nmin STOL: Chicage e painter, 2 Chicagc sday, and ired twice 8 into the 1d the op verybody ngthem- nd other ying bul. tt, Board the neck; 2f opera- ph, jaw ewis, of oT, a se- efused to first but ius Beld- La Salle apparent dent that > Up the and coal io went gainst a railroad > except bloyes of 1 except 1 opera- tion was r reduc- , except eake and ke of all er trains nn. qd. red for on one Jacobs, ‘Weldon is little keep he became nit those rst, and ‘Worth- 8 in the Harry 3 50 bt my & OWEN D hr LSID ILD — | | I - BUDGET OF FUN. HUMOROUS SKETCHES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. A Pastoral—A Woman’s Definltlon— The Rcason—Answered — Dodged Sanctum Pleasantry—A Land- lubberly Explanation, Etc. Now dips and sways the laden grain, The haycocks dot the mead, Thro’ leafy shades a golden rain Sprays fern and lissome reed. One snowy cloud, like ermine rug, Floats calmly o’er the scene, ‘While yet the sleek potato bug Doth browse on Paris green. —Atlanta Journal. ANSWERED. Brown— “How often have I told you not to play ball in the house?” Johnny—*‘Every time you've caught me at it.”’—Judge. A WOMAN’S DEFINITION. Ethel— “Emma, what is a party?” Mrs. Knowitall—-¢‘A party where a lot of men get together and stagnate for the lack of women, dear.”—Puck. stag DODGED. Briggs— “What did you tell your wife when you got home so late Tues- day night?” Braggs—‘I told her she was the sweetest woman in the world.” —In- dianapolis Journal. THE REASON. Jasper— ‘I understand now why there is an eagle with outspread wings on so many of our coins. Jumpuppe— “Why ?”’ Jasper—‘“It is to teach us that money flies.”’—Truth. LANDLUBBERLY EXPLANATION. “What do nautical people mean by ‘tacking?’ ” said one girl to another. “Don’t you know that?” ¢‘Not exactly.” “Why, tacking—er —tacking is sail- ing on the bias.”’—Life. SANCTUM PLEASANTRY. ‘“So this is your idea of wit, eh?” said the editor, as he read Wagg’s jokes. “Yes, it is,” said Wagg. “Well, the idea is certainly origi- nal,’”’ said the editor. —Puck. IN TRAINING. ‘‘Charley proposed to me last night, and I accepted him.” “Why, he proposed to me yester- day.” ‘‘Indeed? Well, he did it so pret- tily that IT was sure he had rehearsed several times.”’—Puck. IT TAKES NERVE. “I can’t pay this bill, doctor. It's exorbitant. I'm no better than I was either.” ‘That's because you didn’t take my advice.” ‘“Ah—well—of course, if I didn’t take it, I don’t owe youfor it. Thanks. Good morning. ”’—Tit-Bits. WORSE THAN AN EPIDEMIC. ‘When your practicing friend across the way has learned how to play the coronet he will entertain ‘the whole neighborhood,” said Mus. Brown. “Yes,” said Mrs. Jones, ‘but by that time there won’t be any neigh- borhood here.”’—Texas Siftings. ENLIGHTENED. Jones (doing a little preliminary sparring before announcing his ap- proaching marriage)— ‘Now, Brown, you're a friend of mine. Tell me can- didly, why did you get married?” Brown (savagely)—‘‘Because I was a dod-rasted, half-baked, idiotic lunk- head!” : (Jones decides to say nothing.) TRANSFERRED. Park Lane— ‘What do you think of this ready-made suit, old man? Since I got married, you know, I have got to be economical.” Baxter — ‘Of course. ‘But you don’t mean to-say you have given up your tailor?” ParkLane—¢‘Oh, no. My wife has him now?”—Clothier and Furnisher. THE HORSE ENEW. Watts—*‘I tell you, old man, I saw the most remarkable exhibition of ani- mal intelligence to-day that could be imagined.” Potts—*“What was it?” Watts — “A bridal party started from the house across the street from where Ilive and one of the horses attached to the carriage threw a shoe. Now, what do you think of that?’ — Mercury. A CORDIAL GRIP. Stokes— ‘The president of your com- pany seems to take quite an interest in you now.” Clarkly— “What makes you thiuk so.” Stokes—¢‘I notice he has fallen into the habit of shaking hands with you when he comes into the office in the morning.” Clarkly-—¢‘Yes; he thinksit’s cheaper than raising my salary.”’—Life. ANTICIPATING THINGS. The youth approached the father with more or less trepidation. “50,” said the old gentleman; after the case had been stated, ‘‘you want to marry my daughter?” ¢‘Not any more than she wants to marry me,” he replied, hedging. ‘She hasn’t said anything to me about it.” ¢‘No, because she’s afraid to.” ¢Aren’t you afraid sir, more than she is?” said the father, sternly. The youth braced up. “Well, perhaps I am,” he said, as the head of our family, I've got ta face it and set the pegs,” and the old man smiled and gave his consent.— Detroit Free Press. ¢ WHAT AILED SMITH. A plainly dressed man, who intro- duced himself as Mr. John Smith, walked into a doctor’s office in a Texas town and, having explained his symp- toms, asked the doctor how long it would take to cure him. The doctor, who had treated the visitor with every possible courtesy, replied: “You will require careful treatment under my personal supervision fo: about two months before you are able to resume your labors in the bank.” “Doctor, you are fooling yourself. I am not Smith the banker, but Smith the street car driver.” “Is that so? Well, my good fellow, I don’t see what you came to me for. There is nothing the matter with you except that you are not a banker.”— Texas Sifeings. HARDLY EQUAL TO IT. “You say you can write shorthand?” said the eity editor. “I can, sir,” replied the applicant for a job. ‘“When it comes to short. hand I don’t knuckle down to any- body.” ‘‘Have you had any experienceinre- porting a meeting?” “Lots of it. I can take a full report of the proceedings in shorthand and put it in shape for the printers after- ward. That’s child's play for me.” , “Report any kind of meeting, can you?’ “Yeas, sir.” “Hm!” said the city editor, ““there is a sort of convention at Saddler’s Hall in the next block. You may go and report the proceedings. ‘Write the speeches out in full.” The applicant for a place on the city 1 editor’s staff took his note book and went away. And he never came back. ‘When he got to Saddler’s Hall he found he had been sent to report the proceedings of a convention of deat mutes. —New York Mercury. EE i rrop@orpot> ”™”}b Some (Quaint Epitaphs, In an article on quaint epitaphs, the Loudon Funeral Directors’ Journal says: The following in Penrith Church- yard is refreshing in these days of de- ceit, on account of its candor: ‘‘Herse lics the man Richard and Mary his wife ; Their surname was Pritchard, and they lived without strife. The reason was plain—they abounded in riches , They had no care nor pain, and the wife wora the breeches.” The owner ot this inscription, now resting in Hebburn Churchyard, was probably a democrat, and had scme little opinion of himself: ““This humble monument will show, Here lies an honest man ; You Kings, whose heads are now as low, Rise higher if you can!” John Dale was a courageous man. This is the epitaph over his remains in Bakewell Churchyard, Derbyshire: ‘Know posterity that on the 8th of April, in the year of grace 1737, the rambling re- mains of John Dale were, in the eighty-sixth year oi his pilgrimage, laid upon his two wives : This thing in life might raise some jeal- ousy ; Here all three lie together lovingly.” One epitaph in Ilfracombe Church- yard shows faiths ‘Weep not for me, my friends so dear, I am not dead, but sleeping here; My debt is paid, my grave is free, And in due courss you'll come to me.” Not far from this we have au exam: ple of quiet self glorification: ‘Here lies a kind and loving wife A tender nursing mother— A neighbor fres from brawl and strife, A pattern for all others.” Evidently marriage was not a failure in this case. What follows was formerly on a tombstone in St. Thomas’s Church- yard, Salisbury: ‘‘Here lies three babes dead as nits. God took thom off in agie fits - They was too good to live wi’ fre, So he took 'em off to live wi’ ’ee.” Who dares to utter the foul slander that it requires a surgical operation to get a joke into the head of a Scotch- man? Let him or her cast an eye over the following, and then sit silent for- ever. Itisona gravestone in Stone- haven Churchyard. #The place whaur Betty Cooper lies Is here or here aboot; The place whaur Betty Cooper lies There’s neen can fin’ it oot ; The place where Betty Cooper lies There’s neen on earth can tell, Till at the resurrection day, When Betty tells hersel’.” Sm re Cold Booms the Optician’s “rade. Cold snaps are a great thing for op- ticians. Sudden changes in the tem- perature from heat to extreme cold often causes the glass in spectacles to crack, ag if trodden upon. Then it also has a bad effect upon the frames, and wearers of aids to the eye-sight are often startled by having their spec- tacle frames suddenly fall apart at the bridge. A man accustomed to wear- ing glasses is utterly lost without them ; he becomes dizzy after a short wkile, experiences nausea and suffers any number of inconveniences. course the minute his glasses break he rushes off to the nearest optician.— New York Journal. ree REE About the Koran. The Koran, the sacred book of the Mohammedans (usually spoken of by Oriental scholars as the ‘‘Alcoran”), was composed by Mohammed (Mahom- et), ( yd is said to have originally been writésn upon the bleached shoulder blades of sheep. The first edition con- tains 6000 verses, the second and fifth, 6214; the third, 6219; the fourth, 6236 ; the sixth, 6226, and the seventh, or ‘Vulgate’ edition, 6225. The words and letters are the same in all editions, viz. : 77,639 words and 323,015 letters. The George Sale (common English translation) is divided into 114 chap- ters. —St. Louis Republic. Of “but ! | WOMAN'S WORLD. "LEASANT LITERATURE FEMININE READERS. FOR THE NEW MUTTON-LEG SLEEVE. The new mutton-leg sleeve is larger, 7ider and fuller than ever below the houlder. It is not only plaited at the rm size, but also at the elbow on the mutside and inside of the arm to give t new additional volume. It is used m all sorts of fabrics, from ginghams o Lyons brocade, and for gowns of very description, from practical util- ty dresses to toilets designed for the aost elaborate occasions.—American farmer. WRINKLE RULES. If you would avoid wrinkles, care 10t only for your skin, but for your lerves; control your temper, and do tot try to have a too expressive and ivacious countenance. Sleep nine ours a night and an hour a day. De- line to worry. Wear smoked glasses nstead of scowling fiercely at the sun- ight and the water. Refuse to try to listinguish things afar off. Wash your ace in warm water with pure soap mce a day, and rub it softly with lannel after the washing. Feed it vith pure cold cream. Don’t be afraid f occasional sunburn. Itsmooths the ‘ace wonderfully. But, above all, be ymotionless.—New York World. A HANDKERCHIEF CASE. A novel case, for the dressing table ir bureau, is made for containing 1andkerchiefs. For foundation, a iquare of pasteboard a little larger han a handkerchief when folded is iovered on both sides with light blue mtin. Then a bag is crocheted of initting silk, and made just wide mough to fit easily around the square, vhere it is sewed on with small ititches. The bag is made in a simple ;rochet stitch, that is, somewhat open; t should be six inches in length, the ower half being of light blue silk and ihe upper half of pink. The top is inished by a row of shells or scallops, ind drawn up by a pink and blue silk ord and balls. This holds a square »ile of handkerchiefs in the most in- riting manner, is easy of access and »xtremely pretty as an ornament.— Brooklyn Citizen. WIFE OF A GREAT INVENTOR. Mrs. Thomas A. Edison is one of those rarely beautiful women whom to s2e is to admire. If ‘“looks” may ever be classified, she ranks as a ‘‘brun- blonde,” as she possesses all the piquant sharm of coloring attributed to that type. As her father, Lewis A. Miller, is President of the Chautauqua Assem- bly, a part of Mrs. Edison’s summers are always spent at that resort of learn- ing, where she and her two lovely children may be seen driving about in » foreign-looking little pony cart, yachting on thelake, or luxuriating on the broad veranda of the picturesque half-house, half-tent affair that is known to the students atthe Summer School as the ‘“Miller Cottage.” An aunt of Mrs. Edison is Mrs. Emily Huntingdon Miller—the one- time editor of that successful child's magazine of long ago, the Little Cor- poral. Mrs. Miller is the present Prin- cipal of a thriving girls’ college in In- diana, and also the head of the Chau- tauqua Woman’s Club, an organiza- tion that meets daily during the Sum- mer School session for the purpose of discussing all affairs of Church and State that are of special interest to its members.—New York Times. ETIQUETTE OF ROYAL WEDDINGS. I may mention, says the Marquise de Fontenoy, that the practice now in vogue in England and in certain other foreign monarchical countries of hav- ing royal princes invariably attended by equerries and gentlemen-in-waiting is of relatively recent origin and was not customary during previous reigns. Dld King William IV., Queen Vic- loria’s predecessor, and her other ancle, King George IV., were fre- quently in the habit of strolling about in the neighborhood of Piccadilly and St. James, quite alone and without at- tendance, both before and after their accession to the throne. Shortly after Rueen Victoria’s marriage, however, her good looking young husband was made the object of marked and offen- sive demonstrations of admiration by sertain female cranks, and it was like- wise brought to the Queen’s ears, whether with justice or not, I am un-. able to say, that efforts were about to be made to inveigle the Prince Consort into certain feminine entanglements, with the object, if not of securing in- fluence over him, at any rate of com- promising him. It was with the ob- ject of preserving her husband from any dangers of this kind, and for the purpose of avoiding even the slightest pretext for any breath of scandal or gossip, that the Queen arranged that the Prince should never set his foot outside the palace precinets unless at- tended by one or more gentlemen-in- waiting. STYLISH WOMEN THE ARTIST DRAWS, The face and figure that C. D. Gib- son has made so popular in his clever pictures in Life and elsewhere are those of Miss Minnie Clarke. Mr. Gib- son describes her good qualities as a model thus: ‘“To be a good model a womon must lack all self consciousness. Beauty, of course, is necessary, but beauty alone is not sufficient. Miss Clarke's face contains more expression than that of any woman I have ever seen; besides, posing is second nature with her. For instance, a few days ago I needed a model for a poor, lone woman, who would suggest awkwardness and stu- pidity. Miss Clarke put on an old palico dress, pulled her hair over her sars to make herself look old, assumed an expression and attitude befitting the character, and she looked not only stupid and awkward, but actually hungry. Hzlf an hour later I wanted the picture of a debutante just enter- ing a drawing room. She changed her tatters for an evening dress, coming into the room with the air of a duch- ess. She is simply all women in one, and that one a very useful one to an artist. . She ean laugh or cry, be awk- ward or graceful, look stupid, pen- sive, amused, interested or clever in as many minutes, and all at will. ““When I want to illustrate a story I first give the manuscript to Miss Clarke to read. After that she knows as well as I do for which characters in it she can pose. There is a picture in Mrs. Burton Harrison's story, ‘Sweet Bells Out of Tune,’ which represents a the- atre box, in which is seated a party of ladies. Miss Clarke posed for every figure in that picture. One of them’ is that of a fat and elderly woman. don’t mean that Miss Clarke looked fat and old, but she managed to suggest the character to me.” FASHION NOTES. A gold tape with a ball at the end is worn by some women like a watch. The latest fad in jeweled ornaments for bonnets and the hair is a diamond bat. A new skirt is made in four equal width flounces, the upper one being gathered in at the belt. Sleeves continue to be full atthe top, but in breadth rather than height. In fact, except for evening dresses, the shoulders are not often raised at all. Some women prefer simple white gowns for the cloudy days, and the pure white pique suits are excellent if not intended to encounter a down- pour. Lansdowne in changeable effects is especially popular this season, and it changes in soft, lustrous folds, wears well and is shown in a great variety of shades. Sloped gores let into the back of a lounging gown produce a graceful bell effect, and an oddly-shaped sailor collar heightens the attractiveness of the garment. Narrow-trimmed hats, somewhat on the sailor order, but with brim narrow .at the back, are trimmed with solid wreaths of roses and chrysanthemums and other similar blossoms. A bell skirt has five bias folds of graduated width, set equal distances apart. The lower fold is about three inches wide, and the others grow grad- ually narrower toward the top. The dress parasols of the season are like small tents, and although in most cases made of tulle, lace, or net, their large size and ugly handles suggest the utilities rather than the ornaments of dress. Both for trimming of bodices and skirts, lace is the most fashionable ad- junct. The fashion of berthas and shoulder capelets of lace is at once pretty and gives width to the shoul- ders, and consequently makes the waist look smaller. A new jacket is fairly close fitting, has leg-o’-mutton sleeves, very wide lapels running to the waist line, a turned over collar and pocket sections set on with a curbed pocket lid into the front corners of the skirt of the jacket rather low down. Bodices have waists fastening under the skirt, the top of which is concealed by a ribbon or fancy belt. Chemisettes are largely used. They are made in some light material in any sort or color. They are gathered, fulled or plaited, as may be desired. Clear white muslins are used for dresses which are worn over colored silk. The skirt is of three deep flounces. with wide hems and colored ribbon run in the hems, and the waist is of silk, draped over with muslin and a broad soft sash of the color at the waist. A pretty blouse waist is three-quar- ters fitting, has & wide belt, very deep shoulder ruffles running in points to the waist line front and back, sleeves with 4wo puffs above the elbows and plain and close fitting below, and a straight frill below the belt over the dress skirt. A new fancy is a plain India silk, with very full sleeves and a single flounce at the hem made of figured goods with ground like the plain or in entirely contrasting style. A dress of black India, with sleeves and a flounce of gold and black stripe, was voted handsome but rather tigerish, especi- ally when finished with a gold colered velvet belt, collar and cuffs. A new Paris model is a dress, the lower edge of which is cut in deep scallops; these fall over a mass of very narrow, very fluffy ruffles; the real- lops are edged with a flounce of lace about four inches deep, set on full. The waist of this dress has a shoulder cape made of a wide band of velvet box plaited into a puffed yoke; the lower edge of the velvet has a deep flounce of lace. The newest hats are extremely simple, of course straw and atrimming of flowers and velvet, while the latest receipt for a stylish bonnet is ‘‘a littla lace, a few jewels and much taste.” A small square of guipure fitted to the head and trimmed with a panache of feathers is a new idea, and for dress toilets a simple wreath of flowers with a velvet bow in front is bonnet enough for a married woman. The latest tea gowns have the bodice draped and crossed over at the waist with a V shaped vest of contrasting color. A pretty effect may be made with gray crape, lined with a rose-pink silk, and a kilted pink crape vest and flounces of pink on the sleeves to the elbow. Accordion plaiting is largely used for tea gowns, and when it is adopted they can bemade very simply, falling in straight lines from the neck to the hem. SOLDIERS’ COLUMN’ IN APANIC. A Bit ofa Story Which Iustances How Men Lose Their “Grit,” “SAY, Corpo™ al, you was in the war and did you? share of retreat- ing, I guess. Did you ever see a panic?” “Well,” said the Corporal,dry- ly,“ always man- aged the line of ! retreat so I never got taken prison- 2 er. Did I ever bh “Ngee a panict You IM! ==" know when Banks g=~ went up the Red |e “er ui boys bad a picnic from the time they left Franklin, mid- dle 0’ March, till they got to Natchi- toches—Mackintosh, the darkies call it. There was good foraging every day and big sugar houses every few miles. Did you ever drink any sugar house rum? Well, you don’t want to, “After we left Natchitoches we got into the piney woods; wasn’t but one road through the hull State, I guess, and that was narrow—just about room for two teams to pass, ’ ‘‘Well, Banks had bis hull army, about 80,000 men—-they’d make a line more'n three miles long—an’I don’t know how many batteries of artillery, an’ about 10 miles o° wagons—had them along to fetch back the cotton he expected to get—al!l stretched out on this one road. But the wagons and the troops did’t get along first rate and some how or other the wagons got most ahead of the army. The regiment I belonged to was on wagon train guard one day—’'twas the 8th of April —an’’long in the afternoon we heard firing ahead. Us fellows in the ranks didn’t know there war a reb around. Banks didn’t nuther, I guess, “Well, we kept on moving up the road kind o’ slow, an’ doubling up the wagons thick till the bull road was chock full. We couldn’t goahead and couldn’t turn out to get by, cause of the hexvy woods on both si1des,so there we was stuck, an’ the fighting was getting hotter in front every minute. No use guarding the wagons any more —they couldn’t get away; nobody couldn’t get em; so we marched off toward the front. ‘Jest fore dark we cometo a little clearing, and formed line of battle on the right of theroad. There wasn’t no fighting after dark, but we laid on our arms all night, an’ could here troops marching and wagons rolling the hull night long, though we didn't know what 1t meant. “Soon’s it came daylight we got or ders to move. There wasn’t any troops in sight nor nary wagon. We started along back down the road we had come up the day before, scairt,expect: ing every minute the rebs would take us in the rear; but they didn’t, an after we’d marched two or three miles we got careless again,an’ things seemed just as they had all the time. “Bout 8 o'clock, when we got "most back to Pleasant Hill, we heard a big noise behind us, A squad of cavalry came flying down the road, turning ix their saddles and firing behind ‘en fast as they could with their sever shooting carbines. They rode right into us, shooting and hollering ‘The rebel cavalry is coming! Git out of the way! ’Fore we could realize what it all meant they had passed us an gone on to the front. Then the’ was a valley in therear, and the bullets sung around our heads lively, an’ then we skedaddled. Less'n two winks the’ wasn’t a man in the road. Every one of ’em took to the woods. The under. brush was so thick you couldn’t see a rod, an’ the bushes tripped us up, and every man that went dewn left every- thing behind him that wasn’t fast ta him. Then we begun to strip down to business. Guns we pitched away, then knapsacks, an’ overcoats. an havyer- sacks, an’ canteens, an’ belts, an straps. “Well. we jest cleaned ourselves, an how we did run. We run for about a .mile till we got to Pleasant Hill where there was a clearing.” There we found cur brigade in line o’ battle, We went on to the rear of them; but it took us more'n an hour to git our wind and to gather our wits enough to know whether we was a regiment of soldiers or jest a lot 0’ scairt Yankees.” Nat. onal Tribune. Me THE YOUNGEST SOLDIER. A Uniontown, Pa., Shoemaker I:ays Claim to the Honor. Was Fourteen and a Half. Cyrus Halliday, a shoemaker oi Uniontown,Pa.,lays claim to being the youngest surviving soldier of the war, He noticed the claim of Patrick Shee- aan, of Allegheny, Pa., and found that he entered the service three months before Sheenan. 'tT'he latter enlisted at the age of 14 years and 9 months, while Halliday has the records to show that he was but 14 years and 6 months old when he elisted as a private in Company H,Third Maryland Volunteer Infantry and carried a musket 16 months to the end of the war. Halliday is now 44 years and 13 days old and gets no pension, A MASTER butcher had twins. LHe at once annoupced the tact to his parents as follows: “I write in great haste to inform you that my wife has just presented me with a couple of twins. More next time!” rt ——o— CorN-BLOSSOMS are the fashionable flowers in Paris. They were aiways the rage in Kentucky and are worn on the nose.—Chicago Tribune. River in 64? His: KEYSTONE STATE CULLINGS eo KILLED WHILE PLAYING INDIAN, ScranToN—Grand Griffin and Stephen Doyle were at the tlicater and saw a West- ern border act. The boys next day took a flobert gun and battled with imaginary Indians on the outskirts of the city. Doyle accidently fired the gun and Griffin was shot through the heart. an KILLED BY A BURSTING EMERY WHEEL, Eriz—A new 75 pound emery wheel burss at Stearns & Co.’s boiler and engine house, killing Christain Scheaffer instantly, seri- ously wounding Fred Schmidt and slightly injuring two other workmen. WHAT THE RECORD COSTS. HArrisBurG-—The final statement of the auditor-general with the publisher of the ‘Legislative Record” was made. The pub- lication for the last session cost the estate £27,289 30. THREE year old Charles Snyder fell into a 30 foot well at Moun ain Top, Huntingdon county. His mother descended the rope band over hand, and found her child un- conscious. Barring some bruises. he is as well as ever, but the mother,s restoration will require time. Her hands are fright- tully torn and the muscles of her arms are so strained and stiflened that she will be for Sone time unable to lift her hands to her ace. Fire on Wednesday totally destroyed the large barn of Abraham Brown, near Wood- bury, Huntingdon county, with seven horses and jarming implements. A 6 YEAR old daughter of Frank Sherban- dy, of Mendon, was burned to death, She bad amused herself by burning holes in a plank with a red hot poker. AFTER conferences lasting more than a week the employes of the New Castle steel mill signed ascale in which their wages are sut from 20 to 40 per cent. WiLLiaM, a 13-year-old son of James Martin, of Dunbar, accidentally shot him- selt through the heart with arevolver which he found in a drawer. ArtorNEY GENERAL HENsEL has decided that 1he state factory inspectors have na jurisdiction in places where only men are employed. Ox account of the Washington electric road not paying expenses its receiver wants the court to permit Lim to sell the prop erty. Bap sewerage at Export, Westmoreland county has caused an ¢p.demic of typhoid fever and several deaths are recorded. McOLeLLAN FETERMAN, a boatman at . the park near Altoona, was drowned by the capsizing of his boat Monday night. Joux MILLER. of Counelisville while on his way to Leisenriug to be married, fell trom a car and was fatally injured. WiLniaM FF. WiNGare, of Altoona, fire- man on a shiftinz engine, was strack by an engine and instantly killed. A 3 YEAR old child of William Henry, of Titusville, was sn badly burned while play— ing about a fire that it died. Epwarp T. Hacer died at Lancaster from the effect of a kick on the head, received in a foot ball game. JAMES SHANER, mi er, working at Smith. ton, was killed by being run over by a loads ed car, REv.B. D. Zweizie, of Reading,on Thurs- lay united his 2,3.0th couple in marriage TeN thousand people attended the fair at Stoneboro, Mercer county. Questions of Ammunition. It is ciearly merely a truism to as- sert that guns, unless they have shells and powder, are of no more value to an army than market carts. To feed the voracious appetite of a great line ot batteries belching forth shell and shrapnel is almost as ardu- ous a task as to insure their accuracy of aim or their correctness of move- ment into pesition. To find them in projectiles is a part of the science of war as necessary and as difficult as to obtain food for the men or fodder for the horses. A carfully planned and accurately- working scheme of supply has to be arranged behind the fighting line, the closest connection between con- sumer and producer has to be estab- lished, and the caterer of bullets is every whit as indispensable as the caterer of bread. To keep the stream of plenty flowing without check through the various channels it is necessary that ottcers should be fa- miliar with their size, extent, and construction, that each should have ocular demonstration of the accidents and obstacles that are sure to inter- vene, and practical experience of the best, means of obviating or overcom- ing them. The commander who directs and encourages the hot fire in front must keep a watchful eye on the ammuni- tion columns behind, like the provi- dent housewife who, while pressing hospitalivy on her guest in the din- ing room, does not leave the state of the larder out of her cauculations.— The Saturday Review. tw Silver Formation. ; The process by which nature forms the accumulations of silver is very interesting. 1t must be remembered that the earth’s crust is full of water, which percolates everywhere through the rocks, making solutions of ele- ments obtained from them. These chemical solutions take up small particles of the precious metal which they find scattered here and there. Sometime, the solutions in question are hot, the water having gone so far down as to be set a-boiling by the internal heat of the globe. Then they rush upward, picking up the bits of metal as they go. Natur- ally, heat assists the performance of this operation. Now and then the streams thus formed, perpetually flowing hither and thither below ground, pass through the cracks or cavities in the rocks, where they de- posit their load of silver. This is kept up for a great length of time, perhaps thousands of years, until the fissures of the pocket a? filled up. Crannies permeating the stony mass in every direction may become filled with the metal, or occasionally a chamuer may be stored full of it, as if a myriad hands were fetching the treasure from all sides and hiding away a future bonanza for some lucky prospector to discover in another age. ,