VO).. XXV THE CELEBRATED ALLEN ASIIER. Why it is Superior to All Oilier,s in Hie Market! ' ' ] s t. Peine wily worked, and d-xs the V i-Z ir' r" rrj idly t?u,n ai.r other i. • liir.f 1 ili d. Bt-iEgecelosed p,-evtiitsali-plftshins; . --yv r.f wr.trr r.Rii ii'l-.ali! ■ :•*< am. .•<• ii ;-!ii to heclih, ar.d unavoidable in the «#« < f all B rpfn rr.?'hints or (lit Tin >'■ fsrds r.i wr.mtn f-re yearly broken down i.i | y~ | ». _hf :i!ih lylb 'l' bor r f tfc* vra -'■ ;,r»: pud in fqjtr perron or ni ■. -j- IS' -j RhffiJwßMi PMbIPS i r< reiving the iHrt frria li-e go>,d«: another I mt.teris) print is thrt there is no fricti' n on Bfewl' >;.y 11 • iicrt- li:-" it wiil saw the j>rice of it in less ti.au a «\ year's time. B The peculiar r.ction of tfce water in the ■« ncrehiee . v.bjj.h cannot be understood uule-- : M cce sets it) forci'ig a strong current of water thrcncb the ©'"thing at every vibration of which if caused top of the machine, in W connection v. itli the New Champion Vv ring * er, aieko the Allen Washer a household necessity. MANUFACTURED AND FOR SALE BY— SHIRA, SHiRA & IIAVS Sutler, Pa, lew Drug Store JUST OPENED, NEW GOODS, NEW PRICES, AT 1.50, E. JEFFERSON ST., Where you will find a full line of Fine Drugs, Chemicals, Per fumes and Toilet Articles. Agents for mi lima, Montrose Dealer. Keno. and Best 5 and 10 cent Cigars in town. Prescriptions carefully compounded by an experienced Pharmacist. Your patronage respectfully solicited. DR. D. E. WILES, Prop'r. ~ FALL MILLINERY! Our line of Ladies, Mieses aDd Children's ST.'AW and FELT HATS and BONNETS, in all tho newest fal i;d winter shapes, in now complete at the Leading Millinery House. XX T. PAPE, No. 18 South Main St., - - - - «utlei% P** A. Troutman Son. Leading Drj Goods Bousa. BUTLER - :F:ELN N'/±- 1111111111 <*> 1111111111 A Trcu'man & Sea. | Cloaks and Wraps, Tbe leading Pry Goods and Car- ! f « r Children and Ladies, pet. House,' Butler, Pa. j We carry tbe greatest variety of New Fall Drees Goods' at prices j styles, our stock never WOP. ES large, which will make them move vt ry prices never so low, goods never 80 fast. nice We have the largest stock ever If 7 0U want to see tbe nice goods, ebown in Butler county, comprising please call and examine our stock, all tbe new goods in Checks, Stripes Ladies', Gents', and Children's and Piain Weaves in Foreign and Underwear, every grade, all sizes, Domestic beat goods. Gloves, Corsets, Hosiery, Velvets, Slack and Colored Silks, Flushes, Yams, etc. OUR— Special Values ~ T 1 uarpets and Oil Cloths, IN TRIMMING Oj 1 never had so many—never were car we have never bad such a nice as- \ „ FO c * !f - a P* Bortment and so many of them. ° U7 Bt ° ck •? com P' e?e D>n 1 hu * a (Jarput until you have seen our BARGAINS stock. Body Brussels, Velvets, Tap _ __ , . _. ~ er-trv, 3-Plv Extra Super, Hemp, Cot 1V J' ( ' k, ? rr - ton aud Rag Rug*. Girghtrtns, W hue Its, Shawls Window Shades, largest a&sort- Tabie Linens, Laee Curtains, mp „ {j loweat pricea> i tf fact everything which can be ~ r _ _ found in a C U i'» TAI N HOL E S n fl ! Pi u W1 " ol! examination our fifst-u f ass Dry Goods Store, A. TKOIiTMAN & BuOegp Fa-__ J.' KLE'E & CO. MANUFACTURERS OF MENS', YOUTHS'. BOYS, AND CHILDREN'S mmm CLOTHING mrnm Of Fine and Medium Grades, at Closest Prices. Also, J. KLEE & CO.'S SUPERIOR WORKING PANTS, Every pair guarantee! not to rip. Hos. 628 and 630 Broadwny. stn Yoi-It. 8U LIBERTY ST.. PITTSBURGH. M.F.&M, Marks! Invite your inspection ot tlieir stock of FALL and WINTER ! I Millinery Goods. .'Receiving goods every week \ their stock is always FKESH AND COMPLETE.! THE BUTLER CITIZEN. CHOICE FRUIT. Having taken the agency for the Cliolce Fruit Preen, Beautiful Shrubbery, Ornamental Trees, An* eveiythinc else in tbP Nursery line, of t!i<> New hnglaiiil Nui.-eries. Chase Bros. & Co., N V.. I v. Hi call upon you In tlienear future and solicit your unlets lor Spi ;ng delivery. A. H, FALLER, Agent, But lei*, - Pa. | HOW TO BtY AXD WHAT TO BIT. WHAT EXTEP.IENCE TEACHES IS BEST. There is something to consider in tbe dailv | expenses for the household necessities, which j in the aggregate of the year amount to a good j deal. The ethics of buying and selling seem I to be for the vendor to get all he can, and for ; the purchaser to see that lie don't get too | much. But what is too much ? It is almost a profound question, and presents the strange ; paradox that the dearc.-t in many tilings is often the cheapest. Certainly this is so in . food where health Ls involved, and in reme dies which restore health after it has been , impaired. It is certainly so in clothing; for a cheap suit that will hardly last one season is ; dearer than the one which" will last two sea _ j sons, the difference in price being reasonable. So in shoes, and the hke. Recurring to the ' ; items of food and health, undoubtedly the most important, it is that villainous | : adulteration is what renders it cheaper, in 1 much that is sold, and men are known who ' have spent thousands to he cured of disease. Lave suffered vears of agony, and have triiica i away their substance 011 worthless remedies. • That which Ls testified to by thousands as be i ing an absolute cure, and permanently effioa • cious, is cheap at any price in comparison ■ j with such as have no virtue, and which pro t long suffering. A case in point is the follow ! ing: "New Bloom field, Pa., April 26. I&H6. , i The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md. ! (rentlenien :—For more than thirty yean I had been afflicted with rheumatism so severe i I had to use morphine to secure rest at night, i Spent hundreds of dollars with physicians and for remedies without benefit. Five years ago I tried St. Jacobs Oil, and it effecte'd an entire and permanent cure. I have not been troubled with it since. Cold or damp weather does not aftect me at all. I desire to give it rnv unqualilied indorsement. J. E. Bonsall. clerk /•i of the several courts of Perry \\ . county, Pa." The point here \y / is not so much what Mr. \l jtr Bonsall paid for the great (vj7 » remedy for pain, for the v§» I price is a mere bagatelle. *3l I but that lie was cured T\ J permanently after thirty \V_/ years'suffering. Of course >}. \ the ixwr must count cost y/J,J in even-thing; but they should" reckon on the * sound basis that that \\ which is bad is worthless. \J \\ and that which is the best 'V_ \l and will cure, and stay \\ cured, is cheap at any V""' " r, , ?7 Catarrh Cream Ba ly^s^H Cleanses the Biwl ; Nasal Passag j « i , S§3 H^ADI es. Allays A pain and In - fiammati on Kp- / Heals th < sores,restore: the Senses o: T a ste an r- U3A-1 Smell. HAY-FEVER | Try llis cuts Ely's Ceam Balm, A particle is applied into eneh nostril and is agree:,!;!?-. Price ry) cent-, at nrugglsts :by mail, refciot>jired, 60 ors. Ciriatlars free, EI.V ltllt)?-, 23j 'ireenwieh St. New York. Br. sT a. JOHHSTON, DETJTIST, - - BUTLER, PA. All work pertaining to tiie profession execut ed nit!;,* neatest ni.unier. ap -cnilties :—(loM 1 and Painles? Ex traction of Teetll, \'it !lize(l Air administered. Office on .IciTerson Street, one ,loor Kast of I.onrj iiotiAe, I t, Stairs. Office open daily, except Y\Vdnesentiil College, is prepared to do anything l:i the line of his profession in a satisfactory manner. tlilice oil Main street, P.utler, Union Block up stairs. J. S. LUSK, M.b., nos removed from Harmony to Butler and has liis oltice at No. 3, Main St., three doors below ■ Lowry House. apr-30-tf. DE. R. C. McCTJRDY _ and Surgeon, Office on M in St., over Kemper's store. Butler, - Fenn'a. iIIMBUIB HOTEL, No. 88 and 90, S. Main St., BUTLER, - - PA. Near New Court House —formerly Donaldson (louse—go?,d accommodations for travelers. Mood stabling connected. [4-0- 'MMy] Ji EITKNMUI.LER. Prop'r. SHU 111 Sli. Iti Fra'dillntwp., half way between l'rosnect and Wliltextown. on tli" riltstmrg and franklin road, conliiiiis fourteen and a quarter icres, lias (,:<>od buildings A Hew Frame House, flood barn and all «,tln r ne« esrcrv outbuildings. Land :dl level, and In good state of cultivation. I go, U v,ell v."ater, I'Olb hitrn and soft, and good I orehaid of :.H kinds of Unit. For price and terms apply to me at m> furniture store in Pros pect . c. M. EDMUHDSON. 9-2-3111 LXIkJIINKIA, insurance and Real Estate Ag't. 17 EAST J RFFKUSON ST. I 5u r ri.3:i2, - I'^v. A J FRANK & CO, DEALERS IN DUL'GS, MEDICINES, AND CHEMICALS, FANCY A:.U TOILET AIiTIOES, SPONGES. BRUSHES, PERFUMERY. &e. ' g:?-r!iysi. i..ijs' cvrcruiiy co—• pounded. 4-5 S Main Street, Butler, Pa. : FARI FOB SALE In Sugarcretk towDsbtp, Armstrong county, near Adams P. 0., one and oae-foui th mile east of the new oil development In Sugarcreek twp. Farm contains 1 100 ACRES, with bank barn, 32x0J feet; BEIGE HOU^ , 18x30 feet, 2 stories, with cellar, frame kitchen, Hxiufeet; gcxl lug of water, farm well wa tered. good orchard of graftcil lrii.lt. farm lu a . goo l slate of cultivation. About, ' l 75 ACRES CLEARED, i balance in good timber. Will sell extremely low for cash. For particulars Inquire of I " J. R. WICK. lltlnier«l)urg. Chirlon r*o., I n, Not the Smartest Folks. You n;ay notch it ou the palin's You u-ny mark it oa de wall, Dat de higher up the totd-frog jumps De haider will he fall. And dc crow dat fly de swiites' Am de soonest iu de corn, And de fly dat am de ineanes' tilts un earliest in de morn. ! De brook dat am ,"»as' N"r am he de greates' man vViio tutes de bigges' muscle; Nor am fche de Cnei' gal, \Yho war de biggev bustle, You kin not j edge de kin' ob man By de manner ob bis walkiu' And dey are not de smartes' folks Who do de londes' talkin'. liy U e'e Z< kc. First Jenny Lind Ticket in the Conniopoliian Magazine, P. T. Barnum thus tells of the mau who bought the first Jenny Lind ticket in this country: I kuew that tbe fabulous sum of money that I was to pay for her dul cet notes would of itself be a ' big advertisement;" that people would begin to wonder what tbe ptice of tickets would have to be in order to even reimburse me; that many would fear they would not be able to pay the price charged, itc. This was exactly the state of pub lic feeling a week before her arrival, when I announced that, in order to give all desirous to hear Jenny Lind an equal chance, the tickets would be sold at public auction, starting at the nominal price of three dollars per ticket. It was acknowledged that this plan was fair, but the wonder grew as to how many times the "nominal price" the choice Beats would bring in this public competi tion. All over the United States, and Europe, the excited people were waiting for the news on this point, which would reach them as soon as possble &{ter the sale. For ten days preceding the auc tion the newspapers were full ot pre dictions regarding the price of tick ets. Everybody wated to attend the i first concert, and orders from all I parts of the country were seat to I friends in New York to secure tick | ets, if they could be bought at prices that were Dot utterly fabulous. It is everbody's business to exer cise the greatest possible foresight whereby his calling can in an honest way be profitable. I 'clearly saw what eifect this auction sale of Jer;ny Lind tickets would have in the ex isting excited state of the public mind; and that the higher the prices obtained, tbe mure would the frenzy be increased Therefore, three days before tbe auction of concert tickets was to coine off, I went quietly to John N. Genin, a popular hat-maker, arid told him I had a secret business suggestion to impart, which if shrewdly managed, would, as I be lieved, belp him thousauds of dollars as an advertisement. "What is it?" eagerly asked aaked Mr. Genin. "Bid off the first Jenny Lind ticket", I replied; "aud the higher price paid the greater renown will it give you all over the country with in twenty-fonr hours after its pur chase." Genin, who was a good adyertiser, instantly saw his opportunity; and seizing ray hand with an air of de light eagerly exclaimed; "Barnum, you have made my fortune. I will buy the first Jenny Lind ticket, but I will not mention it even to my wi'e till I have secured it " On reflection I feared that this bril liant idea might not strike any body else, and consequently the bidding would not run very high; but as I knew that any busi ness man who bought the first ticket would be a great gainer thereby, I quietly called on Dr. Brandretb, the great pill-maker and a advertiser. I asked for a private in terview. The doctor invited me into his office, and locking tbe door, point ed to au easy-arm-chair, and then said in a low voice: "Friend Barnum, what is up." "A mighty big thing for you," I replied, "replied, "if you will keep it a profound secret for three days." The doctor's eyes shone with delight as he fcqufezed my hand, and said: "My dear Barnum, I pledge my hon or not to divulge it to any living be ing till you say the word." "Buy the first Jenny Lind ticket at auction, even if you pay high for it," I replied, "and let every newspa per in America and Europe announce that Dr: Brandretb, .Jr., the maker of the celebrated Braudreth's Pilis,' se cured the first Jenny Lind ticket, at filly or a hundrod dollars, as the case may be." The doctor smiled and replied: Pretty good, Barnum, especially for you, if you can sell a ticket at that price." I was surprised at the calmness of this remark, and said: "Yes, doc tor, it may be good for me, but that doesn't prevent its being a success ful stroke of policy for you " The doctor gave mo a tly wink, and merely remarked: "Barnum, we all kuow you have a fertile brain and don't tnise any opportunity to feather your nest. Your foresight is remark able, aud generally quite profitable," Nettled at the doctor's temporary obtuseness. I replied: "Dr. Brandretb, I have long admir ed your ingenious methods of adver tising 'Bandreth's Pills;' but if you cau't see the vivlue to your business of ray suggestion, I beg to say you will surely regret it when tbe first Jenny Lind ticket falls into other hands." The doctor was so strongly im pressed that my idea was a purely selfish one that several raiuuteselaps ed belore he began to see that, not withstanding I should be benefited by the proposed plan, it would not prevent him from reaping a harvest at the same time. H« then said: "I thank you for tbe hint, Mr. Bar num. Perhaps twenty or thirty dol lars expended for the first ticket would not be a bad investment; so I will seud my cashier to the auction with instructions to make a liberal bid." Bidding the doctor good-bye, I wulktd down Broadway, feeling that my plan had put two worthy and ambitious gentlemen into a frame of mind that would result in a greater eclat for the Jenny Lind enterprise. BUTLFR, PA.. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2,18K7 I On Saturday, September 7, 1850, I three thousand anxious gentleman I entered Castle Garden, New York, to attend the sale of the Jenny Lind j tickets, notwithstanding the (act that the lessees of the gaiden made their usual charge of twplve and one half cents for cro?Bln.u;'ti hopes aa l feirs, Must icbe ami bM bene-it'i your loal; f 1, nearvr to the wayside iau 5 Where toil >hall cc.se and rust , Am wearv, of y<"jr r>;».l I ' -LOMJJCI, INK f The Profits in Beef.--Same Irt ( teresting Facts and Figures. I We gather a numtar of f<;ets and f figures from the Slock Grower oa ; the profits made in slaughtering and , felling beef that will not f:;ii to be of; . 1 special interest to all readers of the ; Ploughman, as well ..ato ail oo.i-u n , ' ers It states that a steer weighing , j 1,000 pounds can he bought in Kan sas City for $2 50 per huudred ; pounds. A 1 200 pouud steer can be bought for 3\ cents per pound, or ; sl2 per head The c>st of buying. .slaughtering, refrigerating and ship | ping varies of course with the | amount of business done, but runs from fifty cents to $2 per head This . | calculation is ba.-ed oa sending off i nine car loads a day, at an expense k of $2 50 ptr bead; where as twelve , cars will reduce it to §1.25 per head, . and fifteen cars to sl, and so on in a , diminishing ratio of expense Beef , slaughtered in Kansas Citv can be de livered in New York for $2lO per 20,- 000 pounds, or $1 05 p*»r 100 pounds , Armour is allowed mileage for the use of bis ovvu cars, bringing the freight down for Ij'm TO cents per 100 pounds. And it costs at the rate of one cent per pound, net weight, to retail beef in the eastern markets A g;ood 1,000 pound steer will weigh, after being dressed and refrig erated, ready for market, 650 pounds, or 55 per cent, of the gross weight; and a steer of 1,200 pounds weight will dress 696 pounds or 58 per cen». of the live weight. The hide, bead, fat, blood, etc., are termed "the fifth quarter," and fiud a ready sale and a market value at the slaughter-house This fifth quarter of a 1,000 pound steer may bo safely estimated to be woi th SS, and of a 1,200-pound steer $lO, The tongue, liver and heart are shipped with the beef and sell readily iu the eastern matkets. A 1000 pound steer that weighs 550 net, will bring all told $45 79; add the fifth quarter SB. and the tongue, liver and heart, To cents; and there is a total of $54 52 received. The same steer costs $25; the killing, re frigerating and shipping $1.50; freight to New York seventy cents, and cost of retailing $5.50; making a total of $35.85. And this leaves a clear profit of 18 69 per head. A steer weighing 1.200 pounds dresses 696 pounds net. Sold at re tail in the New York market it brings to the forwarder S7O 30; the fifth quarter brings slo' the tongue, liver and heart brings $2; making a total of $Bl 31 received. The same steer costs $42; the killing, refrigerating and shipping, $1 50; freight to New York at seveu ceuts, $4.87; expense of retailing, $6 96; making a total ex pense of $55 35, and leaving a clear profit of $25 98. A car load of beef, minimum is 20,000 pounds; therefore a car load averagiug 550 pounds net to the steer, represents about forty beeve3. A car load of forty beeves, at an averago profit $lB 69 to the steer sold iu New York will realize a total net profit of $747 60; and a car load of thirty 1 beeves weighing each 696 pounds net, 1 will realize a total net profit of : $779.40. Is it any such wonder, then, that the cattle kings are the dealers in dead beef instead of those who raise, ' fatten and market them from the far 1 western ranches. It is notorious that the raising of cattle on such an en ormously increased scale has brought down the price in proportional figures to the forwarders at Kansas City and Chicago. Yet the cousumers at the east are compelled to pay not only the ( same price for beef as before, but even ( more than the former price at times. And the packers stand between the breeders and consumers, cutting it fat from both sides and getting rich , and powerful at their expense,—Mas- ( sachusetts Ploughman. I Things Financiers Should be 1 Thankful for. Financiers have a good many things to give thanks for. In the 1 first place, the country was never > more prosperous thau it is now, giv- I ing, very profitable employment to ' all the available money at the com- [ maud of the banks. This prosperity is not confined to a few lines of busi ness, but is general and characterizes ' nearly every section of the conutry. They should give thanks also that 1 we have escaped anything serious in ' the line of pauics and revulsions, al- 1 though a number of incidents have occurred which, under ordinary cir cumstances, would each have caused something a good deal more serious than a mere temporary unsettling of coufidence and curtailment of credits, j These affairs were not due in any sense to anything unfavorable in le- , gitimate business, but wholly to over speculation and attempts to corner ( this, that or the other staple com- modity. The list of failures among the classes who attend strictly to j their own immediate business has been comparativelysmall,andthe aggre ! gate liabilities and consequent losses ( to creditors smaller than in recent years. Business generally is on a more solid basis financially thau ever | before in the history of the country. ( Money is abundant and cheap for those of established credit. Our money was never more stable and never more nearly equal to the com mercial and industrial requirements than at present. Our population and j wealth are increasing with wonderful ( rapidity, and new sections are being ( opened up and peopled at a rate that promises a profitable market for our manufactures for many years to come. Our agricultural interests as well as our industries are increasingly pros perous. These are by no means all the reasons lor thankfulness on the part of the men who control the finances of the country, but, like Mer cutio's wound will suffice. "You chokiu' my fingers," com plained a little Pittsburgh to to its , mother, who was holding its hand too ; j tightly. —A recent investigation into the j price of wheat shows that the Amer- j ican fanner has superior advantages 1 for competition in the wheat markets ' of the world Charges from Chicago , to Liverpool have been reduced with in seventeen years 30 ceuts per sixty i pounds, whiie the freight rates from i India to Liverpool have not decreas* j ed iu that proportion, if at all. [ Reads Like a Novel. About 20 years ago theie came to this country from Ireland an indus trious, honest fellow named Shea, who, shortly after his arrival, found work L*s a farm hand on a plantation ia West Virginia, and for several years worked faithfully, which led to his appointment as manager of the estate at the death of his employer. This brought him in close business i rclatSns with the widow, whom, ia j a short time, he married, and as a r. -tilt of the union the couple wera j blessed with a daughter, who, for | r-a-on* us yet unknown, was placed | in a convent at St. Louis. In a short, time thereafter, a Mrs. Mitchell, bound for New Castle, while passing through St. Louis visited the con vent and was so taken with the child that she adopted it. Aft- r lapse of years the child's true parents, who were independent ly rich, became desirous of again pos sessing their offspring, and started to trace its whereabouts, but the con vent authorities had lost track ot the child and had it registered as dead The irrave was properly marked and it was pointed out to the parents The mother fell prostrate upon the little mound, but the father had a conviction that his child still liyed, He made several journeys to St, Louis, all of which proved fruitless, and he died without ever seeing his child. Previous to his death, the family removed to Sharpsburg, Al legheny connty, and a few days ago. Miss Julia Mitchell—by which name the girl was known—heard of them through a mutual friend to whom she had confided her childish recollec tions, and who bad heard Mrs. Shea's story, and was struck by the similari ty of the tales, and persuaded Miss Mitchell to accompany her to Sharps burg. The interview seems to have estab lished, beyond doubt, that Miss Mitchell is no other than Julia Shea, who, a week ago, as Julia Mitchell, depended upon the needle and ma chine for a livelihood, and to-day is an heiress to $50,000, which amount was left her by her father in his will. Letting Shesp on Shares. • Letting out sheep on shares is one phase of an important industry that is rarely discussed in stock journals, and which has not received nearly as much attention as it deserves, writes a western farmer, and be adds: Tak ing it for granted that the business is legitimate, here is a common method of letting steep in Michigan at pres ent. The old method was for each of the contracting parties to have half of the receipts, i. e„ half the wool and half the lambs. Some took sheep to return double the number in three years. The objection to the former method is that all the profit goes to the man who lets the sheep; the lat ter method is objectionable bscanse, in order to return the proper number, the farmer is obliged to do with fewer sheep than he can handily keep, or have more on hand the third year than he ought. By allowing the man who takes the sheep to keep two thirds of the wool and two-thirds of the lamb 3, both of the above objec tions are avoided. These are the terms upon which I have let sheep for several years. I agree to furnish ewes that are satisfactory and a ram of any kind or quality. I require in return that the number of sheep be kept good, which insures constant and careful attention. When a loss occurs—and it often does in the best of flocks under the best of circum stances—if the flockmaster has dooe his duty I settle at his own terms. Always a Gentleman. A young fellow of my acquaint ance tells me that a friend of his al ways practices, however trying the circumstances or whatever his physi cal condition, that unselfish civility which distinguishes the true gentle man. And he related the following incident: "Last September we took a cauoe trip together, and on going down some rapids we were upset and found ourselves floating about in a sort of bay where the river widened, As the weather was cold, we were pretty thickly dressed, and our boots were heavy, so that the situation was rather precarious. We were strag gling towards shore, and he had his paddle but I bad lost mine. Seeing that I was in difficulties, although he was just as badly off himself, he said: "Take my paddle, old fellow, I don't want it; do oblige me." "I believe I should haye laughed, if I had not been afraid of drowning, at the con trast between bis statement that he was all right and the gasping voice in which it was spoken However we got ashore safely.— Boston Post. No Late Hours in Vienna. There is a peculiarity which Vienua shares iu common with all the Aus trian towns. At 10 o'clock the streets are deserted. Scarcely will you meet one solitary soul. A law authorizes the portier, or concierge, to levy a tax of ten kreutzers (about four cents), called the spergeld, on any person leaving or entering the house after that hour. This spergeld gives rise to some curious fashion Thus the theatre and opera beg early, and the performance is tim to end at 9:45. If it lasts longe nearly the whole audience rises and hastens away, to be home in time to save the spergeld. Cafes are emptied at that hour, the trains are crowded as the last momeut of grace arrives, and even the rubbers of whist at the clubs are interrupted. It grows into such a force of habit, and is such an excepted fact, that, except under ex ceptional circumstances, you do not think of incurring the debt. , The Eternal Hope. No iron BO hard, but rust will fret it; No perch so high, but climbing will get It; Nothing so lost, but seelciug will fiad it; No night so dark, but there's daylight be hind it, —Sullivan's first pound party -in England has not yet occurred. —ln the Volpauk language the word dollar is "doad." But it will be just as hard as ever to borrow one. —The London Times treated Showman Barnum editorially the other day- As P. T. is a temper ance man, this is the only kind of a treat be takeß. > —James S. - Winter, Attorney-Gen eral of Newfoundland, has been ap pointed representative of tba colony in the Fisheries Commission whico is to meet in NO. 4