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I'll tell you the loveliest Game in the world Do something for sonebody, quioki Do something for somebody, quicki Though it rains like the rain -.Of the 1tood, little mai, And tho.oloude are forbiding and thiok,. You can make the sunshine In your soul, little man-. Do something for somebody, quick; Do something for somebody, quicki Though the skies are like brass Overhead, little girl, And the walls like a well-hebted brick; And are earthly aIairs In a terrible whirl' Do something for somebody, quick; Do something for somebcdy, quicki THE PANCAKE MAKER. Mary was a pancake maker in a res taurant. it was her duty to stand in a show window on Broadway, and pour batter upon the griddle. Thour ands of persons stopped before the window every day, and watched Mary as she deftly greased the, griddle or with a turn of her hand eopped the pancakes over to be browned on the other side. Mary had been selectea, for the job because she was pretty. Her selection proved to be a prolitable Investment for her employer. Those persons who were insensible to the charms of pancakes were. not inseusi. ble to the attractions of beauty, and so many came in to eat the cakes and to wish that Mary was a waitress as well as a cook. One day, when the bubbles were ria Ing from the freshly poured batter, and Mary stood waiting with her spatula In her hand, a young man stopped be. fore the windoW- His dark eyes took in the smoking griddle, the rounded arm above it, and the white brow which was wrinkled iii the effort to'de termine when the cakes were prop. enly done brown. She looked up and their eyes met. Then he passed on. What dark eyes he had I thought Mary. What a nice looking girl that was! thought he. 4nd all day long Mary looked up from the pancakes, half ex pecting to see those eyes looking into hers. Even the bubbles in the pan cakes seemed to take oa the expression of his eyes and to look at her from the griddlu with a stare of admiration. As for the young man-who was a clerk in a dry goods store-a rounded arm seemed to beckon him to come in and eat pancakes and become saturated with mile sugaa. Every morning he stopped at the window cf the restaurant and was greeted with a glance from a pair of bright eyes and an evidently studied desire to be graceful in turning the cakes. After a week had passed he left his boarding house earlier than usual one morning and stopped at the restaurant to get his break fast. Mary saw him come in. She did not turn j her head nor give any sign of recogni. tion, but she listened with~ bent head and attentive ear for his order, It * came like this: "!ome pancakes, please!" How carefully she poured out that batch upon the griddle! With what *an anxious eye she watched the edges harden and the centre of the cakes be * come perforated with holes like those in a sponge! And when the cakes were done to a most delighitful brown on one side, she held each one tip on her spatula and greased the griddle anew before putting the cakes on the grid. * dIe, so~that they shonid not stick to the griddle. In her eagerness to bake the cakes to a turn she burned one of them, and so.in disgust she threw the whole batch away and began once again. Meanwhile she stole al furtive glance at the young man, who was drumming on is -plate with his knife and watching * Qtiningly the curve of Mfary's grace * ul neck and the dainty coil of hair on the back of her head, and which Jack * ished was against his shoulder. At last the pancakes were done to the fair c,ook'3 liking and were placed before Jack. lie sald-to himself, as he cut ia section of the full moon of buckwheat. 'Well, I never ate pancakes like those bdfore. They're so- light and flaky, and ihle .sirup is real true maple sugar, and nuot made of watered mo lasses." Jack didn't add that the cook was charming, but' lie thought6 it all the same. The next batch of cakes which Mary cooked was not as well done. as the ones Jack was eating. It was per fectly natural that they should not b, 'ox was not Mary pnxiole to- see how hie enjoyed them, and did not she make in excuse to leavo her post and, go to tbe other end of the:restaytrant to get i new piece of pork to grease the grid le, do,that she might steal a glance as the went by? And when Jack had aaten his cakes and had lingered- twice a long as usual over his coffee, so "that he could feast his eyes as well.as his palate, he arose tq go- and their eyes 1 net for just one ieeting glance. ' Jack lushied and said to himself that it was aused by the coffee. Mary's face was 'nged with crimson, but of course it 1 was due to the heat of the griddle. &nd so the days came and went. Each i vas attracted to the other by the load- I stone of love. Each one fearful to 1 make overtures to the other for fear bat the illusion would be dispelled. But the mysterious alchemist was busy aixing the sweet potion which each 1 )f these young hearts drank. The po ion in Mary's heart conjured up vi-.., ilons of :what a glorious man Jack i must be as she lay awake at night in I ,he' dark with her eyes wide -open. I Then she closed her eyes tight, and. thought of him as a mailed knight 3lanking into the restaurant to refresh himself with a plate of pancakes and a sup of coffee ere -he started out in I iearch of his heart's desire.. "But I'm afraid he didn't care for me," thought Mary, o ning her eyes again in fear. I "I saw him smile'at Miss Bellows to lay." And so between her hopes and ier fears Mary fell asleep and dreamed I of pancakes and her favorite customer, I and only awoke when the sun was shining in the window, and she hur- 1 rled down to the restaurant so that she i might see her knight,as soon as possi 1 ble and catch a .glance from his dark ayes. In the meantime Jack had not been idle. He had cultivated the acquaint %nce of the proprietor of the restaur ant. By careful questioning he had learned that Mary was one of the 1 many girls 'who had been rescued by the Five Points mission when she was a mere child. Mary's mother had died I In a tenement in Baker street from i consumption, brought on by the ne- I ;leot and unkindness of her husband. Since her death tho husband :bad gone i 3n from bad to worse, only saved from I killing-himself by his excesses by being , ient to BIackwell's Island at various intervals for at least eight months in , 3ach year. During one of his sprees ae had signed a paper which commit ed his little daughter to the care of he mission. And so Mary had grown ap to be an exemplary young woman md the pride of her benefactors. Jack's curiosity was awakened to Ind out what kind of a man Mary's lathor was and so he started out one i sight to search for him. He spent hree nights after working hours in I he search, and found him at last in a miserably squalid room on the top floor f f a tenement house in 1'earl street.I Rc was far gone on the road to the grave. The neighbors did what they would for him, which was not much, I or.they were very poor. Bo Jack sat I ip with him late into the night. A ~eeble kerosene lamp burned on the nantle and corners of the room were Ililed with shadows. Mr. Rogera fell nto an uneasy slumber toward mid- 4 sight and muittei-ed in his dreams Lhout the good thmngs he had to eat avhen lisa wife was alive. In his inico. serent remarks he mentioned roast eor and gravy. Then he awoke. "I was dr'amin' iv th' foine feedin' had aforo Mollie dIed. Aye, b'y, but ihe could cook th' grub. An' th' I >ancamkes she could bake was like 1 loney in yer mouth. I wisht I bad ome of them cakes now, 8o I do. I hink they'd be puttin' lire intil me." 1 Next morning when Jack went to ect his breakfast, as usual, he asked t he proprietor to permit him to have n interview with Mary. She came, luttering and I)ailug. into the back art of the restaurant. "Miss Rodgers," said Jack, all or a remble, because his love was so near, 'I saw your father last night." "My father," gasped Mary ii) ilarm. "Whiere was hie?" "In a back room on the top floor of a enement, in P'eari street." - "Was he well?". whispered Mary, iot daring to look -Jack in .the face, )mt droipping her eyes upon her snowy .1 ipron and absent mindedly smoothmng uLt a wrinkle. ' "o lie was i,l.IIe spoke about he pancakes youtr mother used. to nake, and said that If he could have ome equally as good' he thought he night feel better, and perhaps recover tis health. If you are willing to make hem for him I will see that lie gets "Hlow good of you '' replied Mary, ooking at him with a glance of admir ition. "B3ut how can we keep them wa"I anttogto ht, t some to thi ik, I can borrow a little oil tove, you can furnish' the batter and he frying pan, and tonight we will go lown and take him some. ];ut perha a rou are af,aid to gb with. me, as I. am L stranger to you?" Maty looked' abyly at fim and hOe. .tated-for a moment. Thgn she said: "lut I have seen you in the restau. ant, haven't I? And I think ,you can 3o trusted. You don'0 lpok live a ery bad- man. You bring -the oil Itove around to-night at 0 o'clock when the restaurant closes, and I will iave the batter and the griddle ready." All day long Mary sang at her work md smiledto herself in anticipation of he meeting. Sometimes,' hoery s w )ecame grave when she thought of 'her, 'ather. But her recollection oY:himi was very indistinct and associated only with oaths and blows. At 6 o'clock the estaurant was closed and' Mary itepped out upon the walk'with a tin atl in her .hand contahing batter, a mall griddle wrapped in- paper. under ier arm, and a nice piece of. salt pork o grease the griddle in her pocket, Jack was already there with a small >i1 stove. He was w4lking 2up, and; lown the sidewaTk- impatiently. They went across to Centre street and from ;hence to Pearl. They said very little, mud were content to know that each was near to the other. On reaching ;he tenement they felt rather than saw ;heir way up the dark stairiay. Mary was frightened at the dismal look of ior father's room, but Jack cheered ier. Mr. Rogers was awakened by the )pening of the .door. Jack turned his uack on tho meeting between Mary md her father, but he jieard feeble and broken acknowledgements of past weakness and promises for the fdture. When he turned and came to the 'ed ilde he saw two wet faces, one soft med and repentant, the other hopeful mud shining, Do you think you could eat some pancakes,, father?" said Mary. "Oh, dear, I could av I had some iv for mother's makin', Mary. I'm feelin' )etter already since ye kom," and he ralsed himself on his pillow to show ils strength. - "But, father, I can mak.e you .op , mud I'll wairant mother he6vr"ma1 )etter," said Mary, looking archly at rack. And so the pancakes were made. rack lit the wick in the stove 'and creased the griddle, while Mary poured )ut the batter, and the savory smoke arose like incense in the dismal room mnd made Mr. Rogers sniff cheerily. He sat up in bed, b,3lstered by pii ows, and ate two of the cakes. All he time his eyes followed the trim orm of his daughter as she tidied up he room. The lovers remained* with urn until late into the night. Then Jack ook Mary to her boarding house, and he wicked young man actually kissed ier at the door. She ran up stairs and ooked in the glass to see if his lips iad left a mark on her cheek. The iext morning she ran down to see her ather and make him comfortable for he day. Under the watchful care of Jack mud Mary the old i.an slowly became tronger, and liu a few weeks was mhout again. He did not return to his 1ki habits, and forsook the tenement or two rooms ia a more pretentious ocality, where Mary went with him to coep house. ~ The other (lay there was quiet wedding, at whIch Mary and Fack were the principals and a few' iholce friends the spectators. Tne hiheft dish at the wedding feast wvas a ig plate of pancakes baked by the pride. Now the many persons who pass the estaurant daily look in the' window, put they lock in vain for the cook. ihe is baking pancakes for oully two of he hungry persons. Teo Grooer and tho FMesc. A Chattanooga grocer, 'heing greatl.a roubled by fies, put twenty-one sheets >f sticky fly paper about his store. In he ovening lie gathered them up, and moticed how much heavier they were, seing~ covered with flies. He weIghed ho twenty-one sheets and found they veighed seven pounds. Then ho put wenty-one fresh sheots on the scales ud they weighed four pounds and our ounces, Thus the flies weighed we pounids twelve ounces. He found hbat, there were twenty fles to each quare inch of the fly paper; each sheet iad 888 sqxuart ipeobes and 68720 flie4~ mnd the twent.-nne.het4 ad 4i,i6 lies. 'Thuse one may ascertain the veighL of a fly; for, :if 141,120 flies veilh two pounds twelve ounces, it's asy to calculate w one 1i0iweigh. A ueto,lubricant, the.nuse of which 'is. idvocated in the Austriati Rakodd2 Fournai, is mustard oil, It remains erfectly fluid at the loW "tWpd%mture if 140 .F, and wl(,keif ondangedi for fll DING . M fi Ut4 PAOE. The hai aoe tnmo Dvawo { on It in .Uim'stakable I4ues. )t Oao n ause$oange lately published aontaied the. follow !ng n Q oer very yl0io I Inark $ dlbip of h the t its orim b d pd. by all .6,isa soU 1Qght; tar el 180ed; It contaw* the germ a doctrine which 16 1teti l9 to jljue l'gely In the phiei9oIgyof tohe 1utuxei eoiry e konows that men's passions, prope,fl ttes and peouliarities, as well as theit silings, are reflected in their facesj .lt It is only the few who have alade 'study of phyaloghomy an es PeoiaL rsuit who are gifted with the powerp reading those faces. Judges. who.i,e -.ervQd "ling ;terms .on the. lieoh 4yars inq large pIaotle and' doctor Ise'nineico possoss ~the power of interpreting physiognomies more large!y than other people. But any one can acquire the rudiments of the art .y dint of study. it-is (i im;i)slble 'to disguise a face as- a 'h nd-writing, When the expert c)mes t,?i disguise is torn off and the face te1i-the true story of the,spirit lnsido the body. One only needs to visit the paiiten iary to realiz3 how undeniably vice write3 its sign manual on the features. It Is not the drunkard only whose :ird- nose, flabby cheeks and rheumy eyes betray him; It is the sen sualist vbose vice is read in his lips, the knave whose propensity is revealed in the shape of his mouth, the m.tn of violence who 1s surrendered by his eyes. An experienced detective or a trained jpitor seldom needs to ask the crime of 'which the prisoner was guilty. -ie can tell it by his face. It i3 quite evident that in the future the stud.y of physiognomy is going to be pursued more vigorously than it has b en. As a means of preventing crime it may prov6 -invaluabla. How con staotly do we> hear' of men "falling fromn grape," as the phrase goes. Yet tlese men- must have carried their , me 1n their face.for a long time. If Sy' -ond"ha.l bed' able -to-read their features the n}isohief ngight i;ave been averted. ldow often are we assured that this or that orimi. nal enjoyed the perfect coaudence of his employers and the Iubhic till the very day of his detection; an expert physlognomiht whould probably. have. spotted hin long before. Again, face reading might be turned to fine account in business. It Is well known that every man's face is more or less stamped by the pursuit ie follows. An experi enced observer can generally detect a lawyer, or a doctor, or a merchant, or a clerk, or a mechanic, or a clergyman, by merely studying his face. The study might be carried much further. The same rule which enables an observer to distinguish a lawyer from a merchant will; when followed out, enable keen eyes to separate able lawyers from lawyers who are incompe-. tent, merchants who are going to make a fortun'e from merchants who are go. ing to fail. Men often carry their destinies as well as their character in their fases. Indeed, the former de pends so largely upon the latter that it would be singular if it were otherwise. Wimen, too, will be able to disorimin. ate among their luvers and to -pick out the man who will make a good husband from one who will.have to be' dragged into a divorce court. All the advan tages which Fowler mistakenly told us we were' going to derive from the study of phrenology we may possibly gain from the older and more mysterious science of face reading. somnamiblitsmn. The pl.enomena or somnambulism and their i"nnection with the nerve centers zn . .. it been satisfactorily ac counted for. They probably depend. primarily, says the Lancet, upon a di recting impulse or sensory origin. Some of our actions often becoma by practice so nearly automatic that par. tial sleep or stupor does not arrest their onconsolous performance. 1rsomnam. bulism the intellect and controlling will are torpid, while the sensorl.motor man whom they should govorn is awake and 1 active. Ai in dreams the intelligent sensorium is alone drowsily active,with possibly a noticable tendency to rebtless movement, so there may be other states of dreaming, in which the centers of 'motion are stimulated to a more power 'ful but uncon.scious action. P2artial counteractives to somnambulism may be found in throwig oft worries, and in the proper regulation of evening mdals. ElectrcQty is being used to purify sew ?ge, [ti prod uces_ a chemical change by which the solid matter comes to the surface and pire water flows oft A GRE&T INVENTION. One That : Trebles tho Valuo or the Seed of the Cotton Plant. Eli Whitney, though a Mhssachusetts man, happened to be at Savannab, in the house of General Greene; when he Invented tho cotton gin. No mechanti cal revelation of modern times did r4oro to expand commerce, agriculturo an$i manufactures in this country. Whitney'was ill-requitted. The South ern States, with one exception, treated him shabbily, and Southern members of Congress hindered him from reap ing the pecuniary rewards he had hon= orably earned, It was one of the sar. casms of fate that after he had helped enrich the South by inventing the cotton gin, he was driven by discour agement to the North, where he inven ten the gun that had so much to do in subduing the Confedracy. It is now said that another invention has- been about perfected which is second only in importance to Eli Whit ney's discovery. This,new implement Is called the Crawford cleaner,' where by the seed of the cotton plant will command a price equal to that of the lint. It is explained that under pres ent processes cotton seed is not worth to the grower mote than $0 or $8 per ton, and.the oil manufacturers make only a reasonable profit after paying that price. With the Crawford cleaner the seed will be worth from $25 to $80 per ton, and will give the oil mill a much larger profit than it made now. Cotton planters ought to realize con siderable profit by the use of this in vention. There is no reason why they should not have all the advantage at home, instead of allowing so much of the raw material to go abroad for man ipulation. The principle of proteution to home interests ramiles in all sec tions of the Republic and it will be for the common welfare when the South manufactures the larger part of her cotton lint and seed. The value of the seed for oil, for stock food. for lard mixing and fertilizing has been enormously increased of late years, thanks to ingenious brains and magical money investment.. If it be true that the new cleaning process is an assured stoce8s, theb' il; be corresponding awakening in other. departments of trade to meet the public demand that inevitably follows all great and useful discoveries, The Beggar of Dotne. One picturesque character is general ly lacking from the hill top-the beg gar. Dirty and charming as he may be, lie is relegated to one principal Pincio approaches-the Spanish steps, and the piazza at the summit, were his progeny-especially the Nettunese from the Campagna, swarm to heart's content. Au, but isi't lie a beauty of a beggar? he or she, but especially he, for the Spanish step3' people are of the beggar upper ten, and take up such a menial occupation only when their regular trade as models becomes slack, Dr when the only other allowable cal. ling in comport with their dignity be oomes unprofitable-that of flower sel ling. But who, I say, can refuse those great liquid brown eyes of a sol to, even if he doesn't want a bunch of violets, and who anyway can refuse to Look at the superb coloring of the cam paganese costumes as the models throw Shemselves into~ the abandonment of a thousand unstudied p6stures on the steps. They are honoster, too, this motley 3rowd, than some who aren't begcgars, A. little ragamuffln of them who takes a Liking to you will often come running tip to you with his buttonhole bouquet md, deftly sticking It in, will be oif mn liffy. Astonished indeed you are the lrst time this extraordlnay occurrence ~akes place. By and by. repeated ex erlences show y.u that it is an ebalit Ion of gratitude on the part of little 3iull0 or Giovanni for sundry coppers wvhich from time to time you've tossed im, He'll be glad of future tossings, ~oo, for begging has no elements of izegrace 'here, but as pay for his free fift.--neverI Hence, Joy and woe to urm who, daily passing that way, comes o know and %anucy any of the models. [Lis stock; off'emall change somehow vill grow:beautifully less, b)ut heo will evel in the free nature of color and orm and gracious manner, whioh one nay find at al L imes, like wild yet clus ering ilowers, clinging to those sunnied teps. l3oci-Beolothes. 'Paper bedelo . mre madie at a fao ory in Ne.. Jorsey, They are do4bled heets of maullia paper, strengithenedi vith twine, and valuable by re'ason of he peculia'properties of paper as ai ion.conductor of heat. They have warmth preserving power far out >roportion to their thickoess: reight NEWS IN BRIEF. -At the funeral of an aged lady Ia 1'ennsylvania recently, there were present eight near relatives, the young. est of whom was over seventy years of ago. -A silver"haired patroh of the Fifth. avenue Hotel, New York, who has lived there for twenty-fve years, claims that lia that time his lodging and meala have cost him $700,100. --'here are over 2 600 soldiers in the Russian army afflicted with opth. alima in the hospitals of the Odessa district alone. These cases are en tirely treated by nurses and havo no skilled medical attendance. -A cowboy and his horse suffered a singular and violent death - recently near Cheyenne Wells, Col. Lightning struck the iron in the saddle and ex. rploded all the cartridges in The man's belt, also eetting fire to his clothing and trappings. -The forest fires in Illinois have done much good as well as great dam age. . The.y have destroyed the #pyriads of chinch bugs that ruined the corn crc p last seasou. Before the fires started the fields and woods were swarming with the bu .s. -An 8 year-old g rl in Marlboro, Conn., is well supplied with liviog an. cestors, having, besides her fath ir and mother, two grandmotheis two grand fathers, two great-grandmothers, two great-grandfathers, and one g:eat great-gran.dmother who is almost a centenarian. -The use o? eleotri.llgbt on pubito buildings <at Washington has led to a great increase in the number of spiders' webs. The lights attract multitudes of insects, and these in turn attract the spiders. in many cases architectural outlines have become badly obscured by .the webs. -Manufacturers' complain that the African rubbers now received do not yield, when strained and cleaned, more than thirty or fifty-five per cent. of pure rubber gum, owing to the na tives adulterating with saw dust, bark dust, etc., to overcome the nconven ient stickiness of the juice. -The physicians of L,uisvil!e, Ky., are mystined by a case in the hospital of that city. It is that of a Polish man who freely perspires blood. As far as can be ascertained his affection Is the result of a virulent fever con tracted in (quatorial regions. At last accounts he was improving. 2 -.In 1852 .t1h Upited Statq$ govera ment sent: a small' herd of cameja into Texas with the idea of using them and then get to cross -the so-called Great American Desert. The camels pros pered and multiplied; but when the war came they were scattered through the State and Arizona, and many of them became wild. Railroads have solved the Great American Desert problem, and the camels have fallen into inaoouous desuetude. -Eighteen years ago, when the air brake was tried it required eighteen seconds to apply it to a trJtin 2.000 feet long. Four years later the time was reduced four seconds. Recent experi nients with the air brake on freight trains show that it can be applied to every car in a train of that length run ning at the rate of forty miles an hour and that this train can be stoppea within 500 feet, or one-fourth of its own length and all this without any serious lolti g. - -... -A card was Issued to Nina Van Zandt under the name of Mrs.- N. Spies. The library is under control of the city government and when, ~re cently, she appliedi for permission to draw books as Mrs. Spies the mnanagers were undecided as to thme propriety of granting her request and thus giving quasl-oilicial recognition or the validity of the proxy marriage. They sought legal advice, but with no definite re sult. Recently it was decided iu tihe absence of well-definedi objection to give out the card as applied for--to Mrs. N. Spies. -The year 1900 will not be a "ieap - year," as centurial years not multiples of 400, even though divisible by four, are not reckono I bissextile, or leap years. About forty-five years before Cbrist Julius Caesar decreed that every fourth year should be heid to consist of 800 days, for the purpose or using up the odd hours. Seeing thas a day every fourth year was too much, it followed that the beginning of the year moved onwvard. From the time of the Council or Nice, in 8215, when the ver nal equinox fell correctly on the 21st of March rope Gregory found, in 1582, that there thad been an overreckoning to tne extent of ten days, and that on that time the vernal equinox fell on the 11th. of March. To correct this he de creed that the (Lih of O.tober of that year sh.ould l'o reckoned ais the 15.m, -and to keep the years righi In future, the overp)lus being e'ghteen hbours, twenty-seven niinutei mund ten secogids in ai century, lie ord'-red t,bat diery centurial year that coul I not be diflld by 400 .should not be alssextilq, as it otherwise would bo. Thu Gre'g sj a~ calendar wats decreed by P'opes 9lgr fii 1582, on this basis, aind was lea N adopted by Cathulic, though note by rrotestaint curtries. 1t did not. 0' tin ini (heat Britain umitil 1752, e'y which time the diffue~n'ce hetwairi ti,a Jumlian aind Gre.go'riu pe~ la amoun&td to) eleven days. An act of i'. tinem'nn wa,s p.smicd dE m tt that Lhe 3 I r. deptembher thaIt yeatP sh,..i. lie r,,.:. every foesr or' the centurlial yei tra abould, ats ini i'de Gregory S arrau;e in *1, t, n ot ba bisseXijie or leop i' . s, i'he Greegoriani ca!enure i. m..; ', .l