' .STARLIGHT'S CRUISE , In a book entitled , "Adventures by /SLand / and Sen , " which I picked ur > • the other dnyI saw a brief reference ! * to tho strange adventures of Capt. Wheaton of tho ship Starlight. ' 'Among all tho fore-castle 3'arnsl ever heard that story takes the med- ' ali".a . dt\yhen I am through relating 'it'thoVeader will be as much mysti- .fied as t have always been regarding fit. Indeed , I never yet met a sailor * * .vho did not firmly believe in the vtrutli of Capt. Wheaton's every state ment. I tell tho story because I was -an actor in the first and last chapters. It was in October , 1859 , that I o shipped as second mate on the Star- flight , which was then lying in the jport of Honolulu. She was an old 1 ' whaler and had been sold at aucj I * § j tion and cheaply refitted for a voy- I m > age to Lima and return , in the in- B $ * * * terestof some California shippers. ' "We left port in ballast only and I Ju -were * two men short in our comple- JO * ment. Capt. Wheaton was a Bar- § § § - negat man and the crew all English- M | -speaking people. For tho first fort- I si . -night no ship ever had better weath1 I li -er. The captain , as I understood I IjM vhim , was an earnest , , conscientious K | S 'man , being above the average in Hj § > j > oint of intelligence , and of strictly jgl rtemperato habits. Tho first mate mmi ' 'brought ' a demijohn of whisky ljB | aboard tho day before sailing , but MmM • • tlie aptain made him ship it ashore Kg at once , ' and ho cautioned the fo'castf HBJ tie men that ho would clap the man in El • irons who was found the worse for Hk Uiquor. The men used slyly to refer WMj "to him as "The Sunday school super- mWm nntendent , " and I believe he was SI good enough to have filled the bill. rap At the end of the fortnight the fine Iflg "breather was broken by a rousing HK rgale , which struck us during my Ei might watch , and all hands had to Si * be called. We had a hard time of it Ml during the first hour , and were finalI mm 3y compelled to lay the ship to the HE ; < wind that the captain was washed gj overboard by a heavy sea which Mm Iboarded us. With him went one of mm 'the eailors , the hencoops , several 1 .spare spars and booms , and a lot of H 'deck raffle , and by the time the ship mm ihad shaken herself clear of the foam I If i t was too late to render any assist- | | < ance. Indeed , it was a serious ques- I ] | * tion just then whether any of us I --would live another half hour. The H 1 atorm did not break for nearly H K I f < 5venty hours , and the old ship was HI I rso strained and knocked about that Hl | | 'her life was ended. The gale had Hi -.scarcely abated when she began to Hi 'leak faster then the pumps could Hi 'throw the water out , and on the Hi seventeenth day of the voyage we Hf -tiad to abandon her. H [ "When we had been afloat for four B ] -days in the open boats we were pickh HI ed up by the American Lark Yankee HI J3oy , bound from Boston to San Hi Francisco. We were then to the H | north of the equator , and fully H one hundred miles from the Hi Galapagos Islands. These islands HI * lay a good distance to the left of the HI -true course from Honolulu to Lima , Hj -and at that date 0very one of them s HI -was well known and all were in- * H | lhabited by natives who could speak n Hi _ .more or less English. H | . Now , as we got the gale dead from o HI "the north , and as the send of the sea a H | * " - * * * was southward for several days , Capt. p H | "Wheaton could not possibly have y H | ibeen floated toward the Galapagos. " H | He must have been driven down too Hi ward the equator , or possibly totj II 'ward the Marquesas group , although h 1 fto reach any ot those ' islands he 1 | ' -would have had to drive for huna I . dreds of miles , and for days and o K - weeks. How was a man swept overc H T > oard in a gale to sustain himself y E r-above a few hours , even if not it Hj -drowned at once ? Ask yourself these o H questions , and you will answer them ei I -as all others have done , and you d | -will be as greatly mystified over the h 1 ' d -captain's story. I ! On the 4th day of September , 1860 , w If -as the English whaling ship Lady ri II Sascombe was nearing the equator , p II . i > eing about midway between the n If Marquesas group and the time being w Mj jLI o'clock at night , she was hailed hi l | -from out of the darkness , and five m m - minutes later had Capt. Wheaton ai H - -aboard. He had then been afloat g K for three days and a halt on tl H a ; small but well-constructed ti sraft , which was provided with a sail w K nd had carried him safely and buoyhi l | antly an estimated distance of 120 m H .miles. The Captain was in good to Ihealth and spirits , but would answer le mo questions until he had seen the tl captain of the Bascombe. The sailors rt knew that he must have been sc wrecked , but that he should be alone tl I "in such seeming good health in that y dreary spot was a great mystery to is them. Capt. Moore , of the Bascombe. si Jhad heard of the loss of the Starlight , tl . • and when Capt. Wheaton introduced di Ihimself he created a big sensation , ai iHewasatfirsttakenforanimposter , 01 Vbut ho had letters and documents in tc " .his pockets to prove his identity at w • once. That being settled , he told w Shis story. I have heard him tell it bi * ifour'or five times over , andean relate cc It almost word for word. % When Capt. Wheaton was swept tc % f overboard he gave himself up for le Elost. He got but one look at the "VV f .fahip , and realizing that she was drivse ding twaj' from him and that he was ai rbeyoad rescue , ho ceased swimming , tl , -and hoped to drown at once , tl pT -ljusfc then a hen-coop floated ai t. twitbin reach , and in a second he ui W - < manged his mind and fastened to tc I r-the float. He was clear on the point ter K * ' * * . -of floating all that day and far into tv Bv ' -Rthe night then he lost consciousness , tt B" " ' but did not let go his float. He reifc ; W anembered nothing the next day unW ( fe * ttU about an hour before sundown , fo f hen.he opened his eyes and came to ff ( S SilRPSHPHHP IHi F his senses to find himself lying on th snnds , his float near by , and tho storm cleaned away. He was etifl and sore and bewildered , and he crawled further up to the shore and went to sleep again , and it was sun rise before he again opened his eyes. About an hour later ho knew that ho was on an island about three miles long ; by one milo wide. It was well wooded , contained several springs of fresh waterand there was an abund ance of wild fruit to sustain life. I There wns not an inhabitant or sign of , one , nor did ho find any living thing except birds and monkeys. Wheaten was not only a good sea man but a well educated and well posted manand he had sailed on the Pacific for many years. There was hardly ; an island in that ocean which ho j had not set foot on and could ( recognize by sight again. After a j bit he began to figure on his locn- tionand he had madeoutthathehad been j driven ashore on an unknown and j unchartered island lying very close < to the equator , and in longitude 120 degrees west. This puthimmid- way on a northeast , and southwest line , between tho Marquesas group and j the Galapagos Islands. He vis ited i both groups , and as both were inhabited at that time he could not be mistaken in his location had he gone ashore on any one of them. He \ found proofs satisfactory to himself that 1 the island was of volcanic ori gin { , not over twelve or fifteen years old , and that the luxuriant vegeta tion was due to tropicalclimate. The birds , of which there were several species , could perhaps have flown there 1 from some of the other islands , but 1 how the monkeys reached the spot was a puzzler the captain never got over. That he found 'em there was proved when he was rescued , there being two pet animals on the raft. When the castaway came to walk around his island he found the wreck of the Scotch brig McNeil on the east shore , and the wreck of the Califor- nia ship Golden Bar on the west coast. Both craft had been reported lost with all on board two or three years before. The one Was a whaler and the other a trader. The captain not only said he found them , but he had proofs again , ne had the name board of the ship and some papers belonging I to the brig. He found and buried the skeletons of thirteen sailors , and among the debris of the wreck he secured a large quantity of clothing , considerable money , some bedding , a lot of tools , ropes , boards and planks , and within a week he be- gan the work of building a boat to enable him to escape. I alwaj's felt thatthe old man must have had a jolly life of it for the ten months and over he was on what he called "WheatonIsland , "but ho dwelt on the factthatit was terribly lonely. Itwent harder with him because he had a wife and six children , and he knew that they would be mourninghis death. He found several barrels of whiskey and a lot of tobacco in the plunder , but he was not content to sit still and enjoy himself. He put in : two months on his boat , and had just got her finished when a stormy set in and she broke her moorings and drifted out to sea. Anxiety and exposure , aided by the worry about the folks at home , laid the old manj on his back for several weeks , and he probably had a close call fromj slipping his cables. He got up slowly , and as he had been wasteful with his materials , he found that lie must turn to a raft if he ever got away. He worked at it odd hours , being ill and despondent , for several months , and when it was finished he hesitated a full month before making a start , hoping every day to sight a sail. He had a signal flying by day , and J almost every night he kept a fire going , but rescue never came. One day , two weeks before he set out on his voyage , the Captain made great discovery. In a rough , wild place in the center of the island , where a mass of rock was thrown up in great confusion , he found a lump of gold as big as your fist. Aye ! more than that , he found masses of it so heavy that he could not lift them. These chunks , he said , were as pure as his big nugget , and that I not only held in my hand , but saw the certificate < of assay reading that it was 91 per cent , pure gold. He sold at the mint in San Francisco for over § 12,000 , and that in my presJ ence. In the course of three or four 1 days the Captain piled up such a heap of gold on his island that he I dared not estimate its value. There was enough to make a dozen men e rich for life , and more to be had with e picks and iron bars. Then the der mon : of avarice would not let him 1 wait any longer for rescue. Indeed li he did not want to be rescued. He c made his craft ready , cut branches v and pulled grass to . hide his nugI gets < and set sail with a fair wind to I the northeast , hoping to got into the t track of ships bound for the Sand1 1 wich Islands. He was picked up as I r have told you , but he found a tough v nut in the English Captain. He had t believe that Capt. Wheaton had"s left some island not far away , for h there was the man and there was the I raft. He couldn't have made himn self believe that the island was one ot i the group to the east or west , but v yet < he wouldn't believe in a nearer v island because it wasn't charted. He s simply jumped to the , conclusion that s the castaway had suffered and eny iured until his mind was off its balt ance. This was natural enough in one sense , but when Wheaton came show him the relics from the two wrecks , and when the two monkeys were < skipping about on deck , anyone 0 but an Englishman would have been t convinced. u Capt. Wheaton was sharp enough withold his bigsecret until he had d learned something of the Englishman , t When he found all his stories and asn 3ertions discredited he held his tongue , n and let1 them * believe he was light in I the upper story. He was taken to the Sandwich Islands , as acastaway , d ind thence , with money found on his ti unknown island , he paid his passage San Francisco. It was at this lat port he found me , and withih . two hours after meeting him I had * * the story. I had no reason to doubt j , entire truth. Three or four others ivere taken into the secret , and we ? ormed a syndicate to go after the * rold. I had a legacy of § 8,000 from t ] 1 ( Hi JiunC , mid 1 n ' .iiicii < > imi 111 an equal nnmmit , iiiki t.t > .uii : mmIi hjij. ei * anil til teil her out nurf..i.iiMicri her. Something of Capt. V. liiviton's won derful adventure-got into tin * papers , and there was great anxiety to find out where we were going. We had ten times as many men of fer their services as we could accept , and when the story of the big lump of gold was whispered around two other crafts fitted out to follow us. We went out of the harbor on a dark and stormy night , and two orthreo days before we were supposed to be ready , and tjius gave them the slip. One of the vessels stood up tho coast when ready to come out , and the other loaded for the Sandwich Islands and was lost in a gale. As tho captain had § 9,000 in tho enterprise ' , and had not even waited to visit his family , the reader must credit ' him with honestly believing all ho asserted. As I had an equal : amount invested , the reader must be lieve that I am writing of things as ; they honestly looked to me. How \ could I or any one else disbelieve ? There was a nugget there the papers : and relics , and the English captain knew of the raft and lone passenger being picked up 700 miles from any known land. There wasn't the least difficulty in making others believe , either. ' I think we could have raised § 200,000 capital if there had been need of it. The trouble was to keep capitalists * and speculators out. Wheaton had no sooner been rescu ed [ than he asked for tho English- man's lattitude and longitude. Then he J figured on the direction and strength ' of the wind and the progress of ' his raft , and ho had had the locai tion of his island down to within five miles. ] I have had miners and geol ogists { tell me that no gold was ever found in a volcanic upheaval of tho sea. ' If not , where did the captain get { that big lump ? There is no gold on any chartered island in the Pacific , and he certainly could not have drift ed { to or put off on his raft , from the coast ( of South America. It was easy enough ( to sneer at a story , but not so easy to get around , cold facts. We had a fine run to Honolulu , and remained there for a week to make some { needed repairs and lay in more provisions and water. Capt. Whea- ton ] there met a fellow captain named Briggs , wiio commanded a New Bed ford j whaler , and without a suspicion of what he was doing this man great- ly j discouraged us. He had just come in from a long cruise , which tho chart showed must have ] taken him very near theunkno wn island. j He had not sighted it , but the log ] book reported that when in that neighborhood something like an earthquake had occurred. Indeed , one ( did occur , and a new island was born 1 in the Galapagos group. The ship rocked violently in mid-ocean , and { a sort of tidal wave came near being 1 her destruction. Next day the whaler encountered many green trees floating j about , and he said to Capt. Wheaton that ho had no doubt some island \ had been overwhelmed. He had ] no suspicion of our errand , and related the above simply as an ad- venture. However , from that hour we lost all heart. Figure as we would , we could not shake off the conviction that it was the unknown island \ which had been destroyed in the.satne -j manner it was born. After a long and tedious run from the Sandwich Islands we finally drew near the location. Then for days and days we sailed to and fro , and at length realized that the island had gone. It was not there to en- rich us and to prove the captain's story true but still we found proofs. We * discovered more than 100 trees floating about as we saided this way and that , and after we had given up all hope we " made a still greater find. The boat which Weaton had ] built and lost turned up on that vast expanse ot sea. It was sighted from the mast- head one morning , and two hours later we had it alongside. It was water-logged , but floating well enough for all that , and its finding was the strongest link in the whole chain. We hoisted her on board and brought her to San Francisco to ex- hibit to the silent stockholders in j our enterprise , and that relic was1 the only thing we could show them. The story has been told and retold among sailors in various ways , and s portions of it has been publishedbut ? J have here given it entire and corJ rectly for the first time. Officers in the survey service of both England and America have e denied that any such Island existed , A even for a month ; but I ask the read- er as I have often asked myself : It V not , what land could Capt. Wheaten have : reached in so short a time ? He 8 knew every foot of his island and b drew a map of it. No other island ? would answer the description. He built a boat and we found it. He built a raft and it bore him into the tracks of ships. He found gold and he : found and saved papers and relics which settled the fate ot two missing vessels. That island was born in 8 ten seconds , when the bottom ot the \ sea upheaved. Why should it not have been destroyed just as quickly ? c It is not the only one which has come P and gone , and the fact of its remainc ing : until covered with timber and , vegetation was no guarantee that it would always remain. That's my Sl story , gentlemen , and if you are un- a satisfied you are no worse off than , your humble servant who lost all in a the venture. S Qi f if _ n * A Sea and a See. t The wife of a mariner about to sail C on a distant voyage , sent a note to the clergyman of the parish , express- ing the following meaning : _ f ( "A husband going to sea , his wife q desires the prayers of the .congrega- _ tion. : " Unfortunately , the good p matronwasnotskilledinpunctuation ti nor had the minister quick vision. j [ He read the note as' it was written : "jx "A husband going to see his wife , a desires the prayers of the congrega- tion. " ti First deacon You've got that y horse yet , I see. Second deacon If Why shouldn't I have him ? F. D. • * Ton are always selling or trading ° your horses , you know. S. D. . in There isn't anything the matter with * ' this one. Cartoon. " _ . _ - _ i'V f X FACT IS .1 FACT. I remember once in my childhood's ( school , AV'Ja-n I was learning Oeography'fl ruin. My miiBtcr. u innti wlio e methodH I held In teaching a child could not be excelled , To fix in my mind the formula sound "The nhnpo or this our plnnet is round. " Laid down nn npplp cr nundroun eizo tf ' n which I fastened my longing eyes ) ; An object to make of this fruit bo red. ; "This is tho world ! Do you Bee ? " ho said. He remarked , I think , tho looks I had cast , For after awhile , when tho lesson was past , The tempting fruit in my hands ho placed , But never shall 1 forget tho first taste , For : the apple that looked so good and bo . sweet , "Was decayed through to core , not fit to eat ! Then in a ton © 'twixt grave , sad and low ( Which did , I think , his great wisdom show ) , Said 1 tho master , on seeing my grief pro found , , "As the apple , thus is the world often found. " Gertrude B. Duffeo from the Sp anish. Pistols and Diamonds. Uncle Meriwether never liked Eus tace. 1 He never did him justice from the 1 beginning , and when he heard that 1 I was actually engaged to him he j spoke in such • a way that I de clared ( I wouldn't endure it. "I am old enough , I hope , to choose i for myself , " said I. "I don't know about that , Patty , " said l my uncle , shrugging his shoul ders. ( But I remained to hear no more. I ] flounced back into the house , slam ming the door in Uncle Meriwether's honest , spectacled face , and bursting into i tears as soon as I reached the sitting 1 room. "It's a shame , " said my sister Elspeth. "Don't cry , Patty ; I'm sure ' the whole matter is transparent enough. < Uncle Meriwether wouldn't be ] so domineering about it if he did not want you to marry Paul. " "I wouldn't marry Paul Meriwether if i there wasn't another man in tho world , " said I , viciously. "And I'll , marry ] Eustace Dalzell anyhow , now. Uncle Meriwether says we don't know anything J about him , but I'm sure we know enough. " That was a false assertion on my ] part. I only knew of my handsome fiance . what he himself had chosen to tell me namely , that ho was a New York ; engineer staying down at Wraysfield a few weeks for his health. And \ his friend , Mr. Belfield , was a stock ? broker. Oh , how I wished Mr. Belfield \ might take a fancy to Elspeth. It , would be so nice to be married at , the same time to go together and live in Neiv York ! , We lived together in the lonely old brick house on the edge of the moor , so that I was very glad when Olive Oatley . came down from Binchester to visit it , and brought her wedding set of diamonds to show. Elspeth and I looked with awe and admiration at tho sparkling gems necklace , earrings and brooch. "Are they very valuable ? " I asked "Three thousand dollars , I believe , said Olive , complancently. "They belonged f to Herbert's mother , and they . are to be re-set before I wear them. " But just then Elspeth gave a start and turned scarlet , and following the [ direction of her eye I turned scarlet , and beheld Eustace Dalzell standing smiling in the doorway , with his hat in his hand. Somehow the diamonds made mo nervous , and I could not help , in the course of the evening , confiding my vague terrors to Eustace. But Eustace laughed at me , and made light of my fears. . Eustace Dalzell went home earlier than : usual this night. In my per- turbation I had almost resolved to ask him to remain all night , a self- constituted guardian of our treas- ures , but I did not venture to do so , and so at 10 o'clock we three girls , with _ Dinah in the kitchen , were left to ourselves. I had intended to lie awake all night , but I must have fallen into a light doze without being aware of it , for the clock was stricking 12 when I , started up at the loud peal of the door bell below. Olive was at my side in an instant. Elspeth had her arm around me , and even Dinah hobbled in with a flaring lamp in her hand. "Go to the door , do , some ofyou , " cried I hysterically. "Ask who it is. Ask , what they want. " And while Olive , Elspeth , and the old attendant obeyed my behest. I hurriedly threw on my white dressing gown and went to the head of the stairs to listen , for I felt that in an emergency like this some one ought to keep close to the diamonds. "There is no one here , " I heard Elspeth say , after the bolts and the bars of the front door were with- drawn. | "Yes , there is. "I hear some one groaning at the other end of the I veranda , " persisted Dinah. "Oh , dear , the draught has blown out my candle. This way , Miss Oately , please I'm afraid there's been an ac cident or something. " c The next minute the heavy oaken r door blew shut with a bang. It was rj self-fastening on the inside. I was , all alone in the house. A rustle under the vines that s draped the north side of the house c low whistle , and I could hear a voice r saying : in suppressed accents : s "They're safe enough outside , all c three ! of 'em. Now's your time. S Quick ! " J It all flashed on my mind in a sec- ond the sturdy boughs of the wis taria , which affordedso easy a ladder s for an aspiring burglar to reach " Olive's window the open casement the diamonds lying underneath the e pillow. My worst fears had come true , and seizing the six-barrelled little pistol I rushed into the room jjustdn time to see a tall figure with mask over its face spring into the v window and steal with cat-like moI tion across the room. b As his hand lay on the tiny can1 vass bag containing the precious n jewels I raised the pistol and fired , t At the same moment a muttered I oath , mingled with a cry , sounded a my ears and the sound of somee thing falling shook the beams of the li floor. t lam not one of the fainting kind , but [ t _ L , . matt sss tmti f-mm - m& j sm e ttetmmmii for a minute or two 1 stood motion less. Then springing downstairs I admitted tho three eager womo who wore huddled at the door. "I've shot him ! I've killed him ! " was all that I could say. "Bun up stairs , Dinah , and see if if he is dead. " But Dinah would not go alone , so we all hurried up in a crowd and there , half-sitting , half-lying against tho bed post , with tho canvas bag fal len to the ground beside him , and a red pool of blood under his right shoulder blade was Eustace Dalzell. Of course we sent for help to tho nearest neighbor ; of course we de livered my gallant lover , who was not fatally injured , over to tho police , by whom he was recognized as an old jail-bird , luxuriating in a new name. New York Sun. A Happy Family. Raton , N. M. , letter to tho Kansas City Times says , there was a happy family living in a cage at a drug store in this city , the members of which family were a mouse , a moun tain squirrel , an adder , and a rattle snake which wore ten rattles. They had been confined in the cage for sometime andwere apparently on very amicable terms , when an emeute broke out which finally ended in a war of I extermination , and , strange to sa } ' . the squirrel well-nigh cleared the en tire field. When or why the row began is not known , the first outbreak noticed being an attack on tho mouse by the squirrel in which the former was quickly brained , and the victor proceeded to dispatch the adder by simply cutting his throat. He then retired to refresh himself , and after eating heartily pounced on the rat- tlesnake. After fiercely biting and scratching the rattler he retired in good order without any serious in jury , Up to this time the snake had been a passive witness to the carnage about him but he now proceeded to join in the melee in earnest. He coiled him self up and , assuming a defensive attitude , waited for the second attack. The squirrel didn't give him long to wait , but the rattler met him half way , and giving n graceful , half circular swoepfastened his fangs immediatly behind the left shoulder of the squirrel. The plucky little animal shook himself loose and madeready to again attack the snake , which lay in the cage with flashing eyes and quivering tail. The poison from the snake rapidly took hold of the little animalhoweverand he soon began to show signs of approchingy death. Among the thirty or forty wit nesses of the spirited and exciting : fight was a physician , who took the little fellow out and administered ; whiskyand strange to saythe next morning the little fellow was appar ently ' as well as ever. . . - - & Put It In Writing. Verbal contracts occasion more , trouble , dispute and litigation than 1 any ! other business transaction. The wise • merchant taught by experience will endeavor to have a writingexecu- ted 1 by the party to be charged , in every < case of importance arising in his 1 buisness. This is especially nec essary < of guarantees. A man enters your office whom you know to be perfectly ] responsible. He tells you to 1 sell Brown a thousand dollars worth of goods. Brown is all right , he 1 will answer for that , ect. Make n him 1 sign a memorandum. A customer gives you a. large order ° for i future and instalment deliveries. - Make him sign it in writing. a You engage a salesman for a year , or for a month , or for a trial trip. Have ] it all put down in writing and signed. a You save takingyour chances before a jury , who nine times out of ten sl prove ] uncertain and toosj'mpathetic with that party whom they consider is the "under dog. " It is onlyalittletroubleatthetime , " but it usually saves a heap of trouble c in the future. Trade Mark Becord.ls iB > ' - "Sweet Solitude's Seclnsion. " " Henry , have you sent word to v the f Social World that we sail for Europe ] next Monday ? " x " " Ye * * " And that there is a rumor to the y effect that Bella is engaged to a fort eign count at whose castle we will spend a portion of the season ? " a "Yes my dear ; I've taken care of tj that. " bi "Then I guess I'll write to Cousin si Amanda to expect us in a day or so at the farm ; and say. Henry , don't ci forgetto get me two three or European di guide-books. Idon'tintendtoletthat hi hateful Mrs Sniff get ahead of me this ti year. " Judge. tl Yaccination in the Harem. V One hundred and fifty of the ladies \ \ of the Sultan ' s seraglio at Constanti- * iie nople have just been vaccinated. . The Italian surgeon who performed ju : the operations wab stationed on one he : side of an immense screen which n concealed the women. A hole was in made in the screen large enough for ni an arm to pass through , and the operator was confronted in turn by gc arms of every size and complexion , m To guard against any temptation to Cu : curiosity , two eunuchs who stood by dc the surgeon , covered his head with a jrC shawl ; fter each operation , and did M not remove it till the lady had withm drawn her arm and another one takar en her place. - " 1 Lincoln With a Book. . bi Twenty years ago no photograph th ; was more often seen than that of President Lincoln sitting with a big ri < book on his knee , and his little son th : Tad leaning against him and 1 ooking at it with him. The book was then hfl thought to be a Bible , but it wasn't.es It was Potographer Brady's picture en album , which the president was Ei examining with his son while some ladies stood by. The artist begged "c the president to remain quiet , and the picture was taken. ; ' f SUMSK.OIAXDI. Wo own no houses , no lots , no lands , No dainty viands for us aro spread ; By sweat of our brows and toil of our hands , Wo earn tho pittanco that buys us bread. Yet wo live in a noble state Sunbeam and I than the millionaires Who dino off silver and golden plate , With liveried Inquoys behind their chairs. Wo have no riches in bonds or stocks , No bank books show our balances to draw ; Yet wo curry n safe key that unlocks Mom treasures than Crtesus ever saw , Wo wear no velvets or satin lino , Wo dress in a very homely way ; But , oh , what luminous lustre * * shino About Sunbeam's gown and my wooden gray. No harp , no dulcimer , no guitar Breaks into singing at Sunbenm's touch ; But do not think that our ovonings nro Without their mnsic ; thero is none such In tho concert hnlls whore tho lyric air In palpitant billows swims and swoons ; Our lives aro us p alms and our foreheads wear The culms of the hearts of perfect Junes. When wo walk together ( wo do not ride We nro too poor ) , it is very raro Wo aro boned unto from tho other sido Of tho struot but not for this do wo care , We are not lonely ; we pnt-a along Sunbeam and I and you cannot eco ( Wo enn ) what tall and beautiful throng Of angels wo have for company. When cloudy weather obscures our skies , And some dnys darken with drops of rain , We have but to look in each other's d es , And all is balmy and bright again. Ah ! ours is the alchemy that transmutes The dregs to elixir , the drops to gold ; And so we livo on Hesperian fruits Sunbeam and I aud novcr grow old. Never ] grow old , and wo dwell in peace , And love our fellows and envy none ; And our hearts aro glad at tholargeincrenso , Of plenteous under tho sun. And tho duys go by with their thoughtful trend , And theshadowslengthcn towards tho West , But the wane of our young years brings no dread To harm our hnrvests of quiet rest. Sunbeam's hair will be strenked with gray , And Times will furrow my darling's brow ; But ] never can Time's handtake away The tender halo that clasps it now. So we dwell in wonderful opulence , With nothing to hurt us nor upbraid ; And my life trembles with revorenco And Sunbeam's spiric is not afraid. MARRIED J FOR MONEY. , No letter for me , papa ? " "None , Katy. " . . The expression of keen disappoint ment that fluttered across the pretty face of Kate Talbot was noticed not only by her father but by the hand some Rossmere Wylio , who accomA panied him in his journey from the Post-Office. "Kate , " said Mr. Talbot as he dis- mounted fi om his horse , "somehow I don't believe in this cavalier of yours. Out of sight out of mind , you know ; and it may be possible z . that in the attractions of a fashion- able watering-place ho has forgotten the little wild-flower of the Welding- ton hills. " "Never , papa ! You and Bossmere were always unjustly prejudiced against him. " Rossmere Wylie looked at her with grave earnestness. Suppose for an instant ] Henry Gavnor was false ? Ho sternly checked the upspringing throb of his heart. Was it for him to build a palace of happiness on the wreck of Kate Talboc's first love ? Nevertheless the suspicion of Gay- nor's faithfulness was firm , and he determined to visit the watering place and survey the field. f "Have you heard who arrived this t morning , Gaynor ? " Col. Medford's hand , laid lightly t on Henry Gaynor's shoulder , arrested j that gentleman in the midst of an11 afternoon promenade. "No ; any one worth cultivating ? " "Miss Montressor , the heiress. There's a chance for you ifj'ou want ai'ich wife. " Henry Gaynor's handsome e3'es ir sparkled. h "Can you introduce me ? " "No , I haven't the honor of a per sonal acquaintance , but Wylie can * Rossmere Wylie , you know. He's a cousin < or something and there she * now. " "What ! that fat little dowdy con- cern ? I thought she was a beauty. " CJ "So she is from a financial point of view : ? " "But she's forty if she's a day , and I'll wager her teeth are false. " t "Very possibly , but think of her t\ wealth and don't be hyporcritical. m You had better consider the mat ter. " Gaynor did consider the matter , P1 and ; that evening succeeded in obju taining the desired introduction , and cl began to devote his attentions asp aiduouslyto her. And Rossmere Wylie watched the cr curious developments of the littlelife- drama that was beinjr enacted under si his eyes with contemptuous indigna- tion. - ( -j "A heartless scoundrel ! " he } : u thought. S1 Kate will be well rid of him. And W ret , poor girl , she did believe in him. Well , this is a strange world we live . If a man steal a five-pound note as is sent to prison : if he steals a th : ' heart , to it when ivoman s fling away c % is tired of the plaything , he ' s a ? ! : iero ! Bon voyage , Mr. Henry Gay- : j ior. , I shall certainly not interfere , < rj any of your nice little arrangej j " nents. . co August was gone and over ; the golden orb of the full September noon was looking calmly into the sh ; urtained recess of the huge baywinh low where Mr. Henry Gaynor had . rone gracefully down on his knees to ) c Hiss Emily Montressor. after the nost approved and romantic fashion , r.c ind asked her to be his wife. * "But , Henry , " faltered the fair one , to 'lam so much older than you. " mi "A year or so , perhaps , darling ; ut what does that signify to hearts i0 hat are congenial ? " "And then my niece will think it so * idiculous ; she has alway opposed nt he idea of my marrying. " * of > "My Emily should not sacrifice the co lappiness of her lifetime to the interyo sted motives of others , " he urged , rill mphaticallv. "You will be mine , Sn SmilyV" ye "Ah , Henry you are so winning ! I so ion'tknow whatnnsw'rtogiveyou. " co "Say 'Yes , ' darling. " ca And Miss Montressor said , "Yes. " { bil . - _ : mwmmmmmmmmmmmmmjmmmmmmmmm m ' • i "But I really am afraid to let my " < nieco know ; I'm sure sho will opposo > it. " j " love will her iho "My spare oppor- j tunity ; wo will go quietly to tho ' 1 church some morning and bo • mar ried. " "Oh , Henry ! " "Emily , my darling , I am awaro that this is not a common proceed ing , butthen you know that our love - { is not a common love. " "I I know it , " faltered Miss Mon tressor , turning a huge emerald ring round and round on her dumpy little finger : "and if you insist upon / it" ! Mr Gaynor's handsome eyes flashed . in triumph ; ho was sure of the ( prizo at last. Poor , forgotten ICnte ! Tho sudden wedding of tho middle- aged Miss Montressor with tho chief ( of tho made nino exquisite season a 1 days' sensation at Scarborough. f Kate Talbot heard of it in duo time , and cried a night and day before ' sho ' began to realizo that she had ; made a fortunate escape. And Ross mere came back to Scarborough just in time to catch her heart in tlie ro 'M ' bound. m While Mr. Wylie and Miss Kato 9 Talbot ; were gathering grapes and M whispering exceeding interesting lit'M tie nothings under the green , tremu- m lous shadow of the arbors at Welding- m ton , after tho most approved style . of love-making , Mr. and Mrs. Henry , Gaynor ( were enjoying tho grandeur oftyalcs. ( ' 1 "Henry , dear , " said Emily , "I'm I so , disappointed at this letter from ! 1 Emmy. " ifl "Who's Emmy. " 1 "My niece , dear. I thought , of yW course , she'd send me something very I nice for a wedding present. " "Never mind , my love. What do ' ) we want with her paltry wedding ' { M presents ] ? " , fl "It isn't that Henry , but" il "But what ? " M "She's cut off my allowance , tho rm hard-hearted ] minx ; and she so rich ! " ifl "What ! Are there two heiresses in > * tho 1 Montressor family ? " .9 "Two heiresses ? No. - I do not 1 comprehend you. What do you mean , Henry. < "Bo I" Henry cleared his throat tfl huskily i and went on "understand | Jfl that that your niece " ' ym "Why , you must often have heard H of my niece. Emily Montressor she H was named after me the rich heir- jH essAnd now she's cut off my allow- | H ance and left me without apenny , tho 9 disagreeable thing ! Well , it's lucky fl I've got a husband to take care of ' M me now , ain 't it Henry dear ? " ijH nenry Gaynor did not answer ; he M literally 1 could not. His tongue i M seemed to cleave to the roof of his \MU \ mouth ; every drop of blood in his t M body stood still. Had he sacrificed J M his j youth and beauty and brilliant M prospects for this ? The gentle Emily M had 1 never looked as course and un- J M attractive as she did at this moment. | clinging caressingly to his arm , with j W all a wife's sweet confidence. H And then he remembered sweet 'j W Kate Talbot and thought vindictive- M ly of Rossmere Wylii\ \ "He knew he niu - t have known H that there were two Emily Montress- H ors , " thought Gaynor , clenching his H teeth. "He saw me walk into the H trap , and never opened his lips to M warn me. Oh , what a fool ! what a \ double distilled blockhead I have H J So ho had ; but unfortunately it - H was too late for thisself-appreciation \ to be of any use. Ife was safely mar- WM riedtoMiss Montressor , but not to , H the Emily ! And Mr. Gaynor felt , 'm\ \ with a bitter pang of humiliation , fl that his snu/r / little piece of diplomacy fl had been an utter failure. N. Y. Current Wit. H The poultice that draws out a ! B man's virtues is the sod that covers H his grave. W "Is Mr. Bromley tall ? " "Person- H he . " " " " H ally is. "Personally ? "Yes. _ Officially he is short $ .10,000 short. H That's why he went to Montreal. " M Which is the longest word in tho Imm English language ? "Smiles , " be- H cause there's a mile between tho first H and last letters. H We pity theyoung fellow who wants \ to vote , but will lack a day of being I H twenty-one on election day. He f m\ \ must feel lack a daisical. j , mm It mav be doubted whether the < ; j H practice of chewing gum has an in- i H jurious effect on the eyes of the gum- H ehe ver , but it hurts the eyes of other H people. < SomerviHe Journal. 1 , H She ( gazing at the elephant ) : H "What majesty , George ! Such mas- , ' m\ \ sive dignity and conscious power. ' ' ' M He : "Ye-es ; but don't you think , < \ lear , that the one small peanut he | > \ ias just put into his huge body with j 1 H iuch a childish relish somewhat S W\ \ veakens ( the general effect ? " ' j H Snap actor : "I have called , sir , to j U lsk you to insert a lino to the effect ' j H hat I have just refused an offer of f H 500 a week. Accommodating edi- < H . or : "With pleasure. Is there any- * H hingelse I can do for you , sir ? " H 'That's all , unless you have a spare , fl | lime about you. " Philadelphia Re- , < : H "You would be sorry to lose your j' ' > H ister , wouldn 't you Johnny ? " asked u H lie visitor suggestively to the little , * M )03 * who was entertaining him in the Vt B Ira wing-room. "Nope , " replied Ai B fohnny. "I guess I could stand it , ij H Jr. ] Hankinson. Maw says I've got | 9M wear short pants till after Irene's | - H narried. " ' H Tell your mother that I am coming > " f' 1 see her soon , " said a lady on , ' H Lustin avenue to Mrs. Sniverly's j ( H ittle boy , who was playing in front H fthe gate. "I am glad you are , . 1 1 omin' and ma will be glad to see , } H ou , too. " "How do you know she r H be glad to see me ? " asked Mrs. 5 H iniverly. "Because I heard her say J H esterday she would be glad to seo- * W omebody who didn't come hero to j | H ollect a bill. She said nobody evei < * - I H nine to the house except men with ! < I H .ills. " Texas . Sittings. - l m *