Rates of Advertising. One Square (llnrh.,) one Insertion - f! One Square " one mouth -8 00 One Square " three months - 6 00 One Square " one year - - 10 00 Two Squares, one year ... IS Co Quarter Col. - - - - 30 00 Half " " - 60 CO One " - - - - 100 00 Logal notions at established rates. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in ndvnnco. Job work, Cash on Delivery. 18 rtnUSIIED EVERY WEDKE8DAT, BY W K. DUNN. OTf ICE IS ROBINSON & BONNER'S BOTLDITO ELM STREET, HONEST A, PA, TERMS, 2.00 A YEAR. , l,,TOr'1PMw received for a shorter 1 -riod than throe monthn. fV.rrpHpon.Jonoo ol!,:ited from nil parte ol the country. No notice will be taken of anonymous communication. VOL. XI. NO. 15. TIONESTA, PA., JULY 3, 1878. $2 PER ANNUM, .4 A Birthday Present HOW A HVHBANO DUTIFULLY TOOK HIS WIFS'i ADVICB Cl'O ITS MF.RITS. I. ' Hither, my ownost," the husband TTntn hit. mi fa Hi.l ' Thou kunweKt to-morrow is thy Dear Constn Flo's birthday. Ye twain have een as lters been, And 'twbre both Jniit and plossant, That we on her shonM now confer A handsome birthday present. Twa at tier holme I first met thee, And when thy hand I sought She lout snoh aid as usually Qirls in her place do not. Bo forth to tho tore of Tiffany, From oou i il r or from shelf A fitting prcoit to solwt. Jewul, or bronze or delf ; And let it be such gift as thou Would'st ohooxe for thine own self ; On sueli occasion one should not He covetous of pelf. II. Forth fared the hnxhand and the wife To the store of Tiffany ; "When she bad heard her husband's word An angry wife wag she t " He hath thought eno'," she said, " of Flo, But never thought of me. He knowetb, or be ouht t" know, . If he kuoweth anything, That the dress I wear was worn threadbare When I had it turned this spring. When at the E.tstor-tide the theme Of hats I dared o broach, He aii, You may,' bus iu a way Of iultuite reproach, My reference, to expenditure Of d liars e'en of dimes Are'met with gloomy lectures on The hard' tw of the times. And yet, in spite of his complaints, When it is Con Bin Flo, To whom a birth ay gift he'd give He oan find cah eno." in. " He should have known," the wife went on, With a aardonio grin, " Not only I Flo's cousin am Hut in a eiine ber twin. Her inrth and mine are on one leaf Of he family Bible rit j Mv lirihdy's on the same day as hers, Rut be does i ot think of it. BstNuma - are. or bronzes fair, Or dead gold iewolry To his FIom he tfing. but anything Is god enough for me I" la such ungentle mood she came To the store of Tiffany. rr. V We grosser mortals oannot Judge Tween diamonds and 'tween paste," The husband said unto his wife j ' And hence on woman's taste Implicit reliance in such things As these must aye be plaoed. Sit down, my dear, selection make As if 'twere for yourself Of any pretty article In show case or on shelf. I care not what the price may be Or what the article ; An it please thine eve, have it put by And I will foot the bill." v. A fiendish thought was in that wife's heart, And she smiled as if in glee, As they brought her there all that was fair In the store of Tiffairy. "These diamond earrings," said her lord, Keem handsome unto me." " Diamonds," said she, " are worn no more In the best society." " Fair is this string of Orient pears," "'Tis pretty, without doubt, But I read in the last Sunday World That pearls were going out." '"Goodly to see these opals be." ' John, opals do not wash ; And they only wear coral jewelry Iu the wilds of far Oohkosh. Nn woman that respects herself Wears costly jowels now ; Whe leaves thoir use to thejiarvenues And the Bowery maids, I trow. An I had mv choice of all the store For my own self, I wis No article in it would more Suit with my taste than this." VI. " What V" said the lord, relnotantly, . " Teronance you're satisfied, But as a gift would not this look, In the poet's language snide?" She lieat the pavement of the store With au impatient toe ; " What's good enough for me," she said, Isn't good enough for Flo?" Her buxbaud marked au angry flush On tier round cheek come and go j " I did not meau that, Louisa, dear ; You should not answer so. Ho, salesman ! in a package do Me up this article ; Send it to-day to this address." The salesman said, " I will," And the husband be got back some change Out of a live dollar bill. - The wife baa hardly reached her house When at the door she sees A wagon, the superscription Whereof is Tiffany's. They give to her a parcel small, Hhe tears the paer away, Wn bin's a card, 'To my dear wife, On her twenty-third birthday." She opens the oaxket with trembling hand, And it to her eyes doth show, The twopenny halfpenny article Hhe had picked out for Flo Which she had sworn beyond return In the motule was all the go I Her dark eyes tilled with tears, for breath A moment she did catch, And gazing on her husband's gift, She softly said, "Tne wrrrrrrrrmrretob !!!!!" JS'ew York World NANNIE. I cannot set down in eo many words just when or Low it came to be under stood between my partner, John Still iuan, and myself that I was to marry his daughter, Nannie, when she was old enough. I have a vague impression that she was in long clothes at the time we tirst talked of it. Her mother died when she was a little girl, and old Mrs. Stillman took her home to the family house at Owl's Cor ner, one of the prettiest little villages I ever had the good fortune to see. But Nannie was eighteen when I first met her as a woman, aud this was the scene of our meeting. John had sent for me to come to Owl's Corner on a certain July day, promising to drive over to the fetation and meet me, as my elderly leers covered the ground but slowly. We had retired from busi ness, rich men both, some five rears be fore and corresponded regularly. But I had been abroad, and this was my first w own turner in ten years, x remembered Nannie as a romping child. fond of swinging on the gates, climbing up grape-arbors, and imperiling her necu ntty times a day, John always say ing on each occasion: "She's a little wild.but she'll get over mar. I waited at the station for half an hour; then, seeing no sign of John, I started to walk home. It was midday and fearfully hot, and when I had ac complished half the distanoe I turned off the road and started through a grove natgaveme a longer walk, but thick shade. I was resting there on a broad stone, completely hidden by the bushes ou every side, when I heard John's voice: "Where have you been f" There was snob dismay and astonish ment in the voice that I looked up in surprise, to find that he was not greeting me, but a tall, slender girl coming to ward him. Snoh a sight I She was dark and beautiful, dressed in a thin dress of rose pink, faultless about the face and throat, but from the waist down, cling ing to her, one mass of the greenest, blackest, thickest mud and water. "In the duck pond," she answered with a voice as clear and musical as a chime of bells. "Don't come near me." "Yon are enough to wear a man into his grave 1" " There, don't scold," was the coaxing reply ; " little Bob Ryan fell in face .(own. It did not make any material difference in his costume, but I was afraid he would smother, so I waded in xt let him. The water is not over two feet deep, but tho mud goes clear through to China, I imagine. It is rather a pity about my new dress, isn't t?" "A pity 1" roared John; "youH come to an untimely end some day with your freaks. As if there was nobody to Mick a little brat out of the duck pond but you f " lhere wa actually nobody else bout There, now, don't be angry. '11 go np to the house and put on that 'switching white affair that came from New York last week, and be all ready to Irive over to the station with you, at what time ?" "About three. Lawrence is coming on the 2:10 train." And I had come on the 12:10. This accounted for the failure to meet me. 1 kept snug in my retreat until John and Nannie were well on their way home ward, wondering a little how many young ladies in my circle of friends would navo so recklessly sacrinced a new dress to pick up a beggar's brat out of the mud. When I. in mv turn reached the house, John was oh the porch, waiting for Nannie's reappearance. He gave me a most cordial welcome, or rather a luncheon, called Nannie, his mother, and a man to go for my trunk, all in one breath, and seemed really rejoiced to see me. Presently a slender girl, with a truly "bewitching" white dress, trimmed with dashes of scarlet ribbon, and smoothly braided black hair, tied with scarlet bows, came demurely into the room and was introduced. Never, how ever, in that first hour could the wildest imagination have pictured Nannie Still man wading into a duck-pond, but the half-shy, half-dignified company manner soon wore away, and Nannie and I were last mends before dinner, one sang for me in a voice as deliciously fresh as a bird's oarrol ; she took me to see her pets., the new horse that was her last birthday gift from "papa," the ugly little Scotch terrier with the beautiful brown eyes, the rabbits. Guinea hens. and the superannuated old pony, who preceded the new horse. In a week I was as much in love as ever John could have desired. Nannie was the most bewitching maiden I had ever met, childlike and yet womanly, frank, bright and full of girlish freaks and boyish mischief, and yet well edu cated, with really wonderful musical gilts, and lull of noble thoughts. Hhe was a perfect idol in the village, her friends and neighbors thinking no party complete without her, while the poor lainy worshipped tier. John allowed her an almost unlimited supply of pocket-money, and she was lavish in all charity, from blankets for old women, tobacco for old men, to can dies for the children, and rides on horse back for the urchins. And she had a way of conferring favors that never wounded the pride of the most sensi tive. We rode together every morning; we walked in the cool evening hours; we spent much time at the piano, and dis cussed our favorite authors, and one day when I asked Nannie to be my wife, she said, oooly: " Why, of course; I thought that was all understood long ago." I was rather amazed at such matter-of-fact wooing, but delighted at the re salt. How could I expect any soft, blushing speeches ? I suppose I ranked just where John and Nannie's grand mother did in her affections. But one morning, when Mrs. Stillman was snipping her geraniums in the sitting-room, and John was reading the morning's newspapers, Nannie burst in, her beautiful faoe aglow, her eyes bright with delight, crying: "Oh, grandma I Walt has come homel I saw him from my window riding up tne road." She was going then, just as John ex claimed: " Confound Walt I" Who is Walt 1" I naturally inquired. "Walter Bruce, the son of one of our neighbors. He has been Jike a brother to Nannie all her life, but went off to Europe two years ago, when he came ef age. They wanted to correspond bat I forbade that. So he has turned up again. It was evident that John was terribly vexed, aud i very soon snared his an noyance. Walt, a tall, handsome, young lenow, improved, not spoiled by travel. lust naunted the house. He was generally off with Nannie as soon as he arrived, and blind to Mrs, Stillman's ill concealed coldness and John's sarcastic speeches about boys and pupies. As for me, by the time my sleepy eyes were opened in the morning, Nanni had taken a long ride with Walt, was at the piano when I came into the room. and Walt was walking beside Nannie when the hour for our usual stroll ar rived. And the very demon of mischief pos sessed the girl. There was no freak she was not inventing to imperil her life, riding, driving, boating, and I fairly shivered sometimes at the prospect of my nervous terrors when it would be my task to try to control this quicksilver temperament. But one day, when I was in the sum mer house, a very rueful little maiden, with a tear-stained face, came to my side. "Walt id going away," said she. "Indeed." "Yes, and he says I'm a wicked flirt," with a chocking sob; "I thought I would ask you about it'" "About what? ' "Our getting married. You know papa told me I was to marry you ages and ages ago." "Yes." "And I knew it was all right if he said so. Hut Walt says you must be a man if you want a wife who is all the time thinking of somebody else. And you know 1 can t help it. Walt has been my friend ever since we were always to gether. And when he was in Europe papa wouldn't let us write to each other, but I kissed his picture every night and morning and wore his hair in a locket. and thought of him all the time. And he 'says you won't like it after we are married." "Well, not exactly." I said dryly. You'll have to stop thinking of him then." " I don't believe I ever can. And so I thought I'd tell you, and perhaps perhaps you will tell papa we don't care about being married after all. I don't think I could ever be sedate and grave like an old lady, and of course I ought to be if 1 am to be an old man's wife." " Of course." "And I am so rude and horrid, I know I am not like nice city girls, and I am altogether hateful, but Walt don't care. I rather agreed with Walt as she stood in shy confusion before me, her eyes still misty, her sweet lips quivering. It was a sore wrench to give her up, but J was not quite an idiot, and I said grave- !y . " ... .... uut your xatner t " Yes, I know ; he'll make a real storm. But then his storms don't last long, and maybe you would tell him that you have changed your mind. You have, haven t you. " Yes; the last half hour has quite changed my matrimonial views." I could not help smiling, and the next moment two arms encircled my neck, a warm kiss fell uopn my cheek, and Nan nie cried: . " You are a perfect darling, a perfect darling, and I shall love you dearly all my life." So when I lost her love I gained it. She flitted away presently, and I gave myself a good mental shaking up, and concluded my fool's paradise would soon have vanished if I had undertaken to make an "old lady" out of Nannie. John s wrath was loud and violent. He exhausted all the vituperative lan guage in the dictionary, and then, sat down panting and furious. " Come, now, I said, what is the ob jection to young Bruce ? Is he poor?" "No, confound himi lie inherits his grandfather's property, besides what his father will probably leave him." "Is he immoral? "I never heard so." "What does ail him, then!" "Nothing, but I have set my heart on Nannie's marrying you." "Well you see she has set her heart in another direction, and I strongly ob ject to a wife who is iu love with some body else." "What on earth sent the puppy home?" "Love for Nannie, I imagine. Come, John, you won't be my father-in-law, for I will not marry Nannie if you are ever so tyrannical, but we can jog along as usual, the best of friends look!" I pointed out the window as I spoke. On the garden walk, shaded by a great oak tree, Walter Bruce stood looking down at Nannie with love-lighted eyes. Iter beautiful lace, all dimpled with smiles and blushes, was lifted up to meet his gaze, and both her little hands were fast prisoned in his strong ones. John looked, ilia lace softened, his eyes grew misty, and presently he said: "now happy she is, liawrence. "And we will not cloud her happiness, John," I answered. "This is right and fitting. Nannie is too bright a May flower t) be wilted by being tied up to an old December log like me." So when, half fearful, the lovers rame in, they met only words of affection, and Nannie's face lost nothing of its sunshine. She was the lovliest of brides a few months later, and wore the diamond Earure I had ordered for my bride at er wedding. And she is the most charming little matron imaginable, with all her old freaks merged into sunshiny cneeriumess. and tier tinshnnri in m. proud, happy man, while I'm Uncle uawrence to tne children and the warm friend of the whole family. New York Fashions. The short skirt dress for street and out of doors wear becomes more and more popular from day to day. Bioh and elegant fabrics are being made up in short skirt styles, and are seen along Broadway and Fifth avenue daily, worn by the most fashionable women. Trim mings of laoe, fringe, embroidery and pleatings are seen on such suits. The toilet matches in all its details. The hat is trimmed with ribbons and feathers to harmonize in color with the materials of the costume. The gloves, of un dressed kid. are of fine Lisle thread, with clockings around the wrists, are selected likewise with an eye to the colors of the suit, and the short skirt shows the stockings of the cloth top of the boots. also to match. In fact, cloth tops to boots have become universally popular since tne snort dresses have come in vogue. Black cloth tops are most sought lor, but those with gray or brown tops, or checked black and white, are chosen for special dresses. Black velvet tops are also worn, but the shoe of the season is the sandal top Newport tie, with a Jjouis av, heel. The straps across the toe and instep show the colored stock ing, which, in that case, must match the costume, of course. Such shoes, how ever, are not intended for street wear. The side-buttoned boot is still the shoe for that use. ueauuiui .uaibriggan hosiery is shown this season in improved shapes and finish, and knitted to produce bour- ette effects in color on dark sufaces, or in mixtures of white and black, or two shades of grey, ij or house wear with low slippers, which must be ornamented with bows and buckles, are shown ex quisite silk and Lisle thrcud hosiery, with the foot in solid black and the leg pale rose, blue, scarlet, green, or any fancy color, and sandal straps simulated in black bands thrown across the instep. and continued in horizontal lines around the ankle to the point where the swell of the calf begins. Such stockings come of extra lengths, and are gartered above the knee with ornamental elastic-drawn ribbons, bedecked with bows and jewel led buckles. Madame Raymond, writing from Paris to Harper's Bazar, says: "In general, short costumes are flat only in front. In the back the tunio or polonaise is draped in a very marked fashion. This is the transitu n which will lead us back to the bouffant dresses, the reappearance of which was announced for this summer. and the final adoption for next winter. With bouffant dresses will be worn, it is said, small paniers, which will form a sort of miniature crinoline on each side of the wearer. Some fashionable ex quisites have already adopted short cos tumes bouffant on the hips, and sup ported by paniers. Words of Wisdom. Believe not ill of a brother till it is proved beyond doubt. Following many vocations has ruined the life of many a man. Make yourself necessary, young man and your success is certain. There is but one thing that is ure here on earth, and that is death. Everybody seems to think himself a moral half bushel to measure the world's frailties. It is heaven upon earth to have a man's mind move in charity, rent in providence and turn upon the poles of truth. In the cities of the dead the houses are small and close together : and a thistle is as liable to grow from a rich man's grave as a daisy is from the mound that covers the dust of a beggar. Those who expect the most are liable to the greatest disappointments. A man of numerous desires is of all beings the most dependent. He who contracts and simplifies his wants will secure the greatest amount of happiness. It is not worth while to think too much about doing good. Doing the best that we know, minute by minute and hour by hour, we insensibly grow to goodness as fruit grows to ripeness. How to Admonish. We must consult the gentlest manner and softest seasons of address ; our advioe must not fall like a violent storm, bearing down and making those to droop whom it is meant to cherish and refresh. It must descend as the dew upon the tender herb, or like melting flakes of snow the softer it falls the longer it dwells upon and the deeper it sinks into the mind. Two Hundred Thousand Bugs. The San Francisco Bulletin says. Prof. Davidson, President of the Acade my of Sciences, recently called the at tention of a number of citizens to the large collection of specimens in entomology made by Henry Edwards during a period of twenty -five years. This collection is said to be one of the largest ever made in the United States, and by far the most complete ever made on the Pacifio coast. About 60,000 species have been collected, representing more than 200, 000 specimens. These represent not only all the orders on this coast, but nearly or quite all in the United Stater, with a large representation of ordeis from all parts of the world. The collec tion is really one of the most complete known in this country or any other. The collection is valued at 812,000, or rather that is about the sum expended in freights, cabinets, and the purchase of rare specimens. The labor of tweuty five years is cot estimated, The Taking of the Bastile. Henri Taine (rives the folio wine vivid description of the capture of the famous I'aris prison by the French revolution ists on July 14th. 1798. After the gar rison and its governor had capitulated tney were Killed by the infuriated popu lace for firing upon them : At the bastile from ten o'clock iu the morning to five in the evening, men fire at walls forty feet in height, thirty feet thick, and it is only by chance that they hit one of the inmates. At the first demand the governor has his guns drawn back from their embrasures, he makes the garrison swear that they will not fire if not attacked, invites the first deputation to breakfast, permits the messenger from the Hotel de Ville to go over the whole fortress, bears several discharges without replying, lets the fiist bridge be carried without firing a shot. If he do finally fire it is at the last extremity, in defense of the second bridge, and after having warned his assailants that he was about to do so. As for the assailants, they are maddened by the novel sensation of attack and resistance, by the smell of powder and the excitement of fight ; all they can do is to dash themselves against the solid mass of stone, and their expedients are on a level with their tactics. A brewer takes it into his head to set fire to this block of masonry by pumping on it a mixture of phosphorus and ou of tur pentine. A young carpenter, who has archaeological notions, proposes to con struct a catapult. Some believe them selves to have got possession of the governor s daughter and are about to burn her by way of obliging her father to yield. Others set fire to an outstand ing building full of straw, and thus ob struct their own way. "The bastile was not taken by nain force," said the brave Elie, one of the assailants ; " it rendered itself up even before it was at tacked," it capitulated on the promise that no one should be injured. The garrison, only too well secured, had no longer the heart to fire in safety on living bodies, and on the other hand it was disconcerted by the sight of the im mense crowd. Only eight or nine hundred men were attacking . it. But the Place de la Bastile and all tho sur rounding streets were thronged with the curious who came to look on at the spectacle ; among them, says an eye witness, " a number of well-dressed and fashionable women who had left their caariages at a little distance." From the top of their parapets, it seemed to the 120 composing the garrison as though the whole of Paris was marching against them. Thus it is they themselves who let down the drawbridge and introduce the enemy. All alike have lost their head, besieged as well as besiegers, but the last most completely because they are intoxicated by victory. As soon as they enter they begin by breaking everything, and the latest comers fire at random on the first ; every one fire without taking notice where or on whom the fire tells." The becoming suddenly omnipotent and having license to kill is too strong a potion for human nature vertigo follows, men see red, and thoir delirium ends in ferocity. The Goorkhas, The worthy inhabitants of Malta.' says the London Olobe, will soarcely -derive much aesthetic delight from the personal appearanoe of the Goorkha regiments that have arrived among them. Ugly beyond comparison, with flat features, and mere slits for eyes, these soldiers are of stunted stature, frequently very low-legged, and much too broad for their height. But they are splendid little fellows for fighting purposes, be ing very hardy, capable of enduring al most any amount of fatigue, devoted to their officers, and completely devoid of even the instinct of fear. Armed only with their " kookeries" broad-bladed heavy knives of fine temper and feharp as razors they often go on foot into the jungle in quest of some man-eating ti ger, aud if the brute is brought to bay it rarely escapes with life. Buddhists by faith, they hold in scorn the caste proscriptions of Hindooism, and when in our service they adopt many of the customs of the English soldiery. It is an amusing sight to see a Goorkha set ting forth from a station for a day's sport in the neighborhood. Dressed in some cast-off European mufti, which he has purchased in the bazar, he carries either an ancient fo.wling-piece or a razed Brown Bess, while at his heels follow two or three curs of very low de gree, whose ears and tails have been ar tistically docked. Yet, bizzare as looks his get up, the little fellow generally manages to bring home a decent bag unless, indeed, his weapon bursts at the first difcharge. His method is either to stalk the game, be it a dove or a deer, or to lie in wait for hours at some likely spot. Between whiles he pull's his short clay pipe and murmers the songs of his native land, which sound rather harshly to sophisticated ears. Altogether a right merry lad is the Goorkha in quarters, and held in high esteem by the Euro pean soldiers. But his greatest talent lies in fighting to the death for the side whose salt he eats. Some years ago, during one of our expeditions into the Peshawur hills, a Goorkha detach ment was skirmishing with the Afredees. On the re-call being sounded, three or four men who had taken up favorable positions declined to come baok. There they remained, leisurely firing at the enemy until the Afredees swarmed down in overwhelming fore, and then out li imbed the wicked-looking kookeries, aud there was some pretty fair flghtinn. Of course the plucky little fellows were all killed, but not before the ground was considerably littered with, ifefuuct Afredees, Items of Interest. A green age Foliage. The best thing out Out of debt. The man who made a point The proof-reader. When a man loses his balance, where does it go ? The motto of lovers is, " E plural buss yum yum 1" A grocer both sells his goods and gives them a weigh. " Manslayer " is one of the cheerful titles of the Sultan. An Illinois man's name is James James, He hasn't had 'em yet, either. Acorn in the woods is worth ten on your feet. Exchange. Not to a chirop odist. Two things go off in a hurry An ar row dismissed from a bow, and a beau dismissed by a belle. A long man trying to whisper to a short girl resembles the letter S walking with a period. Don't put off until to-morrow that which you can do to-day, unless you are going into the poetry line. The activity of some people is like that of a boy on a rockiDg-horse plenty of motion, but no progress. " Love is an eternal transport !" ex claimed an enthusiastic poet. " So is a canal boat," said a practical old forward ing merchant A correspondent wants to know whether, considering the great utility of the ocean, poets are not wrong in calling it a " waste of water." Whatever may be the aotual Btatus of an individual, he is sure to be cred ited with a certain amount of respecta bility if his boots squeak. David Stevens and wife, of Deerfield, N. H., have just celebrated their golden wedding, and have lived in the same house through the fifty years. The dried kernel of the cocoanut, call ed in the South Sea Islands " copra," is being turned to new account. Hither to it has only been used for making oil, but it has been discovered that after having served that purpose it is valuable cattle food. Thlre are in Russia 1,023,591 factor ies and industrial establishments work ing with five and less men, and 43,513 employing from five to fifty hands. In these 1,667,104 establishments together there are employed 3,625,918 men, and ' 378,959 women. The lightest solid body known is a metal lithium which is only half the weicrht of an enual bulk of water. The heaviest body known is also a metal Elatinum which is twenty-one times as eavy as water, forty-two times as heavy as lithium, and nearly twice as heavy as lead. There is a church built of paper near Berlin, Prussia, which can contain near ly one thousand persons. It is circular within, octagonal without. The reliefs outside and statues within, the roof, ceiling, the Corinthian capitals, are all papier mache, rendered waterproof by saturating in vitriol, lime-water, whey, and white of eggs. Two Little Girls Smothered in a Trunk. One of the most awful calamities ever recorded is that of the death of tho two daughters of Mrs. Amelia Moench, first assistant teacher of German in a St. Louis school, by being suffocated in a trunk. The little girls have for a year past been with their father on a farm four miles from Dixon, Mo. , one hundred and thirty-eight miles from St.'Louis. Mrs. Moench spends her vacations on the farm, and was prepared to go to her husband and children immediately upon the close of school. Mr. Moench had gone to Dixon, and his little girls called cheerfully after him to hurry back, an' if he wrote to their mamma to send their love. On his return he was surprine.! not to see them awaiting him. He call ed but received no answer. He went into the house and saw the trav of tL trunk setting on the floor. A horrib! fear flashed on his mind, ne openiv the trunk and found the two little girl-: the younsrer. who was underneath, w: evidently pust all hope, but the eld 1.11 . i 1: xt was una warm ttuu iiuip. iiuu a uoif bor was within half a mile. lhe fail.. dashed oold water on the children, tin rubbed them with vinegar, and mud every effort to restore animation, Ubor ing until alter twelve o'clock, but i ; vain. He then gave up in despair, an 1 went to seek help from a neighbor. lh little girls were aged eight and five yeai respectively. A Terrier Terrified by a Monkey. Mr. C. F. Crehore sends this to A. tare : A brave, active, intelligent ten er, belonging to a lady friend, one d discovered a monkey belonging to u itinerant organ-grinder, seated upon u bank within the grounds, and at oiu made a dash for him. The monkt-.t , who was attired in jacket and hat, awux ed the onset with such uudisturb tranquility that the dog halted within few feet of him to reoonuoitre. ii 1 animils took a long, Bteady stare at en other, but the dog evidently was tea enug from his surprise ana aooui 1 make a spring for tho intruder. At ti critical juncture the monkey, who b remained perfectly quiet hitherto, rau his paw and gnuvfully saluted by hi- his hat. The effect was magical; t: doir's head and tail dropped and i sueaked off ana curereu 1110 uoune, fusing to leave it till he was sal that his polite but mysterious gu departed. His whole demeauur plainly that he felt the m: goniethiiig "uueaiiny" nu meddled, with.