"5"""S""S5n"r'?5i r.2 ,j BED CLOUD CHIEF A. C. HOSMER, Proprietor. RED CLOUD. - - NFRRAKA TREAN; on THE MORMON'S DAUGHTER. 3y AI.TA SULTON rCEER. 1 Written Whila Living in Utah, CopyrisM't, JW, by UA. X. Ktllooo Xeka- I CIUPTEK xR-.-Con-cluded. CM in Heaven! be had come too late. His heated blood flashed to ice, then to lire again, for the figure in the light shitted its position and lifted the rifle again. But the rescuer did not wait: with a bound he ivent over the assassin, striking him a terrible blow with the revolver, and sending man and rifle rolling in the dust, then on through the door and flung it shut. Like lightning Elchard snatched up his revolver aud fired, and the wild, lx-gricied aud panting appa rition fell crashing beside him. In an in stant Elchard was on hi3 feet presenting his weapon again. -Don't shoot me again!' gasped the fallen man. 'Tin Orson Beam! I've come to save vou ! Men out there are going to kill you !' Elchard gave him one look of wonder and consternation, then leaped over his body and boiled the door, whirled about and shut the window and dropped the shade over it, then he turned to Beam. Oli, my poor friend, where did 1 hit you?" he groaned, falling on his knees beside him. 'In tny side here. I guess it's not bad. I fell mostly from exhaustion, I think." panted Beam. Elchard tore open his cloth ing and found the wound. It was not se rious but bleeding freely, and he sprang up the little stair to the room above, drew a sheet from the bed, and descending, tore it in large strips and bound them tightly around the man's body. Then he brought a pail of water from a Warner and bathed the face and hands of this grimy savior of bis with the tenderness of a woman. "Where did you come from, and why did" you do this:" asked Elchard, gently. "I came from town," said Beam. I found out by accident that they meant to to kill vou to-night. I wanted to prevent it." "What got you in such a plight?" 'I had to climb the face of the mountain; thv were ahead of me.' Elchard gave an exclamation of astonish fcicnt. Beam got up waveringly and looked at lata. Elchard put out his hands grate fully, but the wounded man drew back and bis eyes filled. "No." he said. '"I'm not fit. I tried to kill you the other day. This is my res'itution. and if vou cau forgive me it is all I ask."' Elchard stared at him in dumb amaze ment for a moment, then he caught the man's hands and wrung them. "You are free." h- said. "You have earned forgive ness, and it is yours." They had scarcely thought of the as sassins, their meeting had bean so strange, yji now th?y listened. Evidently tie men had fled. Elchard turned to Beam. "I was going to start for the Eat to-night," he said. "Miss Hartman is waiting for me." Beam's paleness deepened, and hs leaned against the desk for support. " Yes yes, you should go,'" he faltered. -But I shall never go aud leave you in this a-curscd quarter of the world." said Elchard. "It was reported that rou had 2m but now I see why you iave re mained, and I shall not desert you.1 "No. you must not wait for me ; I can not j:o j-et.""' said the other. "Not now-not yet; when I am better I will come," and he wavered about and sat down. Elchard lookod at him with swimming eyes. He i'ould not divine wiat was in this man's heart, but somethingabout him touched his own heart with a greit pity. "If you would help ae down to the bunk houses," said the woindod man, wearily, "I will stay there till norning. Then one of the men may be cat get my horse and clothes and go with me v the railroad. If Tin not able to go they an get me the doc tor, and I will stay hec a few days, then start. Mother is waitin for me at Chey enne: she will be glad to know of this; it will be my greatest rowz-d." "I will watt and tak you to her,' said Elchard. resolutely. No," said Beam, with something like consternation.. "Io, I must not. I can not go yet! Vo are. friends now; please let me vait until you are gone and we shall emain so. Miss Hartinaa is In danger evty moment; you nger cvey moment; you i r If you eel what I have V my fried; if youaroj.iy ise take-her now bo-. " must go to-night. done makes you oblisred to me, please fore harm comes to her: Elchard put his arms abut the man's shoulders and held him a moient; his heart was full. The truth as to thi brothcr-b-ing was glimmering in bis msciousness. He said nothing; words were ot for such a cusa. He went up-stairs andbrougt down some of his own clothing and left tcm by tho man. v.-ho sat with head lcantg forward upon the desk. "Please oecuj. my room until vou arc woU." said Elchal, huskily. "I will send up a man to watchwith you, and another to guard the place. fou shall not lack for friends and comfortsintil you are ready to j;o. Good-bye." Beam "if ted up his head and pu out his hand. Elchard took it in bottof his, fctooped down and kissed it with tbroken "God bless you."' and passed out to tho night- In half an hour he was drivit down the mountain. I But what of the woman whom thes men loved J What or the human wolvefrom whom she had fled away into the darless! In the sime hour that Orson Bearvas toiling up the face of Eagle mountain o, 0f the saddest tragedies that ever staineebe Wasatch range was occurring oveiat ravs peak. When the carriage bcatg the "three figures drew out of Hartm3S lane it passed across tho stream and . rectly up the valley. The tires of the who were bound with cloth aud tho horse's fo were muffled. It moved forward in tl ferlmfss like a phantom, tver ana ano the woman r.trusrsled. but the two men lick atjer uw-i a viw uuuvtvu tuw. Her breath in ,vas labored and difficult, the blocl being between her teeth and lier Head cor. fatal flight. Why the man was tncre, ana Til?and her hands tied in a painful posi- which lifo he had aimed to end, must ever tion behind her. Ah, God. how cruel it was 1 remain a mystory. Perhaps he, too, had sad how fierce and low Thy creatures some-deceived his cruel heart with hopes of times arc! Trean Hartman's love, and thought to rid At length they left the valley and entered the field of Beam just when that honest but a gorge which ran along the west side ofcrced-ridden youth should, silence Elchard. Gray's iak. When they had entered itsoe that as it may, his life was taken froa jaws they seemed swallowed up by theum; he had become unworthy of it, earth. An unseen stream gurgled and mur-md js aim and ultimate end are hid in mured along the canyon's bottom, and on shadow. Mrs. Smoot now lives in the East, cither lttind the huge walls piled upward in .nd breathes the free air with cver-increas-dark outlines against the stars, while the 3g gratitude. Orson Beam is minister of grav arch ol the miiky-way hung over the gaping chasm like a bridge of spangled mists. It was lonely and haunting, and for a long time the carriage went slowly on ward through the gloom. The men had never spoken an audible word since they atartcd, and the woman now ceased to struggle. Apparently she had become unconscious. After a time they turned into a smaller canyon that ran up the mountain toward the east. Hero the road was not good, and the smaller man got out and led the .team. In a little time the canyon seemed to cease, and they came out upon the side of the mountain. Then they stopped. Just above them was tho dark opening of an abandoned minor's drift. They lifted tho helpless figure from the carriage and laid it upon the ground. Then the small man knelt down and prayed with his wild, dark face turned up to the stars. Before he had finished the muffled figure began to strain and struggle, and when he had said 'Amen" he arose, and handing the large man a surgeon's knife, turned away with his face toward tho mountain's top. As he looked the rim of the moon came into a notch near the sum mit, he heard a strange noise behind him, a sound to be remembered in dreadful dreams, then a hoarse horrified kind of shriek that whirled him about with its f rightfulness. Half of the moon was throwing its light down the mountain side, and Hyrum Parley was staggering back with arms lifted and eyes protruding! "I've killed CistencJ" ho shouted. "O God, I've killed Cisterie !" and he caught his hands m his hair, and plunged about like a drunken man. His limbs seemed to double up under the weight of his body, and in a moment he fell head long among the stones and lay there beat ing his face among them in frenzy. The little man stood still and gazed in hor ror. Ah, they had shed innocent blood! The unpardonablo sin was theirs! And tho moon swung into the notch, and looking down a moment with ineffablo sorrow, passed slowly behind the peak and left them, in darkness. The explanation was this: Cistcnc, jeal ous of her lord, had watched him slip away mysteriously toward Hartman's, and had followed. Standing in the darktiC33 under the trees to watch for him, the poor woman had seen Trean fly by her like a midnight spirit, and, stepping forward in fright, was hurled to the earth by the girl's pur suers and gagged and bound. It was a sad ending to a sad deception. Faraway in Norway, the same moonlight which had just shown her pallid face to Farley had fallen but a few hours lefore on the cottago roof which sheltered her through all her peaceful childhood, and had looked down with seeming pity into the eyes of her gray haired parents, eyes that longed and hun gered for their child, but should never bo satisfied. But Trean! She had fled on through the darkness, with her heart shrinking and her feet winged with fec. She knew nothing of the cruel miracle wrich had saved her, but, in fancy, feeling the wugh clutch of horrible hands upon her still, she strovo only to gain her lover's side. Just beyond the rotv of trees, into whose protecting shadows she had plunged, a large gate stood open. Through this she ran, and on across the fields and around the town. In a short time, from sheer exhaustion, sho ceased running, but still hurried forward with quick breath and fluttering pulse, and ever and anon looking back into the gloom with a throb of horror and fear. When she had entered the road below the town, she suddenly remembered that Elchard was to come by the other road, and she turned back into the fields, and, crossing the val ley, found the dim way and hastened on. It was a long walk to Eagle canyon, and lonely as death, but at last she reached its gloomy mouth and entered. Then on and on until it seemed her weary limbs would fail her. At the entrance to the smaller gorge she stopped, not being sure of tho road beyond that point, and sat down in the darkness by the wayside, quivering with weariness. The inooa was lifting its pale disk over the mountains now, and pres ently tho yawning chasm broke open as by magic, with all its huge bowlders, gnarled pines and lowering ledges turned to gro tesque phantasmagoria in the misty light. Then suddenly three horsemen came rid ing down the gorge; the one in the center, who was evidently wounded, being steadied in his saddle by the other two. The girl shrunk into tho shadow, and they passed away toward the city. She could wait no longer after seeing that, but fled like a wild thing up the canyon toward the mines with her heart crying out in apprehension. But soon the blessed sound of carriage-wbeeU came to her ears. It was like music, and she hastened on. When Elchard saw her standing by the road, with her hair fallen down her back and her large eyes lustrous with fear and yearning, ho gave a cry of amazement. In a moment she was in his arms, clinging to him like a hunted thing. "O Paul, take me away from this awful place!" she implored. 'Yes, darling, we wilt go now," ho said, and before the dawn broke they had passed from these valleys forever. '&f- - mimJ fka I T-4sL 4&& "OH, take me awat FKOM THIS M.ACE!" Dr. Dubettc, too, was never seen again in Utah after that might. Long afterward it was rumored that he had been seen in old Peru, a human wreck wandering about tho lonely borders of the world, and all but mad with the belief that he who sheds innocent b'ood can never be forgiven. Bishop Parley died within that year of continuous drunk enness, and at the last laid bare tho pitiable secret that tortured him out of the world. But wnat of Arscn, the tithe-gatherer! Months afterward a youth searching for lost cattle found him lying intkebramblo directly across the road from the spot whore Orson Beam had stood when heat tempted Paul Elchard's life. In his hand was the weapon whose bullet had stung Beam through the shoulder, and in bis brain the lead which had left Beam's weapon, stinging Elchard's tcmplo in its saner, sweeter gSpel, and Paul Elchard, clped by his faithful and worthy wife, both xm the rostrum and in the halls of law, is labored long to bring in tnat dawn softening the gloom of hich at last is ormonism. Tmzso. FLYING FOR HIS LIFE. How Emperor William One THad to Hide In ttarntaad Hutch. This remarkable account, which has only now been made public, although the nioro important details were known, is abstracted from tho unpub lished memoirs of a diplomatist who was a participator in the events of the eventful year of revolution, and an eye witness of much that concerned the late Emperor William of Germany. In 1848. tho year of the continental revolutions, the people of Berlin, fol lowing tho example of those of Paris. raised barricades, and after four days fighting the King, the elder brother of the late Emperor, who was then Princo of Prussia, ordpred the Prince, who had been organizing the attacks on the bar ricades, to retire with the troops from Potsdam. Prince William sought an interview with the King, who refused to rescind the order, when the Prince broke his swonl aud. throwing it at his elder brother's feet, left the palace. The nobles anil tho aristocracy wished the King to abdicate in favor of the Prince, but the people were so enraged against the latter, in consequence ol his ordering the barricades to be car ried by the troops that he had to es cape in disguise, whilst tho democracy triumphed and paraded the King on horseback through the streets of Ber lin. The Prince, disguised as a coach man, took refuge on an island in the river: but here he was not safe, and ho i lied to the Spardau; but, being known. the mayor talked of giving him to tho democrats as a traitor to his countrj. and lie was again obliged to have re course to flight to save his life. To save the crown jewels, the plate and the imperial treasuers from the clutches of the victorious party, it was necessary to remove them from the pal ace. Fortunately a private door opened on to the river, and the valuables wero placed on board barges, which, for the puqiosos of disguise, were draped with black-cloth, as though they contained the bodies of insurgents slain at the barricades. In this manner they were transferred to the railways, and reached Hamburg as merchandise, and were put on board a vessel about to leave for England. The Prince, however, had to leave the railway being threatened with death on several occasions; to save his life he had still further to disguise him self, cutting off his beard and wearing strange clothes. Wandering on foot he hid himself away in peasants cot tages and slept in barns. It was im portant that he should embark for En gland without being recognized. To accomplish this end he passed over the frontier on to Danish territory and arrived St last at a villa belonging to his friend Oswald, where, for the first time since he left Berlin, he enjoyed the luxury of a bed. The following day the Prince, under the name of Muller, embarked on board a vessel about to sail for London, accompanied by a single aid-de-camp. London Queen. m USE OF GLYCERINE. How It Can R Mado AYallable For Inna merable Farpo-te. Few people realize the importance of the uses of pure comm ercial glycerine, and how it can bo used and made avail able for purposes where no substitute is found that will take its place; and herein, Mr. Editor, if you will allow mu space to speak of its utility, no doubt many of your readers will find an op portunity to thank you. As a dressing i for ladies shoes nothing equals it, mak ing the leather soft and pli able without soiling the garments in contact- Where the feot sweat, burnt alum add glyce rine one of the former to two of the latter rubbed on the feet at night and a light or -open sock worn, the feet washed in the morning with tepid wa ter, will keep them during the day free from odor, so disagreeable to those per sons who are sufferers. For bunions and corns Cannabis in dituis and glycerine, equal parts. I painted on the bunion or corn and bound around with Canton flannel, add ing a few drops of the liquid to the flannel where it comes in contact with the affected parts, will soon restore to health. As a face lotion, oatmeal made in a paste with glycerine two parts, water one part and applied to the face at night, with a mask worn over, will give in a short time, if faithfully pur sued, a youthful appearance to the skin. As a dressing in the bath, two quarts of water with two ou nces of glycerine. ; scented with rose, which will impart a final freshness and delicacy to the skin. In severe paroxysms in coughing, either in coughs, colds, or consump tives, one or two tables poonfuls of pure glycerine in pure rye whisky or hot rich cream will afford almost immediate re lief: and to the consumptive a panacea is found by daily use of glycerine in ternally, with the proportion of one part of powdered willow charcoal and two parts of pure glycerine. For diseased and inflamed gams, two parts of golden seal, one part of powdered burnt alum, and two parts of glycerine, made in a paste and nibbed on the gums and around the teeth at night, strengthens and restores the gums to health, provided no tartar is present to cause the disease, which must be removed first before applying. And finally, the epicure who relishes a nice breakfast dish of fried fish, will find "a feast for the gods' by frying the fish in glycerine to a brown, addiug a small sprig of parsley when nearly done. J. S. Charles. D. D. .. in Scien tific American. There are only eight towns In the United States the names of which begin witiiX. Seven of these are Xenias. and the other Xeaonhon A WONDERFUL CAVE. Aa Old Haunt of tho Hortoe Xndiaas la Northern California. The npnning to this wonderful cave of caves lips about two miles from the road leading from Ad in to Linkville ami Southern Oregon and some sixty miles from tho former place. It is in Modoc County and about fifteen miles from the famous lava beds, where Gen eral Canby was so treacherously mur dered by the Modoc Indians. Mr. Spalding lives some two miles from the entrance to the caves and was ono ot the first discoverers, being attracted to the spot bv seeing steam arising from I the opening. This was during the last winter. Unliko the lava beds, the country here is covered with soil that produces feed for cattle and also a straggling growth of juniper trees. The opening, as described, is in a slight de pression and presents the appearance of an exaggerated badger-hole, just large enough to admit a man. From the opening the descent is a gracbjal incline for a number of feet, when sud denly it emerges into a wide 'passage or passages for a number diverge from this point, and the exploiter can choose his own course, the two exploriug parties thus far having taken different courses. Mr. Spalding's party consisted of three persons, and they walked in apparently one direction five hours by the watch before retracing their steps, and were apparently as far from the end as when they entered. For a distance the floor is dry, but farther in it becomes muddy, a soft adobe day covering the floor, which is a smooth, solid rock. Tiie floor of tlie cave scorned to be nearly level, while the roof in many places reached far above their heads, while at other places it oarao so near the floor that they were obliged to crawl on hands and knees. Much of tho roof is thickly studded with stalactites. At short intervals all along the route taken by the explorers openings to other galleries were seen. The atmosphere Is oppressively warm, and not a single current of air was met with to disturb the burning of the can dles, which are a necessity to aid in 1enetrating the darkness of the place. Not an instance of animal life was met with, although numerous tracks were seen in the mud, some of whicii were large enough to have been made by tho California lion; The conclusion ar rived at by the oxplorors was that there was perhaps a number of openings at which the animals entered. About half a mile from the entrance a pool of water as clear as crystal and as cold as ice was encountered. Near this pool evidences of a number of camp fires were seen, showing conclusively that the Indians at some time had visited this place. At one place a curious pyramidal-shaped hillock was encoun tered, isolated front its surroundings by an open passage aronnd aad over it. This little pyramid is about fifteen feet high and perhaps thirty feet through at the base. One agreeable feature of the exploration of this cave is that no dropping of water from the roof is met with. From the above it is evident" that there underlies this won derful section a labyrinth of caves and passages which will take time aud pa tience to explore, aud wuich when fully explored may add much to cthnolngy and other sciences. Han Francisco Call AMERICAN LANGUAGE. Wo Wtll Ha va It a Soon an We Have a Pare Anericaa Raaa. It is heretofore been the belief held by the philosophers and Hunkers fronc the earliest times that language is an evolution growing in developement as human thought needed a vocal vehicle for expression. Savage tribes with an extremely limited range of ideas, and whose actual transactions of daily life embraced only the simplest facts, wonld necossarHy have need for aa extremely simple and scant language. As they might advance in civilization and culture, they would improve their language to meet tho necessities of ex pression. The invention of alleged universal languages by the act of a sin gle individual sets all the laws -of lin guistic evolution at naught, and can therefore accomplish nothing useful iu any large sense. The history of the English language presents a great number of facts which illustrate this evolution. Since no race so far as known possesses an indigenous or original civilization, bnt has always learned from some external and superior source, so there is no language which is complete in itself, developed from indigenous roots without admixture from the exterior. The English tongue, composed as it is of many diverse ele ments, has long been undergoing the processes of evolution which must con tinue to operate for a great period in the fature, so that the day will como when the language will be as different from the Englsh of to-day as is our language from that of Chaucer. In America the development must take to itself forces and forms which will never come into operation in the mother country, and finally through thoir intervention we will have a distinctively American lan guagf. It is impossible to formulate aa American language until we cease to have constant ami extensive acces sions of foreign immigration; until, indeed, we can assimilate aud absorb all the admixture of foreign blood. Then we will have an American race, then we will have an American lan guage. Noah Webster was its great forerunner; ff. O. Picayune. In the Paris prison of detention recently a person committed as a maa fifty-four years old, after being locked up was found to be a woman. It was found that she had put on male tlothes twenty jears before, and hrjd worn them ever since without being dis orered. SCIENCE ANO INDUSTRY. Extracting oil from codar boughs la a new industry in Maine. Steel, when hardened, decreases in specific gravity, contracts in length and increases in diameter. Rosewood shingles are being im- ported as a novelty foi trimming showy cottages at seaside resorts. A New York hatter says that none oi tne so-eaueu rauaiua uaia are muuo at Panama. The best of them, he ex plains, comes from Guyaquil. A late refinement in dontistry is a tiny electric lamp for lighting up the cavities of teeth during the process of tilling. Dealers in hard wood furnishings say that sycamore wood is rapidly coming into use. It works" well, makes an excellent lluish, ami is much cheaper than birch, maple, or oak. A surar refining company with ?o.UUU.UUO capital lias been starteti to use Henry Friend's new method of re- lining by electricity. The cost will bo about SHventy-fivo cents a ton. A recent English invention relates to casting packing rings ready for use without boring or turning. The rings are cast in a chill mold aronnd a me talic core. The introduction of American watches into England has reduced the number of gold cases marked at the London Assay Office from 34.844 in 1876 to 20,416 in 1886. and of silver cases from ll'J.394 in 1876 to 95.708 in 1SS6. The mystery regarding the whites of eggs after tho ice-cream factories have used up their yelks is explained by a statement that they are used to make albumenized paper for photogra ph. The question having arisen as to why the fallen branches of trees, at certain stages of decay, are more or Icbs colored through their tissues with various shades of green, it is alleged that chemical analysis shows the pres ence of iron as the base of tho green coloring matter. The smallest circular saw in use is one used in slitting gold pens. It is a disc about the size of a five-cent piece and has the thickness of ordinary paper. Its velocity tends to keep it rigid enough for use; four hundred revolutions a minute is the ordinary rate of these diminutive saws. The latest idea in tho direction of waterproof footwear is a shoe made with a stout calfskin vamp, seamless, underlying which is a vamp of thin rubber, and between it and tho lining, which is of stout canvas. The bottom of the shoes has a rubber interlining between the outer and inner soles, and thus the shoe is about as near water proof as a leather shoe can bo. Barrels arc now being made of hard and soft wood, each alternate stave being of the soft variety and slightly thicker than the hard wood stave. The edges of the staves are cut square, anil, when placed together to form the barrel, the outsides are even, and there is a V-shaped crack between each staye from top to bottom. In this arrangement the operation of driv ing the hoops forces tLo edges of the bard staves into tho soft ones until the cracks are closed, and the oxtra thick ness of the latter causes its inner edges to lap over those of the hard wood staves, thus making the joint doubly secure. In some recent scientific experi ments on the effects of cold, two frogs were frozen solid in a temporature of about 20 F.. and kept in that con dition for half an hour. On thawing slowly they recovered perfectly, but it was found that large periods of exposure invraiably killed the animals. The ex periment was tried of freezing hermet ically sealed meat, so as to kill its bacterial organisms, and thus render it incapable of putrefying. It was found, however, that so low a temperature as 80 below zero would not destroy the vitality of micro-organisms. It was thus made cloar that the attempts to preserve meat for a long time by a momentary freezing of it must be abandoned. What Cause's Headache. Ovcrstudy. Overwork in doors. Want of fresh air in bed rooms. Nervousness, however induced. Want of abundant skin-exciting ex- ercisc, Tne excitement inseparable from a fashionable life. Neglect of the ordinary rules that couduce to health. Over-indulgence in food, especially of a stimlating character. Weakness or debility of body, how ever produced. This can only be remedied by proper nutriment. Work or study indoors, carried on in an uunatural or cramped position of body. Literary men and women ought to do most of their work at a standing desk, lying down now and then to case brain and heart and permit ideas to flow. They should work out of doors in nne weather with their feet resting on a board, not on the earth and under canvas in wet weather It is surprising the good this simple advice, if followed, can effect. Pioneer-Press. Why Johnny Waa Late. A crabbed old bachelor who teaches school not far from Austin was very in dignant at little Johnny Flapjack tho only son of Mrs. Flapjack, and she a widow for coming late. "1 couldn't help being late," sobbed Johnny. Why not?" "Because ma has done been and got married yesterday, aud I had to wait for my breakfast," Got married, has she? Any thing to make yon late at school. What won't she Uo uexL 1 wea?'- Ttxa Sittings. FARM ANO FIR ESI OS. Time is money in planting time, and an hour wasted way be an acre destroyed. Apple sauce is much improved by the addition of a tablespoonful of but- ter and requires less sugar. j Good sleep and enough of it is a I superior safeguard for health of men and women who overtask physical or . iuentai energies. a) Bloodiness can be hastened in a authority, by I hen, according to one ! leaving eggs in the nesti and giving a little hemp seed. Eight hours spent in work, and four hours spent In study, will afford J better results i:i th-. agricultural world than twelve hours spent wholly in manual labor. Western Plowman. Tho pork that bears the highest I price in the Enslish markets is that fattened bv the oeonle of Ireland. who fec.a a j,reat variety of materials, but i-ftl ir no com little or no corn. A good disinfectant is made by dissolving half a drachm of nitrate of lead in a pint of boiling water, then hs?1tc two drachms of common salt in eijlt or ten quart3 0f water. Sorrel is picked from the stems; washed well and drained, then put in an enameled saucepan or earthen crock with a piece of butter to steam in its own juice. A rich sauce f flour, but ter, gravy and the yelks of two or three eggs is served with it. and it is a delicate dish with roast lamb. As paragus is gently boiled ten to twenty minutes in salt water, drained and 6ericd with a sauce of two ounces of butter, a dessertspoonful of flour, the yelks of two eggs and part of the water in which the "grass" was tailed, which has the richest flavor of the plant. Egg Sauce for Spinach: Melt a tablespoonful of butter, add to it an even tablespoonful of flour, mix until smooth, and add a half-pint of boiling water; stir rapidly until the sauce is smooth and velvety, take from the fire, add a tablespoonful of butter cut into bits, a.teaspoonful of lemon juice, a half teaspoonful of salt, and a dash of white pepper; mix until the butter is melted, and add the yelks of the egg that have been pressed through a sieve. Bring the sauce to boiling point, pour it around the spinach and serve. Kalsotnine: Eight pounds of whiting and one-quarter of a pound of whito glue make the right proportions. Soak the glue over night in cold wator, and in the morning heat it until it is per fectly dissolved. Mix the whiting with hot water, stir the two thoroughly to. gethcr. and have the wash the con sistence of thick cream. Apply warm with a kalsomine brush, brushing it well in and finishing it as you go on. If warm skim milk is used instead of water, the glue maj be omitted. Be fore the wash is applied, all holes aud crevices should be stopped with plaster of Paris mixed with water. Colors to tint the walls may be procured at any paint store. CLEANING HARNESS. A New Way Which Is Said to Bo Saperler to Old Mthod. Let me say to all having any thing to do with harness keep out the lamp black. It never was intended to use on any kind of leather that is to bo blacked on the grain side, bnt only on the flesh side, ofsuchasis used for shoo leather, because when applied to the grain side it will rab off on your hands every time there is a damp spell or the leather gets wet. Nearly all country stores and harness shops keep for sale a preparation of neatsfoot of lampblack and other ingredients, for the purpose of oiling harness. I do not want any such on my harness. A better plan for cleaning, blacking and oiling your harness is this: First, take the harness apart wherever it can bo unbuckled; give each strap a good washing, using lukewarm water with a little washing soda in it. Scrub them well with 9 a scrubbing brush, and be sure you get all the grease and dirt off. Work them well in the hands until they are soft and pliant, for it is no use to apply oil on dry, horny leather; it will never become soft. After the harness is thoroughly cleansed with the soda water you will find places on some parts that will be a little red or foxy. To cover these rightly a little previous preparation must bo made. Take a small keg or a. half barrel and get some iron filings from a machine shop or old rusted stovepipe, wornout horse-shoes any kind of iron put them in this keg and cover with cider vinegar. Always keep it on hand, for thehtagorit stands the stronger it will get. After a few weeks draw off some of this color and put a little copperas into it. Now you have a complete grain color; 1 know of" none better. Take a brush and apply this liquid to parts oa the harness that show red, or yoacaa go all over them with it. This must he done immedi ately after you: have washed your har ness, before oiling; because it will aot dry too rapidly,, until about three parts dry, then apply pure cod oil plentifully on both sides not neatsfoot oil, as has been recommended. Tho cod oil has more body and is more lasting than any other oil I have ever used on leather that has been tanned with bark, besidea.'if you use neatsfoot oil. the rats. and rarjo will eat your harness, while that greased with cod oil they will nofc touek. After giving a good coat eft this cod oil. hang up as before until' dry. Then Iwouid go over them again with the oil. giving them but a i&ht k coat of it this time. After that dries in, wipe off with a dry, coarse doth. For common work harness -nothing more is needed, hut for carriage harness go over with a sponge and caafcHe soap, and wipe with a dry chamois skin, and you may depend upon it there will be no back to rub off on ,vonr haadfc- M. Chambers, a Boston QMu (