11KCJSIVJS THIS WAHDEUKtlS JIACK. Receive the wanderer back , love , Forllfo Is in its wane , Lot us as In the days of yore , Znjoy love's dream attain. For they indeed were pleasant times , Tlioso happy , happy hours , when love lay pure in our young hearts As dew in folded flowers. Though wavering fancy caused my heart On other scenes to dwell , Yet have 1 kept thy imago locked In memory's deepest cell. Like him who tossed upon the waves Of a tempestuous sea , My every thought is that I may A refuge find in thco. I looked upon the past , love , With feelings of regret , And pray that you my waywardness From this time may forget. For if devotion deep and wild My misdeeds can erase. Henceforth it is forever thine Whilst time proceeds apace. For , dearest love , forgiveness Is A truly blessed thing ; It causes oft within the heart A ( rushing fount to soring ; A fount whoso waters arc as pure As those of heaven above , And they who quaff forever sing The glorious tlicino of love. Then , O receive the wanderer back , Give him thy love again , For swceb It is when years have lied To dream love's dream again. Give mo thy love , ere beauty is Within llte's lowest things , And hours will Ily like angel troops With glory on their wings. wings.Finley Johnson. MISS PLPEJ8/S PUPIL. Miss Pandora Piper , teacher of mu sic , who had hard work to keep sou ] and body together , but not unhappy , because she said , she was never left without a new bonnet for Easter Sun day , and one black silk somehow lasted until she got a new one , received a very singular note one morning a note which had been handed in at the door , the landlady's "girl" said , by an "eld erly gentleman. The epistle was enveloped in the costliest and most richly decorated en velope to be procured for love or money anywhere. The paper , nearly as thick as cardboard , was to match. A coat of arms was in the corner , and the words were as follows : Miss Pii'Kii : A person of neglucktctl eder- cashim is wistful to be undertuck. Will kail at 3. Mis-mi SLIGEU. "My gracious ! " ejaculated Miss Pan dora ; "he must have been neglected , that's certain. I never saw anything like that before in all nry life ! Fatally- forgotten , I should say. ' Well , I won der what he can be like. He must be rich , I suppose , poor people can't af ford such stationary as this. Aud a coat of arms , too ! Shoddy , I suppose , but so that he's respectful why should I care for that ? He will probably pay well , and I've lost Anne Eliza Griggs by marriage just as she was beginning to take variations. 'Nora , I shall be in if a new pupil a gentleman calls at 3 o'clock. " Nora , who , like Miss Piper , who often gave her little presents , and who kept on an upper shelf of her closet some soothing balsam which she was always ready to apply to poor girl's fingers , which were always being cut or burnt or pinched in something , gave an amia ble grin and offered to polish up the grate when she had a minute , "seeing aMISS stranger was coming. " The morning wore away. Two little girls had gone through their exercises and a. heavy lady who took lessons in vocal music had nearly burst a blood vessel in endeavoring to gain a certain high note which was the object of her ambition. Miss Piper had been around the cor ner to give a lesson there and over the way to see to another pupil's practic ing.She She came home in a hurry , arranged her hair , saw that the little parlor was neat and awaited her guest with fever ish anxiety. At last he came. Nora showed some one up stairs and there entered at the door an elderly gentleman of benign appearance , dressed in the latest fashion , but not without regard to his age , who bowed low , remarking : "I hope I am not late , mum. I know your time must be very valuable- " "I am sure I only wish everybody was as punctual , " said Miss Piper. "It is exactly three o'clock. " "You're very kind , mum , " said the gentleman , seating himself , as Miss Piper motioned him to a chair. "I'm an oldish pupil , I suppose } ou think ; but I'll explain , I think I've explained in my note , but I'll explain again. I've been neglected , not from any unkindness - ness for my poor mother did the best she could for me but we were very . I don't wish to mention the umble position I've always occupied until a year ago , when somebody came from England and hunted me up. Mother was dead , poor dear ! but this is how it was : Father was very rich and up in the world ; mother was a house maid. He married her , and his mother was furious , and mother couldn't stand it. She ran away ; she came here , and lived an honest , hard-working life. It was only when she died she told me my name was not Niggins , but Sliger , and thai she had written to my father , ergot got some lawyer to write , and he was dead , too , and I came into the property and left the humble position I won't allude to , and well , I'm rich , but I don't know anything , and before I go to England I want to be educated. You understand ? " "It's a very laudible ambition , I'm sure , " said Miss Piper. "I usually teach music , but , of course , I can un dertake the English branches. " "Yes mum , " replied the gentleman , hastily. " "I want to begin with music in this manner. I have known no one in high life who could not play upon the pyanner. Begin with that and go on to spelling , which I am conscious I sadly need. " It was not the true course , but there was a serious and dignified manner about this "neglected" person that made it impossible not to say so. She mentioned her terms and set the hours for the lessons , and so skillfully em phasized the name of the instrument that Mr. Sliger before his departure had begun to call it "the pearino" instead of the "pyanner. " At the door , however , he gave her a dreadful shock. "I wish , mum , " he remarked , "to begin with tunes. " Miss Piper was a conscientious little teacher , but she felt that there were people in this world who. must have their own way , and Mr. Sliger's first lesson 'consisted of the "White Cock ade. " He had a very good car ; he was anxious to learn. Yrom the "White Cockade" he went to "Life Let Us Cherish , " and poor guilty Miss Piper , who felt that the notes had very little to do with his perforniace , beat time and counted. Meanwhile she found that , leaving education out of the question , the man was very sensible that he was very kindly and amiable. Once corrected in the pronunciation of a word lie never became a backslider on that question. However , it was he who arranged every thing , and not his teacher. As other lessons were added the neglected person set the hours for them ; finally lie had six hours a day. The spelling lesson , the lesson on geography graphy ; the lesson in history , followed each other. All the week days were his. his.Poor Poor Miss Piper had no power to say him nay. Ho paid well , lie treated her with actual reverence , but the last pu pil went when he elected to copy some very flat "flower pieces" which Miss Piper had executed in early youth and call this a lesson in painting. He had all her weekdays at last. He certainly had improved in pronunciation , but Miss Piper felt herself to be a humbug. What they really did was to spend the day together exactly as he chose. Play ing with educational books , thumping the piano , daubing bristol board with impossible flowers , scrambling through the lessons in French , of which Miss Piper had had a quarter from a Swiss gentleman. For a long time she was alone on Sunday and usually went to the Methodist church to which she be longed ; but Mr. Sliger soon altered that. He lcgan asking her whether they had "these vespers of theirs at the Cathedral on Sunday morning ? " And Avhen she instructed him that "vespers" were in the latter part of the day , said he would call for her. Accordingly she went to vespers at the cathedral in the afternoon and after that regularly three times a day to dif ferent'churches. . It was then that the landlady thought it her duty to call. She appeared m Miss Pandora Piper's apartment at the awful hour of ten , majestic in her crimping pins , and with a very serious countenance and was wel comed in with a smile by the little music teacher. "Good evening , Mrs. Grimm , " said she , "I haven't had a call from you for a long while. " "No , Miss Piper , you havqn't" said Mrs. Grimm with emphasis. "You couldn't expect me to call after such carryings on. " "Why , what do you mean , Mrs. Grimm" ? " ejaculated Miss Piper. ' Can you ask , Pandora Piper ? " an swered the landlady in her deepest chest note. "The whole neighborhood is talking about you. " "About me ! " screamed Miss Piper. ' You and that man , " said the land lady. "My pupil , Mr. Sliger ? " sobbed Miss Piper , now fairly in tears. "Your pupil ? Don't tell me , " said Mrs. Grimm. "Miss Pandora Piper , shall be obliged to put up a bill for my iccond floor. You've got to go. " "Oh , oh , oh ! " cried Pandora , "Can ou think any harm of me ? Why , you : ould come in at any moment. Nora s in and out every now and then. Such i respectable elderly gentleman , and inch a correct person as I am ? " "It isn't me , Pandora , " said Mrs. jrimm , quite melted. "It's the neigh- ) orhood. The church going ( if it is ihurch ) finished 'em. You're of age his long while , my dear ; you ought to mow how to behave ; but I can't coun- enance this. I shall put up the bill. ) h , oh , oh , Pandora ! that it should : ome to this ! " Poor Miss Pandora ! As her friend and landlady walked > ut of the door with her handkerchief o her eyes , she stood motionless as hough turned to a pillar of salt. She saw just how this repair of neg- ected education must appear to her mall circle of discarded pupils , and elt a strong desire to drown herself , or amp out of the window , or turn on he gas , or take a box of matches in her ea , and she might actually , it seemed o her afterwards , have died of mortifi- ation , but that the gong at the front oor , pulled violently at this moment , tartled her , and Nora , running up , "rapped in a waterproof cloak , for she ad been making preparations to go to ed , announced : "Mr. Sliger ! " "He can't come up , " said Pandora , 'at ' this hour of the night. " "No , miss ; he asks for you to come own , " said Nora. Pandora went down. Mr. Sliger was at the door. "There's a telescope at the corner , " e said ; . "Something going on in some iar or other , I believe. Get a bonnet ud shawl and come and have a peep. : will be a lesson in astronomy for ic. You can explain it , you know ime terms as the other lessons. " Pandora without a word obeyed. The door closed after the two , leaving Ers. Grimm staring at Nora. "That's the capslieaf , " said the lady. "Shall I sit up for them ? " asked fora. "No , " said Mrs. Grimm. "I will. " Meanwhile Miss Pandora and Mr. ligcr peeped through the telescope and iw the rings of Saturn , which Mr. liger supposed to be phenomenal anil jmporary , and which were explained y Miss Pandora to be fixtures , and tien adjourned to an ice cream saloon f much elegance. This , indeed , was desperate dissipa- ation , Miss Pannora said to herself , as lie sat before the cut-glass goblets on ic damask cloth , and saw the water plash from the little fountain in the enter into the aquarium and over the lossy plants , all reflecting in the long lirrors. However , what did it niat- ; r ? She was already "talked about , " irned out of her lodgings as a person rho had' gone wrong. She would keep lis merry moment to remember when ic had put an end to all by saying to ic neglected pupil that she could no mger impart instruction to him. He was ordering every indigestible luxury on the bill of fare , the diamond on his little finger flashing like a small sun , obsequious waiters bobbing about behind them. He looked kindly at her , and asked if she liked this or that. He was as simple as an old baby ; as kind as an old lady , and ho was a nice , pleasant-looking man. "All over ! All over ! " she said to her self. "I might have known what a wicked world this is , and how ill it thinks of innocent things. Why might not I go on teaching him forever with out harm ? " People were coming in from concerts , from the theaters ; tables were filling ; but theirs , between two columns beyond the fountain , was very quiet. The waiters were gone to execute Mr. Sliger's behests. Suddenly he turned to her , and took a letter from his pocket. "Miss Piper , " he said , "read that. " Pandora opened the missive and perused it. It was from a firm of lawyers , speak ing in plain terms of Mr. St. Leger as a gentleman and a man of honor and for tune. "I got 'em to give it to me , " he said , ' to show you. " "I do not need it indeed , " said Pan dora , sadly. "And this is the way your name 4s really spelt ? St. Legcr ! It's a beautiful name. ' ' "It sounds a little curious to me , " he said. "Mother wrote it Sliger. I never knew , but you'll see I'm all right. They never took me without a character when I went for a place in the poor times , and I couldn't expect you to take me without a character , either I I don't know whether you despise me for my ignorance or not , but if you don't , why I want you to take me for your pupil for life to marry me , Pandora. Will you ? " It was a dreadful thing to do in such a public place , but Pandora Piper felt that she was going to faint the room grew black. She held out her hand for the glass of water. Most of it was spilt upon the front breadth of her new black silk , but that which passed her lips revived her. Then a soft , sweet sense that there was no more trouble for her in this world crept into her heart and she smiled up at him. "It was in my mind the first day I came. " he said. "I had seen you often through the window when you gave lessons to that little girl at Bell's. I used to watch you with my opera glass. I felt sure that you were just the woman for me and every lesson you gave me proved it. I shall learn every thing from you goodness as well as spelling. Oh , say'Yes ! ' I want you ! I want you. " She said "Yes. " Mrs. Grimm was sitting up for her , pale with wrath , when she returned ; but Pandora took her by both hands and said : "You won't turn me out until after my wedding day , will you , dear ? You'll let me be married here. It's next iveek. Mr. St. Leger won't wait. You see , we will have to go to England to ive on the estate. And after all a poor teacher needs no great prepara tion. " "Servants and diamonds and a coun- ; ry house and a city house , and every- ihing heart can wish , " . Mrs. Grimm ; ays in telling the story. "A real grand aily now. It's like a romance. " And Pandora , happy with her good , limple husband in her new surround- ngs , often thinks so herself. i Aycr's yeicspaper Annual. N. W. Ayer & Son's American News- ) aper Annual for ISSi is now before he public , and to say that it is the nest extensive as well as the most com pete publication of the kind ever issued s but stating what all must acknowl- idge who give the work thorough and iritical examination. It contains a sarefully prepared list of all newspa- ers and periodicals in the United Jtates and Canada , arranged by states n geographical sections , and by towns a alphabetical order. In this list also 3 given the name of the paper , the 3sue , general characteristics , year of stablishment , size , circulation , and ad- ertfcing rates for ten lines one month , n short a vast fund of information con- erning newspapers of interest and im- iortance to the journalistic craft , to dvertisers and to nearly everybody Ise is found within its pages , and the rhole is so arranged that the information aught can be readily turned to. For full- ess , correctness , compactness of state- icnt , variety and value of contents , nd freedom from favoritism or preju- ice , it perhaps has no equal , and con- idering the size of the book and the liaracter of its contents is cheap at the rice asked , S3 , carnage paid. Gettysburg Itattle-Fleia. hlladelphla Record. Department Commander Dyer , of the - ' . A. R. , has issued a general order in rhich he urges upon every Post and omrade to subscribe for stock in the ettysburg Battle-field Association and ecome a part owner in the greatplace. 'he ' organization already holds in fee ! mple that portion of the grove near [ atalysine Spring in which General : eynolds fell ; "Little Round Top , ' " ic north slopes of Round Top , the ark opposite and east of the National Cemetery , McKnight's Hill , Gulp's Hill nd the "wheat field , " with the woods jtith , which have been styled the whirlpool" of the great battle. "All thesegrounds , " the order states , remain as they were at the time of the attle , except so far as the marks have een effaced by the operation of na- iral causes ; and to a large extent the mettes and infantry defenses have been jnewed and preserved as originally Dnstructed on these portions of the eld. " The association desires if pos- ; ble to secure all the land comprised in ic battle-field , and convert the place ito a sort of national park. As funds re raised portions are secured. An agricultural paper asserts that ell-selected grade cows are more pro- table in the dairy than those of pure reeding , at the same price. This may B so , but it is no argument against lorotigh breeding , xou can't have rades without thoroughbreds. Partisan feeling is the chief of crime. -George W. Curtis. 1'Ol'UL.All SCIESOE. The Association of German Engineers numbers 5,100 members. Citric acid has been ascertained by Dr. Sehultto possess powerful an tiseptic properties. According to the last annual report the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science had 2,011 mem bers. bers.An An English firm has began the man ufacture of casks and barrels of steel. They are lighter than wood and more durable. Oil is now extraced from the seeds of grapes in Italy. Young grapes yield most , and black kinds more than the white. A statistician has calculated that there are manufactured 80,000,000 pins every day , or about 29,200,000,000 every year. year.A A tricycle postal delivery system is to be tried by the postmoster general of Victoria at Portland , Sale and Ararat , with the view of extending it , if it proves successful , to other districts of the colony. To detect cotton oil in olive oil , mix the oil in question with a solution of basic lead acetate , and let it stand for twelve or twenty-four hours. If cotton oil is present it takes a red color like fresh-prepared tincture of myrrh. Mons. Balland has found that the average moisture of the Hours of com merce is 14 per cent. It varies with the hygrometic stale of the air , and is generally from 1 to 2 per cent , greater in winter than in summer. The making of large lenses is a mat ter of many difficulties , as may be in ferred from the fact that there have been nineteen failures to cast the thirty- six-inch glass for the great Lick tel escope to be mounted in California. A German paper trade journal says that a waterproof paper which will shine in the dark can be made of 40 parts paper stock , 10 parts phosphores cent powder , 10 parts water , 1 part gelatine and 1 part bichromate of pot ash. Bronze is a mixture of copper and tin , and sometimes lead , the proportions tions of which vary somewhat , but arc usually nine to one. It is often adul terated with zinc , but when this is the case its surface honeycombs on expos ure. ure.In In order to make plaster set quickly mix it with water into which a little sulphate of potash lias been dissolved to make it set slowly , mix it With line slaked lime. The time of setting may be regulated by changing the relative ( juantities. An establishment in the Hebrides svhich treats seaweed for iodine , ac cording to Mr. Edward Stanford , F. C. 3. , obtains an illuminating gas as a by product. The process also yields rery light and porous charcoal , ainnio- lia and tar. TfViy 27iey Kan Slow. Jouncll Blnffi Herald. "We made a singular discovery the > ther day , " remarked an official of a oad running into Council Bluffs. 'About three miles beyond a certain station on our line there is a farm house > y the side of the track. Just bc3rond ; he farm house is a little creek , over vhich there is a small bridge. About 'our years ago some repairs were being nade to that little bridge , and of course lie bridge gang put up a sign board Run Slow , ' on either side , during the lay or so the bridge was weakened. iVhen they had finished their work they vent off and forgot the signs. The fact s the boards had disappeared , and they lidn't take the trouble to hunt them ip. Some weeks afterward , no one unows just when , the signs reappeared n their former places. Nebody knew vho put them there , or what for. Needy - > ody cared. If tli'e section men noticed hem at all they thought the bridge aen had done it. It was none of the ingineer's business why they were here it was their duty to ibserve the regulations , which re- iiired them to slow down at all such igns. Observe regulations they did. 'or about four years not a train has lasscd over the little bridge without lowing almost to a stand-still. The ulvert , for that's all it is , has been as afe as any part of the road bed , and et stopping and starting trains there as cost the company thousands of ollars. You know it costs money to tart and stop trains. You are won- ering how it all comes about of course , ell , that farmer stole those boards nd put them up again at leisure. For nir years he has been going into jwn or coming from it on our trains , etting on or off right at his own door. t was a slick scheme , and how he must ave laughed at us and enjoyed it all ic while. But his game is up now , nd the engineers are having their re- enge by keeping up an infernal jreeching of their whistles at all hours f the day and night whenever they ass the farm house.1' Tea-Growing in the United Stales. Victor M. Hollingsworth , late divi- onal manager of the Assam Doom- looma tea company , has written to ic Industrial Review a letter upon the ultivation of tea in the southern states. Wherever the tea-plant has been lanted in suitable situations , even as ir north as New Jersey , ifrha's flourish- I. In Georgia it grows wild from plants mt out by the department of agri- iilture in 1850-55. Mr. Hollingsworth : ates that even if tea were worth no lore per pound than cotton it would 311 pay better than the latter , since otton must be cleared for , fenced , lanted , cultivated , picked and grubbed ut every year , while tea is perennial ad needs only pruning and the manu- icturing of the leaf after it has come ito bearing. As for temperature , the : ate of Mississippi stands midway etween Assam and the districts of idia. The rainftil in Mississippi is less lan thai of either of the Indian dis- icts , but our authority assures us that rainfall well diffused over the year , ud most ample in the growing months , L fact , little and often , is preferable to deluge in any one month. The ob- iction of the Avant of cheap labor is ict by the proof that labor in Assam is dearer than in the southern states. The Bengalcso coolie may be cheap in Bgngal , but he lias to bo imported into Assam to gather the tea crop , and costs about S50 per head before ho does a. day's work. The writer makes the as sertion that one southern negro is worth three Hindu coolies. The naturaliza tion of the tea plant is an object worthy the expenditure of some little time and capital , and Mr. HollSngsworth's argu ments seem to prove that a good return mav be looked for. - ! Keeping the Boys ou the Farm. In an extended argument as to tlio desirability of formers' sons sticking to the farm , the Cincinnati Commercial observes that there is a feature in this matter of sons following the calling of their fathers that is not sufficiently re garded. " The calling of the father may rise tea a higher dignity when the sous adopt the business , thoroughly learn it , and proudly pursue it. The accumu lated reputation , capital , and business of the parent can bo inherited and pre served by the sons. " Again , it is a law of nature that holds good in all the animal kingdom , that aptness for any business m y bo in herited , or may bo bred , as we say of stock. The great desideratum in de veloping a race of trotters is to insure an aptness to trot. And this comes not from stock that has habitually been used for the draught or chase or race course. If the dam trots and the sire trots wo do not expect the offspring to be a running horse. " The old Spartans understood this law of developing an aptness for a given calling in the children. The Germans of olden times developed a race of war riors on the same principle. "The law of heredity is so broad and so powerful in its influence that it ex tends not only to color and form of our race , but it extends to thoj temperament and even to the tastes. The taste , though like the muscle and reasoning faculties , may bo improved by educa tion. Still the taste and aptness for any calling may be increased from gen eration to generation. "Then , if we are to reach the highest development as a race of farmers , wo must expect it through the line of de scent. The sun must inherit the fitness of the father , and take up the calling and business where he left off , and his son after him , and so on. "When this shall become the custom in our farm ing families , then shall we see greater stability in society and a higher type of civilization. Every parent has the chief power to bring this work about. The very independence of the farmer's life is to be the germ which develops a race that cannot be other than an inde pendent people. Our nation is to achieve its greatness in the develop ment of agriculture. Its power at home and abroad is to bo established and held through the arts of husbandry , practiced by a skillful and virtuous race of farmers. All , then , that can be done by the State or family to ennoble and to dignify the calling , and to entail its blessings and influence from father to son , will add to the stability and grandeur ofthenation. " The "Wrong Roll in the Right Place. A gentleman at Darien who had been an a collecting tour returned home the at'her night with about $1,200 in his socket. He locked every door , and was jo nervous that he didn't know wheth er ho was a foot or a horseback. After lie and his wife had undressed and got Into bed , he got up and put the roll of noney into liis wife's stocking. In the nornicg when he got up he found his noney in his pantaloons pocket , and isked his wife if she wasn't astonished ivhen she found that roll of money in ler stocking. She said she didn't nnd my roll in her stocking. He told her ihathe put it in her stocking the night jefore. She insisted that if he did he nust have got up in his sleep and taken t out. He insisted on examining her stockings , to see if any of the roll had emained there. She thought she felt something kind of binding around her oes. Finally sue took off her shoe and itocking , and found a half-pound roll > f fine-cut chewing tobacco nicely ammed in about her toes. He said hat beat the deuce , and she said it hat ) aken the skin off her toes. That day he man was very free with his tobacco , riving anybody a chew who wanted it. iVhen the people of Darien , who accept- id his hospitalities , read this , and know hat they helped chew that tobacco that he lady had worn in her slice for a ouple of hours , they -will say words hot they ought to be ashamed of. \tilwaukee \ Sun. Steel Making in China. In the manufacture and use of steel lie Chinese appear to have attained a ery early and remarkable pioficiency. Jhinese records do not enlighten us Ks 0 the precise period at which the art of educing metals from their ores became nown in that country ; but it is evident liat it must have been some centuries efore the Christian era. Mention is lade of steel in the most ancient of the Ihinese writings , ondLeih-tze , an author rho nourished about 400 B. C. , de- sribed the process by which it was lade. In the Yu Ivung section of the hoe King , Book L , it is stated that tnong the articles forming the tribute f Yu were nautical gem stones , iron , ilver , steel , stones for arrow heads , etc. legge points out that , in the time of the [ an dynasty , iron masters were appoint- 1 in several districts of the old Liuu hoe to superintend the iron works , fith the exception of this passage , owever , it is considered probable that icre is no distinct allusion to iron in hinese writings older than 1000 B. C. teel continues to be manufactured in Mna up to the present day. Mr. James Henderson , a commissioner of Lilmii- haug , the Governor General of Chillili , Minister of the young King of Cliina , ates that the " steel -which conies to ieu-tsin from the Upper Yang-tee is ighly prized , and bears much higher rices than the Swedish steel imported .to China. " Joseph Harris says one may feed fat- ng cattle or shee'p all the cottonseed ik'e they will eat without harm , but it ill not do to so feed linseed oil cake or irnmeal. Cottonseed cake makes the chest of manure. ITIicre the Beef Comes From. It was during tlio last days of the war that the Texan cattlotradofirstasstimed largo proportions. At that time Northwestern - western Tcxaa was swarming with cattle , wliich possessed little or no value ou their native jacches. They wore not a choice breed. Largo , raw-boned , with wild eyes nnd long , outspread horns , fierce in temper and forbidding of as pect , they wore about as low a grade of the bovine race as could bo found. The cows were never milked and the oxe never yoked. Still , their flesh \ meat , though rather dark in color and coarse in flavor and taxtnre , and meat was at that time in active demand at the North. Some large Government contractors tried the experiment of importing them. They found that they could buy 2 and 3-yenr-old steers in Toxoa at $ G to $8 per head , and sell them in Missouri at $30 to $35 per head. This paid very well. At first only small droves or " bunches , " as they are called in the West of from 30C to 500 head each were bought , and so careless were the Texan stock-rais ers , and so high was Northern credit , that the bunch was usually paid for by note at twelve months. The cattle were driven north through " the Territory" ( Indian Reservation ) to the Neosho valley , and thence along the boundary line between Missouri and Kansas. Coffeovillo was one of the favorite mar kets of the day. Old cowboys still I speak of it with oaths. It seems that it produces the largest and most blood f thirsty herds of mosquitoesin the "West , and on hot nights the cattle , driven to frenzy by their insect-tormentors , would stampede and scatter over the country. In tlio course of a year or two the profits of the business became an open secret , and capital was embarked in it by several dealers in St. Louis and Ohi- sago. From a. few hundred head the bunches swelled to 1,000 or more , and the price of 3-year-olds rose in Texas to ? 10 and $15. Simultaneously , settle ments began to thicken on the Kansas border , nnd , the settlers naturally ob jecting to periodical invasions of wild jattle , the Northern rendezvous was noved to the vicinity' of Topeka. It lid not stay long there , for many reasons , md , after a general consultation among lealers , Abiline , a new town on the Kansas Pacific , some twenty-five miles farther west , was selected as the future jattle market of the Western country , [ t was surrounded by rolling prairies itill covered with buffalo-grass , well lupplied with water , easily reached rom the South and connected with tlio JSast by a line of railway. Lippincott's Magazine. . . - 03e - Tlie Empress Eugenie. Eugenie do Montijo , Countess of Ceba , was a beautiful woman of 27 , vho had had a youth of vicissitudes , indwas well known in many capitals or her beauty , grace nnd rank , which , laving no fortune to support them , jained her and her mother only theun- leserved title of adventuresses. The nalice of party has raged fiercely igainst this lady's name , but there islet lot n particle of proof to sustain it. tier ability , her affectionate devotion to lie interests of her family , and her re- igious fervor are , so for as the world mows , as unquestionable as her beauty ind her personal charm. No Queen in listory has better fulfilled a Queen's luty as leader of the fashions ; vhile she reigned , the dress of. roinon was at once beautiful , decent , .ud convenient. Hers-was the prettiest ace , the most graceful bearing , the most finning sinile , in all that dazzling court if the Tuileries. But she had a Span- ard's love of political intrigue , and nn Lndolusian's bigotry , and she contrib- ited powerfully to engage her husband u the evil -way that led his policy to Some and his army to Sedan. There 3 a story told by Arsene Houssaye ertainly no unfriendly chronicler hat at.'the Cabinet Council called to de- ide the question of pence nnd war fter the final interview of Benedetti rith King "William at Ems , the pacee arty carried the day , and the Emperor rent to bed. But the Empress , being 2ft behind with the council , won over o her warlike views the gallant De Jrammont nnd the absurd Lebceuf , nnd eversed the decision , and then went in riumpli to the Emperor's chamber , rhere hewas sleeping the sleep of the ust , and gained his assent to the fatal eclaration which was made next day y the jaunty De Grammont , with his ands in his pockets , and by Oliver , ith his ccaur leg er. Harper's 3faga- Ine. American Art at Home. An English traveler in this country , ho careiully observed the progress of mericau art , was surprised that Ameri- ins appeared to have no standard of leritof their own. He observed that le American artist , neither socially nor nancially , came near liis "brother in ondon , nnd that he must leave his own mntry and mnke n nnine in London , aria or Rome before his own people ill believe in him. The truth of this known to all . men. Our collectors go > road , expend great sums on foreign tists , on works that undoubtedly nro orth the money given , but native art- ts are left to languish. The advance ade inwood engraving in this ceuntrv the encouragement of several pr < > ressive publishing houses , shows what raerican art is capable of. This is the ily field in which our nrtista have been ven any chance. On the other hand hen forced to go abroad , the American list suffers under many disadvantages e is poor , and in the straggle for posi- au is trials are many. "When , after : ors of kard work , he wins n place en then the American patron of art is ther coy. New York Commercial dvcrtlser. gj- Krso Louis of Eavnria has contrail mama of fondness for Bismarck his riiier animosity having passed awav : it the other GeJman sovereigns hate : e iron Chancellor as much as ever for g -wiped out their petty courts Tnc White House is ; oing to have a : e floor , imported from i Jtoke-on-Trent , ngland. COOL rain-water and soda will remove achme grease frofa washable fabrics.