Ilatos of Advertising. Ou .Square (1 ineli,,'iie t tiHfrtion - !! One.S.jiiaie " one month - -.100 OneHqiiflto " ihiec month-. - ii I o tin Nnmirc " ono your - - 10 0 IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEI)NE81AT, BY ar. xi. xvxjxxrxx:. T , , , JX BOBIHSOn" & BONNER'S BUELDLKQ XXM STREET, T10NE3TA, PA, & Two Square, one yem - - (Q Oimi turl'ol. Half " On " - .Ml I 0 . . . . JOO I fl TERMS, 1.60 A. TEAR. " Pubserlptlons received for a shorter i iu'l than three mouth. rorrcspomlencc solicited irmii nil part, fifth" fount ry. N imtii-o will ln taken of UllOHVlllOII foil!IIIH4;;!ioll ,. T.puitl notices at established rale. Mririiane ami demh notice, grati. AM Mils lor vcurlv h.Ivi rt: fluent" ..!. ledr-d quarterly. 'ln;ornvy wlver:ie ments must he paid for in relv:iec. Job work, C:i-U on !'.' o:y. VOL. XII. NO. J5. TIONESTA, PA., APRIL 0, 1870. $1,50 Per Annum, mil V" JOSEPH'S ADVENTURE. f "Can't you Icll wimp of your adven- f'lVfor" I naked of Unfriend Joseph. iio had returned frohr his many years' ivcls in the bush, and was sitting witli nd my wife. And, though lie had i absent so long, h was, ho to spmik, a young man yet. " Adventures? "tYell.I lve met with plmtyi Rough ones, Mine ol them. OU1I1I tell " riiiiusc UH of one," chimed in ' o'V. Joseph laughed. "I enn' tell you of a cr one that I met with in the moun- . ... ' )h, yes, do! Which mountains? in California; up in one ofJts wild Gitrirt." , . ."That will be the very thing. "Well," said Joseph, running his tapering fingers through his iiair and smiling at my wife. " I'll Hoften down things in the telling as well as my blunt upeech and uncivilized modes of thought will admit of, mid you must "excuse the rest," "Oh, 1'11'exeusc anything. Please be- B,n.".... v nen I started from home to settle , . . ,, i i i. in UnlroqUCIllett (lisiricis, ncgau urorpii. "I set up a theory that no man should ask a woman to marry him until lie bus f.repnred a home for her. It is surpris Dg how much you begin to think of a wife West yonder; which arisen, I sup pose, from the extreme loneliness of one's existence. I was no exception. The land 1 took up was in the Rogue river valley, and after I had got it a bit ship shape 1 worked uway with only one ob ject in view to liring home a wife." "But, Joseph, had you a selected u wife?" 1 asked. " No. I intended to do that as soon as I could, though you may say I was rather young to be thinking of it. I workedou, and was pretty successful. 1 built me a house, got a considerable stock of cattle, made a flower-garden for my wife, and even put up the pegs and nails she would want to hang her dresses on. I intended thut same autumn to mount my horse, ride through the Wall auiet valley, find my wife nd bring hr home." , At the notion of courting in that off hand t vie we laughed a little. Joseph laughed too, as if the recollection pleased l.:m. ' You think it strange, I see. It was i-.ot bo very strange in those days out there, where girls were ns scares as angels. There was not a girl within forty miles of me; and as I assure you that the very thought of one, as I drove in those jviifs for her tnrnicnts to hang on, went 1'irough me l'ke a thrill. You don't be lieve? (io West yourself and try it." ." But 1 do believe' " 1 had about two hundred and fifty head ef cattle, a good house with a gar den, a young orchard, vegetables grow ing, sweet-scented flowers all in readi ness for the wife 1 hoped to bring home to bless me and to take care of thei-e my possessions. And what do you think fiaiponisl to them?" We could not tell. "There came such a plague of grass hoppers upon the valley that everything perished. Crops, orchard, flowers, grass ?very green and delightful and promis ingthing; the grasshoppers destroyed all. You remember the second chapter of Joel?" I nodded. '"The land is as the garden of Kden before them, and behind them a desolate wildfunis,'.,, L.was. Jiigned. My Block died at leiislnttitTVeater portion of it; the cattle had nothing to foed upon. Yes, it was complete and absolute ruin." Joseph paused a moment, mentally looking at the past. " I considered myseii disappointed in love too," he resumed in the quaintest of tones.. "Though I had not been out to find my girl, 1 knew she was somewhere in that other valley wn'ting for me; and when the greedy grasshoppers ate up everything 1 felt that I had been jilted. It actually gives mc a pang now to think of those useless pegs on which my iuiagin ation had so often seen a girl's pink cot ton dress and white sun-bonnet." Joseph gave a great sigh. lie was an eccentric fellow. " I became misanthropic said to my self that between fate ami the grasshop pers 1 had been hardly used. Tacking up my books and a few other traps I bade adieu to the Uogue river valley for ever and started for the mountains. It was a longish journey, as 1 had to drive before me the stock which was left me. There iu the mountains l settled down again, built myself a fort and played hermit. No jilting girls should come near me now." "A fort?" " A regular fort ; a stockade eighteen feet high, with an embankment four fin high around it and a strong gate in the middle. My tent was in the midst of the inelosure, with my books and household goods, firearms and alt the rest of my property stowed away in it." ere you atraid ol Indian? r i "Indians arid white men. Yes, 1 saw I a good many Indians, at first, within the range of my rifle. They learned to kiep away from my fort, finding it did not pay to attempt an invasion. Ilown in the valley below there were mining enmps; and you perhaps know what some of the hangers-on of such camps are. I sold beef, that is, heads of cattle, to the miners; and as 1 had sometimes a tidy sum of money by me, it was necessary Xo be. cartful." L " W hat a strange life for a young'ml J?" Baid Mary. " For you, Joseph ! " "I herded my cattle, drove them to market, cooked, studied, wrote and in dulged in a mixture of misanthropy and rifle practice, liy the time I had entered on the second summer in the mountains I felt quite at home and was getting rich. After all, the life had its charms. A man cannot quite tire of it when lie is but a few years out of his teens." " A nd the girl-wife " "1 am coming to her. Having had time to forget my ill-usage, a reaction sot in, you see, and I thought, after all, I roust ride to the Wallamet to see after my girl. Hut I was not in the hurry over it that I had been before. This is all very dull, you will say, but thero'll b some stir presently." " It is not at all dull." "One Sunday afternoon (How did I know it was Sunday? you ask. Because I had kept count of tlie days all along; kept my diary regularly) one Sunday afternoon 1 was sitting outside writing, when a shadow fell across the paper, and, looking up, I beheld a skeleton standing there before me. Accustomed as I was to lonely encounters with strange men of all kinds, my hair stood on end as I stared at t he specter. He was the merest boy in years, pretty and delicate by na ture, and evidently reduced to this shadowy state by starvation. His story was soon told. He had left Boston on board a vessel bound for the northwest coast, had been wrecked at the mouth of the Umpaqua, and been wandering about in the mountains ever since, subsisting on roots nnd berries." " He was" " No, 1 assure you," interrupted Joseph, with an amused look at my wife, "the boy was not a young woman in disguise, if that's what you are thinking. He was just a poor, weak, half-starved lad named Kd wards. ' I fed and nurse'd him until 1 got Sam Chong Sung to let him take up aclaim alongside a Chinese camp, promis ing to favor the Chinaman in a beef eon tract if he would be good to the boy. 1 still continued t see a great deal of him." " And did Ed wards succeed?" " Yes; he got on. One dav two China men stole some of Sam Chong Sung's horses, and he offered four hundred dol lars to Edwards if he would go after the thieves and track them. Edwards asked mv advice, aud 1 encouraged, him to go, telling him where 1 fancied he wou,ld find the men. Sihestarted iu pursuit, and I confess I mi.wvd him. Again Joseph paused. We did not in terrupt him. " A man came to my fort one day who was naked and starving. He was a bad-looking fellow, very; but you will say a man naturally docs look bad when Ins clothes are nowhere and ins bones protrude through his skiu. I clothed him, fed him, card for him kindly until he was able to travel, and then he went away. The next Sunday 1 was sitting outside my fort, as was customary on that leisure day, reading some transla tions from the Creek poets for I iliire sav you remember I was never much of a hand at the original when, chancing to look offmv booK, I beheld a vision." "A what?" " A vision. A vision of a lovely woman. She was riding up the ap proach to my fort on a fine liorse, riding gracefully and slowly, as if to give me time to get over my surprise; and 1 bo ieve 1 needed it. The picture sho made is in my mind now ; 1 see the very flicker of the shadow Snd the sunlight across ihe road, and the glitter of some steel tlitt fastened her horse's trappings as lie arched his neck in impatience of her re straining hand. 'Are you tired, old friend?" " Never less, so in my life." "That vision, breaking in suddenly ns it did, upon my solitude, gave me the queerest sensations. I was just spell bound. Not so she. Iteming in her horse at my gate, she squared round on her saddle and looked at me, silently ask ing my assistance to dismount. I helped Iter down what else could I do ? and then, at her request, gently preferred, went tm put up aud feed her horse. Had she drooped from the clouds ? I did not know.' . " Well ?" " If you'll believe mc, when I turned in doors, my guest had got her habit oil". Evidently she meant to make herself at I home. A tall, young, beautiful, well- dressed woman ! Her eyes were large, j black and melting; lmr hair was superb, I her manner easy. She was hungry, she said; would I give her something to eat? And while I was making preparations to give her of my best she read aloud one of i the ( i reek translations, an ode to Diana. commenting upm it herself.. That she ! was a woman of culture and education ! whatever might have brought her into : her present strange position, was obvious. Well, now," continued Joseph, "you can guess whether a young man, isolated on the mountains, ruined by the grasshop- , pers lunl jilted bv tlie girl ot the Walla : met valley, was bewildered or not. -Kn-j tertaining goddesses was not in my line." llow long did she stay.' I " Wait a bit. What with reading aud i eating, our acquaintance improved fast Vint ilVti(tit ti uitinr n initio urn) iraru mi Kate Kearney.' I might have Tost mv head to her perhaps, to say nothing of my heart, but lor a certain inward latent I doubt. I did not care that my girl should ride about, elegantly attired, on prancing horse, and drop down unex pectediy on hermits. Mill, it was a pleasant feeling to find one's self near her, and certainly a novel ne. I asked her history and she told it me. She was of a good New England family, reared in affluence, well educated and accom plislied, tmt by a treak of lortune she had liecome reduced to poverty and exiled trom home. " What was it, Joseph?" "Ah! what indeed? The old storv. I suppose; but I did not ask her. She had made her why to California, resolved to get on and get money ; and she had gofl it. Mie went about from camp to camp with stationery and various articles needed by the miners and others, sold them these things, wrote letters for them, sang to them, nursed them when sjck, and carried their letters ex press to San Francisco to be posted. Fr all these services she received large pay ments, and she had also had a good deal of rough gold given to her as specimens. Did she like that kind of life? I asked her, so contrary to her early habits, and she answered mo quickly: 'It is not what we choose that we do in this world, but what fate chooses fr us. I have raade a competency and gained a rich and varied experience. Life is not what I once pictured it would be, but I am content.' She sighed as she said it; and I didn't believe in the 'content.' " "But what had brought her to you that day?" " She had not told me herself then, but prudently I asked her. I shall never forget the smile with which she turned to answer. It pretty nigh disarmed mo. We were sitting pretty olose, too; her flowing silk gown touched my knees. Altogether, 1 began to think of those useless pegs in the house down in Uogue river valley. But what she said pulled up my wandering thoughts and turned them to present tilings. 'Shall you be surprised to hear that 1 came to do you a real service?' she asked. And she went t ! on to relate that, having had to pass the previous night at a place not many miles away, in a house where the partitions were thin, she had chanced to overhear a plan for murdering nnd robbing me, the villain-in-chief of the plot being the j starved and naked wretch whom I had j sheltered nnd sent away rejoicing not ! many days previously. All in a mo ment, while I was pondering ou the doubtful problem of gratitude, a fancv came over mo that she mighUnot bo telf- J mg the truth; that it might be just an excuse got up to justify her own visit; and I playfully hinted as much. ' A woman does not trifle with subjects like these, nor does she deceive when she goes out of her way to do a service." she answered. 'I rode off from that house the other way this morning, made a long detour, and came here to. warn you. And now that I have done it. if you will please to get my horse, I will ride away again.' All fair, that. I, full of thanks ami repentance, asked her to stay longer if she was not perfectly rested ; but she declined, and I brought the steed round and helped her to mount him. Once iu the saddle her humor changed; she smiled and reminded me that I had not been 'polite enough to invite her tore turn. A week of reading, talking, rid ing, trout-fishing and romancing up in those splendid mountains would be very charming; perhaps she would come if I asked her." " And did you ask her?" " 1 did not. A young man with a repu tation to sustain up there in the mount ains couldn't invite a young lady to stay a week with him; could he now?'' cried Joseph, quaiutly ; which set us both laughing. Sol parried the question as easily as 1 could, and she rode away, in going slowly down the trail she turned and kissed her hand to me with a gracious sweetness. I assure you the struggle within my own mind was great at that moment; and I don't know whether I have forgiven myself even yet for what happened afterward. " What did happen?" " She came back again. She wwie back again and I drove her away. That is, I made ttie best excuses 1 could for not re admitting her, saying we should pej. haps have fighting and murder and what not in my fort that night, and it would be no place for a delieateTy-bred woman. The pretty and modest girl who was to come from the Wallamet valley and hang up her pink garments on ray pegs had rushed into mv mind, vou see. But I never like to confess to this part of the story, because I get laughed at. But don't you think I did right, having my reputation to keep up?" While we had our laugh out Joseph was pushing his soft, fine hair off his brow with those slender fingers that looked as if no rough work had ever come near him; and what must they have been be fore it did come? He went on thoughtfully : " She final ly rode away, not having been invited to get off her horse; leaving me in anything but a pleasant frame of mind. From tell ing myself I was a bear I turned to the other subject, the contemplated murder and robbery of myself. Had she simply invented that little fable? or was it a true bill? I felt inclined to believe it to be the latter. Anyway, I deemed it well to be prepared for al) contingencies, bar ling and bolting my fort against intruders and sitting up late over the fire. This was Sunday night. On Tuesday morn ing three or four men rode up, one of whom was the traitor, my former naked and hungry protege. He no longer at tempted to conceal his true character from me, but said he and his comrades were determine to 'clean out' the Chinese camp, and he asked me to join them in the raid. 1 was on my guard in answer ing him, simply saying that 1 would have nothing to do with robbing the Chinese, that they were my friends and customers, and I thought they had best be let nloue. With that he went oft'. That same after noon Edwards came in, having recaptur ed some of the horses. He was very tired, and asked leave to stay with the horses at mv place till next day. I said nothing to Edwards of the gang just gone away, or that (as 1 suspected) they had talked of making a raid on the Cliinese only to throw me off my guard; for it was my fort on which the attack was un doubtedly to be made. " Dusk came on. 1 sent Edwards, dead tired, to bed, made a great fire in the tent and sat by it, facing the window. My expected visitor came, the villain! He made believe to have been drinking, and put that forward as a plea for asking shelter until the morning. The instant he' was inside I made the gate fast, driv ing the big wooden pins home with an axe. I caught a gleam from his eyes as I was doing tins winch " But why not have made the gate fast before he entered?" "Because he was safer inside than out. A conviction had come over me that this man was some most desperate character. His comrades were no doubt waiting neur, and his plan had been quietly to open the gate ta them." " Had you no arms but your rifle?" I wanted none; for we understand each other, my rifle and I. This villain understood us too. 1 don't think, either, that he liked to see Edwards sleeping in the tent. The lad was not good for much. but still he was somebody. It wonld now be a contest of kill between the fellow and me. He was waiting his opportuni ty, and so was I. Of all villainous-looking men he was the worst looking. Tall, swarthy, black-bearded, and with a hard face ,that must have been handsome once, and fierce black eyes gleaming with evil. Ho sat on one side of the hearth, I sat on the other, our eyes fixed on one another. " You guess, I dare say, that I have a quick ear, for you know what my tem perament is all sensitive consciousness. My good hearing had been cultivated, too, by listening for the Indians. By. andVy I detected a very stealthy movct nient outside the fort ad then a fain- chirrup, such as a young squirrel might make. Up sprang the man, but I covered him with my rifle, cocked. He saw the movement, showed his teeth nnd drew out a pistol, but not before 1 had ordered him to throw down his arms or die! He hesitated ; lie saw that in my eye and as- 1)(V jivt which made him quail. While 1 held the rifle leveled and my finger on the trigger, he threw down his arms, pistol and knife, with a dreadful oath, I had the best of him, and he knew it, for before he could have put his pistol into form or rushed on me with his knife the ball from my rifle would have been in him. His language was awful and ! we are not very nice in that respect, you i know, in California the foam lay on'his lips. He demanded to be let out of the house, denouncing me as a murderer and a robber. To all his ravings I had but one answer, to be quiet, to obey me and he should live; dare to disobey me and he should die. He sat there, cowed, on the opposite side of the fire, not daring to make even a doubtful motion. Then I told him what I knew; that I lieurd who he was and what he intended to do. With that he broke down utterly, or pre tended to do so ; cried like a child, de claring that now he knew my pluck, and I was the first man ever to get tho better of him, he loved me like a brother. All the same, love or no love, he had to sit where he was. and 1 in front of him with my rifle ou my knees. There was a long night before us; he could have no liberty in it, and the restraint was horrible to hiiu. One moment he laughed uneasily, the next cursed, the next cried. It whs a strange experience, was it not? To pass away the time I asked him to relate the history of his'life. He said lie would, but would lirst of all just shake hands for the respect lie bore me. Touching mv rifle siguitieautlv, I pointed to the stick lying across the hearth-place between as. '"That's your boundary-line, my man,' said I; 'don't go stretching your hand over that.' This sent him Into a fit of hulleiiness." What came of it?" " We must have remained in this posi tion until midnight. Several times I heard slight sounds outside the fort, but, though he too listened, he dared not respond to them; he could do nothing. After a while these sounds ceased ; his associates, rightly judging that something or other had gone wrong and fipoilt the scheme, hail uo doubt made off, tired of waiting. The fellow's head was bent, his chin resting on his breast, his shaggy beard spreading over it like a mantle. "He suf fered martyrdom. By-and-by we got to 1 1 1 ' T 1 3 . 1 ' 1 uiiKin, uui i u iu noi reiax my viiuuice for an instant. Once started on his awn history, the sulyect seemed to have a fascination for him. He had been hon estly ' raised,' he said, by good and lov ing parents iu the State ofMissouri ; had passionately loved a young girl in the town where he lived, and his description j of her was so pretty and vivid that I de- clare it brought into my mind that other girl who was waiting for me down in the Wallamet valley. To get the means to many her he resolved to go to Cali fornia. He went, was successful, and, full of joyful anticipations, returned to find that she had married another. The man, the husband, had played them fa'se, told the girl that her "lover was dead, and married her himself. When he came out of the,brain fever which this news gave him, he was invited to an evening party in the town. To this party came his love aud her husband; and when he put out his hand to welcome her their eyes met, and both knew then how they had been betrayed. From that hour the man took to evil courses, and his first victim was tho false hus Hnnd. He became a desperate outlaw. Once again he saw his love; he met her in the streets of Sacramento; she was mar ried again; and she turned from him with a cry of aversion. Yes, lie might lie a desperate man now, he added, but he had had his trials. 1 suppose I should have done society a benefit had I shot him as he sat there, but I did not. l'erhaps you won't believe that I felt a sort of pity for the fellow, but 1 did. Well, morning came at last. I sent Edwards to get the gate open, and es corted my visitor out, telling him that there was not room for him and me in that part of the country, and that he had better quit it for another. "And did he " 1 suppose so, for he never attempted to molest me again. Not long after I heard of his death. He met his fate east of the mountains." "And what of that pretty Amazon, Joseph ? I am sure she w;us almost as good to you as a guardian angel, coming i on horseback to give you warning." " Was she not ? And I had returned j it by behaving so unhandsomely to her ! But now, 1 just ask you, would it have j U'cn proper to let her come in on that I week s visit, and I a young m n with a reputation ?'' i " At any rate, you did not. But have i you ever stvn her since ?" "i nice; it was in rrisco, Mie was married and staving at the same hotel with me. Her husband was a tall, dash ing man, what with you would be called a gentleman, and very wealthy. She hail been lucky, you see. 1 knew her as soon as she came into the dining-room, arid in a few minutes I saw that she recognized me ; but she did not take any notice and neither did I. She told me with her eyes that she remembered, but J there was an appealing glance in them i which I interpreted rightly. After din- I ner wp mil. into con vprnntion tho ! three of us, just as strangers will do in a hotel, and l lotina the husband a very in telligent, well-informed man. In parting I got just a word aside with her. ' I am gl ad to meet you again, and thus,' I said. ' Hush !' she answered, ' I thank vou far your reticence. In the past of a life that has been composed of ups and downs there is generally something or other ly ing on the memary that we don't care to recall or proclaim to the world.' " " And about the young girl in the Wallamet valley ?" " I never found her," replied Joseph, plaintively. "Truth to say, I never started fairly to look for her. Perhaps it's as well.''). C. Mwdonald. j Each frtalk of the banana plant j due from seventy to 100 bananas. pro- TIMELY TOPICS. At a Western Canadian manufactory is being made an implement which is" to plant potatoes, at the same operation markiug out the drills, dropping the manure, mixing it with the earth, nnd covering the seed. It will also hoe and hill the crop and pick potato bugs, ami in three minutes can lie so altered that it will dig 800 bushels of potatoes in a day. Could not the inventor, while his hand is in furnish his machine with a patent at tachment for washing, paring, cooking and dishing up the potatoes? One of the most ruinous habits of the Russian peasants is displayed at marriage celebrations. A peasant, "to celebratethe marriage of his son, procures twenty-five gallons of whisky, to got money for which he sells his horse, cow or pigs, and is ready to become a tiauper. lie cannot resist "the practice, for custom requires that the population of the village, men, women and children, must get drunk. A rich peasant at the marriage festival will procure one hundred gallons of whis ky, and the neighboring villagers are. in vited to take part in the carousal. During a terrific storm at Venice, tlie square of St. Mark's, the piazretta, and principal streets were completely inun dated by the high tide. A large number of people were held captive in restaurants and in small by streets so elovated as not to be covered by water, while in the flooded parts masked revelers wading about bare-legged, noisy uchins and porters conveying on their hack women fresh from balls and dressed in all sorts of finery and toggery, presented an amus ing spectacle. 1 ravel on the canals was suspended, as the gondolas could not pass under the bridges, and considerable dam age was caused on all sides. linto, the Portuguese explorer, who has aruived at Pretoria, telegraphs to the Portuguese government as fidlows : "In concluding ray journey across Africa, 1 strugglixl with hunger, thirst, the natives. floods and drought. I have saved all my j pnpers twenty geographical charts, j many topographical maps, three volumes of note, meteorological studies,drawings, i nnd a complete exploration of the Upper I Zambesi with its seventy-two cataracts." j Pinto left the coast Oetoler25. 1877. with I 400 followers, only eight of whom sur- j .vived the struggles with tho nativos and the privations of the march. There was a great hue and cry over the capture of one poor fox near Dayton, Ohio. Nearly 5,000 men and boys from all parts of the country formed a line around an entire township in which many foxes were known to dwell. The arrangements had been carefully made, and the discharge of heavy cannons at three points was the signal for a general imnement toward the center. Every person had a hrn or bell, or something else with which to make a din, the idea lieing to drive the foxes to a certain gulch, and there dispatch them. But one division did not start promptly, and a gap was left in the line, through which all the foxes but one escaped. The lone victim hid in a hollow tm', and was killed by a dog. A famine next year in Russia is p re dinted by Russian journals. I.ost year about one-third of the crop was destroyed by beetles and marmots, so that the seed has been deficient ; and the cattle plague took off nearly ninety per cent, of the cat tle in many places. To these things must be added the extraordinary drought of the past half year. Then in Russia there are too many holidays (about one hun dred in the year): drunkenness is also a widespread vice, whose wastefulness is greatly felt. Most of the land in Russia is under mortgage to bankers, the pro prietors are hardly able to pay their in terest, and the arrears ore everywhere alxiut twenty per cent. The grain, which is the chief article of export, and which furnishes taxes and supplies, is devoured by parasites while growing, after being gathered, and on railroads. A Distinguished Foreigner. About a year ago, Messrs. Charles j ltciche and brother brought five chini-i panzii-s to the New York aquarium, of which only one remains. Recently, an- j other arrived from Central Africa, and ; there was much curiosity to see how the two creatures would act at their first meeting. When the stranger was put in the cage, "Tommy," the old inhabitant, looked at him for a moment with some little distrust, then he approached nearer, and after a little hesitation threw one arm over his shoulder in a manner that was almost human. They looked in each other's eyes with j serious faci, and then, clasping their long arms about each other, embraced, j Then they separated, and "Tommy " ex- i tended his hand, which the newcomer ! took and shook. Then "Tommy" offered j the eourtesit's of his cage to the new- j comer, gave him a part of his blanket and the remains of his dinner. When the new arrival was given his first bath, he objected strongly, and fought against soap and water and brush ami comb like an obstinate child, while "Tommy " looked on. in apparent glee. At ten o'clock at night, the new chim panzee was wrapped up in his blanket, sleeping soundly, and "Tommy," with his blanket pulled up over his shoulders, sat a few feet away, watching him with great solicitude. One of the oldest customs or preroga tives in regard to fish, 'Was, in the time of Henry I., the right to what aro now termed " royal," but which were former called ''great," fish, namely, the sturgeon and the whale. " Of sturgeon," says the royal autocrat, " caught ou our lands (ic) we will that it shall be ours, saving to the finder his cobts and expenses. Of whales, so found, we will that the head shall be ours, and tho tail our consort's." Wise discrimination for the head was considered the daintiest part, the tongue being the tidbit. Fishermen would offer, as their costliest gift to the church, a whale's tongue, and it was, no doubt, highly relished by the ecclesiastics, for William the Conqueror gave a yearly grant of one to the monks of Matmoutier. AU the, Year Hound-. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A woman's glove is to her what his vest pocket is to man. Definition of nothing: A footless stocking without a leg. What class of women are most apt to give tone to society ? The belles. The kind of food that ' hungry tramps most dislike is a "cold shoulder." Senator Jones, of Nevada, pays 817, 000 rent for his Washington residence. There were nine hundred and five sol diers killed by the Zulus at Isandula. South A frica. Hint to thoie affected by the "walk ing" fever: The most useful pedestrian is the man who walks the floor night with the baby. "On this head," said the lecturer, "there is nothing left to be desired." The bald-headed man in the front row immediately rose to a call to order. Tramps are defined by Michigan law to be "persons refusing to work for the usual and common wages given to other persons for like work iu the place where they may be.'" Some idea of the size ot the State of Texas may be gathered from the fact that, though the population is a mil lion, there are are only four people to every square mile of territory. There are 350 Protestant Sunday schools in New York citv, with 88,237 scholars on their rolls. There are likewise of Roman Catholics, Jews, and so forth, sixty-two Sunday schools, having 27, 588 scholars on their rolls, making total of 418 schooLs, with an enrollment of 115,826 scholars. There is in Chicago a Sunday school for Chinese, which meets every Sunday afternoon. Of tho hundred or more China men in that city, twenty-six attend the school regularly, and there is arteachor for every scholar. The converts are said to be generous contributor for religious and charitable enterprises. Many Italian emigrants- have written home from Brazil that the country they expected to find a paradise is quite the reverse, and that they are treated like beasts while alive and when dying ore without the benefit of triet or doctors. Hence a uiembvr of parliament has in troduced a law to restrain the insane desire of emigration." An Exciting "Tag or War." A "tug of war" is a trial of strength between two teams of men, who grasp a rope and try to draw each other over a mark. A correspondent of the Iindon Sewn in Afghanistan describes a contest of this kind between two teams of native soldiers as follows: The tug of war which excited the most interest was that between the Hazara vnountin-litterv tmm. and one from the infantry of the (.in ides. In both rases they seemed powerful sets of men. The tuq; lasted for about forty minutes; live minutes lieing the usual time in which such trials of strength are settled. The bull dog-like firmness with which thee men held on was an evidence to any of those w at the moment may have thought back on the past history of India, that if these races had liecn pro- perly drilled and led by the right mri " the haphazard frontier" of her ma jesty's Indian empire would still have been the river Sutiej. The (iuide infan try are chiefly Patans, while the mountain-battery are Sikhs. One or two of the latter lost their pugrees in the strug- ?;le, and their hair fell down over their ace, neck and shoulders in wonderful black masses. There was one man whose jet bluish-black locks were in such a quantity that his whole head and upper part of his body was completely vailed by it; so dense was the mass that lie could not seelhrough it. Although the skin was comine off his hands he would j not let go the rope to throw back his j hair, which hung down so long that, his : body being bent, it trailed in the diyt. If any one can conceive a lion with, a magnificent black mane, he will , have a picture of this herons he lay ! on the ground holding on to the rope like a vise. Not only was the skin of his hands peeling oil', but he began at li&t to spit blood : but not a sign oi re linquishing his grip was given. The thick mass of hair hanging round his face like a curtain prevented the air from getting at him it must have been suffo cating and when at last his team had won the victory, this splendid fellow tumbled over on the ground and all but fainted from sheer exhaustion. There was an instant rush of his comrades, and tlie restorative they employed was that of shanipooning him all over the body ; but he was not the only one that n1 q uircd it. About one-half the team re ceived similar attentions from their friends: their exhausted condition will in itself tell how hard the struggle had lieen. The (iuide infantry, who lost in this struggle, had nothing to be nshamed of. They held on manfully, and wurcely lost an inch of rope till the end. During thirty minutes it would have been hard to say which would have gained the vic tory. and at the close it Uvame only a question a,s to which side could sustain the struggle a minute or so longer than the other. A Chance Accepted. Here's a chance for some enterprising paragrapher who wants to get up a poet ical paragraph" All you have to do is to fill up the blanks; we'll furnish the rhymes: gear rifcky beer whisky -temp runee cuum -thren hurrahs. H Keokuk Constitution." We are not enterprising, but can fill this out for you just as well as not, on the condition that you will not sue us for libel: The " Constitution' " out ol Its liubits are so very Its paragrapher will take Whenever be Ouii got uo Ho ad voontc the .... And then for gin giv9" " Rons fentiuol-