r : : : : : i Rates of Advorti- One Square (1 inch,) one Insertion - 1 One Square " one month -3' One Square " . throe months - 00 One Square " one year - . 10 00 Two Hqnares, one year ... 15 (o Quarter Col. 80 M Half " " - M 00 One " - - - 100 00 lgal notices at established rates. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. W PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, Y W K. DUNN. OFFICE 15 ROBINSON k BON NEB'S BUttDINO ELM STREET, TIONESTA, PA. TERMS, $2.00 A YEAR. No Subscriptions received for a shorter period than throe months. Correspondence solicited from all part of the country. No notice will ho taken of anonymous communications. VOL. X. NO. 32. TIONESTA, PA., NOV. 14, 1877. $2 PEE ANNUM, True fame. It may be KlorioiiH to writo Thoughts Hint Khali glad the (wo or three High mmlf, liko those fnr stars that come iu Night Once iu a century. Hut bettor far it in to neak One simplu word, which now and then Bball waken their free nnture in the weak And friondloMg sons of men. To write nome earnent verse or lino VTiiuh Keeking not tho pi aiso of art, Shall make a clearer faith and manhood umilu In the uu tu tore I heart. lie tbnt doth tlr's, in vcrne or prneo May bo forgotten in h's day but Kiiroly shall be crowned at laot with those Who live and speak for aye. NONA. Noun utojj by the window, deeply considering. IIow the beautiful prospect, the world of rose-hues, wax-lights and golden promises allured her ! After nil, would she bo doing just;ee to herself or the refit if tbe declined the broader, brighter life Bti etching out befor j her ? Every one added to the burden press ing on the lt xlmnn paternal smoulders ; the cloud of enre ha I not beea allowed to fall upon Nona, but she knew in n vagne way that the general Bhabbiness which had stolon by imperceptible de grees over tho family was unavoidable in making the two ends meet ; even her support removed would bo a lightening of the load. " I have made up my nr'nd," she said, with sudden lesolution, turning to make the announcement just as the door opened and Robert came in. tioingr inat is rignt, be said, ap provingly, while a storm of reproaches and remonstrances broke fr-.m the younger boys They had a better right to her than Mrs. Mcllvane ; bew would she get along without hiilf a dozen fellows . to fight her battles, and pathetically what in this wide world would they do without Nona ? " Oh, I will be placed bo I can make that all right. Do yon think I am giug t j take aU the beuefits and give none ? There shall be a shower of golden fairy gifte, take my word for it, and such things have a wonderful oft'ect in s luc in? broken hearts, I've heard." .nra. lumnan 1 oko.l up m surprise at this burst of cynicism from Nona, but the girl had flitted away, with the momentary bitterness welling up into one low, passionate cry as she found herself alone. " Oh, it is well I am to go wheir he shows I have worn out my welcome here." Ihe next moment bhe was ashamed of herself for that ungenerous and unwar ranted reflection npou those whose af fection-had never failed her, but the knowledge that Robert would willingly see her depart hurt her all tho same. She could not know what stern repres Bion the" young fellow had put upon him self, how he had argued that it would be nnfair to take advantage of her ignor ance when she 6tood upon the threshold of the sphere to which she properly be lougod, or what strong faith he had that Bhe would go through the world uu scathed. She was not one of them properly. Motherly Mrs. Hodman had taken the lonely little orphan iutj her heart and home. All the boys from manly B )b down to tiny Steve vied with each other in doing homage to the little queen. That was the state of affairs when Mrs. Mcllvane came in her carriage one day with a proposition that took Nona's breath away. "My dear," said the stately old lady "your father was dear to me once as i son. I hope his daughter will not refuse to me the comfort and happiness which she alone can give. J Every advantage can offer shall be yours. These good people have a family of their own ; they will not miss you, and it is a very lonely old woman who is begging for the boon of your companionship." She might have added a very despotl and jealous old woman, too, who had ul ready resolved that the day which Bhould transplant this flower of girlhood into her home should sever her cjnuection with the "good people" to whom Mrs, Mcllvane signified her desires with aff able condescension. And bo Nona passed from the humble home circle into the tphere of wealth, fashion and splendor, where Mrs. Mcllvane was proud to intro duoe her proteye. The freshness and sweetness which bad charmed her patroness had power to charm the world at least that part of the world which was embodied in Mark Chantrey. Mrs. Mcllvane looked on well content. Mark was her ideal of perfection as nearly as it might be attained among mankind. " You do not kr.ow how to appreciate the honor of his attentions at half their worth," she declared, annoyed that Nona seemed bo little impressed. " lie is a man who has been free from the foibles f most meii ; he lias never amused him- Holf by paying idle homage to women, and I believe is the more capable of a eep attachment -that he has been bo en tirely untouched during all tho years when he might have choseu among the very flower of our belles." "It argues either very poor taste or a very absorbed mma on ins part, Hnswered Nona. But in her secret heart Bhe was flat tered by Ohautrey's preference. She had an honest liking for the man, ! and enough feminine malice to enjoy a triumph which was bo widely envied her; and yet it would be unjust to Nona to say that Blre coquetted with him de- iberately. She had never stopped to analyze her own feelings, wneu sue was suddenly faced by the crisis which others had fore seen while she had only vaguely felt that it might come. Mark Chantrey had asked her to become his wife. She sat in her own roam "thinking it out." She was troubled, weary nud op pressed. She had Robert s picture before her, the still boyish face, thinner, paler than should have been from ove rwork, the brown eves wistful and ten der ns she had so often met them. ' Could she, after ouce taking the de lights of wealth, ever willingly relinquish the advantages it hold, and go back con tentedly to the old, humble lot, with its struggle i aud privations ? Little by little her look of trouble died out before a growing resolution, but somehow one-half of tho sweetness seemed to have died, to:), from tho fair young face. The next day was one of respite. She would not see Mark until evening ; thou she would meet him an I give him his answer. Mrs.' Mcllvaino was never gulity of making au early appearance, an I it argued ill for Mr. Chautrey's itnpUieuca as a lover that he was not present when Nona's eyes sought him in the throng. When he did come he did not imme diately join her. He was in close con versation with the editor of a leading paper, and as they drifted near her she overheard the, latter sav : " Ilis articles were serviceable from the first in their marked originality aud real merit. In Becuring young Rodman we hive miulo an importaut acquisition. I tell you he is a rising genius d Btined to make his mark." " Yes," assented Mr. Chantrey, aud as his interest in the subject flagged he turned toward the spot where Nona .had stood, but she was not there now. She ha I found an obscure corner aud hidden herself in the shadows. Ambition aud gratified vanity had al most urged her to accept a man for whom her deepest feeling was friendly regard. She kuow it now that her pulses were thrilling and heart beating high with the pride of hearing Robert spoken of in such terms of praise. Aud realizing her own needs aud capabilities, she. felt tint life held grander poisibilities than the empty honor of wifehood, with one who had overcome all the obstacles in his course aud attained the placid level of bucobbb in which" his best efforts were already expended. . Chantrey found, her there, aud while it would be most unjust to say he did not feel her gentle but unmistakable -declension of his suit keenly aud sin cerely, he wai not a mm to let a disap pointment in love make any difference in the routine of his daily life. And Nona walked in upon tha Rodman circle next evening just as it had been made complete. " Do you really care enough for me to take me back again ?" she aaked, smiling tearfully. "Because I have offended beyond redemption. I was never much help, I'm afraid ; but you must not think Mrs. Mcllvane has spoiled me for all good. " " Dear child," from happy Mrs. Hod man, "it was like losing the sunshine when you left us." Aud all the rest were eager with their welcoming assurances all but Robert. He had not words, but his eyes Bioke for him. He spoke for himself on another subject before they parted for the night. "If you had not come back to us I Bhould have gone to you, Nona. I hardly dared to hope for this time when I Bhould be fiayiug to you : ' I love you, sweet,' and yet I belived in it bo fully that I never lost heart to work and strive. Do you know " " I know that I am fated to have a celebrity for a husband," Bhe inter rupted ; " and that celebrity and that husband is yourself." I'nrounter frith an Ortonm. Mr. Thomas Beale, who was the Bur geon of a South Sea whaling ship, and who afterward printed a " History of the Sperm Whale," gives an interesting account of his encounter while on the Bouiu Islands, with a small octopus which had been washed ashore and left by the receding tide. It seemed fright ened at first, and endeavored to escape, and in trying to detain it he pressed on one of its legs with his foot. He con tinues : " But, although I made use of considerable force for that purpose, its strength was so great that it several times quickly liberated its member in Bpite of all the efforts I could employ in this way on wet, slippery rocks. 1 now laid hold of one its tentacles with my baud, and held it firmly, so that the limb appeared as if it would be torn asunder by our united strength. I soon gave it a powerful jerk, wishing to dis engage it from the rocks to which it clung bo forcibly by its suckers, which it effectually resisted ; but the moment after, the apparently enraged animul lifted its head, with ' its large eyes pro jecting from the middle of its body, and letting go its hold on the rocks sprang upon my arm, which I had previously bared to the shoulder, and clung with its suckers to it with great power, endeavor ing to get its beak, which I could now see between the roots of its arms, iu position to bite. A sensation of horror pervaded my whole frame when I found this monstrous animal had affixed itself firmly to my arm. Its cold, slimy grasp was extremely sickening, and I imme diately called aloud to the captain, who was searching for shells at some distance, to come and release me from my dis gusting assailant, no quickly arrived, and taking me down to the boat, during which I was employed in keeping the beak away from my hand, quickly re leased me by destroying my tormentor with a boat-knife, wlieu I disengaged it by portions at a time. This animal must have measured across its extended arms about four feet, while its body was not larger than a large clenched hand. This little fellow, which it took two men to destroy, when he was out of his native element, was hardly one-tenth the size of the one in New York." The octopus has another meaDB of self-protection, which, though never failing in the water, is useless when he happens to be stranded on the shore. He is provided with a remarka ble organ, commonly called his " ink bag," which is filled with a dense fluid. When frightened or disturbed he dis charges this in such quantities as to dis color the water for a considerable space above and around him, aud under cover of its inky darkness he propels himself swiftly from the place of danger. A Smart Xetrnbov. Did yon ever see that little mite of a newsboy who goes skipping about Fourth street iu the vicinity of the Gazette and ( -omtiiet rial offices like the last mosquito in a house full of fat boarders just in from the country ? Well, that boy isn't much bigger than a washerwoman's bank account, but he- can sell more papers than a full grown man. It's really interesting to see him flying about the street like a chicken hunting foi its head first on one Bide then over to the other tumbling about nuder people's feet climbiuer up a man's let? to shove a paper into his face losing his hat and j ruuning biiok to get it here one minute j away down yonder the next all eyes ; and ears seeing every hand that Btarts ! toward a pocket, and getting at the side : of its owner before the nickle can see J daylight. He's little, but he's " busi ness," and is said to support a widowed mother by his exertions. We don't think the sluggard would fool away any time in keeping an eye on him for a spell. Cincinnati Sunday Breakfast Table. A Itallieau Mien. The Shelby ville (Tenn.) Gazette is responsible for this hen story : A hen made a nest in a box in a baggage car, and in the course of time had fifteen eggs, and stuck to them through thick and thin, night and day, except to Btep off the train occasionally, while it waited, to get food, and at lust hatchedthirteeu chickens, notwithstanding the rumbling, rolling process the eggs pasBed through. Mr. Shiver (baggage master) says that after the Betting process began, she would frequently, when Off the nest in search of food and water, get left by the train al Shelbyville, and sometimes at Wat race ; and on such occasions she would quietly, wait for the train to re turn, and Bometimes meet it as it came in sitrht. and flv into tho basrsrace car and get on to the nest immediately. When the train stopped for WDod he would sometimes fly out to get some- thing to eat, and when the car-bell rang, she would fly back immediately. She would sometimes manifest her joy when the train appeared by Cackling at a high rate. Mother and chickens are doing well. Retort a of 31a nlaem. There are many instances on record, says a writer, where the keen wit of maniacs has discomfited sane friends. Your true maniac may lack sound sense, but he rarely wants in versatile wit. "What brought you here" asked a pert visitor. " What will never bring yon too nineh brain." Well, 'this causes one-third of' the cases of the lorgest asylum in America. Many in mates possess culture and talent to an eminent degree. Some of the most gifted men I ever saw have spent a large slice of their blasted lives within the gates of despair. A distinguished professor thought to puzzle a maniac by the query : How long, my good fellow, can -a man live .without brains ?" The patient at once replied : " I don't know, doctor. IIow old are you?" . A Mr. Mann, , startled at meeting a lunatic armed vith a club, tried to soothe him with a pan : " I am a double man ; one by both nature and name. The other re joined : " Do tell ! Why, I am a man be side myself. We two will fight you two." Clubs won. A young lady who devoted herself to her artist toother, whose mind was a Kttle unhinged, once nar rowly escaped falling a victim to one of his whims. One day he Bhowcd her a carving knife, wiUi the cheerful remark: " Mabel, my dear, an xld idea occurs to me. I must paint the head of John the Baptist. Yours is au excellent study, tso, if convenient, l will cut on your head. Lay it gently in my Jap. My razor is exceedingly sharp. I will scarce ly hurt yon. Now then, Mabel, you are bound for heaven, sweet 1" His face showed no Biprn of jest. The lady felt her story was in chapter last. He grasped her hair. "Well, Harry," said she, " that's a good idea. But why spoil my new lace ? Let me go up stairs and chancre, won't you, dear ?" He nodded sullenly, and Bhe escaped. Vetemtial Enjoyment. After the labor of the day is over, the weary Chinaman iu San Francisco be takes himself to the club-room, theater or opium-den for an evening's enjoyment, The club-rooms are filled nightly. The Chinaman is nn inveterate gambler, With him it is one of the necessities of life. He will stint his stomach to save a few cents to gratify his insatiable de sirfe to win or lose. He does not Beem to care what the game is. It is said in many places in China it is no unusual sight to see rich merchants carrying large beetles aud grasshoppers in the large sleeves of their coats. A certain mark is placed on each insect. A saucer it produced, and two of the beetles are placed in it to fight a battle. The respec tive owners make their bets, and the battle goes on until one or the other of the insects is killed. The same things are done with tame quails, which on bred ami tamed in the same manner as game cocks. Since the effectual raidH made by the police upon the game of tan-tan, and the severe penalties imposed upon all who are arrested for playing it, the game has generally been aban doned. The game which is now univer sally played is " dominoes." The Chiua- men have been raided so much during the past year that the appearance of a police officer at the door of one of their ; club-rooms instantly creates a panio, and it requires the assurance of the officer that everything is " all right " to epiiet them down! AetlonofColtt upon .VI Ilk. Au abstract from a paper read before j the French Academy of Science gives ' the result of numerous experiments ' made by exposing milk to different tem peratures ranging from 32 deg. Fahr. to 100 deg." Fahr. The following facts were ' elicited : 1. The rise of cream is more rapid its i the temperature to which the milk is ex posed approaches 32 deg. I 2. The volume of cream is greater when the milk has been efficiently cooled. 3. The yield of butter is also greater when the milk has been exposed to a very low temperature. 4. Finallv. the skimmed milk, the butter, and the cheese are of better oualitv when prepared under the above circumstances. While it is impossible to offer a satis factory explanation as to the reasou why artificial cold bhould produce a beneficial effect upon the yield and quulity of pro ducts derived from the milk, it ia prob able that it may tend to arrest that fermentative decomiosrtion which is bo prone to set in with organic fluids, and thus, by proventing incipient alteration, ' indirectly to improve the quality of the i material, : The practice of warming the dairy in i the winter time so as to maintain its at mosphere at a const int temperature of about 60 deg., is therefore objeotiouable; the pans should stand in running water at as low a temperature as can be practi cably obtained. Home and Farm. Interesting to Tea Drtnlser. A writer in an exchange has the fol lowing to say about tea : The nose is one of the best indcres for distinguishing good tea, and how to prepare tea prop erly art teaches us. To obtain a beverage very aromatic and ouly in a small degree astringent you must infuse the tea for half au hour in a very small quantity of cold water, and then add the boiling waters-pouring the ten, before it is very brown, into tho cup. The cold water j saturates the whole texture of tho leaves ! and produces tho same advautages as when we wish to obtain good broth from butcher's meat, and the boiling water separates the tannin from the caffeine, which is precipitated when the iuf up ioa begins to grow cold. In effect, if you take tea iu the Russian fashion, in a drinking glass, you will Bee the tea grow turbid almost as soon as it is poured out. I think it is wise to take only the first infusion, which contains from four to Bix times as much useful substance as the second. This last has the incon venience or Deing only in a very sniaii degree aromatic and in a high degree astringent. The addition of a few drops of lemon juice, or of any other vegetable acid, renders tea more exciting; and this custom prevails among poor Chinese nud many Russians. The addition of an alkali, on the contrary, makes tea less stimulating and in some measure nar coticul. In Chinese Tartnry, in Cash mere, and in other countries of Asia, the leaves of tea are eaten, cooked in various modes with butter, flour and soda, aud the richness of the leaves in albumine explains their nutritive power. It is said in the travels of Hue, Cabet, Auchterlony nud others, that a good soup of ten is one of the best aliments for those about to undertake fatiguing journeys iu lofty mountains. Tea ex cites the movements of tlie henrt less than coffee, is less hostile to sleep, and is less fit to sustain intellectual labor; but more than coffee it increases tho elimiuative activity of the skin and respiration. In many persons it pro duces an astriugent effect on the intes tine and a troublesome constipation. More than everything, experience avail- eth to indicate to any ono whether, from the Btate of his nerves, his brain or his digestion, he ought to prefer tea or coffee. Iu every fashion it seems to be proved that after dinner the Chinese leaf ought to be preferred t the Abyssinian berry. In very cold countries and on very cold days, and consequently with supreme reasou m the Arctic zone, tea is the best of drinks, as all travelers have demonstrated. Dr. Kane did not hesitate to call tea the " great panacea of A'ctictrae'." The excessive use oi ten, especially green ten, produces ob stinate wakefulness, nervous tremblings, convulsions, cramps of the stomach, pal pitatious of the heart and bo on. Ilanyetl for a Vet. There are not wantiug instances of persons who have hanged themselves, fir suffered themselves to be hanged, from motives of curiosity or amusement. A remarkable case of this latter description formed the subject some years ago of one of those many curious investigations which have taken place from time to time at Bow street On April 15, 1812, two men were charged before the magistrates under the following curious circumstances : A constable who was passing along Hemp stead road on the previous evening ob served a stout man six feet high hanging by his neck from a lamp-post attached to a wall, having been tied up und " turned off " i ust before by a short man. The oifieer rushed to the spot, and when he : pi-oved stove-pipe went for $40; an op arrived there the handkerchief by which paratus for showiug the names, of ap the tall man was suspended gave wy, j proaching stations in railroad cars, for and ho fell to the ground. His eyes were j $t;0; a music stand that can also be used protruding from their sockets, aud he ! as a nursery table, $400 ; a convertible was nearly "gone ;" but, on recoveyng i portmanteau and bath-tub, for '$85; a himself ButHcieutly to stagger on his j machine for making horseshoes with the legs, he immediately struck the officer so violent a blow on the nose as nearly to knock him down. Both men were'with difficulty secured, when they explained that the tall man who was being bunged was simply paying a " debt of honor." The two had been " tossing " iu the afternoon, first for money, then for clothes ; the tall mau having won the other's jacket, trousers aud shoes, they agreed to toss up which bhould hang the other. The short man won the toss, and forthwith proceeded to hung the tall man on the lamp-post. The tall man urged that had he won the toss he would in like manner have assuredly hanged the short mau ; but the magistrates", expressing their horror and disgust at the whole story, sentenced both prisoners to find bail for their eood behavior. Nut hav ommitted to Bride- U '- ing bail they were commi well. l'all Mall G Rock county, Wis., boasts of its wealthy farmers, fifty of whom are said to be worth $100,000 each, one hundred j $50,000, and two hundred have $10,000 and upward. Item of Mnterettt. There are eight doctors in the present Congress. It is a common saying that " like cures like," but what cures dislike ? Qen. Miles, the Indian fighter is mar ried to a niece of Qen. Sherman. He is a man of striking and imposing presence. From a boy's composition 'l.jhfp? " I cut my Lucie William s hen s Lend oft' with a hatchet, and it scared her to death." Detectives would be of no use in this world if rogues could only hide them selves as effectually as a callar-button when it suddenly drops from yonr fingers and you haven't but two minutes to catch the train. An exchange tells how the joke was on him: "A bright little girl of our ac quaiutance asked us the following con undrum : How many letters iu a post man's bag ?' We gave it np, and she said there were three b-n g." Among the children exhibited at the baby show in BosWn was a girl four and a half weeks old, and weighing one pound and a half. She was apparently in goof health. There were 347 babies txVb ited, and $1,775 iu prizes given. A certain famous wit was invited dinner bv a miser, who placed on tli table two microscopic cutlets, with tho ominous comment, "You see your din ner." Tho wng promptly helped himself to both, and retorted, " Yes, but I don't see yonrsT " Patent HlgMa at Auetipni George W. Keeler held another auc tion sale of patent rights, consisting of 104 lots, iu Now York recently. There was a large attendance, and good prices were realized. A . lamp extinguisher brought $1,200; a self-acting spiuning mule, $450; a blacking-box holder, $560; half-iutci est in a self-closing gate lunge. j $450; a machine for tplitting kindliug ! wood, $450; a folding spring bed, $J00; I a sponge cup (New York State right). 225; au improved chair (half-interest;, $400;' an improved glue dryer, 425; a new, waterproof rxplosive compound (fireworks right), 075; au improved lamp chimney, $2.r0; another, $1,000; a triturator, to Biipercede the druggists' mortar and pestle, JJ400; a breechloading toy cannon, $100; an improved bevel, 8100; a new method of tet ting fence posts, $240; n new strap buckle, $175; au improved churn dasher (part inter est), $100; a contrivance for holding poison intended for rats or other vermin without danger to other animals or children, $120; an improved boot-jack, $380; an improved churn, $205; an im proved lantern for miners' hats and con- j ductors, $1,450 ; a combmed scissors ( sharpener, screw-driver aud button, j hook, $300; a safety oil can, $500; . a ' double faucet for both hot and cold water (New England States), $140; an improved mechanical movement, $200; a double-bhuled draw-knife, $100; a. self-lubricating car wheel (except Penn sylvania), $G25; a pretty device in toy building-blocks, $415; au apparatus, by means of which the horse attached to a cart or dray furnishes the power to lift j good(J from vesBei3 RI1d other places into the vehicle, $850; on improved oppara tus for testing steam pressure, $10(J; an elastic sole for horseshoes, $200; a new folding stool, $150; half interest in an improved drip-pun for barrels, $700; on i improved Bash fawtener, $140, and a j combination toy, resolvable into ten i artielis (half-interest, Bubject to a roy ally of twelve cents per dozen, and one- third the net profits), $1,4.(). Au lm- toe and heel calks on, for $50, and sev eral other articles. The Bale realized over $18,000. Egypt is rich in olndisks. Among the ruins of Ban the Zoun of the Hebrews iu the Delta, lie no less than ten, all overthrown and Bome shattered. At J Hehopolis, an obelisk sixty-eight feet high, which was four centuries old when Moses was bom, still stands erect. Iu the temple of Luxor there is one of seventy-five feet iu height, the mate of that in Paris. Karnak possesses four, j two of which are uinety-two fe.4 n gaj ana iu me grumra iiuurnt-D lies a suorthne monolith of ninety-five feet, which appears to have been leu there on account of a flaw iu the Btone. All these keep their original places a j the ruins of the ages recorded in tb I . . .. 1 11 IT and if ir l inscriptions be around inem. j ne I obelisk which is destined for New Yoi k bus a height of BeventjVne feet, wiih base of seven feet Beven inches f.p' its material is the rose-gray gr'' ' AfBOiian, the ancient Syemu. t