. NIRVANA. To Ha, to rest on iraofc en couch, To hw the wilt) ou fairy brae, . ' To watch a blue loch ttuir the shores, To darker color underway: To we the glooming even Tall On hank ami tree, on mount and wold, Tv mark the stars that rrlimmer bright, To couut the hundred legends old; To clasp the stiver cord that (facte Tlti' locking shadows by a hill, To lie. to rest on hractien couch. To (eel the night coots, soft, and calm and etilL . . . ; - -J. J. JL in New York Graphic "MADAME COQUETTE." Tbere probably was not a brighter nor a vaster room in any house in New York than the breakfast room In John Wheatleigh house. It was somewhere iu the thirties, just off Fifth a veuve,, of which a glimpse could be rught through the east windows, which ad mitted a flood of sunlight on the glass and plate and fine damask of the table, and brought out the golden light in Mr Wheatr leigbs brown hair. j There could not have been a more agree able couple to look upon, either he, tali, athletic, with an open, manly countenance the, pretty, elegant and womanly. They were a happy pair, too, as happiness goes, -and no heavier cloud darkened their niatri snomal sky than the one which was now hov ering over the breakfast table. For that there was a cloud this morning there could lie no possible doubt The fullness about Mrs, M lieatieigh's lips, the droop of her lids and the elevation of her eyebrows formed an undeniable pout, while her husband's face expressed doubt, anxiety and annoyance in turn. Though the atmosphere was clear when the meal began the doubt had been lurking in John Wheatleigh's eyes ever since be took hi-t seat at the table. In bis heart it expressed itself in the hesitation between i will tell her" and "I wont tell her." The wonts bad the bast of it at first; it seemed unnecessary; there was no reason why he should, and perhaps Nettie would not under' atand it, which would be very awkward. Then he considared the affirmative side of the question; Nettie wasa thoroughly sensi ble woman; she had never shown the least trace of jealousy; anything that he would tell her about, honestly and openly, ehe would consider right, or if she did nut she would tell him so gently and without any fuss. , He looked at her as She bent her pretty head over the morning paper, hamming a little tune meanwhile She seemed to feel his gaze, and glancing up at him smiled. John b heart smote him. How could he think of keep ug anything from his sweet little wile! Of course he would tell her he was half sorry he had promised to go; if she ob jected he wouldn't. Ju?t as soon as I finish this egg," thought he. "In the meantime I'll thiuk of the best way to tell her." That was a fatal egg for John. He was some tune in disposing of it. When he had finished he cleared his throat and bud actually uttered the initial of ks mfes name when Mrs. Wheatleigh cried, "'Oh, John, they're going to play Cym :faeliueT to-night; won't you takernvf ! That quesuoj was the deatUknell of John IV" lieatieigh's confession. Ho could never tell uis wife, in excuse for not taking her to the theatre, that he was going hinuelf with another lady, or at least a party in which there were other ladies. t "To-night did you say, Nettie! 1 dont be lteve 1 ca:i go to-night," 'Ob, John, why uotP J 'Won't to-morrow uight dor . ' "No," said Mrs, Wheatieigh, looking at the paper, "this is the only performance of "Cymbehue.1" 'l am going to be out to-night, Nettie; I don't think 1 can take von very well; but any other night I will be glad to." "You are going to the club, I suppose. I wish you did not spend so much time them la this soiuubhing so important that it can't be put oS: I do want to see 'Cymbiuie1 so xnncuv' l ''. here Nettie, its like this," said John: "Ed. WUsou, a friend of mine from out of towu. w going to be here to-uight, and I want to show him around a little, and and taw uini to the club, perhaps; in fact, I ve written to him promising to meet him. Now do be reasonable, Nettie." The cloud lifted from Mrs. Wheatleigh's brow entirely. "I will be reasonable, John; of course if you are engaged with your friend, I suaut interfere, i d tell you what 1 might do. If you will get the tickets, Til send over to Cynthia Olds to go with me; she will be glad of the chance. We'll take a cab and drive to theatre, and it will be perfectly safe." John was glad to have the matter settled so easily, but his wife's sharp speech still rankled a little, and he felt that be ought not to give in all at once. "I don't like you going out a night without an escort, and 1 don't like you going with Cynthia Olds, anyhow. What you see in her to mane yon want to continue the intimacy, ' 1 can't imagine. She is a Billy, simpering old girl, without au idea that she hasn't got from some yellow backed novel, and a wo roan whose tongue runs as hers does is sure to be a dangerous companion." "Cynthia is not so bad as you make her out, John; she is foolish about some things, 1 .know, and exaggerates a good deal, but I stover heard her say anjthiug ill natured about anybody. It is a pleasure to take her -out, she enjoys everything so much. But as you evidently do not wish me to go the thea tre, I shall say no more about it." "There, my dear, you may do as you like," wd John. "Ask Cynthia to go with you and X will bring the tickets to-night" And ao all was serene. . ! When John Wbeatleightook bis seat in the elevated train he drew a letter from his ixwket-rfche letter which caused the little jut in ms nome that had so quickly subsided, lie vend it hastily: Newark. N. J. Anrtl in DXaS Wheatixioii: J am coming over to xora ou mursuay who ivy w ue and bar sister you remember fctheljof course. Vie want to go somewhere in the evening, and would be dtilighted to have you join tit t the Huffman house at (i for dinner, ami snake a partie carree. I hear the operetta of ititaiain Koquette" is vei-y good; may 1 aj;iiissiun you to secure four i&cott for oui jArif, aud don't fail to meet iwl My wus v u.itjN to be reuwiiiiwred. Yours truly, ft H. W UMJ9. "Confound it," he muttered, "i donft like it; I wish X hadn't been ui such a hurry to accept his im itation." i He reutembered Miss Ethel very well; a .handiKime girl she was, too, but not band tamer than her sister, Mrs. Wilson. "01 course, they couldn't have asked Nettie; the; -don't kuow her. I'm hanged, though, if I think it's the thing to invite a married mad without his wife. 1 wish I'd told her! How over, I'm in for it now, 1 suppose, " 1 He left the wain and weut toatheatn where a great artist was playing Bbake spearean dramas, and bought two places fai 'Cymbelino." Then he went ou to his ofiice. All tnorning, however, he was absent winded and low spirited; he let several good oppor tunities on the exchange pass unnoticed About noon be made a sudden resolution. I shan't dine with them at any rate; I'll go home and take dinner with Nettie; Pll com promise ou tkat" He sat down and wrote; ' Deah Wilson I am very sorry, but 1 find it impossible to get away' in time to take tinnier with you this evening. X shall join you at the theatre, though, aud therefore en close the three tickets tor yourself and the ladies, to whom plenw make my eompli ments and regrets at being obliged to forego a part of the pleasure of the eveuing. FaMi fully, Whkatuugh. ! Comic opera was a form of entertainment which John Wheatleigh loathed, yet here he had consigned himself to enduring three hours of jingling music and prancing women, white refusing to go with his wife to witness a noble play. , He pnt the three tickets into an envelope .with his note and sealed it, thinking to him self meanwhile: i wish there was some way out of the whole business 4. might say 1 was ill poor little .Nettie I 'AInie. Rouquette' in deed! Pshaw!" Than he called a messenger, dispatched his letter, and in so doing laid the train to a pretty mine which by evening might explode with a formidabl-: result j Yon will probably guess what John Wheat leigh did in his absent minded, self reproach ful state of mind, so tbere need be no secret about it He was reckoned one of tlie shrewd est men on the Cotton Exchange, yet h did now what shrewd and keen witted men sometimes do committed an egregious blunder. He bad in his pocket six theatre tickets. All were red. and of the same general ap pearance. He enclosed the two tickets he had bought for his wife and one operetta ticket in the note to his friend Wilsou. and thus the three tickets he retained, one for ; himself and two for Nettie, were all for "Mine. Ruquette." j When be came home to dinner Nettie met him with a smile. "Conld you get the tickets. John, dear' Oh, I'm so glad I Cynthia will go. How 1 wish, though, it was you!" j "Indeed, I wish it was, Nettie. I would: break this engagement to-night if I could, but Wibjou is an old friend aud I would not like to offend him." ''And 1 wouldn't like to have you either, dear. 1 was cross this morning, wasn't II I was sorry for it, though, afterward. Please forgive mo, John, dear vou at e always gooi to me." and slie put her arms around bib neck and kissed him. Aren't you weU, John You look pale." Yes, quite well, Nettip; a little headache, that is all" Mrs. Wheatleigh was not quite dressed when her hushund came at H o'clock to hid her guod-by. "I'll try to be back as soon as you are, Nettie," he said, as he kissed her. He was on the stairs when his wife called to him, "John, you haven't given nte the tickets i don't come back back; I'll run down to you." j He fumbled hastily in hiB pocket and drew " out the Ibvw tickets. 'Mine. Roquette j that's mine" he beard Nettie on the stairs ' "the other two are her don't come down, dear; there they are." , "You foo ish boy," said Nettie, "you are rare you are quite weU, Johul There good night." j Cynthia was not ready when the cab stopped at the door. Her toilet was a matter requiring great preparation; presently, though, she came running out 1 How are you. dear Nettie so good of you to think of me so often! Isn't Mr. Wlwatleigh goingf Just we two? How meet What is 'Cymoeline,' Nettiet Shakespeare, Jisu't iti I don't think I ever read it is it a tragedy! How nice!" ; No, Mr. Wheatleigh couldut go to-night," explained Nuttie, "he hod an important en gagement with a business f lend at the dub." Cynthia rattled on, telling Nettie of all her comings and goings since their last meeting until they reached ihe theatre. They entered the house, and Nettie handed her tickets to the man at the gate. "Youre in the wrong place, ladies," said lie; these ticket don't belong here." 'Dear me," said Nettie, "where are we! Did the cabman make a nustaket Aren't you playing 'Cymbciiuer" "Yes, ma am, but these tickets are for Mme. Roquette,' at tlie uptown house. The address is ott your ticket please step aside a moment, ladies." '0h, how provoking!" said Nettie. "How could John have made a mistake! He knew it was 'Cymbeliiie' I wanted to see we talked of it quite awhile." 'Perhaps they will exchange them at the box office," suggested Cynthia, , j "Oh, no, tbey won't do that," replied Net tie, taking out her puree; "we must buy new tickets. Dear me, I have only enough here to pay the cabman 1 Have ou any money, Cynthiar" j Cynthia humbly acknowledged to not hav ing a penny. "Well, there is nothing to do, then, but to drive home," said Nettie. "Oh, X am so dis appointed f They fouud a cab, and were rolling uptown, when Cynthia said: "Nettie, so long as as we have the tickets, why shouldn't we goto see 'if me. Roquettef I hear it is splendid. Florin De Hrassi sings in it, yon know. It we don't like it we can come away in a little while." j "Very well, Cynthia," replied Nettie, apt-! thetically. She was thinking bow could he have been to careless, when he knew she wanted so much to see this play. But she had invited Cynthia to go with her, and felt bound to make the best of the matter. 1 Cynthia hastily put her head out of the window and told the man where to driva fiecretly she was delighted at the change in programme, tihokespeare was very nice, of coon, but such a thing as "Madame Ro quette" was not to be seen every day. "Beanie De Forest was telling the all about it last night, Nettie," she said; "he Bays it is imply grand, and that Floria De Brassi is the ioveatsa. inu$ bewitching thine! The men are all wild about her, Sue singsa 'top i"al song,' or something, called 'Now Ho s a Married Man,' that brings down the bonne, Benuie Bays, I don't know ttiat I approve of such things," site added deprecatuigly, "but it's wall enough to go cx in a wliile, especially when everybody istalking alwut a thing; it makes one tcel like going to soa it in spite of one's self ; don't you think sof" "X suppow it docs, Cynthia, I rover beard anything about it" The operetta had begun wlteu they entered the theater. A little man aecommmed by two hundsome ladies was raising a great commotion about something with an usher. Nettie just glanced at thorn as she passed. Their seats were iu the orchestra, and tlie house seemed quite tu'l, with the exception of one chair adjoining their own, Cynthia divested herself of her jacket at once, aud prepared to enjoy herself. "Wu can put our things on that seat next you, Nettie; if anybody comes we'll taka them away again," sho said. Nettie placed Cynthia's coat in the vacant eat, aud as sho did so her eyes fell on tha man beyond it; lie was staring at her with wide oien eyes and uaugiug juw; be looked quite stupefied. The man was her husband. "Why, John! how came you here 1 thought is this a surprise or a joke what does it menu, Johu!" "Nettio," he said, hostUy, "there has been a mistake; X fouud it out, and came to -I mean let us go quickly quickly, Nettie!" He rose to bU feet; Nettie Jwas quite be wildered, while Cynthia stared. "Quick, Nettie" "Ah, Wheatleigh, I've found you, have If cried a little man bustling up; "such a deuce of a time I've hod. What ou earth did y.u mean by sending me one ticket for this place and two for somewhere else, Lord knows where! I've been having a flue row back there, and the girls are mad as hornets, Maud didn't like It when yon didn't come to diuuer anyhow. Oh, I can promise you a jolly scold ing. How did you make such a bull! Are these the seats here! The usher will try to straighten the tbiug out if these ladles will kindly let him see their couua Maybe" His words were drowued in a burst of applause. Floria De Brassi, as tlie young Prince Oaillard, had bouuded on the stage a glory of blonde hair and silk tleshi.igs, Nette had not an idea of what the trouble was about; she looked at her husband, who was still standing. His face was white, his lips moved, but she could not hear the words. The usher was saying something to Cynthia, who was helplussiy fumbling in her bag for the coupons Nettie had banded her when they came in; but what was this the woman on the stage was singing, her hands pressed to her heart, and her eyes rolled up in mock agony! Ah. sweet fledud'Hl one! Ah. poor deluded one! , He'll tool yitu If lie can, Now he's a married man Ha-ha! j Now he's a married man. j Nettie comprphendjd everything in a flash, i The little man and the two handsome women I standing back there belonged to her hue- j ban'1 party through some mistake she and Cynthia were in their places, and tbey were trying to get them out She rose to Iter feet aud turned to her husband with indignant eyes "Nettie, come with me," he said in a low voice. "1 will explain everything." Nettie felt a strong revulsion; she grasped Cynthia by the wrist and hurried her away. "One moment, indies I meun no otTense," said the little man "by Jove, Wheatleigh, they've gone!" In the aisle they almost ran into a man staggering under a great basket of flowers; the odor made Nettie faint As for Cynthia, she only knew something dreadful had happeiied. Nettie was deathly pale and looked straight tiefore her, not hav ing uttered a word since they left the thee-1 tre, Cynthia took her two hands and held j them tight, not knowing what else to do. How terrible it all was, yet how wildly ex citingl Nlie recalled John Wheatleigh's bag-! gard face, the excitable voice of the little man, the will bml amazement with which the two women had regarded them as they passed out she thought she had seen these women before; indeed, it was such an adven-1 .tore tliat poor CynLhia fonnd herself taking ; a kind of guilty joy ju the situation. And i Nettie how stonily she stared before her; she did not look like Nettie Wheatleigh at all. Would it tie in tlie pupers in the morn ing I Would Nettie get a divorce! Every body would know that she had been there , aud bad seen it all, aud would come to her ' for the particulars. Cynthia fairly grew giddy at the prospect of hercomiug' import ance. Now they were at Nettie's house, she must go in ; she could not leave the poor girl while Bbe looked like that Then Nettie spoke for the flint time. "Come in the house," she said, hoarsely; "tell the man to wait" Bbe ran up stairs and flung bere!f on the bed, face downward. Cynthia gently took off her bonnet and would have bathed her face, but Nettie motioned her away. Hue did not cry or make a sound, but only buried her lace in the pillows as though she felt a thou sand eyes upon her and was ashamed. There was a violent ring at the bell, and John Wheatloigh came rushing up the stairs. She sprang to lior feet. "Nettie, darling, where are you? Oh, Net tie, don't look at me like that let me tell you! Miss Olds, please go into the next room for a few moments; I must t)eak to my wife alone." "Stop; remain where yon are, Cynthia, Do you not sea that whatever you have to ay to me must be said before her now!" "Nettie, dearest, it was all a mistake. That was Ned Wilson, his wife aud her sister. I was going with them, you see to meet them, that is, aud I mixed the tickets up I gave you I ought to have told you." t "It was shameful," she said, in a low, bard voice, "to humiliate me before all those peo ple, before Cynthia, before" she shuddored "those two women." IV 'Nettie, I swear I meant to tell yon at the table this morning the words were on my very lips to tell you. X bad written to Ned Wilson then, but I had made up my mind not to go if you didn't want me to; and just as X was going to speak you asked me to take you then we bad that silly little quar rel, and I foolishly went away without tell ing you. Xf you knew bow miserabb) I had felt all day it was that that made me send 0 God! the doesn't believe me!" and the poor boy covered his face with bis hands and gave a great sob. Then it was that tlie true and beautiful womanly instinct arose and showed iUfiU Ul tt despised Cynthia. f "Nettie," she said, flrmlv, "you are making too much of this; your husband has done no wrong look at him, Nettie, He concealed something from you because he was piqued it was foolish, but not wicked, and he wa sorry for it before it was made known to : yon in the way it was to-night I know who airs. W ilson is and who her sister is he loves you and noitody else. You can trust me, cant you, wheu 1 promise never to speak of this to auy one, and aud, Nottie, X shall try to forget it myself." "Oh, 1 did not deserve it, John; I did not, indeed!" and Nettie flung herself sobbing on her husband's neck, as Cyuthia silently with drew. All his life John Wheatleigh loved Cyn thia Olds for those words. The simper on her kindly face was as a beautiful smile to him ever after her harmless twaddle as pleasant music, Tlie operetta of "Mine. Roquette" had a long run in the metropolis. The airs wore played on hand organs by street bands, and by energetic young ladies ou tlie piano, but although Nettie forgave her husband freely, and restored hiiu to her perfect confidence, she could never hear, "Now lie's a Married Man," without a sjiasm of tlie wart The Epoch, ' Almost to the Boards, Jones Brown Is rich and stngy. An ac quaintance of his met Brown" son tliB other day and said: "Your father seems to have lost a good deal of money lately. The last time X saw him he was complaiuiug aud saying he must economise.11 Economise! Did he say where he was go ing to begiuf" "Yes; ou bis table, he said." "Then he must be goiug to take away the table cloth," was the filial declaration. New York Iiedger. Mrs. Eotildphiet What on earth are yon doing, Clarence! Mr. Kohklphiet -Only securing my halt Interest in berinlothes against possible confis cation this evening, Puck. TALE OF A BALLOONER. One Man Who Ctmrgl Him S)i 5 far Dropping Ontu Hit farm. "1 used to make balloon ascensions In con nectiou with Warner's circus," aaid an old and retired aeronaut the other day, "and one day I went up from Pekm, Ills. The bal lon was new and light aud I got a much longer ride thau what 1 expected. 1 finally descended in a farmhouse yard about ten miles away, my anchor having caught in a cherry tree. Tlie farmer was an old fellow, about 00 years of age, and be sat reading on hid doorstep as i came down. He removed bis glasses, put them in their case, put the case in bis pocket and then oauw forward and carelessly olwervedi " 'That a balloon f " 'Yea, Help me pull It down,1 " 'Are you a liailtKiiierJ' "Y'es. Pull hard.' "We got tlie air ship down and I wanted blm to take me to town In his wagon. He bad none, and 1 had hired a rig of a neigh bor, and was about to dejiart wheu the old fellow stepped forward w ith: " i have n little bill here, sir.' '"Bill! Whatforf " 'Damage to cherry tree, 3 shillin's; skew ing my poultry, AO cent: sintering my old woman', the came; service of myself,!. To tal, $2.25, winch Is mighty cheap cousiderin the times. " 'But I won't pay it,' I protested. " 'Oh, yon won't! Weil, I'm a justice of the peace and I'll issue a warrant My uny bur is constable and he kin serve it The old woman is out of her fit by this time aud she'll be wituess, and I sort o' reckon I'll tine you about & for disturbm of the wane aud con tempt of this court!' "And I was made to realize that the best way out of it was to come down with the amount of his bill, aud luckily I had it, with a quarter to sjiare." Chicago Herald- Mttnks of Near gightod Men. Lawyer Ashley, of New York, was telling Judge Day a story of Damlet, the noveJist, who is extremely near sighted. The storr ran thus: Duudet vfcited some place in which were kept many aninmls. He sauntered slowly a I out peering into their cages until he came to a secluded spot where a f u.ry ob ject, not in a cage, attracted bis attention. "Ah!" said the distinguished Frenchman, "this must be a tamo bear." Aud, taking tome cake from his pocket he flung it with a "There, old fellow," straight into the face of a Russian nobleman who, enveloped hi his sables, bad stoppttd to look at the Iteare near by. Imagine his anger aud surprise. Dau det apologises, etc., etc.. etc. The judge listened intently, but after the lawyer had finished he said gravely: "X can toll you something fur ahead of that in the way of mistakes caused- by nearsight edness. "A friend of mine who lives in the suburbs came from the city one summer evening just at twilight He had broken his glasses and was almost fooling his way along, when he became conscious of somebody walking di rectly in front of him. Xt seemed to be a short woman in a bright gown, wearing a wrap about her shoulders, one end of which trailed down behind her. She walked to heavily that my friend began to think that, though short, she must be exceedingly stout A few steps more aud the wrap touched the ground and dragged in the mud. This was more than his gallantry could stand, so stoop ing forward he said: 'Allow me, madam, to replace your mantle,' at the same time gently reS-rad cow's tail and placing it across her back." Detroit Free Press, ft Was a bold Night. THE LION AMONG THE FLOWER3. Here, In this garden nook, aloha, Um au old Item or gray stone Once, In the long ftonn poldea hours, A lordly lion, proud in Utte, The guardian of a maaiUnti pate Now he Ilea low among Uis Uowera. Then, oft he aw the ubiofnn doors, Beard lUrht feet fall on reatal I loom. Heard mimic wake Its wltclitng dla, Thou dance boiieeih the torches' hlaat . The kulght aud ludM of old days. While he wstohotl over all witblo. Now he liw here; In his old age Cost out rejected, by tlm rage Of time, a down beateu, broken, soarred An old gray Hon; yet not less A Hon In Iob feebleness! Cue thiiiR Is left Uitu still to guard, Bo guard It well, by night and day. In thorn great iaw of granite gray, In the strong shelter of his breast; No mau shall serve him yet with scorn, Though an old lion, thus forlorn, Aud all he giinrtU-Hi lobiu's nest t Temple Bar. Bonded In a Surety Company The method by which au employe la bonded lu a surety company la simple enough. Tlie employe, having been re quested by his em pi yur to furnish a bond in some stated amo nit, goes to a reliable surety company aud fills out aud signs an application the rpplicatiou contains a number of questiot s regarding the char acter and auteccdonts of the employe, which must be answered fully aud apeclf Ically. All employment for ton years last past must be clearly stated, with the reason fur leaving each. A complete de scription of the appearance of the appli cant is noted on the back of the applica tion. At least four responsible persons must be given as references. To each of them a jiecial form of questions is then tent. Upon satisfactory answers to these questions, and upon a careful private in vestigation of the habits of life of the ap plicant, a bond is executed by the guaran tee company and bonded to the employer, Insuring him against loss arising from dishonesty on the part of the employe. At the very threshold It is remarkable to observe how many employer dread to offend their employes by asking thera for such a bond. This nmy be very well as a matter of delicate politeness, but surely, In the expressive language of trade, "it is not business." The question is not what Is most courteous, but what is most right? What is most ju.st not only to the employer, but to the employe umihel ft Could a better teirt be devised than to ask an employe to give a bond? If he is honest, ho will do so cheerfully; if he "gets oft nded." it were as well to dis charge him without much delay. Lin coin L. yre iu LippiucuU's Maaxlue, A Delicious Java Fruit. Travelers in Java have tilled pspes and columns with rhapsodies over the mangos toon, and all unite tn extolling it as the supreme delight of the tropics. The man posteen appears to one as a hard round fruit the size of a peach. Its hard outor shell or rind is of the same color and thicktieas an a green walnut, but In this brown husk lie hx or eight segments of creamy white pulp. The little scgtnpnti are easily separated, ond transferred to tho mouth melt away, the pulp being as soft aud fine as u custard. The mat:goB t ceii's delicate pulp tastes, as all us eu logists suy, like Htrawberrlca. ptraohcn, bananas and oranges all at once; a slight tartuctis is veiled hi these delicious flavors, and it is never cloviiigly tweet. Taken just as it comet from the ire but the maugostoou is an epicure's dn-am real ized, and the more' the pity ttut it only grows in far away places aud deadly cli mates, and docs not boar transportat ion. large sums hare boon offered, and P. and 0. steamships have ciade hundreds of ineffectual efforts to ct a basket of mau- E osteons to England for the queen. The srd ritid looks ituchaugud for weeks, but the delicate pulp inulla nwny, and the dryeat and coldest it Irl orator chambers rmniot keep the heart of the uiuaiguaU'CU from tpoiling. Olobo Democrat. Lost ;argo of bluves. Though the slr.ro trado was prohibited by law cfUT m a period of eighty years, it wr.s clandestinely carriod on so long cs slavery iu this country made a markot for kidnaped negroes. Tho laiit cargo of this h ind that eflucttd a lauding was from tho Wanderer, a slave trading vessel, and some of the negroes kidnaped lu Africa still live on & plantation iu Georgia. They have boconie civilized and Christianized, speaking the Kuglish lan guage, with a little reminder of their original mother totipue. They talk occa sionally iu the Guinea language when by themselves, but make Ho efforts to loach. It to their children. Bostou Budget. "Long" Joha Wcntwortli'a Reply. "Img" John. Wenlworth was once run ning for otflce, and heard that his politi cal opponents were asserting tbat, if elected, ho wouijp soon get liia hand into the city treasury. "May ho 1 will, and may he X won't," he sardonically replied whon he heard of tho charge. "But I'll tell you one thing: nobody else will get bis hand in; I'll bit on the chut."- New York Tribune. Rom Qturtir$ertiion Title The Christian at Work prints tliat of sensational topics announced by American toreacbers, mid says they compare favora bly with dime novel titles. Here are a fow of tho sermon titles: "Boycotting the Dead," "The Great Oil." "Straight from the Hhonlder.' "Hell, and tho People Who Are Going There," "Taken bv the Throat," "Use Your liyes," "Off Goes the Roof," "Dp Conies the Man," New York bun. ; Night in Northern bcotland. A clergyman recently returned from a vacation spent iu the north of Scotland says the nights are so short there that there is hardly two hours of darkness. At Inverness lie was able to md at 11 o'clock at uight without the aid of artiti cuU Ught. Chicago Herald. Farmers fur South America. Patagonia and Argentina are gaining large uccesslons of larmeiy by Imnfigra tion. Xt is said n person may become a citizen on his lu titling there, and he can tfut laud for uothimr. Bostou Budiret