Hatos of Advertising. One .Squared inch,) one lnertion - f! OneH'juare " onoinontli - - SCO One Square " three month - K) OneHquare " ono jeer - - 10 ' Two Squares, on year - 1" 0 Quarter Col. -.-- 3 (0 Half - M (0 f0 rl I V I'MSHF.D EVF.UY WEDNESDAY, BY w k. THJNN. IS ROBINSON & BONNER'S BDILDIKO ELM STREET, TIONESTA, PA. 11 One 100 (0 TEUMS, $2.00 A YKAU. ) Subscriptions received for a shorter !'" than thren month. i i nHmii(l(npn Holicilod from nil parts ' ' country. No notico will lo taken of 'lymouH (niiminiciition. Legal notices at established rate. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement, col. lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Ca-di on Delivery. VOL. XI. NO. 46. TIONESTA, PA., FEBEUA-EY 5, 1879. $2 PER ANNUM, Orthographical. With trsgio air the lovolorn heir Once chased the chaste Louise ; fche quickly guomed her guest wu there To plena her with bis pleas. Now at her side he kneeling tighed IUa aighi of woeful size : " Oh, hoar me here, for lo, most low, I rice before yonr eyes. i soul Is sole thine own, Louise 1 n ill never wean, I ween, !io love W I for aye shall feel, Tho' ff -vy be its mien 1" " You knov mot tell yon no1" The maii-diade answer true " I love you anght as Hure I ought- " To you 'tis due I do 1" Binoe you are won, Oh, fairest ono, The marriage rite is right The ohapol aisle I'll load yon tip This night," exclaimed the knight. Eugene Field, A Flood; and What Came of It. Once upon a time, not very long ago, there was a y aiog damsel called . Bat perhaps I'd hotter not mention her name; she's changed it now, in any case, and to save everybody's feelings, I'll call hi r Mollie MulJoon sweet Mollie Muldoon. Now a more delightful crca ture it would be hard to find, for she bai that incomparable nature that blends the child with the woman; and whereas she could romp and play like a kitten in seasons df frivolity, you might iu a"dire and serious extremity searoh t he wi de world pver for a wiser or matarer i'udgmeat. She hid the most wonderful ;nack of taking' a shabby house, and going over it from top to bottom, with a toucli here and a brush there, and a little adornment over yonder, so that, when she was through, the metamor phosis wonld be staitliog, and one would declare that uoder the kilt plaits of ber bouse dress she concealed the wand of a , fairy. JSv r) body knows that poverty and pride are like oil and water, and won't go together very well; and it oould not be denied that Mollie's beauty and grace were sadly suited to the stinted means of life doled out to the widow Muldoon and her two cliil Iren. When Mr. Mai doon was living they had all the luxuries that his bandxome salary and generous heirt could devise; but the bountiful Leirt became c Id in death, and the . haulsome salsry ceased long before Mollie was old enough fully to enjoy either the one or the other. It was ODly a mercy from heaven that Mrs. Mul doon 's fathi r outlived htr husband, and was able to allow her a small income, or heaven knows what would have become of sweet little Mollie, with heryearnings nfter fashionable furbelows and sur roundings. Poor little Mollie I Many a time I've soon her beautiful eyes filled with tears of rage and niortrfication over an abor tive attempt at making a dress with puff 4 and frills out of a small pattern; but out she came presently with some old under-skirt of her mother's, or aunt's or errand mother's, and with a few touohes of ber magic fingers the whole fubrio would fall t jgtther, colors and all, as gracefully es a ra'nbow, aid then her eyea would shine again, and her dimpled chin go up in the air with the true pride of genius. Just look at that Mollie Muldoon," said Fanny Sharp, as Mollie went by; "she's ruiiiiug her mother, the way she dresses." Pride goeth before a fall," croaked 1.1 Oranuy Sharp. It was only a week or so after that I beard from Mrs. Muldoon's own lips the continuation of a rumor that had been ' going about for months that Mollie was actually engaged to be married to young Adolpbus Dacre. The Dacres bad been given over by our whole little csmmuiii'y Jong, fince. They had treated the church scandalously, hiring the best pew, and never paying a penny on it; the grocer had refused to give them any further credit; the butcher's cart drove;right by their door; and Malony, the milkman, had been seen Bitting upon the front stoop of tho Dacres', waiting, be si.id, for one of two things his money or . the liver of Mr. Dacre. - "... " And of course," said Mollie, " so longaj'lheae. miserable" tradespeople ' held on, and treated the, Daores with ...respect, the whole aristocracy of Bab bit ton followed suit; but now that the butcher nd-. baker and candlestick muker have'gweu. them up "It's a case ol .the rottea potato," said ber seventeen - year - old brother Ilava you too turnel n gainst " 1 1"- replied the lad, with mock tragedy. "Never! As a friend of mine, he's' A 1, and no mistake; but I don't take much, stook jn Dolph as a brother-in-law. It's-all he' can do to keep himself m chuck.". " Mamma, will 'you make Jack stop talking slang 7 "I beg pardon." said Jack; "what I meant to say was tliat under existing circumstances Mr. Adolphus Dacre finds it exceedingly diflloult to supply his own individual necessities, and positive ly declines any inducement to take in the matrimonial racket." " Declines me 1" said Mollie, with scornful emphasis. " Declines the whole feminine genera tion," f aid Jack. Thut very day, which was a freezing ne in December, Mollie was seen down upon the skating pond executing with ivurveious grace and laeility the mm cute evolutions of the outer edge, and with ber was Do'ph D.ioro. Whatever might have been bis inclination toward the feminine generation in general, it was plainly evident tbat to Mollie Jn particular his who'e heart and soul went out in fond emotion. Ilis face was of the same mobile tendency as Mollie's, nnd love, admiration, devotion, idolatry, bourne 1 in every line of it. " It's a shame to part them," said the romantic lookers-on. " It's ruinous to have them so much together," said the prudent; but Mollie and Dolph went gliding on, their hands locked together, their glad hearts raring no more for fate than for the freezing wind. "Dolph is a bang-up skater," said Jack that night at supper. "That pi tch in bis left boot loosened bis skate, or he'd have been the top of the heap. If he conld only get a pair of shoes " " Do you mean to say," said Mollie, the morsel upon her fork suddenly be coming distasteful to ber "do you mean to say that Dolph Dacre can't get as many shoes-as be wants ?" " Why, ei, if it comes to that, can I? Can you ? Poverty is a blamed uncom fortable thing; but I hope it's no dis gn te." " It ii a disgrace. It is a hideous, heinous, unbearable crime I" said Mol lie, and pushed ber chair away, and went up stairs to cry her pretty eyes out. iler mother found her with her head buried in the pillow, her whole little body quivering with excitement. "Why, Mollie, my child" began pcor placid Mrs. Muldoon; and then the young termagant turned upon her. "It's your business," she cried", "to put an end to this madness between Dolph and me. Do you think it's a very nice thing to have your daughter papa's daughter engaged to be married to a man that can't afford to buy himself a pair of shoes ?" "A little temporary embarrassment, oy child." "A little temporary fiddlestick!" roke in Mollie. "It's forever and L, ver, and hopeless, and I wish I was P ,1 t n.. l. - l a. i "What can I do?" said poor Mrs. Muldoon. " You can break off the engagement forbid him to enter your doors in Hult him tell him you won't give your hughter to a pauper--make him so mad 'ie'11 never look at me again." "I'll do nothing of the kind," said the poor lady, her cheeks beginning to mrn. l admire and respect the young nan tA much to cause him any unneces ary suffering; but I'll tell him to give ou up, for bis own sake as well as yours." Poor Dolph met Mrs. Muldoan half vay. He confessed it was the merest presumption upon bis part to aspire to i.he hand of a creature so fair and sweet And supremely perfect; he owned that his pecuniary prospects were hopeless, and his future a blank season of despair. " I can get him back again," said Mol lie ; but she found this not so easy, after all. Dolph had a pride of bis own that had Ions; battled impotently against his love. He camo no more to the honse ; the skating pond missed its champion ; the main street lost its most graceful promenader ; no more little billets-doux went into the vest pocket nearest his heart, or lay in the perfumed recesses of Mollie's battered writing-desk. The broker's office where Doh was employ ed opened late and closed early, for there was very little business doing iu those times of commercial depression, but he haunted the busy streets of the financial center with so haggard and distracted an air that he passed for a youth who had ventured his all upon some rotten security and lost it. Which, indeed, was the truth in more ways than one. Aloliie, who bad not looked for this firmness of resolve upon his part, began to grow pale and listless ;sho also forsook the familiar haunts tliafr love bad made so delightful, and busied herself more than ever with patching up the outward appearances of her toilet and the shabby surroundings at home. She grew lees plump, less rosy ; faint lines of thought traced ber fair white brow ; her eyes took a shade of melancholy in their depth that made them a deeper, softer, darker blue. "She's losing her health," Bighed poor Mrs. Muldoon. It was midsummer, and ISabbleton was at its loveliest and best, and it be came necessary for fashionable people to leave it at once. Among the arrivals at a popular watering-place might have been noticed the names of Mrs. (Jinn bar and her niece Miss Mollie Muldoon, and within a month letters began to reach isaDDieton mat made tne neart of poor Mrs. Muldoon beat with alternate hope and tear. "Mollie behaves like an ancrel." wrote Mrs. Oinqbar; " and if you show the least discretion and sense in follow ing up this providential opportunity of hers, it will be the luckiest thing in the world for you all. Mr. Fithian is a man of distinction and influence as well as wealth, and will be able to give Jack a push in life. We should all of us be exceedingly grateiul lor Mollie s suc cess; and 1 do hope you 11 manage to get that moldy dining-room of yours repapered and painted before Mollie's return. Jack might help in these things during bis holidays, and I'll see that you have presentable linen and china for the table. If you livei within the pale of oivilizition, Mr. Fithian needn't, of oourse, stay to a meal; but no one can tell what may happen in that miserable Babbleton, in the way of a flood, or hurricane, or something." Mrs. Muldoon did her feeble best, aided by some abortive efforts of Jack, whose mveulion far outran his execu tive ability; but when Mollie came buck the whole domcstio menage began to wenr en air of eomfortable serenity. Mollie soothed the fear and fluster of her mamma, altered her old black silk to the newest style, coaxed and bullied Jack into a semi-recognition of the in evitable, and everything went merry as a marriage belL Aunt Cinqbar was aston ishingly generous, for one of ber cau tious proclivities; and other relatives, who had hitherto been as adamant to the calls for relief, became plastic as putty iu the face of this joyful ex tremity. Mollie's wodding trousseau far ex cceded her wildest ambition; and as she had considerable versatility of soul, these smooth expanses of silk and velvet t jok some such a shape to ber as the lump of rough marble to the sculptor, or nicely-stretched canvas to an artist. Her eyes began to glow before the scis sors snipped into the material; and when the whole ideal conception was realized, and particularly as the train bung well, and she was fitted to a nicety, she was wildly happy. Only once was there an open allusion to Dolph. " When it was proposed that the bridal couple should kneel during the benediction, " No, no," cried Mollie; " men never kneel gracefully, at least there are very few only one; but never mind." Two or three hour a after, her mother came upon her unawares, and found her with her face bowed upon her hands. When it was lifted, it was wet with tears ; but she would bear no caresding, and only said she was tired, aud so glad the storm would prevent Mr. Fithian from coming down. In truth, it was a day in which no man, beast or reptile would care to be abroad. Heavy black clouds hung over Babble t n ; the wiDd swept wildly through the deserted streets, increasing ' at night fall to a hurricane, howling and shriek ing like an unloose! demon about the dwellings of that hapless suburb, tear ing ruthlessly the gimcracks of flimsy architecture from roofs and balconies, up-rooting trees an I shrubs, rocking Mollie's bedstead like a cradle, and at lust sending a brick with direful accu racy straight down Mrs. Muldoon's chimney through the kitchen stovepipe, blocking up the damper, and frustrating he baking of a lovely meat pie that Mollie had made for supper. Then the heavens opened, and the rain fell ; and such a rain I A bucket ful at a drop, Jack said, when he oame home from town. He was wet to the knees, and declared tbat, two blocks be I w, a raft was plying from corner to o rner ; the boys were getting out their oats, and if the storm continued, the u.ty of Venice would be nothing to Bab bleton. As the kitchen lire had gone nit, Jack's clothes weie put to dry in the dining-room; the meat pie was still in its dough casing, but the coffee was varm; and there was plenty of cold ham n the larder. " And with helm and pickles," said Jack, " we can defy the elements." So they all sat nownto supper. Mollie's hair in one braid down her laok, and the bib of her kitchen apron stilt tucked under ber chin, when suddenly there was a ring at the bell. " If that s Mr. Fithian," said Mollie, ( shall die. Do run up and see, Jack." Then Mrs. Muldoon and Mollie waited iu breathless silence, and, as the house was small, and its acoustio properties Hccoinmoda'ing, the smoothly modu lated tones of Mr. Fithian came distinct ly to their ears. " Is Miss Mollie in ?" Jack rather thought she wasn't out. Then the parlor door opened and shut, and Jack came below. " He's more like Mephistopheles than ever to-night," Baid Jack. "He's al ways tall and lean and cadaverous, but he's a specter now; and 'his eyes have all the gleaming of a demon in their dreaming." " Is he very wet, Jack ?' " Wet I lie s drowned. 11 ut lie s as polite as a mounseer; he's holding two quarts of water at this present minute iu bis high bat, and smiling blandly while the rain drops over his marble brow." Mollie went bravely up into the par lor. Now there is this about the grace of youth, that it is invincible; and Mr. jnthian liad never lound Mollie so charming as when she stood there be' fore him with her kitchen bib on, and her hair in one braid down ber back but, on the other hand, a gentleman of Mr. 1 ithian s physique and style and age can be awfully brought to grief by two hours wading in a tempest. His devotion was supreme, and merited a better acknowledgment at the hands of Mollie ; but we all know the weakness and ingratitude of human nature. His overcoat and high bat and overshoes were thrown together in a wet mass npon the rack; Mollie saw them as she passed through tho hall, and her heart sank within her. Did he expeof to remain ? With the kitchen fire out, and the back area filled with water, and nothing in the house but ham and pickles, did this alien and stranger expect to be asked to share their humble hospitality 1 He stood there, pretending to look at a book upon the marble table, while the water fell from his coat-tails in a pool. "You you are so wet!" said Mol lie. "I know it," he said. "Uan tI go somewhere and get dry 7 Jjet me go down stairs, Mollie, to the kitchen fire surely you don't mind me, darling. Bun down and ask your mother's permis sion. Mollie kn6w the fire was quenched by the brick in tne kitchen Btovepipe but ehe went down nevertheless any thing to get away from this miserabu iuhu. Her mother met her ut the btairs with a ple face and outstretched bauds, 'Don't come down, Mollie; the whole lower floor is flooded: the beater is out." Mollie went into the narlor acain. ' There isn't one spark of heat in the whole house," she said lo Mr. Fithian. . " Perhaps, under these circum stances, it would be better to retire to the upper chambers," said Mr. Fithian, whose teeth were now beginning un pleasantly to chatter. " Yes, we d better alt go to bed, ' said Eoor Mrs. Muldoon; "we can at least e dry and warm there." At that moment a portentous drop fell straight from the ceiling upon the sparsely-covered cranium of Mr. Fithian. " CJreat heaven ! the roof is leaking ! cried Mm. Muldoon; and, rushing up stairs, they found a stream of water in the upper chamber gradually making its way to the floor below. It leaked from under the closet door. In that closet hung the better part of Mollie's bridal trousseau. Sue walked with a faltering step and beating heart t) the door, opened if, and took one quick gasp to catch her breath. A gast of wind blew her one braid of hair over her ejes, the rain came pelting down; the sky-light had blown off; the pretty conceits of silk and velvet, the unrivalled concep tions of the dressmaker's brain, the rib bons and laca and all the daintv fioerv there, had fallen a prey to the devasta tion ol the elements. It was all over. Mollie was pale, but calm. She walked down stairs again with a firm step. As si e went she heard a familiar voioe in a subdued whisper: "This floor is all right now, Mrs. Muldoon; the drain was clogged. Now Jack and I will get at the kitchen stove." It was the voice of Dolph Daore, the sweetest melody the world held for poor little Mollie Muldoon. Nothing could have kept her then from d?S3eading to the kitchen floor. It wad wet and cold, nnd feebly lighted by the straggling name of a solitary lamp, but Mollie sud denly found it radiant. It was warm, it was glowing, it was delightful. Dolph stood there, in bis shirt sleeves, holding th kitchen stovepipe, while Jaok was extrioating the intruding brick. His luxuriant locks were blown across his brow, a bar of soot extended Dolph's mustache, bur, on I the invisible grace of youth ! Mollie looked at Dolph with clasped hands and pleading eye?. Hold on, Jack," said Dolr h, and dropped the stovepipe. What s the row 7 e aid Jack, and looking up, fonnd Mollie clasped to l) lph s bursting and exultant heart. " Jt 8 all over, Dolph, sobbed Mollie. I did the best 1 could, but every thing's spoiled. And what's the nee ? All the poor man can do is to get away, mi 1 stay away forever." " 1 11 go for some conveyance for him, f yon fay so, Mollie," said Dolph, who had a compassionate lit art. " If yon only would, said Mollie. And he did. Mr. Fithian was quite U for S9vernl wieks, and somehow in gaining one fever he lost the other. At all events, when Mollie was married, the other day, to Dolph Dacre, among the wedding presents was a sot of silver from Mr. Fithian; and whether he meant it for satire or a religious exhor- ta'ion nobody knew, but this inscription was neatly engraved upon the coffee urn: " A foolish man builds hw house upon the sand; and the rail descended, and tho floods came, and beat upon that honse, nnd it fell, and great was the fall of it." Edison's Mystery. Mr. Edison has stumbled upon some thing new that puzzles nnd confounds him. For weeks he and bis men have been at work in bis workshop at Menlo Park, JN. J., to perfect the electric gen erators to supply the new electric light, iue lamp is completed, and the meter to measure the amount of electricity used is nearly finished. The generator has now to be perfected, and then the world will see the light that has worried the holdors of gas stock soloug. Iu the course of this study the great inventor has run upon something whieh bethinks iB a new force, unknown to science. He thus speaks of it: " While we weie experimenting with the electric light the other night, I got some more indications of the presence of some subtle, evasive force that 1 could not call electricity or anything else with which, we are acquainted. 1 would de scribe it as a new radiant force, lying somewhere between light and heat on one hand and magnetism aud.eleetiioity on the other. On bringing a magnet toward the electric light, which was then radiating only heat, the magnet became charged with this what-do-you-call-it, so that it emitted a spark in the dark. Some of the points which go to show that it is not electricity are tbat it does not respond to any of the physical tests of electricity except the spark. It pro duces no physiological effects like elec trioity save on the frog. It gives no evi denoe of polarity. It passes through the air and other resistances by large surface at the terminals, even when the apparatus is not insulated, and when connected with the earth or walls of room it can yet be drawn off from the conductor. Edison is not positive tbat "what-do-you-call-it" is a new force, for it might be some curious manifestation of elec trioity, under conditions not understood and he modestly expresses the wish that some " ambitious students" would take hold of it and solve the problem. A young artist has painted the pio tine of a dog under a tree, and the work is so artistically done that none but the best connoisseurs can tell tho bark of the tree from that of the dog. TIMELY TOPICS. In the United States there were 1,268 murders in 1878, aad ninety-six persons were hung. 4 Partly owing to the severe weather and partly to the general badness of the times, there is at present great dis tress throughout Switzerland. In Geneva alone six thousand people are reported to be out of work. There are now forty-four American firms doing business in Japan. The British population outnumbers the American by three to one, and there are eighty-three British firms against forty-four American houses engaged in commercial pursuits in the empire. John and Ann Thompson celebrated. their golden wedding in Baltimore two years ago, both being of t he same nge. The other day Ann died of a paraly tic stroke while at dinner, while John was stricken with paralysis supper, and died on the day set for his wife's funeral, so that both were buried at once. William Coleman, tramp, went into a New York tailor shop and begged a scrap of cloth to mend his rags. He was told to sit down by the stove, did so, went to sleep, and woke up with a howl of pain. A playful tailor had burned him with a hot iron. In the special sessions the playful tailor was fined $25. A St. Louis beau and belle visiting at Belleville, 111., went out for a ride last Sunday on a child's sleigh three feet long, drawn by a bay horse sixteen hands high. Their turn-out made a sensation, increased finally by the scholars of a Sunday school that was dismissed as they passed, snow-balling them severely. "The Finger of God," is the beading of a local note in the Nouveau Monde of Montreal. Gabriel Cloutier.a pious old man, deemed it his duty to chastise lor ntemperance bis two grown-up daugh ters. The girls, however, chastised him and bis mother, and one of them severely bit the third finger of his right hand. Next day he took ont a warrant for them, but when he and the police men arrived at the factory where the girls work it was found that the one who bit him bad inst had the third nnger ol her right band taken off by a machine. lhe policeman was dismissed, lor the old man said that he saw in this curious coincidence that the finger of God had been laid in punishment upon the prin cipal offender. Young ladies sometimes elope with stage drivers, bnt it is not every one, so loing, who can claim tbat a president s cousin made himself a hermit on that account. Alvin Harrison, an ecccntrio character, and cousin of ex-President Harrison, has just died near Uswego, Kansas, at the age of seventy-three. He was once a "promising young lawyer of Ohio, and when old Tippe canoe ran for the presidency young Al vin went on the stump in his interest. Afterward be studied medicine and be came engaged to a lass who, before the appointed wedding-dny, eloped with a stage driver. Harrison then built him a cabin in the Neosho bottoms, where, alone and neishborless. sleeping on a bed of straw and subsisting n spoilt bacon, he lived the life a morose her mit till the day of his death. Major Andre's Proposed Monument, A great deal of discussion has been brought about iu the New York papers by Cyras W. Field's proposition to erect a memorial stone over the spot where Major Andre was banged, the inscription to be written by Dean Stanley, of West minster abbey. The following letter on this subject is from the Avemng In view of the recent discussion about a monument on the spot where Major Andre was banged, and an inscription, I have " tried my hand at writing one, which seems to me appropriate, and I inclose it more for the sake of calling out the ideas of others on the general subject, if you think it worth while, than from any particular admiration of the production on my own part: Here John Andre, A Britinh Major, Sentenced by a Court-Martial Of Washington's Army, Was, By bis Order, Hanged as a Hpy October 21. 1780, Aged 29 Years. Mistaken zeal for his King Brought him to the Fate Which, by the rules of War, Was his due; Yet were his foes movod to spare him, By the graoei aud virtues of the Man, Which endeared him to all hearts; But the liberty of a People Was at Btake; To warn Others Was their Duty; and Benedict Arnold, A Traitor, Having escaped to the British, They refusing an Exchange, Left Major Andre To Die. The American House of Representa tives is renewed once in two years; the French chamber, once in four years; the German reiohstug, the Prussian diet and the Hungarian diet, once in three years; the Italian chamber, once in five years; while in Great Bruaiu the nom I iual period of the elective house in seven I years. ITEMS OF INTER! ST. Oast down Feathers. The floating population Fishes. The mother of paragraphs Mother wit. The days are growing longer at both ends. A good dentist is a successful man on the stump. There are 11,000 men on the London police force. It is the deliberate man who cs"" wait with him. Something you can't hha iiu a hammer. A whip. Egvpt instituted t bosp l-tbe eer tals for the insane. In Spanish, liberty is "libertad.' Think of raising libertad -poles ? Surly to bed and early to ryes never yet made any one healthy, wealthy and wise. "Wise men never make prophecies," says sombody. They prefer to make profits. He that bath no reverence for the past cannot hope to prosper in the present. We are the most paradoxical creatures. We use blotting paper to keep from blotting paper. When you visit the menagerie and begin lion about the animals, don't give jackal the bad names. A woven book has been manufactured at Lyons, the whole of the letter-press being executed in silken thread. Why, amid the general breaking-up of old business houses, do a few still re main intaotf Echo answers, " Tact." The population of Australia at the last census was 1,742,291. The popula tion of the capital, Melbourne, is 210, 000. Every man hath within himself a wit ness and a judge of all the good or ill that he does ; it inspires him with great thoughts, and gives him wholesome counsels. If you've anything to say, Bay It; If von've anything to pay, Fay it. Bat, with naught to pay or say, Don't fret yourself about it, pray. It is no sign because you Bee three canary-bird cages banging in the win dow, and hear the little birds singing their songs, that the inmates of the mansion are any happier than if they only had a dog tied up in the cellar. When Tom Crystal was passing along Cornhill he noticed a sign in a book store, " Old Books rebonnd." He en tered and remarked to the proprietor, 'Yonr sign there doesn't tell the truth." "How so?" said the store keeper. "Well, it says 'Old books rebound,' when as a matter of fact they don't. Age does not impart resilience to a printed volume. I'll prove it to you by aotual experiment." So saying, he took up a second-hand Shakspeare aud banged it violently on the floor, fol lowing it by a copy of Milton and some patent office reports. " There, you see old books don't rebonnd worth a cent." J ust then be caught the expression of the bookseller's eye, and bounded and rebounded till be reached the sidewalk. Solemn fact. Turning tbe Table". Four young men of Simpsonville went over in the Todd's point neighborhood to call on some young ladies at the house of an old gentleman. After stay ing a short time they loik their depart ure, but returned in a little while, and, either in a spirit of mischief, or to nveDge some real or fancied slight, de liberately moved bodily a garden out house to the front door of tbe residence. On arising the next morning, the old gen t'emsn took in the situation at a glance. Arming himself with a shotgun, he was enabled, owing to the suow which bad fallen tbe night previous, to track the young men to the'r respective places of abode. He formed them all in a line, and at the muzzle of his guu marched them to the 8-cue of the'r depredation of the night previous. After mmmon ing his daughters to witness the fun, be compelled the young mea to carry the building back to the point from which they had taken it. It was a bitter pill, but they subm tted. What made the case eipeoially distressing to one of the young men was to find bis photograph, which he bad recently given to one of the young ladies, onspiouously tacked on the door. Shelby hy.) Sentinel. "Lost Two Golden Hours." The following interesting letter we take from the correspondence column of the New York J-Jventng Post : " Daring the summer of 1875, after passing through the parks and grounds of the late Sir William Stirling-Maxwell, near Bridge of Allen, I was highly favored by an interior view and inspec tion of the castle and castles of his con struction, and of his noble ancestors, a fuvor that one could scarcely expect out side of his circle of acquaintances. In the day nursery was this motto, that I have siroe desired to learn the origin of. If any of your many readers can aid me, it will be an esteemed favor to know whether it may have been original with him or not: " 'Lost. " ' Somewhere betweeu sunrise and sunset. Two Golden Honrs, Each set with sixty diamond minutes. No reward is offered, As they are gone forevrr.' " The beauty and propriety of these few words have lingered iu my mind an 1 given aest to my daily effortH. I hop that they may be of ute toother, through your valuable columnH," i.