O:-0 Sqnaro (1 in- , One Squaro " otto n,- i - -One Square "-, three him. i -One Square " one year - M i Two Squares, one year - 1,5 ;i Quarter Col. V - . .. . 80 : Half " " .- M) i.O Ono " " - - - 100 to Lejjal notices at established rates. . Marriage and death noticca, gratis. All bills for vearlv advertisomenti col lected quarterly; Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance Job work, CmkIi on Delivery. 19 FUHLIPniCI) F.VfcttY WEIiNTSlJAT, by epncE in robimso & bonneivb cuiLDiua ELM BTltEET, TI0WE3TA, tA. TKI1MH, $2.00 A "Y 12 A U. No PnlwrijiMotis roi'rlvod for a shorter period than 1lii'rt hionths. Correspondoiii-n solicited from nil parts of tlio count ry i No notice will be taken of itnnny mmta coniinunical lona. VOL. IX NO. f0. TIONOST A, PA., MAKCII 28, 1877. $2 PER ANNUM. DU3INE3S DIRECTORY. ... . TIONESTA LODGE I. O.of O. F". overv Friday evening, at " 111 o'clock. , in the! tall lormerly occupied y tho'"od Templars. T. J. VAIN lj 1 l',J'-,i, i. . J). W. CLMtK, Sp.c.-y, 27-tf. ,Ss TI0NE3TA COUNCIL, NO O. TJ. J. IMT, 312. ETCTS nt OiM Fellows' Lodf'O Honin, every Tuesday evening, nt 7 o clock. P. M. CLAltK, C. H. A. V A It N Kit, It. .11 'j. 3i. aom:av, ATT On XV Y AT L A If, TIONESTA, PA. ATTENTION ROMHKKS! T baro been admitted to practice as an Attorney in tho Pension Olilco t Wattli inpton. ' I). U. All oincei-H. Moldlcrs, or Hailnrn who were iniured in tho late, war. oun obtain pensions' to winch they may bo ntltlod, bv calling on or addressing mo at Honesta, ta. Also, claims for arrearages of pay and bounty will receive prompt at tcntiou. llavinir boon over four years a soldier in tho Into war, and having for a number of years engaged In tlio prosecution oi moi diem' claims, mr experience will assure the oolloction of claims in tho shortest pos ibloUme. J. B. AUNEW. 41 tf. . W. K. Lathy, K TTOUNKY AT LAW, Tionosta, Pa, tx. Offlee next door to Lawrence llouso. K. L. Davis, A TTORNEY AT LAW. Tionosta, Ta, XV Collections made in this and adjoin ing oountioa. 4U-iy MILKW AV. T A. T E , ATTORNEY AT LAW, fen Strent, TT0XK8TA, PA F.W.Hays, ATTOKXEY AT LAW, and Pcruo, Koynolds Hukill JSIouk, Seneca HI., Oil City, l'a. Notaiiy it Co U'J-ly r. mtxEAi. y.n.s milky KINXEA 11 C SMILEY, itornsya at Law. - - - Franklin, Pa XSRACTICIS' in the several Courts of Vo X Hanaro, Crawford, Forest, and adjoin Htf counties. ii'.i-ly Lawrorce llouso, fHIflMESTA. IT.XK'A. C. E. Mc 1 rit.VY. Piioi-niKTou. This houso in contrail v loratcd. Everything newnm wkII furnished Superior accommoda lions and strict attention given to guests Veucblo and Fruits of all kinds ntrvei in tlio! r peasou. Samplo room lor Com' unx i-iui Agents. CENTRAL HOUSE, naNNKU t ANEW BLOCK. L. I) adsew, Proprietor. This is a now iifMikO, and has jut lieon fitted up for tho nerainmn.latiou of tho publie. A portiou r l.o patronage of the public is solicited i-iy FOREST HOUSE, A. VARNKFl PnorRTVTOK. unposuo Court House, Tionosw, t'a. juhi. -v,nii, l TCvorvtlilnc new ami clean am fi t Tho Ijoit of liquors kept constantly Unii.l. A rort on oftho puljlic patron . r.i In vfsno.'tfull .-soli.'ita i. 4-17-lV W. C COBUHN, M. D., itrr YKrrTAV SURGEON olTers his I .i vli.os to tho people" of Forest I'o, Hafing had an experienco of Twclv Yryii in fonstant nnietieo. Dr. Cobur i.fini Hit Uxih to trive aatihfaetion. Dr. Co burn makes a (specialty of tho treatment i 'n "hi'imt. ijunir anu an liivjTtfrimr diseases. Havin All Rclpiititia methods -f cuV in.r flisHii.so and 8el"otol tho good from all systems, he will guarantee relief ov acmo In all casus whevo a euro is poss'ildo. No "h:,i e for Consultation. All foes will bo rtasonablc. Professional visits mado at all hours. Parties at a distance can con sult him by letter. (KUee ami Residence necond building below the Court House, Tionosta, Pa. Ot tioa days Wednesdays and Saturdays. 2;tf u. ii. ail, MA I jxo. r. i'akk. , PAJtK A. B- KMXY- ,0CO ' 33 .A. 3sT IC E JRj S Corner of Elm A Walnut Sts. Tionosta. Bank of Discount and Doposit. Interest allowed on Tlmo Deposits. Collection made on all the Principal points of tho U.S. Collections solicited. IS-ly. MKADVILLE, - - TEXN'A. TAXIDERMISTS. BIRDS and Animals stuffed and mount ed to order. Artificial Eye kept n ptock. W HEBRASKAGRIST MILL. TnE GRIST MILL at Nobraska (Iacy town,) Forest county, ban been thcr ..rri,ir wrli!iiileil ninl rolittcd in lirst- ultis order, and ii now running and doing all kin(s of CUSTOM a II I X 1 I X cs. FLOUR. FEED, AND OATS. OonnUinUy onhand, and bold atjio very -tim A II. W. LEDEBUR. rM P LOYMEXT, Male and female, sala u ry or eomiiilHMion. We pay aent us hHlnr'v- rf i'lll n unnk Klld OX l)llKe. Eure- M;inul.i.iurinir Co., Ilarlt'ord. Conn i'aniciliu-i fioc. 41 1 MISS. ,'. MT. HEATH, DRESSMAKER, Tioncsta, Pa. TV Til!5'. HEATH lias recently moved lo 1VI. this place for tlio purpose of meeting a want which the, ladies of the town onil county havo for a lonir tirno known, that of liaviiiLf a dreaxniakor of experience anions Ihtfin, I nm prepared to make all kind. of dresses in tlio latest styles, and guarantee sat isliu 'lion. Stamping for braid- iii(r and embroidery dono in tlio best man ner, with llio newest patterns. All T ask in a fair trial. Kesidonco on Elm Street. in the Aoomb lluilding. tf. IME TRIED AND FIRE TESTED ! T1I15 OltlUIXAt. ETNA INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFORD, CONN. ASSETS Dec. 31, 1873, MILES W. TATE,, Sub Agent, 45 T'onehta, Ta. IVnuk llobbius, PHOTOGRAPHER (BUCCE3H0R to PKMIKQ.) Pictures In every styleof tho ark. Views of the oil reurious for Halo or takou to or dor. CENTRE STREET, near Jl, It. crossing, rtYCA MORE STREET, neat Union Do pot, 'it city, ra. zu-u PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. KI,M NIHKET, SOUTH OF ROBINSON A BONNER'S STORE. Tiouosta, Pa., M. CARPENTER, - - - Proprietor. tSSciHSM.: Pictnroa taken lit all the latest styles tlio ai t. II. TINKER & CO. WIOLESALK & RfiTAIL Deal era in ' . Hardware, Iron ami IVnils, Utoves and Tinvaro. BELTING OF ALL SIZES Constantly on hand, at low price. Also Mamufaotnroisof Smoko Stacks,T5rcccli inpf, Sheet Iron, AVoll Casing, FOR SALE One Seeond-liand ten b'orso powor Woodberry Stationary,-Boiler and Engine. II. G. TINKER & CO., OIL CITY, PA. THE LARGEST FURNITURE ESTABLISHMENT IN THE OIL REdlONS! DMCIIj-EIS smith, Dealer in CABINET AND UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE! FRANKLIN, - - - . FENN'A. Consisting ot Parlor, Office and Common Furnuuro, Mattresses, nnows, inaow Khades, Fixturoa, Look ing Ulaasos, Ac. Also- asent for Venango county lor the Celebrated Manhattan Spring Bod and Combination Mattresses, manufactured and for kuIo at my Furniture Warorooms, 13th street, near Liberty. Call and nee samplo Red. 0 ly Dr. J. L. Acorryb, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, whohaa liad fifteen years' experience in a larfio and Buccesnful practice, will attend all ProfoNHional Calls. Olllce in bi Drug and Grocery Store, located in Tidioute, near Tldiouto House. IN HIS STORE WILL BE FOUND A full asHortmcnt of Medicines, Liquor Tobsieeo. Citrars. Stationery. Glass, l'ainta Oil.CutUrv. all of the best quality, and will I m wold nt reasonable rates. DR. CllAS. O. DAY, an experienced Phvsieian and Druggist from New York, has ehargo of tho Store. All proscriptions put up accurately. in Religious and Agricultuml weeklies bal f-i nice. Send for ctitaloiruo on tho Libt Plan. For information,' address UKO. I'. RO WELL A CO., '1 4 41 Park Row. N. Y. A DVERTISERS send 25 cents to Geo, J P. liuH-cll d- Co.. 11 Park Row, N. Y., fur their Ei-.'bty-pavto l'ami akt, allowing i-o.-tol ' advtribintr. lJ R Enriching a Tramp. Two wealthy ecnilemen of Kew York city have lately been making aa experiment upon ft very vile body and havo worthily solved a , very ; interest ing if not important problem. What wuulJ become of a tramp if he were taken lrnm his wandermga and excel lently vell provided for? was a ques tion they discussed one evening, and so many more or less curious thought!) came to the suri'ace that they conclu ded to try th experiment just for a lark. They fouud tha man they were in search of and then employed a de tective to watch him. All being ar ranged, tho tramp, who was apparently about thirty years of age and very seedy, was drugged -one night by the detective, placed in a carriage and driven to a hotel, the proprietor of which, after some demur, had agreed to tho plan. Tho tramp was shaved and trimmed as to'his hair, bathed and placed in bed in one of the most luxurious rooms in tho house; his old clothes were taken away and a. bran new and elegant suit was substituted for them. Everything was there, from the silk hat and boots to the watch and chain, the cane end the silk umbrella.- In llis bronst pocket of the coat was a wallet containing $250 iu notes of large and email denomina tions. The tramp's naino as ho had given U wbea he was first treated by the detective to a drink it may have been Lis and it may not, but at all events he would recognize it was written in tho hotel register, and the day clerk was put "fly" to the whole matter", and instructed to address him courteously in tho morning when he came down stairs, to ask after his health, and to depart so far from the ordinary graudeur.of Iho" hotel clerk 84 to be even deferential in his deport ment to the gueBt. lne tramp was then left to himself, and woke not, it may bo supposed, till the late morning, for he did ifoFcome down till after noon. What his thougiits were on waking, in a condition analogous to that which set poor Abou Hassan era zy and nade him believe himself com mander of the faithful, must, of course bo matters of conjecture. He euiered the ofllco in gorgaous array but with a bewildered look, and would have bolted into the street with out delay had he net bean addressed by name by tho clerk, who most cour teously gave him the compliments of the day, and asked if he had any mes sage to leave for .two gentlemen who had called to see him an hour before, but hearing he had not yet coma from his room, merely left their cards, say ing that they would return at 7 o'clock. To the clerk's surprise the whilom tramp took their cards, examined them, and told the clerk in very good Euglish. though with the tramp's char acteristic husky voice, that pressing business rendered it uecegsary for him to leavo immediately for Chicago. lie was very eorry, but would be obliged to leave a note for his f'ritndi, which he thereupon ,vroto with a fluent pen, sealed it, and directed tho clerk to give it to either gentleman who might call for it. Upon being opened, it was found to ba merely a collection of words put together hap-hazard, but all correctly spelled and written in a beautilul hand. It was evident that the tramp they bad undertaken to examine was at least fairly well edu cated. Followed tv the detective, the nou- veau riche went down Dr sad way n far as Tenth street, looking furtively to the right and left occasionally, and turning at Tenth, crossed over to tbe east side, and so onwaid dowDavenuo A, till he came to a low restaurant, into which, notwithstanding his fine appearance and the deference which he must have known it would win for him, be slouched and shuffled in the true tramp tuanoer. Addressing the bartender, he began with, "Vouldn t you give a poor" hut there he caught himself In time, and asked for a "little gin." When he Lad poured the glass full to the brim, turning bis back to the bar as ho did so and enveloping the tumbler completely with hi hand, he swallowed the whole at a draught, turned to the lunch of ragged ausage, and grabbing a handful of it, was about to leave the place, wen he was reminded that he hadn't paid. Then he felt iu all his pockets and said he hadn't a cent about him, but finally made shift to get at a $1 bill, and hav in; recsived the change, he walked out, and at the corner stood for a loug time in a brown study, multerug to himself. Then he drew out the pocket book aud emptied it, putting the roll of bills into his tromsers pocket. With tho wallet in his hand, he walked on till he came to an ash-barrel mto which be dropped it and then hastened away About every fourth block he stopped at a restaurant, drinking and taking a Lita at each, but his liquor Bcemed as vet to have no eflect on him. Tj however, he bocanie- not, indeed, top-heavy, but generally dissolved and soaked. Appearing to see the necessity of getting under cov er, h entered a hotel in the I3owery for thus far. on his journey had he come i-boozily registered his namo, and then was shown to his room. He did not go to bed, but snoozed in his chair all night. In the morning ho went at once to drinking the vor?t gin ho co vi 11 get, and presently entered n pawnbroker's chop, where ho put p (iiis watch and cverooat ; so out again, and in a scceml-hand clothing store ho bought tho . cheapest of all possible cheap suit?, rolled his good clothes in to a bundlo, pawned them at another chop, and so, fully at ease, ho went on his way. Tho story told bv the detective of his subsequent career speaks of how the tramp endad up iu 1'uxler street, and was robbed while dead drunk. It was noticeable that at about thattiraa the detective wore a swell watch aud chain, and came out brightly with a diamond cluster, for which he long had yearned. As for the two extravagant truth-seekers, they had tueir expeuse for their pains. Lawyer and Thief. borne time ago, while a lawyer was attending court in au interior county, he was applied to by a singular speci men of humanity, charged with grand larceny, to defend him. The lawyer very naturally inquired what crime he was accused of. iho accused replied that somebody had been mean enough to charge him with stealing $150 in bills and got him indicted. "Are you guilty ?" asked tbe law yer. "That's none of your business," re plied the accused. "They say thot makes uo difference with you, wheth er a man is guilty or not, you wil contrive to dig him out some way. So don't talk any more about guilt til you hear what the jury says. "Well, what about tho pay?", said the lawyer. "ion just hold on till the trial is over: give K (the complainant) fits on the cross examination aud that other fellow he has got to back him un. and you'll have no tnoro trouble amut tho pay." The trial commenced, and proved to be "a somewhat protracted one. Tho District Attorney, proved that the moDev in Question wos composed of two fifty dollar bills on a cerUin bank and the remainder all in tea dollar bills, all of which wera wrapped up in a peice of oiled silk. The jury after listenincr to the counsel in the case and receiving the charge of tho judge retired, and soon rcturued with a ver diet of not guilty. Tho accused, who was ureatlv elated over the result of the trial and the effort of his counsel invited tho latter into one of tho va cant jury-rooms. As soon as they were alouc he slapped his counsel on the choulder and exclaimed : "Free as water, aintl? What's the use of trviiig a niau for stealing when you are around? Now I suppose you want your pay. 'Yes, have you got anythiug to pay with? said the lawyer. 'Lend mo your knife and we'll see about that." The lawyer, slightly starlled at such a proposition, rather reluctautly com plied. 1 he accused immediately com menced ripping and cutting away at the waistbaud of his pantaloons, and soon produced tha roll of bills for the stealing of which he had just been tried, wrapped up in the identical piece of oiled silk described by the wituess for the prosecution, aud throw ing it down on the table before the astonished lawyer, exclaimed : 'lhere take your pay out ot that; 1 guess there is enough there to pay you tolerably well. . "What, you villain ! you stole that noney after all," Baid the lawyer. "Do you expect me to take any of that stolen money 7 "Stole that nioBey! Why, what re you talking about! Didn't them twelve men up stairs just say I didn't Steal it? What's the use of your try ing to raise a question of conscience, after twelve respectable men have giv en their epinion on the subject? Take your pay eut of that and ask no ques tions. Don't bo modest iu taking;. I got it easy enough, and you've work id hard enough for it." The chap didn't have much change left after the lawyer had satisfied his couscience in the premises. "What's going on in the uext room, waiter?" asked a staid committeeman at a leading hotel, tho other night. "They're having a little game there, sir," responded tha attendant, and jnst then somebody in the apartment re furred to bawled, "pass tho buck," at which tho good mini's face cleared and he said, "Oh, I see; a venison iunner." and the committee business a went on. Stranso Sea Monsters. The sea-serpent has been " long re garded by most persons as a gigantic fraud. Either the object which ap- :enred like a sen-ssrpent. was some thing altogether different a floating tree entangled iu sea-weed, the serpen tine outline of distant lulls half lost under a scudding haze, a row of leap ing porpoises, or, if a single living creature at all, then one of a known species scon under unusual and de ceptive condition or else tho circum stantial accounts which could not be thus explained nway were corcoc tious of falsehood. Yet, as the natur alist Gosse long since pointed out, in his curious essay en "Iho Great Lu-! known, it is altogether unlikely that men know all the forms of animals which exist in the ocean, and the an tecedent probability against theory of the existence of creatures such as tho great sea-Bcrpent lias been described to he its not sufficient to outweigh tho evidence which has been given re specting such creatures. No ono who has read the account given by the of ficers and men of the Dudalm, for in stance, can for a moment suppose that they were deceived in any one of the ways ingeniously imagined; wo must assume that they all told untruths be fore we can reject the belief that same as yet unknown eca creature was seen by them. That creature may quite possibly not have been a serpent so called, the picture drawn by one of the midshipmen may have been in correct in details (as 1 rofessor Owen insisted it must have been); but unless the whole affair was a fraud, a sea an imal was seen which had all the ap pearance of a gigantic serpent. And the idea of fraud in such njat ters is not nearly so reasonable as many seem to imagine. Travellers are sometimes said to tell marvelous stories ;btit it is a noteworthy fact that in nine cases out often the marvelous stories of travellers have been con firmed. Men ridiculed the tale brought back by those who had sailed far to tlio south, ttat the sun tliero moves from right to left, iastead of from left to right, as you face his midday place ; but we know that those travellers told the truth. Tho first accouut of the gi raO'e was laughed to scorn, and it was satisfactorily proved that uo such creature could possibly exist. The gorilla would havo been geered out of exi8teuc but tor the fortunate arrival of a skeleton of his at an early stago of our acquaintance with that pre possessing cousin of ours. Monstrous cuttlo fish were thought to be roon strous lies, till the Alcdon, in 1861, came upon one and captured its tail, whoso weight of forty pounds led nat uraiists to estimate the entire weight of the creature at four thousand pounds, or nearly a couple of tons. In 1873, again, two fishermen encountered gigantic cuttle in Conception l?ay, Newfoundland, whose arms were about thirty-five feet in length (the fisher men cut on a piece lroru one arm twenty-five feet long), while its body was estimated at sixty feet in length and five feet in diameter so that tho devil-fioh of Victor Hugo's famous story was a mere oaoy cuttle by com parison with tho Newfoundland mon ster. The mermaid, has been satisfac torily identified with the manatte, or "wonian-fiah," as the Portuguese call it, which assumes, savs Captain Seer- esly, "such positions that the human appearance is very closely imitated. As for stories of sea-serpents, uatur alists have been far les3 disposed to be incredulous than the general public. Dr. Andrew Wilson, for instance, af ter speakiug of the recorded ubserva Hons in much such terms us 1 have used above, says: "We map then, affirm safoly that there are many ven fied pieces of evidence on record of strange marine forms having been met with, which evidences judged accord ing to ordinary and common-sense rules, go to provo that certain hither to undescribed marine organisms do certainly exist in the sea-depths." As to tho support which natural history can give to the above proposition zoologists can but admit, he pro ceeds, "the correctness of tho observa tion. Certain organisms, aud especi ally those ot marine kind (c. n., ccr tain whaUs), are known to be of cx ceedingly rare accurence. Our knowl edsra of mariuo reptilia is confessedly very small ; aud, best of all, there is no counter-objaction or feasible argu meut which the naturaliit can offer by way of denying tho above proposi tiou. He would bo forced to admit the existence of purely mariuo geoer ul of snakes which posses) compressed tails, adapted for swimming, and oth er points of organization admittedly suited for a purely aquatic ixistence, If, therefore, we admit tho possibility Day, even the reasonable probabili tv that crijrantic member of these water-snakes mav occasionly bo devel oped, fliould ttate a powerful caso for the assumed and probable existence of a natural sea-serpent. We conleis w do not well see bow such a chain of probabilities can be readily set aside, supported as they arc in the possibili ty of their occbrrence by zoological science, and in the actual details of the case by evidence as trustworthy in many cases as that received in our courts of law." When we remember how few fish or other inhabitants of tho sea are ever seen compared with the countless millions which exist, that not one specimen of some tribes will be seen for many yeirs in succession, and that, home tribes are only known to exist because a single specimen or even a Eingle skeleton has been obtained, wo may well believe that in the sea, as in luavo:i and earth, there are moro thin-rs thxn are known iu our philoso phy. -Harder Weekly. ai How a Minister Outwitted a Street Car Pickpocket. In Now York the other day Key. Chus. A. Stoddard, onu of tho editors of the New York Cbserrer, anil his wife, Mis. Mary P. Stoddard, who re side at One-lIundredaud-Fifty-fifih street and Tenth avenue, were riding down town ia a stage of the Thirty- third Street line from the Thirtieth Btr9t depot of the lludsou River rail road. Wlule turning tho corner et Ninth avenue and Twenty-third etreet, man who bad been seated ocsida Mrs. Stoddard got up suddenly and lurriedlv left the staec. When ha most eut of sight a man sitting opposite winked at Mrs. Stoddard, and, pointed at the man who had left the stage, said, "Madam, that man hat got your pocket-book. Mrs. Stod dard then found that her pocket-book, containing 810 and an unset nmethys haa disappeared. Mr. Stoddard who was seated opposite to his wife, did not make any movement to pursue tho supposed theif, but closely watched the man who had given the informa- 1T...1 i . L - hum. uuuer uio kiuiiuv iot iiieu became very unea3y, and at Eighth avenue left the stage. Mr. Stoddard followed him. Ho walked leisurely at first, but finding that ho was being followed he quickened his pace into a run. Mr. Stoddard ran after him, and the fugitive, discovering that he was closely- pressed, threw away ,.a pocket book, w hich subsequently prov ed to be the pocket-book of Mrs. Stod dard, with its contents intact. Patrol man Madden, of tho Sixteenth pre cinct, joined in the pursuit and suc ceeded in arresting the fugitive. Oa being taken to the station-houso .he rrnvA hiQ immA n Vrnller Rrnwn on- was recognized as an adroit pick-pock et, whose portrait is in the Rogues' Gallery ftt police headquarters. Brown was subsequently arraigned at the Washington riace police cfcurt, and com twitted for trial iu default of 82, 000 bail. It wos apparent that the man who sat besido Mrs. Stoddard was a confederate of Brown and stole the pocket-book. In leaving the stage he passed it to lirown, who, when Jus confederate had preceded far enough to make his capture doubtful, inform ed Mrs. Stoddard that she had been robbed, hoping that the lady would leave the stage and pursue the thief, and thus give him.un opportunity t- escape with tho booty. This udroit schemo was frustrated by the pre sence of mind and 3elf-possession of Mr. Stoddard and wife. A Smart Young Man. Adolpli Z. is young, not unt)re!i.?- essitig and a clerk in a wealthy hank er s ofiice in Paris, on a salary of six hundred dollars a year. The banker hii3 a pretty daughter of eighteen. Adolph has not a ceut, but that doe? nDt deter him from wailing upon bis employer one morning and saying: 'Sir, I.have the honor of asking yoiu daughter's hand in marriage.' Tin banker, astonished, rang the bell, an.1 told the waiter to throw Adolph ou. of tho window. 'As you please,' calm ly said the youug clerk, 'but befor that is dono learn that I am about t become a partner in the Lor don hous of Batburst & Co.' At this the bank er softons. 'The proof, sir, tho proc of what you say.' 'Give nie forty eight hours in which to go to Eu, laud, and I will bripg you the prooi Adolpli hurries to London, preser himself at the office of Batburst & C andsaj-s: I have come to propr that you take me as partner,' and, Mr. Batburst looks us though i thought Adolph demented, he ad I 'I am about to marry tho daughter M. P. of Paris.' Adolph is thereup asked to be eeated, they converse ai come to terms. The brihk you man returned to Paris carrying to ! future father-in-lsw tha proof of statement, and iJ.e young people ; wedded. A youug lad, whoso teacher is r er free with tho rod, remarked other day, "that they had too i holler-davj at their school."