SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. IX. Town boasts that its percentage of il- Hteracj is the lowest in the Union. The London Lancet wants all doctors to wear a distinguishing style of hat. This has already been adopted in Berlin, but hats have been put on doctors' coac'u meu instead. It is a mistake, asserts tho Chicago Herald, to suppose that polar research has cost enormously in human life. De spite all the great disasters ninety-seven out of every 100 explorers have returned alive. Count Von Moltke.'Understood tho vir tues of silence. At no timo during his ninety years was lie much given to speak ing, althoughyho was an accomplished linguist, indeed, it was said of him that he know-how to hold his tonguo in ten languages. Nut farming is a new industry in North Carolina. Small manufactures are prose cuted with vigor iu many parts of the South, and several now plantation nud forest industries are steadily developing that region. "Theso," comments the Washington Star, "arc among tho signs of hope on the American horizon." At least one person in three between tho ages of ten and forty years is subject to partial deafness. The great majority of/eascs of deafness are hereditary and duo to the too close consanguinity of tlu parents. Deafness is more prevalent among men than among women, because the former are more exposed tu the vicis situdos of climato. It is thought thai telephones tend to bring on denfues. 5 when one ear is used to the exclusion ol the other. An interesting incident in connection with Presdent Harrison's visit to Atlanta was his meeting with Mr. George Cook, a courtly, elderly gentleman, and a well known piano manufacturer of Boston. Tho grandfather of Mr. Cook was the Captain Cook who saved the life of Gen eral William Ilonrv Harrison from tho Indians at the battle of Tippecanoe. Mr. Cook and Mrs. Cook had been spending a few days with Governor Bullock, and on invitation of Mayor Hemphill went up the road to meet the President. The meeting of the two grayhaircd grandsons was very cordial, and they enjoyed a pleasaut chat during the ride into the city. Joe Shakespeare, the Mayor of New Orleans, was asked whether he knew how he came by his surname. "Oh," said he, "you think, perhaps, I claim descent from the Bard of Avon. Well, I'm an American, and you know what Americans are after. I never heard that the Bard of Avon left anything but a name, so I took no interest in his family. If he had loft money it would be differ ent." As a matter of fact Shakespeare did leave an estate that was reckoned good in its time. The new Shakespeare of New Orleans is a native of the neigh borhood of Baltimore, where his ances tors were farmers, lie is a rich iron founder. George W. Childs, of Philadelphia, lias consented to exhibit his fine art and souvenir collection at the Ohicago Fair. Among his treasures are the little green harp which belonged to Tom Moore, and which he carried into hundreds of Irish homes; the massive silver vase presented to Henry Clay, when he was at the height of his popularity, by the Whig ladies of Tennessee; Washington's champagne glass; cups, saucers and glasses which came from Louis Napoleon, the late Emperor Wiiham, the Into Emperor Maximilian and the ex-Emperor of Brazil, a miniature ship, formerly tho property of President Andrew Jackson, and the silver waiter presented to Gen eral Jackson after his victory by the citi zens of New Orleans. It really looks now, assorts the New York Hun, as though the action of the Italian Government toward this country had so frightened King Humbert's sub jects as to make tens of thousands of them hasten to fly from Italy and seek refuge hcrt. They are coming over as fast as they cau find ships to carry them, and, according to recent despatches, the Mediterranean ports aro swarmiug with Italians anxious to secure buuks in the steerage of the steamships bound for America. There is reason for enter taining the apprehension that, if King Humbert were to threaten to make war upon the United States, we could not find room here for the hosts of his subjects w>n would be seized with the desire to 4L' from uis kingdom. ILLUSIONS. Go stand at night upon an ocean craft And watch the folds of Its imperial train Catching in fleecy foam a thousand glows— A miracle of fire unquenehed l»y sea. There* in bewildtsringtiirbuleiiee of change, Whirls the whole flrmanent, till As you gaze, Atteise unseen, it is as heaven itself tlad lost its poise, an each unaivchored star In phantom haste flees to the horizon line. What dupes we are of the deceiving eye! How many a light men wonderingly acclaim Is but the phosphor of the path Life qmkes With its own motion, while above, forgot, Sweep on serene the old unenviolls stars! Robert Undtrwood JtihrlsdA-, iti Century. UNCLE FLAXLEY'S HOBBY, BY HELEN FOITTTEST GRAVES. The white, vertical light of a Feb ruary day shone down through the sky light of Julian Dover's studio, its pitiless brightness bringing oilt every layer of dust on the Venetian red draperies, every spot and stain on the much benickcd walls. The lay figure was doubled up in a most impossible attitude against a big chair, covered with cotton velvet and cheap gilt fringe; a bunch of faded roses, in an old "crackle" vase, hung limply down, and Mr. Dover, in a shabby plum-colored velvet coat, and a Turkish fez perched jauntily on one side of his haudsome head, was painting desperately away, intent on economising every BCC ond of tho precious winter daylight. "Oh, the deuce 1" ho exclaimed, ab ruptly. "What made you jump so, Clarie! A man don't want the current of his ideas disturbed just when—'' The model lifted her large, wine brown eyes to his face, with a depreca tory smile. "I hear Kitty Flaxley outside," said she. "Outside she must stay, then!" re marked Mr. Dover, frowning at his pal ette. "I can't be interrupted; every minute is a lump of gold. Wait!" he roared, as a gentle rapping sounded on the door. "Clarie is posing for me!" And then one perceived a slight, graceful figure in a coarse lilac cotton gown, and a striped handkerchief care lessly twisted around her rich, brown locks, leaning in an artistic attitude against a window-sash studded with many small panes, that was supported be tween two standards. Her fingers were intertwined in her hair; her elbows rested on the sill, where a coarse flcwer-pot or two were ranged. She was not Mrs. Julian Dover for the time being; she was"The Fisherman's Wife," destined b/ good luck and the grace of the hanging committee to figure in the forthcoming spring exhibition. "Ob, Julian, I am so tired!" she pleaded. "Every bone in me is cramped. Mayn't I rest?" "You've no idea of true art," said Julian, slowly. "You haven't posed half an hour yet." "I'm so sorry; but—" "Jump, then!" said the painter—for the first time realizing how palo and worn the delicate, oval face was."l suppose I can be putting in the distaut sea while you gossip with your Kitty." lie caught her hand as she skipped past him, and kissed her—a kiss which was a rich reward for all the cramp and weariness she had endured—and she ran out to the hall, tugging as she went to remove the knotted red silk neckerchief which supplied an clement of warm color to the picture. There stood her quondam schoolmate, Kitty Flaxley, with cheery lips and spar kling eyes. "Oh, Claire, how odd you look!" said she. "Yes," s)»i'l Mrs. Dover, composedly. "I'm 'The Fisherman's Wife.' Every bone in me is a sepnrato pain, with sit ting so long watching for my husband's boat." Both laughed; and then the artist's wife led Miss Flaxloy into the studio, where Juliau nodded a pleasant saluta tion to her. "You won't expect me to stop work ing?" said he. "Of course not!" said Kitty. "It's work that I've come to talk about. Such news ns I've got! The family fortunes are all made. Our Uncle Flaxley came home yesterday. That is, he isn't our uncle—he's only a sort of cousin; but mamma naturally wants to make the re lationship as near as possible; so we are all instructed to call him 'uncle' " "And who is Uncle Flaxley?" "That's just it," said Kitty, laughing. "Ho went to the South Sea Islands, thirty years ago, and people took no no tice at all of his exit except to say some thing about 'good riddance to bad rub bish.' Ho comes back, and you would think him a canonized saint. Nothing is good enough for him." "Oh!" said Dover. "He's made money?" "Exactly," nodded Kitty. "But he's the oddest old fish—a little, dried-up, parchment-faced man, who goes about finding fault with everything and every body, and promulgatiug the most out landish theories that ever were heard of. The first thing he did was to upset all our family traditions. You know, Claire, how mamma has brought us up—like the lilies of the field, that toil not, neither do they spin? Now, we arc each of us to learn a trade. I'm going into dress making!" "Impossible!" cried the artist's wife. "Theodora is going to tackle art em broidery. Constautine says she hasn't decided jet betweeu telegraphy and LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1881. typewriting. Oh, you may well look amn*ed t It's all Uncle Flaxley. He says he'll give us a thousand dollars apiece when we've each learned a real, bread-winning, practical trade. He says it'i what bvery woman ought to do. Dora wants to get a thousand dollars to get herself a stunning set of diamonds. Con would like togo to Canada with the Trelawneys next year, and I—don't tell anyone, please, Claire and Julian—but I shall give mine to Rembrandt Alison, so that he can goto Paris and study in the Louvre." "Good!" cried Julian Dover. "Then it's really t?ue that you are engaged ? Kitty, Kitty, an artist's wife is a lirst class martyr!' 1 "An artist's wife is the happiest crea ture in the world, Kitty?" counter as serted Claire, her soft eyes lighted up with love. "A thousand dollars! Oh, I wish I could make a thousand dol lars!" "I'm going do*n town every day to learn the Graftenburgh system," said Kitty. "I shall have to work three long, endless months before they give me a diploma; but I shall have something to work for, don't you see? And now good-by! I'm off for Graftenburgh's!" Uncle Elimelcch Flaxley walked around tho house of his cousin's widow, with his hands hooked under his coat tails, and his blue spectacles balanced on the bridge of his nose, peering into everything, criticising everything, and finding fatilt with everything. Mrs. Peter Flaxley smiled at all his comments. In her eyes his conduct was perfect. "What!" Undo Flaxley had cried, "three girls, and not one of 'cm taught to earn her living! That's no way to bring up a family, sister Annabel. Every woman should have a trade. Every woman should be able to support herself the same as if she were a man. This was Uncle Flaxley's hobby. He trotted it out, he bridled it and saddled it and rode it perpetually, and the upshot of it was that the thousand dollar propo sition was m>'.de and promptly accepted by his three nieces. "It's dreadful!" sighed Mrs. Flaxley; "but of course it is our interest to con sult your uncle's wishes in every re spect." "I've always thought I should like to learn dressmaking," said Kitty. One could clothe one's self at half the ex pense. And then a thousand dollars, all of one's own—think of it." "I know ever so many nice girls who do type-writing," said Constantia, a tall, willowy girl, with yellow hair and pallid skin. "If one must have a trade, I be lieve there's nothing more genteel." But Theodora, the beauty of the Flax ley family, turned up her nose. "Such an absurd idea of Uncle Flax ley's!" said she. "I'm a tolerably de cent embroiderer already, and if the woman's exchange accepts a piece of my work, I suppose the old crank will rec ognize it as a token of being an expert in that particular trade!'' And as she shut herself up with silks and satins and several dozen ounces of rainbow-colored filoselle and crewels, to design a pattern which should take the world of tapestry by storm. Kitty wrestled bravely with the tech nicalities of the Grafteuburgh system. Coustantina worked diligently at the clickiug marvel of the nineteenth cen tury. Theodora was the first to look back from the plow-handles. "I hate it!" said she, pettishly. "I can't make anything out of it! Such wooden-looking things as my cat-tails and storks are! I mcau togo and sec Philomel Alison about it." Young Rembrandt Alison's studio was far smaller and less picturesque than that of his couipeer, Julian Dover. He slept on a sofa under the window of nights, and his sister Philomel, who kept house for him on the most econ omical principles, occupied a three cornered closet at the rear, which she called a bedroom, and which, besides the cot-bed, held exactly two bandboxes, and a chair with a wash-bowl and pitcher on it. She was a skilled embroiderer, and worked her tinger-ends off, while her brother, rapt in visions of Titian and Buonarotti, stood before his canvas. "Children, you work too hard, both of you," said a little, old, yellow-com plexioned man, who had once known their father on the Mexican frontier, and who came occasionally to the studio, and viewed them with not unkindly eyes. "It's work or starve, sir," said Alison, with short laugh. "What do you ask for this picture?" abruptly questioned Mr. Flaxley. "Two hundred dollars—when it is finished." "Tut, tat!" said the old man. "Too muca! Two hundred dollars for a bit of canvas eighteen inches square?" "It's not a mere bit of canvas," said Alison, coloring up; "it's my brains— my ideas—the visions I seo nightly in my sleep." "I'll give rou fifty dollars for it," hazaried the yellow-complexioned man. "I couldn't possibly sell it for that." "Humph! humph!" snorted Flaxley. "The next I know, Philly here will be wanting to sell her bit of brown-and yellow needlework for two hundred dol lars, too?" Philomel looked gravely up from her work. "No," she said. "I'm to receive fifty dollars for it. It is an order." "What. is the world comiug to?" cried [ Mi. Flaxley. "People must bo aching to spend their money. What is the thing, anyhow—ducks paddling in t pond!' 1 Philomel shook her headj "Hersds," said she, "id A marsh full of reeds and rushes. Those lines of yellotf silk—see?—are where the sunshine (strikes the water. Flaxley peered dubiously at the mast of bright colors. "One has to exercise considerable im agination," said he. "I wonder," said Philomel to het brother, after the fussy little visitor was gone, "if I ought to have told him that 1 was doing this work for his niece in Hadcliffe street?" " 'Speech is silver, silence is golden,' " said Rembrandt Alison, mechanically. "It's always best not to talk. Do you think, Phil, I've got the red too deep in this peasant's jacket?" Mr. Flaxleyj making his way home, thought of the studio he had just left, with a softening of the heart. ' 'They are nice children, "he pondered. "Their father was a nice man. He took mo into his ranch and cured me that time I had the gulley fever. I might have died if it hadn't been for him." Time passed on; the three months ex pired. Constantia copied some letters for her uncle on u typewriter with such *kill and rapidity that he wrote out his check for a thousand dollars on tho spot. Kitty showed him hor diploma from Graftenburgh & Co., and proudly called { his attention to a trimly-fitting dress that j she wore. A second time Uncle Flaxley inscribed bis autograph on an oblong slip of pale green paper, and then Theodora unrolled a banner of dark-olive satin, glistening with rich embroidery. "It has just been sold at the woman's exchange," said, she, "for a hundred and ten dollars. Here's the receipt." Uncle Flaxley pricked up his feather like ears; he stared very hard through his spectacles. "Your work?" said he. "My work I" repeated Theodora, with dignity. "No, it isn't!" curtly contradicted Mr. j Flaxley, whoso lorte was not conven tional repose. "I've seen those ducks and marsh-grasses before 1 I saw them when Philomel Alison was working them. Young woman, you have deceived me?" Theodora turned scarlet. Tho sudden ness of his contradiction had stricken her guilty soul dumb. "No thousand-dollar check for you," said Mr. Flaxley. "Go aud say your prayers and read over the Ten Conunund ments, where it says, 'Thou shalt not steal!' For you arc a thief! " He had scarcely overcome his wrath against this bucksiding relative when he trotted around to Rembrandt Alison's studio the next day. "I can't get tbat young fellow's wist ful face out of my mind," thought he. "I guess I'll buy the eighteenth-inch square of canvas after all." He stood wiping his boots on the mat in flie studio vestibule, aud plainly heard Kitty's voice saying: "Do take it, Rembrandt! I've earned it niyselt. It's mine to give, and I've no possible use for it. I thought of you all the time, and Ido so want you togo to Paris and study in the Louvre!" Uncle Flaxley pushed the door open with a bang aud walked in, regardless of etiquette. "Yes, take it, Alison," said he— "take it in the spirit that she gives it. She's a trump, that girl is!" Rembrandt Alison looked at Kitty's scarlet face with grave, searching eyes. "I will take it," said ho, "if Kitty will give me herself, also. There can be no crushing sense of obligation where love bridges the way." "I'll give her to you." said Uncle Flaxley, holding pushing Kitty lorward. '•Things are happening just to suit me." "Me also," said Philomel, in a whis per, her pale face lighted up with joy. ••Here!" said Uncle Flaxley; "what's the price of this picture—and this—and this? I'll buy'email! Gracious me! if you're really going to Paris, there's no reason Kitty shouldn't go, too, on her wedding trip." Of all Uncle Flaxlcy's eccentricities, this was the most delightful. Kitty had a long story to tell Julian Dover and Claire, in their studio across tho hall, tbat day. "It will be such a glorious thing," cried Claire, still enacting "Tho Fisher man's Wife," "for you to marry an ar tist!" But Mrs. Flaxley declared that hot rich relation had been "shamefully partial" in the matter of the thousand dollar proposition. It is so hard to suit everybody I— Saturday Night. Wild Horses of Lob. Two young Frenchmen, brothers, Grum-Grjimailo by name, have just re turned from the ancient kingdom of Lob, in Eastern Turkey. They bring with them thousands of specimens of birds, mammals, fishes and plants. Among the more remarkable animals are some wild horsos, which are not tho descendants of domesticated specimens, like the wild horses of the South Ameri can Pampas, but the real primitive wild type and tho projenitor of the domesti cated breed. Three of these were shot in the Dzungarian desert, just north of Guchcn, after n long auc- difficult chase. The existence of wild camels was also Corroborated, a herd having been pur sued for a long way in the direction of Lob Nor, but unfortunately-the travelers were unablo to come up < with them.— New XorkPrm, Terms—Sl.2s in Advance; $1.50 after Three Months SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A Bethlehem (Penn.) hammer weighs 120 tons, Electricity run# a Wurtemburg (Ger many) iron works. Gas must be fufniahed at flfty-twc cents per thousand feet to c'ompate with electricity in lighting. At Pittsburg the Second Avenue Elec tric Street Car Company is equipping its lines with vestibtiled trains. The system of riveting by hydraulic power is being successfully applied to the shell plating of vessels in course of construction on tho Tyne, England. A fire engine that does away with the Use of horses and forces the water by means of power generated by a storage battery is a recent electrical invention. It has recently been shown that when cast and malleable iron aro used in the structure a galvanic action is set up be tween them ana the malleable iron is corroded. A calico printing machine has been in vented in this country, the novelty of which is that the Cloth may be printed on one side in eight colors, or on both sides with four colors each. It is well known that vegetable and animal oils are unsuitable for cylindei lubrication, and recently in France where colza oil was used it was found necessary to burn out. the deposits in the ports ol the locomotive cylinders. English manufacturers are bleachinc paper by an electrical process without, it is stated, impairing its strength. A mag nesium chloride solution is decomposed by a powerful electric current with th< evolution of chlorine and oxygen. A newly-devised insulated screwdriver haß the shank so thoroughly insulated, nearly to its tip, that shock can be avoided. Tho metal shank is flattened and bent into a loop at one end and then moulded into a rubber handle, which gives perfect protection from the cur rent. A new system of house wiring for elec tric lighting consists of fittiog the build ing with continuous tubes of insulating material, through which the wires are drawn. The tubes aro made of papei soaked in a hot bath of bituminous ma terial, and are said to be hard, strong anc tough. A handy lock is now used upon tri cycles, boats, chests aud boxes. It weighs about half a pound, and, although not much larger than a watch, is consid erably thicker. This padlock is a com bination, and it is fitted with a numbered dial, very much like those used for safei and vaults. The highest atmospheric pressure ot record seems to be 31.72 inches, whicl occurred at Scmpalatinski, on Dccembe: IG, 1877; aud the lowest at any lane station is quoted at 27.13 inches, whicl was recorded on the coast of Orissa, or, September 22, 1885. The difference ol 4.6 in these readings is probably th 6 maximum range of the barometer cvei observed at the earth's surface. Chicago's latest rapid transit project calls for the buildiug of a single-track, single-column elevated electrical railway. Cars will be operated continuously iu the same direction in a loop twenty miles in extent and at a distance apart of 75C feet, which is equivalent to a headway of twenty and one-quarter seconds, an arrangement considered feasible with single car units, with special truck brakes. This would give 140 cars iu continuous operation on the circle. A new apparatus for water has ap peared in the form of a still, which is described as consisting of "a series of large flat disks of metal, placed upright and kept in position by pipes ruuning horizontally on the top and bottom. Water is boiled in a vessel and tfie steam is conducted from the same to the dish through a pipe. Tho steam radiating from the water is condensed in the disks by a current of air, and the water is col lected in the bottom pipe." The size of still designed for family use has eight disks, and is said to distill a gallon of water in nn hour. Tho Papal Swiss Guards. Most foreigners, who have been in Rome,remember the entrance to the Vat ican with the Portone di Bronzo at the end of the seuii-circle at the right of the Bernin colonade. On tho way to the mass you pass along this por tico, beloie the po3t of Swiss guards, whose uniform of "lansquenets" of the sixteenth century is one of the curiosities of Rome; and you may hear the halberds clashing upon the stone floor in salute of some religious functionary as he comes in. I need not describe these guards, with their heavy mustaches and beards; their freeh-colored faces and their unconscious swagger and their doublets, which seem so wofully out of place in modern Rome. On a little triangular place, at the foot of the high and massive wall of the Sis tine Chapel, between the great stretch of the Pontificial garden and the colossal sides of St. Peter's Church, there is an other Swiss guard, at that door of the Vatican by which, last spring, Leo XIII. made his little excursion into the outer world, which was so much talked about in the newspapers. Near by a sentinel of the Italian Army stands guard iu the name of King Humbert. Here we havt the two opposing principals, with theii picket lines scarcely twenty paces apart. —New York Journal. "And why were you discharged from your last place?" "I'd served me time." NO. 35. THB A-D-V. ' x There ore- throe IffUe letters That are used on every days, In orery publication, With tmdisputed sway. That are so very modest Ne'er prominent they'll '^be. But 'way down in a corner* Lurks the a-d-v. Ton read about a shipwreck, A hundred people drowned; The wreckage of the noble ship *. 1 For miles is strewn around. Your heart then swot Win pity For those upon the sea, Until you read on further, To the a-d-v. Or perhap3 upon a railroad " You'll read of a big smash, i And many people-injured In the overwhelming crash. You wondorif somo relative* Upon the trafiKcould be; Then you kick yourself, becaiu. You see the a-d-v. And so you find it daily; In everything it lurks; Tis seen in every paper, And ne'er its duty shirks. To tell the truth, dear reader, 1 Aud we laugh aloud with glee l . This poetry's not pai.l for— It's an a-d-v. —Printer's IIUMOR OF THE DAY. In purple and fine linen—A bandaged black eye. A burst of eloquence is a consequence' of meutal dynamite.— Boston Courier. Not Intimate: "Have you met with iiuccoss?" "I know it only by sight."— Puck. i Marked down—The young man's mus tache when it begins to be visible.— Pitttburg Chronicle. Tho fact that riches have wing» may be the reason that they enable a mau to "fly high."— Washington Post. When a bachelor is asked to rock tho cradle he feels more like stoning the baby instead.— Somcrville Journal. Consider the man who is always punc tual—how much time he wastes waiting for other people.— Elmira Gazette. Tramp—"Will this dog bite a poor old tramp?" Hired Girl—"Just as quick as a fat young one. Git!"— Epoch. When the other man begins to quote statistics you may assume that you have won the argument.— JSlmirn Gazette. Boulanger is haviuj? another desperate wrestle with obscurity, and with all the chances in favor of obscurity.— Boston Pout. Fogg says that, after all, your truo hue-era of wood and drawers of water are your landscape artist3.— Boston Tran script. lie—"So Jack isn't devoted to Kato nny more. Did they light?" She— "Yes; they had an engagement."— Yale Record. "The man I'll wed," says sweet Sixteen, "Must boauty have and youthful be." "Of him I'll wed," says Thirty-five, "I but demand that he'll have me." —Fuck. The saying, "Nothing succeeds liko success," was probably invented before the modern "business failure" system of succeeding was discovered.— New York Herald. Really Enthusiastic: "Oh, Mr. Brown, your picture is absolutely enchanting. Only one Italian word can describe it— and I havo forgotten that."— Fliegende Blastter. "Here's your bill." said the milk dealer to the dissatislied customer. "Well, turn about is only fair play; sup pose we chalk that up awhile."—TFa«A ington Post. "It strikes me that Russian authors have a remarkably venerable and care worn look." "Yes; but then look at the language they havo to do their think ing in."— Washington Post. Clara (just engaged)—"Ah, Emma, if I only knew how to mako Edward hap py!" Emma (a student of human na ture) —"I'll tell you, my dear. Don't marry him."— Fliegendeßlaetter. "I can command my salary," said the Thespian in reply to tho remarks of an envious rival. "No doubt," was the re ply. "It's so small it would be afraid to disobey you."— Washington Post. "The Superfluous Man" is the title of a recently published essay. This is the first time that the man who goes shopping with his wife has figured in serious litera ture, we believe.— New York Jicoorder. Miss Caustiquc—"l hear you won tho 440-yards run." De Boaster—"Oh, easily. The other fellows weren't in it." Miss Caustique—"Ah, you were the only ono entered, I presume."— Harvard Lam poon. "The face of tho returns," said tho chairman of the meeting, "shows sixty seven ayes and no noes." "What a queer looking faco that must be," remarked an old lady in the back row. Washington Star. Mrs. Snaggs (reading)—"A first cousin of the King of Sweden is liviug in Lynn, Mass." Snaggs—"Poor fellow! Why do they bring that up against him if he's trying to live a respectable life."—Pitts burg Chronicle- Telegraph. An effort was made in Ohio to cure a girl of a dog-bite by using a madstone, but it failed. The trouble was the stono was used too late. It ought to have been applied to the dog before he bit the oirl.— Baltmjrc American.