t ... . THE MIDDLKftUKQlI TOST. T. II. IIAUTEB, Emi'H ard Pjio'iu miiiu:h' i;:, o:r. :i !.. Thn Sioux urn to be paid 51 1,000, (KM), r nKouta dollar and n quarter an acre for their lands. The example of capital juitiWimcnt is certainly rl'rriivf in oi.c way. The tintu mho in h:iMvr-il never commits another iminhr. For tlic J"r.t time since In.V.), (tcorgih has made '(ini enough this :i n to sup ply lw r ov.n wants, nii'l she will have be side a sniplm of a i..illiiin bu-hcls fur Silc. Till' i nntriii t f-r puflal cards fur font years t cotilt; calls for 2.(;iO.(Mll,(ill(l jwi'al cards, which will lie liianufai turcd at ii rust of !?(', dOl) in, il nil for .".Ml, 001). finri; llir iiitMihii'tiou of niatir ship mo f'lri of n gy;iit,.isiuiil bus lr en rcc ;ii:ril ;ii ii nn-isMty fir providing the k -Miii n w itli the proper amount of ccr rise, formerly found in the work nlofl. Dai h war-ship will row have ill? needed tIliiti.'e:iKMt.. Irocne inakox up about one-half ths st;:l? we M-ll to ,l;;j..ii:. ttreiit liritaill sells Jive times as much i ii; t. 1 mm I tin re as wo tin. We buy lfi.(HMi,(HM. worth of l''ii ami r-i Ik - from that eoni.try. St. un ship lines are to 1 r et'.alilislieil mi tl;i' I'.icifie eo-,t lo mil to ,l.i pam-rc port. 4. Tlu-Austrian (ioi nniiinl, whii !i co; 1,m!s tin- tobacco trade, made u great linari ial loshy raiting the price of cigari. Ill Vienna aion.' ;i.'i,Hil').UMil f, i r ii.u i have l -en '"ill. with a cnrrcf-poTiiiii'g in. r I .i i - in the roPMimjit inn of rigarittf ml iiies. In ail tile Iom niiioiiiileil to TM, (Mil) !l,,rin. A Ihimpean savant says that life m::) rp imliliuilcly prolonged liy regularly drinking the juice of t!iu lemon. Ami another Kur ipean savant, who knows just as l i ti- t or as little says that the sur est way to shorten life is to drink lemon juice. Life would lie a very plain mid dimple proMein if i; wi re not for the. ad vice of the w be ineii. I.oinlnii has coi; oa'.ional temph nio.Mi:e let oil its list of inter, by a Mohamineilaii the first ever built in (irent lii'itain. Still the total niimlter of thv London Turks is uoi believed to Ihi uvtr ;!00, while every elier great nation of Kurope is represented by lens of thm;i. Willi nil In r misrule "ric.uuci-K, fll.ds. remark tire, ill'! COlitcnl laei lin ed. I, l.v c oil I. Hill. .he 1. 1:: rat loii l: :liolis of d tn than Mam .'liiiW liis iiliv otliel Tiie Chiiuo i'ei lit Sunday aiih on Mieli sul'jrris a (ration,' ' The I) Turkey Trap," 'J'ri'iH' note', that on . ' -el iiioiis Hill' iieaeiled : 'i'ie "Hum's liverl.i:in: an llou'ule 'I'iauedy, to .lapan." "The 'I he Mule (iossin, l'i i ils of liniiii- Cur.se," Kroni aml'ler'j Oiieiital )espoti-.m," 'rniMiivii'l.'d I'elons," "In flueaen of Heredity o:i Uel'Kioiw Train ini;"aiid "Whut 1 ;iw in Me.ieo." And it wonders why no sermons on Uildieal Vnpics w ere pveai h I. ONE LtTTt. WOnD. 11 but a wr,rd In n(tnr breathwt, Vet rutting likn lash. Olio littlo mummt pnt In rtrif ( Inn MiRiitinK lightning Haiili; Vt for that word, thrott(?h triry ytart,) One linll regret with UtlUT left. "To-morrow mom dim will return, To-innrTow 1 will pnrtlon erTe." Tomorrow finds on grinfnitmck heart And one wild form rolxsl for the (jrave. . And memory, with hiii wild rerot, Ktill hauuU the ou who would forget. Annabel Uwiyht. T Mr. IN THE OAK WALK. T.Y KMMA A. OlM'Kil. TTow pretty Mini lVrry looked! Neither Mifm Liine nor Phil Tliotnpson liiul ever wn ipiito mieli a nilit. Mm whs in blurk silk, thotiirli it was nuly for fi mornitif? utroll t th Oiik Wn!k hlnek silk invelop.d, m t tin skirt, in idiiinmtTinu; lure, II- r little Id aek liuiiuet net off her fiiir face mi l yellow Imir; lirr loii Suedo (;loes wero ns yellow im htr lnir, her i:ir:,ol white :i:id I i-ry. " Your e(e.i,in it very iuiiidsoiiic," aiil Mary l.imc M .Mr. Oltuy. In her heart there wan il dhocked din- iililroval of Mis I'errv. I't l'i' eousin I was tint the one locontide it to. 4,Oh. yes, .M i''n prclty!" Mr. Olncy rejoined, tuiuiii, languidly ! irlatiee lit her (ho did everything I uily). "Hut she's not my cousin, you know. Mat;' step-fati:ri"8 eo-.isin in my aunt." Oh? mud Mary her IlK'. said fiiliic.l brown Mr. Olncy, and ..Ik , n staid little The iijt of summary punishments in. diet eil in the discipline of the Jiritish r.nvy d'.iriin; the ear lr7 iif;j,'ria:utcd 4'.',Vi:l i-jisi-M. f tiiese thirty-iiiiie werii j diseharued n o'oji rtiomiMe iind 2t','J laiyi were puni.sh.'l ly the administration of the hireh rod; si uteiiees of imprisoiini'iit for shorl jierioits were jiussed in casiyi, imd iJ7 1 1 were relej.iteil to thi fells. The remainder wire subjected to minor jmni-liMciit pioporiioneil to the nature of the o!Teiie coinmi;teil. i a j Peru is takinv: her place nmong th fivi!iedcoi;ntriesof the world. Arrniif,'i r.icnts are lei.r' peifeeud hy which her fxreiuii ii:ilil'tci'.;.i-s ij lieini; placed una living li:i!s, m:i ii that not only hiiall thu h ondholdi i . le' soc uicil, l-ut the (iovern ment he released from undue pressure. ind he h It rice to develop the country's n i.uree.-.. Little ly little South Amer ica is imin' into line, and will, ire many eu:s, lie positive inlhicnce in tiaii of a Id ink in the world' pro j'asi It is very uiiluulthful work trying tft rollect taxes from the hold Mountain trihes in North Morocco, whose con tempt for the Sultan's authority nearly worries toe life out of the j;reut poten tate. Awhile in.'o he sent worikto lkni Jl'Saru tribe that they must help support thglfovernini nt. '"Oh, yen," they replied to the Sultan's soldiers. "Tell that lord tf yours that if he wants our taxes ho Biust come for them, mid we will make sure ho gets them, in silver coins, too, for wo w ill roll each coin into a bullet nil deliver it to him ourselves." Mo rocco is one of the worst governed eour. trics in the world, says tho Now Yor .Sun, hut many of its highlunder e:i-up tho yoke, and indepemleucu tbiiv Khe raised parasol, "Allow took it. Mary f.une smiled. It nm:i.-e.l her thai roiMitry h iiooliim nm, should be the rei ipietit of the gallantries of a silk hatted, cye-gl.is.-cd young man from the city. lint it did tiot s. much amuse? her that Mi.-s Perry should be the recipient of Phil Thoitipsi-u's 'ialhitilries. S;i" w.-s iiiilii;natit with everybody. With tho Waltons, who boarded her self ami Phil Thompson, Phil's parents being nway on u visit. Why leid they taken utiy more bimrdersf -Miss Perry mid her mother might have summered elsewhere very well. With Phil himself. In spite of the innocence of bis wide blue eyes, Mary had thought Piiil rHther level-headed. Now what v:i she ti think f Hut most of nil with Miss P;rry. Wh it right had she to do it to put forth her finished elutrms for thn undoing of ii defenseless country youth? to trille with h'n honest heart like a eat with a mouse I Mary Luno wiy wrathful. "No, Mag's not closely reln'e.'l, 3-oil see,' Mr. olney was saying, in his not unpleasant drawl. "But I consider it my duty to o:ik after her, rather. That's v.iiy I'm lu re. 1 thought I'd run down for it day or two and see what Mug was up to." It was evident what M ig was up to. She mid Phil were far behind now, under her w bile -iiruMil. Mr. Olncy laughed lazily. "I rather think it's it good thing I ci.i.ie, you know," he remarked. "I niuy he in linn; to rescue Mr. Thompson. You see. ."da:''s a terror. Miss Lane. She doesn't mean it, hut on my word she can't help it!" "W liitf" said Mary, coldly. Flining, you know," said Mr. Olncy, yaw ning. "I don't know how it is, you know, In.t she cawn't see n fresh fellow a new one, I mean," be substituted po litely "without trying to get his scalp. On my word !" No reply from tho Rchoolnm'tun. She was buiningly silent. lie was making fun of Phil, of course; that was plain. Hut that was not the worst. It was so thou; she was amusing heisolf with Phil. Mr, Olney had seen it. Poor Phil! and her poor self, not to bo able to say ono word, to place ouo straw against thu current I "As many good shots as Mag's mnde, tbouli," Mr. Olney added, reflectively, 'she hasn't suited herself yet. Shu knocks down fellows fast enough, but she ilon't pick 'em up when she's got 'em down." "You see the turn just ahead?" said Mary she did not propose to listen to a rehearsal of Miss Perry's triumphs. "Thut brings us to tho Walk. It is an kvenue of oaks, which gives it iU name. Come up here, and you can seo the river," raid Mary, mechanically. "A charming view," said Mr. Olney, niljust'mg bis eye-gla.-s. "Ah, Mag and Mr. Thompson are upon us!" They were, at last; Miss Perry with a pretty minus and graeefully-ilangling par asol, Phil with ft somewhat dazed look on his handsome, honest face. "It's done!" Mary thought, bitterly. "It is too late! Oh, she should be choked!" "What nview!" Miss Perry was cry liiL'.wilh clasncd hands. "Seu tho river. Murmadukel Wuo from tlio sky, ana still as glass!" "lieautiful!" Mr. Olney assented. "And this long avenuo did you ever Bee anything like it, Mannaduk;?" Mirmaduke never hud. "I thank you so much, Miss Lane, for bringing us!" Miss Perry tried, herself beautiful in her gay enthusiasm. "Not at till," said Mary. Miss Perry's thanks wert intolerable. Phil poor Phil if hu could save him! But Miss Perry stood near him was Hailing at him. "AYhat are thoso flowers down there?" she demanded, brightly. "Violets al ready? I must have them!" They were a dozen perilous feet dowu the steep bank, which sloped to the river Sim was at tho brink of tho bank. Olm-y ciught her wrist. "You'll kill yourself, you know Mug," he drawled. I "Perhaps I shall," she rntortfrd, rol lif kingly ; but she turned hotly rctl at his t nieh! "My blood will be on your head, Marmadukc!" She sprang out of his r?fteh, anA stood poised where her ler.p imd taken her, her charming face on a level with thrtir feet. "Miss Perry!" said Phil, and "Mag!" said Mr, Oln-y, sternly, but got no further. She bail lipp'jd. I)own,down tho sheer bank she went sliding, with a dirt rend ing of pretty skirts, a wild fluttering of frightened hands, till she clutched nt a sapling rooted fur below, and sank down with n little exhausted shriek. "Well, how can we get to her?" Phil gasped. "Upon my word, I don't know!" said Mr. Olney, angrily. "She's a madcapl"' Mi's Perry wu gazing up at them in comical defiance, her white hand waring. "I'm not hurt. I suppose you're sorry I'm not hurt, Marmnduke?" she pried. You see the foot puth just below you Miss Perrv?" Mary railed to her, coldly. "If -you will take that It will bring you gradually to u lower grade In tlio wulK, wheryoii can climb up easily." "We will walk unwn hiki meet you t'lcri'." s:id Phil. "Shan't we, Mary?" "Very well," said Mary, frigidly. Miss Perry, with n Inst defiant word or two, was oil. M -.ry led toe way down the walk stiffly. Phil was laughing. "Miss Perry is irrepressible!" ho ob served, admiringly. "Oh, she's a madcap," Mr. Olney rc pca'.ei, strolling leisurely in tho rear. Mary accomplished tho five minutes' walk in silence. A slender figure, in dragglod black silii, looked up at them drolly from down the slope. Phil and Mr. Olncy sprang down and pulled her up. Mary was positive she had stopped there purposely. Her heart burned within her. What a fool she would hive looked in such a po lit ion ! I Jut Miss Perry was flushed and laugh ing and lovely. "What arc you giggling at, you wretches?" she cried, t'pping her bent bonnet recklessly over her nose, and spreading her lace skirt which hung in tags. "Stop this minute, Marmadukc! I've had a delight fill little excursion, l'vo enjojed it there now! 1 didn't got my violets, but " Miss Perry was turning white. Sho clasped her round arm with a shiver of pain, lilood w;s trickling on tho fair skin. "It was a stone it cut it as I fell!" she murmured. Now she would have pity anil concern us well ns ndmiration. It was a cut-aud-dried scheme, Marw' reflected, irefully. Phil would have tcy'hel) her home. She turned away, her'.'.'j between her teeth, hot and futipc tears j0 her eyes. She would not look on at it ! v Hut it was Miss Perry's ambli"011 lative who offered bis arm. "If you've had clinch of an escapado, Mag," ho remarked, drily, "perhaps you'll let me take you home?" She took his arm without a word, that warm red rising in her soft fne?; and Phil joined Mary. Mary looked fixedly ut the river. Sho felt Phil's big, blue iyes tipou her, but site did not meet them. Sh had no patience with him a sim pleton wh ) would let n shallow flirt make an idiot of him! "What's the matter. Mary?" ho stam- mereil, at last, "l i you ion i seem to like Miss Perry much, Mary." That was too much. "No, I don't," said Mary grimly. "I think she's jolly, you know," said Phil timidly. "And I'm sorry for her awfully sorry!" "It is only a scratch, said Mary, with forced calmness. I don't mean thut," said Phil. lie took Mary's elbow to help her up the grade, but sho pulled it away. "Not that, you kuow. You see, she I won der if she'd mind my telling you just you?" "I dou't waut to hear it," said Mary, iu agony. "Shu wouldn't mind," Phil insisted. "If sho told me, sho'd tell anybody. It's about hor Marmadukc he isu't hers, that is, but she'd like him to be. They've been going on together for years, I gath ered, without it's over coming to any thing; and sho doesn't know whether Olney wants it to come to anything. He's so careless and lazy, sho doesn't know whether he likes her or not. But she likes him. She told mo that right out, Mary, as innocent as a baby; seemed to want somebody to tell it to. And she cried when sho said it just cried. That was why she went ou liko that when we nuno up with vou inodo nil thnt fuss about tho flowers, and went down the bank to take his attention oil hor red eves. Sho says she cau't marry anybody else; and then not to bo sure ho cares for her well, it is tough. If he dou't want her, I dou't know what ho doe want," said Phil, indignantly. Mary Lano was looking down at tho perod. "Oh, Phil, It was that! I thought it was just pity for you, Phil, and indignation and nil, that nwbi m hate her. Hut It wr.s hecauso 1 wanton you! It was that. She might hava flirted with anybody else, Phil, and I wouldn't have cored !" she ended, amazed, joyfully amazed, in the sudden li.ht which broke over her. "Oh I" said Phil, eloquently cmiots FAVrw, A Californian lift i quartz intnc llial hn paid him $.30,000 In two years. lit docs his own work, and his only mill is r hand mortar. A well tccently found near Tittaburg, Penn., delivers fresh water, salt water and gas at the same time. There are two t.n....i. ...u,tn .i.,m tnm castings, ono within the other. pnd peer at tho pair behind. One look A projected canal across the upper par, was enough. Miss Perry's face, sweetly rf Italy, connecting front tho Adriatic tJ uglow, was lifted to that of her step. ; tho Mediterranean, would take six year father's cousin's nephew, while the ncph- . lo build and cost (1123,000,000. ew bent his lazy, handsomo head nbovo silver bell has ben hung in a towel her, and clasped the hand clinging to his a tho village where the railroad accident arm. The beauties of the Oak Walk and J t the Emperor of Russia's train hap the river were nowhere. pmed, nnd it will lie tolled every day at "She's got her Marmaduke!" said the hour of the accident. Phil, with a silent Int.gh. A curious foreign bird hns aptieared in Yes. Thfir mixed relations.iip will ' rVfl . M.tript. nt Austria amonir the "Was that what sho was saying?" sho murmured. "He ho said she was flirting with you!" "Ho did?" said Phil, warmly. "Ho wants throttling. I've a mind to do it for him. Ho doesu't df servo her, the puppy!" "I thought so, too," Mary faltered on "I thought sho was. And 1 was so angry with her for doing it!" Phil laughed. "And did you think I was flirting with her, Mary?" ho ilcmaudeu. "Yes," sho owued. "Then you need throttling!" But ho contented himself with a soft shako of her shoulder. "Mary, did you think I Hut Miss Perry gazed brilliantly at , could flirt with anybody but you I Don t Phil nnd Mr. Olney. you know I like you, nud always have? "Wo couldn't get them, Mag," said j and mean to marry you you, nobody Mr. Olcey. "Wo'd brcuk our uecks." i else? Mary, for shone! Didn't you "Shame!" cried Miss Perry, blithely, know it? snd cast down her parasol and gloves, "laggards, I'll do it myself! Oo hido your huads!" Tho gross seemed to swim beforo Mary's eyes. "I I had hoped w, Phil," she wbl Ins simplified now," said Mary, in ai ecstasy. Sho looked back admiringly, remorse fully. "Don't you think she's tho cutest girl ?" sho demanded, her throes of the last half-hour flung to tho winds. "There's only one cuter," said Phil, overlooking her inconsistencies. "You!" -ijat'irdny Niyht. How liie Baby Grows. In t lie last volumo of the "Kdueation Series" on the "Development of the In tellect," II. W. Urown has presented a conspoctus of the observations of Pro fessor Preyer on the mind of the child, which shows chronologically tV.e gradual development of the senses, intellect and will of the growing child, nnd presents in a condensed form the result of a great number of careful obnrvatiors. It is re corded that sensibility to light, touch, temperature, smell and taste arc present on tho first day of infant life. Hearing, therefore, is the only specii I sense which is not nctive at this time. Tho child hears by the third or fourth day. Tost and smell are senses at first most active, but they are not differentiated. Ocneral organic sensations of well-being or dis comfort are felt from the first ; but pain and pleasure, us mental states, aro nut noted till at or near the second month. The first sign of speeeh in the shape of utterance of consonant sounds is beard iiv the latter part of the second mouth, these consonants being generally "m," "r," "g" or "t." All the movements of the eyes become co-ordinate by tlio fourth month, and by this time the child begins to have the "feeling of self" thut is, hn looks at his own hands and looks at himself in tho mirror. The study of tho child's mind during the first year shows conclusively that ideas de velop and reasoning processes occur be fore there is any knowledge of words or of language; though it may bo assumed that the child thinks in s mbols, visual or auditory, which are clumsy equiva lents for words. By tho end of the year tho child begins to express itself by sounds that is, speech begins. The development of this speech capacity ii, according to Preyer, in accordance with tho development of the intellectual powers. By the end of the second year the child's power of speech is practically acquired. Chk.igo IkralJ. Snakes on tho F.ss Shflls. A wonderful freak of nature, resulting from tho charming of a hen by a huge rattlesnake, is reported by .Major Scheller do Huol, who resides just south of this it y, on the line of the Burlington roml. Tho Major states that he had occasion to search for a favorite hen belonging to his coop of rare fowls, and ho found her near a pile of brush, trembling liko a leaf, nnd gazing with strained eyes nnd neck transfixed ut huge rattlesnake, which lay coiled not four feet away, with head and tail up, ready for his fatal spring. Major do Buol had a hoe in his hand at the time, nnd lost no timo m ilo- spatching his suakeship. Ho then at tempted to "shew ' tiie lien to tlio barn, but sho could not be made to stir, and he accordingly picked her up nnd curried her in his arms to tho coop. The strung est thing about tho incident above nar- ratod is thnt for three successive days thereafter the hen laid an egg, on tho largo end of which was nn exact repre sentation in miniature of tho rattlesnake, the flat head, short, thick body and but ton tail of this species of reptile being strikiugly apparent. Otherwise tho eggs were perfectly formed nnd of ordinary size. The coils or representations of the suuko aro raised a quarter of an inch from the Bhcll, and are siugulgrly lormetl ou tho inside, showing conclusively that it was the work of nuturo. The eggs were brought to this city and presented to Dr. E. K. Kittoo by Major do Buol, and are now on exhibition at einiger s drug store, where they have been seen and examined by hundrodsof people. thtcwjo lnuun Mending Extraordinary. In tlieko days stockings cost so little, and time has become so valuable thut it pays better to repluco the old with now as soon as the former begins to show signs of wear; and so, stocking mending has nearly gone out of fashion, but thero are still situations where it may bo nec essary. Listen to tho ingenious way in which a South American traveler con trived to mend his hose without taking a stitch. In tho Brazilian woods are quan tities of a tree called tho Mangabu. tho milk or sup of which has many of thu properties of that of tho true India rub ber tree, aud may some duy bo used in its place. By spreading some of this thick milk on u piece of cloth slightly larger than tho area of tho hole to be re paired, filling tho stocking with sand or sticking the prepared cloth over the hole, and then coagulating tho milk by tlio ad ditiun of a littlo acid, the rent placo has beon rendered stronger thau any other part of tho stocking, for it will never come oil. (Jlotncs oi an Kinas, inciuci ing boots mid rubber cloaks, aro patched in the same reudy and serviceable way.- Amtnean Ayneulturut. In consequence of tho decline in th supply of gum arable the postollieo de partment has been obliged to abandon its uso as u sealer of letter envelopes. In lieu of gum nrabic a foul tasting coai pouud has been substituted. nartridircs and nuails. It is about the lizo of a small pigeon, and has glossy black plumage and a long beak. Ono hundred and thirty thousand per Ions sleep in the station houses in New York city during the year. The lorger number of these in previous years were jien; now the majority are women. Perhaps the largest individual tele graph bill in the world is that of tho Chinese envoy nt Washington, Chan Yow Worn, who regularly pay $1000 a week for his dispatches toC'bina,using a cipher which costs ti a word. In analrzing congregational generosity tt is found that among the Baptists tliir-tv-six cents is the niinual contribution per bend; the Methodists, seventy-four' cents; Episcopal, l.o7; Presbyterian f:U7, and the Dutch, 1.5.21. A recent discussion about the height ot trees in tho forests of Victoria, Australia, brings from the Government botanist tho statement that lie has seen one 625 feet high. Tlio Chief Inspector of Forests measured a fallen one that was 183 feet Wgh. When petroleum was first discovered in the United States it was bottled and sold for medicinal purposes under tho name of rock oil. Its medicinal proper ties wero lost sight of until they were re introduced in a semi-solid form as vascl bio. Tho purifying department of the Eri (Pciin.) gas works is an etlieicnt whoop ing cough hospital. Tho funics of tin spent lima givo immediate relief. Tho (Superintendent says: "Erio doctors now send whooping-cough patient down here every day. Last Saturday we had nineteen callers. They all returned homo well." In Dublin, a small town in Laurens County, On., thero lives a blue man. Ho is a Caucasian, but instead of being whito is a greenish blue, and is known ns "Bhio Billy." His whole skin is blue, his tongue nnd tho roof of his mmith aro blue, nnd where his eyes should be whito is seen tho same ghastly grttwiish-bluo color. ! PENNSYLVANIA NOTES. Dr. E. Mnnk, ol McKeesport, Is r from blood-poisoning, contract i ,r listing at the post mortem of the ." John Ooronson. It Is thought tht h' i'! can be saved by the ampulution of hu f George L. Tore's bam, Incited In ut ant township, Westmoreland, Co., w ly destroyed by fire together witll"'t!1 year's crops, valued at 2,,Y)0. Tht fi u attributed to spontaneous combustion "v insurance. ' The stables on the Perry Count p Grounds were destroyed by fire. Tw seven horses were in tbe stabtej but '"T two perished General Pulaski, a nn hi I stallion valued st 11,000, and Genenl n, ler, valued at I2.SW. Xb- The boiler In the aw-mlll of Prinli Iir New Berlin, Somerset county, exulniUi ' ii. hiii,.. i.,i. iu..'. ... 1 . in """ " inns, r-uwar,! print thr'iuay goods of every positively not bo un. "ft fav via thi Ol'H. T WOllM rn. continuanco of pa. an l I fitJitGH, PA. a .. I' l I I belongs to ES and Tinware, URGH, PA. d Summer. 1889 . - .-v 1 U I'll I. U1 it'llticill iua ih iw luiuiicu lniincf thn Middlo Ages, but wero ro3W yOQ an ilUlUChSC Varictv irived nnd brought into ueiierul notice bj 1 . inn;i)flfle Soino Data About Socialism. Socialism was known in ancient Kom under tho name of tho Gracchian move ment. Its tendencies were forgotten vived nnd brought into general notice by Noel Uabeuf in 1791. His doctrine w; "tlio equality of all French citizens b foro the law. Hint there shall lie m other differences but those of ago am sex. All men have nearly tho same fat uities aud tho same needs; t'.iev oiwhl consequently, to have the same edueatio nnd the same food. Before this iinne pie the idea of personsal property disaj pcarcd, nnd it became the duty ol tt i 1 i w-w vv JM'.ireil, HUH II. lri:uilin iiii; wuij n 1.1 At (iovernment, its highest function, to refClCant lino of Coinljilhltioi application of labor, ami to ilij' fJlotll. SatillCS its funds. After tho dgath ' ' Century Cloth, AVrh i to Dress (loni ulatc the tribute Babeuf, nothing was heard of his systc7"o eV Tin J until 183-1, when Buanorotti atti-mpti 11 Ul GSS VTOOuS. its propagation. nin attempts wc made in France on a small scale to cnri out the principles of Socialism under v nous names, such as M. Mmontanis and Fourierism; but all resulted in faitt nf Or urc. Socialism holds an intermedia,,v'' v COOIIIIUI CO, positiou between pure Communism afa- . . simple co operation. Unlike ComniliTT OrQlCteriP mam if linfl Vtt nilVArntll tilt llUM 111 w abolition of property, but aims simply a more just and equitable distribution it. BoitloA Cultivator. n'oceii'ies! Selinsgrova iVIMJU II U J II Mill lUIHim Intelligent Horses. ' It Is a great mistake to imagine tli ail tho best trained and most iutellige horses are to be scon iu circuses. I ha: handled horses all my life, aud never sa unything very wonderful in an animal btft gOO(l to TO and flip ing taught tricks iu a ring which is a b iu,u 1 ut ways the samo size. There are hundrei of horses which know moro and ui tlcrstand signs better than any circus hor I ever saw; and, what is more, they wi obey nnywhere and under any condition which a so called educated horso proh bly would not. The fire brigade horses of course, lire illustrations of this, nuip many express wagon horses aro only a de1- . . i :....n: . T - i A gieo less iiiit'iiigeui. j. mnivu u luuiiu u calls every day. At sumo places thero isX3e3, VeiTOWn X nothinir for us three duvs out of four, and ' when there is no card iu the window the Cities ami now !,,. lu.ir klili horse keeps going. But if ho sees thu'irocerles. Gents KnrniJiinirfco card he stops of his own accord imd hacksind Shoes, large line of Bres up, no matter how heavy the trallic is.saortiuent and prettiest style, And nt places where thero is no card ho will stop and wait while 1 go iu to inquire If I don't come out at once ho coucludes thero is something and bucks up. If that isu't evidence of reason nnd thought would like to know what is. Globe-Democrat. jy and Fresh The President of France. Bays a correspondent, speaking ol President Carnot, of France: "He is dressed with notable care. Good tasto as well as good tailoring characterizes his shapely figure. The short coat in closes a slim but compact figure. His logs, as ho strides a spirted horse, aro those of a man of quick and easy digestion ; thero is no suggestion of gout in the calves. His face is a study in black and white. The skin is pale, almost transparent. Tho beard and mustache, both carefully trimmed, aro even. The nose, slightly aquiline, would be Roman but for a de cided Jewish cast which marks the entire countenance." - y are not are moth-' enyitliiiig llillef when nniiinuriiil to elected Treasurer, and Julia 1" Tin Irwin Gas Company btf mi well near that nluce at S "'r feet. Tetcr Gregory, of Jsnit'"'J dead at Greenville WeduiW' ease was the cause W... Slnro nf AllnnnS. whil'H .... U.U.J , J, insane, threw himself iu fr"01 ?J train at Uollldavibura aud n . Ml tuvxi LSOSI fort'. 'pmr Uvn'i t l"l pm )TC !no than "ly I T, of '1 well '"rm; tn nut M that 1 t tl 1 to t r'ORniM 'fithe by w, J'UlScpn a. ? "n (un leadililf "nun I i PMflu "'I! the JieUiy " one " IniJiar. fr-rwo j """a in I'fth.we ilaywf t ' Chi, ,,. irtin F s f Unlilnn I"UmN wwa th, " "an Hrooklr I'M CiVHi CiuLlkm.i MUtl I H of U.i liile ridi WesUiri, J'-irrett 1 Vor t uiiJtr j burim. ii " berta i 't'lruej JI illllU' (e Oviduct Miod. uve ilgU pocket !w on of ; ' self 1OCO1,J h Ked.0, ' Indian n'i Was tl u, Of o '! whh l.v in!?.... rkerin A A . . i .