In I'nkliihixl Hrrkly at HK.NHHI Kii, I'AMHKI A CO., PKXS., IJV J ME H. II ASM), Uuaranter.l Clrculatlcu. l.VSXl Kuliorr li Ion Kam. One cony. 1 year, msli in advance J? ,l tlu It nut paid wltniii :i uii.mii. !.-; ,lo do li nut I'H'l wiil'lu month. . t w I- uo da II lift nld ituni the jear.. -To peruns reahlm: outside of th '"' luTJnu additional per year ' chanced to pJ MMlAe. -la no event will tne atove terms be do , arwrt froV and those " 'na,'1 D" attentats tv l y"'" ,n 'u"' u"1 V lit tin. l t l-e UlMiu.-lly un.lertoo.l trui: It, i. time lorwra. w-l'at fr your purer before you Mop It. If U i. .uU uiuit Nun "I wiHnwuc o utlierwlse.- ob t tie a waiawim lite i too snort. $7.95 , ar, ,...r l.uru.. Slock ..f v. OVKUCOATS ,,, ktkkmki.v t.mv nil. .: small Mini of . , . ... -riT Mf.A ! ............ I, 1. . .1 i s.. , i - . i-.. ... i. -n it :i i an ' i... n,t will !.. -nl'l at t!i--ally " li I.I ". don t foi:get the i JD. I.ir-..,i"('l..iliifr. H;i!tiT aril r'urni - WANT A V 1: i . e v. l ; '". I'll S.' s, V.: K.iuiili.iK tin i Kuiit i.il linn lliJIlu! U lUI c l 111 " I ' a! e; i ii-tiii.'. Ki'iK-Niy fpu'iy. V.V want t tiniliiiur. A iv l.-.i.l ti cil.il. ue. Ii is ire t' mil p. kiinw bu itKNS every r hamuiii '.. n "n., r.iiu'h.unt BUILT FOR L Read $1.50 per Year. RHOTATISlTI I.IM-.1.- iMils.' Ill.ti.l.l !:i!ti'rllitr. lli.it li.i" Mi" ili:lkult to run' - s.iiKl till ll' plltK'lllH. I'llllli-'H ( i li IV oll:.."ll. ln:s I'l l tnuiii'iit ly i in.-. I ti.e wi.ist i ;, nf ill. u:ii.it i ;ii mi. I in-lit'. ii'l.i - -.iy ili.i?' nln ll Hi- lli J 11. II iMl.; V ll I In H mi. I . ..t I i tr.ui ut ll.. . . H. I .1 .ii... , i i I. i : ilfit 1 ii r.t. .i li ii. -i tin .Hi I v. ;i- 1 ;.. in, I t II I II Hi- .-r i ii I. I' .1 I- I IV ilni It'.. U .. .li.i I. .1.1.1. I I .1 111. it t. -. I . .. ti n". Slxr-irf..i.. I ! n 4 1-1 - Mlllillu, ti Ii'nt III n lilt il i.ii r fn A Ft Ui. Kir 11 akiixin X i o .I'lupn. . hurliii lull Vt. DIAMOND DYES 'in-e til ' mil! J I .1. -. iw ,l I l.l.. I. I ...llnil f JFOR SAIE . NO UCE TO ICWM1 "Seeing is Believing." rmffjintrifr . . tna a gooa tamp I MiiiMM!& must be ,s,mPle t when it is not simple it is words mean much, but to see " The Rochester" will impress the truth more forrihl v. All Tv,t,i tough and seamless, and made in three pieces only il K absouUty safe and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's ct old, it is indeed a "wonderful lamp," for its mar velous light is purer and hnVhtr thm softer than electric light and Rixtr,, auU lite Ki"" ,7"?" tj P and vt- .U srna vuu a h,.m i our nrw 'HuMratr.1 tataUmr. vrilt.iom,lirJi.l fCT-y"" v.r a.omi AtO IIKVI , u LAnr CO.. 42 rrk Place. N . ... & "The Rochester." THE 0 ,f HAY- FEVER 1 iun COLD N I 1 . ! f'V CreTJ?'?.j?i a l JUL ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street NEW YORK. DUG ? 4 1'MINiSt'KAIKIX' NiH'H'K. J l-etirrn nl ail lulnlstrailoii nn llwar.l lkiiiKtirrty. lat ol tie the e.tate nl lfiwnti iii ot .- y mi.itti,ii. nn-raHri. navtnv lieen Kranlril to l.e unitrisiu lieil , a' I fcrrHini uiili't.tril In fliuil er taiear, ln-retiy n..t ltl.1 in uiuke liiyiiu-nt Willi ut ilrlnj. iii.i thu-B harinx i' I uluu attain! the ame will ,rei-ni tlieiu .r..l.rrlv aiill,,.ncali-i1 'r ett lenient. ANN mil lilil- K i v Mar. li IT ut Ailmiriiiitralrll WANTED S0L1CIT0RSFS. t handletheOrtl.lMl lllmiorr,d ltrlfrrnra HJ'1"ikiiu.iiiub ami wiilt.uy ,1. ".,"' U'riV! W.B.COWKEY CO. Publlahers. Chicago. IIU V T F. M. KKNUICK'i t ""V aUDO.il'HHKLLoB AT LA W I KKKNSIIliKa. . 'pa I rOdlc. on Ueatre alroel. JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and VOLUME XXVIL . A IWEL TO Tlltt DfcAlll. ' " " ' K-tNlUll 1 Uf llll ivaauiu -r v 'j r i a - OVERCOATS - $7.95 AT GANSMAN'S. f !'.". !--.. ". ' a'"' ' and ULSTERS .. . -i . ,.r ..II Civil It:ir- '"".!: ,?:?r;z. ., i.iv I'm- tli- IJ..VS util Children i ivfivouis. ri-t'i' i.ii.'i1 I ii fiu i t y article in mil' M aim.iotli i'il price. ..UK Iirr. tils El.vniili .. WWW PV- -r, -L --. j. WAGON miiii - v - ;. I! !;." , pt.'inpt sliipuu'iit i i:r oii. W rite us. CuMs yi u by an.l by. Sen J fur mir - .'.uler i this paper, tiinv,- ii. N. V. BUSINESS the and NEURALGIA - f.iini- -1 .1. i si-ti.l li lu.-. I- .t fi I W H ll l.l'IIIM .1... ...It 1 1 1 S 1 1 Ii. H'lil. .,-l IW r tin' t l.l I . II I I ,! ! t Ill- i. . iH III" I 111.-. I.I 1 III- I llllll-l lllll I ll ... Jill n. irlv f. Ii.-.- in. i i, ,..!.. ii i.i !l I i n. i i mr.i! in. ii,.-. t. Paine's Celery Compound ; - I li ui- I...--I fii nlH until l.-.l Willi ai'iifn ! rh, ii- i.i i -iii .iiil .,..,1.1 r. ...1 mi r, ll, I in. in 1 I. .1 l' .111- ' i li- I .-TiiIm-uii.I Ili-l lllnf i !..';-.- ..t I i.l - In. ill. 111.- I ull I lii'W i llli-il ..I i li. i.i,...' I t : ..hi. 'i -v,i i i lu u IUSM.IN so. urnl-ti. N I!. Effects Lasting Cure;?. I' .ilin- -' 'i !'!' ' i ill 1 1 i. III. I ll:i- i-rli.i mm-, I li' in i-lln-1 i lie, . i !ll:il'i t-.liN art I ll'"-i'. i-.'l-l.' lit l.-iii t -,M t.i.iiii aililnw. I li'ii-uinl t.i tnki'. .Im iii.it , hi I., hut iil.H iIIl.'i'siI"!i. iiihI I'lilln' U Vi ;i -l. it'll-: : i lill.l imu t.iki-II. What's ttm us,. i,i utt.-i iui; liiiiK'-r Willi rUeuiii.it istu or In ill .ilw'l.l ' D m n ice l-it'irnj upon lariated fund ar lii'atthy OAaitd uj.pt Ucarty. It M Ini-yuaMi. more cheerful than either. HEAD mm I"S: W into ae Wri Pollciea written at itiort nolee In tne OLD RELIABLE ETNA11 ..l other rirat Vtmnn 'omM Ira. T. W. DICK. FiT FOR THE OLD HARTFORD ll' 111 v I itOMMKNOKll Ht'SlNIX-S 1794:. Kbetubnrx.Jaiy l.I88S. 1 . .-,-J h.'vi a; ir...J.-r:,i..-.i I fifj ! IK r - I crJ "4 ; I . rmui nl ft ec Jk I VIRBINUIOOMT fit fl ST to Proprietor. Two Snakea Meet and FIgrht in Deadly Earnest. The Trrmeutlou t rualilnfc Tower ot the Ulack.imke Ulm It Ibc Supreiuacy Over the Veuomou Itut Weaker Kattler. A thrilling fij-'lit lHtHn a lilaek-snakt- atiil a rattlfNiiukf vas witni-sistsl mi t!i. t'uiiiiuins r:inir. jrrove y a jKtriv if ir'!itK'iiK'n from liayt.ma, f-ays tin' t-'luriihi Tiiiies-l'iiiiiu. l'or sv-ral wt'flvs jiat a ll:.-ksiial;' alxmt ti'ii ft't baits lias mailt its In-ailijuart.-rs uii.U-r an fl.l irili nil tli prvf. apHarin in--t'asi.niallv, but nvr alkiwiny hiuis'!f ti Ik kilU-tl. lit was as larjjv ar.nii.il asmii's wrist" ami as lit-n't a liKikinp ft-llow as tun wtiul.l want to I'lmmntiT. ofiit l.-iiifii wtTt si'att'tl uii.l.r a lai Vf pa!iiu'lti trt-t fiij.yiiir tin pleas ant al'tiTii'H'ii whfii tht-y lii'tif tl a ntt tk'siiakt rrs.'i slowly anl tautinusly nut fr. 111 a brush luap ami coil Iiiiiisi-tf with lif.i.l in tlu air anl fyes tiiriuil tiu aril tin-party as if tusay: "Hi-iv I am." Oin fj-.-ii t li'iuan s'if.l a club, but the others pt'rsuaiUtl liiui to ilelay liis attaek and wateli the reptile for awhile .tml m w liat it woiihl lo. Tlir.V li.nl a rhaiiee to sie up the stranger, w ho was ulmtit six feev Itiiijr aiul of a jrvaytsli .lriK'l eolor. In a few minutes the Klaeksiiake was si-en to Epp-ar from muler the trib fifty feet tli.--.tuut aiul inovt slow ly toward the rattlesnake. -Now fur a fijrht," said Mr Kert Walker, and the party tlrew liaek to ive t he rept iles a full show. Noise lessly came the hiir black fellow, i-arry-iiir hir. lie.nl hiu'h ill the air and cca si.iiially dropiiii; it. apparently study -i:i'' the .'round around whieh lie was to make the attaek. It was plainly evi dent that tin filaeksnake wanted to lLrht. hen within twenty feet of the ot her creature he. stopped, raised his head and the rattlesnake saw him for the lirst time. The ground lietwecn t lii-iii was clear, not a stick or a stone beiu-r liotiecd for many yards. The rattlesnake raised his head and threw out his tonjrue ami seemed to lie prepared for an encounter. They really remitnled one of a couple of des perate men just eliterinr the arena for a fii'ht to the death. Presently the lila.-k champion started on a circle around his prey, (vttitlif nearer to the rattler every minute. The rattler never took his eye from his approaching enemy and his head jroiny round re minded the looker-oil of the movements of a corkscrew. When w ithin six feet of the rattler the black fellow flew around so fust that you could hardly t. II what it was. Jt was like taking a a trinir tied to a stick and twirling -it with all one's miht. Suddenly the two came together and immediately liecame entwined alio ut each ot her. roll in over ami over in the dust. This lasted fully live minutes. Then there was a lull ami the blacksnakc was seen to have hi-, adversary by the throat with his mouth. His lxidy was twisted alxnit the rattler's ImmIv. and every few seconds lu-awoiild five a squeeze that sent the rattler so much further toward his end. In ten minutes the black hero dropped the IkmIv of his victim, blew himself up. took one last look aiul then slowly wound otT into the brush. It was a rare and remarkable scene and thorotin-hl y enjoyed by all the party. One of the gentlemen raised up the tleatl rattler on a stick ami found that he was terribly frashed ami mangled. Like the Ua-constrictor, the black-snake does not bite but crushes out the life of its victim. UNCIVIL KINDNESS." Tenitrrnr.ii r Heart Itut I'artlally '011-t-ealed ty Kui;ltieMi tf Manner. KoWrt Louis Stevenson, in his Iwxik of essays entitletl "Across the I'lains. (fives an example of what he calls the "uncivil kindness" of Americans that roup-li friendliness which, in its contra dictory character, is so iiewildcriii? to the forei-fiier newly landed. He says: "It was immediately after I bail left the emigrant train, and 1 am told that I looked like a mail at death's door, so much had the lonjf journey shaken me. I sat at the end of the car, and, the catch beinf broken and myself sick ami feverish, I had to hold the door open with my foot for the sake of air. "In this attitude my lcc; barred the new sUy from bis lMtxofmercliandi.se. I made ha.ste to let him pass when I ob served that he w as coiuinf ; but I was busy with a lork, and so, once or twice, he came u(oti lue unawares. "i ti these occasions he most rudely struck my foot aside, and though I my self apoloyicd, as if to show him the way, he answered me never a word. I chafed furiously, ami I fear the next time it would have come to words; but suddenly I felt a touch upon my shoul der, and a lare, juicy pear was put into my hand. "It was the newsboy, who had c ill served that I was looking ill, and so matte uie this present out of a tender heart. "For the rest of the journey I was petted like a hick child; he lent me newspapers, thus depriving himself of his legitimate prr. lit tin their sale, and came repeatedly to sit by me and cheer me up." - Money Lett ly Author. Some one has been patheriiifT statis tics atout the money left by authors. Lord Tennyson, the most successful of Kntflish authors, left alout $150,000. Iloln-rt Hrownintf, of whose will A. Tennyson ami F. S. l'aaVrave were the attesting witnesses, left personalty 'in London of the value of i;lti,77.. Victor llujro, who. like Tennyson, attained the aye of !s:l years, liad personal estate in Kiiylanil to the amount of ii-J,120. l'r. Charles Macka.y's property was valued at t'J.iHO, and that of Kliza 'ook at 5,0.")7. Matthew Arnold's es tate amounted to 1,0-11. Jlis w ill, in his own band writing, was one of the shortest that ever came under probate. It was: "I leave everything of which I die possessed to my w ife, Frances." Old Time Veaaela. In the American navy there are now but eleven of the old-fashioned wotnlen Vessels in active service. They are the lianyer. Alert, Marion, Lancaster, M hicau, Yantic, Thetis, Kearsarye, Alli ance, Attains and Essex. These will ..ii . . .. i.tpituy pi out ot commission us new . hteel vessels are accepted. The I'eusa , cola is to be sold, being- already ont of commission. Her sale will be followed by this tftjwrumcnt's disposing 0f Omaha, Iroquois and other old timers. ...... ....... ...,.. . n ittti a fiP c TH f STREET CAR. I PAPTC tpniiT tut r.r I r-w m. m tin 1 a rw, tit I "HE IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TROTH MAKES FREE A5D ALL ABE 8 LA YES BESIDE." EBENSBURG, PA., FRIDAY. APRIL 7, 1S93. ICeaaou AiciieU the n'oniu'. Habit of Stvppina; the Wronu Way. Many women descend from a horse car int-xactly the wrong" way. says the New York Sun, that is, they grasp the handrail of the platform and face awuy from the horses as they step off. instead of (fraspin the handrail at tached to the liody of the car and fac ing t i the front, as one should do. A conductor w ho runs a car upon what may le called a trunk line, that is, a line runn'my north ami south upon one of the busiest avenues, says that he ol serves no substantial change or im provement in women in this resiwct. notwithstanding' the fact that more or less has l.vn printed on the suljtct. He mentioned as an illustration a young woman who had ridden upon his car for a iiumlier of years. Hcrticcupa tii. i is one requiring especial intelli gence, but she gets off a horse car now just as she did at first. The conductor,, however, ascribed this haliit on the part of women, not to any perverseuess, nor even to thought lessness, hut to a very simple original cause. The driver of the car must not, w hen he stops, permit the rear plat form to olistruct the crossing; he is more likely to run past it a little than he is to halt upon it or even upon the etlge of it. The conductor said that w hen the car did slop with the plat form over the crossing, a woman would erhaps step straight off. not turning in either direction; but that when, as more frequently happened, the plat form was just licyond the crossing, the woman would grasp the platform rail arut step fuciny away from the horses, so that she might take the fewest possil.le stejs tiiion the rougher, and jM-rhajis dirtier, street pavement, and reach as quickly as possible the smoother, dryer and cleaner crosswalk. BLUE-EYED INDIANS. HiiMetl to Ite l-t-e:nl.'d trow Wrecked SwrUinh SailorH. The Mayas, inhabiting the Sierra Mad re mountains in the lower part of Sonora. are supposed to Ik the de scendants of the crew and passengers of a Swedish vessel wrecked on the Mexican coast long centuries lieforc the birth of Columbus. They have, accord ing; t j the St. Louis Ulobc-lVmocrat. a tradition that their ancestors "came in n great canoe over the big salt water many hundreds of moons ajfo." They have never been conquered by the Mex icans. They are nominally tinder Mexican rule, but are in reality governed by their own ehiefs. Whenever the Mex ican government interferes with them they take up arms and they have got the Id-st of every scrimmage thus far. The Yaquis are their m ighltors and these two war-like trilicshavc reciproc ity reduced to a science. Whenever the government interferes with the Yaquis the Mayas come to their assistance and vice versa. Mexican troops cannot stand In-fore Mayas or white Indians. They are the most desperate fighters on the North American continent. Like their neighbors, the Yaquis. they are mostly Catholics. Although quite prim itive, aim. :,t savage, in their mode of life, the standard of morality is high. They live principally by the chase, but cultivate some corn ami garden truck in the valleys. The men are large, well formed and some of the women remark ably handsome blondes. They all re tain traces of their Swedish ancestry ami the linguists say that their lan guage evidences a North Luropeau an cestry. THE FIRST PAPER. From Chlnia Ita lae Sprre.it Over ala ttnl Thence Into Kurope The first invention of paper manu factured from vegetable pulp is lost in the mist of antiquity, says the Argosy. It apjiears to have lecii lirst introduced into Kurope from the east through the Arabians ami l'ersians. The use of paper, according to the modern application of the word, had liecome common in China at an ex tremely remote period, aiul ( iiblmn tells tis in a note that its manufacture was introduced from China into Samarcand KM IS. C, and thence spread fiver Ku rojH. The Chinese are said to have so great a variety of paper that each prov ince possesses its own peculiar make. The sort commonly known -as silk pa tter is fabricated from the inner bark of the bamltoo or niullterry tree. The rice pajter, so called, is prepared from the inner portion of the stems of a hardy leguminous plant that grows plentiful ly altout the lakes near Calcutta and also in the island of Formosa, whence the Chinese import it in large quanti ties. The stems of the plant lieing cut into the proper lengths for the sheets the pith is cut spirally into a thin slice, then flattened, pressed and dried. The Arabians apjn'ar first to have in troduced the manufacture of paMr into Spain. On the oldest specimen ex tant of this Spanish manufacture a treaty of peace between the king of Aragon and a iicighltoring; potentate, A. li. 1775, is trauscrilied. HASHION NOTES. Iv five o'cloeft tea no two cups and saucers should be alike. A gikl's coat of red cloth is trimmed with gold and black braid. Ul'TTEUFLV bows with aigrettes sug' pesting antenna) are among' some of the most approved hat and bonnet trim ming's. I r is said that five hundred persons worked for ten days on the beautiful lace bridal veil of l'rincess Marga rcthe of l'ersia. It was, made at Hirsch. berg, Silesia. Stick-pins are shown in every imag inable style, f mm the plainest and most inexpensive to the elegxint and elaborate, some of them being of enormous value from some very expensive stone either set singly or surrounded by smaller ones. A Fakir Traveling a Freight. The practice of binding" religious per. sons still exists in India. An incident occurred recently at Mecrut. A fakir, wearing nearly hve mauntls (four hun dred pounds) of iron chains and bands on him, recently left the cantonment station. The railway authorities dc clined to allow hini to traveL as pas senger, but sent him as freight by weight in spite of his argument that native women were never charged for their anklets and bangles. The iron absorbed the heat so much that the rnau naa u ite iWcessaiiii si.r.ua.eu . . I :..i.i . i with water, ue is an uia uuu, nun j nearly ttiea at tue stauon- j Sona ot I'rlitcca and I'oor Men Have Killed the Catholic hurrh. Eighty of the popes are honored as saints, thirty-one as martyrs an.l forty three as confessors. St. A gat ho was the only pope that lived to be a centen arian; he is also the only one after St. l'cter who may le honored with the title miracle-worker. St. A gat ho died at the age of 107, in the year Gs-J, after having reigned three years, six months and fifteen days. Gregory IX. died at the age of IH years; Celestine III. aud Gregory NIL at thei age of Vi; John N XII. at the age of 0; Clement XII. at the age of SS. and Clement X. and lius IX. at the age of Sit. The popes have been drawn from all classes of society, says the St. Louis Republic. Nineteen were sons of near relatives of princes, and an equal numU-r came from illus trious families. Man- came from abt lute poverty and obscurity. Sixtus VII. was the son of a very poor fisherman: Alexander V. was the son of very jumr aud unknown parents, the future pope sindiiig all his young life in Wgging on the streets. Adrian, the only English pope, was aliandoiied early in life by a worthless father and hail to subsist on charity, until, going as a tramp to find an asylum in France, he entered a monastery or convent as a servant. His real worth was soon manifested in his diligence, arwl his virtues and intelli gence soon won for hiui the papal tiara. Sixtus V. hail for father a poor lalmrer, a common servant for a mother ami a laundress of vicious habits for a sister. Celestine V. was the son of a farmer of no means and little intelligence. ISene dict XII. spent his childhood in a bake shop, t'rban IV. learned the caricn ter's trade from his father, as ditl also tlrcgory VII. Five of the popes studied miiliciue before taking holy orders. Julius III. was the son of a famous ju risconsult. Hencdict X I. was the son of a poor notary. The father of I'elagius I. was a prefect ami the vicar of his province. The fatlier of I'aul V. was a patrician of Sienna. The fathers of Eugene IV., Gregory XII. and Alexan der XII. all Itclonged to the patrician families of Venice. Cat holies enumerate but two hundred and sixty popes, w hile some 1'rotestant authorities give the iiumWr as two hundred and ninety eight, which includes twenty-four anti poites, Of the whole number twenty six were deposiil, nineteen were com IH'lled to give up the tiara and leave Uome, sixty-four died violent deaths, eight were j tisoncd, one was shut up in a cage, one was siranghnl, one smoth ered to death, one died by having nails driven into his temples and oue was hanged, or, as the aceount'says, "died by a mtose around his neck. FLIGHT OF THE CROWS. Armlee of Itlril In the Sky Ilaateiilna; to the Mouth. "The preliminary gathering of crows Itefore they take their flight to the southland at the approach of winter is always interesting to me." said a trav eier to a Sl Louis I Jlolte-Demoerat man. "I do not think that they take their flight from this section of the country, as the winters here are not severe enough. Hut from the Ilakotas and the south ern Canadian provinces they leave in great numlters after the first severe frosts. One cold, frosty morning I arose and 1. Hiked out of my Itettrooui window in Red Eric. Dak., dow n into a neighltoring cornfield that was Itounded by a rail fence and from which even the dry shocks hail been removed. Only the stubble, bleak and frttst-eov-ercd. remained. "The village of Red Eru is lo cally famous for crows. They gather altout there in large numlters and ob tain considerable fitod from a neighbor ing wild rice marsh. I noticed that the tiers of rails, rising seven iu nuni Itcr, were thickly sprinkl.il with crows, perched altout and cawing most vocifer ously. I was rather amused at the sitectacle. and stood enjoying it. when I observed a long line of crows ap proaching from over a neighltoring patch of forest. These also settled down within the inchtsure. I watched for several hours and continually ob served great flocks of crows to come from all directions and gather in the field. Hy in ton the fences ami ground fairly swarmed with the birds. It seemed to me that there were hundreds of thousands. Then no more came for awhile. The denouement of the whole affair was a great flapping of wings, anil, division by division, the great gath ering '- ft in harmonious order. It took them fully half an hour ltefore all were under way. When the last flock or di vision t.tok w ing I litoketl to the south and saw the line dimly failing away into space. Then I knew they were migrating, anil I fully understood the beauty of that harmonious simile: Like the llight of birds. OVER THE WIRES. Liinhox has C0,ihj telephones. Kxtkxhivk surveys have lately been matte for a cable Itetween North Amer ica and Australia. MoRK. than one-half of the street rail way mileage in Massachusetts is now peratei in whole or In part by elee tricity. A MAOA7.INK writer quotes Inventor Edison's father as saying that his son while a boy wonld not play with other Itovs. but would "sit around and mope." Neighbors used to call the h;v "Edi son's fKtl." At the end of June last there were CS,."isa miles of telegraph lines, repre senting tioS.W'l miles of vVre through out Germany. As regards telephone . immunization in that country, uo less than towns are provided with systems. !. GAY PARIS, "Paxamad" is now- the Parisian word for anything plucked, fleeced or shorn. A dog dipping establishment has a sign: "I'oodles Fan a mad here. To makk l'aris a seaport is only half the Frenchman's dream. He "wants a ship canal through from the Garonne to the Mediterranean, to save going around Spain. At the beginning of 1W3 there were 1,701.000.000 francs In frold and l.-.7,-ooo.ooo francs in sliver In the vaults of the Rank of France. It would require ;s:t cars of a capacity of ten tons each to move the metals. A flower pot fell from an unpro tected window sill in the Rue St. Denis, l'aris. Siime time ago. upon the head of tt 1 1 1 i II u- a rtMwlmr )u.ii.-utli sml - " frai tured his skull sa that he died La twu hours without recovering scAunes. 81. 0O and The Sectional Peculiarities of the "Tonsorial Parlor." They III Iter m the Heard.-In tiothan Superfluous Hair la Oeotly Wooed Away and Montat.a I lay lUm la Murderous. "Where do you get shaved?" "Ou the face," replies the perennial humorist. Rut it is no joke. There is a marked difference in the manner of shaving. This h-ads to a preference in barlters. The man who posseses a palm like a nutmeg grater will never have a second chance at tender-faced victims. . In Washington, according to the New York Recorder, there is an extempo raneous colored tiarlter. That is, he uses lalior-saviug devices as they occur to him. One of his fads is to jab his patient's ear full of lather. While this is not agreeable to his victim, it saves him money in stepping to and from the shav ing mug. W hen he requires a little more lather for a sandy place on the chin he takes it out of the ear and rults it in. otherwise he would have to walk around to the cup. This little peculiar ity is offset by his silken fingers which keep bis custom. In Richmond and other southern cities, the barlters still stick to the long whisk-broom, the brush Iteing about three feet long and six inches wide. At the conclusion of a shave, the harlter will throw this as a knife thrower tires his blade into a ltoartl. It generally hits the customer Itetween the shoulder blades, and, if the sensation is a new one, he thinks he is assaulted. Then follows a rhythmic rult-a-dub played on the back, while the barber hums a tune in accompaniment. Refore the advent of natural gas in Pittsburgh, all the barlters were wont to wash their customers faces first to see where the Iteanl lay, and also the texture of the growth. The s.tot-laden air rendered this necessary, but as the neck was only washed down to the towels inserted over the collar, the line of demarkation was visible when the customer regained the street. In Chicago this washing preface is still indulged in more or less. Windy city tonsorial artists boast of another little peculiarity. Instead of fanning or rubbing the face dry after the bay rum, the Chicago barber takes a napkin by one corner and whirls it around in front of his subject's face as if he was flagging a train. It is alleged that in the St. Louis barlter shops, patronized by the river men, sand soap is used to produce the lather. Several of the river barbers, though, use an astringent instead of bay ruin. They say that its concoction is a secret, but it dents the face and so intimidates the growth of hair that each individual hair curls back in alarm, on the inside of the skin. When it grows again it conies out like a fish hook. There is a current rumor that the prevalence of goatees and imperials among M issour lans anil steamboat men is dne to the fact that the barbers are unable to shave the capillary growth in the dimples of their chins. In Montana, however, the art of shav ing has reached t he height of culture. The road agent's Ward is a jtopularone. This style is the oue with w hieh the cel ebrated desperado, Henry l'lummer, framed his mouth. It consists of a mus tache and chir whisker. As "two bits." or twenty-tive cents, is the price of a shave, the mere shaving of the cheeks does not appear to furnish the mimey's worth. It is on the chin and throat, anyhow, that the barber earns his money. In order to give the worth of the money the Montana barlter indulges in bay rum. It is bay rum which would eat the varnish from a table or draw knotsout of a ltoaxd. It bites. That is what a native Montar... a wants. He desires to rcaliiu that he is shaved, and he wants his bay rum to take h ld. He is satisfied, but it is alrmtst death to the tenderfoot, w hose mossy checks are blistered an eighth of an inch deep. The Mecca of good liarlters. however, is New York, and the shaving process in this city has reached the pinnacle of art. Each hair is moved from off the face with razors w hose edges rival the Da mascus blade The soap which trains down into lather is the finest, w ith the odors of spices putting to shame those of Araby the blest. A Gotham shave admits a man into so ciety if the artistic work of a genius, or causes divorce if maneuvered by his own hands. J natty Indienaut. At a recent corner stone laying in Newark the cornerstone was swinging in the grasp of a 'powerful crane above the hole left for it to fit in. Down in this hole an irishman was fussing about with a bed of mortar. Suddenly a portion of the tackle slipped and down came the stone with a run. It lit on the Irishman's back, and every body expected to see him flattened out thin as paper when tlTo stone was lift ed half a minute later. No sooner was the stone clear of the hole, though, than the man sprang up like a jack-in-the-box. He was covered with mortar from head to foot and was coughiug-. sneezing and spitting to get it out of his nose and mouth. As soon as ho could speak he addressed the men man. aging the crane: "Here, now! Here now!" he yelled, "O; can stand a joke as well as any mon, but any of yeos can have me job aft her thot." and ho put on his coat and went away, per suaded the highly respectable assem blage had put up a joke on him. Chi cago. Jiewa, The Slae of the i-arth To us who live upon It the earth seems to be a very large affair, and men have been found who would le content to own as little as a tenth of it. In comparison with some other bodies, however, it is small almost to the point of insignificance. Five hundred earths like our own placed side by side could be easily encircled by the outermost ring of Saturn; and if by any process we could hollow out the sun, it would require three hundred thousand globes, like our own to fill the space thus cre ated. In spite of all this, however, the world is large enough for our purposes, and, for all we know, more comfort able to live upon than any other planet in the universe. Harper's Youug feople. fir. postage per year In advance. NUMBER 14. WHY HIS NERVE FAILED. The liurclar Restrained from (ummit-tl-ig- Crime hy the " o-o-o" of a Hatty. The burglar was not a bail-looking man, although his business had a bail look, says the Detroit Free I 'less. He stottil by the door of a sleeping room and peered in. A faint light was burn ing and he could hear the measured breathing of some one asleep. Cau tiously he crept inside, stooping low and looking around. No one there save a sleeping woman. In an instant a cloth saturated with ether was thrown over her face and he waited one, two. three ten minutes, ami the stentorous breathing of the sleeper told him the drug was doing its work. With a dex terous hand he seized the jewelry anil money lying on the dressing cast and liegan a quick search in the drawers of the case. "-oo," carne a voice from the shadow of the room, tjuick as a flash the burglar clutched his silent knife and turned to meet his victim. No one was visible. tKt-oo." came the voice again, and the burglar saw a child in its crib by the foot of the lied. It was a pretty baby, sleepily holding up its hands t.) him. He let the knife fall to his side. and. stepping over to the crib, touched the child. It coo il again softly, and held up its arms for him to take it. The impulse was licyond his control, ami he lifted 'the baby to his ltosom, and it nestled its soft, white check down to his and put its white arm around his neck. He purred to it. and in a moment its curly head was laid against his face, and it was asleep again. "Never seti a kid like that." he w hispered to himself. "Most of "um is afraid of strangers." and tenderly he laid it in the crib. Then be went back to the dressing case. He stood still a moment and then looked furtively over his shoulder toward the crib. The sleeping face of the child was turned toward him. Slowly he replaced on the case all he had taken from it, hastily snatched from the woman's face the saturated cloth, opened a win dow near the lied and quietly slipjHil downstairs. Once on the street again he looked up at the house hungrily. "Dang it." he growled, "a man that aiu't got no more gizzard than I have ought to get out of the business." And he disappeared into the shadows of the night- FAST SKATING IN HOLLAND. The Hutch man Itoeen't 1-ook Handsome, Itut He iitra a l ively 4.alU . The average Dutchman of the south, though he can skate very. well, looks rather f-xilish on the ice. His short legs and wide breeches are admirable ad juncts to his nose, ids thin, cocked beard and the lunipishness of his ex pression, says Chandlers Journal. To lie sure, this breadth makes him look important, but if he were less muscu lar it would Ik a sail hindrance to him in battling with the wind, which in w in ter is apt to make skating in one di rection something of a trial. The Fries lander, however, is taller. Itetter pro portioned and in all resHcts a hand some fellow. The yellow licard he some times wears seems to put 1 1 i in at once on a footing of afiinity w ith the other mcmlters of that respectable Anglo Saxon family to whicn .we ourselves 1k long quite as much as his provincial sieech and his blue eyes. He is a unst masterful creature when once he has put on those quaint, old-fashioned skates of his, and thinks nothing of making a score of miles from one vil lage to another Wfore you and I are out of Iiil. As for tin ili 1. what cares he for it? He knows he must rely on that lusty circulation of his to keep him from Iteing lK-nutnlKd, though he clothe ever so lightly, and seems more regardful for his head which a seal skin cap takes care of than of his well-shaped In sly. A Friesland canal in winter is as lively as anything can lie. The ice may not lie very goinl or of unquestionable strength, but no MNiner are the Units jN'mied in and the broken pieces of ice sufficiently welded to allow him to skate In-twi-en them than the sport In-gins. It is a feat of honor to 1m the first in the district to cross the canal when the wintry season is in its youth. The name of the bold lad is remem bered for a week or two, and I have no doubt his pluck stands him in gt n nI stead in the esteem of the chcrry-cheeki-d damsels of his province, w hose eyes dance past one so brightly w hen the ice festival is in full swing and journeying is all done on skates. OFFICES ODDLY WON. The Applicants A 1 1 rat ted Notice by llolur Kecentrftc Thins:. "I'cople sometimes obtain work from 1'ni-le Sam in peculiar ways," says the San Francisco Argonaut. "Not so very long ag-o a piM'tcss of fashion in a far western state became an office-seeker, adopting a novel method of pursuing her object. She appeahsl to a Tinted States senator, botiiliartliiig him with p:Ktry by mail. Once a week regularly he received from her a long letter in the shape of a pmta. Soiuetinu-s he got two a week. The pin-try w as probably the worst that any poetess of passion has ever produce!. "At first he paid no attention to it: but at length it began to prey upon his mind. When this sort of thing hail gone on for five or six months he be came desperate. So finally he wrote to her. saying: 'Your poems have proved to me that you are unlit for any public office. Nevertheless, if you will cease writing and setniing them to me I will get you. a joK' And he did. It is re corded that a man, appointed sixth autliu ir of the treasury. subjtct to ex amination, was asked to state the dis tance of the uioon from the earth. His written answer was simply: 'Not near enough to affect the functions of a sixth auditor.' He passed. Two Facts About m Ring. An impressionable young gentleman in a certain country town recently met a charming girl whose grace and beauty took his heart by storm. While conversing with her he made a discov ery which he fondly hoped would en able him to make at one brilliant stroke an elegant proof of his ready wit and his lioundless affection Glanc ing at a modest band of gold that en circled her fair finger, he remarked: "Sweet damsel, I pray you present me with the riuc you wear, for I fissure you it exactly resembles my love for you it has no end. "Indeed, sir, promptly replied the maiden, "you must excuse me if I keep the riug, for it exactly resembles also my love for you it has no beginning." JeeveletV Circular .Aclvei-tiwinfrr I tntcs. Tne larvresnd reliable elrrulatlon ct the .' attia Kaaaaan eommemls It to the lavor.t.ie eonaiderstlou of ailtrertiaera wbuae favora will ltt Daertetl el tbe following low rate : 1 Inch, 3 'line I H llncb.S month.................. i.m 1 lcb, monibi.... ft.frii 1 men. 1 year b ml S lnrbe 6 muntbe .ml S Inrbea. I year lo.oo l Inches, f month. S.0U S Inebea. I year t.uu i eolntnn, 6 montbi.... ................ ...... lu.ui column. 6 month. mi column 1 year M OO '. column, 6 montbi o iw 1 oolamn, I year 7.V0 Hnalneaa Itemi, flrat Insertion, 10c. per line nttaeqnent Insertions, be. per l'oe AominiHtrator'. and itxccutor'. Notices, f? sO Auditor'! Notices 2. Ml Strav and similar Notice 51.00 w-Kesolut tons or proceedlnsa ol soy eorpi.ra tt.m or aoclety and eomaiunlcatlone denttcui-d to call attention to any matter of limited or indl vidaal Interest mom be paid for aaadvertmnienii. Book and Job Printing of all kloda neatly and e zealous it executed at tbe lowest prices. And don'lyoo lorget It. FOREIGNERS OF NOTE. Mr. (Ii.aiistonk is by no means the oldest mcmlier of the commons, in spite of his S-i years. Charles Villiers is the father of that InnIj-, having completed his with year January 2. Rkv. Josir.rn Jamkm Ciii-.hhkmav. the Ifaptist minister recently elected presi dent of the republic of Lilteria, is a colored man of the most pronounced tyjH. and is a very effective orator aud preacher. Mwk. 1K Ll:ssKpn, so says a fashiona ble lyondon paper, has recently written to a friend in England saying that her husband has constantly remarked of late that, "like Napoleon III., he w ill die in England." Mo.NTAdf Williams, the eminent English barrister who died recently, was so overcome with stage fright when be made bis first speech in court, in a horse stealing case, that he would have given up the profession but for his wife's encouragement to jK-rsist. Kkicmia !MiT has sent a diamond ring and photograph of herself in the role of Cleopatra to the English lady who cap turisl and restonil to its owner the ac tress serjH'tit last summvr. The snake hail cscatcd and this lady, while out walking, noticed it, attention Wing tlrawn the more readily to inadaiue's "cher python" by the gold chain aud jeweled ringattacheu to it. MEDICAL SCIENCE. Emftics have no effect on horse", which have no gall bladders to lie acted upon. A cask of bleeding through the sound skin is the subject of a European medi cal report. Tiif. imperial cholera commission in Germany announces its discovery that wine I'iaret or hH-k will kill the bac illi of cholera in a few minutes. Tea will kill them in an hour. Ai.i. the motions anil sensations of the various parts of the biMly are repre sented in the surface of the brain as on a map. Thus there is a separate brain area necessary for sight, another for hearing, another for the motion of the fingers and so on. Nt'TMKiis have strong narcotic prop erties. A pint of tea made from two nutmegs if drunk by an invalid, w ill produce a sleep of many hours' dura tion. The symptoms will Ik alxnit the same as those occasioned by opium. Nutmegs in the quantity of two or three drachms will cause In ith stupor and delirium. PRETTY FANCIES. Dreshf.n china tea bells are very pretty. Jcoh are now especially designed for hot milk. Mikroks of Venetian mosaic come for dressing tables. Dkohai :n china pots are intended to hold condensed milk. I'onk dishes are now regarded as a ne cessity, and are in many charming de vices. Rosk jars of crystal and gold of Doul ton and royal Worcester are now indis pensable. EfK.KV sort of article for table use, excepting knives and forks, is found in CojH-nhagen ware. DntsiiF.x and Worcester candelabra are very jNipular for the aesthetic ban quets now in vogue. Toast racks of fancy' china are new for the breakfast table, and share Ihiii ularity with those of silver. Jeweler's Circular. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. Thf rice crop in the south this year is estimated to lie TiJS.lKKl.ooo pounds TllF. anthracite coal fields produce more than 4't.ooo.OOO tons of coal a year. Thf. output of American manufacto ries for the past j'ear was (7,-15, woo, ooo in value. Last year lnO.SO.l.Tf.H feet of lumber passed through the port of ISangor. Me.; 10."i.."i44.:577 feet was spruce, J4.4.rt:t,07S hemliK'k, and the rest pine. ToBAttu has lK'cn successfully raised on the banks of the Audroscoggiu river in Maine, and one man is preparing to cultivate it the coming year on a large scale. Thf. earliest machine used for making screws was invented by David Wilkin son of Rhode Island, for w hich he ob tained a patent in 17V4. There wen in 70 in the I'tiited States eighteen es tablishment engaged iu manufacturing screws. A COUNTRY'S HEROES. Serot. Ckockktt. of the United State" colored infantry, claims to have been the last man wounded by a confederate bullet in the civil war. Thf. famous five-hundred -dollar sword which was presented to Gen. R. M.. I'reutiss, "the hero of Shiloh," w as re cently purchased from a New York pawn-shop for fifty-five dollars. Catt. John Ahav Cihu-kk is the youngest veteran of the Mexican war, having enlisted at the age of twelve. He is also the pioneer horse-car driver of San Francisco, having been iu the business twenty-nine years. A. V. 1a KfcF.it, a street-car conductor in Oakland, Cal., w ho ttMik part in the march with WolscUy across thed.-s. rt to Khartoum, to relieve Stanley, is Un fortunate possessor of two medals for bravery on the battlefield, one given by the queen, the other by the khedive of Epypt- FOREIGN NEWS NOTES. A jcew scheme for the extermination of rabbits is being tried iu Australia. Cartridgws generating poisonous gas are put in the burrow s, the holes are closed, and the rabbits an killed by the poison in the smoke, n.tt by suffocatiou. Tobacco and snuff have loug lui'n sup plied to thu paurtcrs in the Lamln tli workhouse, aud now thu lmur.1 of guardians has passed a resolution: "That the old women in the workhouse who do not take snuff be supplied with SWlH'ts." Rt ssiAN female convicts in Silteria are in future, if a pmposal made by the ministry of justice to the imperial couucil. is ratified, to tic exempted from flogging and wearing leg irons. Re strictions in diet ami solitary confine munt are to lt sultstituted. Amf.ricax Ufa Hand Eagle Elk, two Sioux Indians, who were taken to Syd ney. N. S. V.. as part of a sort of ild West show, are in the hands of the t lio at that place. They broke their contract, then went broke themselves, aud soon joined the profession of tran us .. if J T r