Infii) fir" J- I 4 B. F. SOHWEIER, THE OON8TITDTION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Propria tor. B2 . - y VOL. XL VI. PARTED. M. J. HEADER SMITH. IHH n.crninp hen I lie sunbeams rose. Ami tmii ii' J t tie ciowii on furest rears, nit in l lif i; lui y tl I he daw n, Wi:h Hfins Ttukle1 all Ihfl lar.n, (jurejcs tre brimming o'er wllh tears. For In thi dawnluij's brightness we pltiuctlv view another scene. A ifefl lilil. a flowing river, (i prnLi' li lie nunbeaiii dam e and quiver ft lib iivii uf i ceil spread out between, VVbere to no down an orchard Data lo tell 'ove's story Vr anam. Ihe tcet are ymina that brush the dew, jt od Ir.-li and new. untried, but true, Ibe Hi'-' thai bind (lie happy twalu. j he i.ictu'e ha lies all dm with tears. Ihe .uililul twain are sundered far. l ove's piMeu links are sadly scarred. Ami wieU' iied apart. The chain so mar red. Becmi.cs a broad dividing bar. A careless word, a luckless speech, A iil unbent, thoiuh loving much l,i hands iinciiisiied, two laces turned Asidi' ti h de the tires that bumea. Anil gluwtd btuejth an Angel, touch. Ttien i.1.r urt-w their steps apart. Till sreen m ass ere. t their paths between. That i l.oki d and smothered Love sweet bl.H.lll While memory built upon its tomb, A miaiiiuieni Dial i'nde uolh screeu. And so a lovly morn' like this, Lilim bai-k the bappy past lo me. A.nu we l.ve o'er weary years, Aim.ii we shed "ome bitter tears. Which Li-ne but Hod can see. A LITHE LE?& " II AN KIN. BV B! V. TaKulMJKII WOOD, F.E.S. Quite irrespective of the more or less diiant relationship which is by many supposed to exist between the two, the members of the monkey race will prob ably continue to exercise a atrorjg fis ciu:itiou over tlie ruiud of nuture-lov-ing ruiin. Probably it was in this fact that Kiu Solomon found his reason for including thesd animals amongst Lis royal curiosities. Be that as it may, they lis J a special place in the palace gardens of "the Preacher, the sou of LaviJ, Kirg of Jerusalem." And still, ihe man who would give bis "heait to search out by wisdom all things that are doue under heaven," ruay find material for interest and thought, if not ulso for humiliation, iu tkee strangely composed creatures. There is something in their impish cuuuinx, something in tbeir seeming pomer-sion of mental characteristics otherwise unknown in the lower crea tion, something, in short, in their grotesque rehemblacce to a dt graded humanity, wh cli charms whde it re pub, aud dives, aud must give, to these strange beings au unique attraction in the eyes of all students of the animal world. And as there are very few of us although perhaps we know it not who are not in some degree students of this wonder-teeming kingdom, this is equivalent to saying that monkeys Lave an interest for us all. The term "monkey" is a comprehen sive one, for it includes creatures so widely dissimilar as the gorilla and the lemurs, the chacma, and the marmoset. At one end of the scale we have an animal which some writers seein to consider as almost half a man, and at the other end another which is certainly almost half a bat. And though we mar subdivide the family iuto a) es, gibbons, baboons, monkeys proper, and lemurs, yet by the popu lar miud the distinction is never drawn, and a monkey is a monkey, although it may have little that is really monkey like about it. Ureutiy is it to be desired that we might have more frequent and more favorable opportunities for watching the habits of the great apes in cap tivity. It is said that no adult gorilla has ever as yet been taken alive; cer tainly none has ever been brought to Europe, And, until the fabled unieorn is discovered and captured, one can hardly conoeive of a more at tractive and interesting addition to a menagerie. We have, it is true, more than once succeeded in bringing a juvenille gorilla from across the sea, but only to find, either that travellers are altogether wrong in their state ments regarding the animal, or else that the gorilla in early life is a total ly different being from the gorilla in maturity. Probably the latter is the more likely. Undoubtedly the yonng gorilla does lack that expression of brutal, savage ferocity which is ao painfully conspicious in even the most Ill-prepared skin of the adult Cer tain, too, it is that the young animal is timorous in the last degree, and is so painfully shy when under observa tion that to gain any idea of its real character cr its natural habits is alto gether impossible. When "Qena" was brought to the Crystal Palace come ten years ago, I enjoyed almost unique facilities for observing her dur ing the whole of her lamentably brief existence. 1 was present when her case was unpacked, together with a number of others, who probably, like myself, were expecting to see a wild and farious monster, of hideous aspect and gigantio strength, tearing at the bars of its prison, in foaming but impotent fury. And all that we did Bee was a cowering little blaok crea ture, about two feet high, doing her beet to hide behind a chimpanzee, her companion in captivity. And in all the three subsequent weeks 1 do not thick that I once saw the poor little animal otherwise than in state of pitiable timidity. She never for a mo ment Feemed to leave her self-appointed protector, which, with bared teeth and gleaming eye, fiercely re sented any attempt to separate it from its tiny charge. She never responded even to the advances of her keeper, nor betrayed the least interest when ap proached In the manner traditionally dear to the monkey nd. But this may have been owing to the weakness and -weariness caused by the rapid in roads nf disease; for lei-re the month was out the poor little gorilla had suc cumbed to rapid consumption. The seeds of this fatal complaint seem to Lo sown in almost all the lurger apes almost as soon as they leave tho torrid climate cf their native land. Their bright activity rapidly gives way to a dull apathy; the frame is torn tJ a raiking congh; the piteous, plead ing look iu the eyes gives one a weird impression that the sufferer is sadly familiar with death, and loresees the successive steps of its deadly com plaint. And in a few short months, at the most, all is over. To this sad rule the only exception is in the case of the chimpanzee, which seems to be of hardier constitution thau its fellows, and occasionally lives in expatiiation and confinement to what, comparatively speaking, is a grien old age. Quite recently passed from us the lamented "Sally," of Re gent's Park celebrity, who for nearly fight years bad been one of the stand ing attractions of the Gardens, and, un der tbo able tuition of a persevering keeper, had acquired the art of cor rectly counting up to five, with other accomplishments of almost equa note, the chimpanzee stands, as jar as the larirnr x.. ... : . iT a concerned, on a sort of intellectual pedestal. Its men tal capab.lt.es do not diminish or dis appear ,u the heavy ferocity which come, with age. It is alonamong apes in understanding the principle o combination, and lives in anTall colo! mes, which are banded together by tack and defence. It is posted of suffic,ent tactical skill to pSst leutries, who transmit warning of approaching danger to the main body which every member of the com munity understands. And we have even been informed by a recent travel lernot, however, it is right to add, upon his own personal a nthority that it has learned the secret of producing nre by friction, and is acoustomed, when it mades its raids upon the plan tations, to iilum nate ita midnight way by carrying a blazing torohl Setting aside, however, the extreme lmpr,.babUitJ that eTen chimpanzee should attain reasoning powers so ad vanced to allow it, not only to over cona natural dread of an element which animals seem almost universally to regard with the utmost terror, but also to control and utilize a force which no living creature but man has ever been known even to produce, we may acoept it as perfectly certain that so cunning an animal, even if it possessed the faculty in question, would be far too clever to make use of it. For if, as we know, the chimpanzee is Bufli ciently wary to avoid even the needless cracking of a dried twig, when on predatory excursion bent, it would scarcely be likely to cha lenge the at tention of those whose property it was stealing by providing an illumination, which its own keen eyesight, moreover, would render perfectly unnecessary. Most of the monkeys which live in society appear to adopt the same tao tics in their nocturnal raids. A cer tain number are told off to act as sen tinels, while the actual robbery is en trusted to a few of the most experi enced, the remainder acting as receiv ers of the stolen goods, and conveying them at once to a place of safety. Among the most interesting of the monkey tribe are the highly acrobatio Gibbons, whose wonderful activity of hand and foot pats that of even the most accomplished human gymnasts to utter shame. I have never yet been privileged to see these creatures save within the bounds of a comparatively small cage; but even in those narrow limits, which must greatly have ham pered the freedom of their movements, their agility was perfectly amazing. The eye literally could scarcely follow them in tbeir flight. They swung themselves with the most marvelous grace and lightness from branch to branch and from bar to bar, touching each in turn for but the merest frac tion of a moment, and passing with perfect ease through twelve or fifteen feet of space. Yet never once did they overshoot their mark, or come short of it by so much as a single inch. They did not appear to put out the slightest exertion as they darted along, and the impetus of "the first leap seemed inexhaustible. So that it was rather hard at first to realize that these were actual living beings of flesh and blood, and not the fantastic crea tures of a poet's dream. No wonder that many a traveller, when first he sees a troop of gib Ions darting ont from bough to bough in the distance, mistakes them for giant birds, for cer tainly there are not a few of the fea thered race which could scarcely excel them in speed of their flight. One member of the monkey tribe the colugo is said to fly; but incor rectly. It has indeed the enviable faculty of skimming for a limited dis tance through the air, for the skin of its sides and flanks is widely extensi ble, aud is connected with both fore and hind feet, so that, when the little short legs are stretched stiffly out, the animal is converted into a kind of living parachute. And by mounting a lofty tree, and then leaping in the di rection of a distant branch, it can pass at a single bound through eighty yards or more of space. But of flight, in the strict and proper sense of the term, it is wholly incapable. It oannot beat the air with the membrane which con stitutes the so-called '-wings." It can not alter its course when once it has launched itself into space. And it can not alight at a level higher than that from which it sprang. In faot. it is simplv bnoyed up by the air during an extended leap, just as an oyster-shell is buoyed up for a time when flung edgeways from the hand of a thrower. So, too, with the petaurists of Aus tralia, the 'flying" squirrels of India and America, and the "flying" dragon of Borneo and Java, which do not really fly at all, but simply leap from one branch to another, and are enabled to pass through an unusual extent of intervening spaoe by the peculiarities of their bodily structure. And yet the colugo although some naturalists are insisting that it is really a first cousin of the hedgehog snd the mole may fairly be regarded as a connecting link between the monkeys and the bats. In the general princi ples of its struoture which, how ever, is in many respects abnormal It is a lemur, and therefore a monkey; bnt in the singular develop ment of the skin of the sides of the body, and in the use made thereof, we can trace at least an approximation to the wonderful wing-hands of the bats. For in these also the frame work issop plied by the fore-limbs, greatly extend ed and attenuated, while the connect ing membrane is identical in character with that which enables the colugo to skim through tie air without actually flying. Lemurs are very odd creatures. They have been called "the monkeys poor relations,"jnst as monkeys' them selves have been styled the tKor rela tions" of man. And ;certainly they do give one a kind of impression that they are snfferinir from a deep sense of in feriority and bumiliatiqp. Perhaps it is because they are nocturnal vj nature, and consequently extremely uncom fortable when one sees them in open daylight. And they well deserve their popular title of lemurs; for there is something strangely spectral and "uncanny" about them. Their dark ling habits; their slow, measured move ments; their stealthy, silent tread; and the weird expression of their large, rounds, staring eyes: all these com bine to give the observer an undefined notion that he is looking upon creatures from the world of shadows, ghosts, perhaps, of monkeys dead and gono, which some stern fate compels to wan der by night on this upper earth. As a recent writer puts it, -they re the mere phantoms of monkeys, agile as goblins, with the wailing voices of ban shees, the fitful ways of an apparition, and the half-witted, wistful, but fear eome look in their eyes that changeling children are said to have." The Howlers are so-called from the dis mal olulations which they keep up in i concert from dusk till daylight They MIFFLINTOWN. All the forest with sound, and that of the most hideous description. "Noth ing, says Wharton, who passed mauy night in the Uuianan woodland, da 4? BPeaki,1 in particular of the Ked Howler, "can sound more dread ful than its nocturnal howlings. ion W.!ld ""PP080 hH the wild beasts of the fore.t were collecting for the work of carnage. Now it ia the tre mendous roar ot the jagnar, as he springs on bis prey; now it changes to his deep-toned grow lings aa he is pressed on all sides by superior force; and now you hear his last dying moan beneath a mortal wound." Other travellers tell us that the din which these animals maintain inoessantly throughout the night oan be heard at a distance of ful ly two miles. The males are the prin cipal vocalists, and seem to endeavour to outvie one another in the harshness and power of their utterances, while the females chime in at intervals in gentler fashion, like an undercurrent of chorus accompanying the main chant. A year or two ago, in a pichare ap pearing in one of our leading illus trated newspapers, a group of monkeys were represented as performing an act of which I do not believe that any monkey can be justly accuFed that, namely, of pelting an offending travel ler with stones. The artist himself described in the accompanying letter press the scene which he had repre sented with his pencil; doing bo with a circumstantiality strangely at varianoe with the fact that, although the adven ture in question was said to have taken place in India, every monkey in the sketch is a spider monkey. And pider monkeys are peculiar to America! I subjoin the account : ' I had started in the early morning on a march between Barrrmoola and Muree. The road led along the side of the mountains, and in many places was a mere path hewn out of the solid rock. In one part there was a pro jecting rail at the edge of the track; on the right was a sheer drop of several hundred feet; on the left rose an al most perpendionlar cliff. As I ad vanced along the path I saw two large monkeys seated on the raiL One of them when he saw me jumped up on to the rock. Just for fun, 1 picked up a small stone and threw it at the other, when he, too, bounded up the cliff and disappeared. 1-thought no more of the incident, bnt before I had gone forty yards a couple of stones whistled close by my head. I looked up, and there on a ledge of roci were about a dozen monkeys, all busy throwing stones at me. "They seemed to "shy" them just as a maa would do, and very fairly straight, so much ao that 1 thought it wise not to stay to make a very critical examination." The illustration in this case is obvi ously incorrect, possibly the narrative may be so also. For no authenticated case is on record in which a monkey of any kind has teen seen, in the strict sense of the term, to throw. Even in the case of mankind the faculty of throwing is altogether an acquired one, which only eomes by much prac tice, and by many is never learnt at alb And probably no monkey, living or dead, has been much more successful in this respect than a baboon which lived for some years in the monkey house at the Crystal Palace, and whose performances I have myself repeatedly witnessed. He was an ill-tempered brute, as baboons mostly are in captivity, and, in order to prevent him from injuring a number of smaller monkeys which inhabited the same nage, he was fast ened in one corner by a chain, which allowed him to roam over about one fourth of the whole available space. His fellow-prisoners were perfectly aware of the exact limits within which it was safe to venture, and used to ag gravate tbeir tyrsnt intensely by sit ting just about two inches outside the magio boundary, and ostentatiously eating the nuts, io., snpi lied to them by the visitors. This prooaeding al ways roused the insulted baboon to furious anger, and, after spluttering out a quantity of what I imagine was monkey bad language, he would gather up a quantity of straw from the floor of the cage, and hurl it with all his might at the offending animals. For this operation, however, he invariably employed both hands; and therefore it could not be properly described as a throw. Certain monkya are considered as sacred in India to this day; and it is in teresting to find that baboons were among the animals held in special rev erence by the ancient Egyptians, who even in some cases elevated them to the rank of actual gods. "Somet;mes," says Sir Gardner Wilkinson, "a Cjno cephalut (t. e., dog-headed baboon) placed on a throne as a god holds a sacred ibis in its hand; and in the judg ment scenes of the dead it frequently occurs seated on the summit of the balance as the emblem of Thoth, who had an important office on that occa sion, and registered the account of tue actions of the deceased. The place where this aniiaal was particularly sacred was Hermopolis, the city of Thoth. Thebes and the other towns also treated it with the respect dne to the representative of the Egyptian Hermes, and in the necropolis of the capital of Upper Egypt a particular spot was set aside as the cemetery ol the sacred apes. Mummies of tht Cynocephalua were put up in a sitting posture, which is usually that given to the animals in the sculptures when representing the god Thoth; and its head forms one of the covers of the four sepulchral vases depicted in the tombs of the dead." HabittjaIi drunkards are cared for in a singular and withal effective manner in Norway and Sweden. The penalty ia imprisonment, and during incarce ration they are fed on bread and wine, no water being allowed to them. The bread is steeped in wine for an hour before it is brought to the cell, night and morning. It tastes good at first, but after eightr ten days the prisoner is so nauseated by it that he refuses it. The cure is considered quite as ef fective as any gold treatment can be. There are many fine collections of intagli in Europe, one of the finest being The Hague. Suspension bridges which were built in the time of the Han dynasty (202 B. C. to 220 A. V.), are atill standing, striking examples of early Oriental engineering skill. The City of Paris has 87,655 trees in its streets, and each tree represents a cost to the city of 175 francs. This makes in ronnd numbers $3,000,000 worth of trees in the streets. At Oreencastle, Ind.t there are two maple trees, growing about fifteen feet apart. At the height of fifty feet one of them makes a sharp angle, trrowins rolidly into the other so that their identity above that point is entirely loax. JUNIATA COUNTY. STARS AND SCISSORS. Bow to Make Five-Bayed Stan at a Slasle Stroke. Tills Is the way to obtain the exact shape of a star with five rays, by a siugle cut in a straight line wiCh pair of scissors in a single piece of paper. Take a letter sheet double, folding It on the left, A B, as in figure 1. Then fold It according to the line ,C D, figure 2, so that the angle A B snau oe nan or the angle a u u. You will get this by folding the sheet according to the line C E, which is do other than the prolonged line C B of figure 2. Your sheet Is now in the form in jdicated in figure 3. Now double it HOW lO CUT riVI-BATID STARS. over as indicated by C A. If the line C E tomes upon 0 D it will show that you folded correctly according to tlx lire 2. If it comes a little out aide or inside, modify the first fold C U. When you are sure that the line C E comes exactly on C I), cut with your scissors along the straight line marked by dots, and, unfolding the paper, you will have the star with five rays, aud can cut as many thous ands of them as you like on the same plan. Electrlo Light on BattleUelile. The ubiquity of electricity is be coming almost proverbial. From the "brightest spot on earth" to the blood-stained battlefields is rather a far cry, but there Is no end to the application of electricity. A recent telegram from Austria described some experiments of great interest which have recently been carried out successfully there. The difficulty of searching for the wounded on the night after a great battle has been one which has long occupied the at tention of military reformers, and the army medical service In Austria has been endeavoring to determine how far the electric light may be utilized for this humane end. The value of powerful search-lights with reflectors has been proved in naval affairs, and at Saukim and elsewhere soldiers have found them very effec tive on open ground. They would be equally effective, under similar conditions, for assisting in picking up the wounded, but when the battle has raged over a wide extent of coun try, or when the fighting has occurred amidst woods and brushwood, the use of this class of light is attended with difficulty. The need for a special form of lijrbt for this purpose having been recoguized, the Austrian medi cal service have been experimenting with portable electric lanterns fed by secondary batteries contained in the knapsacks of the men who carry them. These experiments, concludes the Electrical Keview, have been carried out under conditions as nearly as possible similar to those which would occur iu actual warfare, and the results were so encouraging that it is highly probable that the port able "search-light" will be taken up In earnest by the military authorities in 'ther countries. Pocket Flre-Eeeape. A correspondent of the American Architect describes the successful working of a novel fire-escape. If the invention is what it appears to be it is very Ingenious, and likely to prove of great benefit to mankind. A public trial of It was made from the top of the new Masonic Temple at Chicago. The pocket fire-escape consists of a metallic tape one-quarter of an Inch wide and a thirty-second of an Inch thick, running on a steel reel which Is fastened to a web belt passing ttout the waist. The reel is provided with a brake by means of which the person can control the speed of his descent. There is also an automatic brake to keep a required tension on the tape, and thus prevent a sudden drop. The end of the tape is provided with a thumb-screw, which can be fastened to the window-sill or any object in the room. In appearance the ma chine Is like a fisherman's reel, and is about twice the size of a' spool of thread. The beginning of the experiment jeeraed perilous in the extreme. The inventor fixed the thumb-screw, fastened the web belt about his waist, and stepped off apparently into space from the twentieth story. At first he descended slowly, theu faster and faster, till it seemed as if he must have lost control over the little machine, the slender tape of which could scarcely be seen, and at any time looked no larger than an ordinary cord. At the tenth story he stopped suddsnly, and then descended aain, rapidly and slowly by turns, until he came to the scaffolding where were several workmen. There he took tbrcc men on the "escape" with him, vnd thus dropped to the ground. Oacchue. The aucient Greeks always repre sented Bacchus and the Bacchanal ians as vine-crowned. The ancients, men and gods, appear as If they could ,not enjoy tlieir liquor unless they were "crowned" with some sort of flowcrjr or vegetable coronal. Gar lands of leaves and flowers were out ward and visible siirns of merriment and rejoicing. People liked to "dress themselves up" when they were happy with anything of this kind, just as children do now. Chaucer de scribes one such A gerloud badde be sette upon hie head. As gret as it were for an ale -stake." i This habit of crowning the ale take with leaves and flwwers put ting a "gerlond" on top of it, In sort was the first public-house sign. In many parts of Belgium, France and Germany It U the paly outward jlgn PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 10. 1S92. of a drlnklng'house to this day.' Even when modern pretentiousness has caused the host to adopt some other high-sounding name for his "hotel," the green branch, bush or "gerlond" hangs in front "Good wine needs no bush," says the old proverb, in allud ing to this ancient custom. One Mu't Expedient. When the Doctor entered the room the man on the bed indicated by a motion of the hand that his wife should be sent outside. The physician, accustomed to many queer things, contrived to send her away without any apparent design, and then the sufferer turned to him and said: "Doc, are you a married man?" "Yes," replied the man of prescrip ,lons. "Ah!" sighed the patient, with evi dent relief, "then you'll understand." "Well?" queried the M. D., hoping to get at the trouble in the case. "Perfectly. Never was better io ny life." This was somewhat of a startler to the Doctor, who had been railed In a great hurry. He retained his nerve, however, and asked: "What did you call me for?" "Why, because I've got to be sick. It's this way, Doc. Last fall 1 made fun of some of my wife's purchases, accused her of getting swindled, and told her to take me with her when she did her spring shopping. She took me up, made me promise to go, and yesterday she began to talk of starting out. I'd rather live on baled "hay for a week than go." "Oh, I see," interrupted the Doctor, "you want to be sick until the shop ping is done." "Exactly." "Well, how would grip or pneunic iia do?" "Not any. If she thought I wa& sick she wouldn't leave my bedside Give me something easy, something just hard enough to keep me in the house and let me send her out. You advise her to go tell her she need air." The Doctor "saw," and made a life long friend. Detroit Tribune. An elaborate Fire Extinguisher. An original method has lately been proposed by a New Hampshire in ventor for the extinguishing of fires. To accomplish this purpose a chemi cal generator as large as may be needed for the case In hand Is first provided, and pipes run from this into each room in the building; at the top is a jar in which acid Is stored, inside of which is a cartridge; an open circuit battery is used. The thermostat in each room is set at whatever figure Is desired, perhaps at eighty degrees. On the occurrence of fire the mercury runs up to this figure, and the circuit is closed; this explodes the cartridge in the jar, a valve drops down, and the chemicals are sent to the room through a sys tem of sprinklers. In connection with this device there Is a system of dry pipes, and in case it is found that the chemicals do not extinguish the fire an attendant on the outside of the building is able to tell by the enumerator in which apartment the fire Is located, and by turning a switch can flood the room with wate What Makes Stenographers Weep. "Whom do you find the most diffi cult witness to take?" asked the Her ald man of A. M. Griffin, one of thr oldest court reporters. "Decidedly a woman with a griev ance," he readily replied. "A Pole in a passion is bad; an Irishman de nouncing an enemy is equally so; a Frenchman rendering meaningless his words by ejaculations Is still more de plorable; but none of these can hold a candle to a woman with a grievance. If Sam Weller had ever happened to have been a reporter he would have overlooked the widow and warned his friends to beware of a woman with a grievance. By the way, I can always tell the profession of a man by the manner in which he gives his testi mony. The real estate man, the ac tor, the traveling man, the doctor all carry their profession with them Into the witness box," Chicago Her aid. Why They Knelt. Charles II. of England was noted for his good nature, and although he was sometimes called "Unthinking Charles," yet his heedlessness was more an apparent than a real charac teristic The extravagance of his reign went band-in-hand with poverty, and on some occasions even the royal table was but poorly served. There Is a story told of Grammont, who one day dined in state with the King. Charles bade the Count to notice that he was served upon the knee, a mark of respect to guests of the King not common at other courts. "I thank your Majesty for the ex planation," answered Grammont. "I thought they were begging pardon for giving you so bad a dinner." A Kite Flies m Boy. James Donovan, a 14-year-old boy, while attempting to fly a kite six feet in height made of linen cloth, was carried about twenty feet up in the air. Fearing that he would be car ried atill farther up, the boy let go bis hold and fell heavily to the ground, striking on his side. A doc tor was sent for. The boy was found to be severely bruised, but no bones were broken. New Haven Palladium. Miscalculation. The Boston Globe prints a story which reminds one of the old saying about the shoemaker and his last. A Yarmouth captain had a small coasting schooner lying in port, and decided to give a lesson to painters in general by himself painting the ves sel's name en her bows. He could not reach high enough from the float, and did not care to put out a swing ing stage, so he reached down over the side to do the lettering. After finishing the job on one bow, he went ashore to view his handi work, and this Is what met his gaze. 3IOO V K Men of science estimate that every year a layer eqnal to fourteen feet deep of the surface of all oceans and other bodies of water Is taken into the atmos phere as vapor. . Spiders hare bright ayes. HOW WE MOVED: AS TOLD BY JOHNNY BROWN. BY LILLIAN OBKT. I ain't much used to tellin' a story, out this is jest how it was: We hadn't moved before in a long time, bnt pa has had his t alary raised, so he said he guessed we could afford to live in a Better house: an ma said so, too. Aunt Hester helped us move. Ma told her she needn't take the trouble, an' pa said she better not, for it might break her down for life; but it didn't stop her. She said it needed somebody with experience an' a level head to manage tnovin,' an' bein' we was bound to do it, she was bound to see ns through, btill she thought it was a piece of non sense, an' the house we was in was plenty good enough. She is pa's aunt, so that makes her aunt to all the rest of us. I don't like her not so very much. Pa says that's wioked. He says she's got quite some money, an when she dies she can't take it with her. He likes Aunt Hester real well, only he didn't like her to go house huntin' with bim an' ma, 'cause there didn't nothin' suit her; they come home all tired out both days; an' then they that's pa an' ma they went off by theirselves and hired a house without any trouble. Aunt Hester was kind of miffy about it, an' said most likely it was damp, or somebody had died in it of some catchin' disease, 'cause if it waa all right the folks wouldn't think of movin' ont theirselves. She don't lika me much. She says I'm the worst boy that ever drew the breath of life, exceptiu' pa when he was little, an' I am a limb of the old block. Pa langhs an' says he guesses I'll eome ont all right after a time; an' she goes at him, an' shows him all how he orto bring up his olive branches; that's what she calls me an' the girls. The girls is older'n I be. I ain't such a dreadful bad boy most times, either. My clothes are always gettin' booked onto the picket fence or on nails or something, an' they tear awful easy. The cloth isn't no ways stout enough, for Aunt Hester will make me trousers out of pa's clothes, in' then they tear, an' she rolls np her eyes an' says it takes half her time to patob. She don't have to do it, for the don't live with us all the time. Uncle Peter's folks have to have her ome; but when she comes to see us ihe stays an' stays, an' then comes back in a little while an' stays some nore. She's always pickin' at the girls tbout their hair an' clothes an' lessons, in' patchwork; an' if they speak np to tier, then she goes to pa, au' says she isn't treated with due respect and shildren wasn't brought np that way when she was young; an' pa he has to lalk an' talk to smooth her down. I started to tell about movin', bnt ther things keep comm' iu the way. Aunt Hester said there had got to oe some system about it or she wouldn't lift a finger, an' so days an' lays before the time she begun to pick up little things around an' pack 'em ap. She got pa's razor an' blackm' brush put away, an' had to hunt 'em up; an' we eat without any tablecloth two or three days cause they had to be all washed an' counted an packed to gether. We had newspapers spread n our table, an pa eat to a restaurant eal often. An' when we got the carpets all up, the rooms seemed so big an' funny, an' made a lovely noise when I run through 'em, an' up an' down the stairs; but Aont Hester said I had got to stop that, for the racket made her head crack. She only said that to make me be quiet, for there wasn't a thing the matter with her head only a little bald pot on top of it. She says trouble made that an' turned her gray before her time; she's got little gray curls that bob when she shakes her head, which ihe does most all the time. Ma says she's been disappointed, an' it's had a wurin' effect on her temper. An' come to think, how funny it is that there ain't no women with real bald, shiny heads, as there is men. I always conut 'em when I go to meetin; we've got lo s of 'em to our church. Deacon Smith's is the worst; he's only got the least bit of hair back if his ears. Mebbe Aunt Hester will git jest like him yet. if she has any more trou ble; an' won't she look funny then? I'd love to aee her. Well, there, I ain't told how we moved yet It didn't rain, as we was afraid it would, but was as nice as if made a purpose. Aunt Hester said. She got us all up awfully early, an tore the beds down, an' the house looked bke fury. I had a lot of things to move. She said they was more'n half trash an' ought to be burned, bat pa said I should keep 'em if I wanted to; an he got me a big box to put 'em in, an' she said I was indulged past all be lief, an' 1 wonld be ruined forever 1 was groweiT np; then pa laughed an' laughed. MINEKAL WAX. At the month of Nehalem Kiver, on the coast of Oregon, is washed ashore at high tide a substance having the ap pearance of a mineral and the qualities of fine beeswax. It is nlso lonnd on shore in black soil where trees are growing, at considerable elevations above the water. It is Bold in Astoria at the regular price of beeswax. It belongs to the hydro-carbon series, al lied to amber, a fossil remain of the resinous trees of the Tertiary age. Our truckman took one load off, an' then another truckman came with the folkses things that were goin to live in our old house, but Annt Hester wonldn't let him bring in a scrap of anything till ours was all ont, an' made him set them on the stoop au' in the yard. He was mad as bop, an' said bad words to himself all the while he was unloadin' an' when she took him to do for such language, he said some swear words at her; she said be wasn't ' no gentleman, an' she'd have the law of him, an' then our truckman come back an' said the other one was in his way, an' they got to jawin' at each other. They was goin' to fight, but just then Annt Hester pnt her head ont of an np stair's winder, an' ordered our man to come np an' git a wash-stand that min nit. She's always puttin' in an' spoil in' something. The men said they'd settle tbeir trouble some other time, but I won't be there to aee it. Ma an' the girls went over to the new houae,but Aunt He tar an' I staid till the very last thing had gone, an' I worked like a dog all the time. I was kind o' sorry to go leave Ihe old house after all. Ma carried the cat herself; we've got an awful nice cat, an' she would move him. Aunt Hester was horryfied about that; she said we court ed bad luck; au'ehe told of Iota of fam' Uea that bad moved their eats, aa' I something awful had happened W every single fam'iy of 'em; but ma said she'd risk it an' Jackson should go ith his folks. The new house looked like every thing when we got there. We was all about starved, too, t n' ma hurried an' made some coffee, an' boiled some eggs; but when she came to open a big box of vittlea she jest screamed. She had some biled bam in it, an' a big pan of baked be ma, an' a lovely eake an' some biscuit; but Annt Hester had found a bottle of bluein' that hadn't been put in where it orto, so she tucked it in the box with all them good ies, au' the bottle had got smashed an' the gl is an' blue stuff had run all over the beans an' things. Ma pat 'em straight into the ash barrel; an' Aunt Hester says we was the most wasteful fam'iy ever she see, an' if we didn't come to want she'd miss her guess for once. There wasn't many of the dishes an' things broke, only a couple of vases that ma thought the world of, an' a pitcher that was give to her when sbe was married, an' some cups an' plates an' such things, nothing like as much destruction as might have been expect ed, so Aunt Hester said. She wonldn't have a single bedstead put np till the carpets was put down, so that night we slept on the lounges an' floor. Some of us got awful colds an' pa said he'd take his family an go to a hotel if there couldn't be some beds put np an' we live like Christians; so there was Borne fixed right away, an' things finally got bo we knew where to find 'em an' looked good. Ma cooked a lot more vittlea soon as she could; an' I've got a nice big room with a key to the door of it, an' I've got all my things in it, an' nobody can't snoop when I don't want 'em to. We have taken lots of comfort in our new hoase since Aunt Hester went away. She had to go. Sbe said she knew Peter's folks was a-snfferin' for her presence, an' we most git along the best way we could; she couldn't be in two places at onoe. She's goin' to stay there all summer. I'm glad I don't live to Uncle Peters'. A SEAL'S INTELLIGENCE. A few years ago some fishermen were following their vocation off a har bor on the Main coast, when they ob served a commotion on the surface, and soon made out a seal leaping from the water as if follow d by some enemy. It came near the boat, swimming around it several times, and then, mak ing a leap, the men saw that it was be ing chased by a larg e fish. One of the fishermen dropped his line, and, stepping into the bow, leaned over and held out his hands. To his amazement, the seal immediately dashed toward him, and, with his help, scrambled out of the water into the boat, just in time to escape the sharp weapon of a sword fish that darted by, its big eyes staring, probably in won der at the method of escape, to its fishy intelligence being evidently a case of out of the frying-pan into the fire. But the little seal apparently knew better, and it need not be said that its confidence was not misplaced, as the men were so pleased with its action in coming to them they kept it as a pet, and the seal became a familiar object about the shore. The fishermen had a small house upon the beach, in which their boats and nets were stored, and here the seal made its home, sleeping on a pile of old nets, and during the day lying upon the sands, lazily rolling over in the enjoyment of perfect freedom. When the men came down to the shore, the seal was there to greet them, frisking about and attempting to crawl into the boat. When not taken in, it would follow the boat out, swimming alongside, with its intelligent black eyes fixed upon them. If taken into the boat, it wonld lie on the forward deck and watch its protectors, occa sionally eating a fish which they tossed over to it, or diving over alter one which they threw away. During the winter, the seal was moved np to the home of one of the fishermen, where it spent much of its time by the kitchen fire. Chas. F. Kuider, in Golden Day a. FOREIGN PAPER MONEY. The Bank of England note is five inches by eight In dimensions, and is printed in black ink on Irish linen, water-lined paper, plain white, with ragged edges. Inn notes of the Banque de France are made of white, water-linei paper, printed in blue and black, with nnmer ons mythological and allegorical pic tures, and running in deaominations from the twenty-franc note to the one thousand franc. South American currency, in most countries, is about the size an,d general appearance of American bills, except that oinnamon brown and slate blue are the prevailing colors, and that Spanish and Portugnete are the pre vailing language engraved on the face. The Oerman currency is rather ar tistic. The bills are printed in green and black. Thty run in denominations from five to one thousand marks. Their later bills are printed on silk fibre pa per. The Chinese paper currency is in red, white and yellow paper, with gilt lettering and gorgeous little hand drawn deviaea. The bills to the nrdi- J nary financier, might pass for washing bills, bnt they are worth good money in the Flowery Kingdom. Italian notes are of all sizes, shapet and oolors. The smaller bills five and ten-lire notes are printed on white paper in pink, blue and carmine inks, and ornamented with a finely engraved vignette of King Humbert. The one-hnndred-rouble note of Russia is barred from top to bottom with all the colors of the rainbow, blended as when shown through a prism. In the centre, in bold relief, stands a large, finely-executed vignette of the Empress Catharine I. This is in black. The other engraving is not at all intricate or elaborate, but is well done in dark and light brown and black inks. The Australian bill is printed on light colored, thick paper, which shows none of the silk fibre marks or geo metric lines used in American currency aa a protection agaist counterfeiting. Ka'eid scope is from the Greek kalos, beautiful, eidos, form and skopein, to look , and the sentence-like word means, to look upon beautiful forms. The lenses, mirrors and broken bits of glast making this wonderful toy, have been well named. A enrlous relic of old Riman life found recently at Lannrlum (Porto Portese) and now stored in the British Museum, is a thin slab of stone that was anciently a circus poster, NO. 34 NEWS IN BRIEF. Teak ranks as tha best wood for ship building. When terrified an ostrich will '.ravel at tne rate of 25 miles an hour. New York is said to be the b st market for English damask linen in the world. There Is but one suiden death among women to every ten among men. Horse flesh has come into general ose among the poor of Europe as aa ar ticle of diet. The umbrellt business does not flourish in Aden Arabia. During the last 29 years rain has only fallen there twice. A thimble is only etvmologically considered a "thumb bolL" the original thimbles having been worn on the thumb. In Quito, the only city in the world on the line of the equator, the tun rises and sets at 5 o'clock the year round. The custom of adoption Is universal in Japan, where it is resorted to, to keep family names fiom becoming extinct. A recently designed Incandescent electric lamp, supported by springs, is Intended for use in carriages and other vehicles. A French community will try the experiment of supplying electricity to drive 18,000 looms scattered about in private nouses. Pasco county, Florida, boasts of having the oldest Soldier in the United States. His name it Jonathan Pratt, and he Is clalrred to be 103 years old. In the time of Kenry VI IL Parlia ment passed a law which declared that on and after that dale pins should not be sold for more than $1.(56 per 1000. A dlsh-wasblng machine has been for some time in use in a New York hotel. With two persons to aitend it, it wasLes one thousand diihes an hour. A large cave was recently discov ered in Montana which contained the bones of hundreds of animals which bad fallen Into it and weie unable to escape. When the Orand Duke Paul of Russia travels he cariies his bed with him. He Is so tall that no ordinary bed will enable him to stretch his legs. The latest use of the electric motor in replacing human energy in the man ipulation of the death-dealing Uatling gun uas been found to work with great vuccess. Three factories In the United States consume nearly 2,000,0:0 eggs a year in ranking the peculiar kind of paper used by phoiograpuers known as albumen paper. The underground electric railway proposed for Paris is to traverse the ciiy in the direction of its greatest length, which will causo It approximate 'y to follow the course of the Seine. Jay Gould's outlay in pocket-money amounts to about iZ a month, and he rarely has more than $1') in his clothes. Nearly all his purchases are paid for in checks. It has been said that Washington died duting the last hour of tbe day. on the last day of the week, in the last month of the year and the last year of tbe century. There Is still a fire burning In In dia a sacred fire that was lighted by tbe Parseea twelve centuries ago. Tbe fire is led with sandal and olber fragrant woods aud is replenished live times a day. Labrador, a country which we al ways associate with Arctic snow drifts, icebergs, etc., has 900 species of flowering plants, fifty ferns and over 250 species of mosses and l'.ch ens. What will be the largest electric locomotive in the world i being con structed at Baden, Zurich. It is to develop 1500 to 2000 horse-power, and will make its trial trip In a few months. The teak, which has passed into proverb as the best material for ship building, Is superior to all other woods from tha fact that It contains an essen tial oil which prevents spikes and mala driven Into it from rusting. The grouud on which Zioc's Luth eran Church stand at Manhelm, Penn , was granted to the congregation 120 years ago by Baron Henry Selgel for the consideration of the annual pay ment of one red rose. The delvers among the wonderful in nature h ive discovered ao ice cave in Kilcklial county, Washington. It is said to be of enormoui size, but per vaded by an atmosphere so intensely cold as to prevent thorough explora tion. There are seven brothers and sis ters In New London, Conn., whose com bined ages are 512 years. Their family name is Comstock, and their Christian name are Emily, Orlando, Cordelia, John, Frank, Ezra, and Stephen. A stream near Tucson, Arizona, petrifies all soft substances thrown into it. It is In the great Colorado potato beetle belt, and at tbe time of their migrations thousands of them strike tbe water and are converted into solid stone. An English firm has Invented an Ingenious device for turning on tbe currents for electric lamps at a certain hour. Ad ordinary clock is so adjusted that at tbe desired moment a spring is released, permitting a pair of pivoted contacts to fall into mercury cups, thus completing the circuit. Tbe rate of progression of a storm Is often fifty miles an hour, and a aeries has been traced in a direct line from north to South, a distance ot 400 miles. Mr. Marriott thinks that the average altitude of a thunder storm does not extend beyond about 5030 feet bove the earth's surface. The man who has the courage to fail In trying to do right, rather than suc ceed lu wrong. Is the real hero, no matter whether be wears a paper cap or a crown on bis head. Our life U determined for us; and It makes tbe mind very free when we give up wishing, aud think only of bearing what Is laid upon us, and doing what is given us to do. The man who says he will welcome death at a release from a life made up of sorrow, generally sends for four doctors when be has tbe colic. People Intend to do their test, but somehow they do nothing during tha day they can think of without regret when they are alone at night. 1 1 SaC4SS'fjr m iilitTBiBi