I 1URDER 0R MERCY. _ M ASIory ofTo-Dny. ; It was half-past four , and the norning room at Minton Court was B dotted with confidential groups. M Eugologs blazed in the two fire- places , but no lamps or candles had been brought in to disturb the in- B timacy of the twilight hour. Tea at H Milton-Court was always drunk by H firelight on winter afternoons , W " "Darkness is such an aid to scandal. " K ILady Minton used to say ; "how can Hfwe pull our neighbors to pieces in the | j ijglare of those odious lamps ? Ilalf B efche best things 1 havo ever heard jR fhave been told me in the dusk. " H The hour of tea was a sociable one , B * and the surroundings were thoroughc B Uy feminine. The morning room was B 'furnished in that heterogeneous manc B mer which is the characteristic of our H * time. There were many screens , and B jpalms in brass pots , Indian mats B nd Japanese tables , Turkish divans f ? ind Smyrnese carvings , while a numt , J tier of Bajon etchings , framed in J § Salack , made a sad note on the Pom8 K speian red walls , giving the other- B wise over-luxurious room that touch 9 of studied pathos which is ever prost M nt in the complex and many-sided ; :1 : life of to-day. The curtains were not , i yet drawn , and far off , apart from | ' the group of dainty fingers who were ije clustering round the tea-table and j § the fire , stood a young girl with her JS < face pressed against the window. It m was a cold , melancholy afteroon , and m outside a heavy white fog was gathc 1 eringover the frost-bitten ground , | naking a fine contrast to the gay I -and cheery scene within doors. Sud- i < denly 6he turned with a cynical little 1 faugh from the window. "What a 1 flfool I am"said ! the girl to herself. 1 " * 'I have been standing at that cold 1 window for exactly twenty minutes , I .And for what reason ? Because Dr. i Brooke chose to go out for a walk 1 oves the moors on a particularly im- § possible day , and hasn't come back | .yet. Is that a reason why I should I ; go without my tea , not to mention a 1fche awful possiblity of catching a i cold in my head , and having a red 1 nose ? Oh , thanks , Capt. Egerton , 1 I should like some tea , awfully" and repeating thelastsentencealoud , Alison Bligh came forward into the fire-light. j Even in the flickering fire-rays she I j revealed herself as a very striking II jirl. There was an unmistakable 1 * ouch of sensuousness in the full lips | and in the clear-cut nostrils , which Hj rere the best part of a nose which B "was somewhat too thick for a worns I .n , and in the fine curves of her I houlders and bust. But intellect H Tvas not wanting , as her broad , well- I narked forehead proved ; nor deter- B anination , whic.li was revealed in the B square lines of her jaw and chin ; nor B a. certain amount of ideality , which B looked out of her somewhat dreamy B -eyes dark , Southern eyes which were B Jin direct contradiction to the twists B of pale red-gold hair which crowned B 3ier head. In sum , a very danger- B -ous young woman , whom Lad3' ' Min- B * on was wont to declare she would B 3iot trust with her own husband , aln B though Sir Francis was past 70 , and B m model of the conjugal virtues. B Miss Bligh felt her spirits rise sud- B denly as she took her place in the B * cheery round and fire , and she smiled B tivhen. she thought of her watch by the B window just now. How cold and B "miserable she had felt how ridicu- * B lous to have ceded to such a senti- B mental impulse ! That was not her B way either ; she who had long ago B made up her mind to snatch every P B anoment of happiness every pleasure- " B ; able emotion even lite could offer B iher. And then the soft voice ofLady ° B IMintonwas heard saying : "Alison , w B whea you have quite finished • with ? B apt. Egerton and those muffins , " B 5 > ass them both'on. And do , like a B dear child , sing us something. " Miss Bligh thereupon sprang up * > Mmy and went to the open piano. ni p "I will sing you , " she said gravely , I * < ca little romance which I heard once e3 I at the Varietes. I believe it has a amoral. Judic used to sing it , " and I striking up a quaint accompani- I vment , she sang some words familiar tl enough on the boulevards. tl B While the room was echoing with w B iplaudits on her rather risky te B performance , the door opened and a w B ' anan of about 35 came in and sat lii B ndown in a rocking-chair at the far he B end of the room. pi B • "Awfully good , by Jove ! " cried tl B Capt , Egerton , who was leaning on lii B the piano. "I could have sworn it vi B vas Judic , herself , only you aren't in B ffat , you know. " The last part of w B the gallant captain's sentence was cje B a tender whisper intended for Miss lii B Bligh's ear alone , but , like many ti B other soft speeches , was audible to w B the rest of the room. Dr. Brooke w B frowned as ho moved from his seat S B near the door and , coming forward G B into the firelight , asked Lady Mina B ton for a cup of tea. ai B * "So glad you're back , Doctor ! We tl B xall thought you were lost on as B Exmoor , " said Lady Minton purring at B over her guest as she poured him out ir some tea. w B "Yes , we were all looking forward tl I -to seeing you brought home stiffiy bi I frozen on a shutter ! " cried Allison , fl I who seemed in the highest spirits , tl jHad she forgotten her impatient hi I -watch by the window only half an 1c I fcour before ? r ( B "Ah , the gods don't love me. I y I .shall not die young , " said the Doctl tor whose keen eyes were riveted on A I aer ' face. Thenthepartybrokeupin t < B tto small groups , and it was either la B tbv choice or by chance that she found B ifcprfielf only a few minutes later , hi I fUSinValine with him at the same fij I Sow which she had watched te B half hour before. n I aa are back , " she said " glad you B "I am . the ter , Af ahvlv. as young man B " ' 0 • - I BI BBHBfli BBBNf9HM9MK BHBMBB9HHflBCBHHBHHB f "Are you ! You know I was out then ? " "Yes. " "None of the othera missed me , I should imagine. They were playing somegamo which looked uncommon ly ] liko 'kiss-in-the-ring' when I left , Wero you one of that lot ? " "Oh , no. I havo been in my room all the afternoon. " "Thank heaven for that ! " Alison smiles at the fervor of hi tone. l "Would you have minded much if j had been 'one of that lot ? " The Doctor frowned. "I should havo 1 been rather disappointed. I should havo thought very little of you if you had. " "Well I wasn't. But I am afraid it j is not a sense of the outraged proj prieties which kept me from playing 'kiss in the ring' in the hall , if it could possibly have amused me , I should have done so. I believe in amusing oneself. But somehow or other , that sort of thing doesn't ent tertain me. Perhaps I am too old er not old enough ; anyhow , I don't care for the infantine pastimes which are the fashion now. Isupposewhen I am getting on for forty I shall like them. " "No , I don't think you ever will , " said Brooke , smiling down at her charming upturned face. "But I am afraid you don't under- stand me , " she said quickly ; "you think me better than I am. I havo no moral aim , no aspirations , nothj ing of that kind. I simply enjoy the present. I suppose , if I wanted to poseIshould call myself an epicurean. It is strange , but 'to-morrow' has absolutely , no meaning for me ; I be- Hove in 'to-day. ' I mean to enjoy every hour of my life. After all , what do we know of 'to-morrow ? ' Nothj ing. But we do know that roses aro divine ! " And pulling a hothouse flower from her waist belt , the girl pressed it , with a pretty , unconven tional gesture , to her lips. "At that rate , " said the Doctor , "if you were to have some great mis- fortune ( to lose all your money , for instance , or catch the smallpox you would have very little to fall back upon. You might feel the want of the 'consolations of religion. ' " "No , I don't think I should. If any great unhappiness , " she added dreamily , "were ever to befall me , I should not want to live. I did not ask to come into the world , and why , forsooth < , should I not go when I am tired of it ? Life after all , is very like ? party to which some one else has insisted on our going. If we are bored , we are surety not bound to wait till the very end. We leave when we please. " Dr. Brooke looked steadily at her. "You are a very strange girl , Miss Bligh. Not one woman in a thousand would dare to say such a thing as that. But I think yon are right. There are cases when death is 9 release from torture , mental and bodily. " "How did we get on such a lugu brious topic ? " said Alison , shivering slightly and turning away from the dark landscape. There was a pause and then the young man said suddenly : ' 'Why did you sing that song just now ? " "I don't know , " said Alison with droopingeyes. "Do you know what itmeans ? " "Do you ? " she said , raising her eyebrows innocently. " 1 walked the hospitals in Pai-is for two years. I understood every word. " "Oh , I am sorry. I thought , with my . accent and an English audience , that I should be perfectly safe. " "Don't do it again , " he said ; "for heaven's sake , don't. You can't imv agine how dreadful it is to see you do a thing like that. " "Thank you for saying that , " he answered , gravely. "Sing something for me now , will you ? " Miss Bligh answered by.moving away to the piano. Brooke stood still by the window , looking out over the snow-covered grounds and wait ing to hear what she would sing , Allison's fingers strayed tentatively over the keys , as if seeking the strain which suited her mood best. Presv ently her clearyoung voice was heard in Handel's immortal air , "Lascia I Ch'io Pianga. " n "Handel , instead of boulevard ft songs" Duncan Brooke smiled to b himself "that will do. Allison loves me. I know itrI can see it in her a eyes. " Ia • a It was a passionate yet half-pater- nal feeling that Dr. Brooke had for n this beautiful girl ; a ieeling akin to that which the tiger cherishes tou ward its cub , and yet with a yearning * tenderness , too. He felt that lie CJ would gladly have thrown away his " life to save her pain , but as it was , D meant to devote his life to her pleasure. Nothing should be spared that could give her pleasure this r little epicurean who believed so de8 voutly in the Now ! There was noth ing , too , which could stand in the j * way of an immediate marriage. Dunu can Brooke had already made a bril- * liant reputation and a large prac- " tice , and Alison being an orphan , J with a fortune of her own , there "j would be no difficulties about their * settling down at once. His house in Grosvenor street was a fair-sized one , a and : with Alison's taste in furniture and pictures , might be made one of the prettiest in London. He smiled 0 he saw a vision of her radiant face the head of his dinner-table , smil- & ing at his guests , perfect in her young matronhood , Somehow he always " thought of her in connection with a beautiful and pleasant things ; with r flowers < , andpicturers , and music , and ni the sparkle of dinner-table wit. She w had told him that day that she n loved roses ; well , she should have Je roses on her table every day of the n year. < And then Brooke remembered ni that pearls were another hobby of 0 ] Alison's. He would telegraph to B } town to-morrow for the finest neck- " lace he could get. si That night , when Lady Minton b < had sent her maid away , a pink robed s * figure knocked at her door and knotw ted a pair of soft arms tight round her neck. "My dear child , what is the mat- " ? " she grasped in the midst ofthis rt impetuous embrace. on ] , * r ' . ' - < - - * - - "It's all seUiKu and I'm bo hap1 p.v [ ! " "Indeed , " said Lady Minton , la u . 'rh1 ing. i "And may I ask who is tlie lucky man ? " "Oh , Dr. Brooke , of course. How can you ask ? " " v\fy dear , all the men in the house are mad about you. I listen to their confidences you know my way. " "Well , you shan't bebored with any more , you dear thing. Please let 1 them know that lam the hap- piest I woman in the world. " hi. A weak later Lady Minton and two or three of her guests stood at the hall door to see the Doctor and Miss Bligh mount the dog-cart for a drive. Lady Minton was profuse in her j advice. "Now , mind you take care of Alison , Doctor. That mare is rather frisky and the roads aro slippery to-day. You've got to bring Alison back safe and sound. We don't want to have a 'case' { for you down here. " The doctor smiled as Miss Bligh came down the wide oaken staircase. A week's happiness had changed a handsome j girl into ayoung goddess. In her tight-fiting , manly garments , and the soft furs at her throat , she looked j the personification of youth. Her eyes always fine seemed twice as large , and had acquired a soft exI pression which was irresistible ; the cynical little laugh , which had formn erly been one of her characteristics , had disappeared. Another two minutes and the girl was snugly tucked under a fur rug on the front seat of the high doge cart , and Brooke , touching the mare with his whip , sent her flying down the long carriage drive. How ridiculously those people are in j love with each other ! " said Lady Minton , with a little sigh. "Upon my word , it is quite Acadian. I wonder how long it will last ? " "About six months , I take it , " drawled Capt. Egerton ; "at least I hope so. Miss Bligh won't look at any other fellow than saw-bones. But it can't last , that sort of thing , Quite uncivilized you know. " "Well they are to be married in six weeks , " laughed lady Minton. "So this time next year we shall see you making the running' with the beauti- ful Mrs. Brooke ? " "Nothing more likely in the world , " replied Capt Egertonwho had a roy- al idea of his own powers of fascinar tion. At the luncheon table two chairs were vacant. "I wonder where our two young people have got to ? " said Lady Minton. "I wish Dr. Brooke would not take her these long expofc ditions , it makes me very uneasy. " "They are probably lunching some- where a deux , dear Lady Minton , " suggested the "frisky matron" of the party. " 1 don't know where they will lunch out on Exmore and I don't feel at all sure about that mare. She is getting a regular jade. " The afternoon closed in and there were still no signs of the girl and her lover. ' Tea had been brought in and Lady Minton was trying to hide her growing alarm as she chatted with guesls and did the honors of the tea table. "I am sure I heard wheels at the front door of the house , " she said suddenly. "Yes , but it is not the dog-cart , said Capt. Egerton ; "those were cart-wheels I heard. " ; "Go out and see what it is , for goodness' sake. No carts ever come up to the court after dusk ! " The young man hurried out of the ' room and a minute later a scared footman < came and whispered to lady Minton. \ Hurrying into the hall she was met by Egerton and Brooke , The Doctor's face was destitute of every vestige of color and his eyes g seemed to have sunk far back into his head. "There has been a bad accident " - "Where is Allison , " cried Lady Minton ; "she is not " "No , not dead ; but she is very serig ously wounded. Can you bear the t worst ? " "Take me to her , my poor darling ! " si wailed Lady Minton. "We have carried her here , into Sir p Francis' study ; and she must not be p moved any more. Don't look at her face , Lady Minton. I want you to n be strong to help me. " si A motionless heap lay on the sofa , n and that heap was Alison Bligh. y Piteous groans came from her lips , & and one side of her face was carefully ] bound up with a man's white silk Q handkerchief. y "Make up a bed quickly here. Call tl her maid if she has strong nerves y to ' help you take of her clothes. I u can tell you nothing definite till I nj have examined her. Bring some st brandy. " of These orders were briefly given by p the Doctor as he hurried from the tl room < to fetch his case of surgical in- p struments. b An hour later the worst was sj known. The girl's spine was badly d injured that she would never be able ft to ' rise again. One side of her face hi had been so terribly crushed thatshe ni was hardly recognizable , and her suf- ( ferings were acute. She might live , m the Doctor thought , but her life yy would be so many years of mental ej and bodily anguish. D IV Jy ] The house party at Minton Court s\ broke : up immediately , and by noon the next day the last carriageful of guests had swept down the drive. Silence in the Fl : reigned large rambling house ' , Lady Minton and Miss Bligh's maid taking their turn in the sick li room. As for Duncan Brooke , he 1 hardly left his patient's bedside. Al- - ways a reticent man , not even his hostess < ever guessed what .he suf8l fered , during those long days and e\ nights ] of anxious watching. At tl night , particularly , he would let no a ( one else sit up with her , even if he a snatched an hour or two's sleep duw ring the day. For a whole fortnight bl she lay almost unconscious on the it bed , unable to articulate , and only oi showing by her low groans that sho ki was still alive and suffering. ' pi Then came a chnnjre3 and Alison in was able to speak again. One day it the Doctor was alone with her in tho a room where they had laid her down a the day of the accident. The great hi house 1 was hushed into perfect still ness , and not a sound was to be heard 1 but tho occasional fall of a cinder < on the hearth. "Duncan , " she whispered suddenly , with a very little sigh. "What is it , my darling ? " said tho Doctor ] , bending his head to listen. "I 1 want to go to sleep. " "So you shall , dear. 1 will give you i an opiate to-night. " "Oh , but I want to go to sleep for . nUva\s. I cannot bear it any more. It ] is all over for me now ; all over , and I am only 22 ? I should go mad chained J to a bed all the years I may have to live. * * * And you would learn to hate mc how could you help it ? I know I am a horrible , maimed mass , although you have never let me see my face since. * * * Oh , Duncan , and the pain ! I can not bear it. I always hated pain ; I am sure I feel it more than other peoc pie do. And what I suffer now is in- human * ! What havo I done that I should have to bear this terrible agf ony ? We would not let a dog suffer what you all look on and sue me enri dure ! It is cruel cruel ! " "Alison , I would give my life to save you one pang. " "Would you ? " she said eagerly. "I know you are bravo and good. Have you the courage to help me now ? Oh , Duncan ! when you give me that chlo- ral to-night give me enough to send me to sleep for always. No one will over know. Oh , my darling , do me one last service ! " "I cannot do it , " he whispered back , some inward voice telling him , even as he spoke the words , that here was the merciful euthanasia for this poor maimed girl. He knew that her life ] even if she live I would be hence- forward a martyrdom , and that nevfc er again would she rise from her " " "mattress grave. As night closed in Alison grewt worse. She was evidently suffering frightfully. "I shall notleave her an instant j to-night , " said Brooks to Lady Minton , who stood with scared , white face at the bedside. "I cannot tell what may happen , " he added at the door , having persuaded his host ess to take an hour or two's rest , "She might succumb now from the shock or she might live for years. I shall give her a strong opiate tot night she must have sleep. " "Thank heaven for one thing , "said Lady Minton "and that is that you are here in the house. Think if we had been obliged to rely on the local practioner ! It is simply a mercy that you are here ! " "A mercy ! " repeated the Doctor gravely. "Yes ; perhaps it is. " When the day dawned the house was , all astir. Swiftly moving figures hurried j up and down stairs , and the Doctor , meeting Lady Minton in the cold , gray light , at the door of the sick room , took her hand and led her away. "Allison is gone , " he whispered.e "She I passed away last night without pain. I was with her ; she died in my arms. " "Poor darling ! It is a merciful re- lease ! < , " sobbed the kind-hearted worn- an. "Yes , a merciful release , " repeated Brooke , pressing his hostess' hand. Next day Lady Minton went with n sinking heart to the Doctor's door. e He had locked himself in ever since Alison's death , and had refused all food < on tiie plea that he wished to sleep ; but she found him sitting dressed l at his writing table , having obviously never been to bed. Some medical books and sheets of manuu script lay about , he seemed to be writing. I "I am so pained to speak of anycl thing connected with this awful aft fair , but you know there are the usg ual formalities to be observed. Poor sc Alison had no near relations living , so , we must arrange all the last sad offices. Here is the Registrar's ft certificate. Will you , as you were t her only medical attendant , fill in g the cause of death. h "The cause of death ! " cried Brooke , Vi rising from his chair , "I I cannot w say ; howshould [ know ? " he shouted , tl throwing ] up his hands. s1 The next instant he . was lying in a i senseless heap on the floor. * * * Six months after , the • following paragraph appeared in an evening paper : "A Heko of the Hospital. Once more one of our most eminent phyoi sicians has proved that heroism is Dl not confined to the winners of the Victoria Cross. It is with the deep est regret that we record the untime- ly death of Dr. Duncan Brooke ot si Grosvenor street , physician to the bi Whiteckapel Hospital. It appears - that an impatient a boy of eleven a years , of age was suffering from w acute < diphtheria. The physicians m agreed that there was a chance of a saving the child's life if the operation ja tracheotomy could be successfully n performed. ( It will be remembered w that in this operation the putrid and poisonous ( matter has to be sucked by the operator through a tube. In jn spite of the opposition of the other j1 doctors , , Dr. Brooke insisted on perj j forming the operation , which was jj highly successful , the boy being now a nearly convalescent. Dr. Brooke j who , it appears , received a severe mental shock some six months ago ) was taken ill shortly afterward , and expired this morning in the hospital. Deceased was widely known and highW respected. [ E. Hepworth Dickp son , in the Woman's World. Superstition Rife To-day. From the Bufiulo Express. ] u People are wont to host of the enyc lightment of this age and. laugh at w. the superstitions of their forefathers it * But it is quite safe to say that g superstition is as rife to-day as it se ever was , the only' difference being ea that now people are ashamed to si acknowledge their weaknesses. Said se real estate man : There is nothing as which gives a building a lasting pi black eye quicker than a report that p < is or was haunted. The slamming in a door , the rattling of a window , a1 knocking down of a tin pan by w pussy cat are all the work of ghosts hi such buildings And the worst of tl is that people are just as afraid of lo new building erected on the site of cl haunted one as they areof the H haunted one itself. In f - - V I T • • --f- I Curiosities o ! Currency. From ] Texas Siftings. Almost every nation and tribe , as well as every epoch , has its peculiar currency. Not only gold , silver , cop- per ] , brass , iron , lead and paper , but glass j , shells , bends , books , stones , soap , bits of various colored cloth and numerous other articles have been used to represent money. The Burmese 1 , Karens and Ghans have no coined money , lead and silver in bull- ion \ beingthe ordinary tender in trade , weight and purity beingthestandard of value. It must be a curious spec- tacle to see a Burmese out on a "hur- rah" with a lot of pig lead to spend at bars. Salt was , for a long time , the or- dinary money of the Abyssinians , which rendered it difficult for them to get f a fresh supply when they were broke. Fish has long been and is now the legal tender of Iceland "Shad scales" as money probably , originated there. The Carthagenians were the firstto introduce a stamped leather currency , Leather coins with a silver nail in the center were issued in France by King John tho Good in 1306 , but they are not good now , In the interior towns of Northern China slips of the bark of the mult berry tree , bearing the imperial "chop" and a stamp to denote their worth , have long been used as we use bank notes , and malefactors who conterfeited them got the imperial "chop" also. Marco Polo found this kind of money there in his time , and they have still an extensive local cir- culation. In some small villages in Scotland laborers \ formerly carried in their pockets nails in place of coin to "pay on the nail" for the day's supply of bread and ale , just as a native Au- stralian divests himself of a string of beads for the purchase of some coveted luxury. A Scotch missionary to a little group of islands in the South Pacific found , bits of red flannel circulating as money , when they were not needed to tie up a sore throat. This came about in a curious manner. The body of a shipwrecked sailor had drifted ashore , and to these untutored savages , who had never before seen clothing of any description , his red - flannel shirt was an object of wonder , and admiration. By common con- sent they cut the garment into shreds , which thenceforth became the currency of the island. A savage destitute of flannel was said to have "nary red , " we suppose. A Finnish Girl's Farewell. At Tavastehuus I saw a group of eight or ten women , all well dressed , 1 - on the platform of the railway station. One of them was a rosy faced , pretty girl fo 20. She carried r a magnificent bouquet. She was the recipient of much attention from the others , who kissed her twice around , When the last warning bellrang T she was locked in the arms of an * elderly ] woman , who , with streaming _ eyes , strained her again and again f0 to her heart , and I saw , asked the gi good God to bless her child. I knew they were mother and daughter.C1 As the train pulled out the girl stood upon the car platform and bade • them adieu with wet cheeks. But If thought I saw a ray a gleam of cherry hope shining through her \ tears. I asked a man where she was going. Till America till Mjnne- sota , " was the reply. Ah ! I then read that hopeful light Jj it her tearful eyes. She was leaving friends and kindred to go all alone a to the far offiand , where her lover had gone before , and to fill the nest he had built up for his coming matem Who knows what places high in the , world the young to be hatched in that free nest may fill in the lake .1 state of the north. Carter Harrison J in Chicago Mail. > 3S'o Wonder He Felt Old. th "The singular mistake , " explains of the editor of a Texas paper , "by which our leading editorial appeared at the ac bottom of a column on the third page B was caused by our having intrusted th the setting up of the same to a long W be slabsided Yankee jour printer who happened along and wanted a job. m We told him to make up the forms and ] work the papers off while we nr went home to give our wife some at much-needed assistance in making her ca apple-butter. The article was in rear lation to the recent act of the goverhe nor ) in pardoning a sheep thief , and in was headed 'Crowning Folly. ' The wi blundering tramp set it up "Cranex berry ( Jelly' and chucked the article All the department of 'Useful Houseth hold ( Becipes. ' It is such things as tic these that make the life of a journate list one of constant care and anxiety be and make him an old man before his wj time. " th AV EH Perkins on Bed Bugs. to sti A remarkable case of the death of a s woman ( was reported recently from esi Franklin township , Beaver county * an Pa. The death occurred while the P woman was suffering from a violent Y attactofthe heahache , to which she P had been subject for nearly three ai3 years she has been living in a house j : ul which has been badly infosted with bed bugs. Shortly after moving into she began to be troubled with a 6 < 2 af strange type of a headache which ° , seemed to increase in violen'e with each returning attack until at times j she was renderd unconscious by the , , severe pains , which she often described resembling a heavy weight or P presure on the top of her head. The . , peculiar nature of the case and his inability to render relief aroused the . attending physician's curiosity and ing with the consent of the bereaved " husband he cut open the skull after j fn the woman's death. He found firmly lodged on the top of the brain in a : . clotted mass , a number of bedbugs. , How they got there baffles all who , have heard of the case. nv { A Wonderful Cattle Pen. Indian tradition as well ns white lore i tells that seventy-five miles northwest : of Meeker , Col. , is the most : wonderful cattle ranch in the world. Within a space of five miles in j length and a half mile in width roam , a herd upon whose sides tho branding ] iron has never been placed , and , around whose horns tho lariat has ] never tightened. But a score or oven fewer of them have ] ever seen a man or horse or other animal of their kind , and , in truth , their kin , except at a distance of nearly GOO feet high above them. The Uto Iniians call them "p'chek- up" or red buffalo. And yet if an Indian who had seen them should bb asked about it he would laugh and shake his head , and all the informa tion obtainable would be "P'cheku up ; em 'em red no ketch 'em , " There are more than 600 ofthis herd , and yec no man owns them ; nor is thero any man , white , or black or copper colored , who has ever been able to possess a hoof of these fat and tempting beeves. The cattle are in a prison. Out of it there is one method of escape , but to travel that road means death to the adventurovs one. There is no way to get in except it be by use of a rope a thousand feet in length. As the . Indians say , "Heap see em ; no ketchum ; no come away. " On the two sides of the oblong space in which these cattle roam , rise pre cipitous and even concaved rocks for 500 and GOO feet. At either end seethes and rushes the Yampa or Bear Biver. For miles above and for miles be- low j ( it plunges on in its headlong • haste to reach the arms of its par- ent , the scarcely less tumultuous but | deeper Green Biver. Like the won- derful flat-top mountains of Colo- rado , this home of the imprisoned herd has no likeness in the world. It r recalls ) , in its inaccessibility the marvelous stories of the valley of r verdure into which Mayne Beid's ad- + venturers only found their way by the assistance of the-balloon. _ The story of the way m which these * cattle came there is as strange as their existence is curious. Fifteen . years ( ago , when the government troops , . were pursuing the Mormon murderers of the innocent victims of j the j Mountain Meadow Massacre , the Danites ) , or Avenging Angels of the i Mormons , fled into what was then literally the wilderness. A few of those who had been the blindest fol lowers of Lee , the Mormon fiend in11 carnate , whose hands were red with blood of women and children , found jjC in ] their wandering a pretty valley on a stream which flows from the Wasm atch range into the Green Biver. They stuck their stakes , built their la sagacious leaders had a vision which sa told them where to stay. They could . " scarcely have chosen in all Utah a more fertile or more isolated spot. , They called it Ashley , and about . ' them have since gathered more of I ,1 their sect , until where the refugees q posted the picket of guards on the j ' ; ? lonely nights of the first summer has | ? grown a thriving village. , . It is 140 miles from the Union Pa- - 1 cific Bailroad south and 14. > miles " • north of the Rio Grande Western. . / Until within five years it has been : isolated entirely but now it is ? ? thirty-five miles from the Utah BesorV' V. vation , and furnishing supplies for it the agency forms quite a business ; - for the community. It is a tenet of the Danites that robbing or theft from a Gentile is no crime. So it was thought to be only Fr cunning trick when Joe Wycliffe , one of the Mormon settlers of the new town , and his three sons made a night sortie on Henry's Ford in a l Wyoming , and carried away 800 sin head of cattle ranging there. This of was in 1S76. The " owners of the catj10 tie discovered the loss of the stock a , , few , days after they were gone and started in pursuit. J112 TheWycliffes had their friends along jlc the trail , and were warned b } ' signals ? . the gang of the pursuing party , . Accordingly they drove the cattle as l\a last asthej'could travel on eastward , . Eicross Green Biver and up along the ° , 1 Bear , with the intention of reaching ? .vf the Elk Mountain country in North- \ western Colorado , where they would parctically safe from detection , cm and their stock , also could secure the co1 most succulent of feed. ma The ' thieves and the stolon herd aad reached a mesa of inviting grass sundowh one day and halted to Frc camp for the night. A terrific storm < arose. The four men desperately held the terrorstricken cattle by rid- ing about them constantly. But the " ; ' tvild fearfulness of the furious storm bili 2xcited the brutes beyond measure , anj at once , as if by one wild impulse , jjjn they stampeded. Astampede of cat- . by day is calculated to strike terror to any heart lest there aJt some human being in the pathhm ivay. A stampede by night is one of lem the most appalling spectacles. John ma Wyckliffe and his sons endeavored to head off the stampeding herd. Infree stead , they and their horses were heij swept on and driven in the terror to beg escape the charge of the maddened ner minials , over tiie brink ot the awful sen precipice which frowns up from the wit Ivaters of the Bear. After them the blunged the whole frightened herd , effe md down to the bottom of the fear- fall went horses and riders and lorned creatures. _ Out { of this plunge , to what was r seemingly certain death for all. a few the herd were not killed. Those at ivhich had gone ahead formed a att mshion of death. Maimed , stunned ie Out still invested with a spark of life , vhen the storm was over the living anc cattle formed the nucleus for the pla ierd which now roams at will within thei bheir rocky confines. Chii On ( the bank of the river , stretchtha back a few hundred j-ards , grow He succulent grasses , and upon this the f her cattle have propagated and thrived , san looking over the precipice , one her an see that they are small and as brii ivild and agile as deer. They have lad. been shot so as to see the effect , and ma mue learned to regard the appearwer nce of a man. whether Indian or lev . * ' 1 i , i ' , " ; white , as a menace from which thoy ; flee , clambering over rocks and through underbrush to a point of concealment. The place whore the thieves and their i horses and herd fell is plainly marked by a pyramid of bones ' j which ] rises to tho height of twenty feet. Tho ghastly reminders , relics of the human and animal victims of , i , tho terrible leap shine forth white / and glistening. Tho progeny of the | surviving ! animals from tho fall aro ] 1 fat and sleek , though , and have ! their sunny , beds , deer like , whero s A the'lie for wurmth in tho winter. ' There is no fierce mountain lion or more dangerous bear , nor , in fact , any other animate thing within this cow garden of Eden. As yet , too. ' no man has been able to reach or disturb them. Philadelphia Times. -t > - en i How Ho Gave the Flics a Chance. j Ho was eating a substantial break- 1 fast of steak and eggs in a well known I restaurant a few days since , and the * ; meal was enlivened by the presence . , of a small army of hungry flies , which h\ \ perched contentedly upon tho food j * and clung thereto much closer than I a brother , varying their exercise by ' ; ' lighting 1 ; on his face to rest from their \t \ * labors. He bore the ordeal with su- } | premo patience and unconcern for a time , but he had ordered a square r mealand as the waiter had deposited \ \ the 'check therefor he naturally f desired to appropriate the majority ' j part of the edibles to himself and to ii contribute ( but little to the voracious M insects. 'H Finally he muttered an expressive \ oath as a detachment of the enemy 'i ' ? made a bold attempt to carry off a \j \ roll , and dipping his spoon in the 'M sugar he proceeded to erect sundry pi little , piles of the saccharine pellets at fi $ intervals of several feet from tho ] plateto j which he invited their atten- .1 j tion j and earnestly besought tho buz- • | | zing j besiegers to communicate their ' ; relatives and friends. ,9 , j The experiment worked to a charm , jj ! for the dainty creatures preferred tbo .a sugar to the rump steak , and they jli feasted right royally and in utter con- MJ tempt of the j'oimg man. When he p left the table his face wore a triumph ant smile , and he paid his check with so much promptness and satis- . faction that the clerk ventured to re- ' mark that the meal miicst have boen uncommonly well prepared. He re plied , aft r some hesitation , that he j had A given the flies a chance and was j at peace with all the world. Provi- j tlenceJournal. • - 1 A Diet for Sharks. ' 1 Philadelphia : l'rcss. When Capt. Andrews , in his little boat "Dark Secret , " was about 1,000 ' miles out , he met sharks. This is ' tvhat he did : "I had several cans of Iambs' : tongues , pickled lobsters , ami sardines , that wero partly spoiled. I 1 "ook the tongues and tossed them ' aver one at a time , and letthesharks nistle for them. I fed out all tho iongues and some sardines. Then I thought ' I would give them a change. o 1 took one of my cannon salute ' cylinders , made to explode under . vater or anywhere. These are about ive inches long and two and one-half * nches in diameter , and as loud as a iix pounder. I lit the fuse to one of ' hese , put it inn can , and threw it ver board. The quic kest shark got . ' ' and he soon became a flying fish. j deluge ' of bloody water swept over | he boat , shark's meat Hew into the . lir , and the other sharks scooted. " \ ' ' oei „ Every Man His Own Pasteur. " _ 021 Galignani's Me = songer. " ' A man went down from Paris to ; 4 Lutenil a few weeks ago and , hiring ' 2 room in a secluded part of the city. { hut himself up in it with a quantity 4 provisions. He stuffed the key- 1 lole with paper , pasted paper over " window panes and in other ways I ; nanifested a desire for secrecy. After had remained there several days ' inhabitants told the police about ' \ iim , and the doors were burst in. It \ ras then found he was inoculating hree terriers with his own blool , in j u'der to ascertain whether a bite \ hat he had received from a dog was , , " ' ikely to prove fatal. He explained \i \ $ hat he was experimenting in the i/ ause of science and expected to dis- ! ' over some means by which every ; nan could be his own Pasteur. ' The Painlessness of Heath. j rom the Forum. ' ] The act of dying , it is now ascer- { ; ained . , is absolutely fret from suf- ; ring ; is really unconscious , insensi- j 1 ility always preceding it. Any t ; nguish that may attend mortal j Iness ceases before the close , as j iiousands who have recovered , ' | iter < hope had been surrendered , ' J ave borne witness. Sudden and vio- i death , shocking to the senses , t } ( my not be , probably is not , jiainful | : the 1 victim. Drowning , hanging , , • eezing , shooting , falling from a ( " \ eight , poisoning of many kinds , J * eget stupor or numbness of the } \ \ arves , which is incompatible with j \ \ msation. Persons who have met ' ' such accidents , and survived . lem , testify to this. Becords to the feet are numberless. j -m& m- 1 jfl A Romance of the Wire. ' rom the Chicago Herald. 'i Mr. J Lloyd told of a lady operator I | ] Omaha < and of a male operator ' . * the Chicago office who talked over ( . % wires unheard of those around , y ! how the talk led from common- * M laces < to expressions of esteem , and i 1 to pleadings of love from j f\ \ liicago , with answers from Omaha s • 1 thrilled his heart with bliss. ' | had never seen her face nor heard ! voice , yet he loved her just the ! j ime , and had promised to make ! < his wife. He asked Mr. Lloyd to • j ring them together , and the young | V was transferred to the Chicago j } | ain ; office. Two months ago they H married and went West whero [ . ' now live. ' • - ? a w