SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W, M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VIII. Influence. The morning broke upon a sullen world; A heavy mist encompassed sea and land; The city's smoke hung low 011 every hand; The roses stood with velvet petals furled. Like pouting maids with pretty lips half curled, Waiting, with drooping heads and cheeks unfanned, Their zephyr-lovers—a dejected band; While listlessly the languid windmill whirled. Then, suddenly, a ray of golden light Fell on the earth; the gray mist slunk away, The smoke sped upward in majestic flight, The zephyrs sung a merry roundelay, The roses laughed, the windmill whirred de light, The sunbeams danced, and all the world | was gay. Emma C. Dowil lit Youths' Companion. THEIR NEW NEIGHBOR. BY KATE M. CLE Alt Y. "Girls I" cricl Margery Kearney, I 'l've seen him!—Clive Sterling!— Our new neighbor!' 1 In quite a whirl of excitement Mar gery had dashed into the cozy room where her threo sisters were sitting. She was shining with rain, from the hood of her silver-gray gossamer to the very tips of her rubbers. The fluffy brown curls across her forehead were sprinkled with bright drops, and her cheeks were glowing from her rapid walk. "You did?" interrogatively chorussed three eager voices. "I really did!'' "Is he handsome?" asked Janet, who appreciated all beauty as intensely as only a plain-looking person can. "Intellectual-looking?'' inquired Clo tihle, who dipped daily into Emerson, and professed to adore Ruskin. "Jolly?" queried little Bertie, who was at the ago when jolly people seemed created for her especial amusement. "No—no—no!" laughed Margery. "Not handsome—or learned-looking— or even jolly. He is simply tho most awkward-looking mortal I ever be held 1" And she broke into a peal of heartiest laughter at recollection of her encounter with their new neighbor. "You see it was this way, girls," jerking off her gossamer, and disclosing a form attired in a dress of chocolate cashmere—a form that was trim, slim and willowy as that of sweet scvontcen is apt to be. "I was running home in a great hurry—for it's chillier out than you folks imagine—and just as I came opposito the gate of 'The Oaks,' 1 stopped very suddenly. For right there was the most tremendous black dog 1 ever saw. I said 'Go way!' and he didn't budge. 1 shook my umbrella at him. lie wasn't a bit afraid. I said: 'lf you don't get out of tho way I'll hit you!' and he actually grinned. There was nothing to do but step out into the the street—it was so muddy, too—and walk around him. 13ut just then—l suppose my dilemma was apparent from the house—down the path he came run ning. *Oh, he looked so ridiculous 1 He is about as tall as Jack's beaustalk, lean as a lath and brown as an Indian." "Well!' exclaimed Janet. "He must be charming." "Oh?" cried Margery, going off into a fresh paroxysm of laughter. "What with his glasses, aud his coat-tails liv ing straight out as ho rushed to my res cue, he looked like some great, curious, comical bird'" "Birds don't wear glasses," corrected Bertie. "Was his coat a swallow-tail?" The appeal for information was ig nored. "Well, ho callel off the dog, and apologized for the monster, and—that's all." "I wish he'd offer mo the me of his library," sighed Clotilde. "They say 'The Oaks' is a perfect palace as far as furniture goes," mur mured Janet. "I think I'll ask him to loan me the lovely little white pony," decided Ber tie. But this rash resolution was juthless ly crushed. "The Oaks" had been shut up so jong—ever since tho Kearneys had come to live in the gray -green cottage near by. Its owner had gone abroad on the death of his mother, thrcj years ago, leaving his handsome house in tho care of a couple of servants. But now that news of his return had spread, curiosity was rife in tho fashionable suburb of Riverview. And not tho least inter ested were Clive Sterling's new neigh fbors. A pleasant room this in which the sisters sat; a hemedike room, even if the carpet was threadbare, tiie chairs venerable, the damask curtains darned —perhaps all the more home-like for these suggestions of social service and experience. Janet went on with her task of re modeling an old dress. Clotilde went over to the window and looked wist fully through the drizzling rain to the red brick chimneys which rose above tho house which held tho coveted books. Margery, obeying a sudden impulse, had snatched up her ever-ready sketch book from tho table, and was scratch ing vigorously away. An ecstatic gig gle Irom Bertie, who was peeping over her shoulder, called the attention of the other* to her work. "What is it?" asked Janet. IMargery lookud up with a nod and a smile. "Wait a moment." On her brisk pencil flew, the dimples in her pretty cheeks deepening as her mischievous smile grew. "There!" She held up the open book. The others flocked around to her. "Oh, Margery!" "He can't look like that!" "What a caricature 1" Indeed, comical and grotesque was the drawing of the long, lank figure, with the spidery extremities, the flying coat-tails, the tremendous goggles. "Oh, just a trifle accentuated—not quite a caricature," she said, laughing ly, as she scrawled under the picture the words, "O ir New Neighbor." "The rain is clearing off!" cried Bertie; "I'm going to run and ask mam ma if I mayn't go out." And off she rushed. S >on, with her kitten in lier arms> and her little spaniel at her heels, she was out on the wet road. The rain had quite ceased. The afternoon sun, weary of sulking, was coming out in splendid state. In its radiance every drop on every clover leaf was a glitter ing jewel, and the pools in the street relleeled b;ls of tho brilliant sky. On and on wandered Bertie, her scar let skirt blowing backward, her yellow hair tangling flossily as the breeze caught and played with it. As she parsed "The Oaks" she paused to put her small, inquisitive face against the iron railing, and peer througli. What a grand big hous3 it was! And how smooth and green was tho lirge lawn, all lovely with beds of bloom! And how sweet the flowers smelled after the rain—the geraniums aud carnations, and sweet-brier, and verbenas! "I should so lovo to see tho funny man Sister Margery saw," she said to herself. And then, just as if she had had a magical ring, her wish was grati fied. For out on the main walk, not twelve feet away, from a small side path came Mr. Sterling. He saw the little maiden outside the railing—the bright-eyed, curious face. He liked children. 110 sauntered towards tho gate. "Hello, littlo lassie! what is your name?" "Kearnpy, sir." "Oli, you're one of tho Kearney sis ters, are you? Which one?' B.rlic hugged her kittea more tightly and looked very important. "I'm not the clever one," she said. He smiled. "No?" "No. Clotildo is the clever one." 'Well." "And I'm not tho good one. Janet is the good one." "Indeed!" "Yes," with a nod. "And I'm not the pretty one, cither. Margery is the pretty one." "Aud you?'' "Oh, I'm the bad one. At least that is the way Uncle Dick says wo ought to be dis-dis-distinguished!" She was breathless from her struggle with the big word. "Then," ho said, laughter lighting up lus quiet brown eyes—"then it was Margery I saw to-day?" ' Yes. and I think," indignantly, "she was all wrong. I don't think you're one bit awkward." • Eh!'' "1 think you'ro downright nice. And some day—not now, because the girls sail I mustn't, but some day, when we're better acquainted, I'm going to ask you to lot me rido on your little white pony." He bowed gravely. • 'Certainly." "it's so sweet I" growing friendly LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1881). and confidential. "Do you know that last summer—keep still, Kitty Kear ney? 'to the pussy, which was writh ingly attempting to escape—"last sum mer Margery, who is the grandest artist that ever lived, I think, made a Bketch of it when it was out at pasture. Just wait hero and I'll run and get it. Come 011, Twig!" Away she scampered, her little dog after her. Smiling amusedly, the tall, brown gentleman by tho gate awaited her return. In about fifteen minutes sho was back with a flat book under her arm. "It is in there; and ho is eating grass!" He took the book rather diffidently, but very curiously, too. It could not matter. Sketches were mado to be looked at. And this was a sketch of his own pet pon}*. ' -By George!" Ho almost dropped tho book. "Oh, please, please," cried Bertie, in an agony of remorse, "I quits forget your picture was in there. What won't Margery say! Oh, never mind the pony's picture now! ' She snatched the book, turned, ran home as fast as her feet would carry her, leaving Clive Sterling crimsoning and laughing as ho never had crimsoned and laughed before. "Well, I've seen myself for once as others see me, thanks to tho pretty one!" He dropped his eye-glasses and saun tered back to tho house. For several days he neither saw nor heard any thing of his neighbors. Then ho chanced to encounter Bertie. "Oh, please, I can't talk to you," the child said. "Tho girls say I'm so unreliable. You know Margery caught mo when I was sneaking her sketch book back, and made me tell her where I had taken it to." "Aud then?" "Then," confess d Bertie, with a contrite gulp, "then she sat down and cried!" "Isay! No!" "She did. There sho is now! Oh, Margery, Margery!" The girl had come unexpectedly around the corner. To avoid a meeting was impossible. She was quite near her sister and the master of"The Oaks." "This is Mr. Sterling, Margery. You know you weren't reg-regularly intro duced before. I've boen telling him how you cried about—" A delicious blush of mortification, regret, pleading, swept across Margery's wild-rose face. Frankly she held out her hand, lifted her clear eyes. "I am so sorry for having been so rude! Will you forgive me, if you can? And come over aud play tennis this afternoon?" "Thank you. Yes!" he said. "Why, Margery," the others said to her, when he, after a rattling good game, had returned home, "ho is just splendid? ' "Good-looking, too!" "And a gentleman!" "All three!" decided Margery, promptly, as sho sought tho sketch of their new neighbor aud deliberately tore it up. She is Mrs. Clive Sterling now. Bertie was her bridesmaid.— The Ledger. A Desirable Name. "In the year 1664," says the Leeds (Etig) Mercury , "on tho sth day of December, the English ship Menai was crossing tho straits, and capsized in a gale. Of tho eighty-ono passcngors on board but one was saved; his name was Hugh Williams. One the same day, in tho year 1785, a pleasure schooner was wrecked on tho Isle of Man. There wero sixty persons on the boat, among them one Hugh Williams and family. Of tho threescore none but old Hugh Williams survived the shock. On the sth day of Augnst, 1820, a picnicking party on the Thames was run down by a coal barge. Thero were twenty- five of tho picnickers, mostly children un der twelve years of age. Littlo Hugh Williams, a visitor from Liverpool, only five years old, was the only one that returned to tell tho tale. Now comes the most singular part of this story: On the 19th day of August, in the year 1889. a Leeds coal barge, with nine men, foundered; two of them— both Hugh Williams, an undo and nephew—wero rescued by some fisher men, and were tho only men of the crew who lived to tell of the calamity. These are facts which can be substan tiated. qUAINT AND CURIOUS. The Emperor of Chija runs 426 ser vants. Mrs. McCutclieon killed a largo lynx with her rifle recently at California. Thousands of smugglers are plying their trade betweon Cuba and the Gulf Coast. The electric light on the Eifel Tower can be seen at Orleans, seventy miies distant. In Ilingham, Mass., the fire depart ment is called out to assist in searching for lost children. Partridges are so numerous in the vicinity of Eastport, Me., that they frequently invado tho business streets of that town. At Ukiah, Cal., a man of twenty two has married a widow with several children. One of her sons i3 older than her husband. It costs about $6 per head more to carry cattle from Boston to liverpool than it docs to buy a steerage ticket for an adult person. The discipline at West Point is stricter than in tho army. The penal ties are not as severe, perhaps, but their enforcement is inflexible. Five years ag> John Sill, of West Chester Penn., parcliasod a five-cent peach and buried tho kernel. This season he picked eight baskets from tho tree which grew therefrom Somebody figures out that 3,000,000 people walk about London's streets daily, and that in so doing thoy wear away a ton of leather particles from their boots and shoes. A pack of cards was recently sold in London for S3OO, which is quite unique in its way. It is nearly two hundred years old, and represents the principal scenes and personages in the reign of Queen Anne. While sitting at his desk in the libra ry of the White House the President was surprised at the intrusian of a big gray rat, who deliberately crawled upon a side table and dragged off a piece of fruit which had tempted him from his hiding place. The other day a Chinese cook at Liv ingstone, Cal., made a pie for the guests of a hotel. It looked all right, but ho added two ounces of pulverized glass for seasoning. The first bito caused a stalwart teamster's mouth to bleei and he beat the cook to a jelly. In the Italian army the system of siesta prevails, under which all troops in the field lie down to sleep for a cou ple of hours during the heat of the day. The practice is so universally accepted that the hour is fixed in gen eral orders. The Swentien Lolc R >yal Chinese Dramatic Company of New York city is no more. The company started in with a capital of $15,000, and it took just two months to blow it all in. The Chinamen realizo that there are not enough of them in the city to support a theatre. It is proposed to substitute wooden clappers for the iron ones now in use on locomotives running into New York city, and which are so often complained of as nuisances. The sound would still make noise enough to be heard where it should be, while the neighborhood would get a rest. Mr. and Mrs. Addison G. llayner, living near Buskirk, N. Y., are a' sub stantial, solid married couple. Mr. llayner weighs 410 pounds and his wife pulls down tho scales at 315, making a conjugal to!al of 725 pounds, and it is all solid fl sh. Both are in good health and cheerfully do the ordinary work of a farm. The Value of Pine Trees. In the dark greea foliage of the ever living pine, science has discovered a tex tile fabric, not only for tho covering of fleecy bales of snowy cotton, but for carpets, matting, aud many other prod ucts of the loom yet in their infancy, but still to be brought to perfection. The limbs and laps can bo converted into charcoal or distilled into rosin. The bark and burrs are used for fuel, the trunks for lumber, and even the sawdust is a commercial product, while the stump aud routs will sell for more as lightwood in any city than the whole tree commands in its native forest. Poor, short-sighte 1 mortals, who have waited long for the day of deliverance, cannot yet fully realize that it has come at last, and that they have indeed a treasure in the matehlcs pine forests of Alabama.— Atabami Mirror. Terms—Sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months, Catching Fish in Central America. Writing from the city of San-Salva dor, Central America, a correspondent of the New York Times says: While along the coast the most difficult article to purchase is a fresh flsli, the Indians of the Lcmpa river depend upon it to vary their diet of beans and bananas, and I venture to say that throe-fifths of them have never tasted beef, which, poor as it is in the country, is far b-'- yond the reach of their pockets. In the method of securing fish they are not genuine sport>mca, but the lankest kind of pjt-hunters. Staying over night at a village I learned that what is called a "chilpate" fishing was to take place the next day, which the proprie tor of the tavern assured me was worth seeing. Board, in most of the hotels, is only 70 cents per day form m and mule, and, concluding nothing would be lost if the sport proved to bo a failure, I lay over. Immediately below a little falls in th 3 river the natives had placed at an early hour a network of branches closely woven in and out like lattice-work, and bound with willow withes. Above the rapids, in deep pools, were the feeding and spawning grounds of many varieties of fish, and a variety called the "cuyamal," which, when full grown, weighs twelve and eighteen pounds, was known to have a liking for the spot. Wue 1 the network was completed about a dozen women entered the stream from above, carrying large earthen pots containing a strong solution of a vine called "chilpate," which resembles the Bermuda plant, made by merely mashing the leaves to a palp in warm water. It has the quality when mixed with running water of stupefying the fish, causing them to float helplessly drank on the surface of the water, as if shocked with the ex plosion of gun cotton, as done by the frontiersmen in our Western country. When carried down by the current they are picked up by hand by the men who station themselvos at the network be low. At a given signal that all ,1s ready at tho dam the women, jump into the swift water, casting the solution right and left, while advancing down stream as a line of skirmishers. In anticipa tion of the feast to succeed the catch, "marimba" players place themselves on ; the bank, tho women keeping step to the music and throwing tho mixture in accurate time, reminding one of the advance of the chorus girls on the comic opera stage. The water was goon colored to a milky white, which smoothed the surface like oil. In a few moments the water was again troubled by tho fish, as the drug affected them. | There were all kinds of drunks—some nervously so, others sleepily so, others dead drunk, and some only slightly in toxicated, but all so unwary as to be bagged at the network, where the quick work of catching tho great numbers and throwing them on the bank kept three or four dozen swarthy natives busy. The drug is not permanent in its effect, and the little onos thrown back into the stream soon recuperated and swam away no more affected than one who has tried laughing gas. Among the lot was a fine species of speckled trout, but salmon-colored, like thoso west of the Rocky Mountains, and any sad thoughts over the manner in which they wcro taken were dispelled while discussing the fry an hour or two later. Commodore Ynnderbilt, Commodore Vanderbilt made SIOO,- 000,000, beginning with no money and very little education. He could write his name, and that was about the extent of his scholastic acquirements. His name which was good for any amount on a check, was not much to look at. He could not pronounce the letter V, and always called himself Wanderbilt. A new clerk at the postofhee greatly annoyed him by looking for lotters under the W's. "D>>n't look among the W's; look among the Wee's." said the millionaire. At the ago of SO the Commodore was a match for the whole street. He opened all his own letters, dictated his answers on the mar gin, spent an hour in transacting busi ness involving many millions, and then went to his stab'es. Ho was very proud of his horses and liked to lead tho road —and he generally did. Chicigo Mail. Unnppreclatlve. "What is the use o' that girl bangiu' away on the piano, Maria?" "Practice, John. Practice makes perfect." "Perfect what pandemonium?'' NO. 10. A Plea ForUnsnng Flowers. The poet sighs, with tearful eyes, About the flowers dying, When autumn's breath, o'er hill and heath, Sends falling leaves a-flying. He sings a song a column long, All of a rose that's faded; He prates of blooms consigned to tombs By frost, until we're jaded. The golden rod is ruthless trod To earth hv storm and raining; The sight of it gives him a tit,. And raises dire complaining. When from the north the cold comes forth. And slays the morning-glory, He lifts his voice in painful noise, And numbers lame and hoary. Why won't he sing some useful thing, Whose life's cut short in autumn? There's plenty such, with quite as much Of beauty, ere frost caught 'em. The cornlield pea, as he might see, Blooms prettier than the daisy; And as food-stuff, its good enough For rhymester, sane or crazy. The mustard shows a head that blows Rare as aught sang in ballard; Its incense sweet the wind does greet— And then, its good for salad. The okra bloom—without perfume, A fashion now in flowers — Bright red and cream, sure it would seem, Would tempt a poet's powers. A dirge I chant for every plant That sleeps on earth's cold bosom; I would that they might with us stay, I weep when we lose 'em. But those that bring some useful thing Beside their bloom, are sighted; Their virtues I extol, and try Their wrongs to have arighted. —O. S. JBlackburn in Arkttnsaw Traveler HUMOROUS. A close thing—A miser. Strong motives—Locomotives. "Is it raining, girls?" asked Fanglo. "No," broke in Cumso, *'ouly cats and dogs." A river is one of the queerest things out—its liead isn't near as big as its mouth. It's odd that tho word "Trust" should of itself bo enough to excite suspicion. The significant notico, "Il inds off," is plucod over a circular saw in a wood working factory. Letter-carriers ought to make the be-t elocutionists; they have such g oi ideas of delivery. It may sound funny, but it is a fac tlint many of the penmen at the Chica go stock yards cannot write. The severity of the Russian climates is the reason, perhaps, that nearly every Russian name ends with a koff. "Come, take a walk, Judkins." "No, can't. You see my wife's not very well, and I'm going to the the atre." So you wish to know what a "styl ish" color is, Maud? Well, generally, it is the last ugly thing that has been discovered. "Marry your sweetheart on your birth day, if you can young man. It will save you money every year in anniver sary presents. The London police are now ordered to wear noiseless boots at night. This is so they will not wake one another up, wo suppose. Man, with a mirror—"Como here, boy, and look in this glass, and you will seo a donkey." Boy— l, llow did you find that out?'' Mudge—That's a pretty truo saying that a man at 112 orty is cither a fool or a physician. Mr. N. Peck—Not always true. Sometimes he's a bachelor. Fop (to old man who stepped on his foot) —Aw, bah Jove I you've smashed my foot to a pulp. Old man (patroniz ingly)— Why don't you sell it for calf's foot jelly ? Cnmsonbcak—You remember our old friend, Bell? Yeast—Certainly. "He has developed into a public speaker.' "You don't say so!'' "Yes; he's a clerk in a telephone office." '•Well, what did you learn new in agriculture at the county fair?" asked Mrs. Granger of her husband upon his return homo from tho exhibition. "Why I learned enough not to bet ten dollars on the wrong horse next time." "Papa, what is a doubtful Staic?" asked littlo Freddy, who had been look ing over the political news. "Mar riage is a doubtful state, my son," an swered Blown, with a humorous twinkie in his eye as ho looked at his belter half. "Don't you think so, Jin. Brown? ' ' No, I don't think it's n state at all," she answered. "To me it al ways seemed like a terrcr-tory. ' Biown was silent*