HB.Srai5)i)a CHAPTER XXIV (Continued.) 8t'(U explained to hitn that she could mt pmiltr leave Brumm thus abruptly, fee bad frand kind friends and a home Vtat and ber friends must not be left toa. 4iosrtesy. Her feminine instinct sH bar that to be driven back to the testis ja Lord Lashmar's phaeton would t rU a scandal. If she was to re Mr Arc mt all, she could not so too "IX ber ladyship realty wishes me to bo sKk. Vthxpm she win be kind enough to m mm a line and to send a conveyance r te to-morrow." ""$be shall do so. Yes, perhaps It would Mt ut it shall be to-day, not to- TVS' went out of the cemetery togeth- ajui through the streets of Brumm, lkUK to ch other as if they had been a of a year's standing. The love Tsaat ap Jo -liber breast, the passion long ntkt is cheek, drew them together In a hWBfmt. Yhcj met as rivers meet and 'Jfcjjiee aa rivers mingle. The shock of .4"ati!g waa tremendous, but the a-ws instantaneous and complete. Mj Caapman shop was not very far CJokl-wm'g aiir a long way from the SneRa lexplatned that since she had aw-art is Bxamm she had gone daily and "muines twice a day to her -father's rv "3i waa tbe-ordy thing I could do to be Nur'iiini,'" ae said. ""Ah, it was my cruelty which told you 7f&3 death." '-lit 5,4, Tbettpr for me to know the " oruii." jih Answered gently. "All my k K-Wu about Vim were childish dreams. Z wsrht fe have known that if he were "Vast fee would have come fir me or sent ant. aSe wwH'Mt-lare uvea away erWtoe all we years and made no sis", fesfi I tMerVJbjm more and more love 'tepj-moaM "cannot for the sacrifice of 'twSifts. What am I worth that two such V lives should be risked for met' To ure worth all the world to me, Jfctfia.' answered her Jover fondly; "and tnrtux tells me that you are going to tbe BTt charming story teller if I MR American I should say romnne-st-o the age, and to delight all the "Mc. "Resttotto Ts too kind." Ji4 he asked yon to be his wife he, tuataa wona women have adored and at rinsed him. Why did you reject grit a a. Stella"?" Sffe vn silent, the pah1 cheeks kindling nhio blush, the eyelids drooping. "Wtkjs, 4Sf lia, why?" he urged. i could care for no one in ss -swartd "but you," she answered falter fcsafeu "Yu seemed so far off and so l w'iw loved you passionately all the ,SSt0; loved you and fought against wn S"dUatey.i; ried to be wiser than aJea. It you knew how laboriously I m.irKd 4o fall in love with Lady Car taisi r jnu would understand how potent mm bat w3er influence which drew my tVu)aitwa.v from her." Thffwere at Mr. 'Chapman's corner by as tiate a -corner shop in a street of sfcaTwy little houses, out of which a "1 rigst and left other streets of just k hbk .pattern. ""Tfcstse. s s private door," said Stella; jvu snind going through the sJM&T' "3 -sfeoalu adore it. 1 hove never seen isViifT -tw kind.' laughed Lnshmnr. tfce i..r: to trend his head a little under wbws hanging from the ceiling ', onions, ii-nnrtis in nets. 3at m 4ear little bop:" he exciaim- .M well found. It U like the cshin on my Norwegian yacht." 3SWl led hiiu into the parlor, that sa s"4 1iMiher w rarely tenanted in lhe The Chapman family were tak saE 4i.4ock tea in the kitchen. went in to them mid told them trM4 l-ashmar had crmie to thnnk tbem 'ir iindness 1o her ami how her fc-sasB wished her to go hack to the fkik 1 aliall have to leuve you this or to-morrow at least," she said AjsV; "but I shall never forg-t your kind- ease to tnlnk of you as my And I shall come to nee you I if yon will let me. "f own; we will, my lass, and always se jrour pretty face," said the Kassjsaan, looking up from a break- tuasi f steaming tea. -Lasltfnar here!" exclaimed Polly, awe-slrickeo look. " IMdn t I tell wt. -' ), you naughty girl, to try to aV - to me." ,.; conie in, Mrs. Cbnpinsn'" ask 1 tjbmar, showing himself in the door sr5 fretsyeet) parlor and kitchen. IMtaiar shook bands with Chapman .affably aa if be bad been elect ion srtnK. a that worthy citinen remarked THTwrnda.and thanked the whole family fci rTiest fashion for their goodness to IS ili'iiWttoi. Htm -will have another name before , 1 hnpe," be added, glancing fondly omtitas race, and when she is : mhsnsT she eaa take rare that her twajsah n i w deals at Mr. Chspman's for vwa nnaiers IM inings, wito a CHAPTEB XXV. Hark! carriage wheels, decidedly car riage wheels, and the rhythmical trot of a pair of horses. Stella ran into the front room and looked out. The blase of car nage lamps seemed to illuminate all the street It flashed in upon her as she stood at the window. The carriage was her ladyship's own chariot, the horses were her own partic ular sevenleen-haiiders, grand, upstand ing bays, which in that shabby little street looked almost as lanre n.ir ..t i;iriuams, Hd Ibis state vehicle hn mockery? Stella wondered, scared at the Ieciacie. W as it a piece of practical Irony on the part of Lady Lashmar? A footman opened the uuwager nerself alighted, moving slowly and feebly, leaning on the tall footman's arm a little as she descended tn earth uui tan, stately and imperial looking in her large circular cloak of black velvet ana darkest sable. "Stella. I have come to fetch you," said her ladyship in an earnest manner. "You were very foolish and very impetuous in running away because of a few unkind words from an impulsive young man. Put ou your oonnet while I thank these kind people for bavmg tket care of you." "Oh, Lady Latdiiuar, I only wanted to be allowed to love you," faltered the girl, her cheek against the dowager's shoul der, her waist encircled by the dowager's arm. "The permission is freely given, child. Love me jour hardest, love me with all your might. I may not be spared many years to enjoy your love to see you and Victorian happy together to live in a new atmosphere. It will be the Indian sum mer of my life." - Mrs. .Vluieiber was in the hall when the dowager and Stella alighted from the car riage. Domestic convulsions were her natural element. She came on board the family ship st such times like a pilot, and thought no bark could get safely to har bor without ber assistance. She took Stella in her arms and cooed over her with a sound as of an elderly wood pigeon. - ".My sweet girl, did 1 not tell you it would be so?'' she murmured. "Oh, Mrs. Mulciber, you told me some thing quite different." 'lid I, dear? About Mr. Nestorins? Oh, to be sure I did. Bot I was right, yon see. I knew you were destined to make a great marriage. And now run and dress for dinner." "I have dined with my friends in Brumm," answered Stella. "I shall have some tea in my own room, thanks." Mr. Nestorins had heard from Lashmar how the fugitive had been found among the dead; and how in that place of death the bond of union had been sealed be tween the living. He and Lashmar had talked gravely together for a little while, and then Nestorins had bid him a kind and quiet farewell and had driven to the railway station on his way to Indon. "Will you not stay? Would you not like to see her?" pleaded Lashmar. "Xo, my dear friend, the wound is too new, I love her too well to lie able quite honestly and frankly to rejoice in her happiness jet awhile. Years hence, when you are a family man, I may once more be your guest and hers. Old Dr. Time has an ointment for all wounds." Stella did not appear at the eight o'clock dinner, a officious Mrs. Mulciber would have had ber appear, accepting at once all the importance of her position as Lush mar's promised bride. She had some tea in Barber's sitting room and was wept over by the warm-hearted Barber and slipped back into her old life as naturally as if she had only left the castle for a few dnys' holiday. ' "Will you come down to the drawing room with me and lie made known to my son's friends?" asked her ladyship. "Not for the world, dear Lady IjihIi niar," she pleaded; 'let me be Just what I hare been, your reader and amanuensis. Only love me a little, if you can. U is so sweet to be loved." Her eyes filled with tears as she spoke, and for the second time Victorian's moth er took the orphan to her bosom and kiss ed her. "I cannot help loving yon," sh said. "Yes, it is sweet to be loved. You have been patient and faithful to me without reward, poor child. Henceforward give me love for love. There shall be no debt unpaid between us." tfL?Kli '","JrK-".W '"V" "oa """ " ' to es. b other ui.sw.res, ovr bL I hi L" realisation of ( stepping . boundaries of rank .ud clr- r.A i '"k" a . eumstauce. Never was there a quieter tn a L , ui serious wedding, seldom a prettier one, s.-cirdin Illness during her sou I absence, through- to the few spectators, wbo were sli rap turous about it sfterwar4. n i wsaSaisceace of the mingled odors rt 9ercelved as bt passed through " i )1 my lava, yo do as too much hon r." us1 -Ae grocer. "Bat I hope your imAitp wBI always remember that it ss Jonathan Bold wood's daughter we M MM b, sot the future Lady Isb- rfkssa BoMwood'a daughter m Mgratafal because she aaa.n aasnrerad Lashmar. Jtd$umlm, ahmmt, 1 wMl leave you with rr nm4 M4a km fat a eoaale of ( e flag ie. ggfrtai will a here i wy at tateak, I toft, Ovod day, .,.-Jjffc!3BMa - -AisJ CHAPTER XXVI. Guests sud host were all gone by the end of the week, each to his or ber several destinies. Lashmar to make sjei'hes in the endeavor to enlighten Ihe great mass of the washed and unwashed who were soon to enercise their elective functions and to leturn whig or lory, as tbe tide of popular opinion (lowed this way or that. He was to come buck for a week at Chrislmss; and then he was to go away again and ii'cnr no more till he came in the season of woodland primroses and budding hedges to claim his bride. Iidy Lashmar had stipulated that he should wait six months. He was to give himself this much time in which to lie sure of him self and his own feelings, and he was to give her this much time in which to take her new daughter to her heart. "1 want her to grow to me; I want her to be verily a my daughter before you give her the right to call me mother," she aid; "and when once there is this bond of love between us neither you nor she shall ever have cause to dread the influ ence of the proverbial mother-in-law." "I have no fear of that, mother. I know bow noble yon are, and that when once you have accepted a position " "I shall perform the dnties of that poal tlon. Yea, V let oris n; but in this instance I hope to render something more than duty" Lashmar waa too grateful to rebel. H ateeped himself 1n th rmiltles! vortev snd uicu oieim nursea ner wltn un wearying patience and care; and day by day and hour by boor tbe bond grew closer between them, and the proud, re served nature opened its treasure house of tender feeling. "Ah, Stella, my Stella, you have given me new hopes and new joys in spite of myself," murmured the dowager once, in the deep of night, when Stella bad been sitting for hours beside her bed. "After all, love is the one thing needful for us poor mortals in our earthly pilgrimage the one star to euide us thronvh rinh'i dark labyranth and in loving one anoth er we learn to love our Uod. ho has told us mat He is love." "Iear Lady Lashmar " "Call me mother: never aeain bv anv colder name." Dear mother, you have filled rnv life with gladness. I never could have been ! happy with Victorian if you had denied me yonr love." Lady Caiminow had no remained in England to assist at the trinmnhs of an obscure rival. She had taken advantage oi Kuoo-narurea Mrs. Danebrook's being wen, to whisk her off to Aix-le Bains as rapidly as if she bad been nro- vided with Medea's fiery chariot, and from Aix, when the weather grew colder, they went on to Montretu, and from Montreux to Bella gio, and tbence to Flor- ruce. aou in one of the noblest palaces of mat favored city Lady Carminow set u ner court, and surrounded herself with worshipers and sycophants of the highest quality, spending Job Danebrook's hard won wealth with a royal lavishness which enchanted everybody. From her Italian retreat the sultana of toe ltanebrook iron v-orks held occasiona communication with her vassals through her grand vizier, the manager of the worss, wnom she regarded as a particu larly troublesome, officious and pig-headed person, with a passion for giving unnec essary and even lmirtiiient advice. 't 1 - a ruie never to take anv notice of anything he says," she observed to one of her friends, s civil engineer. nu mom, as a practical man. she some times discussed the prospects of the iron iraoe. out may not bis advice tie wnrih b. ing once in a way," suggested this tentle man, "were It only as tbe exception which proves tne ruler un, ir I were once to rive wav to his ideas I rhould never again be mistress of my own pioperty. I believe he is a very wortny person and that he understands the iron trade; but be i a horrid rndin! The very air of Brumm is infected with revolution." In the face of this calm and sweet-tem pered obstinacy the manager could do nothing. Vainly did he write his views nHin this necessity of marchinir I n the vnn rather than in the rear of Progress. Vain ly diii hif inform her ladyship of increasing signs of disaffection and ill-will among her army of workers: vainlv warn her f the peril to ber fortune involved in this question. Lady Carminow was as obsti nate as George III. in his treatment of America, and tbe result was somewhat similar. One winter midnight the city of Brumm was seared by such a conflagration as l.ad not been seen under that murkv skv for more than half a century. Men and wom en thronged the streets, strangers drove into the city from outlying towns and vil lages, little children were taken out of their beds and lifted up at tbe windows to see the red havoc flaring against the dark night. The great Danebrook iron works and all their dependencies model dwelling honses, clerks' offices, store houses, stables were burning, and no power of fire engines which Brumm or the neighborhood could muster could in anywise avail against tbe might of that gigantic conflagration. The fire had broken out in a dozen dif ferent places almost simultaneously. No one could doubt that there had been de- j 111......... -.I-L ..I.. . ... luridir niiu mnuoraiciy piouitl arson; and the traces of thqt crime were found afterward in several directions, while it was also discovered that one of the con spirators, just a i: lie Ies ruthless than bis fellows, had sent an anonymous scrawl to the head stable keeper, warning huh iu Ki-t ma iioim's out or tne way soon I after dark that evening. This message the stable keeper hud brooded over for hours, and had obeyed only just in time to save his stud of magnificent tart horses from perishing in the flames. The loss of Lady Carminow waa com puted at nearly a million. Mr. Dune brook bad been his own insurer. The only policies upon the whole establish ment were thoe small policies which in sured the furniture of tbe operatives, and which Job Danebrook bad always insist ed upon paying the premiums himself and deducting the amount from wages. Happily there were no lives lost. It was suposed afterward that a signal of some kind had been sent round from house to bouse at 10:30 o'clock, and that all were on the alert, ready to make their escape before the moment of danger. De liberately, audaciously as the work of destruction had been carried out, the con spirators were never brought to book. There was n prolonged inquiry and the police did their best; but among nearly fifteen hundred disaffected workmen it was not an easy matter to bring the crime home to individuals. ' Seven men were arrested on Biella was given away by ber future mother-iu-law, who had all the loiperisj gra. of a portrait by Sir Jo.htiu lte ookls, clad in white samite Angltce, in a lar(.-e white velvet mantle bordered with white fo.v, and a white velvet Unmet with otitrkh fi-atbers. The tall, thin figure, silvery bnir, and Marie Antoinette counte nance were wondrously set off by that white velvet and fur. It was said that the dowager was a mort interesting figure than the bride, although Stella looked lovely in her shite cashmere gown and fox fur jacket and little white toque. arensed ready to start on her honeymoon journey to the land of Don Quixote, where Lnshmsr was to take her in search of a grandfather and pedigree, lie had shown her copies of her moth ers letters and they had planned this Spanish journey together, lie was to take ber to all the fairest soots in Hint romantic land, all scenes richest in. his torical associations, and cities rich in treasures of art; and it was only as if were en passant that they were to bunt for the traes of her parentage. I hey were saved all trouble upon this score, for within a fortnight of their mar riage, lashmar received a Spanish letter addressed to his town house, and forward ed to him on his travels. It was from a lawyer In, Madrid, who wrote to inquire whether the lady whom he had married was Jonathan Bold wood's daughter by his marriage with a Spanish lady, or whether she was tbe offspring of a prior or subsequent marriage. If she were indeed the sole offspring of Jona than Bold wood's marriage with a young Spanish lady, whom he carried off from Madrid and was supposed to have mnr- ried at St. Martin's-in-the-Fields in Au gust, 1,S! , the said daughter was sole heiress to Don Zavier Olivarez, merchant. no nan lately died intestate, arid who had left papers relating to his daughter's elopement, and letters written by him to her, in the care of the writer, his leiral aaviser, Tbe formalities which appeared to be necessary to complete the identification of the inheritrix lusted nearly six months and at the end of that time Stella became. possessed of alwut A30.000 variously in vesica. It Is more than enouch to renovate mat old barrack in Grosvenor souare." said Lashmar, who was eager to we his young wife take her place in society. And to buy an annuity for dear Mr. erner, so that he may feel quite inde pendent," added Stella. iiaoricl erncr Imd been brought back to his old rooms in the castle since Stella's marriage, and reinstated In his nost of !i- nrarian with power to add from time to mie to that magnificent collection of old books which bad made I-ashmar Castle famous. iJidy Lsshrnar's novel was published nonymousjy a few weeks after her mar riage, and more .than justified the opinion r me publishers render and the admira tion of that still finer critic, Mr. Nestorins. It was the book of the season, a book which a great many nconle read, and hich everybody talked aUuit. those who ad only read the reviews naturally talk- ng loudest. The freshness of the style, with Its pas sionate flow and youthful vigor, was cu- lously contrasted by touches of archaic earning which set the critics wondering tiont tlie writer. Before the book had been out a month there were plenty of people ready to affirm that It was written y Mr. Nestorins, and some even went so far as to produce circumstantial evidence n proof of that authorship. firstly, the book was produced by Mr. estorius' publisher. Secondly, it had leaked out that the proofs had been sent to Mr. Nestorius, Thirdly, nobody less ccomplished of less all-round cleverness could have written such a book. There was, however, a small section of the reading public chiefly women who new by fine instinct that this story of passionate, unrequited love could have leen written only by a woman, since only to woman Is "love the one thing needful." (The end.) Isn't It Worth While? The construction of a system of na Clonal highways would, of course, be I matter of enormous magnitude, but It Is worth considering whether, lu view of the tniquestlouable advantages :o be derived, it would not be worth while for the national government to X)utribute largely toward the construe- Jon of aucu In-conirnunlcatlng lines of roud by the several States, conditional uiKiu the following of certain prcwrlb- nl lines and the observation of certain requirements essential to good con struction, maintenance, etc. Boston Herald. Turkish Policemen at Prayers. When tbe muezxin called from the I minaret nnd the faithful lnld down their work and moved Into the mosque to prny, Mabmoud went too. After the first day he dimorded his uniform, all but bis fez, for a suit of light gray, exchnnglng his short sword for a atout stick. This stick Caslmlr held aa his badge of office while Mabmoud prayed. I followed bltn once Into the Mosque of Ahmed and watched him as be knelt, barefoot, his face to the slone wall, hi lip moving In prayer, bin eyea on Mec ca, bis forehead touching tbe mats. This bloodthirsty savage! This bar baric Turk whom we would teach mor 1 and manners! I can Imagine how hoarse a mu;y.zln't throat would be come calling the Broadway squad to prayer If bis duty compelled him to continue calling until our police should fall upon their knees In tbe nearest ehurch.-F. Hopkinson Smith In the Century. suspicion Collected the Bill. There Is a one-cbalr barber shop In Southeast Washington. Tbe proprietor formerly owned a grocery store, but In- and a mass of evidence was brought to-1 Judicious credit broke him up. A man gether, conversations held in public entered the little shop and took a seat houses and club rooms were repested lu In tbe chair. The barber tucked a detail-circumstantial evidence as to the towel under bis chin, lathered his face then, passing the keen edge of the ra- purchase of parafflne and other combusti bles was sifted and resifled a hundred and fifteen witnesses were, examined and cross-examined-the men were remanded and again remanded, till newspajier read ers began to tire of the great Danebrook arson case, and the result was nil. So the great Danebrook Iron works came to an end like a tale that Is told. Lady Carminow decisively refused to re build or to hear anything more about iron. "if I could be grateful to those wretches for anything it wonld be for this fire," she said, with her grand sir. "f t's such a comfort to think I am no Urfijfer In trade and that I shall never sgain have my carriage blocked by a hideous procession of grimy wagons with my name painted upon them." CHAPTEB XXVII, Victorian and Stella were married la Vaster week. It was an early Easier, the season of primroses and hedgerow vio lets and wood snemores. Such self-sows lowers seenied most In bamoay with such a wedding a nlon of hearts that or across his customer s wlndplie, said: "You owe me a grocery bill of fl'O. Will you pay It or shall 1 collect It now? The man In the chair saw In the glass a determined face, a Arm hold on a glittering blade, and, producing two tlO bills, jumped from the chair and ran, saying: "I don't want any receipt, and never mind the share." In a few minutes a hoy came In with tbe barber's towel, and requested the customer's cott and bat. Good Demswd for Saakea. Baat ladlaa snakes are In great da man for European collections. Kr ery German steamer that leaves Cal cutta takes bnadreds to Hamburg for distribution over the continent cbnatp thinks other ebuape are mighty amart Good Koads. "There be thive things," said tbe great Lord Bacon, "that make a nation great and prosperousa fertile ttoil, busy workshops, and easy conveyance for men and commodities from oue place to another." Tbe first and second of the.He rpquls ites the- great West jiottsesses in abund ance, and in an abundance that, ho far ast.be "busy work.boa" are concerned continually is hicrea.sliig. In the third it Is sadly deficient. Tbe West and the South certainly do not have "easy con veyance for wen and commodities from one place to another." They have t runt ed too much to their railways, forget ful that railways must be but receivers of travel that coinen along Innunie-ra b!e lines of highways. Many a farmer who live three miles from the nearest railway station spends more time and worries himself more In reaching It thin ! traveling fifty miles nftor he has reached It. It often costs more to haul a load of corn from the farm to tbe railway than to carry It a hundred miles after It Is placed on the cars. It often takes a longer time to go for and come back with a letter or newspaper from the nearest postofllce than It docs for the missive to come from its start ing placr to the office. Many a plow emu unrepaired, many ft needed j.4eoe of farm work goes un done during (he long winter months and forms a needless part of the "wor ry" In getting ready for springtide op erations, because of the all but Im passable roads between tlie farm and tbe store or the shop. Country mer chants lone trade, farmers lost; money by Inability to take advantage of a temporary rise or fall in the price of produce because of roads uion which nothing considerable can be ba.uled during a great part of the year. There are whole counties which rain and frost rule w-ltb despotic authority. Rain converts the tracks that are dig nified by the name of roads into Im passable swamp, frost hardens tbe mud Into ridge and mounds that no horse cau travel without danger of lameness and acrosa which no beavy weight can lie drawn. Tbe loss to the farmer and country merchants of fhe South and West Is not to be counted y hundreds of thousands but by mil lions yearly, and It Is quite probable liat tens of millions would be needed o express It. It Is true lhat vigorous work, ,md work that I as lntell!ent s It Is vla- orotis, should be done In remedy of the evil condition Into which we have fal- en. Every road district should have Its society for fhe Improvement of high ways, every county should have Its central committee with which tbe dis trict societies can confer, nod every State should have Its yearly convention of societies. The questions of drain age of road beds, of the os!!l!!ty of finding gravel, stone, or other material for construction, and of the compara tive merits of roads built by local cor porations that can levy toll, or by coun ty taxes, or by State aid, should be carefully discussed. The Interest of the public In this Important matter should be stimulated by frequent com munications to the newspapers, both those of the county seats and those A'hleh have a circulation co-extenslve with the domain of the Ilepubllc. Dur ing tbe winter season farmers bare much enforced leisure; they can em ploy a part of It to no better purpose than In striving to organize a move ment for road Improvement. along at a behind time rate of speed, when tbe old bishop, frightened aad trembling, dured to ask the conductor what was the time of day. If you have traveled Westward yon know that at Ogdeu the time citungea, and San Francisco lime, one boilr ear lief, is adopted. The conductor bad Sau Francisco time and lie said: "It Is 7:10 ten minutes after seven.'" The old bishop, previously haunted by a dread of Impending destruction ticca use of the horrible rate of speed at which he was being whirled through apace, rose with a wild cry and made for the door. "Letnme off." he cried. "It was 35 minutes after 7 an hour ago, an' we're goln' so fast we are goln" faster than time can count Itself. Lentiue off!" Had be really been going as fast aa the old man had believed, be would surely have been beaten to bits as be Jumped from tbe train. Aa it waa, ha was only rolled somemlng like a hali nille, and was carried back to Ogdea on a hand-car. Chicago llecord. The Cayman In the Weet Indies ex port nothing but turtles. The tiger's strength exceed tbat of the lion. Five men can easily hold down a lion, but alne are required to sulslue a tiger. Ou June 12, 1775, upwards of 2,400 salmon were taken above the bridge la the IUver Tyne, and sold In Newcastle st Id. and ld. per pound. Herman fJunaallus, of Beech Creek, I'., recently caught a large caUamount in a trap at the bead of Big Run. Tbe animal measured three feet seven lach es; from the tip of the nose to the Up of the tall. Guosallus has also caught four bears In traps last winter. Live bee are sometimes shipped on Ice, so as to keep them dormant d urine tbe Journey. This u particularly the case with bumble bees, which have been taken to New Zealand, where they are useful In fertilising the red clover which baa been Introduced Into the colony. The common seagulls will become great pots. They are useful birds la tbe garden, eating everything in tbe form of an Insect they can get bold of and do not seeru to reut the restric tion of clipped wings. They will con tentedly spbtKb around In any little pond of water, and so Ion aa they geX their meals are conteut. They become great frleods sum! are very amutring. One seagull made friends with a cat and presumed upon uhe Intimacy to rob pussy of tbe mice she caught. Here Is a w range story. Tbe plant known aa vervain, which Is not dkctlu gulshed for Its beauty, aad which grows in EuglUb villages utUwly disre garded, was so sacred to tbe Druids tbat they only gathered It for their divinations when the great dog-sstar arose, In order that neither sun nor moon should see the deed. Moreover, tney lert lioueycombs on the sttot In atonement for tbe violence done to tbe earth In robbing It of no holy a herb. Nor was It precious to the Druids alone, for anioug the Greeks and Rxkumns M crowned altars, decided fortunes), waa sen by ambassador on tieatlcs of IKsice, was used in solemn IncanUaioua, and also as a love philter. In fact, waa regarded with sacred awe and revsr-ence. Beating Father Time. Speed was once demonstrated on a Western road In a fashion to curl tlie hair of at least one old Mormon bish op. The churchman considered It a phenomenon, and got off the lraln as quickly as he could. He had bull whacked across tbe plains In the early days, aud, si range to say, bad never ridden on a railroad trslir until the time when he entered upon bis trip rom Green River to Kan Francisco, The speed was, therefore, s revelation o him. He had never before aeen any thing so swift, sud he was scared. I bout twelve miles from Ogden he isked the conductor for tbe time of lay, and was told ihst It was 7:35. He m pressed this time forcibly on bis 31 1 nd. Now, for a wonder, the Western con nection at Ogden was quickly made, and after the lapfe of but a few min utes the Kan r'rncl--houut travel ers wan on their way California ward. Ogden had been left behind only a few tiles, and (lie ira'M was whooping! Mistake In Delivery. Queer things happen In, suburban towns, where the residents have a way of utilizing menus at baud uhterly re gardless of the consequences. Mrs. Stiuipson, a uotable bouse-wlfe wbo lives In one of these terreKtrlal para dises, recently replenished ber stock of household furniture at tbe ouly de partment store lu the place and ordered tbe purchases sent home tbat afternoon when sbe would be there to receive them. She was In a particularly bappy frame of uilud ait she sat at ber front windows watching for thcJr arrival, remarking wllh satisfaction the vacant v places tbe new furniture would adorn, J when an undertaker's wagon drove up and stopped In front of ber door and a solemn-looking driver In rusty black descended from the front seat and rang her bell. She did not lose a moment In raising tbe window and calling to blm In a frightened voice: "lo away! You've stopped at the wroug house! There Isn't anybody here!'" "I don't want a body, ma'am, I've got some things I was to leave here," called the man. "Take them back!" she commanded, "I tell you 1 won't have them! You ought to be ashamed to stop berel What do you suppose tbe neighbors will think?" "Uell, ma'am," said tbe man, as he climbed on his wagon again, "If you don't want your new furniture, ail right, but I've got It Inside." "And I wouldn't take It as a glfl," said the distressed woman, "the Idea of bringing- my goods In an under taker's wagon," "Wo hadn't another vehicle lu the barn, and you said yen wanted it right off," responded the man as he drove away. But the man of many calling who had utilized the last conveyance In his establishment lost the sale of the fur niture and Uie good will of a customer who did not appreciate such mortuary en tori wise. Hick Prloa fbr Bread. In 1901 the prloa of the quatsm loaf In Kaglaad reached about 37V& cent,. This waa la the tints of the Nayoisoale wan.