-j ' jj'' lj' jjjj S. P. BOHWEIER, THE OONSTITIJ7?ION-THE UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor ud Prepurtotjg. VOL. XL VIII. MIFFLINTOWIN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., WEDNESDAY. APRIL 11. 1S94. NO. 17. 1 a ;'tPRINO CLEANING. TeiTclean yer house an" c'ecn yer she! . An' clean yer born in ev'ry part; But brush the cobwebs from yer heal ' An' sweep tLe snow banks from yer heart Jes' w en spring .Jeanin comes aroun Brins forth the dustir an' the broo n Cut rake yer foy notions down . An' sweep yr dusty soul of glo.n. Bweop 61' idees out with the dust An' dress yer soul in newer style, 6crape from yer min' its wornout crust An' dump it in the rubbish pil. Eweep out the hates that burn au' snare, Bring in new lovos serene an' purj Aroun' the herth-stone of the heart Place modern sty es of furniture. Clean out yer morril chubby-holes. Sweep out the dirt, scraps off the scuu; Tis cleanin' tine for healthy so a s Git up an' dust: The spring bez co ne. C 1- sq out the corners of the brain. Bear down with scrubbm' brush an' soap An' dump oi' Fear into the rain. An' du-t a cosy chair for Hop?. Clean out the brain's deep rubbish hols Hoak ev'ry cranny great an' saiall, An' in the front room of the soul Hang pootier picturs on the w ill. Scrub up the winders of th minJ, Clean up, an let the spring bijin; Swing open wi le the dusty blind An' lot the April sunshine in. riant flowers in the soul's front yard. Set out new shade an' blossom trees, An' let the soil on froze an' har J Hprout crocuses of new idees. Ye?, clean yer house an' clean yar the I, An clean yer barn in ev'ry part; Cut brush the cobwebs from yer heal An' sweep the snow banks from yer heart -S. Walter Fos in Yankee Biade. REVENGED. t.i. trembling c v e n i a g star hanging over tin green silence of tin fragrant Tennessei ' woods. V a p o : j wreathed phantom; from the river course I f I U'1 from the dense thickets that skirtoci the camp ground cmio ever and aiiot ' the mournful sound of whippoorwills, ; sounding 'aiut anil low, like tna rcmem- j be re 1 (.cooes of a lircirn. Yet Wallace Keeno would have gives well nigh all he ! was worth to exchange its luxuriant verdure one moment only for the pine vdad heights and salt winds of Maim, ' T'ith russet winged robins chirping their familiar madrigals in the apple orchards . below. I "Two years ago I left home," niur- ' mmcd . Waliaco Keene as he gazac thcivghtfully out where the purple ekj seemed to touch the waving woods "Two years since young Harney told m he sever would give Marion to 'a corn- ' moo mechanic,' yet the wound rankles sharply still." I "Captain" -:- ' - ! 'Is that you, Spicert What now )' Captain Keene turned his face to ward the opening of the tent, where Private Spice r's head was just visible. J "Why, sir, our fellows have just brought in that lot o' men that was hurt in that scrimmage across the river this morning, and some on 'era Is wounded ' bad." j . "I will be there directly, Spicer." ! There was a little crowd of men gath- 1 ered on the river shore in the warm ' glow of the spring, but they silontlr parted right and left for Captain Keene's tall figure to pass through their midst. 1 Six or seven dusty, bleeding men were sitting and lying around in various pos tures, their ghastly brows made still i paler by the faint, uncertain glimmer of I the young moon. Keene glanced quickly 1 around, taking in the whole scene lit that one brief survey. ' lie stopped short as his eye fell on I new face, half shadowed by the greea sweep of drooping alders a pale, blood streaked f.icj with a gaping cut on the forehead. "This i3 not one of our men!" ho ex claimed sharply. "How came he here?'' "Xi sir," exclaimed Spicer, stepping forward. "I think he belonged to the Eighth. I'm sure I don't know how he ever got mixed up wiih our fellows, but there he was, and I thought we'd bettor not wait for their ambulance, but bring b-ira straight here." Right," briefly pronounced Keene, stoopi:ig over the insensible figure. "Lot thcui carry hiai to my tent, Spicer.'' g your pardou, captain to youi ten s ' "Didn't you hear what f said?" sharp ly interrogated the superior officer. "Bruce, make the others comfortable ic L'cutenant Ordway's quarters. Then will be plenty of room lor them there." 'Well, I'm beat!" ejaculated Bplcei five or ten minutes afterward as ho cair.f out of the captain's tent scratching Lit shock of coarse red curls. Meanwhile the dim light of a lam;! swinging from the center of the little tent 6hone full on the singular group within its circling folds the wounded privato lying like a corpse", still aud pale, on the narrow iron bedstead, the youn g officer leaning over him and supporting bis head aud the biisk, gray eyed little surgeon keenly surveying both as he un folded his case of phials and powders. 4,flc is not dead, doctor?" "So; but he would have been in an. other half hour. Your prompt remedits have saved his life, Captain Keene." , "Thank Cod! oh, thank God!" The surgeon looked at Keene in imazement. "He doesn't belong to your regiment. Why arc you to interested in tho easel" . 'Because, doeto.-," said Keeno, with i strange, bright smile, "when I saw him lying under tho aiders, dead, as thought, I rejoiced in my secret heart. At Crst only at first. Tho next moment I rcmcmberc 1 that I was a man and a Christian. For years I have carried the spirit of Cain in my breast toward that man; no.v it is washed out in his blood." . ' It was high noon of the next day be fore the wounded man started from a fevered doze into the faint dawn of con sciousnc33. -'- ' -' ' "Where am IJ" he faltered, looking wildly aruund hira, with ai ineffectual cJort to raise his dizzy head from the pillsw, . . hi''ow, b9 easy," eaidPfivate Spicer, 'giZr T was about half ai -i) jjff hour after sunset, bu ,H r-n orange light stil .V2? t ry burned above thi ;. tV 1J I lonely southern val W- '' Uv. The side. "You're all right, my boy. Where are you?" Why in the captain's tent, to be sure, and that's pretty good quar ters for the rank an 1 file, I shocid think." The captain's tentl IIo came I herel" "That's just what I cn't tell you you'll have to ask himsel', I guess. You ain't any relation to Cvi.ain Keene, be you?" 'Keene Keene!" repeated the inn. Because," pursuod Spicer, "If you'd been bis own brother b ru, he couldn't have taken better cire of you. Ills cousin, maybe 1" "iiot God forgive me, no!" faltered the wounded man with a low, bitter groan. :-v- "Hera he is now," said Spicer, the familiar accents of his voice falling to a more respectfully modulated tone as he rose and saluted his officer. .He's ail right, captain as clear beaded as a billl" 'Very well, Sicer; yoj cn gi." The private obeyed witU aUcrlty. Yhen they weie alone together in tuo tent, Wallace Kene came to the Iott bedside. "So you're all right, Mr. Harney i" ho asked kindly. "Captain Keene," murmured Harney, shrinking from the sjjliiiug tone as if it had been a digger's point, "I have no right to expect this treatment at your hands." "Oh, never mind." said the youn man lightly. "What cm I do to mt'xe you more comfortable?'' Harney wai silent, bat bis eyes wero full of the te-irs he fain would driva back tears of rem rse!ul shame and he turned his Sashed face a.vay lest the man he had once s grossly insulted should see t'.ie-u fall. Tb.3 next day he a;;ain allude 1 to the home subjsct. "Captain Keene, you asked me yej terday what you could do for me?" "Yes." "I want yoj to obtain leive for Miy to come and nurse me wuea I a n trans ferred to the hospital." Captain Keae turned to.vird the sick man a face win te aai hard m m irble and said in a strangely a'tcrei vjic j: "Do you mean your sister?" 'My sister yes." "Of course, if you wish it, I can ob tain permission, Harney. But " "Weill" Keene's cheek colored, and he bit bu , up. --v- ' j "I should not suppose she would be i willing to leave her husband for the i very uncertain comforts of hospital life." Harney smiled, looking into his com panion's face with keen, se itching eye3. i "May is not married, C.iptain Keene. S'le hat no such m:cnla;a as a hus band!" j "Not married !' "I know what you tuought. une was engaged and almost married. We had nearly iaiuciU her to become Lisle Spencer's wi'e, but she refused on the very eve of the wealing day." I Keene had risen and was pacing up and down the narrow limits of the teat with feverish haste. I "Because," went on Harney, "she 1 loved a certain young volunteer whileft 3 about two yeirs ago too well ever tD become any other man's wife." j "Harney yoa do not mean to say " i "I do, though, old fellow, and, what is more, I meau to say that since I've b( en lying in this tent my eyes have been pretty thoroughly opened to my own absurd folly and impertiae:i;a." ! Captain Keene wrung bit co npinioa's hand and hurried away, to mistake the bootjack for the inkjia id au i to on mit several other no les? insxrmhle ab surdities. i "I see you'll get nothing written to day," sighed Harney as he lay watc'imj Wallace Keene tear up sheet after sheet of condemned note paper. I "I shall, though," smiled Wallace, j ''Only I can't tell exictly which end of my letter to begin at." I Captain Keene did write and if he I inserted a little foreign matter into tho epistle it didn't matter, for Harney, con siderate fellow, never asked to see it. Marion came, and when her brother wa3 promoted into the convalesceat ward, and she went hone again, it was only to lose herself in bo .vers of oriage blos soms, forests of white satin rib on aal acres of pearly, shimmering Bilk, shot with frosty gleams of silvery brocade, for tho course of true love, after all iu turn and intricacies, had at length found , its way into the sunshine and was run ning smoothly overaanls of gold. Nct York News. TTOKDS OF WISDOS Love Is the unknowable. If you can be silent keep silent. Don't"givo heads --lies instead oi" heart aches. Cbsrity and mney cver a multitude of sins. Work taken in proper doses is a good medicine. Dividends are the legs investments walk upon. There is always something provoking in amiability. To be a shining light we must have a heirt burning. In order to carve out a fortuie, on: must be sharp. If we leave the wolves alone we csne to bo shepherds. Welcome is the honey the visiting b;a finds in the flowers. Happiness is a result of what we are, not of what we have. Love is like religion ; it mast be ac cepted largely on faith. To be young is surely the best, if the most precarious, gift of life. The highway of virtue is so little fre quented that collisions are rare. Laziness grows on people. It bagios in cobwebs and en Is in Iron chains. 'Tis a grand thing when a man ha the faculty for precipitating decision. The truths which have broken th preacher's heart will break the hearts o' Lis hearsn. Avowed work, even when nnconge nisi, is far lees trying to patience thao feigned pleasure. The bore is usually considered a h ru les creature, or of that class of irrational bipeds who hurt only the.ne'.vs. Man only was cisated under the la of reason ; man only maintains a constant Opposition to the Uw and reason of era- MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD. torn Drag Coat Jer Their Weight 1 the Tellow SK-tiO. Some months ago, at an exhibition of the American Public Health Asso ciation Id Brooklyn, one manufactur ing chemist handed in medicines the total value of which amounted to some 130, 000. The most costly druu in the collection was that labeled 'Hom-atroplne hydrobromate, cryst." In all six pounds of It were contained in a sln.'le lar, and the price thereof was U',600, or $2,100 per pouud. This expensive remedvls an alkaloid, artificially prepared from atropine, a preparation of belladonna. Another costly medicine shown was an aconite alkaloid in the form of an amorphous powder, prepared from aconltum napelius. Three pounds o this wag valued at $489.50. A three and one-quarter ounce bottle of anemonla was priced 9191.45. OI caffeine there were thirteen different preparations in small bottles, rang ing in price from lS to S2i a bot'le. i A small vial of a tetter wart prepar ation called chelidomine alkaloid was marked $S8. locaine is another ex pensive medicine, four pounds of it beinx there valued at ?120. A nt;.v form of cautbaridin crystals wa priced 31411 a small vial. A tlfteen-o ince bottle of a prepara tion of m ir, h tie. called c deine phos phate, stood for $135. Digitalis u'ormaine, the creat heart remedy, costs about 410 per p und. A lUe ouncj bottle of "true cotoin" sells at 70 an oun -e. The t outh American lud an anow poison, as prepared in the form of crvstals acd used as a medicine in hydrophobia and lockjaw, costs $35 co ounce. A still more ex pensive funu of crystals named liyo-. seine hvdrobroniate, is valued at tl, IriG. titi per ounce. Certain othei drucs varied in price all the way fron $12 to $35 per ounce. j rapa'ne alkaloid, a vegetable pep ' bin obtained from the juice of the melon tree in tropical America, sells tor 4120 a pound. A solvent for dip- thcric membrane is valued at $14.57 j an ounce. The calabar bean comes in for v?ry costly preparations chiefly j used in di-.e:ises of the eye and lock jaw. One of the-'c. physostlgmine alkaloid, is value i at the sum of $l0f.35 rer ounce. Another prepara-j tion of the same costs something ovef i 9H13 an ounce. A special form of nitrate crystal, prepared from the leaves of the Jarborandi, pilocarpus pennati folius, and u-ed in consump- ' tion, is priced at i37, ounce value. I The list might be indefinitely ex- j tended, for the number of new and costly drugs is on the dally increase. It would be hard, indeed, to And the ' d.ugglst who Is familiar with allot Z , :r edge on this point the immense phar- ' ruacop'i'ia of the Cnited States must not only be studied, but those al-o of Germany and Great Britain, them selves vast complications of sclentifl' lally assorted tact. Out of this great number of rerue. dies, however, but few are lo actual use, aod the task of the practical pharmacist Is. therefore, not so hope lessly bewildering as it would seem. To the cost of the d runs he manipu lates must, moreo' er. be added a cer tain per centum of the cost of his own training let alone that of the pre scribing physician. Tutting all this and that together, it would seem a matter of wonder, not that it costs so much, tut that it costs so little for tho luxury of being ill. Fittsburgb Dispatch. Wonders from ftocky Island. The ro ky islands of Jersey and Guernsey are perhaps .the highest tyres of culture at the present days. Jersey farmers make $.-;00 an a re yearly from early potatoes for the London market; they have more than one cow to each a er of meadow in grass, and average $250 to ea-h acre of the island. Guernsey, with 1,300 souls to each square ra lo, and more rock than Jersey, has developed creenhoase culture. The raising ol hothouse grapes was started 30 years ago by a few men, and now the island exports yearly 50 tons of graces. which bring $215,000 at the low priri 18 rents a pound in winter. I Kit'-neu garaen unaer glass art now the rule. Three fourth of an acre covered w th glass and heated for three months in the spring yleldi a ton of tomatoes and 200 pounds ol beans as first cro in April and May, to be followed by two crops more dur ing the summer and autumn. One nardeaer is employed, with two ass s t&nts: a small amount of coke is con sumed with a dollar's worth of gas a month for a small watering entrlne. ITInce ICrar otklne wntos that he saw a quater mile of green peis un der glass Jo April wbi h has already vie'ded 3, 00 p(unds of excellent jeas and were full, as if untouched, and be also saw potatoes dug from the ground in Ar 1 at the rate of five bushels to 21 feet square of ground. The Immense vineries of Mr. Dash- ford, in Jersey, cover 13 acres; cost, ex ellently built, was a square yard. The whole is done by 35 men, and their 2.34 work 1,000 loads of coke and coal heat the whnlr tor a season. A well-known writer on agrkulture states that the money returned from these 13 acres of irlass greatly ex eeds those of an English farm of 1,300 vrrcs. The Snylock Quotation. A good story is told on ex-Pension Commissioner Black. Everyone who knows Black is aware that Lo is one of the most dignified legal practition ers lo the West, and that he is also somewhat enamored of the classl s. Sot long ago he was attorney II a usury case at Sprinefleld, 111., and in his address to the jurv he quoted very freely from the -Merchant of enice." and wound up by saying. that although the plaintiff could de- 2V'nv h J"nd.f ' C,h vV10 10""' bis bond did not enable him tc go be- yiLl o; , n a 1 The attorney for the alleged usurer . , , . of argument Mr. Black was taking, and when that gentleman's peroration was concluded he rose and remarked with somewhat of a pitying tone that Brother Black had recently held a brief in a dresscd-beef case and that : he bad got the two cases mixed up, i concluding by assuring the jury that ' there was no liesh in the case at all. ' but only money. A leiral friend of uilne, whj solemnly assarts Ji was in court on tne occasion, says tne loot of disgust on Mr. Wack's face would have beeu wortha small fortune to any artist wno couia nave reproduced it on canvas. He Wanted to Be Robbed in StjU A lanky individual in a long nnd faded brown overcoat dropped into a restaurant on d earborn street re cently, took his scat at one of the tables, placed bis bat on the floor be side his chair and beckoned to one of the waiters. "Have vou got any stewed pun VI bo asked. '1 think not replied the waiter. Got any fried onions?" "Xa" "What have you got that a man tan eat, anyhow?" 'Here's our bill of fare." "I can't read It without my specs. and I didn't bring 'em. S'posen' you was hungry yourself, what'd you want?" "Well, here's porterhouse steak, roast turkey with cranb rry sauce, veal cutlets, breaded, saddle of veu sion, minced clams on toast, pork and beans " 'Tork an' beans? That'll do. Bring me some pork au' beans and a cup of sassafras tea, purty stroug." We haven't any sa-sifras tea.". 'Hain't got no sassafras tea? Whav kind of a cat in' house are you ruu uin"? Don't you know everybody ort to drink sassafras when tho sprin's comin' on? Kind o' thin's the blood, like. How much do you charge tor wrk an' beans?" "Xwenty-Uvc cents." The stranger stooped and picked up his hat, put it. on his head, roso deliberately, and said to the waiter 'n a tone cf withering rebuke: "Young man, when I want to git robbed on pork an' beans I'll go to a Crst ciass tavern and have it done in H Ic. Any charge fur the time I've been settin down here? No? Wall cood day." A FIRE FIGHTER. The Hi f.acimttitlvo Fire Eiigine autl wp-s It C:tn Uo When at IVurk. The largest aid most powerful locomotive st am tire enifl e in the world s owned by tne City of Hart ford, Conn., says Ilarptr's Weekly. Tho name w th which she has bee i christened, Jumbo, is one to wh h net dime:. s o s will entitle l.e-. Over 10 feet high ar.d 17 feet lo u, she weighs ej tons a:.d c n thrmv 1,300 gallons of water per minut?. Her boiler contains 3!)1 copper tubes. This engine, at her lirst trial, threw throuyh fifty feet oi bos ', three and one-half inches in diam eter, a horizontal stream of water a distance of 448 feet, and threw tv e streams, each as large as that thrown by an ordinary Are engine, a distance: ofoer .'iOO feet. The si :o of t1 i leviathan is better appreclatea whep wo think that a common ho::e draught engine only weighs about li.ooo pounds and has a ca;acity ot only 600 or to0 gallons p t minute. I Too road-driving power of this en gine Is applied through two endless chains running over prockct. wheel; on each of the main rear wheels, per mitting the e wheels to be driven at varying speeds when turning corners, "ine engine may be run either for ward or backward and can be stopped inside of fifty feet when running ai "ull .--peci. When In the bouse the boiler i connected with steam pipes from e heater in the basement and steam Is always kept up to about ninety-five po n Is, which would run her about a quarter of a mile. The firebox i. ki-pt full of material ready for l'ght ing and a steel arm under the engine curries a quantity of waste saturated with kerosene oil, in close proximity in a card of matches In a holder un der a scrathcr, tho latter being at tached to a cord tied to a ring In the floor. At an alarm of fire the steam pipes are disconnected, tho throttle opened and before the engine has moved six inches the cord pulls the scratchcr and the hod carrying te blazing waste swings around under the tire-box, igniting the shav ings and wood. Cannel coal is burned and steam enough can be generated ln lw ml"uKl" t0 run 8 enlae at Water Proof Masonry. What was at first considered a doubtful exierlment. namely, the use of coal tar as a means of render ing masonry Impervious to water, es pecially in positions exposed to di rect contact with the latter, ha3 proved a tractically valuable resort, t'sed as a coating for masonry butit up of very Dorous stone, tar renders it quit-.: Impervious, even ata depth of some fifty feet of water, and. ac cording to the opinion of those whose experience hns been extensive with it the article should be utilized in all public I. u ldings particulariythc.se ile-Uned forthe preservation of works ol art. the d's-olving action of water, even upon mortar of superior quality, being we I known, and also the un favorable effect of the exudation ol water charged with lime salts from the water. Two methods of using the tar are named, namely, in a boil , ing state ln one or several layers, this being suitable tor surfaces ex posed to the air; or it may be made to flame up before using, this Leins appropriate to surfaces which have tc , be covered up. It is stated that wt.cn ; boiling coal tar is employed ln three coats on masonry the result is a Mac's ; and very brilliant varnish, which ' perfectly resists the action of frost, water, and sun, being likewise abso lutely impervious; and the tendciic;. of the black coatlne to absorb beat maybe overcome by white-dusting '.ho whole before the tar is ru;te d.y ' ifitmcAt. ite a. An English lady who rccantly vlsita 1 America states that on tho voyage sh.- was one day shocked by seein ' a saipi offlc kn( down one of the wa was inclined to mutiny. 80 much dld th "S" X.'8t her that t, ,fM,j v f. , ,: , BUV V UOl IIMbCi '.JL1. till 4 U', not again appear on dack until Und w.i; sighted. Then' she perceived at tin wheel the man who had retired th. blow. 'How is ymrhead now?" 'West and by nor', mi'atn," was tha reply. Texas Siftings. . .. , . " ., . , L:lstor 0:1 .l!a3 not w'ei In any cue i TeulOY0 "arls lo wnica it was aoji; once a dtj for two wccSu. 5 CURIOUS OLD WEAPON.1 j OLDEST ITPE OP THE MAGAZINE ASM IN THE WORLD. ?IaJe in London in 15SO and Fouu I at Baltimore After the War Its Itoraantic History, HE oldest type of magncine gun in the world is the John Cuck son, which was made in London (1 during the last part of the Six teenth Century. Tho only arm of this kind in the United States now known to be in the possession of collectors is held in Unrtford, Conn., by the :jnuii?ecur, A. IT. Brooks, and can only be seen by ( the collector's favorites. I A number of inventors, including j Lieutenant II. K. White, of the United I S;u'e3 Navy, have been afforded acccii i to the arm, which is one of romantic I interest. The story of iti loss aud re covery in tne city ot lia:tiinore aunn; the war is in itself a fascinating one, n .t to speak of the mystery that surrou.i b-d it for years prior to the attack on t.iu Federal troops in 1S6I in the city lounded in honor of Lord Baltimore. This ancient gun bears the name and date "John Cuckson, fecit, London 15-rC." The magazine was calculated for ten shots and rested at the left of the breech mechanism. The bullets were round and were ejected into place simul taneously with the powder. The use of a flint lock necessitated a device that wojld carry the powder into the pau, where it could be ignited by the spark from the Eteel. This was accomplished by a peculiar mechanism that carried enough powder from the magazine to the right of the gunatock, from which point the distribution supplying the basin took p!ac;v. The magazine was operated by a lever on the lelt side of tho stock, which moved in a semicircle at right angles with the magazine itself. 'The motion threw the left hand oat and away from the gun until the quadrant was com pleted, when the hand in operation was driwn back to the butt or stock. It is nn interesting fact that the ball adjoiued the powder when loaded, tho paper wadding that was regarded as in diaoensible iu the cartridge that was used for 100 years before the war being conspicuous by its absence. The car tridge ot the present data is identical in principle, with the exception that it i3 elongated and attached to the shell con taining the powder. Tho sight, which is perhaps six incae3 from tho muzzle, Is a crescent in form. The muzzle show3 a plain bore half an Inch in diameter. The stcck, which is fiaely preserved, shows raro aad curious carvings. The heas of the screws even are embellished with figures of dragon3 and wild animals. The cost of this old arm must have been great, as every particle of work counccio 1 wiiU it niait have beea exe cuted by hand. Tne gun was so expen sive in design and workmanship that it could have been owned at first only by tho rich and powerful land owner or military leader of tho timo of its uis -u-facturc. It is a plausible theory, at least, that it was brought to America by one of tho wealthy colonists uuder Lord Baltimore. While there are no ex act data at hand at present sustaining this notion as fuliy as could bo desired, there is unmistakable reason for ad hering to it as the only tenable one. The history of tho gun during the last thirty years is not destitute ot exciting features. After the attack on the Union forces that were marched through Balti more in April, 1S61, the city was ordered to be searched by the Government forces, and arms of every nature were confiscated by the Provost Guard. These arms were rendezvoused at a central point, where they were kept under guard for four yearj. At the conclusion of hos tilities, tho residents of Baltimore, from whom the firms in question had been taken in loGl, were allowed to recover them. They were rusty, and the selos tions were generally of small value. Strange as it may seem, the old mag azine gun of tho Sixteenth Century, was so unprepossessing in the rust and de filement of its long servitude that no one cared for It enough to take it homo. In tho end it was actually thrown away an 1 left to ba carried otf by a ragpicker as old junk. It was purchased from the ragpicker for half a dollar and taken to an old German gunsmith in the city, to be transformed, if possible from the flintlock to a modern piece. Weeks af terward the German gunmaker decided that the job could not bo done and that the old gun should have no better fate tha 3 the junk heap. A second trade was effected, and the repairer of old muskets became himself the owner, pay ing $1.50 forthe privilege. It occurred to him one day, after assuming the proprietorship, that ho would attempt to disassemble the gun. The process was slow and intricate. Tho more the man worked, the more he be came absorbed with interest and do light. Eleven days were actually spent in the process. The rust was removed and the barrel polished to the old surface. For the first time the gunmaker, as he deciphered the inscription, began to understand the treasure that had como into his hands. It was found to be a veritable Cuckson, with possibly not a duplicate on this side of the Atlantic. So far as known, there is not one in tho United States. Mr. Brooks was in negotiations. with the Baltimore owner for three years at least, trying to buy the arm. It was not until within a few months that terms could be made. A personal visit from the collector to tho old German gun smith was the only way that led to suc cess in the negotiations. A large check was made payable to the Baltimore dis coverer before his consent was obtained to the removal of the ancient weapon to Connecticut. The army men and inventors who have seen the gun have gone into ecstasies over it, considering it one of the most interesting mechanisms known of in gun manufacture. New York Times. Epileptic Infancy of Great 3Iei. Sir Andrew Clark is quoted as saying at a meeting recently held in London to promote the fouudingof a colony for ep ilentics: "It was a singular fact, and hal been proved by specialists, that a large ' proportion of our great men, from New- ton to Charles Darwin, were sickly in their infancy in fact, they had been ep- ' ileptics and yet wheo they had attained to manhood they were capable of doing zreat things." Chicago Times. SELECT SIFTISGS. The authograph of General Israel Put. cam sells for $35. Men with gray aud blue eyes are ( usually better marksmen than those with I dark eye3. : ' In olden times deformed people were j frequently thrown in prison to be kept cut of sight. A Louisville (Ky.) barber cuts halt with a razor more artistically than his rivals with shears. i Kearly every county in England ha its favorite oak, the largest of .which is the Cowthorpe of Yorkshire. Mcrvin Paje, a colored man of How I ard County, Missouri, wears a shoe four ! teen inches long and Cvb inches aero;? I the sole. A fourteen year-old boy who his bcec nttending school at Alliance, O'aio, for the seven years cmnot even Ic.r i his letters. j Kouiseau tells of a fricnl who was i warm advocate of suicide, and at tltt pto of eighty drowned himself in tii Ls're of Geneva. A stranger on the cars neir Lis i Angeles, Cat., ordered cigars far his fel I low-passcnsers and, just a3 the weed; had been lighted, blew out his brains. A wonderfully good irritation o maple sugar may be made by fUvoriu: ordinary brown sugar with aa extract ol hickory bark. It is eaid to bo almost indistinguishable from the genuine. In a recent case in Chicago an expert testified that tho vaiu? of a corpse i:i good condition was $12.5. lie said thai if a man had no use fur a corpse, hi might not give more than ii or $10. The Minnesota Historical Society sir; that the source of tho Mississippi llivc: is in a partially enclosed basin coutainin -many'ppnds, lying directly south of Lake Itasca, and distant from its head three miles. Buffalo, N. Y., is the only city in the United Slates that has given the country two Presidents Fillmoie aud Cleveland. Both theso Presidents appoiuted theii former law partners to the office of Postmaster-General. The Simplon Tunnel, which is to ru i from Bieg in Switzerland to Isella ia Italy, will take from eight to nine years for its completion. It will be the longest tunnel in tho world, and will measure about twelve aud a half miles from en trance to outlet. According to tradition the test of tho ancient Japanese sword was eren more rigid than that of Saladin's blade. It was enough for tho latter to cut in twain at a single blow a down piilo-v thrown In tho air, but tho Japanese blade, suspended horizontally beneath a tree, must sever any leaf that, f a!liur, should accidentally light upon the edgo of the blade. The wil'i'iness of perfor.iri doj'i is one of the mo3t interesting character is-1 tics of those intelligent animals. So delighted aro they to play their parts that they can hardly wait for the cue t go on. Even the coldblooded grey hound, usually undemonstrative and siiy, wags his tail in the pleasant antici i i :i of an early call to the front. The po ( lies simply cannot keep still ' a m.a-- it. They whine and bark for recognition, and never tire of their own tricks. Toi, the National Dish or JIaiKuI. Pol, the great food of the natives of Hawaii, is made from the taro plant, a vegetable similar ln size and shap: to a rutabaga turnip, which is grown iu bcd3 kept constantly submerged in water, a number of tho beds being termed a taro patch." Owing to the genial character of the climate the plant can bo culti vated throughout the year. It is consid ered to ba one ot the most nutritious foods known, and is specially adaptel for dyspeptics and persons troubled with stomach disorders. The process of making poi from the plant is to first boil it and remove tua skin, after which it is placed on large wooden trays and thoroughly pounded with pestles of stone, small quantities of water being added from time to time during the process of maceration. Aa hour or more of continual pounding is required, when a substance like dough results, known as paiat. In preparing it for the table, the paiai is placed in a wooden bowl, or calabash, and is al lowed to stand for a couple of days, un til fermentation sets in, when it becomes poi, and tastes, to the unaccustoine I palate, like sour flour paste; but tha taro when boiled simply aj a vegetable is very palatable. The natives eat poi sitting around a large calabash and dipping int j it with their fingers. The dish is known a-, either one, two or three Anger poi, ac cording to its consistency. One fiuger poi is the thickest form in which it is served, and sufficient of it adheres to one finger when dipped into It to ad nit, of its being conveyed to tho mouth. A thinner form of poi requires the use of two fingers for the purpose hence two finger poi ; and yet another, still f url'ier diluted, cannot bo secured from tho dish without tho use of three fingers, heaca its name. Dyspepsia is almost uakuo.vn among the Kanakas, owing principally, it is said, to the general use of this sal utary fooJ. JJemorest. Hiltlug tho Fanny Bon--. This most unpleasant sensation is caused by the violent excitation of the ulnar nerve duo to a blow on the eli;-.v. This nerve passe3 down on the inner sido of the arm, and then, rather inconsid erately, bends round and enters the fore arm at the back of the elbow joint. Any one who has felt his neighbor's elbow sticking into his ribs knows that the elbow is remarkably deScicnt in flesh. The nerve is, therefore, at this point very near the surface, and has lit tle to shield it from a blow. If we are so unfortunate as to give our elbow a smart tap, we obtain a practi cal confirmation cf the fact that the ul nar nerve is the principal sensory nerve of the forearm and hand. New York World. Prayer by Machinery. Praying by machinery is uied among the inhabitants of Centra) Asia. A large hollow cyl'ndcr like a drum is erected, and within it are in closed the prayers that any one may wih to offer written out neatly, lbe cylinder is then made to rewd .e by wind or water power, and every time that it goes around the devotee imagines it to be equivalent to a verbal repetition of all the prayers 1' witalns. . - , . . BUDGET OF FUN. nU3IOROTJ3 SKETCHES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. roof Practical Tiieolo jv Tho Xeo Caisary Accessories Never ia ; Lack Explained A I'aiu - iul Subject, Etc., Eto, It's t'aa littla tiling that telU" Admge tr'i?, lika uiaay others. If you don't relieve it well Ask bi - sister- wita suiatl brothrs. Life. THB XECESSAtl? ACCESSORIES. 'How was it that he managed to null tho wool over your eyjs!" "Well, he had fleece 1 several fellows before I met him." Caie.ij Xawi. Record. EXPLAINEL Miss Kiddle j "What makes oau women look so oK12'' Miss Agie "It's because appearances aro deceiving, I presume." Detroit Free Pross. rRACTICAI. TUEOLOfiV. Baggs "Dj you tiiuk that a maa can servo two masters'" llenpeck "Well, simetim-js; he miy have a wife and a growa daughter, yoi: know l" Puck. Tnnowx in-: hence t uto.vs our. Merchant (c itching his c'.erk ma'.iiaj lovo to his dau'utiT during business hours) "Why, Mr. M iller, want iat'.iU? Do I pay a salary for this kind of wjri;.' ' Cierk "Xo; I do it gratis NEVKli IN LCCK. OM Lady "Just my lue'v!'' Caller "What's wrong 1" Old Lady "I've just heard of s'x cures for rheumatism, aal not oa.i of our family has got it." Ne v Y.ric cckly. TIUKU. Doctor "Will your ladyship p'.o.s let me hear how you c j'igh." Countess "I don't feel so incline! at this moment. (To her runid:) E is;, just you cough in the sa;n3 way ai I li r-j been doing ail this morning." AX EXEU3ETI0 VO'CTII. Mother (anxiously) "I don't bjlij.-j that young man who comes to s.-e you will ever ba abla to make his way ia the world." Sweet Girl "O'.i, you do him injus tice, indeed you do. llo isu't at all bashful." Good News. TEET ALL HAD It. Customer "And this will care mst any of those tired feelings?" TJrug Clerk "Yes, ma'am." t Customer "I'aI Ukw of 1'is .-tru est sized bottles and try it on then boarders that's bin refusiu' the pruaa-." Chicago later-Ocean. ASOIUEll O.VE3TION" ALT03ETUErt. President of Booming Western Ojr p ration "Wo can easily pay our oljii feationsby filling out blank ordars oa t'ao treasurer." : Stockholder (somewhat dubiously) 'Ye3;"but how shall we pay tha pr'r :: for our blank orders?" I'uck. A TAIXFUL SUilJiiCr. Mr. Shortcash "I shall feel grea'-iy honored if you will accompany ma to the theatre this evening." Miss Beauty " Wil i pleasure. Wh it is tho bill for to-night." Mr. Shortcash (absently) "About ton dollais." New York Weekly. A REAL rillEN'D. If was making friends with the licsman. po "My good fellow," he 6aid, "you musti't believa everything you Lear about me." "I don't," responded tho ofUc-r. "If I did I'd run you in." Detroit Frej Press. TEitaon. "Did you ever seo a ghosti" Once." 'Were you scare 11" "Was I scared? Was I? My f'lls-j teeth were in a glass on a table three feet away from the bad, and they actual iy rattled so loud thitthey wo'.ie the neigh bors." Indianapolis Journal. KETUIEtrriON. Teacher "Do you know what ret-ii-bu-tion means?" Bright Boy "Yes'ui. We Lad that word las' week." Teacher "You have a good mem ry. Now stand up aud give a deSuition." Bright Boy "W'y, if you play ia th' dirt, your mamma fills your ears an' noso an' eyes full of soap." Good News. A PRESCRIPTION". "I'm feeling very much ran doTn," said tha twenty-sixth spring poet who had called that day on tho editor. "Could you recommend anything I coa'.d tke for it!" "Yes," said tho editor, wearily, yet strong enough to ssiza tho opportuaity. "Take two ounces of prussio a3id or a twenty years' trip to Central Africa." Harper's Bazar. mas raorosES. Mr. Shortpurso "Whit are yju pay ing that woman for washing?" Mrs. S. "A dollar a week." "Hum! I can get a washing machine for tea dollars, au I I'll do it." Mr. Shortpurso (a month later) "How does that washing machine wori?'' Mrs. S. "Very nicely, but it's rather expensive." "Expensive? How?" The woman makes me hire a boy to help run it." New York Weekly. DEEP ATTACHMENT. Suitor "Respected Ilerr von M.-. r, yoa must not be surprised at my calling upon yon in evening dress. The reason why I have adoptel this gala costume is a very seriou3 one. I am in lovo with your daughter, aud have coma to apply for her hand." Stern Parent (a millionaire, taken by surprise) "Bless me, I feel hiialy ho,i crel. But I have three daughters; which of them is it you are in love vit'.u'" Suitor "Whichever you i.j . . 'I::: von Meier." 3j lanc-tjr Vi There are few nmendmonts to rewri tten laws. NEWS IN BRIEF, Kentucky is first in tobacco. Connecticut has 30,000 farmr. Tied is the Chinese lucky color. Yeiuce is built on eight i , lands. Ptkin, China, has 15,000 police. Tho llo of Man has no pawnshop. California stands first in gold a-d grapes. Tho Union Pacific Railway crosses nine mountain ranges. Moio pe )plo dio in spriug than in any of the other seasons. Furlong was a furrow-long, or the length of a plowed furrow. Brandy is a contraction of the old Enlih brand wine, burnt. Kuf-sian farmers bold an average of twenty-seven acres to each family. Blankets were invented by Thomas Bl.inket, who made them in Bristol in 1310. The blood rose is found only in Fiuridta in an area five miles iu diameter. Wolves have bejn killing sheep at a great rate in parts of Minnesota not very remote. There are HOG savings banks in Frane.o with depositors to tho number oi (5,173,0.r4. Kid gloves aro sewed with otton thread, as it does not cut the kid as readily as silk. Eufuula, Ala., has a curiosity in the shsipe of a chicken with threo bills and threo eyes. There are 1G20 counties in tho United States named after the Futher of His country. In the year 1C20 England coined tin bbilliugs, each having a stud of copper set in the centre. Tho Koman architects used to put empty jugs in the walls of theatres to make them more resonant. So far as can bo discovered, the first use of nn iron roof was on a buil dicg erected in Ohio in 1SG8. Moscow is said to have 170G ''big bells, " tho smallestof which wei.'ti.s .1000 pounds, and the largest 413,772. At tho beginning of tho eishteontfi century people were hanged in llreut Britaiu for the illicit manufacture of salt. There aro over 0010 person foil three times a dnv at Dolina-Bagtch Palaco while the Hultnn of Turkey u. thtro. Sinco tho repeal of British naviga tion laws in lsll) British shippiug h is iueitnseil seven times taster tiiau tho yopulution. IeiMutitichilly manufactured by ths use of chemical mixtures is not a late ideii by any moans, tha invention dat ing back to 17-3. Pons an I beans cooked in hard wa'er containing Mine or pvrsnm nil! not 'on ttmirr, irr-enftse lljt'BtJ enlif anctB burden vegetable cnaeiup. Tho two highest inhabit d s;iot on earth i:ro Arevichiury nnd Mnrupatn, mining camps iu tho Andes. The former has an elevution of 17.'JjJ feet. A rabbit was recently killed near Jefferson City, .Mo., which bad the form and features of a rabbit but wus r-iiptirently wearing tho iskiu of a Maltose cut. An nnthority is of the opinion that the natives of Mashoualand nre ull de scended from n commercial ieopls who, some 3i')0 years ug, penetrated froiii Arnbia. Tlio wonderful miniature witch of King Georgo III., which to kept for vi ars as a curiosity in tho Kensington Museum, wa3 about tho size of one of our silver dimes. Mr. Austin, of Livingston Connty Missouri, just dead, was seventy-four years old, never was out of the State, never was shaved in a barber shop, never ate in a hotel, and was never ill nut ill just before bis death. - -The oldest mathematical book in the world is called tae "Papyrus Bhind. It is iu manuscript, of course, and was wn'.Un bv one Ahmet, an Egyptian, who lived in the year 2000 B. 6. The book is now in tho British Mu seum. Cardinal Mezzofant, the most rc m arUnble linguist the world has ever known, is said to have been able to nse every word of any considnrable impor tance 'n over I X) different languages, and to have been nMe to carry on a conversation in forty-five or fifty others. A murderer in Alabama fled the scene of his crime. Soon after, a man of the same name and appearance, indued ing a peculiar tear, was positively identified ns the murderer, found guilty and sentenced to death. Bo fore the fatal ample evidence was furnished proving that he was at work in Tennessee at the time cf the murder. A widow in Vienna, having asked whether s.he would be allowed to pre serve tho ashes of her husband in an urn in her apartment, hns be?n told by tho Government that this could not bo permitted. The minister responsible says the custom, if it became general, "might lead to strange eccentricity and superstition. In tho brave days of Quten Eliza beth the handkerchief bad a senti mental as well as useful mission. In that day liny pqr.nresof linest lawn finely and delicately wrought and edged with gold lace, were made purpo-ely for ladies to give to their lovers, who wore these tokens neatly folded in their hats. Friendship Between a Uorse and a Do?. A plumber at Xarragansett, R. I., hal a horsa twenty-sevea years old, whica was used for carrying around Lis master's material when that was necessary, but spent most of its time ia a small pasture. A fox terrier, also boloniina to tha plumber, was an Inseparable companion ' of the old horse. ' When the old horse was harnessed to the cart tho dog was on guard to seo that nothing was stolen from the cart. In the pasturo the dog was always saining around the ho-se and wa3 never so delighted a3 when the horse would begin to roll in the gross, which it often did, apparently to please the dog, which would jump about ia every direction and bark for pure Joy. At night when tha hor3e was put In the barn tha dog always entered with its friend and slept on the animal's body. One day tho neighbors heard the most dismal howls coming from the putnre, and found that the old horse had die4. There was the terrier oa the dead body, howiiug out its sorrow and misery. Tho dog remained with the body "until it was tiuioved for burial. Ne .v York Trlbuae. V8,