RATES OF ADVERTISING. (Ejjf crest lirpabliran I rOBURHF.D ITIIT WIDXBUDAT, ST J. E. WENK. - OITlo In Bmearbaugh k Oo.'i Banding, EMU STREET, - TIONJE3TA, PA. TICUMH, Ircrt YIEA.Il. Ko BnlovIpUiitni received for ft shorter period Wish hrro months. '(.'irp))Mcl((nc(l folicitml from til pnrtaof tlx 'Miilrv. NoiKiiiiowi l lietnk n of anonymous wwimiinlcatiiiiiit Ono flfTir on Inch, on lnerton... 1100 Ono Square, one Inch, one month....... 00 '.m S jimr?, oua incli, three months.. 6 00 Ono ..q'.iiK, oiie inch, one year......... 10 00 i wo Htjnnre, one year 15 00 ij:iartr Coiiimn, one year. ...... 80 00 iiall'O'luinn, one year M 00 One Column, one yoar. 100 0 LorrI notlcei at established rate. Marriage and death notice gratia. All bills for yearly advertim meote collected unarrnrly. Temporary advertieementa must be I ... i r i for in advance. Job work, cash on delivery. P Vol. XV. No. 19. TIONESTA, PA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1882. $1.50 Per Annum. Here's 1o Our Slarry flag. Here' to onr (tarry flag t u lu-ttnr where it fly, Over tbe polar snows, under thooplo aky, Out on the silent prairie, or on the restless wave, Over the lonely camp, over the inarching brave Or in tbe busy city, whore'or men fling it forth; In the East, or the Went, or the Bontb, or the North, Here'ato tbe starry Aug, The flag that fliea above ua t Here's to the land we love 1 Hore'a to the hearts that love us I Here's to our alarry flag I Over our homes it I Oh, dear is it to our hearts, and pleasant unto, our eyes j Over the little children, over the maiden j sweet, Over the toiling men in the. city's crowded street, Over the court and mar'cet, over the rich and poor, Fjrlsonr flag of freedom, beautiful every, where. Itertj's to our starry flag, The flag that flies abovo cs t Hore'a to the land we love I II ore's to the hearts that love ua 1 If you would know how dear, wander away from home ; Far, far eaet to othor lands. Just for a season roam, Buddouly wake to see, some lovely autumn day, The starry bunting flying free over New York bay ; Ob. then with throbbing heart, oh then with happy fuar, You'll say j "Pear flag of my oountry-dear flag, so dear? so dear 1" Here's to tbe starry Aug, Tbe flan that flies above us 1 Here' to the land we love I . Beie'e to the hearts that love us ! llarprr't Wetkly. A SUMMER IDYL. Tbe train was appro ichiDgRhinebeck "Miss Barrow raised ber eves . from the Tjovel between which and the river, the doodles ky slid tbe Rreen bank opposite, fresh in all the freshness o' earlvjnne, .h hod been desultorily dividing Iter attention, and her maid began (fathering rip her wraps. One o two paafengera in tbe tame ear did the same for theirs, and anion them a young man f twentv-eieht or ao, with a fair rnnataohe, who had traveled opposite "Alias Burrow ir m New York absorb. 4 in a scientific mwazine. He waa a "candaome fellow, bat more dis tins aished-lookiDB than haLdsome, and dressed with quiet, unimpeachable Correctness. These two qnalitiea Mies Barrow had noticed in a casual way when her eye happened once or twice to fall on her f llow travt ler, for she thought a great deal of both of them The latter, indeed, is a finbject to which women pay more attention than men are aware. As the young lady alighted on the platform at Rbiuebeck an urbane servant met her and announced that Miss Ham rslej's carriage was waitiug and that Miss Hamersley regretted not feeling strong enough to diive down herself. Tbe man remained l hind to seo to the luggage and the caniage drove off. In rounding tbe corner to tho other side of the platform Muss Barrow saw again her fellow tr .voler with the fair mus tache; ho was I'pfaHicg to Miss Ham orsley's man, the latter having possessed himself of bis portmanteau, and as They passed she heard him saw! "Nevermind; I'll take another vehicle." Apparently, then, the gentleman was guest of Miss Hamersley. Two or three years before the knowledge Would probably have afforded Miss Barrow some gratification, very natural under the cir-.utubtances. The prospect sug gested possibilities which would cer tainly have added an Unexpected zest to ber solitary visit to an elderly maiden lady in delicate health at an isolated country house. But a disappointment which Miss Barrow had experienced not long since, through a man to whom she had been engaged, had changed all such feelings. As she herself hod said t her old friend, Miss Hamersley: "1 not only feel as if I never again would cure for anv man, but the whole sex has grown indifferent to me." The drive was quite a long one, and the sun was shooting rays of slanting light between the trees and across the lawns of the well-kept gronnds when the old Hamersley mansion came in sight. On the vine-olad porch stood Miss Hamersley herself, looking like a piuture of Revolutionary times with her small, delioate face, her pray silk dress and wealth of puffed white hair. Well, my young friend," she said, " bo I have you at last. Let me look at you." 8be raised MUs Barrow's veil and kissed her cheek. " As pretty as ever. Now let me take you to youj room whv, what's this? Jack Tra vers, I declarer It waa Miss Barrow's fellow traveler, whose vehicle had followed hers at a . little distance, and who now drove up and sprang to the ground. "I expected you to-morrow," said Miss Hamersley, laying her band affec tionately on the ypung man's shoulder. " I should have telegraphed " "Never mind. You're always wel oome. Maud, let me introduoe my nephew, Mr. Travers, Miss Barrow." A few minutes later, when Miss Ham ersley, had joined Maud Barrow in her room she said: "I hope you will lire Jack Travers. Cat X know you will. He's a splendid follow." " I daresay I shall like him," replied, the. young lady. " I know, of course, that you will not except in a friendly way, and that's just why I asked him up while you wens he'e. The fact is you are very similarly situated. Jack has not gotten over an unlucky love affair, and if I had him meet some irl who would have fallen in love with him it would have been a bad thing for the girl, as it would be a bad thing for any man who I should in vite and who would fall in love with you. is it is, yea and Jack are both nvu I ner able to the tender passion, and can bVoei best oi fiiends accordingly. Yo'.i will pet on nicely, and yonr visit will be lens of a bore than it would be in tbe solitary society of an old woman like roe " A little later Jack Travers came upon his aunt and asked: "Who is this young lady you have with you, dear aunt?" "Someone," was the reply, "whose heart is full of a memory though, really, why she should still think of that brute of a man who treated her so outrageously is a mystery to me and who not only will not expect you to fall a victim to her charms and begin a flirtation instanter, but would think anything of the sort a great bore. So you need not exert yourself." "Indeed? That's a comfort. But what a singular girl," and if he had spoken bis mind he would have added, "and what a beautiful girl, too," for just then Maud entered, having laid aside her traveling dress and thick veil for a long dinner dress of pale blue, which showed to remarkable advantage the brilliancy and the piquant charm of ber face ; the warm fairness of her skin, and the light glossy brewn of her soft hair. Miss Uamersley's explanations to both her g nests had the effect of putting them thoroughly at their ease with each ether, and the dinner was a gay one. By tho time it was over they had dis co voted that they had many ideas in common, and many points of sympathy. Tho long Jnue twilight had not yet faded, und Miss Hamersley suggested that her nephew should take Miss Bar row to the parapet to see the view. " I'or,'' she raid, " I can't go about nn;ch, BDd you must entertain each otlif r. ' Tbo viow was extended, for the Hani i r.Mlcy pl.ee stood high. Jaok Travers Im.tH'd against tbe' parapet, while Miss Burrow looked around her. Suddenly "hrt glanced up and caught his eyes fixed on her. " 1 olteu think what a delightful exist ence your aunt's is in this place," she Maid. ' There is such a harmony in it. She lit a the place, and the place fits ber." " My aunt is a charming woman. It iri a pity she never married." ' A pity. I don't see that her condi tiou us it is could be bettered. If she had married she would have run the chance of getting some obi-tioate man with not a thought in sympathy with hers, who would have been putting down bis foot eternally and making her life a bore." " Yon don't take a sentimental view of marriage," remarked Travers. "No. I am not sentimental. Perhaps I am hard." , Travers glanced at her, with the blaok lace she had thrown around her head as u protection from the dampness cling ing about her soft, piquant face und whito throat, aud thought she did not look so. Bat Mies Barrow did not seem in clined to pursue the subject further. She turned to go back to the house. In doing so she brushed her fan from the parapet. Travers stopped to pick it up, and noticed that it had a large metal ring attached. Instead of laying it in Maud's outstretched hand he (dipped the ring over her wrist The wrist was very ptetty, aud bo was the hand, and Travers experienced a subtle pleasure in performing this familiar little act. He glanced up quickly ; but the young lady's eyes were averted. The next morning Travers proposed to take advantage of the cool, line day for a horseback ride. Miss Barrow was willing, and a couple of hours later they were under way. The roads were in good condition, the air was exhilarat ing, and MiBS Hamersley's horses were capital. The color came into Maud's oheeks and her eyes shone like stars As for Travers, it did not seem to him that he had ever enjoyed such a ride before. By-and-bye, however, be said: " Don't you think we had better turn back, Miss Barrow I It may be too much for you. " Oh, I am not tired. I am thirsty, though." Travers looked around him. "I think I could get you a glass of water at that little house on tbe top of that slope, but I don't like the idea of leaving you alone. ' " Oh, I shall go, too. It will be a ohangefrom riding," said Maud. " You can tie the horses here." Tbe olimb proved to be a rougher path than she had imagined, but she would not be persuaded to take Travers' arm, " No, no," she laughed, and stepped quietly to one side. In doing so she stumbled over her habit and uttered a little cry of pain. " Mies Barrow I what is the matter T' exolaimed Travers. " 1 I'm afraid I have sprained my foot. Let ns tarn back," she murmured faintly. She took a step or two, and then stopped again, flushing and paling alternately. Travers looked into her face. " You moant," Le said, " that you can't walk a step. You must let me carry you." k' Oh, no, no." " Miss BarroW, this is really unrea sonable. I must insist." And without more words he rained her in his arms and began descending tbe slope again. Maud crimsoned and a faint flush rose in Travers' cheeks also. The wind blew a sti ay wisp of her hair against his face, and with it the faint perfume of violets she had on her handkerchief. When he reached the foot of the slope and lifted her on her horse his heart was beating rather fast, and Maud was trembling a little. " Does your ankle still pain so much?' he said, softly. She shook her head. u. hey rode slowly home throng n tne green fields, almost in silence. Travers, while constantly watobf al of his com panion, seemed to be distrait. " I sup pose he is thinking of that girl he waa in love with," said Maud to herself, and for a young lady to whom the mas culine sex had grown indifferent she certainly allowed the supposition to give her a oonsidetable pang. Miss Barrow, for the next week, lay on a couch which waa wheeled from the house to the grounds as she felt inclined to sit indoors or out. Miss Hamersley and Travers took turns in reading to her, bat the latter offloe in this respect was rather a sinecure. He always found after a few momenta that it was much more pleasant to have Maud talk to him, and to be able to look at ner. Thia tendency, indeed, in a few days grew into such a distracting wish to be always near her that Travers might nave been alarmed had be cbosen to question himself and his feelings. But he did not choose to. Oae warm afternoon he came into the library, where she lay on a lounge near the open window, with a cluster of red moss-roses in his hand. "They are the first of the season," he said. Maud raised her hand for them, and he stood looking down at her. She wore a thin white dress, and looked prettier than he had over seen her. Her cheeka were a little flushed, and her hair tossed about a trifle as if she had just been asleep. She seemed too listless and comfortable to move, but thanked him with a bright glance, and pressed the roses against her face. ( Pres ently his persistent gaze appeared to tmbarraBS her, for she said, not a little uneasily: "How hot it is I Why don't you sit down?" Travers sat down mechanically, still withent speaking. Miss Barrow glanced at him, and her eyes began to sparkle mischievously. " Perhaps I should not have ' asked you to sit down, though," she said demurely. "You might have been con templating a speedy exit for the pur pose of smoking a cigar." "I assure you, I was thinking cf nothing of the sort, Misa Barrow." " Not thinking of smoking ? I fancied thero was no hour of the day a'man did not t inns oi that." "He may make an exception when he is in the society of ladies. "Indeed he does not, or I have yet to learn it. Oh, women are not of as much importance as that to men 1" Her tone bad changed, and she spoke the last words bitterly. " That is what that brute of a man she waa engaged to has taught her,1 thought Travers. " I should like to " Be started up, and completed his pious wish with regard to the said man at the window. But Maud waa in a strange mood this afternoon. When she spoke her tone was quite di Cerent again. "Are you angry ?" she asked, softly, "Angry no." he replied, coming back and standing before her. " How tantalizing you are to-day," he broke out alter a pause. She took no heed. " To show you I did not intend to be rude, I will give you a rose," she said "shall I T' "Yes," he whispered. " Stoop down," she murmured. He knelt beside the lounge, and she passed the stem of the rose through his button hole. Her little white fingers were very near his face, and he saw that they began to tremble. Suddenly he caught them both in one of his, and before she could stir, without knowing himself what he waa doing, he threw his arm around her and kissed her. The next instant he waa on his feet. Maud, crimson and palpitating, stood before him, supporting herself against the lounge. "You have insulted me" " Miss Barrow Maud ! Forgive mel Pardon me I I did not know what I was doing, I love you so I" "It is an insult," she cried again. ' Leave me leave me 1" And throwing herself baok on the lounge she burst into a passion of tears. Travers, curs ing hia folly, left the room. That evening he told hia aunt he should have to go to New York for a few days. Maud heard the announce ment calmly and took leave of him very coolly. During the days that followed she never spoke of him to Miss Hamers ley, except once when, in an olaboiately careless way, she inquired whether the girl to whom Mr. Travers had been engaged was very pretty. On the other hand she did not seem at all averse to hearing her old friend's eulogies of her favorite nephew. Thia Misa Hamersley notioed, as well as that, as the week wore on, her young niece grew very restless and nervous. Bat, whatever bar thoughts were, she kept ner own counsel. After Travers had been gone a fort night Maud came out of the house one evening toward sundown. She was slowly crossing the lawn, with her long dress trailing over the gross, when the raised her eyes and saw him standing not six feet from her. She stood quite still, not startled; she waa too over whelmingly glad for that. She had just been thinking of him indeed when, for days had she not ? and Baying to herself that of course he would not come back, that she could not expeot it when she had dismissed him so summa rily; and now there he waa before her. Still she spoke lightly aa be came for ward and took her band. "Ion reappear like a ghost," she said. " Did you spring from the ground or drop from the skies 7" Travers laid the band she bad given him on his arm and led her toward tbe parapet where they had stood together on the first evening of ner arrival. When they reached it he said:" Yon know why I have oome back, Maud. I love you with mv whole Heart and soul and strength, and I have come back to tell you so; to tell you that I cannot live without you Stip," he con tinned, aa she waa about to speak, " I know what yon will say, that it is too Budden, that I have not known you long enough. Well, I don't ask yon to ac cept me now. I will wait only let me think that you will care a little for me by-and-bye. Will you, Maud f He leaned over her and looked into her eyes. Alas I Maud could nave said tbat she cared much more than a little for him then. But she was wise and knew that a man should never be given more than he asks for, but rather less. So she only murmured, " Perhaps I may," and Travers, with hia eyea fixed on ner sweet faoe and the roguish dimples at the corners of her mouth, waa content. Presently he said: " Am I pardoned my misdemeanor of the other day? Yes? Then you should let me repeat it to show that I am for given." But thia time Misa Barrow drew her self away with much dienity. " Not at all. x or shame, Jack, Uive me your arm and we will go back to the house. And, mind you, let me explain to your aunt first." And she did. But, to her surprise, Miss Hamersley was not surprised at all. Indeed, some months later, when they were both talking about Miss Bar row s approaching marriage, such a v learn of mischief came all at once over the older lady's faoe that the younger one suddenly said she believed Miss Hamersley bad invited Jack and berselt to her place In J une with an ulterior motive. ' Well, frankly, I did," owned Jack's aunt. ' You were the two nioest young people I knew, and it was my opinion you should make a match of it. As to tbe fact of your ootn having been in love before being a barrier, that was absurd, of courso. All you needed was a chance to unfold a charming little idyl, and I knew no better place than this for such an idyl " Swords. The first weapon used by man was probably a club; and it is also likely feiat in lime missis maaa oi very noiu wood, and somewhat sharpened on one or more sides, so as to inflict a more deadly wound. Wooden weapons of this kind are now in use by some sav age races. Then it was found that more effective weapons of the sort could be made of a harder substance, and short, unwieldy swords were bewn out of stone, very much aa our Iudians made their arrow-heads of flint. Bat a sword of thia kind, although a terrible weapon in tbe bunds of a strong man, was brittle and apt to break ; and to in time, when the use and value of metals came to be understood, swords were made of these substances. The early Romans, and some other nations, had strong, heavy swords made of brocza. But when iron and steel came into use it wa9 quiokly peroeived that they were tho metals of which offensive weapons should be made. By a careful study of the form and use of the sword, from its first inven tion until the present time, we may get a (rood idea of the manner in which ia various ages military operations were carried on. At first men fought at close Quarters, like the beasts they imitated, But as the arts of warfare began to be improved, and aa civilization and en lightenment progressed, men seemed anxious to get farther and farther away from one another when they fought, and so the sword gradually became longer and longer, until, in the middle ages, a man's sword was sometimea as Ions aa himself. But there ia a limit to this sort of thing, and when the use of projectiles which would kill at a great distance be came general, it was found that a soldier was seldom near enough to hia enemy to reach him with his sword; and at tbe present day it is seldom used in actual warfare except by cavalrymen, and these frequently depend as much on the Are arms they carry aa upon their sabers. It is said that cavalry charges, in whioh the swords of the riders are depended npon to rout the enemy, do not fte qnently oconr in the warfare of the pres ent day; and those naval battles of wnion all have read, where the opposing ships are run side by side, and the sailors of one, cutlass in hand, spring upon tLe deck of the other and engage in a hand to hand fight, are now seldom heard of, Our iron clad ships fire at one another from a great distance, or ene of them comes smashing into another with its terrible steel ram ; and a sword would be a very useless thing to a modern sailor. Our armies lie a mile or two apart and pop at eaoh other with long range rifles and heavy cannon, and to the great body of the opposing forces swords would only be an incumbrance. Ht. jichata. General Skobeleffs Carepr. The late General Micbael Skobeleff was probably the most popular man in Russia and the most picturesque soldier in Enrope. In peace be tfexcelled the swells of the kingdom in hia fondness for the luxuries of dress and the dainti ness of hia tastes. In war he waa the embodiment of bravery and the personi fication of reckless fury. Clad in a white uniform that glittered with gold braid, and mounted on a white horse, he led hia men to victories snatched out of the very gulfs of death, and it waa said of those he commanded that they idolized him, and seemed to prefer death at the heels of hia horse to victory under any other commander. He waa of aoldierly carriage and fine physique, black-eyed brown-haired and full-bearded. He came of a race of soldiers. His grand-father, rather and himself were all generals and chevaliers of St. Oaorge, and valor got eaoh one his title and honors. Michael waa the youngest Russian gen eral. He was graduated from the Mili tary Academy in St, Petersburg in 1868, and, without serving in the Guards, he at once pitched into battle in Turkestan at tbe head of a corps of Cossacks. He waa then twenty-five years old. He re mained in Turkestan until 1871, and went thenoeto the Caucasus on the stall of the Grand Dnke Michael. Later he commanded a battalion of the Seventy fourth regiment of the line, and in 1873 he was transferred to Khiva, where the czar was fightiig the khan. When the formality of military disci pline hampered him in thia campaign, he deliberated disobeyed orders and at the same time gave evidence of his eenius as a soldier. In the same cam paign, in order to finish and deliver his report to General Jiauiman, be ana MacGahan. the famous war correspond ent, remained in the palace of tho khaa when it seemed madness to tarry there For this and a reconnoissanoe in dis guise to the Turcoman desert he was given the cross of St. George of the fourth class. When Don Carlos was flghtini? for the throne of Spain Skobe leff joined his staff avowedly to study war out of Rassia, but probably because he could not keep away from war. As a cavalry commander he fought in Turkestan, and here, at night, with 150 men, he dashed into the main camp of the enemy, who, imagining the Russian army upon them, fled without taking even their turbans. JNot one oi mobe leiTfl men was killed or wounded. Tern, porarily left in command he stormed and took the city of Namanyah, which had revolted. For this, though he was but thirty-two years old, he waa made a major-general. Jn the second war witn Khohland he compelled the kban toeur render, and when that country was an nexed was made its governor and given the third class cross of St. George. His next brilliant feat waa in tbe Russo- Turkish war. He had been on tbe staff of the Grand Duke Micbael, been trans ferred to the staff of his father, s lieutenant-general, and his father's com' maud being broken up, be found him nelf out of employment where the tightim? waa heaviest, lie remained in tbe army aa a volunteer, and sent hia name rii triuK through itussia by cross ing the Danube on horseback, sword in hand, at tbe head of a few men, and driving the Turks from their positions overlooking Sistowa. Again, almost in the next dispatches, he was reported at the siege of Plevna, at the head of a whirlwind of cavalrymen, actually pen etrating the fortifications. Bat the in fantry npon whom he relied failed, and Skobeleff had to retire. In the second battle of Plevna he captured two re doubts, and, after defending them for twenty four hours against the incessant hail of lead from a vastly su perior force, he waa forced back, still fighting like a bulldog. He lost 8,009 out of 12,000 men, had seven horses shot from under him, and when the last had gone led the way into the redoubt on foot, waving his oiamond-hilted word. His greatest military feat was, when, with 20,000 men, he stormed and took Lovtsoba in Bulgaria, and won a strate gical point behind Osmaa Pasha's army. The war was not half over when be was made lieutenant-general and commander of the Sixteenth division. When Radetzky and Prince Mersky had both been repulsed by Vessel Pasha at Shonova, Skobeleff made tbe Pasha surrender. At the czar's' order he en tered Adrianople. With hia already famous command be waa long before Constantinople, and finally had charge of all the Russian foroes retiring from Turkey. Since the war tbe world outside Rus sia heard but little of him, though two thirds of hia oonntrymen worshiped him aa the foremost champion of Pan slavist theories. Love for him was said to be one of the few things in which the country and the czar were holly in accord. Last February his soldierly bluntness gave him world-wide promi nence. It was at a dinner of Servian tulenta in Paris tbat he declared a uuggle between the Slavs and Tentons inevitable. He said it would be long and bloody, but the Slavs would con quer. He had the world for hia hearers, and Europe waited anxiously for an ex planation. Skobeleff disavowed any desire to make trouble, or any authority to speak as he did, and the czar re provod him with signal mildness, and sent him to Turkestan for a time. He was thirty-nine years old. Children wear Mother Hubbard and Kate G i ten away dresses of Turkey-red calico, with white muslin pokes or guimpes and sleeves. A Leap for Lire. The citldel of Cairo, Egypt, stands on a steep, rocky bluff above the city, the relative positions of the two bitig very much those of the capitil and the lower town at Washington. It wan the favorite residence of the famous Esrp- tian dictator of the last generation, Mebemet All Pasha, who strongly forti fied it and kept a number of heavy cannon constantly pointed from its walla at tbe city below to overawe the disaffec tion which hia iron rule inevitably pro duced. The walla are still in tolerable repair, and might give some trouble to a force unprovided with heavy siege ar tillery. Above the ramparts are visible at a considerable distance the tall, slen der, white minarets of the Muhamme- dteh mosque, built by Mehemet All. Thia ia one of the principal ornamenta of Cairo, its interior being decorated with a richne68 of coloring unmatched in the world, except, perhaps, by the Albambra palace at Grenade, in iron of the main entrance lies a vast paved quadrangle surrounded by a low colon nade, whioh has acquired a tragic histori cal renown as tbe scene of the famous "masaaore of the Mamelukes" by order of tbe pasha. Mehemet, finding in tho turbulent independence of these war like chiefs a formidable obstacle to his cherished scheme of absolute power, invited them to a banquet in the court-yard oi tne citadel. They rashly accepted the rteacherous courtesy, and were suddenly fired upon in the midst of their revel by a detachment of soldiers concealed in the encircling colonnade. All peri-hed save one, the son of the prinoipal chief, who, alone preserving his presence of mind, threw himself npon the ground and succeeded in reaching his horse, which was tied to an adjoining pillar. Springing upon its back he cut his way through the swarming assailants, and, finding the gates shut against him, took a flying leap from the top of the wall, a height of eighty feet. The horse waa killed on the spot, but the daring Mameluke, escaping with a broken limto, crawled away and hid himself be fore he could be overtaken. SCIENTIFIC NOTES. The transpiration from a forest is nearly twice aa great aa the evaporation from an equal area of free soil. There is reason to believe that ants produce sounds of such high pitoh tbat they are inaudible to the human ear. Remains of a remarkable bird of the Eocene epooh have been found near Rheims by M. de Lemoinne. The bird waa at least ten feet high when ereot, with a much larger skull than that of the ostrich, and affinities it is believed to the duck. It ia reported that a telegram and a telephonic message from Brussels were recently received simultaneously over one wire at Paris. The system is the work of the Belgian meteorological bureau, Herr Van Kisselberghe, and if sucoessfal must prove very valuable. Colors fade under the influence of the electric- light, as in snnlight, but M. Ddoaux find that the effect is weaker. With an arc light of 200 candle power the influence upon oil and water paint ings and colored wool seemed to be about one fourth aa powerful as sun light influence. A Wealthy Newsboy. "Without doubt the richest newsboy in the country is Mike Mykens, of Den ver, Colorado. He is supposed to be worth 850,000, which he has invested in Denver real estate. He is not yet ready to retire from business, but from early morning until midnight may be seen upon the atreeta crying, 'Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Cincin nati, St. Louis and KnFas City morn ing papers.' In connection with his paper stand he has a bootblack's chair, whioh he generally leavea in charge of an assiatant. He sells hia papera at a uniform prioe of teu cents each, and long experience has made him very expert in detecting at a glance from what part of the country any ono cf the strangers who throng the streets of Denver hails. ' Ran after that old man with a white choker and sell him a EuoUju Ilerald, be will say to his as sistant ; or Work off a San Francisoo Bulletin on that slippery-looking cuss under the awning.' Mykens ia no longer a boy, but he ia likely to remain a newboy for years to come." Tower City, Dakota, Las a water sup ply from a remarkable artesian well, the nature of whioh seems to deservo close examination by geologists ou the spot. When the earth was penetrated 560 foot salt water was obtained. Twenty feet further down a gravelly stratum was straok, yielding also salt water. After boring down 604 ftet fresh water mixed with quicksand came up. Now, from a depth of 675 feet, there ia a flow of pure water of steadily increasing quantity. Who can deservedly be called a con. queror? He who conquers hisranooroua passions, and endeavors to turn his enemy into a friend. Thou sbak n?t say, "I will lo7e the wise, but the un wise I will hate;" but thou bhalt love all mankind. After trying his hand at many things in various parts of the country, James Harris one day took it into his head to plant a few orange tress at Ocala, Florida. He now owns 75,000 of the trees and btU an annual income fro a them of &30.000.