K^i?^wp,-' i,i_ 'im^yK IW^ V '" Jill»if "r*:^--..* i^ ^?; '^^ t^Â¥ 1 ' la '?!^' J -vv-i lOB AID ABOUT WOMEV. QLIifFSBS CF FARMERS' DAUGH- TERS. AUCI BBOWK. Hie lirw rf moat people are all cluui|;ea, and the fanner'a dani^ter ii no ezoeptum. She ii foand erefywlMre fining pontioiia in «yery rank open to women, and this will al- waya be ao, for ahe cannot always stay on tbe faxm if she wishes it, and her edncaljon b best when it fits her for changes. The Swisi Gorenment treats its diildren wisely when they wish to leave home. In- â- tead of hindnmoes and disoonragements, aid is given to those who leave the crowded mother-land. Thqy are watched over in their new homes and not suffered to become paupers in the land they adopt for their own. The wide knowlec^ and experience of the government are nsM for the protec- tion of its weakest children. In farmer's families where it is probable fhe daughters must be self -supporting when they reach womanhood, their education should be such as to give them a fair chance of suooess. Whether as wives or working singly, they will find life smoother if they have been wisely fitted in girlhood to do well at least a few things. A musical edu- oaoion given to one farmer's daughter has Kved a constant pleasure and profit toherin womanhood. Shebecameanuniater'swife, and in church, prayer-maeting and Sunday- aohool is her husband's dependence and willing helper when organist or leader is absent. But if her music was used only for the pleasure and instruction of her family of boys and girls it would be inviJuable to fcer. gowns plaoe of navy bine for linen, serge and flaimel. TbenoveitieB ef the aeawm are Ike law sad crape parasols in white, Uaek and pale tints, wtth haadles of gold, nlver and rwe woods. The frame woA is covsc^dsmooHi- lywich surah or pon«e, and lace or crape is tJiSB gathered upon it with even fulness, and kaviag atiny frill at the oater edge as a finidi. Suitings, as thenars termed, still show striped effects, fine hair lines and broad stripes being alike fashionabljy worn, and soft, light summer cheviots, with a dull sur- face in beige, gobelin.blne, terra cottismuiy shades of gray, golden Inrown and reseda, with lines or starves of some different but harmonizing color, are fused by ladies' tail orsand dressmakers alike for waUdng and traveling gowns. flow to Bay a Hoise. From some wild Western journal comes the following amusing sketch " If you X. !.«.. ^M«at4: KaIIav Another country-bred girl, one of a large family, found no opening at home for her mnpaB after graduating arom ayoung ladies' aemmary, and led an aiunless, half-satisfied existence until a friend urged her to learn diew-making. The result was a busy, in- draendeat ufe and many [opportunities to brighten the lives of the people who emplov- •d her, many of them ola fnends who made her welcome as a friend as well as a worker. Being the fomnate possessor of a contarious good-humor the families in which she sewed often laid aside some load of household trouble, and perhaps f o/got to take it up again titer tbe sewing was done and the dressmaker gone. The girlhood of another woman was spent in hwa work in a family of seven boys, and was followed by a few years of teaching, when she became a farmer's wife. After ten years the family moved to a growing young eity, bought a house with a lot large enough for a bam, chicken house and range and a garden. Here the wife raised fruit and vegetables in the garden, cared for the chickens and cow, supplying the table with as fresh and wholesome fare as though still living on the farm, and by the sale of milk and eggs always had a few dollars at h^uid for unexpected demands upon her purse, such as arise in a city household. Her edu- cation in the hard school of lier country- house, harder than is usual for the farmer's girls, fitted her to make the most of her city garden, saved to her husband many dol- lars of expense, and was her special pride imd pleasure. No one else could laise quite so many tomatoes from the same number of vines nor have strawberries so plentifully from a patch of equal size. The row of beans was always loaded with pods, and it was only because the family demanded sweet com tiiree times a day that her supply of that ever fell short. Some farmers' daughters remain at home. One living in comfortable circumstances saw her brothers and sisters leave for homes of their own, and still stayed to be the compan- ion and helper of her mother and father, stayed after the mother's life was over, until her father passed away, and still she re- mained, trying always to make country life as bright as passible by entertaining friends, by study and reading, by growing flowers,and vines, and trees, and studying botany to interpret the wonders o. the woods, which near her home were pr fuse- ly filled with wild flowers. After her fath- er's death the care and supervision of the farm, the live-stock, and the house kept her life wholesome, and the two motherless ne]^- hews under her care kept solitude and loneli- ness at bay. Flowers bloomed all winter in her sunny sitting-room, and her fingers were equally at homebetweenthe pages writ- ten by eminent authors and in the soil of her garden and flower beds. A real lore for the country once planted ii the hearts of the daughters of the fanner, will never be entirely uprooted. To the parents is entrusted the planting of such a love. A bright home, where sympathy and all possible advantages are given to the growing girls, will make the country a mag- net to hold them contented while there and draw them irresistibly when they are in the cities that, witl. buildings and pavements, smother out the country life, both vegetable and animal. Hundreds of country-loving girls have spent years of their lives in cities and hun- dreds of those growing up will do so. Is it wise to insut that this is only evil, and dis- courage every aspiration pointing to such occupations as are possible only in cities and towns? Such occupations for a woman will try her strength and courage at the best, and how much more if, through the opposi- tion of friends, she enters a new work half equipped and unhelped by the support that sympathy gives? Sisters ix Yucatau. Sisteis in Yucatan have a fancy tor dress- ing precisely alike in the minntest particular, so that not a bow or a button ,a flower or an article of jewellery varies. Id the tropics large families are the fashion, and any day one may see girls out in groups of three or four to a dozen ,who ,by one glance at their clothes, one may know belong to the same parentage. Thus it is easy to distinguish the members of a famOy, and not infreqnentiiy the 'j one* are caUep by tlM^ favorite col- or. For example, the five senoritas of the Espanoza household are known as " the red rosea," because each erf tiiem invariably adorns herself witii jacqueminots, while the people speak of the Omzslez j^ls as "las coloradas," because they are always dressed in red. The style of hair-dressing does not differ as «rften ners as in other countries, probaUy firom c(»stitntional lack ol enter- prfae more than aavthliw die. Years ago andSGoMtna.Aiaawftf «li4 mKmfito^iffjfmf: ' tlHc W»'ot'«ad.'Set-' witti want to buy a horse don't believe your own brother. Take no man's word for it Your eye is your market. Don't buy a horse in hameas. Unhitch him and take everything off him but his halter, and lead him around. If he has a com or is stiff, or any other fadluig you can see it. Let him go by himself a way, and if he staves right into anything you know he is blind. No matter how clear and bright his eyes are, he can't see any more than a bat. Back him, too. Some horses show their weakness at tricks in that way when they don't know any other. But be as smart as yon can, youll get caught sometimes. Even an expnrt gets stuck.' A horse may look ever so nice and go at a great pace, uid yet have fits. There un't a man could tell it till something happens. Or, he may have a weak back. Give.him a whip and off he goes for a mile or two,*then aUof asuddenhe stops in the road. After a rest he sturts off again, but he soon stops for good, and nothing but a derrick coiud move him. The weak put of a horse can be better discovered whUe standing than moving. If he is sound he will stand firmly, and squarely on his limbs, vdthout moving any of them the feet flatly upon the ground, with legs plump and naturally poised or if the foot is lifted from the ground and the weight taken from it, disease may be suspected, or'at least tender- ness which is a precursor of disease. If the horse stands with his feet spread apart or straddles with his hind le£,s, there is a weakness in the loins and the kidneys are disordered. Heavy pulling bends the knees. Bluish, milky cast eyes in horses indicate moon- blindness or something else. A bad- tempered horse keeps his ears thrown back. A kicking horse is apt to have scarred legs. A stumbling horse has blemuhed knees. When the skin is rough and harsh and does not move easily to the touch, the horse is a heavy eater and digestion is bad. Never buy a horse whose breathing organs are at all impaired. Place your ear at the side of the heart, and if a wheezing sound is heard it is an indication of trouble." Why She's Woe-Befifone. ' An Eastern editor wants to find out "just for curiosity" why women break down. He's either a bachelor or a brute. Some- times there is not much difference between them. Why do women break down, indeed Because women cannot in the morning, after a breakfast, where all waits on the word and taste of one high and mighty person, light a cigar and stroll down to a comfort- able office â€" an office where six hours covers a day's work. Because women cannot put their hands in their pockets to indulge in the simplest pleasure. Because women have a thousand ills of which men never dream. If they did they would turn over and sleep on the other side. Because women have all the cares and little of tbe comforts of the house- keeping. Because women can never lanore through a bass solo while croup and dipther- ia are stalking abroad. Because women have to make one dollar rustle round for two dollars. Because women have to plan, think and act for several instead of for one. Because women have to rip, press and make- over so that a certain member of the family can sport a new suit or a silk hat. Because women are rarely offered a seat among the roses of relaxation. Because women are forced to keep their noses to the grindstone of drudgery. And this is why women break down, Mr. Editor.â€" [San Francisco Report. American Bailway Buildins;. Our railways have now reached a develop- ment which is wonderful. The railways of the United States, if placed continuously, would reach more than half way to the moon. Their bridges alone would reach from New York -to Liverpool. Notwithstanding the number of acci-ients that we read of in the daily papers, statistics show that leas persons are Ulled annually on railways than are killed annually by falling out of windows. Railways have so cheapened the cost of transportation that, while a load of wheat loses all of its value by being hauled one hundred miles on a common road, meat and flour enough to supply one man a year can, according co Mr. Edward Atkinson, be haul- ed 1,500 miles from the west to the east for one day's wages of that man, if he be a skilled mechanic. H freight charges are diminished in the future as in the past, this can soon be done for one day's wages of a common labor- er. ' Fresh Cnimbs. " What Dart of the school exsrcisesdo you like best, Johnme?" " The purt we get at recess." A new novel is called " A Bachelor's Para- dise." That must be the place where but- tons grow m shirts. Fw coffee stains try putting thick glycer- ine m the wrong tide and washing it out with lukewarm water. Nature uses a great many quHls witii which to make a goose, but a man can make a gooae of himself with only one. m Young lady â€" I heard somebody kisj yim in the dark hall last n%ht. MiOdâ€" Yoa|ot kissed, too. " Yes, bat tiiaffe the youg man to whom I am eBoagsd -to be marrieC Thereianohamifai i£at.*' "Fm igtaA to bear it He ym» Af^ yobag toaiayou haatd " g^alrU.*;. Y« aa-ilattsff .atzitaata: The WodcB of Ood. R J. a rouiOGK,,K Ju Bneatk aboreaad sU anmad. Deep ia the «arth, the air. tbe sea. Do AbniKiity's voiksabODiid, Fiodidmia? his gMt Hajsetr. The ilowexl Oait dc the vsfduit plainâ€" Btenial Bnow»that iiKmatsiiis orowsâ€" Ihe stMsms that in tbs sprinir again ooean pour their waxets down The sea, whose mighty votemea quread From the iqnator to the Pole, Whoae deep, d»ik dratha annnmboNd dead Contain within tber mysUc goal The heavens whoae broad, celestial blue The son engOda with Kolden light, And gives the tInH of each bright hue Of earth or sky in colors brif^t Gives aeaaooa to oar p1aiMt4tar, And marks the bounds they may not pass And apreads hia warmth to worida afar BcvoIviDg roond Um glittering maas The moonâ€" tright crystal of the sky- That spreada to earth her beams at even. And courxs with aeresity Amid the brilliant throng of heaven. All. the Almiefaty's power nnbdd. And His infinite wisdom tell Who hath a million worlds nnrcdl'd Wth laws that mark their motions well And Who in this revolving sphere man snch Ufe and Jight 1ms given. That he miafat read Gcd'a wiadom here And ift his eyes from earth to heaven. " Joy Oometh in the Mdzning." ST Ik A. MOaaiBOH. 5? Huaht huahl thy dole My weaiy soul I Though oare and pain oppreM thee And Joy-lights fade. And truat betrayed And human hate distreas thee, And sore the rod; KeepfaithinOod, He know* His servants' BoiTCW His Son will rise And flood the sUes With golden light to-monrow. For none may miss Life's truest bU«8, Who stillâ€" in Christ abidiogâ€" Low at His cross. Count all things loss. In His sweet love confiding. Though like a pall Bin's aliadows fall In darVniog haze around us. The light of day Will chase away The gloom in which they bound as. ... Pain hath an end • â- â- And sorrows blend And fade, and God shall measure For thef eâ€" and all That now appallâ€" Eternal rest and pleasure, â€"Supreme, divineâ€". Each soul shail shine With Heaven's light adorning, And Love adoi-e For â€" evermore â€" " Joy Cometh in the mpming." What the Flowers are Doing. BV R08ALIKB B. JOKES. What are the flowers oil doinsr â- ' Why, the daisies are softls' tiptoeing To hear, if they eao, if the grasses Reply to tbe wind as he pases. Ah, the gossip they tell, silly liepeis Ill inflnitesimal whispers. And the rose, with dew-diamonds aglisten. Is lifting her head, too, to listen. Acd the lily, with Puritan sweetness, Stands aloof with a maiden's discreetness But is found, ne'ertheless, by tbe rovers. Her bee and humming- bird loveia. And the panoiea lift up laughintr faces As if all aware of their graces An4 the sweet wild violets haU-hidden Exhale the aromas cf Eden. The purple and pink morning -glories Just hint at the loveliest stories That ever a scroll yet unfolded Oh, the daintiest blossoms e'er moulded The dear things fitly adorning The day's and the soul's sweet morning. The lilacs are throwing their kisses. All ardent with young summer's blisses. The beauteous arbutus is ceeping Where the dec'v purple shadows are sleep ng And tiie wild r jse the wild bee is wooing ' 'Neath the bough where the wood dove is cooing. And away where the wood-aisles are dusky. Its pathways all tangled and bosky. Where the fern is unfurling her feather. The wild flowers blossom together. In shy motley prroupj 'neath the tinging Of pactans the bird cboir is singinar. And they list to the lesson he's teaching. While Jack-in-the-Pulpit ispreaohing. Forever. Those we love truly never die; Though year by j-ear the sad memorial wreath, A ring and flowers, types'of life and death, Are laid upon their grave. For death the pure life saves. And life all pure is love, and love can reach From Heaven to earth and nobler lessons teach ' Than those by mortaU.read. Well blessed is he who has a dear one dead A friend he his whose face will never change A dear communion that will ne'er grow strange The anchor of a love is death. J* The blessed sweetness of a loving breath Will reach our cheek all-fresh through weary years. For her who died long since, ah I waste not tears She s thine unto the end I Thank God for one dear friend, With faith still radiant wtth the light O) truth. Whore love comes laden with the scent rf youth Through twenty years of death. A Graff Old fellow. Arkansaw Traveler On a railway train a woman, pale acd careworn, sat holdfaig a child. " Hush now don't cry," she said, " That awful man " â€" meaning a gruff old fellow who sat near â€" " will come here and â- nap our heads off, Just look what an aw- ful laoe he is making at us. Please don't and we'll see papa after a while. O mercy, he's obknfng," the said, aa the gmff.lnftMng old fellow approached her. ' I can't main her hush, aur," die said pleadingly. "I know thafs very annoying, DUt I reaUy can't help it.'" "Let me take^er." The woman fearing to disobey, suffered him to take the child, idio, too much aatomshed to cry, meekly submitted. The gruff maa walked np and down tbe oar, and onoe tt* tf(in»tl dm wonuHi faaiaed that rite aw kfitt pnw the chUd to hb bosom. Wbm llm tgVaxuai the littiis^il to her motiier the woataki aalc- ed ' " Are^fodilaad dl oUNban. drt"^^ .-1 -hardly faw»,«' Idfbinth^CQQiitiy. It ia never ieal morning except in the oonntry. 1» tbe city ia uw early part of the day there is a mixed ocdor that dimbi down over Hie roofa oppodteaod throngh tiie â- awAeef the ddmney titikt malna people think ttietfane toget iqi aind oomb their hair. But tiiwe ia real morning in the oonntry. • Morning descending " from God out of heaven like a bride adorned for her hus- band." A few momenta before I looked out, and the army of niglit abadowawere striking their tenta. A red Ught on the horizon that does not make me think. as it did Alexander Smil^, of '• The Barren Beach of Hell," but more like fire kindled on the shore by Him whom the disciples saw at daybreak stirring the blaze on the beach of Genesareth. Just now the dew woke np in the hammock of the tree branches, and the light kissed it. Yonder, leaning against the slcy, two great uprights of flame, crossed many rundles of fire i Seme Jaoop must have been dreaming* Through those bumiahed gates a flaming chariot rolla. Some EUjah moat be as- cending. Morning I wish I had a rousing bell to wake the whole world np to see it. Every leaf a psalm. Every flower a censer. Every bird a chorister. Every sight beauty. Every sound mutio. Trees tranifigured. Tbe skies in conflagration. The air as if sweeping down from hang- ing sardena of heaven. The foam of cel- estial seas splashed on the white tops of tht K^sMk. The honeysuckle on one side of the porch ohallepeeB the aweet-brier on the other. The odors of heliotrope overflow the uma and flood the garden. Syrens with bridal bloasoma in their hair, and reset bleeding with a very carnage of oolor. Oh, the glories of day-dawn in the coun- try I My eyea moiaten. Unlike the flam- ing aword that drove oat the first pair from Eden, these fiery aplendoraaeem like awords unsheathed by anael hands to drive us in. We all need ue refreshing influence oi more out-door life. Almost every nature, however sprightiy, aometimea will drop into a minor key, or a anbdued mood, that is common parlance is recognized as " the bluea.' There may be no adverse cauaea at work, but aomehow the bella of the aoul atop ring- ing, and you feel like aitting quiet, and you atmce off 50 per cent, from all your worldly and apiritual prospects. The immediate cause may be a northeast wind, or a balky liver, or an enlarged spleen, or pickled oysters at 12 o'clock the night before. In such depressed state no one can afford to sit for an hour. First of all let him get up and go out of doors. Fresh air and the faces of cheerful men acd pleasant women and frolicsome children will, in fifteen min- utes, kill moping. The first moment your friend strikes the keyboard of your soui it will ring music. A hen might as well try on populous Broadway to hatch out a feath ery gourd, as for a man to successfully brood over his ills in lively society. Do not go for relief among those who feel as badly as you do. Let not toothache, and rheumatism, and hypochondria, ge to see toothaches rheumatism and hypochondria. On one block in Brooklyn lives a doctor, an undertaker and a clergyman. That is not the row for an nervous man to walk on, lest he soon need all three. ' Throw back all the shutters of your soul and let the sunlight of genial faces shine in. We all need to freshen up in our work, and a dose of the coimtry is a mighty cor- rective. How to get out of the old ru without twisting off the wheel, or snapping the shaf ta, or breaking the horse's leg, is a ques- tion not more appropriate to every teamster than to every Christian worker. Havinft once got out of the old rut, the next thing is to keep out. There is nothiog more kill- ing than ecclesiastical humdrum. If we would keep fresh let us make occa- nonal excursioiu mto other circles than our own Fcr a change put the minister on the hay-rack and the farmer in the clergyman's study. Let us read books not in our own line. After a man has been delving in nothing but theological works for three months, a few pages in the patent offi-x report will do his more good than Doctor Dick on " The Per- severance of the Saints." Let us go much into the presence of the natural world if we can get at it. If we would once in a while romp the fields we would not have so many last year's rose leaves in our sermons, but those j ust plucked, dewy and redolent. He Disliked Dark Complexions. A merchant of New York who availed himself of the services of a matrimonial agent tbe other day, was unlucky in his experiment. When the usual "professional" fees had been paid, he was placed in corres- pondence with a lady who was reputed to be handsome and wealthy. He forward^ her presents, and eventually sent a railv^ay ticket to bring her to Now York. «• On her arrival," to quote a' newspaper paragraph, his condition of animated expectancy was suceeded by one of suspended animation, or the sprightly charmer was jet black I" â- A^ Brace of. There was an obinn* market tiie other ^** «* collected a crowd, irr**©: medium tize, and he hX.*Q with enormous taeka iS?*«^l his body omaSl^SS* fastened to his forZ.t.'^C were the same gafi, ^i**«l«,» oocks. " You «'^».i,;ijj^is;j ^sa8. "ifou 8ee,"eft:i.-"«l every time BelshUt?i?? 4. with me he is tackled 2?* *»t«h2 some of your smart AleefcT $^w of it, and I've fitted h£^. ^HL^^ brought hi self, waggon. bring -*«I'dki„d;£tt np your best stock."""" 1*1 across the street and «i\ .* about as big as a yearliii ill SS CO sooner caught siggT'^^lIk chuken under the waiSâ„¢. *v *« i him. There was aT«S^t^'V acd thee the big dogb4k.^*»* acd the little dog olSse hSiiS' *«»a ful of tacks wasfncnSff ^5l his yelps of pain sndKt^CJi tiireebW' «ci;:a^' the wawoB." g^f^m under " We've struck dal is ours. ch in as fast wicgs, but we git th'ar'iTtk* [Detroit Free Prei "J"'*«i«»i' Are dogs intelligent? One w«,M ly tiimk so could le have «l„^kl**l formed by a shepherdZ M^^l Hunt, of this ci^. The*!S32Jf«l How Long a Child OoiUd Sleep. A healthy baby for the first two months or ao apimda most of its time aaleep. After that a baby should have at leaat two houra of sleep in the forenoon and one hour in the afternoon, and it ia quite possible to teach almost aoy infant to adopt this aa a regular habit. Even to the age of 4 or 5 years a cMld ahould have one hour of sleep, or at leaat rest in bed, before ita dinner, and it ahonld be pat to bed at 6 or 7 in the evening and left undiaiurbed for twelve or fourteen' honra. Up to the fifteenth year moat young peo- ple require ten houra, and till the twentieth year nine houra. After tiiat age everyone nada out how much he or ahe requires, tlioaeh as a general rule at leaat ux to eight haun are neceaaary. Ei^^t hours' aleep •Win prevent liiore nervoua derangeraisnts in women than any medieinea can core. Dur- Ug crowtii tlieve moat be amnle aleep if tbrah ia.to d^^wtop 4o Ite M ezteai ud tbe more aervooa, axoitaUe or niieoat- Qimui aJUld Ji, the Joogtt deep ahoSd ft fw if |a .^telfeataia vnggtm ia not to oomo (MM of Mjhm^" ran away and turned down the Z Mr. Hunt resides. The dog wmI^I the doorstep, but when thi iZ. '^^I tight he stwted for the Z"pJ?J horsc^he leaped after the bridlsStfM ceededfti stoppmg hfan. sSrCj front of him, he kept hun S5. ffl 2| owner arrived on the scene /uezM dog doubted the JIr^i,t^^M and he cntioally watchef him: Atwl evidentiy becommg convino-id fnm il mans actions that he was the Zjl\ owner, he quickly trotted back to SISI cile.â€" [Augusta, Me., JonnuL Contagiousness of Btimaii Emotuni, Every day's experience may wnply i^ illustrations of the immense inflQeBoeoloJ tagion in the developement of 11 imA emotions. Nor is it by any means to hj down as a weakness peculiar to or chmi istic of a feeble mind, to be blindly niul ibleofsuch contagion. Even the itoguil wills are bent and warped by the viidi J other men's passions, persistently bloiial in given directions. Original miDda, ^1 with what the French call I'esprit 'prim ml ier, are perhaps, indeed, affected rather ma than less than commonplace people \i^m emotions cf those around them, becan8eii| larger natures are more open to the s^l pathetic shock. Like ships with eTeryall set, they are caught by every breeze. Ltil a question of degree how much each inu"» ceives of inflaence from his neieihbon. Moreover, be it carefally no:ed, itis isi) by contagion, and not by any kind «f ui ority or command, that emotions canbecoi municated. It is a matter of common plwt I vation that any effort to direct the emotiMl to order has a tendency to prodace the m posite effect to the intended. To chaUetgi] a man to be brave is to makelumner70!ia;ti| bid him admire apersonor aworkofartiik suggest to him to be critical; to commuii young man or woman t» love the elect oi their parents is to chill any nascent inclia tion in the desired direction, and to auke] it a duty for Montagues to hate Upnleti i tostart the loves of Romeo and Juliet Wtl must give the feeling we desire. Wa sin* 1 possibly impose it Buyin? a Cow. We now sport a nice milch cw. 3to did we get her Paid forty dollars fo: « the whole amount being ten cents per (l»f saving since March 6, 1886. On th»td»T' friend of ours insisted on treating m a' smoke, as it was our birthday bnt «» fused the kindness, informing hm, -p eousiy, that we had never smoked a c^ to which he replied that he aversged ff» one to three per day, at a cost of 5nB twenty cents each day, and th«heji«a missed the small change. e told toj* that from that day on we would toy wi ten cents per day as long^s *« ^««„^., do so, and" see how much it would «nM3E» each year. We have kept it up to as a consequence we have a fane Mhm^ and calf, bought with four hundyed^ J pieces. Small business, u«n t it e- -^ Serly kept up, it will result m mM Urge aSd while our Wend, wno, Bod«» wUl sU this article, can show'wtoka, his thiiteen months of ^^fXn'c» stubs and, perhaps, imparcd heritti, » .^ show a goool cow and calf worth H' ^^ I cash. How She Changed. Ier Tune. He put up a job on the bi^ed ^iri «^'rr hehopedtoSell her a patent prg* making fir^ rugs fhe/" irJd^bs' Then he rang the door-bell, *na^^ answered it he put on hu "^o?* " aJ sm'le. lifted his hat high off a» "" remarked in his blandest voice The Udy of the house, IbeW h3« " Oh yes!" she said, with »J"J»^, .tfcasm, " if I'm sixty y5»"i » squint in one eye and a ngg« "» crow, I s'pose I'm her ijte^ but" He saw his mistake when too W^^ he slowly backed down the gt»" tiie gate he said regretfully s^ "How was I to kney. **!jinLi0df^ tiwfcshe was young and beftutifoi.*- I saw youâ€" " „natteIB»^J^ " Well, if. you've get any P»^ "J" 111 buy lii outfit," emterni,P«* atep in and I'U lo ok at th^ Defining the Status of a J Tfftgi At an old-faahioned hojrfijj" S/ffi twX gentlemen were dinBtfW" aroke as to what a P«f»PP^^ tiie liuera insisted that it w« » jj W pineapple tne aiuers mawieu ^J^^aUt wra. other with equal confidences*^ opinion that a Po W*|^ deW**^ iC bet was made, »d the fiw^ tOjw*»fe*ked«to4»*»J5r 1'8 f iTH! OBABLOTTK M. YOmfG. be s si al .pTBB XXXVII.-(CoNTiNi j.« returned in the mornm ftjJ*£Sd^ylighthehadb^ ^*^S2n; b»' '^®™ ^^ P-»i!ffSoathU face, and yciB »^*d to leave him alone .^ "d^ »S'»* "" breakfast*. *!SEWiltog and hawy hi «* •* ^mrserv." but he did a'sownnurser^.^ so tired,' "'himself in the baby fo ^rie^^-^o"*!^" discarde. l-ii-o " thank you," and i^eiSas^^|i-;-jj^j i?:2^tS mo^r bTtouch^"^^ K*^e was sent for to report o P^i?!-Tho would not hear for s *»*!^ declaring that the boy l»^jSdinsUting on folio •^SS of seeing a poUce sup f^de^d whether the k. rj, could not be prosecuted. KrJ*w bv Nuttie nor nurse co "«SSKm tiie poor littie f e •| SStbie adventure. He L to ttink of them, and there. "«Kon over hw mi^d, pa •SStfMd spirits with which he •I^STonS, dosed.. He diml a^ilsaing Gregono in the hrhadVed to find h«^ -e but some one, a big^F. »» Rid he would show hue the^ Vol his hand, dragged him, be into dreadful dirt acd s jidv had sUecced him wi stripping him. B'^ti'Tf' â„¢-^ct. hToould not teU h( rtjSholdofhim, andthebeii T£nefi of a girl had someh hL hoWof his own identity. Hi ISn at all certain that the ISJpettiooated tiling who h.^ IfhirSble cellar, or in a dark]. Itio had been dubbed Pan, wh irrMd by the stick to dance and IsSSllod to drink burning, cht |«M the aame with Alwyn in his I* in his white cot. r B was Dr. Brownlow who at o led t^t there had been much of t I aad drew forth the tact. It ha Ibeeo done whenever it was exp keAould bo hidden, or unable t Xd to outsiders. Alwyn wa. by day. and showed co u lear or shyness, but he begged touched, and though be tried to -Mdy. could cot keep from I aereams when the doctor examm ' Then it came out, "It'swhe â- e." ••Who?" ., « xhat manâ€" master, she said fciBL He kicked poor Uttie I neat heavy big bootsâ€" 'cause t Wye's piayers." .. "Wno was Fan?" asked doctor. .- "Himself," whispered Nutt eimself!" "Wyn was Fan," said Alw flone now " " And did the man kick pool repeated the doctorâ€" "here V" ^h don'tâ€" don't IthurtJ Mid he would have none of kicked with his big boot. Oh 1 dance one bit after that.' He could not tell how long been. He seemed to have lost of days, and probably felt as if in Funny Frank's van, but! Dionght the injury oould not b( ftree days old, and probably for there bavuig been no mor pot in the way of removing th feehadceaaed to be of use, anc ef the injury might have bro petrator into trouble. Ind© llr. Egremont caused the poli ten to, demanding the arrei and woman Brag, but they h eamped, and were never trac decidedly a relief to those wl tiiat a prosecution would hav And Dr. Brownlow beca •VM the injury. He ssdd it case, and he should like to e^nion, enjoining that the c kept in bed, and as quiet as eould bring his friend in wUoh was no difiicult mat aeemed to have no desire f o rest and the sight of his f treasures, which were laid b gently himdled and stroked ed with. Mothu and wen among the friend for, but he showed no desi boy, and it was thought be young gentieman's rampan ttrtanoe. The chief diflculty was who declared they were a tliat the boy would be as saorrow. He went and sat talked merrily of the pony to ride, and the yachting t ia the aammer i^d the lit •ad was pleased, but wen' nidat Then Mr. Kgremoi iag AnnaplB witi him, bees net BO laU the doctors' visit he dedlared that they to oome till long after tiie drive. He actually we and bad pony after pony p ••Riafte, c^moaiDg a cham •tUat, aabject to ita bel foenhmau'e little boy, whi VopefoUy amed with 1 woold be m its back in an Be atm maintained hia V Wafclaaat, iriien he was ' ' VSattie with a pale, abn v-Jma. Dr. Brownlow hat r ^^ "^^^^^ aoothe awajr the M ^F^J'f^^ examination, to WiS^^ »A hia ooUeagu " tl» injory and a»A it vary doa i fellow o«mid be «*t aotiiw ae-i .. =.::,'--