Dense itdpan Friday Morning, October Ii, 1889. : amm— AS AUTUMN COMES. With shy brown eyes she comes again, With hair a sunny, silken skein, As full of light as golden rod ; Love in her voice, love in her nod, She treads so softly no one knows The time she comes, the time she goes. The grass is brown, the leaves begin Their gold and crimson dyes to win, Each cricket sings as loud as ten To drown the noisy locust, when You come, O maid, to bid us ery To summersweet a long good-bye. And when you go the leaves are gone ; The aster’s farewell scent is flown ; Poor Cupid puts away his wings, And close to cozy corners clings ; The rude winds usher, with a shout, The winter in, the autumn out. There's sadness in her 3 brown eyes, Though gay her gown with tawny dyes ; Love's in her voice—but telling most Of one who's loved, but loved and lost, She treads so softly no one knows The time she comes, the time she goes. — Boston Journal. A COMMERCIAL VENTURE. It was a sharp October evening, the street lamps were struggling faintly through a haze of yellow fog—the dead ailanthus blossoms rattled overhead as if the tree in front of Mrs. Medlaw’s red brick house had blossomed full of little rattle boxes. And Mrs. Medlaw had just sat down to her evening reffection of toast and tea, when Polly, the little maid, who always wore green checked gingham and carpet slippers, came shuffling in. “Please, ma'am, there's two young ladies down in the parlor assays you're their aunt.” “Oh, bother I” said Mrs. Medlaw,in a sort of soliloquy, “it’s Edna and Ella. I knew they'd come on me when their father died. Asif I hadn’t anything else to do but support a swarm ot lazy relations. Why didn’t you say I wasn’t at home, Polly ?”/ “I would, ma'am, if I'd a-supposed they was any relations of your'n, afore I'd let 'em in,” said unconscious Polly. “But they was dressed so nice and looked so chipper I thought, of course, they was real ladies!” “And just as the tea was boiling, too,” said Mrs. Medlaw. “Oh, dear me, what a world this is!” Edna and Ella Carr were sitting, pale and black robed, in the mouldy smell- ing little parlor, when their aunt came in. They were pretty girls, with deli- cate, wax-white complexions, hair so dark that it gave the impression of be- ing black, and great, blue-gray eyes. “Well, girls, "said Mrs. Medlaw rath- er ungraciously, “so you've come here ?” “We had nowhere else to go aunt,” said Edna, meekly. “Humph” granted the old lady. “Take off your things. I suppose you calculate to stay all night? Well and what are going to work at?” “We don’t know, aunt,” said Ella, trying hard not to ery. “Well, ain’t it high time you had ?” said Mrs. Medlaw. “Folks can’t live on air. And two great, grown-up girls like you ought to be doing something to earn their salt. There's always plenty of work for willing hands. I’ve had to foreclose a mortgage on a little fancy store. I want to put some one in it to sell out the stock. I'll give you a fair commission on what you sell. Come, what do you say to that?” “I am willing to try,” said Ella. “Heaven knows 1 am anxious enough to earn my own living.” “And I, too,” said Edna. “We know nothing about a business——"" “But you can learn, I suppose,” said Aunt Medlaw. “But we can learn,” said Edna, hope- fully. . In less than a week the little thread and needle store around the corner, which had presented a grim and shut- tered front for some days, was reopen- ed, and two pretty girls dressed in black, were posted behind the coun- ter. Mrs. Mopson sent her two little boys to match a skein of green worsted, and inquire for peppermint taffy first. The widow Hope purchased a little hosiery and three cheap pocket hand- kerchiefs. A small girl came to ask the time of day, an old man bought a pair of suspenders, all within an hour —and Edna and Ella began to think they might, in time, develop into com- mercial characters of note. To be sure business waxed rather dull toward the end of the day, but just at dusk & tall, nice looking young man came in to buy a card of pearl shirt buttons. Ella took down a box, and they were quite a long time in se- lecting the prettiest pattern and the most appropriate. “I forgot one thing,” said the young man after he had contracted for an eighteen cent investment. “I must have them sewed on. Could you do it 2 “I'll try” said Ella, laughing, “if you'll bring the shirts around.” So the young man brought theshirts and sat down to wait. Ella's needle flew deftly in and out. He was in a hurry,he told ker. He was foreman in the printing office of a great daily pa- per, and worked at night, when the rest of the world was asleep, likea bat or an owl. In the meantime Edna was trying to suit an old lady in green spectacles, who wanted some ribbon whose color she did not exactly know, whose width she wasn't certain about, and whose quality she had yet to make up her mind concerning. But Edna's patience, tact, and good temper were inexhausti- ble. At last the old lady was suited and went away rejoicing on the arm of her nephew, who had manifested extra- ordinary interest in the shade of drab ribbon. “That's a nice girl, Oswald,” said she. “Do yon know I almost think she might snit me as a companion, She seems s0 very good-humored! | wonder if it would do to ask her it’ she would like a situation 2" “I don’t see why not,” said Oswald Grey, thinking he never had seen softer gray eyes or prettier hair. “Shall we go back ?” “To-morrow is time enough,” said Mrs. Martiguy. On the morrow she came back. “Didn’t the ribbon suit?” asked Ed- na. “Oh, yes, the ribbon was all right, but there's something else I want.” “What is that!” asked Edna inno- cently. : “A companion to read to me, take care of my canaries, and play drowsy old tunes on the piano when I teel sleepy. I give $500 a year, Saturday afternoon and board. Will you come ?” Edna looked at her sister. Five hundred a year seemed a great sum for the girl who had never yet earned five for herself. “Yes,go, Edna,” said Ella. “I can manage the store by myself easily enough. And,”in a whisper,“I've taken a contract to make a dozen new shirts for Mr. Lessner, he to find the material.” “Who is Mr. Lessuner ?” “Oh, the printer. I can do it at odd minutes, when there is no one in the store.” At the end of the month Edna came to report to her sister. “Well, Edna, how do you like it?” asked Ella. “Oh, so much ! Mrs. Martiguy is queer, but she is kind. And—and— Mr. Oswald Grey, her nephew; is very polite.” “Is he?" “Yes,” said Edna, fingering at a box of hooks and eyes; “I like him ever so much, and he likes me. To tell the truth, Ella—" “I see,” said Ella, putting her arms around her sister ; “he wants you to be his companion for life, eli, Edna ?” “How did you know?’ faltered dimpled Edna. “0, I'm not quite a fool,” said Ella. “But now I've got something to tell you. 1 finished Mr. Lessner’s shirts, and they fitted him perfectly. He says I’m the only woman he ever knew who fitted him with shirts on the first trial. He has saved up a little property and he wants to invest it somewhere, and Aunt Medlaw wants to sell out this store. So he’s going to buy it and I'm going to keep it on condition that I marry him.” 0), Bla I? “Not such a very hard condition either,” said Ella, “because he’s very handsome, and very pleasant, and I like him very much; in fact, I believe I'm in love with him, There, now it’s ali out. And I do believe, Edna, we're the two happiest girls in the world, and all through Aunt Medlaw’s thread and needle store.” “Well, well,” grumbled Mrs. Med- law, “so the girls are gone, and I'm all by myself again. It is rather lonesome. They were nice girls—but the young men found it out as well as me. Young men always do find such things out.” Confirmed Girl Horse Thief. Year-Old Etta Robinson's Adventurous Career, Seventeen A Parkersburg, Va., special of Sep- tember 24th says: There is now in progress here a trial begun yesterday of a seventeen-year-old girl named Etta Robinson whose life has for the past six months been full ofsensations. The charge against her is horse dtealing and the circumstances attending the com- mitting of the crime are very romantic. Six months ago Etta was visiting her brother, who resides in the adjoining county of Putnam and is engaged as a farm hand by Thomas Hanbly,a wealthy real estate owner. One morning Etta was missing and also a fine horse be- longing to Nathan McCoy, After a search for some days through- out the nei. hborhood, including some of the roughest of West Virginia's hills and thickest ravines, the horse was found in the girl's possession near the Ohio River. While her pursuers were debating what to do with her Etta dash- ed into the Ohio, still on horseback, and endeavored to swim across. Sle was captured and placed in jail, but broke out and returned to her brother, when McCoy from whom she had stol- en the horse, took pity on her youth and refused to prosecute her. A short time after a horse belonging to a farmer named Smith was missing, just at the time when the low country in the Kanawha Valley wasall flooded. The horse was traced to the edge of the waters. The next day both Etta and the horse were found in a hollow. The girl had swam the stream, a mile wide, on horseback. She slept out at night, living on what she could steal. For the second time her youth protected her and she was not prosecuted. Six weeks later she stole a horse from Lewis Losley. She was pursued across the Ohio, captured and brought back to the Putnam county jail. She was confined there several weeks, in which time her winning ways won lier an en- trance into the confidence of the jailer, who allowed her many privileges. Two weeks ago he awoke to find the fair maid gone, having cleverly made her escape by cutting through an old wall. It was afterwards found that she had stolen a suit of men’s clothes, stolen a fine horse temporarily in the jailer's possession and fled the country. She was finally captured with the horse still in her possession near her old home. During her escapades she lived on berries, corn or anything she could find, and alone wandered through the wildest and most dangerous territory. This young adventuress does not steal from any other motive than sim- | ply the love of excitement and adven- ture. Her face glows with youth and apparent innocence and her every look | and accion deny that her peculiar con- duct is from evil motives. Her beauty have created a vast deal of sympathy in her favor. The trial will yrobably | I | : and general excellence in many ways | | last a week. mr ———C———c——— i —dJay Gould is a broken-down old man at the age of 53, when heshould be in the prime of life. "Wall street is not conducive to good health or a long life. | finishin’ his dinner, says: The Case of the Farmer. How the Tariff’ Takes Money Out of His Pocket. At a recent meeting of the State Grange at Williams’ Grove, Pa., Gerald C. Brown, a practical farmer, put the case of the farmer plainly and practically on the tariff in these words: “I am convinced that on one subject is there much misrepresentation and much prevalent prejudice. We Penn. sylvania farmers are resolute in refus- ing to other classes of citizens the right to compel us to pay their taxes under any pretext whatever. How can we acquiesce in the kindred proposition that we shail be forced to pay a bounty to other classes of citizens to enable them to reap an assured profit at our expense on their business? “The theory that the farmer is more | afterwa { ! | quite full, leaving the sedement in the than reimbursed for the extra cost of supplies by the home market created for him through its operation, is so completely rebutted by the facts that argument to its falsity is unnecessary. In spite of protection farm production has so immensely outgrown the home market that prices are lower than this generation has seen—on the whole, be- low cost of production. From the for- eign market, which invites us, and which would afford an immense relief, we are barred by a restrictive tariff which cripples commercial exchanges. The plea that the tariff also covers and protects the products of the farm is ri- diculous and purposely misleading. “The wool tariff may yield a profit to the herder of the far West on the govern- ment lands, but in the enchanced price of clothing alone it takes from the aver- age sheep farmer of the East more than it returns to him.” ——————— Saved by Her Wit and Courage. A striking instance of woman's cour- age and presence of mind occurred in Philadelphia recently. A lady resid- ing in that city retired to her room as usual the other night, after having locked the front door of the house and placed the key on the bureau in her bedroom, as was her invariable cus- tom. » She was standing before a mirror pre- paring for bed whenshesaw reflected in it the form of a man croaching under the bed. She was alone in the house, and was naturally terribly startled, but her presence of mind did not desert her. She reasoned that if she cried out or gave the slightest sign that she was aware of the intruder’s presence in the house, he would overpower her before help could come, and with a wonder- ful self-control she went quietly on with her toillet, giving no outward in- dication of the terrible mental torture she was suffering. The door key on the bureau suggest- ed an idea to her. She picked it up and walked over to the window, which was open, and without showing any signs of alarm sat there looking out until help should arrive. Fortunately she did not have long to wait, or she could not have endured the strain. A policzman walked slowly by the house, and without attracting the attention of the man under the bed, she dropped the key directly in front of him and signed to him to unlock the door and come up. He did so and pulled a burly and brutal-looking negro from under the bed. It was not until he had been taken away and all danger was over that the reaction came, but the tremen- dous and long-continued strain on her nervous system proved too much for her and she was completely prostrated by her adventure. s—————————rv—— A Lincoln Reminiscence. The Rev. Dr. Haney, a pioneer Methodist minister of Canton, I1l., told this reminiscence of Abraham Lincoln : “The Rev. Peter Akers, an eloquent pioneer Methodist, held a meeting near Springfield some years before the war, and one day Abraham Lincoln and several other attorneys of Springfield drove out to it. Father Akers spoke that day on the “Sin of Slavery,” and prophesied that in a few years God would wipe out this crime of crimes in blood. The sermon was generally re- garded as the mouthings of a blatant abolitionist, and in returning home the lawyers laughed and joked about it. Lincoln, however, remained silent and grave. Noticing his unusual conduct; his companions rallied him by asking : “What do you think of Brother Akers sermon 2?” Mr. Lincoln replied as follows: “Well, I confess that I have never be- fore been so deeply impressed by hu- man utterance. I have never thought we should have war over slavery or any other question. But those utter ances seemed to-day to come from far beyond the preacher. They came to me as areal and awful prophecy. More astonishing than all, you may langh at your will, I seemed to be thrilled in my very soul with the conviction that I'am in some way to have a tremen- dons responsibility in that coming and awful war.” ct ——— “TrePING'’ A WAITER. —“I had the greatest time at the hotel T stopped at while T wasdown to the city,” remark- ed Uncle Josh to the admiring crowd who collected at the store to hear of his journey. “They had a great, big din- ing-room there, and more than a hun- dred waiters, but none of ‘em came around where I was. 1 sot there as much as an hour,an’ none of ’em paid the least bit of attention to me. Finally a man at the table with me, who was just You'll have | to tip one of the waiters it you want to get anv attention here,’ “Wall, T lowed IT cud do that fast enuf, fer I felt about mad jest then, so | the very next waiter that came skipping { by with a hul raft o’ dishes up over his head, T put out my foot and tipped Lim up quicker'n wink., That was the quickest way to getattention T ever seed. Why I hed the whole hotel, boss an’ all, there in about ten seconds.” Making Cider Vinegar. Timely Suggesti®ns Based On Erpe- rience and Observation. Many of our large orchardists use the entire product of their orchards, that is not desirable as fruit, in making vine- gar. The agricultural editor of the New York World tells how thisis done. As soon as enough apples have fallen to furnish a supply, these are ground up in any kind ofa cider mill and the juice may be pressed out at once and be left to ferment or sour, but it is better to keep the pomace in open vats or casks until it has thoroughly fermeiited, when the juice will be more easily and completely separated from the pomace than if pressed at the time of grinding. After the pressing is over the sour liquid is put into open casks to settle and is afterwards racked off into barrels not bottom ofthe casks. To get the benefit of the warm fall weather these barrels should stand out in the sun, but be cov- ered with loose boards to protect the cooperage. On the advent of cold weather the barrels onght to be removed into the vinegar house, where there should be a stove-or some good arrange ment for warming the house that will keep upa mild and even temperature through the winter. Many who have no such convenience put the barrels in- to the cellars to prevent freezing and bring them up again in the spring ; but when the liquid can be kept above ground and in a warm dry atmosphere the souring process goes on much better. Experience has shown that keeping the liquid in packages ot barrel size will secure the desired acidity sooner and better than when stored in large tanks. Throughout the whole process, until thevinegar is made and no great- ter acidity is desired, the barrels should remain unbunged, with a small piece of netting over the bunghole to keep out insects, The barrels should be iron hooped aud kept well painted. Some dilution is often needed in the manufacture, as where there is an excess of saccharine matter in the juice, it will be too slow in turning to the acid condition without a proper addition of water. All the varieties of summer, fall and winter apples may be used together indiscriminately in making vinegar. During the process the chem- ical changes eliminate from the juice everything that weuld identify it as the product of any particular variety. Making vinegar by the natural pro- cess will require at least one year, but it will continue to grow stronger and better the longer it is kept. In the first stage of the making the sugar in the juice is turned by fermentation into al- cohol and carbonic acid. The acid, be- ing a gas, bubbles to thesurface and es- capes, while the alcohol 1s retained. The richer the juice is in the sugar the more alcohol it will contain after fer- mentation. To make vinegar the alco- hol is changed by oxidation into acetic acid, and when this is accomplished the vinegar is made. But when alco- hol exists in liquids in large propor- tions it will hinder or entirely prevent its own change into acetic acid. Thus when asmali amount of water is added to whisky it simply weakens the proof, while if the amount is large the whole will turn to vinegar. So apple juice too rich in sugar may remain after fermentation in the con- dition of hard cider for years, unless it is dilated with water, for the reason that it contains too much alcohol for a speedy change. Making vinegar may be hastened by running itslowly in a small stream from one barrel to an- other a tew feet apart, exposing it more fully in its divided form to the action of the atmosphere, or by trickling it down through beach chips or shavings or corn cobs saturated;with old vinegar,or by the addition of a gallon or so of strong vin- egar to each barrel of cider. an r———— The Path of Fame. Perhaps we may safely say that the mind bf every great man is shadowed by melancholy. Greatness is not an easy triumph ; toil, suffering and fear darken the path which leads to fame; the final victory scarce compensates for that which was endured in achieving it; the recollection of early trial saddens and zoftens later success; often the most ardent spirit would hesitate and turn back were it not for the consuming de- sire to excel which impels the toiler on- ward and never permits his weary brain to more than briefly flag in its task. Melancholy is not pessimism. The pessimists are those who have never striven and succeeded. A touch of sad- ness tinges the minds of the greatest, the wisest and the best. Truly great men are rare. Extraordinary combinations. of cir- cumstances alone prodnce them. There must be a meeting of the man and the event; both the mind and the occasion must be ready, and when comes the great soul taught yd patience, courage and sagacity, leaps to its oppor- tunity and the flood of enthusiasm and ardor overwhelms all obstacles; without the severe discipline of waiting it could not have succeeded, but in the hour of triumph the melancholy of past failure cannot wholly disappear. Perhaps it is best that great men should be subject to melancholy. The recollection of their own disappointments gives them more sympathy for human suffering, and they can judge, with tenderness, our follies and our frailties. A few lofty and far seeing intellects lead, | though their influence may for the time be unfelt, and when they teach wisdom and mercy the lesson will not be lost. —Louisville Courier-Jourual. Syart ALeck.—Black—Did you ever notice a woman darning a pair of stock- ings and observe how she— White~I never saw a woman darning | a pair of stockings in my life. B.—Oh, well, perhaps your wife does not darn your stockings. W.-Yes she does ; keeps them in ex- cellent repair. But I never saw her darning a pair. Never saw her darn more than one at a time. Then Black led White around the nearest corner and drew him down into the depths of a subterranean lager—becr 1 saloon.— Boston Curio, the time | Counting Gum Chewers on a Train. She was dressed in one of the cool, simple but charming gowns which are the style. A mass of fluffy, sunny curls clustered about her forehead and neck, and the aristocratic looking Psyche knot into which was twisted a wealth of shin- ing hair. A clear.eyed young fellow sat not far away and looked at her with evident admiration. Her complexion was perfect, her eyes large and express- ive and of the rich purple of the ame- thyst But there was some indefinable defect about her mouth. The lips were red and shaped like Cupid’s bow. The flaw was not in them. Yetsurely some- thing was not satisfactory about the girl’s appearance. It is—yes, it is evi- dent that onercsy cheek is fuller than the other, just where it slopes away to the white smooth neck. There isa swol- len lump which suggests toothache. The young man feels a pang of pity thrill through his entire being. when the sufferer is young and beautiful. He gazes intently at her. Slowly her dimpled chin droops, the Cupid bow of her lips looks as though it were being drawn to dart an arrow through his heart. The swollen protuberance disap- pears. Then the jaws close forcibly up- on the quid of gum and an expression cf complacent meditation steals into the fair creature’s cerulean eyes. The thrill of sympathy fades from the young man’s bosom as the color fades from two cent calico in the rain. Then he arose and a spirit of inquiry came strong upon him. It was upon the excursion train from Bethany park, and resolutely he passed slowly through the ten coaches and made an enumeration. On the train were 523 persons. Of this number 78 men and boys and 209 women and girls were chewing gum. —Indianapolis News. No Fight, No Prayer. A group of naval officers were indulg- ing the other day in reminiscences of the war, when one of them told the fol- lowing yarn : “Early on the morning of December 24, 1864,” he said “Admiral Porter sig- nalled to the fleet before Fort Fisher,'Get under way and follow me.” The ship to which I belonged was assigned, in the programme, to a position between two ironclads close under the fort. We anticipated hot and terrible work. The flagship led way and was approaching within range, when Lieutenant Com- mander B——, of my ship, ordered all hands called to muster. The brawny tars gathered aft on the quarterdeck, with the officers in - their usual places, and cur commander began to read from the ‘Prayer Before Battle.’ It was a solemn moment. None knew who or how many among ns might suddenly be ushered into the presence of the God of battles. Our commander read as though he felt it; the whole ship's com- pany were awed and hushed, and the throbbing of the engines and wash of waters along the side seemed preternat- urally loud. When about half through a signal was reported from the flagstaff. “ ‘Come to anchor in your positions.’ “When it was read to our command- er a sudden revulsion of feeling came over him. Throwing down the prayer book upon the hatch, he exclaimed : ‘“ ‘Well, I'll be hanged if I'm going to pray if we ain’t [going to fight! Pipe down!” rr ———————— In Twenty-Eight Battles. And Can Freely Say He Never Got Used to It. St Louis Globe-Democrat, Colonel James M. Thompson gave his opinion as follows: “The quality of courage in battle I regard as being to a large extent a physical attribute. I have heard a good deal of talk about the nonchalance of men in action and their ease and composure after the first gun was fired, but I never took much stock in it. I went through the war in the army, and it was my fortune to be ina porticn of the service in Vir- ginia where there was a good deal of hard fighting to do, and there wasn’t any creditable way to get out of it, either. I saw service in 28 battles and I can freely say that I for one never got ‘used to it.’ I never went into a fight without an all-prevailing sense of dan- ger, and was always glad when it was over. Of course moral courage, high patriotism and the military spirit kept the great majority of men right up to the mark, but there were notable in- tances of men whose physical natures simply failed to respond when called on. They could not possibly go into a fight. A clear head and a full conception of the enormous consequences of cowardice to themselves failed to spur them to the sta ‘ing point, and on the first whiz of a bullet their signals of distress were visible to all in sight. “A well-known New York colonel, a perfect gentleman, a scholar, a patriot and a real noble fellow, was so weak in peint of courage and his humiliation so great at really being afraid to face dan- ger that he was forced to retire from the army, and went to Washington, pined away and died in a few weeks. I knew | another prominent officer whose friends, out of consideration for his well-known failing, used to manage, on one pretext or another, to keep him out of engage- ments and thus shield him from expos- ure. Men like that are to be pitied, not blamed. They want to fight, but their bodies actually refuss to obey their will.” Where The Commendation Was Due, Philadelphia Record. The Massachusetts Republicans are “gratified,” tuey say in their platform, over *‘the prudent management of the treasury, by which the national debt is extinguished at reasonable prices and the money market protected against speculative combinations.” Would it not have been a deal more frank and manly inthe Massachusetts Republicans to have commended the treasury man- agement for strictly following the finan- cial policy marked out by Cleveland's administration ? In not the slightest re- | spect has Secretary Windom departed. { from the policy of his Democratic pre- decessor in the management of the pub- | lie finances. But it is quite probable that the Massachusetts Republican lead- | ers have not yet forgotten how unjustly they assailed and misrepresented that ' policy a year ago. Suffering becomes much more pathetic | All Sorts of Paragraphs. —Artificial ice is cheaper in the South than the natural article is in the North. ‘—A Mrs. Magdeline Miller died in Waynesburg, Ohio, a few days ago, at the age of 101 years. . —Lenawee county, Mich., is at pres- ent paying out something like twelve dollars a day in bounties on dead spar- rows. —The first electric tramway in Italy is soon to be opened between Florence and Fiesol: Tts total length will be 73000 metres. —Main lumbermen are entering the woods early this year, in order to get much of the cutting done before the deep snows come. —Lord Tennsyon is writing a thous- and-dollar poem for an English maga- zine, thus beating his famous charge by : four hundred. —Mis. Charls Kimla, of Trenton, Wis. recently presented her husband with three fine girl babies, their combin- ed weight being 21 pounds. —J. B. Buckstone, the clever English playwright, was glad to get $500 for a piece 50 years ago. Now, a popular play sometimes pays its author or adap- ter $50,000. —The English postoffier does all the express business in Great Britain, car- ries parcels at an average cost of 11 cents each, and makes a profit of $2,250,000 a year. — William Sloop, of Rye township, Perry county, has a German Bible that is 160 years old, and weighs 20% pounds. It has been in the Sloop family 71 years. —The statement of the warden of the Eastern peniteniary that out of a thous- and convicts in that institution only ninteen are mechanics is exceedingly suggestive. —AMirs. Hiram Snell of Malad, Idaho, has given birth to sextets, three boys and three girls. They weigh eight pounds altogether. All are bright and hearty and promise to live. —W. H. Cross of Maroa, Ill., issues this: “I'll challenge any man in the world to sleep with me 142 hours for cash. I can sleep more hours in 142 than any man in the world.” —A miserly farmer of Napoli, N. Y., who hid his wealth in rat holes, old chimneys, etc., was robbed of $1000, on Monday night week, by two men who entered the house during his absence —XRobert Garrett inherited $10,000,000 and the Presidency of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. He has lost the latter and much of the former by the great de- preciation in the Baltimore and Ohio stock. —Richard H. Stoddard says he has made $1,000 writing about Poe having threatened to kick him out of his(Poe’s) office. Had the threat been carried out, Stoddard’s fortune would have been made. —The greatest known depth of the ocean is midway between the Island of Tristan d’Acunha and the mouth of the io de Ia Plata. The bottom was there reached at a depth of 40,239 feet, or neatly seven and three-quarter miles. —In thirty-one words how many thats can be grammatically insertec ? Answer: Fourteen, He said that that that that man said was not that that one should say ; but that that that that man said was that that that man should not say. —The Secretary of Agriculture is going to makea personal investigation of the sorghum sugar factories of Kan- sas. “Itis an industry we ure fostering,” he says, ‘and we are going to make it a success. Last year Fort Scott made 300,- 000 pounds at a profit. —Two young people were caught kissing the other day in New York by a jealous old maid, who had the pair promptly arrested. When brought be- fore the Magistrate he could find noth- ing in the code forbidding the action and quickly discharged the prisoners. — Works though 106 years old. The Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette remarks. “Captain Costello, the oldest man in this city, is reasonably busy this year in cultivating his garden, and shows con- siderable activity for a man 106 years old. Tis growing vegetables look fine.” —The wife of Moses Vandegrift, of Bensalem toweship, Bucks county, who eloped wilh William Rue last spring and went to Kansas, has returned home af- ter being forgiven by her husband, and is now living happily with him at the old homestead with their child. It is supposed that Rue deserted her. —To the Lower Wabash annual con- ference of United Brethren in Christ, whose thirty-second session recently closed in Clay City, Ind., belongs the honor of giving to the church its first lady circuit rider in Miss Alva Button, of Greenup, lll. The act authorizing the irnovation was passed by the ses- sion of general conference held last May. — Mus. Fannie Hollin, 72 years of age, residing in London township, near Van- dalia, T11., started for a neighbor's a dis- tance of two miles, and got lost. She wandered around in the woods four days without food or drink, and finally found her way back home alone, though the neighbors had been searching for her during this time. --Passengers on the steamship Algiers, from Galveston, Tex., were treated on Sunday afternoon to a nautical spectacle not usually observed by coast skirting travelers. About 50 miles off Hatteras the ship took them through a big school of frolicsome sperm whales, which sent 100 fountains in the air just before the rush of the ship drove them felow the surface. —In one Maine town is a very heavy girl. She is quite sensitive about her weight and it is not generally known, but two mischievous young men want- jing to know it, one of them persuaded her to stop and speak with him on the hay scales. The owner of the scales was in with the plot and quickly weighed them. The weight of the man being subtracted, left the amount of 301 pounds "for the girl. =X