CHAPTER XI. (Continued.) What a big Jump Gladys' heart gives is she hears the word "Christinas." and bow it sinks again at Lady Rentou's sub sequent, observations. "You thick Miss Temple may detain him?' nay the Karl, with a grim laugh. "I think b.s mitid is so unsettled on the subject that a feather's weight may turn the scale either way. ami keep him out there till the Christmas after. Aud he appears to be enjoying himself so much that I have not the heart to influence the e!L-ar boy. He has evidently quite got over bis little trouble whatever it may have been and to have ta'.eu out a new lease of pleasure. Why should I be so selfish as to wish it cut short?" "Perhaps he may bring home the fair Miss Temple to you as a sister-in-law." "I shonldn't be surprised." says Lndy Kenton, lau-hingly, as if the idea were both pleasant and natural to her. "She is the only daughter of Colonel Temple, who is attached to the Governor's staff, and report says a great beauty. If Jem mie wants to niary her I shall be quite sittisfied. You know, Monntcarron, that !1 I desire is the dear boy's happiness. And it is almost time that he married." CHAPTKR XH. This visit is naturally followed, on the part of Gladys, by a great access of grief. I-ady Kenton's insinuations have placed Jemmie in entirely a new light be fore ber. She has bem mourning their inevitable separation - her own unkiud ness and want of courage, and her lover's despair. But she never dreamed that he Could be unfaithful to her. She tielicves herself capable of bearing a widowed heart about her for a lifetime for bis sake, but to give him up to another wom an is simply impossible. She cannot, she will not, do it. If she only knew where to address him, Gladys is quite ready at this juncture to write to Mr. Brooke, and tell him to come back to England and claim her as his own. Her vanity is wounded, as well as her affections. At one time she raves against him for never having loved her; at another she re proaches herself for having driven him lo other anus for the consolation she de njed him. Her mind becomes a perfect chaos of jealousy, longing, and despair; and she hopes but for one thing Jem mie's return. If he only reaches England without having compromised himself with that abominable Miss Temple if she can get speech and bearing of him all will be right again. Jemmie cannot resist her pleading tears and smiles. She knows him too well; and the only comfort Lady Mountcarron can gather for herself lies In looking forward to the future, and re membering ber power over him in the past. ' Meanwhile she obeys her husband's or Sers, and calls on some friends of his. the Kushertons. and sends them an invitation to dinner, which is eagerly accepted. On Thursday they present themselves full half an hour before the appointed time, which gains Lady Mountcarron a reproof for not being ready to receive them Mr. Rusherton looking rather stiff and uncom fortable in his evening suit his wife, so nervous in the presence of an earl and countess, that it becomes painful to ad dress her and his daughter, overdressed, underbred and rather inclined to be too forward. ' Gladys, sitting at the head of her table, in a high black velvet robe, looks a being of a different order from her guests, whom she scarcely knows how to inter est or amuse. The old gentleman can only talk crops and stock, and the old lady is j uneasy to talk at all so that the greater part of the conversation at dinner , falls to Lord Mountcarron nnd .Miss Rusherton, who is seated on his left-hand side. Agnes Rusherton is a fine, bold, dashing young woman,' of perhaps five or six and twenty. She has dark bair find eyes, and a brilliant complexion, a splendid figure, and plenty to say for her self. The chief signs of her inferior blood lie in her month and hands, both of which are coarse and prominent fea tures in her composition. She feels flat tered, as well as her parents, at being Invited to dine at ("arronby House, bnt it is not so much of a surprise to her as it is to them. She has been ncquaiuted with the -Earl for some time past. . They have met in the hnntiiig-neld and other places, and their knowledge of each other is not a thing of yesterday. Indeed, there was a time, now faded In the distance, when Miss Rusherton fond ly hoped Ithongh quite without reason), that she might occupy the place in which Gladys now sits. The latter is surprised to see how fa miliar her husband is with Mis Rusher ton, and how many topics of interest they possess in common. . Wert ahe attached to the Earl she might feel jealous to find how mncb she has been kept in the dark concerning this acquaintanceship, but ahe Is too much occupied with ber own trou ble to do more than think it strange. Hhe takes a violent dislike, however, to the whole family, and Is very thankful when the ordeal 1 over. The hoar spent with the ladies in the drawing-room after Sinner li a very trying one. Miss Rush erton ta forward and pushing, almost rude, in her way of pressing an unwel come point, and her mother can aay do th ing but "lor'!" Gladys welcomes ber husband' return with avidity. He dirt all tbe evening with Miss Bnaberton, ' and be throws ber entirely on tbe vatgar oM father a ad mother for society. Aa soon aa their guests bare depart ad, Lady aaoutearrotr express heraelf rare stroagly caaeentef then to the Bart I : ' "They are gone, tsjktjkr baaves east exMahas, as thJsfaMkia tkmt. "awl I slucarlyTrst I shall arvar ,wm . w v.-i-i '.-i t at ble. all three of them, and the daughter is the worst of the lot. I never sicn: such a miserable evcuing in my life, nor asked to assoi uite with such vulgar H-ople. If you invite them to the house again, Mountcarron. you must entertain them yourself, for I shall refuse to do so." The Earl is astonished. This is the first time since their marriage that Gladys has ever asserted herself, and he cannt understand it. lie looks at ber as if she were another woman. "What ou earth has put your back up like tliis''" he says. "What have they done or left undone?" "Everything -especially that horrid girl. Tiny are the most forward, pre suming people I rvrr met ii) my life. They are not lit associates for me, and I refuse to receive them again." But at this open rebellion Iord Mount carron looks grave. He is not a good tempered man. He is only good-natured. When things go rgiit. and he has his own way in everything, he is too indo lent not to be delighted to leave them alone. But when he is thwarted he can be very uasty. And he feels wtsiy now. It is he who brought the Kushertons into Carrot) by House, and he tells himself that he cannot see them insulted. So be assumes a higher tone to Gladys than he has ever used before. "It is for me to decide whom yon re ceive or do not receive, my dear," he answers, "and whomever I ask to my bouse you will be good enongh to enter tain with the courtesy befitting the rank to which I have raised you." CHAPTER "XIII. Moiintcarron's words are perfectly po lite, but they are very severe. Gladys bites her lip, and taps her foot upon the fliKir, as she replies: "I shall not receive the Rnshertons again!" The Earl rises and o 'u!!y c! rs the draw iiig-roi .a door. I....J is standing ajar. "I think we will settle this little mat ter before we go to bed, "he says, quietly, as he reseats himself. "1 have dealings with old Rusherton transactions which concern the stock-farm which oblige m to be polite to him and to his family." "That need not necessitate your ask ing them to dinner," interpolates Ijidy Mountcarron. "Will you hear me out, Gladys? It does necessitate my keeping ou good terms with Mr. Rusherton, and the great est compliment I can pay him is to ask him laud of course his wife and daughter) to dine at our tabic." "And the worst compliment you can pay me." "I really don't see it. I don't pretend they are cream de la creme, but they are highly respectable people, and we can do in the country what we cannot afford to do in town. And I'm sure you can have no fault to find with the daughter. She has been educated at a high-class school, and is considered one of the beauties of Sussex. She is a splendid rider really to see that girl in the field is a picture aud she is clever, and brilliant, and " "1 don't care what she is out of doors." cried Gladys. irniH'tuously, "she is a fast, presuming creature in the house, and I cannot bear her. Why, she talked to me as if she had known me all my life. Could anything bp in more execrable taste from a woman in her position to one la mine?" The Earl laughs derisively. "Ah, I see it all now. Your ladyship's pride iias been wounded, aud you can't forgive it. You expected these people to be at your feet all the evening, and you are indignant to find that they treated you like an equal. And so you were their equal before I made you Countess of Mountcarron. You seem to forget that" "I was never their eaual." cries Glndvs. fir;I3g up. '! yOU . to tell me that j.0 consider those i vulgar old people ou a par with my dear father and mother, or that their pushing daughter can compare with me? I have some of the best blood of England running in my veins. I am on equality with any man or woman in the land, although you do seem to think so much of the coronet I condescended to accept at your hands." "Yon were a commoner before you wore it. all the same," retorts Mountcarron. "Your father ranks among the gentry of England, and so does Mr. Rusherton. Education is a mere accident. Yon all spring from a common stock." "I think." says Gladys deliberately, and with the most withering accent she can assume, "I think there is no greater vulgarity in the world than to boast of the rank which has come to us by in heritance only. That is an accident, if you like, and yon cannot bring yourself down to the level of creatures like tbe Kushertons, better than by talking as if your title set you above me or any gentle man of birth. But as you seem to admire them so much, perhaps that ia tbe object you have in riew." Mountcarron looks more puirled than angry. "It is very strange." he says, "that yon have never attempted to speak to me in this strain before. What has eouie over you to-night, Gladys? What is tbe rea son of it all?" ' "Yob have never given me occasion to speak like thia before,"' she, answers, "bnt when I see job degrading yourself by associating familiarly with such peo ple as these, I consider it is time to speak. Besides, you flirted with that girl all the evening, and you know it." The Earl whistles significantly. - 'That's where the shoe pinches, la it? I cannot try and make myself agreeable to a lady at my own table, whom yon are treating with marked neglect, without in curring tbe ontia of flirting with ber. Now, Gladys, I want to put a question to you. Have I ever tried to thwart any wiah of yonra?" "1 hare never aaid you did," . "That ia no answer. Have I ever Inter farad with your companions or amuee MatBf Hava I not let yen go about fret aa air where you ebot aad With whom fa cooae?" ,.,!.. Glada. recaniaf her amaay walka and rlto wttk Jew Bate,, (ajtee aoaadoMlyt 1W . "Well, why can't you accord me the Mine liberty ? I dnti't k you to lit familiar with them. Ail 1 deuiaud fort them is a polite reception when they come to my house. And that is what I intend to have." He speak with more authority than he has ever dune before, aud Gladys thinks it prudent to give in to him. Did she love hiui she would r.ot be so complaisant. But after all (as she says to .TselO. what does it signify? Mouo'csrron may control her actions, but not her maimer, and it will be easy f-r her lo show these upstart Kuhertoiis that they are not welcome to the hostess of C'arronby. So she answers lightly: "All right. If you are determined on it, of course it must be! But for heaven's fake don't indict me with them ofteuer than you can possibly help. I feel as ' I bad had enough of that dreadful oid wotuan to last me a lifetime." The Earl laughs, aud says he thinks he has had the same, and the matrimonial storm blows over. The husband and w ife iMith learu mething frr.m it, however. Mountcarron. that Gladys can assert her rights ufcere s,e considers they are in - va led. i,d Gladys, that Mountcarron will have bis ou way. Tie discovery makes the one more secretive and the other more amenable. Her decision is to let hiin do just as he chooses, so that he does not interfere with her. aud his. that i'r i ..u ieuer Qispiav u;s cnaiuiuoiisuiit lor his friends outside of his own do mains. The consequence of which is. that he shows his desire to gratify the Kusher tons for the future by dropping into their house, instead of inviting them to his own. and by being polite to their daugh ter when be meets her in the hunting field. Such things, however, cannot bo kept quiet in a small plai-e like Carrouby. Lady Mountcarron cannot help hearing some of the rumors that fly about ('ar ronby concerning tbe Earl and Agnes Rusherton; they seem to crop up at every turn, but she turns a deaf ear to them. and refuses to believe, even while iiic color rushes into her face at the id 's i they may be true. Now some one has met them riding together at some dis tance from borne, or an incautious bache- ! lor blurts out the information that Mount- I carron was not in the field on the very 1 day he described to her tbe excellent run they had had, or she finds out by th merest accident that fruit and Bowers i have been dispatched from Carrouby House to the Kushertons without ber knowledge. Still, these are all circum stances which may bear their own inter-i pretation. and Gladys is unwilling to be lieve that her husband can do anything to openly disgrace his standing and his name, until one day, when the bomb ex- ' plodes at her very feet with a suddenness and a certainty that overwhelms her. CHAPTER XIV. Tbe discovery comes aUmt in the most simple manner. Such discoveries gener ally do. How many lives have been wrecked by the going astray of a letter a clock that was ten minutes too slow i or an incautious sentence, spoken with j door ajar. It is one morning in the mid- j die of December that Lady Mountcarron j perceives a restJessness about her lord that is very unusual to him. He leaves ! the breakfast table more than once to walk out iuto the hall and examine the state of the weather, and he appears very anxious to ham how his wife feels, and what she intends to do. "By jove!" he says, rubbing his hands, "it's a splendid day for a gallop. Are you going out, Gladys?" "Not this morning I think. Isn't it cold ?" "Not a bit- It's bright and bracing. It would do you all the good in tbe world to take a ride or a drive. You should be as much in tbe open air as possible In such weather as this." "Perhaps I shall try it in the after noon " "But that's tbe mistake you make. Yon shouldn't wait till the afternoon. The beauty of the day is over by two. You should take advantage of the morning." Lady Mountcarron is puzzled to under stand her husband's solicitude. "Do yon want to get rid of me?' she asks, abruptly. "That's just like yon, Gladys. You are the most ungrateful woman I ever knew. You can never appreciate advice that is given for your good." "1 think few people can. However, we wjjl let that pa ss. Is there Anything you wish me to do for you?" Lord Mountcarron's brow brightens. "Yes, there is! only you frighten a fel low from asking you. I want a note of importance carried to Portsmere. and I thought if you were going that way " "I can go that way if you wish it. When will your note be ready?" . "Oh! there's no hurry. I don't want you to start till eleven or so. Shall I order your pony-chaise?" "If you please; I shall be obliged to yon." says Gladys, walking out of the room. She feels wearied and heart-sick as she does so. At another time she might have had her suspicious aroused by her husband's conduct, but now she j does not take the trouble to consider if it is snspicious or not. What does it sig nify what does anything signify, now that Jemmie is untrue to her? 8h has heard nothing further of him since tbe day that Lady Renton paid her visit It la evident he is not coming back to Car rouby. Lady Mountcarron is not In the happiest mood as she gathers up ber reins, and touches op ber pretty little roans, and makes them fly down the drive, and turn ao sharply out of the park gates as nearly to upset a stable lad coming into them. He Is but a lad, and the sadden aparition of a lady in a pony-chaise, which nearly run over his toea, frightens him to that degree that he backs into tbe park palinga, and stands up against them, with hla mouth open. Gladys fancies ahe has hurt him, and reining in her ateeds, desire tbe groom to inquire what la the matter. "Her ladyship wishes to know If tbe wheel grazed you?" says the groom. Bnt all the anawer be gets ia by another question: ' . "Be that her ladyship T "Yea. Are yon hurt?" "No. I ain't, hurted, but I've got a letter for ber." And be produce a small acented note, twlated np In the uaual Planner. "The boy is not hurt, my lady," says the servant, returning to Gladys; "be waa bringing thia note for your ladyship." 8h takes tbe note, aad without exam ining tb addraa proceeds to open and peruse It It contains but these word, written In a fens! baad: "Thursday, eleven, M. D." Lady afountcarron sees at glance R la aot iatdd for bar. She laoks for tba alreetS. It ia t tho Right BoavaraM dut But tt Mautearra. Bar I ladyship bites ber lips, as she twists op tbe paper into its original farm. "It is for his lordship not for me." th ays. arelesly, returning it lo the ser vant. "Tell the U.y to take it op to Ibe MATTERS Of INTEREST TO HU house." And then she lays the lash pL ANU TEACHER, about ber pomes flanks again and sends tbeiu spinning along the road. I beg your pardon, my lady." says the groom, presently, leaning forward, uui your ladyship has passed the turning for ' Portstuere. We are oj the Nutley road, ! my lady. "I know it. I have changed my mind," replies Lady Mountcarron. She is as -ertai that the note she in tercepts is from Agnes Riisbertun as if she had seen her write it. and the idea makes her blood t i I with indignation. She 1 as borne a grew -it-al. s!;e telis her self. She "has put up with the v.iiage g'sip. and taken no notice of the rumors ' ITovement Sncreanltijr , with a corre hrotigbt her by kiud friends about her fpouding in-reae In riower. This tlj- husband's intimacy with Miss Rusher ton. But this is a lit'le too much. She nil! not have the scandal hrotiirht under I h,.r verv nose, nor nern.it letters of .iM,jn , (, ,.arr;H backward and , frwarj lu C'arn.iiby House with the ; (.h:inc of being read bv everv servant ttilu lnken trouUf. l0'j,en them. She !h(. r,.a!m whv Mountcarron j .M , ai,xju, , 1)(.r ont f ,h. way , tt llv ., .ii,,,,,,.;,,.,! to I'ortsmere. , village six miles cfr mr..r .,t.n. ,.f making the most of the bright weather. but. in reality, to allow her husband the time and opportunity to visit his inu morals. Hut she won t do it -savs Gladys, indignantly, to herself. Sh.e will not he made a cat's-paw of. She will go to Kiinor and tell her all about it. and ask her advice how to act in the mutter. (Ta b continued.) A Hit of Irish W,t. Some time ago while I was trailing In a village More one of the clerks came to I the Junior partner, who was waiting on me anil s.'iM: j "Please step to the desk. Pat Flyrin wants to settle hit accounts Hlid want i a receipt." The merchant was evidently annoyed "Why, what does lie want of a re ceipt?" be said; "we never give one Simply criH his account off the book; that is receipt enough.." "So I told him," answered the clerk. "but he Is not satisfied. You had Ix-t- ter nee him." So the proprietor stopped to the i!ck, and. after greeting Pat with n "(rood morning," wld: "You want to settle your bill, do you'" Pat rclied lu the affiriiifitlve. "Well," said the merchant, "there Is no need of my giving you a rwvipt. ' Si-e! I will croMt your account off the liixik;" ntiil suiting the action to the word he drew his pencil diagonally acroMK the account. "That la a good receipt." "And do you ninne that that settle It?" exclaimed Pat. "That settles it," said the merchant. "And ye're sure ye'll never be askln" uie for it again?" "We'll never ak you for It again," said the merchant, decidedly. "I'aith, thin." said Put, "I'll be after kaplu' me money In rue pocket, for I haven't paid it." "Oh, well. I can rub thnt-out!" "Ealth now. aud I thought the same," said Pat. It Is needles to add that Pat got hi receipt. Romance. C hlld Answers. The publication from lime to time of answers made by children to ques tions at school examinations 'make most amusing reading; but it has been reserved for a small Welsh Ikjj to eclipse bis predecessors in general vagueness and mixedncsH as to the se quence of historical events. He had to write au essay ou 'The Greatest Widower." ami this is his production: "King Henry III. was the greatest widower that ever lived. He was born at Anno Domhil in Ibe year 1WI. He had TtVt wives. lisliles children. The first was beheaded and executed. The second was revoked. She never smiled again, but she said (hp word 'Calais' would lie found ou her heart after her death. The greatest man in this reign was Ixird Sir Garret Wolsey. He was sir named the Boy Bachelor, He was lsiru at Hie age of 15, unmarried. Hen- , ry S was succeeded on the throne by Ills great grandmother, the beautiful and accomplished Mary Queen of Scots, sometimes known as the I-ady of the Ijike, or the Lady of the Last ' Minstrel." It Is not lioys alone who distinguish themselves . at these ex- ! arnlnations. for It whs a girl who w rote, 1 "The Middle Age Is that period of history which lie between antiquity and posterity." Carpet Dust After five yearn' wear and tear, few carpets can have any value whatever. It depends, however, upon where the carpet has been laid down. For In- stance, one of the rooms of the mint! at K,n Vrn w. .., . rr,.t af.er II 1 ,.d lawn ,rA.n , five year. Waa 11 then handed to the deserving poor, or tbe rng and bone merchant? By no means. It waa cut up Into little pieces, which were then burnt In puns, and from the ashes there were got gold and ellver to the value of 2eV)0. Thu that carpet waa worth a great deal more at the end of five year' service than It waa when it was brand new. To Best the Baad. "Those cool nlgbta are great," said Mr. Wallace to bla visitor. "Fellow can aleep to beat the band." "Yea," Interjected Mrs. Wallace, "and when be seta down to bla favorite trotn- bone efferta In snoring any ordinary band would And Itself pretty closely crowded." Cincinnati Knqulrer. Two Wive la One Hoasc, The alngulnr punishment of bigamy In Hungary 1 to compel the man to live together with both wirea In ont house. A girl's Idea of a faithful friend ir on who calls bar by whatever dw ibe flvaa baraaif. VPrrV AV L" 4 1 A T H V UlijjUl Jji Lt.il Iv, Teacher. Fhoa'd Know the V.lna rd Influence of Praia fcducationat Progrm in the fontb-I naiat aa Attention Notea tnj Comment. The Influence of fra'e. Many educators of the present day have a theory that If children, who have tried their very lct. lie preveut ; cd from knowing when their work is ; bad. they will aoou Improve; this Im- ory Is tK"ing tenu-d at a Philadelphia Normal School, mil whether It lsc true or not, certain It Is thst nothing is mure helpful toward a useful and happy life than real honest praise The theory, held by some, that to praise a person only tills him w 1th van ity aud so prevents gr-ater effort, is a mistaken one. The thought that he never does and never can do anything well will prove discouraging to even the stoWost-betirted; while on the other hand, to one who is striving to do well, the knowledge that he Is succeeding will act as a powerful Incentive, goad ing him on to achieve still greater suc cess. With children especially, praise is a necessity. Nothing Is more discourag ing to a child than tlie thought that everything he im- Is either wrong or. at best, nothing above the ordinary. To have everything he does taken as a matter of course, his best efforts meet ing with no approval, will mum lead In 1 in to n-ase his efforts altogether. While a word of praise, or it may be only an approving glance or smile, w ill cause the little face to light up with pleasure, and because he know that his mother or his teacher likes to see lilm doing well, he resolves to do still better In the future. Teachers should know the value of praUio from their own experience. If a teacher feels that she Is not winning the hearts of her scholars, she becomes discouraged; but If she knows that they siwak of her to their parents and friends she Is at once lifted up and stimulated to greater effort In their liehalf. Nor does this praise from her little one lead to any feeling of van ity. n the contrary, it brings a sense of the deepest humility and a linn reso lution to be worthy Hie loving trust of the children under Ikt care. If praise can so Influence tin; teacher. It lias a still greater Influence on the scholar. Extravagant flattery Is to be avoid od. The child must not be made to foe! that he can do everything better than iila fellows, nor must he lie made to think tltat wrong is right; but when he doc well, encourage him to go on try ing to do well always. Paint the right In such Ixwutiful colors that the wrong will be entirely lost to sight or. in other words, aim to cultivate the ikwI- tive side of the child's character and the negative side will take care of It self. Instead of constantly holding tin before Uie children the things which they should not do, let us teach them those things tbnt they should do, and encourage them by sincere. Judicious praise. American School Journal. With an Itrsnore. Peel an orange by puttini; the rind through the center and removing it In the shape of hollow half spheric. In the tKittoiu of one of these pierce two hob's side by side and then place one half in a goblet, the concave side down. The diameter of the glass should be little smaller than that of the orange peel, so as to bold the latter in position half way down the sides of the glass. Pour some red wine Into the orange peel; It will run through the holes. Let It Just reach the level where It touches the Isittom of the orange )eel. Now pour water into the glass until It is almost full aud watch the result. You will we a (bin red film rising through one of the holes to the level of the water, while the water, which Is heavier I ban I he wine, descends through the other hole to the Isittom of the glass. In a short lime Instead of having the wine below and the water alsive the orange akin, the conditions are revers ed, Isrth liquids having completely hanged places. Two goose quills may be placed In the holea, one going downward and one upward, but they are not Indispensable ,to the eiiccecs of the experiment.- fie- lected. Educational I'roereaa In the "oath. Supt. Hogg, of Fort Worth, Texae, estimates that while the South has gained TA per nt. lu population dur- !"K ,h" V" fT" l"" enrollment of school attendance Is I30 I"" -nt- K'-1'0"1 PWItiTir lm In creased In value from f li,(Kg,lHKi to 51.00C)00. Of the $.i:!CUHJO,00i ex pended for education during the last eighteen yeain. one-fourth has Ix-en for the colored jmpulatlon. Florida lends tbe van In this work, having an enrollment of 66 per 100 of her popu lation aa compared with 01 In other States. The Hdiool Journal. liet the Attention. Tsaeber, If you cannot get tbe atten tion of your pupils your work ia worth- leaa. The pupils' attention you must have. Get It in some way. No one can I tell you just how you can get it. Per aonallty la greater than method. Wlth- out attention there can lie no perrep- tlon; without perception there is no'th- lng to remember; hence there la no ad- vancement without attention. The art of teaching la the art of getting atten ' tlon. Southern tVbool. Bdneattoaal IbUIIIi Troy la to hava a nrw 1100.000 high school bclldlng. Notwithstanding atroag aentuaaitt ta favor a that on of tha pUno nx tha board Is not aUe to tuj.jdy thf nee'ed Instruments. A chair of oriental I-mguagea. lti'-!ud-!nz Chinese sa I Jspauese. Ins l"cu es tablished lu the rniversSiy of Cal for nla. Kxciusfve of c.dlere publications, there are l.Vi or more perliell.-als In this country issued In tbe Intercut of ed j-ation. Charleston intend to establish a ochoo! for the training of negro nur. New Origins was Ibe first city to open an iutirut!on of this kind and the ex- j iN-ritneut has been highly successful there. President Harper, of the Cniversity ! of Chicago, announced last week that Ijidy Aberdeen, wife of the Governor General of Canada, will be convoca tion orator at the university exercise!, April 1. enjoying the distinction of be ing the first woman named for such an occasion In this country. A contest of the will of the late Thomas Armstrong, it '71 I'nlon Col lege alumnus who isMiucttthod property worth S1.Vi.imsi to the college, lias re sulted lu a division sustaining the will. The Income from this property will be devoted to the spffial departments of history and government. A numls-r of cveniiu' schools are Ink ing held under tllP auspices of the col ored churches cf I'blcago. and not only middic-nged, but s'mi old people of the colored race, are seeding the elmation which was denied rhem In their youth. The colored people say tliat they fel more at home In these schools than la the public sclusils. The freshman class In the University of Illinois, recently had a class oHa ble and supper. Tbe men of the sopho more class tried lo break up the socia ble. They broke the windows of the dining-room lu which the friwluneii aud their ladies were assembled and threw lu some foul-sme'.lilig chemlcnl. Some of the fluid fell on a lady's face and pirt out her eyew. In some schools the children are taught lo say that Anieri'ftiiK are "civilized and enlight ened." Exchange. The Kansas Ci!y. Mo., Board of Edu cation recently itirployed a drill master for the high miiool cadi-Is. of wiiich there are three isttnan:es, nx-etitly or ganized by the pupils themselves. The lalsr organiitaiiiiiiis of the city strenu ous1' object to rhe movement, and Imve held metlngs and given expression to their objections through the prms. rlmt the Isianl might lie warned. They have slated to the hoard, through their rp resentatlve. that remonstrance, sign ed by the entire organizations of the city, would be presented to that body at Its next regular meeting- I'cat in lh I'nltrd Stairs. Peat bogs are usually found In north ern latitudes. Those In Ireland, Scot land and Kngland are ts well-known to need di-scrlptioii. In France and Germany Isigs of this description are almost equally numerous, but It la not a matter of general information, how ever, that North America Is abundant ly supplied with U.gs of genuine peat. Along the Atlantic const, from New York to Florida, these ls.gs are of fre quent occurrence. The Dismal Swamp, of Virginia, has a great deal of peat. The Okcflnokce and other swamps In Florida also furnish a fair quality. In New Kngliind. Newfoundland and Can ada, particularly in the region of the great lakes, there are peat twigs of Im mense extent, the Hudson Bay region also having hundreds of square miles of isigs, some of which are of consider able depth. The jeat Is not, however, to any considerable extent utilized In this country, the nb.'ndauoe and cheap ness of coal causing the Inferior fuel lo be disregarded. When our coal gives out, as It probfilily will In 2.("o or 3.SKi years. iM-nt fields will come Into play, furnishing a reserve stock of excellent fuel, not Inferior In Its heating qualities to a good article of wood. Blight on 1 rult Trees. The blight which sometimes attacks fruit trees of every description Is of extremely oliscnre origin, Ining attrib uted by some naturalists to a diseased condition of the sap. while others charge it to a mk'rosjMrple fungus growl h. and still others assert that the snacks of Insects are responsible for ' the damage. Whatever may 1k the. cause, the fatal effects of Die blight on apple, peach, cherry, plum and partic ularly on pear frees are well known lo all nurserymen and orchard owners. Many remedies have ln-en tried: but, probably from the fact that blights arise from different causi-a and condi tions, none have in all cases proved ef ficacious. The subject M ,. 0f great Interest lo those engaged lu growing fnilt-prodiniiig trees, and has enlisted the earnest efforts of naturalists and scientific men, but I he causes of the destruction are such that no certain remedy can be preTiled for any given case. A Woman Photographer. The courage characteristic of Call fornlatis that enables them to face any sort of elrcutnatjince with a dauntless Ismyancy has never been better exem plified than In the case of Miss Flortde Green, who went there comparatively unknown a few months ago, and ta now established In a most attractive atudto In Union square. Hhe baa the distinc tion of being a successful woman pho tographer, and is especially in demand to go to private house to take photo graphs of women who are In such deli cate health that they cannot go to stu- dh. Mrs. James H. Fry, widow of General Fry, who has been an Invalid for years, la among Mlaa Green's pa trona. Mrs. Fry's friends In Kan Fran cisco will be aoon gratified to see a "counterfeit prantroent" of herself, which la tha work of a Oallforulan. " Nsarrhoa, tha Admiral of Alexander tb Oraat, not ad tha ffewwnth of tka onr rant la lata B. A. 836. i ' , ' 1 4Tef i