fAI.V.mV A wisa. Vlirno'iT vuiltltful lovur IUi-ourri:ihtbiSKUM, lfowiizrjrion iilm to Un Tlinl 'lU iut nlwiivn fun. I'm in-laia-, r hciilio'- I'lanueil lii hIobo, Ami thin 'it the luUsilf I. T1:-j Ki l " t'iHtruWful .ul':it Mtowu him a triiw'-T two. Ami in with much niomculiim Ho down the ntqs tlolli filMc, Aufion tho iick.-t fonco dotll lund, JIo feoU much moi Ur-nod. Tin maiden in tho meantime j;..cti"-H in'o tho yard, Aul hhrick, with much emotion, My pit has Htruck fotard." Tho youiiK man think it over, Ami, though ho'll not dodure it, Conclude!!, einee ho can't bullet, That ho will have to Lear it. AT THK .MOUNTAINS. UY CUiltn: I.. KliWEY. "J)id all the fates combine, Nell, to bring you to tho inoiintiiius this bless ed day? It they could have asked me, of all the world, whom I would most wish to sec this minute, I would have answered Nell Battsford. And your brother?" he continued. "I just ftawhim disappear down the carriage road. Could lie not remain? Child, why don't you speak? Have you no .words of welcome, after all theso years'" I hud turned to the speaker when ho first addressed me. Ho was stand ing by a small rowboat, drawn up on tho bench of n little blue lake at K , in front of the Mountain House, handsome JJob Trueruan, the artist. i answered slowly: "Oh, it all seems so strange to see you again, Bob, I was trying to rcal izef And, indeed, it did seem strange; jui if the great wheels of Time had rolled backward, and I was picking up the threads of a romance broken lour years before. In 'the parting that he must have witnessed between myself and another on tho beach, a few minutes before, ho had mistaken my husband, Lieu tenant Norton, for an older brother of mine, whom he had once met years before. Lieutenant JNorton was nanasome, brilliant and accomplished, and I was very proud of hira. But physi cally he much resembled my brother Harry; and this was not the first time one had been mistaken for the other. 1 saw at once tha Bob had made the popular error, and the same instant :tn imp eeemed to whisper in my ear, "Fool liim a little while; it will be Mich iuu." 'And your cousin Maud," I said, addressing Bob again. "I saw her with you at dinner." Lis'.'.tcuant Norton and I arrived just before dinner, and the table at which we dined was close to tho hp .11 door. I had recognized Bob and Maud clear down to the other f-nd of the immense dining hall. Immediately sifter dinner Fred (my husbaud) and I retired to our rooms lor a f jw miuutes' hurried conversa tion, i.ud then I aocompanied him down to the carriage, which was waiting to convey him to the station, (or ho c;u$-t return to town by the next b.:uu to transact some business, but was coming back to the hotel on the evening train. But to return to Bob and my men tion of Maud. "Yes, " he replied, "she is with me. Pooi girl! Hhe has a terrible head ache, tud has lain down for a nap. She tohl me not to call her at tea time. I say Nell, you and I must take ;i i ow on the lake. It is a glori ous altoruoon, and we can talk over old times.' I lo'il-cd at the blue lake dancing in the f.-mlight. It was so tempting. There were water-lilies on the other -hlr h it shone like stars in the dis tv.ice What could he the possible i:.;i:u rowing a little while m I iioi it rr the hotel, in broad daylight, t wit i? r. am married? j 1 L o'.c J down the carriage road; :(tnl i!. '.ls.'ht of Fred. But Fred was ; uevi v l it jealous: and, besides, he j enjoy, d a joke immensely. He tMi!v.i'i Ldp but understand. He ! cuii!.1i'i i-cold. And if when I told : him -'out it, he added that perhaps it illicit not have U-cu quite right, j wo':! I : 1 was "so lonesome; and : 1 liCVLi . !:v:l 1 have gone if you had lain V !..." which last clause would ; oiitj-.u u v.crd ot tiuth. anyway. Bo.k. I owed .,! an o'd score a ji the j a.-t which had Lcv-tr!-: .Vul there was just i'Uo;:;.:t' I in my composition to wi L :- y it, :a.d this wor.1.1 be an.li ;. ' joitr.r.ity. S, i- !n? I Lani'v L'.av whatof v 1 1.. J Uvd the :rincs I my ri lil, was KaUii in the stern i of tL V:'c Ui, uv-1 Bob had rrsb cd out ": the lake, a:.d was ukirg ' thoso long, rapid strokes of his, feathering the oars till the array thai llcw oil looked like little drops of melted silver in tho sunshine. Bo you remember, Nell, what des perate efforts you used to make try ing to feather oars at Bmnfoid? Then that was my most brilliant ac complishment. Ah, well! sinoo then T Imvo feathered oars in many lauds or waters, rather," with a laugh. "But, alas? I haven't always had you for an enthusiastic spectator." And. after a slight pause, ho went on. "And tho regatta ball you surely haven't forcrottou that: how the moonlight shone on the billows-, how we waltzed around to the glad u-ensures of Strauss and Waldteufel, and afterward strolled on the wide veranda, and how sudnenly I left? I stem now to feel tho vexation of that old steamboat bell's clanging, that tore me from the beach and you. When ever I picture a glimpse of Paradise on earth I go back to that night by tho cea. But that was Paradise lost, and this is Paradise regained." His rapid rush of words brought back a tide of memories. I remem bered that when that steamboat bell rang he was talking around a danger ous subject. And it had often since occurcd to me that had ho lingeied longer, perhaps I should not have been Mrs. Norton, but the wife of Bob Trueman, the artist. The hot blood surged into my checks at tho thought that I, a mar ried woman was passively allowing such ghosts of the past to be resur rected ; so, quickly changing the top ic, I said : Tell me of yourself, Bob. Have you brorght back little bits of all tho world, as you said you would when you bade me good-bye, sketch-book in hand, for that grand European tour bits that were to make you so famous, and us so " "I was going to say happy, but I remembered once more that I was married, and stopped short. He, however, divined my meaning, and finished the sentence for me. "So, happy," he said. "Yes, I have brought back about half of the world, in. black and white and colors. And, oh, Nell, in all my wanderings, 4f v.mrv i-ivtmcirnrlT in mtr AQTR I "lint oye tliiug waut ficse banks of Rhine Ihy geutio baud to clavp in mine." "Don't you know, I have tried so often to sketch you from memory! For instance, as a naiad of a wood land study, a nymph by a Swiss lake or a spirit, in some ot my mountain glens. But I could never get quite the tint of gold in your hair, .so I rubbed them out. You know you never would let me sketch you in the old days. But, Nell, there k one thing that I never could do I never could rub you out of my life." "Though you have often tried, the remark imnlies," I answered, quicks-He did not seem to notice my re ply. We had rowed across the lake, and we were close to the water-lilies. He fished out a few with an oar, shook the water from them, and, leaning over, twined one in the coil of my hair. Then he handed me a couple which I had fastened in the bosom of my dress. Leaning back on his oars, he said : "These flowers are like the friends I would choose through life whose lives are as spotless as the petals of these lilies, and whose hearts are pure as gold." He regarded me a moment with a flush on his cheeks and an artist's light in his eyes, and then added : "How I wish I had my colors with me ! If I could get you upon canvas now, it would be a revelation. You must come to my studio some time, Nell. I've a gorgeous one in New York, and I am not as poor as I used to bo in the old days. I have much to show you there. I have been abroad twice," he went on, with an odd look, I thought. Then there was a queer silence, rather oppicssive. To bieak it I said: JSliall you and your cousin re-j main long at the mountains?" ; "A ceuple of weeks," he replied. fche was looking so pale at din ner,'" I said, for want of something better to s iy, and mentally added, "so ! homely too." "Then I thought of Maud's long bank account, and decided that it would be of inoie service to her, in this practical w orld than all the beau- 1 ty of a ilebe. So 1 need not waste '. my pity there. iJobVecuied steeped in reverie a ; little vhih : then roused himself and ?aid: ' "Nc'.l, if this water were a shade cictiior :;: J, a little rougher, I cocld almost f'ney w c were cn the sound at BrantiorJ." Ti:ea tLe Mood came into ray ehtks sriiu, for somehow I did not re so Lave him I rice np the old d.-,T ct more I therght of the ' half bushel or so of letters from him that I had destroyed on the evo of ray wedding day. Then I wondered why ho did not answtr tny last letter. That was the cldscoro 1 wanted to pay up, though somehow I did not enjoy the paying up as much as I h id anticipated, and it occurred to me, odJly enough. "Why, child, you couldn't have answered it if ho had written, unless you had sigued Nellie Norton to your letter, which would not have done at But, all tho 6amo, it vexed me to think tbat ho did not write, evn if I couldn't havo answered; and I con soled myself by thinking how surpris ed Bob would look when I introduced Fred at tea time. From my reflections I was aroused by Bob, exclaiming: "Why, there's your brother on tho beach!" Wo were approaching the hotel now. "Oh, Bob!" I cried, "it isn't my brother, but my husband, Lieutenant Fred Norton, U. S. A." Bob raised his eyebrows, whistled a low whistle, then exclaimed, as a lady appeared on the jeaeh : :By Jove, there's Maud, too! Her headache must be better. I say, Nell, forgive me; Maud is not only my cousin now, but my wife also. That is why I am not so poor as in the old days. My last trip to Europe was inv bridal tour." 'Did he sigh, or did I fancy it? I shail never know I was so confused. The how of our Jboat crated on the pebbles of the beach just then, and we were ashore. "We" Editors. fcjomo people aro unreasonably in quisitive and curious, especially about matters that do not concern them in the least. For example, here- 13 a correspondent who makes the start ling revelation that he is a "constant reader of our valuable and influential paptr," and would like to be im- formed why it is an editor or newspa per writer, when speaking of himself in his writings, invariably uses the plural pronoun "we" instead of the singular "1. There are several reasons. Self- preservation is the first law of nature. it begins at Home, nice oia iuotner Chaiity There is some human na ture about an editor, public opinion to the contrary notwithstanding. An editor thinks too much of his "Fs" to wear them in mourning, and there fore, when speaking of some slabsided six-footer as a miserable red-nosed, pusillanimous, wife-beating snoozer, he considers it the better part of valor to drop in an occasional "we." This creates in the mind of the six-footer the impression that the editorial force consists of & standing army, armed with deadly "we"-apons. Furthermore, in cases where the victim comes around to the oflice to kill the writer of any particular item, it is so pleasant to have the guilty man's identity buried in the obscurity of the plural "wre." The editor-in-chief, the commercial editor, the city editor, the local editor, the reporters, the book-keepers, compositors, book binders, jobbers, pressmen, devil and all the delivery boys are thus placed on a common footing by the little pronoun "we," and when the enraged person looks about him and finds how many wives he would make widows and how many children or phans, by killing off all included in the little "we" at one feil swoop, he sickens of the sanguinary undertak ing, turns sadly away, goes to some bar-room, takes a drink, condemns, the paper, prophesies that it is being run into the ground, and declares that he will henceforth use his political influence to squelch the sheet. There are other reasons. When noticing a marriage or birth "we" implies that at least a box of cigars will be required to go around. An editor says "wc" when advising the President how to conduct his ad ministration, because the President might not aet on his suggestion if it wa-: written plain "I." When teliiag the minister how to preach the editor uses "we" to intro auce the lelief that he has just had a ?:iterence with all the ex-ministers ahout the establishment. The editor w ho tells the tencher j how to teach says "we," because he J Lai consulted w'ith his wife about the j m.'.f.or, and she, having been a teach- J er a lew years before, of course knows i all about it. 'We' i sometimes used because of : ... writer's modesty. Most writers ' at- trouble i in this respect. Ii -hot. we use "we" because nj -tii o-:l l survive the trials, trib-; t'Uy found a Lost a prist . . i . f it 4 MrrVi. . - i. precise raidea t.it:e Southern Industry nnrt rnwiwrllJ Ike South, ColiiuiUm. Mlm Never before was there such rapid progress in nearly every branch of industry throughout the South as at this time. There is unprecedented activity in tho railroad building, and marked improvement in the man aecment of most of the roads in oper ation; cotton factories aro being erected in many cities and towns in each of tho cotton States; coal, iron and copper mines are being opened, and furnaces and rolling mills and factories of every kind established and put in operation. To put these new industries m motion, hundreds of millions of dollars have been brought from Europe and tho North, and this inflow of capital seems to be steadily increasing in volume. The result of all this is that tho ..i.,t; ftf Mm Smith is raoidlv in- creasing; agriculture is feeling the quickening influences of a greater de mand for its products, and there is a marked improvement in the system of farm work that is reaching every department; towns and cities are ra pidly growing, some of them have doubled their population in tho short space of a few months, and new towns are springing up and putting on the garb of cities almost in a day. There is no quarter of the globe that presents such attractions of the industrious and enterprising faimcr and artisan and capitalist as the South. Here they will find every facility for the profitable enployment of the'ir skill and thrift and capital. Our climate is better adapted to white labor, even thoso of the summer months, than that of the North, and the soil for ail agricultural purposes is unequalled. It would indeed seem that the South is entering upon an era of un paralleled growth and prosperity. The products of her mines and for ests and fields, that are so rapidly in creasing in volume and giving life to every branch of trade and industry, are exciting the wonder and admira tion of the people of other sections and countries, and giving her a marked prominence before the world. Rich Indians. , The Navajoes are a great nation, numbering some 27,000 souls. O f tins number there are some 10,01)0 warriors. They are well armed, but fortunately for the whites, they have immense flocks of sheep and many cattle and ponies which tend to keep them at peace. Man-ue-li-to is reported to be worth not less than $300,000 most of it being in sheep. He has been an In dian of great character and power, but of late has become a great drunkard. The Navajo Indian Agency is forty-five miles north from Fort Wingate, N. M. They manufacture curious and unique ornaments from silver coin, and their blankets and rugs have already become famous for curious mingling of colors and remarkable textures. They are eagerly sought for by the whites, and have a high value, ranging from $5 to $100 each, which is really not extrava gant when one considers that they of ten occupy months in weaving them. There is neither cotton nor shoddy in the blankets, but pure, unadulterated wool colored with unfading dyes. We saw a few of the tribe, great strong, repulsive looking creatures. Cor. Chi cago Inter Ocean. Woobekry, Mb. Rev. V. .T. Johnson sayj "I havo used Brown's Iron Bitters In m family and they have proven a splendid health iuvigorator.' The famous Bidwell Bar orange tree in California is twenty-five inches in circumference. It bore last year 2,075 oranges. ELET,xiauixi . oTTfTlie" h nowu Kloctro Galvanic Applianees at llifl present rtacft is nnw conceded to f. e Medical Fraternity "l Klcelr -clans Keue'ully, that the Auicrlcau Galvanic Co's Howard Shields are t best, possessing Intrinsic ' 10 ;tripal merits, as one shield or appliance can be fitted to an part nft e body, whlcli is not true ol any other. See advertisement In another col nmu of thin paper. electric Gazette. Obtained, and all other bnslneis in the 17. . Pal int otHce attended to lor Modekatk Feks. Our office is opposite the U. 8. farVut Ofllce.ani me can obialu patent? in leu time than those re note fmm W asiiinoto.v. 8rndMonELorlliA.VIXG. We advlc an to patentability fr- nf rhartre. anil we make NO &H AUG E UNLESS WKOUTAIN PATENT, We refer, hero, to tlie I'oAtmaster, the Sunt, of toner Order Dir.. and t officials ot the S. Patent Office. For circular, adrlce, terms an4 references to actual clients In your own State or county, address CA.S.W Sc CO., U Opposite fattnt Office, SVasulBgton.B.C TsS BkU !2!.oh."jf f !? lncf their earn. 1 af B U lCrPPl nila ilmt come wealthy. T Those who do not Improve thr'it 0p.lrtu.nl,le,. rem,n ,n P"erty. We ifler a rnt rhante to rna'.e money. We wint many men w Bien. boyiandplrls to work for n rlht In the own locality. Any one can do the worYnrSiiertT from the nr.: atari. The bn,lne""will paTlnorl ?Xilh,A.'a"0,2iuT W1,re- Kxpeni"? in-fit mo .. j rapMiy. i on can devote voor whol- til., ..the rk. or oi.lv voor apare moment. inV. n ..m,.i..B .i m!! tfli, ", -.- , :..,, , o.. r-rii,.,. Main" . m tZUi VRlRt Lll l.il Kill, p H EtC"rt srn:p. T.Mr. Je WM I'-ar In imio. it l.r,lriir.TSv I w --t. wf.i,. a.r ni i u jr. 1 .iv;m ,. 1: PATE Ira TS 6T New Life is siven by using Bkown's Iron Bitters. In hc Winter it strengthens. v.v, warms the system; in tlv Spring it enriches ih... U,)U and conquers disease ; in Summer it gives tone to th nerves and digestive oiyanV in the Fall it ur.hh::- tfjj system to stand th : .shock of sudden chuiigv;,. In no way can elisor no be so surely prevented iu by keeping the system in per fect condition. Huowx's Iron Bitters ensures per fect health through the changing seasons, it disarms the danger from impure water and miasmatic air, and it prevents Cun uinip tion, Kidney and L: er Dis case, &c. . .S. Berlin, Jisq., of the well-known firm of ii. S. Berlin & Co.. Attorneys, Le Droit Building, Washing ton, D. C, writes, Dec. iSSi : Gtnlhmcn : 1 t:i-? . urc in stating that 1 !ia c us...! "Brown's Iruii Hilt ! r v-;.-laria and ncnou.-, tivniWi., causuil by overwork. .i:a excellent results. Beware of imitations. Ask for Brown's Iron Lit ters, and insist on h,iv.:i? it. Don't be imposed on with something recom mended as "just cs &:ti." The genuine is made only' by the Brown Chemical Co. Baltimore, Md. m JQHft BULL'S SiiRIoiiicSyriij FOa THE CURE OF Or CHILLS and FEVER, AND ALL MALARIAL DISEASES. Tho proprietor of this celebrated medi oin9 juBtly olaims for it a superiority oven all remedies ever offered to the publio for the SAFE, CEKTAIN, SPEEDY and PEE- M ANENT cure of Ague and Fever, or Chills and Fever, whether of short or long stand ing. Ha refers to the entire Western and Southern country to hear him testimony to the truth of the assertion that in no oase whatever will it fail to cure if the direc tions are striotly followed and carried out. In a great many cases a single dose has been sufficient for a cure, and whole fami lies have been cured by a single bottle, with a perfect restoration of the general healtn. It is, however, prudent, and in every case more oertain to cure, if its use is continued in Bmaller doses for a week or two after tne disease has been cheoked, more especially in difficult and long-standing cases, usu ally this medicine will not require any aid to keep the bowels in good order. Should the patient, however, require a cathartic medicine, after having taken three or four doses of the Tonie, a single dose VEGETABLE FAMILY PILLS will be sul- fiCBULL'S SABSAPAEILLA is telMj reliable remedy for impurities of the blooa and Scrofulous affeotions the King Blood Purifiers. runnX DR. JOHIf BULL'S VEGETABLE "WOEK DESTEOYEB, is prepared m the form .01 candy drops, attractive to the sight a pleasant to the taste. DEI. JOHN BTJI1'8 SMITH'S TONIC SYRUP, BULL'S SARSAPARILLA, BULL'S WORM DESTROYER. The Popular Remedies of the Day. Trlnripal OIBre. 831 aIn St.. LOnSTItilT LASVIEBAC1S Disease, of KItoeys Bladder, Bheuma ,Sclatlca.EpUepsJ THE HOWA"D,, GALVANIC SHIELD and Vlror dr"1 wlttotit TT'Z Wp AMERICAN CALVAw--312 N.eth t-.t. mut pay J?mmr-J MM SSCB n male a ..m T 1 ' '.' ,w C fa irt f oa. M.u o; "f"V.- vtarttd ntrywln re to wrk U.r - . , ,r tir&e. Yon can rk In f pare J,f:1flr Sol time t tb ta4iwM. ui J3