1L Csnil3ii:i AdvertiKinfjllntcH. The larire and rellanle r ii-eolatlon cl IlieOaf bkia I-'BKBitAM eomiuenai It to the lavi.ral' runalderatliin of mfi vert I firm alio., furor will ha Dneru-il at the lullowiriK low rlcf : 1 Inch, 3 'lroi..., 1 f0 1 Inch, 3 muntha v.oo 1 Inru.e nomhn 2.60 1 Ich I year fc ( 'i. Ini'hef . 8 month..... fl.uu I lucheii, I year in.i-o a Inrhea. A inxntba IS.OU t Inrlion. I year a.uu cxinuin. inonttia ... loud oiluiun. montha...... ju , ciliitun I year M.VU0 ; ruluuiu, ujontha 4U.UU 1 column. I year.. Tfe.OO Kuvlneat itema, ftrat 1 t,-ertlon, (k. per l!ie iulaeiuent lnfert lona, V per I'se AiiuiiDiftrati:r tui! Kxecutor'a Notlrea . i Hi Auilitiir's NntiiTH ............ V stray and aluiilar otieei 10 ar-lieo!ut iona or iir.joentinvi" ot any for pi ra tlon or auciety and poniuuini-atlotia ilrHKiilto ca I attrition to any n.aft-r of liuilted or tndi vi lual Inleti nt niuM I r jili) tr ar advert tpuiem a. HiMk ami J0I1 f rititina of an kinda tiewtiy aiid e3jK.uiy executed at tlie lowent rioea. A ad doa'tyoo turret it. I I'iiIiMMixiI W really at j IIF.Sll IHJ, A Midi I ."., PKXS., MY J 4 Mils Ii. n .so, Uoar;uittt-. l'liculati'-n, ... - 1,200 ii ig m -dip is-fc Nnliorrlplliin K.iir. Ilr.e co y. 1 yca-,jieli in iLiviim-o $1 Fi ll.l l il tl.lL .a.ij a l! limit mt.lUllH. 1. 7", lo d I f n.t pi:ii w 1 1 It i u t; mi.ut hp. . ikj ilo il il-.. 1 pm.l v illi ui tiiecr.. v: ii l'i Uer-ous resi.lii.K .muiile 01 tho cor.nn i. 4-nln .tiiUionl i er jrar IU tie 1 harxe.l to pay K!t in. "ln no event will the at.ove feruia tie le . arioil ir..ui. ami tlr.su who Jon 1 dondnli tnulr f.n ;nterefi ly o.iylnri Iti ..J. aiioe ihum not es pevt to t-e. i:a.-.-i.l on Una -loue. imlin- i-j cliche a Qo j ,. tail iii is fa-. ie illMHHKy iimler.'il xl fr.-u; JAS. C. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. "HE 19 A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRCTH MAKES FREE ASD ALL ABE SLAVES BEflDE." 81. SO and postage per year In advance. mrt'my rr yimr i.er h.-fi.rr 5. uu btnii it. If sii.j j tivi'UtiiUtu Nooe Nut si-atii w.tu ill. -i nerwi-i.- 1 VOLUME XXVIL UnENSBUKG. PA., FRIDAY. OCTOBER G. IS93. NUMRER 3). .n i.- a 34-aiaa-i.- lire t.M. nTur. j (Ok fev tty 5stirrvNt"5( Vsiit'-!-' Hi it m I vt. MM mmm mm iilei ' y- y ' v w vy CARL RIINIXJS, riiACTICAL WATCHMillCEE & JEWELER, AN I) I) K A LEU IN jTS ' Mi ' Ail V -I1 in CM ciii, uuu uu imvc seen te Kur-.n.irs and you ' Vi m Kaufman n'S 1 S . ; i v t! J ' 1 r -; : b u Pj - i -i 1 embracing over five acres of floor space and w (U employing over one thousand hands more w 1 than the three next largest stores in Pittsburg '.k nut lofcr her. r c- - Kaufmann'S M mentin Pittsburg where m you may want--whether to clothe a person or furnish a home--in the greatest possible variety and at the lowest possible prices. ill KALLMANN'S: 7 Pifth Avp QmiHiflol,! CZ4- fit m j m .iau - nil kllllVIVI I. IriV-5irnples sent free. Mail "Seeing is Believing." A w rds mean much, but to w.il impress the truth more forcibly. All metal, vvVf tough ar.fl seamless, and made in thre- pieces oriy,!$$5F&&& it is apsjiU'ii'v Ji7r and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's of old, it is indeed a "wonderful lamp," for its mar velous light is purer and brighter than cas li:zht. softer than electric li-ht and r.mU f. rthistan-.r Tux Rociifstf. Ifthe In mt dealer ha n't the rrnnine f .- '!r " bivib yti'i waui. .ati'l v ii snd yi.u a 1 .mo varicl 3 In :u the f ut eU lame 3U.I HKVIlill Lin? - ar ifuux IClmrnLVt.r . . wholesale prices. XJ If I ! ) J '1 'Prn W r.-cn, S;.. '. S H). inranteBf ) V i-M -" ' "il 'U .oiM. Top iiarfir at ' J. Pn 1 iV.yy.n "lilk Wa,'i:ui,i:i'litrirU'r.jta:iauKlKiiu'iCurU. . . i f . n Wajio S'. H-JtJi '..' .;T; ".2i -A '. !ldlE S It'-.. :TilCv . iJiiaaii' f't r.r v..b w.ili e - .1 . J IfAl.H lft. J ( v , 1 VX A v -I 7 1 "-4 .-tr A-TV a 3 l a a a.."i. Mountain House SUB WIM PABLOB! LiUTiIi 01 DLL I , LDLitCbUuLl. 'I'lll well km.wn and ! nat eatnhHatie.l Shavinu 1 rurlori" flow Ixl'.ite.l i 4VTltr !ri;et, i-. l .i,e ; he liv ery el iLle i I I'll ra. I' I" X l.ui Ii it. Iifre I lie l.iin.i.ja will i e CHrrle.l on in I lie iiii..n- SII WIM:, IIA1K I CITINil AiM ll l.MCuulMi .! ' Iri riua'et and iiiu.t urti .i ir inn. ii. r. I'l., lupa a upei-l tny. K. li. ..en w.iite.l mi Mt their rennlen-' . JA.MKS H.IUNT. Proprietor m i .e. or!- I -.ukn .. ,-ii ltt I " ' ' ( nl ;isti":i:-ti, im: i y .un. m i i( u! ui - t, , p, ... ,f ,ft f tm M 1 1 i i,,r, . h.v.- -v ,,, ,. v nf''4 J' ) i'm ! r ),) f (tin nnl wtlitaiy .t. y.pt UiKt v' UTii '' '.''. l.H't for i.:!ml mitMltMf rtitf ivi'4-irritlMr. W, B. CONUYCO. Publisher. Chicago. II U Watches, Clocks -J K W iV,- AM Optical Goods. Sole Agent -Kl'U Tllr Oelebratod Rockford Jitlum!i!;i Frpdr.nin Watrhrs. In Key anil N!en. VViinfr. A!t;K SKI.KCl'ION ok AM. KIND lit .ItiWKl.K. :tinyeun liatid. i-t Mv !in of .f,' wnlry is tiPKnriasfii '. nif sn.l for vonrplt tu tors purrhai m cl- ulipro. ir i,t, woiik firmNTKdi CARL RIVIN1US. K -rifihura, Nov. II, ls.-o--tf. 1 iji itc t have seen Pittsburg! is a whole citv in itself, is the only establish- vou can iret anvthinr Pittsburg. Orders Promptly filled. see " The Rochester " tq; more cheerful than either. seua to us tor our new iiniMratcit catalmiir. snfrlv bv citircss vour clioica: ut over Store in. the Hon'. CO.) 42 Viurli Place, New York. City. 1 1 1 1 The Rochester.1 - W UV --1JTT Pl. ke7 I aam , tine I r;n ci U.uib'c Huc.y. MIS; itil..m .i.l l-lr rl inlr. K4niiluM- I'ollciei written at vnurt notic to the OLD RELIABLE 1 ETNA19 .! other Firal t'latnia 'mn T(. W. DICK, Atif-ST fOK THE I KoniiMinf.Joiy t. 18i. CIHll'tU, M . I IHVMI'IO AHrNl'Fltt!, KI1K. Hli Ki . - f'A. . I Iflli-e in II lah aireei ti ridu lormerly o euuiad ly tfao VVawUiru t'uluu iToleKrapti 'n- s7 ; 'IMV i V 1 X Vl ' v' i z v 1 o s A 1W)Y'S J10U.M. His Experienco at Taklnur Caro of It Il-maalC "Whore is my vest? Oh. here 'tis i where I shietl it last nijrht." . Frvd pu-keJ up his vest from lxhinil the leil, ami then lkel arouiitl for his collar. I wonder, now, if that collar's leen carried olf to the wash! .Just like Susan! If ever I pel hold of one that fits me h tter than any other, aud would like to hold on to it for a little while, otT it pes. h, lu-re 'tis. I for f.it I was standing by the window when I took it olT, and left it on the sill. Uut it's all limp. IV-ar me, what a drawer! I wonder who interferes with my things? I'm sure I never got it into hitch a muddle as this." St irritifr amonir collars and neckties, turninpr th'mtrs up ami down in a way that would lead anyone reasonably to jjive him credit for any amount of dis order, Frvd at length found a collar. "Now, my necktie. Where di.l I put the one I wore in the morning, when I drcsseil in the afternoon? Of course, some one was in here straightening up u:y room. I never know where to find anything after that. Come in." Fred turned a face full of abused ex pression toward the door as, his moth er's untrance followed her tap upon it. "t.ood morning. Are you ready for breakfast, dear? Here is one of your neckties." "Yes, the very one I was looking for. Who took it away?" "Susan carried uwav for the wash the clothes you took otT when you dressed, and this was among them. You must have thrown it down." "Yes, I knew somebxly must have In-cn lu-re." "? ly dear tu" mother looked around with a discouraged face, "how often r:ir.;-t 1 speak to you alout keeping your tilings in lictter order? You really -t worse and worse. I come in here and set the room to rights, and by the next day it will be as untidy as lie fore." ' mother, tidy may do very well for girls or women. It's a real girls word, I think." 'leod for either loys or girls. I am sorry to see such an ugly habit growing with you." "Really, mother," said Fred, with a return of the injured look, "one wo'.ii.l think from your talk that you thought it a real sin that yon look upon it as jou mii-'l.t look upon tying or stealing and such." "No. Rut in evil habit is evil, make the lest you can of it. Its indulgence is sure to have an evil effect upon the ei.arai-ter. A person sloucliy ami slov en'.v in liis small habits is pretty lilccly to be so in the greater thing in his life. I wonder y u don't find enough ineon vriii. nee from your carelessness to lead you to wish to improve." "My carelessness, mother? Wh-, if my tilings could im'y be left alone. I'd Uret a:oug well enough. When I come in t the room. I never know where to mid anything, because so e one has been setting things in order. Of course I don't mean, mother near, that all you do is not the very lest that could le done; but a loy, you know," Fred put on a dignified air, "can't le expected to be just like a girl, and ought, I think, to lie allowed to follow out his own way a little in his own room." "How do you think it would work if you were left to your own way?" said his mother with a smile. "Entirely? Why, mother, I think it would le line." I have a great mind to let you try it," she said. "Do, mother!" said Fred, eagerly. "I t ever could see the use with all re spect for you, you understand of this everlasting sweeping and dusting. I ll a 'ree to take entire charge of the room ii I may le left to myself." "Well," said mother, still with the smile, "1 think Susan would tietter make your lied." "No." interposed Fred- "Sometimes I have things -lying there that I don't want touched." "Then she need only attend to the withstand. You may bring me any thing which needs mending, for I'm afraid that it might make the keeping of our agreement difficult for me if I made visits to the room." "I will. I want to do the sweeping myself that is. if it needs any sweei itig for Suisan always plays the mis chief with my spet imens." "You may try it" And mother went down to breakfast, still Mnilinvr. For a few Jays Fred rejoiced in his new-found freedom, as he called it freedom to fling his things this way ami that, in full assnranee that he would have the delight of finding them exact ly when- he had Hung them. "Hut I must say it gets a little mo notonous." he admitted to himself, with a little shake of his head, "to find all tny coats and vests ami trou--rs piled together on the same chair, and to hunt among dirty collars for clean ones. Who could have dreamed that mother settled up for me so often? Hut it is a privilege to have a chance to keep my specimens jus.t as I want to keep thern." lint even a privilege may be over done, Fred was obliged to acknowledge one morning not long after. lie had brought a friend in to see hii geologic al :-pecimens and his collection of but ter llics. As usual, he had set things out of his hands just where it was most con venient to set them. Arriving at home rather late in the evening, he had come in hastily and gone to lcd in the dark, having forgotten to bring up any matches. "Well." he exclaimed, sitting up in bed to take rather a disconsolate view of his surroundings, "if I chose Ut con fess it, I wouldn't mind having mother and Susan text to skirmish about here for awhile. How did I come to set those trays and boxes on the foot of the bed! I've had the meanest kind of a night, those stones going rattle-to-bang on the Uoor every time I turned over! And oh, my! Look at my but terilies!" In real regret he gathered tip the crushed remains ot the pretty winged creatures he had taken such pains and such pleasure in mounting. While doing so his attention was for the first time drawn to the condition of the carpet. "W ell, it really is dirty. A nd no one can say I ever liked dirt. Why, it looks as though some one had been throwing a lot of wool ami feathers under my beL I'll give it a sweep to-day. I undertook to do my own sweeping. I suppose folks think boys can't sweep." Fred put all his strength into the wielding of the broom. It had been a rainy week, and Susan's careful hands had not supplemented her morning care of the room by gathering with brush and dust-pan of the mud which his careless feet brought in. It was now dried and ground into the carpet, to lie raised in clouds of dust by his vigorous sweeping, o "Phew!" (ilad enough was he, hav ing at length finished, to get into the open air, burdened with a few doubts as to whether, after all, he so very much enjoyed the new order of things. "I don't really believe boys were made to be housemaids," he concluded. "Rut it's only an experiment- There won't be any trouble in getting back to mother's dear, careful ways." con scious of an unexpressed yet decidedly increasing respect for his mother's ways. Late in the day Fred rushed back to his room to make ready tor an evening to 1h spent in company which he held iu high esteem. Fred's slovenliness did not. as a general thing, extend to the care of his tH-rson, his mother having often bail occasion to wonder at the neat appearance with which he con trived to emerge from the chaos of his n m. "Thunder!" Fred stood for a mo ment at his room door, finding the situa tion worthy of his strongest expletive. The dust from whih he had tied lay thickly upon everything, adding dis mally to the prevailing disorder. "I forgot all a'oout the things mother spreads over things when she sweeps. How I hate dust on books! Well," seiz ing a towel and hastily whisking it alioiit, "1 haven't time to do much dust ing now. Jack iiarper will call for mo in a quarter of an hour. "lint tons oil? I forgot to take my liest suit to mother. And there's a lit tle rip near the coat cuff, but I can ink that." - Sv-tting the ink on the bureau, he carefully darkened the white streak, bat as he turned from a study of the ef fect, his brow took on a deeper cloud. "My white tie in the blacking lxx!" He snatched it up. "The last one I have left! And all these," tumbling over a nuiiilK-r which were mixed in v.iih other things thrown on the table, "are covered with dust. Perhaps this one will do; but there's a spot on it." Sei.ir.g a towel, he carefully rubbed the front of the lightest-colored tie he could find. Rut it was the towel which had already done duty as a duster, atid was streaked with the sooty dust which prevails in a house in which bitumin ous coai is used. As the tie soon looked rather worse than letU-r, Fred ttirew lxth towel and tie from him with an angry excla mation. They struck something on the bureau, which went with them to the li. Kir. "Oh. that ink! And all over those books 1 left there! What shall I Mother! mother!"' Mother, quickly appearing in answer to his lou.l cry of distress, could not for bear a smile at the mixture of expres sions on Fred's face. Despair, mortifi cation and a eomu-al sense of the ludi crous seemed striving for the mastery. "O mother," he said, after she had done her best to arrest any further mis chief from the ink, "will you take me back?"' "Take you back?" she asked, not quite understanding what he meant. "Yes, me and my room. I've given j ...... .i . up. I 11 ta.ie ail you nave to say- ou tlu- subject of lniys and tidiness if only you'll wind me up and then ki p me running. Rut first will you please go down and tell Jack Harper 1 can't i,'o to-night?" "U hy can't you, dear? I thought you were so anxious to go." "So I a; but look at me. Ruttons off. Rips. I can't find a clean collar in that muddle, and my white tie's spoiled." "I'll ask Jack to wait for you a few minutes. 1 think we can manage things yet." Most boys who have mothers can imagine the quickness with which her hands dew from one thing to another in making that particular ly look as a Imy should look. From hidden depths of her own stores a tie was un earlhetL Ruttoas went on anil riis hid themselves from sight- At the end of a quarter of an hour Fred joined his friend-, a wiser and lappier boy. Some houis later he turned the light high for a satisfied gaze aiiout his room. "This is jolly! Everything clean, ev erything iu place. Well, it's rather mean in me if I can't cooperate with mother and Susan in keeping myself straight. I guess its lost for folks iu this world to help each other run each other, and not b- always making things han'cr for each other 1 mean me, for mother and Susan ami other folks for each other." With which very indefinitely ex pressed but very sincerely felt senti ment as to every day's small duty, Fred went to bed. Sydney Dayre, in Inte rior. Ann ii.-.t-.. ioiii :n..i-. In the Aiy.'iim'se language, spoken in Cochin China, the same word is given in::ny different meanings by the moderation of the voice. Thus the syllable "lia" pronounced with a grave accent, meins lady, an ancestor. Pro nounced with a sharp accent it means the favorite of the prince. Pronounced with a semigruvo accent it means w hat has le n thrown away. Pronounced witli the .'tave circunille.v it means what is left of fruit after the juice has lieen f-.quecA'd out. Pronounced with no accent it means three. lronounced with the ascending or interrogative accent it means a box on the ear. Thus "ba ba ba ba" is said to mean, if prop erly pronounced, "three ladies gave a 1hx on the ear to the favorite of the prince." Iuif l p In the street or Koine. In UnmoS'J milesof newstrectsyield-d the following "dupups:" Nine hundred and five amphora-, S.HC.U terra cotta lamps, l.S-.'l inscriptions on marble, T7 columns rare marble. 13 pieces of col umns, K7 marble capitals, lis bases, .V.KJ works of art in terra cotta. 10 works of art in bronze. 711 intaglios and cameos. IS marble sarcophagi. 1SJ has reliefs, l!l-J marble stat m-s. mar ble figures of animals. busts and heads. M pictures in polychrome-mosaic, 47 objects of gold, :! objects of silver, St'..!"'.! coins. Even this astonishing list does not cover everything, but embrai-es J only those objects" which were Worthy ' of a place in the museum. i I SCIENTIFIC MISCELLANY. Twkti.ve TiiorsANp mierolies, strung in a line, would make a procession only one inch in length. Tunr.K miles per hour is alut the average speed of the gulf stream; at certain places, however, this sped is increased to fifty-four miles an hour. (Ie.vkrm.i.v speaking, we say that the curvature of the earth amounts to alxmt 7 inches to the statute mile; it is exactly li.uy inches, or 7.i'.i inches for a geographical mile. Aoookpixo to a promise made to her dead husband, Mme. Schliemann is continuing the excavations at Troy, which made his name famous, an 1 jht sonally superintends much of the work. Prof. liARNAKp's recent photograph of the milky way shows the existence of 5h.(hhi.(kmi suns, each supposed to le the center of a system of pl:nets, where hitherto it was thought to con tain only alHut -'0.tKH,(HK) such su is. TllE celebrated "glole fish" is not always glo!e shaped. They have the power of distending themselves into a globular form by inflating a larire air sac in the alxlomen. When this is blown out they assume a normal shape. A i-orxp of rice contains Ki.in per cent, of nutritive matter. Lear lecf contains but Jil.s:: per cent. Fa.ln-cf contains -i"..o:; per cent.; potatn-s. -i:i.-J4 p-r cent.; Indian corn. s.'fT por cent.; ats, 74.0-J per cent.; rye, s-i.T'J per cent., and wheat, s-j.54 per cent. PERSONAL MENTION. Jonx L. Hkheick. of Salisbury. X. C, is ninetv years ld and weighs two hundred and thirty jmunds. Chaici.es Monoky, still livirg in Kings county, X. Y-, invcnte.l the monkey" w rench. He sold his patent for two thousand dollars. Lrui: Smith, of Acton. Mass., is per haps the only man living whose rather fought at Hunker Hill. Mr. Smit i was in tho reN llioti himself, and is eighty. Lr u s Lanopon Nicholas, wh has just married Mrs. Rishop, motl or of the late mind reader of that na no. is said to Ih. grout-great-grandson of a Russian emperor. DavipS. Patterson, of Xorthllatte. Xeb.. who is seventy-five years f age and has 'n-en totally blind all hi . life, has received letters patent on a t.eviee in tho driving gear of a locomotive. The executors of tlie estate t.f the late Mrs. Theresa Fair, of San Fran cisco, intend to erect to her memory in Holy Cross cemetery, San .Mateo coun ty, a mausoleum to cost not les.- than S.V1.W) I. The decorations will Ik- very elaborate. 1STORICAL DATES. The first linen made in Englan 1 was manufactured by Flemish ref-igees under the protection of Henry III., in pjri.i. The fir?.t coins were struck in brass alniiit 11 '.-4 R. C. and in gold an-1 silver bv Pheidon, tvrant of Argos. aljovit si;j II. C. Tm: first panorama was exhibited in Edinburgh by Roliert Rarker "ilnrnt lTss, ly which he portrayed a view of the ci:y. The first champagne was made by Pcrignon. a monk of St. Peter llant villiers, Champaglre, in tl? seventeenth 'entury. Tin- llrst onovelotv.edia was "Plinv's Natural History," which contains :;!).- j O'.Ki facts compiled from 2,000 latoks by Iimi authors. Movaiii.e scenery was first u-.ed in theaters in l.V)S. It was invented by Ral.lassare Peruzzi, and displayed in Rome before Ia-o X. TYPES OF AMERICAN WOVIEN. Lizzie RoIipex has !een invit.nl by the t.lobe-I icmocrat to lecture. "Cavenpish" says that American women are K-tter whist players than are their English sisters. Mr:. Vanki.kkei:. of I.eeds. Can., re joices in four children recently lirn at one birth, two loys and two girls. Maktha Joijoax. of Dallas, Tex., is said to le the first colored woman in the I'nitcd States to study the pi fession of dentistry. Miss Piioi iiE J. V.'oopxiAX, a niece of the ioet W l.ittier. and tho original of his "Red Riding Hood." is cngarred to Ik- married to Mr. C'aliga. a Roston artist. Miss riMii.Y LorisE Cekrt, living at New Ilawn. Conn., is a daugh:er of El bridge lorry, a signer of the I --clar-atioii of Independence. Miss ! rry, it is claimed, is the last living child of a signer of that famous document. JUDGE AND JURY. Refotie lsr.rt there was no trial by jury in Russia. A "i.eoai. fence" has been defined in Kentucky as one that "s "pig tight, horse high aiul bull strong." Tin: use of torture in legal proceed ings was permissible in Austria until well within the present century. Ai;tiii rJ. Massev wants the courts of New York to award him 52.WW dam ages from Moses King, who pulled his whiskers out. A sfiT in the English chancery court begun l.V! years ago was concluded the other day. The government duties and legal fc-s covered nearly the entire sum fought for. ;(KMl-Nat ur-l IncliTirenre. A certain g.od-natured fatalis n pre vails in Russia as to the one csime.f theft At Sara toff on the Vi iga a crowded steamer was aiiout t start, when the assistant captain, hurrying through a crowd of third -class pas sengers, was suddemy stopped by a peasant, who had previously com plained that his money had been stolen. "Yiutr honor," he said, "the money has been found." "Found! Where?" "Sewed up" in that soldier's l lantle. I went over there to search for it. and sure enough, there were fovty-tme roubles and a twenty-kopeck piece in my chamois purse." "Where is that soldier?" "There he is, asleep." "Well, he must le handed over to the police." "Handed over to the police? Why to tho police? IMn't touch him, let him sleep on. Sure, the money is found; w hat more do we want?" Ami as tho captain proved equally in different, the matter was dropped- Youth's Companion. GOOD FORM TO EE SOLEMN. So the I JiKlli-hman la Only 'Appy Away from "t)nie. What an utterly different lieing an Englishman is when lounging on the terrace of a hotel at ("adenabbia or on the deck of a yacht on the ti-.leless sea, from the same individual on the terrace of the house or sauntering in tho park on a fine morning! He not only looks unlike himself, but is ever so much let ter looking, says litidon Truth. His garments are more picturesque, but it is not only that His features relax into an expression of unconscious sat isfaction with things in general which almost approaches to amiability. Of course, a true gentleman would naturally regard hiinscl f with contempt if he ever permitted himself to look really amiable or pleased. Except in a tete-a-tete with a pretty woman or while enjoying a goo 1 game of romps with children, such a thing would be thoroughly bad form. It is one of Arry's social mistakes that he grins when he is pleased and wears a chronic unile if he happ.;:i to be a good-tempered man. The men of our cl:i s ari l upward refrain from any such insane exhibition, especially when at homo, dans lour ilo. It lias often amused us to w:it -h an English 1mv while at the adolescent period of life mastering thi tumu plishmcn:. He jH-reeives that hi:. th:i!o elders have cnltiva'ed v. i.at at ly'e called a cheerful stoici: in. 'i hey INtoi: to tho funniest story w ithout a Miiile. unlo.-s the narrator is a rsoti whom they rejoice to honor or 1 ike to pleas-. They make their greetings i'. hout re laxing an iota of the gravity which sorves thi-m a-, a mak. Tho liy, in nutating them. sulTers many an in ward spasm in endeavoring to render his emotions outwardly i:ivi i.!.. He catches hiiu: lf i Uiilinj at something In licrons, hut immediately conquers himself as ho sees that hi, ei ! -r . are grave of dom.-a.ior. If hj sii o.i1 1 so far forget himseif as to exhibit liny pleasure or animation in cirevsinstaiices where it would bo onlynatui.il to do so. but in which the seniors icl an ex ample of undemonstrative cahn. he whips himself inwardly with a lash of sol f -scorn. During his transition period he de spises women and girls, because they laugh when they are amused and some times cry when they are distressed. He would rather hurt the feelings of his mother or sisters than m:;'..- the slightest (li.-playof gratitude or kin.lii jiess. In fact, he is di..ngreeal)e. and a very uncomfortable individual for the time being. Often when he frowns it is only that ho has no other way of pre venting himself from smiling. SOME WONDERFUL INKS. furious lartfi Com-, rx.iiif; TIis.m- Known an 1 fu-l Ijy i'reiiihmoi. Ralelais complied a ci:r;,-us list of inks of a sympathetic nature, which were largely in vogue in Lis days. !n his b.x.k. entitled "Pautagrucl." he makes his readers acquainted with Panurgue's exploits in try ing to !e eipher the invisible oli-.icters of a letter in which a l'urisian temale had written to Pantagruel. "lie held it up before the lire." says Ral-ciuis, "to f-ee if it was written with spirits of am monia mixed with Water. Then he placed it in water to see if the writing had not Ih-o.i done with sirup of tithv mal. Wh;-". tVs would not work he held- it over a cr.ndle. which would have br ug it th ehar.u-ter.-. outh.id they be';:i v.ritte i with the juice of white o: lev.. Rv rubbing o. part of it with nut he tried to ii:.d whether it had not bee.i k. iitten with the :u of a l:g tree. And if fr.)g"s b!,H.l had been used in the place of ink the r.iilic li-om the biva.-.t of woman suckling her tirst-born daughter would have be trayed tho soerotsof that letter." While in Rabelais' time during the seventeenth century French lx-op'e ad hered strongly to the ln-liof that sympa thetic inks of this character cnii! 1 be and were u.-e.l. they are now- -iu high feather over tho discovery of a 1 .iminous ink by one of their own countrymen. This ink mulres it possible for letters to he read in the dark. One ni the Fn-rich jonr'u ls roei ntly gave the recipe for this ink. A phosphorescent ci.mpouwl cu:i be obtained by; calcinating carbon ate of cha ': v.-ith :-ulphur. Messrs. Peligot and Hecquorel. ln-th of whom gave thi ; matter a ; reat deal of i tudy, ;.ay now that lle yellow glow can be obtained by adding to the above mixture from one to two per cent, of peroxide of manganese. To make the writing appear in a green light it is i-eces-sary to mix with the a I mvc a little enrlmnate of soda, and for the blue from one to two per cent. :f a bismuth comjxiund may le used. Ry porphyri.ing those phosphores cent substances and adding to them a small quantity of linseed oil, the mix ture i-aj lie used for ty pographic im pressions from which plates can le prinftil. which, exposed to the 'ight in the daytime, apjHar luminous at night FIGURES OF INTEREST. The population of liermany averages 2:i7 to the square mile; in the United I Slates the average is only Is. Nearly 45 per cent, of the 9.240.5 J7 foreign-lKirn residents in the Fnited States are living in the 124 cities of largest population. The total numln r of Chinese in the Fnited States in lsso was lor. 4 ... The total numlier in lSiM was only 107.475. a gain in ten years of but 2,010. Since the centennial year, ls7C.. the number of newspapers in Xew York state has nearly doubled. There were Loss published then and there are 2,181 now. The largest block of coal ever mined was recently brought from the Ixnvcls of the earth at Roslyn. Wash. Its size is twenty-four feet in length, five feet eight inches in width, and four feet eight inches in height. It weighs over 41,000 pounds. MtMtic-it Art and ti.e star. During the middle ages, when as trology was in fashion, a character very much like our R was the sign of Jupiter, the preserver of health. The physicians, then ln-ing equally devoted to the science of medicine and of as trology, invnriably began their pro scriptions Wiii the following words: "In the name of Jupiter take the fol- ' lowing doses in the order set down i hereinafter." In the eotm- of time this form ti In was abbreviated, until at present only the letter R remains to i teach in that medical art was once as- j sociatod with the science of the stars, j illS WIFE'S ALARM. It Was Causod by tho Lies of a Rascally Janitor- "I tell you, leiys," I said, "if I was not a married man, I should go to the races on Monday and put all I'm worth on Razzle Dazzie." "Why don't you?" asked Tom Mur- "Why?" said I. "Oh, I'm a married man, and my wife has a horror of the races. I've promised her to keep away from them. A promise is a promise." "And good enough you've made it, sir," said our old porter. Honest Jim we called him. "Many a man has gone down to ruin and degradation on ac count of them races. The lady is wis. She is wise. I'm telling you what I mane. Obey the lady, and you'll never see yourself in difficulties." Honest Jim was fond of giving ad vice, and he broke up our chat with these words. Murphy and Wiggins went away to get a glassof ln-cr Ik-fore they parted, and I taik the train home. A brooding storm broke just as I reached my cottage, and triad enough was I to escape it. We had supper t--gelher and went into the parlor as usual. What a night it was, to be sure! A wild night, a bitter night, a night when there seemed to Ik strange voices in tiie wind, and those within the house were likely to fancy knoeKs upon their doors and unbar and unbolt them and cry: "Who is there'.''' when it was only the blast that had causd them to rat tle. Yet it was on this night that my wife, my little, delicate, beautiful wife Fh--.bt arose from the fireside and tell ing me that she would return shortly, left the room. To leave the rtoin was nothing, but when I heard her leave the house I could scarcely Im-Hcvc my senses. She, who was so timid she who Why, no, it could not Ik. 1 went about the house calling her. I grew alarmed, and, fearing to find her lying in a swoon some .v here, carried the lamp low and looked in the garret the cellar, the lit tle kitchen where cooking was done in summer everywhere, in fact. Sh w as gone, and so was the cloak, that usually hung in a certain place, and a hood she wore about the grounds on cold 1 a vs. What could have taken her out? Had ohe heard our jamy fidgeting iir his stall or the peep of some stray chicken? Was she anxious al-out the day-old calf? We had ail these luriil belongings iu the small boundary of our little summer-home. if so, why did she not mention it to me? It was. no doubt, that Cold of mine, whi'-h I had made too much fuss alxuit She went herself rather than to expose me. I tossed on my water proof coat, pulled an old hat over my ours and went out up m the porch. The lantern was gone. " F'.eda!"' I cried, lifting my voice, "I'leda, I say! Where are you, Fleda?"' I heard no Stiund, hut shortly, far along the road. I spied a yellow blur wa--'r.g near the ground, and know, when I had watched it f. r some time. that it was a lantern carried by some one to light her steps along tho irregu lar foot-path. I say "her." Itecause shortly I could see the drapery of a woman's dross. It was my wife, re turning home. I was certain of that now, and 1 called to her at once: "Fleda, why on earth are you strag gling alo:it in the storm? W hy didn't you send me to do what you wanted done? The wind is strong enough to carry you over the hills. I've been w ild about you." "I did not know the wind wns so strong." And I asked no more questions. My anxiety for Fleda sw allowed up every other thought However, she was per fectly well next day, though curiously depressed aud abstracted. I have not yet introduced myself. I am Henry Carrington. My business was that of cashier with the Dayton Rrothers. My wife and 1 lived simply in a liny out-of-town cottage in sum mer; in a tinier 11 at in winter. I had never liven extravagant, and my only great folly had la-en to risk a certain sum of money, left me as a legacy, at the rae.-s. I backed the favorite aud lust every dollar. Fleda was very much distressed when I told her the news. Xot at the loss of the money, Henry," she said, "but that you should risk it at the races. My uncle once em ployed a young man who became dis honest and was finally arrested because of going to the races and betting aud all that. Pray, pray. In careful." The week passed quietly. Pay night eame again. It often happens that the stime night is stormy for several suc ceeding weeks. This night, however, was not as bad as the one on which my story opens. However, it was much more comfortable indoors than out. Aud yet, just as I was in the middle of a paragraph I was reading to her from the evening paper, I looked up and saw that Fleda hal vanished. Again I searched the house. .Again I found that she h-d left it Again the yellow light of the lantern told me of her re turn. She was not out of breath this time, but she was pale and trembled a little. She shook her head when I asked her where she had been, and said: "Nowhere. The house felt close. I wanted a little air. That is all'' "You didtiot fiud what I was reading interesting?" said I. "I assure you " she began, then broke off suddenly. "Don't talk alout it!" she cried. "Don't! Don't! I pray, don't talk about it!" I did not talk, but I thought a good deal, and I had reason to think. Day by day I noticed that Fleda was gradu ally grow ing thinner and paler. Her spirits were deserting her. And when the same day of the week came around, she left the house as mysteriously as before. The presence of a guest pre vented me from following her; but 1 discovered that, in order to keep the knowledge of her absence from the house from me, she entered the store room, climbed out of the window at the risk of her neck and returned in the same manner. Moreover, I discovered on the sill a few scattered coin- tn ceut piece and two pennies which told me that she had dropped a portion of some money that she had taken with her. All this made me very unhappy. I detested mysteries, and it was evi dent that one of the sort whioh I had always thought unnatural when intro duced into the pages of novels had arisen in usy quiet little home. I remembered that I had met my wife by chance; that our introduction was brought about by a chance acquaint ance, who really knew nothing of either of us; that she was alone in Use world, without any living relative, it claimed to be so; teacher of music, with few pupils, making a hard struggle for life. Very possibly a disreputable father or brother had turned up. to whom she was obliged to give assist ance, and whom she did not w ish me to know. It was a pity, but I would have no more of this. I would get at tlie truth and help her if I could. Then a terrible thought occurred to me. Wh:.t if it should prove that she had nu-.rried early in life; that a worthless husband had returned, and that she was trying to get ej.l of him? In that case what a goose I would lie to meddle and force upon myself a terrible knowledge whi h I might avoid. It was cowardly, perhaps, but I loved Fleda f-o dearly that I had rather be deceived in such a way 1 never doubt ed her utter truth for one moment than to be undeceived to my misery. And, hoping against hope, I permitted two more weeks to pass by without do ing anything whatever. Then came an hour w hen graver doubts possessed me. My wife hail si Id the diuuiond ear rings which my sister had given her upon her wedding day. 1 came by this knowledge while examining her desk for letters, and I ln-lieved tiiat she in tended to give the money thus raised to the mysterious person who had the power to call her from her fireside w hen he pleased. The night cn which I followed her was as beautiful as night could 1m. Tho air was warm and full of the breath of flowers. My wife wore a white dress and a pretty hat with daisies around the brim. She had told me a deliberate falsehood, asking me to stay at home to receive a friend who might call while she went to the dressmaker's house. A w ild li-po that she had only been to this dressmaker before, anil that the jewels were sold to pay some extrava gant bill, filled my he-rt, but it van ished as I followed her, and saw her leave the road after going a few paces, and take a by-path which ran baclc into our own orchard. It was a small place full of old apple trees. The moon light failed to fiil it, but I saw amidst the shadows of the foliage the darker shadow of a man's figure. "Ye've kept me waiting," he whis pered. "I could not help it," my wife re plied. The man gave a low growl. "Ye've got the money?" he said. "For your own iutherest you've got the money, the fire hundred do!l - " W here had 1 heprd that voice lwf.-ro? "Xo,"ir.y wife faltered, "n t so much; the jeweler would only give me tiir. o hundred, but I nave that" "Ye must raise the other two." growled the m;tn. "Oh, you'll do it it won't lie a groat dale to pay to save them we know of from twenty years in jail. Prodhuce it and tell me w hin, or, afther ali, I'll tell the truth; it's my duty anyway." "Oh. good Heaven! I've given you nil I have'." cried my poor wife. "I can get no mori.' She seemed almost to faint What ever this mystery might be, it w as my duty to defend her. I strode out of the shadow, and, with out warning, stood before thern. "Fleda." I cried, "what does this mean? Whom are you talking to? I miu-t know! I w ill know! Do you fancy I have been blind to your meetings w ith this scoundrel?" "Oh, don't speak so, dearest"' she cried. "Don't anger him. Oo away. You don't know your danger." " 'Danger" " I tried, clutching the collar of the man. w ho strove to rush past me. "Come; let me see whom I have here." I dragged him into the light, and saw our porter. Honest Jim, and no otln. r. "Jim, by all that is comical!" I said. "And w hat is he to you, wife?' "Oh. don't! Don't!" cried Fleda. "He knows all! He knows alii" "Fleda," said I, "whatever he may know about you, have no fear. You are my wife, I love you. Nothing can alter that" "Oh, it isn't I, Henry! It is you! He knows all about Razzle Dazzle, and what you did to get the money to let on him. It was such a temptation, I know, my poor husband! And he swore he would not betray you if I gave him five hundred dollars. Rut I have not loen aide to raise it. I will, though. Span my husband, and I will! Yes! Oh, 1 will earn it, somehow!" cried Fleda wildly. "What confounded blackmailing trick is this?" said I, shaking Honest Jin. furiously. "Pl'ase. let me go!" groaned Jim. "You put it into my head with your talk of your missus fearing you'd go w rong. 1 was up liefore you the night of the storrum, aud she met me, ami wus ai-y tuck in. An' I tried it ag in You an' the divil put it into my head. Here's the money back. Don't choke me! Here is the money back." "What did he tell you, you sillv child?" 1 asked Fleda. "That you had robbed your employ ers to get money to stake on Razzle Dazzle," said she, "My only thought has lx-en how to save you. " "Go!" I said to Honest Jim. "Show your face in the ollice again if you dare!" J I dismissed him with a kick and took Fleda in my arms. "So you'd be true to me if I were both fool and rascal?" said I. "Poor little goosy :" "And you'd love me if I had some dreadful story in my life?" said Fleda. And we were very happy as wo walked home together, arm in arm. my wife and I. M. duly, iu N. Y. Ledger. Mourniiid Co'ora iu liu-M-'a. Rlack is the n'most uni vcr ul mourn ing color in Europe, but there are a few exceptions. I or instance, in Rus sia black is never used for covering coffins, the cloth U-ing of a pink shade when the deceased is a child or young person, a crimson color for women and brown for widows. Italians do not Use black cloth, white being used in the ca -e of a child and purple velvet in the case of a l""1ts Mr. Chimpanzee "That ostrich eats enough for two birds. What do you suppose makes it so greedy, Mrs. C.?" Mrs. Chimpanzee "I hoard the keojH-r say it swallowed a pair of strong eye glasses yesterday, and they magnify its appetite." Vogue. "ir