TERMS OF PERMEATION. The Dnanronn TiEPORTYn is published every Thursday morning by GOODRICU kWoCK, at One Dollar per annum, In advance. .11.17-A , lvcrilslng In all cases exclusive of sub scription to the paper. .• EC lAL OT IC ES Inserted st vim CZNTB per line for first Insertion, and FIVE CZNYS per line for - nch subsequent insertion, but 00 notice inserted fui IrSii than flf ty rents. YEARLY AIiVERTISEMEN'T will he Insert ed at - reasonable rates. Administrator's and Executor's Notic:es,. $2; A editor's Notices, ,12.50 t Bum eas Cards, avenues, (per year),ls„ additional I inesit each. Yearly advertisers are, entitled to quarterly changes. Transient advertisements must tre paid for in advance. All resolutions of associations; communscatlons of limited or individual Interest, and notices of marriages or deaths, exceeding five linesare charg ed rtc t c xxxs per line, but simple notices of mar riages and de tthswlll be published withontcharge. The Itai.oterrtt havihg a larger circ)ilation-than any other paper in the county. makes it the beat advcrtisingmedium in Northern Pennsylvania. dUR PRINTI.Siti of every kind. In plain and fancy 'colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Handbills., Blanks. Cards, Pamphlets. Itillheada, Statements, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The liktkiwrkn office is well supplied pith power presses. a - good assort ment of new type, and everything in the printing line can be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TEIIMSIN VA.Ri ABLY 1 4uoincos earbs. JOHN W. CODDING, ATToItNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA (ifty over MayOn's old Bank THOMAS E. M 1 ER ATToRNEY-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, PA with Pattlok and F.,yle PECK k 9V.ERTON ATTiibNEICS-AT-I,AW, TOWANDA, PA. IVA. OVERTON T)ODNEY A. MERCIT_R, .1.1) A TTOIr. , : e.v T( VAN DA, PA.. Sollritor of l'.o:4•ltts. Uarticular attentlan paid n. 1 1 11,1neSS in Li , ,r,,han.X Court and to tbel4ettle 1n or In '..+lon!anyes Mork OVp:TON & `ANDERSON, ArToRNE - s-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, l'A. I=lEZ=l 1,1:7 - . 11. .1 Esst"l', ATIWINEY kND 1 OVV , III.LIIt-AT-LAW, l'A. • • • • • •• • • .1 .I••ssup harlt.e; 1,..nue.fl the praeth•eofthe t‘u will attend t. 4 any .. intru.ted 1.4•1111:1 in Brailfirra county. wh.hiug to e.,n•uit him. an tall 011 11. S it•et,r, E.I.LTow appeip:ment c;4l. bi • 1113 h. L\ RI STREETER, ATToi:NLY TuWANDA, PA JAMES WOOD, A TT/AIAN AK' TA /W A N DA, PA. MEI T_ L. tow S . EII, M. I)., PIT:11 ( 1AN STIRCIE)N 11 ,, iklene • an 1 t , f Dr. Cm - . M pIC26-Ciri. 1L J .1 o A TT. AW, TOW A N A, PA. IF. GUFF, A TT"1: 'V A Lt - S . EN , G, PA I::.•nry for the sale mol trttrchnse of all kinds of r-omr1:1 , - , aml for tmtisio . g Mat, to H.,' }:.tart, M•lne,, mit* reroqt: careful mot prompt o::entlon.t.tooe I. 1:479. ATiT H. Tirompsos.‘ATTOßl4Ex if I • AT LAW, NV I.A. in attend t:, rol I , usotess entrusted to hfn run' in Bradford, and Wyoming. Counties. Othre with Esq. purer. - flowl9-74. 7 1 . H. A NUL'E, I). S. 1 / • ATIV Nl - 1M F,CII AND.' DEN3ISt. 0. State second. floor of Dr. Pratt's , mpr 3 7% 1 - 4 1 4 1 , 5.1111E1 ,„ . SON, ATThltNkl"S-AT-I.A.W, Tu ANDA. PA. I::BREEME (). K tNNEY, ATTORNEY- ‘T.T...N ium•ii = !tricus forruirriy occupied by Y. Nr. C. k 4 •- L.,611 R tour., AtcPIIERAON, T. A TTOIt,EY-AT-LAW, ToNVA NDA, PA pixy AU' y Brad, TWIN W. P ATToI:NT.Y-XT-LANNI AND U. S. COMMISSMSER, PA. ()thee—North Side Pixidie Square IVIES & CA RNOCHAN, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW: ,rTli WA} MEE! ANDIIEW WILT, ATT•ti:x%Y-AT-LAW /PV,.`r SZ I ; Store. T 0,311.13, Nl:iy lie c010.01t.01 11 Gorman. , ;Apr 12, '76.1 NIT .1. YOUNG, V.,' • EV-AT4..AW, • Till.lj. A N OA, PA. I d.or sooth theQ - 0:t1...nal 111.,1 • NITILLIAMS • - ATT. , 1,1.Y.-AT-1. ,W. • -.'l' TFI4 • F..—F : mr: - :, 4.,,uplt:d by Wm. Waiptirs, (”et.l7, '771 K. .11kNOLIc, , - 1 i , =I WTM.'MAXWELL, ITT.IINEY-AT-L VC DA , PA. Daytgqi - , A , - 1112. 1,476, - V i tA DMA; CALIFF, A TTOR KY s -AT -I. AW, I=l Orlo . •• th , or;out:l of thr First ”Pflk,lll , - , th!r H. J. • 1 . .1-7.11:: 1 - 1„11 . S. M. wt)()D111'11N. amt IVA!. S.. VINCENT, IVEN It•A I. INSURANCE AGENT, TOWANDA.PA, B :Ir K m E \ 1 1 1 N optriCC .Tet•th 1:11:pher. and Al Tt,lll,xtraeteil wittiOut 0PL;441% *U. D. PA YNF„ M. P., ! 1 . 111 -4 1CIAN ANII m . HcroN. Umro ocer,M.mt.suy , .." I)fflre hours 6,30110 12 A. NI., and from '2 to 4 r, Special attentitat given to Dl , Ekte.,*,t! ) ItISR I . SES e and 1, OF THE -EYE „ TIM EAR G RYAN, cousTy SUPrRINTENDENT. ofb, , edir 1a t f•latorday earn month, over Turner &ftiordn's Drug Store, Towanda, Pa. Twx•nntiri. amit. • Al I\6. I'EET, TC.AI' it F. It OF riA NO 51 CSI C, TERM. I . 10 per term.. (Itrsideneo Thud street, 15t 'ward.) Tt.watida, .101 t. 13:79-13'. MINIM i:IENFrt INSUhANCE-AGENCY CESEM ‘ F IRST NATIONAL BANK, ToWAN RA, PA C A. VITAL PAID IN FUND;. Thi, 'tank off,-.;0rku..;11 farliftles for the trans a•ll,,n of a git:u•rnl , bail - rang Uuslt:epcs. ~.. rreNlderit Arll I. 157.9 • • E E LEY'S OYSTER BAY AND 1 1:::"ItOPEAN fIoUSE.—A few doors southOf Mean, House. .1 - Ward by the day or week on j i i••,••,table terms. Warm meals be rved at all boars •I oy , ters at wholesale and retail. febl'f7. GOODRICH & HITCHCOCK. Publishers. VOLUME XL. The course 'ef the weariest river Ends In the great gray sea; The acorn, for ever and ever, Strives upward to the tree; The rainbow, the sky adorning, Shines &melee through the storm ; The glimmer of coming morning Through midnight gloom will form By '4lOlO all knots are COMpler though they be. .A.apeace will at last be given, Pear, both to yoti and me. ~,, , ThenShough the path.may be dreary, Look onward to the goal; Though the heart and the head be weary, Let faith Inspire the soul. , 4 4; Seek the right, though the wrong berp4 [Mg ail Speak tr at any cost; Vain Is all weak exempting , When once the gem Is lost. Sop 25,'"3 DEN). M. BECK Let strong hand and keen eye be ready Fur plata and ambushed foes; Though earnest and fancy. steady' Bear De'st unto the close. The heavyelouils may be raining, . But with evening comes the light Through the dark are low winds cornpl!ilnlng, Yet the sunrise gilds the height; And love has his hidden treasure For the patient and the pure; And cline glees his full measure .• To the workers Whuendure ; And the Word that Ito law has shaken Has the future pledge supplied For we know that when we waken We shall he satisfied. rktled talc. • 11:iy i, '79 =1 The scene is a 'prettily furnished sitting room in Bloomsbury Square, London, and the tilue nine a bright spring moiMing. TwO - oung people—husband aid wife evidently —arc seated.-at breakfast;but the meal is so far advanced tiatt they -have both turned to their newspa pers,-I or rather to the one paper, which they have divided between them. She, strange to say, is im mersed in the city article of the Morning Cfipper. Ile is -fuming to himself Over a critique on the. new comedy produced last night at the -Variety Thotre. She is a handsome blonde of two-and-twenty. He is a tall, thin,- ratjier melancholy-looking , young man, who has . just, seen his four-and twentieth hirthday,v, , " Veronicas down ,again one eighth," muttled Mrs. Rivers. ," They have been sinking every day for the last fortnight. They used to lie a favori',e --stock with papa. .I hope he has rich dipped_ .deep in them of late." =BEM r, 'lnv 1 1 -Ifs "And they dignify this rubbish with the name of criticism!" cries Gerald in disgust, as he flings away his paper and turns to his cold cof fee. " A 'more unfair and one-sided attack Was never penned. But if Babcombe were to write like an an gel the Clipper would stab him all L, ELSBIIRE he same;_lind if. he were to write as ally as—as I do, the Pharos would be sure to treacle him ; so . 4hat one always knows - what toexpeeti",4.• Presently'. the postman's knock was heard, and a minute latFr a slat ternly maid-cif-all•work lrought tip a' letter for Mrs. Rivers and a sealed packet for Gerald. "A, 'letter from papa! I .should 'know his queer, cramped hand any where," cried Alice. "Good news or bad, eh, Gerald'?" - rfel,r7B "My story back from the "Picca dilly."' groaned poor Gerald, With a visible lengthening of his• already Icing face: " Was ever such luck as !nine ? I shall begin to.think soon that I anronlv fit to - break stones by the roadside ." But his wife did not hear him. She was lost in her letter. Her fact paled a little as she'read. and presently the tears sprang to her eyes. "Just-like papal" she cried. I might have known what his answer would M. , . I felt sure at the time 'that my letters wont i lie of no avail.blit I could not rest till I land,written. Even though he refuse tOSee me himself. he'might" at least let' Carry and Grace see.mc once, now and then." She • got utk suddoly, and pushing :the letter across the table to her husband, she hurried out , throtigh the folding doors .hat opened into-the bed room. Ger ;aid Rivers tools up his wife's letter I;and read asunder : TOWANDA, PA MY DY.3i?. At t I found your two letters awaiting not on my return front 3lontone. As they L•nih ref , to 1111,S:111W .1111• rl, orie answer will do .for the rut, iu itoth of them yOu ask me astapfore le the v nrd u.. e d by your lli forgive you. To this I reply. that I idly.• nothing to forgive. .YQtr are of I.ffe, eons...mem - 1y yt it ate the misttess of Aga ono act lobs. tool I lifiVe to CM(' rid over you 417 way. But mile', you a.k niti fo see you, or, Lt I Witt not do that. to allow y:tu to visit your sisters, you put the case Oil an affoi . ether different footing. .'ro both 2.11 r reqiu-sts my answer Is an eta p hat I c No. In toted 11111 ,, ,Za11t step of your life you have C1:0- Sell to act ni direct opposition In my frequently .•spres,t-t1 nishes, mid, as a matter of course; you ntui.t put up with the conscquences of your folly. - lime of those consequences is the severance of all tie. that Imond you to me as u cherished member - of my family. You discarded your family of ytiur flee-will, and your - family now discard you. such It-mg the state of affairs between Ups 1 need baldly tell you that any letters you uray send in time to come teseept fit a case of urgent. Illness, and aceonifettitod by a medical certificate to that effect) will remain unanswered. Your father, I!NE=6I Si.=sklnee writing the above a fresh thought has struck me. yoi know that.lt was my Intention rto have given you six thousand pontidsagia wedding portion hod you mat - raid In aceto dance with my ishei. Now., I promise you that i .111 overlook the past, and give you the six thousand pounds Into the isp gel n, on the day Thar you or your hushind ran come forward mut prOduce anotherjrx thou sand to put to li. That chance I give you , . A bar gain's a bargain. • " The old boy might as well tisk nic to jump over the moon as to find six thousand Pounds, or six thousand pence either," ,said Gerald, with a sigh, as he aid the letter on the Li- . ble. " Alice always said that he was full of eccentric whims and notions, and this proposition of his proves that she was right." Presently Mrs. River's came back into the room, , and placing her hands nn her hu'sband's shoulders, stooped fiver and kissed him. She had been ervinct t and .ber eyes were'still red ; •,. Irving, but there was a - smile on her lips. "Just phpa; ,{fear," she" said. "So inflexible, so self-willed. Noth ing Can move him•when once he has made up his mind." . " Tliereis One consolation," said Gerald . " weiare - no worse off than we were before." '‘Not - a bit." TOW,ANIiA, PA $125.000 66.000 " You see what you bare brought yourself to through marrying a pau per." . "Through marrying the dearest and.bestlellow in the world." This with another kiss, N. N. BETTS, ClAler " Our futu're en hardly be said to be rouleur de nwe2! foehtn. TEE END. Her Father's Daughter. IN FOUR CHAPTERS CHAPTER 'I EDWAND CUEWDSON " Suppose we form ourselves into a committee of ways and , means." "Agreed. I vote that you take the . chair." So'Alice.went and sat down in the big easy-chair - opposite her husband. " Three months ago to-day wp were married," said Alice. " On that day our joint. capital consisted of three hundred pounds. Yesterday,l looked at our bank book and found that we had just one hundrediand ninety-nine pounds six and sixpence. standing to our credit." - "So that we have - spentn hundred pounds in thirteen. weeks ?" ": - Precisely so. But you must re, member that out of that hundred pounds. were paid - the expenses of our wedding trip." ' - " If we, go on living at the same rate for six months longer we shall be bankrupt." tßsimething not far from IL" . " Then the sooner I look out for a situation of some kind, the better for both ,of us." " But long before the six months are at 'kr' end your novel may be brought out, or your comedy accept:- ed; or— i " " My dear Alice," interrupted Ger ald, " where is . the use o_c_our deceiv ing ourselves any longer? Three months ago we became than and wife: You brought, as yotir (lOwry three' hundred pounds in hard, cash—the little fortune left you by your grand . - mother. I brought-- What? A bundle of wretched manuscripts, that were fit only for the bntterman." " Oh, Gerald, donft. say that !" " A bundle of wretched mann scripts;" reiterated 'Gerald,. bitterly, " comprising, among other useless {natter, a novel and a comedy. I was going to do grand things—to set up life as a man of letters ; to make a name for myFell; to earn an easy and luerative'lliving with my pep. Icarus has come down with a crash. No publisher will corei.ene a penny for my novel ; no manager will read - a line of my corned?. I have the consolation of knowing that I hav mistaken my vocation; that I am tint nearly such welever fellbw as in my folly I fancied myself to be, and that I have been living all this time on my wife's moßey for lack of any of tely own." r " 0, Gerald • • • " In three months I have earned twelve guineas—twelve miserable guineas. During, the nest three niontlissA may earn as much More, or, peilaps, nothing at all." You must not lose heart in this •way, dear. What are three months? A very little time,. indeed. Itemen: ber • how 'Jane Eyre' was hawked about from one publisher to another • before anyone, could be found to ac cept it." Gerald shook his head. " lity dear Alice, your luisband is not a man of genius, and rotone knows that better than yourself: I made - the mistake, common enough, 1 dare say, among young men who have .an itch for seri of believing that the world would appraise my literary wares at the same value that I set• on them Myself. Three months iii London, three months among to Publishers and manaaers, have sufficed to undeceive me once a:nd forever.Thelestion has been t shlrp one; 'but I, hope I am man !enoirgh to 019 that 1 think it has done me good." . " Ilow bitterly 'you speak, dear_ ! What can I say to comfort you ?" Gerald - rose from' i hitri ,- eliair, and, crossing to wherebis .tfrife. was seat ed, he took her hand and pressed it 'to bfi§ lips. " You are my comroA, now and ever," he, said: Then, with his Shoulders resting against the i chimney-piece, he went back to vrqat' he had been talking about. " Anoth er fact-my lesson has taught me," he said, " and that is _that there is no present prospect—and whether there is one in the future Seems highly problematical—of my being able to keep you and myself by the proceeds of my pen in anything more than the 'most abject pauperism. Such being the state of affairs, you cannot- fail to agree with me as to the absolute necessity that exists for 'my at once setting about some other mode of earning a living. The only question . is: What is that mode to be.? In: Other words; what am I fit fo0" "What are you fit for, indeed I' Why, anything and everything. With' your abilities" '" My abilities, forsooth! Where arethey ? In what do they . consist ? Would the'exercise of . them in any direction bring. me in a hundred'a' year? 1 eally,Alr. Chairman, really; you are most unpractical this morn' : and wanting in your usual sa gacity." " Yon don't know what you can do till kou try „dear. Your abilities have never been properly put to the test." There's the mischief of it. If my uncle, iivistblisf of bringing me.up to a life of idleness, and luring me on with the hope of one day being liis heir, had insisted on inN being taught some decent trade or, profession, I should not-be in the predicament in which I find myself now. • Seriously,. Para vile, what sin I fit for? I know nothing,.have been , taught nothing, and have no special aptitude—unless it be for a little fpOlish scribbling— by means of which, ns already-proved, I might, perhaps, earn enough to find you in gloves and myself in cigars. But where is the bread and cheese to come from ?;" " We hate several. months before us yet, dear, during which we can look out and consider what it will be best for us to do." "And 'in the meantime youi,money —yours, Alice-..-which ought to have been put away untouched, , is melting day by day. And there's a sting in knowing that."' • "You foolish Gerald 'As if both my moneYlpthi were not your own, to. do' as 04331ike with How.would it be if we went into less expensive lodgings? . These• rooms are very dear." "What are these rooms in compar ison with the home You gave .up for my'sake ?" Helm; his arms sudden ly round his wife's neck and kissed her. "Something must be done, Anti at once; but what that something must be I knoW no more :than the man in the moon. You, with your clear head, must try to think for me. TOWANDA, BRADFORD 003INTY, 2 PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 30, 1879. I will leave you now, I 'fun' gotng to the Museum' get up my teferencei fbr an article : 1 'intend "writing for- Makfair." . Left alone, Mri: Rivers had anoth er little cry all to herself. .• 'Then she bathed her face, 'and 'after that she' took up her father's letter and''read it -through, slowly and carefully. " Six; thousand pounds," she mur4 mured to herself. If. I couldsbut take him that,.he would*: forgive me, and put another six thousand. to. it s : Row he must have laughed to tint self as be wrote those words, know-i ing how utterly unlikely it was' that such a miracle should ever happen !" Ordinarily one of the most active of young housewives— Mrs. . RiVers this morning' never stirred out of her easy chair till Gerald came home to luncheon. She. put airaylier father's letter :IS her - husband 'opened the door. " Gerald, den; do' you :know anything about • the electric' tele-. graph ?" was her first question:- • . ." Theoretically I know - sodiething of it from books; practically, I know nothing." , "Then you could not send a mes sage by it, say faint one ;station to another?" ' "'Certainly not; not if my life de pended on it." "But you could learn ?" • • " I suppose so, should the DeCeSSI -ty for my doing so ei•er arise." " I wish you would learn." With. all my heart, if you partic ularly wish.me to do so. Though I certainly fail to. sce in %dial, way such kreAledge could be Of use to ,um." " It may be of use to you—of very great use; and .1 want you to begin to take lessons.to-morrow. I see by the newspapers that there are one or two places where , telegraphy is taught as.a 'branchi or knowledge, so that it need not take you long to learn." "Good. But may I ask—" ' Yothing at present. Like a good little boy : you must shut your eyes and open your mouth, and see what your will will give you." One afternoon, some tWo -months later, Gerald •llivers put into the hands of his wife a eirtilieate a pro ficieni.y from the,!sehool of • telegra phy, at which ho had been taking lessons for seveial weeks past.N Al ice's eyes sparkled as she_ read it. "To-morrow morning, dear," she said. '•I shall 'go' an see my god father, Sir Charles Stopfurd.". CHAPTER Ii "Why, now 1 What, what! Just say that over again, will you?". The speaker was Sir Charles Stop, .lord,,and the person woken to was .his goddaughter, Mrs. Rivers. Sir Charles was a city magnate, who had been knighted during his mayorality some years previously. fle had heen very fond of AliCe, in a godfathbrly sort of. a way, and been greatly shocked by the news of her ruesalli ance. •This was the first time they had met since that dePlurable Omit. "Just say that over 'again, will you ?" repeated Sir Charles. " You areCliairinau of the Easter ham Junction Railway, and in that capacitY you can, doubtless, do what, you Bite on the line." ' " Quite a mistake, my qear--quite a mistake. There ard three or four members of the board—l. won't Men tion names,i—who are no better than stupid assc4." "But the favor I want' you to ,do for me is a very trifling one, and such as there can be no' difficulty about. It is simply to asklof you that my husband may. be appointed station master at Leaswood Station." " What, what! Station master at LenswoodLyour husband ? Why, now that's the statim: for Brookfield,. ppnr father's place.'' " Precistqy so. That is . the very rC.asonits proximity . to Ili!ookfield why I want you to give mrhusband the npoOintment." "-Ay, ay !• I see now.; I see. Let ters having, proved of no avail, you think that it-you and your husband are down at Leasw.ood; you will haie an opportimity of waylaying papa as he steps out of the train, and of go ing down on your knees and begging his forgivsineSs there and then.. A pretty pidture, and one that 1-should like to "see!" ' • - "HoW absurdly you talk, godpa! I' shalt - not appear' in the matter at all. Everybody k.driws ,pie at Leas wood, and that would never do. The:, last thitiv-in the world that t I should' want papa to know would `be that Gerald was station masts there." . "But the name, • Ind petite, the . name, why_ now, your flltiter would be - sure to suspect something troth that." • • • "Gerald. 14s three names. ,11$s . fa name is Gerald Htinstone Rivers. He would go doWn to Leaswood simply ag Mr. Hunstone:= "There's a scheming little, brain for you! I always said it was a pity you were nut -born a ,boy ; so _bright and sharp-and all that. You're plan ning something now—a surprise :or something. Well, well,. Mr. Him- stone, eh ? But there are other diffi culties in the ways of which 1 have not yet spoken." " What - sdifliculties, god pa ?" " Why,-in the first place, the. man whom we 'have nowogot at Leaswood is a eery -good fellqw, and we -are quite satisfied with him, and under such circumstances RC don't care to remove a man." Promote him. ..Give him more money and send him elsewhere." now. That's your idea. Not so so bad, No, .no I But even granting that we found or made a vacancy for husband, he knows noth it4of railway Work, and we dare not appoint a man who is ignorant of his; duties to the important post of sta tion master. •In case of iii'a;Oeident, hoW•eould Nre justify ourselves?" My husband has an excellent knowledge of telegraphy, so that one great difficulty is obviated. And as for the Mechanical routine Of railway work, why not ptit him for a month under the tuition of the man who is at present at Leaswood ;' and if at the end of that time Gerald hasn't acquired : a competent knowledge of his duties, ill never. call him hus baruul of mine again." • ''Why, now. Listen tir her. Just like ..her . father. No-difficulties sl lo.wed to stand in her way.. But re- , \\ J L NpaAR.bI:ESS - Of DENtiNcLATION FROM ANY QyARTER.. - ally now, don't know ;hat to say." There's no occasion, godpa, for you to say another word. I look upon the'matter as finally settled. I Gerald yeti to-mor row; morning, and you will Send him down to get him initiated into his new, duties as soot{ as possible." -She went over and kissed him, and then sat down on his knee; as she had done:tuany a time when a girl.. !Pon my word, there's no putting you off," he said.. " But what a sad foolish thing thaViarriage of yours wat'„,, I never w:i s smoreastonished in MY life thaw-when I heard of it." "'A sad, foolish thing w.ai it, god. .pa?" asked Alice -quietly. ' "That depends altogether on the point of view from Which you lOok at it. To Me, now, it seemed the 'wisest and most sensible thing that 1 could do.; to - marry the one person' in the world whom I felt I could love, and who, I felt I was convinced, - loved me in re., turn.. How much more sad and fool= ish it would have been had 1 not made sure- of .my happinesss when it lay there ready to my hand ?" " - Ah, well, well. You view every thing - through Love's ruse-colored spectacles. But it's a color that soon fades:--won't stand the wear and tear of every-day life. So papa won't for. give ypu, eh ? I cannot Wonder at it." "He will forgive me when I go to him with six thousand pounds in one hand and my husband in the other:" "So, so. .116's-fixed his price, has he? Just like hidn. But there's not much chance of-yoVilipsband saving six thousand pounds While he's s!a- Con master at 1. - Aswood, eh, now? " No; I supposriot." said Mice, as she arose to - go: "But I don't forget a certain favorite proverh•of yours.: "There are more ways of killing a dog than _hanging And I don't despair." (coNci.unco NEXT XEEK.) A REMARKABLE SNAKE CIRCUS. Mr. John D. Merton, a well-known traveling salesman, had occasion to drive from Conneautrille, Pa., to Ashtabula,Ohio, via Jefferson. While driving leisurely along throng!' East or Southeast Denmark, Mr. Merton heard a strange sound is - suing from a. dense undergrowth at the side of the road. The gentleman got oat of the buggy to investigate the cause of the noise, being of a curious turn of mind. - Hitching his 'horse he can tionslTparted the bushes and stealth ily made his way into the thicket for perhaps th diStance of: . one hundred feet. Het was a spot of ground About twenty feet in . diameter, which `Was such a place as one would imag ine for a fairy's ball-rbom. The Sticks and- brush were all cleared away in the space, doubtless by the \ burning of a brush-heap. Notwithstanding the gentleman had made his way, into. the brush so quietly, all sounds were hushed at his approach, save the chirping of a melancholy cricket or the drowsy singing of a distant har vest fly. Mr. Merton, not to be non plussed, sat down upon a log in full view of this arena and awaited devel opments. He had but a short time to wait, for not more than a minute' had passed ere a small striped snake darted out of a bunch of grass at' the side of the arena and commenced running around the space in a circle. Another snake a little larger soon followed, and then ,a rattlesnake about two ,feet in length joined in whate seemed to be a sort of snake jubilee; every one after that seemed to bring a new-comer of some kind. ft was a noticeable fact that striped snakes, milk- snakes, rattlesnakes, black snakes and water snakes all joined the throng in ,the greatest harniony. When perhaps seventy five 'or eighty snake S -had entered the space a curious combination of pur ring,--rattling, sounds arose at one side_of the circle,. A glance in Ot.. direction disclosed five large snake —two rattlesnakes, a striped snake and two black siiakes—lying stretch ed upon a log. The rattlesnakes were, shaking their rattles violently,...and. each of the three remaining' reptiles had a frog in-its mouth which it was torturing into ,croaking.and making noises frog fashion, apparently for the amusement of the snakes in the ring i beloii% The, rattles and the ,croaking frOgs made rude music; which -.furnished vgy fair marching time t'o the squirming mass of ser pents, and our intiiimant says they time kept very fair ti& . with the music, 'their heads 411 swaying' in unison ' .from - one .side to the cith - er. -The,gen : tlerrian was thunderstruck at the wonderful sight, and could . scarcely believe it was not. ft dream. Ile said to us: "Of 'course you will think it an improbable., ridiculous story, as I would myself , if any one told the same to me; but my own-eyesight is the only eviden - ce' I want." After watching this. scene for perhaps, a quarter of an hour, -Mr. Merton thought it would be a much 'safer place nut On the road; and.startcd to move in that direction.. No sooner had he' made a stir than the music Ceased, and every serpent disappeared as if r by magic. WaS 'scene Mr. Merton will probably remember to his dying day, and such a one as no other man ever witnessed. In telling .us the story, Mr. Merton would in voluntarily shudder - every few min utes, as though - the mass of reptiles was, before • him.—.Verson (Ohio) Gazette. . . MR. ROnERT COELTER'S las ser mon in. his Chicago church on Sun day was heard in silence and tears by .his congregation, " You have never held me," he said, "as one set-aboVe you who could• not. laugh and . enjoy short and a Wholetiome_play ; a man . ; who - might stay to supper, but sure 'to go out before the supper began, or 'who must eat only lentils and creases, like the old Dnchorites, and never tell a story not liaged on holy writ:, Noneof these things; for it has been my pride to be onOvith you ; to the peril, perhaps, of ministerial dignity. I don!t, caren cent for that; I have always thought that the nearer a minister gets to his people the better, and I say, -with humility, that the record of our church during all these years has justified just this view." TBE most Chased mimic is that t played in the streets by bands which small boys follow.—Picayttne. AN "ITEM." fi Want an item ?" 't What is it ?" we asked. I've got the dundest item you ever kern tell of. I struck an ile well on my - lease Monday. an' she flowed a stream of ile 100 feet high straight up for half an hour. Then she kinder died down. One of my. drillers was standing over the hole when she suddenly Aiiirted again, an' blast my eyes if it didn't take that driller right up with it. The 04esin..was.a:powerful one, you see, an' he went Op 100, feet. You've seen those little balls as dance about- on top of those little spurting fountains , `such is they have in the cities ? Yes ; wall, that!s the Way this thing acted, and there's that air driller right up on top of that loft flit column of erwleile,antl he's dancing about like chaff in a. fanning mill. What do.yo - U think tif that un ?" " IkW long has he been 'up there ?" " About four days and. four night s." " Ile must be very hungry by this time. Doesn't he come down to get something to eat ?"• Why, we just put • a plate of ash it% this stream of ile and it takes it up to him, you see. And it's migh ty handy, as he _finds his victuals already greased, an' he doesn't need any butter." " But he, must have frozen:to death by this time:" " Why, man, we've sent him up on the same stream bed and clothing, a small stove an wood, an' we're goin' to build him a small house, and th'4.n he can live there as comfortable aS rinee." Ills face was as innocent of deceit as a piece -of 'tanned leather, and when he a:,kell to have his name put down as a deadhead subscriber for information he hail given. we dolutf have the !Ivan to hurt his feelings. Dorrif-k. PREDICTIONS ABOUT 1880 AND 1887 In, a pamphlet recently. published, the author, - Professor Grimmer, as serts: "Froth 18s0 to 1887 will be one universal carnival of death." Asia will .be depopulated, Europe nearly so, America will lose fifteen million people. ilesides plagues we are to have storms and tidal war - es, monntains ar•: to " Joss their 'heads through the choicest valleys," navi gators will be lost by . thousamis ow ing to " the capricious .dellexures of the magnetic needle," and islands will appear and disappear in •mul ocean. All the beasts, birds and. ishes will diseased, famine and civil strife '.*ill destroy most of the human beings left 'alive by '-iplague;and, natty, "two years of fire "—from 1885. to ragb with fury in eilery:part of the globe. , In .11.4 - : . 'the " Star of Ilethrehem" will " reappear in Ca.;siopia's Cliair," , the immediate result being universal war and por tentious floods 'and shipwrecks. North, America is again to be in volved in a civil war, unless a "Na poleon arises to quell . it ; but during these terrible days the Pacific states will be a veritable Paradise of peace compared to the hellish strife that will be waging throughput the world." The few pc(lple that may manage to survive till 1887 will have reason* be thankful. Cl.OlllO DAYS.—These, the poet as said, are "the melancholy' days, the saVest of the,year,"- ,but to our unpoetaeal mind they are the bright est and most-enjoyable, as any lover of nature can attest who has taken a jaunt through the rural districts. The air' that comes wafted from the northern zone stirs the. blood and vigorates the muscles, nerves and brain. 'The senses are thoroughly roused as the charm:s of the scenery and loveliness. of the landscape un fold like a vast panorama before him. The orchard bending with its clus tering fruit, the vine laden with its luscioU_SAnid,The-liarvester gathering the ripened corn ; 'the ploughman 'upturning the mold, all pass in re view, while beyond, in the dim dis tance4he atmosphere takes on the azure hue, as the sight catches a view of the far-off hills aml mountains ; but all this delightful prospect will sbon fade and pass away, to be suc ceeded by-leaden skies and Novem ber blasts, and anon grim, sterile .winter.. Typical of human life; it, too,_ has ifs- spring, summer autumn —the last the most. beau .sous period of man's 'mental strength,. when the tiod-like mind asserts its - majesty. But, like the waning :lftman of the seasons, man must als6 pass into the sllre and yellow leaf of age," and encounter decrepitude and .da cay, until finally closeS the winter of his lifd bY-death and the ,rave. A CURIOUS INDUSTRY-H-Tile : prin cipal industry of the town of West Falmouth,' Mass., is tying business tagsf,with bits of strings, by which the tags may be attached' to articles which-require to be labeled:- A cor respondent writing from that vlll t q,ri. ! says : " These tags are cut elsewhere and sent in bulk to West Falmouth. The string is•also sent in skeins. The business here is to cut the string in suitable lengths, tie one into each. tag; and return it to the manufacturer in BoSton. This sounds simple enough, and small enough, and ,yet it furnishes occupation to between three and four hundred persons, and in volves an elabbrate system of book keeping. • The business has beep car ried on by a woman for the last twen . - ty years. The , orders which were once filled id; a bushel basket now require largd freight • boxes, and amount to an aggregate of forty lions of tagsin a year.. The little pink strings are realed off and cut into given lengths, each bunch haVing 101 strings. The strings are given out by the 1010, together with the corresponding number Of tags; to people coming to the office for them, atd are paid for at the rate of twelve to seventeen cents a thousand. Young children tic with tkeir Moth ers, and even old men, and it is a great source of On money to the community. THERP.- i no legal rate of interest in China. When a Chinaman wants to hor row eighteen' cents to buy his pmvisions for the winter he goes out and steals it, and says nothing:Of interest, high or low. —Free PreAt!: rit:Ltr r. On the old school book,,ln its dusty nook, . With a tearful eye I gaze ; Conic 'WWI; old frieltd, ;Or an hour we'll spend In talking of bygone days. I gam once more, as la days of yore, On the talk that vexed my Main The lesson done ani victory 4on, And feel a child again: And I seem to stand with the youthful band, In the old house tit the green, • Lhear the fun ere the school begun, And hJutn in the gladsome scene. I take my place with a sober face, O'er the roll-carved desk I bend, And hourly pore o'er tee antique lore • Of thy wonderful page, old friend. Then our cares wore few, and our frionds*were true, And our griefs seem rare and light The world *as hought (so we fondly thought) But a region of pure delight. But time has sped,And our path has led Through the dark and tearful scene; And passed away are the good and gay— Me the old house on the green. Hut We'lFstng no more. of the days of yore, I , or the tear-drug dlths the eye; Steel, on, old book, In the dusty nook, As In years that have glided by ; No guilt we trace In thy honest face, But aMine of gold within Enriched the youth, as they.sought for truth, In the old house on the green. Nineteen jears ago I bought in Madras a peculiar kind of horse. He had to bc?•wound tip to make him go. It was not a machine, but a veritable live •horse. Whqn breaking him to go IP the earriiLi,e he had been-Injured: An accidallt occurred in starting him the first 'time, at.d he was thrown and hurt and frightened. It -made lath timid; afraid to start. After he had once .Started he would never balk untiqaken out -of the carriage. Ile would start and atop ands go on as manv, times as you pleased, but it was . ierkditlicidt to get him started at first, eagi tithe he was harnessed to the carriage.?' He . was all right, under the saddle, an excellent riding horse, and would carry me long distances in my dis trict work, so that i 1 did not wlsh to dispose of him; but as I courd not afford to keep tvo, whatever I. had must in carriage as well as ride, and I 'determined that I would eon- flow I worked over Oa', horse ! At tiest it sometimes took me anr hour to !„ , et him started from my door. At • last. after trying every-, thing. I had ever heard of, I LA upOn an expedient-that worked. I took a strong bamboo stick two feet long and over an inch thick. •. A stout cord loop,"was 'Passed through a hole two inchCs from its end. "-This loop we would slip, over his left eaf downko thO roots and turn the stick arrotind and around and twist it up. It is said that a horse can retain but one idea at a time in its small brain. Soon the twisting would be (*in to tint. II is attention would be abstracted to the -pain in his ear. 11e would forget all about a carriage being hitched to him, bend down / his head and walk off as - quiet as a . lamb. When he had gond a rod the horse boy would begin to untwist, soon off would come the cord, and the horse would be all right for the (lA% The remedy never failed. After having it on two or three times lie objected to the-operation, and Would spring about and leaf and twitch awl back ; anything but start ahead-, to keep it from. being applied. We wouldliave. two'.ol us, to betin to pat and rub his neck - and head. Ile mink' not know. which had the key. All at once it would be on his ear and winding sup. -"The .moment it began to tightest e would be Stand,iind bear it' as he could, and then off her would go. It never took , thirty seconds to get him Qtr., with • the: key: ft would take .an hour without. • After a little he . ceased objecting to have it . put on: He seemed :tb say to himself, ," I have got to f_dveln, and may as well, do it At, once," but he would slit start without key. .-In a few months lie got so that as soon as. we gut into the carriage, he Would bend down his head to have the. key pit; on, and one or two turns\of the key would be enough. ;. . Then the key became unnecessary: He would bend down his heail, tili "ping Eris left ear e ,,ton the, horse boy, who would take„A it 'in his hand and .twist it, and off he would go. 'My native neighbors said, " That horse must he wol'ind up 'or he can not run." And it did- seem to me When lie got so that the i " op was nothing hut a form; I tried to break him of that, but. could not succeed. I would pat him And talk to him and give him a little salt-or sugar or bread, anti then step quietly -into the carriage and tell lan to-go. " No..' Coax - him. " No." •V hip him. - No." Legs braced, every muscle tense. for reSistance. A 7ennine balk Stop : and keep:quiet tier an instant and he would -hold down his head, bend over his ear and look around for the horse-boy ay. pealingly, saying - very very enestly by his actions, "Do please hind me up. - I can't go without, but I'll go gladly it you will." The moment his ear was touched . an'd one twist given. off he would go as happy and cOntentedas ever horse could be. Many hearty laughs have we and our friends had over the winding up of that 'horse.. if I were Out on a. tour for a month :or two, and- he were not hitched to the carriage, or if he stood in the stable with no work for .a week or two 'during the monsoon, a real Winding up had to, take - place-the lirst time he waa . put in. We kept him six ytitri.4 The last weak I owned him I had to wind him up. I sold ; the patent to' the man that, bought the horse;' and learned from him that lie had to ttse it as-long as the horse lived. • • At the last lunar eclipse, Italto - Sabib..a pious Ilifidoo, weighed himself, and gave his weight in silver coins to the poor. Go thou nimbi!) likewise.—Neir,York Work,: ItumAx hair has gone up 75 cents a Found, and the best quality of lifittr has gone down td 30. Boarding-houses will now be comlielled to furnish the essence of cow unk-moellished. CAN any one tell why it is a man blows the foam off a glass of beer bcfOre drirdt lug it ?—nrereport Timis.. Give it up. Never saw a man drinking foam that had been blown from a beer glass.—Piraiune: THE OLD SCHOOL BOOK —N. Y. drapltte WINDING UP A HORSE 4. 191.00 per Annum In . Advance. SHERIDAN ON DEMOCRACY While Gen. George A. Sheridan, of Louisiana, was speaking Monday night Oh the West Side, Chicakct he was interrupted by anadcipted citi zen with this question " WhaVhs the , matter-with the Democratic par- I ty any wax.?" • guiele as lightning - Sheridan turned froni the line of his argument and gave, an answer to his - • interrupter which" all who heard it will ,remember as' long.as they live. .It was as - follows,: •"' What is the :,natter - with the Democratic party,' eh?. I, will tell -yon ; my friend. •'" The Democratic party was born under planets that were in opposi tion. it lives in - the objective case'. Like a mule, 'it has no _pride-of an cestry ;:- - „hope of - posterity.! ,It never'originates anything.',lt shines with borrowed light.. It has never been joined in honest wedlockT,to a grin` iple, but lived ;par years in-open adultery with a harldt caked slavery; livetrwitli.her till she;died of corrun tion,.and was buried amid the sobs and groats of her- paramour. Tile atmosphere that surrounds :-Dernoc racy is full of noxious vapors that breed. moral pestilence and death. The Sun never shines through it; vice seeks its 'shadow, and • corruption grows lusty - under Ats nnholy influ ence. .Springs of purity are -never foun4,in Deniocracy. Its waters are lifeless--- , covered with filth and scum, with which stagtilint pool 4 'and moveles4 waters always offend the eyes of men. The soil which De mocracy_has cultivated has failed to , yield harvests of valhe to the- nation, but has given ergps of worthless weeds and briars. Democracy. has no love of country ;- believes - in -states instead of Nation ; : driv,,es - - loyalty from its doors and - Welcomes treason in its habitations-; - holds the deeds, of our soldiers and sailors - as naught; hrives to 'blacken the names of our eroes; . weeps •over the lost cause; hates the blue,rind loves the gray slabs loyalty in - the back ; - binds, up the wounds of treason and s-Peaks, words of Hope and cornfortljo devotees; applauds when tielplesS blacks' are stricken down in' the South, and caresses the hands: reel with their innocent blood ; denies the riglikof American citizens to iniike homes for*themselves fn the South ; justifies the `men who shot them down or drive them out. Democracy is-aidurse to the , land, the source of our 'hiherest woes; the haven *here viceiqinds friends - and -crime its and defenders. I)einderacy is origitmCsin -let ~pose, td rend -and de stroy -,,M*411e. spirit Of evil filling the swine onlie nation.; the incar nation of unhOlinessll -the child of the its lidme should be in that outer darkness- where: there is weep - - injz, wailing and - g nashing of teeth. Such,-faintly pictinied, my friend, is • what Is the matter with the Demo cratic party.'" . ." AN AMUSING ANECDOTE. Here is" a story' far funnier than most of the : anecdotes one finds under. tthe caption of pimrglls a la, main in `the ,Tair»al .4 masa& or the FiOro.. ,It is a story of .George . Honey, the 'distinguished - actor, who, . many years. ago, while on a 'tour ifi the provinces, had taken lodgings in an huuible house, somewhat. the worse for Wear. Soon after retiring. he was, awakened by a fluttering noise as' of a bird around. the curtain of his bed. He 'sprang, struck a light, and s'aw a dark little-creature With wings bFundering about the room. Not being well acquainted with natural history he did 'riot. recognize it as a bat, but determineeto 'patch it—if possible—and examine; it carefully in tho• morning.. Taking Up. a felt hat, he began to hunt and:capture the in truder, for a long time in. vain but; last he pounced upon it, took.it from the shat, shut up in a drawer o listening to its.straggles to - escape•H wanting ,to be sure ttlo. - t" he had "really -caught , it,• and went •to bed dreaming -Ofilly in -, • - dragons: But lie was not destinrd to - sleep long. ,hardly had :hi! dozed off. when( a further , flutter aWakened him, -And lighting .another match, he found anotherzbai.'. After this. bne he had. another limit, caught it, putOt in the, drawer. brother, and again. went to bed. , Again, hOwever; he was awakened in a similar manner, bats came not in single spies, but-if the expression he - .pardonublU—in battalions:" Inin,ted dil gently, making. quite - a collet Hon. of specimens, and. put them all with great care in the drawer. Heated with the -chase, he' thin opened the window, and \ tired. out, at last en joyed a feW mitlites' sleep. Waking with the mornNg Hight he jumpedk Out of bed and openeil, the drawer very 'cautiously to look for his bats but lo, b and behold ! There were no bats there. He, Op - ened, the _drawer wide,'Uud then discovered. that it had no hack' to it: ;He had, in fact, been passin all' • his night catching Hh ie same bat, which had tloWit-out at the - back of the, drawef as soon as he had put him hi' , at the. front,• and when the window was . opened finally es- caped " Ilsvwally of the idiots asked, What did the:pipe-stem f?!• "—New.- York Herald. you're thelirst mie.—Puok. - Tun manager of a country theatre, -whose audience consisted one night of but two men, both drunk, declared tbat he had L!'_full house?" •_ • . TiM man who carelessly investigated some excavations that were flanked with a red flag was called a blasted idiot " .by. the unfeeling ccironer'sJury. , --Xeir- York Netts. • ' " WHAT is the USiial definition of con science ?" asked ktuan of his pastor. ' man's! iule for his'ileighboes conduct is alxiiit the way it comes oat practically,'" was the reply. A MAI: who •still earths in his body a bullet which entered it at Antietam' calls it lead astray. • i "Ou, vleN ; I have' made faces m) study. Do you paint, Miss Brown;"' "Sir?" "I niZuu, do you paint pictufes?" A .COUNTRY paper says : " A child - , was rhwover by a wagon threoyears old, and cross-eyed, with pantaleti on." IT is Over sit weeks since George Wash- ington'sbody-servant ;,vas last beard from. If this should meet, Ids eye, will he com municate with an anxious public without • delay ? • G EXTRA'. - GARFIELD' says : " What , *l3 want isa dollar that will keep over night." 'Unless • it weighs several tons he- can't keep it over night in askew-York iugs bank„--___,Yerristown 'Herald. ' . J.— Alter some days of unconscious= tiees, FienatoiTnonuAs recovered enough last week to ask what it was that struck ' • .. Billiard playing by minors, in 'the public rooms of Wilkes-Barre, has been prohibited by an order from, Mayor Loo ms.- • • ....We - send : missionaries all over - the world when, according to the. Newport Ledger, there is not a Stinday . school in Howe township, Perry county. A. man jumped from a New York Fe 4 tral train at Lyons -the other. day That did not kill him, but he rolled into a mill race and was drowned. . . X.' Bn.i.pws, Of Gaines,-Tio ga County, died suddenly at hia home on Sunday evening, .octoher 12th', Mr. H.. was ; called the wealthiest nian in Tioga NUMBER 22 : telephone along the Pittsburg Southern-Milroad is now used by the porteri; of the press, and 'conversation held between WaShington wind Pittsburg whenever the occasion dernands i it. Curivoro, the captive Zulu King, IS said to be as rather handsome man; and "wears a two dollar tablecloth of the or= dinar); red and green pattern." We.judg,e his newspaper portraits don't flatter him." " .....Every cell in the Lycorniiii (4 jail at William Sport, that's in condition to be used; has,two prisoners in it. i4oming's usbal Democratic majority is about 1200. It will be ithout eiglityle;s tills year. ..,..Chester County has at last temn4d a female taX' collector. The County Treas rarer has appointed Mrs. Jsmis ar Atglen, tax collector of Ithe d inquent taxes of that borough . for, the . yeai the fiist' fine in- nearly six years: every furnace stack in Allentown is in operation, the • last idle. one, Stack No. 2Pof the Allentown Iron - Company,- laving been blown in a few days ago. There are nine in - blast. - 5 • •.,... A. Williamsport man, fiZdting fithu a boat, was taken by surprise when -large black bass flopped out of ale water • and landed.in his ark. Ile didt(l:u.; how ever, tak mndh.stock in that as - the satisfaction that he saved` his bait. r'&juir6s a half 4 column of since in a Demecratie, newspaper. t.o r .;•give the returns of!the.lateelectioti in Newark, N. J.,. while' two lines in the i sante Rapers • seem to be ample room in which to give the returns from the Statesiof Ohio' and 3 , ,lowa. DRIFTWOOD. GATHERED FROM THE STREAK Or 401UNALI8M, Bucks County Courts have be fore them a lawsuit caused by a squirrel. The incautious little squirrel, ran up a tree skhich the hunters set on fire. Now one of them has been sued by the fanner who awned the tree. - _ ' • A dress ii by \count fiii• a New York lady has eight bultons of sO.l gold, each enameled by - a celebtated artist from his'Owirde:signs: The dress-is..ot ruby velvet, its sole -trimmings :donsiSting, of buttons and a cascade of Alencin "point worth lere is the way they learn to spell in Colioe:;. Ney i : ) 7 6tIc : When a girl iiriss es a, word in the 2.C1100114 the - bflY who. cur rktS herds sternly directed by the school ma'am to kis's her on the Spot. 'piere aro some balspeller's among the girls of Co- Imes. llot 11 ., .,ne among the ....An eiChange •tell.:t the followirig -• sad stow : "A eert4n man in town. wq.) has never adverti-.ed, ; was ieceutly fottrld .. dead under his counter, wile:o. he had .. been lying for two. (lays. 'He - was acci- ' dentally discove'red by. a ;mail bOy vo - - went in to get a - nicitle changed. AN': he had never advertised people bud forgot ten. where his store was; ,and hence -No body happened to discover the cprpse un til decomp . osition set it. - ' .' - ' ......Judge Cpmmis made it lively -fOr offenders of the law in Lycoming County at the last term of. Court. Liquor_tlealers -,iti thatcOunty, who - sell witifolit .license..., 7 who sell to minors, and on Sunday, will take knowledge l cif the recent decisions; 'F:,, , and govern themselves accordingly.- Filies •. of frcini $lOO to , ' $500 . ; impri;onment, - from. three to .twelve mouths until the 'sentence is complied with, with costs of; prosecution,' is Ia 'heavy percentage ,on 'such receipts. .. - . '•,. ' ......Three fishers—from Cumberland, Maryland—were catching •bass in 'the . south branch of the - J'otanac, in West Virginia.. A string of fish were fastened . -in the water at the edge of the. river. ,-.. When'tlie fisherm9i came tote the fish. they found that a line-bass liad:,been ad& ed to'''t-he string. On examination they, found ilia the big bass had -'Swallowed 'one of the smaller ones on the string and - then - could not get away: , ;.- -- .- • nev. EVERETT Hit thinks that as-the American tinitarian Association has been devoting itself to publishing some fourteen varieties of hymn-books, it would be well fur it to now turn its attention to . theLpublication• 'of aT.l3ible, which•should contain the. best' • selections ,of the Bible, • leayillg 'out the mythical and perplexing portions, and Le advoCat es thense of such a Bible. • • Frankfort, the - capital .of'06•1illarl-. oils' Commonwealth or Kentucky, has . been wondering for t year past: where it grot so nitich counterfeit coin, and it was finally traced to' the State penitentiary, where, in a convict's cell, was-found a lot of-tools. metal, and plaster of Paris-_ moulds, besides - a quantity of the qucer., Niihether the convicts. implicated Were pardoned by floyertaril . ...BLACKlll:RN x- • cause he struck' a- bad quarter,'- is _ not Stated. " • 2 ' l . '• • A. Massachusetts pewspaper says : "BEN D i rt' ALDRICH, of ....Montgordery, was bitten by 'rattlesnake some three weeks 'ago, - when full of liquor. SinCe that time he has drank a gallon of liquor a day, and he says be has experienced th), unpleasant el Bets fromthe bite,•except a severe the . bottom of his foot.'.' Quite likely. A man whodrinits galloii . ofkWhisky eiery . day, for. three weeks is hardly.going to 11 - ndAt out,' even if there are unpleasant 'effelts.. - Snakes in tho boots versus snakes in the :piss, .consti tdo a - variation- of homeopathy '-'which probably did-not occur to the founders of that school. " nineteen years with hair as black as night, Was one, of seven packers who left ,Port Lincoln in 1875 to ride with Gener:il C4'STER along the Little -Wherr,his party was three miles distant from the scene of action, the Sioux attacked them. 1 ' Every man for himself," was the ruling princi- le i and LaEt4ltlt sprang on horseback to ride off. lie saw his six' companions go down one after the other.' One bullet. out-of the hundred that followed him tore through his neck, another. cut a deep' rime* across hiii cheek, 'a third imbed dettittielfin his thigh, and a foiirtli - kill: ed his . The desperate biy shot at au approaching Indian ~and ran fora belt of timber a half niile distant', Barefoot ed, ivealcand Taint - from loss of blood, he outran his .pusuers and reached the woods, where he hid fol. three daYs.pe was at last found by three friendly Cow Indians and taken by them to Fort Lin. coin, 'where he found out that 4;6: hair; had turraid'as white as snow.-