0 XL 1 7 4 B. P. SOHWEIER, THE OON8TITUTION-T HE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OP THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XLV. MIFF LINT0W1N , JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 28. 1891. NO. 6 liifetfet r r V -7 La? &way the new diploma, Wim the ribbon tied arouDj; With tee big bouquet's aroma Let it be eecurely bound. File sway tLe loug oration With its words of learned leog- Let the Daughters of the Natioy Rest a fear and gather (treugld. i ake the books uf Greek aud I atln, Sell them all at second-hand, Let otue other brain space fatw l"p a flabby kctiryiual gland. fcuro the tout to Alma Mater; Never mure beneath the mooa ilust the singer linger later Tban the solema uiiJui.ht's ujob Spare awhile tht fattened weiuer, Do Lot kiii the Utile cow, Wait uiitii the 'tad gets leaner, JvhLUK'i get to hustle now. Sujalo Etprm- When everything appears unusually fresh we say the season is forward, and when a person is unusually foi ward we ay he is too fresh. Boston Transcript. A Chicsi O paper reports that Savan imh has h flock of red-headed geese. Their tav. . rite resort is probably be neath the Lad.- of a white horse-chestnut tie Chieio Herald. Mr. M:uipur;e What I Want ta get a new Uauid for Fashion Beach? Why don't you take the one you have? Mis. SliiiipuT'-e She knows how we live ft hen we are at home. New York Weekh . Ftfie MaKuid. why dos the beat .take that dreadful noise? Marunia That is because she is jus ohjg to start. Eme If I was as Sony as that 1 wouldn't go. Pick me up. I want the library," said Mr. Ga ieii to the architect, "to be the largest and aire;! room in the house." "I don't see what ouwant with a lib lary," interposed Mrs. Gaswell, "you i u'iw reiy well you don't smoke." fcui Jtte. Mr. Popinjay My dear, I have in vited Mr Forinland, the distinguished txplorer, to tea to-morrow. Mrs. Popinjay Whatever put it in to your head to do that? Mr Popinjay I want to see if he can rind that collar button I lost last Monday. Burlington Free Pres. A young Englishman the other day was relating his first experience at an ice cream table with a Philadelphia girl. He said: "I was utterly broken up and astounded, don't you know, when, after finding a strawberry in her half-finished plate of cream, the fished it out on her spoon and offered it to me. " 'Won't you have it?' the asked. " 'No, indeed,' I replied, no doubt lookins the horror I felt in my soul. " 'Why not?' the demanded, seeming to be hurt by my refusals " 'Why, my dear girl, don't you itnow,' I explained, -you have had the spoon in your mouth.' "'Well, what of that?' she pouted prettily, as she made her perfectly paralyzing reply. 'YoV'd kiss that mouth if I'd let you, wouldn't you.' I confessed that I would be only too glad to do so, and since then I have made it my business to get better ac customed to the ways of the place. Philadelphia Press. The Summer Hotel Bored Her. 'Why don't I go to a hotel?" re plied a Boston woman the other day to a remark of a friend that It would be a pleasant change for her summer housekeeping. "This is why I don't board. I heve to say 'good morning' to fifty people I don't care a straw about. Every time 1 step out on the piazia the other women ask me how I do, if I am going to drive, if my book - is 'nice,' ifweli, you know the for mula, 2s w, some of these people I lika and some I detest; but I have to be civil whether I feel in the mood or not. If I remain in my room I am .ailed 'reserved,' disagreeable and worse. I loathe fancy work, and all the boarders expect me to gamine or admire what they are making for Christmas and church fairs. Any serious reading out of doors is not to be thought of, because it is impossible to concentrate the average mind in a chatter about the relative merits of a Rosenbaum or a Kedfern trown or Vtiether fouin d -;s preferable to India silk, or vrW boat or train somebody's husband ccme on that afternoon. No 1 am not-tedtothe summer hotel One Way to Cross. There are more wav8 of taking a Journey by water than to swira or em--ploy a boat. Not long eg0 Mrs. E. Parks, who lives near Bangor, wanted to cross the flume of the Forbestown Ditch company, going from Ur to tne residence of her daughter near by. As she could not jump, she placed a board over the ditch aud started across. On the second step the board broke and she was precipitated into the water, which was running verv rapidly She was carried through the ditch and flume down to the "dump about three-quarters of a mile distant" wTf! t0 rel6te' 8he ePed wlthout injury and accomplished the errand sne had set out to do, before he returned to her home. Lucas SUva, who was a doctor In the Independent Army ol Bolivia,!, m -;iUTt-hMirwb'k1' "9thyn Wanted An Owner. There were a dozen, passengers on a Broadway car the other rainy day, who noticed a very large, showily dressed man get aboard at the earner of Seven teenth. He had a gold-headed silk umbrella, and he leaned it against the front door and sat down. "When the sar got down to Wall street the large man suddenly rose up aud hurried jut of the car, never thinking of his umbrella. Then human nature began to how itself. A young man with a very loud suit of clothes, changed his seat from rear to front to get nearer the prize. A very solid woman, with a Sandbox, pushed a boy along to bring herself nearer. A man on the other side, who bad been very busy with his paper, now folded it up and fixed his eye on the umbrella. A shop girl, who seemed to be out on an errand, :ast covetous eyes, and thought of the well she could cut over the other girls if she had that particular piece of personal property. An old man with a very prominent nose finally observed in subdued tones : "I live next door to Johnson, aud I'll return him his umbrella." "Johnson!" exclaimed the young nan in the loud suit, "Why, that's our mperinteudeut, aud as I am going :o the office, I'll carry it to him." "Seems to me he s my grocer, but won't be sure of it," remarked the olid woman. "However, I'm an xinest woman, and it will be safe with aie." "Look here!" exclaimed the man ith the paper. "You are a nice :rowd, I must remark. I was just .aying low for you. The gent is my brother, and I'd like to see some of you try to walk off w ith his umbrella !" This settled all but the shop girl, she turned white and red, moved about ineasily, aud finally decided it was aow or never. She suddenly rose up, walked to the end of the car, picked jp the umbrella, and tiptoed her way :o the rear door and passed out. "Thank you, miss!" It was the large, showily dressed nan, who was standing on the plat form with his hand extended. "Don't mention it!" snapped the rirl in reply, as she turned over the property and dropped off. And then everybody chuckled and dapped himself on the back to think le had been wise enougn to let the imbrella alone. A Fortune With His Wife. All the Athenians know Dan Talia ferro, the colored barber, who did msiness in this city and afterward noved to Jacksonville, Fla., and narried. Dan was a polite and espectf ul man, and had the good will f our people, who will be glad to enow that he will soon come in xesession of a handsome fortune s ti mated at $100,000 or more. His story is a strange one. On Dan's removal to the laud of flowers le met a colored girl of Key West , ind after a brief courtship the pair were married. It now seems that the iroudest blood of Castile flows in the reins of this octoroon, for she is a inual descendant from, a Spanish General who commanded troops in St. ugustine when it was under the lominion of that country. This old reneral was a great roue, and becoming ittached to a mulatto girl, a de scendant pf the Minorcans, raised a family of children by her. On his lealbbed he repented of his liaison, ind left these children his entire anded property in Florida, including 10,000 acres, much of it lying in the principal cities of that State. A portion of the ground ou which ;he Ponce de Leon Hotel stands was purchased from the heirs, while they itill own valuable possessions all over hat city, as also in Key West, Tampa, rallahassee and other places. This property has never been divided, being :ontrolled by an old aunt to Dan's wife, who lives in flue style at St. ugustine, and was recognized as the lead of the family. There are now nly seventeen heirs to this vast prop irty, and, as they are all of age, have lemanded that a division be made, ar angements for which are. now in pro rress. The best lawyers in the State ire employed. There is no question of ioubt about the title to this property, ind not an acre is in dispute. When Florida was sold by Spain to the United states there was a clause in the trade y which this Government was pledged o protect the titles of the Spaniards vho had private landed interests. Jn'ier this clause does Dan's wife ome in. Athens (Ga.) Banner. Fooled the Farmer. A swindler sold a Clinton County, ilich., farmer a receipt for making his wheat weigh twice as much as it night to, and signed a contract to livide the money gained by the extia weitrht with the scientific swindler. The "contract" eventually tnrnednp as i promissory note and the farmer paid 1300 for it and didn't advertise the natter with a brass band either. A very exi easive fad Is having your protrait cut as an onyx cameo - work is very alow, aimcuis ous. The imare when done Is perman- Hit UU WUl IWt 1IU wui" , . are enough people In er York who enjoy tnia xma or hii-" " . constant einDlovment to five cameo , protrait carvers, Concerning American Railroads. It is claimed that ie fastest timeoii record was made iver the Philadelrjhin & Reading Railroad. The time wao ninety-two miles in ninety-three min utes, one mile being made in forty-six econds." The chances for loss of life in rail road accidents in this country are one person killed for every 10,000,000 carried. Statisticians claim that more people are killed every year by falling out of windows than there are in rail--oad accidents. The Canadian Pacific Railway ex tends further east aud west than any other road in the country. It rum from Quebeo to the Pacific Ocean. The cante lever span- of the Pough kaepsie bridge is the longest railway j bridge span in the United States. Its length is 540 feet. The Kinzua viaduct, on the Erie ; Railroad, is the highest railroad bridge in the United States. It is 805 feet high. The longest railway tunnel in Ame- I rica is the Hoosac tunnel, on the Fitch burg Railroad. It is four and three- I fourths miles long. j The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe system operates more mileage than any other single corporation in the United .States. It covers about 8,000 miles. -American Commercial Traveller. Grant's Devotion. It is doubtful, says the N.Y. Graph ic, whether any chronicle or romance of the days of chivalry contains so touching an instance of matrimonial devotion as that lately told of General Grant. When the honors came upon the Grants, like sorrows to the house of Denmark, not single spies, but in battalions, the mistress of the White House began to renew the dream of her girlhood to have her cross eyes straightened. Wishing to surprise tho president, Mrs. Grant, telling nobody, sent for the most eminent oculist in America. He willingly promised to undertake the operation, which he as sured her would be easy to accomplish and without danger. The good lady could not contain herself for joy, and, woman-like (am I right, mesdames?), gavo way when she saw her husband, aud confided to him her secret, the pleasure 6hc bad in store for him. Ho looked wistfully into those dear eyes wiich had hold him with tender gaze through all the trials of a checkered career, and said, in a simple way, "Julia, I wish you would not change them. I love them as they are, and they might seem strange if altered." ISor Launcelot, nor Romeo, nor lover of any clime or age, ever spoke words of tenderer gallantry than those of the hero of Appomattox. An Innovation In Family Discipline. Atlanta, Ga., is said to have a queer way of punishing profanity in the public schools. The boys caught at using bad Iiiguago are made to wash their mouths out with water infused with quassia. The bitter stuff is con sidered a cure; at least it is not so easily forgotten as a licking or a scold ing. Is it not an invention worth more general use? Our family dis cipline is a poverty-stricken affair mostly made up of jawing and thrash ing. Why not havo a family quassia cup, with say another containing salts, and a third with ricinus communis, that is to say, castor oil. St. Louie lobe Democrat. i The Congress of Americas. ( ' i he Congress of the Tliree Americas, which will meet in Washington in tho autumn, is attracting a good deal of attention in England and on the con tinent. The State Department has sent out circulars, explaining the pur pose of the meeting, far and wide. These circulars state, in substance, that it is proposed, by a congress of representatives of all the American governments, to improve commercial relations between the different coun tries, to establish a system of arbitra tion In international disputes, and to idopt a uniform monetary system. Canadian Indians. . i , m t .. . j : - l .. A Hie total nuiuuer vi juivunua iu uic Domiuion of Canada is given at 124,589, of whom 37,944 are in British , Columbia, 26,3C5 in Manitoba and the Northwestern Territory, 17,700 in Ontario, 12,465 in Quebee, P0O0 in Athabaska, 7000 in the Mackenzie dis trict, 4016 in Eastern Rupert's Land, 4000 on the Arctic coasts, 2145 In Xcw ' Scotland, 2038 in the Peace River dis trict, 1594 In Kew Brunswick, 1000 in the interior of Labrador, 319 in Prince Edward Island. A Deluded Emigrant. A German peasant who arrived at f-ocMo Harden recently, with only 1 seven francs In his pocket, had been told by an emigration agent that gold was po plenty iu this country that people gave golden trinkets to their children to play with, and trimmed the 'carriages, buildings and streets with ' the precious metal. He therefore sold his little ldace, bought a ticket for New j York, and gave a farewell feast to his ! neighbor. He was sent back. a dpw female device for earning a livelihood is that of eoin- around to the Souses of society people and cleaning r.airlnz fine dresses that have been ImSSIbA or otherwi-e Injured. The ecneiewai dereloped in Buffalo. There are tome women who hT til Tli Terribl. Tcherkosses. The Tcherkessos the term now most used in Europe to designate the different Caucasian tribes are a wild, bellicose, and rapacious nation. The Tcherkess is a warrior ia bis very soul, sly, cruel, and blood-thirsty. The sufferings of aa enemy awaken ia him only a sensual, smile of eujoyment He tortures his prisoner, kills him, and mutilates htm terribly. How ruaDy loved comrades have I found with tboir arms twisted out of joint, and other parts of their bodies cut off and stuck: la their mouths' The Tcherkess U not a fanatic, but he is arreat fatalist; and now he is in Die Russian service he attacks with the same ruthless ardor and blood-thirstiness the Mussul man with whom thirty years ago he used to fight side by side against tiie Russians. He always seeks to attack his enemy on the sly, but when he does not sucoeed in surprising him, he clashes upon him ani displays pro digious courage. Is European warfare tho Tcherkess es are very useful on outpost duty and as skirmishers. Even in open battle they can make very successful oharges. Ia the last Turkish campaign it hap pened once that a trench occupied by the Turks was attacked by a buttaliou of infantry, but the deadly lire pre venting them from reaching the in trenohments, order was given to the Jangouche militia to mount to the at tack:, and they simply dashed upon the enemy like a hurrioane, leaped over the defences, and massacred the Turks inside. A Russian General, In Har per's Magazine. A Bar Cars for Drunkenness. A Russian physician named Pqrtu faloff declares that strychnine Is an infallible cure for drunkenness ad ministered in subcutaneous injection. He asserts that the experience of physicians ha shown the cure to be as rapid as it is certain. The effect of the strychnine volution is to change tho craving for drink into positive aversion, and this change 13 effected ia a day. After a treatment of e'ght or ten days a patient may be dis charged. The strychnine is adminis tered by dissolving one grain in 200 drops of water and injecting five drops of the solution every twenty-four hours. Journal of Health. Th Well Brid Man. Things that a well bred man doesn't do: He doesn't wear larje check clothes. He doesa' t use perfumes. He doesn't beg a woman's, pardon for neglecting to call on her. He doesn't criticize one woman to another. He isn't always trying to tell a good story or make a brilliant remark. He doesn't make rifts that he can't afford. He doesn't try to turn a compliment with every breath be draws la woman's presenco- He doesn't use a crest oa bis writing paper. He doesn't t ike his women friend Into his business or love matters. He doesn't ask to bo allowed to smoke In the presence of a woman un less he Is morally certain she doesn't abject to it Lot Letter Wrltl.f. The latest device of girlhood Is a fancy for stuffing pillows with their old love letters. There is one thing about the contents of theee pillows that can be depended upon with a marked de gree of certainty they are sure to be soft. Mow, the Question naturally arises, say the X. x. Sun, Must the pillow be stuffed with letters from a einsrle person, or may missive from Jack and John and Algernon be tumbled pro miscuously together? Is It a test of loyalty that when once a girl really falls In love, or thinks she does, that she discard from her pillows all letters save those ot the subject of her deep est affection? And how does marriage effect the fate of tho pillows? Do husbands enjoy having their wives' faces ourled in a mass of soft nothings that other men have written to them? And what dreams mny come, and what skimpy, flat, little pillows some poor girls must have; but how nice it is for some men to reflect that their sdored ones slumber softly on these words of love, and what an excellent place to store away the litter of letters. Flrt 5w(jap.r. The first newspaper published ia Virginia was issued at Williamsburg in 1739. It was entitled the Virginia Gazette, edited by William Parks, who. during the nine preceding years, had published the Maryland Gazette, at Annapolis. In 1771 the first num bers of the Massachusetts Spy, edited by Isaiah Thomas, appeared in Bos ton. It was removed to Worcester in 1775, where it is still published under the title of the Worcester Spy. At the outbreak of the Revolutionary War there were in existence seven newspapers ia Massachusetts, one la New Hampshire, two in Rhode Island, four in Connecticut, four in New York, nine ia Pennsylvania, two each la Maryland, Virginia and North Caro lfna, three in South Carolina and one ia Georgia, a total of thirty-seven. With the exception of tho Philadel phia Gazette, which was published semi-weekly, all were weeklies. In 1300 the number had Increased to 200, of which several were dallies. It gerr4 All ParpotM. One of the Spanish provincial papers publishes a singular obituary notice. It says: This morning our Saviour summoned away the jeweler, Slebaldo Illinago, from his shop to another and a better world- The undersigned, bis widow, will weep upon his tomb, as will also his two daughters, Hilda and Emma, the former of whom is married, aad the other is open to an offer. The funeral will take place to-morrow. Signed. His disconsolate widow, Vero nica IlUnago. P. a This bereavement will not Interrupt our business, which will be carried oa as usual, only our place of business will be removed from Calle de Commercio to No. 4 Rue de Mission aire, as our grasping landlord ha raised our rent. WATCRE'S MASTERPIECE. The lovely maiden ta the bimuock swings iwneain tn' umbrageous tree, While robin iu the ripeniug orchard sing Els thrilling melodies. In dotted muslin dressed, of tnowv lawn Adorned with cherry bowi, She is a vision tiirer than the dawn, Sweet the new-blown roe. The ahinlng tre-tes of her silken hair About her shuulden play : There Cupid hide. each ringlet Is snare, Avoid her while you my I for who can look upon her lovely face, Her brightly beaming eye, Behold her smile, her form's bewitching grsc And scatheless paai her by f Turn back, O youth 1 another path pursue; Tarn back, thou art in peril ; If thou wouldst keep thy heart, avoid bar, do The sweet vacation girl. Eosto Courier THE It UX AWAY. "Would they put her In the asylum; he wondered, "if they caught her? " Folks would surely think she way crazy. She stopped at the stone wall to rest and looked back timorously at the" ok familiar 6ceue. Far behind her stretched the mead ow, a symphony of olive and green ii the late fall. Hero and thero by i sunken boulder stood soldierly golden rod, or berry bushes clothed now in scarlet and gold. At intervals in th long slope stood solitary trees, when fluttering, brittle leaves fell in the gen tle chill air. Iu summer time she re membered well the hay-makers rested in the shade, and the jug with gingei water she made for the men was kept there to be cool. She seemed, as she sat there, to re member everything. The house was all right, she was sure of that; the key was under the kitchen door mat, the flre was out in the stove, aud the cat locked in the barn. She held her work-hardened hand to her side, pauting a little, for it was a good bit of a walk across the meadow, and she was eighty years old on her last birthday. The cows feedint looked home-like and pleasant. "Good-by, critters," she said aloud, meny's the time I've druv' ye home an' milked ye, an' I alius let ye eat by the way, nor never hurried ye as the bov. done." 'With a farewell glance she went again, smoothing as she walked the scattered locks of gray hair falling nuder the pumpkin hood, and keeping her scant black gown out of the reach of briars. Across auother field, then on through a leafy lane where the wood was hauled in winter, Uicu out through a gap in a stump fence, with its great branching arms like a petri fied octopus, to tho dusty high-road. Not a soul in 6ight in tho coming twilight. John, the children, and the scolding wife who made her so uu happy would not be home for an hour yet, for East Mills was a long drive. Down the steep hill went the biavt ilttle figure, followed by an odd shad ow of itself in the waning light, and by tiuy 6tones that rolled so swiftly they passed her often and made her look behind with a start to see if pursuef were coming. "They'd put me In the asylum, sure,', she muttered wildly as she truged along. At the foot of the hill she sat dowi. upon an old log and waited f or the train. a Across the road, guarded by a big sign, "Look out for the Engine," ran two puvallel Iron rails, that were to be her road when the big monster should come panting around the curve. At lust the dull rumble sounded, a shrill whistle, and she hurried to the track, waving her shawl to signal. This, in the conductor's vernacular, was a cross-roads station, where he was used to watch for people waving ar ticles frantically. The train stopped, and this passenger was helped aboard. He no iced fthe was a bright-eyed old lady very neat and precise. "How fur?" he asked. "Bostin." 'Git there in the mornin'," he said kindly, waiting for the money, as she opened a queer little reticule, where, under her knitting, wrapped in a clean cotton handkerchief, was her purso with her savings of long years the little sums Sam had sent her when ho first began to prosper in the West, aud some money she had earned herself by knitting and berry-picking. At a cross-roads, as they went swift ly on, she saw tlie old sorrel horse, the rattling wagon, and John with his fam ily driving homeward. She drew back with a little cry, fearing he might see ber and stop the train, but they went j on so fast that could not be, and tho old horse jogged into the woods, aud John never thought his old Aunt Han nah, hi charge for twenty long years, was running away. At Boston a kindly conductor bought her a through ticket for Denver. "It's a long journey for an old lady 1 like you," he said. j "But I'm peart for my age," she said anxiously ; "I never hed a day's sick ness since I was a gal." "Going all the way alone?" ,ej "Vitn rrovmence, she answer brightlv, alert and eager to help her- self, but silent and thoughtful as the train took ber into suange landscape, where the miles went o swiftly It seemed like the nasi vears of her life a she looked back on them. I, Thy works Is marvellous," h murmured often, sitting with her handi folded, and few idle days had thcrt been in her world where she had sal and resitd so long. In the day coach the people weri kind and generous, sharing their bas ket with her and seeing she changed cars right and her carpet-bag was safe She was like euy of the dear old grand mas in Eastern homes, or to grizzled men and weary women, like the mem ory of a dead mother as faint and. far away as the scent of wild roses in s hillside bun ing-ground. She tendec babies for tired women and talked tc the men of farming and crops, or told the children bible stories ; but never i word she said of herself, not one. On again, guided by kindly hand, through the great bewildering city b !the great lake, and now through yet i stranger land. Tired and worn bj nights in the uncomfortable seats, hei brave spirit began to fail a little. Ai the wide, level plains, lonely anc drear, dawned on her sight, she sigh ed often. "It's a dre'ful big wurld," she sail to a gray-bearded old farmer near her: ("so big I feel e'enmost lost in it, but,' hopefully, "across them deserts lik Ithis long ago Providence sent a star tc (guide them wise men of the East, an I hain't lost my faith." But as tho day wor6 on, and still thi long, monotonous land showed no hu man habitation, no oasis of green, hei eyes dimmed, something like a 6ob rose under the black kerchief on the bowed shoulders, and the spectacle? were taken off with trembling hand and put away in the worn tin case. "Be ye goin' fur, mother?" snid tht old farmer. He had brought her a cup of coffee ai the last station, and had pointed out on the way things he thought might Interest her. "To Denver." "Wal, wal ; you're from New Eng land, I'll be bouud?" "From Maine," 6he answered ; theL she grew communicative, for she was always a chatty old lady, and she had possessed her soul In silence so long, and it was a relief to tell the story of her weary years of waiting to a kindly listener. She told him all the relations sht had were two grand-nephews and their famiiic-s. That twonty years ago Sam (for she ha brought them both up when their parents died of consumption, that hikes so many of our folks) went out West. He was always adventurous, aud for ten years she did not lu-ar from him; but John was different and steady, and when he came of age she had given him her farm, with the pro vision she should always have a home, otherwise he would have gone away tiMj. Well, for five years they were happy, then John married, and his wife had grown to think her a burden as the years went on, and the children when they grew big did not care for her, she felt she had lived too long. "I growed so lonesome," she said pathetically, -it s-eui I couldn't take up heart to live day by day, an' yit I k no wed our folks wa9 longed lived. Ten years back, wheu Sum wrote he wasa doin' fair an' sent me money, I begun to think of him; fur he Av.as alius generous an' kind, an' the grate fullest boy, an' so I begun to save to go to him, fur I knowed I could work oiy board fur a good, nieny years to come. Fur three years he ain't hard ly wrote, but I laid that to the wild kentry he lived in. I said b'ars an' Injuns don't skeer me none, fur when I was a gal up an Aroostuk kentry there was plenty of both, an' asfurbutfuh-rs them horned cattle don't s-keer me none, fur I've been u-cd to a farm alius. But the Joncciimness of these medders has sorter upsot me an' made me think every day Sam was further iff than I ever calc'fated on." "But what will you do If Sam ain't in Denver?" asked the fanner. "I hev put my faith in Providence," she answered simply, and the strang er could not mar that trust by any word of warning. He gave her his address as he goi off at the Nebraska line, and told her to send him word If she needed help. With a warm hand-clasp he parted from her to join the phantoms in bey memory of "folks thet hed bin kind to her, God bless em'," and then the train went rumbling on. But many of the passengers hac listened to her story and were inter ested, and they came to sit with her. One pale little lad in the seat it front turned round to look at her now and then auto aud swer her smile. We was going to the new country for health and wealth, poor lad, only to find eternal rest in the sunny land, but his last days brightened by the reward for his thoughtful act of kindness. "She probably brought these boys i up, be thougnt, "ana denied ner uie ! for them. Is she to die unrewarded, I wonder. There cannot bo any good In the world if that be so." He thought of her and took out his poor purse ; there is so little monev in it. too. Every cent made a big hole in his store ; but the consciousness of a good deed "BS woruiwuisiuiug. '"'"'" th chance t0 do nT more'" thouut the lad omng up hi. worn over- f,oat ' He slipped off without a Word at a tion and sent a telegram to Denver. "To Samuel Blair" for he had caught the name from her talk "Yrat Aunt Hannah Blair of Maine is on th W. & W. train coming to you." It was only a straw, bu. a kindlj wind might blow it to the right one, after all. When ho was sitting there after hi message had gone on its way, sht leaned over and handed him a pepper mint drop from a package in hot pocket. "You don't look strong, dearie,' she said; "hain't ye no folks with ye?" "None on earth." "We're both loueones," 6he smiled; "an' how sad it be there aint' no on to fuss over ye. An' be keerful of the drafts, and keep flannel alius on youi chist; that is good fur the lungs." "You are very kind to take an in terest in me," he emiled; "but I am afraid it is too late." Another night of weary slumber lt the cramped seats, and then the plain began to be dotted with villages, and soon appeared the straggling outskirti of a city, the smoke of mills, the gleam of the Platte river, aud a net-work ol of iron rails, bright and shining, as the train ran shrieking into the labyrinth of its destination. "This is Denver," said the lad to ner, "and I'll look after you as well ai I can." "I wun't be no burden," she said brightly. "I've twenty dollars yet, an' that's a sight of money." The train halted to let the eastern bound express pass, there was an air of excitement in the car, passengers getting ready to depart, gathering up luggage and wraps, and some watch ing the new comers and the rows of strange faces on the outward bound. The door of the car slammed sud denly, and a big bearded man with eager blue eyes came down the aisle looking sharply from right to left. He had left Denver on tho express to meet this train. His glance fell o '.he tiny black figure. "Why, Aunt Hannah 1" he cried, with a break in his voice, and she she put out her trembling hands and fell into the big arms, tears streaming iown the wrinkled face. "I knowed Providence would let me find ye, Sam," 6he said brokenly, and no one smiled when the big man at 3own beside her and with gentle hand viped'r tears away. " W.y, I've sent John twenty dol lars a month for five years for you," he said angrily, as she told him why she ran away, " and he said you could not write, fur you had a stroke and was helpless, and I have written to you jften and sent you money. It's hard for a man to call his own brother a nllaiu." " We wun't, Sam," she said gently, " but just f urgit ; an' I wun't be a bur Jen to ye, fur I can work yit, an' for vears to come.' "Work, indeed! don't I owe you svery thing?" he cried " And my wife lias longed for you to come. There ire so few dear old aunts in this coun try, they're prized I tell you. Why, It's as good as a royal coat-of-arms to have a dear handsome old woman like .ou for a relation." Then he found out who sent the tele gram and paid the lad, who blushed nd stammered like a girl hud did not want to take it. " I suppose you wautajob," said the big man. " Well, 1 can give you one; I'm in the food commission, business. Give you something light. Lots of your sort, poor lad, out here. All the reference I want is that little kindness if yours to Aunt Hannah." " Here's the depot, Aunt Hannah, aud you won't see ' bars ' and Injuns,' nor the buffaloes you were talking about, but the prettiest and sunniest lity you ever set your dear eyes on." He picked up the big carpet bag, faded and old-fashioned, not a bit ashamed of it, though it looked like Voah might have carried it to the ark. They said good-by, and the last seen Df her was her happy old face beaming from a carriage window as she rolled away to what all knew would be a pleasant home for all her waning years. A King's Joke. A Swedish statesman recently in veighed most eloquently in Parliament against oleomargarine. Next evening he was invited to dine with the King, who loves a joke. There wa only oleomargarine on the royal table, and the statesman liberally partook thereof. At the close of the meal the King asked him: "Well, sir, how do you like our butter!" "It is excellent," replied the statesman; "the contrast between it and artificial butter is very marked." "But," said the King, "that is artificial butter!" The other guests roaied with laughter, but the "old par liamentary hand" returned, quick as a flash: "Your Majesty, if one can be deceived so easily, there is all the more need of strict laws against bogus goods!" Tae Educated Boy's Error. The trouble Is that a boy who gradu ates from our public or high schools or colleges would feel it a di -grace to be come a tip-top carpenter or cabinet maker, and so chooses to be a connter jumper, sell pins by the penny's worth and tape by tho yard, bow and scrapo to his lady customers, and delude him self with the idea that he is in one of the gentlemanly callings, NEWS IN BRIEF. Cardinal Wolsey was the sod of a tiutcher. The greater part cf the ocean be3 la pitch dark. The raven has been taught to re trieve mo3t creditably. The latest fad in Parisian society Is the decorated shirt front. Claude Lorraine, the Italian paint er was bred a pastry cook. There are at least ten million nerve fibres in tae human body, Fish bave no eyelids and necess arily s eep with tlieir eyes open. An orange measuring a foot In Cir cumference has been found in Starke, FU Executions are publ c la Ecuador, and the musket is the instrument of death. Dublin is better provided with or-en spaces than any other town In the Uni ted Kingdom. One dog of the Convent of St. Ber nard is said to bave saved more than forty human lives. The blood of clams, lobsters and nearly all other invertebrates contains no red cells but only white. A pension has ju?t been granted to an Oregon man who i-i a veteran of the War of 1?12. He is 102 years old. There are a hundred chances : hat any boy or girl will be struck by ligiitn ng for every ono chance of having hydro phobia. A nove'ty of an e'ectrlcal exhibition at Frankfort, Germany, is to be tho transmission of 50U hoise power toa dis tance of 140 inilcs. By a new derice, piecps of nietel may be shaped with ercat rap dity by being forced under d:es while rendered olt or elastic by aa electric current. By electrolysis of a fluvoride lu a molten state. M. Miunt extracts 21.6 rrrmmp. nf 1nmin!nm fnr ftn arnnnil. T - - J iture of one horso-powj: hour. Chinese pheasants were introduced into the vast foreets of Oregon ten years azo.and now it Is estimated that there 1,0.0 000 of them m the country. The use of electricity for slaughter ing lions is proposed. It is c'aimed that the current will not only kill the hogs, but will kill triebnae at the same time. A luminous crayon has recently been Invented to enable lecturers to draw on the blackboard when the room is darkened for the use of the lantern. Ono causo given for the failure of the peach crop in Delaware and Mary laud Is that the elements of the soli re quired by the peach have been exhaust ed. A French electrician has construct ed a Wimshurst machine, having twelve elats discs, each 29 J inches iu diameter, the machine v ill give a ppaiklC inches long, Theloveliest sumrac r resort on earth is probably the plateau ol Newera Eliia, the "King's Summit," as the natives rail it, in the highlands of Southorn Ceylon. -The rapidity with which f-e hawk and andmany other birds cccasionly fly lspro bably not less than at the rate of 15J miles an hour, when either pursued or pursuing. Lemons originally came from In dia.' They were used by the Romans to keep moths Iron their gar in -nts, and In the time of Piiny were considered an excellent poison. Swpts and swallows fly every year from England to Southern Africa and to the Molucca-, and the reot ess, wan dering flight of various oceanic birds ia still more surprising. "Better lato tLan never" wns used over three hundred years ago by Thom as Tucker ia his "Five Hundred Point of Husbandry." Later on Bunyau uaed it In hia "Pilgrim's f rogrcs:. Justices of the peao3 were first ap pointed in England by F.dward III. la tho yearl327, aud m 13U0-1 they were empowered to try felonies, while tltoir wages were flxol by Richard IL tn 1389. It is interesting to know that their hair which waves from the helmets of French dragoons is the real article, be ing the product of Chinese and Tonk'n skulls. It Is liner aud lighter than horso hair According to Captain Wissman, ot the African exploring party, the para dise of Mids seem to have bec.i found on thd shores ot a lagoon communicat ing with the eastern extremity of the Albert Nyanza. H. C. Angel, of Weatherford, Tex as, was In good health ou a recent Sun day, but he told his wife that be would d e on tho fol owmj Monday nluhl. He made his will, attended to bis busi ness Monday ua usual, and that nl-ht lay down and died. Several factories have just been started in England for manufacturing tea from u ps, and Lliederaaul is said to le greater than t he supply. Thu facul ty has discovered that (he lupulin of the hop counteracts the excessive tannin of the ordinary tea. F. neai, a keeper o' tho G!enda!o National Cemetery, near KicLiajiid, Va., has a desk, made in 1010, which has Lee n iu pos--ej-ion of the Heap fam ily, of England. It is said to have neen used by O.lver Cromwell lu ie-47-4d wheu fighting Charles 1. It u of antique oak. beautifu ly carved and highly pol ished. A lady returning to her home la Cursou's Mills, Mass., was greatly as tonished to see :i live plcUerel weighing about one aud one-half pounds drop in the road at her fecL Look luz, she dis covered hove rir g about ti e r jt a large American eagle, which had evidently secured the HjIi lrotn one of the neigh boring brooks. The hump on tho back of tho dromedary Is an accumulation of a pec uliar species of fat, which is a store of nourishment beneficently provided against the ('ay of want, to which the animal Is of ten exposed. The drome dary or camel can exist for a long period upon this hump without any other food. John Bancroft, a man who was a tramp eight years azo.and who diei re cently at Portland, Ore , bequeathed all his property, estimated at fclo.OUO. to a woman tn Sacramento, Col., who once gave hira a night's lodging and break fast aud SI besides, together with some good advice, "One good cigar Pinoked after eaoh meal," says Dr. William A. Hammond, "is what may be called moderate use, and can rarely inflict any damage to the system. Ti e exceptions occur la those persons of peculiar organizations, impressionable and ens ly disurbeJ by tlaulauts, aud sdUvc4 or iutrwUca,'!