SULLIVAN ALBFE* REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY. Publisher. VOL. XI. Tliey ore proposing to peusion crs in England. Crime is rapidly increasing all over Argentina. Statistics show that it has moro than doubled during the past two years. The School Board of Auburn, Me., has decided that it takes six children to mnko a school, and they intend closing up all schools having less than that number. A California man offers to give, with out charge, to the city of San Fran cisco a flow of water amounting to 190,000,000 gallons daily and bring it about 120 miles from the forks of North and Middle Yuba Rivers. His only condition is that he should have the privilege of leasing for a period of twenty-five years the horse power to be developed from the water. A novel method of meeting the chinch bug pest is being adopted in Minnesota, where these insects appear in such large numbers as to destroy the crops. There is a disease known ns entomophahera, which is deadly to the bugs. Several hundred of them are caught, inoculated with it and turned loose. These give it to others, and in the consequent epizootic the bugs disappeor. A controversy is raging in St. Louis about the identity of the last surviving soldier of the Revolutionary War. The facts seem to indicate, concludes the Atlanta Constitution, that this obscure individual was John Gray, who died at Hiramsburg, Ohio, March 28, 1868, and who lies buried there in an almost unmarked grave. He was 104 years old at the time of his death, and was a Continental soldier when only sixteen years old. More than eight thousand persons— the exact number is 8180—committed suicide in Paris iu 1891. The propor tion is twenty-one to every 100,000 of the inhabitants, and the increase over 1881 is twenty-five per cent. What has caused the enormous percentage of increase in self-destruction in ten years, wonders the New York Mail and Express. Apparently life is no harder and its condition no more dis couraging than they were ten years n K°- Says the Boston Herald: "The country taverns are reported to be getting a good deal of custom from bicycle riders this summer, who make long journeys into the country, put up for a day or a night, and then keep on or return home. Any town in the rural districts that has good roads is pure to be benefited by this sort of custom, nud in time it will more than make up for the losses which the country hotels and boarding-houses are likely to experience on account of the prevailing business depression. Let the town authorities bear iu mind that good roads are the prime requisite for encouraging this business, how ever." One of the most commendable pensions granted by the British Gov ernment- during the past year, the New Orleans Picayune thinks, was that of 8500 to Miss Lucy Garnett in recog nition of her literary merits and to enable her to prosecute her researches in Oriental folk-lore. Other note worthy pensions bestowed during the year were one of 8370 to the widow oi Professor Minto, and one of 8250 to T. Adolphus Trollope's widow. The ladies, indeed, fared very well, Mist Margaret Stokes receiviugßsoo for her researches into early Christian art and archaeology in Ireland, and Mrs. Cashel Hoev 8250 for her novels. The Rev. Richard Morris, to whom every student of early English literature and philology is indebted, receives 8750. The English, who are trying to anglicize Egypt, are very much an noyed by a recent decree of the young Khedive to the effect that the Arabic language must be used in all branches of the curriculum of the Government schools. The study of this language has always been required of every pupil, and they attain considerable proficiency in it, in order to pass the necessary examinations, but under the present order it will become practi cally the vernacular. The English consider this a lonf? step backward, and say that all the text books on the modern arts and sciences are in the languages of Europe, and that all at tempts to teach them in the Arabic have resulted badly. This, perhaps, was due to the fact that the teachers were not ho familiar with the language as they might have, been. At all events, no one can blame the Khedive for using all the means in his power to keep alive the National institutions and feelings of his people. Egypt is almost a British colony now. A Western geologist says that Kansas can raise wheat for another thousand years before exhausting the necessary properties of the soil. The Greek style of building, modi fied to modern needs, has been most successfully used in Paris, where many palaces are seen of this construction. A New York music dealer says that the composer of"After the Ball" will make 8100,000 out of his song. Many other authors of popular songs have made nothing because they failed to take out copyrights. Some time ago an lowa cyclone fol lowed the route of a railroad for sev eral miles, and now, the Chicago Her ald learns that there is a theorist on deck who proposes to steer these storms, by means of rails laid and wires strung for the purpose, into open sections of country where they can spend their force without damage. Prince Henry of Orleans, who is not of much account in most things, has shown wisdom in advising the scions of French royal houses to assist in the colonial development of France, since they can but add confusion to confu sion if they take part in politics. It was upon his advice that tho young Duke of Uzeo went on the Congo ex pedition, which proved fatal to him. If half the stories told of him aro true, Lord Cromer, tho British diplo matic agent iu Egypt, is an original individual. He divides his leisure time between lawn tennis and Homer in the original Greek. During the recent Egyptian crisis Lord Cromer ordered the Khedive to dismiss his prime min ister within twenty-four hours,ordered troops from Malta and Aden in case of an emergency and then went out and played tennis until sunset. The paucity of American-born sail ors in the United States Navy has ex cited a great deal of comment, ob serves the Chicago Herald. A record of the seamen serving iu the navv since the establishment of this system shows that not more than four per cent, of the lads who are graduated from tho apprentice training system continue in the service of the United States. The records futhur show that of the 7250 seamen allowed by law in the navy, less than one-half of those who enlist at the receiving ships are native born Ameri cans. The interesting fact is shown in the emigration and immigration returns of Great Britain and Ireland last year that, while the native population is leaving in hundred of thousands for this country and the British colonies, there is a considerable influx of immi grants into the United Kingdom, com ing for permanent settlement. Last year 210,042 British and Irish left their home, the great majority, 150,- 039, coming to the United States. In the same period 22,137 aliens from the continent of Europe arrived in the United Kingdom "for permanent set tlement." Western railroad officials say that this year's corn crop will be 300,000,- 000 bushels larger than last year's; that the oat crop 50,000,000 larger; that the wheat crop will lie only 100,000,000 bushels smaller; that, the hog crop will be 4,000,000 larger and that all roads will have vastly more to haul than in 1892-92. State Secretary Mohler has issued a special report on the corn prospects of Kansas. He puts the area at 6,290,000 acres, only 600,000 under the wonderful area of 1889, when the yield was 273,000,000, and that the condition this year promises a yield exceeded only by 1889. The New York Post remarks that "Few people have any conception of the pressure for pardon which is brought to bear upon every Executive. Governor Stone, of Missouri, has at least 500 applications before him, and declares that it is not an exaggeration to say that one-half of his time is ab sorbed in listening to such applica tions, which Hre presented by mothers, wives, daughters, lawyers, friends from every part of the State, singly, by twos and threes, and often in larger delegations. Most of these applica tions he has to refuse, only nineteen having been granted during the first six months of his term ; but it is easy to accept his plea that 'an undue pro portion of my time is consumed with these matters, and the strain upon nervous vitality resulting from the pa thetic incidents connected with them is very exhausting.' It is obvious that some change ought to be made, either by the establishment of a Board of Pardons or otherwise; for it is absurd that half of an Executive's time and strength should be exhausted in con sidering petitions that he will set aside tho findings of the courts." LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1893. HOW TO LIVE. Po should wo live that every hour, May (lie as dies the natural flower. A self-reviving thing of power. That every thought, anil every deed, May hold within Itself the 9eed, Of future good and future meed. AN INTERRUPTED VERDICT. lights were j 112 I I turned low in I the courtroom, g ami about them slowly circled • the foul, heavy d im n ess. J Judge Green goods had gimc t° his dinner, B?l J/ I having an ||| A nounced his iu- V.|fc \||sg||ggp tent-ion to re turn at 9 o'clock unless sum moned sooner by the agreement of the jury. The District Attorney had packed away the papers that had seen 1 heir day in his green bag, rind, arm in arm with his assistant, had strolled uway, pausing now and then to whis per a caution to a bailiff, and to re ceive in return more or less authentic information. The prisoner had been led over the covered corridor—another Bridge of Sighs—into the jail, to await his fate in the cell where murdererß were al ways kept, as the great iron riug in the centre of the floor, for their better se curing, attested. His counsel had accompanied him to the stairway, and then had turned into the oflice to have a smoke ond a chat as to prospects with his friend the Sheriff. "Dubious," said that functionary, munching on his cigar. "The Judge was agin him from the fust, and the jury seed it." The reporters had hurried away with their notes, first arranging for telephone calls when a verdict was reached. High above the Judge's bench run a gallery. At the end nearest the win dows was a door. Beforo this door sat a court officer, anil behind it were the jury, discussing, and so vigorously, too, that again and anon a muffled sound would descend to those who waited. These were few in number—the jan itor of th'e building, the clerk, who lived out of town and had brought a lunch with him ; three or four attend ants, the blind crier, dozing in liiiL chair, and, in the further corner of the spectators' seats, an old woman and a young girl. The former of these two was stiff and motionless, her features set sternly, and her eyes burn ing with u tierce desire. The latter was slight and yielding ; she swayed from the weakness that terror had brought, and would have rested her head on her companion's arm hail not an unrecognized antipathy prevented. There and thus they had bat through out the day, the matron a stone and the maiden a reed. Finally this young girl spoke. "Grandma," she said, "why docs that man sit without that door?" "He is on guard, ray child, to see that the jury are secure and unmo lested. " "But why should they be locked up?" "In order that they may render a verdict and thus punish the wicked." "But surely each one must have I known what he believed when the case was finished, and confining them won't cause them to change." "No, but discussion may." "Then that would be yielding to other influences than that of the evi- \ denee, and that, would be contrary to the oath they each one took." "Some are strong and sensible, and ' others are weak and foolish. It is proper that the will of the former j should prevail." "But that wouldn't be their unani- ! mous judgment then, and who can say but that the weak and foolish may not j sometimes be right? Besides they must be hungry and tired and cross. And when people are cross they ore unfair. Oh, what a dreadful thing is ! the law !" "What a dreadful thing rather is murder. Think of your only brother done to death by the Barlings. 1 only wish the old days of drawing uml quar tering had returned." "Oh, do you really believe—" "Bel'eve! Don't I know? Hain't the Knowleses rfiid the Barlings been at odds this fifty years? Didn't the , boys quarrel at the tavern? Haven't we heered the detectives' stories and ! this lad's admission? What if the others did get away? He was there, and he done it as much as them. And the jury will say 'Swing,' you mark me." "But there were two who seemed to believe his story." "Them poor critters in the back row? They dassent trust their own feelings in the face of the others. Do you mind that racket? That will set tle their doubts in short order. Now you shut up, Patty. If I thought that one of my kin wouldn't rejoice in the death of an enemy, I'd turn her into the street without a shawl to her back or a shoe to her feet." "Poor, poor Tommy!" sobbed the girl, as she trembled before the indis tinct sounds of wrangling that cone from above. Patty Knowles shrank still further away from the stony bosom and the threatening arm, and tried to Hunk, as if thoughtseould bring comfort. It was all too awful to be real; she must be dreaming; yet why could she not. awake? Was it true that she, with her grandmother, was awaiting in court the verdict which should shamefully destroy their enemy, and that enemy her old comrade, Tommy Barling? Ah, there were substances, not sliod- ows, about her; her mind in its peace sul slumbers had never imagined any thing so cruel t Yet ho would be ac quitted, how could she doubt, when the jurymen as well as she had heard his frank, simple story and had seen the candor of hiß beautiful face? Had she not watched them and detected expressions of sympathy,of confidence, on at least two of their countenances? And if these men had once trusted would they dare to condemn? Then, indeed, were not they the murderers who- would slay for relief from cus tody, from fatigue, or from fear of their associates? Oh, a dreadful thing was this law which beclouded the truth when it was so evident! Hadn't Tommy explained that he was removing the obstruction from the track when the "wildcat" so unexpect edly came arouud the curve and struck it, and was derailed? Couldn't they understand why he had remained silent when asked how he happened to be there? Surely, any one could see that he had discovered his brothers' plot and had striven to thwart it, but was now too loyal to im plicate them. The idea that Tommy, her gentle, true-hearted Tommy, would connive to slay the only brother of the girl he loved! And yet, when he had refused to answer, the Judge, who surely should be impartial in action as well as word, had swung arouud im patiently in his chair, and the District Attorney had smiled, oh. so ironically, and shrugged his shoulders and said : "You see, gentlemen. See?" The case which had occupied the Aberdeen Oyer and Terminer for the past week, was, as tho District Attorney had said in his opening, "awful in tho simplicity and directness of its proof." At the further end of the county, amid the arid sand plains, the Barlings and the Knowleses had occupied adjacent farms for many years. Tho railway ran in front of their dwellings, and the young men had grown up half farmers, half linemen, gleaning from the two occupations livelihood and recreation. There had been a constant feud be tween the two families, sprung from somo forgotten trivial cause, but en hanced into bitterness through paucity of daily interest. There were three Barling boys, of whom Thomas, tho defendant, was the youngest, and one Knowles, the brother of Patty. This latter had encountered one evening the two elder Barlings at tho village tavern, and a quarrel and a scuffle had ensued. It was the follow ing day that a "wildcat" train, of which young Knowles was engineer, was derailed and ho thrown from tho cab and killed. Thomas Barling was seen running away from the place where this accideijt- occurred. His brothers disappeared, but the detec tives, incited by liberal rewards, caused the arrest of the lad, claiming that it was ho who had set tho obstruction on the track. His presence, his .'light, his terror, certain incoherent words which ho had uttered ou hi" apprehension, consti tuted the ma.u points of the ease against him. His defense had been necessarily brief, consisting of his youth, good character, aud his own story slightly corroborated—that he had been en gaged in removing tho obstructions, when the "wildcat," of whose existence he liatl not been aware, came around the curve and struck. But on the question of how ho happened to be there at just this time ho had remained silent. Solemnly the great clock in the courtroom beat out the dragging mo ments. Tho bailiffs droned stories and yawned. Tho clerk scribbled on tho back of papers. Tho crier slept the sleep of childhood and smiled over its reviving scenes. The old woman sat erect, motionless, intent like another Sphynx, awaiting tho culmination of burning desires. Perhaps she alone could explain that ancient feud ; per haps when that bosom had been ten der and that arm softly responsive to caresses, an inujry to her beauty had been the dragon's tooth of this future. Perhaps the past now returned to her : for expectancy hath its panorama of spent, but not dead, emotions. Cer tainly little Patty, as she saw tho grim face growing grimmer, grew faint with dread, for in its lines she read ven geance upon Tommy and woe for her self. There was a sharp, demanding rap on the door of the jury room. Its drowsy guardian sprang to his feet and unlocked it. There were whispers, and then onco more the door closed, the bolt was shot, tho sentinel sat at his post. Once more, but with a differ ence. The man no longer lolled. Ho was big with the consciousness that every eye was upon him, big in the possession of a secret which he had no right to know. The great clock ticked warningly, for tho hours of excitement are mo ments. It was nearing the time for the Judge's return. Tho clerk set dockets and pen and paper in order. The bailiffs shut windows and opened doors, aud turned up lights and took their stations. There was one whose post was by the door at the end of tho gallery leading to the jury room, which opened upon the main stairway of the building. The guardian of the jury room was his friend, and, as he passed, whispered a single word. The bailiff stepped to his place and beyond. He leaned over tho rail aud gazed down into the gloomy corridor. The front door swung open, a dignified form entered. He recognized it, and in an instant was leaping down the stairs. And in another instant Judge Greengoods knew at what verdict the jury had arrived, knew that the solemn words which he had mentally arranged during his walk thither had not been marshaled in vain. Many sharp eyes had noticed the passing of that single word from officer to officer, and ere the crier had begun his sonorous proclamation, bailiffs and attorneys and Shi-riff and prisoner kuow that the verdict was "guilty.,' Patty knew it, too, for she had watched that guardian at the door as if he hold tho portals of her happiness. Patty knew it, and a groat sob swelled in hor heart and hardened into a resolution. In this moment of extremity, when human and Divine powers had coalesced against him, she would be by her old playmate's sido to comfort, to sustain, to bless ! She looked at her grandmother. That expectant gaze had not yet changed into triumph. "I will go a little closer, so that I can find out," she said, anil the old lady nodded an eager approval. Down the narrow iron stairway along the wall came the jury—swaggering, hesitating, stuttering. Patty leaned against the little door of the railing which divided the ccmrtroom, thus seporating tho goats of spectators from tho sheep of the bar, and studied the faces as they passed. Stolid, im movable for tho most part; but there wero two that seemed worried and dubious, and they were the faces of the two men in whom she had put her trust. Oh, cowards! Why had they not preserved the courage of their convictions or why had they put them selves in a position where faint heartedness is a crime? The jury took their seats, these two men in the places which they had occupied during the trial, Nos. 7 and 8 in the rear row, directly behind the foreman. From the anteroom came Tommy, and sat by his lawyer along side of the. table in front of the Judge's bench. How pale ho was, but how quiet, how stern! Was it possible that those lips which had ever curled in smiles could be so firm? Why one might bo afraid of him, that is, one who didn't love him as she did! Patty brushed a tear from her cheek as she gazed; it seemed as if he wore already dead, and that it was his cold gray shado that now appeared. "Call the roll, Mr. Clerk," said Judge Greengoods, and, as that func tionary obeyed, each juryman answered "Present"—complacently so, too, ex cepting Nos. 7 and 8, who looked as if tlioy wished very much they wero else where. No. 7 was a tall, slendor, bent young man, awkwurdand bashful, who was perpetually blushing, either lie cause people were looking at him or because he imagined they were. He also stammered. No. 8 was a short, thick-set, aggressive-appearing old gentleman, very deliberate in action, slightly deaf, but ever ready to slay any one who imputed such a defect to him. Consequently, No. 7 dropped into a pool of stuttering, \vhere he hopelessly floundered, and No. 7 shouted "Here" some time after tho clerk had noted the attendance. "Stand lip," said *ho clerk to the prisoner. And Tommy arose and stood with folded arms, a fragile yet in trepid Ajax defying tho lightning. But, oh, it was dark about him; if there might bo but a single ray of sym pathy, then he could endure. Tho court officer at the little gate was nat urally moro interested in the procee ings than in his duty. He moved for ward, an I Patty slipped within the rail. "Let the prisoner look u, . - the jury; let the jury look upon the pris oner," continued the clerK. "Gen tlemen of the jury, have yon agreed upon v >ur verdict?" The foreman dropped his hat and folded his overcoat ard struggled to his feet. In that silent instant of suspense there was a fluttering sound, and Potty flow to her old playmate's side. She throw one arm about his neck, and stood with the other ex tended toward the jury box like a guardian angel performing her mission. She upraised her face glowing with with light of love, and Tommy bent his head and kissed her tremuloils lips. "We have," answered the foreman. "We find the prisoner"—but hero arose confusion. From the touching tableau Nos. 7 and 8 sprang forward on either side, both noisy, incoherent, and in dignant. From the spectators' space an ancient fury with blazing eyes and twitching fingers was menacingly ad vancing. "Sileuce! Order!" cried Judge Greengoods, rapping sharply, and the crier reiteroted his command. The bailiffs rushed to their posts, One caught the grandmother at the little gate and forced her back; another gently placed Patty in a chair, but she leaned against the prisoner and clung to his hand and onnointed it with her tears. Once more the silence of suspense prevailed. "We find him guilty, your Honor," blurted the foreman. "Or at least I thought we did, but these two gentle men seem to object." Then again there was confusion. The District Attorney, his assistant, the defendant's counsel wero on their feet together and talking at once "Sit down !" thundered JudgeGreen goods. "Mr. Clerk, poll that- jury." "Guilty," answered the foreman in response to his name, and "guilty" answered the succeeding five. Then came No. 7's turn. He sprang forward, apoplectic with determination to ex press himself aud for oncouuconscious of his own personality. "Not guilty," he screamed, "and I've been trying to say so ever since wo retired." Then No. 8 deliberately set each foot in place and arose. "Your Honor," ho said, "I am thoroughly convinced of the defendant's innocence, and I un derstood that we all were. 1 am a man, sir, not apt to be mistaken, aud there must be some chicanery at work here. 1 solemnly protest against the verdict as given by the foreman, and I beg to say that I am prepared to main tain my judgment for the rest of my natural life." "It is evident, your llouor,"said the prisoner's counsel, "that there lias been a mistrial. I would ask that the jury be dismissed and the defendant released ou his own un- j less, indeed, my learned brother will agree to an order of nolle prosequi—" •'Never," exclaimed the District! Terms—sl.oo in Advance ; 51.25 after Three Months. Attorney with on oratorical swing. "Never. I have a duty, sir, a sacred duty that I owe to the people of this great commonwealth which sustains me." "There, there !" interrupted Judge Greengoods, "of course, of course. I dismiss the jury and continue the case unto tho next term. The prisoner is remanded without bail. Adjourn court, Mr. Crier," and withavery dis satisfied expression contorting his reg ular features "his honor" hastened away to his club. The Sheriff led his prisoner away. The lights were turned out and the great building was left to the ghosts of sorrows and the echoes of sobs. And little Patty driving homo with her wrathful grandmother dared smile through her tears. But before the next term news came of the violent death of the elder Bar ling boys in a foreign laud and of their prior confession and assertion ot their brother's innocence. The grim jail yielded up its captive, and the cell where murderers had been chained knew his guileless nature no more. Impotent rage increased the weight of year» until they crushed the grand mother into her grave. The feud be tween the two families was buried with her, and over their joint farms Patty Barling now presides as a happy mis tress. —New York Times. WISE WORDS. Hasty marriage seldom proveth well. Self-respect—that- cornerstone of all virtue. There is no malice like the malice of the renegade. Tho absence of temptation is the absence of virtue. No man who needs a monument ever ought to have one. No nation can be destroyed while it possesses a good home life. Out of clothes, out of countenance; out of countenance, out of wit. The lowest people are generally tho first to find fault with show of equipage. As soon go kindle fire with snow as seek to quench the fire of love with words. What is becoming in behavior is honorable, and what is honorable is becoming. Be thou the first true merit to be friend ; his praise is lost who waits till all commend. It is vain to trust iu wrong ; as much of evil so much of U»ss, is the foiinula of human history. He who observes, the speaker moro thai the sound of ljip words will seldom meet with disappoin*meuts. A politician weakly and amiably right is no match for a politician tenacioyoly and pugnaciously in the wrong '"Con seldom, or rather, never, for a ongth of time tnd deliberately rebel against anything that does not deserve rebelling against. '.a Incident in Ers are taught; receivers must bo born. Equipped by nature and training, Edison gave up the newsboy life, in which lie had earned in four years S2OOO, the greater I part of which he g ivo to his parents. Now began his migratory career as a telegraph operator. Many lips jjnd downs were his. Often he was cold, hungry, and shelterless, for ihe insati able impulse to experiment to the neg lect of his duties kept him continually out of work. One day he reveled in tho pra'3oß his ingenuity evoked ; the next, he was dubbed "Luny" and turned adrift. Perhaps his most ingenious boyhood feat was performed during an ice jam that broke the cable between Port Huron in Michigan and Sarnia in : Canada. The river at this point is a mile and a half wide. Tho ice made the river impassable, and there was no way of repairing the cable. Edison impulsively jumped on a loco motive and seized the valve controlling | the whistle. He had an idea that the i blasts of the whistle might be broken into long and short sounds, corres ponding to the dots and dashes of telegraphy. In a moment the whistle sounded over the river : Toot, toot, toot, toot—toot, toooot—toooooot— toooooot—toot, toot—toot, toot. "Hallo-o, Sarnia! Do you get me?" "Do you hear what I say?" No answer. "Do you hear what I say, Sarnia?" A third, fourth, and 'fifth time the message went across, to receive no re sponso. Finally, the operator on the other side understood. Answering "toots" came cheerfully back, and tho connection was established.—St. Nicholas, Cured by Laughter. Laughter has often dissipated dis ease and preserved life by a sudden effort of nature. We are told that the great Erasmus laughed so heartily at a satirical remark that he broke a tumor and recovered his health. In a singular treatise on "laughter," Joubert gives two similar instances. A patient being very low, the physician, who had ordered a dose of rhubarb, countermanded the medicine, which was left on the table. A monkey in the room jumping up, discovered the goblet, aud liaviug tasted, made a terrible grimace. Again putting only his tongue to it, ho perceived some sweetness of the dissolved manna, while the rhubarb had sunk to the bottom. Thus emboldened, he swal lowed the whole, but found it such a nauseous potion that, after many strange aud fantastic grimaces, lie ground his teeth iu agouy, and iu a violent fury threw the goblet on the floor. The whole affair was so ludicrous that the sick mau burst into repeated peals of laughter, and the rocovery of cheerfulness led to health.—New York Ledger. NO. 49. WOULD WE RETURN? Would wo rot urn If onco the gates which closed upon tha past Were opened wido for us, and if the dear Remembered pathway strotched before • I clear To lead us back to youth's lost land at last, When on life April shadows lightly cast, Reoalled the old sweet days of childish fn&r With all their faded hopes, and brought nnear The far off streams with which our ekies were glassed; Did these lost dreams which wake the soul's sad yearning But live onco more and waited our returning, Would we return? —Robert Burns Wilsoa, IIUMOR OF THE DAY. Good luck is the best nerve food. In at the death—The heir-apparent. —Truth. A model young lady—The one who poses for an artist. Jagson says he has no objection to a foreign air if it is disinfected. —Elmira Gazette. Antiquity is the thing which we aro going to be a thousand years hence. Ram's Horn. The woman who vows that she has "waited for an age" never confesses to it in her years. Hope is the smiling personage who presents us with a bill-of-faro when we haven't a cent in our pocket.—World's Fair Pnck. Landlord—"You should always pay as you go, young man." Impecunious Boarder—"True, but I don't intend to go for six months yet. "—Boston Gazette. "When I was young we prepared students for life ; now wo prepare them for examinations," is a bit of truth from Jules Simon.—Medical Record. If all things oomo to those who wait, Then wide must be the range Of things to come to those who stop In dry goods stores for change. —Buffalo Courier. Mr. Foster Tightfist—"Say! let mo have that five I loaned you last night, will you?" Mr. Spender—"Man alive, I haven't had time to spend it yet."— Brooklyn Life. Late revelers singing "There's No Place Like Home" always stop their melody just belore they get there and creep upstairs in their stocking feet. —Boston Transcript. He—(maliciously)—"lt in only tho female mosquito that annoys.people." She (musingly) —"I notice .that, you take a great delight in mashing ♦ in." —lndianapolis Journal. Skiggs—"Must be something inter esting. What is it?" Skaggs—"Long account telling how a man was robbed on a car." Skiggs—"Humph! Wag ner or Pullman?"— Buffalo Courier. Charity—"So, Jim, you were ex travagant enough to pay S2O a dozen for your handkerchiefs. Don't yon think that was a good deal of money to blow in?"— Columbus Spectator. "One of you boys has been" stealing raisins again ; I havo found the seeds on the floor. Which one of ,you was it?" Tommy—"lt wasn't me ; I swal lowed the seeds in mine."—Tit-Bits. Tommy (at the Fair)—''' Mamma, what makes all the guards wear straps under their chins?" Mamma (tired out) "I think it is to keep them from asking questions."—Chicago Inter- Ocean. He—"What kind of a story did .that tramp trump up to get his breakfast?" She —"None at all. Ho said ho'd seen a good many babies, but ouf Teddy was ahead of tham all."—Chicago Inter- Ocean. Teacher—"Now, Tommy, if you were a man and had 82000, and you wanted to buy a house worth SIO,OOO, what would you do?" Tommy—"l guess I'd try and marry some woman with SBOOO." —Texas Sittings. Drill Sergeant (to recruit) —"l've told you forty times that you must stand up as straight as if you had swal lowed a ramrod. Instead of that you appear to have swallowed half a dozen Turkish scimitars." —Texas Sittings. He —"Is there anything I cian do to prove my affection so that you will not doubt it?" She—"There iB. Marry my sister. Sho is older than I, and mamma is determined to not let me marry till sister is disposed of."—ln dianapolis Journal. Mr. Wickwire—"l notice that Jules Verno is uixty-srx years old .and has written just sixty-six books." Mrs. Wickwire— "Well, that is not so many. He only had to writo at the rate of one book it year to do that." —lndianapolis Tournal. Doctor—"What you need is more exercise. What business do you fol low?" Patient—"l am a bricklayer." "Humph! I should think you would get a. I the exercise you required, but your symptoms indicate that you ore of a sedentary disposition." "Well, you see, Doctor, I work by the day." "Ah, that explains it."-—Texas Siftv •ntfs. Length of the World's Days. At Stockholm, Sweden, the. longest day is 18J hours in length; at Spits bergen it is three anil a half months. At London, England, and Bremen, Prussia, the longest dny has 19 j hours. At Hamburg, Germany, nnd Dautzig, Prussia, tho longest day has seventeen hours. At Wardbury, Norway, the longest day lasts from May 21 to July 22, without interruption. At St. Pe tcrsburg, llus.iin rvnd Tobolisk, Sibe ria, tho longest day is nineteen hours and tho shortest live hours. At Tor no 3, Finliui 1, Juno 31 bring* a day nearly twenty-two hours long, and Christmas one loss thau three hours in length. At Now York tho longest day is about flftaon hours; at Montreal, Canada, it is sixteen hours.—Chicago Herald.