(lt $aw0t gfpuMtora. rt'HUurn f.vi.ry wrdnwdat, r f ar. 3a. "waaavacc OFFICE 15 ROBINSOS S. BOHJTER'S BUILDIW ELM 8TRECT, TIONrSTA, PA, TERMS, 1.50 A TUB. Hates of Advertising. One Square (1 inch,) one Insertion - ! One. Square " one month - - 8 One Square " three month -0 00 OneSqoere ' one row - - 10 0 Two Sqneree, one year - - - IS Ce Quarter Col. " - - - TX) (A jfalf " " - CO CO One " " - - 100 00 LC1 notion at eeUbllehed rate. Marriage and death noUoea, gratia. All bllle for yearly adTeriemeot ? leoted quarterly. Temporary adrerfie went must hn paid for in ndvsnee. Job work, Caeh on Hellvory. n sin) f f JOT weJBPC. Jfo BnbHcrlption" reeolvd for hrt p.ulod than tliros month. C'orrwtponrfono solicited from ail part of tl country. No notice will be Ukon rt unouynious communications. VOL. XIII. NO. 14. TIONESTA, PA., JUNE 23, 1880. $1.50 Per Annum. Ik Oar Ships nt Sea. How tunny ol us hnve ships nt tea, Frelghtod wilh wlnhes, nnd hopes, and fears TosMing nhoitt on tho wnvos, while we Linger and wn't on the shore lor yonrs, Oii.ing nliir through the distance dim A yfigliinu, will over onr ship come in ? fjjiit them uwfty with laiiiditcsr and song, Tho' deck wore white, and tho sails were . now, Tho Inigi'iitit Inwiwn boro thoni along, Tlin hcii wiim cnltn and the skins woro bine, An l wo thought as wo watched thorn sail nvrnjf Ol tlie joy thoy would bring us some luture luy. Long have wo watched beside tho shore To catch the glcmn ol a coming sail, But w only hour tho breakers' roar Or tho sweeping night wind's dismal wail, Till onr clocks grow pulo, and our eyes grow dim, And wo Kinlly uigh, wi.l thoy ever come in ? Oh! poor tnd heart, with its ourdon ol cares, lis Hinu iloleutod, its vorthloFS lile That has garnered only tho thorns and the tnrcs, That is searod and torn in the pitiful strife Aiur on the heavenly golden shore Thy ships are anchored lor ever more. An Idea in Decorative Art. "I I'd perfectly useless; the thing is my beto noire don't laugh, Elsie, I'm not joking. If there is nny such thing as 'the contrariness of inanimate ob jects,' then of all inanimate objects that hiileoua biack mantelpiece is the most contrary." I'ictty Mr?. Van Schcnck threw her self bmk in 1 er hair, gazing with min gled wratli and disgust at the object of lir r animadversion, a high wooden man Uloiece, i (tinted black, and diversified with various dull jellow streaks and spots, fondly supposed by housekeepers tiiirty yearn ago to be a most faithful imitation of marble. Fastened across a portion of the front, and from thence trailing to the floor, hung a strjp of mummy cloth richly embroidered with a gurUnd of poppies, but looking Badly our. ol, keeping, . epending lrom tin high narrow shelf it was intended to . ndorn. "Nowjmt look tl ere, Elsie! Ove and again I have tried to eover, drape, alter that detestable marde'picce, and each iit'cmpt lias proved a mon wretched failure than the last one. l'o blistered my Aimers knotting macranie late, hahin.yred my thumbs till tin v were blnck ami blue trying all sorts ol devices suggested by all sorts of people. I rei.lly did think I should suc ceed this time, and perhaps if tho bor der hud 1 een twice as deep it might have looked passably : but that narrow strip half way between floor and ceiling is p rleeily ridiculous. Grace Alston gave me the pattern. It was lovely on .her. modern mantelpiece. Hew stupid in me not to think of making it wider! 1 believe the tiling is bewitched." Here she paused to take breath, and meeting her, sister's merry eyes, burst into a ringing laugh. " It dees Seem absurd to rail so, but tho whole room is spoiled, and it wou'd be so pretty but lor that frightful old mantlcpiece." "I am sure it is lovely a9 it is Nothing can spoil the beautiful oak floor and wainscot," replied Elsie Hor ton. glancing around the spacious apart ment of oblong shape, lighted by four large windows, two on the southern side, overlooking the SDarkling waters of IiOng Island Sound, and two facing the west, where a dense pine wood at no greut distance from the house huge old mauaion dating from colonial days slip t in the view and gave an im pression of great seclusion. The first glimpse of the room revealed the fact that the pretty hostess wor- . sliiped at the shrine of decorative art though good taste fortunately excluded the honors ol scrap vases, bedaubed drain-pipes, and spatterwork tidies Nay, at this moment, brightly illumined by the flood ot sunngbt pouring througl ttie southern windows, tlie apartmen might have given an artist a suggestion for a most charming interior. The floor and richly carved wainscot were of polished oak, almost black with age: handsome Persian rugs lay scattered hero and there; soft muslin draperies shaded the windows; bits of rare old china made spots of bright color on bracket and table; arj easel supported a line old painting; Kbnsington art work appeared in screens and chair cover ings; and a quaint spindle-legged table, nearly a century old, stood in one corner. Fit subjects, oo, for any artist'B brush were the occupants of the room. Mrs. Van Sihenck dark-eyed, dark haired, add slightly flushed with exer tion and wrath, formed exactly the right contrast to brer sister Elsie's blonde beauty, as the latter, leaned care lessly back in a laro easy-chair, her white draperies, relieved by knots of blue ribbons, sweeping over the dark, polished oaken floor, and her violet eyes sparkling with amusement at her companion's vivacious tirade. "i like to listen-to you, Kate," she said at last. "It seems like the dear oldyimes before you were married to hoar you set off on one of those Don Quixote tilts against windmills. Now, in the name ot common-sense, let me ask why, instead of blistering your lingers and hammering your thumbs, you didn't have tho mantelpiece taken down, and another one put in its place? You could have had something carved just to match this beautiful old wain scoting." " My dear, that highly sensible sug gestion strongly reminds me of Marie Antoinette's equally pertinent query: 'Why, if the poor people can't get bread, don't they eat cake r You tor get that, we're not rich enough to gratify all our whims, and an oak' mantelpiece carved to match the wain scot would co9t a pretty penny, I as sure you. If only the original one had been left! Harry remembers it per fectly, and says people would rave over it now. Great cLtstPrs of fruits and flowers on the panels, connected by drooping wreaths exquiitcly done, too. And they split it up, and burned lor kindling-wood, the Goths and Vandals, when this new and elegant ' monstrosity took its place." "But couldn't vou have the lovely Dutclutiled mantelpiece in the dining- room moved hero at very little ex pense P" " Ah, my dear, don't pride yourself on striking out a brilliant idea. Did not I suggest that to Harry long ago? No, indeed, lie won't have this hideous thing removed, because it was his uncle'd dying wish that it should be kept here. I can't blame him either, dear-lellow. ,Ud Air. van Jschenck, with all his eccentricities, was very kind to him, and in his will left him his whole fortune, but the wretches who murdered him took everything, stocks, bond?, and all it was one of his peculiarities to keep his property in portable lorm and ttio will was doubtless among them. The law gave Harry the house " "Tell me all about it. Kate." inter rupted Elsie. " You know I only had the bare facts while I was abroad, none of tho particulars, and the three days I spent at home before coming down to you" "Wre filled with descriptions of travel, displaying your finery, etc. Yes, I know. I her isn't really very much to tell; tut, 'to begin at the beginning,' 1 11 inform you how my bete noire came to ho the hane of mv life. It seems that thirty years ago old Mr. Van Schcnck hen a rich bachelor ol htty tell des perately in love with a beautiful girl. wtiose tatlier lie bad befriended, blie engaged herself to him, and he began to remodel the housa to suit her taste fancy the taste that would destroy a lovely carved oak mantelpiece to make way for that monster! when an old lover appeared on the scene; and she. probably fearing that her father would torce her to keep tier promise, ran away with him. It was a terrible blow to Mr. Van Schcnck, an excessively proud man. lie stopped ttie repairs ust wliere they were, dismissed all his servants except one old woman, and, in spite of the entreaties of all his friends and rela tives, persisted in living alone up to the d iy of his murder, lhis was the room lie always occupied. The bed stood in that corner, facing the mantelpiece. Phe mnrderers entered by one of the western windows, and had doubtless been hiding in the wood, watching their opportunity. His eccentricities were well known in the nughhorhoon, and lie was reputed to be immense ly rich. Only a wrek before Harry had been here, represented tne danger, and Deg- ed him to have at least a trusty man servant on the place. He obstantly re fused, and tne next news we naa was a oummona to his deatti-bea. My hus band reached here a few minutes before dusk, and found his uncle still alive, but unable to speak the principal wound was a deep gasli in the throat, ihe old mm seemed terribly anxious to tell him something, and made a motion of writ ing on the coverlet, but his strength was failing, the room growing dark, and Harry could not understand. At last. struggling to a sitting position in bed, lie pointed to the mantelpiece, gasped 'Kept, kept,' then the blood gushed from mo wound in his throat, and he sank back on tho pillows dead." "Horrible! horrible!" cried Elsie. "Poor old man. how he must have loved the girl, to think, even on his death-bed, of preserving the, one thing she had given him time to preparo in his home for her fake! Doesn't it lend the uglv old mantelpiece a touch of romance? No wonder Harry won't alow it to be removed! I should feel as if it were sacrilege." I don't want it removed either," re plied Kate, slowly. "But" with sud den animation ' how 1 1 hould like to cover it up, every inch of it!" Elsie looked at her inquiringly. " I'm half ashamed to tell you," con tinued Kate, lowering her voice, " but 1 believe I s'lall aetual'y grow afraid of that thing unless 1 can find some way to change it. Of course it sounds silly enough to say so now, sitting here in this broad, bright sunlight; but its quite another matter when the dusk comes stealing in, casting shadows in every corner, and the wind howls and shrieks around the old house. A week ago I sat yonder at one of the windows, watching for Harry, who was a little later than usual. It had been a gray raw. chilly day, like a forerunner of November, with one of those dreary. moaning winds sighing through the trees that always do make me dismal and I was troubled, too, about Harry's business. I can trust you, Elsie, I know of old. so 1 will tell you the whole story He is on the brink of ruin. Hard times have sorely crippled tho old firm into which he was admitted when he married me, and Mr. Van Schcnck was to have advanced $100,000 tho week he died to carry them through to the first of J anu- ary. liarry has always reproached him self lor his carelessness m discussing the arrangements while walking with his uncle in the wood behind the house. He thinks the murderers may have overheard them, and killed the old man to obtain the money, for he was to have delivered it to him the day atler the murder, and not a trace of that or any other property could be found. With this amount the hrm would have been eafe: now, it is very uncertain whether they can hold out. That's the reason, Elsie dear, why we are obliged to stay here this winter instead of going to New York. We must either live on the dace or st 11 it for since the murder no body will rent it and the old mansion has been in the family ever since Long Island was settled, so of course Harry won't part with it until the last cent is gone. "Hut to return to the reason why I am more than ever anxious to alter the old mantelpiece don't laugh at me, Elsie! Just a week .ago I sat here, thinking of Harry's troubled face when he left mo in the morning, wondering why he was so late, and listening to the wind moaning drearily outside, when suddenly I fancied 1 heard a loud, pierc ing shriek; the windows rattled vio lently, the whole house grained to shake, and I heard, yes, I really did hear, the ringing, clinking sound of coins. The noio appeared to come from the man telpiece. I glanced toward it, and oh ! Elsie, every one of those horrible streaks and spots, instead of being a dull yellow, was tlie brightest crimson ; they looked like fresh blood streaming from wounds. "I would never have believed I could have been so frightened; if my hair didn't stand on end, it was only because my net held it too tight, and for one mo ment I fully expected to Bee tho old man's ghost on the heart-stone, ready to protect the solitary memento of his love for in my annoyance at my last failure to remodel it I had been heartily wishing it away. I sprang from my sett and flew out of the room. There in the hall stood Harry, who had been carried on in the train to the next sta tion, and returned home by another way. Luckily it was too dark for him to sec my white, scared face, and he in stantly exclaimed : " Come quick, Kate, there is such a strange effect from the sunset light.' We went down to the hall, and ho threw the door wide open 1 saw nothing but the same low gray clouds, the same wan gray atmosphere that had dem cased my spirits all day long. " ' How strange !' he cried. ' J ust as I reached the steps the clouds suddenly parted in the west, and a blood-red light illuminated everything; trees, walls, stones, werecrimson in the glow. I rushed in to cail you and now it has van shed as instantly as it came. But how pale you look, Kate! Are you ill?' You may imagine that I felt heartily ashamed of my folly. And yet, scold myself as I may, I never can be at ease in this room when it begins to grow dusk. I always have a horrible fear of seeing those jellow spots and streaks suddenly turn b'ood-red again. .Of course it's absurd; nobody knows that better than I, but I can t help it." Elsie sat looking thoughtfully at her i-isters's bugbear for a few moments. then her blue eyes flashed with delight, and clapping tier uttie hands like a child, she sprang from her chair, ex claiming, "I have it, Kale dear, I have it; just the very idea. We'll change the old mantelpiece completely with out using anything but a little paint. and, moreover, not anger the old man's ghost by even driving a nail into the beloved souvenir of hi3 youth." "Paint!" asked Kate. doubtfully, " I'm ued to being helped out of diffi- culties by your bright ideas, Elsie, dear, but 1 don t see how paint " "Don t your" interrupted her sister, quickly. "' Of course not, else it would be vour idea, not mine, listen quietly, then, to my superior wisdom draw- naruo her nreltv hgure with an air ot mock cienitv as she spoke "ana i n ucidate. lou remember the pair ot borrento brackets 1 brought home, and which you admired so much yester day?" " Yes ; but what have they to do with mv bugbear?" Didn t you say the inlaid-work looked like painting?" "Yes." " well, then, here is my idea, my brand-new, bright idea, ever so much easier to carry out than my wise sis ter's blistering of lingers and hammer ingof thumbs. You see the long nar row panel over the hearth?" Yes." And the two oblong panels, one on each side, and the little square panels above them r" ' Well, what in the world have they to do with Sorrento brackets?" " Wait a minute. You see. too, how verv deenlv sunken they are in the woodwork, much deeper than I should think necpssarv. but iust the thing for mv idea. I'll get very thin pieces oi wood to fit over them exactly, paint lovely garlands of poppies, corn-uow ers and wheat on the long panels, charmine little bouauets on the square ones, then you can have the rest of the wood ebonized, and I assure you your bugbear' will be far from the least pretty thing in your drawing-room. Whprfi'a vour vard-measure. Kate?' and in a second her white lingers were deftly taking the dimensions of the various nanels. " The svstem of modern humbug had beeun thirty years ago, Kate. This mantelDiece isn't half so substantial as the work put into the old mansion a century before. Why, tne central panel is really shaky ; the wood has warpeu, I suDDose: Derhans it ratuea a ncue the other evenine. and vour lively im agination made you fancy you heard the chink of nionev." " Perhaps so. I'm ready to admit anvthing in sheer gratitude for being delivered from the sight of those horn ble streaks and SDlasUes. loure a jewel of a sister, Elsie, and Harry- dear old leiiowi win De as aenguieu as I am. I know he has been on the noint of telling me to have it taken i urn iMan I rt-oa tlinn TPI'A 1 t PP tion of his uncle's last words stopped him. I wouljn't have had it demolished. much a8 it has tormented me, but your idea wnl make a complete transtornia tion. Yes. it will be lovely. I can see it in mv mind's eve ' already." " And you shall see it in reality in ten days. I sha 1 begin as soon as I get home to-morrow, and work like a Tro jan to deliver you from your guostiy visions, such a lunny thing ior you to be superstitious. Kate." Mrs. Van Schenck to Miss Elsie Her ton: " Oh. Elsie, my darling, I am the hap piest little woman in the world, and all through your ' idea.' Let me try whettier 1 can tell the story intelligibly. for it all happened scarcely two hours ago, and 1 sit scribbling, while my lord and master, like the king in Mother Goose's rhymes, is counting out his money.' I really feel giddy with the sudden plunge from dread of approach ing ruin to tho possession of wealth be yond our dreams; and iust here let me assert that I really did hear tlie chink of monpy that ghostly afternoon. "liarry brought the box ol panels' down from the city, and after dinner I pretended I could not wait till to-morrow to try their effect, and begged him to open it. I really only did so to divert his thoughts from his business cares; he looked so white and sad, poor fellow, that I had little interest enough even in laying my ghost. He hesitated a mo ment, then said : I have something to tell you, Kate j but it cm wait till we have seen Elsie's pretty work.' And added under his breath, but I caught the words : ' Trouble will come to her soon enough, poor child.' " we easily wrenched off the lid, and Harry really seemed to lorget his wor ries a moment while admiring the lovely garlands and bouquets. I'm so glad you chose morning-glories for the little square panels, l never saw any thing so perfect as the way you have grouped the buds and blossoms. The mantelpiece had been painted dead black, as you suggested, bo we set to work at once, put in the side panels, then the little square panels above them they fitted exactly and after gazing at the effect a moment, tried to slip the center panel into its place. It seemed a little tight, and one end Bank lower than the other. ' Will it stand a blow, Kate?' asked Harry. ' I must crowd this side down a little more to make it even.' I wrapped the ham mer carefully in flannel, and gave it to him, saying : First try pushing ; it will never do to bruise the paint.' lie did so, and suddenly shouted: 'Stand back, Kate, the whole mantelpiece is giving way.' Before the words had left his lips his end of the panel van ished: mine, which 1 had been holding to steady, swung straight out into the room, and such a clinking and rattling echoed in my ears, as a perfect Danae's shower of gold pieces came rolling down tae hearth-rug, glittering and flashing in tho lamplight, while we stood en veloped in a cloud of dust, staring into what looked like a huge blac ' hole. After a few minutes the shower stopped, and we began to look about us. On the hearth with the money lay some dusty papers, bonds f nd stocks, liarry said, and inside the black hole were bigs ot gold coins, one ot which had burst onen. more papers, and among them the missing will. Imagine our astonishment, our aeiighti i can ban ly bt Ik ve it now. It seems hkea fury tale. And, oh! the re'ief of Harry! Ho had ben trying all dinner time to iummon ud couraae to tell me that the firm was hoi elesslv involved, and would be declared bankrupt to-mor row; every resource was exhausted. Think of it, Elsie; a few days more anu tho house would nave been sold tho property lost to us forever. What a narrow escape. Blessings on decora tive art! I have been laughing and crying by turns for the last hour, and liarry hasn't behaved much morr sensibly. We've 'had a war-dance around my poor old bugbear Such a simpleton as I was to fancy all sorts of gliostlv horrors, and run away when the dear ugly old thing rattled its secret in my ears with every gust of wind that blew! It shall never be taken awav and SDlitup ior nrewood now. that's certain. Wha'. nonsense I am writing! Nevermind: I've felt lit tie inclination for nonsense during the last few months. I have a right to in dulge myself in it now. Poor Mr. Van Schenck ! Ho tried so hard to tell Harry the secret. He had had a safe for silver built in the wall when the mantelpiec e was put up, and afterward used it for hi a valuables. A spring hidden in tne cen tral panel opened it. I wonder you did not find it when you wero taking tne measure and spoke of it being shaky Do vou remember? liarry has hnished counting out his money, and authorita tively ordeis jae to bed, saying it is long past midnight, and no proper hour for anvbody but ghosts to be abroad; so, unlets x uieu i my iciui iaj wc u&c Tennyson's brook, and ' go on forever,' T t . i ..... - . i. l : I. 1 am to close it at once, like a good wile. I obey. I am too happy to be any thing but dutiful. Shall I confess that I took a base advantage ot the oppor tunity, and asked my liego lord a short time ago what he thought of my 'hobby' as he calls decorative ait now. 'His answer I need not record; sutlice it to say it was perfectly satisfactory. Good night, my darling, l can c mm words to express my gratitude, but if a pair of solitaire diamond earrings as bright as vour idea- Another warning from liarry; now l really must stop. " lour loving sister, katk." Harper's Bazar A Terfect Home. '1 he mo6t perfect home I ever saw was iittle house into the sweet iacense of w'.iuso fires went no costly things. A thousand dollars served as a year's liv ug lor father, mother and three chil dren. But the mother was the creator of a home: her relations with the chil dren were the most beautiful I have ever seen; even the dull and commonplace man was lifted up and enabled to do good work for the souls by the atmos phere which this woman created; every f . l i .. : .r.. 1 ....... I ininaiB ui me iiuusa luiuiuuwinii looked into her face for the key-note of tho day, and it a! ways rang clear. rom tho rose bud or clover leaf, which in spite of her hard house work she always found time to put beside our plates at breakfast, down to the story she had on hand to read in the evening there was no intermission ol her influence. She has always been and always will be my uluilot a mother, wife and home-maker If to her quick brain, loving heart and exquisite face had been added the ap pliances of wealth nnd enlargements of wide culture, hers would have been ab solutely the ideal home. As it was, it w:is the best I have ever seen. Helen Lu'tt. There are now about 200.0(H) Chris- tiaps in China, FOR THE FA IK SEX. 1'nrUlnn Marriages. The rarisian, an American paper published in Paris, says: Our lady readers will perhaps be interested to know how a grand marriage is arranged at Paris. The preliminaries are gener ally arranged between the two families with the help ot the notaries; lessoiten the marriage is more romantic and springs purely from love, in which case the traditional steps of courtship and marriage are much modified, ouppos inir. however, that a marriage has been recognized as advisable between the two families the first thing to do is to ar range an interview between tho young folks. For this purpose some neutral ground is generally chosen a reception at a friend s house, a concert, a Dan and the theaters. The opera is preferred by the world of fashion: the opera comique is popular with the bourgeois and the provincials. The young man sits in the orchestra and the young girl dressed in her best, is placed in Iront ol a box. Between the acts the young man pays a visit to the box and is presented. The next day lie pays a visit to the father and makes a formal demand of the young lady's hand. If it is accepted, he begins to pay court to tho young girl. Every day, a; this stage of proceedings, the young man is admitted to the house of his future wife as if he were one of the family. He is called by his iChristian name. The day alter the "accordailles," or his acceptation by the lamny, ne presents his future wife with a ring, always the same o:i0 pearl or two pearls mounted with two diamonds. xou may see these rings by the score in the jewelers' shops. Every day, too, he sends a oou quet"of flowers. Nowadays these bouquets are spienoia ana cost, a smiu fortune, for it is the custom to envelop them with lace.which is sometimes re placed by watered ribbon, on which the name oi tue young gin is eiuuruiucieu. In aristocratic families the nrst person to whom the marriage is announced is the pope, who sends his benediction by telegraph, on tue day i me ceremony at the church. The mother, accom panied by her daughter, visits her friends in order to inform them of the happy news. In Madam de Sevigne's days a young girl's wedding trousseau contained only thiee dresses. In tho year of grace, 1880, a wedding trousseau HI UJU 13 1 TC1J giauu nut.., "in comprises twelve dresses, ail made up with Blockings, shoes, sun snaues ana h its to match. The trousseau, together with the linen, is worth from SO.OOO to so. 0.00 francs In the trousseau of the Princess Isabella de liroy, tne who oi tho Archduke Frederick of Austria, all tho linen i3 counted by the gross. There are twelve dozens of everything. Summer Dresses. Leaders of fashion, with their craving for variety, are already protesting against the use of figured fabrics to such mi extent that Pans dressmakers send to the modistes here dresses ot plain surface and solid color, lhis is espe cially noted in the use ot sewing-silk irrenadines in preference to brocaded ones, nnd of plain Surah silk instead of figured silk, also in the attempt to re vive taffeta, which is always plain and lustrous. The most elegant black dresses this season are of the plain sew ing-silk grenadines, trimmed elaborately with black lace in which gin tureaas are thickly interwoven, or eiau wun open trimmings entirely o? jet, or per- bnns with tine eniDroiaery uone on arpnadine for flounces- and panels. Danish laces over colors, especially red or yellow, are aUo used ior trimming h -.u:k irrenadines. i.ne Equare-meenuu cunvns irrenadines is liked for parts of dresses that are completed by Surah, or, if ritrures are not objected to, by very rich brocaded grenadines that have sm.int.h cround of satin luster, with larc-c. onen-worked figures. Ihe plain canvas grenadine in such combinations is used tor three or lour narrow piaueu frills at the foot, and these are sewed directly on the black siik skirt used lor the foundation. There are men pyra mids of such olaitings up each side, or on lv uo the Iront. Folded plaitings ot the n'.ain crenadine are then laid like a diagonal scarf across the none ana eiucs : Hiuive this is tue aoron oi orocauu, ami the hooped drapery of the back is also hfrmade. Rows of ietted fringe laid on knife-plaitings that pass up the sides or front add to the rich effect. Another caprice is that of lining the waist ot h ,i'k 0-rpnnmno nresscs wuu ieu ui vcllnw silk, and omitting it in the skirt this gives a touch of color, and makes the difference between waists and skirt ilint. urn now so noLiular. A very narrow plaiting ol red burah should db spr. under t ha lowest row of black plait ing around the skirt of such dresses, the aiudi helt mav a so be lined with lea, and there may be one or two large ro settes ot hack with cav lining set un the sides. Harper's Bazar. ltaln. Riin is the moisture of the atmos nbrre enndensed into drops large enough to fall with perceptible velocity to the nnrth. The water thus prtcipitatcd is quite pure, except in so lar as it absorbs a slieht auantitv of air. carbonic acid and ammonia irora me aimospm re Tt.e formation ol rain is in general a continuation of the processes of the lor mationof clouds, dew ana log. ihe d.-nnsition of moisture depends upon the cooling ol the atmosphere, but eoncern- ini the precise process oy wnu n mat. mmlinir is affected erroneouH views have been w idelv entertained. In general it may be said that the temperature of a i ven mass of warm moist air is low ered in the ordinary course of atmos phi ric phenomena by one or other of the following four processes: 1. By rriint inn to the cold skv. 2. By radia tion to neighboring masses of cold air or the cold ground. 3. By mixture with cooler air. 4. By the absorption of heat in the expansion of ascending air. The fourth of the above processes u doubtless bv far the most efficient ot nil in lowering the teiupe iature and producing rain. ITEMS OF INTEREST. The boy with the gold watch wants to know what time it is twice as aften as the boy with the silver chronometer. It is said that there are one hundred different ways of ctokina onions, but unfortunately there is only one way of smelling them. A gentleman who was asked for his marriage certificate quietly took his hat off and pointed to his bald head. The evidence was conclusive. Mr. Jame3 G. Fair, of mining fame, is just now amusing himself in China. Thence he is going to India, Eypl and Europe, not forgetting the Emerald isle. Florida's orange yield will, it is esti mated, increase over tenfold in the next four years, owing to the immense num ber of trees that wili come into bearing within that time. The production of cotton-seed oil in the United States has risen from 2.300, 000 gallons in 1873 to 7.800,000 in 1879 ; about one-third of tho present product going to France to be sold as olive oil. Take a bran new straw hat, drop it into the cylinder of a threshing ma chine, and when it has been run out on to the straw stack by tne carrier you have the latest style of ladies' hat. Watcrho Observer. In Wichita. Kan., the city council has passed a law compelling householders to plant a certain number of trees be fore each place, and already 44.000 trees have been set out along the streets in obedience to tho law. The author of "Nancy Lee "-made $8,000 by the song ; the owners of " My Grandfather's Clock" netted $11,500; the " Baby Mine " man counted up nearly 87,000, and yet honest and Irre proachable citizens are toiling away lor $2 a day. Simultaneously, in the Audubon flowa) counlv clerk's office, one man applied for a copy of a decree of divorce from his former wue, ana another man for a license to marry her. The former wished the latter joy, but sarcasm was detected in his tone. Intelligent servant to caller: "Will ye kape still a minute while I look at yeP No. Missis hain't at home. She told me if a woman came with a wart on the end of a red nose to say she wasn't at home, and there'd no mis takin' that wart." A woman in New York accidentally went to church with two bonnets on her head one stuck inside the other and the other women in the congreg ation almost died of envy. They thought it a new kind of bonnet, and too sweet for anything. Tho Deep Sea. Some interesting results of recent deep sea explorations were concisely stated in a late lecture at tne royai in stitution, London. Four-seventh, or nearly three-fourths of the surface of the eaith, are covered by sea. Ihe average depth of the ocean is, accord ing to the latest calculations oi uuo Krumraell, about 1,877 fathoms, or somewhat over two miles. The great est depth known to exist was d iscovered by the United States ship Tuscarora, near the Kurile islands, in Northeast Pacific. It is 4,655 i.-ithoms, or about . five and one-quarter miles, l ho high est mountain existing is ot aoout uio same height as the deepest sea is deep. Mount Everest is ,ojj miucms in height. So insignificant, however, is the total volume of land raised above sea level in proportion to tho vast cav ity occupied by the sea, that were this cavity emptied of its water, the whole of the land now above sea level could be shoveled into it twenty-two ana a lmlf times over beforu it would be filled up to the present sea level. Nevertheless, the acpin oi me oceans, arfiat. ns it is. is as nothing in compari son with the vastness of their extent of surface. As Mr. Croll has said, the oceans in roauon to ineir nupcnicwi area are as shallow as a sheet of water 100 yards in diameter and only an Inch in depth . The sides of theocefji basins are not at all steep. They are mostly so liUle inclined that an ordinary loco motive engine could run up them in a straight line with ease. Their inclina tion is usually not more than three or four degrees or less. Around some oceanic islands the slope is greater. The steepest slope known is at Bermuda, where, t here is an inclination oi nearly twenty degrees from the edge of the reef to 2.000 fathoms. There are no such things as mountains and valleys on tne deep sea bottom. Animals cannot slip down against their will into the depths, but must move deliberately into them, and travel a long journey to reach them. The pressure exerted by the superin cumbent water at great depths is bo great as to be almost beyond concep tion. It amounts roughly to a ton on a square inch for every 1,000 fathoms of depth, about loo times as mucn ita mo pressure to which people are subjected on land. At the greatest depths the pressure is about lour tons aa a nan. Vast though this pressure is, it is, how ever, only anout one-cisum m mv which Professor Aoei anu ipim Noble have measured, as produced in their experiments on gunpowder. The deep sea animals, being completely per meated by fluids, are probably no more conscious of pressure acting upou them than we, and, so long as they move slowly from one depth to another, are most likely unaffected by the consequent changes of pressure. With regard to the temperature of the deep sea waters, tho conditions which would affect animals are com paratively simple. Nearly all over the ocean the temperature at 500 fathoms is ui l.iur a fnrtv decrees F.. and this is ' ,w . - 'j n .. . , , . .n 1 ,.l i i ka v nnitpr till. LIIU Case even ijj.ixn...j . equator in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Below 2,000 fathoms tho tem ncrature is never more than a few de grees above ireczing puim, cHTimg in the peculiar cases lof land-locked seas, such as the Sulu sea.