v WAIT. Canst thon lot wait for me , O harrying years , Till I go l-aclcand gather up the past , Though 'tis hut to sued upon its grave my tears , That cvea now are falling thick and fast ? Let me go hack and bind the ripened sheaves That I left Arastlng In the harvest Held , My night of need has come ; these poor , dead leaves Are all I have my sustenance to yield. Let me go back and Irom dimmed eyes the tears Let me them wipe till they arc clear and dry. Why did I leave them there In other years I Methinks I thought I ne'er should mourn or cry. Let me go hack , with sad , repentant hands Gather the unkind words my lips have said , And hid me walk the years though on scorch- Ing sands , But say to me their sting is lost and dead. Let alLmy fair days die , hut those I marred WithH. lilshnesstind sin-r-I hnmhly ask To have them hack , unbounded and uuscarrcd , To live them hetter , this to he my task. Canst thou not wait , hut now , 0 hurrying 3 ears , E'en while I lay at thy.swift-going feet Atonement for tiie past , o praters and tears , That in my cup of. rue shall he some sweet ? The shivering vines cling closer to the walls , Around the house the wind creeps with a cry , . And while the midnight snow weaves cruel ] tails , I and my soul are waiting theTeply. S. Ji. Jlc-lfanut , in Chicago Current. " , DUNCAN'S GLASS. "Then sometimes , sir , " said old Mat thew Duncan , the coast guard at Tram- bay , "I've thought I'd write a book. I've got so far as to think what color the cover should be , and that's half the bat tle ; and I settled that it should be as like the Union Jack as the book folk can make it : but I never get any further. I'll tell you some of the things"'ve seen through this glass , andwhat I've thought of them , too ; and if thedo any folk I'll be all the better pleased. "Now , first of all , yon point this glass over at yonder old bit of. a ruin on the cliffs. You can't see a large black stone in it well , the focus ain't right for your eye ; every man must shift il'for himself ; but the stone is there " - "Ay. I see it now. And I see a white cross a rough dab of paint on it" ' "Right ; Avnen a man sees that , 'tis a sign he has the focus right , and that he can see us I could only I hope 'he'll never get a chance to see what I saw. When , a man can sec that white mark , 'tis a sign that he could know one per son from another if they were standing at the same place : and that he could see all they were doing , and so to speak , al most bear what they were saying. We ain't quite come to that yet , but if what folk say who come to talk to me in the summer time be true , we're on our way to it and we ain't far away either. But now you're sure that a man standing here , can see what is going on over- there. ' Well , fifteen years ago , come mid summer-day , I was on guard here at three o'clock in the morning. I gener ally gave a look all round with that glass ; and as there was nothing at all m view out to sea , I kept watching a rabbit that was skipping in and out amongst the stones of the old ruin. Presently I saw it was frightened and ran away ; and I saidto myself , 'Now , what's that ? ' for you know "when a man is long hours in the same place , and them day after day , he's glad of any thing that makes a stir. " 1 hadn't long to wait before I saw what made the rabbit jump away in such a hurry ; a man and woman came out of the ruins and sat on some of the loose stones outside. The man was dark , with a-sailor's dross , and sis far as I could see and that , I think was pret ty near was about thirty years of age. He warn't the looking man tliat I'd trust myself to if I were a young girl but no Jiving man can tell what any liv ing woman will do , or will not d"o , or why she will do it or will not do it and that's a , knowledge I've come to by thinking , and by wa'tchiug my old woman , and was one of the first things I was going ( o put down m my book. At lirst these two were friendly enough even if the glass were wrong in tke focus , I could have seen that they were sweethearts ; but after * they had been there about half an hour or so , I saw" that the girl began to move away from him ; and when he shifted his scat i-'O as to get near her. she rnacle another move. "Said T'Here's the old story of all Ilie world , of morning , noon and night , : , oing on here on the top of this cliff at tour o'clock in the morning. ' "But I hadn't time for much thinking as it took all ray attention watching. There was a quarrel , and that was plain. But , 'Pooh , ' says I to myself , 'they'll kiss and be friends in ten minutes. ' Well , I waited , for the kissing , and then 'E thought I'd have another look around the ocean ; but that poor girl never got a kiss again. There was a something in her hand that he wantedto get that was plain though I couldn't exactly make out what it was , but whatever it was he snatched it from htr , and she struck at him in her anger , and then there was a pushing abour.7 but always with her getting nearer and nearer the edge of the cliff , until at last I saw the man's two arms thrust straight out , and over she went. Once or"twice she hung on the face of the rock ; her dress caught in the brambles then ; but it was only for a moment , she was in the sea in less time than it takes to tell you this. this."The tide was full np at that time , but just at the turn ; and once it turns , it runs there like the race of a mill ; and the man was soon lost to view in the ruins , and then I searched the ocean all around of miles , I never got sight of the body any more , "Now , sir , says t to myself , 'What shall I do shall I report this ? " I thought , and thought , and at last I says , 'No , I won't report it , even to my .old woman , for if I do , there's no tellin' "to whom she'll report it again. And the reason I had for not doing this was , I says to myself , 'If lherevs nobody missing and if the body never turns up , as 1 don't believe it will , people will say I was dreaming ; it may be they'll say I was drunk ; for all I know , they may say I'm mad. I'll jut wait and sec whether the body is found or not. Besides , ' says I to myself , 4I can't tell that a murder has been committed. 'They fell outthei's no doubt of that ; and there was a scuffling ; but perhaps her going over was ant accident ; 1 couldn't > wcar Hint , wjienlie-'thrusfc out his two hand.he had given her a push that had sent her over. ' ' Well , sir , the burden of my secret lay heavy on my mind , and as I'vvalkeil up and down on my lonely beat it began to eat into me. Says I to myself , 'Mat thew Duncan , you know .of a murder and you've never told of it , ' and it end ed iu my getting a fiivcr , and I was as near dead as a man could be. When I came a bit to myself , I had the parson sent for and I told him that 1 had a great load on my mind , and wanted to ease it by telling it to him , and I told him the whole story from beginning to end , and our captain I had him intoo. "But the gjntleman only smiled at what I said. 'Poor fellow , ' says one , the fever's on him still. 'Ay , ' says the other , 'you see 'tis the same thing he's been raving on all along. ' "Well , 1 was very weak , and couldn't talk much , and I was weary with my earnestness in trying to make tliem be lieve what I said , so I just laid back with my eyes closed , anil they thought I was asleep. But I heard them talk ing , and the captain said , 'Tis a pity , too , for he's one of the Jjest and sharp est-eyed men on the force , and I'm afraid he'll never be fit for anything again , ' 40h , 'twill work off , ' said the minister ; 'you may be sure that when he strengthens up he will forget all his fe ver fancies. You mustn't think of his leaving the service. He must get sick- leave for a while. I've seen many cases as strange as tliis , and they came round all right at last. "Well , I made two or three more at tempts , and I tried the doctor , but he says , Til send yon some strengthening medicine , Duncan , and you'll bs all right , ' and he tapped his forehead and said , 'Fever makes sad work with our brains. ' "I saw it was no use trying to per suade any of the gentlemen ; I did my best , and there , now , I must leave it "But I warn't quite easy in my minO. Looking at it now at this distance of time , I think it was my duty to have re ported it , and taken the consequences , whatever they might hav j been , but this I did : I says to myself , 'There's no knowing what may IIUM up by-and-by , if this is murder murder will out , as tho saying is , but I may not remember all that ought to be remembered by the only man that saw the deed done ; ' so I just took and wrote down on a paper what I had seen , and hid it carefully away lest it should come to any hand. And if I died well , I took care that the accountwhatever it might be worth , should not be lost , for I marked it out side , 'When I am dead this paper is to be given to the minister of this parish , and no one is to break one of the seals upon it , but himself. ' And to make the matter as sure as I could , I put six seals upon it everyone of them different I borrowed them far and near , wherever I could. I put down the day , the hour , and the color of the young lady's dress , and the shape of her hat , and the cut of the man's beard and whiskers , and the red handkerchief around his neck of that I made especial note , for seafaring men don't wear that color often. 'Now , ' said I , 'I've done all I can. ' Time will tell. But it's an aw ful thing for that man , that there has been an eye upon him that he knew and knows'nothing about , ready to give evi dence against him if the question of murder ever turns up. Polk often think they're not seen , and there'll be no witness against them ; but I often think , 'Ah , there's one Eye fl.t any rate that's been upon you ; and there's one Eye witness against you ; go where you will , and do what you will , the testimony of an Eye-witness is there. Of course , sir , " said the coastguard , reverently , "I mean the great Eye above. " "I used to think myself particular be fore , " said the old coastguardsman , but since this happened , I've been ever so much more particular , for I says to my self , 'There's Somoone looking , ay , and there's Someone listening ! You don't sec'Iiim , but lie's there , ' and in a way it's made a difl'erent man of me ever since. "Five years passed , " said the old man , and the doctor , and the parson and the captain forgot all about this matter ; they didn't trouble themselves much about the ravings of a man in a fever , as they thought , and 'twas midsummer morning again , and it wis my turn to be on guard. I don't know what it was that made me keep looking continually at the cliff , and at the part of the ruins where you see the cross painted on the stone. "But everymomcntl felt the lass a'most turning of itself to where I had seen the poor young thing go over ' the cliff. 'Twas as though I most ex'pected to see something ; and they say. if one expects to see something , they'll do it I suppose they think the lancy brings the thing. Well , sir , I did see something. 'Twas the very hour and the very day when that young woman was thrown from the cliff for now we all know about it and there coming out of the ruins I saw the man I had seen five years before. I knew him in a moment he had the same beard , and the same dress , and'the same kerchief , but this time he was by himself. I was watch ing him well , for I was determined that there should be no mistake ; and I kept the glass on him , as a rifleman would keep his rifle aiming at a bull's eye. I could see him as plainly as I can sec you now. He was the same man but ay , he looked twenty years older. But he was the sa'me ; and I says to myself , 'I know you , but I never saw a , man age iPre you ; you're the same man , but there's an awful change came over you , too. ' " "Well , sir , he looks about him here and there , and then he takes out of his pocket a small parcel and puts it in un der a stone , and puts three or four more over it , and walks over to the edge of the clill. Up and down he goes , and goes through all I saw him do five years before , and at last and I never could make this out struggling against it as though some one was pushing him from behind ; still staggering nearer and nearer to the edge of the cliff , over he leapcdand he was caught just the same as that girl was here and there ; and the tide did to him as It did to her carried the body out to sea , and what with congers and other greedy fish , there were plenty waiting for him out there. Th's time I determined uot to. hold my tousrue , so I reported to the crptaiu. who at first only .tapped his forehead , and said I must not go back to fever again but the rights of it was gone in to and found out. "I said'Captain have the ruins search- ad , and I'll take anyone you name to the spot. " "Well , Duncan , ' said he.'Td be sorry for you to go off your head , for you are my sharpest-eyed man. I'll go with j'ou myself , and I'll ask the minister to go , too. " "And there , sir , under the very stone which I pointed out , we found the par- 3el sure enough. It was an old leather purse wrapped up in a piece of tarred canvas , what looked like an old bit of a sail , and in it was a ten-pound note and a piece of paper , and on it was written , in i hand such almost as a school boy would write 'John Hinch threw his sweetheart over this cliff five years ago , this very day and hour fj011 see su" no had it all got rea'ly for the very time , ] because she wouldn't give him the ten pounds in this purse. He wrenched the money from her , but never spent a farthing of it. For five long years he's roamed the earth , feeling that some jyes saw him do the deed , and he's come here in the selfsame clothes that he had on that day ; he's always hearing voices saying that there's some one to meet him here. " "It would look a'most as if there had been somebody there , pushing him from behind , from the way he went over , but [ saw nobody the man was there alone. "There was no one to make a row about the matter , for no girl .had been missed , which is easy enough to account for , 'for we're within a walk of a large town and no one new anything of the man. No inquests had to be held , for no bodies had been found. Folks don't trouble themselves much about things which happened five years ago , and a very bad murder coming up quite fresh then , people didn't take much note of this. this."But "But , ch ! sir , I've often thought what a terrible thing it is , that there's an Eye on us when we're not thinking of it , and how little good sin does us , and how in some way or other it is sure to meet us. There isn't any better preacher to me than my glass ; and there ain't manbstter teachers than the things we have to do with in our common life , jf only we understood all they say. The Quiver. The Artless Japanese Way. The following example of Japanese et iquette reminds us of a somewhat anala- gous case where two young Cuban gen tlemen were the actors. They had called on some _ young ladies in the town of Concord , Mass. , where they were re siding for educational purposes After sitting till quite a late hour in the even ing , they took their departure. As they left , the"ladies went through the usual formula of asking them to call again soon. The gentlemen went out , walked round the block , and returned in twenty minutes. They thought they were com plying with their friends' request to call again soon. Now for the Japanese story : A Japanese gentleman called upon a Washington lady one day just before luncheon. As it was a first and presumedly ceremonious call , she natu rally expected it would be brief. To her surprise , he accepted her invitation to lunch , and that domestic rite overhe still stayed. The hours wore on and he did not go. The ladwas wearied be yond endurance. Dinner time came. The lady's husband returned and still the gentleman from Japan stayed on. H" was , as a matter of necessity , invit ed to dinner. Finally , the gentleman of the house relieved his wife in enter taining this apparently stationary vis itor , but as the evening wore on he be came so tired and sleepy that he retired to his own apartment , and the hostess again screwed her courage to the stick ing point and resumed the entertain ment of the guest. At last , about mid night , the Japanese , with the most elaborate and abject apologies to the lady for leaving her , took his departure. But the comedy readied its denouement the next day , when a friend , in whom the extraordinary guest had confided , told the hostess that he taid he never had such an ordeal before in his life ; that he was so tired , and he thought tho lady would never let him go , and linal- Iv he was obliged to leave her without her permission. Then the hostess learn ed that in Japanese etiquette the lady receiving a gentleman gives him the signal for his departure , and it is very rude , in their code , to leave her till she does this. _ How Texas BecameThe Loua Star" State. The use of sealing-wax : with an im prcssion of some device or initial there on having become fashionable for seal ing letters , it is interesting to note in connection with curious things which have been used as seals when one made for the purpose was lacking , that the "lone star' ' in the banner of Texas originated in that way. When she was struggling ( many years before we an nexed herfor / independence , on one oc casion some of those earnestly interest ed in her behalf were preparing a docu ment to be sent to Gen. Jackson , while he was President , and when it was con cluded , one gentleman remarked : "This needs a seal , and we have none. " To which another instantly answered : "We will use this for a seal. " And pouring melted wax on the paper , he stamped it with one of the military but tons cut from his coat , which button having a single star upon it , that be came the emblem of the State. Harp er's Bazaar. Wiiy Not ? A census-taker called at a house on Commonwealth avenue one day when all the members of the family were out except an only .son , a boy of about 10 , who was required to answer the ques tions put by this gatherer of facts. This he did satisfactorily until he was asked his mother's birthplace , which he answered he did not know. "Not know where your mother was born ? " exclaimed the man. "Well , can't you guess ? ' ' "Guess yourself ! " quietly an swered the boy. "Boston Beacon. Fully Conversant. ' Aro you familiar with the game "draw poker ? asked a lady of a meek looking gentleman at a party , the" other evening. "Yes , m.ifUm , I'm a married man. " National Weekly. A TEXAS PIONEER. Dcatli of n Distinguished Citizen of tlio Xiono Star State. A special telegram announcing the death , at his home in Karris county , Texas , on the 21st of January , of Hon. Ashbel Smith , was received Friday morning. With this death one of the most distinguished of the ancient and heroic band of Texan pioneers has Eassed away and few > of them left be- ind. Ashbel Smith was born in Connecti cut in 1806. He graduated at Yale col lege and then studied medicine. After obtaining his medical degree he re moved to South Carolina and spent some years there in the practice of his profession , but subsequently visited Paris , where he resided for a considera ble period , devoting himself to the study of languages and the civil law , and perfecting himself in his profession by practicing in the hospitals of the French capital. In 1830 the Texas struggle for inde pendence began to attract attention both in America and Europe , and Dr. Smith resolved to espouse the cause of the Tcxans , and sailed for America , but this was before tho days of railway and steamship travel , and he did not arrive in Texas until the great and de cisive battle of San Jacinto was fought. He at once tendered , his services to President Sam Houston , and was early in 1837 appointed surgeon general of the Texas army. From 1812 to 1845 , under Presidents Houston and Anson Jones , Dr. Smith served the Texas Republican as am bassador to the court of France , and subsequently performed special missions for his country to the courts of Eng land , Spain , and Sardinia. At Turin , the capital of the latter kingdom , in 1842 , the Texas ambassador attended the wedding of Victor Emmanuel , then wown prince , but subsequently king of Italy , who was married to the Arch duchess Adelaide of Austria , afterward the mother of Humbert IV. , the pres ent king of Italy. In 1815 Dr. Smith was secretary of state to President Anson Jones , who took an active interest in the negotia tions which brought about the annexa tion of Texas to the United States , and during the Mexican war he acted as Texas commissioner with General Tay lor's army. In 1849 he was appointed by the president of the United States chief of the board of examiners at the military academy at West Point. He served'many terms in the slate legisla ture , both 'before and after the civil war. At the breaking out of that strug gle lie raised a company which was incorporated into the 2d regiment of Texas infantry , and marched to the scene of war m Tennessee. It was en gaged in the battle of Shiloh.losing many officers and men , and there Capt. Smith was promoted to be colonel of the regi ment on the field , and served with great gallantry to the close of the war. He was a warm friend of Gen. Albert Sid ney Johnston , with whom he had served in the Texas national army , and after the war , being a member of the Texas legislature , ho offered a motion that the body of Gen. Johnston bs interred on Texas soil at the cost of the state. The resolution was adopted , and Dr. Smith was chairman of tho committee which had charge of the matter , finally secur ing the interment of the remains at Austin , the Texas capital. Dr. Smith was a man of profound learning , and up to the time of his death never neglected his duties. His charity was provcibial , and for many years his services in a large medical practice were given away freely to all , while a great part of his income from valuable estates A\as spent in private benefactions. His courage , fortitude and endurance were invincible , and , al though advanced in life while in the military service of the confederacy , few men could equal him in undergoing the hardships of a campaign. To the end of his long and I'seSul life his energy and acth ity never Jlapged , and at the time of his rlcath he was serving his state as president of the board of re gents of tho Texas university. He died at tiic ripe age of 80 years , and was one of the most distinguished and usc- fnl men which To.vas has over produced. Orleans Picayune. Oil the Hinges. He never oiled the hinges , sir , Uut let them clog with ntst : Ami that's the UMMMI breezes stir lhe trrasscs o'er his ilubt. Too full of bu iness for rest , No time for holiday ; And now , his hands upon his hrcast Aie cruiiihling to dcc.iv. She danced the gayest of the crowd , Amidst the ball-room hirht ; To-day her limbs encased in shroud Were buried out of sight. She didn't top the hh gj to oil , But , buoyed on the v.ave Of social gayety's turmoil , She danced iuto her grave. The pen is silent , and the song , Half-uttered , turned to ice ; The cord is snapped , for overlong He paid the mule's price. Rest would have oiled the hinges when His temples throbbed with pain ; Thev broke as break the lives of rucn "Who stem the tide in vain. Then stop to oil lhe hinges , sir , "When traveling the road ; For rest were better than to spur The flagging brain with goad. "Reprisal's death , the price of toil Or pleasure unrestrained ; -And death the end of all turmoil , "When life might have been gained. IT. S. Keller. A Domestic Paradox. "Jennie , what is that thing you are wearing on your head this evening ? " in quired a newly-made Benedict of his bride. "It's an invisible net , George , dear. " "O , I see. " "Sec what ? " "I see that it is invisible. In fact , I never saw anything so plainly invisible in my life. " Drake's Travelers1 Mag azine. Bored the Professor. Miss Popular ( to Prof. Pfcffer , who is showing her the paper he is to read be Scientific ClubAin't fore the ) you have to read these long , long jiapers , and before an audience ! How I pitv you ! " Prof. Pfeffer "Oh zat is not zo much ze pity as to haf to listen to zc ozzcrs ! " Uarpcfs Magazine. A Cnre for Blizzards. "Yes , I am on my way to Washing ton , replied a man with a buffalo over coat and a beaver cap who was held up for an interview at one of the hotels the other day. "It is hinted that you have made an important discovery ? " "So I have. I am Capt. John White , of Montana , the man who lirst discov ered the birthplace of blizzards , and who invented a cure for them. " "Tell me about it ? " "Well , I have nothing to conceal in the matter. For five winters past I have been 'in the Far West watching cold waves or blizzards. Nineteen out ol every twenty start on a line drawn from Fort Union , in the northern part ol Montana , to Fort Laramie in Southern Wyoming. There are mountains , riv ers , valleys and plains on that line , and these bring about the conditions re quired for a radical atmospheric change. " "Did you ever see a blizzard born ? " "A hundred of them. " "What is the operation ? " "Well , for instance , one day last win ter I was in camp on tho PowderRiver , in Wyoming and directly west of the Black Hills ; * It was a pleasant , sun shiny day , and during the forenoon the wind blew smartly from the Hills. Just about noon , while I was preparing my dinner , a puff of wind from the Lara mie Mountains to the south , hit me. On the plains , a mile to the south ol me , and just where two valleys brought these two different winds to a focus point , a cloud of snow was lifted high in air , and the wind began to circle. In ten minutes the cloud began moving toward me , and the mercury soon went down eleven degrees. The cloud bore to the northeast , struck the north fork of the Big Cheyenne lliver , and fol lowed it cast to Fort Sully , spreading its Hanks as it went. At Sully it ran down the Missouri to the Iowa State line. Here the wave was a hundred I miles long. When it got down to Oma-1 ha it was 200 miles. It left the river there and went east , and by the time the center reached Des Moines one wing was at Minneapolis , due north , and the other at Sedalia , duo south. From wing to wing wis o)0 ( ) miles. That wave took in Wisconsin , Illinois and Indiana , and was kept from Michigan by lake 5n- lluences , and later on all the Atlantic coast , from Maine to Virginia as over spread by it. TJiat was only one out ol the many I have seen born. " "Could it have been stopped ? ' ' "Certainly. It was no larger than a barrel when it started. " "What is your cure for these cold waves ? " "Well , I've been experimenting. You must warm the air as the first stop. In that case you kill tho germ and the blizzard falls Hat. On tint , line of the birthplace of bli/zards , a distance of 500 miles , base-burner coal stoves should be set about six feet apart. Ten thousand stoves might do it , but the government might as well add 3,000 more and make a sure thing of it. Each stove would burn , say , nine tons of coal during the winter. One man , as I figure it , could attend to five stoves. As all the stoves would be out of doors , onljone length of pipe to a stove would be required , i iijriire on saving 78,000 joints of stove pipe. This item alone would pay for most of the coal. Every blizzard costs the country ยง 3,000,000. We have an average of ten per season. I figure that I can stop every one lor $100,000 each. This saves tho country $29,000- 000 per season. The government puts $20,000.000 in its pocket and hands me the other nine. " ' "And you have an idea that your scheme will be adopted ? " "Certainly. The only fear I have is that the government may want to put plain stoves off on me , while I shall stick for the nickel-plated affairs. There's no use going into this thing with am " thing cheap/ shall return in about a"wc k , and as I will then know exactly how much I can save on stove pipe 1 hope you will como and see me. This afternoon T shall try and figure on using one leg to a stove , thus saving 30,000 stove-log * . This would pay for the coal for 3G7stoves. Don't forgot to come and see me. Detroit Free 1'ress. Toonibs and the Philanthropist. After Toombs' famous Boston speech a philanthropist came to him as he stood in the center of a group at his hotel and said : I "Sir , I have come to ask you a qnes-1 tion , and you impress mo as a man who j will toll 'the truth , oven if it bears against him. " "I will try , " said Mr. Toombs , with great meekness. "I am told sir , ' ' said the man , "that down in Georgia you actual ! } ' work poor negroes to the plow , instead of niules or horses. Is that true sir ? " j Mr. Toombs looked like a man hit hard , but asked : i "Do you know the cost of a negrc man. sir ? " "Oh , AX'S. " was the rcplv. "From $1,000 lip to $ lr 00 , for human llesh , sir. Man's horrid trade in man ! * ' Said Mr. Toombs : "Will $900 do for an average1 | "Yes , sir , " said the man ; I think we ma } ' say that. " | "Do you know the cost of a common mule or horse ? ' ' said Mr. Toombs. j "Yes. sir : the average cost of unim proved stock may be $100. You neglect your brutes , sir. " "Granted , " said Mr. Toombs. "Now how many negro men do you think it takes to pull : i two-horse plow in clay soil like ours ? ' ' i "I have not thought of that , sir ; but ; ahem we will say ten. * ' ' "Then , " said Mr. Toombs , in that tender , pathetic tone which would have made him perfect as a revivalisL o\hor- ter"thcn wo have a mule team at $200 , a negro team that cost $9,000 : and what do you think of the economv of it vour- sell1 The talk ended , and only one man failed to smile Soul/tern liivonac. When lie Gets Round. Wife "John , dear , I notice that youi brother James nev.r makes a friondl } call upon u > unless he iintoxicated. . " ' Husband "No , my dear , he doesu't James reminds me of the mocu. ' " AVifc "Reminds you of the moon ? " Husband "Yes. dear : he never got : round till he's full. " ' Boston Courier. t OTHERWISE AND PERSONAL CHIEF JUSTICE . WAITS has in mini a pleasure trip to Alaska. II PAULH. HA.YNE , tho poet , has jus- passed his fifty-sixth birthday anniver sary. SOME of Gen. Logan's admirers a-1 Knoxville , Tenn. , have shipped a large , live gray eagle to his address in Wash ington. EDGAR ALLAN POE is said to bo the favorite American author in France. Edition after edition of his works have been published , some of them bein | very sumptuous. THE Bulgarian government has in formed the Russian government that it would bs ready to pay on tho 25th ol April next , the sum of $223,000 , as an installment of the amount duo for ex penses incurred by Russia in occupying Bulgaria with her troops during the Avar of 1877 and 1878. THE Bulgarian government has clos ed a contract with a house in German ; for the purchase of forty thousand uni forms , Avhile the Sevvian government has concluded an arrangement with the Austrian Capt. Zubovitch for the do livery of torpedoes enough to cost about $120.000. These torpedoes are to be used on the Danube south of Nisch. KATE FIELD says that Mrs. Brown ing's conversation was most interest ing. It Avas frequently intermingled with trenchant , quaint remarks , leaven ed with a quiet , graceful humor of her own , but it was eminently calculated foi a tete-a-tete. All that she said was al ways Avorlh hearing. Persons Averc never her theme , unless public charac ters were under discussions or friend , Avcre to be praised , " Avhich kind ofiicc she frequently took upon herself. IN southern Russia a severe agricul tural crisis is prevailing , and the dis tress is very great. The provincial authorities have been empowerQd to borrow $12,000 to be distributed in small loans for the purchase of grain seed. A request has been made for tho state to build a railroad from Panza to Lozow in order to furnish the destitute people with work. On account of the drought wheat has risen considerably in price. Miss AXXE WHITNEY is much talked of in Boston now as a sculptor of mark ed power. She used to fancy herself a poet. One day , however , having over turned a pot of sand in the greenhouse , Avhich , from its dampness , readily took impressions , she began to model it , keeping at the Avork for hours , and re turning to it next day with zest , till she had Avrought out her idea. Her thought had taken visible form , and it gave her such satisfaction that she then anc ! there decided to make sculpture the pur suit of her life , and began to Avork im mediately and in earnest. SOMK idea may be formed of the magnitude of the higher institutes o' learning in Germany Avhen compared Avith those of the United States , by reading tho ollioial reports of the mini ber of students in any one of them. It is reported that there are now 2,865 students in the University of Munich. Of these 1OC7 arc devoting themselves to the studies of medicine , 890 in judi ciary branches , 890 law students , 52i to the study of philosophy. ISO to theolo gy , 102 to national econmy , and 152 to pharmacy. THE decorations of the "Order ol Christ , ' ' Avhich Prince Bismarck hai just received from Pope Loo XIH. , con sist of a diamond star , Avith eight prin cipal and seven smaller points. In the center is a red enameled cross , tasteful ly entwined Avith a golden garland o. oak-leaves and acorns. The star is to be Avorn upon the breast. The second in signia is a large enameled cross of the same stellated form as the other to be Avorn upon a scarlet ribbon about the neck. Surmounting the cross are the military emblems of Bismarck's pro fession in gold , such as cannon , swords , armors , and helmets. The whole dec oration is about six inches in length and cost $3,000. THE board of education of Berlin , as an experiment , will soon place in the three school houses about to be erected Avarm water baths for the accommoda tion of the school children. The city of Magdeburg will soon follow suit , but tho merit of this innoA'ation belongs to the mayor of J Gottingen , upon whoso recommendation such baths were intro duced into the school buildings of that city , and have been for several years in successful operation. The official re port describes their constitution and management as follows : The apartment containing the baths is situated in the basement of the building ; the Avails are covered Avith cement and the floor with asphalt , and when necessary overlaid Avith boards and mats. The apparatus consists of three tin bath-tubs 3 } feet Avide each , supplied with douches. In the beginning children seemed disin clined to use them , but gradually grew more courageous , and the baths have now become so popular that they are used by 75 per cent of the children. Bathing is done during school hours , five or six children of the same size are permitted to enter tho bath at a time , and by proper management a middle- sized school-room can take a wash in an hour.