hang down tho back. Longhair-pins, with clusters of wistaria and ml camellia, aro thrust across tho top of tho head, and fastened so that thoy stand out llko horns ovor tho forehead. In detnll tho costume Is not protty, but In its genoral effect it hv singulnrly bright and picturesque Ono can havo as many priostossos and as long a danco as ho will pay for. and as soon as tho money is handed, ovor tho two priests got into tholr ceremonial whlto gowns and high black hats and, sitting before tho an cient drums, chant, pound and blow on. doloful pipes an accompaniment for tho littlo dancers. Tho sacred danco 1.4 Bolomn enough, nnd oach dancer has a. fan and a bunch of bolls, from which hang long strips of bright-colored, silks. Thoy advance, retreat, glide to right and left, raise thoir fans, shnkor tholr sacred baby rattlos, and with few changes in tho moasuro repeat tho? samo figures and movomonts font cer tain length of tlmo. If ono pays moro money thoy eontinuo repenting tho samo thing, and tho priests can wall tho ondless accompaniment by tho hour. To us tho danco Is simply n, curious and plcturosquo custom, but ono should see tho faces of tho dovout Jd pilgrims, who havo hoarded up their money for months and often, years for tho trip, to know somothlngr of what it means to them. It is really pathetic to soo thoir faces glowing and tholr oyos almost filled with tears at tholr satisfaction with tho lino specta cle that is so rare an ovont in thoir lives, nnd which crowns their surnmoc pilgrimage to tho old shrines of thoir fnith. Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Whcro the bun Does Not Set. A scene witnessed by somo traveler in tho north of Norway from a cliff ono thousand feot above tho sea is thus described: "Tho ocoan swopt away in. silent vastness at our foot; the sound of waves scarcoly reached our airy lookout; away In tho north tho huge) old sun swung low along tho horizon, llko tho slow boat of tho pendulum ia tho tall clock of our grandfather's, corner. Wo all stood sllont. looking; at our watches. Whon both hands camo together at twolvo, midnight, tho full round orb hung triumphantly abovo tho waves, a brldgo of gold run ning duo north, spanning tho water between us and him. There ho shono in sllont majesty which know no sot ting. Wo involuntarily took off our hats; no word was said. Combino, if you can, tho most brilliant sunrise- and sunset you over saw, and tho beauties, will palo boforo tho gorgeous coloring which now lit up ocoan, heavon and mountain. In half an hour the sun swung porcoptlbly on his beat, tho colors changed to thoso of morning,, a fresh breeze rippled ovor tho flood, ono songstor after another piped up ia tho grovo behind us wo had slid into another day." "You don't know, Johonos," said his editorial visitor, "what tho temptations aro that assail the polit ical journalist. Publishing your modest littlo society paper, as you do, you havo to deal with a constituency unllko mine in every rospoot. Your manhood is not assailed. No attempt is made to buy you oponly. You, my friend, havo never been approached by any political emissary who wanted to purchaso tho support of your paper outright for $,r00 to $1,000, or somo such paltry sum." "Never!" ropllod Johones, with a wistful, yearning look. Chicago 'Tribune. Hartford is literary, but not geo graphical. Whon the bronze image of 11. Wells found its present resting place on Hushnell Park, this Inscription wus chiselled into tho huso: "Horace Wells, who discovered Anmsthosia." And a protty society girl, happening to pass that way, road the inscription und wrestled with the problem therein suggested until she roiiched homo; and then, with hor brows knotted with perplexity, she said to her sister: MUllo, whoro is AhffiBthoslaP" luck. Leaves and dead branchos rottira, to tho soil tho same substance thui trow take away. iroper caro them.