gPBBCBIPTIOM BATEfc Per year, in advance •£ Otherwise 3 w No •nbaoription will be diaoontinued until all irreirWM are paid. Foetmaater* neglecting to notify us when aabecriberj do not take» oat paper* will be neia liable for the • a^| crip^cn- Hunecribers removing from one *° another ehould give ue the nun# of the former M well as the present office. All oommunieatione intended for P°bUoatioi, n this paper mut be accompanied by the real name of the writer not for pubUcation but « a iruarantee of good faith. Marriage and death notices ma»t be aoeompa nied by a responaible nam*. ADDR# "* THE KDTLSK CIT1«*B». BCTLEB. PA. TRAVELERS' QUIDS. BUTLER, ZAKKS CITT AND PLMI* BAILBCAD Trains leave Butler for St. Joe, MUleratown Earns City, Pctrolia, Parker, ete., at 7.27 *• in iud sod 7.25 p. ffi. . Tralua arrive at Batter from the above named points at 7.17 a. m., and 2.15, and « 18 p. The 3.15 train connects with train on the Wesi Penn road through to Pittsburgh. SniKANQO AND AUJOM" RAILKOAD. * Trains leave Hllliard's Mill, Butler county, for Harriaville, Greenville, etc., at 7.50 a. m. arrive at Milliard's Mills at 1:45 A, A., "lUcks from Petrolia. Falrvlew, Modoc and Trontman, connect at Hii llard with all trains 0.1 the 8 ££ember and U c ß f : week Tor to Jong " neceeeary to diepoee ofllb® gssr,ujwsiMttiWSS s the several Urms. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. J. M. OALBREATH, ARROW IT AT LAW. Office on M»in of Court Howe. Augint^-Uy- R. P. SCOTT, Attorney ftt Law, Butler. Pa. Office near Cour Bouse, two doors of CITIZKS office. ' JOHN K. KELLY, Office with I Q. Miller, Esq., In Bradjr Law Building. * K - " A. M. CORNELIUS, Office with W. D. Brandon, Berg Building. Main Street, Boiler, Pa. . J. F. BRITTAIN, Office with L. Z- Mitchell, Diamond. A. M. CUNNINGHAM, Office in Brady'* Lew Building. Butler, Pa. 8. H. PIERSOL. OOoe en N. E. comer Diamond, B idd^^ d JOHN M. GREER. Office on N. E. oorner Diamond. novH WMTHTLUSK, with W. H. H. BWdle, Keq- FLEWTON BLACK, Office on Diamond, near Court Howe. eouth •ide. BTLBRUGH, Office In Riddle'* Lew Building. Offioe in BiddU'e Law Building. J. B. MCJUNKIN. Special attention given to collection* Offic opposite Willerd Howe. JOSEPH B. BREDIN, Office north-«e*t corner of Diamend, Butler Pa. H. H. GOUCHER, Office in Bohnotdeman'* building, up eUb*. JT.DONLY Offioe near Court Howe. 1 " W7D. BRANDON, •M 7-75 Office In Berg'* CLARENCE WALKER, Offioe in Brady building- mar! - , " FERDREIBER, Office In Eeiber'* building, Jefler»on Bt. apOTj " F. M. EASTMAN, Office in Brady bnilding. LEV.^MCQUISTION, Offioe Main street, 1 door *outh of Court How JOS. C. VANDERLIN, Office ¥»'" street, 1 door eooth of Court House. WM. A. FOUQUER, tf Office on Metal street opposite Vofsisy House. " GEO. R. WHITE, Offioe N. E. oorner of Diamond J. D. MoJUNKIN, Office In Uchneldeman'* bnilding, w side Main •treet, 2nd »q«Are from Conrt House. ' T. C. CAMPBELL, Office in Berg'* new building, ad toot, cart side Main at., a few door* eouth Houee. _____ _ "TTATSULLIVAN, m »y7 Offioe S. W. oor. of Diamond. TTTT BLACK, Office on Main .treet, one door south o. Brady Block, Butler. Pa. (*ep. 2, 187*. EUGENE G. MlLL*.'*, Office in Brady'* Law BuUding, Main street, eouth of Court House. JBoctai THOMAS ROBINSON, BUTLEB. PA- _____ JOHN H. NEGLEY (VOlves particular attention tc ransaotions la real estate throughout the oouu.y. Omcioi DIAMOXII, *U» CO U *T HOBS*, I* OmziM wjiiDDia X. K. EckLBT, K«***DT MARSHALL (Late of Ohio.) ECKLEY & MARSHALL. Office in Brady'* Law Bnlldiug. Bept.9,7< c. G. CHRISTIE, Attorney at Law. Legal bu*inee» carefully transacted. Collection* made and promptly remitted. Business correspondence promptly attended to and answered. Office opposite Lowry House, Butler, Pa. PHYSICIANS. JOHN E. BYERS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, myUl-ly] BDTLBR, PA. Office on Jefferson street, opposite EHagUr's Flonr Store. F EHBI^AHMOB, Justio© of the Peac© H«in street, opposite Poetoffice, ZILLUIOFLI .FA. VOL. XIX. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. Estate of Nancy E. McDonald. Letters of administration on the estate of Mrs- Nancy E. McDonald, dee'd, lute of Connoque- D&utiog township, Butler county, Pa., been granted to the undersigned, all persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment, and any hav ing claims against said estate will present them duly authenticated for settlement. ENOU. MCDONALD, Administrator, Mt. Chestnut P. 0., L'utler county, Pa. Estate ofThomas Campbell. Letters testamentary on the estate of! homas Campbell, dee'd., late of Concord twp., Butler county, Pa., having been granted to the unuer signed, all ]'I>I.SPKNSABLK TO KVERY IIOIK. Perfectly harmless. Used internally or externally for Man or Beast. The Fluid has been thoroughly tested, ami we have abundant evidence that it has done everything here claimed. For fuller information get of your Druggist a pamphlet or send to the proprietors, J. H. ZEILIN & CO., Manufacturing Chemists, PHHADELPHIA a.. SEEK health and avoid sickness. Instead of feeling tired and worn out, instead of aches and pains, wouldn't you rather feel fresh and strong? You can continue feeling miserable and good for no thing, and no one but your self can find fault, but if you are tired of that kind of life, you can change it if you choose. How? By getting one bottle of BROWN' IRON BIT TERS, and taking it regularly according to directions. Manifield, Ohio, NOT. 26, Mt. Gentlemen :—1 hare suffered with pain in my tide and back, and preat soreness on my breast, with snoot ing pains all tnrough my body, at tended with weakness, depres sion of spirits, and lots of appe tite. I haw taken several different medicines, and was treated by prora iusnt physicians for my liver, kid neys, and spleen, but lrot no relief. I thought I wouj-i try Brown's Iron Bitters ; I have now taken one bottle and a half and am about well—pain In side and back all gone—soreness all out of my breast, and 1 have a good appetite, and am gaining in strength and flesh. It can justly be Called the king 0/ tntdicina. Jouif K. ALLXNDU. 1 BROWN'S IRON BITTERS is composed of Iron in soluble form; Cinchona the great tonic, together with other standard remedies, making a remarkable non-alcoholic tonic, which will cure Dys pepsia, Indigestion, Malaria, Weakness, and relieve all Lung and Kidney diseases. JAS. LOCKHART, GROCEB, Hfo. LOS Federal St., ALLEGHENY CITY, Hns in stock a full line of FAMILY GROCERIES, (JonnlstiiiK of every article lu the line, both Foreign and Domestic. I have been formerly loented on South Dia mond street, but now ean be found ut No. 103 FEDERAL STREET, a lew doors above depot, and will be pleitscd to see an} of our old jrat rons. ap6,m FOR SALE. -o-O-o-o A large, new, weveu room, frame house, front ing on Jefferson st., liutler, I'a. The house contains seven large rooms and also has throe snnll rooms iu the attic. It lias a large hall and good dry collar under the whole house. The lot is 60 br 183 feet and has on it beside the main building, a good, small two-room house with cellar, a large wash-house with a hake oven and tire place, a large stable and ice house capable of holding 500 tons of ica. and a well of No. 1, water. This property can be secured by a cash purchaser at about half its original cost; or will be exchanged for a farm For particulars enquire at the CITIZEN OFFICE, BUTLER, FA. M. MOORE, 325 Penn A venue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Will offer for a short time, to reduce st .ck be fore going to Paris, an exquisite assortment of Imported Dresses, Mantles and Hats, All recently received for the Huirmer, and of the most fashionable description. Advertise in the CITUKN. BUTLER, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16. 1832 IM > ETRV. A tlianco (or Everybody. There's a chance I everybody in the whole wide wo: Id, A chauee that coaloill soon or cometh late. When we may retrieve our losses, aiid unmind ful of life's crosses Win a glad and glorious victory over fate. There's chance for everybody in the whole wide world, A chance to do a favor for a friend, To prove a benediction, aiid to lessen an af fliction, And with feeling heart a helping hand to lend. There's a chance for everybody in the whole wide worli, A chance to win a fortune and a name, When with inspiration's power we may seize the golden hour, And find ourselves exalted unto fame. There's a chance for everybody in the whole wide world, A chance to reach the goal and take the prize, If we watch the tide that'* going in its ebbing and its flowing. And are quick enough to take it on the rise. There's a chance for every body in the whole wide world To redeem the past and build in better shape ; But still to a shining bauble we keep clinging, there's the trouble, And let golden opportunities escape. There's a chance for everybody in the whole wide world, To make a safe and prosperous advance, But the prospect i* so hazy to tho timorous and the laafv, They sit and mourn that they never had a chance. There's a chance for everybody in the whole wide world, To fill the soul with never ending bliss, Or perform an act of kindness, but alas, in our blindness. There are many, many oliances that we miss. There's a chance for everybody in the whole wide world, A chance that cometh soon or cometh late, When the morning sun is shining, or perchance at day's declining. And its coming we must ever watch and wait. SELECT. THE EASTERN TROIBLE. liUSSIA IN TIIE WAR. A Draft of (he Proelnmatioii AsaliiMt Arab! lo be Sub mitted. ALEXANDRIA, August 7.—Twenty Bedouins were arrested while pilfering at Bamleh last evening. The Khe dive has written to Ragheb Pacha that he considers it incumbent upon his Government to notice, without delay of its intention to indemnify the sufferers from the disorders at Alexan dria, without distinction of nationality, in some manner compatible with the resources of the country. The rebels are entrenching between Aboukir and Ramleb and on the western bank of Mahmoudich canal close to the point to which they were driven on Satur day. A train full of rebels proceeded to the Mahalla Junction this afternoon, intended to destroy the railway. A few rounds from forty-pounders in the Ramleh lines compelled them to with draw. The armored train has return ed from Mahalla Junction without en gaging the enemy, who about the same time brought up some troops by train from Kafrel Dwar, which were busy entrenching and burying their I dead. Admiral Seymour does not intend to surrender the Egyptian prisoners to the Khedive. The Gua boats Dee and Don have arrived here. Admiral Sey mour has received a telegram from the Queen inquiring about the condi tion of those wounded in Saturday's engagment. TURKISH PACHAS GOING TO EGYIT CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 7.—Sultan Pacha has gone to upper Egypt with a large number of Bedoins to prevent the Egyptian forces from that district. Dervisch Pacha aud Server Pacha sail far Egypt this evening. The council of ministers have given instructions to Server Pacha. El Jawaib states that Arabi's troops will submit to Dervish Pacha immediately upon the arrival of the Turkish troops in Egypt. LONDON, Aug. 7.—A despatch from St. Petersburg says it is reported that troops in Odessa and in the Caucasus have receiyed instructions to hold them selves in readiness to embark for Con stantinople in the event of war between England and Turkey, which from pres ent indications seems imminent. It is believed that the Czar would regard such a conflict as an interposition of Provideuce whereby the present Nihi listic tendencies in Bussia might be overthrown aud result in the complete pacification of the empire. THE PORTE ANGRY. CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 7.—An un pleasant feeling has beeu caused to the Porte on account of the hoisting of the English flag on the public build ings when the British occupied Suez. The Porte has beeu assured that the raising of the flag has no significance. The flag displayed was that of the Consulate, and was hoisted in con junction with the Egpytian flag. This explanation is not considered satisfac tory. ft is understood that the Turkish delegates will shortly present to the Conference drafts of a proclamation against Arabi Pacha and a military convention with England. The Porte has received intelligence that Arabi Pacha has ordered the garrison and population of Ismalia to retire to Cairo.- Twenty-five Frenchmen will have special escort. It is stated that Arabi Pasha has ordered the garrisons along the Suez Canal to avoid con flicts with the British. At the sitting of tho conference to day the Turkish delegates accepted the conditions proposed by the Powers in their invitations to the Porte to in tervene in Egypt. 9 With reference to the expected ac ceptance by the Porte of the Military Convention demanded by England, there Is an unconfirmed rumor that Lord Dufferin, the British Ambassador at Constantinople, has been ordered, in the event of the Porte's non-acceptance, to quit Constantinople. Said Pacha has promised Lord Dufferin that the Porte will issue a proclamation declaring Arabi Pacha a rebel. Dyspepsia, the bug-bear of epicure ans, will ce relieved by Brown's Iron Bitters. How a Quaker ficleiidvii lliui self. A new method of dealing: with sere nades was lately invented bv Mr. Fox, t ol Stillbrook, lowa, whi?h reflects the highest credit upon the gentleman's in -1 genuity, and which promises to be a ! precedent of inestimable value Mr. ! Fox, when nearly sixty-four years old, ; married for the first time about a week ago. He has resided in Stillbrook 1 for manv years, and b s reputation as a man of shrewdness and integrity has never been sullied. Nevertheless, Air. Fox has never been regarded as a lib eral man. He does not approve of the use of ardent spirits as a beverage, and he does not smoke. Hence he has never been known to invite his fellow citizens to drink or to take a cigar, and has thus won a reputation for miserly habits which not even the fact that he gives liberally to all charities and never turns a beggar away hungry from his door, cannot alter. Finally, Mr. Fox is a Quaker, and a firm be liever in the doctrine of non-resistance. When such a man ventured to take a wife, the propriety of giving him a sere nade was instantly perceived by the young men of Stilibrook. 'The old man won't stand nothing,' remarked the leader of the young men, 'because he's too mean, and he can't fight be cause he's a Quaker. Boys, we'll just go down and serenade him all night and see how he likes it' Now, Mr. Fox, although a non-re sistant, had quietly made up his mind that he would not suffer from any pro longed serenade. He was addicted to the cultivation of bees, and he had on his premises twelve large beehives, each one of which contained a thousand or so of the largest and fiercest variety of bee. On the evening of the expect ed serenade Mr. Fox conveyed the twelve beehives to the roof of his front piazza, aud placed them very near the edge thereof. He then provided bim sell with a pole long enough to reach from his front bedroom window to the beehiyes, and with a sweet and placid expression of countenance sat down to await the serenaders. In due time they arrived in force. There were at least fifty of them, and, grouping themselves in the frout yard close to the house, they begrn their uproar. Mr. Fox listened silently for ten or fifteen minutes, and then appear ed at the window, and, with a gesture, induced the musicians to pause. He told them that they must leave his premises, and that if they refused they would probably be sorry. With scorn ful laughter the young men declined to depart, and, drowning Mr. Fox's voice with ironical cheers, they resumed. It was then that Mr. Fox deftly upset his twelve beehives with the aid of his pole, and, closing his window, proceed ed to go peacefully to bed, undismay ed by the yells which suddenly arose from his serenaders, and without seek ing to know why they fled headlong from his front yard. 'There wasn't one of them liees that would let up on a man under three mile,' remarked Mr. Fox next day. Euiperor William'* Great Age. New York Evening Post.] Long reigns are rare in history, long royal lives are rarer still. Princes occupy one of the lowest ranges of 1 longevity. The air of courts is de structive to health, nerve and vigor. Lives which early corruption, luxuri ous and effeminate habits, unchecked passions and unceasing excitement do not undermine, are frequently shorten ed by consuming ambition and care, warlike toil and peril, or the muder ous hand of conspiracy. Among the remarkable long reigns in history are those of Uzziah of Judah (52 years), Mithridates of Sapoy 11, of Persia (71), Alfonso I, of Portugal (73), Froderick 111, of Germany (52), Christian IV, of Denmark (GO), Louis XIY, of France, (72), George 111, of England (59), Ferdinaud IV, of Naples (05), and Pedro 11, of Brazil (51 till now). But Uzziah was a youth when placed upon the throne, Mithridates a boy, Sapoy a n IvKAiUMi. Aug. B—Persons who have ju-t returm d from a tour of eighteen miles through North Heidel - Iul t>d >r is emitted. A hasty examiuatirs Owens and Collins, who are also busi ly engaired in the work of attending to various herds now in quarantine. The spleen of some of the dead carcass es is fouud to be quite putrid. The bodies of dead animals are very poison ous, and ono man has already died from lock-jaw and blood-poisoning. His name was Harrison Haag. He . undertook to skiu a carcass for its hide aud also to perform a pest mortem | Some of the poison of the animal got I into bis system through a wound ou j bis baud, and iu a few hours his entire ! system was poisoned. His body, arms ! and limbs became fearfully swollen and ! covered with black blotches. He was I then attacked with lock-jaw ami died |in terrible agony. Two others who assisted him narrowly escaped death. ! Their blotches were burued with caus ! tic. Since then no attempts have lieen made to xkin animals or examine them. They are buried in a hurry and the balance of the herd quarantined. All barnyards and stables are being thoroughly cleansed and farmers are strictly quarantining all their cattle i The disease is contagious and said to be worse than rinderpa.it or pleuro-pneu monia. Facia lor I lie Ciirlon*. The most acute pain will not pro voke an elephant to injure those who have not offended him. A needle passes through the hands of eighty workmen before being ready to deliver to the trade. If a lamp chimney is cut with a dia mond on the convex side it will never crack with the heat, as the incision af fords room fo r expansion, and the glass, after cooling, returns to its original shape, with only a scratch visible where the cut was made. In "Walton's Complete Angler" is the story that a pike was then taken in 14I»7, in a fish-pond near lleilbronn, in Arabia, with a ring fixed in its gills on which was engraved the words, "I aui the fish which Frederick the Second, Governor of the World, put in this pond on the fifth of Octolier, 1233," by which it would ap|>ear that this fish bad lived tbree hundred and sixty years. This fish was said to have been nineteen feet in length, and to have weighed three hundred and fifty pounds. There is a class of objects to be found in ponds aud ditches, of great interest the rotifers so-called because they have a motion resembling that of a wheel. In length they are about the fifteenth part of an inch, and form beautiful ob jects in water under the microscope. Tbey are- mavcllously tenacious of life. You may dry them to a powder, and keep them a year or two in your cabi net, ami when again put into the water tbev will in the course of ac hour or two revive and be found whirling about with their accustomed vigor. The most clever of all spiders are fouud on the shores of the Mediterra nean. They not only live in silk-lined tunnels in the loose soil, but actually have doors to tLeir bouses. These doors are made of layers of web and earth, and shut down naturally by their own weight, so as to be hidden by the i;rass growing above them. Hut if by chance they are disturbed, the spider herself will often rush to the top of the tube, and sticking her claws in to the door will hold it down with all her might as she presses her body against the side of hep house. When the spider would ensnare a victim, she goes to the top of the bole or tunnel, pushes open the door, fastens it back by five tnreads to blades of jrrass near, then spins a web round the open hole, and goes back to her tunnel. When a beetle or other insect is caught, the spider darts, out pierces her victim with her poison fangs, sucks its blood and carries the carcass away some distance from the bole. To guard against the crawling insects that creep into thei holes to attack them, these spider make a second tunnel branching out of the and build a door-way between them, so that tbey cau retreat into the passage in case of attack, aud setting their back against the door, UafUe the intruder, ADYIiKTIMIStJ KATEM One a jnarr ,u» m»ert...o. (I ; • tiiMi talc*; a.lii.n. o»l cbtrg** or fetuktbl? .-La i.«e# art ma if I.uvii 10 Cxlilj Imi to: Ir-t ir*«itii 11, «i ,J Srrib- par liu« *•' r«i<-at!.a iol -11 r« < f Obit \i*. cttrjjtd a* a ' i.rt wni:». a:rl j,ar»: .* aliMt !.a. ■ . r Aikkiijra'Xotwca. i 4. I.it- .1. a: a traluiV Xi i.n s. (3 tlet; tuliir. I 131^) Janon Notu. *. act ti «i>iln.g tan lib**, etcb __ IWib Ik* fact thai tho C:ri*hx i« 'to cMnl ai:J Ikat !y nis. u!»trj Ra pnbluan uewsjj*p*rtn tiutiet t .a Jwiqt •*-art e xintT) it mn»t If aj;j. r! lEt n that it la ti;( m«. i ? nir- aii-'HiJ or a | a fel*err:«ii)K tb«sr t>aajuea«. NO. in: LOXii'.t How II Will in- Prixtcrrri !»urlng (be Lsac Ju: )r . nr| iw Aiui'riui. \BW v..UK. Aug «—Tii«r 11. raid to-morrow will -ay that metallic burial caskets will be immediately sent to Itus-ia f<»r the trsn.-p nation of the !><>.ii«-s of the Jramtte d*ad to this couutry. An oScer of the llitafic Civso Company said on receiving the crder : "We propose that the bodies be taken as they ujw are (fruZ'-n) and wrapped in ft-'t and (tacked in cork dust in the mctalic caskets and per manently sealed. Tben wrap tbe racket in felt and then pack in the b>x iu cork-dust, also cover the bo* with felt. We believe tbe cleric from the outer air cannot penetrate to the frozen body, &ad if it did L»t lon* exposure -«» wetrate, that um bodies would uoi *• y great extent be ef fected by i. Un of their being per fectly air-tigbi n pt*r?e», where no moisture could U; evolved to aid tbe iLawmg ;-r..eess; and they mnst, of course, reiu*ia :a this firozen state for >»n itidt finite i»r.ud. The pmpoeftinn to t .k;- the i>o>t be urrr.-ied by any embalming process Ibe process of embalming, nailer tl>« iu-»*t favorable cfrcum staares, nn-> proven ineffective, as ta the e*M ui ('resident Lincoln, wbo had t » be Kiuotfd to an air-tight m«:atie easkei, n-td recently tbe wholo n ttioit was sb->. ked and grieved at tbe re.-u.i. in I'rniiiin Garfield's cut, and our fi-ui 1 relief when the re main!) where u». n from the wooden r« Ce;»:ae!e, and embalming being if uo;. «J, flanrt ir» ;i*. btonzecasket. W il«g. H. —Secretary Chandler yr.-Hrrday cabled Mr W M. Hum, L u»Lee Long and Companion*, »nd aibsd that he telegraph I.icutenaut Ila-bor. at akutsk, to have sled~rs built ami to bring the bodies to where metallic eases will bo to>tnd ia waiting. A cable message was m e.*iyed Minister Jliut ibta rocrning, acknowledging tfce receipt at Secretary Chaadfer's Tseng*, and stating that Lieuteaent Ifir'vr his Ixrea mule artjaaiated with the*i*Les «l the department ia tLe matter. i:>n* m-.-nf ict-in; as if I- rankiin did not lr»U.r..M»-;> re pair by vigorous Study - the waul of early op|>ortuuity The scholar ap pealing to experieaee is proudly told to close his books, tor what has Amer ica to do with experience? as if bock-* were not tbe ever burning lamps of accumulated wisdom. When Voltaire was insulted by tbe London mob, he turned at bis door and complimented them upon tbe nobleness of their aa tional character, their glorious consti tution and their love of liberty. Tbe London mob did not feel the sarcasm. But when I hear that America may scorn experience because she is a law to herself, I re ait racer that a few years ago a foreign observer came to the city of Washington and said.* "I did not fully comprehend your greataeas until I saw your Congress. Then I felt that if you could stand that you could stand anything, and I untkr stood the saying that Ood takes care of children, drunken men. and the United States." The scholar is de nounced as a coward. Humanity falls among tbeives we are told, and the college I/critr, the educated Pharisee passes by oo the other side. Slavery undermines the Republic but the clergy in America are tbe educated class, ami theCburcb makes itself the bulwark of slavery. Strong drink flays its tens of thousands, but the educated class leaves the gos|>el of temperance to be preached by tbe ignorant and tbe en thusiast. as the English Establishment left the preaching of regeneration to Methodist intinerants in fields and barns. Vast rjuestions cast tbeir shadows upon the future—jnst rota tions of capital and labor; tbe distribul tioo of land; tbe towcrinir power • f corporate wealth, reform in adminis trative methods; but the edu'*ated calss, says tbe critic, instead of advanc ing to deal with them promptly, wise ly and courageously, and settling them, as morning dissipates the night, with out a shoek, 1* aves t.'iem to l«e kinkl.il to fury bv demagogues, lifts a panie cry of commuuism, and sinks paralyz ed with terror. It is the old accusa tion. Kraemus was the great pioneer of modern scholarship Rut in tbe fierce contest of tbe Reformation Lu ther denounced him as a time server and a coward .— Genrje ll'i/luna Cur tit. "Hough ou Kslm." The thing desired fouud at last Ask Druggists for on Rats.'* It clears out rats, mice, roaches, Hies, bedbugs. 15c. boxes. Tbe tail of a fashionable youth's coat is very, very short. Hut it is not as 'short' in a majority of cases, as tbe fashionable youth himself—by a hand some majority. Leigh Hunt was asked by a lady, at desert, if he would not venture on an orange. "Madam,'' he replied. "I should be happy to do so, but I am afraid I should tumble off.*' For the primer: See the men. Ono of them is struggling. The others bold him fast. He is a bank robber. Why do the men hold him so fast? They are taking him to a detective.—/JTWts fille Courier Journal. An Indiana farmer went to law about two egjrs. He paid hit lawyer SSO, lost thirteen days' time, paid witness tees and expense, and then got beateu and ha