mm VOLUME 1. KEYXOMWVILLE, I'KXX'A., WEDNESDAY JANUARY 4, Um. NUM15EK 31. VrtUrorth (Mint fable. UFKALO, KOllIKSTKU & PITTS- UUIttUI RAILWAY. Tin short line 1etween DuHols, Ttlrtirwn v, lli.n.lr. Ui. I mn It I.. !.... ....,'.. Miiifiiia Fall hikI K)ltilH 111 the. iit)tr oil On nnd nrter ov. Wh. pnsen (ror trains 1)1 arrive iintl depart from Falls nfK Minion, fiitiiy, except Miminy, b roi- tilO A. M. Itrnrifnifl Aivomniotliitlnn For iH)in1s orln lietwecn I n U Creek and lrndforl. 715 n. m. mixed trtitn for runXHiitiiwnt'y. 10:O.V.M- lluttuloiiwl KocheMer miill-Voi Itrorrtwavvllle. KIli:u !iv..John-onbtirir.1t Jewell, Mrtidfoitl. Hiiltimtinrn, Itntliilo mid ttitehester; ctinneet I nit it t .lolniHon hurtf wiin r. a r,. triitn ;i, ror w ucox, i:ine Warren. Corry nnd K.rle. I0:hh A. M. Ari-ommodiitloii- Tor Pit-Hoi, Svke It Lir 1 titi mid lkMtimi1numv. l:ttO I'. Si. Mrndfonl Acfommodiiilon For tcerhtreo, Hrorknny vllle, hllmont. Cnr nmn, Uldtrwa)', .)olinniihunr, .Mt.Jewett nnd Mnidtord. 4:50 V. M.-Mall-For PnHoK Hyke. Ultf Ti5. P.M. Accommodation For PuHoKWk nun. I'linxsii i iiu tiev (i Tim vtn tton. itnn and i'unxMi!iiwney. Train Arrlvn-7:H A. Afrommodntloi runxHtitiiwney ; lOMfl A.M. .Mull from Wnl l on nnd riinx-miuwney ; i:5 A. M.,Ae rommodiitlon from Hrnflford: 1:20 I. M Arcommodittlon from 1'iinxMiliiuney; 4:V1 r. M., 31 it 1 1 imin liiiuuio linn Koi'hester: 7:.V I. M., Accommodation from Bradford Thousand mile tlrketn ft 1 ivo rents per nine, utMHi lor pMHMiiue net ween an niiiiioiim. .t. II. MclMVHK. Airent, Fulls neck. Fa. J. II. Hahhktt K. V. l.Avr.y. General Sunt. (ien. Tim, A if e tit Hradfoid, I'n. Koehrster, N. Y. 4 IXKGHKXY VALLEY RAILWAY COMPANY (ommonrintr Sunday IVe. 1 111:1. Low Grado Division. KAHTW.VIII. ptations. i No. I.; o..v;No.ii. loi 1011 M.1A. M l'. M Ked Imnk LiiWHonhtim New Itethlehem Onk U Id-re May villi' Pummel' villi , .. Hrookvlllo, Hell Fuller Iteynnldsvllle .. I'nnconst Kails Creek DuIIoIm Sahnla Wlnterliurn .... rVnneld Tyler. ilen Fisher Heneitette Urant.. Driftwood i" "i 2-:, M S HI. 1:1! e io in ii m1 i its .Vl; H 471 II s. r ti 10 m 9 in1 ti l :m I 4.-1 7 Zi 7 m 7 41 7 All H 01 8 HI 8 30l 9 0.1: A. M. WrUTWAKD. Nn.2No.No.lli lfi KHftwond (iriini . Mni'7tp (ili'n KIsIiit..... Tyler 1'i'tiHold Wliiti.rhurn .... Huhiilu IHiHuli 1'nllKtVot'k I'aiMMiiiKt Ki'VikiIiIkvIHo.. Fullor Hell ItrookvtlUi SunimiTvlllo.... Mnyvlll OiitiKlilirc P. M. ii ml P. M A (10 A 811 A 41 7 ( 7 lil 7 Mi 7 44 7 A4 8 (III 8 l 8 ZV 8 :i! 8 40 8 4N (i m 0 17l II 2.V II 44 10 IH: A All II m 111 r x. 7 lo 12 0.1 12 i: 5 40 A mi 7 2( 7 2 7 41 7 A7 n m 8 III 8 :i 8 .V II (V. II I .-. II 47 10 00 1. M.i 10 IK! 10 2.V Ni'W llcllili-hcni KHWHiiitini. Kcd Hunk.... Trnliix dully exrppl Hundiiy. DAVID McCARdl), ClF.'i.. SrpT.. I'lttNliiinr. I'n. IAS. I. AXDEKSON. Okn'i,. Iamh. A.it.. I'lllsliurK, 1'h PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. IN EFFECT DECEMBER 18. 18112. I'lillndi-lplilH A Frio Itiillrinid Division Tlmo ThIiIu. Triilnn leave llrlfl wiwhI. KASTWAHI) 11:04 A M Train 8. dully ixeept Hundiiy for Hiinluiry, llurrlHliiiiu mill InlerineJlliite Htu IIoiih, urrlvliiK in riilliideliililu tf :Ml p. m., New York. IISIA l m.i Hiilllinore, B:4S p. m.i WiiHhltiKtnn, 8:1A p. m. I'lillnuin I'ai lor eiir from V 1 1 lln niKMn ti net pitMHunwr voiii'ht'M fmio Kline In I'hlliuli'lplilii. 1I:W 1'. M. Train (I, dully cxet.pt Huiidny for llHtrlKliiiid hiiiI Interniedliilii mUoiih, iir rlvliiKHl I'liilHiliilplilu 4:2A A. M.: New York, 7:10 a. M. TliniiiKh couch from DuHiiIh to WlllliiniMport. 1 'u 1 1 n i it ii Sleeplnu carx from MiirrlHlmru lo riillndelplilii mid New York. I'lilludelpliln piiHsciitrci-H can ronmln In Hkn'iH-r unillHtiirhcd iinlll 7:00 A. M. !:: I'. M. Train 4, dolly for Hunliury. IIiiitIk linrit anil liilerini'iliale hihiIiiiih, arrlvlnit at I'lilliidelplilii, l:S0 a. M.i New York, H::i0 A. M.i llalilmoni, 11:20 a. m.; Washlniiton. 7::) A.M. I'lillntHn nirn mid piiHst'om'r coaehiMi from F.iIchimI Wllliunmport to I'hllndelphlii. l'iusi.ii(rtrH In Hlct'iier for Hiilllmore mid WushlMnton will he traiiMferred Into AViihIi liitfton rilueiier at llarrisliurir. FTWAIil. 7::B A. M. Train 1. dully except frinduy fur llldnway. IhilloU, ( lerioont and Inter -mediale HtaliijiiH. Lcuvch lildwny ut 11:00 p. M, for Krle. H:A0A. M.-Trnln 8, dully for Erin mid Inter mediate point. 11:27 P. M. Traill II, dally except Hundiiy for Kane and Intermediate NtutloiiH. TUKortill TKAINH Foil DUIFTWOOD FltOM THE KAHT AND HUI'TII. , TRAIN 11 leitvH I'lilludelpliln K:A0 A. M. WaiililllKliltl, "..Til A. M.i Hlilllniole,K:4.riA. M. WIlkeHliarru, 10:15 A. m.i dally exwpt Hun day, urrlvinir ut DrlflwiMid ut 11:27 p. m. with rullmmi Parlor :ur from I'lilludeliliiu, to WIllluniHiMirt. TRAIN H leuvea New York tit 8 p. m.i l'lillu deliihlH. 11:20 p. m.s WuHhlniiton. 10.4(1 a. m.i Hiilllmore, 11:40 i. to.; daily arriving at DrlftwiMMl at :A0 u. m. l'ullniao Hleeiilnu eitrH from I'lillailelplila lo Erie and from iihIiIhuioo und liultlmore to VllllmusMrt nnd throuirli puMwutier coucIiom from I'liilu delpliia lo Krle and Halt linore to WllluiuiH IKirt mid to IluHols. TRAIN 1 leaven Uciiovo ut 8:3A n. m., dully except Hundiiy, arriving at Driftwood 7:;tS ii. m. JOHNSONBURO RAILROAD. (Daily except Sunday.) TRAIN 1 leuvHM Kldiiway atV:40n. m.i Jolin Honliurit at U:5A u. m., arrlvltiK at Clermont ut 10:4A u. m. TRAIN 20 leu vex Clerniont at 10:55 a. ni. ar riving at JdIiiihoiiIiui'k ut 11:40 a. ni. and Rldxwuy at 11:06 a. m. JIDGWAY & CLEARFIELD R. R. DAILY EYCEPT SUNDAY. HOUTUWAKD. NORTHWARD. I'.M A.M. iTlB 9 40 12 18 4M 12 22 U52 12 ill 10 02 12 i)H 10 10 15 42 10 1A 12 44 1017 12 Ml 20 20 100 10 ;u 110 10 42 1 14 10 48 I U 10 AA 1 45 11 OA HTATION8. A.M. P.M. Rlditway iNlund Run Mill Haven t'royland Hhoru MIIIm Hlue lUn-k Vlneyurd Run t.tirrler Hnx'kwuy vllle McMlun Hummlt llurveyx Run FuIIh rreuk ilulloU 180 700 120 6AI 1 10 6 4(1 10(1 6 85 12 AO 80 12 A4 8 25 12 52 28 12 50 C2I 1288 0 (M 12 81 6 A7 12 20 52 12 20 5 45 12 06 6 80 TRAINS LEAVE KIDGWAY. Eastward. Tnilnf:17a. m. TruliiTl:45 p. ni. Eastward. WeMtwiird. Traill a, 11:84 a.m. Truiii 1, 8:00 p. in. Train 11, 8:25 p. ni. o'uy :ix p. CHASTE. PIIU PIIOH. J. R. WOUD, Ueu. J'tUM. Ag't. Ueu. Muuuger. LANGUAGE IS SrYEET. EXPRESSION BY THE TONGUE IS NECESSARY TO HAPPiMESS. Life Would Re MIKlity Deaolata Without Swrrt Words Mnrh Mora Itrttutirnl Conlil We Mnka Till Kxlntrnre If We Took More I'alnn In Tnlklng. How wonlil yon enjoy life with sweet words left out? My littlest one runs to me and with both arms alxmt my neck pnlld me down to kiss me, and whisper is if it were a new necret: "P ipa, I love yon. Oh, how I just lo love, love you!' What a pest it is to he pulled about o when one is busy! How it ili.tlocates one's collar and one's thoughts! But. what would you tnke for such prattle? How would you like it cheeked, and in stead of such spontaneity be compelled to imagine you are loved? Denr mo, old man, but why so fusRy? Do yon not know yon are loved? Do not actions spenk louder thnn words? Does not your wife cook your meals, and does not your girl put your room in order? Must you also lie mussed over and gabbled to in order to be satisfied? Then conies my oldest boy, a grand fellow, stout and wholesome and brainy, and before I nm nware his arm is about my neck, and he pulls my head over on his shoulder witli n kiss and a "Papa, you are awful dear to me." Pshaw, what is there in words? A few sounds noth ing else! I am not so certain about that. I only know that I would not take a mint of money for that small bouquet of my boy's words. No, not for the world would I have to guess at his affection and get hungry for a solid certainty. There is not enough such eloquence, as I have looked about the world. And yet it should not flow too eas.ly. Tonguy love is quite another thing from open heartedness. In my Qjrinion we should bring up our young folk to easily and frankly express their feelings, only not to express any more than they feel. The art and trick of speech is to be more eloquent than true, and so to turn love into a lie. Somewhere I have lately read a good story of a married couple that from some spleen vowed not to speak to each other. Well, if they had not really loved they could have got on without talk, but in this case they could not. So by happy inspiration they used the household cat as a go between. "Go," said Betsy, "and tell John that dinner is ready." "Go," answered John, "and toll Betsy I am on hand." "Here, puss," says John, "tell Betsy this pudding is remarkably good, and I ,vill take another plate of it if she pleases." "Go tell John," answers Betsy, "that I am glad he likes this peach shortcake, and he shall have three pieces if he will." So for years they kept their vows, bnt told their love and gut on famously. It is a general fact that friendship grows stronger by a short separation and cor respondence by pen. A man or woman will say sweet or true things in a letter that they would not say first by month. I do not quite nnderstand this, but I know it is true. Friends treasure let ters, and friendship never is quite itself until a few letters have passed. en courage young folk to write letters to learn the art of talking well. One would suppose it would be the other way that good talkers should write well. How came it abont that the tongue and adjacent organs got control of lan guage? Possibly Dido can explain this. Slie leaps and bounds about me in over whelming joy. Her nose is in my fuco and her paws on my chest. At last, ut terly unable to express all her emotion, she throws back her head and explodes in a bark. It is nothing but an explo sion, bnt it is a great reliof to her. That is the beginning of speech in all creatures only a noise made by the rush of emotion through the mouth. By and by this noise is modified to ex press different emotions. The dog can ex press a dozen passions and resentments, and yet most of these are told by the tail and the body in general. The next Btep is, or was, to modify these sounds into musical roles. The bird does not enunciate first, but sings. The lower races sing well and talk badly. The highest art is to sing well and talk equally well. So language slowly gets stolen by a certain set of organs that at first had little to do with it. The legs and hands come less into play to tell emotions; the tail, which has done so much animal talking, is aborted. I think it is aborted mainly because its functions are mostly passed over to the tongue. I have not heard whether the tailed tribe of Africans wag those appendages in friendly greeting like dogs or not I would not own a tailless cat or have a horse's tail even clipped of its hair. It is to abbreviate speech; it is to lop off the organ of ex pression. Yon will see that my theory about the development of language accounts for many abnormal forms of speech. Pro fanity is a mere explosion of sound, closely allied to the dog's bark and the cat's squall. It is not so wicked as it la beastly. It is the natural language of a vulgar fellow who has no art of high language. Half the world talks by ex- filosion and expletives. The more beast y a man's habits the more profane he becomes by necessity. It is his natural language. What a stretch it is from such a man to Coleridge or Emerson or Lowell! I heard of a man the other day, "Ah. be is a great scientist, to be sure, but he is also such a splendid talker." The art of saying fine things finely you cannot affprd to be without, "Live with wolves and yon will learn to howl," says the Spanish proverb. We ought to be ablo to add, "Live with men and you will learn to talk well." But that is not so. There are ti o few really good talkers really wise and witty tongues. E. P. Powell in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. He Knrw. Judge Come, you'd better plead guil ty. You'll get off easier. Prisoner Ah, I twig yer lay. Yer want to get home to dinner! London Tit-Bits. A Grateful Old Wiiinnn. A dean was visiting his parishioners when one of thnn, mi old woman, in formed him that since they met "she'd gone through a sivl t o' truuMi', Her sister was (lend, ami there wnr a worse job thnn that; the pii died nil of a sud den, bnt it pleased tlio Lord to Ink' him, and they nmn bow, they nr.m bow." Then the poor old lady brightened up and said, "Hut there's one tiling, Mentor Allen, as I can sny, end ought to say the Lord's been pi ; well on my side this winter for green-;!" Exchange. Detecting Dlneiue by the F.ya. It is Jierfectly jiossible, by means of the instruments of the Nineteenth cen tury, to exactly learn the optical condi tion of an eye, to decide, ju-t what glasses, if any, are needed for its perfect working, and it is also possible to look in upon it, and by llie npifiii-uuce of its tissues and its blood vessels to decide as to the existence of serious disease when Ihere nre few other symptoms that point to it, when there may be none besides to be found in the body that positively prove it. I may mention two classes of disease, one constitutional and the other local, which illustrate this statement. The eye mirror opthalmoscope is the instru ment by which such things are settled. Bright's disease, a name carrying dread to many a household, is the constitu tional disease to which I refer. In not a few cases the diagnosis of it is made by the examination of the retina with the eye mirror. The expert will make no mistake if the eye gives evidence of it, for its signs are positive in minute bleeding from the blood vessels and peculiar fawn colored spots on the retina. The surgeon dreads to find them, because they are evidence of an advanced stnge of the malady which prematurely destroys so many lives. Bright's disease is in fact a de generation of many of the tissnes of the body, the walls of the arteries being among them. In no part of the Wv can this degeneration be so readily ... tected as in the retina of the eye. Co. mopolitan. lure Nnrcotlo Death. Under chloroform, as under all anaes thetic gases and vapors, there is a mode of death which may be called the final or natural. It need never be produced, and never could be except under the most unskillful management, and it is a long time in its progress. When death does occur in this manner it is by the slow extinction of the natural animal cymosis, and is illustrated, as to method, perfectly by the simple experiment of gradually extinguishing a candle in a confined paco by introducing vapor of chloroform into the air that fills the space. It can he illustrated also by the ex periment of stopping ordinary fermenta tion by the presence of chloroform, and even by tho simpler process of using chloroform vnpor as a preservative of animal tissues from decomposition. All angpsthniics are open to kill in this man ner, but that is the safest anopisthnric which puts out life in no other manner, which does not, that is to say, cause either of tho reflexes of spasmodic char acter during administration. Asclcpiad. When Jay Gould Waft a Hoy. "At one time," said Mr. Woolhiser, who as a boy worked in the same store with Jay Gould, "while Oould was in tho employ of Bumhana he fell sick. My father, who was a general nurse and something of a doctor, attended him and brought him around all right. Not long alter he recovered he met tny father and said, 'You saved my life, and if at any time you are in need and I can help you I shall do so with pleasure.'' Fortune has not smiled oa my poor old father of late, and being in absolute need he wrote to Mr. Gould, telling him of his condition and asking for help. No reply was ever received. I think that our letters never reached Mr. Gould, or he would sorely have helped us. I wrote to him only a few days before his death for the fourth or fifth time. Gould was always a good boy, and for awhile we slept together In the same bed in tne old store in Roxbury. Jay never missed saying his nightly prayers before retir ing." New York World. The Study of Philately. Philately is a atndy. It is a pursuit that adds more to the life of the young collector than any other of his pleas ures. Philately in the present genera tion is assuming vast proportions as an instructive science and is even now a formidable rival of numismatics. No longer is it called a mania or a craze, but a science teaching the geography, history, language and the morals of a country. Our philatelists are not mere schoolboys and girls, although they col lect stamps, but men of mature minds; men well established in business and Srofessions, men of sound judgment, itelleotual and thoughtful men. And it is this fact that gives the young col lector encouragement, the knowledge that such men do exist in the rank of philatelist. Ohio State Journal WOMEN AT ENGLISH RACES. They Are Nearly Alnays Wealthy and Attend nerause They l.ove ffpnrt. The women one sees at tho races here are the women of the fashionable world, beautifully nl tired, escorted by gallants. They move about on the l iwn, or pre side at their luncheon' tables tinder tit trees or over their hampers in their car riages; they chat and promenade, takes light interest in the races, walk alionl the paddock and look at the horses, dc the honors in a box or rest in their seat! at the grand stand; but one doesn't se them hauling out money to put on a horse or chasing around to find out "what's good in this race." One doesn't see them consulting the tips in the morn ing papers, or Jack's tips, or anybody' tips, or in any way showing that they are afllicteu with a severe attack oi gambling fever, The English women are the most charming feature of the English races. They, with their lovely toilets and holi day airs, give it the garden party flavoi that helps to keep it a swrt instead of e business. But it's not in naturo for them to al ways look on and never participate. English women have a finger in the racing pio also. You'd hardly snsiertil to watch them at the races, but they do. They are usually women who go racing for the love of the sport and who know more or less nbout the horses. When they want to bet they ask a comuiis sioner, some gentleman who is betting for himself, or else some one they can tip for the trouble, to put a certain amount on a horse for them. No money passes on the course. Tho "settling" if all done away from there, and usually by letter and checks. Women who bet heavily and contin ually and there are such transact theii business directly with a bookmaker, just like a man. But this again isn't evident on the course. When such ii woman fancies a horse she sends a tel egram from her home the morning ol the day he runs, making her bet, or she wires her bet or "order" from th course before the race. Usually, too. she's the sort of a woman who can retail the latest fashionable gossip in piquant stylo, while her equine "fancy" is add ing to or subtracting from her bank ac count. There are a great many English wom en who bet in this way, and who now and then stand to win tidy sums in tlit early books on big races. Then there'i a lot of playful impromptu betting al places like Epsom and Ascot. I've seen ladies lean over the front of the boxes al Epsom and hand the shouting booklet who stand in line in front of them sov ereigns and half sovereigns and name their horses, to give the day zest oi "have it to say" that they were on n Derby or Oaks favorite. And I've seen ladies going to and from the paddock at Ascot stop to have a look at the shouting ring, and go np to some bookie and make a bet "just to have th experience," and the bookie would be Mas polite as a basket of chips," und the "experience" would be filed away with those other wonderful ones of hedged in lives, like a ride on Jumbo or a dusb into the Blums. London Cor. Chicago Inter Ocean, Native Wit In a Street Gain In. Wit in the New York "young fellow," if sometimes brutal, is usually ready and often imaginative. An unmistak able oriental, in turban, liaggy trousers, gay stockings and tinseled coat, sat on a bench in Madison square the other day, an object of interest to all the boys, and apparently not displeased at the attention he attracted. There came along presently, however, two rough looking young men, and one of them, pausing in front of the stranger, looked at him in undisguised astonishment. His first surprise over, he called back his fellow, who had passed on, and said, pointing to the oriental, "Jimmy, git on to this." Tho eastern stranger's splendor seemed to call up some strange picture in the rearward of Jimmy's imagination, for his instant answer was, "Oh, Cin derella; poll his fringes." New York Sun. l'0Klf's Aluria Clock. Fogg staid up very late yesterday morning, or very early, if you like that expression better at any rate it was nearly 4 (SJolock before he had roughly footed up the amount be would have to pay in hats and cigars and wine and oyster suppers and climbed into bed. He was to arise in good season, and set the alarm cluck to ring "for all it was worth" at 7 o'clock. It rang with a vengeance, and fearful that it would awaken the whole household he reached up, smothered the bell witli his hand and took the clock down into the bed to hold it until it would stop ringing. When he awoke again the bell had stopped ringing and he was still hugging the clock, which truthfully asserted that it was after 0. Hartford Post. Philosophy from a Child. Two of the Virginians who have come to tho Pasteur institute to be vaccinated against hydrophobia were in grave con sultation. "I am sorry you told the doc tor that he must not hurt you," said the elder, aged twelve. "I am sure you would rather suffer than die." "No," replied the other, aged six, "I would rather die and be born again and not be bitten by a dog." Savants have tortured their brains for centuries and not found truer philoso phy, and the innocent say things that make the experienced tnrn pale. New York Times. EXPLOITS OF A CROW. VERY CLEVER INDEED, BUT HE MET AN UNTIMELY DEATH. Anecdotes liy a Man Who Hnxr Rome Strange Things Kven Though He Hnil a Gnn The Crow Distilled Certain Kind, of Animals lie Was a Great Hunter. "When this region was nearly all woods sixty years ago," said an old resident of Bell Meadow, "I picked a young crow out of the mud in Tamarack swamp, where he had tumbled out oi the nest before he was old enough to fly. I named him Abe and tinned htm, und he developed into the brightest bird 1 ever saw. Like all tome crows, Abe was mischievous and inquisitive. There wasa knothole In the floor of our cistern, and the crow couldn't find out what wa under it, although he tried very hard. "Several times a day Abe Hew down to the creok, hunted up a pebble ami carried it in his bill to the floor of tin cistern, where he dropped it through the knothole. The instant he let tho pebble drop he would put his ear close to the hole and listen. Ho could hear the peb ble strike tho witter, and the noise out of his sight excited his curiosity so inucli that he dropped a half bushel of pehlilef into the cistern before he gave up. "Aim accompanied me on all my hunt ing trips in the full und winter, and he saw me kill live or six wolves, half n dozen wildcats nnd several deer. The woods were full of deer, and there were so many wolves that we couldn't keer any sheep. Abe took a great liking tt deer and rnbbits, but he hated wolvei and wildcats, seeming to understand that they were destructive and danger ous. One afternoon, the summer thai he was a year old, Abe flew into oui little clearing and cawed and fluttered about as if he wanted me to leave my work. "I knew the crow had seen something that displeased him, and so I picked ti( two rifles and told him to go ahead, just U see what he would do. He went squall ing through the air toward Bell Meadow brook, and when he alighted on a tree he kept yelling and looking down in tlx ravine. I looked, too, little expecting tt see what I did. A pair of wolves were tearing at a doe they had pounced or and pulled down. I killed them both before they got threo leaps from the doe. nnd when Abe saw that they couldn't move he cawed and croaked as thougli be was glad. "The next winter there were three feel and a half of snow on the level, and we had to wear snow-shoes to get around. While I was splitting wood near the house one cold morning the crow came sailing and sqnulliug to the settlement from the direction or Lake Henry. He was excited about something, and he perched on the log and went to flapping his wings and dancing up and down. 1 understood him well enough to kuow that he bad seen something that be didn't like the looks of np in the woods toward the lake, so I and my brother and cousin put on our snowshoes, shoul dered five loadod rifles and started into the woods, Abe leading the way and yelling. "He led us to the hike, where we saw a sight that I shall never forget. In a space where tho wind had blown the snow from the ice a flock of seven deer had been cornered by a pack of five wolves. The doer couldn't gut out on account of tho deep snow, and the wolve had killed three of them when we Kot there. While we were blazing away at the brutes the crow flew overhead and shouted his approval. We killed the whole pack, and Abe felt so good that he rolled over on tho crust several times "One day in the spring the crow cuw a fisher catch a rabbit and carry it to a hole iu a basswood tree, thirty feet from the ground. My brother and I were chopping near by, and Abe squallec around till he attracted our atten tion, when he flew up to the hole where the fisher was concealed, W chopped the basswood down, and tha fisher skipped out and ran up a hemlock tree to where the leaves were so thick we couldn't see it. Abe flew np, alighted above the fisher and began to squall, and squinting tnrougn the foliage below him I could see enough of the fisher to fire at. I banged away, and down came Mr. Fisher with a bullet in his head. Abe fairly laughed when the fisher tumbled. "s)ne morning I found six pullets on tne noor oi tne nen shanty. A mink had killed them, and that night I set two steel traps and put one of the pullets be tween. In the morning a mink had its lore feet in one of the traps and one of its hind feet in the other. Abe tagged me in, and when he saw the mink strug gling to get out he ran np in front of it and began to yell in its face. I let the crow torment it, and while my back was turned the mink caught Abe by the neck and bit him so hard that he died in a few minutes." Cor. New York Tribune. Always Willing to Loan. Merchaut (to persistent peddler) Oh, don't bother me this morning. I wish you'd kindly leave me alone. Morris Abraras (producing wad) Why, shertinly, my frent, how much and vot inderesht vill yon gift Kate Field's Washington. Sumatra Iluflaloes In Water. The bnffuloes in Sumatra, according to an English traveler, in fear of the tiger take refuge at night iu the rivers, where they rest iu peace and comfort, with only their horns and noses sticking above the water. Nothluf Maw Under the Sun. "I am beginning to believe that thote is absolutely nothing new under the sun, bnt tli at every thought is a revival orun iinltntion or a downright pluglarlsm of some one which preceded It years and roars ago," said Calvin B. Southwood as be warmed his feet ngiiinat a heater in the rotunda of the Lindoll. "Even the Inventions that appear so brand new may have existed or their possibility boeu suggested away back before the dawn of history. At any rate this is evi dently true iu the realms of literature. In this line, If in nothing else, history re peats itself and the world runs in cycles. I attended church Sunday fact, I assure yon and beurd a distinguished gentle man use a metaphor as his own which I at once recognized as used once by Oliver Wendell Holmes, and which in different form I once ran across in an old book containing the 'Canterbury' Tales. Yes terday I read iu a magazine au article by a writer of national reputation, who used as his own the expression, 'Pride that dines on vanity, sups on contempt.' "This expression was evidently taken bodily from the 'Poor Richard's Alma nac' of Benjamin Franklin, and this dis tinguished philosopher 1 feel sure bor rowed it either consciously or uncon sciously from an old German book full of folklore. Many of these old thoughts in more recent writers are unconsciously reproduced, and in their new dress can hardly be recognized. 'A guilty con science needs no accuser' may easily bo recognized in Hamlet's soliloquy, 'Thus conscience does make cowarduof us all,' but it appeared far back of that, in the sacred pages, 'The wicked flee when no man pursueth,' and no doubt in other shapes ages before that. No, there's nothing new under the sun." St. Louis Globe-Democrat Mora Potato. Renan had a great contempt for mere words, however eloquent. One evening he met at a sort of a literary dinner M. Caro, the philosopher beloved of fine la dies, who set himself to prove the exist ence of God. His eloquent assertions did not seem to interest the sage. In the middle of one of his most sonorous pe riods M. Renan attempted to make him self heard. But all the ladies were intensely in terested. They would not have their pleasure spoiled. "In a moment, M. Renan, we will listen to yon in your turn." He bowed submissively. Toward the end of dinner M. Caro, out of breath, stopped with a rhetorical emphasis. At once every one turned to ward the illustrious scholar, hoping that he would enter the lists, and the hostess, with an encouraging smile, said: "Now, M. Renan" "I am afraid, dear lady, that I am now little behindhand." "No. nol" "I wanted to ask for a little more po tato." Fortnightly Review. Indorsed for Offlee. I nice looking old gentleman with a florid complexion approached the ap pointment clerk of the treasury one day with an application for a place, indorsed by some lotters of recommendation. When the official asked him a question he said: "Please write it down. I am so deaf that 1 could not hoar a sound if a cannon were fired off close to my ear." General McCanley thought that this was rather a disadvantage for an appli cant for employment as a clerk, but he asked the stranger to write his name and address. The old gentleman shook his head. "It is impossible," he said. ' I cannot write at all, because my band is palsied." Washington Cor. New York Sun. Aa Good as lfe Gave. A reproof which was just and not dis courteous was once addressed to a young rector who bad been reared under tin highest of church doctrines, und whe held that clergymen of all other denomi nations are without authority and cot entitled to be culled ministers of the Gospel. One evening at a social gather ing he was introducted to a Baptist clergyman. He greeted the elder man with much manner and ostentation. "Sir," be said, "I am glad to shake bands with yon as a gentleman, thoagh I cannot admit that yon are a clergy man." There was a moment's pause, and then the other said, with a quiet significance that made the words he left unsaid emphatic, "Sir, I am glad to shake hands with you as a clergyman." San Francisco Argonaut. Why tha Child Cried. A Brooklyn physician says that he wot recently attending a family where the little man of the bouse was in a some what refractory humor, and thinking to quiet him he said, "How would you like it now if to punish you I should take your little sister away from you?" The boy sulked and did not reply, but as the doctor arose to take bis leave the child burst into a woeful blubbering. He wa. asked what was the matter. "Doctor's goin away without tukiu sister," he an swered. New York Recorder. Two Honest Men. A Paris furniture dealer recently bought from an architect au old writing table, and in overhauling it he found a packet containing 1,600 francs. He ut once Informed the former owner of bis find, and be was rewarded by an honest declaration on the part of the architect that the latter knew nothing whatevet abont the money and wonld not accept it Paris Letter.