) r , ) 1 r Itatca'of Advertising. One Square (t inch,; one insertion - $! One Square " ' one month - m 0ieNuare " iuro montliH - H CO One .Square " otio yoMr - - 10 On Two Squares, one yr-;ir - -, lo In QtwlorCoI. " - - - - ;I0 Mi Hah ''.. - .so ( n One " " - . . . loo ( 0 Lk1 notices at established rates. Mrirri5te nnd death notices, gratiR. All billH for yearly advertisements col. looted quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must bo paid for in advance. Job work. Cash on Delivery. IB Pt-BUHKI KVI IIY WKIIXMDAV, UY t. 33. wnrjic omen ry nojjur-iitf l bonneks buildho FLM BTEEJTr, TI0SE3TA, PA, i w TERMS, ei.CD YEAR. . " N Snli.si'i-ipiloiis received for shorter 'i led !i;m Uirco months. 'irrcNpoii(1fHi'p solicited Irom ail pnrln y. the country. KVtnot.jm will be taken of anonymous communications. VOL. XIV. NO. 3. ' TIONESTA, PA., APRIL 13, 1881. $1.50 Per Annum. 1, ' . 1 'In .-- t uiuiiu i - v iic num. wilii n mnvemenr. in Over a Million OF ProI.GuIImcUe's FRENCH IKWney Pafls ;1 Hare already .'i ben sold In this f country and in , r ramie; every ' oiimoI which ha-" ft I v e n perfect tatislacfion anil has performed Cures evorv time when used ac cording lodirec. tlins. We now aay to the afflicted and doubting; one tbat we will pay the above reward for a tingle cue oi LAME BA.OIK That the Tad fail to eure. This Groat Rem edy will positively and permanently enro Lumbago, Iiame Back, Relation, iGmvel, Din botes, Iropsy, Brights' DineaHe ot Vbe Kid- noyg, Inooniinnnoe and Hotntion ol tlio Urine, intl'immation of the Kidneys, Cntarrb ol the Bladder, lligh Colored Urine, Pain in the Back, 8ide or Loin?, Nerrou Weakness, and in fact atl dienrdots f the Bladder and Uiinnry Organa, wbetlior contracted by pi). Tate d venae or otherwise. L 1)163, ityon aresuGTurinB from Femole Weaui.ew, Leneorrbea, or any dita-eot the Kidneys, Bladder or Urinary OrRans, Y.OU CAN BE CURED I Without swallowing naaseoos medicines, by simply wcarins; mor. GUILMETTE'S FRENCH KIDNEY PAD. WHICH OURH BT ABSOllPTIOJf. Ask yonr droct for Prot. Guilraette's French Kidney Pad, and take no other. II he has not fot it, send 92 and you will receive the Pad by Mtai mail. mmoiuu rsoM ths rson.B. Judge Boehaziaa. Lawyer, Toledo, O., days: One oi Prol. Gnilinetle's French Kidney Pads cured me of Lumbago In three weeks' time. My ease bad been fciven np by the bet doctors as Insurable. During all this time I suffered untold actMny aad paid ont large sums of money." Gi-orge Tetter, t. T., Toledo, O., eayst " I s offered lor thrso years with Boiatiea and Ki. ney DfseaM, and Men had to go about on orutohea. I was) entirely and permanently onred alter wearing Prol. Guilmette'e French Kidney Pad four weeks." 9riir N. C Soott, Sylvania, O., writes: "I have bees a great offerer lor 1A years with Bright' Disease ot the Kidneys. For weeks at a time wae unable to eat ont ot SH ft ok barrel 4 medioine, but they gave me Zii'ui7 nii'elt I wore two of Prol. 'UuiliniHr vtnnv VhAm aix WMkL mil I nnn know I am entirely enred." ' Mrs Helen Jarome, Toledo, O., eayst "For years I have beea eonflned, a great part ot the lime, to soy bed with Lenoorrhea and Female Weakness. 1 wore one ot Guilmette'e Kidney Pads and wae cured in one month. IX B Green, Wholesale Grooer, Flndlay, writes i " 1 safTered 26 years with lame i-avk and in three weeks was permanently mred by wearing one ot Prof.. Guiimettes Kidney Pads." II. F Keesling, M. D , Druggist, Logans, port Ind., when sending in an order tor Kid ney Pads, wri'eai 'I wore one of the first ouoa we sad and I received m re benefit liora il I baa anything I ever nsed; in fact the Padt give better general satisfaction than any Kid nm remedy we ever sold. ' Ituy A Shoemaker, Druggists, Hannibal, Mo. t " We are working up a lively trade id your Puds, and are hearing of good results liotn them every day." For sale by O W DOVARD. Tuv" a. T O&k CEiMTS, flka POSTPAID W -A" TREATISE ox the housh . .. . -.' (fV...At ! ' " S DISEASES. t'j.iktuliilncr an Indexof Dls (;aos,whlohBlVes the ymp loniM, Caue, and the lleat Treatment of oaciH. A. Table trl vlnuc ftll tlie prlnolpaldruKs uHOd for tlo Horse, wltlx tlie ordinary dose-, efl'eotie, and untldote when a polnon, A. Table with an ICnaravlnar t tlt I roi'HC's rVeotli tit dlfler I out n:;e wltU lules Tor tell I lug the ue. A. valuable ool I leotlon of lloelpte ttnd j niiioh otlier valuable Infor ' niatloii. sent poet' paid to any ad dreijii In the I'nlted Htotea or Cnnadafor 25CETJTS. CLUB RATES: i Five Copies Ton Copi'-fc Twenty Cop OneHun.iuo Coplai ii.oo I.7S s.oo 10.00 l'eia,e htuuipM n-ecivi d. P. Y. EE'SSPAPER CHIOS, I 43 & I 50 Worth St.. N. Y i 100-FABE BOOK Sauce. i. What is life without ite aatieu ? Banco for gander, sauce for gooso ? Little gain and much of losa Chicken pio without ite price. it. Marriage is a royal dih, Than which there is none above; Yet to taate of it who'd wish If 't has not the sauce of love ? nr. Hope is good to feed upon; On life's menu it ranks high; Yet ite flavor soon is gone If ite sauco grows hard and dry. IV. Tid-bite in tho world's cuisine Woman's wordH are pleannnt thiiigM If the nance in the turreeu Is not made of bittor stings. ' v. Life a Htruggle is all through, Yet we'll havo moro gain than Iobm, If, no matter what we do, We secure our ehnre of eauce. - Caleb 1)huii. A RACE FOR A WIFE. A STORY t'KOM THE IJlENCK. Mv father nscil to live at Bethel, in tho high Btreet, in a house I can still see before my eyes with its slate roof and projecting beams, nhospitablehouse if ever there was one. Poor folks knew the way to it. They entered with their wallet empty and Vent away with it full. We were all seated one night at the fireside; mv father was smoking his pipe and watcliing the fire burn, my mother was ironing, and I was reading, when we heard a noise at the door, and saw enter a boy with frightened looks. " What is the matter ?" "It is a soldier very tired who has just fallen exhausted before the door." My father loved soldiers. lie rose brusquely, ran out, and there he was, before I had taken a step, coming in a-uin with a young soldier leaning upon him, or rather my father had taken him up and was carrying him like a sack of com. My mother hastened to draw the big armchair up to the lire. Tho soldier was made to sit, or rather to recline in it, and my father said, looking at the poor fellow : "Is it possible! Walking in that sttfo?" The fact in that the soldier was very thin and pale, his hair flattened on his forehead, tho veins of his temples big as your little finger, his face black with dust. We were then in the month of October and the weather was beginning to grow fresh, but the poor fellow was nevertheless sweating big drops, as if it had been dog days. lie mu6t have had a long tramp. Ilis shoes were in shreds; you could see where the stones had torn the leather; the loft foot was bleed ing. The soldier did not move but re mained in the armchair with his head thrown back, his eyes half open and white as a sheet. t My mother had already put some soup . on the fire. "Bah!" said my father; "the first thing -to be looked after is the feet." And kneeling down he began to tear and cut away the shreds of leather. The soldier's feet, all swollen and full of blis ters, looked like the feet of the martyrs, swollen with pain and wealed by hard cords, which we see in the pictures of the Spanish painters. My father dipped his handkerchief in vinegar and washed the wounds. "ion, he said tome, "make some lint. ' And I began to tear up some old linen that my mother had taken out of tho big cupboard. Meanwhile tho soldier hadcome to himself. He looked at us at my father, my mother and nivself and the two or three neighbors wlio- had come in one after the' other. His wandering eyes seemed to interrogate everything. It was no longer the road, the stones, the great deserted woods that he saw before him, but a gay room with a ceiling of shining oak, a cloth on the table, a knife and fork laid and a brown earthenware soup-bowl emitting a savory 'smell of cabbage soup. Then he raised himself up, leaning on the arms of the chuir, and said to my father, with donfused emotion: " Ah ! monsieur. Uut you do not know me." " Ah ! well that does not matter; we will become acquainted at table." We had already dined, but my father wished to bear tho soldier company. He sat down to table opposite liim, as it were brooding over him, and looking at tho regimental buttons that shone on his cloak. The soldier ate, and ate heartily; my mother served him. "Well," said my father, suddenly, pointing to the tin box tliat the soldier carried slung on a cord, "you have fin ished your time, for there is your conge. Then why do you kill yourself by toiling along tho highway ? I see how the mat ter stands. You have no money to pay for the diligence." "I?" replied the soldier. "I have received my pay and bounty, and my mother has sent me enough to pay for a place in the coupe, if I liked. But I could not." " I understand," oaid my father, who did not understand at all. When the meal was over the soldier tried to walk. He tottered, uttered a smothered cry, and fell back into the chair. I then saw a tear into his eye. Ho was a young man, rather thin, but nervous, dark, and with an energetic look. He was not a man to bhed a tear for a little, and that tear puzzled me. An, he said, with a movement in which there was lit tle anger and a good deal of grief; "I shall not be able to walk until to-morrow morning." "Walk?" cried my mother, terrified, The soldier shook his head. "Yo" on't know I must. It was a vow In ou. Ardennes those primitive souls have respect and faith. I saw my father look at the young man in the face with out astonishment and with mute inter- . rogation. "Yes," said the soldier, " I will tell you the whole story. You have, per ! haps, saved my life; I ought, at least, ' to tell you who I am. Mv name is Jean Chevaucheux, and my father is a wood splitter at Mezieres. " He is an honest man, like you, monsieur. Seven years ago, when I drew for the conscription, I was madly in love with Marguerite Ser van, a good hearty girl and a pretty one. I had already asked her in marriage, and I fier father had not said no; but, you see, Pierre Puvioux bad asked her in mar- riago at the same time that I did. Pierre ! Puvioux is a man of my nge, who car j ries his heart in his hand, ns the saying i gay and well-looking. I ought to I have detested him, and he has remained j my friend. Well, Father Servan said to i me as he'held out his hand: "'You are worthy to be my son-in- law my lad, but first of all you must please my daughter. I will ask her.' ' Marguerite, when asked, said that she would gladly' consent to be my wife. But she said the same when they talked to her about Puvioux. She loved both of us, one as much as the other; she hesitated she did not dare to decide, But still she could not marry both of us. " Time went on. When the time of the, conscription came we drew lots, Puvioux nnd I, on the same day. I had number three and he had number seven, and so we both of ns became soldiers. For a moment I was in a state of great fright I confess. People nt Mezieres said that Puvioux had a rich aunt, and that she would buy him oil". If Puvioux did not join the nrmv, Puvioux would inarrv Marguerite, and I, know ing that I should bo obliged to go, for I was poor, I thought I already heard the fiddler at the wedding, rending my ears and my heart. "Luckily, Pierre Puvioux was not ljonght ofi". His aunt died leaving debts instead of a fortune. He had not d son. We were obliged to shoulder our guns, nnd we were expected on our w ay bill evei-y moment. One night Father Servau took us each by the arm and led ns to an inn, nnd this is what he said to us: " 'My boys, you are good and honest Ardennais, equal in merit. I love vou with all my heart. One of you shall be my Bon-in-law ; that is understood. Mar guerite will wait seven j'ears. She has no preforenco either for you, Puvioux, or for you, Chevaucheux, but she loves both of you, and she will make happy the one whom fortune . shall choose. Thee are the conditions on which one wf you 6hall many my daughter ; you start on the same day it is probable that you will return the same day. Well, the one who first comes and- shakes hands with Father Servan, and Bays : "Here I am, my time is out; he, I swear, shall be the husband of Marguer ite.' " " I was astonished; I thought that I had misunderstood; . I looked at Pierre Puvioux and he looked at me, and al though we were sad enough at heart, wo were certainly ready to burst out laughing. " But Father Servan was not joking. He had discovered this means of getting ont of the difliculty, and he meant to stick to it. I held out my hand and swore to act neither by ruse nor vio lence, and to let Pierre Puvioux marry Marguerite if he returned to Mezieres before I did. Pierre stood up and swore the same, and then wo shook hands, while Father Servan said: "'Now, the rest is your aftair. The only thing is to escape bullets nnd to return safe and sound.' "Before leaving I wished to see Mar guerite. Just as I was arriving under her window it was at dusk I saw some one in the shade coming in tho same direction. I stopped short. It was Pierre Puvioux. He seemed vexed to find me there. I was not particularly pleased to meet him. We stood there for a moment like two simpletons look ing at the toes of our boots. Then, with a movement of courage, I said to Puvioux: " 'Shall we go iu together?' " We entered and took our farewell of Marguerite. She listened to us with out saying anything, but there were tears at the tips of her blonde eyelashes. Suddenly Pierre, who was talking, stop ped and began to sob and I to do the same. Alien Marguerite joined in, and there we were all three shedding tears and pressing each other's hands. "When the diligence that took us away from Mezieres began to rattle on the pavement the next day I felt inclined to throw myself down from the imperial and get crushed under the wheels. The more so as there was a Lorrainer at my side who was Binging in a melancholy voice a song of his country, and I said, to myself: It is all over, Jean, you will never see her again.' " Well, you see. Time passes. The seven years are over, and who knows ? Perhaps I am not only going to Bee her again, but to marry her. "There are, indeed, strange chances in life," continued Jean Chevaucheux. "Pierre and I started on the same day and the same hour, and we were placed in the Fame regiment. At first I was vexed. 1 should have liked to have known that ho was far away. As you may imagine, I could not love him much. But I reflected afterward that if Puvioux was with me I could at least talk about her. That consoled me. Well, I said to myself, I am in for seven years of it. After all, one gets over it. "In tho regiment I became a fast friend of Pierre Puvioux. He proved to be an excellent good fellow, and at night, in order to kill time, we used often to talk of Mezieres, of Father Ser van and of Marguerite. Wo used to write to Mezieres often, but each told the other the contents of his letters. It was a struggle, it is true, but it was loyal. When Marguerite or old Servan replied, the letter was for both of us. An equal dose of hope was given to each of us, and bo we went on hoping. " One day the colonel took it into his head to appoint me corporal. I was vexed and proud at the same time. You see, I wns no longer the equal of Pu vioux. My stripes gave me the right to command him, and in the eyes of our Ardennais that was no small advantage. But I did not glory in my rank; on the contrary, it made me ill at ease. I did not dare to talk to Puvioux any more. Then I reflected that there were more w ays than one of getting rid of my new rank. I neglected my duty and was forthwith degraded. But who should be made corporal in my stead but Pu vioux. But Puvioux was not to be out done ; at the end of a week he resigned. After that there was no danger of any propositions being made to us to make any change in our uniform. We were condemned to remain common soldiers. " ' So much the better,' said Puvioux. What luck?' said I. " When we had served seven yearn I for I do not mean to tell you our history I day by dav I said to Puvioux: '"Well, now is the time to start, eh?' " ' Yes,' he replied, 'wo are expected.' " Y'ou know,' I said, the ' game will notbe finally won until both of us arrive nt Mezieres, and until the loser has de clared that the combat has been loyal.' " 'Agreed,' said Puvioux. " And so one morning, with good shot a our feet, and stick in hand. we i- i out for Mezieres from Angel's, where w o wtv in garrison. At first we walked aloug in company, not saying much, thinking a good denl and walk ing above everything. The weather was terribly hot and dusty. Half way on one of our marches I sat down on tho roadside overwhelmed with fatigue. '"Are you going to stay there ?' said Puvioux to me. "'Yes.' " 'Adieu ?' he said, continuing his march. " ' Au revoir.' " I watched him as he went on with a firm step, as if he had only just started. When Lsaw him disappear at the bend of the road, and when I was once alone, as it were abandoned, I felt a great despair. I made an effort. I rose and began to walk again. That little halt had done me good. I walked, walked and walked until I had caught up to Puvioux and passed him. " At night, too, I was well ahead, but I w as worn out. I entered an inn to sleep a little. I slept all night. In the nioming 1 woke tip. I saw that tho day was getting on; I was furious and called some one. " ' You have not seen a soldier pass on foot?' " Yes, monsieur la militaire, very late last night. He asked for a glass of water.' "Ah ! I was outstripped in my turn ! I started hurriedly. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon I had not caught up to Puvioux, nor at 6 o'clock either. At night I took my rest while I ate, and started to walk again. I walked a good part of the night, but my strength hail limits. Once more I stojped. I knocked at an inn. The door opened, and there, sitting in n chair, I saw Pu vioux, pale as death. He made a move ment of displeasure when he saw mo that was natural. We did not talk much. What could we say ? We were both tired. The great thing was to know who should get up first for the next morning. It was I. "Tho next morning was this morning. Since this morning I have been walking, taking a, rest now and then, but only a short one. We are getting close. Bethel is the last stage between Angiei's and Mezieres. I know my map of France now. The last stage! Good heavens, if I arrived too late !" "And Pierre Puvioux," asked my father, "has he caught you up?" "No," replied Chevaucheux, "lam ahead. If I could, start now I should be saved." "Start? In this state? Impossible!" " I know my feet are swollen and cut provided that to-morrow " " To-morrow you will be rested you will be able to walk." "Do you think so?" said the soldier, with a look ardent as lightning. " I promise you." My father then advised the soldier to go to bed. Chevaucheux did not refuse. The bed was ready. He shook hands with, us and went up to his room. It was 10 o'clock. "I will wuke you at 5 o'clock," 6aid my father. It was not yet daylight on the follow ing morning when my father, already up, looked out of the window to see how the weather was. While he was at the window he heard some heavy foot steps on the road below, and in the ob scure twilight that precedes daybreak he perceived a soldier who was walking in the direction of Mezieres. "Up already?" said my father. ; 1 he Bolclier stopped. i "Well?" continued my father, "are i you ofi'V" Tho soldier looked up and tried to ' make, out who was speaking to him. "You are Jean Chevaucheux, are you i not?" asked my father. "No," said the soldier, "I am Tierre i Puvioux." And as if that name of Chevaucheux had been the prick of a spur heresumod i his walk more rapidly, and was soon ; lost in the obscurity. When my father ! could no longer see him ho could hear ! tho noise of his shoes on the road lead ing to Mezieres. " Ah !" said my father to himself, ! " Chevaucheux most be sharp if he I means to catch up that man." And he went straight to the room where Jean had slept. He w as already up and look ing at his feet by the light of a candle. "Victory 1" he cried when he saw mv father; " I feel free and strong and I suffer no more. En route !" "And quickly," replied my father. "Puvioux lias just passed through Be thel." " Pierre Puvioux ?" "I have just spoken to him. He passed under our window, going along as if the devil were after him." " Ah, mon Dieu 1" exclaimed Chevau cheux as if he had been struck down. He repeated once more: "All, mon Dieu !" Then he buckled on his knap sack and cried: "After all, what you have told me gives me courage. Let me be off." In the room below my mother, already up, was filling a wallet with provisions for Chevaucheux. But he refused. He was not hungry. Putting on a pair of my father's shoes he started, blessing my mother nnd leaning on my father's arm to take the first step. Three or four years after this we hud Iteard no news of Chevaucheux. We m.ed ofteu to talk of that evening when the soldier had come into our house bleedincr and wcarv. What Jind lwpnrnf of him ? What had been the end of that J : romance oi love so strangely begun? Ono day my father had to go to j Mezieres on business. He took mo with ( him. At Mezieres ho wished to enter the I first barber's shop that he saw to get ; shaved. On the doorstep a little child i was sitting with its legs apart and smil ! ing nt the sun. " Will you allow me to pass ?" asked I my father, laughing. "No, I won't," replied the child with ! a little lisp. j At that moment the door opened and i a niiin in his shirt sleeves appeared the I father and took the child up in his I j aims, saying: . ! " Pierre ! Pierre ! do you w ant to drive I ftwnv tho customers?" . ! 1 recognized the voice and so did my father. Wo looked at the barber. The barber looked ftt us, It was Jean Che vaucheux. , He laid the child down at once and held out his hand. His face was all red and beaming with pleasure. " What, is it you ? Ah ! and to think that I have never written to you Ah! you don't know. It is I who married her; I arrived first." And rushing into the back shop: "Mar guerite ! Marguerite! " he cried. "Come, come ! " He was wild with joy. A young woman appeared, blonde, pretty, blue eyed, with a pensive and gentle air, a little sad. "Y'ou do not know?" said Chevau cheux to her. "It was this gentleman who took care of me so well at Bethel the night before I arrived at your father's house. I have often and often talked to you about him; this is the gentleman." Marguerite fixed her large, calm eyes upon us, saluted us and thanked us softly; then, as her husband continued to evoke the past, she looked at him tenderly, with a look that supplicated and was not without reproach. But Jean saw nothing. "Ah, it is to you that I owe all my happiness, monsieur! My child, my little boy, look at him, my little Iierre ! It was my wife who wished that he should liave that name ! Isn't he a fine boy, and strongly built? And my shop is going on first-rate. My wife, I adore lii-r ! And all this I owe to j'ou !" . "And the other?" asked I, imptu- dently. i "The other?" said Chevaucheux. ! He curled his lower lip, did not see that Marguerite turned her head away, and answered: " Pierre Puvioux ? Poor fellow. He arrived second, and that very evening it made me cry, I can tell you that very evening he threw himself into the river." Hints to Tattlers. The heights Jand recesses of Moun Taurus are said to bo much infested with eagles, who are never better pleased than when they can pick tho bones of a crane. Cranes are prone to cackle and make a noise (lsa. UH: 11), and particu larly so while they are flying. The sound of their voices uroubes the eagles, who spring up at a signal, and often mako the talkative travelers pay dearly for their imprudent chattering. The older and more experienced cranes, sensible of their besetting foible and the peril to w hich it exposes them, take care before venturing on tho w ing to arm themselves each with a ntone large enough to fill the cavity of their mouths, and conse quently to impose unavoidable silence on their tongues, and thus they escape the danger, lteader, hast thou an un ruly tongue? Learn a lesson from tho elder cranes, and to bridlo thy tongue by watchfulness and prayer, that thou Harvest say with the Psalmist, " I said, I will take heed to my way, that. I in not with my tongue." Don't Stay Laf To-SIghU The hearth of home is beaming With rays of rosy light; And lovely eyes are gleaming, A falls the shades of night; And whilo thy steps are leaving Tho circles pure and bright, A tender voice half grieving Says, "Don't stay late to-night." The world in which thou movest Is busy, brave and wide; Tho world of her thou lovest Is at the ingle side; ISho waita for thy warm greeting; Thy smile is her delight; Her gentle voice entreating, Says, "Don't stay late to-night." The world, so cold, inhuman, Will spurn thee if thou fall; Hie love of one poor woman Outlasts and shames them all; Thy children will cling 'round thee, Let fate bo dark or bright; At home uo Bhaft will wound thee, Then " Don't stay late to-night." HUMOR OF THE DAY. The average editor can sympathize with England in her trouble with the Boers. (Jrajtliic. " What is fame ?" asks the Philadelphia A Ttierican. Fame is the result of being civil to newspaper men. liosion Post. The New Orleans Picayune 6avs that a man should be the boss of himself. But suppose the poor fellow is married! Philadelphia Bulletin. Keep that world's fair as far away from here as" possible. There are about 14,000,000 out-of-town relatives waiting to sock it to us for the time we have spent in the country for the past twenty years. JW York "Dispatch. A Chicago society offered last year ft prize of one hundred dollurs for the best treatise on the question: " How best to destroy rats." The prize has just been awarded to Doctor Burnett, of Philadel phia, who answered: "Increase the number of cats." Frederick Marriott, a San Francisco editor, has invented a flying machine. It is only by some such scheme as this that an editor can ever get away from tho town where he lives as long as the bloated monopolies tliat cqntrol rail roads are permitted ;o charge fare. Chicago Joinnal. Montreal has a haunted hou;.-. a which "the Btove lids are lifted off the stoves and tent flying through the air." If the owner of the haunted house takes ore aavice he will buy his wife a new dress. He may think he can always dodge them, but some time one of those lids will take him on top of the head and scalp him. Peck's Sun. "Doctor," said one of our best young men in society " doctor there is some thing the matter with my brain; I know there is. What shall I do about it?" And the doctor calmly but firmly said he guessed it needed a little exercise as much as anything else. And now the best young man goes around saying the doctor is a fool. Hawkey e. A New York firm sends ns a double column "ad." of a new stenographic pen, for the insertion of which in the daily for three weeks, the firm agrees to send us a pen. No, thank you. We had one autographic- pen. Just sold it to a druggist for a soda fountain. Ii she lets down soda as fast as she did the ink, some man will be drowned at that fountain before the middle of June, and don't you forget it. Havkeye. It was in the opera house. The two gentlemen were from the country. After the curtain fell on the first act, one of them who had been reading the pro gramme, said, in an excited manner : ' It's a blame swindle, just got up to take in strangers." "What's a swin dle ?" " Here it says the next act is two years later. I wonder if they think we are going to stay here, fat $2 a day, for two years, just to see the thing out?" They went out and saw the ticket man about it. Austin Statesman. ' "Ah, dear," sighed MissFitzoy, as she yawned wearily, "there isn't anything to occupy one's mind now. I've made toilet cushions and tidies and embroid ered slippers and painted majolica jugs until I'm weary of life. I believe I'll go down into the kitchen and watch Jano make bread. I suppose I ought to know how many pints of yeast it takes to a loaf." And she penetrated the business part of the house only to find out that bread was "raised" from the baker's cart. New Harm JlegisU-r. A "ucstiou of Time. On tho way to his ajuirtmeuts ho stopped under the window of a pawn broker on Sixth avenue, aud with vio lout knocking and shouts attracted the attention of that estimable tradesman, who, putting his head out of the win dow, irefully asked the business of his visitor. "I want to know the time," cried the man. " What do yon mean by waking me up to ask such a stupid question?" roared the pawnbroker. " Stupid question ! " howled the man, clinging to the lamp-post; " I like that. Where else should I ask for the time haven t you got my watch ?" New York Hour, Few persons are aware that tho fore foot of the horse is the counterpart of the hand, and the hind foot that of the toe of the human foot, the heel compar ing with the hock of the hind leg of the horse. To get a proper idea of this try to walk on the tips of your toes; you will then see how clostlv Allied me I1 , extremities of the horse ud of man 5 '