She $cwsi gtpuilban. 18 PUBLISH KI EVEKY WKDNKHDAY, BY W K. Djjxx. ' OFFICE IS ROBINSON & BONNER'S BDILDIK& ELM BTEEET, TIONESTA, PA. Ratos of Advert. ... One Square (I Inch,) one Insertion OneHijuare " one month -One Square " three month One .Square. " ono 3'car - Two Squares, one year - - Quarter Col. Half " " One " ..-- . ; JO 15 ' 30 ' - r.o 100 I TKUMS, f2.00 A YKAH. No Hnhxerlptlon received for u shorter t 'ilol than throe months. ''iines.onilcnco HoMcMed from nil part i tlx cmintiy. No notice will o taken of anonymous crimiuunicnUona. I,ena1 inll'Pftt CHfahiishod rates. Marriage and dof li notice, prati. lectnd quarterly. Trmpornry advert incuts nmxl 1'' paid lor in nl vance. Job work, t';h on HcHvery. VOL. XI. NO. 37. TIONESTA, PA., DECEMBER 4, 1878. 82 PER ANNUM. V ThnnkflglTing. The boaded front at early mora Gleams wbitoly o'er tbe stubble, And pant tbe caves at night In borne Tbe north wind's wall of trotible ; nt shines the earth with mddy light, The board is gay and cheery, And household mirth is flowing bright Hound hearts forlorn and weary. How dark soe'er the world path be, now vexing earthly clamor, To-day the sunbeams goldonly Fonr down a heavenly glamour. The warring voices coase, or blend In ohords of solemn sweetness, While harvest anthems seek the friend Who gives tbe year completeness. For tender spring, for summer s wealth, For autumn's royal splendor, For ho moil of peace, for Joy and health, Thanksgivings full we render ; And age with winter's sifted snow Moots childhood's snnny weather : The seasons come, the seasons go, And all are glad together. " LEFTENANT JIM." A STORY OP TH4NK8GIVIN9 DAY . Time About 11 o'clock, a. m. of a November morning, 1G8 a dead sky above and a dead earth beneath, as thej are seen in dreams. Place A litf'o creek wedged in be tween two high banks, and alow rickety bridge over the creek, whose three-foot depth of water was filmed with ice ; water whose sleeping ripples had not been wakent d by the sun. Person A shabby, scarcrow sort of maa bending over the roil, leaning the while on his arm. The flgnre hardly seemed a man. Its once black hat of felt was rnsty hned, and haggled with gashes, out of which sprouted thin b inches of jet, black hair. The brim wis pulled down, front and rear. The coat, once part of a nobby summer suit, was dirty, stained by rain, bleached by s line, and trimmed with holes, the scut tling leaks of unostentatious ill-fortune. iue repose of man and nature was suddenly and sharply ended. A tuneless whistle broke out behind one of the banks a feeble, wavering spirit of hor rible discord suoh a sound as only a little boy can make with cheeks and lips. The man turned his head a little. Through the air sailed a speck. It dropped upon the arm of the lounger. It was a stone. It hurts, for the man stood erect, uttered an oath, and turned his face to the road down which now traJged a small boy, The youngster and the whistle stopped as tbey reached the bridge. The face frightened the bov. It was thin, baggar.l, and savage, with a black board of a fortnight'? growth, aud wild eyes that showed by their setting how hunger had crowded them baok and pinched the nose and cheeks ; not a cru d face, all in all, but one made pitiable by hopelessness and starvation, " You young rascal," he 6aid, catch ing the little fellow and giving him a gontle shako ; ' I've a good mind to drop yon into the river and let the minnows tight for yon. What did you hit me for, eh?" The captive, more frightened than hurt, yelled at the first touch, and then boy faahion, dropped to tears. "What did you mean ? " aaks the inan, suddenly softening in temper and speech, and putting his hand, with kindly touch, on the little fellow's head. " I didn't mean nothin'," sobbed the child. " I I was only tryin' to whisf "Hal ha! That was it, eh? You made a very bad note in your tune, don't you know ? You pegged me with a stone. The Btone hurt, hurt even a fellow like me," " I didn't mean to," says the child. "Of course not. l Know that new. You couldn't ece me. I'll apologize Now stop crying, cheer up, call it even, and let's bo friends 1 Is it a bargain ? " Bnt the sobs would come up and the tears fill the eyes. The boy had sprung a leak and seemed likelv to sink. The man became nervous. lie might fright en a grown-up fellow, aud enjoy the victory ; but as to this child well ! he was heartily ashamed of himself. 80 he tried the strategy of wealth. He thrust ono hand into tiie. ruins of a pock et. It worked ubopptherein like the scoop of a dredge. Mt came to the en trace, full of debris. " Hee here, little one I " he cries, get ting down upon his knees, aud spreading his collection upon the boards. "Just look here ! Isn't this -brio-a-brae, as they call it ? " That's a brass button useless for want of a button-hole. That comb I'll keep for my party-going hair. Yea 1 1 know you have one. That's to baooo, but you don't chew. This fat jaok-knife is uo good, for it will not cut, I only, keep it because it shuts up when I want to tfdk. Ugh ! Don't touch that I for it's vile tobacco. Here's a key to a house I never owned. Let me see I That, I guess, is bread done up in tobacco. We'll "oast that upon the waters," pitching it iuto the creek. Wheat the last of my crops. String you can't eat that and there's not enough for a kite. Ah ' Here we have it " the sad remains of au ill-spent life " and ho flopped in the pa! in of his hand a dingy hve-eeut piece. JNow sonny, wring out your eyes, stop crying, make friends with me, and the money is yours for candy or the uiiaaionary-box, as you choose. la it a bargain f " The boy's eyea brightened. He swal lowed his sobs, put out his hand, took the money cud said "Thank you!" Uis captor laughed. "That's the way of the world, Johnny, boy. You can always buy silence for grief. Remember that, when you come to make your will. As I've paid you for five cents' worth of misery, show me the candy store I" He had said all this in a grave way, just as if he were talking to some one who could understand him; and the boy had looked on just as if he did not (which was the fact) compre hend what was meant. But " candy store " were two words of one meaning for him, and he became a guide where, heretofore, he had not even followed. It's at Winscom," he said. " And where is that, my cherub ?" " Over the hill there. I was going to it when you cotched me. " "Tut! tut! Don't say cotched I Say caught !" " Caught !" "Excellent. Now I'm going to Winscom. Homebody in it owes me a big dinner for not giving me my break fast. Will your royal littleness that is to say, Johnny, will you ride?" "Where's your horses?" asks the boy. "In iy boots, infant! Oh, you needn't look for them. They're sure to be out at the toes, when you want 'em. Don't be afraid. I'm a tramp, and I'm hungry; but I don't eat little boys. Steady, now, sit on my shoulder I" With a laugh, and a whistle as sharp as a mocking-bird's, he swung the child to his shoulder, settled him firmly and moved slowly and with labored steps over the road to Winscom, his rider aglow the while with boyish exultation, and chirruping like a jockey. "Let me down I" shouts the boy, as they arrive in the outskirts of Wins com. I live in that house. Oh, papa ! papa !" A bare-headed man, standing with his back to the road, looked around, and then came hurriedly to the gate. His boy in the possession of a ragged strang er gave him a fright. "Here you I What are you dome with my son ?" he demanded. M Rob, get down this minute. Ain't yon ashamed of yourself ?" " tie ought to be, answered the trump, as he swnng tbe boy to the walk. " He ought to be. The Lord knows 'm ashamed of myself. But, sir, we can't all be Vanderbilts. I'm no inten tion of stealing youi son. I gave him a lift because I liked him. Good-rnorn- ii g 1" and with a downward jerk front and rear to the brims of his shabby old hat and punching his hands into shabby old pockets, this woeful vagabond went huflhng away against the raw wind and dc wn the leaf-carpeted street. The respectable citizen, for balf a minute, seemed puzzled, end leaned over the gate, shading his eyes with his hands, though there was no sun, and inattentive to the story which the urchin at his legs was pouring out " 1 11 b wear H s be, he says at last. " It's Jim. I'd know him among a thou sand." Then, half opening the gate, he called out: " Leftenant P The figure proceeded without a re sponsive motion. , " Lei tenant Jim I 1 That time it was a shout It was heard. The tramp halted, whirled half about, touched his hat involun tarily, shook his head angrily, call ed himself an idiot, whirled about and went on bis way at a more rapid pace than he had shown during the day and all regardless of the recall of " Leftenant ! Leftenant I" - " That was the dear old call of the dear old boys; and it is Belden, by all that's great," he says, half pleased with the recall, and vet half ancrv at discov ery. " But why can't I be left alone and utterly lost to an who Knew me be fore f became a a tramp ?" and the last word came out with an emphasis that showed an agony 01 sname: v kill myself if I dared. Ah, if I dared. Bah ! I'm hungry. No breakfast, and here it is high noon by the sun, ' Lef tenant Jim,' if yon want something to eat or drink, you must beg for it, yon hero of lunacy, you miserable vagabond, yon outcast, you pauper." He was not joking with himself when he brought out these last words. He was somberly mad. At the same time he was so full of shameful hesitation at the inevitable course that he would have to pursue in order to get a meal, that he abandoned the main street and sought the Bhelter of the underbrush by the river, that he might think over the matter. Meantime Belden had run into the house for his hat. " Wife," he cried ; " Sis, both of you, listen ! I've just seen Leftenant Jim. I am going out to catch him, confound him." "Bring him to dinner, Charlie!" says both of them in one voice, for they had heard of this friend for years. But when Rob told his little adventure, and described his morning's companion. they rather hoped the lieutenant might not be caught Up into the village raced Belden. He had missed his man on the road. At the drug store, at the tavern, at the grocery, he demanded "Have you seen 'Lef tenant Jim ?' " No one had seen him ; but few. apparently had heard of him. At the postoffloe the crowd of loungers were just as ignorant, just as indifferent as were those at the other resorts. More than- that, some of- them asked for in formation as to the officer's identity. It was then that Belden became an un age of wrath, that he glared with fierce eyes, that he smote his hands and snap ped his Cngera in indignation. "Who is Leftenant Jim? Nice men you are. I've told you forty times, but I'll tell vou again. I'll tell you who he was and and, thanks to a grateful country I what he is. He was a soldier without fear, a hero unhonored, and a sergeant without promotion, save by his comrades and I was one of them. It was plain private Jim, who got six bul lets in his body for picking up his com pany's flag and holding it until the ene my had to. tear it from him in strips and make his body a bullet poucb. It was Corporal Jim who with four men captured a six-pounder at Ohancollorsville and fought it until only Jim was left. It was Sergeant Jim who, in the Wilderness, while waiting under fire for orders to advance, left the ranks, flicked up a shell that lay with burning use not ten feet from him, carried it to a mud-puddle and threw it in. It was then the boys made him leftenant. And two hours later it was this same leften ant whe fought like a demon over the body of his wounded colonel, and got two saber cuts as his reward for saving his man. He wanted to die, he said, but conidn't get kiiled. That's a little of what he was. To-day I've seen him I thought he was dead and he is a tramp, gentlemen, a miserable vaga bond, with clothes too mean for scavenger, and without food enough in side of him to keep his skin in place. Give him something to eat if he asks it, and you U feed a hero. As for me, he is to me as a brother. My home shall be his .home, if I can find him." Hav ing delivered this speech, he set out once more in search of bis friend. Poor Jim, crouching in the brush, weary and cold, had dozed a little at first Then he began to chew basswood buds and wondered, as he munched, how and where, he should get his dinner. He disliked to venture out of his place of concealment, for he feared Belden more than he ever feared au enemy. In all his vagabondage he had never yet asked for more costly charity than a drink of water. He bad worked when he could get anything to do, and earned his money, the last of which had gone to the boy. He had avoided towns be cause their people were inhuman, giv ing strangers no chance. But he was in Winsoom the great city lay only a dozen miles away and he must eat though he begged for it, and was turned from door after door. He rose to his feet, every motion caus ing him pain, and came out into an open lot The wind had freshened since morning. The skies had darkened, and dashes of fine snow gave signs of a bad night Adown tee long street into which he emerged not a person was to be seen. A dull town, thought the lieu tenant, forgetting that its men went to the city. Then he made a circuit to avoid Belden, and to escape groups of people: He began - his disagreeable task at a diagonal point of the town from where he started. At three houses the door was shut in his face before his request for food was half spoken. The " Leften ant" swore at this sort of treat ment That was natural enough for. a hungry man who had been a hero ; but everybody did not know his record. Of course not, and they would never hear of it from his lips. Moody and despair ing, he prepared for what he resolved should be his last request. A hand some cottage was before him. It was well-lighted, for the dusk was falling. He pushed up his hat on oneaido and pulled it down on the other, that it might have a more jaunty look. He took that trouser leg out of his boot and de posited" in his pocket the string which had belted his coat. Those little alter ations did not change bis appearance much, but they softened some of the outlines. His timid knock at the back door was answered by a buxom Irish girl. As the door opened, there rushed out the fragrant incense of roasting turkey. "I am hungry," he began. "I've had nothing to eat to-day." The door began to close. He put his hand against it. "For heaven's sake give me some thing, if it's not more than a crust of bread ! " It was the hero "Lieukr i Jim' who was pleading for just a A mouth fuls.. The door opeued a littloA VaV a linrd-lrtnkittff trami- r ' said the girl. n - O -m I " I know it, admitted the lie " And the mistress is might jtf lar," continued the girl. " Tu? rt va'q va fail iiint. ran nvav ticu ,et one U the J " . ' J.i. shpoon, though, to be sure ltv s an ould iron one. Ye'a a mighty uly fel low." "Perhaps. But I don't steal," as serted the ex-soldier. " Now think a minute! I've eaten nothing to-day. Give me a bit of something. I'll eat it in the back yard anywhere.". " Well, come in," said the girl doubt fully. "I'll take my chances. There, set in that chair and don't shpake a wur rud." She bustled around and soon handed him a plate loaded with cold meat and bread, a generous slice of butter on the edge, and a bowl of milk to keep the food company. " Pitch in now !" she ordered. " You tind to your business and I'll tind to mine, but no thavery." Dinner had not been served. He heard the hnm of distant conversation and little bursts of laughter in a distant room. Now and then some one struck a piano. The lieutenant's keen eyes swept the kitchen and the pantry. Be fore him was a wealth of pies. A pot of coffee on the stove bubbled up its in cense. The turkey sizzled and crackled in the oven. Dishes of apples and nuts and raisins were upon the long table. Everything betokened "nusual festivi ties. " A party ?' he eaid, nodding toward the front part of the house. "Thanksgiving day " was the senten tious reply. "Ah! s'o it is. Ihadforgottenit.lt is a day not down in my almanac." The girl stopped as if . to say some thing, but changed her mind snd went on with her work. A door opened and a little fairy of a girl perhaps six years old came in to the room. She stood with her hands be hind her, and watched the " man " eat. His plate was nearly empty. He felt like one intoxicated. " Were you ever hungry, little one '(" he asked of the miss, scraping the last crumbs off his plate. " Lots of times ; but never so hun gry as you. And I don't eat in the kitchen' Nor I, either, always ; but I like it" said the lieutenant, rubbing his month on the baok of his hand in lieu of a napkin. " In fact, it's fine." " Don't ye's talk too much now, Miss Laura !" ordered Bridget, kneeling to baste the turkey. The small girl shrug .ged her shoulders and pouted. "Is yon really a tramp ?" asks Laura', coding a little nearer. ."A first-class one." says the lieuten ant " look at my boots," and he bal- KtnnnA V.fa f nl nn l.-'a i " They's real funny. They's laugh "Ipg" said the child, stooping over to itudy the chasms in the toes. " Don't your papa wear Bnch boots ?" inquired the man. . -7 'i "I ain't got no papa," the girl re plied. " Nor I," laughed the tramp, but the child was very sober. " My name's Laura, what's your name ?" she asked, a moment later. " My name ?" said the lieutenant, his face becoming very grave. " My name ? I haven't any. I lost it long ago.'.' " Did anybody find it ?" was the ques tion sagely propounded. She stood close to him now, one hand on his knee, and wistfully looking up into his face. A something he saw in it overcame him, and he bowed his head, in his hands. " Don't be imperent !" said Bridget. "Lave the man alone ! I think you'd better be going, sir." The leftenant raised his head. "I think so, too." He looked again into the child's face--s looped down and kissed her. - "My hat!" he demanded, sharply, as he turned away. It was near the dining-room door, where Bridget's dress had swept it He stooped to pick it up. At the same in ftant tbe door opened and a handsome woman, richly dressed and not more than thirty years of age, stood in the door way. As he rose his face looked into hers. His hat dropped from his hand and he staggered back..-! " O God 1" he cried. V It is Marian." A quick cry of surprise and joy came from the lips of the woman. Sue placed her hands on his shoulders and gazed lovingly and mutely into his face. The man's head slowly drooped. " Husband, look at me I she cried, catching his hands in hers. 1 cannot, 1 dare not. See what 1 am ! Remember what I was to you," he said. "Always my husband, James, and always forgiven." "Always your husband? standing erect and with a wild vigor in his atti tude.' " Marian, I heard that the law had freed you from me, because I struck yon when I was drunk, and in my shame deserted you when I was sober." " It was all false. I have waited for you for five long years. I knew you would come back some day. Now you are here. Poor, poor husband ! How you muBt have suffered ! Come with me! Laura, child, come! The back way is clear." Still he hung back. "I am not fit," he said. " I am forever disgraced. Let me go away and come back again some time when I am no longer a tramp." "James, this is Thanksgiving Day. It is our day, if anybody's. You must come. You are no longer a tramp, thank God Come ! It is home again for all of us ;" and putting her arms around her huhlmnd she led him out of the room and out of his bondage. An hour later the tramp sat at his wife's table as a gentleman, dressed iu black clothes, his hair trimmed, his beard cut in civilized bhape. The trans formation was complete. To his wife, her father, her brother and her brother's wife, he told, after grace, the story of his self-imposed exile, of the shame and remorse which had followed him for years, of the strange faith which had brought him back that night to the presence of one whom he had supposed to be a thousand miles away, and for ever lost to him. Happy ! No home ever knew keener joy than waited upon this reunion ; no home ever had such pathos at its Thanks giving dinner. Of all his heroism none was nobler than that which made " Lef tenant Jim " once more a husband and father the heroism of confessing and regretting the greatest wrong of his life. Sicilian Brigands. The Sicilian authorities have no easy task in attempting to suppress brigand age, even after they have caught their brigands. At Palermo recently twenty three bandits were put upon trial, being cooped up in an iron cage. Bo frightened were the people of the neighborhood that only twenty jurors out of a panel of fifty appeared, and when eight of the convicted prisoners were being removed in a van, the van by remarkable coin cidence broke down at a lonely place on the road, and the three most formidable ruffians escaped, two of whom had been sentenced for fourteen crimes, including murders and kidnapping. In Dlstrese. A policeman was passing down Rich mond street last Wednesday afternoon when he heard a woman's voice lifted iu high lamentation ; opening the wicket, he strode up to thfl door, where a wo man was lying prone on the steps, be dewing the rubber foot-mat with her briny tears. " What is the matter, mam ?" he said, gently. " Ooh, boo, 00 h ?" said the stricken female. " Now, don't take on so. "said the club carrier, with tremulous gentleness; "tell me what is the matter." " Oh, I, I'm, a a ooh, 00 h !"'and she wept afresh and copiously. " Why, my dear, dear madam," said the officer, " what great sorrow has blighted your life and drove the sun shine from your happy home ? Where fore are yon thus cast down into the depths of anguish ? Why are the foun tains of your being broken up, and your beantions eyes become springs from which the aqueous fluid" " Get out, yon brute ! ooey, ooh, 0 o h, boo-hoo." The sympathetic officer was bon plnssed. He backed off a step or two, and, as his great heart throbbed in sympathy with so much suffering; he could but make one more effort at com fort . ."Madam," said he, and as he spoke "his vbice grew husky with emotion; " madam, I sympathize with yon from the.bottom of my heart, and, while yon do not seem disposed to trust me, yet if there is anything in the round world I can do to lift this sorrow from your heart, let me do it. I assure you it is no idle curiosity. I would be your friend. I will avenge your wrongs, and the services of one loyal and true are yours if yon will accept them. I would not pry into that whioh does not con cern me, but I know that some great sorrow is upon you, and gently, tender ly would I raise the pall that hangs about your life, dress the wounds that have been opened in yonr tender heart, and pour the balsam of consolation over tbe" He did not notice in. his vehemence that the woman had stealthily risen, but she had, and, launching the foot mat full in his face, she said : "Get out o' this, you mean old blatherskite ! Yon're meaner than that old guardian in this dime novel who wouldn't let his niece marry the hand some trappec If I want to cry about what I read it's none o your business." Two blocks away the policeman flicked a bootblack off the sidewalk by the ear, and muttered: "If women ain't the curuBest-built animals in the world, kill me for a fool Cincinnati Breakfast Table. Direrce In Other Lands, An Arab may divorce his wife on the slightest occasion. So easy and so com mon is the practice that Burckhardt as sures us that he has seen Arabs not more than forty-five years of age who were known to have had fifty wives, yet they rarely have more than one at a time. By the Mohammedan law a man may divorce his wife orally and without any ceremony ; he pays her a portion, gener ally one-third of her dowry. He may divorce her twice and take her again without her consent, but if he put her away by a triple divorce conveyed in the same sentenoe, lie cannot receive her again until she has been married and divorced by another husband. . By the Jewish law it appears that a wife could not divorce her husband ; but under the Mohammedan code, for crnelty and some other causes she may divorce him. Among the Hindoos, and also among the Chinese, a husband may divorce his wife upon the slightest ground, or even, without assigning any reason. She is under the absolute control of her bus bond. The law of Frauce, before the revolu tion following the judgment of the Catholic church, made marriage indis soluble, bnt during the early revolution ary period divorce waH permitted at the pleasure of the parties when incompati bility of temper was alleged. The Code Napoleon restricted thisjiberty. On the restoration of the Bourbons a law was promulgated, May 8, 1816, declaring divorce to be abolished ; that all suits then pending for divorce by mutual con sent should be void, and such is now the law of Frauce. Albany Law Journal. Burglars and Defaulter. The New York correspondent of the Troy Times says: The amount of loss inflicted on our banks by burglars is really small when compared with that due to internal fraud, 'mere nas been indeed, during my own memory, wseries of defalcations in the banks of rja city which would make a burglarTr mouth water, since in but one case was there any punishment. Here are a few figures American exohange bank, pay'g teller. 90,(HK Fulton bank, caubier's son 65,000 Ocean bank, paying toller iiO.000 Oroooru' bank, aHxiiitint oanhier 60 000 Tradeuman's bank, book-keeper 40,000 Merchants' exohang. bank, cashier. . . (iiK),CM,0 City bank, book-keeper. . . . - 100,000 The entire capital of the Atlantic bank (300,000) was embezzled by its cashier, and this was the only instance in which a sentence was incurred. The bank of the State of New York lost $500,000 by the fraud of its officers, who retained the plunder with perfect immunity. Every blade of grass in the field is measured ; the green enps and the color ed crowns of every flower are curiously counted ; the stars of the firmament wheel in cunningly calculated orbits; even the storms have their laws. The Old Maid of Athens. . ' Rome where yon will and man U falxe ; His Spain may be mojt dire When once he has a Belfast, he Will shortly of her Tj re. Tekin this Brest and yon will soo That Isle of Man most dearly, And yet Issy this Dublin plan Will Bonen ns quite clearly. Heed not, oh, maid, the sighs and Wale Of man, or else forlorn yon Will me the time, when feet erect, He'll puff his Sweden scorn yon. Though yon be Hungary for love, , There's Norway that yon can Hivana thing that's safe to do -With such a brute as man. Eugene Field. Itemg of Interest, Ode to a five-hundred-dollar sealskin- cloak : " Thon art so dear and yet eo fur." - The Waco "Examiner estimates the wheat crop of Texas this year at 12,000, 000 bushels. A lisping young lady said she hoped to get married before she was old as "MithThnthelah." Lawyers are never more earnest than when they work with a will that is, if the estate is valuable. A boy who went after chestnuts on a Sunday, broke the Sabbnth, his righ1 leg and his suspenders. Sam" John, do yon think my poeia ;, makes music?" John "Don't knov. Sam, but it makes me sick." . . To a young msu struggling with y a still younger mustache, the "darkei- bour is just before the down. I will listen to any one's conviction?, bnt pray keep your doubts to yourself, I have plenty of my own. Ooethe. In a discussion on cremation at London club a member is credited wit!, the argument: "We earn our li vine , why should we not urn our dead I" A sewing maohine agent, who was very ill, being told that he must prepare to pay the debt of nature, wanted to knou if it couldn't be paid on the monthly in stalment plan. " Is your master up?" asked an ear!; visitor of a nobleman s valet. "Yes, sir, "'.answered the valet, with great in nocenoe ; " the butler and I carried bin up about three o'clock." ' Twelve thousand different works ha been published in regard to the Amei can war. A good deal of this w4r liter ture first saw the light in Europe, b tbe bulk appeared in the United State, A chamois, with red eyes, white horn and hoofs, and a snowy-white fleaco, i among the curiosities of the Zooplast museum at Solenre. It is theseco: specimen found in tue Alps in tm; years. Not over one person in three has 1. of equal length, and eveiy man shoi be posted on the relative length or l limbs tkat ho may know which one use for short and which one for 1 kicking. A young husband who was advised his wife to put on his overcoat to t, down town one cold morning, compl with her request by pinning a ti ket on the lappel ot hisundeic She could not soe through it. "What," asks a correspond "causes the hair to fall out?'' D we answer we must know whether are married or single. This is inippr to a true understanding of the cr Keokuk Comtitution. French papers state that Gambe'. about to marry a widow with a fortn $8,000,000. If the right-angled everlasting truth were told it v probably be that he was abent to : a fortune of 8,000,000 with a wido "Do you make any reduction minister ?" said a young lady to ft ... man. "Always. Are you a mini wife?" "Oh no. I am not mart said the lady, blushing. Dan then?" "No." The tradesman 1 puzzled. " I am engaged to a fis cal student," said she. The red was made. Indian Spirituals. The natives of the Marquesa i are reported to be Fpiritualists c most uncompromising sort. They that they are always surround spirits, which, or whom, they ii fear so long as it is dayl'ght A as it is dark? however, they are i tal dread of ghosts, never ventui alone. Then they go in pair, fours, fives or sixen, imagining ; alone, bad spirits may seize uy. carry them off easily and suddenly, is supposed that suoh spirits m search of human samfioeB which t were unable to procure while iu flesh. When a native dies, his r turns into a ghost, it is thought, nv turns to the place where he hae ! If he or,it can find no human fice, he is" obliged to depart to 1 nique, the wildest and most steril the islands, and from thf iSeup i. sea. As he can never cc , uack to this is the close of Lt ihostly i The natives also hav.Vmedium olaim to have power to summon 1 trol spirits, and as they are L superstitious, the mediums tL here, do a good business. The are usually tuo mediums, and tU pi et all the mysteries ot the L world to the ignorant laity. TL great professions of -sanctity, the poor savages exactly ss tl v and are never exposed as " posters.