SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W, M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. VIII. Of 100 samples of "safety envelopes," •o prevent rifling in the mails, which Were submitted to the conference of postoffice insprc:ors at Washington, all were rejected. Alexander Ilogebnd, president of the Boys' and Gills' National Home associae lion, makes the startling stat m ;nt that there aro 60,000 boy tramps in the Unite I S'atts. A now company, in which Thomas A. Edison, the inventer, is largely in terested, has been organized to manu facture dolls on a large scale. It will turn out 250,000 the first year. A race between bees and pigeons late ly took place in Westphalia. The bees were marked by rolling in flour, and the first reac'ici home over the distance of three and a half miles twonty-fivc sec onds before the first p : geon, three other bees arriving before the second pigeon. Professor Bchrond, an English medi cal authority, points out that in a prac tice of thirty years, largely among He brew patients, he has not met a single case of phthisis in the members of that faith, their immunity from its attacks being undoubtedly due to the Hebrew method of examining and slaughtering cattle. Tne Ku-si.in naval manoe ivres in tno Black se i narrowly escaped being a direct failure. Owing to the impossi bility of procuring efficient stokers three of tho largest ironelads were pre vented from lcav.ng their moorings to take part in the affair. It is impossible to find Ruisians enough to fill these places, while for varii u« rea«ons the service is not particularly inviting to foreigners. Probably the smallest republic in tho world is the one which recently de clared its independence at Franccville, one of tho island') of the new Hebrides, and elected M. CheviUiari its preu dent. The inhabitants consist of forty Europeans (including a solitary Eng lishman, a missioner), and 500 black workmen employed by a French com pany. The new flag of the republic having been duly hoisted, the French gunboat Saone landed a detachment and saluted the flag r—r-r- r A tost of mei\L railroad ties will soon be mtide in Chi..ago. It is predicted that metal tiei will be used before long on all railroads in the country. Beyond their technical value, observes the New York World , theso ties suggest tho pos sibility that our American forests may be saved from total destruction. The grentest drain upon our forests has been made in tho construction and repair of railroad tracks. A woode.. *io has only a short leaie of usefullnejs an «. to be replaced very frequently. The Japanese minister to America, Mr. Mu'su, has just received the decora tion of the Order of the Crown, con ferred upon him by tho emperor in recognition of his recent conclusion of a treaty with Mexico and other services for tho state. Mr. Mutsu had pre viously been dec >ra ed by tho emperor with the Orde:' of the Ri ing Sun. The order was inclosed in the hollow of a bamboo stick, a method which prevails in J.ifan. Mr. Mutsu is not a no:>lo mnn, but belongs to a clasi in J ipau analogous to that of the gentry in Eng land. It is exceedingly raro that the orders which he liasreceivcd are bestowed upon any but the nobility, and they in dicate that ho is held in the highest re pute at home. The charges made with r.gurd to the treatment of recruits at J U rson Bar racks, Mo., have been investigated by an army court of inquiry and a re port made to the Secretary of war. A number of tho charges of cruelty against enlisted men were proved to be exaggerated, al though the cooking was found to be bad. A number of non-commissioned ■ Di cers, it was discovered, had been running games of chanca whereby re cruits lost a considerable p>rtion of tUeir earnings. More desertions occur from this post than any other. T.iis is attributed to the fact that the post is so near a large city. Many men enlist in the Eist merely for the sake of getting sent out West. Many chronic deserters from the artillery and in fa itry enlist and get sent to thi* cavalry post, where the chances of meeting their former officers become very slight. Ia this way they manage to desert, in many cases, for the third time. AT CHRISTMAS TIME. At Christmas time last/year So many friends that are-now gone were, here! I So many hopes were glowing then unspoken, So mauy faiths were strong that now 1 lie broken. And loving hearts that trusted. without|fear, At Christmas time last year. At Christmas time this year So many of us find the world so drear And barren desert wherein blooms no With mountain peaks surrounding it, wjhose snows Have chilled our hearts and turned foliage sere At Christmas time this year. At Christmas time next year Who knows what changing fortunes) may be near? Take courage, then! For night shalbturn to i flay. From brightening skies the clouds must roll i away, And faith and hope and love shall all be here At Christmas time next year! —Helen if. Winsloiv. , A CHRISTMAS FAN. ELL! it isffinished at last. Isn't itaibeauty?" ' r/ pretty and bright-j looking girhof eight- i een, pushed«away her : palette, rose from her seat, andtstanding in the midst, of the room, helduip with a graceful pose a fun of silk and mother-1 of-pearl, exquisitely painted. "Indeed, Eva, it-is your masterpiece," I said an elderly girl, tall and handsome, j as she took the fan and examined it. j A pleased smile lit the pale facetof a j lady who reclined in a rocking-chair, engaged in the certainly not artistic work I of darning linen—fine old linen which j told plainly enough that the owners had ' known "better times." "I will take it at once to) Monsieur! Fouquerein," Eva said, turning to a mir ror, and beginning to adjust the pretty, i gold-brown curls above her smooth fore- 1 head. "It wants only three days to j Christmas, and be was anxious to get nil j my work in time. The rest I can finish.! to-morrcw." And enveloped in a thick veil and man tle, she left the house in which they had j lodgings, and tripped lightly down the I street to the store of a dealer in "fancy and artistic work," in a fashionable busi- j ness quarter of the city. ****** It was Christmas Eve, and the snow j was falling without, as Mrs. Belton sat I in her cozy dressing-room, looking over a quantity of dainty articles, useful or ornamental, which stewed the table be fore her. Opposite her sat a handsome young lady, with a magazine lying open in her lap, idly looking on, and occasionally making a rather sarcastic remark, which seemed not at all to disturb the elder lady—her aunt. "A terrible bore, this (business of pre- j seutiug Christmas gifts,*'Mrs.Belton said, as she selected and laid aside several arti- j cles. "Such a strain upon one's purse, where one must give; and one cannot well avoid it without an appearance of : being mean or stingy." "Fortivx 'Sly, you have a way of escap ing both alternatives," said the young lady, laughing. "You give what costs j you nothing, and so save both purse and reputation." "I do as others do; and consider it a very commendable course to give away i what you don't care to keep, and avoid 1 unnecessary expense. Now, here is this I lovely handkerchief, in an expensive anil useless fancy box—a Christmas present from Mrs. .ferrold. I happen to know that it was purchased for Mrs. Jerrold herself, who, having more handkerchiefs than she knows what to do with, has kindly bestowed this upon me. Well, it , shall go further. I will give it to that i pretty Marie Leasing, who sends me flow- j ers, and who, being prolmbly not so well , provided with costly gifts, will know how to value it." "What will you give Mrs. Herrick ? She has been very assiduous in taking LA PORTE, PA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1889. you out in that elegant new carriageuquerciu,and inquired for something appropriate as a Christmas gift for a lady. Several articles were placed before him, one of which seemed instantly to take his fancy. Ir was a fan of silk and mother-of-pearl,!painted in water-colors; and as he closely examined it, his eye de tected, half-hidden amid blue forget-me nots, the tiny initials, E. L. M. At once before hiswision rose a sweet, fair face, with brown eyes, and golden brown hair shading a pure, white fore head. How often, in the summer past, they .had walked together amid fields and 'woods, and."on the bank of that lovely iriver whosefbeauties she had so skillfully • sketched! > i r Then, when he went back to visit her in her rural ttiomc she and her family had disappeared—swallowed up in the big city to whichHheyjhad gone—and not to be found or heard tof, until there came to him, from hismncle's widow, the intelli gence of her-approaching marriage with the young clergyman, of whom he had been somewhat jealous, even though he had, as he fancied, good reason to be lieve that his own sentiments were un derstood and reciprocated by the fair girl, who, indeed, had never ceased to think of him, despite his apparent for getfulness of her. "Pi> you knowtwho painted this fan?" Mr. Neil Gordon»uskcd of the polite pro prietor, Mons. Fouquerein. Certainly monsieur knew; liut Ls was unfortunately under obligations not to reveal the name or address of the artist. "Could the lady paint, another such as this—say in time for a New Year's gift?" "I presume so, monsieur. If monsieur desire, I can atonce send an order for a duplicate." And he obsequiously took the gentle man's address "How soon can you send it?" the lat ter inquired. "At once; in fifteen minutes; so soon as my office boy returns, if that will suit monsieur." The gentleman left the shop, and se cured the first messenger boy he chanced to meet. For a pecuniary consideration this youth agreed to follow M. Fouquerein's office boy, take the address of the house to which he should go, anil immediately inform Mr. Neil Gordon thereof, at the latter's residence. It was a simple plot, but, as it proved, effective. It was barely 8 o'clock when Eva May nard came in from a walk—one of the long and lonely walks to which she was accustomed when her day's work was over. She found the little tea table laid and a small parcels for herself, with a note, lying upon the table. "It is my mother-of-pearl fan," she said, after glancing over the note. "Mons. Fouquerein has a customer who wants both this and a duplicate, to be ready for New Year's. I was sure it would be liked, and now I think I shall soon get plenty of custom." An hour after, when her mother had retired, and she sat reading aloud, while Laura sewed on what looked like a piece of bridal trousseau, there came a ring at the front door bell. The girl whose business it was to wait on Mrs. Sutton's lodgers, hastened to answer the summons, and immediately appeared in Mrs. Maynard's rooms. "A gentleman to see you, Miss Eva; and here's his card, mum." Laura glanced at the card in Eva's hand, and then at the blushing face of her sister; and well posted in such delicate matters, slipped out of the room as the visitor entered. "It is Mr. Gordon, mamma," sin answered, to her mother's inquiry. "I knew he would come some day, though Eva doubted it. " And when, an hour later, Eva came, radiant yet subdued, it needed but. one glance at her face to know what kind of an interview she had had with the lover she had deemed so forgetful. ALr*. Belton learned in time, le iuu Terms—sl-25 in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months. great vexation, that had she been more appreciative of the Major's Christmas present, her late husband's nephew had probably never married "that Mavnard girl," who, as Mrs. Neil Gordon, was now so much admired in society. She still owns the Christmas fan, but has never painted its duplicate. Yule-Lot: and Mistletoe. The Yule-Log and the Mistletoe are traditional garnishments, so to speak, of the English, and largely of our own Christmas holiday. From Scandinavians, who in winter built immanse tires on the hill-tops in honor of the sun's return, we borrowed the yule-log. And it became an English custom to preserve a bit of one year's yule-log to light the fires on | the great heart 11 at the following Clirist- I mas-tide, in token of warmth and plenty to abide in the household throughout the year. When the log was ready to be brought in, the youngest child of the family was seated upon it, and all the rest assembled to witness its entrance, drawn by the merry retainers, and to prepare it for the lighting. Au English superstition is that the bees sing in their hives between the 24th and 25th of December, while mysterious bells can be heard echoing underground. From the Druids come our Christmas decorations of evergreen garlands and the mistletoe. The latter was sacred to them, particularly that which grew upon an oak tree. It was considered medi cinal, and especially believed, until a late day, to be a certain cure for epilepsy. With great pomp,at the winter solstice, the priests and people surrounded the oak upon which the sacred vine grew, and the chief priest in his white robes ascended iuto the branches to cut down the twisted stems and waxen berries of the mystic plant, with a golden knife. There must have been steel in the yellow blade, however, for the mistletoe bough is tough. Then followed the slaying of '•two snow-white bullocks," as one chronicle has it, while another saith just as positively, ''two milk-white heifers." Then in both accounts arc given ghastly details of human sacrifice. But this is past, and to-day the mistle ( toe remains to us a joyous harbinger of merriment, and harmless cheer. It inaketh spring in winter— Our merry Christmas Day; May it chase frost and snow Forever far away. , Bound to Attract Santa Claus's At tention. Having no stockings to hang up, they i stripe their legs— And leave the lamp burning, so Santa Claus can see thein. VVe hope he will! Christmas Fun. Christmas is the great modern give away. Now, girls, bring out the fifty-cent necktie for Charles, and prepare to re ceive a SSO locket. The best Christmas gift is what every man may give himself. And that is a good record. "Books suitable for the holidays," reads an advertisement. But it fails to mention the most important—pocket books and bankbooks. Under the Mistletoe Bough. She (coyly)—" Now, you must only take one, George." He (gallantly)—" Hut one from one leaves nothing, Mable. Let's make it one each and tie." She (lilushinir) —"It's very sudden, George, but you may ask papa. With children a Christmas present beats Christmas i NO. 11. />. ISabv's Kcfleclicits. I'm :i very little baby, Little face and hands and feet, And my mother says she never Saw a baby half so sweet. It's nice to hear them talking In that way, but I can see. Oh, a lot of little babies Who all look and laugh like me. When I look out of the window There's a baby in the glass. And he wavts his hand as I do To (he )> ople as they pass; When I put out hands to tonch him And pat him on the clieek, He will look and act as I do, But he'll never, never speak. There's a baby in the mirror, There's a baby in the spoon, And there's one in front of mother When we plav a little tune. These are very funny babies, Where I go they always come, But I never hear them talking, So I guess they're deaf and dumb. —London Figaro. HUMOROUS. There's nothing like leather—espec ially in a pair of $1 shoos. The occupation of a wheelwright is in one respect a tiro-some one. Why poach your eggs when you can honestly buy them at a fair price? Asking a man togo on your bond is likely to liavo a bail-ful infltienco in your future relations. "I have been in a country," said a Nebraska preacher, "where the hand of God never set a foot." First Arizonian—So Pete is dead. naturnal death? Second Arizonian—Yes—hung first and then shot full of buck and ball. Dock: "Bess, I have three millions and I love you." Bess: "No mistake about the threo millions, is there?'' "You never saw my hands as dirty yours," said a mother to her little girl. "No, but grandma did," was there ply. Foodlebhoy—"Not at home! Why, I told her I d call this afternoon.'' Footman—"Yes, sir; so she told me when she gave me the message." Disgusted Tramp: What! hard boiled eggs, madam? Old Ijidy: Ain't the* fresh? Tramp: Bless yer, mam; don't yer see yer've forgotten the saladl "Now, really, what was the most as tonishing thing you saw in Paris, Mr. Bpiccr?" asked Miss Gusher, and with out a moment's hesitation, Seth an swered, "My hotel bill." Old Gentleman—Little boy, if you don't want to lose your dog you'd bet ter collar him. Little Boy—No need of that. Pa said the police would collar him, and 1 guess I'll wait. There is a man traveling through the East delivering lectures to newsboys. His avowed purpose is to prevent tramps in the future. If he succeeds he will cause a big aching void in Amer ican humor. Grocer—"l've got a lot of Limbur ger cheese that I'm going to sell at cost. I want to stick up some taking notice of the sale. Can't jou give me something?" Riddiwit—''How would 'unapproachable bargain' suit you?" Fond Mainma—Oh, uncle, you should see our darling bahy when I play the piano! Ho just listens by tho hour, and when I cease playing the nurse has to take him away, ho cries so awfully Cynical Uncle—Perhaps—aw—my dear, he—aw—weeps for—aw—joy ? Short Names. The family in France which has no other surname than the letter B, has, since the publication of tho account ol (i registry official's perplexity over tho name, developed several rivals. In Belgium there is a family of some distinction whose name is O. One branch of this family is said to bo descend-d from a French Marquis of O, who was * court official in the reign of Henry 111. In addition to the French village named Y, there is a river Y; and in Sweden there is a village callel A. It is said that there is in China a vil lage named V; but as the Chinese have no equivalent for our alphabet, the bestowing of this name upon it on the maps must have been the result of the ingenuity of the geographer, who had no room to got in •Vee'' on his chart. Youth'* Companion. Too Tough for Him. Mi P.incalte 'la trump): W