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THE CHILD-SOLDIER. BY PHILIP GILBEUT HAMEUTOM. A little boy stood on the field, A little English boy; It was a merry game, thought he, And he was brisk with joy, For the battle seemed but spdrt to him. And every ball a toy. He was a British Grenadier, And he was ten years old: And therefore what had he to fear. A soldier brisk and bold ? The little lad was bravely clad In English red and gold. Undaunted when the iron balls Were bowled along the ground, He marched unhurt where six-foot men Their graves of glory found; He marched along with a stalwart throng To the cannon’s awful sound. But when the battle had been fought, And on the field at night Lay fifteen hundred Englishmen In miserable plight, The little lad would take no rest, Though wearied with the fight. But, stepping over many a corpse, His comrades saw him go, And risk his life by passing close To many a wounded foe. “What means the lad? He must be mad To court destruction so!” They watched him. He was gathering wood. It warmed their hearts to see That fearless lad—of broken stocks A heavy load had he. He made a fire upon the field, And boiled a can of tea. Cold, cold, and stiff the wounded lay; Yet still one cheerful spot— One fire was blazing brightly near— One kind friend left them not; And grateful were those pleasant draughts He brought them—steaming hot. And so he passed the midnight hours With hell on every side; And during that long dreadful night In suffering hundreds died; But some were saved by the soldier lad And the comforts he supplied. At Balaklava, and the height Of Inkermau—the grave Of thousands—this heroic child Fought bravely with the brave. Hemmed round by Russian bayonets, He still survived to .?ave The lives of others afterwards; And there are those that say, That, but for that good-hearted boy, They must have died that day, When on the field of Inkermau The helpless wounded lay. AN AMERICAN HEIRESS. Lady Francis Trimson was charm ing. She was also clever, wonderfully well preserved, had a natural com plexion, a moderate jointure, a good milliner, was a widow, and had only one child—a son. She had experienced little care or sorrow, for her husband was an old man when she married him, aud he was gathered to his fathers before he became very disagreeable. He was the younger son of a Duke, and moder ately well off. Lady Francis’ life, or at least, her widowed life, had been strewn with roses; and, although she could have settled down comfortably again, she preferred to retain, as she said, her freedom. ‘‘lt is so nice to marry an old man; you are a widow quite young, you know,” she murmured to her dear friend Clare Melton. “I suppose it is, dear,” sighed Clare, whose husband was a young scamp. Few of us are perfectly content with our lot, and Lady Francis had a griev ance that marred sadly her happy butterfly existence. Do what she could, her son Jack w’ould not marry. “Dear Jack is so poor and so ex travagant. I wonder what will be his end?” she sighed. “He will marry a rich girl, of course,” said Clare. “It is his duty to do so, aslteilhim; but he only laughs at me,” sighed Lady Francis. “Where is he now?” “Shooting Indians or buffaloes, or some other wild animals in America.” “When do you expect him back?” “I am sure I don’t know—in a month or two, perhaps.” Jack Trimson had been out west, hunting buffaloes, shooting prairie chickens, racing Mexican mustangs and playing “poker” with the miners. He had a pleasant time of it, for he liked America and the Americans, and he was sorry to have to ret urn so soon to England. But life in America is expensive, and Jack, who had extravagant tastes and and a knack of getting through mon ey, had spent in two months the sum he calculated would have lasted four, and he was in the middle of the Atlan tic, on board an Inman liner, w r hen his mother told her friend that he was shooting Indians and buffaloes. The passengers on board w’ere chiefly Amer icans who w r ere going to Europe on a pleasure trip. There were one or tw’O pretty girls among them, and Jack, W’ho w T as a dangerous lady’s man, commenced a hot flirtation with one of them before he w’as tw r o days at sea. '* •• Katie C. Brown was a nice girl, and had a pair of soft brown eyes that al ways did great execution—w’hen they opened fire—and they did not open upon Jack. The Brown party con sisted of three, for besides Katie C. Brown, th_re w’as Mary L. Brown, a fine, hones*- American girl, w’ith no pretense to beauty, but with a look of strength and character about her homely face, and Samuel Washington Brown, who had made money in ’Fris co in the good old days of gold mining and wild speculation. He invested in a part of a silver mine in Nevada, w’hich turned out a gigantic success, and Samuel w’as now worth his good five millions of dollars. Jack Trimson was pretty deep in the intricacies of a hard flirtation with Katie C, Brown before he heard who Samuel was. It was his friend, Gen. G. Jones, w’ho enlightened him. “I guess, stranger, that girl has got a heap,” he said. “A heap of what?” asked Jack, carelessly. “A heap of dollars. I calculate Samuel W. Brown is w’orth a million of your money. I always heard he had only two children—daughters. ’Spose that brown-eyed friend of yours will have her half-million of pounds ? ” Jack Trimson was astonished. “By jove! if my mother heard of this fortune she would go mad,” he ejacu lated to himself. “Fancy half a million of money! Ye gods! what fun I should have spending it.” The Brown party landed at Queens tow’n and w r ent on to Kiilarney, while Jack came over to London. It was arranged when they parted that the Brow ns w ould write to tell him of their arrival in London, and Jack had promised to show them the sights and make things generally pleasant, Ijady Trimson was delighted to have her dear Jack back again.! He was looking, too, she thought, so hand some and so bronzed. “Any girl w’ould fall in love with him, my dear,” she said complacently to her bosom friend, Clare Melton. “He can be very nice when he likes,” murmured Clare. Jack, who wanted money badly, was very nice just now to his mother. He described to her his experiences of American girls,' and Lady Francis was deeply interested in everything re lating to her sex. “They are really pretty, and no* at all bad style, but their accent is abom inable,” she sighed. “You get used to it after a time,” said Jack. “I know'such a nice Amer ican girl, who will be in London next week.” “What is she like, dear?” “She is pretty enough—good eyes, gocd figure, good carriage, good feet; clever, a dangerous liirt, and she will have half a million of money.” “Good heavens!” exclaimed Lady Francis, springing to her feet, intense ly excited. “Half a million of money! Oh! Jack, wffiat are you thinking about ?” “Why, w’hat is the matter, mother? You are quite excited.” “Oh, dear, Jack, do be sensible,” said his mother, caressingly. “You know you are very poor, and you are alw 7 ays in difficulties. It cannot go on. You must feel this yourself. Now' tell me about the American girl and her family.” “There are tw’o sisters—Katie and Mary; no mother. The father is worth at least a million, and he is not a bad sort of fellow.” “Of course I must call on them. When do they come over?” “In a few days, I believe. I said you w'ould look them up, and I think you will like Katie; she is great fun.” “And you, Jack, have you any chance, do you think —I mean ” “Chance? I rather think I have,” said Jack, interrupting. “Chance, in deed! Why I have to keep the girls away from me at the point of my stick.”’ “Now, Jack, dear, do be serious. I am so interested in all this. Are you sure about the money?” “I believe it is all right.” “And, dear, w'ould you really marry her?” “If it is a case of coming ‘a cropper’ or marrying her, I shall select the lat ter,” said Jack. Lady Francis w'as in a flutter of ex citement during the ensuing week. “Fancy, dear! a nice girl with £50,- 000,” she remarked to Clare Melton. “American girls are quite the rage now" the men are wdld after them,” said Claire. Lady Francis’ face assumed a seri ous expression. “We must take care that dear Jack has plenty of opportunities. It will be shocking if all the men run after her,” she answered gravely. “The best thing that you can do is to give out that Jack is engaged,” “You can do that for me, dear.” “Of course, but you wdll have to entertain and make much of them— Americans are mad after society and our set.” It will be very expensive, but I sup pose there is nothing else to be done,” sighed Lady Francis. The Browns arrived in London and put up at the Langham Hotel. Lady Francis called on them immediately after their arrival. She w'as delighted with Kate, and told her friend Clare that wdth the exception of the Ameri can accent, “she was just as good style as anyone else. They are so quaint and original, my dear. Fancy, they call their father ‘Uncle Sam,’ ” “They will soon settle dowm to our ways. Look at Lady Wilton—w r ho would imagine that she w r as an Amer ican?” said Clare, soothingly. “That’s true, dear. I assure you, Katie wdll create quite a sensation. She is really very pretty and graceful, and full of vivacity.” “If she be so nice, Jack will have to be careful, and you had better not in troduce her to anyone until it is ar ranged.” “So I told him, dear; but he won’t listen to me. He says we must give a dinner to them next Thursday, get all our set to call, and give a ball next w 7 eek.” “I don’t think it is wise,” said Clare Melton, seriously. “Perhaps not, dear; but w'hat can I do ? Jack is so obstinate, and I posi tively believe he is serious at last.” Lady Francis had half a dozen of her relatives to meet the Browns. The dinner was, of course, perfection, and the guests well chosen—two lords and a duke, with their respective wives— and, as there w 7 as no young men, Jack had Katie all to himself. Samuel W Brown did not ap£>ear a bit abashes in the presence of the old nobility. He was a shrew'd man, who had studied human nature and had seen many phases of life, and his anecdotes of A: .i erica were very interesting. He de scribed graphically his experience of California life in the old days of gold mining and wild speculations, and his noble listeners, who had never before met a character like Samuel, were deeply interested in his narrative. Next day, wffien Lady Francis was talking over the dinner with her old friend, she said: “Oh, I am so nervous and excited about it all. Francy! the Duchess praised her most w r armly!” “Her position then will be assured,” added Clare, decisively. “And Lord Oldin w r ants the elder sister for his son,” continued Lady Francis. “It will be such a nice con nection.” “But wffien is Jack going to pro pose?” “I am sure I don’t know 7 . Perhaps at the dance. I wish, dear, it was all arranged, for it will be most expensive for me if it lasts long, and I really can not afford it.” It was most expensive, and Jack got his mother to pay for everything and he and Henry Smilly, Lord Oldin’s second son, had a pleasant time of it, “running the heiresses,” as Jack ex pressed it, at her expense. The ball was a great success, and Katie C. Brown created quite a sensa tion. Jack was most attentive to her and, she actually danced six times with him. He allowed, however, the op portunity to pass with out proposing to her, much to Lady Francis’ indig nation. Jack and the Browns once again relapsed into the same pleasant life. One day they went to Windsor, the next to Hampton Court or Sandown races, and so on. Lady Francis was nervous and shocked, for Samuel Washington Brown allowed the girls to do exactly as they liked, and sel dom accompanied them. “I calculate young people prefer beino; left to themselves. You and I did long ago, Lady Francis,” he used to say. “Yes, but it is not our custom,” she protested. “I don’t believe English girls are half so wicked as you think. Why don’t you trust them a little more?” he asked. She did not exactly know what an swer to make, so muttered something incoherent about society. “All artificial, Lady Francis; all humbug. It is a great pity it is so. Society spoils you all. Do you know that duke of yours would make a good fellow it he wen? not a duke, and Lord Oldin has his head as well screwed on as s,ny man in the states. You, too, are a clever woman yourself, Lady Francis,” he continued, “1 like you, and I like your nobility, too—when they thaw.” Lady Francis could not altogether understand nor appreciate Samuel W. Brown. Indeed, she was growing quite concerned about him. He had a habit of calling on her at all sorts of strange hours, giving as an excuse that tne girls were away with the boys, and he was lonely. “I really believe,” said Lady Fran cis, with a shudder, to her friend Clare man is making love to me.” “Good gracious, my dear, how terri ble! It will spoil it all if you have to refuse him,” exclaimed Clara Melton. By this time Samuel Washington Brown and the Miss Browns were ce lebrities. Every one knew and heard of the great American heiresses, but Jack Trimson did not seem a step nearer to marriage. Lady Francis was in despair. “They will ruin me between them,” she moaned. “Why, I have actually overdrawn my ac count at the bank.” “It will be all right, mother, when I marry Kate. Old Sam will ‘stump up the dollars,’ as he expresses it,” lauched Jack. “I wish you would propose at once. We really cannot go on living in this extravagant manner. lam positively ruined!” moaned Lady Francis. “Fancy half a million of money, mother! Why, you can have as much as you like when it is mine.” Matters, however, gradually became desperate. Everyone was talking of Jack and the heiress, and wondering why the engagement was kept a secret; “For surely,” they reasoned, “they must be engaged, or they would not be going on in this manner.” And by degrees they also began to associate Samuel W. Brown’s name with that of Lady Francis. “Fancy the old tabby going in for that rich savage,” said her dear friend, Lady Oldin, to her husband. “He is worth a million of money;” said his lordship dryly, “and Lady Francis is not rich.” At last the crisis came. Lady Fran cis received an intimation from her banker that he could not cash any more of her checks. Nothing could save her, therefore, but Jack immedi ately engaging himself to the rich heir ess. On arriving home her ladyship explained the startling news to him. “I will propose to-morrow,” he re marked, “but perhaps I had better ■write and get an appointment first with the old gentleman and sound him,” He accordingly dispatched the fol lowing epistle: “My Dear Sir: Can you give me an in terview to-morrow morning at 11 a. m. at the Langham. I wish to speak to you on a delicate subject and hopo to see you alone. Pray remember me ■ ery kindly to your daughters, and b^ 1 _ve me very truly, J. Trimson. “/S'. W. P , wn, Esq." “The’mother,” he remarked, “the die is ast. To-morrow will decide my fate ” .ie next morning while he was seat ed at breakfast with Lady Francis, a k -ter was handed to him by the serv nt. He read it quietly, and then aft ir a little hesitation, passed it over to nis mother. It ran as follows; “My Dear Sib: I shall be most happy to see you, as suggested at 11 a. m. If, how ever, the delicate subject you refer to has reference to the absurd rumors connecting my name with that of your mother’s, I hardly think you need trouble to call, as I am happy to say ray wife is still alive. Yours is indeed a strange country. Just because your good mother took a kindly interest in me, her friends immediately put it down that she was about to become Mrs. Brown. I am sure there has never been anything in her conduct to justify such an assumption, and I venture to offer her, through you, my most sincere sym pathy that her considerate attention to me should have been so misunderstood. Believe me, very truly yours, Samuel W. Brown. P. S. —I see by your note that you send kind remembrances to my daughters. They are at school in Boston. You mean, I presume, my nieces, Mary and Katie. Poor girls! They will, I fear, find it diffi cult to settle down as governesses after all the gaycty you have kindly shown them. Mrs. Smith— “ Tell you the truth, I’m almost tired to death. I’ve heard so much opera this winter, that I can hardly bear to hear a bird sing. And plays! Good gracious! I have been completely surfeited, and the theater has become actually hateful to me; yes, actually hateful to me.” In the pause which followed these remarks, a quiet-looking young lady in the corner was heard to remark: “What an ad vantage it is to have a husband who owns a billboard.” — Boston Tran script, F/DDI AND GA it DEN. Bee-hives are better in a shady place in hot weather. The humane farmer has a few shade trees in his pasture. A green crop plowed under is always beneficial to the soil. The wolves and eagles are thinning the flocks of West Virginia. A rat in acorn-crib will consume and waste enough corn to keep a pig. The Norway spruce, planted two feet apart will soon form a beautiful hedge. There are no “off-years” in quince culture, and there is always a ready market for the fruit. Weeds, briars and bushes may be cut from the pastures with as much profit as from the meadow’s. A central. Illinois correspondent of the Cultivator says 90 per cent, of the bees in that section are dead. It is said that 1,000 new farms will be opened up in Colorado this season. They all have to be irrigated. Beet seed has a faint tinge of pale green if new, but is a dull brown if old, and its vitality is very doubtful if old. The sorghum sugar-works at Cham paign, 111., have been abandoned. The venture is a total loss to the stockholders. Soot is an excellent “starter” for corn, as it is rich in nitrogen. It is a substance that is often wasted, but which is really valuable. Soft-W'ooded plants should always be placed nearest the light, while hard and smooth-leaved ones will not suffer in quite shaded situations. The Western Farmer recommends the sowing of orchard grass with blue grass, timothy and clover for pasture. It starts early and grows late. A loan agent who has had thirty five years’ experience in lowa, says he had never known a mortgage to be foreclosed on a dairy or stock farm. An Englishman, who has recently been investigating the agricultural re sources of the Soudan, says it is one cf the finest agricultural regions of the ■world. A Frenchman claims tohavediscov ered that butter can be separated from milk by passing a suitable electric cur rent through the lacteal fluid. He has secured a patent. A W’iuter in the Rural Workman says a teaspoonfnl of coal oil poured into the w’ound made by peach-borer i in the body of limbs of trees is sure death to the borer. The roots of clover and some other grasses often find their way to very considerable depths, but drains laid from three to four feet deep are seldom chokjd by the roots. Use plenty of lime in the orchard and around the vines. It prevents the attacks of insects and serves as plant food, as well as hastening chemical ac tion in the soil, thereby rendering the inert substances available. Lampblack mixed with strong vin egar is said to make a paint for mark ing sheep that will not injure the wool, and will remain for a year. It is worth trying. Tar and paint are both blotching and difficult to scour from w’ool. “The meanest man on earth,” says T. B. Terry, “is the one who hires his children to do a job and then forgets to pay them—who gives them a calf to raise for their own, and sells it when grown up and coolly pockets all the money.” In the draining of sloughs straighten the line of descent as much as possible without too much digging. Because nature forms water courses crooked is no reason why man should follow the example blindly,however good nature’s laws may be generally. Black pepjjer is the cabbage protec tor, says the Farming World, and the way to apply it is to reduce it to a very fine powder and dust it over the plants. Go early in the morning, while the dew is on the plants, and dust over each a small quantity and the vermin will leave. Prof. Maynard says that the strawberry, in a botanical sense is analogous to an ear of corn; that as the cob exists merely as a receptacle for the kernels’ so the pulp—edible part —of a strawberry, exists merely tor the sake of the little seeds which dot its surface. The Rural New York er wishes the “cob” of the strawberry was several times as large. No green manure should be placed in contact with the roots of any trees newly set, but any kind of manure may be spread on the surface and cul tivated in. The best way is to pre pare land by liberal manuring a year in advance of setting trees. Then they will find an abundance of plant food in suitable condition for immediate use. High grade fertilizers, especially bone and potash, are always safe to use broadcast in orchards, for any varie ties of trees. A Pomfret, Conn., farmer, whose cows are accustomed to run beside barbed wire fences, wishing to open a part of the mowing to them for fall feed, drew two lines of old cord and other pieces of twine across the field, making them fast here and there to some bean poles, The whole thing was the work of only a few minutes, and not one of the eight cows ever crossed or molested that fence. They fed up to it, then turned aside. Such is the force of habit. With any amount of hard wor ahead, which must be done, it is very necessary that farm horses should have the best of care. Feed them all they want, but don’t give too much corn. Good hay cut up and mixed with bran and meal, about equal parts, is a fine ration twice a day. If you have been far-seeing a few bush els of oats have been saved up for a Eart of the noon feed. See that the arness does not chafe them, and es pecially watch the collars and don’t allow them to hurt the shoulders. It is held that five or six diameters of the seed, whatever its size, consti tutes the extent at which seed should be buried. This may do in clay soil which is compact, and admits air tardily, but it is not putting the seed deep enough in light soil, especially where the climate is subject to drouth, in which case an inch and a half is not, too deep for the grains. For grass seed something less than half an inch in clay soil, and a little deeper in light, porous soil will do. This requires a carefuly prepared soil, with a view to uniformity of covering. Barn owls are inveterate mousers, and in. summer time feed on night-fly ing moths and beetles. Owls are val uable in destroying mature insects, thus preventing the laying of the eggs. Hawks eat mice, frogs, grasshopjiers, snakes, lizards, beetles, small birds and various vermin, according to their species. The crow is an omniv orous feeder, but eats less corn than any other food. The proportion of hawks that kill chickens is small. The National Stockman says: In culling the flocks include all the under sized, flat-ribbed and weak-constituted sheep. No matter how well wooled they may be they are not perfect sheep, and should not be perpetuated in the flock. About as good disposal as can be made of the culls is to fatt en them on grass. The sheep can be fat tened very rapidly as well as cheaply on good grass, with the aid of some grain twice a day, and the local butch ers will as a rule pay a fair price for such muttons. A correspondent of the American Cultivator says that for protection of wound made after trimming apple trees, he uses a mixture of resin and tallow in equal parts, melted and ap plied hot with a brush or swab, and finds it superior to any other prep aration he has ever tried. It should be applied in from eight to ten days after the limbs have been cut. It will then fill the pores of the wood and prove effectual in keeping out water, as well as preventing bleeding from the wound. The wrinkled varieties of peas are more sweet and succulent while green than the smooth sorts, and are less hardy for ea rly sowing. Having more water in them they are more difficult to dry without injury to their germi nating powers. It is quite probable that if carefully and quickly dried, spread in thin layers, the wrinkled peas would have much greater ger minating pow'er than most of the seed bought at stores possesses. If left in even small heaps before being thor oughly dry the seed is injured. Grapevine mildew, says the Gardener’s Monthly, can be prevent ed by soaking stakes on which the vines twine in a solution of blue vitriol. A recent experiment, where such stakes were mixed with others not soaked, throughout the vineyard, showed that in every case where not soaked all the leaves were entirely ruined, while those in the soaked stakes were healthy. A weaker solu tion of the vitriol was not so effective. The effect of the soaking gradually dies out, but will last from four to six years. A correspondent of the Western Rural tells that journal how he pre vented rabbits from destroying his trees: “I took a strip of tar paper about two feet long, and wide enough to go around the tree, and a string, and tie it at the top and bottom, and I will warrant them not to hurc the tree any more. In the spring I would take it off and put it in a box and set in my barn, and in the fall I would put it on my trees again. It, costs but a trifle, and only a few hours’ work will put it on again. By practicing this plan, I have a fine orchard, the best in our country, while my neigh bors have lost their trees by neglect. ’ She Pulled the Wrong String. [From the New York Tribune.] “I’ve been a-laughin’ most fit to kill myself all the way up,” said the driver doubling up over the brake handle in another paroxysm as the reporter swung on to the platform with the calm confidence and grace of the pos sessor of a $5,000 accident insurance policy. “We picked up an old lady down here on Grand Street, and after the conductor helped her on and she had fixed herself in the seat a young feller had given her, she pulled out an old-fashioned purse and counting out five pennies, says, ‘Conductor, I want to get out at Great Jones Street.’ “ ‘All right, mum,’ says the conduct or, and he went back on the rear plat form and began talking to a friend. When we got up by Prince Street she waved her parasol and sang out: “ ‘Conductor, ain’t this Great Jones Street?” “‘No, mum,’ said the conductor, ‘this is Prince.’ “When we passed Bond Street she jumped clean out of her seat. ‘Con ductor,’ she shrieked ‘this must be Great Jones Street.’ “‘Be easy, mum,’ says the con ductor with a scowl, ‘l’ll look after ye-’ “Pretty soon we did come to Great Jones Street, but the conductor was talkin’ politics and didn’t notice it. I made up my mind I’d see the fun through, so I kept the horses movin’ at a right smart pace. Just as we was a-goin’ by, the old dame saw the name on the lamp-post. Did she holler? not much. She just grabbed for the cord that runs to the clock and com menced ringin’ up fares at the rate of 500 a minute. The conductor was so paralyzed he couldn’t move a hand, while I was laughin’ so I couldn’t have stopped it if I’d wanted to. Bimeby, a man in the corner pulled the bell and the horses stopped. Then the old lady got out and sailed up the street leavin’ the conductor starin’ helpless ly at the clock which registered fifty fares when we hadn’t had a dozen passengers on since we left the sta bles.” An Augusta lawyer told the other day of a witticism uttered by Henry W. Paine. He was prosecuting attor ney in a criminal case. The evidence plainly showed that the respondent was guilty and the defense admitted it. The respondent’s counsel asked for a verdict of not guilty on the ground that the defendant w r as non compos mentis. Greatly to the surprise of Paine, and everybody else, for that matter, the jury came m with a verdict of not guilty. Paine, on the instant, turned to the presiding judge and said: “Your Honor, the prisoner evidently has been tried by a jury of his peers.” CUPS AND KISSES. Deep draught? of wine yield joy divine, et far, far higher bliss is riM him who sips from his dear love’s lips ihe red, red wine of kisses. The. wine will make him groan and ache ij pon the grievous morrow But heavier bane than a drunkard’s pain is parted lovers’ sorrow. And yet, methinks, from him that drinks Ive caught a plan will fit me; Like him I II take, when my heart raav ache, A hair of the dog that bit me! —Temple Bar. PEE A 8A \ Tlli ES. One of the latest recipes: If you step upon a dude’s boot, you are likely to make a calf’s toot jelly.— San Fran cisco Post. Mr. Brown —Miss Gray, allow me to present my friend, M. L’Oiseau, of the Canary Islands. Miss Gray—How de lightful? You sing, of course. Landlady —The pipes are burst and the water is all over the house. Boarder —Yes, I’ve noticed it. “Did you? Where?” “In the soup?” A gas well has been discovered twelve hundred feet below the surface in Ohio. Can it be possible the Ohio Legislature has sunk so low ?— Lowell Citizen. I see the French have taken um brage,” said old Gosling, as he read the paper to his wife. “More fools the Chinese for not fortifying it better,” said Mrs. Gosling. Karl —“Mamma, mayn’t I go out in to the street a bit? The boys say there’s a comet to be seen.” Mamma —“Well, yes; but don’t go too near.”— Anekdoten Magazyn. A Marklesburg mother, having oc casion to reprove her little 7-year-old daughter for playing with some rude children, received for a reply: “Well, ma, some folks don’t like bad com pany, but I always did.”— Altoona [Penn.) Tribune. “And so you have received a divorce from that vagabond husband of yours, Mrs. Smith?” “Yes, lam glad to say that I have.” “Didn’t you feel quite overpowered when you heard the de cision of the judge?” “Net exactly. I felt sort of unmanned, so to speak.” — Exchange. Miss Florence Marryat in a recent lecture advises the girls to “sit down on the men.” This should certainly go with the advice of the colored wom an to her grown-up-son when he came home with his hat ruined: “Sonny, wen you goes a-callin’ ebenin’s allers keep yo hat often yo lap.” “Is your coat padded?” asked Angelica, as her head reposed graceful ly on William’s manly breast. “No. Why do you ask ? ” he inquired fond ly. “Because it is so much softer than Mr. Martin’s coat or Mr. St. John’s either, for that matter.” The engage ment is broken. —Detroit Post. As he was walking along Broadway a few evenings ago a stranger accosted him with the question; “What time is it ?” He raised his eyes slowly and answered: “Spring time.” The next morning a man charged with assault and battery told his story to the judge and was discharged. “Hullo! what are yer tryin’ to do?” remarked the conductor to the elderly female who had just executed the time-honored maneuver of step ping off the horse car face to the rear, and, of course: with the usual result. The old lady smiled sweetly as she gathered herself up and replied: “Only taking a trip on a horse car.” A prominent divine who was to offi ciate at a wedding, finding himself and congregation in the church consider ably in advance of the bridal party, asked that someone should strike up a hymn to improve the time. A good brother started off, just as the bridal party entered, with the hymn begin ning, “Come on, my partners in dis tress.” A tramp applied at a boarding house for a bite, and was given his choice between chop and steak. He preferred chop, and was shown the wood-pile, where he wrestled so man fully that the lady afterward gave him a generous piece of steak. He said it was mean in her to give him the tough est part of the job last.—Binghamp ton Republican. Not exactly the idea he meant to con vey; Fond Mamma—What do you think, Prof. Solfado, is there the least probability that Eupheraia will ever make a singer? Prof. Solfado—And why not, Mrs. Smith ? Your daughter has every reason in the world to hope for success. Some of our greatest ar tists came from the lowest rank in so ciety. Miss Proudflesh (of New York) — “Oh, dear yes. I know all about Can ada. It’s a lovely country.” Miss Oldfam—“You have summered there ? ” “Oh, we never consider one summer anything. We spent several years there. It was just after pa retired.” “Retired.” “Yes. I don’t remember what bank he was connected with.”— Philadelphia Call. Jeweler’s clerk— “ Anything else?’ Customer—“ Nothing that I -* think of.” “Wouldn’t you like J ok at some of our new alarm clo< They are a great improvement o*i the old kind.” “I now ha/e to get up early to catch my train, but I don’t need any alarm clock.” “Never oversleep yourself?” “Oh, no! My next door neighbor has anew lawn mower.”— Philadelphia Call. Jones is very green. He came to the city recently, staying over Sunday. When he returned home he was asked ij he went to church while he was away. “No,” said he, “I couldn’t find the men’s meeting-house. I went in to about a dozen churches, but as they all appeared to be women’s meetings, of course I went out immediately. ~ I didn’t wish to intrude upon their pri vancy, you know.” She had but recently arrived from the “owld country,” and, being sent out in front of the house to water a large bed of crimson petunias, the fol lowing conversation took place be tween herself and the younger son and heir: “I say, Bridget, what’s the name of those red fiowers?” “Sure, now, I don’t like to tell ye. ’Tisn’t a noice name they have at all, dear; for ’twas up at the house I heard your own mother herself calling them spit unias. ’’— Harper’s Weekly.