Rates of Advertising. One Square (1 inch,) ono Insertion - ! One Square " ono month - - 3 00 One Square " tlireo months - 6 00 OneHquare " ono year - 10 00 Two Squares, one year - - - 15 To Quarter Col. - - - - "0 CO Half . " " - f0 00 Ona " " - - - - 100 00 Legal notices at established rate?. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advortisenionts.col leeted quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advanee. Jon work, Cash on Delivery. 13 rUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, BY sr. xj. -wuigrax. rrriCT! I IT R0BIN80W & BONNER'S BUILDING ELM STREET, TI0NE8TA, PA. TERMS, 11.60 A YEAR. Subscriptions roeoivod for a shorter in ? than throo months. 'orroKn(lrnco. solicited irotn all parUr ! llio country. No notice will bo tiiken of iiiH)iiy!iii)Ui -iiiiiiimiiUicii.. Vol. xii. no. 2. TIONESTA, PA., APEIL 2, 1879. $1.50 Per Annum, T- Time's ranorama. It needa no maglo glass or mystlo mutterings, To read tha prophecy of coming years; Ko sage Interpreter, to Mite the utteringf Of Father Time, the patrlaroh of eeers. ' ' all the world'! a stage, tod life a drama, . " hone aoton oome and go, bat oome no wore, I is the future but a panorama Of ivi'-uos to be, bnt aeen in thought before. Tiftt the bright play flash on, bnt do not linger In contemplation of iti changing hues; t instead where Time'i prophstio finger relate, and behold the piotnre that he views, deoade henoa nay, two', it doe not matter VTora are the self-game atage, the aame old New actors ooanterfeit the hollow clatter ' Worn out long alnoe by aotora paiaed away. Hurt Vloe looks mockingly on Virtue slain; There Tooth and Boauty plight their troth together; Here Borrow aita and there brood, cruel Pain; There, ahadow chilli the friendship of fair weather. Binoerity still sows the toed of hate. Candor and Truth go cautiously in maak; Honesty plods; Corrnptlon ridea in itate; - Labor etiy bends, complaining, to hia task. " Stay 1" you exolalm, in accents discontented, " If not your c dialogue complete at last ? ' ThH future, so minutely represented, . la but the present, tempered with the past " Aye, ao it is 1 Youth dreams of bright fuooeesea; Manhood begins to doubt, perhaps to fear; While Ago bin weakness faltering confesses j And bo the world rolls on, year after year. Year after rtr beholds the same endeavor Of pnuy mou for wealth or fame, and seei . How history repeats itself forever, And fortune still from her pursuer fieea. One life there is worth living, and it beauty Transcends all charms that hopes foltlled ran bring; He who doe trustfully his honest duty, Alone is happy, le he serf or king. THE BABY'S PICTURE Miss Arethnsa Peppard was out c i temper. She said she was "mad.'' Bat it must iisve been a mild kind of madneaa, for b5f pleasant voioe had onlj a daub, of sharpness, and no tire floaheit from her so't blown jes. Bat she wan out of temper; no doubt about that, am. "TfrJRS wonder, She bad left her mite of a 0ka8e early that April morning, am , gOTie over, to New York to bhop, and - the verv first tore she entered a stort crowded with people buying seeds and bulbs ami i bmtx 1 er pockit book, eon ' taining her half-monthly allowance, had been stolen, and sne had been obliged . to return to tSammertown without tin young lettuces and cabbares and onion sets and parsley aad radish seeds that tyhe had intended the very next day to " plant mi her mite of a caruen. And aUrr day lost in a garden in early spriugas everjdy knows, or ought to knowi is a loss indeed, and there's nothing in the world so exasperating to an amateur gardener, as everj body also knows, or ought to know, than to hear from a neighboring Mnatenr gardener ''Ooodrmoruing, Mi Peppard. How backward you are wiis year I Your radishes are just showing, and we've had at least"- dozen a day for three days past. And our parsley's up, and our onions doing nicely. And you nsed to 'be so forward I So Miss Peppard, Who was . a dear little sweet-faocd, wonderfully bright Qld lady, living in the neateet and most comfortable manner on a small income, with a faithful colored Bervant-woman a ew years younger than herself, a roly poly dog, a tortoise-shell cat, ana three ' birds, had two reasons for being sorely vexed : the loss of her money and the loss of the days which she had expected would start the green things a-growing. "All the money I had." she said to Pe'teona called Ona for short as she rocked nervously back and forth in her rocking chair, her eyes sparkling and ner cheeks flushed. "I. only wishl could tatch ttie thief. I'd send him to jail as sure as grass is green." "Dtlt's sho' euuf, Miss Peppar'" Peteona alwas dropped the "d" "an' it '& earve 'em zackly right, w'en dey war ketohed, to be drug to de lockup by de neela." Then after a slight pause, which was Una s way, she added an afterthought: "Dono, dough; s'pose dey might as well take de pore wretch by de head." AU the money I hadl" repeated Miss Peppard; "five-and-twenty dollars; and I can t get any more for two weeks, for bUrrow I never did and never will. And there's, the garden all laid out and ready for planting, and Mrs. Brown sets out her lettuces aad cabbage plants to-morrow morning, and sue 11 be send' ing them here with her compliments hat oompliments, indeed I before ours have begun to head. 'If she do, I'll frow 'em ober de fenoe," said Ona. "Better eat them. dough, I gu&ss. Her complimen's can't hurt em. ' "And, oh! my conscience!" Miss Peppard went on (she could invoke her "conscience" thus lightly, dear old lady, because she had nothing on it), " baby's pioture was in that pocketbook. And I can't get another. Polly said it was the last, and the photographer don't oome that way but oube a year. "Well, well, you are a pore soul. sympathized Peteona, " to go an' lose dat ar pioter dat lubly thing jus' like a loomed angel. . An' yer sister's onliast chile 'oept five. Wish I had dat rob ber yere dis minnit; I'd box his ears so he oouldn t set down fur a week. " He wouldn't be here long," said bet mistress. " Of all things in the wide world, I hate a thief. I'd have him pat where he d steal nothing for a Tear or two at least." " Might be a she: dar's she robbers. suggested Ona; ' an' dey's all wusa den caterpillars. Caterpillars takes yo' things right 'fore yo' ejes don't sneak in yo pookit. Take a enp of tea, Miss Peppar. Dar'a no nse of frettin' no An de oat a ben a-settin on yer skirt for half aa honr. wantin' yon to notiee her, pore thing. Bhe ins came in off de po oh a minnit ago. Miss Peppard took the tea, and spoke to the cat; but she couldn't help fret ting, and she slept but little that night, and awoke the next morning almost as vexed as ever, and denounced the thief at intervals'of about half an hour from breakfast until dinner, although Peteona emphatically remarked : " Dar's no nse cursin' an swear in', Miss Peppar': can't do no good. Wish I had dat robber here, dongh." But after dinner, for which Ona served a soothing little stew and a cool ing cream custard, the old lady became a little calmer, and retired to her own room to write a letter to her sister Polly, wlu lived away off in Miohigan; and she had just written: "And I can't make a strawberry bed this summer, as I intended, and 1 11 have to wear my old bonnet, and dear I dear t how I shall miss baby's picture I" Peteona opened the door $ana ceremonie, as she always did, and walked in with a mysterious air. "Pusson want to see you. Miss Peppar' man pusson. 'Bout a boy's age, I guess, v " What does be look like, and where did you leave him ?" asked the old lady, laying down her pen, and looking a lit tle alarmed. "Out on de po'ob. I lock de do'. An' he's a dirty, ragged feller dat looks jus' like a dirty, ragged feller. Shall I broom him off, Miss Peppar' ? Looks as dough he ort to be broomed off or gib sumfln to cat pore, bony, dirty soul." 1 11 come right down, said Miss Peppard: and down she went. And there on the porch stood a dirty, ragged, forlorn-looking - boy of about twelve years of age, looking exceedingly-! " bony and half starved, sure enough. He pulled off his apology for a cap when Miss Peppard opened the door. tmt said never A word until the old lady asked him, in a mild voice she nevt r spoke unkindly to dirt and rags: " Well, my boy, what do you want ? "Then you loBt your pocketbook yesterday ? " he blurted out. les, said she eagerly, "inaiis, it was stolen from me : for I felt it in my pocket a moment before I missed it. Do yen know the tbiel I " 1 m him, was the answer ; ana ce raised a pair of dark eyes, that looked like the eyes of a haunted animal, to her face. " My conscience I ".exclaimed the old lady, and fell into a chair that stood near, while JL'eteona darted out and seized him. shouting : " Golly t got yo' wish mighty soon dis time, Miss Pep par', Run for de constable. 1 11 hold him. Gould hold a dozen like him or two or free." " Let him alone, Ona," said her mis tress, while the boy stood without mak ing the slightest resistance. "Ain f be to be drug to the lookup r asked Ona, with a toss of her turbaned head. " Wait till we hear what he has to say." said Miss Peppard. Then turn ing to the boy, Bhe askedas mildly as ever : " OI course you havp t brought raeback" "Yes, I have," interrupted he. Here 'tis, money and. all, 'cept what I. had to take to fetch me out here. 1 found your name in it on a card, and where you lived, " But, bless you ? " exclaimed the Old lady, more and more surprised, "what made you take it if you were going to bring it, back? Oome into the kitchen and tell me all about it. Ona, give him a drink of milk.fv I aha'nt do iv'Spect robbers gits thirsty s well as odder folks, dough. And she handed him the milk, which he drank eagerly. Now go on, said Miss reppard. "Whvdidvon steal mv Docketbook ? and why, having stolen it, did you bring it back ? Are you a thief 7" " S'pose I am." he stammered " but I don't want to be no more. I wouldn't 'a took it a year ago, when my mother was alive ; but she died, and father he went to prison soon after for beatin' another -man ; and I hadn't no friends ; and it's hard gittin' along when your mother's dead and you hain't no friends, and your father's in prison." " 'Tain't soft, dat'B de fac'," said Pe-. teona. gravely. "Bo I fell in with a gang of bad fel lers, but I never stole nothin' but things to eat till yisterday. I oome out of the house of refuge two weeks ago " M House of refuse I exolaimed Pe teona, holding up her bands. "An a-settin' in my clean kitchen, on my clean oilclofl Wot nex r I was there for breakin' a winder and saasin' aaoop," said the boy, with a show of indignation, " and nothin else, though they did try to make me out a reg'lar bad nn." And then he went on, under the influenoe of Miss Peppard's steady gaze: "And the fellers said I was a eofty not to have the game as well as the name, and so I went into that store 'cause I Been a lot of folks there, and I stole your pocketbook. And " dropping his eyes and voioe" there was a pioter of a little baby in it. " My sister Polly s child I" cried Miss Peppard, her wrinkled cheeks beginning to glow. "Heronliest child 'oept five." said Peteona. "And it looks like," continued the boy, bursting into tears " it looks like my little sister." "Yonr little sister?" repeated Miss Feppard, her own eyes filling with tears. Is she with her mother? " 'S to be hoped she be," said Ona, with a sniff, " or some odder place whar she 11 be washed, ller brudder s dirty nnff for a hull fam'ly." " She's in a place ten miles or more from here," said the boy, " with a wo- man who nsed to know mother. Mother give her fifty dollars just afore she died She managed to save it and hide it from father somehow, to keep Dolly till my aunt in California could Bend for her; but my aunt's dead, too, and I'm 'fraid Dolly 11 have to go in the orphan asylum after all. Father don't care ' nothin' 'bout her. But if Bhe does, if I'm a food boy, I can go to see her; but if 'm a thief And when I saw that pioture I said I will be good. It seemed as though the baby was a -lookin' at me and wantin me to kiss her. Nobody ever kissed me but her and my mother. Here s your pocketbook. Miss feppard took it from his baud, opened it, found its contents as he had described them, and then eat for full five minutes in deep thought. " xou want to be a good, honest boy," she said at last,' so as to be a credit instead of a shame to your baby sister ?" : " Yes," answered the boy. "It's mostly 'yes. ma'am,' in dose parts," corrected Ona. " Well. I'll try you," said Miss Jfep. pard. " xou I starting from his chair. " Yes, I. I want some plants and seeds from the store where you sto took the pocketbook, and I am going to trust you to get them for me. But be fore you go there, do you know any place where you. can buy a suit of clothes, from shoes to hat, for a very little money ?" " Yes, ma am, answered the boy, in a voioe that already had a gleam of hope in it "Second-hand Bobby's ?" " Well, go to seoond-hand Robert's. buy the clothes By-the-bye, what is your name ?" vick Jt'opiar. " And. Dick." continued the old lady. ' do you know any place where you can take a bath ?" "8 to be hoped he do," said Peteona. "Yes, ma'am." ' " Take a bath, put on the new clothes. throw ' with a slight motion of disgust " the old ones away ' " o to be hoped he will, eaid Peteona. Then go to the seedstore and give them the note I will write for you. And here are two nve-doiiar bills. " An' dar money is soon parted I" ex claimed Peteona. "No matter 'bout de fust word." But the boy fell on his knees before Miss Peppard and sobbed outright. at. An he 11 nebber come back any mo , sang Una, at the top of her voice, as she went about her work that after noon after Dick's departure no, he'll nebber come back any rao . But he did. Just as the sun was sink ing in the west, a nice-looking, dark- eyed, dark-haired boy. dressed in a suit of gray clothes a little too large for bim, and carrying a package in his arms, came up the garden path to the door of the mite of a cottage. It was Dick, bo changed Peteona scarcely knew him. and the package contained the seeds and onion-sets and young lettuces and cab bages, and before dark he had planted them 411, under the superintendence of Miss PeDDard. in the mito of a garden. and Mrs. Brown had no chance of send ing her "oompliments " that season. And now ma am, said Dick, after supper, "1 11 go. I thank you ever so mnoh, and I wish my mother had known you. "P'r'haps she knows her now. said Ona. 'And I will be a good bos I will, indeed. " With the help of Uod " said Miss Peppard, solemnly. With the help of Uod," repeated the boy, in a low voice. " But I guess you d better stay here tonight," continued Miss Peppard. You can sleep in the woodhouse. Pe teona will make you a oom for table bed there." " Shan't do no suoh thing 1 " said Pe teona, defiantly. " Ona I reproved her mistresa " Till my dishes is washed, I mean. Miss Peppar , said Ona, " And then to-morrow morning you can start for that baby, I've always wanted a baby. Cats and dogs and birds are well enough in their way, but a baby is worth them all. "Uollyl now yonr e talkvn . Miss Peppar' I " shouted Ona. "l's always wanted a oaoy a wite baby too. "And if you choose to stay in Sum mer town," said Miss Peppard, "you may have a home here until you can better yourself. There's plenty of work for you ; and the youth upon whom we have depended for errands and garden help, etc, is " A drefiful smart, nice, perlite boy I" chimed in 'Ona ; " as lazy and sassy as he can lib. An 1 11 call you in de morn in' w'en de birds arise, an' we'll hab dat ar angel here in a jiffy; an' won't de oat an' dog an' birds look pale w'en dar noses is outer j'int. But dar noses '11 be as straight as ebber. The verv next night a sweet babv arirl with great blue eyes and fair ourls sat upon Miss Pappard's lap, looking won denngiy about, as she ate her snpper of bread and milk, at Peteona and the dog and oat and the birds, whose noses, by-the bj e, were a traight as ever, Aod before long ck Poplar became the most pop'lar C dial, I know, but couldn't help it boy in that neigh borhood, he was so olever. so obliging. and not a bit "sassy." "De Lor' works in funny ways, sho' enuf," said Peteona, one April Jay about a year after the return of Miss Peppard's pocketbook. "Who'd b'lieve me and Miss Peppar ebber wanted Dick drug to the .lockup by de heels? An' all the time he was a-bringin' me an' Miss Peppar' de lubliest chunk of sugar, the sweetest honey-bug of a chile dat ebber coaxed ole Peteona for ginger snaps. he shall hab more, de Lor bress and sabe herl" pouring them from the cake box into the little uplifted apron. "Peteona 11 bake dem de hull liblong day, for ebber an ebber, for de blue-eyed darlin' wid a little time lef out for her odder work." JIarper't Weekly. Words or Wisdom, He who is starving does not look to see if the proffered loaf be fresh or stale. Those who have made mistakes and suffered for them are the ones to help others ; to show that any error can be atoned for. You may mnd a rent in a damaged reputation so that it may not show, but you can never make the reputation quite whole again. Beauty may attract love at first, but it alone cannot retain affection. It is the sterling qualities of the heart and mind that win in the long run. e love our friends all the time- when we are so absorbed in working for them that we seldom think of them, as well as when telling them of our regards. We do not, in our own minds, have a secret contempt for the work of the great man we do not know intimately, but we have for the work of the one we do know. How beautiful is youth I A little moon shine, a few musical water-diops, the strain of a song, and the. young heart experiences poetry as it never could be entrusted to paper. It is a dreary sensation to find one's self wholly forgotten by mere acquaint ances; but to find that we have no place in the thoughts of those we love, seems in a certain sense like being annihilated. Iho profoundest calm always seems to come just after the most terriflo storm. The exaltation of spiritual rap ture follows fast after a far descent into the gloomy Hades of the soul. Life is a series of alternations at best ; and he who mounts highest to-day sinks deep est to-morrow. Derrick, the Hangman. Derrick was the most famous or in famous hangman in English hiBtory. lie is desoribed by contemporary pens as a "prime villain," and succeeded Bull, the earliest recorded English hangman, somewhere about the year 1593. The earl of Essex took Derrick with him to Cadiz, where, after hanging twenty three prisoners, he was sentenced to be hanged himself for an assault on a woman. Lord Essex interfered and saved the scoundrel's life. In return for this, Derrick, in 1601, with much complacency, cat off his preserver's head at the command of Elizabeth. Sir Wal ter Scott enlarges upon Derrick: in the " Fortunes of Nigel."- He throve on hia( dreadful trade ; lived to a bad old age, and died infamously rich, just in time to lose the intense satisfaction ef presiding over the judicial murder of King Charles I. He is alluded to as still living in 1647 and as being dead in 1650. During his later years Gregory Brandon was his assistant, and Oregory suoceeded him, only, however, to die within a year, leaving his office to Rich ard Brandon, his son. Ihis estimable creature was twice sentenced to death for bigamy. He began his career as a headsman by decapitating the earl of Stafford, and in all probability ho was the masked executioner who beheaded King Charles. The maoLt r.tw called a derrick takes its naino Koia its pleasing resemblance to the horrible tree so long kept in full bearing by the English hangman. The Dag as an Article of Food. By moBt people the do; is valued only during his life; his skin is not particu larly valuable, and his flesh is little es teemeJ. This is by no means, however. the case everywhere. It is well-known that the Chinese use the dog as a regu lar article of food. Many of the North American tribes look upon an entree of dog as the greatest possible sweet mor Bel they can set before a stranger. Sir Leopold McCintock relates that in the Sandwich islands he had the most pro fuse apologies offered to him because there was no pnppy to be had for a feast to which he was invited. The Esqui maux, too, look upon a dish of young dog as a great treat, and it is related that a Danish oaptain provided his friends with a feast of this kind, and when they praised his mutton, sent for the skin of the beast and exhibited it to themt Tha Greeks and Romans also used the dog as an article of diet, and many ancient writers, such as Galen and Hippocrates, represent dog-meat as a highly desirable dish. Cincinnati En quirer. " Come, now, stupid," said the school master, you don't know how much two and five make. Now listen. In one pocket I have two dollars, and in the other five dollars. Now, how many dol lars have I got?" " Let me see them, and I will tell yon." School was dis missed. A fashionable belt for the feminine waist, says the Wheeling Ledger, is called the uuss band. TIMELY TOPICS. The larfffiflt hill svpt nfrrulnnol infn a legislative assembly was the new code Submitted to the Ohio BAnnta Tt Ann. tained 3,200 pagen,and, as it was insisted inai it snouia be read in full, the senate sat up till midnight to hear it through; even at that, hundreds of nacen wer slyly skipped. Mr. El ward King, who has been writing some interesting letters from the South to the Boston Journal, makes the broad assertion that the prettiest women in the world live in New Or leans. He Bays: "At the grand ball given by the Mystick Crewe of Comus,' in the Varieties theater, several years ago, I saw twenty-five hundred ladies gathered together. It would not have been an exaggeration of the truth to say of any one of them that she was beautiful." The Peruvian government, having be come somewhat alarmed at the rapid destruction of the cinchona trees in gathering the bark for exportation, has passed laws to repress the evil. Here after the gathering of bark will be re stricted to certain seasons, and in no case will the cutting down of trees be permitted. This is a matter in which the whole world is interested, because oinchonia and quinia are remedies of such importance that the souroe of sup ply ought not in any way to be endan gered. T. S. Tuoker and Louis Bedan, Colo rado miners, have reached New Orleans, after 'spending five months working their way down the Arkansas and Missis sippi rivers. They had no money to pay their way, and, building a flat at Canyon City, they started down the Arkansas river about the middle of Sep tember, floating by day and tying up at niffht. Thev haA tn nnnh iViAi'r nraft over shoals, dodge hostile Indians, andl were irozen up ior seventeen days, but finally swapped their awkward flat for a skiff, and reached New Orleans in safety. The most striking fact with regard to the French working classes is that nearly all are possessed of money. However little they earn they save something. Thrift is their great characteristic: in fact, it is said of the French -operatives that they spend less in proportion to their means than any in the world. Many keep their accumulations in an old stock ing secreted in their houses; others a daily-increasing number invest in va rious securities, the most popular invest ment being the pnrobase of land. Every frenchman, when he can, becomes the owner of the house in which he uvea, Of course he is greatly aided in this way by the French land laws and laws of inheritance, which cut the whole country up into small holdings. Sav ings banks with government security. building clubs, sick clubs and friendly societies are also in favor; but no money . i i is lieu up in iraue unions. A striking example of the sanitary effects on body and mind of work as compared with idleness, is given from the records of the New Jersey State prison. . In 1871, when all the convicts were employed, there were only three deaths. May 81, 1875, when they were still at work, only twenty-one out of 664 were idle because of illness, and only five were insane. December 81, 1875, after six months of idleness, fifty out or 717 were unfit for work, eighteen were insane, and there were thirteen deaths in the year. In 1876 only a few were busy, and there were twenty deaths. In 1877, when 500 out of 835 were at work, there were only eight deaths; and on December 31 there were thirty-eight unfit for work. In 1878. with only 270 busy, there were nineteen deaths. In January, 1879, with the same number busy, there were 107 in the hands of the doctor. A True Hero. The city of Marseilles in France was once afflicted with the plague. So ter rible wal it that it caused parents to desert children, and children to forget the obligations to their own parents, The city became as a desert, and funerals were constantly passing through its streete. Everybody was sad, for nobody could stop the ravages of the plague. The physicians could do nothing, and as they met one day to talk over the mat ter and see if something could not be done to prevent this great destruction of life, it was decided that nothing could be effected without opening i corpse in order to find out the mysteri ous character of the disease. All agreed upon the plan, but who should be the victim? it being certain -that he would die soon after. There was a dead pause. Suddenly one of the moct celebfated physicians, a man in the prime of life, rose from his seat and said: "Beit so; I devote myself to the safe ty of my country. Before this numerous assembly I swear, in the .name of hu manity and religion, that to-morrow at the break of day I will dissect a oorpse, and write down as I proceed what I ob serve." He immediately left the room, and as he was rich he made a will, and spent the night in religious exercises. During the day a man uied in his house of the plague, and at daybreak the following morning the physician, whose name was Uuyon, entered the room and critically made the examination, ne then left the rdbm, threw the papers into a vase of vin egar that they might not oonvey the dis ease to another, and retired to a con venient place where he died in twelve hours. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A hen with a clipped wing has a de fective flew. There are but two cotton factories in the whole of Mexico. A lady need not be an athlete though she jumps at an offer. When you have a family jar you can't always preserve the peaoe. A good motto for a young man just starting a mustache Down in front. A French physician says drinking boiled water only will prevent yellow fever. Paris has a municipal laboratory where wines, beers and brandies ollercd for sale are tested. The debt of the city ef Paris is'now ' nearly $400,000,000, and the interest about $20,000,000 a year. On leaving a room make your best salaam to persons present, and retire without salaming the door. The hair-spring of a watch weighs l-15,000th of a pound troy. In a straight line it is a foot long. From the debris of their coal mines Franoe makes annually 700,000 tons of excellent fuel, and Belgium 500,000 tons. What is the difference between an editor and his wife ? One writes things to set and the other sets things to rights. " He lived above hia income," . Was the dark reproach he bore, Till at last it waa romembered, That he lived above his store. ' In Copenhagen there is manufactured from the blood of cattle a chooolate, whioh is said to be the most nutritious article yet known to science. The man who married a whole family lives in Traverse oohnty, Michigan. His first wife died, and he married her sister. She too died, and then he married the mother of his two former wives. The editor of the Cincinnati Saturday Night discovered that his girl wore two seta of gold mounted false-teeth, and he sat down and wrote a poem entitled, "Rich and rare were the gums she wore. To ascertain the length of the day and night any time? of the year, double the time of the sun's rising, which fives the length of the night ; and double the time of its setting, whioh gives the length of the day. At one of our schools recently, in answer to the question : "What is the difference between an island and a con tinent, and upon which do we live ?" a bright little shaver replied: "The dif ference is that a continent is much. larger than an island, and we live on bread and meat and other things." A Dog Story. This comes from Charleston, Ind. Mrs. Brandlon tells it. She says: "My husband had a dog which he brought from Kentucky, which seemed to mo to have more sense than any animal 1 ever knew. She would look up when order ed to do anything, as intelligently as a child, and if she understood what was said, would give a pleasant bark, and start off to fulfill the order. I have often de her. shut the door after the chil ren, and she would come in at the kitchen door, opening the latch with her foot, and always shut it after her. One time she had half a dozen puppies in the barn, which were her glory and her E ride, but one morning when my huS' and awakened he heard a great row at the barn, and went out with his gun, expecting to find, a horsethief. Ashe opened the door Flora went by him like an arrow, and though he called her loud and long she kept right on toward the village. In looking around the barn for the tramp he expected to find, he dis covered that everything was all right, exoept Flora's nest. The puppies were ail gone. " We did not see Flora for Uutw ' v lni. .i.; ... about three pounds of sausage, whioh she kept ia her nest until they spoiled, and ee died of grief that summer. One of our neighbors saw her; while she was missing, hanging around a butcher's shop in Louisville. She had followed those puppies fifteen miles and re covered them." A Grocer's Trick. This happened long ago in the early days of Minneapolis and is. related to Bho.w that even in those days the grocer was "up to snnil." A certain well known individual, now a resident of St. Cloud, was dealing in groceries in Min neapolis then, and told the story himself the other day, as follows : "I happened to strike four chests of tea, which I bought at a bargain twon-ty-flve cents a pound. These four chests of tea was all I had, and of course, as my customers expected a variety of prioes, I accommodated them. I turned the tell-tale side of the chests toward the wall, and marked the tea to suit cus tomers. Deacon , still a resident of the city, came in one day after some tea, and wanted a good article. I gave him a sample from eaoh of the four chests to take home and try, stating their respective prices as thirty-five, fifty, seventy-five cents and a dollar a pound. Well, after testing the samples, he returned and rendered his decision, as follows : " 'That thirty-five-cent tea is a very fair article for the prioe ; the fifty cent tea is sauoh better; the seveuty-flve-oent tea is excellent, and the dollar tea is a very superior article, I cau assure you. But 1 can't quite go that figure. Let me have ten pounds of the seventy-flvA-oent tea.' " He was accommodated. How grocers have changed since then. &'(. J'aul IHontef frets,