Bema itd Bellefonte, Pa., January 3, 1880. IN THE OLD DAYS. Dear Grandmamma sighed As she slowly untied The packet she found in the loft; The paper was bluish, The words were too foolish, The sentiments, awe thought, were soft. Now if our dearGranny Were young, like our Fanny, Who lingered last night at the gate, It would not seem queer, To be called “love” and “dear.” And “prithee, sweet, tell me my fate.” But it sounded se silly To sing “Your sweet Willie,” “Who worships the ground at your feet,” Now Grandpa lakes enuff And thinks it enough “To doze, in the sun in his seat. When Grandma wasyoung Her praises were sung By rapturous lover a seore ; I wish 'twas the fashion ‘To record the blind passion In verses of twenty or more: Then pen, ink and paper, Some wax and a taper, Were all the expenses inearréd; Now, costly bouquets, Drives, operas, plays, And “seats in the parquette preferred.” The, old-fashiond ways, The minuet’s maze, The sonnets by messenger sent; A seat meant for one, Her promise is won, And all without costing a cent. —Chicaga Journal. ——————— a THE MAN-EATER. A STORY OF INDIA. There were two entrances to the draw- ing room; this must be born in mind. The house itseif was old-fashioned, a large and many-gabled one, standing standing alone and solitary in a spaci- ous garden ; all the windows had been closed and the jalousies shut and se- cured from the outside ! th tatty-grass blinds on the piazza had been rolled up and put away until another blazing nworning called for their refreshing shade. The locality was near that part of the delta called the Sunderbunds, through which the Ganges expands its branch- es as it approaches the sea—a laby- rinth of creeks and rivers, of jungle and stagnant water. The night was fine, but moonless ; there was a heavy dew rapidly falling, like a misty rain, which in hot countries, is a perfectly natural occurrence. I went into the drawing-room by what might be called the back door, as it led into the back drawing-room, and smaller of the two; thejother, a far larg- er apartment, communicated with this one by great folding doors of gold and white. The back drawing-room was very full of furniture, rather incouve- niently so. As I was carrying an arm- ful of books, and in my disengaged hand a lamp, I proceeded, with ‘tolerable security, though slowly, but then, of course, I knew the room and could have gone to my destination in the dark. What struck me as both curious and irritative was the fancy that the room seemed more impe- ded than ever with the furniture—dark, old-fashioned rosewood furniture, which had been made to match the piano. The various articles looked as if they had been dragged about the room. Possibly the darkness above and around me helped the illusion; anyway; they had the appearance of having been gradually spread toward the cen- tre of the room round a heavy and solid table. It was this table that I wish- ed to go to. I walked very slowly, partly because I--did not wish to spill the books which I had spent the last hour in collecting, and partly because of an unaccountably horrible feeling which had come over me. This part of the house was quite silent; indeed, it was oftea so of an evening. My brother had passed me on his way upstairs, having been all day at Madrepore, and no doubt being tired had gone to bed. There were very few stairs at all,as the house was practi- cally a one-storied one. rambling and full of angles having been built and ad- deed added to at various times; here and there little staircases streamed out, leading to long passages and unexpect- ed cupboards ; the back drawing-room door itself opened from a side-flight of five stairs. As I had encountered two small chairs and an overturned music "stands I stood still for a second, looking for a clear passage, and there- by helding the lamp high and well in front of me; as I paused amid the com- plete silence which reigned, an im- mense tiger slowly crossed the path of light, turning on me two burning, yel- low eyes, gleaming like vivid topazes. I stood there in stiffened terror and heard my heart beat. The tiger's mouth was parted and running with sa- liva; so wide was ithanging open atthe corners that the serrated edges of the lower lips were plainly visible. It glar- ed with a steadfast look of such grin- ning cruelty, such conscious malignity, that it froze my blood and turned my limbs to stone. The tiger crossed the India-matting of the room with a noiseless, swinging gail ; as it appeared to have come from the obscurity near the piano, so it vanished into the obscurity beyond— that is, outside the pathway of the lantern-licht. TI stood perfectly immo- vable, still clutching the books with my left arm, still holding the lamp be- fore me, still gazing at the place it had crossed. and apparently forever seeing that awfnl look upon the tiger's face. It seemed as if my eyes saw the face, though my mind had rapidly suggested the frightful probability that the tiger was behind me. At the same time, by some dual mental process, it was hold- ing out hope that the animal had pass- ed through the great folding doors into the dark room beyond. I have no re- membrance at all of my mind dictating the next action. I pursued ; it seemed just an instinct indulged in by the body upon its own account for its own im- mediate preservation. [ laid the books very carefully down { you mind pulling the front door to in | the large drawing-room as you go by ?” { think of nothing else to say then, and 1 I said it slowly and quite naturally. ry noise or disturbing the hand that | held the lamp, and then, raising with : slow effort one of the heavy little chairs that had blocked my passage, I silently swung it on to my shoulders and held it so that it covered my head. then turned slowly sidewise, with my mind impressed with the necessity of keeping the lamp as far as possible be- ! hind me. This struck me at the time as clever and of unquestionable im por- tance in saving my life. I managed to walk gently out of the room. 1 sup- pose [had been in it fiye minutesout it seemed like a weary hour. As I closed the door and locked it,my brother unexpectedly came down the passage and passed me on the little flight of stairs ; he was rather in a hur- ry. “Godfrey;” T called out to him, “do It seems strange now, but. I could He assented and disappeared, and I, without noticing it at the time, took up the chair again, and with my lamp as- eended the short flight of stairs, and proceeded along the passage to my own room, walking slowly and guardedly. The mind had evidently been so shock- ed that it had not recovered its domi- nant sway over the body. Upon reach- ing my own room, I put the chair care- fully down and sat upon it. The lamp I had placed on the table at the same time. I sat there a few seconds, feebly wondering which room the tiger was in. Then I got up with a sudden alacrity, took from its case a large revolver, and turned into the pas- sage again. In a minute or so I was in Godfrey's room. He was half un- dressed. “What's the matter?’ he de- manded, with startled eyes. When I had told him he tcok my hand and wrung it. “Yow may thank God that you are alive, old fellow.” Then he dressed hurriedly, took a heavy rifle from a rack, and filled his pockets with cartridges, ‘Come along; stay, let me go first; your nerves are a bit shaky yet.” : © We creptout and awakened the pun- kah wallah,an old and faithful Hindoo, whom my brother once nursed during a dangerous illness—a brave and trust- worthy man, who would have laid his life down for Godfrey. “It is the man-eater !” said the Hin- doo, after my recital. “You will come with us, Remee?”’ asked my brother. The old man smiled as if the question were superflous. “Will the sahib let his servant advise him ?’ “Yes, Ramee ; tell me your plan.” As the Hindoo rapidly unfolded it, my brother smiled dubiously at the strange idea. “Cunning must be met with cun- ning,” said the Hindoo. “It'll take three hours to arrange,” I remarked. “Three hours will bring the dawn; now, who can see in the dark ?—not the sahib, but yes, the tiger.” “Very well,” said Godfrey, “let's see about it at once.” From the garden- er's outhouse we brought a roll of wire netting which had been put there for fencing in a paddock a few days previ- ously. Together we collected armsful of shavings the workmen had not clear- ed away, quantities of dried leaves, rags—everything we could find soft and pliable ; and, having cut the wire into three square lengths, firmly lashed them together, one over the other. When completed, it was the shape but rather larger than the window in the room in which the tiger lay been licked. Our operations so far had been conducted upon the veranda out- side, near the gardener’s room; we then rolled up the wire netting and car- ried it round the corner of the house to within a few yards of the big window ; here it was unrolled again and flatten- ed, out, then upon its surface we pour- ed all the shavings, rags, leaves and re- fuse we had collected, and upon this mass smeared and spread a quantity of lime left by the workmen for the mor- row. This we smoothed down as well as we were able, till the whole mass assumed some consistency and clung to the interstices of the netting. Remee next took some stout twine and impro- vised arough kind ot a needle from a bamboo-cane. With this implement he sewed all over the mass of stuff. thus making a string-netting which helped to keep the composition in its place. So far, so good; the most dif- ficult operation yet remained. “Take my gun,” said Godfrey to me, “and give me the revolver.” “Sahib,” whispered the Hindoo, placing a restraining hand upon my brother, ‘let Remee complete his work —is it not his duty? If he fails he shall sufter.” “You foolish man,” said Godfrey, “how can yon do it alone?’ With slow and noiseless steps the netting, looking very like a large mattress, was carried exactly opposite the window and laid gently down ; then both re- tired as siletly as they had advanced. Ramee then brought from the out- house a ladder, and with a gesture of entreaty signed to my brother to stand aside and take his rifle in his hand. With bare feet the Hindoo crept up to the window again and reared the lad- der against the wall. Taking a coil of rope from his veck, he deftly fastened it to the highest wall staple of the out- side shutter. Descending, he quickly enlaced the short stand in the netting, placed the ladder on the other side, and ran the thong to the other staple. For the first time he made noise, but it was unavoidable, caused by the netting be- ing drawn upward till it hung like a great curtain, covering the shutter and hidding the window from us. Godfrey and I stood ready to fire. The Hindoo, perspiring at every pore, descended the ladder, which he lowered and placed horizontally on the win- dow-sill, and lashed it to the bottom of the netting and again fastened that to the two lower staples on either side. The thing was done; far away in the east the dawn was breaking, above! without making theslightest unnecessa- which the morning star was slowly hidden, and the doors of which had |- paling its silver fire. “But, Ramee, the shutters are still fastened !”’ “Sahib, I unfastened them ; they are open the breatdth of a man’s hand; presently the light will stream through.” “Quick ;, fetch another rifle.” When he returned, I took the gun and gave him my revolver. A light breath of wind passed mur- muring through the feathery erowns of the slender cocoa-palms, two great spears of light shot up in tne sky, some- where in the garden a bird sang—the sun had risen. “Wait the signal,” whispered my brother ; “now, Ramee.” The Hindoo knelt down and imitated the bleating of a kid that had lost its mother. At the instant Ramee sprang to his teet, the silence was rent by a sundering crash and a sudden, terrific roar ; the shutters were torn from their sockets, a great mass hurled itself pre- cipitately through the window, and the tiger, with its head aud shoulders bur- ied in the lime-covered debris, was grap- pling in maddened fury with an enemy he could not see nor make much im- pression upon. Onr guns were at our shoulders. The animal was twenty feet from us, tearing up the graveled path, and coil- ing itself in inextricable confusion in the broken netting and splintered lad- der. Ramee uttered a loud ery. The animal had freed its head, and stood with its bleeding moath in an enforced listening attitude. It was the moment Godfrey had waited for, and he fired. The tiger, evidently not seeing him, sprang at the window again, but missed the opening, hurling itself against the wall and falling on the broken shutters. At the minate it alighted, I aimed at the spot behind the shoulder and fired; it gave a convulsive leap and turned 1ts bloodshot eyes in our direction. Then Godfrey fired again and told me to do the same. “Back! back!” cried Ramee. The animal had gathered itself to- gether and sprang forward with one mighty bound, ann rolled_over with a scream of dying rage. When we came to measure the bru e afterward, we found it was fifteen feet from the nose to the tip of his tail.— The Argonaut. After Half a Century. Meeting of Brothers who were Parted for Fifty Years. In conversation with an aged gentle- man from Pembroke, Ky., a* Chronicle reporter heard a story which reads like a romance, but nevertheless is true. Away back near the close of the last century there lived a happy family in the “Old Dominion,”’ blest with all the comforts that surrounded a Virginia homestead at that date. The family con- sisted of father and mother and two sons. They were as happy as one could imag- ine a family to be, who were blest with all the luxuries of primitive husbandry The father was stricken with paralysis one day, and lived only a short time. The demise of the father was soon fol- lowed by that of the mother, and the two boys were left to divide the estate, the father having made no will. Things moved on pretty smoothly for awhile un- til the elder brother married and tried to take possession of the homestead and make a general utility man of his 16- year-old brother. The outcome of this was that the younger brother proposed to leave home, and called for his half of his father’s estate. He was met by his married brother, and was told that he could have nothing. A quarrel ensued, and a fight in which the boy came out considerably bruised by his brother, was the result. ’ DRIVEN FROM HOME. The young man, stung to the quick by the brutal treatmeut of his brothra, pack- ed up what few clothing he could carry in a sack and turned his back upon the home of his childhood, to try his for- tunes in the west. At that early day Kentucky and Tennessee were open for settlers, and people were pouring into the new states by the hunderds. One day a youthful looking person came into a settlement, near where the town of Pembroke, Ky., is now located, and asked for work. He told the people that he was from Virgin- ia and had come west to make his fortune. He was taken into full membership by this band of pioneer settlers and given work and a place to sleep. He worked along awhile and finally entered a piece of land for himself. He turned out to be the shrewdest man in the camp, and soon was recognized as a leader in all public affairs. He grew wealthy by de- grees, and by the time the section in which he lived was fully settled, he was regarded as one of the rich men of the community. In early days he moved to Clarksville and went into the lumber business—that is, he employed a force of men in rafting logs down the Cumber- land before there was much of a settle- ment here. This venture proved re- munerative beyond his most sanguine expectations, and he soon went back to the Pembroke neighborhood and invest- ed his gains in land. After Pembroke had become a little village, and people were raising all kinds of farm products in the neighborhood, an elderly looking gentleman drove into the town one day and put up at the little tavern. He remained in the town sev- eral days before he made known his busi- ness. When he had examined the coun- try closely, he made known that he wished to buy a home. He was referred, by the landlord of thetavern, to the gen- tleman mentioned in connection with the early settlement of the place. REUNITED. He sought out the man who owned more property in that conntry than any one else, and made known his business. A trade was soon made, and when docu- ments were drawn up transferring the property, the elderly gentleman become very much excited and betrayed consid- erable emotion. On being questioned by the gentleman he said: “I once had a brother by your name who lett Virginia some fifty years ago at the age of about 16 years, and seeing the name brings up thoughts of home, when he and I were boys together, happy in a father and mother’s love.” The man wept bitterly and said that he had hunted for a broth- er, for years, that he drove away from home in Virginia. The men compared notes, and soon found out that they were the same brothers, and that they were the same brothers that parted in boy- hood, vowing eternal enmity to each other. They fell on each other's necks and wept like children, a curious crowd standing around looking at the transac- tion. When the two brothers parted in boyhood they had heard nothing of each | other—in fact, they had not tried to communicate. They are both now dead, but have descendants living within ten miles of Clarksville, and others near Hopkinsville and Pembroxe. They were both good citizens, and the young- er of the two was sent as a representative to the Kentucky legislature two or three times, and made one unsuccessful race for congress years ago. The gentleman who gave the infor- mation is now an old man and says that the circumstances occurred as related above, when be was a boy. They lived on adjoining farms atter the older one moved to Kentucky,and were fast friends. ! Their names are withheld on account of family relations, but the whole affair cer- tainly occurred as narrated above. If it doesn’t read like a romance, what is it ?—Clarksville (Tenn.) Chronicle. One of the Animals you Can't Catch in a Trap out of Water. They Are Very Fond of Crawfish and Can Be Trapped Under Water— How to Smoke Him Out of a Tree—His Habits in Win- ter, Especially the Long Fast. “Did you ever hear any one say he had trapped a coon ?’’ said P. B. Eyler, of Pittsburg, who has been spending a tew days on Lake Keuka, and says that if there is anything he knows all about it’s coons. “If any one ever told you he trapped a coon in the woods he told what never happened. Coons can’t be trapped except in one way, and I never found a coon hunter yet who knew how it was done. The coon leaves the coldest scent be- hind it of any animal that lives, but it carries the keenest scent in front of it of any animal. You may track a coon to his home in the crevice of some rock, which is a favorite retreat for him. You may place your trap in front of the hole, and disguise it as you may, cover it with leaves a foot deep, if you like, but that coon will never leave that hole as long as that trap is there. starve to death first, as I have proved on more thin one occasion. He can smell the iron of the trap, and he seems to know the danger it threatens him with. He knows it will be death to leave the | P hole, and he prefers death by starvation to being trapped. I have tried iron traps and snares and all sorts of devices, but could not succeed in fooling one of these wise little animals into getting caught by me, until one day a new idea struck me. It isn’t oflen you see a coon in the daytime, unless you know where to look for them. If there is a creek in your vicinity in which crawfish are plen- tiful, you will be likely to discover some epicurean coon fishing for them, if you hide at the side of the creek and keep very quiet. : The coon is particularly fond of craw- fish. The way he fishes for them is to wade in the creek, generally going down the stream. The crawfish live under the stones on the bottom. The coon feels under each stone he comes to with his fore paws, thrusting one under on one side and the other on the other side. It is a comical sight to see a coon fishing for crawfish. He keeps his head high in the air, moving it up and down and to and fro, his eyes evidently gazing at nothing, every sense seeming to be con- centrated on the business beneath the water. You can tell ina second when he has fastened on a crawfish, for.the ex- pression en his face changes instantly from the dull, vacant stare to one of brightness and animation. He draws the crawfish out of the water, and, stand- ing on his hind feet, rolls it smartly be- tween his paws. This crushes the shell and claws of the crawfish, and makes the sweet meat more accessible. The coon eats his capture with great relish, and then begins the search for another one. While watching a coon fishing in this way one day I got the new idea of trap- ping for coons. I thought that by plac- ing a steel trap under the water in the creek where coons did their fishing they could be deceived, and more than likely caught. I tried the experiment. I sank two traps at different places on a favorite crawtfishing route for coons, and the same afternoon found a coon in each trap. And that is the only way you can trap a coon. I often hear hun'ers talk about smok- ing coons out of hollow trees where they havebeen located. If they say they have done the smoking by burning straw or leaves or substances of that kind, I don’t believe them. Coon hun- tersin western Pennsylvania know by experience that there is only one thing, the smoke of which will force a coon to beat a retreat from his hollow tree. You may burn leaves or straw till the cows come home, but you won't get your coon. You cin hear him sneezing every little while like a man with the hay fever, but that is all the effect the smoke will have on him. If you want to get your coon by smoking him out of the tree, you must take what we call a sulphur match over in western Pennsyl- vania. The coon hunting sulphur match is made by melting down a quan- tity of sulphur in asaucer and saturating a strip of muslin a few inches long and an inch cr two wide in it. When you run your coon into a hollow tree all you've got to do is to put vour sulphur match at the bottom of the hole and light it. It won’t be burning ten seconds before Mr. Coon will pop out of his hollow as if he'd been shot from a catapult, and then if you don’t get him it’s your fault. I never read anything about the hab- its of the coon yet that didn’t say that the animal lays up stores to subsist on during the winter, and I never met any- body who professed to know anything about coons that didn’t hold the same thing. A coon depends on stores it col- lects to see it through winter just about as much as the bear does, and every- body knows that the bear goes to sléep in his hole when the weather drives him in, and doesn’t generally wake up until spring, and so he can’t eat much. The coon does the same thing, except that he will wake up now and then on some fine day and take a little stroll through the country. ‘When he goes to his win- He will | ter home he roils himself with his head between his hind legs, and very close to his hams, at that, and gives himself up . to oblivion. "When he comes out in the | spring he’s as thin as a shadow.. I’ve | cut down dozens of coon trees in the win- | ter, and always found the coons in that | rolled up position, with not a vestige of anything to eat in the hole. Ifa coon | comes out on a winter's day and the { ground is all covered with snow, he will ! accept the inevitable and walk on the snow to his destination, but if the snow | is 1n patches, or lies in scattered banks, | the coon will follow the leading of the bare ground around the patches of snow, keeping shy of allcontact with them, al- | though such a course may lead him | miles out of his way. The coon is an | interesting creature, and is worthy of a I good deal of study.—Hammondsport | Cor. New York Sun. : The Short Line. If You are, | | | Are You Going West ? Read This. i The lines of the Chicago, Milwaukee | & St. Paul Railway ex‘end through Il- ' linoise, Towa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Min- nesota, South Dakota and North Dako- ta. The Company owns and operates "nearly 5.700 wiles of railroad. It has | i the finest equipments, with all the latest | ‘improvements. Vestibuled trains, heat- | | ed by steam and lighted with electricity. | It is the short line between Chicago and | Council Bluffs, where it connects with ! the Union Pacific and B. & M. R’ys for points in Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, | Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon, Washington land California. It is the oldest and | shortest line between Chicago and St. | | Paul and Minneapolis, running through | | Milwaukee, La Crosse and Winona. At | | St Paul connections are made with all | | lines for points in the Northwest. The | line to Kansas City is known as the | “National Route.” At this point con- | | nections are made for points in Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona and | | California. All ticket agents sell via | this line, and if you intend going West | I vou will make no mistake by asking for | | vour tickets by the Chicago, Milwaukee | o v a | & St. Paul Railway. If any informa- | tion is desired write to John R. Pott, | Traveling Passenger Agent, Williams- | port, Pa. Maps and time tables furnish- | ! ed free. Ia AA AAA About Pianos. “Very few know how to take care of a piano,” said a musical man toa re- orter who visited his warerooms. “How do you doit here?’ asked the scribe. “Tt is a popular notion that pianos ought to be kept very dry. Nothing could be more fallacious. Pianos are not nearly so much affected by heat or cold as they are by dryness, and, reverse- ly, by dampness. It is not generally known that the sounding board, the life of a piano, is forced into the case when it is made so tightly that it bulgessup in the center, on the same principle as a violin. The wood is supposed to be as dry as possible, but, of course, it con- tains some moisture, and gathers more on damp days and in handling. Now, when a piano is put into an overheated, dry room all this moisture is dried out and the board loses its shape and gets | flabby and cracks. Even ifit doesn’t | crack the tone loses its resonance and grows thin and tinny, the felt cloth and leather used in the action dry up, and | the whole machine rattles.” “How do you prevent this?” “Keep a growing plant in your room and so long as your plant thrives your piano ought to, or else there is some- | thing wrong with it. It should be noted how much wore wate will have to be poured into the flower pot in the room where the piano is than in any other room, In Germany it is the practice to keep a large vase or urn with a sopping wet sponge in it near or under the piano and keep it moistened. This is kept up all the time the fires are on.”’——New York Mail and Express. A Cat That Lives on Canaries. George Fair, of the Haymarket thea- ter, says: I have a tiger cat, a pug dog, seventeen gold fish, and forty canaries. The dog is the most submissive of the lot. He has been licked so many times ' that his tail won’t curl. Eversee a pug | dog with the curl taken out of his tail. I've got one. But the cat is the boss. Mors. Fair is very much attached to the cat. I wanted her to sell the cat, or let me bring it down here, or kill it—any- thing to getit out of the house. No, gir, she wouldn't have it. Said the cat could stay in the house as long asshe did. One day she went home and found a lot of feathers on the fioor, and the cat] asleep on top of the piano. The cat had eaten the canary—several canaries. I said to Mrs. Fair, “[ guess the cat will go now,” but she said no, For two or three days we noticed that the cat didn’t eat anything. He refused beefsteak, | mutton chops, whipped cream, and all of the dainties. He had tasted the ca- nary, and nothing but canary would sat- isty him. So we are raising canaries now to appease the cat's appetite. The dog eats the bones and the crumbs which fall from his master’s table.—Chicago Tribune. Spoiled His Programme. A thug who was ecently imprisoned in Idia, having been caught almost in | actual commission of a murder, com- lained bitterly to an English officer at aving been deprived of the opportuuity to fulfill his ambition. He bad begun life with the fixed determination to kill an even thousand human beings, and at the time ofhis capture was in a fair way to carry out his design. He had already killed 700 persons, énd if the authorities would have let him alone for quite a little while longer he would have reached the 1,000 mark. He was willing to agree to give himself up again if he were allowed to go free long enough to bag the additional 3C0 need- ed, and he thought it a great hardship that so reasonable a request should be refused.—San Francisco Chronicle. All Sorts of Paragraphs. —Over 5,000 Russians have settled in and around Kureka, Cal, within a year. —One of the visitors at Fortress Monroe last week was 60 feet long. It was a whale. —A competent authority thinks that the Paris Exposition drew at least $250. 000,000 into Paris. --Twenty-four sportsmen shot 485 rabbits in the vicinity of Jerseyville, I1L., the other day. —Minnows two inches long are said to have been taken from a 74-foot well at New Iberia, La. —An Albany, Vt., man has shipped to Western markets this year 8,000 tons of maple sugar, valued at $97,000. —dJules Millet, a nephew of the cele- brated French painter, lives in New York and makes brierwood pipes for a living. —The Brazilians are said to form the largest and richest foreign colony in Paris. They never haggle over any-. thing. —The year 2118, according to the President of the Manchester Geological Society, will see the exhaustion of the English coal. —GeorgeLedicker caught a monster spotted snake near Bell fontaine, O. Ttis: seven feet long, and playtul and harm- less as a kitten. —A Salem county, N. J., woman, past 30 years of age, saw the railroad and took her first ride in a passenger train a day or two aco. —Farmer Harms, of Kent, Kings coanty, Ore., cut down a cottonwood, tree last month from which he took 700 pounds of fine honey. —The largest salmon ever taken from the Tweed were caught recently. The weight of four of them were as follows : 43, 44, 48 and 55 pounds. —Phonographs are to be put in the postoftices of Mexico, to be used by persons unable to write, in order to send messages to friends through the mails. —A year ago, in Henderson, Ky., Mrs. Mary Beck, aged 64, and ‘Wallis E. Yanson, aged 24, were married. The old woman is now seeking a di- vorce. —A wealthy man who has been con- victed of shooting partridges near Laur- el, Del., and shipping them out of the State contrary to law, will have to pay $480 in fines. —Isaac Harris captured a large bald eacle near the Lewistown. O., reservoir Tuesday. The bird isa noble one, and evinced no fear, but fought bravely and viciously. It is on exhibition. —A wealthy Colorado weman says that the begging letters which have reached her during the last six weeks called in the aggregate, fora sum of money as large as her entire fortune. —The belle at a recent dog teast on an Indian reservation in Dakota wore a jacket trimmed with teeth from 150 elks, which she herself had slain. She is the grandaughter of the chief of the tribe. —The dogs in Birdsboro, Pa., are all mad As everybody wants a revolver dealers in weapons are reaping a great harvest. The citizens have determined on completely exterminating the canine population. —A citizen of Hawkinsville. Ga., who was suffering from asthma, was advised to try a remedy sometimes used by the negroes. He gota hornet’s nest, boiled it, made a tea, drank the liquid and was completely cured. —A big black diamond picked up in Brazil is on ‘exhibition in New York. It looks like a piece of chestnut coal in the rough, but it would take a good many tons of coal of any kind to equal the value of this lump. It weighs 867} carats, and is worth $5,000. —An Augusta, Me., whist crank has occupied his time during the past two years in the construction of an elegant whist table on which he hopes to win a good many rubbers. It consists of 500 pieces of wood, no two of the same size and of nearly every variety that grows. —A lately married Belfast, Me., | couple cannot be accused of hasty ee- tion. They were published and the certificate was issued a year ago, but the knot was not tied until last Friday. A young lady who has had experience, suggests that the bride probably had to wait for the dressmaker. —The feat of playing 20 games of checkers simultaneously and winning all but one, which was a draw, was ac- complished by Clarence A. Freeman, in Providence, R. I., a few days ago. His contestants were experts from all over Rhode Island. The play lasted just 1 hour and 40 minutes. —A whistling contest, open to young ladies only, occured at the Congrega- tional Church in Litchfield, Mich, Tuesday evening, and the oldest inHab- itant confessed he never before saw such a puckering of ruby lips. Miss Pearl Playford took first prize with an an- donk quaver that made the windows rattle. —Mrs. Bootman, of Hodsick Falls, N.Y. will be 94 years old on Sunday, the 15th inst. She is in good health, and mental activity. She confesses to being an old, if not a great sinner, and having been recently converted, will, on her 94th birthday, be admitted to member- ship in the Methodist Church on con- fession of faith. —In Germantown lives a noble Nimrod who shot for one of his female friends a crow, and from the day she received it, stuffed and mounted, she has been followed by misfortune. She finally gave it away and the spell was removed Another girl who moves in the ‘set’ religiously carries an umbrel- laof antique design, and she says it is her mascot. —George Hardy, a poor hostler, who plaesd up a lot on the edge ot Bar Har- or a few years ago for $150 and sold it for $600, built a livery stable on a half acre of ground bordering on the site of the Malvern Hotel. As his stable be- ——Mr. N. Peck—T think if any one is entitled to a pension it's me.”” Mudge —You were never in the war, were you?” Mr. N. Peck—“No; but the fellow my wife was engaged to got kill- ed at Shiloh.”’— Terre Haute Express. came more objectionable to the Mal- vern’s guests the price of Hardy’s prop- erty climbed up. He absolutely refused offers of from $5.000 up as high as $18,- 000, and finally thought he was doing the Malvern’s owner a great favor when he sold out for $20,000. i i —— pgp etme Sg