®he Cmtw - ■ - BELLEPONTE, PA. Tk* Lurgoit,OhMfMt and Bast Ppr ruiILISUEI) IH CX.NTKR COUNTT. (leorge Suniuor in St. Petersburg. Mr. Dallas wan sitting in bis office at the Legation in St. Petersburg on a cer tain morning, when a voung man, or rather a boy, presented himself, with tho arms of his jacket out at the elbows, and remarked that ho "would like to see tho Emperor." "You would like to see the Em peror {"inquiringly, rejoined Mr. Dallas, adding the further interrogation. "What do you want to see the Emperor for ?" "Oh 1 have a little business with him," replied the youth. "Well," said the Embassador, "you can't see the Emperor." "Why not; can t you introduce mo ?" earnestly inquired the boy. "No! I could not introduce you," said tho minister smilingly. "Aren't you the American minister ?" said the boy. "Yes; lum the American but I should not dare to introduce you, if I am." "ltut 1 am an American," replied tho boy, "and 1 have come all the way from Mount Vernon, tho tomb of Washing ton, on business with the Emperor, for whom I have a present, and 1 must see him j and 1 call on you as the Embassa dor of my country to introduce me to his Imperial majesty." " The most I can do, my lad, is to in troduce you to one of his ministers," said Mr. Dallas, "und if lie pleases, ho may introduce you to the Emperor." "Very well," said tho boy,that will bo one step gained jjust introduce mo to the minister of His Majesty, if you please." At this point of the dialogue the American minister took the boy to one of the Imperial Cabinet,remarking to the dignitary as he approached him, "Here's a boy who says lie has come all the way from Mount Vernon, in America, and that he has some message for the Em peror and demands an introduction ; can you gratify him ?" "1 cannot introduce him without first consulting His Majesty," replied the autocrat's minister. "If he is willing, 1 will introduce him." After a brief lapse of time the minis ter returned from an interview with tho Emperor, to whom he had related in substance what had been previously said of the boy. The curiosity of Nicbo las being excited as to the boy's errand, he was induced to command the minis terial functionary to "bring hirn along." "He says he will see you," said the minister, addressing himself to the Yankee lad. And immediately they set off for tho palace, where the follow ing interlocutory discourse took place between Nicholas and the ragged boy : "Well, my little fellow, I understand you wish to see me; what is your busi ness ?" "I came all the way from the tomb of Washington, at Mount Vernon, in America, and understanding that you had liked the character of Washington "I hare great veneration for the char acter and memory of that illustrious personage," interrupted the Kmperor. "Well," continued the youth, a* he thruat hia hand into hi* jacket pocket, "I brought this acorn from the tomb of Washington, thinking you might like to plant it in your grounds and raise an oak to his memory. Will you accept it?" "Certainly," replied the Kmperor, "and we will go out at once and plant it," No sooner said than done. They pro ceeded to the palace grounds ; and, having raised the soil with a spade, the Kmperor committed the acorn to the earth with his own hand. Thanking the youth for tho simple but agreeable present, the Kmperor inquired, "Is there anything more that you wish of me, my lad f" The boy replied : "I should like to see Moscow amazingly." "What do you want to seo Moscow for?" interrupted his Majesty. "Oh, I have had a long desire to see that city, and as you were pleased to in quire into my future wishes, and as 1 know you could gratify my desire, I thought I would honestly tell you." "Well, you shall see Moscow, said Nicholas, and at once a barouche with six horses was ordered, and the boy was toted off to the ancient capital by llis Majesty's imperial command. "The last I saw of the youth," said Mr. Dallas, "he passed my office in Bt. Petersburg in a coach with six horses, and, as he deigned to look at me, he joyfully waved a white handkerchief, of which he had become the possessor, and triumphantly cried out to me : 'Hurrah' I ain going to Moscow! 1 am going to Moscow !'" IMS > wm - Ancient Kelira. Discovery of a Prthiatorir. New Jmry Sau rian. Trrotnn fltotl' A couple of days ago a miner, while at work in shaft No. 2 of the Weehaw ken Tunnel, 165 feet below the/urface of the ground, found a young alligator, t-oty inehea long, in a crevice at the heading. The reptile waa hermetically sealed in the "pocket" where it was discovered ; and although it hss been dead for countless thousands of years, it is remarkably well preserved, and baa not undergone the slightest putrefac tion. There is a deep, swamp peat for mation over this shaft, and it ia proba ble that there were extensive everglade* here once, which were inhabited by the various saurian reptile'*. Popular opin ion to the contrary, tfew Jersey waa among the first places on the earth to be created, as the tracks of extinct ani mals, such aa the bronUisoouro, have been found in the red sat'dstone quar riee in various parts of the Ktate; and also Urge numbers of warlike weapons belonging to the Jerteymen who flour itbed in the old stone age. The axes, spear-heads and arrow points of these Ami families ol New Jersey—for tbey were here before the mound builders, and the latter before the Indians—were not made from the trap-rock, but from basalt, which composes our Palisades and the columns of theOiant'a Cause way in Ireland. How and when the baby aligator got "left" is a very inter esting matter to scientists, as it is sun posed that men, plants and animals were scattered to the southward of this continent about IK),000or 100,(XX) years ago. At all events it must have been at a very remote period when aligators were indigenous to Jersey. The re markable find is on exhibition in Ed. Huth's, in Union Hill. A Champion Snake Story. The (treat Snake Pen that Kriata Sear Warren, Pa. i'liilulfljthU Titnei. The outlines of Cobhatn's Hocks can bo seen miles away. In itself it is u lonesome place. A great, gloomy pile of ponderous rocks, rising grim and bold above waving branches of oak and hazel bushes ; above stretches the sky, blue as the sky of June below, hundreds of feet almost, straight down, n grand sweep of water lies j cradled between steep mountain aides. Ear away down the valley the river is dark with the shadows of the great hills ; and far beyond in hazy waves of grandeur the outlines of the Alleghetiios loso themselves in a broad belt of crim son sunset. I stand on the very top of the giant rocks and look down. To the left, near the Allegheny Ever, and fronting an island of trees and bushes, with glimpses of summer arbors between stands the old McWilliaras homestead, brown with the storms ol almost forgot ten years. To tho right, in a little val ley running straight back from the j river, uestle the clustered buildings of j another branch of the McWilliums lann ly. lteyond and over the brow of a small knoll the old time glory ol the Eaey homestead stands as an imposing barrier against tho encroachments of the spik-and-spun eastern side of the j town of Warren, a niile below. Every where is peace and beauty. Nature j was in her most pleasing mood when ' that picture of water and mountain and : forest was made and crowned with a monument of stone. .Since the days when the first settlers chased the Indians from the broad and fertile valley and played a lone game | against panthers and boars ami wolves, the great rocks have had few visitors. Although the top of the great pile is a key note to one of the finest pictures in the (Quaker State, yet no photograper has ever shown the hardihood to plant a camera on the extreme summit. The place hears a bad reputation. For miles around the rocks are synonymous with almost everything thai is weird, ghost ly and uncertain. Years ago some hu man bones were found at the entrance to one of the unexplored crevices in the rocks, and it has only been a short time since that Other bones, partly human and partly animal, were found in the same place. To lend an additional ah bore nee to tho gloomy pile in the midst of the the people, nature infected the ' rocks with rattlesnakes. Hundreds i upon hundreds of the reptiles swarm about the holes and hollows of the som bre monument, multiplying year by j year, until the number is almost be | yond conjecture. An effort was once j made to destroy tho snakes by burning i the lenves and brush across the motin 1 tain. A man who stood on the top of the rocks to watch tho effect* aa the i flame* swept toward the summit, said ! yesterday that even now, years after the occurrence, the scene recurs to , him in his dreams and will waken him j from the soundest sleep with thrills of: horror. As the fire was borne upward hun dreds of snakes, driven from tho hush es ami shallow holes by tho smoke, rushed ovor the ground to a hole which seemed to lead directly into the center of tho largest rock on the pile. The snakes, nearly frantic from fright, dashed into the hole one after the oth er with remarkable rapidity, the big ones forcing tbo others aside and mo nopolizing the means of escape. As the tire drew nearer the rush of snakes ho came greater. It was a perfect stain pcde of reptiles. The utmost confusion took posession of the escaping things; big snakes hissed defiance at the ap proaching flames, but did not stop a moment ; little snakes darted under small stones and pieces of fallen logs, only to be driven out again by the heat. One monstrous serpent, in trying to crawl through the hole in the rocks, stuck fast, half of his body hanging out side. The other sn-kes squirmed about the struggling victim of his own size in a frightful way, striking the defenseless tail and writhing together nearly a foot deep aa the fire crowded them against the wall of stone. The fire swept up to the summit with a rush, and as it came upon the living mass it seemed as though a thousand snakes leaped high in the air and struok fiercely at the hurst* of flame, only to fall, writhing and helpless, into the fire. The sight of the air full of snake* and fire proves! too much for the lone spectator and with a howl of terror he rushed down the mountain in hreathlesa haste. ——♦ mm Novel Defense Against a Suit for Damages. William Finney, who lived in Klmira, New York, became acquainted with hi* wife Bridget in 1856 or '57, shortly after which they were married. Mrs. Finny WM born in Ireland and came to this country when quite young. The mar ried couple moved from Klmira in iB6O to lock Haven. When the war broke out about that time, William obeyed the call of his country and enlisted in the army. Bridget remained behind and became so intimate with Martin Nation that after her husband return ed from the war in 1864 ahe abandoned him to live with Naylon. They lived together aa man and wife until 1870, when they were married. William Finney continued to live, and I* living up to the present day. In 1878 Mr*. Finney and her second husband found themselves living in the borough of Kennvo, Clinton county, of this state. In Heptember of that year Bridget and Martin had gone tochurch with a friend. On their return at the close of tho ser vice, while walking along a boardwalk, Bridget stepped on the end of a plank which tilted and struck her, throwing her down and causing her serious In jury, She brought suit in the name of Martin Nay lon against the borough to re cover damages for the negligence of tbe city in not keeping the board walk in proper repair. Curing the trial her first marriage was found out and it was found necessary to change the captiou OF the suit so that utm might appear to have sued in the mime of tier first ami lawful liUHbuiid, Wm. Finney. The case was altered, and, going be fore thejury, resulted in a verdict o| SI,OOO which was afterwards reduced to S7OO in favor of (be injured woman. Tbe borough of Keuova appealed to the supreme court, claiming that the court below was in error in refusing to charge thejury that it tlioy believed from tbe evidence in the cause that Bridget Kin ney was married to Martin Nay lon in the year 1870, after deaerting her hus band, who wus then in full life, and continued to live with Martin Naylon until this suit was brought, and thui us this suit was brought iti the instance of Bridget without the knowlege of Wil liam Finney, she could not recover. In an opinion filed in the supreme court this morning it is stated that such a principle as iliat asked for substantia tion by the borough is entirely new iu common law, and hns no support in any authority. The decision and judg ment of the lower court was therefore affirmed. From Poverty to Wealth, /F.'IR ,i fiiofffiirtf ffmrner Bmum WTUUHR TV —IWTFTTT RNIRF DMTTTIE IMTPPBWTT The divorce suit that Im* been insti tuted by Mrs. Tutor, wife of ihe Lieu j tenant Governor of Colorado, is another ! illustration that wealth does not always i bring happiness with it. Mr*. Tabor asks for divorce ami si.Ocu alimony I per year. The facts are thus related by 1 the Cleveland L II T: The unhappy couple were married at .tugust.i, Me , iu 1857, ami their cuwr tlnoo thai 1 period has been marked by transitions | from domestic felicity to the most vio lent family jars; from u!.no!ut< poverty 10 princely wealth; from the rude j hovel of the frontier to tbe most lux j oiious home that the purse of a million I aire could command. In l*i'J tbey J started for I'ike'a Peak in a pirlor car drawn by two oxen, Uhing nil their property with them, and alter drifting about the country lor some yivais they set lied down in the place where Denver now slauds. He searched in vain for "pay gravel," and while be was pros pecting she cooked bpcon, made bread and kepi up tiie household expenses by boarding miners. Finally Tabor built n log but and started a store and boarding house combined, which wits a general rendezvous for the miner*. All the hard work of the establishment fell upon Mr*. Tiibor. She wa* tbe only woman within one hundred and sixty miles, and the did the cooking and washing for the miners, attended to all their want* in the store, weigimd their gold dust 011 the only pair of scale* m the neighiiorhood, making herself the waiter and drudge of every one. In the meantime the husband yielded to (be irresistible fever that seldom lessens Its grip Upon one who. has once become ! its victim, and continued his search tor j gold. He moved from prospect to pro<- | pect, from digging to digging, always i believing himself on tbe brink of for j tune, and while he reveled in golden ' droams the wife drudged and toiled to ! procure for herself and her royal dream er the Ruhstantial* of life. In 187(1 b 'began to realize some of hi* grand ex l>ectation*, and he was soon known as a j millionaire. ! 1 atior continued fo prosper at a won i dertul rale, and i* now considered one |of the wealtic*t men in the State. Hi* wife's pelition says he is worth $10,000.- 000, and ha* an income of llhO.lksi |>er , month. Ho nent his means lavishly and I surrounded his wife with every luxury ! that money could buy; but, adds the IJTADTR, she says that be grew hard heart jed in proportion a* he became rich ; i (hat he at*ented himself from home for week* and months, and on one oc casion he ntfored to give her a portion of his large fortune if she would apply for a divorce. All he has to *ay i* that he gave her SIOO,OOO a few year* ago, which she invented, ar.d which now yield* her 114,000 a year ; that she is a woman and he hopes he will receive all the sympathy growing out of the case. Both sides of the aiory will only coine.out on trial. What is certain now i that their domestic happiness took wings the moment wealth rolled in j upon them ; that as soon a* they ceiued fighting with |)Over(y they began fight ing each other. Their happiest days were when they were poor, and as they now sit in the midst of luxury and plenty it is probable that their memory holds no pleasanter period than when they sal together behind the ox-team 1 nd were b>itig dragged out into the Western wilds to seek their fortune nearer to the setting sun. Indian Wltea. M"titrul Bl*r Among the Northwestern tribe* of Indian* innoeence is a* marked among the girls as their color. The impression that the red maiden doe* not entertain a high standard of moralitv is an error, for she is taught a* other girl* are, and grows up with well-developed idea* OF the responsibilities of life, and a firm resolution to discharge them. Kducated in the faith thai she was or dained to work, she trains herself to un dergo hard labor, and at aixteen years of age is sturdy and strong, brave against fatigue, and a perfect housewife. She may not pOMesa New Kngland notioni of claanlinrw*, but ehe lake* not a little pride in her pemooal appear ance, and in the arrangement of her lodge *he displays some crude idea* of tante and a certain amount of neatness. If she marries a white man she make* him a good wife aa long a *he live* with him. Home i* her sole mm fort, and hi* comfort her *ole ambition. She thinks of him and for him, and maktr* it her study to please him and make him respect and love her. Hhe recog nise* in him one of a superior race, and by her dignity and devotion endear* heraelf to bim and itrugglea to make him happy. At the agencies of the upper frontier thousands of men are employed, and it U not an exaggeration to say that the minority of them have Indian wives and live happily. Tbey ere not sought after by the maiden*, for the Indian girl'* custom to remain quiet until after the marriage contract is made and the mar riage portion paid over. The husband muat have tbe dowery, with wbich he mut invent hi* projected tnolher-in law before the ceremony taken place. The prone** in a little out of the unual run. and a description may be of inter est. The aspiring bridegroom muat be well known n the tribe before he can hope to win a wife. Her people want to thoroughly understand him and know if he can support tnft only her but also all her relatives in the event of a pinch. He must lie a kind-hearted man, with a temper warranted to keep in any climate, and he must have a gooil lodge, and at least half a dozen of horses. If he be, and have all these, he can a-wooing go. Selecting the la dy, tie make application to her mother, and at a council the price is fixed upon. If the girl be especially pretty, her mother will demand a gun, two horses and n lot of provisions, blankets and cloth. A gun is valued at SSO, a horse : at I. and be must furnish material to I tiring the amount up to from #IOO to l S!.TO. Then he tries to beat the dame I down, and if he aucceds he knows I there is some rea-.,n for letting the girl | go; if not, Im- understands that he is i making a good choice. The courtship is left entirely to the mother. "Wii.it would you do if you wi-ro ine , and I were von. tenderly inquired a young swell of his lady, as lie escorted iier home .rom church. "Well," said she, "If I were you I would throw a\ av that vile cigarette, cut up my cane for firewood, wear tny watch chain under neath my coat, and stay up at nights and pray for brain*,'' The walk wa liliished in alienee, and it is presumed 1 that for once in In- life the young uiau , thought. Nimit I.iuiit in B< ,'ihooms. —Tbe com mon practice of having night lights in the bedrooms of children is deprecat ed by Pr. Hubert If. Bakewell. He Btys that it i t - n im st injurious elb-ci upon the nervous system of young children. "Instead of perfect rout tbe optic nerves ought to nave and which nature provide* for by the darkness of tbe night, these nerves are per{>etually stimulated, and of course the bruin and [ tbe rest of the nervous system sulb-r. Children thus brought up are excessive lv timid for years after on going into the dark." TreuMtirer's Salt* _e,_ I V-I'.ATKD I.AM't ! 'I: TIM - I'OB )"■< AM' tss|, on I KI.VJoI s V KAli* NOTICE i* hereby given that in of at. 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