If! tip B. F. SOHWEIER, TEE OOIHT1TUTI0I-THE TTHOl-UD TIE OTOXOIXEIT 0? TIE L1S. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XL. AIIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNaT WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 15, 18S6. NO. 38. - i Her Letter. Prue t Tbe wirnls and birds unt, too. yjawyou thro' tbs villags highway in Pf9 vonr Pre,,y no8e Pn Class, lo see ii In the pigeonhole lor you, Kepoeed a letter, 1'rne I True I Tbey sane jour secret to ill lb D0 cared to listen to their song. Vo were sot dreaming asyoa passed along Tie font aisle, of soma one's eyes of blue. Ot I know Letter, Prue! Prnel Beneath tbc pines you grew Then you tuuk that letter from your tnidic.-, anrt, . -... , i,,,..! wt ti-mlilin a VlUl '4. - baud. hun Of poppies I kcow, Prue I True! flh I rat. If tou but knew I wood lards saw tbe sweet words that jou reau in, saw you bend your pretty golden head. AnJ press your rey lips upon the two ivisses irom yoar sib, Prue I A BUNCH OF WHITE LILAC. So much? It is too much!" said a ifL tilaiutive voice behind me. I turned to see a small creature Uridine on tiptoe ueiore a nower stana t tbe entrance to Covent Garden as I was passing. In this position, her head was about on a level with a Luge bunch of white fiUc; and the rough straw bat pushed hack, and ti e fair curls glittered in the sunshine, as the little face was fairly buried in the fragrant Dloom. stopped short; the bright hair and the m e lionets both arrested me. fcwift as thought, they had caught my meoiorv back to a bowery seat under a white lilac clump, and a golden head cdoq a level with my shoulder, and a face that for fairness and sweetness night have put the white lilacs them selves to the blush. Somehow I could not help wondering if this face would be like that face, as these blossoms were like those of the past, faded now more than half-a-dozen years ago. And it was startlingly like. So like, tbat I could almost believe that three times half-a-dozen years had vanished. and my little playmate. May my May (jueeo, as I used to call tier stood De lore me in the lilacs. The child looked up at me, frankly and conliding'.y. out of those great blue eyes that might have been May's eyes, forgetful that there had ever been a bit ter auarrel and a Darting. What a folly in me to be thinking of ber now! But, thinking of her, some bow I could not help answering those soft, appealing eyes. "You wanted the . flowers, . little me?" "res, sir. Tlease sir, the big white ones." "You like white lilacs?" Tbe flower-girl lehind the stall was sinidincr out a treat, sweet bunch, re sponsive to the coin I had laid beside it. But the child was snaking ner small head. "I like those belter she said, polnt uz to a mass or yellow daffodills. "Bat Little Mother, doesn't she just loves the big white lilacs?" They're for ber, sir; and will you make this buy them?" She showed me her penny. over tthich the rosy lingers were shut jeal 0us!v. "Keep your penny, child, and I wiil buy the liUcs for you." But she shook her head. "No; Little Mother was crying this morniiig when 1 woke up did you kaow grown-up ptople ever cried? and she told me it was because she had no white lilacs on this May-day. Wasn't that a funny thing to cry for? And then she told ine she was Qieen of the May once, and she had to get down off her throne, and wander away and away from the white lilacs, and out in to the col 1. dark streets here. I don't thlLk they're cold and datk, do you?" the little thing added, looking up at me fai the sunshihe. Suddenly a wondering expressing grew in her eyes. Tou are not going to cry, are you?" she asked. If Little Mother had felt the blank sense of misery which had been closing in and blotting out the bright day from me, as the child prattled on, she would have been too near to despair for tears. 1 could only hoi her pain was less than mine. The small band I took into mine had torn open an unhealed wound; and now It must lead me until I could see her Little Mother face to face, and know if it were indeed my lost sweetheart. May Elliston. "Xo, no! I am not going to cry," 1 aid. "But I ara going home with you to see your Little Mother. See, we will tale her all these lilacs." "Yes, but I must buy them myself," she decided. "I didn t tell her so; but I promised myself to take my bright new penny as soon as I had done my lesson and Little Mother was at her work and wouldn't miss me." So the bright new penny was laid down on the counter beside my coin, ad the little maid, her pinafore heaped with a gsy bunch of daffodils amongst the lilacs, trotted on, her free hand trustingly in mine. It was not until we were some dis tance from the stall, and the knot of wayfarers about it, that I could give 'oice to the questions burning in my heart. "What is your mother's name?" "Why, Little Mother of course! What else should it be?" "And your own name?". "Bertie." "What else?" "Why, nothing else!" she said with wonder in the uplifted eyes which were so like May's. My heart grew heavier and heavier. For Bertie was the name f May's Kapegrace brother who was lost at sea when my little sweetheart had not much more than entered her teens. She hl all a young girl's romantic devo tion to him. What more likely than that she should have named her child after him? There weie ugly stories whispered about of Bertie Elliston before the ves sel was wrecked in which he was flee ing from his country out of reach of the law, it was rumored. But May would he sure not to believe the stories; ta was never a half-hearted partisan. If eveiy one had not known that the esselweut down with every soul on ward, it might have been supposed that 7 had gone to her brother some where, when, after the death of her granaiather, her last remaining rela tive, she simply disappeared with the iorcune tne oia man bad left her. ho. cause he could not carry it in his grasp ing, miserly hands into the other world. i. hat was just after May and I had naa our bitter lover's anarral: anrt when I came back to the old Tillage to look for her, she had vanished. And now to find her again not my May, but this child's mother. I could not bring myself lo question mo cuuu auuui. uer tamer, oae naa a bit of black ribbon tied round her straw hat. I dared not even think of It. I tried not to think at all, while she drew me gaily on, her feet dancinir over the rough ways of the dingy streets, up wuicu sue turned, as ner bright eyes were dancing over the fragrant blos soms heaped up in her pinafore. Up the dingy street, up and nn the dark staircase of a dingier house to the very garret floor. Surely it could never be May Elliston, tbe heiress, lodged so uiru as uiisi Little Mother!" There was a slender figure In black, stooping over along, while seam over ner knee. It must have le?n the sun that shone full on the window where she sat which dazzled me, for 1 seemed to see a halo shining round Uie drooping golden head, tbat never lifted though May's voice it iras May's voice, faltering with tbe sound of tears in it answered the child. "My little Bertie back airain already? Why, you couldn't hare got as far as the park, darling; and it would have done you good to play there in the sun shine. Did dolly get tired and want to get home?" She was stitching away so busily that she never glanced round. "Wait, darling: I am just finishing. Then we'll go out together and take all this work borne, and if they pay us this time" this in a lower tone "we'll get a nice dinner that will make up Tor the breakfast." "Little Mother, see!" The child had slipped behind her, and was showering down the fragrant blossoms over her shoulder Into her lap. "White lilacs!" It was with a wild sob In her voice that May cried out, and she gathered up tbe fragrant lilacs and buried her face in them. When she lifted her face they were all shining and wet, but not with de And when she lifted her wet eyes, it was straight into mine that they looked. Slowly the yielded her hand into mine, outstretched for it. "I Vina Ml iftorall thau rem " "And changes." l'erhaps my voice was bitter, for after that first impulse to draw her to me, to claim her in spite of everything that had come between, came the re vulsion. I looked down at her black dress, and I seemed to see, under the mock ing heap of flowers, and the coarse, white work, tbe little left hand with the wedding-ring upon it. Xo, I couldn't forget tbat she had forgotten that she had given herself to some other man! I touched a fold of the black dress, letting go her hand. "He is dead. May?" I said. She gave a startled glance at the child, pressed against her knee, ab sorbed in bunchiug the flowers to gether. "Yes, he is dead." And then, very softly, lifting up her lovely eyes to me: "If you know so much as that of him, Donald, it is likely you know alL But let his memory rest; he was sorry enough at the last." "Sorry! But first he brought you down to this. Your fortune " "Gone!" she said; and with the hand I had let fall she gently stroked the golden head of the little one, intent upon her task, not heeding us. "His child," she said. 'Donald, when I parted with my last sovereign lor me simple cross that marks his grave, that Sacied to the Memory' made nn memory ever sacred to me. so let ii rest, untouched by any slightest breath of unkind word." 1 looked down into the drooping face of the girl my May Queen once; and suddenly I knew that, try to dethrone her as I might, she was my queen stiu and mistress of my fate. 'And because of that stone, sacreu to his memory." 1 said bitterly, "De- cause of that, May. you are going to send me from you again, more wretched than when we quarreled ana partea. years ago?" "Send me from you againi" Tner was a frightened gasp in the sweet voice; ar.d in the blue eyes lifted to me a look that told me I might ven ture to do what thereupon I did that is, to catch both of her hands in mine. to draw her to me, the lelt nana as well as the right. Then, suddenly and sharply. "May. what have you done with your wedding ring?" "My wedding ring?" "Oh. see. all the poor, pretty flow ers spilt!" the child broke in, trying to push us back from the fragrant show ers lying about our feet- "Oh, Little Mother, see what you nave uoue i fit tun start tbat went through and through May, as I still held her in my arms. .. a mi thpn she looked up at me, smil ing tremulously, blushing ravishingly. "Ah, now l see wow. .ucivro done! It is her 'Little aiotner- mat j misled vou into fancying l couiu cc. have been false to yon! Yes, I am her Little Mother'-the only mother she has ever known; for her own mother died before she could remember, She is poor Bertie's child, ! nald." I stooped ana caugut up u .atHni, hr flAWn one rapMirousi , r- ,L again, bewildered and staring, in the midst oi ner uiosjhiiu Blessings on ner pretty - just what yours was, May, wneu first remember it." She shook ner neau. have been as pretty as that." she said simply, lowering ber voice that the child should not hear. , 'But my brother ana i wem 7 alike," , Her voice soiieneu. "IrtAr all. be had never sailed on that ill-fated vessel," she explainecu "And when be wrote me to come to him, after grandpapa's death bad left m alone in iiiw wuiiu , m . it hrt left vou an heiress," I answered in my own mind, but never ?rom tSt & thls one 8jUable f " I aloud. t ,, -ymtjnued. of cou r5" . zrrr "And I bad to awPP". - - nf for nun u ' v badlv known before,' she e red, with a pained glance at the child. "I never thought you would care we bad parted in anger, we two " I stopped tbe last words with my lips on hers; we would never be two again. She whispered, clinging to me: "Never ask me of those years, Don ald, if you love me. Only, he was sor rysorry at last," The tears vanished in sunshine in May's blue eyes a I made her look at tbe child amcng the flowers. "Little Bertie never shall be sorry all her bright life long, if I can pre vent it," 1 said. "I owe her all that fortune can give her for bringing me again to woo my love among tbe white lilacs. Sweetheart, long ago I bought back the old place, for the sake of that white lilac bower, where once you re- raemuer it .-you were entnroned May Queen, and ever since have been Queen Mav. Wa will hn mnrri! n-mnrrnw May, and will go down there while the macs are sun Dicoming. The Dreadtnl Devil Fish. A jolly party of ladies and gentle men went over to Santa Rosa Iife-sav lng station to enjoy the fine surf-bathing on the gulf beach. One gentleman rushed himself into a bathing suit in double-quick, and, with a triumphant cheer, plunged into tbe briny, scoring the first header" (not a charity), and swam out some ten or fifteen feet sea ward; his triumph was short-lived. however, for he discovered, by the bright moonlight, an enormous devil fish within - a few feet of him, which hoisted its dippers above the water and splashed threateningly. With a yell of dismay, the gentleman made for the shore much faster than he went out, and, while each breaker took him off his feet, be imagined himself in the clutches of the horrid monster and made frantic efforts to escape from the impending danger, finally reaching the shore, safe in limb but tearfully weary. When safe ashore the gentleman and bis companions viewed the monster, which slowly moved around or calmy floated near the surface, not more than twelve or fifteen reet distant, and saw that it was a large devil fish, such as are often seen on the Florida coast. which seemed desirous of having their company. "Bush" Hutchinson says that he and another of tbe crowd walked along the water's e'ge some 200 yards down the beach, and that the fish kept them company, timing its movements with theirs, and stopping when they did, swimming or floating as near inshore as It size would allow. Bush says it appeared to be about eight feet across, and that it occasion ally elevated its flippers playfully above tbe water. It finally disappeared for a time, but after on was discovered near the first place, when all bands scampered ashore, and concluded they didn't want to bathe any more that night a very sensible conclusion, though it is doubtful if tbe fish would have harmed them, unless they had "run agin" it. New Post Office Decision. . The Postmaster General has Issued a circular to postmasters concerning the acts authorizing the extension of the special delivery system to all postouices in tbe United States and to all mailable matter. The circular says that on and after Oct. first, every pos'.master will be held responsible for the immediate delivery of every article of mailable matter stamped with a special delivery stamp. Such immediate delivery must be made, except on Sunday, when the article is directed to a person residing or having a place of business within one mile of the postoffice, but the postmas ter will be at liberty to make such delivery beyond such limit', and to receive tbe compensation thereof as in any other case. The hours within which immediate delivery shall be made shall be at least from 7 a. in. to 7 p. m., and further until the arrival of the last mail, pro vided that such arrival be not later than 9 D. m. At third and fourth class offices the postmaster must provide the means, and pay expenses or such deliv ery, and will be allowed the full com pensation of oO per centum ot tne lace value of all special delivery stamps on matter properly delivered from his office and recorded as provided in the circular. . New Postal Card Th new nnsta.1 card adODted about a year ago will soon be superseded by an ntiior which lias been Drenaring at the Bureau ot Eugraving and Printing. It consists of one piece or engraving instead of two pieces, as on the present card. A head of Jefferson, a miniature portrait after the original in the &tate Department, occupies a central place nn thA unner third of the card. Over his head, in light letters are the words "United States." in panels, sup ported by scroll work at the left and right, are the words "Postal card" In distinct letters. Under tbe head are the words "Oae ceut" and beneatn uie border line encloug the line of desig nation m thrt line "Nothing but the address to be on this side." The Post master General may decide to print tne new cards on wnite paper, in uuvcn inir f.ir tha reason that white paper furnishes a better ground for written characters. As there is a stock of about 12.000,000 postal caras now on han.i it. i nmhabla that the new cards will not be out for a month or two. The Ackcn Family. m,. iVon fomtitf of Middlesex county. New Jersey, hai furnished four sons whose great age, ueigui, uu weight are remarKaoie.- ine oiaesi, uniitam i ff.l vears of ase. six' feet in height, and weighs 240 pounds. The next, llenry,lS Ol years vi asn, i and wniffhs 200 DOUndS. Capt Samuel, the third brother, is 7o years of age, six feet five inches in height, and weighs 22o pounds. The voungest is Theodore, and he is 73 years bf age, six feet three inches in neignt. and weighs 230 pcNinas. iue couiu:irou 8"s of the four is 312 years, an average of 73; the combined height twenty-iour feet eight lncnes; ant me u w :.!. CD, nnnnilo an sverklTft of The brothers are all in good health, and bid fair to li ve many years yet. Tt.m-nir thA twentv-four days of the Monmouth Park meeting lob races were run. and there wms not a single postponement on account of the weather. The aggregate of stakes and purses amountea to sjuaaj. Hiost successful owners were the Dwyer Brothers, who won iwemy-iwu d 33.10o. A. J. Nassau. iui una with eight races and 22,505, princi pally earned by The Bard.- Then comes J. B. Haggm, whose stab.e cap-?1--a roc and S17 S13. while the Freakness stable won eight races and amounts ranging from f 1000 to J10,Q0 HOW THET USE TOBACCO. Peculiarities of the Tobacco Trade. Tricks and Oddities of Smokers. "How do men smoke?" repeated the man or Knowledge, as he tilted back in his chair and lit a cigar. "I should answer that by asking another question that is, Why do men smoke?' You tell me why a man uses the 'noxious weed,' and I will tell you how he does it There are an infinite number of reasons why men smoke. Some men smoke because the are nervous, some men smoke because they are phlegmatic many merely from habit, a very large number do it because others do so, and a small minority smoke because they reauj enjoy iu "A nervous man will smoke because he thinks that it will soothe his too ac tive organization. Such a man will take short quick puffs, one after another in constant succession. A nervous smoker I can spot every time. "Then there are the phlegmatic smokers. They are followers of Sir Waller Raleigh, because they want a stimulant and they think, or pretend to think, that tobacco will stir up their sluggish temperaments. Such men take tobacco as a man would take a wuisky cocktail. A great many men, in fact I might say almost all men who have smoked for any great length of time, smoke more from habit. To see these men fumigating always disgusts me. They don't seem to think of what they are doing. No thought of the pleasant sensations which thev are or might be experiencing seems to enter their minds. They puff away and emit the blue volumes of choice Havana In combustion as if they were so many Chinese. They smoke as they would sleep or dress for dinner. Their one idea eeems to be to get through and light another. You will see a man pull ing away on a stump of a cigar, everv little while looking at it impatiently ana wonaering if he will ever get through so as to start the next one. Now. why should they do this? Tney are not enjoying themselves. Tbey simply seem to consider It a duty to get away with so many cent's - or dollars worth of cigars in a day. And they rerform tbe task. "Now, smoking is one of the most delightful experiences in the world of seme, to those who can appreciate it. Some men are, however, so coarsely made as not to have any knowledge of me nne pleasures or life. You set be fore such a man a dainty dish, a pate de foi gras. a few exauisltelv browned frogs' legs, or any other of the triumphs of a French chef's art, and what wdl be do? He will swallow them down like so much corned beef and cabbage or pork and greens. He is so crudely constituted that his palate cannot ap preciate tne niceties or the culinary art. In the same way. if you set before him a dainty glass of rare old sherry or Madeira, he will gulp it down with no more knowledge of iu virtues than if it were a 10-ceat glass of Jersey lightnir g. So it is with some smoker, . Oae oi your cross-grained men will pnll away on a choice culling from the sunny fields of tbe West It dies with no more satisfa.-tion than if it were an old clay pipe full of navy plug. Probably he won't enjoy it as much. With a man of finer grain, however, it Is different. "I enjoy, above all things, the sight of a connoisseur of the weed at work on a fragrant Havana. He takes a dainty puff. Then he draws the cher ished 2o or oO-center from his lips and gazes at it lovingly, meanwhile emit ting from his lips a slender thread of blue smoke. Then he will pause and the fragrant, soothing narcotic will seem to penetrate through every nerve in his body. That's the wav a man ought to smoke. I've no patience with those fellows who hurry through their smoking just as they hurry through their dinners, never etopplug to enjoy it. Such men rush through life in the same blind fashion. Tbey don't snow what real enj jyment L. Smokers have all sorts of peculiar tricks and oddities. One man I once knew had a trick of constantly knocking off Uie ashes with his little finger. He would keep .that little finger wagging continually, and when there was no ashes he would burn bis finger. But it was a habit which he seemed wholly unable to overcome. Some men whom I have known would always swallow the smoke. The nico tine laden vapors which they would take into their stomachs must have kept those organs in a constant state of distension. "Others seem to find an inexplicable delight In making chimneys of their noses and sending the smoke in volumes through these orfices. I once knew a man who had a peculiar trick of shut ting one eye to look along his cigar with tbe other as he put it into his mouth. He was a bashful man and never thought of flirting with the girls on the street, but that habit used to get him into no end of scrapes. How? Why the girls all thought be was wink ing at them. Tbe peculiar habits of smokers will sometimes run through a whole family I remember a f unny instance ot that. A man came to me in my office one day and represented himself as a brother of an old fnend of mine. He was a shab by, forlorn-looking specimen and I was not inclined to believe his story, espec ially as there was no personal resem blance to his brother. But I sat and talked with him awhile. He told a plausible story, but still I was not in clined to believe him, and finally I told him to clear out, that I couldn't be bothered with him. Then my better feelings came to tbe front and I gave him a cigar. He took it witn a sad, forgiving smile and lit It. ' 1 "He hadn't taken but one puff be fore I was on my feet begging his par don. After taking that puff he bad taken out his cigar with a peculiar Jerk and had blown tbe smoke out of the corner of bis mouth in a manner which I had noticed and laughed over a hun dred times when with his brother I saw him do it. I knew then tbat I was not being imposed upon. "But talking about smoking makes D9 think what a wretched habit it is, after all. It is expensive, dirty, re pulsive. Will I have cigar? Well, yes; thank you. Have you got a match?" A Great GcueraL ' Toipnl.v mn atro tne name of Crei- sau was never fpjken of, but Moltke has made tbe place famous, just as Bis marck has thrown lustre upon Varzln. Here in rural quiet, far from the or.Hvitv nf thA ritv Field Marshal Count von Moltke has set up for him- 1 1 I ttiA self a j. uscuianum, wuere u ntmnit. sprliisiftn he recruits his Strength after the fatigue ot tbe winter. Hav ing intercourse only with his nephew and bis Immediate neighbors, he asaem- b'es here new forces for his work. Chatting on tbe way, we came at last to the village of Creisau, and soon we arrived at the castle. It is a plain, quadrangular building, with one story and a high gable. General von Moltke acquired this seat with the money given to him by the grateful Father land. On both sides ot the iron steps leading to tbe hall are great cannon taken in the French war at Mount Valerien and afterwards presented by the Emperor to the Count. Tbey are bronzi, and are covered all over with reliefs and chased work. In the hall itself are three beautiful equestrian statues of bronze, resting on colossal sockets. The central figure Is that of tbe Emperor, with mantle, helm it and flying plume, the right band raised. An inscription says this was a gift from the Emperor on the sixteentn anniversary of Moltke's service. Bight of this statue is an artificially executed copy of Rauch's monument of Freder ick the Great. On the third plinth stands the excellent equestrian status of Moltke himself, a gift of the Grea General's Staff. On tbe walls of the ves tlbule are large bronze busts ot the Prussian Kings, with those of tb Crown Prince and Prince Frederick Charles. Entering the sitting-room we find it simply furnished, giving a true picture of the Field Marshal's modesty. Here is the low field-bed, with a plain writing desk, while large maps hang on the walla. In the upper rooms ot the castle are many family portraits. In these rooms, too, are kept the gifts made to the Count frona time to time. Beneath a glass shade is a small marble bust of Napoleon III., a gift of the late French Emperor to Moltke, made when be was at the height of bis power, lironze busts of the late Grand Duke of Mecklenburg, of the King of Saxony, and portraits of the Emperor, the Crown Prince and Prince Frederick Charles also adorn the rooms. All these works of art were tbe gifts of tbe Princes themselves, and were accom panied by cordial words expressing high praise of this faithful counselor. Count von Moltke likes when staying here to go over his fields and to prune the young trees planted In the park. Home-grown fruit must appear on the table, and the Count then speaks with pride to hla guests of tbe produce of his lands. The school which he has is often visited by him, and he listens to the teaching, questioning the young ones himself at times. It was late at night when we left tbe portal of the castle by moonlight. On the corner pillars rise gladiators larger than life size, Tbey keep guard at the entrance of tbe residence of tbe man whose name will be spoken of so long as any one asks after the architects of the German Empire. SOME SIMMER Gilt US. A Few Samples that May be Found Everywhere. The. unlucky girl who is one of six or seven big sisters. ' The giddy girl who wears short skirts, tight shoes and dotes on Saratoga. Tbe elephantine girl who bowls twice a day in an ineffectual effort to re duce her weight. Tbe engaged girl, who, with an anx ious stir, is always expecting a tele gram from "him." The envied New York girl who has more stylish dresses than any one else in the house. The subdued girl with older sisters, who wishes tbey would marry oft and let her have a chance. The particular girl at Ocean Grove who will not permit herself to be hugged anywhere but in the ocean. The lively Atlantic City girl whose craze is caramels, and who thinks tha sweetest thing in life is dancing on the pier. The sensible, modest girl who behaves herself, and will be married well when all the ragin; belles have become old maids. The ing nious girl, who, in the ab sence of young men, dirts with the botel clerk and bathing master just to keep her hand in. The smart New England girl who goes botanizing in the mountains, and paralyzes the young men with, long Latin names. The ugly girl, with a blue-blood ped igree, at Mt. Desert, to whom every nice young man has to be presented as soon as he arrives. The stupendous girl in a litchen green costume and a Rembrandt bat. who carries her chin in the air on the front seat of a Newport drag. The eccentric girl who sits on the beach at Sea Girt alone, or wanders in the woods and doesn't seem to want to know a soul in the house. The shapely girl at Narracansett Pier who looks best In her bathing suit and spends her afternoons iu the water or lounging on the sand. The athletic girl who Is camping in the Adirondacks, who has cultivated her muscle by smashing the pestiferous insects that abound there. The inexperienced girl who is tickled by the attentions or a played out beau, and thinks the other girls are jealous when they advise her to dis courage him. The harpy Klrl wh vrent to Europe earlv in the season and slipped several nice Pans dresses through the custom house, in which she now flourishes su- Perbly- ... V , Tne flirtatious gin wno goes uoauus with callants without a chaiieron at Lake George, and has been doing so for successive seasons without any ap preciable result. The desperate girl nearing 30. with an extra bottle of bloom of youth, and a trunk load ot jivenile sashes, who feels that "now or never" is the time to decide her fate. Th sentimental cirl who carries a yellew-crtvered novel to the breakfast table at Cii May and whose stock of conversation Is confined to a rehash of the latest silly fiction. Bar Harbor is gayer than many other resorts. Ani gold jewelry that an immersion in water will not injure can be beauti r.,lr laanJ hv shakinsr it well in a bottle nearly full of warm soapsuds, to . . . . . V. 1 V. kAAH which a little preparea cuai. uu rou added, and afterward rinsing it in clear, cola water and wiping it dry. A. simple test of the quality of leath er belts is thus given by the London Jffcftanical World: A smaU piece of the belt is cut out of the strap and put into vinegar. If tbe leather n thoroughly tanned and of good quality it will re main unaltered, and even show, after some months, only a somewhat darker color, while if it has been insufficiently prepared with tannin the fibres swell and are converted into a gelatinous mass in a short time BOYS AND GIRLS AS MODELS. Ifites ot Humanity Who Pose as Sub jects for as Artist's Pencil. There are several hundred persons In this city whose business is to sit as models for artists. Young girls who are particularly beautiful are engaged every day in the year, and may earn from SI 50 to 12 a day. They must keep still for hours, and often stand or kneel hi tiresome positions while pre serving their gracefulness. An artist who has a handsome studio uptown was visited the other day hy a reporter. He was drawing designs for Christmas card. A small blonde-haired boy half naked was sitting in a chair made fast on a table, which is called by painters a throne. His mother, a handsome woman of 25 years, stood near the throne with a pair of reins tied round her waist, the other end which the lit tle cherub held in his hands. "What is the purpose of this arange ment?" asked the reporter. "Don't you see?" said the artist "We make tbe little fellow think tbat his mamma Is a horse and that he drives her. I have to keep two things In mind: first, to make tbe picture; second, to amuse the boy. That Is not so easy a task as it might seem. At tirst, perhaps, daring the first sitting I only play with the child or get bis mother or brother or sister to play with bim, until I see some pretty or natural movement or catch some striking ex pression on his face." "He does not look particularly pleased at present," the reporter re marked. "When I wish to see him laugh," re joined the artist, "I request his mother to caper around like a wild horse. Sometimes she must make a car horse of herself, and stop every moment and let bim take up passengers, and when ever she stops I get a good chance to put in some good touch." "Don't many of these artists paint out of their heads, so to speak?" "No artist who does not paint or draw from life, as painting from mod els u called, ever gives his picture a look of reality. We may be able to paint a marble floor from a small piece of marble, or a brocade dress from a yard or two of the material, but even to do this we must have made studies of large surfaces of marble when op portunity has offered, and we must have spent several days In studying tbe folds of drapery In a dress worn by a living model before the special material of the brocade can be copied into It." "How do you procure your models?" "There is no difficulty in obtaining any material or substance, for we can get at any time a piece of it. But the most important of all things tbat can be painted or drawn are the forms aud faces of men and women and children; and for that purpose we must employ people to pose for us. As a rule the models form a caste and are usually known to each other." "How old are your youngest mod els? ' Srme begin to sit when tbey are mere babies. I have often wished that some rich children could see how patient these little ones can be when they un derstand that they are earning money to buy food and clothes. There is a little girl who lives in a tenement house on the west side who is very proud to sit for me. I make a chalk mark on the throne where her little feet should go, and she will carefully keep on the mark. She has a few minutes for rest at inter vals during each hour, and a long rest at dinner time, but she will keep very quiet while I am working and not move without leave." "What other expedients do you re sort to in order to keep the children models quiet?" "Patience will accomplish almost anything. I have a little boy who found a stuffed bird in my studio, and he is always quite happy for an hour if I let bim play with it." Second-Hand School Books. "What becomes of all the second hand school books?" was asked of a veb?ran dealer by a reporter. "That's what people are all the time wondering" he replied. "Tbe general public have the idea that tbey go where pins, needles, hairpins and such things go to. that is. tbey disappear somehow or other and no one knows where to. Y'ou m ty be surprised to learn it, bat there Is a large and increasing trade done in second-hand school books alone; so much so tbat we have now a regular school book exchange, Y'ou see. boards of school trustees are all the time changinz the books their pupils study, unless not allowed to do so by law, which is the case In some States, aud in former times, when they made a change, they either sold the discarded books for old paper or burned them. But now they are more economical. They hunt up the school-book exchange and are allowed to trade their dis carded books for those they want, of course paying something for doing so. Why, through the agents, booksellers, school trustees, and others, we keep track of changes of this nature made in any important school throughout the United Statas. "I have a book here, indexed, which gives the towns In which a certain pub lisher's geography is used. To give you an illustration: As soon as I hear that a school Is going to substitute another geography for that one, 1 make a bar gain for the discarded ones, and at once writing to the towns where it is still in favor, probably will have the lot sold before they reach here. It is the same way with dealers in a town. When the public schools branch off from a certain book the dealer has no further sale for them, and so he is glad enough to get rid of bis stock to me, and I can dispose of them where they are in use. I h tve on file blanks from all localities on which are given the names of the school books in use In the vicinity. Of course, I take the books at a discount." "How much do you get for a second band school book?" "As a fule, about half price. The demand for the regular second-hand ones is now particularly in tbe farming districts and throughout tbe south. Take a farmer's boy who has been to school only a few months and has not much spare money, and he will eagerly buy a school book but little worn when he can get it at half its original price. As to the demand in the south, there seems to be a greater appreciation of the advantages of a more general edu cation, and my agents all report a marked Increase in the demand for schools books there." . The power of persistence, of enduring defeat, and of gaining victory by defeat, is one of the forces which never loses its charms. A Story that Doesnt End in the Usual Way. "I want to tell you a story; may I?" This proper petition came from a clerk in a down-town banking-house. I was willing, and this is the way he went on: "Ten years ago two young men went to work for the same firm in Wall street. Their salaries were the same, their op portunities even, their tastes similar, and, generally, they were on a par all round. Both married, neither adding much to his dollar-and-cent account in that way. Tbey climbed along together. Eight years ago they were drawing a yearly salary of $3,000 apiece; but in one particular the twain differed, and this lift erence was in their method of taking re of their money. A at the end of each week took his salary home and handed it over to his wife. B looked out for his own funds himself. When A wanted funds during the week he went to his wife for it; he took but a certain sum from home each day for lunch and incidental expenses. When II wanted funds during the week he lived into his own pockets for it. He iidn't need this was his boast he Jidn't need any petticoat financiering in his family. B had lots of fun at A's expense as the weeks heai-d themselves up into months and piled into a year, but A seemed rather to have the whip end when, at the end of the twelfth month, be asked B to conijKire bank oooks. B had $4:1 to his credit, sole remnant of his whole year's salary. A's tccount showed credits that amounted to S.t.UUO. That wife at the purse strings did it. But B was set in his way. He went on enjoying himself; prosje-tive rainy daysdidnt annoy him: the theatre and the dinner-table, excur sions and good fellowship these kept liini fat and happy. And the first year's 5,U.J tliat Mrs. A accumulated grew in increasing ratio year by year. On last New Year's day it had become, through safe and shrewd investment, something like $OU,UUU, all in hardcash." "And, to boil the story down," I in teijeited, "Spendthrift B, who hasn't wted a cent, has to go on toiling for a living, while, thanks to his trust in his trood wife, A gives up labor and is set tled down to enjoy his remaining years in ease." "Now that's where you make your mistake," ejaculated my tale-teller in a tone sublimely sarcastic. Because you newspaper men are always so good, and because your goodness always brings you happiness and shekels, you imagine that the same rule holds good every where. And, as I've said, that's where you make the mistake. This is isn't a unday-school chestnut. No; A isn't living at his ease; no more is B toiling for a living. Fact is that last New Year's B, the scalawag, calmly eloied fmm this town, and Mrs. A and that loO.'XH) of hard cash went with him." Intelligent Gratitude of a Dog. "You may call it instinct, if you like, but I shall insist that it is intelligence that make some brutes behave as sensi bly as they do," said an Allegheny gen tleman in conversation with a reporter last evening, and then the gentleman added: "I've hail all the proof I want of it. In the door-yard of an unoccupied house adjoining mine, were twelve little pup pies uttering their first yelis. Their mother an old black and" white mon grelwith an eye to the safety of her lame, new family, took them one by one md laid them in a narrow area, down by one of the cellar windows. One of the aiies happened to 1 out of the window, however, and liefore night every one of the puppies hul crawled through the oieniug and fallen to the cellar floor, some six feet In-low. "Next morning we missed them, and from the whining of the mother, siiiik- sed the puppies were all dead on the haid cellar floor. But later m the day. day, the maternal brute set np such a pawing and howling at the cellar win dow tliat I made up my mind that there was some puppv life lielow. Accord ingly 1 broke into the cellar, and, to my surprise, found eight of the little family of d"s still alive and kicking. ne by one 1 took them up and placed them in the di wr-yard grass for the mother to take whatever care she might choose, and one bv one she laid each one of them b;ick in the area of the broken cellar window. "This comtielled me to stop up the hole in the broken pane to prevent the , puppies from craw ling through again. ) t hen when it was done me om mot ner brute, leside herself as she was with joy, and anxious to devote every second ot her time to the recovered puppies, crawled up lalKriously oat of the area, and leaving the litter alone, came wrig gling and sneeezing ami all but laugh ing, np to me a stranger, licked mv hand aud I held it down to pat her head. 'o. that s not instinct. I hat is a.- piain aud as intelligent a 'Thank you ;ts a human being ever uttered." K-a oration r Cliillon Prison. It is said tliat the Canton de Vaud is .ilxnit to repair the .'astl; of Cliillon md to make it a residence lit for human habitation. Wc see no reason why one of the most interesting buildings in the world should not lie rescued from damp md decav, so that it may aflord shelter to happier human beings than the luck less prisoners who once pined within its clooiny dungeon walls. The lake which laves and gently kisses its foundations is said to In SUl feet d.-ep licnearh the. windows which still dimly light ISonni vard's cell, and in the seven pillars which Bvroii has immortalize'! the iron rings to which the early reformers were liained are deeplv imbedded. The fur row wrought in the stone pavement by Ikmnivanrs footsteps during the six years of incarceration is still visible. md across Ins cell stretches a wooden beam black with age, from which ii is iid that the condemned were formerlv suspended. We entertain no doubt that the dungeon occupied for many genera tions by nameless prisoners, and celebra ted by Hosseau and I,ord Bvron. h:is brought in a good revenue to the syndic of the Canton in which it is situated. To 1 on the Lake of Geneva without visiting Chillon would be tantamount to putting "Hamlet" on the stage without assigning a part to the Prince of lvn- mark. Even, however, ir Chillon ce repaired and modernized, the How of English and American visitors win probably know no decline. Children are unconscious philoso- puers. xuey reiuau iu yuu iu lurtca their enjoyments to see what they are made of. A child is laughed at when It tries to iktth ft liiutnv snrl TPt irrftvn nervui- ' rasp at and capture bat little else it Ibis world. NEWS IX BRIEF Always have the change when yoa beard a street car. Bostonians have developed a craze for the moonstone. -The Toledo Blade flashes in favor of cindered streets. Harvard students may omit Greek or Latin in future. Mussels are much esteemed as a delicacy at Cape May. Golden-roi parties are being given now by rural belles. Carnegie is to build a Scotch castle near Cresson Springs. The averao employment bureau is a delusion and a sham, Seventy-two acres in West Duluth Minn., sold for fOO.OOO. A machire for drying C3h has been Invented by a Pensucola man. Cantaloupe has taken the place of berries at the morning nieaL A Lowtll co-operative association makes 120Ibs of butter dally. Lisle thread stockings are only half the price of last summer. Robert Kershaw, of Terry. N. Y., has a white robia with pink eyes. A New York family has a Mt. Desert house built entirely or logs. Mrs. Goodacre, of Wayland Mich,, is 60, and is teething the third time. Damage by hall iu the vicinity of Inkster, D. T., covered 30,000 acres. Twelve old ladies at a Parma, Miclu, q-iilt!i!g, ajgre;:ated 012 years. The Michigan forest fires have driven the bears from their leafy lairs. Pacific county, Washington Terri tory, has no en I of oysters and clams, Signal service ofTieers in Ohio are aggravating called weather pedlars. The wealthiest sections ot New York aie called the tenderloin districts. A AVashington .Si ir writer says tyrotoxicon is the lofty name for dirt. Boston is trying a noiseless pave ment of grauita blocks set on cjnerete. Mr. Girardeau, of Montlcello, Fla. will save ten tons ot watermelon seed. Piloting into and out of Philadel phia is not so proutab'.e as it once was. A man In Campbell county. Ga., had twenty-three sons killed In the war. The surface of California still vi brates with t.he treal of l.lKJO pound bears. Among South American cannibals a tattooed man is thought unfit f jt food. A tin can, holding $2,000 in gold, has been found on a MahoaU:g, O., farm, There are one hundred and forty nine Grand Army posts In the State of Maine. The ore output of I.eaJviIIe fer i ily reached 1000 toss a uay for every working day. The output of the mineral prod nets of the United States In 1S:4 was valued at $403,2iM,C2J. It is believed that the California wine crop this year will reach 27,000, lJ0 gallons, the largest yet produced. The product of the silver mines of Bolivia is estimated at !, 000.000 ounces The Bolivian government levies -a tax of four-sixths for each ounce of silver mined. The Sliver King mine of Arizona has paid since lsTO, il.500,000 in divi dends and has produced something like SXVAIO in silver. The total value of all minerals raised in the United Kingdom m 184 is reported at i.''il,2'!2,02'; at the mine, as against i!u4,j3o,i&l in loi'-i. Sir John Lubbock's Clearing-House returns show that the volume of trade during last year was less than that of the previous year by S.j00,'AJO,0O0. A lot of dairy cows have recently Iieen shipped from S.m Francisco to China, where the natives are turning their attention to the dairy business. The "Wa IVnn," a locomotive b'lllt in Philadelphia in lCo, was the first railroad engine ever run in Cali fornia, and is still doing good service la that state. A Hindoo, who enjoyed himself by denouncing Christianity in blasphemous terms at Ocean Grove, has lieeu sent to jail on the charge of disturbing relig ious meetings. Of gold and silver the mint au thorities estimate the production in the United States in lsSl at $:M.S00,000 gold, and $4S SOO.iiW) sliver (coming rate); total, ;7'J,G.iu,000. There are only on thousand peo ples men, women and children in all of Harlan county, Kentucky, yet the murders and assae-i nations during the year outnumber the births two to one. Not very many years since toma toes were known as love-apples, and were regarded as poisonous Last vear the canning establishments of the Uni ted States put up o2,:!22,'J.j2 cans of to mato s. The nnmber of railway servants employed per mile in the United King dom lias risen from 1G.7 in l,7o to 19-tij In 1S8.J. Thai is to say with the growth of traffic, increased precautions, etc., it takes three more men to work a mile of railway now than it did eight years ago. Shakespeare's birthplace, the trus tees report, was vidited last year by nearly 14,000 people, who paid the usual admission fee. The trustees have over 2-"00 in consols, and purchased deeds of lease and release from Sir XihnClofton to Hugh Clofton (dated January lY.O) for the property at New Place (Stratford on-Avon), where Shak espeare spent the last days of his life, and where be died. Tbe live stock of the United King dom steadily increases. The cattle this year number 6,211,127, an Increase of 4.7 and 7.5 per cent, respectively on last year and the year before. The sheep and lambs cumber 20,037,217, an increase of 3 9 and 7.1 per cent.; and the pigs number 2,i2,323, a decrease, of 1.4 per cent, on last year, but an In crease of 2.9 per cent, on l-is'2. The saving effected by the cable Tstem of propelling street cars isstrik dgly shown by tbe fact that a 375 norse power engine operates 10 miles of double track road in Chicago, doing the work of nearly 2009 horses. It n estimated by engineers tliat a 2400 horse power engine could move all the street-cars at present in use in Naw York city, a work for which acar j 13, Q00 horses are required. j i i ssslsKKJ