Aa&T'A2aCW3uw.Haftwa iYasieas.Ym 4 $& "I liOVB VOtl, DKAn." She looked nt him with quick uur- prise, She looked nt him with tear-brimracd CJC8, Her tight-closed hnnd no motion shap ed, No word her curling lips escaped. HI eyes were bright, his, voice was clear; Be only said: "I lovo you, dear!" Her eyes were deep with anger's hue, They softened Into tender blue; The haughty curro her Up forsook; Her hand lay open on her book. Then as he spoke he drew more near, And Mid again: "I love you, dear!" Whero sweet lovo dwells wrath can not stay; Her smiles chased all the tears away. She looked at him, "Ah, do not fear, I too, can say, I love you, dear!' " His smile replied "Our hearts are near." 131s words were still: "1 lovo you, dear!" Ahl when the fire of anger burns, And all life's sweet to bitter turns, When eyes are flashing, lips close set, Prepared to storm and to regret: Then happy we If Great Heart near Have strength to say: "I love you, dear I" i "OUR OWN FOLKS." j Mrs. Montague wan the mother of thirteen children, all grown up ex cepting the two youngest, and aar rled and settled within visiting dis tance of the old homestead. Mr. Mon tague seemed like one of the ld patri archs when the children and grandinll dren all came home to Tbanksgivlug; and Mrs. Montague was addressed by the minister when ho called as "a mother In Israel." The Montagues were very well off now. Mr. Montague had for years been adding acre to acre and field to field; but he and his wife had begun poor, and there was as much differ ence in the bringing up of their oldest son and their youngest one as If they had belonged to different families. There were three sons born before i years went on ns years do, and while there was a daughter In the house; j every new requisition upon Mrs. Mon consequcntly the oldest boy from hlB ! tnguo was freely granted and In her remembrance had, been kent at work both In doors nnd out. "When he was only three years old," his mother satd, "I used to tio Nelson into a little low rocking chair and give him the baby to hold. He cheerily sang "Do ra do ra' and was a happy child." But his etrong 'healthy parents little realised how the child Nelson dreamed at night of rocking the baby and was still at work even while he slept. Ills par ents never seamed to realize that his little legs could get tired, running here and there on errands all over the farm and all over the house, There was al ways so much to be done on a New England farm. i -- .- Mr. and Mrs. Montague were always up early and late. There were the jCOWB to milk, the butter and cheese to be made, plowing, planting, baying, harvesting; then .vhen winter came though there were plenty of apples end potatoes In the collar, with corn and nuta In the attic, there was plenty of work still. The wood to be got up and chopped, the apples to be pared and dried, spinning to be done, nnd a pile of stockings to be knit for the many little feet that kept omulng to elr home. As one of the girls said, long after ward, when relating an incident of her girlhood: "I went to our neigh bor Blo8Hom's and took ihe haliy with me; I do not remember which, there always was one." She met a young man at this nclghbors's houas who ac companied her part of the way home and carried the baby. That yjuug man she afterward married. And his part of the story waB: "Ethel looked bo matronly with that sweet child In her arms that I wanted ti pnpoKe nt once." I Little Nelson bad none of Uio leisure moments that generally lads of his age enjoy. The farm Mouse wns by no means furnished with modern con veniences. Nelson had wood and wa-' ter to bring from a distance for his mother, who not only did the house work for all the family, but nlso cut and made by hand all 'he garments that were worn by them; though she did not spin nnd weave nnd dye the cloth, ns her mother nad done, and bo her tnsks were, accordingly, consider ed light by contrast. In those days there were no sewing machines heard of. Thus the winter iveuings as well as the summer dnys witnessed no Idle moments. Early In his young life there was a little rake provided for Nelson, who thought it very manly to rake after the cart; and his father boasted that bis little boy saved him 75 cents per day In hay time. The consequence of all this was that their oldest son giew up hardy and tough, though his growth was checked by overwork. Ills par ents saw too late that they bad kept him, when almost a baby, turning tho grindstone, picking up apples nnd po tatoes, and while yet a growing lad had expected a man's constant hard labor from him, their first-born: but with their Industrious habits s.nd nm- . J . v i bltlon to get on In the world, they had not realized that tho uncomplaining child was being stunted in his growth. But it was far different with his youngest brother, who was more than twenty years his junior. Little Eben had no younger brother to care for at home and at school. His evenings "were free to read the Juvenile publi cations that were abundantly supplied, and plenty of such books as never en tered the house while Nelson was at home; for NelBon had married young, ana naa now a nome of his own, out was still a hard-working man. Laugh ingly he often said: "I must have been born on Saturday. To work hurd J for a living has been my lot" Later, Eben, the youngest, was sent , to college. After having had the ben efit of a classical education he studied for a profession, but ultimately be came a teacher in e high school, where hit life work was Appreciated by par ents and pupils. Nelson was proud of of his young brother, and never man ifested a particle of envy that so much more had been done for Eben than for himself. Memories were his of the hardships of his parents, and he was glad that It had been his priv ilege to be nn assistant to them In their early struggles. Some members of the Montague fam ily had married poor, and, with little families growing up around them, they often came home asking "mother" for this or that that was lying unused about the old home and which would be of great convenience to them. The mother always gave freely and cheer fully, and encouraged their asking; yet, from force of habit, she almost Invariably said: "Yes, you can have it; but If you wasn't our own folks you'd not get It." Or, "I suppose, be ing our own folks, you must have it." The children understood their moth er's favorite expression, and hardly heard it; at least it made no Impres sion upon them to prevent their asking for other things, ns, Indeed, she bad no desire that it should. When Mary, the oldest daughter, was married, the Montagues were not as well off ns they were later. Hut things had accumulated In the house, for Mr. Montague had his peculiarity as well as ids wife, and his habit was to attend auctions vendue It was then called generally, a French word mean ing sale, or sold off, and pronounced by them vandu. From such sales Mr. Montague brought home many unnec essary articles, of which they already had duplicates In the house; but in stead of scolding hor husband's wast ing money, Mrs. Montague selected the best of the many articles and put them away, wisely nodding her head and saying to herself, "This will do for Mnry to begin with." Mrs. Montague had married young and took It for granted thnt her child ren would do the same. When Mnry was married and needed a "Betting out," what with the taxes to pay and the carpenters who were building him n new barn, Mr. Montague had little ready money. However, for all prac tical purposes, Mary had a plentiful outUt from home. Still, though her mother parted with a few things that she herself needed, she was constant ly telling the nplghbors bb they came In, of her empty house and saying, In her loud, cheerful tones; "Mary hns Just robbed me; "but then she would ndd: "Well, well, you know, Mary's our own folks." In due time the old cradle was brought down out of the garret, for mnry s urst uauy, ana then again It was all for "our own folks." The heart she felt It a privilege to give, still the ungracious words fell from her lips, "I suppose you must have it as you arc our own foks." Grandchildren nnd great grandchild ren ent at the Montague board, nnd reverently nnd heartily Mr. Montague an old man now, thanked the All-Father for the blessing of long life and prosperity and ihe many olive plants about the tnble. Mrs. Montague though past the threescore years and 10 that David enjoyed life, still re mained mistress of her own home and dispensed the sweet charities of life. Often and again she sent a poor neighbor Into her pantry nnd bade her help herself and take a share home to the children; and mnny a child re members with grown-up pleasure the apples he was sure to be welcomed to on Mrs. Montague's back porch. Per early habltB of Industry, acquired when It was necessary to economize, were still one feature of her dally life; nnd though later generations might smile nt her thrift, not unfre qneutly were they glad to nvall them selves of the results of her Industry nnd economy. But all at once the springs of life, seemed dry; nnd, ns her husband truly said, "Wire seems to have lost her grip on life." The old family physi cian was summoned. "Really," said he, "you seem like a clock Just about run down." "Yes," feebly responded Mrs. Mon tague; "and I did not send for you to wind up the old clock, my life Is about over. I've had a long nnd busy life; but now I'm going to die, and never thought anything about dying before. I sent for you not to doctor me, but to tell me nbout dying' "Oh," mentally exclaimed the old physician, "no sooner hnd 1 come to years of discretion than I thought j nbout dying and settled the matter to my satisfaction." It was such a Bur prise -to. the" doctor that any one could live to old age and never think About dying, in tho dying world, that at first he made no response. But Mrs. Montague did not notice; for she wns too busy with her own thoughts, new thoughts about dying. Tho doctor also asked himself be fore speaking; "Why did she not send for the minister?" But, nt Inst, nfter somo preliminary observations, he quoted the beautiful passage that hns comforted so many dying beds, "For God so loved the world thnt He gnve His only begotten Sou that whosoever belleveth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life," The physician felt sure thnt the In vnlld had saving faith lu Christ as the Son of God. our Saviour, But she had said that she had never thought nbout dying, nnd he could not freely express such thoughts, so he repented the fourth verse of the 23rd Tsnlm: "Though 1 walk through the valley of death, I will fear no evil; for Thou nrt with me; Thy rod nnd Thy 6tnff they co.rort !?e- t lmvo lonrnpii snirt Mm Mnntnmia "on that staff all my days, and trust In God has held me up; but now It is n matter of dying that I have come to, and what shall I do?" sum trust." rPRnniuifxi tiiA tvfnr. She looked at him with unsatisfied and questioning eyes though she did not speak. "Theoretically," mused the doctor, "but practically, practi cally!" and he asked for a prayer book and read the beautiful prayer for the sick beginning: "O God, whose dnys nre without end, nnd whose mercies cannot be numbered, make us, we be- , seech Thee, deeply sensible of the i shortness and uncertainty of hninnn I life." After a little he took up a Testa ment printed in large type that was on a table near at hand and opened it rather meditatively and at random to the first chapter of St. John. When he hnd reached the 11th verse and rend: "He came to His own nnd His own received Him not. But ns mnny ne recolved Him to them He gave power to become the children of God." The doctor closed the book saying: "We are nis own folks If wo receive Him." "Ob," brightly exclaimed Mrs. Mon tague, "what more natural than that God should do for His own folks," The familiar words "own folks," had touched her heart, and she happily and clearly said: "I've been doing that all my days." And the good doctor thought: "The Lord had helped me In my Infirmity to sny the word that this woman need ed to help her across." The dying woman now seemed per fectly satisfied and asked no more questions; but after that was oftea heard to murmur pleasantly to her self: "Yes, we are Ills own folks, Just the Lord's own folks, nnd living or dy ing He will do what 1b best for us." Mrs. E. E. Orcott. TYPESETTERS IN JAPAN. Each Compositor Handle 4,006 Dif ferent Pieces erf-Metal. There arc very keen journalists In Ja pan, but It must be allowed that the business Is carried on under difficul ties from which even the hardened Western newspaper man might be ex cused from shrinking. The Japanese written nnd printed characters consist of the Chinese Ideographs, those com plicated, square figures made up of an apparent jumble of zigzags and crosses and tlckB and triangles and tails "the footprints of a drunken fly" and of the original Japanese syllabary called kann. Of the former there arc 20,000 in all, of which perhaps 14,000 constitute the scholar's vocabulary, and no fewer than 4,000 nre In dally use, while the forty-seven simple characters of the kana are known to everybody. There fore, the Jnpnnese compositor has to be prepared to place In his stick any one of over 4,000 different types truly an appalling task. From the nature of the problem Eev cral consequences follow. First, be must be somewhat of a scholar him self to recognize all these Instantly and accurately. Secondly, his sight suffers fearfully, and he generally wears a large pair of magnifying goggles; nnd, thirdly, ns It is pbysl eoily impossible for any man to reach 4,000 types a totally different method of arrangement bus to be devised. The compositor, therefore, of whom there are only three or four on a paper, sits at a table at one end of a large room, with a case containing his forty seven kana syllables before him. From end to end of the room tall cases of type arc arranged like the. shelve in a crowded library, a passage three feet wide being left between each two. The compositor receives his cop In large pieces, whla he cuts Into little "takes," and hands each of these to one of a half dozen boys, who assist him. The boy takes this and proceeds to walk about among the cases till he has collected each of the Ideographs, or square Chinese picture words, omit ting nil the kana syllables which con ned them. While the boys are thus running to and fro, snatching up the types and jostling each other, they keep up a con tlnunl chant, singing the name of the cnaracter tney are looking for, as they cannot recognize it till they hear its sound, the ordinary lower class Japanese not understanding his dally paper jinless lie reads It aloud. Pitts burg Dispatch, i ' ovn woihily earth. It Is Poised Deltcntelr and Slightest Vibrations Are Noticeable. The discovery thnt the axis of the earth Is not fixed In direction, but to cause the north pole Itself to re volve once In every fourteen months that It swings round In such a way as round a circle ten yards In diameter, Is now generally accepted as an es tablished fact. It Is evident that such a wobbling of the earth's axis of rotation, small though it be, must produce some effect upon the level of the ocean at Its shoreB, nnd nn examination of the very careful records, which have been kept for more than forty years, of the height of the tide in the canal at Helder, in Holland, wns recently made for the purpose of determining wheth er such an effect could be perceived. The result of the examination show ed that the average level of the water had varied with great regularity, In a recurring period of fourteen months, ever since the tide records were begun In 1851. The Inference Is that this regular change of level must be due to the swinging round of the nxls of the earth. The amount by which the level changes a little less than five-eighths of nn Inch also corresponds to the calculated change thnt should result from the proposed cause. So we are gradually learning to ap preciate how delicately the ponderous earth is poised as It swings In Its vast orbit round the sun, and bow even the mighty ocean respouds to the slghtest tipping this way and that of the great axis of the globe. Baltimore Herald. I The Man Who Walks. If a person really wishes to enjoy on i Interesting bit of scenery there ils but I one way to do It. It cannot be done from tne wmaow oi a rauroaa train. i nor even from the saddle of a bicycle. 'A carriage or a horses back Is better, but the best way of all Is to use your own feet. The pedestrian can Bee a . landscape or other bit of natural scenery from view-points which nre not possible to those who trust to an nrtlticinl conveyance. The longer time which he will take in coming up to it gives him a better appreciation of it. It grows upon biro as It gradually gets within his vision. People who walk little, miss the least expensive and the very best means of outdoor enjoyment. If pedcstrlnnism should become the fashionable fad that bicycling npw Is, It would be a national blessing. Buf falo Express. Fashionable Anyhow. First Clerk That's all the thanks a fellows getB, Here I've had my pay reduced after making a horse of my self. Second Clerk Well, there's one sat isfaction to you. Docked horses are considered extremely stylish. Boston Transcript, THE PASSING OP TUB SPIRIT. The wind, the world-old rhapsodist, goes by, And the great pines, In changless vesture gloomed, And all the towering elm tress, thatched and plumed With green, take up, one after one, the cry; And as their choral voices swell and die, Catching tho Infinite noto from tree to tree, Others far off, in long antlstrophe, With swaying arms and surging tops reply. So to men's souls, nt sacred intervals, Out of the dust of life takes wing nnd calls A spirit that we know not nor can trace; And heart to heart makes answer with strange thrill; It passes, and a moment, face to face, We dream ourselves immortal, and are Btlll. Century. A -WRESTLING LION. Am Interview With Deraaardt'a Nctt Property.- Mr. Cross 1b the "universal provid er" of "wild beastesses," and bis firm, represented successively by his father and himself during the last fifty years, has made the name of "Massa Cross" a household word on every hilltop and in every swamp by its liberal purchases of the fauna of every country, cry country. "Well, Mr. Cross, I have come to see your wrestling lion not only as au observer, but ub a critic." "I am sure that I shall be able to answer every question, and to meet your minutest Inspection. But, as re gards the proprietorship, I must tell you that he belongs to Mme. Sarah Bernhardt. You are probably aware of her great Interest in all animals and her love of making wild beasts her domestic pets. Directly she bad seen the wrestling lion and had notic ed his extreme docility, she insisted on possessing him, I didn't want to sell him. I hnd been doing very good business for some time past with him I in the provinces, so I named what I , hoped would be a prohibitive sum tlOOO. However, madome took him at that price the hlghcBt ever paid for a lion. I luue met Mme. Bern- Mnte.Dernhardt'a Lion. . hardt frequently. She never omits to visit my repository In Earle street when she comes to Liverpool indeed, Mr. Irving and the leading lights of the drama generally look In. I recol lect on one occasion a number of my snakes got loose, nnd I think you would have been amused if you had seen the great actress entering into the chase with the greatest ardor pos sible." I glanced for a moment at the sa cred six-legged Indian cow and the quaint Java monkeys, but when I reached Sarah Bernherdt's Hon I wanted nothing else to see. Marco Is nudoubtedly an extraor dinarily fine example of his species and in the pink of condition. Four teen nouuds of finest beef nre admin istered to him during the twelve hourB of dally exhibition. "Now tell me all you know, Mr. Cross, nbout this lion." "I got him ns a cub, and imme diately I was struck with his extreme docility; he 'took down' all other specimens I have bad-sand I have had scores of them as regards even ness of temper. With" all animal training, especially lions, It Is better policy to be kind. Directly you Intro- duce the whip or stick, good-by to teaching tricks. Marco has been In training over two years. But here comes Clyto, who has been with me five years, nnd who will presently wrestle with the Hon." Then there approached a good look ing young man, 23 years of age, clad In a smart tunic, the left breast of which was decorated with three or four medals one especially attracted my attention, as on the reverse Bide It bore the Inscription that It was tho gift of W. E. Gladstone. By and by he retired to put on his wrestling suit, which, I noticed ns he entered the cage, bore In Ms raggedness unmis takable evidence of the severe con tests he had had with the Hon. Before Clyto was within a yard or two of the cage, the Hon appeared ' solitaires to be reset at 's, where to scent him. wns up nnd nlert, and they had been purchnsed. The morn began to purr round Clyto's legB, as ing nfter the mnld brought her the would n pet cat, on bis entering the card of the firm, saying a gentleman enco. "TTn." snld Clvto. nnd thi lion ! wished to see her, and, on golnc down ohiced a naw over each of his shoul- ders, with his head dangerously near his keepers face. Then the struggle begnu. A twist or two, nnd Clyto bad thrown, by a buttock twist, the Hon on his back on the floor of the den with a thud. A piece of meat was then the reward of the vanquish ed. Again there was a prolonged smuggle, and this time the lion had thrown Clyto, nnd was on top of him Clyto lay for a moment quite still, with the heavy weight of the beast upon him. Then be began to wrlgglo quietly, with the intent evidently to I Z YZ V, , i. i,io i. j a ioi ,! 22 &? lUfLhJ8Ja,d" AUl8t ! I I 1 1 II. It I IIIB Mlll'lll s-- IV 111 leaned against the bars, panting for breath. The next feat was getting the Hon to sit on a chair; when there, Clyto, retired to the other tide of the cage, and placed a piece of meat in his mouth. Then, with a jump, the Hon sprang on his keeper and took the beefsteak from his mouth, but Clyto had the breath knocked out of him by the heavy impact of the beaBt. Clyto's next be gan to sweep out the cage, but be seemed to care little whether he kept his faco to his charge or not. While this was being done the Hon proceed ed to play with the chair as a cat would with a reel of cotton. Evident ly tho show was nearly over; but, be fore tho keeper left, the Hon had got cheeky and made rather a nasty charge, and began to wrestle, and so ardently that Clyto exclaimed: "Come, cornel that's enough! This is a bit too rough. Give over, will youl" A short struggle then ensued, and Glyto's head appeared likely to bo bitten off; but Clyto succeeded in throwing the Hon off nnd then dealt him a backhander on the face, by way of admonition to better manners. The keeper then deftly slipped out. It was a splendid show. "Is there much danger, Mr. CroBS?" I asked. "I think the Hon has been too well trained. However, what risk there Is seems to be appreciated, for I have noticed that some people come to ev ery show, perhaps on the principle thnt actuated the conduct of those who never missed seeing Van Am burgh of old place his head in the lion's mouth." "People will sure ask me If the lion is drugged?" "My best answer Is to nsk you to give them the evidence of your own eyes. If the animal hnd been so treated, could he be so alert?" "But how nbout the claws? Are they drawn?" For answer Clyto showed mo the lion's pnwB. There could be no doubt nbout the power of his majesty's claws. HELD DY A LIVE WIRE. Wrapped Around a Car The Pass enfecra Made Prisoners. The fifteen passengers on Clifford Avenue Car No. 289 last evening, be tween 5 and 0 o'clock, bad an experi ence on Massachusetts avenue, near Delaware street, which they will never forget. The motorman and conductor will probably remember the accident for some time, as will each of tho hundred or more persons who wit nessed it. The car was bound north wnrd, and the trolley wire broke be- foro Dolawnre strppt xvnn rpnrfiod liclawore The live wire wound around and around the car, making tho passen- gers, the motorman nnd conductor prisoners. The motorman dared not touch the brake. Mrs. Barbara Cregle attempted to jump nnd received In juries which may result fatally. The wire finally became wound bo tight about the car that the car stopped, and those aboard crept carefully out. The accident wns one of the strang est which hns resulted since the ad vent of tho overhead wires. In most enses where the trolley wire was broken the wire had fallen harmlessly to one side and little danger had re sulted. Yesterday the wire became fastened in some manner to the car, and the motorman realized in a mo ment the danger there would be in shutting off the current or putting on the brake. All that could be 'done was to allow the car to run. Fully 150 feet of the wire was wound nbout the car, some of It becoming fastened along the side where tho passengers would have to get off. The motorman was a prisoner, not daring to move a foot for fear of coming in contact with the live wire ,and not knowing what mo ment the wire would be brought in contact with him. He first saw the situation, and cried to the passengers to keep their seats. The conductor had to forcibly put several passengers down In their seats. The wire was playing all around the car, and a pass enger, in jumping, would have run a great risk in striking it. Several of the passengers screamed and became panic-st-icken. Mrs. Cregle risked the wire and Jumped, although the car was going rather fast. She fell to the pavement badly Injured, nnd was tak en to the drug store of It. I. EndB. It was discovered that she had suffered an injury to her knee, nnd It Is feared she sustained lnterrnl injuries by the fall. The wire broke south of Delaware street, and the car came to a stop a few yards north of the crosslnc. belnc brought to a standstill by the mass of wire. While several men'held the wire away from the car the passengers alighted, greatly relieved. They all ran to a place of safety. The wire, from where It broke (to where the car stopped, was torn from Its fastenings The repair wagon wns called, and In half an hour's time the damage was repaired. The street car traffic of the I north end lines was delnyed for some ; time because of the accident. Fully ! 1.000 people gathered around the drug ' store where Mrs. Cregle was carried. It was reported that several persons 1 were badly Injured, but she was the j only one hurt. Indianapolis Journnl. THE CHANGED RUDIES. Clever Piece of Substitution, and the Offender Never Discovered. There seems no end to the curious stories about Jewels lost and stolen. One of the latest is that of Mrs. A, who recentlv took a nnlr nt lnriro nihtr to the drawing room, she found one of the clerks, who told her thnt the stones, which were nppnrently of grent vnlue, were, In reality, false and worthless. Very much agitated over the intelli gence, Mrs. A asserted that the Jewels had never left her possession since tneir purchase, and claimed that h 'J?u """ J?'? before she received them. This, of course, the firm denied, but the feeling on the subject became very bitter on both Bides, nnd detectives were em ployed by both to ferret out the mys- I -' - . tery. When a former butler or Mrs. I A was proved to be a discharged clerk of the well known Jewelers, the inference was obvious, although no proof against the rnnn has been found, and the Jewels have never been re covered. Boston Gazette. It Is not generally known thnt, size for size, a thread of spider silk Is de cidedly tougher than a bar of steel. An ordinary thread will bear a weight of three grains. This is Just about 50 per cent stronger thnn a steel thread of the same thickwsB. A BAND-STOltH AY DONUOLA. The Pertnrh&Uoa It Carrlrrt to the Tent ! a Newipuper Correipondent. Dongoln was visited yesterday by a sand-storm to my idea tho most dreadful of storms. Was there over such a ono before? Millions, 1 sup poso; but I nevor experienced one so bad. I must really use tho ponny-a-llner's very convenient expression, "It baffles all description,'' and for that reason I shall describe it. Our respected friend tho penny-a-liner, I observo, after stating that n thing baffled description, invariably tries to desorlbe it Why, then, should not I? Midday, everything sweltering and seething in the sun that happens to be exposed to It; ovorybody bubbling positively bubbling with perspiration that happens to bo in tho shade; ther mometer looks as if it would burst I am afraid to say how high the mer cury has risen in fact, the perspira tion pours so into my eyes that lean not eo tho small figures. Hock and sand pain tho eye by their glare. A black, dense, mud-colored cloud sud denly appears on tho horizon at the south, at lirst a speck, then growing larger and larger, rolling rapidly to ward us, now m the distance, now noaror and nearer. Down go tents and up in the air go straw huts and sheds, whilo the palm branches wave and nod liko tho plumes of a hearso naught in a gale, or of tho helmet of a knight at a mad gallop. On, on, it rolls, that grimy, fast riding cloud. Now 1 can not see twenty yards ahead ot mo. Tho landscape is suddenly enveloped in a black shroud. It bursts upon my hovel. Away, away, away go my half-answered homo letters. Who shall catch themP "Go; run after them; quickly, quickly, boy." I am enveloped in sand. Over goes my only globe lnnip crash! My bottle of seven days' allowance of lime-juice-it totters and capsizes. Down come tho spiders, and away bole tho rats whom I encourage to run nbout and eat the scorpions, centipedes, and white ants. In comes a ilock of httlo crimson-headed bats, nnd turn bio ex hausted. I lmvo no doom or windows to bo blown in, and thero is no fear of a shower of broken glass, such as I have seen during a sirocco on tho shores of the Levant. Books, sketch es, writing paper, manuscript, linen, lie scattered on tho iloor, I was going to say no, tho earth wo have no floors hero in Ethiopia buried in a moment in black dust; and over goes my only bottle of cognac, kept for medical purposes. Luckily the cork was in. But the only bottle of whisky an Irish friend had been at; ho had left tho cork out; it was light, not much balance left, and over it wont. An aroma of mountain dew pervades tho room. Bisallah! It was to havo accompanied me across tho desert to Wady Haifa, where somo say Camby ses lost his army, though others near Meroo. I put my head out of my window, was I going to writeP I mean a square nolo in ono of the four mud walls forming what is called by cour tesy a house. 1 was blinded as quick lv as any inhabitant of tho cities of the plain was by the hand of the an gel. My eyes were instantly filled with sand, every molecule of which was a burning Bpark every particle a scin tillation. It wearied me to find my way to my washing stand; I mean my pile of old wooden cases, on which was carefully balanced my basin an old biscuit tin, with a classically shaped red amphora In it. Finding it at length 1 cleansed my eyes smarting with the hery dust, and put on a pair of hugo green goggles all glass; these are the only Kind that keop out the sand. Thus armed, I looked forth into the moving mountain of sand. A burning blast, liko unto tho breath of a fiery furnace, scorches my face, dries up my akin, stopping every pore. I look unto the heavens. The sun was a blood-red ball of iiro, floatiug "all in a hot and copper sky;" while along; the horizon hung a lurid light, such as one sees on tho Ocean be'foffi a storm. In tho distanco trees, huts, and tents were invisible; but near one could just make out tho winding, lead-colored Nile, lashed into billows. A denso cloud, which enveloped all, scorned raining fire. Tho atmosphere as if seething, boiling, sputtering. And now waltzing, whirling along tho banks come the "devils"- (shnvtams), as the Arabs call them, tho sand spouts aerial giants each indulging in a pas scul, their huge, fantastic figures rearing their heads from earth to heaven. One is reminded of tho djin of tho "Arabian Nights" lot out of the casket in which King Solomon had sealed him up, and rising as a tall col umn of smoke. How grim and grue some are they! No doubt the fanciful ghouls, efreets, add genii of Arab folk lore drew their origin from such as theso. And a destructive clement are theso rolling, spiral sand billows powerful agents of disintegration, having a grinding, roughing action on rocks, and stones as they rldo the whirl wind, accelerating destruction a coun try replete with decaying pedigrees of decay a country wfiero all changes are not of life, but of destruction where the characteristics of the scen ery around aro heaps of rocks break ing into fragments. And these gnsts of sand penetrate everywhere, into clefts and fissures of siones. eating into and sapping their foundations, and acting with immense mechanical strength, lifting and rolling rock over rock. There is a weird and ghastly dunce all around, in a dull and lurid glare. Now I am enveloped in a heaving mountain of sand; the air is stilling, my mouth is parched, speech is impossible without wetting the lips, the tongue is swollen. I never before properly understood "tho darkness of the Egyptian plague" which "could be felt." Half an hour tho sand tor nado has swept by. I can hear the rush of scared horses, mules, donkeys, and cattle, as they rush madly by, having broken loose; the tremendous guttural roar and grunting of camels. the howling of dogs, and . the shrill screeching of vultures and kites flying beforo the gale. All nature groans. Half an hour the Dongola carnival of the wild elements of the "Soudan" je over. London Xtws, i 'rf-'k n . ikiiyjsa-.