' . a- - ' WHEN . MEAN TO MARRY. WhflB a ( bmm to lurr -WU lis tdW i d'tptit wttb IWt: I'-ut If Toa cbiKt to tu isll, Pry U.f a wml. ) flx the 4i. When daafbtcra ht witb ar feet, A muttesr r.iUr toil to bu ; ii auLkf tb paa4ivv wfmb thr -t. And umo4 tt tot king bub tAir vw; Am lu hmtf imt iby woulU marry. And not mmy soldier emu A talk ur oooimuMury : Whn (tntU U4u who hat-spot T h oi r for a lover t mn4. Cotwm lo .br( bi ' tnu-ttily lot. And do Bot Dito Mm lot of land; When toudk rowhanim ar allowed lo flod ami w d i ha furuiHr. girls. Who dun t S)M?t to kw uit.l Wlib rut.it,., dUujou'U. and pwU; W Jwn v1vT in vhnrc, urmll frly tin llietr heart aud hand to hid bf ir oue, j nd His thev wr w ut to live. Witlitn tbeir air oo-Btory bouaa, Tho. madam if I'm tun twoM hi-4i loqiiii thU Inuwly Ut. ill bruth Jnv xvr, ethane tosodd. And look atMut me lor a wife 1 THE AUNT'S EAKRIXCS. Ix-ctcctlvestories have always lieen my favorite form of literature. have read many, and have gained from them a thorough contempt for probability and the polii'e. The first thing von should do when a crime Ins been committed, as 1 often said to I'ncle I'offkins. Is to suspicion the most unlikelv man as bcinir the crimi nal. That was the course I adopted when Aunt I'offkins' earrings were stolen. It was In the morning when trie theft was discovered. Aiititcani" down late and ran Into t ho room where I nchr Poffk ns. lora, and 1 were breakfasting. My aunt bore! traces of strong agitation, and she I had forgotten her cap. j "My earrings" t-tn cried. "They j aie gone they are stolen!" ( "God bless my soul!" exclaimed' I'ncle I'ofTkitm, dropping his teacup as if he had tcen shot, and leaping UP with a yell of pain. He said the ; yell was attributable to the heat of the tea, which was trickling down his legs. My aunt explained. The earrings I were kept wr.ipjs'd in cotton wool in ' a jcwel-liox on her dressing-table, The Ikix was never locked, and the housemaid had access to the room, j The girl had only been in the, house a week, and was known to have a Ikj.iu. My aunt and cousin at once j concluded she was the thief, and, sent ! for a policeman, win searched her., trunk ann found nothing, of- course. I could have told them that. Meanwhile 1 kept my r ye on I nch: I'offkinti He was the one person . who could have no motive whatever In stealing the earrings, lie was very rich, 11104 respectable ana ex tremely Mow and noisy In his move ments: moreover, my aunt would have given him the earrings at any moment If he had asked lor thetn. Evidently he was the last man to attract huspicion. Accordingly I watched I'ncle 1'offk ins closely. We passed a week of exe. lenient. The police were running in and out. Dora cross-examined the housemaid inqewantly-' Aunt PofTkins went about weeping and remind ng every one she met that the earrings were a present frtm I'ncle l'ofTkinsou the occasion of their engagement. My uncle himself affected to make light of the mutter and went so far as to loudly and ostentatiously cur.-e the earrings. He was wrong if he thought I could be put off the scent by that clumsy muneuver. I never left him alone; 1 tracked him to the city, hung about all the morning, shad owed him when he went to luticn, when he returned, when he crossed over to the exchange. 1'nknown to him 1 was on his bu-, inside if he rode on the top, ami on the top w hen it rained and he stowed himself away Inside. He never escaped me, except while he was in his ofllce. At last, after ten days' wearv chas ing, 1 wan rewaroed. I need not say that the police had discovered noth ing. The house was still topsy-turvy, and my aunt subject to intermittent hysteric That wronged creature, the housemaid, did her work with a mop in one hand and in the other a handkerchief wet with innocent tears. Hut to return to I'ncle 1'olTkins. The tenth day after the earrings had dis appeared, as he was brushing his hat before leaving the house and looking at my aunt's tear-bedewed visage, his conscience smote him and he so far forgot himself as to exclaim audibly: I "I'm blamed If 1 can stand this any longer!" The folly of the man waa Incredible. I had him now. In an Instant 1 w is after him. He took a bus, I took a cab, and started for the city. Xow came the odd thing I'ncle I'offkins disappeared. How It happened I do not know, but when the bus pulled up at the bank I'ncle I'offkins was not to be seen. 1 .oued tloned the conductor, but he had evi dently been brilxsd, and tol l me very rudely thai he had something better to do than answer my riddles. He drove on, and 1 wasleft for the llrst lime at fault. It was evening befoie J t.aw I'ncle i'otlkins. 1 was going home in a very disconsolate state, nhen, about two hundred yards from our gale, 1 j earned htni ahead of me. Quickening i my pace I stealthily approached him, lie opened the gate and passed In: noiselessly I followed. A little further on, sheltered by the shrub- j horror she bent to give the baby a bary, he stopped, and after a j brisk shake, crying Joyfully, "llobbv, tealthy glance toward the house took ' dear! Wake up and laugh for the from his overcoat ocket a small mo- j butcher, Hobby!" Hoston Common rooeo case. I stood on tiptoe just be-1 wealth. bind, and, with mingled horror and satisfaction as 1 looked over his shoulder. I saw the earrings! 1 was right! Uncle I'offkins sighed. "Shall 1 give m to her or not!" he said to hlniMlf. "It's waste, Still it will kMp bar unlet." 1 watched the struggle between his good and evil angel. Clearly hln good angel had triumphed so far as to bring the ear rlDga wltl.ln fifty-yards of Aunt I'off klMt hut now camo tbe tug of war It was severe, nJ il ene'ed In th victory ( f evil. I nele I'oBkina, but ting the case with a snap, exclaimed: "It's all blamed onnsense. I'll take enj back Ut Abraham's to morrow." Abraham no doubt was the re ceiver, for luy uncle went on, in a sat isfied tone: "He'll make no trouble about tak ing 'em." He was putting the case in hit iKCketwnen my loenrigs overcame me. Hooped for one's elderly rela tives is a praiseworthy feeling, but it must not be allowed to override higher duties. 1 flung myself on I'ncle I'offkins, crying: surrenaer: 1011 cannot escae me. My uncle fell heavily on the giavel path. I fell heavily 011 top of him and pinioned bis arms to the ground "lorn, he exclaimed, "what the mischief are you drunk.'" "it is useless, sir," 1 began, "to affect ig I had leached this point when I was violently collared from In-hind, lifted Unliiy oil my uncle's chest, where i had u-eri sitting, and was deposited on a grass plat, while a deep voice said i.i my ear: ".Now. then, young man. turn it up You're a lively '1111, you are. i Kust your aunt and now your uncle." The new comer was a policeman. From his picket he produced a pair ! of handcuils and put them on my un i resist ing .vrists. Then I found my t voice. "Wb.it are you handcuffing me I for?'' I demanded. "There's the ! thief." ";ammon!" said be, grinning. "Why. you fool, there's the prop erty," saiil I. He looked atfd saw the earrings ly ing on the ground by I'ncle I'offkins An expression of bewilderment over spread the otllcer's face as groping again In his pocket he brought forth a pair of earrings. 'J hen gazing from the pair in his hand to the other pair 011 the ground, he ejaculated softly, and. to my ears at least, mysteri ously: "These earrings In my 'and was found In your drawer, young man, wrapped in cotton wool. '() do you account for that?" "These on the ground," 1 retorted, "were found in Mr. I'offkins' jx.cket How do you account for that?" He shook his head sadly. Then he suddenly brightened up. He had an Idea He produced another pair of handcuffs, clapped them on my uncle's hands and cried cheerfully: "We can't be wrong now, can we? March!" So I'ncle roffkins and I marched, the policeman between us, with ahold on each of our collars, and In this predicament we were presented to Aunt I'offkins, 1 to I)ora, and to the housemaid. The housemaid giggled consiun edly, for which under the circum stances one could hardly blame her. Aunt I'offkins experienced a relapse, and lora alone was equal to the nitu atlon. She made us sit down and gave us each a glass of sherry. Then the recrimination began. I'ncle I'off kins declared his earrings were not the stolen pair. Distressed at my aunt's sorrow, he had gone to the jeweler's and bought her a similar pair. They cost ho guineas. The st ruggle I had witnessed was between love and economy, not honesty and crime. I swore that the earrings founu in my bureau had not been placed there by me. "And yen are both ulte right," said Dora. "Cncle's earrings are not the stolen ones. Tom, do you re member having the toothache?" It was clear to me in a moment. I had asked lor cotton wool, had been directed to my aunt's jewel box, and from It 1 grabbed a large handful and carried it to my room. Then, on re flection, I had tried brandy Instead of laudanum, and the cotton wool was thrust In the drawer out of the way. The earrings had been buried In the cot ton wool. "So you were the thief yourself!" laughed I ora. It was true. If only I had strictly followed what my reading had taught me' I'or, improbable as it was that I should think I'ncle I'offkins guilty, it would have been still more im probable had I fixed the crime on my self. 1 lacked the full courage of my principles, and the result l.s I'ncle I'oflkins and 1 do not speak. Chi cago Post. P.ritrtlnliijf the lliitclipt. Do you rememlior the Irishwoman who told her consumptive son lo "Cough for the lady, Jimmy?" One of my nursemaids gave me a yarn lo match that. Iiaby Hob had been ailing, fretful, and wakeful for a few days, and It occurred to me that per haps, if his carriage was wheelolup and ('own the path the sunshitiv and sweet summer air might be the best anodynes for the poor little -hap. Sure enough when 1 looked out at the end of half an hour Haby Hob was rosily sound asleep: and my heart re joiced. A little later the butcher's buy, corning In at the side. gate, stopped to gossip with Kathleen. "A fine baby you have there!" said he. "And If you think that when he's asieep, It's awnke and laughing you should see him!" hald she; and to my l.lqilltl fuel. Another engine fitted with liquid feul has been running on the Orcat Kastcrn Hallway, England one of a class of ton similar express engines and, as compared wltb the other nine engines doing the name round of duly, la reported as doing efficient crvlcc. The man who la given u, sober re flection seldom gets Into a tight Plata HOME AND THE FARM. A DEPARTMENT MADE UP FOR OUR RURAL FRIENDS. How to Itmitror loan-u-lmivt from C oro- olkn-M-ttiiic t-rnre I'wli - Arx-nir la Wail rer-Murkt-tlujc buull Lod Adultrrallou of SM-dh. Dr-atrurtlouc of luH:-ts. In the spring, when the sun warms the earth, the insects appear regu larly. There are hundreds of speci s, and their was du!er. Some can en dure the lowest temperature, while others bide U-yond the reach of old. It is in the winter when they are Inactive and helpless, and as the hai its of many are well known they ran be det roye-l witb but little ef fort. A farmer alone can do some thing in the way of attempting to lessen the number of insects, but no doubt the discussion of this matte befoie the farmers' institutes would lead to united action aud more satis factory results. It Is a fact that the greatest pro tection to li sects Is a very cold winter. old does not dest oy manv kinds at all. while others go down in the earth IjcIow the reach of the frost. It is the warm winter, during whiih the earth alternately, thaws and freezes, which increases their liability to de struction. W hen the ground is warm il becomes damp after a rain, and should the ground suddenly freeze the result is fatal. To withstand cold, th n the Insect must be pro tected against dampness. Instinct prompts it to guard against sudden changes bf t mperature. Kggs that are glued to the limbs of trees are protected to insure hatching in the siring, and thousands of hiding places are utili ed to protect those that seek seclusion under shelter. Wliile the farmer can accomplish much by examining and cleaning hm trees and vines as far as he Is able to do so, as well as burning all refu-e andsiubbe, he can do the insects heavier damage by plowing his fie ds as soon as the ground will permit. If not prevented by th frost the ground should be turned up, and many irsects will thus be bro ght to the surface in a condition of help lessness, the llrst rain, followed by free Ing of the ground, putting an end to them, cocoons being softened by the moisture and broken by the fro -it lb Ids that are overrun with cut worms can be r (Iden of theru in this manner if the plowing is deen, and. while the work may not destroy all ot them on heavy sod ground, yet It will greatly reduce them In num bers. As stated above, however, the best results O' tained in lnect exter mination Is when the community is det -rniliu'd to destroy them: but ih' individual farmer can accomplish much by seeking to protect his own farm and using the plow for that purpo-c whenever an opportunity Is a, orded for so doing. Philadelphia Kecord. Ar-nl- In Wall f'aiwr, It is generally known that arsenic enters Into the coloring of many kinds of cheap wall papers, and some of the better grades also, writes W. 1. i'ond in the Ladies' Home Journal. These are generally, but not alwivs of hues in which green predominates, and are very Injurious to health. The first symptoms of arsenical poisoning are headache pains In tho eyes at the back of the pupil, Itching, and gener ally nausea of the stomach, all of which are liable to be the result of living In a room with wall paper on the walls which is impregnated with arsenic. A Bimple but effectual test wili immediately lo ate the presence of the mineral, and every housewife should have the necessary knowledge. Take a small piece of the suspected paper and lay it In a wat h glass, or lu a porcela 11 spoon, pour over it enough solution of the household am monia to cover It, lot It stand a few minutes, and then drop in a piece of nitrate of silver (lunar or stick caus tic,) and if a yellow precipitate forms as It dissolves there is arsenic pres ent, and tho paper should be re jected. If the n trate of silver dis solves without yellowappcaring there Is no arsenic, and no trouble need be apprehended. ( lotcr liny ;ool Knougli. We doubt whether there Is much if any advantage in ensilaging the clover plant. Anyone who has tried cutting gr. en clover In a cutting box into fine pieces will understand that It requires an immense power. It seems easier when the power Is furn. Ished by horses or by steam, but the strength to run the cutter wears on it very fast. Cutting cornstocks is easv work in comparison. Then after cutting the cloer does not work in the silo as the corn does. It is too nitrogenous, and will turn black with excessive heating, however care fully it is covered up. The smell of rotting clover is peculiarly offensive. Even If comparatively sweet, clover ensilage loses more valuable nutri ment than (In b corn under like clr clistances. It Is a -mistake, there fore, to lecd clover as ensiLge. The clover is ncede 1 to balance tho corn ration, but It Is all the belter, especially In winter, to be. fed dr.. Cood, well cuicd clover hay will be eaten readily in cold weather by slock after they have eaten all they will of corn ensilage. i'art of the ration ought to be dry. In our v iew tho clover should be that part-- Swret from ('oriiMOilltA. The Idea of making syrup or molasses from cornstalk uicc is not at all modern. It was 1 . uei.ed In a letter from Abigail Adams to her bus and, John Adams, dated Sept 21, 1M7, in which she says that there was not a town within -III miles of whoro she wrote that the process of grinding cornstalks and tolling the piece was not in successful operation lly re II 11 lug the syrup It made a very good mollis '. This was a tlruV when American commerce v a cut off by the lirituh. and New E:iwlaud farmer were dependent upot their own resource for sweet It is pos sible that a considetao'e paitorthe molas-jn in those days was for dis tilling into rum. Mrs. Adams writes that a very good syrup was made for this purpose by I ling the juice from ground conisU.ks. The sta ks were stripped and gl en lo the call e, the old-!ashioned idea beinge idently that they made a better feed than the courser stalks. Marketing Small Loads. The waste of time in marketing small loads of p oduce is enormous with many farme s. They often act as if their time had no app eciable value, hitching up a single horse and light wagon to draw to market what sometimes little mo e than pays their expenses while away from home It. is olten common for farm ers who have business In the city or village lo put up some kind of a pro duce to sell for the purpose of pay ing expenses This may be a ne cessity occasionally, but the ten den y is to make the pract ce of go ing lo market with a light load a habit. It is one that few farmers can afford to acquire. The time sient on the road i." lost so far as farm improtementgoe. There is no farmer who cannot if he will tind profitable employment on his farm at nearly all seasons of the year. Aaultenitlonn In SiIk. To detect adulterations in seeds we must use the sieve, water and microscope, says I'rofessor lilount of Coloiado. Hot water dissolves pow der and dirt and washes off the coloring matter. The sieve makes the separation of the, true seed from the impurities, and the microscope discovers the shape, natural indenta tions, p otubcian es and discolora tions. To determine the vitality of the seed put 10 or Ii-O inside of three or lour sheets of blotting paper, which wet and keep where it will be warm all the time, and in the dark. Jn ten hours radish will germinate, cabbage in eighteen, wheat in tweut.y-six and corn in thirty-two hours. These ruies are simple aud will cost nothing. They may save you much. Keeping Munnre from Fr-.insr. Manure In winter should be piled in heaps large enoiuh to ferment. It will theu always b;- warm in the middle, and if tile manure be from grain-fed horses it will tie sure to heat and lire-fang in the middle while frozen at the outside edges. The act oi turning of the heap, put ting the frozen part in the center, will stop this loss, but after two or three times turning the manure will be compact so that it will heat much more rapidly than at flrst It must then be trodden down so as to pre vent act ve fermentation, or better still be drawn and spread on land in- , tended fo.' hoed crops next season. Farm Ncep. Tn k queen bee has been known to ; live fifteen years and to produce fer 1 tile eggs during the whole of that pe ' rlod of time. 1 r is not the old tool or machine i that deserves to be thrown awav, but 1 the worn out one; and it may not be ' in the last state, even if old; It all depends on the care it has received. Fkncks are a necessary evil, to be dispensed with if possible, and to be made as Inconspicuous as possible if you must have them. No dooryard was ever inclosed with a paling fence without marring Its beauty. Tiik well-known purslane, one of ' the most persistent weeds that in 1 tests farms, is said to produce more seeds than any other plant, one pod containing 3,000 seeds, while each plant will produce twenty or more pods. ; Fa i( mi: us do not pay as much at tention to their crops as they do to growing them. They are often at a loss to know to whom to ship their goods for sale. The farmer has the ' same opportunity to understand what to do with his produce as the ; merchant who buys and sells Is addition to the use of the Bor deaux mixture In the vineyard and I potato fields It has been generally ' used in the fruit garden and propa gating pit, as a fungicide. It has proved especially valuable in check ing the ravages of the red rust of the blackberry and the leaf blight ol' the cherry. 1 Hoos may be led on clover hay, I and iti is one of the best and most ' nutritious foods that can be pro vided them during the winter, rnak Ing more pork and of better quality than when corn alone is fed. Cut the clover into short length-, scald It, sprinkle witb bran and give it as a warm mess. Wouldn't Iteiliiee Them I ni l her. One day a .vcotch parson was talk i ing to a member of his flock. Dur ing the conversation h" asked Sandy how he liked his preaching. "() verra weel,"sald he, "only ye always exaggerate too much.'' 'Well, the next time you hear me exaggerate," replied the minister, "you whistle." "All tight,'1 said Sandy. The next Sunday in the sermon foxes' tallt) were mentioned. "We, all know," said the parson, "that foxes hate very long tails. Some peopie say they are forty feet long." Sandy whistled. "Others say twenty feet" Sandy whistled again. "1 myself think about ten feet" .Sandy whistled again. Then the parson, raising himself on tip toe and looking Sandy full in the fa c, called out: "Sandy McDonald, I'll no tak an il her Im h off the bastes' tails gin ye whuttie t il the end ot the world." OLIVER CROMWELL. Hia Country Lllwrty Bui li. - eawe a ;reat Tyrant. It is tafe to say that England has produced few more interest ng char- jacters than Oliver Cromwell, the 1 j great Puritan. Inspired by religious . zeal he won great victories, rirj Eng- ; j land of a tyrant and implanted a love 1 of freedom which has lusted until j now and yet, inspired by a mad am ' bition could show himself as great a j ' tyrantasany Stuart and finally gloom- i ily meets his end. his life endangered I by plots arid his name hated by bis countrymen. It is 'l years since he 1 passed away .'rom this world but the j impress he made on Kngl.sh-speaking people, in some ways is still aud indelible fresh . liver Cromwell was born al Huul log lou April. 1. ..-.!'. of a gentle famiiy which were th1 owners of con siderable pro erty. In his I ovhood, from the various anecdotes told of him. he seems to have been strong headed and bent on having his own way. lu his stu les he in ide poor progress and his teachers considcre 1 him little better than a dunce and otten Hogg d him severely. He was sent to Cambr.dge to (ollege and afterward lived in London where he studi d law. His life in both places was not different from that of other young men of his class and it was only alter his marriage in ! 130 that he adopted his extreme religious views, lie experienced a complete change then; to persons lrom whom he had won money at play he made restitution and much of h s time was devoted to preaching and praying in the Puritan s meeting houses. Cromwell had served previously in Parliament but it was during the ses-jion of the long Parliament which began in Pi-Mi that lie became es pecially conspicuous. lie was ap pointed on several important com mittees and gradually became known as one of the most uncompromising opponents of King Charles 1. and t ie royalists who were seeking to estab lish a despotism in Kng.anil. The differences between the King and the Puiitau party increased and at last in Hi-ll, civil war broke out The royalists in Parliament vacated their seats and joined the King and, Oe to her !i, the first battle was fought at Edged 11. The war went on through the ear and the royalists were triumphant; it really seemed as If one more important victory might put, an end to the Puritans, when Cromwell undertook the reform of the round head forces. He sought lo inspire them with a eal begotten or rellgbn. It was not, he told them, an earthly power which they fought against but it was the great principle of evil. Thev were fighting in be half of Jehovah himself and were like the people of Israel warring against the enemies of the Lord. This teaching inspired the soldiers with courage and, in addition. Crom- ll'ttll i r 1 1V1H i ifnr I hn t.,-t i.nrf.,,,1 ai cipline into h!s forces. At once the t do began lo turn; battle followed battle and in each the Puritan arms wer - victorious. Finally, at Naseby. June 14, 1 04."), the King's forces were completely overthrown aud dissipated and Charles fled to Scotland. Eminent as Cromwell had been as a soldier from this time forward ne showed himself a statesman of no mean order. Parliament under his inlluence passed several acts of great popular benefit and Jfor once showed itself the champion of the people's rights. In 1H47 the Scots gave up Charles to the English. Cromwell was disposed to make some terms wllh him and 1 t him easily regain his crown, but as Charles could not tell the truth to any one or be faith ful to a single living soul, as it was seen to be impossible to trust any promises or pledges made by him it finally became evident, to Cromwell that If the liberties of the Knglisli people were to be preserved Charles must be sacrificed. 'Ihe army had been ever opposed to Charles and it is believed that Cromwell used his Influence w th the soldiers to still further pre'udice them against him. June 4, PUT. Charles was taken and Imprisoned. The Parliamentdcbated long over what to do with tne King and whether it was riot better, even now, to come to some terms with him. The army watched these de lays with impatience and finally, 1 ecember li, Col. Pr.de invaded the House of Commons and turned out all who would show the King any favor. In Juftuary Charles was brought to trial, condemned and be headed on the 271 h. ( rom well was at the bottom of this. His name stands third on Charles', death war rant and the execution was brought about through his influence. Cromwell's n 'Xt proceeding was to put down the remaining royalists in Kugland an i Ireland and defeat, at least for a lime, the pretensions of Charles' son to the throne which were upheld by the Scotch. These things he did In a series of great bat tles and by 10."1 Cromwell was su preme. The. wcakess of this great, man now becomes apparent Not content w,th being the act.ial ruler of England he would be lung and to that end he now directed his every force. iol "lice and unconstitutional measures were employed; those only were allowed to sit in Parliament who were known to be In Cromwell's avor. while hlsopnonents were driven out with Ignominy. A despotism followed equal toanything attempted by Char e- I. Cromwell rcvied cus- toius of the monarchy and adopted the slate of a price; he had himself called Lord Protector and in every way sought to add . to his personal magri I licence. Continual plots wero formed against bun in consequence and be could only avoid them by the constant employment of spies and other htimll atlng expedients. If Cromwell showed himself weak In -his personal ambltloop, bowe er, he made Flngland feared and re spec ted by every foreign nation. Never before had she assumed so proud an attitude before the world and neer nad she played a more con spicuous part in foreign politics. Whether consideration of these things would have 'saved Cromwell from his enemies' pints cannot be told. Fortunately, perhaps, for him self, death stepped in and delivered him f om his enemies September 3, A New Arliliiiiil Ml one. A new artificial stone is being made jn Germany, which appears to le im measurably superior to many kindred materials now in use. The saud employe I. which is well dried and sere ned 1 efore being used, contains fn,m -' 10 :i l1" cent, of clay. It is placed with a certain proportion of . I gro.ind lime into an 1 on drum with 1 diagonal ledges in thcinte ior. which , is tiieu closed and nlovviy t evolved by steam so as to secure a thorough in corporation of the materials with each othe '. The mixture is taken out and conveyed 10 an apparatus consisting of a fi line of w. ought iron, having a Hat t ed. on wh ch molds are ouilt up. When the frame is t iled co ers are placed on the molds, everything is wedged up tightly and the frame and molds ilro nin 01 'ails : into a cylinder. When the cylinder is closed wat r and ste 1111 are ad mitted. The water 11111 t c ver the ; molds, and the steam is admitted at ; a pressure of 4'i pounds or u pounds ! per s iuare Inch. The steam forces i the water between the crevices of i the molds, the waiei slakes the lime, j caus n' it to expand in volume, and 1 as the molds resist the outwar.i ex j pansion the lime is forced into the ; sand and cements it into hard stone. ! The steam pressure is kept up for three days. The frame Is then with drawn, and twelve hours are allowed for cooling before the taking to pieces of the molds and the removal of the stone. D.l.'crent tints can be given to the stone by mUing a small percentage of colored earth with the lime and sand in the cylinder. In some experiments made in England lo ascertain the resistance to thrust ing stre-s of six 1 -inch cubes of this artilieial sandstone, three ot them, of buff color, crushed at an average of lHii.n tons per s tuare loot.-while the rcmainin : three, which were gray,, went at 177.0 tons per squie loot. Queer Cats in a Church Spire. The trio ot felines which B. E, Wo dbrey, a carpenter of Brighton, found in the tpire of the First Parish Church of Brighton recently, are of a species entirely unknown. About a year ago the property of the First Parish w s sold. Ilecent'y Mr. Wood, rey began to tear down the old spire of the church. He first tore off a heavy wire screen that en closed the belfry. Thisscr. ening has beer! n place for a 1 umber of years. When it was removed three most pe culiar cats were seen to jump from rafter to rafter and ascend to the 1"' the!Plrj: They were exceedingly wild, and their appearance is extremely pecu liar. They are covered with a coat of long shaggy fur; their teeth are long and are almost like tusks. On the nose of each is a large tuft of hair resembling a tusk. They are very agile, and spring from rafter to rafter with theease of a squirrel. It is not known how they got into the spire or how long thev have been there, but they must have been con fined in their aTial abode for many years. About a vcar ago a stra ge singing noise, was beard coming from the spire at frequent intervals, and it was thought that it was caused by the swinging of the vane. It is now believed that it was c msed by these animals. How they have managed to live is unaccountable, unless they catch the sparrows that abound in the spire. It is not known how their supply of water was obtained. Mr. Woodbrey will endeavor to capture t hem. Boston Transcript. A l-'HCt. The head of one of the government establishments gave orders that strict watch was to be kept over a plot of grass near his house, aud that no one was to be permitted to pass over it. A poli enian, new to the force and place, was put on guard. That same day the Governor's daughter, on her way to return some visits, and unaware of the order given, took a short cut across the plot of grass. "Hi! there, getotf that grass," im mediatelv called out the policeman on guard. The Governor's daughter in great indignation drew herself up and con tinued on her way. "Hi! do you hear me," shouted the man, "will you get off that grass, or must I make you?" "Fellow," said the lady, "do you know to whom you arc speaking? 1 am" with dignity "the Governor's daughter." Policeman (who suspects a trick:) "1 don't care who you are, whether the Governors daughter or his great grandmother, but this 1 know, that my orders are that no one Is to cross over this grass but the Governor's cow, so off you goes. " Tableau!" Music lor a Hulehcr. A music teacher undertook to coach up the young and beautiful daughter of a wealthy butcher in the art of crotchets and quavers, and hav- ing In duo course brought her to pcr- fectlon in one or two easy show pieces, such as Tannhauser" and "Lohengrin," sent her borne lo her pa. But the master of (he marrowbone and the cleaver was far from satifr fled. "1 wanted yer to teach he' sorucuhln' appropriate," said be somcthln' as she could play when we gives a party. Ain't there a com poser named Cboppln? Well, that's the bloke tcr write a bit 0' music for a butcher." 1 A 9 a x m: V 'i J v . r -'. . i- V.- ... ' ,:' mi r . 'Wit .. -.. . ! .... - .