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MANAGING A MAN. Nollio Davis was the prettiest, sweet eat, beat atnl dearest little girl in Hilla hurg; and when Tom Carter fall bead* over heels in love with her, nobody blamed him in the leant. And whim the parson gave bin blessing and they wont to commence housekeeping in a cosy little hoilHU on the MOUtn Hide of the town, everybody prophesied all Hortu of liappineMM for the pretty hride. And, truth to tell, Nellie Carter wan very bapjiy. It in a very pleasant tiling to go to iioiiho keeping for the (but lime, with every thing new and shiny; and if yon have Homebody you love very much for a companion, it in mill pleaa anter. Now Nollio did love that great big blundering Tom Carter with all her might and main and there wan only one thing to diHlurh her perfect peace. Khe wa the very pink of tidineMM, and Tom wiim the moat cureleHH follow alive, lie kept hia per Him neat and nice—hut lilh personal helnngingH anything else. Torn would persist in throwing bin slippers under the parlor ofa to have them bandy. In vain did hlio suggest Ibal the rack in tin; ball wan the place for lilh hat and overcoat. 'Tom would fling Ida overcoat, damp or dry, on her pretty, smoothly made bed, and drop Ida hat anywhere. In vain did tidy Nellie make a place for everything, for Tom invariably toaaed everything in aoine other place. Now little Mra. Nellie waa only human, and Tom’s alovenly waya annoyed her exceeding ly. She waa reaolved not to apoil the peace of her cosy home by aeolding, lint bow to cure him abe eonlil not tell. She bore with the patience of an angel until, one morning, after be bad gone to Ida ollieo, abe went into the parlor, and there lay Tom’a heavy abawl right aeroaa the (aide, rnlhleaaly cruahing be neath it the pretty trillea which lay upon the marble table. “ Now I can’t aland this and I won’t I” aaid Nellie, iimmlio carefully raiaed the ahawl from the delicate treaaurea and diaeovered the ruina of a favorite Ho homiuti vaao. " 1 don’t know what to do, hut thia I won’t have !" ahe eontinued, with tlm little wifely anaji which every good wife moat have if ahe expeeta In get on at all with that oeeaaionally unreason ahle animal—a man. Hume way must he discovered to cure Tom of Midi performance ns thin!" wont on Mrs. Nollio, as she removed Urn rui iih of her vase. ami all Dm morn ing dm wool about tho house with scar lot li|)H closely compressed ami a littlo flesh in hor brown eyes, whioh argued well for Maxtor Tom’a domestic anb jootion. Ami wbon adotorminml littlo woman says •'must” and ‘‘shall,” masculine insubordination might as wall Hiirromlor at on oo Moforo Mru. Nollio closed hor bright eyes that nielli, aim had arranged lior plans for tho campaign against hor liogo lord, who slopl tho sloop of tho innooont at her side. Hot she mount to give him ono morn ohanoo. Ho, after breakfast whim Tom drew on his hoots and gave his slippers their usual toss under tho sofa, she gently said: '•Torn, dear, hadn't you bettor pul your slippers in tho passage or in tin' lied-room ?" “ No, lot ’em alone; they’ll ho handy to-night," said Tom. “Hut Tom, dear, they look so un tidy." " Why, no, they don’t. A thing looks as well in ono plane as another. What's the use of a man's having a homo, if ho oan't keep things whore ho wants to?” said rebellious Tom. " What’s the use of keeping a wife and a servant on their feet all dav to pink up things after you?" asked Nel lie, without the least show of temper. 11 Don’t pink 'em up at all. .lust let 'em alone, and then I can I'md 'em when I wan’t 'em," declared Master Tom, as he gave her a kiss and took himself oil'. And the moment the door closed on him, Nellie's red lips compressed again and her brown eyes wore the saim look they had worn yesterday. " War it is then,” she said to herself. “ Now Master Tom, we shall see who wins the held !" She set quietly about the usual morn ing’s work of a mistress of a bouse where only one servant is kept; and when Tom came home to lunch, every- 1 thing wan in its usual good order. It remained so, and Nellie busied herself with her needle-work until | nearly time for Tom to return to din-1 uer. Then she rose to pul away herself, to “ open the eam|>aign." First she put Tom's slippers where he always left them, under the sofa. Then she tossed her shawl upon the piano and his best hat on the table. Then she brought some of her dress es and thing them across the chairs and on the sofa. Her furs reposed in Tom's own espe cial arm chair, and her best bonnet kept Tom's slippers company under the sofa, while her ow n slippers lay upon the chiflonivr. And then, think thal female ingenuity could mulct no greater sacrifice than her Sunday bon net, she took a piece of crochet-work ami sat down. Presently the door opened and in walketl Master Tom. He gave a low whistle of surprise as he glanced as the unwonted disorder amt at Nellie sitting calmly in the midst w ith her croehet-work, and then came into the room. Haven't been putting things to rights, Nellie?" he asked. “ No. Why?” she said looking up in sweet unconsciousness. “ I thought mayoe you had been, that's all," remarked Tom dryly, as he looked for a place to sit down. Nellie quietly pursued her work. Presently Tom aaid. “Paper come I this evening?" ‘ Not yet,” answered Nellie. Tom gave a half sigh. Nellie, I met Granger jnat now and be aaid he would cull round thia even ing.’’ “ Very well; probably be won’t come before dinner. It will he ready hood,” aaid alie, working away in demure inno cence. “ Hadn’t you better put things a lit tle to righta before ho cornea?” aaid he, glancing uneasily around the room. “Oh, no. dual let ’em lie,” answered Nellie sweetly. “ Hut they look so had," said he. “ Oh, no, they don’t,” aaid Nellie, aa sweetly as before. “A thing looks as well in one place aa another.” Tom’a face reddened. “ I never saw your room look like thia before,” he aaid hesitatingly. “ J should not like to have any one step in.” “ Why not?” said Nellie. We might aa well keep things handy. Wbat’a the use of having a house if you can’t keep things whore you want to?” Tom’s face grew redder and redder. Ho tried to look actions, and then broke in to a laugh. “ ()h, that’s your game is it? ’’ he said -—“Trying to heat mo with my own weanons, are you, little woman?” “ Well, don’t you like the plan ?”aaid Nellie, demurely. “ No, by George, I don’t,” aaid he. “ Well, then, I’ll make a bargain with you. Aa long aa you keep your things in their places, PH do the same; but whenever you don’t —” “Oh, 1 will!” said Tom. “Come Nel lie I’ll confess like a man -you have heat me this tune. Only just put things right in this awful mom, and I’ll m ver throw anything down again. There now, let na kiss and make tip, aa the children any. Nellie rose and laughingly held up her sweet mouth fora kiss of peace. And then under the magic influence of her deft fingers, confusion waa sud denly banished; and when Mr. Granger came round to spend (ho evening, ho decided that nobody had a prettier wife or a tidier home than Ida friend Tom Garter. Wise little Nellie, having gained pos session of the matrimonial field, took good earn to keep it until Tom was quite cured of his careless habits. Sometimes he seemed threatened with a relapse; hut Nellie, instead of scolding, only had quietly to bring something of her own and lay it beside whatever he had tossed down and it was sure to he put away immediately, for Toni seldom failed to take tho hint. And if some other little woman, as tidy and clean as Nellie, takes a hint, also, this story will have served its pur pose. - -♦• • Itelies iif Bygone black Hills Miners. Slcnix City (town) ilenrunl. Mr. Witcher gave us an interesting account of the evidence recently found, that men had gone into these mines years ago, hut never came out again. Accounts have been published in the Black Hills papers, hut never in any papers outside of the Hills. In Ruta baga. Gulch between Dcadwood and Bald Mountain, an old tunnel has been discovered, thirty feet into the side of the gulch, evidently made years ago. About forty miles above Dcadwood an ancient stone cabin has been found, and evidences that it was built by a party of brave adventurers, who, satis fied of the rieljness of the country, boldly penetrated into the wilderness, braving the danger from Indians and the severe winters, and falling victims, most probably to the former. In other places, broken picks have been dug up, from an evident burial of many years. The remains from what was evidently a log barricade have been found, the logs and trees in the vicinity being tilled with leaden bullets; while behind the barricade were the skeletons of two men with bullet holes in the skulls. These are believed to he the skeletons of while men, who attempted to defend themselves from the Indians, hut fell in tin' defense. Near the stone hut is a rock on which is chiseled " IS,lk’,” and a portion of a memoran dum hook was found with the date l-STgJ still legible upon it, hut with the other writing defaced and erased by time. In excavating fora theater at Dead wood a few weeks ago the diggers un earthed a bottle of Berry Davis' Bain Killer six feet below the surface, and canto upon a place where there had been a lire at the same depth. Broken pickaxes and hatchets were also found there. OKI mines have been found, where claims had evidently been worked for some time, and in some places new mines suddenly run out, giving evi dence that parts of them had been worked by somebody in the distant past. There are trails of trees having been blazed, and these blazes show evi dence of having been made as long as the date above given, or thereabouts. Other striking proofs are found of some civilized people having twenty or thirty years ago known something of the valuable mineral deposits in that coun try, and having, " in the mad purpose of wealth," gone there to unearth the treasures, and lost their lives in doing ! so. Certain it is that they never came out. Swift and sure the Indians swooped down upon them, and left none of them to tell the tale, while the imperfect relies and marks of these ex peditions alone point to tho fuel that these men were there and that the i Indians wiped them oil’ the face of the I earth, and for almost another generation kept the secrets of die hidden treasures locked up in the thou almost impene trable wilderness. A in kmko lake of sulphur has boon discovered in the Indian Territory. HARRY MEIGGS’ BROTHER, Playing Hliilf with (he Pi * rim an An thorilies, and the Result. , John G. Meiggs. the brother of the late Henry Meiggs, and the associate of the latter in his Peruvian railway opera tions. says the New York Time*, became alarmed at the prospect of their not being able—through want of the neces sary funds—to carry on their ventures, and he wrote to Joseph 8. Spinney, his confidential agent in this city, to pur chase 1100,000 of government bonds, and hand the same over to Messrs. J B. &J. M. Cornell. This was on Feb. ■'), IS7.‘{. On the same day John G. Meiggs, wrote to-Spinney a confidential letter, saying among other things; “ Thing* look just a little dusty here, owing In a fight between the govern ment and Dreyfus ” (the financial agent of Peru), “by which-the loan is for the moment postponed, and, to prepare my self for the worst, I have used uiy power of attorney to ask you to pur chase HOO,OOO bonds for the cubs, if things came to a regular break,” The power oj attorney referred to was one from Henry Meiggs to John G. Meiggs. The “ c|l>s ” presumably referred to the lalttr’s six children. Spinney bought *lOO,OOO of bonds and turned them ovtr to the Cornells, who gave a receipt t* the effect that they held them in trust f)r the children. Things bright ened in Pern for John G. Meiggs, in May, J.S7!, and he then wrote to the Messrs. Cornell asking them to turn over the bonds to him. They, being advised y counsel, refused to do this, luit contimo to hold them in trust for the children. Meiggs then brought suit in the supreme court to have the bonds declared to belong to him. A referee reported in his favor, hut the guardian of his children has appealed the case to the gcicral term, where the case was argued yesterday. Decision was re served. Right* of Children. The lint right of every child is to he well I k mi; and by this 1 mean that it hat a right to the best conditions, physical, mental and moral, that is iu the power of the parents to secure. Without Hi is lliechild isdefauded of his rights at Ike outset, and 1 1 is life can hard ly fail of keing a pitiful protest against broken lavs. Centuries of preparation fitted the earth for man’s occupancy, hinting tins tliegrundeur of his destiny, and suggeiling that in an event of such nnignituiU as the incarnating of a soul, prevision thould ho exercised, and all the best conditions secured, in aid of a harntoHiois and happy result. Good health, good babbits, sound mentality and roverjnt love should form the husis of every new life that is invoked. The mother who gives herself up to morbid fancies, win considers her health an ex cuse for petulance and non-exercise of self-contru, proves herself unworthy of the hoiy office of mother, and ought not he surprised if she reap at a latter day the hitter harvest of her unwise sow- in; (Second in importance to none, as a means of tenuring the happiness and host good o'childhood and youth, is the right to he aught obedience. It is easy to submit t<i what we know is inevitable, ami to the ittle child the requirement of the paretts should lie law without ap peal. The tender, immature being, shut iu by .lie unknown, whore every relation is a mystery and every advance an experiment, has a right to find itself everywhere sustained and directed by the parent. It should not he tempted to resistance by laws that are imperfect ly enforced, nor subjected to the injuri ous friction of discussion by having a long list of reasons given for require ment. The habit of obedience to the parents may lie formed before the child is two years old, and this is a necessary precedent o( obedience to law, the next stage of a true developemeiit. The child has a right to employment and the free use of its faculties. “ What shall 1 do?” ii the plaintive wail of many a little one imprisoned in rooms whore everything is too nice to lie played with, and among grown-up people who can not endure nai-c "Sit down and keep quiet," is too often the impatient ans wer—answer which 1 never heat with out an indignant mental protest. 1 ad monish yon. father, mother, guardian, into whose 1 amis God has committed the sacred trust of a chilli's life, he care ful how yon betray it! Beware how you hinder a soul's development by a selfish seeking of your own conveni ence! Absolute reliance on the love of the parents, faith in tins wisdom that for bids doubt, are the indispensable condi tion of a healthy and happy development They consitutr a fertile soil and genial atmosphere in which all beautiful hu man affeelionshudand blossom. “Fath er does what is right," “ Mother knows better than i.” are the instinctive utter ance of a child whose life and education have been rightly begun. That these utterances are not often heard is a se vere commentary upon our methods, a sad indication how much the rights of children have been neglected. The child has a right to ask questions and to lie fairly answered; not to he snubbed as if he wore guilty of an im pertinence, nor ignored as though his desire for information were of no conse quence, nor misiled as if it did not signi fy whether true or false impressions were made upon his mind. He has a right to he taught everything which he desires to learn.and to he made certain, when any asked-for information is with held. that it is only deferred till he is ! older and better prepared to receive it. Answering a child’s questions is sowing i the seeds of its future character. The slight impression of to-day may become j a rule ol life twenty years hence. A I youth in cowing the fields dropped cher ry-stones from his mouth, and in old age retraced his steps by the trees laden with luscious fruit. But many a parent whose heart is lacerated by a child’s in i gratitude might say. ■ “Tlic thorns 1 Lilted wltlml are of the tree ptuuted" To answer rightly a child’s questions would give scope for the wisdom of all the ancients and to illustrate needed precept by example would require the exercise of every Christian virtue.— Victoria Magazine. “ Little Classics.” It was along about the Kalends of May when Coriolanus went into the hall closet at the head of the stairs and brought forth a pair of his last summer trousers. The mailed hand, that “ like an eagle in a dove-cote, Buttered the Voices in Corioli,” dropped witli a gesture of despair when he beheld a yawning postern gale in the raiment, where breach or fissure there should have been none. To him, his true and honorable wife, the fair Virgilia, said: “Now the gods crown thee, Coriola nus, what appears to be the trouble with you ?” “ Now the gods mend these trousers, oh my gracious,” silence replied Corio lanus, “See what a rent the envious tootli of lime lias made.” Virgilia dropped her tender, beaming eyes and drew a heavy sigh as she turn ed and dived mournfully into the rag bag to hunt for a patch. “ My lord and husband,” she said, wearily dragging up hits of red flannel, tufts of raw cotton, scraps of calico, tugs of carpet-rags, and finding nothing that would match the lavender trousers any nearer than a slab of seal-brown empress cloth, “ I’ve patched those trousers till my eyes and lingers ache at the sight of them. I would the im mortal gods would send on Rome and to ottr houses the one unending blessing of eternal piece.” Coriolanus looked at her steadily for a moment, hut couldn’t toll her nnrip pled face whether she meant it or not. “ And I too, thou noble sister of i’uh licola,” he said, “Itoo, thou moon of Rome, for my great soul, to fear invul nerable, is weary of the restless god of wore.” Virgilia dropped the rag-bag and looked at him quickly, hut lie never smiled. “ Keno," she said. “ I’nt it there,” he said and they both promised they would never behave so like mouthing paragraphers again.— lin rli nylon Jf< i xckeye. Matrimonial Advertisements ami Soeial Rain. 11 With a view to matrimony.” Those words are the ending of a good many advertisements —principally under the heads of” personal”—in the New York papers, and there are quite enough evil results therefrom to justify a legal en actment for their suppressson. To ad vertise for a husband or wife may seem robe quite as legitimate as to advertise for a man servant or a woman servant, and there would he less trouble if all the world were honest and wise, hut there is the hitch. Some young people indulge in this adverisiug, and the cor respondence which likely follows it, for amusement, and some are simple enough to 11 nd a romantic clement in it and are led to their own ruin. Instan ces have been known where girls have married men who already have wives and families. But a few days ago the story was tola of the marriage of a young lady of good family with a plausahle. hut llashy young man, with whom she had a correspondence, brought about in this way. lie turned out to he a gambler, and in a few weeks she was forced to return to her father’s house. Another story is told of a widow wno was thus wooed by a“ hotel proprietor.” She went some hundred of miles only to (hid that her Adonis was a waiter. Advertising is a glorious institution, but it is quite as liable to abuse as any other. —Newark Advertiser. The Rest Method of Arresting Hres. On the discovery of a tire, it is of the i utmost consequence to shut, and keep shut, all doors, windows or other open ings. If the tire appears at all serious, and there are lire engines at a reason able distance it is best to await their arrival, as many buildings have been lost from opening the doors, anil at tempting to extinguish the lire with in adequate means. If no engines are within reach, it is well to keep a hand pump. If that is not to he had, the next best thing is to collect as many buckets outside the room on tire as can be obtained, keeping the door shut; then creep into the room on the bands and knees (if the heat and smoke are considerable), and throw the water as nearly in the direction of the tire as pos sible. keeping the door shut while more water is being collected. The police of London understand snutting up tires so well that they have in many instances kept tires two or three miles distant from the engine stations shut up till the liremen arrived in time to extinguish them. DeKoicn Declines. Dr. DeKoven, of Racine College, de- 1 dined a good nice thing when he said I “No" to the recent call to become as sistant rector of Trinity Church, New York city. The call was accompanied by an offer of an annual salary of $lO.-! 000, an allowance for a residence, a liberal pension if disabled by old age orj sickness while in the service of the! parish, and after death a pension to his j widow. It isn't every minister who could have resisted that temptation.— j Chuixgv Journal. A Manifest Absurdity. It is manifestly absurd to claim for u mere stim ' ulant, tonic ami alterative properties. Yet this i i* what Is daily done by the vendors of cheap, • local bitters, colored to make them look attract ive. ami agreeably flavored, hut the alcoholic basis ; of which is 01 the vilest and most burtfnl descrip j tion. The tiauscendent success of Hostetlers 'stomach Hitters, the leading alterative tonle of ■the United States, has induced many of these ■ compounders of drams in disguise, to attempt the ! counterfeiting of this standard medicine, but their efforts have never proved successful on a large scale, and they have themselves in many instances notoriously “come to grief," through the instrumentality <>f the law. The genuine Hitters have. Indeed, a spirituous basis, but they are emphatically a medicine, since their botanic ingredients arc signallv efficacious in overcoming and preventing chills and lever, dyspepsia, liver complaint, constipation, and many other disorders. Ladies.—When you buy Saleratus I please notice how much larger I). 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