SQiXm ! t i I RED CLOUD CHIEr A. O. HOSMER, Proprietor. BED CLOUD. - NEBRASKA MEMORIAL DAY. Far down midst Southern mountains Where lonely pine-trees stand, And where the silvery mist-like moss Has laid its soft gray hand. Where through the silent forest Xo voice e'er echoes, save The sweet wild song of bieds that throng There lies a soldier's grave. And no stone tells the story. And no woVdstell his name. And in the list of battles fought He bears no share of fame. Bis was the soldier's spirit f To do and dare and die. But not for him in the forest dim The shout of victory. "Died on the march '" the saddest - Words that a comrade writes; As brave a soldier, though, as he Who in the front rank fights; For him no drums are muffled, Nor pomp, nor funeral signs. Hut comrades tried who marched beside Laid hiu beneath the pines When we. through all the country. Honor the soldier dead. And wreaths of choicest flowers are brought And words of praise are said Far off amid the mountains Who marks the grave so lone? Will no one make for soldier's sale A wreath a prayer not one? Ah. yes ! tor tender Nature Loves well to mark the spot. And over all that lonely mound She strews forget-me-not-She knew with what true courage His fresh young life he gave. And flowers whose eyes reflect the sides Each year sends to his grave. What matter if that soldier ' Did wear the Blue or Gray, For brave and strong must be the heart That gives its life away. Not theirs alone the glory Who share the battle's din, A hero he who valiantly Meets death though others win. While we with martial musie Honor the soldier's name. Unfurl the flag and deck the graves Of those who earned its fame, On many lonely hill-sides. By forest, vale and sea. There Nature brings her offerings That none unmarked may be. Ada SUicart Shtlton, in Springfield, (JTom.) Jltpulllcan. .REUNITED. Story of a Man's Repentance and a Woman's Forgiveness. During the autumn of 'SG, tho weather was remarkably pleasant all over the West ern States till the middle of the month of November. Up to that time men worked out of. doors in their shirt-sleeves, and women continued to wear sun-bonnets just as in midsummer. But the 16tb dawned cold and gray, and the wind, which is always astir in this section of tho country, was sharp and keen. Still nobody expected a storm of very great severity, as a raw, cloudy day is not infrequent at this season of the year, and just as frequently it comes and goes unheeded, save to cause one to put on an extra garment for the day and lay it aside again on the morrow when tho sun shines out brightly as ever. But then, no one in this slipshod West ever docs expect a storm till it comes on and finds them un prepared. Some way the idea that the winters arc not going to be scvorc and don't open up till late is so fixed in the brain of the average settler that he wouldn't be ready for cold weather if he didn't begin till the following season, and when it comes and finds them napping oh, what a rustling there is to "fix things up a little for the cold snap. 'Done, declare!' who'd 'a thought winter'd a set in right away so soon.' " The more shiftless never make any pro vision for their cattle during the severe weather unless it "be a straw stack for them to stand against in case of a blizzard. At other times they are expected to rustle their living on the buffalo grass. This is a short, -woolly growth which is popularly believed -to contain an oily, nutritious substance for the animals. Many of the poor creatures die of starvation, and those which do man age to pull through are so poor by spring that it takes three of them standing together to cast a respectable shadow. On this particular day, it did not clear off -as was expected ; on the contrary the clouds became denser as the day wore on, the wind -rose to a perfect gale, and toward night a sleety rain set in. "It's going to be a bad night, mother. What will wedowithCherry'scalfl Twon't -do to let it stand out," said Julian Ashley, coming from the stable where he bad been -"doing the chores," just at nightfall on the memorable ICth. "We'll have to put it in the back room in the hen-housc till we can get a place fixed," replied the mother. "I'll come and help." There are usually exceptions to a rule, and Urs. Ashley was tho exception to the gener al rule of shiftlessness in her neighborhood. Her neighbors claimed that this was due to her pocket-book being better filled than "theirs; but when did laziness ever fail to in vent an excuse behind which to screen itself? The fact of her purse being longer than theirs -was due to her providing food and shelter for her stock which is the greatest source of revenue on a claim thus increas ing the profit and doing away with the losses which impoverished her neighbors. The calf having been induced with many a "Book bossie," "Huay there," and an oc casional twist of its caudal appendage, to enter the dark hen-house and allow itself to "be tied to the center-post, Mrt. Ashley took a final survey of the animals in the sheds and staalesto see that all were as comfortable as they could be under the circumstances, then she and Julian each carried in a scuttle of coal, closed the door and pulled the rug "before it to keep the cold from coming ia at the bottom. The bouse .was a long, low structure, as aod houses asaallyase, and was half "dug out." It, tike the outbuildings, was better than the generality. It contained three rooms, and aotonly had board floors, but they were carpeted acd the walls were papered. It also had a afcingle roof which, nuchas ft may astonish you to find it out, my Eastern friends, is a luxury not enjoyed bythecommoa herd of homesteaders. A board roof with sod laid over it to keepout the rain is considered fine, feat people who go to the extent of sporting tkingle roofs on their dwellings are considered '"way up," in Western parlance. The houses are usually coveted in this wise. A ridge-log is laid from oao end wall -to the other, supported in the ceatcr by a log with a crotch on the upperend, standing perpendicularly. Small poles are then placed at a distance of two feet apart, one end of each resting upon a side wall, the other upon the ridge-log. This constitutes the frame work. Willows are then laid thickly sos3 the poles, a layer of buffalo- j sod, added, and tho entire roof covered with dirt a foot thick. Board ooes are another luxury not en joyed by the majority, dirt floors" being the rule. That is, the earth enolosed within the four walls is leveled down as smoothly as possible with a spade, and considered quite good enough. It is no uncommon occur rence to see people who own hundreds of heads of cattle and three or four sections of land living in sod houses or even "dug outs" sometimes, with dirt roofs and dirt floors buildings which Eastern farmers wsuld not consider lit to winter stock in. This being the usual style of living among the pioneers of Nebraska, of course when Mrs. Ashley took a claim and fixed it up so much better than the surrounding ones, it was no wonder that she was at once set apart by her neighbors as being "too fine haired for any thing." Perhaps it was owing to this, or, it may have been because she never encouraged familiarity with her neighbors!, that whe had not a single intimate acquaintance among them, after living in the vicinity over five years. She had made proof on a pre-emption at the end of the first six months of her residence there and had Immediately placed a homestead filing on a quarter section adja cent to her tree-claim. That she had consid erable stock and was making money was all any or her neighbors knew of her. Even the people whom she hired to do her work knew nothing more, except that she was never backward or afraid of putting her own shoulder to the wheel when work was press ing. She had a boy. twelve years of age at the time of which we write, and a girl three years younger. To any inquiries concern ing her husband, she invariably replied: "I lost him many years ago." One hired girl, more daring than the rest, ventured to continue the subject in spite of her mistress' forbidding looks when the matter was alluded to by inquiring: "What ailed him?" "Heart disease," replied the lady, white a srrim smile rested on her face, as she went outside and closed the door to end the con versation. She was a handsome woman, not over thirty-one or two years of age, and several of the bachelors of the vicinity hud made advances with a view to matrimony, all of which were politely, but firmly, repulsed. She always declared she was opposed to second marriages. The truth of the matter was that, owing to a sad experience, she did not have much faith in men, or in mar- 4 riage of any kind, whether secend or first. She had passed her girlhood in a country village in the vicinity of Chillicothc, Ohio, and at seventeen had become ciigwed to Ashley Winthrop, a rising young lawyer of that city. Her acquaintances thought she had married extremely well but she hadn't. She had become acquainted with young Win throp while he was rusticating in the vil lage. She, being the belle there, he engaged her in what he at first intended to be a flirtation; but before he knew it ho was more interested in her than he had intended, and when it came time to leave, some way it was so easy to ask permission to come back for her some time. She seemed to look and long for some such proposal, too, and he could not but acknowledge to himself that she had a right to do so, after their intimacy. Yet ho had never meant things to go so far, and knew that it was not for the best. She was too thoroughly a country girl to bear transplanting to the city. She was not the sort of woman he had always looked forward to marrying, yet so proud was ho ef what he termed his 'honor," that, galling as the bondage would be no him, he would not make a clean breast of it, and end matters between them. So they were married and went to Chillicothc to live. If her unassuming country ways annoyed him before, when there was no one but himself to note them, how much more so now that all his friends could witness them. She soon learned that her husband was ashamed of her, and this made matters even worse, for she tried to please him by affecting the fine lady, and made a miserable failure of it. To a man of domestic tastes onlv she would have proven a treasure. Her house was the best ordered, and her table afforded dainties unsurpassed. But her husband overlooked her virtues entirely, in contem plating what he considered her dcficicaces. He avoided taking her out with him when ever it was possible, and made both himself and his wife miserable. When they were married five years, Mr. Winthrop was elected to the Legislature, and, of course, never offered to take his wife to Columbus with him when he went, which was a bad move for both. Having no one to look after, and no one to look after him, he bad too much time for getting into mis chief. At the same hotel at which ho was stopping a Senator from a northern district was also boarding, accompanied by Bis daughter. It is hardly likely that a man so tenacious of his honor Chat he would fulfill a distaste ful contract of marriage for its sake, would willfully withhold the fact of his marriage and enter into a flirtation; so, perhaps, the opportunity for disclosing the fact never presented itself. However that may have been, certain it is that Ashley Winthrop soon began to seek the society of Senator Seoly's daughter, Louise, and acknowledge to himself that, if he were only free, here was the woman he would choose for a wife. And the girl? Why, she was flattered by the ovident interest and admiration of the bright young member from Chillicothc; en joyed his society at first, and later on why will women be such fools T proceeded to fall head and cars in love with him without so much as trying to find out any thing about his past life. Her father, also, rather en couraged the intimacy, taking it for granted that a young man whose fellow-citizens re spected him enough to elect him to the legislature must be all right. (This goes to prove, by the way, that men are not always as acute as they ought to be, either.) No mutual agreement as to the state of tncir ncarts was arrived at in so many words, but each knew the other's feelings intuitively. The only reference made to the subject was in parting. Then, as Ash ley hold her hand and noted her look of re gret at the separation, he said earnestly: "Much as I have enjoyed your society, I trust we may never meet again." "Why!" she asked, opening her eyes wide in pained surprise. "Because oh, Louise! Can't you under stand wbyt I've been a fool aye, worse than that!" "I don't understand," she safd huskily, as a feeling of foreboding crept over her heart. "I can't explain it now. I could not face you and acknowledge my own villainy." Just then others entered the room and they parted without further explanation. -When he came heme again he was more than ever dissatisfied with his wife, aad seriously thought of committing suicide to end his misery never dreaming that he was one of the most fevered mortals on whom the sun shone if he had only been sensible enough to realize it. Ho considered that be owed Louise an explanation, besides he longed to write to her and" perhaps receive a reply, anyway; so ha wroYe a long account of his iormcr courtship, his unhappy marriage, present miserable state increased by his ardent affection for h-self, and ended by aescnoing tnc ODsracic to tneir union as a ties, with a soul not aspiring beyond house work. He was writing this epistle in his office, and just as ho was about to close, who should step in but his wife. He thrust tho letter hurriedly into a book and turned with a very embarrassed countenance to greet her. Her suspicions and curiosity were roused at cose, and she invented an excuse for sending him out, possessed herself of the letter and read it in his absence, then wrote below his last line: "Xo need to send this. The objectionable 'oMacit' will be removed by first train to Mat vernCrossing. Lucy Malvern-Winthhop." Then placed the letter again where she had found it. Somowomon would have fainted, some would have cried, it is safe to say that nine out of ten would have mado a scene, but Lucy was that tenth one who will suffer and make no sign. She chatted pleasantly for five minutes or more with her husband when he returned, quite as though nothing had happened, then picked up her purchases and started home. When she reached tho street, however, her self control began to ebb. She worked off some of her excite ment by walking home, as if her life de pended on her speed, and when once there, she gathered up what things she had brought when she came there a bride, packed them and her own and her child's clothing, called a dray and had them re moved to the depot, and was on her way to Malvern Crossing before her husband had succeeded in getting rid of two clients who had come in as Lucy went out, so as to finish his letter. When at last he was alone again he drew the missive forth, feeling guilty as a thief, as he remembered how near his wife had come to dotecting him in his treachery. But when he read her comments at the bottom of the page he was stunned. But he must stop her going. Shame, contri tion, fear of scandal all working upon him at once, lent rather a hang-dog appearance to him as he entered his own house. Every thing was topsy-turvy for the first time since he was married. He began to realize too late at least one of his wife's virtues. Finding her gone, he took the next train in-pursuit and found her in her father's parlor, and there made his confes sion and apology and promises to never do so aain without avail, however. After heariughim through and listening to his petition that she return to him, sho said scornfully: "Not for worlds!" "ot if you could offer her a kingdom j should she return to you, you rascal!" ex-J claimed her father. specimen of mankind, leaving your wife at home and galvantiug round the country making mashes on other women ! I am able and willing to support my daughter, and tho sooner you get out of my house the better. And, mind you, don't show your face hero again. Vamoose ! !" Here he emphasized with-his cane in such a manner that his son-in-law thought best to retire. He waited a week, expecting their anger to cool, Mien went back agaiu. His father-in-law met him at the gate and threatened to have him arrested if he ever came on h?s farm again. So he troubled them no more. Eight months later, Lucy gave birth to a girl, and, with the inconsistency of a woman, named it Louise. Two years later. she was notified of her husband's applies- f tion for a divorce, and a little later she read of his marriage to "Louise, eldest daughter of Senator Soely." Her father was dead by this time, so she decided to move West. Not wishing ever to know or be known by any former acquaintances, she changed her own and children's name to Ashley, and under this cognomen we find them, several years later, located on a homestead in West ern Nebraska, as mentioned in the beginning of our story. The hired man and girl who worked for 3Irs. Ashley, and were brother and sister, had been called away the morning of tho loth to tho sick-bed of their mother; so only herself and the children were at home. Julian studied his lesson, and little Louise practiced her music while the mother cro cheted. The wind howled and the sleet carno against the windows with such force it seemed it would breuk them. Suddenly, in the midst of the roaring, there came a sound just outside the window like the neighing of a horse. They listened, and in a minute it sounded again. "It must bs one of the ponies loose. Some thing must bo wrong at the 6tablcs. Light the lantern and we'll go and see," said Mrs. Ashley, putting on her wraps. When they opened the door andlookod out, there stood a buggy with two horses attached, and in the buggy the figure of a man. "Hell !" called Julian. No response. It's somebody lost in the storm," said the mother. "Perhaps he's frozen. It's a good thing I left the curtain up; the ponies must have seen the light and instinct led them to it. Here, let's see if we can lift him." They got the man into the house, and the ponies stabled as quickly as possible. Then, finding that life was net extinct, they ap plied all the remedies they bad at hand to restore him. By and by he began to show signs of animation, and after a long time opened his eyes. They wandered around in a pnzz'.ed manner until they lightened upon Mrs. Ashley's face. Then with a glad cry, the stranger leaned forward. "Lucy!" he cried. "Is it only a horrible dreamt" "A horribly real dream," she replied, icily, recognizing in the man before her, for the first time, her husband. "Don't bo hard with mo, Lucy; I remem ber now. I deserve every thing harsh, but if you know all, you would pity and forgive. Believe me, Lucy, I learned too late, what a jewel you were in comparison with any other woman I ever saw." "How about Louise!" questioned Mrs. Ashley. "Didn't you ever hear? She led mo a mis erable life, and we quarreled, and she used to flv at me like a mad creature. She finally the next Issue of the McCoolc Democrat, and the reunited couplo began the neiv year to gether, at Akron, Colorado. Frona i. Gat U,iH Yankee Blade. m m m ANIMAL LANGUAGE. Incontrovertible Evidence That Speech Is Not Limited to Mao. The intellectual superiority of civil zed man over his savage brethren is due to the multiplicity of his objects of thought, and precisely so is it with the intellectual superiority of the savage man over his Simian ancestors. The actions of nil have tho same aim viz., the supplying of the wants of physical nature and the gratifying of the desires aroused in the mind. The old theory that speech was altogether limited to the human race has now to be given up once and for all. for such a state ment can not stand against tho scientific evidence brought forward to oppose it from all quarters. Language is but a product of reflec tion and experience, and originated, in all probability, in interjection or the instinctive expression of the subjective impressions, derived from external nature; and just as tho reflective powers of tho race were developed and shown more brilliantly as each stage in the evolutionary march of intellect was passed, so did language pass from the simple monosyllabic cries of the lower animals and savage men to the complex dialects of modern civilization; and it is worthy of note that at the present day, or at least very recently, there were races of savage men inhab iting the earth who possessed no proper language at all, and could not, on account oi tnetr manner ol living, be placed on a higher intellectual level than the higher apes; while we have the authority of the leading phil ogists of the day in support of the fact that the monosyllabic cries of some of the lower human tribes arc well within I the grasp of the ape's voice. you, you rascal!" ex-J . --i- -- .....v ...... .iw...v "Ain't vou a nrettv'Can not be lmnugnea nave described f-"m-vm - HUNTING HIPPOPOTAMI. How the Tonne Are Caught by the Aetata of Menagerie Proprietor. I have counted as many as twenty hippopotamus heads in ono pool." said Mr. Lohso. "and the river is full of them. Of course, it would be impossi ble to catch the old ones, but they liavo to be got out of tho way, and the only way to do is to shoot them. I have shot six in one pool in an afternoon. As soon as all the old ones are killed, the hunters and they are very brave ones who go after hippopotami harpoon the vounjj through the neck. The neck is very thick and fat. and if the liar- t poou is skillfully thrown there is no , POINTS FOR LADIES. niats aail Saggentioea Concerning the) Ijitet lire Nnveltie. French percale remains a popular material for serviceable wear ia women's undergarments. French nainsook is the material from which imported French gowns am made. Imperial lawn, a goods finished like a linen cambric, is used for niatince sacques and gowns. The materials used for trimming ia hand-made French underwear are real Valenciennes lace and French laces ia same patterns. Small black mantles of Bcngalinc, IrtrifVAa i9 Irilliiwr tlir 1411 ti cm Iti utoiwif. t ." i? .i i ' silk or embroidered cashmere, trimmed anius. A float is fastened to the har- . , ... . . poon bv a rope, and when the animal --", v-u'" !-.". - r.. ;. ,... uifcwvj . ... m.... long conferences held by monkeys where one individual addressed the assem bly at great length, fixing the attention of all upon himself and quelling even t disturbance bv a loud and harsh crv. which was at once recognized and J obeyed by the multitude; and we need no traveler to point out to us tho many notes of call and recognition possessed by birds of all kinds, who thor oughly weu understand eacii oilier s expressions, and, moreover, are able to produce quite a string of different notes consecutively, and without any hesitation. In fact, tho organ of voice in some of the lower animals far ex ceeds in power that of some tribes of the human family. . The Euphonia niustca of the East Indies can perform the seven notes in the scaJc; the chafliuch not only sings real songs, but invents them, one of his songs containing as man- as live long strophes, while the songs of many savage races of men nevpr run to half that length, and when Cook visited the Fiji archipelago the native women could only Bing from la to mi. Asia appears to have been the birthplace of stringed instruments, no Southern tribes ever having been discovered using such musical appliances. We see, therefore, a gradual improvement taking place in vocal apparatus as w rise in the animal scale, which results in speech and song. and. indirectly, in becomes completely extiaus'ed in its efforts to free itself it is drawn gently ( to tho shore by tins rope, and secured. It is put into a pen and kept there and ! fed upon goat's milk until its wound . is healed, when it is driven to tho seriffa. j "As I said, the hippopotamus hunters are very courageous mm can swim and dire like seals. I lost one of my best men the last trip I made on a hippopotamus hunt. Early one morniiijr we saw a young hippo potamus in the water near the opposite bank of tho river, Before I , could stop him, Elbibo. the chief of my f hunters, was in the river and swim ming rapidly across to harpoon tint animal. lie got close to it and had raised his arm to throw the harpoon when he suddenly gave a yell and sank out of sight A ripple near where ha had been told us that he had been drag ged under by a crocodile. We had given him up as lost, when he reap peared and made his way to the bank, where he lay down exhausted. His Corset covers are cut high at tho back, with Pompadour front or pointed front, the pointed styles being a feature of the season in all undergarments. Gloves having wide bands of stitch ing, in self or contrasting colors, aro still in vogue, nevertheless the plain Etyles are quite as desirable as ever. For little girls, from three to tea years of age. white muslin frocks aro made up of open embroidery in all over designs to be worn with guimpes. Short skirts and walking skirts aro 6hown in lawn and nainsook, with trimmings of line quarter-inch tucks, and insertion and holders of embroidery and lace. Babies jnst in short clothes wear tiny shoes of embroidered cashmere, white, blue or pink, with bows and two rows of ribbou up the front and tassels on the sides. Matinees are of surah, nainsooks and various other materials. Scotch ginghams for frocks for even the tiniest girls are chosen in largo- left arm was torn off at tin: shoulder. . I"---'--- aml w-e irregular stripes. I did what I could for the poor fellow ! -'-: colors are also made up for their but he bled to death that night. Ho I us, never made a crv. but asked me o met- Ilienc;v rrenensuapesm gowns aro ly just before he died to see that his two wives did not siiflfisr from nnvirrv ' Mr. Lohso has also had c;t?!- i featmes of the Directoirc styles are re- i , -.! I proiiueed m many oi tne new snanes. Main polonaise costumes are noted in most instances considerable higher in the neck than last season. Tho times hunting the rhinoceros. As with the elephants the young an- run down by horsemen until tliev are exhausted among the spring importations. Tho and " i 1 .. r. ii , it -i Tl.n ll,v rl.;..n,.r..c S tl... l......l IlunaiMl ' "Miauy Ol UIlO WOOI, ..u wu-v -vuiwi mi bax. 7. M. m. ' -m - . m uic Mtiri ot ieugaiiue or ouier reppeu, silk. The first choice in embroideries instrumental music of various degrees: and we find fresh proof that there N as wide a diflerence between the de velopement of civilized European and the savage man as between that of tin? savage man and his brute ancestry. Gentleman's Magazine. m m m VORACIOUS REPTILES. XatarmtUt Rockland Drsrrlbm How a Pj thon Tnkes II In liuucr. It is not every one who has seen a python take a meal. It is usually averse to dead food; but it is partial to a live rabbit, or a chicken, or a guinea-pig. or by preference a rat. The python seems to know that the rat will try to escape and he gives it no time or quarter. With a rapidity that can hardly be conceived lie seizes the rat with his mouth and the fatal coil passes around the creature, squeezing all the life out of it anil reducing the body to the form of an elongated sansazc, which the aaake lubricates with its own slime and swallows entire. If a fowl is put into a python's cage the snake some times seems to take no notice, and the frightened bird, finding that no harm comes to it. begins to ruffle its feathers and to peck about, occasionally trying its beak on the snake's skin. But after awhile the end of the pvtlion's tail mav be seen to quiver wiih a strange emo tion, whilst the small, black, beady eve is fixed upon the fowl. Suddenly ran away with a bank cashier. I wasn't there is a convulsion. The snake has sorry inatsno went, ettner. i bad been to a tree until its spirit is broken suf ficiently to permit of its being driven to the camp. As in hunting the other animals there is a particular class of trained men who go after the rhinoc eros. They must be expert riders, and fully acqainted with the habits of tho huge, dangerous beasts they attack. "An infuriated rhinoceros," said Mr. Lohse, "is literally blind with rage." He puts his head down, and runs in a bee line, knocking down every thing in his way. If there was a stone wall in front of him he would smash rhrht up against it. Sonio of my Homrahu hunters wounded a female rhinoceros one day, when the brute ran off. The men were securing her young when she suddenlv stopped and rushed to ward them. It was such an unbeard-of thing for one of the animals to do. that the hunters were taken completely by surprise. One of them was caught by her horn and thrown high in the air. He dropped to t he ground a corpse, for the rhinoceros had disemboweled him. V. T. Evening Sun. arc those from the French manufac turers, which copy faithfully the pat terns and style of needlework. A novelty in footwear is a houso shoe) of Russian leather, which may be ob tained in both the crimson and taa colors. Some neat examples had small studs of cut steel or bronze on the ia step. A'. Y. World AMERICAN WOMEN. ni HARD ON THE EYES. ire Almost drinking and my credit was gone, and I was so down in the world that I didn't car for the disgrace;. I've hunted for you ever since, but I had Riven up all hopes of finding you. I think Providence must have directed me here. I was over by Culbcrtson looking at a piece of land to-day, and I tried to make it back to McCook, but the blizzard overtook me, and the horses wouldn't face it, so we drifted here. My money, friends and repu tation are gone, and I'm going to take a claim and settle down and try again. Tou must help me to redeem myself, Lucy. I've been a terrible scoundrel, but I've paid dearly for all my misdeeds." To repeat all that was said by this man and woman, who had once been husband and wife, would fill a volume. The main sabject dwelt upon by Ashley Winthrop was a plea for forgiveness and a remarriage. Had be returned in the full tide of pros perity, it is doubtful whether any argument could have prevailed with Lucy; as it was, however, pity for his misfortune and fallen condition, tho knowledge that he nejJcd her to help him in hi3 new start, belief in the sincerity of his repentanes, and the thought of her children bavins a legal guardian in case of her death, whereas, before they would have been loft to strangers, all worked in his favor. The notice of final proof to ba mado on beinff utterly devoid of tho finer ssusibi'.i-' Airs. Ashlay's homestead entry avpeured ia 2lagouinc moved and the fowl has disappeared, and can only be discovered by the end of a feather or two protruding from the coils in the python's neck which have crushed the bird's life out. In its natural state the python will catch a deer or a wild pig and crush it in the powerful coils of its neck. There is a well-authenticated story of a large py thon having caught two wild sucking pigs simultaneously, crushing both with the same coil of its neck. In tho case of the python mentioned above, which was killed by the Horns of the buck that it had swallowed, the snake must have been able to break all the bones of the body, but the stag's horns were proba bly too sharp and pointed to be easily crushed, and the snake rashly took the chance of digesting them in its stomach. No stories of a python killing a man ever came to my knowledge, but one of the I keepers at the Calcutta Zoologica' Gardens had his arm much injured ono morning by a python coiling itself on it aad squeezing it severely before the man could bo rescued. Longman Vthy Pittsburgh Iron Heaters All r Sighted. It is a fact that a large percentage of the men employed as heaters in the iron mills of Pittsburgh are more or less troubled with defective vision, the na ture of their work compelling them to gaze for protracted periods npon tho intensely dazzling light of metal at white heat, which tlu-y must be able to distinguish from the flames of burning g:rf which surround it. Secretary Will iam Martin, of the Amalgamated As sociation of Iron and Steel Workers in Pittsburgh, says that among men who have worked for a few years in the iron mills near-sightedness or weakness of the eyes is almost universal, and ad- vi-ed the reporter to interview a few of the employes of any mill in the city to test this statement. Tin's was done, resulting in confirm ation from half a dozen heaters in one of the largest rolling-mills in the city. The men seen had worked in the iron mills from periods ranging from three t twenty years, and with very flight differences their powers of vision had all l)Ctn affected in the same manner. They are unable to distinguish small objects at any considerable distance. One was entirely unable to read the print in an ordinary newspaper; an other pointed out a clock .with a dial a foot in diameter and said he could not see the hands ten feet away. With ono the trouble was permanent and unvarj ing. while another's eyes were restored to their normal condition if he stopped a month. None of them experience pain, and it does not seem to have oc curred V any one that a physician's services were needed. They regard the change that takes place in their cye-i as a sort of process of "'getting used to necessary requirements of their trade. The reporter on looking into one of their blazing heaters could distinguish only a blinding glare, scarcely inferior to the dazzling light of the sun i'self. ret these men must be able to see cleariv the white-hot masses of metal through the flames of the gas that is burniner all around them. The diffi culty of doing this may be compared to that which would be experienced in trying to perceive one bright light through another. Yet the experienced heater docs it with as much ease as if the hot iron were so much wood float ing in water. They say that no degree of proficiency can be acquired in li-s.-han thive months' time, and that since t!iu employment of natural gas in the furnaces the difficulty has become iniie'i greater and the effect upon t':e -ye aiore pronounced. tiUsburgh Lc'isr. Some of Thnnn Who Cat Quite In Karopesut Polities. The two most powerful republican statesmen iu France are married to American women. Waddington was married to an American woman in En gland, and Clemenceau was married ta a Yankee girl on her native heath. Waddington is the son of English parents, bnt a native of Franco and a thorough Frenchman in tastes and ia stincts. Clemenceau, when he was exiled from his country in the time o the Little Napoleon, settled for awhile iu the United States and taught school in Connecticut. There was a bevy of marriageable young girls in his set, and all were en gaged to wed but one. Ho persuaded the one to accept him. and the hist en gaged was the first to bo married, Clemenceau hastened home at tho breaking out of the Franco-Prussian war. fought for his country, and when peace came, he took an active part ia politics. He is called an extreme radical in France, but in this country be would pass for a conservative. He ' is a thorough republican, and is am bitious to plant the main stems of the United States Constitution in Franco. Mrs. Clfmenceau is the head of tho house, and has the pleasure of know ing that her husband is one of the most domestic and best regulated men mor ally in French public life. Some eminent British politicians, too. are wedded to Americans. Sir William Vernon HSrcourt, Gladstone's first lieu tenant in commandof the Liberal party, is married to the daughter of John, Lathrop Motley, atone time Minister to England. Harcoiirt brurs the reputa tion of being gracious to his wife oni. He has rhe ugliest disposition of ariy man in English public life. He can seldom say a kind word of a-ivbodv but his wife rhen a j;niff w.orij w' :uj swer as well. In thiscnuntrv Ik? wonM stand no chance in politic-", but in En gland members of Parliament and pub lie men generally seldom come in con tact with the great body of the people. Harcoiirt can mount a platform and larrup the Tories for hours at a time, and that satisfies his Liberal coastitu- ' cuts. The wife of Thomas Power O'Conner,. Mr. Parnell's ablest- lieutenant, is also an American, the daughter of the latu Judge Paschall. of Texas &. Laui Republican, - - How to Manage Manure. Mr- Waldo F. Brown, a noted Ohio farmer, says it is a common practice to throw the manure from the st:if,b. .,.- of a window and allow it to accumulate in a heap against the barn, when it rots the building and often contamin ates the rurof the stable, Fresh manure should never be left in a eoaieal heap. Probably the best wav to man.-i.-,. t U , .-neat- .. evenly m an adjoining shed m which stoek is kept We to tramp it. It. however, it is put out of doors ,t should always be wheeled away from the building 3d mixed with T : -f re aml W:ls-e from 4ii-Biac..Y. JT. Witness. tho I tji ft? BaMEiggKSSaBgSg rJM"i r" Si'.-s-rarBBtwKMT