Bellefonte, Pa., February 21, 1880. WHY THEY TWINKLE: BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES. When Eve had led her lord astray, And Cain had killed his brother, The stars and flowers, the poets say, Agreed with one another, To cheat the cunning tempter’s art, And teach the race its duty, By keeping on its wicked heart Their eyes of light and beauty. A million sleepless lids, they say, Will be at least a warning; And so the flowers would watch by day And the stars from eve to morning. On hill and prairie, field and lawn, Their dewy eyes upturning, The flowers still watch from reddening dawn, Till western skies are burning. Alas! each hour of daylight tells A tale of shame so crushing, That some turn white as sea-bleached shells, And some are alway blushing. But when the patient stars look down, On all their light discovers, The traitor's smiles, the murderer's frown, The lips of lying lovers, They try to shut their saddened eyes, And in the vain endeavor We see them twinkling in the skies, And so they wink forever. aL AA ————a THE RAZOE OR THE RIVER. QUAY DID NOT DECIDE WHICH HE WOULD USE TO END HIS LIFE. After Robbing the State Treasury of $260,000, He Becomes Despondent. The Scoundrel Saved by Cameron. The following is taken from a twelve column article published the New York World : When vice prevails and impious men bear sway, the post of honor is the private station. — Addison. The uninterrupted tide of power which set in Statesman Quay’s favor for fifteen years of political life caused him to become more and more unscru- pulous. His private habits at Phila- delphia and Harrisburg,were such as to cause almost continuous scandal. If as a gambler Quay were successful he would have accumulated a fortune at cards or on the turns of the wheel, but there never was a more unlucky votary of the fickle goddess who patronizes games of chance. “How much did Quay lose last night?” has been the inquiry for years past by some one or other who was present at or was aware of the part taken by the eminent states- man at a game of some kind or other the night before. Hard play and hard drinking told on the nerves of the state treasurre, or,at least, his acquaintances thought thac such was the fact during the winter of 1879. The customary phlegm, the nerve, the undaunte i cheek of the boss appeared at times to be insufficient to buoy him up, and he was nervous and 1rritable. His exces ges became greater than usual, and finally the gang around him began to shake their heads and whisper that “the old man was breaking down.” Among the cronies of Statesman Quay were J. Blake Walters, the cash- ier of the state treasury, and A. Wilson Norris, the reporter of the supreme court. They too were observed to be unusually distrait. A friend of Walters informed me that during this period the condition of the cashier was fretful; that he would suddenly spring from his chair and walk up and down the room and would sigh. “One day I found him lying on a sofa in his office. He said that he twas so nervous that he could not rest nights.’ I asked what might be the trouble. He replied: ‘It you knew you might understand my feelings, but this is something I can’t talk about to my best friend. You see how Quay acts? Well, he feels just as bad as I do.’ When Walters told me this he was a sick man. He had an ulcerated tooth, and I thought that he was ner- vous from pain. I did not think for a moment what the real trouble was.” Samuel Butler, of Delaware, the newly elected state treasurer, would by law assume his duties on May 1, 1880. As the time approached Statesman Quay became more and more nervous. He paid frequent visits to a certain broker's office down Chestnut street in Philadelphia, and when he came away it was observed that his face looked very grave. Samuel Butler flitted in and out of the state treasury with an air of importance. The treasury who was to go out of of- fice was Amos C. Noyes, of Lock Ha- ven, who was known popularly as uSquare-Timber” Noyes. He was elected to the office in 1877, and I do not think that a person could be found | who questioned his personal integrity if | the broad state of Pennsylvania were | oone over with a fine-tooth comb. Old “Square Timber” was a man of business, cool and level-headed. When he appointed Blake Walters his cash- jer many of his friends told him that he | had made a mistake. Noyes was a. Democrat of the old school who was elected by the people during Gov. Hartranit's incumbency by a change of feeling against the Republicpn ring. Blake Walters was likewise in thelum- ber business. He held timber lands and he was interested in a mining | scheme in the West. He was a tall, finely proportioned man, with a full face and bushy hair. His appearance suggested a well fed ecclesiastic in many respecte, and when he went down to Harrisburg he was comparatively unsophisticated and guileless in the de- vious ways of politics. He had no legislative experience. When at the state capital he fell in with the fast, drinking and poker playing set, of which Statesman Quay was a master spirit, and he quickly became as dissipated as any of the gang. Senator William Wallace was his political sponsor, flu- and it was through the latter's in ence with “Square Timber” Noyes that the latter disregarded the advice of friends and appointed Blake Walters cashier of the treasury. About this time Noyes became one of the group of visibly nervous person about the capitol, and his nervousness was of a kind that was more apparent than that of the others, As for Wilson Nor- ris, he simply maintained a substantial spree, and his nervousness rested with comparative ease. On a memorable afternoon there dis- embarked from a train at the Pennsyl- vania railroad station a fine-looking gentleman, gay and debonnaire in his aspect and with the confident, easy manner of a prosperous man of the world. He entered a cab and was driven to the Lochial hotel, the head- quarters of the leading politicians who make Harrisburg their home during the sessions of the Legislature. For many years Statesman Quay had oc- capied a suite of rooms at the Lochiel, and Host George Hunter regarded “the old man’ as one of his valued guests, notwithstanding the occasional little eccentricities of the latter, which were of a nature no conservative boniface could consistently permit in his cara- vansary. As a digression, for instance, when the festive stateman had gazed so frequently upon and partook so deep- ly of the contents of the flowing bowl as to become threatened with the dire nervous malady vulgarly known as the jimjams, Mine Host Hunter, wisely and with unselfish regard for the future of his guest, ordered the myologist in charge of the Lochiel bar to refuse, un- til further orders, Statesman Quay’s call for liquor. The boss was not ac- customed to being thwarted in his will, and, although in a state of dishabille, clad only in a single white garment, he proceeded downstairs to the recalcitrant barkeeper and threatened to blow out the contents of his cranium unless the whiskey bottle was fortwith produced. Entertaining little episodes of this sort were frowned on by Boniface Hunter, who was also explicit in demanding that his distinguished political guest should show a marriage certificate when attractive young women were introduc- ed as nieces and wards. Toresume: The jaunty] gent'eman who had recently arrived in town ap- proached the office of the Lochiel and inquired fo: S.atesman Quay. “He'sup in the room,” was the response, and then it was whispered in the ear of the pew arrival : “The old man’s in a bad way. Been full several days.” ‘It was unnecessary for the handsome gentle- man to appear shocked or even sur prised, for he was entirely familiar with the habits of the man from Beaver. He merely shrugged his shoulders and remarked that he would go up and see what was going on. On reaching the apartment of the distinguished statesman he knocked. Probably it the door had been unlocked he would have entered without aid or preliminary formality. After a while the door was opened, and a singular spectacle was presented. The occupant was partially dressed, his hair was awry, his eyes were bloodshot and watery, his broad, round face was flushed, and his hands tremulous. An unshaven chin added to the general as- pect of unkemptness. In plain lang uage, he was the eminent leader of Pennsylvania politics in one of the stages of the condition known in the slang of to-day as a “jag.” The gentleman inquired, “What in sheol is going on?” In thick, husky tones Statesman Quay replied : “J am debating whether I will cut my throat or go and jump into the Sus- quehanna river.” «Pooh, pooh,” replied the visitor, “what'sup? Tell me all about it.” After some desultory preliminary talk, the explanation for Statesman Quay’s nervousness, which had been the cause of solicitude to his henchmen, was made plain. He informed his visitor that, in company with Blake Walters aad a high official of the state, he had embarked in a speculation in certain stocks of the New York market, that Walters as cashier of the treasury drew out funds belonging to the state, that the venture proved unsuccessful and that an exposure was emminent. Sam- uel Butler the new treasurer about to take office, would not do so until a quan- tity of paper in the treasury which was placed there by Quay, Walters and the rest, was taken out and cash substitut- ed. Butler was not a man to be in- timidated, and old “Square Timber,” who only ascertained the raid on the funds of his office when they were gone, was nearly frantic. Altogether, it was a very pretty how-to-do that the quak- ing despairing boss poured forth to his listener. The latter was, as he is to- day, above all things, cool and collect- ed. He neither expressed surprise nor unfavorable comment. He merely in- quired : “How much are you out?” The boss groaned as he replied: “Pretty near $200,000.” Then the visitor whistled softly. The conference which followed was prolonged. Quay made as complete a statement as his maudlin condition would permit. He said that the money was gone for goud and all, that he fear- ed that Blake Walters would squeal or that honest od “Square Timber” would allow his indignation to control him and denounce the perpetrators. Blake was a Democrat—the only mem- ber of the party included in the ranks of the conspirators—and there was a pressure on the state treasurer to keep quiet from an influential member of his party, in the hope that the scandal would be averted. Altogether States- man Quay’s state of being was quite as abject as it was when his fears ran away with him at the time of the Pitts- burg strike. The manner assumed by the gentle- man in whose auricles the damning tale of crime was poured was such as to temporarily calm the fears of the despondent boss, and the latter promis- ed that he would forego committing snicide until his visitor could look about and see what could be done. “I will go to Washington and see Don Cameron,” said the visitor. “Keep quiet until I return and cut off’ your lignor.” Immediately he repaired to Wash- ington over the Northern Central rail- way to communicate the startling in- telligence to Senator J. Donald Came- ron. The latter had recently taken the seat in the Senate chamber which he kad acquired as the result of the fa- mous deal when his distinguished fath- er, the wily old Simon Cameron, resign- ed the office in sublime disgust. Don Cameron was then, as always, a chip of the old block, and the man who went ‘from Quay’s room to see him knew the value of his cold, delibera- tive mind. “My son Don is a d——d far seeing fellow and the principal disadvantage he has had to contend with in life I did not have, for he was born rich and I poor,” old Simon used tosay with gusto. Senator Cameron was in his seat in the Senate when the messenger arrived in the lobby. I wili say at this point in the story that the latter individual, who plays so important a part in this story, is one of the best known citizens of Pennsylvania, a man of wealth, and commanding influence. He sent his card to Senator Cameron, who hastened to meet him. The two retir- ed to a private place, and the story of the great raid was recited. Don Cam- eron can be as cool as an iceberg, but on this occasion he cast reserve into the fire, and the whole of the troops in Flanders could not have sworn any worse than he did. And why not? He saw the desperate nature of the situa- tion. Not that he cared for the plight into which the Republican boss had placed himself,but the danger the scan- dal would cause to the Republican par tp was in his mind’s eye. A hasty con- sultation was held and a plan of action agreed on. “Go back to Harrisburg,” said Cam- eron, “and investigate this thing to the bottom. You will find that Quay has not told all. Probe itdeeply and then report to me, and I mast try to fix it up. The party must be looked after.” It is entirely probable that Senator Cameron's action was based on that which he regarded as his duty to his party, otherwise he would have allow- ed the statesman and his fellow con- spirators to have disported in a striped suit in the penitentiary. Back to Harrisburg hastened the messenger of cheer to poor, miserable Quay, who was cndeavoring to sober up only to realize more acutely the terrible position in which he was placed. Senator Cameron was so deeply interest ed that he followed his visitor to the open air, outside on the capitol steps, and stood bareheaded and anathema- tized the folly of Quay and his con- federates. As Senator Cameron prophesied, the subsequent delving into the intri- cacies of the affair only served to dis- close its magnitude. The sum of mon- ey involved was larger than forgetful Statesman Quay would at first admit. The total was in the neighborhood of $260,000. Quay still resided in Phila- delphia, where he went at the time of | the recordership deal. He had moved from North Broad street to another residence when the investigation was completed at Harrisburg. When Sena- tor Cameron had been apprised of the details of the steal a meeting was ar- ranged to take place at Quay’s house. Thither repaired Don Cameron, sup- ported by a distinguished lawyer,a gen- tleman of commanding position in the profession, who once filled a cabinet of- fice. Quay and his visitor were of course present, as was the state official involved in the steal, and others whom I have no occasion to mention. The state official last mentioned was feeling toler- ably comfortable for his part of the sum to be made do to the wronged and robbed treasury of the people of Pennsylvania had been guaranteed by a wealthy firm of coal operators of Pennsylvania and New York. He had turned over what property his wife and himself possessed In a provincial city and he was in the condition of mind which a man who had fallen over a precipice and had been drawn back by the hair of his head may be supposed to feel. T will say nothing of how the minor crimi- nals were saved. The whole of the de- tails are known, but for reasons they are omitted here. Quay,the arch-raider, had given all of the securities he pos- sessed, but the gap still open was a tremendous one. Here stepped in Don Cameron. He paid out of his own pocket a sum of money in excess of $100,000—I am pledged not to mention the exact sum—to save tne Republican party in Pennsylvanta the disgrace and the expense of the rapacity and roguery of the leaders. Cameron was a rich man, and he felt able to put out of his private means the large amount of money mentioned above, to accomplish that which he felt to be a positive duty to his political affiliations. When the business was completed a high state official, in the excess of his complacency over his escape, approach- ed Senator Cameron and exclaimed effusively : “Senator, vour act has mortgaged me to you for the remainder of my days.” Po which, with a sarcastic inflection of his voice, thus coldly replied the son of old Simon : “Well, sir, I regard my security as devilish bad.” The statesman of Beaver likewise felt chipper. His proverbial good luck had averted ruin. He ventured to thank the senator for what had been done. The answer was sharp and em- phatic. “1 dont’ do this to save you, Quay, but for the sake of your wife and your children.” Cameron probably al- lowed a dash of sentiment to step in momentarily when he made this reply. To the gentleman who first received the story from Quay's own lips was left the carrying on of details. He re- ceived notes of hand from Quay, and one of them for $25,000 has not yet been paid. Statesman Quay was indirectly the cause of the death of two of the persons mentioned in the story of the great steal. “Old Square Timber” Noyes never recovered from the shock the dis’ covery caused to him. Blake Walters was as sensational as a scenein the Sur- | ‘go Herald. rey theatre penny-dreadfuldrama. His habit of dissipation developed at Har- risburg increased. his life by his own hand. There was an effort made to conceal the suicide by certain interested persons, and it was given out that he died of blood poison- ing, resulting from an abscess around the root of a tooth. He certainly suf- fered from a trouble of that nature, but it was in’ a moment of extreme depres- sion that he destroyed his life. Wal- ters always felt deeply his treachery towards “Squire Timber” Noyes. He was by no means a bad hearted man; but he was weak and easily yielded to the superior will of Quay and others of the Harrisbnrg ring. His conscience prompted him to write a letter, the existance of which is known only to four persons. The special correspondent of the World spent ter days endeavoring to see this posthumous writing which proved to be of momentous importance. I was not permitted to use the contents of the letter, although I pursued it from be- ginning to end. Itis in possession of a person to whom it was given by the person to whom it was addressed. Contrition for his acts while cashier of the treasury is the prevailing theme. Four pages of paper are covered, and there is asad tone, which shows the state of mind the writer was in. The time may come——there are certain con- ditions which may supervene—whea the letter can be made public. By per- mission I am enabled to quote a few words. After naming the persons asso- ciated with him in speculations which caused the loss of the State's money, Walters said : “A will stronger than my own led me on.” And there is not the slightest doubt that he told the truth when he mad: the claim. A lawyer of the name of Speer was the attorney who aided in adjusting the business of the settlement at the treas- ury when the money was refunded. A newspaper like the World could have driven the corrupt gang out of power in short order, but the press of Pennsylvania has allowed Quay to go on unmolested by aggressive attacks on his shameless conduct. The feeling which the pardoning board scandal cre ated and which occurred openly at about the same time as the secret raid on thestate treasury—which the people of the state did not know about—they do not to-day for that matter—led a turn over in politics and Mitchell wa selected United State senator in 1880. For a period of three years after 1882, Statesman Quay was in very bad odor and ont of office in voluntary exile. The manner in which he obtained his next place is not the least entertaining of his many undertakings ; certainly it is quite as unscrnpulous as any of his crooked dealings. His friend and de- pendent, Gov. Hoyt, thought that his rather tough conscience had received a strain and turned Independent in the fall of 1882. He became desperate, and although entirely in the power of Quey, the latter was likewise as deeply in his power. Neither one could well afford to anger the other. Then it was that Robert Emery Pattison, who was ore of the best governors Pennsylvania ever had, was elected and held office from 1883 to 1887. During the period of Quay’s open disgrace he passed his time at various places—Atlantic City, the Continental hotel, Philadelphia, in the winter. If I were to recount some of the stories of the temporarily depos- ed statesman’s doings at Atlantic City and at certain places in Philadelphia, the hair of the reader would stand on end. The two States of North and South Dakota, says the Pittsburg Post, ‘‘were hustled into the Union to subserve par- tisan purposes and before their people were ready for the responsibilities and burdens of State government. North Dakota, only two months a State, is al- ready insolvent, and there is such des- titution in both North and South Dako- ta that there are loud calls for relief. The expenses of North Dakota for the coming year are $534,230. Her utmost receipts can only reach $251,898. Her deficiency, therefore, will be nearly $300.000. She cannot relieve herselt by taxation unless it is made confiscatory. She is estopped from borrowing enough to meet the deficincy by her constitu- tion. In this dilemma it is proposed to close the public schools, and many of the public institutions and thereby cut down expenses.” The two Dakotas, as the Post ob- serves, should have been admitted as one State, and had it not been for ofiice- grabbing politicians who deluded the peo- ple, and the necessities of the Republican party, that proper policy would have been adopted. As it is, the two infant and sickly States have the same represen- tation in the United States Senate that New York and Pennsylvania have with their eleven millions of people. Ho 2 He Got a Place. One of the brightest advertising men in Chicago made his rise through the fall of another. It was some years ago when as a mere boy he was tramping the streets of Chicago, broke and in search of any sort of a job which offered. His last nickel had gone for ford, and one afternoon he was walking through a down town alley tired and disgusted. Happening to glance upward he saw a boy leaning out of a window. In 2 moment the boy lost his balance and fell to the pavement with the customary dull thud. The discouraged youth has- tened to the boy’s side and discovered that death had been instantaneous. Looking up at the open window [rom which he had fallen the youth counted the stories and then sought the stairway near by. Mounting the stairs he dashed into the editor's room, for it was the of- fice of the Prairie Farmer, and blurted out: “Do you want a boy?” Looking up in surprise the editor answered : «No, we havea boy.” Then the youth said: “I'll bet you haven’t--your boy just fell from the window and is dead. T want his place ”” Investigation found that the youth was right, and he was engaged for his pushing way. Since then he has risen by degrees and made money, and very few of his friends know how he gained his place.—Chica- Finally he ended The Farmers awakening. It would seem as though the great | cause of Tariff Reform were pervading all classes, all states and all of the peo- | ple (except always of course, those in- | terested in tax robbery, and the politi- | cians who expect to be keptin power : by the monopolists). The Jersey State Board of Agriculture is the last body to betray a decided reform bias. These gentlemen had a meeting yesterday, and a member from the ‘agricultural county of Burlington offered a resolution against the proposed increased duty on tin plate, which matter is now being considered { before the Committee on Ways and Means of Congress. The resolu‘ion ex- pressed it as the cpinion of the Board that such an increase would work di- rectly to the disadvantage of a great number of farmers in the State whe were interested in the business of can- ning tomatoes. Judge Forsythe, another representa- tive from Burlington county, was par- ticularly strong on the subject. He laid giress on the fact that the industry of ti plates competed with no similar in- dustry in the country. “We've had twenty-eight years of your infernal high protection,” said the Judge, “and we're tired of it.” He continued that the Sheriff was taking possession of the farms around him in Burlington county, and such as brought $175 an acre a few years ago were recently knocked down at $54. The Judge concluded: “More protection to the mill-owner, and let the poor devil of a farmer take care of him- self.”’— Philadelphia Evening Herald. The Late Lord Napier’s Nerve. The death of Lord Napier, of Magda- a, recalls a story of the old soldier’s nerve as exhibited once, in a time of profound peace, in India. The Sikh warriors were famous swordsmen, and if any one was hardy enough to test their skill, they could cut an apple, resting on the palm of a man’s hand, cleanly in two equal pieces, so that each piece dropped separately to the ground, with- out fraying the skin of the outstreched hand. Perfect steadiness was required in the person holding the apple, for if the hand shrank the consequences were likely to be serious. It is, perhaps, needless to say that the offer to perform this feat was more often made than accepted. For along time Lord Napier refused to believe that the wild soldiers could do this thing, and when one of them in- vited him to hold the apple and wit- ness the exploit he promptly consented, supposing that the swordsman would flinch from the undertaking; but the Sikh had entire confidence in his own skill. His eye, however, detected a lit- tle irregularity on the general's right palm as it was held out, and he asked him to present the apple in his left hand. Lord Napier afterward said that, for the first time in his life, he was conscious of the sensation of fear,as the conviction flashed upon him that the man was not going to “back out.” However, firm as a rock, the hand, with the apple upon it, was extended.thesword flashed down, and the fruit fell in two segments to the earth. The skin was not scratched, but its owner said he felt the keen blade touch it, as though a hair had been broken across it. He added that,though he was at last convinced of the Sikh swordsman’s skill, he would never again allow one of them to test it in that way ; and he advised his officers to make the same resolution.—New York Sun. A Pretty Story. Secretary Rusk has appointed Mrs. Josephine O'Brien, of Washington, to a position in his department ; and theraby, writes a correspondent of the New York World, hangs a pretty tale. Mrs. O’- Brien’s application Lad been on file many weeks, and the utmost efforts of Republican frienda failed to secure the coveted appointment. Naturally she was very much depressed. Her little 11-year-old daughter, Josie, was very indignant when her mamma failed to secure an appointment, and avowed her intention "to see the Secretory about it herself. A little later the bell of Secre- tary Rusk’s house in Massachusetts avenue was rung and the servant who answered it was confronted by an indig- nant little damsel, who wanted to see the Secretary. He was not in, but Miss Josie replied that she would wait for him. Secretary Rusk eame in soon, and the little girl immediately demand - ed to know why her muzmma had not been appointed, and proceeded to give the astonished Secretary the names of prominent Republicans who had in- dorsed her application, The Secretary was so much amused that he assured the little girl that her mother should be appointed. But Miss Josie had evident- ly heard of assurances that do not a - sure, and she went next morning to the department and presented herself to the Secretary, saying that she had come for her mother’s appointment. This was too much for the Secretary, and the ap- pointment was made out, much to the delight of the persevering little girl and to the astonishment of the mother. Josie says that Secretary Rusk is the nicest man she ever saw. v EEC a ———— A GRAMMATICAL QUESTION.—Years ago, in Cheyenne, there was a terrible dispute about a point of grammar, one party claiming that “I done it” was cor- rect, and the other contending that it should be “I have did it.” The decis- ion was left to a tall professor, with sev- en revolvers and a porcupine beard, who promptly declared that anybody who said “I have did it” was a liar. “Are you.a grammarian ?” asked an opposing member of this society for the promo- tion of pure English. No, by 1” shouted the Professor, “I'm a Missou- rian!” ECTS —————— Hoodlum Politics in the House. Houston Post. Speaker Reed remains master of the situation in the House of Representa- tives. He is proceeding on the plan of the hoodlum ward meeting, where ‘de Chair runs der Machine, an’ any bloke wot don’t like it gets de bounce.” The Western Republicans suffer by this method as well as the Democrats, and there is a prospeet of rebellion that will break the backbone of the majority. All Sorts of Paragraphs. —The Pan-American delecates will visit Montreal. —~Queen Victoria receives 300 or more letters a day. —French speculators have created a corner in sardines. —General Raum has issued 34,000 pen- sion certificates thus far. — General Sherman was seventy years old the 8th of February. —A dog that can’t bark is one of the curiosities of Edinboro, N. J. —Two-thirds of all the children born in Conecticutin 1889 were boys. —Leo XII will beeighty years old on Mareh 2, should he live till then. -—No less than 1,000,000 prairie chick- ens are marketed in Chicago every year. —Colonel North, the English nitrate king, has a private dog-house that cost $5,250. —The Farmers’ Association of South Carolina will nominate a State ticket this year. —D’Albert, the pianist, is a strict veg- etarian and eats an enormous number of apples. —Rubber pavements have s uccesssful- ly been tried on a bridge in Hanover and a street in Berlin. —A Philadelphia shoemaker’s dog died from swallowing a piece of sole leather in mistake for beetsteak. —Eight hundred pennies were re- ceived in a single collection in one of the Chicago churches not long ago. —Sir William Gull says that when fagged out by professional work he re- cruits his strength by eating raisins. —Unecle Sam pays his 200,000 em- ployes, including soldiers and sailors, an average annual salary of $825 apiece. ——The new Spanish Minister ot Com- merce, the Duke of Veragua, is reported to be a lineal descendant of Christopher Columbus. : ——«Buffalo Jones,” of Garden City, Kan., killed a buffalo from his herd the other day and sold the meat for fifty cents a pound. ——Levi Williamson, of Ansoaia, Conn.» has a hog that is seven feet long and weighs 1,000 pounds. It isso fat thatit is unable to get up. ——Chicago is to have a fourteen-story hotel, costing over a million .of dollars. The projectors expect it to pay for it- self during the World’s Fair. —A bundle of spider webs, not larger than a buckshot and weighing less than one drachm, would, if straightened out, reach a distance of 350 miles. —Thomas E. Blacksheer, of Thomas- ville, Ga., is eating new potatoes from planting made in September, and has ripe strawberries on his place. —The freedom of the serfs in Russia has been repeatedly declared a great fail- ure. They are said to be far worse off now than in their former condition. —Concurrently with the reports of destitution in the Northwest are asser- tions that cattle are so cheap that it does not pay to ship them East. —One of the lessons taught by Nellie Bly’s girdling the earth is that a young woman may go on an extensivetrip with no other baggage than a grip-sack. —The first convert to Christianity in the Upper Congo valley was recently baptized at Equator Station. The val- ley contairs thirty million people. —1It is figured that 1,664 houses were lost in the Johnstown disaster, and property in the flooded districtis valued at $770.693 less than before the flood. —An observant contemporary has made the discovery that the fair should not be held at Chicago, New York, St. Louis or Washington, but around the waist. —M. Eiffel not only got his idea of a great tower from American suggestions for the Centennial Exposition, but an American elvator lifted the patrons of his tower to the top of it. —T. Bailey Aldrich, who isa recent vietim of the grip, compares the sensa- tion to that of a misfit skull that is too light across the forehead and that pinches behind the ears. —One of the professors of the Univer- sity of Vienna, is said to have discovered the bacillus of the influenza, and it seems to be a near cousin, if not the twin-brother of the pneumonia germ. —The German imperial administra- tion’s effort to pass a bill for the expul- sion of the socialists from the empire has been beaten in the National Reichstag by the overwhelming vote of 169 nays to 98 yeas. At a recent autograph sale in Lon- don the signature of Voltaire brought only two guineas, while that of Isaac Watts sold for three; and while ten pounds were given for a Boswell letter, one by Johnson brought only nine. —The Shaw of Persia in additien to the masses of jew, in the royal treasury, has a private fortune stowed in vault or elsewhere which is known to consist of at least. £3,000,000. To this he is per- petually adding fresh accumulations. —Georee Newcomb, the English lion tamer, who died recently, in 1874 had a terrible encounter at Swindon with five African Lions, when he received nine wounds on the right arm, in addition to other injuries. Three of the lions died in the struggle. Newcomb had previcus- ly had his lefteye torn out by a leopard. —The Cloverdale (Cal.) Reveille says: Tt has been reliably ascertained that out of 185 cases of successful swindling throughout the State by traveling sharp- ers in various ways, by which people of the rural districts were robbed, some to the extent of thousands of dollars, only nine or ten were subscribers or readers of a country paper. — With this issue of the Kicker we cease the weather forecasts we have been publishing, as forecasted from our own observatory, for the last six weeks. While we have had wonderful luck in hitting the weather for three days abead our local subscribers have had no inter- est in it and have discouraged the enter- prise. This arises from the fact that no one here cares a cast iron cent what the weather is. If fair, they go out and shoot jackass rabbits and run horses; if foul, they gather in the barroom and drink whisky and play sevenup. The least that concerns them is what the weather is going to be on the morrow, and we don’t propose to educate them up to feel anxious about it. =ame TE