TWO DAYS. Blytbe wiads that sloe lonS tne Iea "Whit clouds in airy floeces curl'd, Freh reaches of a sapphire sea, A sound of laughter through the world. . A pair of lovers in a lane, , A coy coquetting with a ring, t A gleam of sun. A scud of rain. A day in spring. Rough blasts that roar across the wold, Chill mists on mountain summits spread, Black branches naked to the cold. The river frozen in its bed. A gray head either side the fire, Dim eyes that watch each crackling eplin , tcr, A snowy roof. A snowy spire. A day in winter. MISS TRAVER3. "A hat of last year's fashion I" "But her eyes were like grey stars." "And her manner dreadfully quick and decided." "Bright and sparkling I should call it." "My dear Richard, you are really ab surd! The girl is a hospital nurse, and what woman with any refinement or delicacy would take up such a profes sion as that? It shows she can't be nice." "Ladies do such things nowadays" less defiantly. "Now, you know you are only saying so because she's pretty. Of course ladies do queer things nowadays, but that doesn't excuse unwomanly feeling. Be sides, she's only a solicitor's daughter. I shan't risk mamma to call." "But don't you think common civil ity" "No, I don't. She's only staying at the rectory, and we're not forced to call on every one's friends. Beside, Cap tain Hardwicke is expected home, and it would make it awkward. What would one of Lord Belmont's people say if we asked them to meet a 'girl like Miss Travers?" "All the same, she's as pretty and ladylike as any one I ever met in these parts." "Very likely, but she's not in our set. Now, Richard, if you say any more I shall begin to think you're falling in love with, her, if the idea is not too absurd." But Richard had closed the drawing room door upon his 8ix sisters' languid voices, and was halfway across the wide lawn with its brilliant parterres of sum mer flowers. Poor Richard Allerdyce! only son of the richest banker in Chellow dean, people of good family, but with just that uncertainty of social position which made them afraid of overstepping any boundaries, rather gratified at being on intimate terms with Lord Belmont and the Hardwickes, he was of divided mind this summer afternoon. He had been greatly taken by that sweet face and slight figure in the rectory pew last Suu day ; was sensible of a thrill of more than civil interest when he met their owner walking home with the good old rector after service, and was introduced to "31iss Travers," while the eyes, "like grey stars," were suddenly raised to his; and he had ever since spent a larger por tion of his time than was strictly needful in walking past the rectory's rose-covered garden gate. But, on the other side, his sisters words had certainly struck home. Brought up, as all the Allerdyce3 were, like hot-house plants, sheltered from every breath of frosty air, it was not strange that Richard at five and twenty, though a big, burly enough young Englishman to look at, was but little of a man in mind or heart. Knowledge of the world had been carefully kept from him, as from his sisters, lest they should learn evil; but their very ignorance had cost them the loss of power to choose between evil and good, and had given them weak preju dices and conceited opinionativeness, in stead of a mind able to discern and pre fer the right. Richard's handsome face was overcast as he swung out of the lodge gates, and down the road. Miss Travers a hospital nurse! certainly it was a shock. Not only did it seem to him unwomanly for a woman to work at all, but infinitely more 30 to do menial work. And then the awful thought of what his mother and sisters would say, were they asked to re ceive' a hospital nurse as his future wife! For it had gone as far as that in Rich ard's susceptible mind, even in these three short days. All at once his thoughts broke off as Miss Travers herself, sweet and bright as ever, in her black dress, came out from the rectory gate, the great rectory mastiff pacing behind her. Now Richard's own collie was at his master's heels, and there was a border feud of long standing between those two faithful followers. There was an angry growl, a heavy rush, a thud, and then a brown body and a black rolled together in the dust in a manner sugges'.ive of ?. do's funeral on one side or the other. Richard, who was actually staggered by the suddenness of it all. could not for a moment regain his senses ; and when he did, it was to find Miss Travers, both white hands locked in the hair of Rollo's shaggy neck, pulling him from his foe with all her strength, and calling to "Mr. Allerdyce" to "take hold of his dog and pull him off." She was being whirled round in the cloud of dust by the frantic waltzers be fore Richard could quite settle where to "take hold, but that task was performed for him by a gentleman in tweed knick erbockers, who started out of the "White Hart," a few yards away, and run to the escue. Between Miss Travers and him self the combatants were separated, each carrying away a few fragments of the other's person; and Miss Travers, flushed, panting, covered with dust, but looking lovelier than Richard had ever seen woman look before, sank back against the rectory wall and tried to laugh. The stranger lifted his hat, looking straight at her with a pair of piercing brown eyes. 1 "Excuse me, Miss Travers !" he said, in rather an off hand manner, "but that was about as rash a thing as any one could possibly do. The dogs might both have turned on you and bitten you badly." "Thank you, Captain Hardwicke, I had not the least fear," was her only re sponse, given with a little haughtiness ; and the gentleman, with a nod to Rich ard, turned and strode away as rapidly as he had come. "Miss Travers ! are you hurt !" Richard was able to articulate at last. 4 'You ever should have done a thing like that; Hardwicke was right; it was awfully rash! By the way, you know Hard wicke I" "No, I'm not hurt a bit." The won derful grey eyes were dancing with fun now. "Don't scold me, please; I know it was a silly thing to do, but I didn't stop to think. Pray don't look so hor rified!" "But if you had been bitten!" , "Well, I wasn't." And her face dim pled with a friendly smile at his shocked look. "But you know Hardwicke?" he per sisted, unable to get over his surprise in that quarter. "Oh, yes." Her face grew cold ihv stantly. "Captain Harwickewas in hos pital with an accident some months ago- my hospital. I had charge of him there, that's all. And she pulled a rose so sharply from the hedge, that it fell to pieces in her hands. 'Look there V she laughed, showering the petals on the ground before her; "let us cover over the battle-field with flow ers," and she laughed again. . Richard went home more thoughtful than ever. Surely this women was a novel thing in his experience of men and manners. She acted with the skill and daring of a man; and yet he would rather not think what his sisters' faces would be like had they but seen it ! Was it actually lady-likef or should she not rather have fled from the scene of con flict, or even had screamed and fainted? Nearly three weeks had passed since the dog episode, and Richard's courage still wavered in the balance. He had grown to know Miss Travers well in those three weeks, and to; know her well was but to love her better. There was never a woman so sweet, so clever, so sympa thetic, so beautiful he was certain of that no woman he more ardently longed to have for his own; and yet and yet!: That terrible strength of character, that profession, that lack of pedigree! Only last night, in the moonlight rectory gar den, he had almost flung all prudence to the winds, she had been so dangerously,. fatally sweet (she Avas always especially kind to him), but he reeled back from the gulf just in time when she mentioned casually, without a change of voice or countenance, that she had an uncle who waa a chemist in Rochester. "A chem ist! Shades of my ancestors, protect me!" Richard recoiled again as he thought of it, and fancied Hardwicke's look if he could have heard her. For Captain Hardwicke was still at the "White Hart," and perhaps his presence, and the atmosfhere o exalted society about him, had been one of Richard's re straining though unconscious influences. Now, as he slowly worked his way up the steepest hill in the neighborhood, on his new tricycle, he was pondering the old question in his mind. Could he take the fatal plunge, or was it too costly ? A trim graceful figure on the road before him, as at last he gained the sum mit, drove all else to the four winds ; and in an instant he had overtaken the object of his cogitations, and sprung to the ground beside her. "Mr. Allerdyce!" she said, turning with her own bright look to shake hands ; how like a ghost you stole upon me! Oh, I see, it was on a tricycle, and what a beauty! Do let me look at it." And Richard, nothing loth, began to display his new toy a perfect thing in build and finish the Allerdyces' possessions always were the most perfect of their kind. He began to explain it to her, forget- ing all about the chemist uncle, but she interruptedhim. "Yes, I know all about them, thanks, I see, it is a regular bit of perfection. I should so like to try it; may I?" Once more Richard was dumb with Surprise. A lady on a tricycle was as yet an unheard-of thing in rustio Chellow dean, and it seemed an outrageous idea to him. "I really don't think you could," he faltered. "My sisters never have done such a thing." "Your sisters? oh, perhaps not," with a smile at the idea. "But I am quite used to tricycles. I ride one whenever I can get a chance." Further blow for Richard; but there was no knowing how to refuse her, and he stood aside. She took her place like one who was thoroughly used to tricycles, and he could not but admit she adorned her position. - "What a delicious hill to run down!" she said, with a happy little laugh, as she placed her dainty little feet on the treadles. 4 'I really must try it. " "Pray, don't attempt it!" was Rich ard's horrified remonstrance, for the hill stretched down even more abruptly than on the side he had ascended, and near the bottom there was a sudden sharp turn, with the railway line running just below the nastiest bit of road for miles around. Perhaps even Agatha Travers would have hesitated to hazard it, had it not been for the consternation in Rich ard's face. " Mr. Allerdyce, you are faint-hearted," she said, gaily, as she started on her downward course a little more rapidly than she had at first intended, but Richard's new tricycle ran smoothly. His heart wag in his mouthr as the coun try folk say, as she began to- glide rapid ly off. She turned her head and flashed back a merry defiance. "My uncle, the chemist at Rochester, used to say" Then the wicked sparkle faded! sudden ly, and she called quick and clear, "Can you stop me, please? The brake is stiff; can't make it work; it's, running away." Poor Richard of the faint heart! it seemed to die within him. The next second he had darted forward, but it was just one second too late. The check she had been able to put on the heavy ma chine with the treadles ceased to keep it back, and faster and. faster it tore down the; perilous road. Ia all his life to come, Richard will never know any minute so long as that next, while the Straight, slight figure flying-through space seemed to swim be fore his eyes, and his knees knocked to gether as he stood. On oo faster, faster! she managed somehow to cling to the steering handle, and; kept the machine in the middle of the-road.; but the mad pace grew more desperate. She could never turni that fatal corner by the railway embankment ; over it she must go. . And it was just then that Richard and she both together saw the- puff of snow-white smoke from the hillside, that told them that the-even, ing, express was out of the tunnel, and j thundering down that very bit of Ene. It all flashed over Agatha in one rush : Would the fall kill her, or would it be the train? It must be onex or tne' other ; the-next second or two would settle that; and a swift prayer was on her lips, but what she never quite knew; for even as she breathed it, some one or something in. brown tweed knickerbockers hurled itself over the roadside stile before her, a stout stick darted into the flying wheel, and with one quick swerve the tricycle crashed into the ditch, and lay there, a confused mass of spinning spokes and mutilated tires, while Agatha flew out from its midst like a ball, and alighted on a grassy bank a yard or ' two away ; and the express rushed past with a wild yell on the line just below, and vanished round a sharp curve that matched the road above it. Then, and then alone, did Richard's legs regain their power of motion ; and he set off as fast as they could carry him to where the little black figure lay. Somehow it took longer to run down that hill than the last descent would have led one to think ; for when Richard, panting and breathless, reached the scene of the accident, the little black figure, very much out of its usual trim neatness, was seated on the grassy tangle that -broke her fall, busily binding up with her own small handkerchief a deep gash in the nana ot tne knickerbockerea person who knelt at ner side, it was a very pale face that looked up at Richard's, with, the, sort of awe that any human creature must wear who has just been face to face with death; but her great grey eyes had a wonderful shining light in them. 44 The poor tricycle !", she said ; "I am so sorry. Is it very badly hurt?" And, in the fervor of his relief and gladness, Richard could find words for nothing but "Bother the tricycle!" ' He was ready enough to say some thing, however, presently, when he found himself obliged to stop and see its re mains decently cared for, while Captain Hardwicke took charge of Miss Travers' return to the rectory. She said she was none the worse for her fall, but perhaps she wa3 ' a little shaken ; but Captain Hardwicke kin Jly offered her his arm, and she took it. Richard hurried after them before long, his whole heart aglow. That awful minute thi3 afternoon had taught him that life without Agatha Travers would seem a poor and worth less thing, were she a factory-girl. He hurried after them, therefore, and camo in sight of the rectory gate as two hands, one very neatly bandaged, unclasped' over it, and a small dark head raised it self from a brown tweed shoulder, where it seemed to have been resting. "Good gracious!" "was all Richard could utter, as Agatha vanished, and Captain Hardwicke, looking odiously ra diant, sauntered toward him. "Ah, Allerdyce, old fellow, caught us, have you? Then I may as well tell you all my tremendous good luck at once, and take your congratulations. Perhaps you've heard how Miss Travers' nursing saved my life last year, and when of course I fell in love with her, as who wouldn't? She would have it, it was only gratitude, and refused to let me make what she called a misalliance, just because there's that brute of a title com ing to me some day. I told her I thought all that rubbish was obsolete, and of fered to drop the title altogether if she liked; but nothing would do, and we parted rather out of temper. I heard she was cfbwn here, and ran down to see my uncle, hoping he would talk her over, but I began to think it was no use. And, do you know, I was frantically jealous of you, old fellow ! I saw she liked you, and I almost believe you could have cut me out, early in the day, if you'd had' the pluck tc try, she was. so set against me. But to-day has made it all right, and she thinks I've saved her life this time, so we're quits. Well,, old man. am I not the luckiest man alive?" "But but " stammered the wretchea Richard, "surely her tamilyrT "She's an orphan'. Oh, I see what you mean; she told-me she had been shock ing you with. an uncle- who?s a chemist, or a butcher, or goodness- knows what. Bah! I should; think the- mere fact of being a hospital nurse was- at patent of nobility to any: womaa. But if my little girl were a.' beggar-maidcni she would tyi be a real princess.. God. bless her!" And RichardTs groani may have been an assent. Casseu.. The Anvil;. Ordinary anvils are.- forged in six or seven pieces ana men, put togetner. Cast anvilsare hardened, ia a float in stead of being dipped, and larger sized ones are swung into a. tank by means of a crane. These latter are- also frequently cast about a. core, which permits them to cool more uniformly. Gold beaters use for an anvil a steel block having a sur face about three by four inches in ex tent. Upon this the gold is reduced to a plate one-sixteenth of an inch in thick ness and afterward beaten out on an an vil of black marble; The forms and! uses of the anvil are- constantly extend ing in variety and, from the liliputian one of the watchmaker to the great ones used in forging heavy cannoD, they are daily growing more busy throughout the world. Many of the common black smiths' anvils are provided with a second horn socketed upon the beak and having grooves upon its upper surface into which horse shoes are driven for the purpose of bevelling the inner surface, so as to pre vent "balling" when traveling in snow.1 The various special forms of the anvi are exceedingly numerous. The progress of machines and the introduction of steam hammers have brought into use in late years enormous anvils weighing, in many cases, several hundred tons. These are usually cast in the form of a trun cated quadrangular pyramid, and placed with the smaller end upon substantial foundations of masonry. Industria7 World. English railroads are adopting cars in which are boxes fitted up inside with India-rubber paneling and floor-coverings for the transportation of valuable race horses. ." " The modern Noah's ark is an umbrclH and a rubber coat. IIolcl $faih LONDON PENNY-A-LINERS, Their Halt and Practices Vohe mlan Life In London. In a receit letter from London to the Louisville Commercial the writer describe in an interesting and vivid manner a per culiar phase of newspaper life in the English metropolis. He says: In describing the London newspaper press of to-day it is no inappropriate he ginning, I hope, to descend to the lowesV round of the ladder, and to introduce your readers forthwith to the " penny-a-liner." He still exists poor fellow and at times plays an important part in the pages of daily journalism. Indeed, with a clear run of luck, I venture to state that the "liner "is the most read man of the day, and when he has chanced to fall on a great sensation, and is suc cessful in retaining the monopoly, his readers are to be numbered by millions, and are limited only by the united cir culation of the Beveral prints publishing .his "copy.'T The "linerrn then, is "the picker-up of unconsidered trifles." As such) he is attached to no one papcr,but contribute, to all. He belongs to no staff and ac knowledges no superior. His daily work depends entirely upon his own selection and his anxiety at all hours is for news. When his search is successful, he' pro ceeds to use his "blacks," a carbonized paper, his stylus and his wits, iu order to produce some' six or eight "flimsies, which he afterward drops into the re spective editors'' '"boxes" of Fleet street, ia the hope that" oney two, three, or even, more of the journals of the following day may contain his item of intelligence.- The? liner is paid by the-line for what is used only, and hence his income is a most pre carious one. Perchance some windfall may put a heap of gold in his way,, at rare intervals, but ihithe ordinary course bis "flimsies" are thrown into the waste basket as soon as received. Sub-editors are but human, and badly written, almost illegible, horribly spelled,, and frantically ungrammatical expres sions on commonplace subjects are liable to try their patience; unduly. "Boil it -down" is a rule which is not to the "liner's" interest to observe. On the. other hand, one of trie chief qualifica tions of his craft is to enlarge, expand, distend, dilate the most matter-of-fact ' circumstances. Artful. " liners " write a. small, cramped hand.asid leave no mar gin for corrections or. space between the linesv If "so fortunate as to secure some sort of engagement by one of the morning or evening papers, the "liner," has a stimu lus to labor honestly, which most of hij fraternity are without; There is every reason to suppose that low-class " liners ' make the major part of their incontCs- f ont of the douciers .they receive for sup pressing reports. Provided there be a.. combination among them, they can safely promise to "keep it out of the papers,' and they are sometimes bribed to hush, up i what probably never would have appcared at all, for it is the ignorant man who magnifies, his personal affairs, that is most desirous- of paying hush, money. The feeling of rivalry is so strong among; "liners" that they do -not hesitate to - be- tray each other when it serves their pur pose. An amusing incident is related, by Mr. James Grant,, formerly editor of the Morning Advertiser; A "liner" who, in those days, was. allowed access to. the sub-editor's room. placed on the table- a ; report of the romantic elopement of arich. beauty with a-stable: boy. The subrcdi- ! tor was absent, and: before he rofcurned another "liner"" entered the room,. sawthe "heading of the copy and purloined the news, men ne sea to work to rcwrue. tne statement which was a most interesting one, and under his own name- took it back to the 'office. The account duly ap peared.. Both ''liners" sent in.their bills, and the dishonest one was first at the cashier's counter, and went his way with his ilkgotten gains. On the arrival of the real author a scene ensued, and the sub editor was called upon to produce the MSS. On his doing so the victimized 4 'liner" was bewildered to find that it was his rival's handwriting. A collision sub sequently took place, in the sub-editor's presence, between the two. ''penny-liners,' and by and by the recriminations reached so great & height that the real author, de termined to be revenged on his enemy at all hazards, broke out with great .energy in these words : "Sir, the article is mine. The man must have stolen the copy Heft on your desk, for there is not a word of truth in the story. It was a pure inven tion of mine from beginning to enL" Eleven men, bearing the name of ''Billy the Kid,"- have been killed and buried in the cemetery at Fort Worth, Texas, since its existence ' A. I)