rr?-i Si " v .. f-t ,' VE, ', -C) t 2KJ-3't 1 (3"-ftt REST. Let us rest ourselves lt Worry J- -wave- your band to it K;M jonrflnger-tlps and tail 7 It f srewell a Ifctie wane. Weary of tbo weary way r We oaro come from yesterday. Let us fret us sot, instead. Of the weary way ahead. Let us panto aud catch our breita Oa the hitter aula of death. While we see the tender shoots Of the grasses sot the roots. While we yet look down not op To seolc out the buttercup And the daisy, where they wavo O'er the greca borne of the grave. Let us launch us smoothly oa Listless b:Ilows of the lawn. And drift out acrors the mala Of our childish dreams again. Voyage off beneath the trees. O'er the field's enchanted seas Where the lilies are our sails And oar seagulls, nightingales. - Where no wilder storm shall beat Than the wind that wares the wheat Abd no tempests burst above The eld laughs we used to love. i Lose all troubles gala release Languor and exceeding peace. Cruising idly o'er the vast. Calm mid-ocean of the past. Let us rest ourselves a bit. Worry! waro your hand to it Kiss your finger-tips and smile It farewell a little while. -J. Whitcomb Riley, in N. O. Picayune. MlRpl Ike Bonce of HeateleiBalL By Manda L. Crocker. CoPTRiorrr, 1SS9. CHAPTER XVII. COM1& VOX. At a glance she saw that it was for Miriam; doubtless the sender did aot know that the Rest had changed hands. At any rate the letter was Miriam's, so upstairs sped Patty, wondering at a letter coming in this post-haste manner. "I sincerely hope it contains no bad news," she murmured, going in search of the owner. Hinam was half reclining, half sitting in her favorite deep arm-chair near the win dow. The rich crape folded about her rounded form gave her pretty, proudly arched neck and half-exposed arms a mar ble whiteness by contrast with its somber folds as she gazed dreamily away out to sea. The jewel at her throat gleaming in its bed of shadowy black lace seemed to. light up her pale, proud face with a cheerfulness it did not possess. The pallor of her sorrow ful countenance was not so noticeable in the light of the window as when she turned in the shadows and you met the yearning Jook of her sad eyes. "The letter is for you, Miriam dear,"--said Patricia, entering the parlor softly and dropping the letter with a-strange-looking .seal in her lap. "For me!" and a little surprised look came over the fine features. Perhaps father had written, and and but no: a yes, wasn't that the Perciral seal! Yes, the handwrit ing was strange; it wasn't Sir Rupert's. The beaier waits for an answer; waiting below now," said Patty, almost forgetting the pompous carrier in the waiting-room in the strange, anxious light flitting over .Miriam's questioning countenance. "Indeed !" and Miriam broke the seal ex citedly. Her face lost its questioning and grew drawn and white, so white that Patty knelt by her side in alarm. Suddenly she sprang to her feet. 'I will go ! I will go I" she exclaimed, almost wild ly "Tell him so; no, stay. Write it. Write that I shall come if it be the last thing I do. Now I know why 1 have lived. Poor Allan 1 Poor Allan's son 1 My relative in sorrow, as well as name." An unwonted light burned in the depths of her fine eyes, and an expression of sympa thetic pleasure flashed into her face as she took an excited turn about the room. Although Patricia knew in part, she could hardly fathom the spell the letter had thrown over Miriam. She guessed, how- ever, that the legend and malediction of the Percivals had a part to play in the excite .aent of her sister. "Pen and paper," said Miriam, sinking exhausted into her chair again. Patty produced them, and Miriam, seizing the pen, hastily wrote a reply. "That is right," she ejaculated, hurriedly. 'Take it to the post-boy; 1 am so glad so glad." She talked incoherently; Patty felt no little alarm concerning Miriam. She had rgrown so strangely different, metamor phosed, as it were, within the last half hour that she was excusable in feeling no little concern in regard to her. Patty took the reply down herself and gave it to the waiting carrier, who bowed thimself out in haste. When she returned to Miriam she found her crying softly, her face buried in the let ter she had received an hour before. "Cousin Allan is very ill and wants me," explained Miriam, drying her tears and looking up. "I never knew where uncle went to after after his marriage, but Cousin Allan is now in London, and Uncle and Aunt Pcrcival are both dead. I shall go to him at once, Fatty. It seemed good to have some one care for me at last" "Why, Miriam dear, I love you as an own sister; you must know that, certainly," an .swered Patricia, in a pained voice, looking -at her with brimming eyes. Miriam threw her arms impulsively around Patty's neck and sobbed out: "Not that, .Fatty; not that. I mean to have one of my own house to speak to me, to care lor; a real Percival, Patty." "Ohl" exclaimed Patricia, enlightened; there, there, do not weep in that heart broken way, Miriam," and she soothed her as she would a child. "Sou will make yourself ill," warned Patrica, "and you may not be able to visit that dear cousin who, of course, would give worlds to see you." Miriam unclasped her hands at this, and calmed herselt as much as she was able, considering the unusual news she had re ceived. Never in all her life had she heard from a real relative; and this one wanted her to come. With a nervous eagerness Miriam set about her preparations for leaving for Lon don on tfM morrow. CHAPTER XVIII. When Miriam alighted from the com fortable railway compartment at Charing Cross Station, it was raining in little, .disagreeable gusts. The pleasant weather had put on another and colder phase aside .from the dampness, and she shivered as she drew her wraps about her. Hollis and Patty had come down with her. having an excuse to visit Mme. Mont iaim a lew days, in order to accompany her. They were kind and thoughtful, Mir iam knew, and as Hollis bundled her into a omnibus and gave the driverhisdiree JiOBS,sae Bovedaerlips ia prayerfalthtiifrf -Between the drizzling rain and the foggy, sseky outlook, Miriam scarcely recognizea the somber and place, as described in the letter, when Hollis helped her up the steps of die second-rate establishment in middle London, with a shopon either side. ' "I will never be any better." the sick man said, holding Miriam's hand in his thin, almost transparent fingers. "I sent for yon because I wanted some one of my kin near me when I died. I am aware of the shadow which has cursed your life and mine. I had the reve lation from my father; he said it was as much his duty to give me the Percival le gend as it was toliveaChristian, butlbave never yet teen any good come of my know ing it." . No good to either of us," said Miriam, with stony face. The past came np in all its terrible me nacing vengeance before her. and she shut her teeth to keep back the imprecation about to be uttered: not becauso of her own wrongs; no, she could suffer with all the calmness of a stoic, but this pale, fragile cousin had also been smitten. Prone on a sick bed be lay, the picture of bis handsome father, her Uncle Allan, whose name he bore. "Uncle Allan was disinherited," said Miriam, savagely, "and so was I, for the same reason." Tho dark eyes of the patient man on the pillow sought hers inquiringly. "They wero all disinherited for marrying in oppo sition to paternal wishes, if I understood it aright!" "Yes," assented Miriam, 'and married better companions than the petted children who staid at Heatherleigh and courted society swells." Allan smiled at the show of hatred in tone and manner, a strange, wan, pitying smile. Cousin Miriam's tone was the very vnintrnrt of his father's, he remembered. To be a Percival was to have a soul fitted for hatred, he verily believed. In this he was not a Percival, then; his mother's milder blood warmed a heart fitted for for giveness. He was only a Percival in name. "Ahl me," and be signea audioiy. "Tin not. irrtave- I bee-" said Miriam, soft- vv w .. . , DT ening, "the hopelessness of it is enough - FBONB OK A SICE BED BE LAT. without grieving to make it worse. Where did uncle die!" she asked, (hanging the drift of conversation. "In Trouville, France; my mother, also. is buried there. After their demise I came back to London to be near you." "Me!" asked Miriam. "How did you know I was even in England!" "Oh ! I knew," replied Allan, brightening visibly. "The Montcalms are old friends of my relatives on my mother's side, and Hollis' engagement to Miss Fairfax led the way to several other connecting links, whereby I traced you to the Rest, that lovely home by the sea. By inquiry 1 found that you were my cousin, Uncle Rupert's daughter. I wrote to you because I counted it a heavenly privilege if haply I might see face to face a genuine relative once more." ' He reached out his hand and touched her sleeve significantly. "Mourning," he said, sadly; "mourning for Aunt Percival sweet Lady Pcrcival, as I have heard, and your husband, Arthur Fairfax. Ah! well, wear a little knot of crape forme, after awhile, won't you!" His dark, serious eyes turned with plead ing look wistfully on the handsome face of his cousin for a reply. "Yes," she said, tearfully. Then a deep silence reigned in that gloomy apartment where death and despair were preying re lentlessly each upon their respective victim. Outside the rain came in gusty dashes against the pane, and in the corners of tho room the deep shadows wero already gath ering. It was evening. Hollis had taken his leave and was now with Patricia, enjoying the luxurious warmth and elegance of the Montcalm residence in the aristocratic West End. She, with her proud soul almost rent in twain, was sitting there in the close, unpleas ant rooms of a dingy establishment in tho busy, restless central part of the city by the bedside of her only living relative, ex cepting her unnatural father, who would not recognize their relationship. The sick man shut his eyes and remained quiet; he felt contented to find ho had a friend with him at the last. The physician had said he could not last many days now, and she, Miriam, his regal cousin.would re main until the end came. He had not asked this of her, buthe knew by the deep, grieved expression on her beautiful face that she wo aid grant him this priceless boon. The attendant brought in lights and, un derstanding that this woman was the ex pected relative, showed her to her room's in the adjoining suite. Miriam's rich apparel and costly belongings set the servant to wondering why she had not come before and helped her relative financially before he lay down to die. The next day Miriam set about in earnest to make tho sick-room as cheerful as possi ble. "He did not dare to be moved," the physician had said when she suggested living in plcasanter apartments. That be ing so he should have all the comforts and luxuries money could bring into this stuffy place, Miriam decided, and forthwith the changes became so numerous and so happy that the servant who felt that the fine lady had been neglecting this sick relative be gan to believe she had a heart after alL But after a feeble protest from Allan, that "it wasn't necessary to waste so much attention on a dying man," that very thankful fellow looked on in silent wonder to see such blissful transformation. "I believe," said Allan one afternoon as Miriam sat by him, "I believe that I feel better. There is a change for the better, I am sure, although I can not explain it ex actly. I feel as if I wanted to live now; be fore I only wished to die, with a friend near me." He sought her face again with those wist ful, magnetic eyes for an affirmative. Al lan had wonderful, clear, expressive eyes, and now they were continually filled with a happy thankfulness toward this refined and cultured woman who had flashed the glorious light of loving care over Us dark day. Miriam looked at him, a hep kiadlag t within her bosom. If he only could live. She bad wealth enough for. both, and to spare. She would lighten any financial burden he might have and send him on his way rejoicing. 'I believe you will recover," she made answer, assuringly, while a pleased ex pression came into her white face. "Only live, Cousin Allan, and we will at least have each other. We can each say 'I have a cousin,' which to me will be great happi ness, knowing that we will always be friends." A mist obscured her vision, and she put out her hand toward Allan with a gesture of decn emotion. His thin, trembling fin gers closed over it in silence. Neither of tnem were aoio to sptrut lor sumo uuauu. Then Miriam spoke. "lam glad," she said, "so glad to have found you in time. When I was bowed down with grief and sorrow for the dead; when my heart ached because of the cruel decree, separating me from my bouse; when I prayed for a friend, I found one! Henceforth we are friends, inseparable, whether you live a week or a lifetime." 'Amen! amen 1" responded Allan. "And now I shall live," he continued, in assuring tones; "instinctively I feel that I shall out live my lonely, troublous existence and en joy life. I am only thirty years old, cousin, and it seems as if I ought not to give up life so soon, especially with a sworn friend at my side, and she a Percival." A faint smile lighted up his wan face and his fine eyes shone like stars. "God be thanked!" he said, fervently. "I know what it is to be hopeful and happy at last. I believe I have groped out from under tho curse, Cousin Miriam, and I trust it will lift from both lives as well; it must." "I have no hope for myself," said Miriam ; "but if you aro only from under the maledic tion I am content." "Don't, don'.tl" pleaded tho sick man, visibly distressed, and he turned away his bead so that tho eyes resting on him might not detect tbo gathering tears. The physician came in and noticed the change. "Much better, much better!" ho said, encouragingly. "I urn hardly pre pared to say why or for what reason this happy change has taken place; but I could shrewdly guess," and the little old man glanced meaningly about tho room, and then at Miriam, who was looking out of the window. "Yes," nodded Allan, with a happy smile, "she has come and wrought the trans formation. The tonic of her presence and kindness of her care have helped you, doc tor, to effect this marvelous change." "Certainly, certainly," fussed the little old physician, spreading out and counting the powders he had been dealing. "I have no doubt now but that you are on the mend, finely, sir, finely. Now have a little care, sir, a little care," emphasized tbo precise doctor, with his hand on the door, "or you may have a relapse. Don't get too ambi tious, sir; remember you have been very ill, very ill, sir." The little nervous physician nodded in emphasis, little jerky nods, meant to convey authority, and the convalescent listened re spectfully, although he knew the better physician of the two was over there by the window, where the dim sunlight sifted over her becoming coiffure. "When I am able to be about, cousin, will you go back to the Rest!" "Most likelr, for awhile, at least." "And then!" "Allan. 1 bavo a favor to ask of you; will you grant it?" "Certainly, if possible I will be glad to. Cousin Miriam." His eyes held in their depths such a glad light of anticipation now that he might do something to reward and please one who had done so muchifor him. "It isn't much," she said, half in apology, coming near and taking a seat by the couch. "But as yet you know nothing of my plans. You have asked me 'where then,' or words meaning the same. If I should tell you that in a very short time I will leave for Ameri ca, what would you say t" To live there; make the Western conti nent your home, Miriam!" asked Allan, all tho eagerness dying out of his face be clouded by gravest apprehension. Was he so soon to lose her, his regal cousin! To reside there," answered she, an odd little shadow passing over her countenance. "Oh, I should say, please don't go; what earthly good can there be in that, Miriam!" "I want -to forget," she answered, sad ly. "I have a friend over there, at least a friend of my dear dead mother's, who has written me to come. I should have been gone ere this had it not been for a severe illness directly after the receipt of her letter." Then I would have missed finding you and died!" Ho turned his head away once more to hide his tears. "I am glad I did not go," she replied. "And you will be glad a second time if you give up your plan now," he ventured. "Oh! not when you get well and strong, and do not need me." "There never will be a day again that I will not need you. Oh! Miriam 1" Then as if shocked at his untimely confession, be buried his face in the pillows and lay quite still. Miriam went back to the window, without gainsaying this outburst of her cousin's. Poor, lonely, sick man, she thought, he hardly knows what he is say ing. I will not chide him. When he will have fully recovered this thought will have passed. No; she will not say any thing now to hurt him. Doubtless her kindness had almost turned his brain, in bis weak state, and as ho convalesced he would for get. The attendant came and thinking the sick man asleep, went quietly out again. The silence was growing irksome. Miriam WHEN TOO ABB BETTER STILL COMB A5T VISIT ME." looked at her watch and then glanced furtively toward the couch. Allan Percival had not stirred. "Allan," she said, softly; "it is time for another powder, I believe. Jack would have given it to you, but he thought you were asleep. Shall I give it to you!" Her cousin took his face from among- the pillows and looked up. "Yes, if you please." Bis lace was very pale; all the vivacity of hopeful convalescence had fled, aad even his lips were white and trembling with Miriam thought best net toaotioa It, aad :-t4 J M gave him a powder in a little wine glass of Maderia. It will strengthen him, sho thought. Then she drew her chair near him and sat down. "Allan," she began, "what I wish you to do for mo is this. When I am gone please forget that you know of my whereabouts should any inquiry come to your ears from Heatherleigh. Will you do this!" "Yes," he answered; "they shall never j know through me if you desire to have your voyage remain a secret." I wish it, most assuredly;" and then she told him of her visit to the Hall when she was waved off by Sir Rupert in his fury, dwelling tragically on the sorrowful recital. "Now you know vhy I wish to be buried, as it were, from sight and sound of Heather leigh." "Ii-notc," he answered. "I will promise any thing you desire; you will forgive and forget my speech of an hour ago ( it grates on your heart, cousin. I I I am too lonely and desolate, and well, you will forgive?" He reached out an eager band and Miriam took in a warm, friendly clasp tho out stretched palm. "Don't grieve," she said, generously. "You have said nothing wrong, Allan. But wait uutil you are well and strong and per haps you will forget it, too." Miriam saw a puzzled, far-away look steal into those splendid eyes; then a quiver of the pale lips, aud she knew he was battling with disappointed desires. She hesitated for a moment, then passed her hand caress ingly over tho noble brow, and up among the dark, clustering hair. Ho was her cousin, all the relative she had, and well, sho would. So bending over the pitiful, won face on the pillow, she pressed ber lips to his brow. "There is nothing to forgive, Allan; you and I are the firmest, best of rfenfo." Then she went to her own apartments, and the attendant came and satout thoday by Allan. When Allan Percival was ablo to sit up and walk about the apartment Miriam an nounced her intention of going home. "Though Ihavcn't any," she added, bitterly. Sho was thinking of two graves, side by side, beneath the dark yew trees of the church-yard. Allan looked wistfully up, and a sudden, yearning light almost glorified his handsome face, uut he turned away bis head as Miriam looked up. She should not seo that j he could not forget. She should know that he could feel grateful, without making him self offensive. "When you are better still, cousin, come and visit me. won't you?" Miriam put out ber hand in a cordial, cousinly manner. With a questioning look he hesitated. "I shall miss you very much," he stammered, but' "And I shall feel badly if you do not come. I want you," she said, with a posi tive, imperious air. "Then I will come and gladly." "Good-bve until I welcome you at tho ! Rest," she said, cheerfully, almost gayly. "Good-bye, I shall remember, good-bye!" and the hansom rolled away. Allan went back to the gloomy, old silence, and sat down with his head resting on tho table. He was still weak and the parting had unnerved him. though he fancied he had borne up bravely considering how well he loved this gloriously saintly cousin. Tho j touch of her lips on his brow that day i when she had kissed him forgiveness i thrilled him to his very soul's center. But I she was a genuine Percival, and if she could' not return his love, why, sooner or later, she. would cast him off without a single regret, and he would goto the bad! Oh! this this suspense but tho room went around him with dizzy velocity and he knew no more. Ue was too weak to calmly count up tho odds against him in this first deep, true love of bis life, and had fainted dead away in consequence. . TO BE CONTIHtTED. SELF-TORMENTORS. Unfortunate Persons Wbo Cultivate the Art of Maltinc Themselves Miserable. There are few arts more assiduously cultivated by the human race than that of making themselves miserable. People who give their minds to this melancholy branch of mental industry are often frightfully successful, and many attain such proficiency in it that they fall a sacrifice to their own skill. To such experts the future, which to your jolly makc-the-best-of very-thing fel low seems a fair white surface prepared expressly for Hope to paint her pictures on, is a black abysm athwart which horrible shapes are continually Hitting. The imagi nation of one of the ingenious self-tormentors is a sort of magic lantern furnished ex clusively with dismal slides, and projecting nothing but infernal spectrums. There is another set of unhappy creatures who extract their misery from the present. If a friend inadvertently passes one of them in the street without a nod of recognition, be or she fancies that an affront is in tended. Remarks uttered at random, and without the slightest idea on the part of the utterer of giving offense to any human be ing, are often construed by this style of persons into innuendoes and sarcasms covertly leveled at them; and, in fact, it is scarcely possible for one to do or say any thing in their presence without being sus pected of a design to turn them into ridi cule. Of course, scores of our readers aro ac quainted with individuals wbo understand and practice tho art of making themselves miserable. Possibly a few are given to dark forebodings, or have a knack of sup posing themselves the special targets of conversational small-shot aimed at nobody. If so, we advise them for their own sakes to abandon the thankless task of anticipat ing difficulties and of misconceiving casuai remarks to their own discomfort. Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof and to be on the alert for insult is a very foolish kind of vigilance. The true philosophy of life is to meet misfortune, when it comes, bravely and calmly, but never to borrow trouble or make mountains out of molehills. The art of making the best of everything is a noble and manly art. Cultivate it, and leave its antithesis to moral dyspeptics. N.Y. Ledger. Aa UadefirrMBd CaaaL "The strangest canal in the world is one I never saw mentioned in any book or news paper," said an English clergyman to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat reporter. "It is a canal sixteen miles long, between Worsley and St. Helens, in the north of England, and is underground from end to end. In Lan cashire the coal mines are very extensive, half the country being undermined, and many years ago the Duke of Bridgewater's managers thought they could save money by transporting the coal under ground instead of on the surface. So the canal was con structed, the mines connected and drained at the same time. Ordinary canal boats are used, but the power is furnished by men. On the roof of the tunnel arch are cross-pieces, and the men who do the work of impulsion lie on their backs on the coal an-push with their feet against the cross bars on the roof. Six or eight men wfli draw a traia of four or five boats, and as there are two divisions in the tunnel boats pass eacn other without dilsculty." A TAXXDnxisT at Pasadena, Cat, has contracted to sta 2,000 honed toad to be tent Eat IN THE OLD DAYS. Dear Grandmamma sighed As she slowly untied The packet we found In the loft; The paper was bluish. The words were too foolish. The sentiments, ir thought, were soft Now. if our dear Granny Were younp, like our Fanny. Who lingered last night at the gate. It would not seem queer To be called "love" and "dear." And "prithee, sweet, tell me my fate." But it sounded so silly To sign '-Your sweet Willie." "Who worships the ground at your feet" Now Grandpa takes snuff And thinks it enough To doze, in the son in his seat. When Gramlm was young Her praises were sung By rapturous lovers a score: I wish 'twas the fashion To record the blind passion In verses of twenty or more. Then pen. ink and paper. Some wax and a taper. Were all the expense incurred; -Voir, costly bouquets. Drives operas, plays. And "seats in tho paniuette preferred. Then, old-fashioned ways. The minuet's maze. The sonnet by messenger sent; A scat meant tor one. Her promise Is won. And all without costing a cent. Chicago Journal. MY FIKST CIGAR. Reasons That Determined Me To Let It Be My Last. "Go and buy a cigar." Mr. JCimon was a carpenter employed in building a warehouso for grain-shippers at Wyekles, a littlo station on the "Wabash railway, in Central Illinois, and, as he spoke, ho handed me a five-cent piece. My parents lived at Wycklcs. I wa3 tho youngest of four sous, and was ten years old at the time just the right ago to think it smart to step around with a cigar between my teeth. I had always been a favorite wifh Mr. Kimon, arid I suppose he thought he was doing the right thing when he told me to buy a cigar, or, ho may have thought the attractions of "gum-drops" and "taffy-on-a-stick" would bo too-much for me and I would lay out tho nickel in those luxuries instead of buying a cigar with it. Rut. if such wero his thoughts, he was mistaken, for I took the nickel. I and, marching into a store near by, kept by a cripple named Rradshaw, planked t it down upon tho counter and asked for a cigar with as indifferent an air as I could assume,. with the doubts of my ability to conquer the weed already as sailing me. The store-keeper gavo me a quizzical look, reached for a box, hesitated for a moment, and then took down another. Throwing tbo lid back, ho sot before me somo very dark and ominouslooking cigars. Had I been an experienced smoker and a judge of cigars, I would have known that the ones before me were particular ly dangerous specimens, but I wasn't, and did'nt, and so," in blissful unconcious ness of what was beforo me, I selected one of the noisome weeds, bit off the end (as I had seen men do), and then light ing it, stuck it in my mouth and strutted out of the store with my head thrown back and chest expanded, puffing away like one to the manner born. Had I seen the amused smile upon Bradshaw's face as I left his store, my suspicions might have been aroused, but I didn't see it, and so continued to step round with the cigar between my teeth, feeling, or rather, endeavoring to feel for tho cigar tasted horrible, and made me have a queer sensation in the region of my stomach that I was every inch a man. Rut this state of affairs lasted but a short time. Had I taken the troublo to look at myself in a mirror after five minutes at that cigar, I would have no ticed an unusual pallor to my face, and a whiteness about my lips foreign to them in a normal state. And my stomach! from a simple stato of sickness it had broken out in open rebellion, and the war which was waged between tho le gitimate contents of said stomach and tho poisonous saliva and bits of tobacco which I had unwittingly swallowed was Bnfitl vl.tlr, if loafrul anil if loaf nrt vllifA long enough to suit me, I assure you. VAmllnua it got- Tmti?lTka fllA fnlinfVA ' .1V(.UlVO V ".J, JJ1..UH WV WWV,V conquered, and around behind somo cars which wero standing on the sidetrack where I had gone as quickly as a swim ming head and staggering footsteps would let me I was speedily relieved of both contending forces. Rut. oh! how weak, and sick and faint, and wretched I did feel! not a bit like a man now and thinking I would keep quiet for awhile, until I felt better, I crawled under one of the cars and laid down beside tho rails. How it happened that I went to sleep I do not know. Perhaps it was induced by my particu lar weak state, both mentally and phys ically, at that time; but, be that as it may, certain it is that I had not lain there ten minutes beforo I was asleep, sound as a top. How long I slept I do not know, but I was suddenly awakened by a queer, grinding, gliding noise, accompanied by a regular click-click! click-click! I knew tho sound only too well, and even if my eyes had not told me what occasioned the queer noise, I wouldhave known what made it: The cars under which I was lying waro moving, and at a speed which would have made it dangerous for me to have attempted to spring out between the wheels, even if I had been on my feet, braced, ready for the leap. Rut I wasn't. I was lying flat upon my back upon the thin layer of earth which covered the crossties, between the rails, and to attempt to regain my feet would have been suicidal, for the tracks of the cars would have knocked me down and I would have been run ver by the big iron wheels and killed. What to do I did not know. I was frightened, almost paralyzed with fear, and I lay motionless, watching with a species of fascination the rapidly revolv ing wheels aad listening to their click click! click-click! as they crossed the joints where the emds of tba rails came together. Then a terriblo thought struck nit: tho cars could not move without motivo power, where was the engine? There was about a foot of epace be tween my body and tho trucks of tho cars, and I cautiously raised my head a trifle and glanced down along my body in tho direction from which the cars wero coming. Horror of horrors! The engine was on that end of tho string of cars, push ing them, and only-to cars intervened M between it and my trembling self! F I was paralyzed with horror for a mo ment. Tho ash-pan on all locomotivo engines is beneath tho body of tho monster, and is invariably only about six inches from the rails. It would bo impossiblo for it to pass over the body of a child, much less that of a good sized boy, without mangling, scraping and tearing it to pieces. I realized this with a chill of terror, but what to do I could not think. It really seemed as if there was nothing I could do that I had no choice in tho matter, but would bo forced to lie thoro and be mangled scraped torn to pieces beneath that awful ash-pan. and I invol untarily closed my eyes and shuddered. The cars wero moving at a rapid rato of speed now. and as my eyes came open again, tho rear end o tho first of tho two remaining cars was just passing over me. Tho forward end of tho last car paed rapidly, and tho other end approached. It would be followed by tho tender, then tho engine, under which was tho ash-pan, which would manglo my poor bodj- in another moment. The horrible thought nerved me to desperation, and, as the end of the car reached me, I threw up my hands and clutched tho rapidly-moving' trucks with a grip made trebly strong by terror. I was jerked with such suddenness and force that my arms wero nearly pulled out of their sockets, but I held on with an energy born of despair, and was dragged along with tho car, my feet thumping against tho tics at a rato which threatened to relievo my shoes of their heel-taps if not my feet of tho shoes themselves. Rut I retained my hold. To lose my grasp and fall upon tho trzck would bo certain death death in a particularly horriblo form, and I shuddered and gripped the trucks wtth renewed en ergy. As onward I was dragged, I mado at tempts to draw myself up upon tho trucks, but it was beyond my power and I could only grip them tighter and wait. Would the cars never stop? Onward and still onward I was dragged, across two cattle-guards. whero tho wagon-road crossed the railroad, and for fifty yards farther, when just as I was on tho point of having to let go my hold it really seemed as if I could not retain my grasp a moment longer I no ticed that tho speed of the cars was di minishing. Little by littlo they slackened upH slower and slower they moicd. but ns until they had come to a dead stand-still did I dare let go my hold and crawl out from under the car. This I did and then sank upon tho ground beside tho railroad track, utter ly unnerved almost fainting. And my ' arms and legs, how sore they were! was two weeks at least, Derore they re. turn to any thing like their normal con dition of usefulness. Tho train took the care which were loaded with shelled corn away with it, and as I stood in tho middlo of tho track and saw the old red caboose disappear around the curve in tho deep cut a quar ter of a mile to the east of the littlo sta tion of Wycklcs, I thought, with a shud der, of the narrow escape which I had had from a horriblo death, and I regis tered a vow to never, never again touch tobacco in any form. And I have kept my vow. S. A. D. Cox, in Yankee Rlado. SOME RARE OLD BONDS. They Were Yellow Front Age. But Proved to lie Worth 70,00l ia Gold. It was while Judgo Folger was Secre tary (said an old Treasury official.) Ono morning an old man came in to me who was from a New England State. Ilo said that about twenty years ago ho found some old stocks or bonds among tho papers of an undo (mentioning his name); ho bad been a man of National reputation for ability, and had a com fortable fortuno for those days that is from 1830 to 1840 and ho had come to tho United States Treasury to find out if they wore worth any thing, as thoy seemed to be United States bonds. I looked at them. They wero ten of tho "old dobt" bonds, and wero indeed curi osities. They were old and yellow from age, but wero worth, principal and in terest, in gold 870,000, for there wero ten years' interest duo on-them. You can imagine the old man's amazement when I told him this. "Why, I would gladly have taken 55,000 for them," said he, "and I offered them to a Roston banker for less than that, but he rather superciliously and contemptuously de clined to buy them at any figure." I took the old man in to see Judge Folger, who was very much interested in tho matter when I explained it to him. He had never seen any of the "old loan" securities, and after these were paid and canceled I believe ho directed that one of them be framed and preserved. Well, in less than half an hours' time the old Xew-Englandcr walked out of tho building with a check in his pocket on the New York Sub-Treasury for S70, 000 in gold. How that "smart" Roston banker must have cursed his own ignor ance and stupidity when he learned what he had throws away." St. Louis Republic. A duck got into a queer fix near Rochester, Pa., the other day. The ducks of that place eat the acorns which are scattered over the ground under the oak trees, and this particular duck ate so many that when the owner returned from work in the evening it was lying prostrate, unable to walk or squawk. He , looked into the mouth and saw that its " throat was clogged with acorns. He tried to drive them down, but as he ' failed ia this, he cut its head off, aad nearly a half peck of acorn fell oat of iteboey. 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