Wit gmtfit 3&tjroMtara. IS PUBLISH M KVKItY W l;1 KHDAY, BT w u, nux.x. OmCE IS ROBINSON & BONNER'S BD1LDIKO ELM 8TREET, TIONESTA, PA. Hates of Advcr u On Square (1 inch,) on insertion -One Square " one month -One Square " three months - 6 1 One Square " one year - - 10 Two Sonares, one year - 15 0, Quarter Col. 80 (m lalf " - 60 00 Qne . " . . . 100 00 Legal notices at established rate. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col lected quarterly, temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Cauh on Delivery. TERMS, $2.00 A YEAR. No Subscription received for shorter period tlmn tline months. rorroHponilonon HoliHtod from all part of the country. No notice will lo taken of nnouyiuous communications. VOL. XI. NO. 22. TIONESTA, PA., AUGUST 21, 1878. $2 PEE ANNUM. 1 v 1 Mondow (Sweet. When I can look within thine eyos, I see the blue of sommor Bkioa. Then shonld thy perfoct mouth nnolose, I find the small, sweet-brier rose. Thy bauds to mo are daisy blooms ; The meadow pink thy breath perfumes. When In the pond the wild bird dips, Someway I seem to touch tby lips. The gotdon-rod I even dare To match against thy fioeoo of hair. When thou dost smile, the butterfly Hath not a lighter heart than I. Thy laughter, rare and rich, I think To bo the tuneful bobolink. And If thy mood be sad and still, I seem to hear the whip-poor-will. When round the tree clings close the Tine, I thrill to dream thee wholly mine. The soarlet lily all aglow, Tolls of the love I may not show. Flowers, birds and grasses of the field, Their tendor, hidden meaning yield. But what are Love's own charms to me, Are only meadow sweets to thee t A Florence Chimney. 1. IT SMOKES. Mr. Paul Chamber yawned slightly, glunoed at his watch, and sallied forth from his hotel with his usual aspect of listless indifference. The city was Florence, the month March, blusterous and stormy, and the hotel one of those dingy edifices in a nar row street of the commercial order to be found in all towns, and chiefly frequent ed by travelers with a light purse. The purse of Mr. Paul Chambers was an exceedingly light one, despite the gen tility of his appearance, while that list less bearing, heightened by the melan choly of his large dark eyes, invariably inspired interest. Women glanoed pen sively at his head-oovcring in search of the weed which should designate his being a widower, and were possibly dis appointed not to discover that mourning badge on his hat Mr. Chambers was not a widower. lie wore the garb of poverty easily, and yet was a bitterly disappointed man of the type that, hav ing lost the one prize coveted in this world, suffers all others to escape his grasp. Ilia watch indicated the hour of two as he emerged from the hotel. "What is the use of making calls f" he HoMloquized, discontentedly, and baland a card between his fingers. lie had been in Florence a fortnight, sufficiently a student by nature to eujov the sojourn, rambling about church and gallery at his own pleasure, and the card had rested in his pocket-book un disturbed. Now it troubled his con science to the extent ef occasioning a doubt as to whether he should present it at all. An old lady at Palermo had insisted on bestowing the card upon him one of the throng of motherly creatures he was wont to meet in travel with the injunction: When yon reach Florence, do not fail to call, and I will write about yon. The young ladies are charming girls. " He had weakly assented and de parted. What did he care about charm ing girls! He was not a society man detested balls and parties. Perhaps this family would bore him with an in vitation to dinner. " Mrs. Henderson Tompkins, "he read on the card. Should he seek the address indicated, after all ? now could he ever look the good old lady in the face again if he did not ! A gust of wind swept aronnd the corner, bringing a cloud of dnst in his eyes one of those treacherous gusts which lurk on the Arno, often beneath the bluest of skies and away sailed Mr. Chambers's hat. The hat was whirled against the door of an expectant cab drawn no in the bo u are. The owner re covered it, entered the vehiole, and gave the address of Mrs. Tompkins without further procrastination. Arrived at his destination, Mr. Cham' bers dismissed the cab, and surveyed the house he was about to enter with faint sense of curiosity. The house was handsome and spacious; tbe vestibule was adorned with statues, and permitted a glimpse of garden behind through stained glass windows; opposite were squares and a new boulevard. The por ter in livery popped out of a dark nook, received the card, read it, somewhat vaguely, upside down, all foreign names being alike to him, and delivered several sentences of voluble Italian, from whioh the visitor extracted "second piano, and began to climb the stairs. The second story proved to be untenanted, silent, and closed. Clearly be had mis taken the porter's directions as to the apartment occupied by the Tompkins family. 1X8 retraced his steps to tiie first floor. There was no name on this door, but it stood open. The tap of hammers and grating of saws were to be heard on the right, and added to the general uproar was the tumultuous tone of a piano, touched by a firm hand. " The musical Miss Tompkins, found' ed on the Btuttgart method,' " shudder ed Paul Chambers. "I know that she practices six hours a day, thereby driv in or her afflicted family mad." The piano ceased abruptly. The voice reached Mr. Chamber's unwilling ear. and held him spellbound. It was clear vibrating, not to say piercing, in quality. and spoke the English language. The Voice. "I hope yon will get enough in living in apartments abroad my dear, without a refrigerator or so much as a gas-fixture to your name, and all your washing carried out into the country, as if they were ashamed to be seen aoing anytmng industrious in ine town. An Echo. "But. Aunt Bophia. von wished to come." The Voice (after a pause). "So I did wish to come. What of that f I did not expect to stay forever, though. Oh, these Latin races I They will always en joy idle poverty as long' as there is a festa to be kept, and we shall continue to pity them as children of the sonny south to the end of the chapter." A silence ensued, and Mr. Chambers. with a guilty sensation, not nnmineled with embarrassment, rang the belL For reply, the hammers tapped, with saw accompaniment, the parrot clamor ed, and the cook trolled his song, clash ing dishes about " Confound it ! I will try the bell once more, and go away," he thought Just then he fell over a stove-pipe, and was unexpectedly precipitated into an apartment It represented tempor ary chaos; chairs and tables were hud dled in corners, a stand of flowers leaned against the wall, a trowel and some mortar occupied the center of the floor. Two masons stood, with their hands on their hips, in attitudes of repose, watch ing the movements of a. third, who, with his feet still resting on a chair, had thrust the whole upper portion of his body into a square hole cut in the wall for the purpose of investigating the chimney. The somewhat undignified advent of Mr. Chambers over the recum bent stove-pipe did not surprise the masons in the least His visit' was clearly none of their affair: but he suc ceeded in eliciting from them that the signora was to be found further on, be fore the man up the chimney concluded to come down, and began to attack that orifice with the stove-pipe much as old prints represent the assault of battering-rams on walled cities. The situation was becoming ludicrous. Mr. Chambers smiled somewhat grimly. and crossed an anteroom toward the Voice, prepared to bow profoundly on the next ttire shold. The Voice. " This Agatina is a clever oreetur, and does not understand one word 1 utter. What is she laughing at now, X wonder? Ijook, Agatina, this picture is a horse." Here was the owner of the Voice at last. She was an elderly lady, wearing spectacles, and at the present moment iier costume consisted of a Balmoral petticoat, a linen sacque, and a white night-cup placed over her gray curls, Homewhat askew, to protect them from the mortar dust in the dining-room. " Ahem 1 I have called, madam egan Mr. Chambers, hat in hand, and paused. Eh ? Gracious ! who is that ? she exclaimed, and fled. Mr. Chambers put his hat firmly on his head, found his way back to the corridor, and was about to stalk away throngh the still open main door, when a circumstance occurred which not only altered his intention, but the course of his whole subsequent life. A door further along the passage was suddenly burst open, a stifled feminine scream reached his ears, and a volume of smoke poured forth into the corridor. Good Heavens ! was the house on fire ? He rushed to the spot, and found him self in a large salon, already rendered decsely opaque by smoke, and as he did so, a woman, young ana lair, despite the obscurity of that atmosphere, com ing toward him, paused, recoiled, then held out both hands in glad recognition. " Paul I she said, in a low, tremulous voice. "Anne!" There they stood, with hands clasped, gazing at each other, the smoke wreaths gathering and billowing about them. II. IT BEKINDLES AN OLD FLAME. The man and woman thus brought un expected!? face to f aoe continned to look into each other's eyes in silence for a space of time which seemed long, so fraught was it with deep emotion, bnt which in reality was scarcely a moment s duration. A wave of color swept over the sensitive, mobile features of Paul Chambers, and was reflected in those of his companion, succeeded by pallor in both, only while her lips trembled, he compressed his own firmly. "Why are you here I" he finally de manded harshly. 'I have lived in Florence during the past year, she replied, with forced com posure. tears suffusing her eyes. Another question rose to his lips; he checked it, and released her hands. She uttered a little sob, and hid her face in her handkerchief. Paul Chambers became aware that the chimney was belching forth smoke, that the masons stood in a group in tne door, with Agatina, and the cook, in his white oap. skirmishing in the rear; and that Aunt Hopnia. owner oi tne voice, was advancing to the front, hastily adjusting a cashmere robe, and a lace cap on her head. "What are we to do now ? she ex claimed in accents of despair, and was answered by a choros of sneezes and conghs from the assembled company, "Open the window," suggested Paul Chambers, promptly, and himself threw wide the casement "To be sure," assented Aunt Sophia, in admiration and astonishment, "J reallv like to meet a man who knows what he is about Anne, is the gentle man a friend of yours eh ? Pray intro duce me. my dear. Anne removed her handkerchief from her tear-stained face, and murmured Borne formula of introduction. Nobody noticed her tears, for the rea son that all were weeping, Tears trickled down the cheeks of the head mason, and even Aunt Sophia's own spectacles were dim. Paul Chambers, with heart throbbing as he had never anticipated it could throb again, in the great shock of a meeting for which he had longed and equally dreaded, paused like one in a dream. If the whole group gathered in this smoke-laden room should suddenly vanish before his eyes, he need scarcely be astonished, but treat them as a phan tasy of the brain. He had said to him self repeatedly during the past five years, "If she came to me once before I die, and allowed me to look in her eyes without speaking, I should be satisfied." Here was an unexpected and even start ling fulfillment "Oh, the trouble that chimney has given us we bad better give it up, and freeze." Thus spake Aunt Sophia, in smoke-stifled accents, and the Voice, sharp, metallic, and practical, acted on Paul Chamber's lethargy as a douche ba th revives a somnambulist. He recol lected not only himself, but that the at tention of Aunt Sophia and the gaping menials must be diverted from Annie's evident distress, even if up a chimney. He removed his gloves, stepped forth valiantly, and became leader in the bat tle against smoke. " This fire-place was never bnilt to be used," he said, removing, the velvet hangings. "The space below is too shallow for a lucifer-match to burn well." Aunt Sophia glanoed at Anne triumph antly, and nodded her head. Paul Cham bers, with his own hands, began to chisel out the back of the fire-place, recklessly enlarging the space. The padrone a gentlemanly person, addict ed to cigarettes and embroidered smok- mg-caps would never have descended to thus mending the chimney's evil ways, nor would the porter in livery below-stairs have done other than point to the four winds for remedy. Aunt Sophia simply exulted in him, and the blacker bis fingers became, tbe more highly did she respect his efficiency. Anne had vanished. In half an hour the chimney's mouth was enlarged past recognition; in an hour Mr. Chambers applied a match to an artistio structure of pine cones, twigs. and sticks, and the flames leaped up merrily. The chimney having found. acknowledged its master. Where was Anne? She did not return, and Mr. Chambers received Annt Sophia's cor dial invitation to dinner somewhat stiffly. " We shall expect von at six o'clock." said the good lady, beaming with satis faction. "We will blow out all the smoke before you return." " I suppose I must meet Anne s hus band, then," meditated Mr. Chambers, as he walked away. " Why could not he mend the chimney ?" At six o clock a most radiant little lady received Paul Chambers, and ac cepted graciously the bouquet of roses he brought. "You used to like roses, ne said, looking at her dreamily. She was the Anne of old, with added charms, such as an intercourse with the world imparts. The softly ronnded out line of her face remained unchanged, was still youthful and serene, bnt she carrieM her head with more dignity, and there was a certain latent pride in the bine eyes unlike the saucy sparkle of girlhood. Valuable jewels flashed on her fingers. He noted these details with a jealous pang, which he was too proud to betray. " I trust that I am to have the pleas ure of being presented to your husband this evening,' he said, coldly. She gave mm a wild glance, and the blood rushed to her brow. Aunt Sophia, in a fresn cap witn lavender bows, bad to come to the rescue, and tapped him on the arm warningly. " Hush I Did you not know 7 Anne has been a widow for two years, and a better husband than the judge never lived," she whispered, as they went in to dinner. It would be impossible to describe Mr. Chamber's emotions while he ate his soup, these words ringing in his ears. Anne a widow I Why had he not known the truth before ? Who was to inform him ? He looked severely at her pre siding over the pretty table with its flowers and fruits and silver, in her robes of pink and gray. These were her widow's weeds, then I Anne looked back at him with a warning flash of defi ance or indignation in her beautiful eves. "Bne is rignt," ne tnougnt, witn a sigh of deep despondency. Annt Hopliia was delighted With him, because he proved such an excellent listener, ohe nod seldom met a more interesting man, she afterward affirmed, although he bad scarcely opened his lips. When the meal was concluded she was quite hoarse, and discreetly withdrew to a comfortable arm-chair, the Persian cat on her knee, while Anne and Paul Cham bers occupied the window, and watched the twilight deepen over the city. Aunt Sophia, with the philosophy peculiar to middle age and a good di gestion, after dinner, fell into reverie, Her page in the great .volume of experi ence read thus: Her nephew, the mature and wealthy Judge Moore, nod fallen in love with mere school-girl, Anne Horton, and married her for his second wife. Aunt Sophia was not surprised ; the extra ordinary ways of men never surprised her. The school-girl was docile enough a trifle pale and listless, perhaps, and willing that Aunt Uophia should man age the household in that old-fashioned homestead of the country town, famous for its hospitality and the historical characters once sheltered beneath its roof. The school-girl Anne had made a very great match, and was the envy of all the country round, where ambi tion lurked in the feminine breast to handle the old china of the grand pan try, locked most of the year, and drive out behind those fat gray horses in the family carriage, slow and ponderous, if reliable, like the judge himself. Possi bly Aunt Sophia, by guarding her nephew from these ambitious ones in Blighting their invitation to tea, was un prepared for his being taken captive by a slim maiden in a straw bonnet, ho showed a marked aversion to looking at him. The secret of Anne's subtle in fluence over her husband remained an unsolved riddle to Aunt Sophia. Sit ting in a Florence saloon after dinner, with a Persian cat on her knee, she re called another scene intimately connect ed with her own transplantation. The awful day when Judge Moore had been brought home from the court-house, smitten with the apoplexy on the bench, had passed with the summer heat Now late autumn had succeeded, the sombre skies promising snow, and the woods, sere and brown, carpeted with fallen leaves. Aunt Sophia had caught the pretty widow seated before a mirror, and accepted it as a good omen. The face reflected in the mirror was pale with mnch weeping and painful thought, yet dimples lurked in the fair cheek and rounded chin. The lines of woe were rendered more prominent by a widow's cap and the sable garments in keeping with the silence of , the old house, stand ing remote from the villrge street in the seclusion of a garden. The public had been surprised by the overwhelm ing grief of Anne Moore at the death of her husband. To be sure, the bar and the country had sustained an irre parable Iobs in his demise, according to the obituary notices in the county papers, yet everybody knew that Anne had only married him for his money. The town was not to be cheated on this point Well, Bhe had obtained her end, and there was no use in crying her eyes out, since the judge was ripe in years, after all, and had left her all his world ly possessions. Deaf to this advice, the widow shut herself up in Ue old house, and pined with a grief too sincere to ad mit of incredulity. The key to this sor row was remorse. She had not loved her husband, and had married him as the only avenne leading to independ ence. Aunt Sophia had said, behind the mir ror: "My dear, the new minister has arrived." "Ah 1" was the apathetic rejoiner. "Yes, and I wish you would try to interest yourself in the fair for the town hall fund." "Oh, aunt, I can not 1" and the widow had begun to sob, the human instru ment being so Badly out of tune. ine older woman had folded her hands, and said, decisively: "Anne, you must go away." "Where r with a faint gleam of curi osity. "To Europe, perhaps." And Aunt Sophia studied maps with a zeal after ward. She had achieved every thing, and might be permitted to repose now in an arm-chair, with a Persian cat on her knee. The couple in the window also turned their leaves of experience in the silence which had succeeded a rush of words, the cold constraint of mutual misunder standing, and this stillness melted the barrier of estrangement far more effect ually than explanation. Anne's leaf was a closed page to excellent Aunt Sophia; in turn that of Paul Chambers had been by hor unread all these years. Anne beheld in a dream her own youth again. There was the young ladies seminary, presided over by Miss Crimp with- prim gentility a structure whose very walls vibrated with the jangle of many pianos. Who bo affable to parents and guardians as Miss Crimp, and who so tyrannical to young Anne, assistant teacher, homeless and friendless, gaining her own education at odd moments ? Those were dreary days in tne treaa-miu. ram Chambers bad made all the sunshine. He was the drawing-master, with Blender purse; yet when the roses bloomed there were al ways fresh buds for Anne's brown hair. Judge Moore, portly, dignified, and rich, was observed to study attentively the seminary pews in church. Miss Crimp bridled complacently, and Paul Chambers suddenly departed. Then the judge astounded his world by mak ing Anne an offer of marriage. How acrimonious had Miss Crimp then be come I fairly driving her yonng teacher to the protection of this elderly suitor. Why had Paul deserted her ? What be came of him ? one bad no longer a right to ask these questions. Aunt Sophia's proposition of foreign travel had proved a happy one. The advent of the pale young widow in the capitals frequented by Americans was a marked event One faction did not believe she was rich, pronounoed her to be entirely devoid of style, and detected in her every look the indications that this journey was a campaign in search of a husband. The opposition, in sheer perversity, dis covered that the late Judge Moore had served his country with brilliant renown, and left an immense fortune. Such honors were heaped upon his memory that he would not have recognized him self. At Paris he was pronounced a senator, at Dresden a rich mill owner, at Nice a member of the legislature, and at Geneva, minister to Spain in Is . Oh, wise Annt Sophia, foreseeing that youth and health would assert sway, if once the mourner could be lured into the busy world I Anne, blooming and gay, had accepted with ready tact the lofty position unexpectedly assigned by strangers, and been charmed by the nov elty of travel. Paul Chambers's leaf was dark. He was not a martyr, weary of the ills of life, who turns from the world to become a morose recluse; still, he was lonely and miserable. His years had been made up of painful drudgery to win bread. He did not imagine him self born to any heroic and lofty fate; he had saved Anne from sharing his own bitter poverty by going away. That was all. From the moment of sacrifice, when he had renounced his love that she might marry the rich judge, he bad fallen a prey to poignant regret . He who looks back suffers the golden sands of the present to Blip through a nerve less grasp. " Paul, I believed you had utterly for gotten me, and at the moment of my greatest need," said Anne, in the win dow. How the tender voice vibrated on the chords of memory 1 How familiar was the fair face in the waning light I " Oh, Anne, if I could believe that you needed me still I" he whispered, his fingers closing over her warm soft hand. Aunt Sophia interposed on soul-oom-munings, briskly. " It is time for a cup of tea. I hope those Tompkins girls will find husbands in their summer campaign. They have jaunted to Vienna already, and you might as well try to follow a comet" When summer again dawned, the old Moore homestead wore its most cheerful aspect. Children were abroad in the fields berrying, and the cattle wended their way soberly along the village street beneath the elms. Jfaui unamoers kneeled on the moss of the garden, studying some object. Aunt Sophia glanced through a window. "What are you doing ?" at length de manded feminine curiosity. " I am considering the ways of ants," he replied. " What wonderful fellows the are ! Depend upon it, we make a profound mistake m ever traveling oe yond our own gardens, where we meet the best foreign society. The day-lily of Portugal bids you good mormng.madam, the heliotrope from Peru is your scent- bottle, while all about the mystery of life goes on seeds floating throngh the air, buoyed up by downy umbrellas, and bees carrying love messages to tne now ers." " Suppose you come in to breokfast," said Aunt Sopnia. Summer had entered tbe dark diniDg room, with its quaint furniture and plate. At the table sat Anne, widow no longer, in crisp pink muslin, resembling her favorite roses. Judge Moore s por trait, entwined in ivy, hung on the wall. Fashion Notes. Many of the new dresses are mode en tirely without linings. Checked cotton braids are used for trimming linen dresses. The military jacket is one of the latest styles for yonng ladies. Ladies in mourning wear black lace mitts with a cuff of crape. - Velvet overskirts, with polonaises of delicate fabricp, are largely worn. Wide belts embroidered in gay colors, like those worn a generation ago, are now fashionably used with black silk or grenadine dresses. Lisle thread stockings are growing in favor on account of the perfection of their fit They come in all the desirable shades, and are very durable. The coolest and most desirable tie for ladies is the sheer-lawn tie, which has the ends handsomely embroidered in colors. These ties wash to look as well as when new. Bonnets grow smaller, and the capes on them grow larger. Some of the re cent importations in the capote sbapo have large capes made of foundation covered with shirred silk or gathered lace ruffles. A favorite style of dress for your g girls is the " blouse " polonaise. It is made loose to the figure, is held in by a belt and is sometimes fitted in front with two darts. Thin materials make up very well in this way. The fronts of this style of dress are sometimes left open all the way down and a puffed front insert ed. They have small mantillas added for street wear. Many pretty effects are given to the simplest dresses by tbe pre sent taste for embroidery. A princesse dress for a young girl, of dark blue linen, has a front or plastion of light blue zephyr, embroidered in dork shades. The flounce and ruffles are also em broidered. Montenegro In the Late War. What a plucky little State may do against apparently overwhelming odds in a country adapted for defense is shown in the Bumming up by the Deutsche Jlecres-Zeitung, of the great part played by the little State of Montenegro in the recent war. Her campaign began on Jnly 1st, 1876, and ended February 1st, 1878. Thirty thousand Montenegrins, Uerzegovinian8 and Albanians fought against 250,000 Turks. The Montene grins were victors in twelve battles, ten actions, seventeen larger and thirty -two smaller encounters. In two smaller fights (at Bishina and Anamaliti) they were beaten, while in two others (at Goransko and Nozdren) they had to retire before overwhelming numbers. The Montenegrins took twenty-five field and mountain guns, 107 siege guns, an army standard, a ship'B flag, sixteen flags of fortresses, 112 battalion colors, 2.200 horses. 52.000 rifles and 10,671 prisoners. They captured three large and twelve smaller fortresses, eighteen forts, thirty-nine kules and block-houses, and ten redoubts. This brilliant result was obtained with a Iofs of 2,Di5 dead and 6.495 wounded. The Turks lost in the Montenegrin campaign, besides the 10.671 prisoners mentioned, 38,660 dead, 42,410 wounded, and about 56,000 victims to diseatte, deserters and miss ing, as well as 6,600 horses and mules, !K),000 cattle, and four men-of-war, TIMELY TOPICS. Artificial ice factories are succeFsfully running In several Southern cities. All the members of the family of No- beling, who tried to kill tbe German emperor, have changed their name to Edeling. It is estimated that the number of settlements on publio lands this year will be nearly double those of last year. The land office at Washington is hard at work in consequence of the increase. A regular system f kidnapping the Chinese and sending them as laborers on the haciendas (plantations) in the northern part of Peru has been discov-' ered in Callao. The government has begun earnestly to correct and reform the labor system, and make the condi tion of the Chinese laborers more tolera ble. Do hens eat live bees? A Los Angelos (Gal.) agriculturist seems to throw some light on this mooted question. He says that having often caught his poultry in the flagrant act standing in front of the hives and taking the busy insects as they pass in and out be finally dis- Eatched one and found in her crop 180 ees ! The territory which Turkey loies by the Treaty of Berlin is roughly estimat ed by the London Daily News at seventy-one thousand five hundred square miles, or more than the whole area of England and Wales. The loss in popu lation amounts to moie than three and a half millions, or somewhat more than the entire population of London. The conundrum about the pins is well enough, but who breaks all the needles ? A single factory in Redditch, England, turns out between 6,000,000 and 7,000, 000 of them each week, or about 350, 000,000 a year, which is equal to one third the population of the globe. With all the factories in the world going, who breaks these billions of needles ? Patagonia is a very attractive country. Its climate is of the coldest, its men are of the tallest, and its women of the ugli est specimens of the human race. Its mice are likewise gigantic, and the na tives display an ineradicable disposition to tell lies. This delightful country is destined to become very important in consequence of the recent discovery of gold therein. From the Cordilleras to the Atlantic, from the Santa Cru7 to Terra del Fuego, the country teems with gold. A simple method, but one not gener? ally known, of discriminating between real and spurious diamonds, is io im merse the specimen in water. If a gen uine diamond.it will sparkle withal most undiminished light and brilliancy of color; but if it be spurious, whether paste or rock crystal, the " fire" of the gem will be completely quenched. Another simple test is to draw a small steel file across the stone. If real, the Btone will not be hurt; if imitationit will be badly marred. A young Chinese princess, wife of tli- ambassador of the empire to London and Paris, attracted much attention at the Paris Exposition lately, as she pro ceeded from one section to another, drawn in a bath chair, and in a magni" cent coBtume of her country, bhe v- wholly unacquainted with either th French or English langnage, and we. accompanied by Mrs. Hart, wife of ti commissioner-general of China, who c : plained to her the curiosities or the position. The princess. was interested i.. all she saw, her pleasure partaking 1 the child-like delight attending tb first sight of so many marvels. Bishop Whittaker. of Virginia CiiV has been giving the Nevada newspap i some queer stories of his exponent in a recent tour through the towns Tybo and Ward, Nev. At Tybo 1 could get no building to preach in but gambling-house, and in response vo -Litany, instead of " Amen," an exoif listener, with his pants in his bo : cried "Keno." At Ward, a horse i.. had been announced for the afterno but at the bishop's earnest request h racing was postponed im ine rengioi services were over. The whole congre gation weni from the church to the race track as Boon as ine sermon was nnmuc ... What the traveler in France must r pect in the way of charges is told by Paris correspondent, who says: Evt thing a Frenchman does he expects i for; even as low as half a cent is gru! fully reooived, larger sums in propoi tion. You pay for everythinir, you get ; your coffee, sugar, milk, all separuk-. Every item is spread out with the mot minute care, and when it is time to p your bill you wonder at the string, l as figures can't lie, of course you run. hand over. Order a lemonado, wine, any drink the French drink everytL hot, an American can't Well, you or ! ice. In your bill will be three ite: First, your glass; second, your drii third, your ice. Wonder that they d charge rent while you stand in t house. You are bred, wish to i yourself, and enter a park and sit do A woman comes around with a V punohanda slip of paper, and , you give her six centimes (twoot i. . she hands you over to the tender n r cies of the police as a swindler : I fraud. I am not exaggerating a t There is no gas in bedrooms, an 1 1 charge you for your candle Iv rent of your room.