Hates of Advertising. OneSquare (lincli,)one Insertion - ft One Square " one month - - ?, on One Square " three months - (5 CO One Square " one year - - 10 no Two Squares, one yoai - - v" 1" 0 QuarteiCol. "... -30(0 Half .. - ,'0 CO One -... iiK) CO Iegal notices at established rates. t Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col lected quarterly. Temporary mvrtise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work. Cash on lellve y . ; i rm.in:n every Wednesday, by ar. aa. wiawic r-JTICT! Iff I10T?I305 & BONNER'S BTHLTOTIJ ELM STREET, TIONESTA, PA. TERMS, tl.60 A YEAR. No R.ihscripUons received for a (shorter u ioil than throe months. forrcHponrionce solicited from nil parts It lie country. No notice will bo taken at ;ioiiyiuous communications. VOL. XIII. NO. 34. TIONESTA, PA., NOV. 10, 1880. $1.50 Per Annum. 1 1 P Around the Tear. tiove came to mo in the springtime, With tho golt, sweet April showers; Her breath was the breath of the woodland, And her lap wag flilol with flowers. Nor stop was a song in the silence; Its melody rose and (ell As t-ho danced through the iragrant twilight To the bower we knew so well. And the fpring glidod on to the snmmer With the flame ol ils lervent darts, Ami the noon ol the fleeting season Was the noon ol our heating hearts. Hut the autumn canie with its shadows, And noon was no longer hot; And the Irost orept Into our pulseft, And Kummor and spring were not. And Jove was alive with tho winter, But her beauty and (trace had fled; 'Mid the snows of March I le't her, With a cypress wreath at her bead. Hurt Lyman, in Hatper'$ Magazine. BOWKER'S TRIUMPH. : B MJfSRFTTIi END OF AOOLLIEIl 8 COUItT- smr. William' descended to the pump in i back yard, and had a wash in the Might of four o'clock, and Selina got i of bod and took sly peeps at him nth her tears. William, his ablu i over, went out for a dreary atroll, ' (i'o Hilly piece, and over Steven 's hill, and down Jacob's ladder, and id Minvrt lane, and on to the brook- again. Thero, on Juno bridge, he i I and watched the eddies circle ind the groat atones, and found that five and bewildered comfort which 'do always finds in running water, luwhilo Selina had gone back to bod, ; bad there renewed her tears, and finding some comfort in running ; also. And, at the moment when ; nn stood upon Juno bridge, Abra ( lough, in a suit of flannels, was itr liis wny to tho day shift in the iind-at-it. Iiest you should find ( If. too much disturbed by tho i, lot me explain that the Strip-and-was a coal mino, so named by its in- firm the cant phrase of, some or ganger: "Now, lads, strip r William regretted his holiday, longed for the hour when work 1 begin again. Ue beguilod the hours of the day by the composi - f w oo-begone versos, whereof for 3 ns preserved a fragment, which I embalm : ' he. mn tbat shines so bright above, w naught about my wronglul love; r- iilrda 11 at cing in Wignvre lane ins: nothing to my heart but pain, s a very dismal thing n' in my oars the binls do sing, iii'e my Solinn ha Kone off walk w'th Mr. Aniaham Gough." illinm's muse was in the right. It i very dismal thing to the wounded i t, grown egotistio through its pain, t nature should seem out of sympathy i it that the sun should shine and birds should sing just as brightly I as merrily as though Selina was I I true and gentle. William took his humble meal at a '.tie public-house in the aforesaid lane, d then strolled home again, atill very iserable, but a trifle soothed by the rse-making process. He was due at b mine at six o'clock, and an hour be re that time he was upstairs exchang .g his Sunday costume for the work er coaly flannels, when he became con ious of a bustle in th,e street. Look it,' through the window, he beheld men mining hatless and coatless, and1 tin S onneted, unshawled women hurrying ilong as fast as their feet could take i hem. Evervbodv ran in one direction. itid in the crowd lie caught a moment's glimpse of Selina and her father. The girl's face was white with some strong excitement, and there was a look of the wildest imaginable fear in her eyes, Both hands were pressed to her heart as she ran. A Black country 'collier's in stinct in a case like this is pretty likely to bo true. William threw the window open, 'andcried out to the hurrying crowd: "Wheeriait?" " At the Strip-and-at-it," some famil iar voice called out as the straggling crowd swept by: "What is it?" he cried again. ' Shaft on fire," cried another voice, in"", answer ; and in a second the street was clear. William Bowker dashed downstairs and hurried'iiniself along the street. "Anybody down?'' he gasped, as' he turned the corner and passed the hind motit figure in a hurrying mass. The woman knew him. " Tor God's sake, lend me thy hand, Willy-yuni," she gasped in answer. " My J ,oo s in. He "caught the shriveled little figure in his great arms as though tho old woman had been a baby, and dashed on again. ' Aye, the tale was true ! There belched and volleyed the rolling smoke. There were hundreds upon hundreds of people already crowded upon the pit mound and -about the shaft, and from every quarter men and women came streaming in, white-faced and breathless. William set his withered burden down, and pushed through to the edge of the shaft. There was water in the up-cast, and 'tho engines were at work full power. Up came the enormous bucket and splashed its 200 or 300 gallons down me unrnimr snail, ana dropped like a stone down the up-cast, aiidaftera loner, long pause came trembling and laboring up again, and vomited its freight again and dropped like a stone for more. in a with ring an spit at it, sanl isowkor, his faco all nalo and his eves on fire. " Get the stinktors up and lot a man or two go down." "Will yo' mak' one, Bill Bowker?" said a brawny, coal-smeared man beside him. , "Yis, I will," was tho answer, given' like a bulldog's growl. " I'll make another," said tho man. "An me," "An' me," "An me," cried a dozen more. " Rig the bowk, somebody," said the love-lorn verso-maker, taking at once and as by right the place ho was born for. " Bill Joe Abel Darkey come wi' me." The crowd divided, and the five made for tho offices, and found thcro in a row a number of barrel-shapod machines of metal, each having a small hoso and a pumping apparatus attached to it. Those were a new boon from the genor ous hand of Bcienco a French contri vance, as the name affixed to each set forth " L'Extincteur." Each of the men seized one of these, and bore it to the edge of the shaft, the crowd once lnoro making way. A bucket, techni cally called "a bowk," some two feet deej) and eighteen inches wide, was allixed to the wire rope which swung above the burning shaft. Tho solf-appointed loader asked for flannel clothing. A dozen garments were flung to him at once. He wrapped himself up like a mummy, and bound a cotton handkerchiof over his face. Then, with the machine strapped securely across his shoulder, he stepped one foot in the bucket and laid a hand upon the rope. A man ran forward with a slender chain, which he passed rapidly round tho volunteer's waist and fixed to tho rope which supported the bowk. An other thrust an end of ropo into his hand, and stood by to reeve out the rest as he descended. 1 hen came the word : "Short, steady." The engine panted, tho rope tightened, the clumsy figure, with the machine bound about it, swing into the smoke, and in a death-like still ness, with here and there a smothered gasp, the man wont down. His comrade at the edge dribbled the rope through his coal-blackcnod fingers as delicately as though it had beon a silken thread. Then came a sudden tug at it, and the word was flashed to the engine-room, and the creak of the wheel ceased, and the gliding wire rope was still. Then, for a space of nigh a minute, not a sound was heard, but every eye was on the rope, and evory cheek was pallid with sus pense, and every heart was with the hero in the fiery depths below. Then came another warning tug at the rope, and again the word flashed to the engine room. The wheel spun round, the rope glided, quivered, stopped, the figure swung up through the smoke again, was seized, lowered, landed. When his comrades laid hands upon him, the flan nel garments fell from him in huge blackened flakes, so near to the flames had he been. He cast these garments from him, and they fell, half tinder, at his feet. Then he drew off the hand kerchief which bound his face, and, at the god-like, heroio pallor of his counte nance, and the set lips and gleaming eyes, women whispered, pantingly, "God bless him!" and the breath of those bold fellows was drawn hard. Then he reeled, and a pair of arms like a bear's were round him in a second. In two minutes more he was outside the crowd, and a restorative which came from no body knew where, was at his lips as he lay upon the ground, and two or three women ran lor water, And while all this was doing, another man, as good as he, was swinging down ward in the blinding smoke. So fierce a leap the flames made at this hero, that they caught him fairly for a moment in their arms, and when he was brought to the surface, he hung limp and senseless, with ereat patches of smoldering Are upon his garments, and his hands and face cracked and blackened. But the next man was ready, and when he, in turn, came to the light, he had said good bve to the licrlit forever in this world Not this, nor anything that fear could urge, could stay the rest. There were five and thirty men and boys below, and they would have tliem up or die. With that Kod-like pallor on their lips and cheeks, with those wide eyes that looked deatli in the face, and knew him, and defied him down they went! I saw these things, who tell the story. Man after man defied that fiery hell, and faced its lurid, smoky darkness, undismayed, un til at last, their valor won the day The love-lorn llliam had but little room in his heart for superfluous senti ment as he laid his hand upon the wire rope, and set his foot in the bowk again Yet inst a hope was there that Selina should not grieve too greatly if this second venture failed, and ho should meet his death. He was not, as a rule, devotionally inclined, but lie whispered, inwardly, " Uod bo good to tier. And there, at that second, he saw her face before him so set and.fixed that in its agony of fear and prayer it looked like marble. The rope grew taut, he passed the handkerchief about his face again, and with the memory of her eyes upon him, dropped out of sight. The man at tho side of the shaft paid out the slender line again, and old hands watched it closely. Yard after yard ran out. The great coil at his feet snaked itself, ring by ring, through his coaly fingers. Still no warning message came from below. The engine stopped at last, and they knew that the foot of the shaft was reached. Had the explorer fainted by the way? He might, for all they knew abwe, be roasting down below that minute. Even then his soul, newly re leased, might be above them. Through tho dead silence of the "Yo' might just as well stand crowd the .word flashed to the engine room. The wheel went round, and the wire rope glided and quivered up again over it. There was not a man or woman there who did not augur the same thing from the tenser quiver of the rope, and when, at last, through the thinner coils of smoke about the top of the shaft the rescuer's figure swung with the first of the rescued in his arms, there was heard one sound of infinite pathos a sigh of relief from 20,000 breasts and dead silence fell again. "Alive? asked one, laying a hand on Bowkor's arm. Bill nodded and pushed him by, and made his way toward that marble face, nursing his burden still. "beliner," lie said, quietly, "here e our sweetheart." "No, no, no, Bill," she answered. "There's on'y one man i' the world for me, Jim, 11 ever he iorgives me an my wicked ways." Cheer and cheer of triumph rang in their ears. The women fought for Bill Bowker, and kissed him and cried over him. Men shook hands with him and with each other. Strangers mingled their tears. The steel rope was gliding up and down at a rare rate now, and the half-suffocated prisoners of the fire were being carried up in batches. Selina and her lover stood side by side and watched the last skipful to the surface. "That a the lot, yelled one coal- smeared giant as the skip swung up. Out broke the cheers again, peal on peal. William stood silent, with tears in those brave eyes. The penitent stole a hand in his. "Oh, Bill," she whispered, "you didn't think I wanted him ?" "What else did you think I fetched him out for?" queried William, a smile of comedy gleaming through the manly moisture of his eyes. She dropped her head upon his breast, and put both arms around him, and neither she nor he thought of the crowd in that blissful moment when Mr. Bow ker's courtship ended, and soul was as sured of soul. A Hint to Boys. A philosphcr has said that the true education for boys is to teach them what they ought to know when they become men. What is it they ought to know? 1. To be true; to be genuine. No education will be worth anything that does not include this. A man had bet tor not know how to read he had bet ter never learned a letter in the alpha bet, and be true and genuine in inten tion and action, rather, than, being learned in all science and in all lan guages, be at the same time false at heart and also counterfeit in life. Above all things, teach the boys that truth is more than riches, more than culture, more than earthly power or po sition. 2. To be true in thought, language and life pure in mind and body. An impure man, young or old, poisoning society where he moves with his smutty stories and impure example, is a moral ulcer, a plague spot, a leper, who ought to be treated like the lepers of old, who were banished from society and com pelled to cry " Unclean," as a warning to save others from the pestilence. 3. To be unselfish. To take care for the feelings and comforts of others. To be polite. To be just in all dealings with others. To be generous, noble and manly. This will include a genuine reverence for the aged and things sa cred. 4. To be self-reliant and self-helpful even from earliest childhood. To be industrious always, and self-supporting at the earliest age. Teach them that all honest work is honorable, and that an idle, useless life of dependence on others is disgraceful. When a boy has learned these things, when he has made these ideas a part of his being, ho ever young he may be, however poor or however rich, he has learned some of the important things he ought to know when he becomes a man. With these properly mastered, it will be easy to find all the rest. Methodist Recorder. A Laplander's Home. In a large but rather low room, with walls and roof of rough-hewn planks, and with beams stretching from wall to wall in every direction, were assembled at least twenty-five persons of all ages and both sexes. Most of them ha taken off their skin blouses and hung them on the rafters near a huge wood fire, fit to roast an ox at. The half stewed garments and the steam from the dirty persons of those in front of the fire caused a most unsavory odor, which prompted us to make our stay as short as possible. All around the apartment, except near the door, was ranged the sleeping-shelves, the major part of which were already occupied men, women and children all indiscriminately mingled together, not distinguishable to the un practiced eye the one from the other, and appearing like nothing else than mere animated bundles of fur. From the group congregated around the fire no cheerful laugh, no buzz of conver sation, no noisy merriment emanated all were silent and still; perhaps they did not wish to disturb the sleepers, but, judging from their solemn and lugu brious countenances, their gloominess seemed but too natural and very far from assumed or constrained. Well, in the joyless and monotonous life those poor people lead, it is not surprising that all merriment Jabout them is soon stifled. Reindeer Ride Through Lap land. Thought at a church fair Faint pocketbook never captivated fair lady Yonkers Statesman. WAUN'ER AMU THE BARBER. How the Great Herman Composer Had Ills Hair Mhlnaleil-The Tonsorlal Artist's Dilemma. Wagner, the composer of the musio of the future, writes a correspondent, is sojourning in his " own hired house " at Naples, where he is preparing a new work, and being lionized to an extent that must fill his soul, so fond of adula tion, with sweet content. The maestro is shaved by a certain Neapolitan knight of the brush by the name of Gennaro, and a good story is told in this connec tion. The barber thought he had " a soft thing of it," and bargained in ad vance with certain worshipers of the composer to soli them locks of the hair which he should cut from the maestro's head, and the shaver had in consequence a nice little sum in anticipation. He went gaily to the Wagner villa The composer was waiting. Don Gen naro tied the towel around his neck and began operations. " Not too short," said Wagner. "It's dreadful hot, maestro; you will feel a hundred times better after the operation," said Don Gennaro, slipping his scissors into the salt-and-pepper curls. .Hardlv had the barber said these words when he turned white as a sheet. The scissors nearly fell from his hands, together with the first lock of the precious hair. What had happened? If I were a novel writer and not a correspondent, I might take a barbarous satisfaction, at this point, in writing " continued in our next," which would keep your nerves twitching for twenty-four hours. But I refrain. What had happened? Had Don Gen naro, from over-excitement, cut the skin as well as the hair of the illustri ous head he held in his hands? Was it remorse for having sold the spoils which made him tremble? Neither the one nor the other. Mme. Wagner, with measured steps like one who fulfills a sacred mission, had come to his side with an open ebony casket, and the in stant that each lock fell she caught it on the wing and laid it reverently on the blue satin lining of the box. Imagine the disappointment, the or gasm of Don Gennaro! How he man aged to finish the job I don't know, but do know that he came home thor oughly desperate; in fact, completely wilted. Donna Teresa, liis wife, thought something dreadful had happened. What shall I do," cried he, after re counting his terrible story, " what shall I do with all those Germans? Alas! I must refund the money.because theypaid half in advance. Who could imagine this? " Don Gennaro. Baid his wife, severely, " when I married you I thought you had more brains in your head. Will you drown yourself in a glass of water ? The maestro is a great composer, no doubt; but- his hair is salt and pepper like our neighbor, the butcher's." A word to the wise. At the present writ ing there are fifteen or twenty houses in Germany where, m the place of honor in the parlor there is a small lock of salt and pepper hair in a frame, and be low it in gold letters in German: " Lock of hair of Richard Wagner, cut in Naples, March 23, 1880." Don Antonio, the butcher, has never been able to make out why Don Gennaro, the bar ber, insisted on cutting his hair, as it were by force, on the morning of the twenty-fourth of March, 1880, the fol lowing Sunday being his day instead. Canoe Travel In Alaska. Alaska is full of food for man and beast, body and soul, though few are seeking it as yet. Were one-tenth part of the attractions that this country has to offer made known to the world, thou sands would come every year, and not a few of them to stay and make homes. At present, however, Alaska is out of sight, though by no means so far and inaccessible as most people seem to sup pose, i For those who really care to come into hearty contact with the coun try, making a long, crooked voyage in a 2anoe with Indians, is by far the bet ter way. The larger canoes made by these Indians will carry from one to three tons, rise lightly over anv waves likely to be met on those inland chan nels, go well under sail, and are easily paddled along shore in calm water or against moderate winds, while snug harbors, where they may ride at anchor or be pulled up on a smooth beach, are to be found almost everywhere. With plenty of provisions packed in boxes, and blankets and warm clothing in rub ber or canvas bags you mav be truly in dependent, and enter into partnership with nature; be carried with the winds and currents, accept the noble invita tions offered all along your way to en ter the sublime rock portals of the mountain fiords, the homes of the waterfalls and the glaciers, and encamp every night in fresh, leafy coves, car peted with flower-enameled mosses, be neath wide out-spreading branches of the evergreens, accommodations com pared with which the best to be found in artificial palaces are truly vulgar and mean. ban rrancisco Bulletin. A London undertaker has within the last few weeks driven through the city as an advertisement an enormous conin mounted on a base and drawn by fiv horses. This final receptacle is got u in most gaudy colors, ornamented wit the name and address of the purveyor on the outside and lined within with satin or some other comfortable am; pleasant-looking material. A live corpse with a sheet about him, did duty in this luxurious tenement. The one-cent postal quite take the place note-paper. card will never of the scented A NEW THIJitt IN OPTICS. Discovery Tha. Does Away With the Need of Telescopes, Professor Benjamin 0. Merrill is gen erally conceded to be .one of the fore most scientific men of Milwaukee. Hitherto he has confined his researches to the field of electricity rather than to that of optics, and it was not supposed that the world would be indebted to him for the most important discovery in connection with the eye that has ever et been made. Professor Merrill has long been of the opinion that tho tele scope is a clumsy method of supplying the deficiency of eye power, and some months ago he undertook to ascertain f there was any way by which we could e able to dispense with artificial lenses. It is a well ascertained fact that persons who are near-sighted, or, in other words, can see only such objects as are near to them, have the ball of the eye globular and protuberant, while those whose ision enables them to see objects at a long distance from them have the eye flattened and sunken. The obvious ex- lanation of this fact is the theory that hen the eye is flattened the lenses are compressed, and thus focal distance is increased, while the opposite enoct lol- lows the too great rotundity of the eye. Acting in accordance with this theory, Professor Merrill conceived the plan of increasing the power of the eye, not by using artificial glass lenses, but by improving tho natural lenses. He de signed an instrument, consisting of two Tiall metallic disks, each pierced with an extremely small hole, and connected by light steel band. These disks are to be placed one directly over the center of each eye, while the steel band, pass ing around the head, holds them in place. This band is so made that it can be shortened or lenghtened by turn ing a thumbscrew, and, of course, just in proportion as it is shortened tne disks press against the eyes and flattens them. The inventor tried his instrument upon himself before exhibiting it to any one. He found that when the disks were put in position and the screw was gradually lurnea nis power oi seeing distant objects steadily increased. A very slight increase of pressure on the eyes gave a very marked increase of visual power, lie made experiments both by day and night, and in every case with marked success. He found that in the daytime he could read the "Times" at a distance of twenty rods by giving the screw two complete turns, and at night he could perceive the moons of Jupiter and the ring of baturn with six turns of the screw. Up to tins point, the operation of the instrument was auite painless, but any attempt to give greater eye-power was attended with a sharp pain in the eyes and a dazzling liKht, which rendered all objects invisi ble. Professor Merrill has calculated, however, that six turns of the thumb screw trive his eyes a power equal to that of a refracting telescope of forty two feet focal distance, and that, in fact, there is no telescope in existence which has anything like the power of his eyes when they have been properly adjusted by the help of his new instrument. The Leather Medal. And now it is the leather trade that Americans are making their own in Eng land. There has been held recently a leather exhibition at the Agricultural hall, London, in which various foreign leathers as well as the British home produce competed for the prize. The result was that tne united tates liter . . . . ... . ... ally bore off the leather medal. We ex port enormous quantities of leather to England, as also does Australia; leather of the heavier kind, sole leather, ready tanned. It was found on inquiry that American firms actually bought up pelts and hides in the English market. brnncht them over here, tanned them and sent them back to England in the form of finished leather. All this causes John Bull to rub his eyes, open his mouth and bellow, lhe xankees. he found, do more vet. The American tanners buy the hides of the living ani nials exported from here to England and when the annuals are killed in England the hides are brought back here to be tanned. J. lie explana tion uiven is that American opera tors work on a very lame scale, with a large and cheap supply of hemlock, which gives great weight, and cives it nuicklv, the tanner being pan by weight. The Australians have an abundance of hides, and send shiploads of solo leather. As a consequence of this fierce competition against two con tinents, the English tanner finds him self driven to the wall. The horn trade in England is being mined, tan neries are being closed, and capital re fuses to waste itself on a profitless speculation. Even in light leathers, America competes w ith the British. The kind known as Levants, Memels am Cordovans are capitally imitated am equaled, if not surpassed. Germany does the same. France supplies the chief stock of waxed calf for boot up pers of the finer quality. The exports of tanned leather from France to Eng land in the interval between the exhibi tions is a great increase In the United Kingdom there are 40,000 persons em ployed in the various departments of the leather and skin trade. Tho value of the hides and skins manufactured in the kingdom is about 0,000,001). Tho value of the imported skins and hides exceeds this by jE:J,5(K),000. The im ports from France have more than doubled since 1H07. In round numbers, the increase in value of the imports into the United Kingdom over the exports is equal to 1,000,000 since 1G7. New York Graphic, nOMOROUS. Animatedjsaltcellars Grocers. A joiner's benchThe hymenial altar. A Texas dog was born without a tail, and he will sit down right beside an old kettle. " Do we eat too much," asked the " De troit Free Press," and out of five dozen boarding-house keepers sixty an swered in the affirmative. Whv is a vain vonntr lady like a con firmed drunkard? Because neither of them is satisfied with a moderate use of the glass. Owego Blade. When Sydney Smith was out of health his doctor advised him to take a walk on an empty stomach. The witty patient asked, " Whose?" Butter is now adulterated with soap- stone to make it weigh heavy. With the usual hair, this ought to ma1:o "od mortar. Syracuse Sunday limes. " Canadian hemlock forests are being rapidly destroyed for their bark." Why not destroy a few dogs.' -1 here is as much bark in a Spitz as there is in a forest. Make a note of that," said one busi ness man to anotner wno ow ed mm a balance and was not manifesting much enthusiasm about settling. Steuben- ville Herald. The pleasure of having a thing con sists ; in knowing that some one else wants it. This accounts for the alloyed joy of possessing a sore thumb. Bos ton Transcript. Camping out in a canvas tent during one's vacation is like kissing a pretty girl at a candy scrape you have a good time, but you come out of it rather the worse for wear. Boston Globe. A eood manv of the new stars anu comets we read about in tho newspapers are discovered by men who come homo late and meet the clothesline across the bridge of their nose. Middletown Transcript. This is getting to be a well-padded world. There are horse-pads, foot-pads, hip-pads, liver-pads, back-pads, kidney pads, and stomach-pads, and soon it is expected tnat someooay wiu gei up a pad for bald heads. "Small women generally have the largest hearts." Hope thats so; we own a small woman no, a small woman owns us but we haven t seen hoi heart yet to see what size it is. We've heard it speak, thougn. it s a good speaner.-- Kentucky State Journal. A Minnesota exchange says that "Peter Butler, of Cannon Falls, aged eighty years, shocked eleven acres of grain one day last week." Some of these old farmers use pretty hard lan guage when they once get started. Peck's Sun. Dear soul ! she looked at me askance, Her eye filled lull ol tears; Wbile I, content to take my chnnoe Kissed her, and quelled her tears. And what her tears were, who can say? Perhaps at thein you'd laugh For near her stood, blocking the way, A tiny week-old call ' Meritien Recorder. A young man with an umbrella over took an unprotected lady acquaintance in a rain-storm, and, extending his um brella over her, requestod the pleasure of acting as her rainbow. " Oh," ex claimed the young lady, taking his arm, " you wish me to be your rain-dear." Two souls with but a single umbrella, two forms that stepped as one. ALL S FA1K. " Do you attend the laiiT" she Faid, And toesed her pretty little head. He spake up, with a roguish glance, ' Y8 always, when I get a chaucu." She hlushedand said: " Now, don't ho Rieen; You know quite well, sir, what ( mean; There's only one fair in the Uiwn." Said he: " That's what I said to Urawn." Charles, I shall have to box your euis," 1'Iih lovely eyes were lull ot tottis. You know what lair; will you take nioT" For better or worjo.'" said Uliarlua in glee. " All's lair in love or war," and they A family ticket bought next day. Now Charles looks into hei sparkling eyes And sweats he has carried oil' the prize. Mochetter Kxprcss Coaratre Rewarded. Some notable deeds of unselfish cour age were rewarded yesterday with the silver medals of that excellent institu tion, the Royal Humane Society. H onor is due, in the first place, to a lady, twice noble by compassion and by birth the Honorable Blanche Colville, who, at West Cowes, on August, 2-4, hearing that a poor girl was drowning who had already twice sunk, plunged in the sea in her yachting dress as she stood, and, notwithstanding the weight of her soaked gar ments, saved this all but lost life. Another brave breast decorated with the medal was that of Arthur Evans, u lad of fifteen, who, at Aberayan, in Cardiganshire, seeing a man carried be vond his depth and sinking, flung off his clothes, swam to t lie spot, dived thrice, and finally brought his prize up by the hair of his head, saving him, but so narrowly that the gallant boy fainted himself wliilo still in tho water. Wil liam Chambers was tho third of the gen erous souls whose loving kindness honors human nature. He descended a well at Ashford wherein two men had already becomo asphixiated, and fasten ing a ropo to one of the sufferers, brought him out alive, returning for the other, but only to obtain a dead Inidv. We sulute with deep respect the English lady, the lad and the workman. In days of cynicism and self-seeking they teach us the impressive lesson that there are many things bettor than lifo and dearer than length of years. Lon don Telegraph,