A. fiiiiMPil JMflk: lit! ill Hi! m a - vivm x VsavmmwAU . am. v 1 B. F. SCHWEIER, THE 00I8T1TU T10I THE TJJIOI AID TEE UTOEOIXHT OP TEE L1TB. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE II, 1SS4. NO. 24. IN TUM STUBS. A Hnrf of shadows from the iky, Wide tirl.ls witlwut a flush of pm, fi.ant iifele branches tossed ou hLjjh, A sullen wt, a wintry aoen. The rushing of tb swollen brook Comes ou 'Ue in'1 bo,h ,ad 'n1 cold n, bmls am sileut In their nooks, Tbr fl.ivrrsare prisoned 'neatti the mould; ne wood that wrre so green and fair Have noriiiog now to make them glad No BiuiiL-tio. no bloasotn-glow ; " Auj m.iiieliiuea Life U jut as sad. bean tint feels its yooth is pat, " Vhi !.v are dull with heavy care 1 A louely lot 'mid stranger cast j Hew drear and sad It is to bear ! Or bcn a udden darkness falls i here lately shone Love's brightest glow, lb, Lad..w of IVsnair appals The soul, and lays Its courage low. r j thm feel tbat aanuht can heal Our acLing hearts or soothe their pain. Vt look on bih ttie dawn is nijjh, 'Jiesun aid surely rise a-ain. i jnovdrop starting from its sheath, Ynai:g crashes in the sheltered lane, inl till ed daffodils beneath Ifceorcbani-bouBhsare green again. Ami, X ,be thrushes bow they sing' " Thefkviarks bow they suriin high ! Sear iiie b:th come to everything IWtuixt tbe joy tut earth aud sky. Ibennliiue snn dispels the storm Finn scei.es no longer bleak and bare; E'en so bath Life, with all its strife. Sweet Spring-tide seasons fresh and fair. (INK OFTHK FAMILY. There were difference of opinion and titten-ess of speech in lennistoun Manor House. The Stjuire had pone o't in the morn in" with his hat pulled down over his ees, hud banged the door behind him, lud kicked away Topsy, her ladyship j Ma.tef a Huffy white animal always um'.er suae one's feet liad snubbed his bailiff wrongfully, and did not apol ogize, came noaie late for breakfast and r:ed the butler, and, J'when he saw iiie V'ii i, his language was hawfuL" that iiwciioiiary reported, after taking iu tlie le'.tera. Lady Cecilia had a headache, and tea and toast iu bed, and was heard to mur mur to her pil o that "dear Reginald's misfortunes must have affected his bran." Miss Ciss:e, their own fair daughter, remarked coniidentially to her looking-jr'a-a, -Now, my dear, ou've two very s;!y cluidren to manage. How are you to persuade them to kia and be fneacs ?"' To go back to the beginning of txou Ves. They all came from the London tad S.iutli-'Wessex Railway, which suc reeded. in sp.te ot herceopposltwn from tlic Squire and a few other landowner, in exteiidibg itself across an outlying piece of waste land b- lont;inR to tlie Deiiiiistotia estate, and placing iu the Squire's reluctant hundj more ready oioi.ey than lie had ever before p sessed. He amused himself with it iu his o way dabbled in shares, bought anJ sold, ran up and down to and frum Luiuluu utteiier than he hid ever done in his hie before, took the advice of Inends kuowinc iu investments had ;x nioiitl1 mtene enjoyment, six weeks of gTownig cousiernation and nckueis of heart, aud a bad quarter of an hour, when he came to confess his THgaries to the family man of busiuess, od realize the pme he would have to pay for his raiue ot ejaculation. Iidy tecilia behaved admirably. it is not for niielf, dear Lady Mal lowdaie.'he sobbed to her paiticular frieLd and cuntidant, the great lady of tee county, "1 can face peuury, utter destitution as it will be- without a murmur but my children I Poor Cis tie must give up her season in town tiit Lus seut away her maid already .and fays siie will get her dresses made in the village. Aud though we can still xeep Reggie at Oxford, he must sell all bis hoises and for tbe future live with lu iiis aiijwance. People say, Wny ot go abioad and retrench ?' But my n.-ljjiid wouid be miserable, dragged nay from ail his home interests ; and uieiy it is better to face our troubles amongst friend who know u3 and w Ji not desert ua on account of our pov erty ! ' "IVsert you ? Never 1" cned Lady Mailowuale, with a sympathetic preas ure of the hand. "What difference can mere waut of fortune make to us 1 Cissie shall come to me in town next ilay for one week only ; and I'll take care to keep Gerald well out of her ay." was the muttered sequeL "I khew you'd say so. We've done all we iHjssitily can. All the horses, except Reginald's old cob, are sold; the hunters, Cissie's mate, Lady Grey, the carriage-horses, my ponies all are piuv. Only one gardener is left. Souf fict has had notice " "Xo !" ejaculated Lady Mallowdale, la a tone cf sincerest commiseration then mentally "I wonder what wages be got ? I must secure him. Mallow dale leads me such a life about the Den istiiun dinners !" "Jones, our faithful old butler, stays; shall have a plain cook, a girl from the village for housework, and a lady help." '"Good 'racious, what's that ?" ask ed laiy Mallowdale, who was behind her generation. "I've read something in the papers about ladies being serv ants ; but do you really mean to have one V "Of course I do Just think of the comfort and the saving 1 I call it prov idertial, my meeting Mrs. Crawshay that winter, and reading all her letters to the paers and speeches ; and it seems the very thing we want. Jast think a nice wall-educated girl, used to good society, who can take the place of a great clumsy housemaid, dust one's china without chipping or cracking, or der the dinners lor one, and, most like ly, show cook how to make all sorts of delicious little dishes that cost nothing; do up j, ly lace for me, make my dresses and cans, aud do all that my maid used to get twenty-live pounds aud all my last year's di esses for and at the same lime be a companion and a real friend ! She can study with Cecilia, play duets wiiU her the bass, of course write my letters for me, aud do a thousand things besides." Lady Cecilia stopped, out of breath. "But did you ever hear of such a person ?" asked her friend doubtfully. "Dozens 1 Here's a note from one the very thing 1" aud Lady Cecilia, who had talked herself into the best lwiiible spirits, produced It in triumph. "Poor thing, an orphan, only anxious to lind a home where she may be of use! Ada St, Clair such a pretty name t will do housework, all but the rough work, and act as lady's-maid if required, and asks only thirty pounds, and. to be treated as one of the family ; and would you believe it ? Reginald won't hear of it says he'll go to Boulogne oouer than have her in the house, and won't read or hear a word on the sub ject I" "Dreadful," declared Lady Mallow dale, "after all your sacrifices !" Lad? Cecitia. however, on her arrival at home, found that, aftrr all, she was to have her way, Cissie having taken the Squire in hand and coaxed him into a state of grumpy acquiescence. ..o"Ada SL CUil lndeed h8 growled. Sounds like a young woman in the Stereoscopic Company's window Bet ter get a decent housemaid. Walt till Reggie comes home I Your mother'll wish her far eaougt then I" Cissie laughed and argued, sorely against her own secret inclination. "I could have dusted the drawing room, and made mother's caws aud bonnets,anisewu to Topsy and the love birds, without having an intrusive fe male spoiling our evenings," she thought; but she was a good-natured little body, and from the earliest days of her sensible girlhood had petted aud spoilt her silly little mother more tlian was perhaps quite judicious. " "One of the family I' Well, I sup pose, that being the case, the correct thing will be for me to go and meet her this afternoon," she observed some days later. "Rather you than I, russ." said the Squire. "Remember, you've promised to be civil ; and you must find a man and horse to take the wagonette and me to the station." Cissie was in good time at the little roadside station, and in no danger of mistaking the one lady-passenger who alighted, a tall slight girl carrying a Mentone basket, who. with a rustle of many flounces and a glitter of jet fringes swept majestically along the small platform. "Miss St, Clair, I suppose ?" said Cis sie. "I hare come to met you." The young lad? raised her long pale eyelashes languidly and bowed distantly. "Have you had a pleasant journey ?" Miss St. Clair surveyed Cissie with a pair of keen biue eyes before replying, noting her weather-stained tweed suit and rather battered felt hat. "Thanks," she drawled still more distantly and languidly. "Is there a carriage here ?' "Close by. Can I help you to see about your lnggage " "Thanks if you'll be so good." She motioned to a huge pile of dress bas kets and trunks, handed ber basket to Cissie, and swept oft slowly towards the wagonette. "Takes me for one of the maids," said Cissie to herself delightedly, "and means to show me my proper place at once. What fun P The drive was an almost silent one. Miss St. Clair receiving Cissie's remarks with frigid graciousness and making scant response. As they alighted, the Squire suddenly apiteared. Ah, CIss, come along with, me I I want you. How do. Miss SU Clair ? You'll find Lady Cecilia expecting you" and he carried off his daughter, leav ing Miss St. Clair eyes and mouth open, and the aristocratic composure of her demeanor considerably disturbed standing under the portico staring after them. It was awkward enough meeting again at dinner, though Cissie was good-tempered and Miss SL Clair evi dently not troubled with over sensitive ness. There was an undoubted restraint over the party, and the evening was, by mutual consent, cut as short as possi ble. "I don't like her," said Cissie to lier usual confidant, her looking-glass, that nigbU "Her language and her dress are ooth too fine. Black tulle and silver for a quiet dinner l But she's deep ; and, though I'm sure she isn't a lady, it would be hard work to prove it and do no goud either." Three or four weeks passed unevent fully. Half of Lady Cecilia's visions were realized. Tbe interesting Ada seemed determined to justify her de scription of herself. She was up early to assist Lady Ceiilia to dress, aid down in time to make the breakfast, if Cecilia gave her tbe chance, which was seldom. The lighter part of the house work was done thoroughly and with magical rapidity, to the bewildered ad miration of her rustic assistant. Cook however opposed any invasion of her domain. She's an interloper, she Is ; and I'll have none of 'em in mv kitchen." As for the faithful Jones, he thus de livered himself "Whatever my opinion may be.ma'am, I keeps it to myself, and treats her with the respect due to an 'obby of my la dy's." Nevertheless he sternly declined as sistance in plate-cleaning and table laying, and received all orders from the lady-help under protest. Miss St. Clair was not musical, so the duet-playing was Impracticable ; but bhe wrote Lady Cecilia's notes, made her caps exquisitely, took Topsy and Mouton, the poodle, out for their daily airing, and finished oil some mighty performances in orewel work which had been abandoned in despair by Lady Ce cilia, listening tbe while with the pro foundest attention and sympathy to the good lady's gentle stream of small talk. In fact, she made herself so in dispensable that Cissie felt herself "crowded out" many a time, and had hard work to combat a rising sense of injury. "It's mean of me to the last degree just when I ought to be so glad of any tliing to make the poor little mamma happy nowadays too, when I must be wita papa as much as possible, to keep him from moping about; finding fault with the men, and fretting over the im provements which he meant to have made this year. I do dislike her more than ever since Sunday. "Oh, you wretch I" she exclaimed suddenly to her pretty pink reflection. "I've found you out I Last Sunday T Yes, you've bated her ever since she took your Sunday-school class, and Mr. Athelney said what a help it was to have any one so well up in the routine, and he carried home her books for her. You're jeal ous, Cissie Dennistoun jealous of Herbert Athelney I As if he cares a button for youl And yet and yet, when ne said he couldn't bear to see any one else on my poor mare, and gave papa such a fancy price for her, I did tninK that he Never mind ; he may marry Ada if he likes ; and she'll live at tiie Vicarage, and perhaps ride past here on Lady Grey sometimes. "On, dear oh, dear I There" with a proud little toss of the head "there's my last moan ; and now to behave like a gen tleman" Cissie's views of her own sex were not exalted. "She shall have my class every Sunday morning, when he's sure to be there, and go, instead of me, to the Mallowdales' garden-partj he's asked ; aod we'll have him here to lawn tennis and dinner he offered to teach her when she said she didn't play ; and and you're beaten, you spiteful thing I" and she shook a pretty little fist at her own flushed face in the gla5, aud marched away bedwards with the step of a conqueror. "Why do you. rjever go out with Ada ?" asked Lady Cecilia plaintively. "You're very unkind to the poor thing, Cissie. Every morning she has to go my errands alone down to the village and afternoons too sometimes. It doesnt look as if we really considered her a one of the family." "Ada can amuse herself," said Cissie shortly Ciss had grown somewhat sharp and irritable of late. "I saw ber chatting away most happily to the che mist's assistant the one with the red whiskers in Love Lane. She puts on ber interesting silence and melancholy only with her indoor dress." Cissie stopped as the subject of ber remarks entered, rather Dink and excited. "Dear Lady Cecilia, such an escape we have had 1 Poor Mouton a butcher's cart right over his poor dear paw I Fortunately the young gentleman from the chemist's was passing, and told me what to do. I ran all the way home witli him-iu my arms Mouton, I mean and have sponge! and bandanged him, and he seems quite recovered." She paused, breathless, and Cissie crimsoned with self-reproach. By way of penance and atonement, she took the first chance of suggesting that Miss SU Clair's lesson in tennis had better come off soon. "Why not to-morrow ? I know Mr. Athelney is disengaged : and we can get the Mayhews and Freddy Brand just a nice party for dinner" Lady Cecilia approved ; Ada acqui esced sweetly, and withdrew to arrange an effective toilette for the occasion. "I met Medlock to-day," announced the Saulre the next day at luncheon. "He's going back to Leicestershire to morrow, and taking Athelney with him. I never knew he was staying at the Vicarage. He's coming with Athelney this afternoon, of course. He was com ing to call ; but I told him that would do as welL lie's tennis-mad, I believe plays splendidly. Another teacher for you. Miss St. Clair." "Thanks ; you are very good," mur mured the fair Ada confusedly ; "but I'm afraid so many people my recent mourning you must excuse my appear ing." "Nonsense I You went to Mallow dale, Dont be shy 1" "Very good," said Ada sweetly. But later in the afternoon, when Cis sie went to Miss St. Clair's room to an nounce the arrival of some of the guests, she found the shutters closed, a smell of eau de Cologne, and Ada with a wet bandage on her head,"totally prostrate.'" Cissie sympathized, and did all she could to make her comfortable, and conscience-freed enjoyed the rest of the day thoroughly. Ada cam? down pale and extra lan guid ths next day. "1 am going to try what fresh air will do," she announced. "No, tbanks.MLK3 Dennistoun ; I'd rather go alone." The walk appeared to have done her good. She came in so fresh and bright that the squire was actually compli mentary. "You look another woman I" he ex claimed. "By-the-way, is Monton still under medical treatment? I'd have sworn it was his face I saw looking out of tne chemist's as I passed " "I was there getting something for myself," said Ada demurely. "It has done me so much good." "Then let's send for Athelney, and have tea on tbe lawn and more tennis. No ; he and Medlock were off by the early train. Brand then, or somebody or I'll play you two." Half an hour later the Squire and Cissie were indulging hi some prelim inary practice, and Ada, having settled Lady Cecilia and ber crewel-work com fortably on a garden-seat, was arrang ing a picturesque rustic tea-table under the shade of a big cedar, when the Vicar's tall shadow preceded him across tbe lawn, accompanying a second shadow, belonging to a stout hilarious elderly gentleman in semi-clerical at tire, carrying a racket. "Hallo I' ' shouted the Squire. "Not gone yet ?" "We missed our train," began Mr. Athelney. "He fell asleep over his clothing-club report ha, ha 1" broke in Dr. Medlock, in a voice tbat shook the evergreens. "Lady Grey had a cough, and he sat up all last night with her iu tbe stable ha, ha. ha 1 I saw the balls going from my bedroom window ha, ha I And now Tve dragged him here. Awfully hard work It was, Miss Cissie ha, ba ! Why, Polly Polly Loveday I You here ?" and he faced round suddenly and cut off Miss SL Clair in a quiet retreat by the far side of the belt of rhododen drons. "How In the world did you get here ?" Miss SL Clair faced him for a minute, first grew red, then Dale, then gave a pert little toss of her head. "That's my affair, Dr. Medlock. Tm doing no harm." "Why, Dootor Medlock, do you know Miss SL Clair? What is it?" and Lady Cecilia struggled to her feeL let ting all ber crewel-balls patter down upon Mouton s nose. "Know her. Lady Cecilia? Why, I've a letter In my pocket from her mo ther I Don't you remember our old nurse Loveday ? Here it is " 'Pollv's gone for a lady-help, and has cast off her poor old mother. She always was a genteel girl, and wanted to play the lady. She gets twice her old wages, and does half tbe work, and sees the best of company ; but why should she be so secret about it ?" "Old fool I" muttered Polly unfllially and emphatically. She had quite lecovered herself by this time, and stood looking Dr. Med lock in tbe face, with a saucy defiance that seemed far more natural than her former languid serenity. The Squire, as yet uncomprehending, put his arm around his wife, who clung to him aghasL "Polly, Polly to think that yon should have come to this I Our best Sunday scholar, and such a favorite of my wife's I Such an Interest she always took in you when you were our house maid and a very good one yon were I'll say thaL But" the situation seem ing to dawn upon tbe Doctor "do you mean to say you've had the audacity to impose on these good people, you naughty girl ? Ha, ha I By Jove,there's tbe best of the joke to come ! Your mother says 'There's an honest young man after her as is able to keep her comfortable ; but I'm afraid she's having ber head turned by a young clergyman In those 1 parts who's leading her to think far too. much of him.' " "Oh, atop, stop!" broke in Cissie. Dont be severe upon a woman. Doctor Medlock. Perhaps she can explain." "Thank you, Miss Dennistoun ; you're very good, I'm sure ; but I'm happy t say I want none ot $pur kind excuses," Polly interrupted. "It may be a relief to jour mind to know tbat I'm engaged to be married iu a month to a young man in a genteel way of business, who intends setting up for himself at Mi chaelmas as chemist and drupgisL" - "And I've taken her to Mallowdale and introduced her everywhere 1" moan ed Lady Cecilia. "That was part of the bargain," said tbe undaunted Polly. "I'm sure n one can say I've not done my part." The girl was mistress of the situation. Doctor Medlock and tbe Squire even looked at her with a sort of admira tion. "You young hussy," said the former, "what put such a prank into your head?" "Reading and observation," was the reply. ' I found that ladies were get ting good pay for playing at being serv ants 5 so why should not a servant get the same for playing at being a lady ? My bast mistress gave me all her cast off dresses when she married, and, as far as look goes, I'm Bure I'm as good as any lady, and, as for the work, a great deal better." The Squire fonnd that the disclosure was proving too much for Lady Cecilia, who was making arrangements for a speedy fit of hysterics. Cissie and the Vicar were both stand ing dumbfounded, blushing like two peonies. It was evidently time for hint to assert himself. "Now, my good girl, the best thing you .can do is just to go indoors and write to that good old mother of yours, and say you're going home to her to stay till your marriage. Yon shall start to-morrow comfortably, and have your month's wages." "Quarter, If you please. I am not a domestic servant." "Quarter then ; and youll bold your tongue like a sensible girl, not only for our sakes, but your own and your che mist's eh?" Polly nodded. "Now be off and pack np 1" The Vicar and Doctor Medlock" here discreetly bade farewell. "Now cheer np, Cecilia," said the Squire, turning to that lady ; "there's no harm done. No one will ever hear more of iL It might have been worse if Reggie bad been at home. He's had a providential escape, I say." "Oh, Reginald, Reginald, I never will have my own way again as long as I live !" cried his wife penitently. The Squire laughed. "Well, well, we've both made some mistakes, and I wish mine were as easily forgotten as yours, my dear." lie picked up tbe crewels and, with a resonant kiss, replaced Lady Cecilia in her basket-chair. Cissie, smiling and blushing, was busy at ber table under the cedar tree making a pleasant suggestive clinking with her caps and saucers. Monton composed himself anew to repose, the rooks overhead cawed peace fully as they sailed homewards, aod the setting sun sank on the last day of dis cord at Dennistoun. Bars Cars ta Tartar. There are no sidewalks in Galata, and everybody goes in the streets. As a consequence, the first week's fatali ties of Uie horse ear company included four Armenians, three Turks, a Nu bian, and a Greek, children and dogs not counted. Business was equally good tbe second week; but tbe third, they had the misfortune to Include a Pasha. It was a bunglmg piece of bus iness, for they did not kill tbe Pasha; they only mangled him. And when he Kot around again be put in his whole time working for an Injunction against tbe road. It was shown m evidence that the company did not want the Pasha or the other people killed, tbat they had been at considerable expense to dispose of them; and further, tbat it had rung Its bells, as by law required and so was not responsible for the peo ple who got In the way. The Pasha filed his answer, and said that he had heard the bell; that any one not dear could not help hearing it; but that it was not his bell, and he could not be expected to look out for every slave that rang one in the public streets. If the slaves were to be bell sheep for the Pashas he thought it was tune for the latter to resign. It was a very pretty quarrel, and occupied a good deal of Government time. But finally a com promise was reached and an arrange ment adopted which has continued in use until tbe present time. Tbe speed of the car was not slackened nor its right of the way denied. Bat In con sideration of the crowded state of the thoroughfares and the impossibility of making the populace turn out or mind the bells the company was handicapped with outrunners. Each car was pro vided with a negro, armed with a club whip and tin horn, whose business it was to run some fif ten paces ahead on the track blowing his horn. They are pietnresque fellows, these outrunners, in their red fezes and green shirts, that are open nearly to the waist. Atfvlea to Mj Soa. Did yon ever hunt for something yon didn't want to find? asks Bardette? People frequently do. No man wants to find a horizontal collar button, nor does the gentlewoman who carefully and anxiously looks under the bed every uiUht for a man, really went to find tbe man. She believes there is one there, but she wonld be greatly disappointed and surprised to find him. Never look for things you do not want to find, my son, It is hard enough to find the things you wanL If you do not want to find faults in your friends, do not look for them. If yon do not want to find your enemies, do not hunt for them. They will hunt for yon, my son. And a hat is .worse, they will find yon, too. 1 bave known men who passed all their lives bunting for things which no body wished to bave discovered and which only made the finder miserable. There are men who can't smell a helio trope held at their lips, but have a nose for carrion that would be a fortune to some poor struggling buzzard. He never looks for a good point about any man. He finds the spots on the sun, and sees not one ray of its brightness, A clear running spring brook gives him the hydrophobia, and a mud puddle is a reviving Turkish bath to his mean little souL If he could go to heaven, which, praised be all goodness, he never can, he wouid be of all men most mlseiabie, be cause he could find no mud to throw at the angels. Faunas an4 Docs. The dogs are a blessing to the Turks, ff a Mohammedan gets very drunk and wants to run amuck and is afra d to go out and kill a man for fear of the after consequence, when he gets to feeling real nice and murderous he takes his knife and goes Into the streets and sticks it recklessly into the first dog he meets. If he is real murderous he kills two, anil so great is the respect for the canine tbat be gts more reputation as a "bed man" out of this proceeding than If he had killed four or five mere Mohammedans. A pasha ranks nearly jp to a dog in point of secular respect, tut the dog holds over him in religious sanctity. The dog has the right of way in the public streets, and I have seen a heavy pack train turn aside for one ly ing asleep on the cobbles. So fully assured are they of their social position that they have lost tbe sensitiveness one expects from the race in civiliza tion. One day in the fish-market a greasy, yellow fellow walked into a stall and selected a good sized fish while the vender's back was turned, hauled it down and began licking it preparatory to making a meaL A Turk never allows his religion to drop Into mat ters of loss and gain, and the owner of the fish sacrilegiously Interfered with a club. A civilized dog would have taken the hint and departed, but this canine saint bad too much respect for his cloth. Relying on his sanctity, at the first blow be sat down on the pavement by the bsh and lifted up bis band to heaven in a howl. He shivered and squirmed and wrinkled his skin as the blows grew more persuasive, but It was some min utes before be was convinced that the affair was not a joke and that be really was not wanted. It is the foreigners who abuse them mosL I kicked one so bard behind that be tilted clear over and struck on bis nose. He did not pay any attention or make a sound. He just tilted back into bis old position and went on sunning himself without tven looking around. Horn tii story tlrsw. Tfne lowest name printed on tbe stone W) In the doorway of a Court street sOdujg, Boston is only an inch or two a-.e the threshold. To add to the Crtiiy which may be experienced by 'rtai-fett vision none of the names on the rt are in very large letters. A near sigtVd man was observed rubbing bis nnee aiig this slab in a downward direction. As he settled lower and low er, absorbed to his inspection, two or three people stepped to look at him. In order to get to iht, last name be was obliged substantially to lie down in the doorwav. By this time the two men had increased to Bvo, and five was enough to do the buslnea. When the near-sighted man had got on his feet again there was a orowti. The crowd, or rather the inner ring of kt looked at the man with curiosity and trest, and the man returned it with aitst and auiinvaure. , "What's the matter?" he aaied, sharply. Nobody answered him. "I understand there's a man druaiaw fainted in the doorway." The oflicer elbowed his w,ay throng the gathering throng. "Where is her' he demanded again. The near-sightec man had passed on. The drunken man was nowhere to be seen. No two people told the same story. Tbe officer ended by clearing tbe sidewalk. But pulsations of the original excitement continued to throb about that doorway for hours. Everybody knew there had been a row, but nobody agreed as to the cause. A Uiief bad been arresied, a man bad been obbed, a street fight had taken place. Late in the afternoon one ragged ur chin was explaining to auolher in front of tbat awful theatre of o rat ions bow this was the place where "the big codger had hit the little codger and dnv bis whole front teeth down bis neck." The awful mystery that hangs about most street excitements hung about this one all day. Anotliar Kalla of Washington. In the office of the Rogers Iron Com pany at Ausable Forks, Virginia bangs a document in the handwriting of George Washington, whtcb Is an object of much iuterest to visitors. It is a memorandum for arrangements which were ro bo observed lu entertaining at Mount Venion of the Count de Ro chambeau, who was expected to visit Washington tliere. It reads: JIEMOUASUfM FOB THE SEBVASTS: ''They are to cross at Colchester and lodge at Dumfries. 'They will, for themselves, get enter tainment at the best public bouse in the town, aud direct dinner to be ready for us at that pluce by 12 o'clock to morrow, and by no means to exceed iL "They are to draw public forage fpi their horses, this being laid in at that place. "They are to set out at 5 o'clock to morrow morning for Fredericksburg and put up at the best tavern, where we shall lodge, draw public forage there also, and are to wait there for our arri val or further orders. "Geo. Washington." "Moot Vebnon, 11th September, 17S1. "N. B. Public forage is to be drawn for the horses of the Count de Roch anibeau, etc." This document was found nearly fifty years ago among the papers of Benjam in Graves, wbo was tbe third sheriff of CHntou county. It has been in the pos session of his grandson, II. D. Graves, ever since. ' Chanced H anda. At the beginning of the oil excite ment in Pennsylvania a very religious old farmer wbo owned forty acres in the center of the ' belt" had offers for his farm until he couldn't sleep uights. They began at $4,000 and went up to SdO.UOO, but to each and every would be purchaser the old man steadily replied: "If tbe Lord bai put coal -lie under my farm it isn't for me to dispute his will." One day however the agent of a syn dicate came along aud asked what figure the old man would set on his acres. "I've bin offered toO.OOO." "Yes." "I've bin saying as how tbe Lord put the ile there for some purpose of his own, "Exactly." "Well, now, if you could convince me that about one barrel in ten of the ile from this farm would be used for people to read their bibles by I reckon I'd set my figures at aoout ftX),000." In less than three hours the farm changed hands. Boston has 55,573 school children. Cape May la to have a 100,000 ler. Fig brandy la a California drink. FUhiag Traps. Among other exhibits in the Nation al mnum of fisheries, recently opened in Washington. Is the model of a Greek netting boa, which. In all respects save, one resembles the ordinary boats to be found along onr coasts, and that excep tion is a peculiar projection at the nose, which is said to be the last vestige of the ram which adorned the prows of the Roman triremes two thousand years ago. Every nation seems to have its marine architecture represented. The lug-sailed boats fmm Scandinavia, the lateen rigs of the Mediterranean, the unwieldy jtiuksof China, the rakish, piratical craft of the Malay, are all exhibited; but the masterpiece of the room Is a model of the three-masted schooner, Lizzie W. Matthewson, of Province town, whose graceful lines and beautiful proportions elicit unqualified praise, and it was to this model that a gold medal was given at I,ondon, last year. The ensemble of the larger room is perfecL The fishing nets, which hang in graceful loops from the ceiling, the life-size figures of the fishermen clad in the garments of their calling, and poised in attitudes typical of various peculiari ties connected with their hazardous trade, the plaster cast of the cuttle-fish, with its spreading tentacles, looking like a huge spider suspended from a mam moth cobweb, together with many other strange and grotesque objects, all meet the eye at once, presenting a novel spectacle, which is greeted by exclama tions of surprise and pleasure. In the cases arranged around the room are found thousands of articles representing the growth and extent of this interest. Beginning with the rude club of the savage, one can gradually' trace the successive steps of improve ment np to the most complex traps of civilized ingenuity. Hooks of stone, wood, bone, and of wood and bone, with the barbs fastened by winding with the sinews of beasts, scarcely wilder than the barbarian fisherman, are shown in conjunction with the pro cess of making the steel hooks which the boys use when they take their Sun day rlslilng trips up the Potomac. The rudely sculptured float of the Alaskan Indan can be contrasted with tl e brightly-painted bob from the fac tory of a Yankee manufacturer. Un couth stone knives of wonderful struc ture bave a ludicrous appearance in comparison with the gleaming steel from a Massachusetts cutlery. Artifi cial flies of a thousand delicate sh ides, filmy shells and shimmering spoon books, recall to the angler hours passed in casting for tbe greedy baas or troll ing for the lively pickereL in another case is the collection of reels, and tbe spectator can almost hear the familiar click, click of the snap as the line Is drawn by the frightened and struggling fish. On a large drum cov ered witb a beautiful shade of blue plush Is arranged tbe collection of fish ing rods, from the eight and ten ounce split bamboo, bass and trout By rods to the heavy grades used in capturing the gamey salmon. American workmen excel the world In the manufacture of fishing rods, and since the London exhibition tbe export trade in this branch has been multiplied several times. The superiority of American rods consists in the combina tion of lightness and flexibility with tenacity and strength, and in the inter national contest our representative not only made the longest cast, but the (lies were never snapped from his lines, although the contestants lost many. Turning from the implements of the angler one notices the nets and traps of the fishermen who find not merely sport but livelihood in the cappture of the fish A net made of human hair, from the Fetjee Islands, is exhibited, but it is not stated whether the hair is from tbe head of a missionary or noL Nets of the most delicate workmanship, from Japan and the far East, are shown. The primitive traps of the aborigine and Uie intricate inventions of civiliza tion can be seen. Kapoleon. On the Avenue de Keyser, in Ant werp, tbe broad stone-paved street that leads from the Cathedral square to the Zoological Gardens stands a circular, windowless building. After paving a (ranc for admission I was left to grope my way along a narrow, dark passage way, which only came to an end when a quintette of toes tried to dislocate a staircase. Stumbling upward, day light finally appeared by the opening of a small door. The scene was bewilder ing; the transformation was as wonder ful as it was sudden. A moment before I bad been propelling my way through groups of jolly Belgians who thronged the avenue; now I stood on the battle field of Waterloo, one of those marvel ous panoramas of battle scenes that picture the conflict with startling reality. A clear sky, save for a patch of black clouds in the east that threat ened a thunder storm and a few lurid shafts of flame shooting from burning buildings, gave a mocking brightness to the scene of blood. All around the eye ranged over imaginary distances of bills and valleys aud steep-roofed houses until the earth and sky joined hands and dropped the curtain. While yet taking in tbe wide view, I walked to the wooden railing that incloses the platform, and leaned over. The first look almost mesmerized me with horror. I shuddered with a terror painfully real. There lay, almost within reach, a dead soldier, bis sabrecut face both bloody and pale, bis eyes glaring with transfixing glassiness, bis teeth protrud ing from the bloodless, shrunken lips, his hair tangled in bloody masses. Be- ' side him, almost hidden in the long ; grass, was his gun, snapped in two, I whi e hi-t helmet, res'.ing on a bed of j violets, faded snd dying from the crush, ; lay near bis dead horse. It is supiosed i to be 5 o'ch ck In the afternoon. To the right is a deep ravine, a ready filled witb dead and dying soldiers. On one side is a British square, each man a citadel of strength as dt fiance and cour age gleam from his eye. One noble fellow, pieroeJ by a ball, la dying, bis right band clutching his coat with a terrible grasp. One can almost bear the death rattle of the berol Bearing down upon them with a wild, reckless abandon is a corps of grenadiers and the Milhaud cuirassiers, with drawn j sabers, with which to add to tbe groan ing, bleedin; beaps in tbe ditch. Here one is thrown from hs saddle, aud is being dragged to death over the up turned earth; there a shell from au English gun is c-eaving a horrible path way through a line of begrimed uni- I forma. Over all is shed the reflection from burniug barns and hostelries. S irroundeJ by a scute or officers a sol der, plainly attired, though his uni - betokened military rank, la acxi- ous'y watching the straggle and ques tioning tbe peasant at his sid Napoleon reads his doom and his at ntencel One sees Napoleon every whee in Europe. Canvas and paint, marble and stone, clay and terra cotta, wood and wax have all been utilized to pro duce his form and features, and even the rocky wall that juts into the Rhine where the Lurlei nymph once kept house is said to portray the very like ness of the great Emperor, but as far as I could see the jagaed edge might have represented Robin Hood or Ben jamin Brown wita as much correctness had not the guide b ok assured me I was mistaken. The saloons of Ver sailles aud tbe Louvre-picture bim as a pretty-featured boy posing at h-s mother's knee; as tbe Consul, standing in stately attitude before his fellow ministers; as tbe husband, surrounded by Josephine and her children; as the determined and almost unconquerable soldier at the Pyramids, at AusterliU, at Wagram, at Jena. But Brussels cans the climax. In one of the rooms of the Weirtz Gallery is a stretch of canvas which for blood curdling awlulness and condensed hor ror cannot be equalled bv same of the martyrdom paintings in the Roman galleries. In the midst of hissing, darting flames stands Napoleon in belli Clad in a military costume, gay with its colors and adornments, be stands erect with folded arms. Crowd ing closely around him are scores of wild eyed creatures who, with an im petuosity of revengeful grief and in tense hatred, are reviling him as the author of all their misery and unhappi ness. A mother defiantlv holds a leg, reeking witb blood, before his eyes a ghas'ly relic of a'boy murdered in bit tie; a father bears in bis armsahiedous head all that is left of his only son; a brother carries 'he trunk of a brother slain at Waterloo, and confronts the great maker of war; a child In the background is borne down with the re mains of her father. One leaves the room with a feelii g of discomfort that haunts bim like a bad dream ior days alterward. 1 saw Napoleon still again In London at Madame Tussaud's exhibition on Baker streeL An .xtra fee admits the visitor to tbe Napoleon room. In its center, lying in state on what was bis own camp bedstead at SL Helena, rests Napoleon, clai in his chasseur uniform and covered with the cloak he wore at Marengo. In one corner of the apart ment is seen the famous carriaze cap turea from Napoleon at Waterloo a remarkable old vehicle, having carried its illustrious owner to Muse w, to Dresden, to Pans, to the Mediterran ean, and finally to Waterloo. Now it is shown for sixpence! Inside it is a w nderful combination of secret drawers, writing desks, diniug tables that fold out of the way, powder magazines, gun cases, sword scabbards and pistol pockets. In fact, it was bis armory, bis dining room, and his bed room combined. Tbe rest of tbe room is filled with touching relics the coun terpane used on tbe camp bed on which he died, stained witn his blood! His coronation robe, faded aud ciurnpled; a tooth brush taken from his dressing case; a golden snuff box; his war atlaj bewiidenngly marked aud re-maikU; his knife, fork and spoon ued at SL Helena, and bis shirt and drawers even. France still has bis impeiial crown, but tbat has ben decreed by the Frence Senate to be ignomuiiously sold alone with tbe other crown jewe's. Tnfimg and silly you may ssy to attach any importance to these reminders of a great man, but nevertheless one looks upon them wiJi a curiosity that soon deepens into awe. The end ot my sight-seeing of Napo leon was reached wneu 1 eutared golden doomed Invalided through the biah roofed church where doz.-ns of shot suined and suell-torn bauuers each a history in itself tell more eloquently than words of the glorious victories of the dead Emperor in Italy, in Austria, iu Prussia in all Europe, in fact. Beneath these old war tlas tue crippled, battered soldier from the adjoining hospital kneels before a golden Madonna and reverently crosses his palsied hands. V e as reverently lean over the marble wall and gaze long and earnestly at the massive porphry mausoleum illumined by golden aud crimson and yellow-uued rays of sunlight that slime through the stained glass windows a mighty rock covering a few specks of dust and scattered pieces of withered bones all that is left on earth of Napoleon Bon aparte! flaring Cness Blindfold. There is nothing very remarkable in playing a game of chess without seeing the board. When one mastered, the trick is not only fairly easy of perfor mance, but tbe fact tbat tbe process is purely mental rather facilitates than impedes the action of the mind. To the blind folded chess-player, there is present a mental picture of the board with the pieces in position. He can change the position of the men as easily as he can think, and after be hat once mastered the difficulty of fixing" the mental picture, it is distinctly be fore bim. Some players, who do not m tbeir common process of memory use picture phantoms, work out the moves as algebriacal propositions are occasionally worked, by phantoms of sound; but as a rule, chess-players are mental-picture-readers, and can at pleasure call np any one of several pictures of boards as they lait conceived them. The most difficult feat, and one which very Tew mental chess players can accomplish, is to play two or three games simultaneously, tbe moves made by their opponents being told them in close sequence and the.r own moves being directed after all the reports of the proceedings of their opponent have been received. Thus, if there be sev eral plavers against tbe one mental player, he must be told and remember what each of his adversaries has done before he begins to give the instruc tions for his several counter moves. In this exploit the most perfect devel opment of the menial faculty of dis tinct picturing and the displacement and recall of mental p'cturea at will is exhibited. The prodigious difficulty of the feat can be realized in the at tempt to perform iL Even the expert blind-folded chess-player can larely succded in accomplishing the perfor mance we have attempted to describe. The Rothschilds own 1400,000,000 of Uni'ed Slates bonds. Washington territory promises a large yield of fruit this season. A swarm of bees, nine miles long, recently visited Oaxaca, Mexico. Forty cords of oak wood will yield just about tea cords of tuerchauUble charcoal. NEWS IN BRIEF. Staten Island censuses 40,000 resi dents. Prince Leopold's widow will have to s'rng le along on an annual Income of 140.000. Rowell has mae up.vird of S0. - 000 nut of the various walking matc'uC3 he has entered. The refflnin-r Duke of Cohunr is a studenL Tbe King of Bavaria is an artist dreamer. A scheme is on foot for estaWsh- Inc turtle parks nn the coasts of Pro vence. Algeria and Corsica. More than sixtv p"r "nr, of the adult male population of New Mexico can neither read nor write. The largest cotton emwer in southeast Arkansas ha tv-t ween S.OuO and 9.000 acres in cultivation. Whooping cough nh the"inTTri-ny old as w 11 as vnnfr persons on the Pa lfic coast, it is reported. Bismarck. It is said. sp'k' Frne, nndentarKis E iglish an I Italian. a'ks Russian and is acquainted with Polish. Cremstion establishments under the control of the G vnifn'nf t t be found In all the chief c; ties of J itain. On the South Park Railroad. Colo rado, is a line of tree stnmp of an un known kind in all stages of petrifica tion. Five-cent cigars, a correspondent who alleges accurate knowledge avs, are rmoked by most Congressmen in Washington. The world's tin production amounted last year to 4"."70 tor ah- ut one-third of which was consumed In the United States. Proportions of gunpowder as mido by the government are seventy-fiv" parts nitre, fifteen parts charcoal and ten parts sulphuf. A missionary, who has completed a translation of the Dmk of Mormon into Spanish, has gone on a pro&elyting Uur in Mexico with It, Italic tyi. It Is s.vrt. wa first in troduced by Aldus Pius Manntins in an edition of Virgil, pnuted in liiJl, and was first called A Mine. Tbe Mtyor of Vienna, AnstrH. r rently received a donation of 100 0 0 florins and a seale l-tter. wliic'i is not to be opened until 1390. According to the laws of Wyom'ni there shall I no d?sritn)nar.i m nn lj in tnat Territory wiih regard to sex in the pay of any kind of work. Mary Allen ot Decatur connfy, Iowa, has captured fifoeen yoiug wolves, for which she has received in bounties the sum of $15. Dwelling houses at llai'ev, Idaio, are invaded by an insect which eini'3 an odor, it is mid. s sirkei uig tLat "all who smell it want to d.e." The cigarettes manuf.ctnrel la Vera Cruz, Mexico, are all made by women and children, and tney earn only twenty-five cents per day. The Prince R.yai of Greece U described aa "a la 1, nob e-lu-)kirj youih barely out of bis teens, lie looks like his noble aud queeuly mother. " The Empress of Austria Is visitiL Amsterdam incognito for the purpuoo of consulting distinguished physicians in regard to the nervous disorders with which she has been afB.cted. Over 2100 lives, it is fi'ired, wpra lost during tbe first quarter of Uie year by disasters which resulted in tbe loss of not less than ten lives each, The greatest distance ever ridden on a bicycle without dismountm is stated to be 230 miles 4ti'J yards. The feat was a ccoiupiisned iu Loudon, in 1SS0. The Government has paid out since the close of trie war near SoVi ), OuO.000 in pensions to tbe so'.dieisof tbe Union, and is now distributing among them over $C0.00O.0UO a year. The eldest daughter of Lord Lyt ton, though ot.ly 14, has taken up the family pen and written one of the most blood curdling ghost sloiies tbat has seen the 1 glit for many a day. A society has been formed at Port land for tne purpose of punlUhiug rare historical documents, especially those relating to Maine, called the Gorges Society. Dr. Trottski says that the relative frequency of the pulse iu smokers and nou-smokers is as 1 ISJ to IlHJ , and regards the danger of bmokiug m re siding In this fact. The rojues album of the Berlin Criminal Court has been increase! by 334 photographs during the past yr, thus swelling tbe same to a total of portraits. An estate costing 1,100.000 'r. Is to be bought In Algeria, wheie two hun dred poor children of Uie Djnr. merit of Uie S- ine ( Paris) will receive instruc tion in agricultuic A gentleman In the French Consu lar Service, XL Poguon, will shortly start for the Lebanon, to copy Uie text of tbe Assyrian Inscriptions concerning Nebuchadnezzar's murtary operations in Assyria. The cigars consumed in Germany during the past year amounted to a total weight of 37,3oo tons, while l he quantity of tobacco consumed in ad dition reached a weight of 36,oi)S tons. The judicial statistics of Franco for the last five years show that there has been a yearly average of over 3 0 men tried for murder in various de grees, while the average i uaiber of execution s amounted to but five a year. In 1SS2 the London sas coinoantes real zed a net profit of 117' 3J, equ.tl to 10 42 pet ceuL Oo ti e stuck aud share capital r.iis.-.!. In lSal 'In net profit was Xl.lU'i 'JJ!, equal lu tf 03 per ceut. ou tbe stuck aud snare capi tal. Berlin has a population f 1 .!-',-392 as appears y the teusu ot ISb 1, including 2U.3S7 soldiers. The iu'hih was 41-J.7J) hi ls.'s, iujiudiu 17 .A7 soldiers. An iucn-ast of dcsj.uTii ni years would satisfy oca a Camao The consumption of water within Uie metropolis ut 1-oudon U a, the rate of about 31 gallons er hal per day. Of the total quantity, o'J.U'V.uikj if gallons are obtained from the TUjuvs, and 71,UO0,OUU Imui the liver Lee, the New Hivcr, anil u.her su'iice. During 1S3.1 there were made in this country 5,177.S)0,dV2 cigars, a'tmt forty for every suiid oi ioUicc used. About 3u.OAI.UUU weir- Unpolled, llm-l making a total of about 3,l kl.tXiu.:.U. or iul for even num. wuiitai. a.-.d child iu the United Stales, and ijU iS I wvery luau over 21 yean of sr- !'.:.- !:i:' ! ?i ;!!!: !!!; W m m m nV." ''U'.'v til. It ! ;s; m m '!!? j; m '! i:i!fi ' 1 ' ill'.'. tl II I 1 I PI w a;. "F 1