-AUTUMN-DAYS. , A-woalth of heimty meets my eye Yellow and green , and brown and "white , In one vast blnze of glory fill My happy sight. Tbc rlcL-robed trees , the ripening corn , Bright colored \ \ Itb September flro Fulfillment of the farmer's hop And year's desire. Sweet In the air are joyous eonnds p ; Of bird and bee and running brook ; And plenteous fruits hang ripening round . Where'er 1 look. 3T- " The mellow sp'endor eoftly falls On morninu ; mists and evening dews. And colors trees .and flowers and clouds With thousand hues. O dreaming clouds , with silver fringedl I watch je gathering side hy side , Like armies , in the solemn skies , In stately pride. ' I love the woods , the changing woods , v Fast deepening down the russet glow , When autumn , like a brunette queen , Rules all below. S ; The soul of beauty haun'ts the heavens , I : Nor leaves for long the warm-faced earth , , And like a kind mother , the kind air Tolifegives birth. r rK _ _ 2ut death rides past npon the gale , And blows the rustling golden leaves ; K They whirl and fall , and rot and die , ; t And my heart grieves. Farewell I O autumn days farewell 1 Ye go ; but we shall meet again , As old friends , who are parted long By the wild main. William Cowan , ? ' POLES APART. Dick Fellowes flung himself back against the frail door-post of the sum mer house 111 the airy building rocked to its foundations. "Say one kind word , Stella My love may not seem much to you , but at least it is the bust I have to give , " he said , earnestly , looking very white and hurt. Stella Howard , sitting sweet and calm in her white sown and pearls , half glanced toward her impetuous lover ; then dropped her blue eyes again with a suspicion of a dainty jhudder. Dick's hands were so very big and ted , and his evening dress looked as if It came out of the ark. Of course he fras very good and nice , and Stella did frot mind his clumsy , little attentions frhen no more interesting was at hand ; but to be made love to by a big , awk ward , young civil engineer working on the new ra iway line ! a creature who couldif t siug or ride , or play bill ards ; who entered a room like a wandering elephant , and was forever buried in dlagiams and calculations , instead of talking society chatter ! Stella could not help feeling it a decided liberty on Dick Fellowes' part to imagine himself entitled to love Colonel Howard's only daughter , and she heartily Wished she had never suggested his being invited to dinner at which he had overturned a glass of cbablis over her new lace flounce or consented to show him the garden in the soft sunset glow of that June , evening. " 1 don't know what to say. I've told you it isn't the least use , Mr. Fel lowesour ; Lfe and mine are poles apart ; we can't make them meet. I'm very sorry you should be pained. Try to forget it all , " ' she answered , trying 'not to show her disdain too plaiuly. Forget ! " echoed Fellowes , the blood rushing to his temples. "No , that's not likely. I tell you whileou live no man. will love you as I have done. Good-by , Stella ; i can't stand any more. Heaven bless you , although you are so cruel ! " And he was out of sight down the garden path before Stella could have stopped him , even had she so wished. What curiously abrupt manners he had , thought she , as she made her way to the drawing room through the sweet scented roses to sing the song Captain Thurlow had begged for in a whisper as she left the table. How odd to go without b dding good-by ! And he was leaving Churlstone the next day , she "tnew. Captain Thurlow's polished manner Tas a pos tive relief after such behav- 5r , and as he turned the pages of the { Bohemian Girl ! " and murmured com- iimenls into Stella Howard's well flea-scd ear D ck Fellowes and his woo- WJg faded from her mind like a disa- "greeable dream. 1 Only once did she hear his name in the two years that followed , and that was in connection with the scheme of some proposed Government works , and ho was called ' 'Mr. Fellowes , the well known and rising engineer. " Dick rising ! Dick famous ! Stella was sensible of a little shock of intense wonder. But there was very little time for any thought of the outside world after that. Colonel Howard died in Af ghanistan , and Stella found herself a penn less orphan , dependent on the distant relations with whom she was living. Even in her sorrow and de spair there was a little ray of comfort in the thoughtof. . Caplain Thurlow. Surely there was one strong arm and brave heart that would not fa 1 her. But Captain Thurlow was endowed with a knowledge of the world , which made him keenly aware of the nice difference between Miss Howard the pretty daughter of his reputedly wealthy Colonel and Miss Howard the penniless orphan. H.s engagement to s. "Lancashire manufacturer's daughter was in all the society papers within a fortn ght ; and as Stella tr.ed to crush out the mortilication and resentment from her heart , which seem : d full to overflowing , there sounded in her ears , as if it were aproyhecy , Dick Fellowes' parting words : "No one will ever love you as I have done.11 Was it all the perversity of a woman's nature that made Stella's memory dwell * so often and so kindly on the recollection of that wooing as time ireul on ? In the old days life had held to much love for her that Dick's seemed % thing little worth the having ; now Uiat she was that lonely th ng , a gov- ' houses , she > nicss in other people's wondered how she could have despised ny love so honest and so true , and her recollection of clumsy Dick grew to be a very kind and gentle one. Not that her lot was as hard as that of many ; indeed , the Bouchers were very kind to her. Her pupils were good and affec'ionate , 'with the careless affection of children ; she had plenty to eat and drink and nothing to complain of , except that her life had passed her by. She tried to do her .duty , to teach the children well and wisely , to help Mrs. Boucher with her numerous guests and society cares. The house was to be full for regatta as usual , and Stella had promised to give up her holiday till they wereall gone again. She was writing notes for a great garden party when the little girls burst in upon her in wild excite ment "Oh , Miss Howard ! only think ! Sir Richie is coming our own dear Sir Kiel lie. Isn't it lovely ! " they cried. "And who may Sir Richie be ? " in quired Miss Howard , very composed ly , directing another envelope. "Not know our Sir Richie ? Why , everybody knows him. Ho plays tennis with-us , and rows us on the lake , and buvs us dolls. Fancy , mamma , Miss Howard does not know our own darling Sir Richie ! " "Miss Howard has beenout of so ciety so long that there is an excuse _ for her not knowing at least the name 'of Sir Richard Fellowes , " responded Mrs. Boucher. The pen rolled over upon the newly addressed envelopes and ruined two. "Sir Richard Fellowes ? " was all M'ss Howard could gasp out. "Yes , the great' inventor and civil engineer. He had his baronetcy con ferred a few months ago , when he finished his great railway * lme to Thibet ; and he's just been stopping at Osborne. Is it possible you've never heard his name ? Whhe was one of the lions of last season , young , rich1 * and the fashion. I'm lucky to get him here , even for a flying visit ; but my husband and he are old friends , and he is wonderfully fond of the children. Can it "be that you have never heard ot him , really ? " " 1 I met him some years ago , " Stella managed to falter. Gladlv would Ste'la ' have hidden her self in her distant school room tbat night and pleaded neuralgia or any oth er synonym for a broken heart rather than enter the crowded drawing room , whence the soft flow of voices and laughter floated out from the open win dows over to her own room in the wing. But Airs. Boucher had told her that they would want some singing and governesses must not indulge their feel ings when other people's entertainment is at stake. Stella's heart seemed beating in her ears as she entered the great drawing room behind a tray of coffee cups and hid herself in a sheltered nook near the piano. At first she could see nothing clearly , the rose shaded lamps threw so dim a light ; then she grew aware of a group of smiling , interested peopleall bestow ing their most gracious smiles and at tentions to a tall figure in their midst. Could that be Dick Fellowes that broad shouldered man with the brown mus tache and close cropped , curly head , who moved and spoke like a man confi dent of his own powers and used to succeed and pjease ? Stella thought of the ill-fitting garments' of old days as she noticed the shapely cut of his coat collar and the grace of'.self-possession in his every movement. Dick had red hands and big boots and suggested a bull in a china shop. Was there some mistake after all ? A moment and then he raised his head and she caught the old merry smile and the flash of the qu ck , gray eyes ; and half blinded and bewildered with a rush of recollections , Stella made her way tb the piano in obedience to Mrs. Boucher's smile and nod. Why had Mrs. Boucher asked her to sing "Golden Days ? " Itvis Dick's favorite song long ago , and Stella telt as if it would choke her. Her voice shook so that Mrs. Boucher's guests thought their hostess had a good deal overpraised her governess' style , and a Miss Verney near by remarked to Sir Richard Fellowes that she did not ad mire that tremolo kind of manner so mangirls affected. As she rose from the piano stool her eyes met those of Sir Richard , who was standing close to the piano. There was nothing beyond the most casual recognition in the slight bow on both sides , and Stella got away somehow to her own quarters to find vent for the passionate flow of tears that overcame all her self control. The next day was to be the grand garden party. Miss Howard was sup posed to be unostentatiously in the background , dressed in her best , to keep a supervision over her little pupils. Ethel and Maud , wild with delight , hastened her out to the tennis lawn long before any one could possibly be ex " pected to "arrive. "Just one 1 ttle game before the peo ple come to the grounds , M.ss Howard. You know we may not play when all the grown up people are here , and we do so want a little , tiny game , " begged the children. Miss Howard , mindful of her best cream gown and the difficulties of ten nis when combined with long gloves and plumed hat , vainly endeavored to escape. "Only a little scrap of play. Ah ! you know you can't refuse , " they said. Arid Stella was forced to laugh and yield to their entreaties. So that was the picture that met the eyes of the idle gentleman who saun tered down the shrubbery path , among the fragrant syr.ngas , and turned the corner ) f the terrace steps a girl's figure in a creamy gown , vivid in the hot sun against the trees and shrubbery ; a shade hat which threw into relief the crisp , bronze hair and the soft flush on her cheek , a racquet poised aloft , and a flutter of white-winged pigeons toward the dark blue sky. He stopped short , as if spellbound. "Oh , sir , Richie , vou're ju t in time ! Come along and have a game with Miss Howard do , do ! " cried the children. Stella turned with a violent start ; the racquet slipped from her gloved hand and struck her left wrist a vio lent blow. The pain turned .her faint and giddy and she felt herself grow wh'te to the very lips. "No , no , young woman , " she heard the voice that was so like , yet so un like , the voice of other days say : "Miss Howard won't plav with me she never would. " " " Then he turned to her with a sudden change from thv. laugh ng tone : "Have hurt ? I you your arm am afraid I startled you ; " and hojcame for ward hastily. But Stella * drew away as he ap proached. "Nothing it is nothing ; pray don't trouble me , " she said , almost crossly. And as a stream of gayly dressed people emerged from the conservatory and began to spread themselves over the terrace and approach the lawn Stella turned and fled into the shrub- berv. She had reached , the fountain by the statue of the dancing faun before she was overtaken. "Pardon me , " said her pursuer , in a tone that was certainly not Dick's it was too commanding. "I do not want to contradict you , but I can't believe it is nothing. " And in another moment the little bruised wrist , from which he had stripped the glove , was in Sir Richard's firm , light grasp , and Stella meekly surrendered. "Sit down here , " "was the order , and she found herself placed on the mossy step of the old fountain , while with quick , deft fingers Sir Richard dipped his handkerchief in the cool , clear water , and bound it round the slender wrist Could it be Dick ? Was it not all a mocking dream ? - Stella could only hope with'all her might that the awakening might be long delayed. The splash of water in the old stone basin and the mysterious whisper of the pines overhead were th e only sounds that broke the summer stillness. The tennis was too far offfor them to hear the merry players ; they were quite alone. Did Dick remember the last time they had been alone together ? He came and sat down on the broken step by her side. "Stella , do you shrink from me still ? After all the years I have been working and toiling to be worthier of you , .am I no nearer the goal than when we last parted ? Must I ask in vain , as I did then , for the least little word ? " he said slowly and gravely. Not a movement , not a sound from the shrinking figure at his side. His face grew graver still , and * he bit his lip. "Am I to go away again , then ? " he asked , after a pause. Still no answer. With a su dden impulse , Sir Richard stooped * and peered under the broad hat which hid her face from him. "What ! crying. Stella ! " He was on his knees bes de her on the moss. "Have I made you cry ? " My darling ! my own1' ! I He was trying to tak'e her in his ! arms , but she struggled to free her self. self."Ah "Ah , Dick , I told you once that our lives were poles apart ; it was false then , but it has come true , " he mur mured , brokenly. x "If it had , which I deny , the rela tive positions would be the'same. You are , as you have always been , a world above me in all things. But love can bridge any gulf , Stella. Won t you let me try ? It is my trade , you know. " And then she struggled no longer. "Dick , " she whispered , by and by , when conversation had had time to be come a trifle less absorbing , "do you remember what you said thut night at Churlstone ? You told me no ii-t/i would ever love me as you had dore. I didn't belive it then , but I know now that you were right. " "D.d I say that ? " he asked , laugh ing. "Well , yes , I was right , I dare say only I put it in the wrong tense. What I shoufd have said was not 'as 1 have done , ' but 'as I do , and as I shall keep on doing as long as the worla shall last' And that would have been truer st 11 , my guiding star ; so let it stand like that m the future. " And tliat point was settled without opposition once and for always. C'/u- cago News. Fattening1 Swine. Mr. A. B. Allen , who founded the American Agriculturist nearly fifty years ago , and was for many years its editor , is now spending the evening of his days on his farm near Toms River , N" . J. As in early years , he is devoting very much of his attention to stock raising , and in the November number he gives the following advice about fattening swine. Swine should be pushed forward now in mild weather as fast possible , as'they will gain flesh much more rapid on the same quantity of food than in freezing weather. During the fattening process it has been found highly beneficial to feed a moderate quantity of pumpkins , for when this is done they assist the digestion of the gra.n or meal given the swine , and enables them to more perfectly and economically turn it into flesh , thus saving a considerable per centage in the consumption of food. Pumpkins , or , what are richer and' better , winter squashes , ought to be grown especially tor this purpose by all swine keepers. Aside from this , they are excellent forthe store stock , as they will do well if fed alone on these that is , provided they are of a good , quiet breed. When pumpkins are not on hand a few roots may be given raw , of which beets and carrots are better than pota toes , ruta-bagas , or common turnips. The last are very poor feed for this purpose , being better for cattle. Grass , and especially clover , is an ex cellent substitute for roots , so long as it remains green and growing in au tumn , but when turned out to this , the swine ought to have a warm shed , into which they can come when fed and to protect themselves from dew and frost during the night as well as from storms. To make superior hams and bacon , corn should be mixed with oats or bar ley , or perhaps rye might answer , at the rate of one-half to a third of one of the latter to the former , and ground thus together. Such feed increases the proportion of tender , juicy , lean streak ing the fat , which is essential to pro duce a fine quality of hams and bacon. If fat pork for salting and barreling alone is wanted , then pure corn , whole or ground into coarse meal , is the best feed , jo ned with some puronkin or roots , barley or rye , as recommended above. BETWEEN THE LIGHTS , Uctwecn the 1'srhts the > ul has time to think , To viuu" in letrosuect the vanished hour , To cull a ain hope's amaranthine flowers. To stoop beside the fount of life , and drink. Between the lights no nue.1 o , spoken word Our language is too poor when we are near Th Idcal'Liie whon other tones we hi-ar. Tones more divine than mortal ear hath heard. Love chants of pnrrr joys and nobler heights Tinu music thrills the soul with deeper power , And life grows richf r in the quiet hour , When we can pause and rest between the lights. Eva Gorton Taylor , in The Current. IN THE DIAMOND FIELDS. How "Wealth. Hunters Are Periodi cally Beguiled. The daily scenes in th's south African El Dorado were very similar to those I experienced in the gold mines of Cali fornia. One day the news was , east of us.they were finding diamonds by the handful ; plenty of open ground , a sure fortune ; and away went the gold dig gers , 'while the speculative canteen- keepers followed. When one of the Americans from New York and I , after a three-miles' tramp under a scalding sun , approached the reputed mine , we found a dozen 'saloons in full blast , while sever.il carts were coming on the ground loaded with d vers suspicious- looking casks. It looked to us as if somebody was intent on starting a new town or was anxious to sell his stock of liquid refreshments at a single swoop , as it were , i saw tiie trick at once , aud was mad with mvself that 1 had been so simple-minded as to have been one of its victims. Near by was a hole , aud packed close around were almost a thousand d.ggers , while in the cavity a black. man wis grubbing the lime. A few were marking out claims , but the majority , having seen no diamonds , de clared indignantly. "This is a fool's rush. " Stidilenlv a bloated old fellow appears upon the scene , nicknamed Mahogany Nose , from the vermillion- colored appearance of that organ , jumps up and down over his table and shouts : " "Diamond ! diamond ! A rush is made for him. "Let's see' it ! " all exclaim. "Oh. it's only half a carat , but indi cates , " and Mohogany No e resumes his scraping. The bait takes. All seize their picks and pick until the irround is occupied. More people arr.ve. Cla ms are mark ed out New-comers are astonished at the imltistr ons scene , and conclude that th s is the spot the place that they have been so long looking for. No more room for claims but i ' < sa in the secret so ze several claims ; i o lire- tended original owners getiatliftil and threaten , and a riot is in pi < - . pei t , when 'it is suggested b one > f the "friends" that the matter of ili.sputes be settled by the rules of tho ring. Agreed to ; and the winner is borne on his friends. . ' shoulders to a canteen. where ale and beer is consumed in im mense quantities to cornrnemor-tte the victory. After awhile , when quiet is rstored. it finally dawns upon t.e : aver- ag. : mind of the "kapj" ' that Mahogany Nose has succeeded in playing his cards well. Tins canteen where so much fer mented refreshment was swallowed be longed to Mahoganv Nose , and he "planted' the diamonds he pretended to find. Fur reasons unnecessary to state , old Mahogany found it prudent to abandon his claim , enter his canteen , and give a free treat to all th : t come. That settled it. and all was torgiven , except on the part of some g jm old diggnrs who had come many miles to ' the no vEl Dorado They'il-'inanded brandy and got it , instead -poonch- - ing the Tead of thatd d old wi-.tsel. " Uoston Commercial Bulletin. Accidents to Sleep-Walkers. It seems strange , on the first blush ol the matter , that so very faw accidents befall sleep-walkers. The proportion of instances in which aninjury is sus tained by the subjects of this remarkable slate of semi sleep is very small. The explanation of the immunity is doubt less to be found in the fact that it is a state of semi-sleep in which the sleep walker makes his exi-ursio'i. He is sleeping onlv so far as part ot his cereb rum is concerned. The rest o. ' h s brain is awake , and therefore it is really not a strange feat to walk carcfuHv and es cape injurv , doing all the necessary acts of avoidance while .carrying tint some dream purpo-e , just as a waking pur pose is fulfilled. This hypothesis ob viously requires a very full explanation of such an accident as that by which a sleep-walker recentlv carae to her deatii namcl , falling out of an open win dow. It is not likely to have Ien part of the dream to gut"out of a windw. There must have been some error in the carrxi'ig out of the process ; such , fort example , as turning to the right instead of the left on leaving a room , and thus walking through a low window instead of through a doorway. As a rule the ' sens'-s are sufficiently on the alert to ' enable the sleep-walker to take all pre- , cautions for safety , ami when he comes face to face with a d.llicultv involving more than automatic or sub-conscious self-control , he wakes. We should like to know more of the case which has ' just ended fatally from some competent med c-.il obervvr who has stud od tho development of this interesting d sorder in this parti < ular instance. Surely a practitioner was consulted. No case of sleep-walking should ever be left w.th- oiit medical scrutiny and counsel. In sleep-walking there is the making of madness , and u its inception this d s- ordcrly sleeplessness ought to be stayed. The Lancet. The Lost Cord. "Hear that piano hear that piano.11 "Yes. " "Old Snagsby's daughter. . They just do it to tantalize me. " "Whv , it seems-averv nice song. The. 'Lost Cnord. ' I bcleive. " "Is that the name of .t ? " "Yes. " "Meaner and meaner ! The cheek of them snagsbys is something terrible ! Here the old man stole half my wood pile last n ght , and his daughter's sins- ing about tiie lost cord. Tight under our nose ! " Uticago A REMARKABLE MAP. An Interesting Specimen of Cartog raphy * of tlio Era of Clilstoplier Columbus. The struggles of geography in the middle ages were so far successful in laving the basis of modern scientfic discovery that their results are even now admitted as evidence in tho settle ment of disputed questions ; a notable instance of which fact is afforded by the second Borg'an or Ribero map , re cently brought into consultation with a view to determining international rights of possession in the Caroline is- lauds. This remarkable specimen ol cartography is the beaut ful work of Don D ego llibero , of Seville , geogra phero Charles V. According to tra- dit on t was commenced about 1494 , or from that date to 15l > 3 , and was not iin.sIn.Ml until 1529 , the retardation of theork being justified by the active profci-iition ot geograph.cal research at i I'M t me , and the desire to include all - . : c latest discoveries. It is repute. ! to ! Ii.earl cs > t map of the world in existre , for the lirst Borgiaa map do. s > . - ! pretend to completeness. Thotign full of the old absurd inaccura cies , J contains many shrewd guesses , or ? c ; iilhing ( more than guesses , at triitl.and is e.-pucially remarkable as prong that central African explora tion Ij.tll bcun conducted to a stage of Ecieutifio discovery which modern ge- cgraph. rs are hardly disposed to con cede us the ach evement of travelers threi : or four hundred years ago. The f our-es of the Nile and pos lions of the three lakes now c illed Albert Nyanza , V ctoria N\'anza and Alexandra Nyan za. liayu been very definitely , though not accurately laid down. They are p act d too much on the straight line from west to cast , their size is too nearly equal , and their form is r diculous rucfcs work. Moreover , they lie too far soi.th of the trop.c of Capricorn , but their presence on the map is , at least , sufficient tes- t inony to the knowledge of their ex istence at the time when R hero d d his work. Considering , too , that the west ern continent hail only just been d > s- coxcred , thehole eastern line of c.ia-t comes at least as near exactness as if a promising child of 10 had d r\wn : \ it on his slate from memory of the. school map. All the western si.ores of North and South America have been left undefined , and even in great part unsuggestcd. Like the e.irlier maps of imperfectly explored countries , such , for example , as those which are supposed to illustrate the tr.vus ! of Marco Polo , S.r John de M uUleville , and others , this map , by D.iigo R hero , is largely pictorial. The h | > an ard's rule evidently was. when i ) lionbt , to draw a stag , an elephant , a on. a bearr a tree. Prcster John's dominion is s1 mbolically indicated by a ia ge. church in its midst. Russia is in n -tstu of most admired disorder , the lavk of geographical defin t on being , 1 imwer. compensated by aplen tudu OT 7. < ioiogy. The Holy land is likewise nisich con used ; and Jerusalem , indi- -alcd by three crosses which obviously It-note Calvaiy , is placed about fifteen ami ired miles out of true reckoning. 'A country found by the English , and ot no Use ' to w.t. Labrador is plae- d r ght up at thu .op of the map , far . \vay from its proper long tude as well s latitude , ami is signalized b'y a pro- 1 uious growth of forest trees. Gal loons in full sa 1 , each as large as a con- t nent. hold then * steady course either to or from Molucca , the maritime cen ter , act ord ng to mediaeval gcograp- uer . of the woi Id Tnis extraordinary map , which will repay an hour's attentive observation , has , by the liberal permission of tne popa , been lent from the archives of the propaganda at Rome to the Colo nial and Ind an exhibition. Sir Augus tus Adderluy , K. C. M. G. , the royal and executive comm ssoner for the West Ind es and British Honduras , has also received on a loan from the con gregation of propaganda at Rome a small statistical atlas and an engraving of the celebrated brass map of Marco Polo , the original of which is included in the magnificent representative of his famous famil3Curious and ancient maps , rare engnrvings , work of art , antiquities , and other interest'ng ob jects richly illustrate West Indian his tory at the colonial exhibition , having been lent in great numbers. But un- quest'onably , and almost beyond com- pari > on. the most interesting of these * i storical treasures is the Ribero map , which is indeed a document of pricc- le-s archceological val c. The parch ment is seven feet long by three in he ght , and it has never been folded , ts preservation being evidently due to 'he. utmost care whether in keeping it rolled up or in d splaying it under glass. J'he rich colors u-ed in its adornment , the ultramarines , vermilions , and other haralil c t nts employed in the coats of arms , quadrants , zodiacal signs , and ra.s-cellaneous devices , being as fresh as they could or should have boon on the day they were painted. The no tion that Don D ego R hero * com menced this map under Julius 1L is somewhat favored bthe fact that the family arms conspicious in which is the oak. emblematic of his name , Ro- ? ere are emblazoned with the tiara at the "hottorn of the parchment. This would make the date 1503 ; but there are earlier Snd cations. Nothing more in nutely exqu site than thevr ting , wliih is not confined to geographical names , can be imagined. It is the per fection of caligraphy , rather Italian than Span sh in its graceful freedom , ilany of the names are written in gold , and t is surmised that these , which oc cur n the north of Mexico and Peru , are intended to sign fy the presence of gold mines there about. The large let- teiing on the upper and lower margins is in Spanish , the lino above being to vhis cff ct : Univcr.-al map , in which .s contained all that has been hitherto discovered of the world. Maile by Diego Ribero , geographer to his majes- t % in Seville , 1529 ; " vvh.le the words ntath , translated are : "The which is ct v ded into two parts , according to the agreement made by their Cathol.c majesties of Spain and K.ng John of Portugal , in Fonte.-Olla. A. D. 1494. " This s the important part of the in scription , recall ng as it does the h stor ical incident of tiiu drawing a line across the lirst map , by Pope Alexander" VI.- to settle some differences with the Port ugese in relation to the frequently vexed question of posession in newly discovered lands. Strange is it that within the past few months this same map should have served a similar pur pose of defining territorial rigths. At one corner is a drawing of a quadrant , accompanied by a written direction how to use it ; and on a space borrowed from he Pacific ocean is an astro labe , which should have a silken cord attached to the center. The line of divis on drawn by Alexander "VT. is de scribed exactly as on his map , with the addition that on each side the foot of it is a flagstaff with the Spanish flag car ried toward the west and the Portu guese toward * the east. Though it is supposed that Alexander made one line of demarkation only , this map of 1529 , sent from Spain to Clement VIL , gives a second. But it will be found that the first line , drawn to the west of the Canary islands and the Azores , has merely its counterpart in the second , which , passing between Sumatra and Borneo , carries the division round or through the globeIt is curious that while the second line is so drawn as- just to place tho Moluccas within the limits it represents as having been as signed to" Spa'n , the delineation of those and of the neighboring islands , iu their then only partially discovered forms ucludiug what appears to be a bit of thu coast of New Guinea , should have deen added at tho Western ex tremity of Alexander VL's map , while the eastern extremity of that map , which if complete would show whether the pope had drawn a second line , or had completed the first through the op posite hemisphere , has now disap peared , and may possibly have been mutilated at that time. London Tele graph. Carp for Every Farm. Seth Green , the noted fish culturist , writes to the American Agriculturist for November : To construct a pond , first stake off 3our land the desired dimensions ; then take a plow and scraper , and with them make the necessary excavation. The pond should be about live or six foet deep in the center , gradually sloping up to the edges. The object in having the pond deep in tho center is to provide the fish with a placo to set- tie into during the winter without dan ger of the water freezing solid and thereby killing them , as would be the case in cold climates if the water was all shallow. The reason for having the bottom sloping is , that thereby the fish can have access to plenty of warm , siod ! water , and also that in case the old fish are not taken out after spawn- ing , the young fisn will have the pro tection of the shallow-water along the edges , into which the larger fish cannot swim if they should feel inclined to make a meal on some of their younger relatives. l The outlet should be about three feet wide , and so constructed that t catf be. ' well screened to prevent the fish from escaping , and so as to admit of the water being drawn off when it is de sired to remove the fish or to cleanse the pond. The screens may be made - of wire netting , and painted with gas- tar mixed with one-third turpentine , or to the consistency of paint , and applied with an ordinarv paint brush. The Wire netting should be tacked to strong wooden frames , made to fit the space to be screened. To screen a carp pond effectually , three screens of different s.zed meshes should be used. These should slide in a grooved frame work , so that they can be taken out easily and cleaned. Carp can be raised in well water , but water from a brook is preferable. They will succeed in the Northern , States if the ponds are deep enough not ; o freeze to the bottom in winter. * * Carp do not requ.re feeding in winter , is they burrow into the mud or libernate , until the ice disappears in * ; he Spring. f There appears to be a difference of opinion among the authorities as to which is the best kina of carp. The scale carp are said to be the most pro- ifie , and the leather carp grow the rastest Fcr my part I prefer the lat ter ; it is the handsomer and finer fish i x of the two. As to their qualities as table fish ; so far as my experience goes , L have not been able to discover any difference between them. i Protecting Small Fruits oa the Prairies. Snow is the cheapest and most abun dant of all protecting materials , but to retain it where it is wanted is the ) oint , yet it is simple enough if one will take a lesson from some neglected piece of breaking , or other piece of ground , that has been allowed to run to weeds. The snow will accnmmulate here to a depth almost corresponding to the height of he weeds , and will remain until late n the spring. Jt will he a very easy matter when running the cultivator through between he rows for the last time , about the irst of July , to scatter a little corn and allow the cult vator to cover it. This will grow tall enough to retain a large body of snow , and does not seed the ground and cause additional labor next rear ; a mulch of straw < Jver straw- jerries or around bushes will also help , ilany prefer flax straw above all other cinds of mulching materials , as it will stay where you put it American Agriculturist. Australia's Rabbit Plague. The farmers of Australia seem to be still troubled by rabbits , which breed. n that country at a most enormous rate. One man has just accepted a tender for wire netting which is to make a rabbit-proof fence from Narro- mine to Bourke. and will extend over a distancu of 203 miles. If the unfor tunate rabbits search along to find the ; nd of the obstruction they will be a bit weary before they have arrived at their destination. It is said that the work will cost 15,000 , and at that rate , if a man could offer such a fi mre , t proves that the rabbit must be the most destructive animal in the anti podes. ( Jalignanfa Messenger.