Urn VOLUME 2. REYXOLDSVILLE, PKNiYA., WEDNESDAY AUGUST 9, 1893. NUMBER 13. 1 Slrttlvotttt (Mttie tTnblre. BUKPAIA KOTHKSTKK A PITTH HL'KGH HA1LWAY. Th short lino la-twm-n IIiiIIiiK. Uldttwny. Bradford, Hulainivara, HiiITiiIo, lto-lieter. Nlinriira r'nll and pnlnta In the upper oil region. Hn nnrt lift or .Tune 4tli, 11, pnsspn gertrnlimwlll arrive mid depart from 1'iiIIk I 'rook Million, daJIyi exrept fumliiy, an fol low!: 7iO0 A. M . Wnilford Ai'ooniniiMlntlnn For Eilnt North In-twoon I'lill- I'rrek nnil radfia-d. 7:1-1 u. iu. nitwd tniln for IMitiXKUliiwnov. 10:0sA.M. Miiiralnanri Rorhfti-r mull- Kor llrorkarnvvim, lldtriiy..MinoiilMii-ii-.lt. .Towott, Hradfnrd.Hnlaniniii'a. Buffalo and Ko-hetT-, onnnot'tliiK nt JohnwmlMirn with I'. & E. I in In it, for Wilcox, Horn., Warren, iiorrv and Krto. 10: A. M. wnitiiiHliit1o-r"or PllBMa, S.vki'M, Umtoiin and I'liiixiaitawTioy, 1:90 1'. M.- Bradford Aivonnnoliillon-For Hooohtrm, Brockwavvlll, Kllniont, far mon, Klileway, loliiiaoiihur?. Mt. Jowtt mid BriidiWd. 8:10 I. M.-M.all For IiinVK Hyko, 111 Itun.l'iinMuiJiwney and Valtm. 8t1H P.M. A"nmmfiition- l'or IhillolN.nig Hun and I'mmmitawnoy. fttktO A. M. fnnulny train For Bmckway- villo, Kltlirway and .loiiiiionhiirir. il B.M. Hiniihiy tniln For ImiBoIs, flykea, Hid Hun mid llinxniilawney. ThouMind Billo tk-keta at two cent per mile, f""d for pitxMiifo iH-twwnall attttlnna. J. H. McIhtvhn, Atfviit, FiillMorook, I'a, J. II. llAiiiirrr. K. ('. l,i'KY,' Clcnornl Sunt. (Ion. I'm. Airont Bradford I'a. Kia-hnVr N.V. ALLEGHENY VALLKY RAILWAY COMPANY commencing Sunday June IN, 1WI2. Lowltrado Diviwion. r.ABTWAiin. Xo.l. N'n.1. No.. A. M. P. M. A. M. JO 4" 4 I'l 10 ST 4 !W 11 :H A i'i II I '.' II ill (V H.I IS '.HI 11 III S II IV 3 12 " It l T 12 2R It 2U (IT 12 ill II 211 III 12 4:i .'II B 2.". 1 fi ft" fl 44 I IK J (Ifi W 1 ill 7 l 7 m 1 m 7 :ii 7 Id 1 47 7 4H 7 2:1 1 m a (m 7 m 2 ( a on 7 41 2 I '1 N III 7 M 2 2J H 2H 8 (II 2 42 H 41 N 111 2 M a .Vi 8 ;m ii 211 11 !" 11 nn l. M. I. M. A. M. Rod Rank.... Lawaonliam . Near Hotlilchoin Ouk Kidiru.... Mitynvillo HuiTimorvillo . Brookvllle.... Ho 1 1 Fuller Koynoldsville I'linroiiMt Fit I Ih Crook... DuHnlK Hiilnila Wintorhurn .. I'onllold Tyler (ilon FNlier... Bencgetto Onint Driftwood in m 1 m 1 43 II ( WKKTWAKD. No.2 I No.tt INo.llll 1(H A. M P. M Driftwood (irniit llonozotto (ilon l'lnlior Tylor I'onllold Vluterliiirn .... Hntnila IIiiHoIh FiillNl'riH'k Panooiiwt ItoynoUlHvlllo.. Fullor Holl Brookvllle Niinitnervllle,... MiivhvIIIii OllkitlllL'O A mil A an 7 (fi A 41 7 HI 7 !H A All I) 0! 7 44 7 A4 II 111 It V 8 ll a :rr li !l H 12 8 'ii a ;c 12 W 12 !.', A 40 A ; 7 2i 7 ' 7 411 8 4111 8 4N HI 7 AT K (HI 8 III 8 :in It IT II 2.1 II 44 8 AT in m 10 IB 10 i'i Now Hcllili'honi V 1! V 4 l.aWMIIlliaill. Hod Hunk.... io n il A. M. P. M.A M.I P. M, Tralna dally except Sunday. DAVID Met' A KOO, Gkk'i.. Hitpt.. I'lllBlnim. I'll. J AS, P.AXDF,HSON,Okn'i,. I'ash. Aiit., I'iltburif, I'd PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.. IN EFFECT MAY 21, 1811.1. I'hlladolphla V Erie Kiillroad DlrlHlimTlme Tulilu. Trulim Ii'hvo Driftwood. EASTWAHD 9:04 A M Train 8, dully oxcopt Hnndiiy for Hiiuhury, llarriHhurir and Intormodlatt hIii tioiiN, iirriviuit at I'hlliidolphlii li:MI p. M., Now York, V:liA I', m.i Kultimoro, H:4A p. M. WaKlilnitliin, 8:IA p. H. i'ulliiian I'arlor our from WIllluniHport and piiHaoiiKor conolioa from Kimo to I'lilladolphlii. :;! I'. M. Train tt, dully oxcopt Hundny for llnrriHlnirir and Intorniodlato HtiilloiiM. ar rlvhm at l lilhidolphla 4:311 A. M.; Now York, 7:10 A. H. Throtmli coach from IMiIIoIh to VilliumHiort. I'uliuiun Hloopluir cura from llarriKltiit-K to Philadelphia and Now York, l'lilludnlplilii imNHcuifcrH can romaiit in Nloopor undiHturlMMl until 7:00 A. M. (l:iiA 1'. M. Tniln 4, dully for Hunhury, HnrrlH huri: und Intormedluto atatioim, arrivinir at I'lilladolphlii, ll:A0 A. li.; Now York, 11:110 A. M.; Hull Imoni, 11:20 A. H.; WimhliiKton, 7:110 A.M. I'ullnian can and piiMMcmror coachia from Eric and WilllumNMintii I'lilladolphlii. l'jitr4cntrcrH In alooMr for llulltmoro and WuHliinitton will 1m trannforrud lino WiiHti liiglou aluopor lit lliirrlhlpiii. WEW'l'WAKD 7::i5 A. M. Train 1, dully oxcopt Hmiday for Klduwny, liultoia, ('lormoiit mid inter mediate million. 1,1'iivuh Kldiiwuy ut 11:00 P. M. for Erie. 9:30 A. M.--Trti(ti il, daily fur Erie and inter medin to poliita. 8:27 V. M. Train 11, dully except Sunday for Kane and intermodliiteatutioiiH. TUUOI'I.II TKA1NS Foil DRIFTWOOD FllOM THE EAST AND SOUTH. TRAIN 11 leuveH l'lilladoliilita H:A0 A. m. WiihlilnKUui, 7.A0A. M.; llultlmoru, 8:4S A. M. Wilkoaliurre, 111:1.1a.m.; dully except Sun day, urrlvluK at Drift wood at 11:27 P. M. Willi I'ullnian I'arlor ear from I'liiladulplilH to WlllluniKMiit. TRAIN a lcuveaNow York at. 8 p. ni.: IM1II11 delphla, 11:20 p. 111. 1 WiiHliliiKton, 111.40 a. m.i lliiltlniore, 11:40 p. m.; dully arriving at Driftwiaid at U:A() a. m. I'ulltnuii Klotiiliif ciira from l'lilludolnhlu tu Erie and from Wiishliuilon and llalliiiiore to WlllluniHHirt and tiimiiKh paaMMiior coachea f roni I'lilia delphia to Erie and llultimuru to Wlllluina- IHirt and to Dullola. IAIN I louvoN Hdiiovo ut H:ai a. m dally except HiinUuy, arriving at Driftwood 7:JS a. ni. JOHNSONBURG RAILROAD. (Daily excopt Hunduy.) TRAIN lfl leaves RldKway at 11:40 a. m.i J11I111 Miiiliiirn at U:.Vu. 111,, arriviuK at lUuriuuut at ln:4."i a. m. TRAIN 20 leaven Clermont at 10:5.1 u. m. lir rlvluir at JoluiHonliurK at 11:40 a. m. und Uidiiway at 11:03 a. 111. . JJIDGWAY & CLEARFIELD R. R. DAILY EYCEPT SUNDAY. BOT1TI1WARI). NORTHWARD. P.M A.M. STATIONS. A.M. P.M. HTii 94(1 RldKway TST 12 IH 9 48 iHlaud Run 1 20 12 22 II A2 Mill llavoii 1 III 12IU 1002 Croylund - KM l'ilta III 10 HhortHMillH 12 All 1A42 10 1,1 muoKock 12 A4 12 44 10 17 Vineyard Run 12 .12 12 4M 20 20 Currier 12 AO 100 1082 Brockwayvllln 12IIN 110 1042 McMliih Summit 12 30 1 14 1048 HurveyK Hun VI M 11 10 M FallH (iruuk 12 20 143 1103 DiiUola 12 03 TRAINS LEAVE RIDGWAY. Eaatward. Wentward DM 6 4rt ilA II HO 11 23 6 2;i 021 HOI AA7 A32 A 43 SHU TralnH. 7:17a. m. Train U. 11:M u . m. Traill II, 1:4A p. ill. Truiu 1, ii:l) u. Train 4, 7 :H p.m. Train U, 8:26 p, m, m. 8 M, PREVOST, Gun. Manager. J. It. WOOD, Guu. Piu. Ag't. THE HERMIT THRUSH. Ovfr the tops of th trrrm And over the Mini low stirum Th ihenherd of sunnct frees Th mlwr phantom of rlrrara. Th time in the time of vUion; The hotir In the hour of calm, llnrk! On the ulillneM Klj sitin Ilrnke how divine a pnliul Oh, clear In the flphcre of the atl Clear, clear, tvnriVr anil far Onr aspiration of prayer Unto eve's clear atiu'l O fllnger senpite, sec arc. From thy throat of silver and deir What transport lonrly and pure, Vnchanfflntr, rndlrssly niw An unreracmbrance of mirth And a contemplation of tears, As if the musliitf of earth Commnned with the dreams of the years' Oh, clear In the sphere of the air. Clear, clear, tender and far. Our aspiration of prayer Unto eve's clear star! O cloistral ecstatic, thy call In the cool, green aisles of the leaves Is the shrine of a power by whose spell Whoso henrs aspires and be II eves I O hermit of evening;, thine hour Is the aacratnent of desire, When love hath a heavenller flower And passion a holler Are I Oh, rlear In the sphere of the air. Clear, clear, tender and far. Our aspiration of prarer Unto eve'a clear start O. G. D. Roberts In Youth's Companion STRANGE SOUNDS. GUNS OF BURRISAUL AND OTHER MYSTIFYING PHENOMENA. KoUea Made by Natural Caaien For Whlrh No Explanation If aa Kver lloon Found. Faranna Sound In Various Farta of tha F.arth Hav Reared Many. Of atrntifre lotinda which probably de pend on metporologicnl or other natural causes, one of the most remarkable has long been known as "the guns of Dur riBaul," bat though its causes have long been debated no accurate explanation has been given, so fur as we are aware, that is thoroughly satisfactory. The Sunderbunds as the delta of the Ganges in native dialect is called is covered with a vast and luxuriant jnnglo of marshy vegetation. One of the stations is named Burrisaul. From here, in the rainy season, have long been heard mys terious sounds resembling the discharge of artillery, and therefore popularly named "the guns of Bnrrisaul." Only heard in the rainy season and from the southward, they have been heard 100 miles off, yet on the coast it self they appear still farther south. The sounds resemble the booming of cannon. Mussulman and Hindoo superstitions have each associated the sounds with their religions traditions. Others have thought thosoumU were produced by the breaking of the sea on an island in the bay of Bengal. But where? That some atmospheric or meteorological cause is the explanation is all that can be said after hearing all arguments. A much humbler yet ancient instance of great local interest used to exist, we believe, at Baddeley, in the New forest, in the shape of a groaning tree. Whether it still lives and groans we are uncer tain, but it is said to have uttered mys terious and lugubrious sounds at certain times, probably dependent on wind or weather, but full of omen and import to past generations. Indeed in the various mysteries which, despite fin de siecle acuteuess, still surround us, eerie noises have always played a most conspicuous part, whether out of doors or within ancient houses. Instances of the hitter, indeed, abound. Some of the most thrill ing of inexplicable ghost stories turn not on anything which has appalled the eyes, but has "distilled horror" through the ears. It is, we believe, in East An glio that the shrieks heard from time to time round certain pits have long been tradition in which a female phantom has part. The "drummer of Tcdworth's" phan tom sounds are so well known from Aubrey and more modern doscribers as only to need allusion, but we may here say that, according to a communication in a popular periodical some few year back, similar sounds had recently, com paratively speaking, been heard in the locality, and by people of most practical disposition. These may be called phan torn sounds. Returning again to those which hover on the bordor line between the natural and inexplicable, there is tli wild strain as of weird music which has been heard aboard ships when getting within the circle of a Mozambique cy clone. One of the same kind, formerly mys terious and thrilling enongh, has been resolved into a natural one. Early trav elers through the primeval forests of Brazil still among the few unexplored pluces of the globe were astonished and awed to hear the distant resonant sound of a bell pealing from the depths of the woods, which certainly had no building and for ages had known no human foot Btcp. Many a legend was woven round the strange sound. Ultimately it was discovered to be the note of the bell bird. There are, however, few mysterious sounds wliich have been as satisfactorily explained as this, For instance, there is the legend of the sounds heard at times on the plains of Marathon, the clash of weapons, the snorting of horses, the "shouting of the slayers and screeching of the slain," which recall to memory the famons battle that lives so much more vividly than many modern ones in the history of the world. Of course there are many instances of sounds which, at first mysterious, become so re ally from the distance over which they traveled, but these must be distinguished from those which are our theme, One of the most Interesting examples rests on the authority of the late Sir Ed mund Head, who rememltered when a boy going to church on the famous "Waterloo Sunday," June 18, 1815, ot Hytbn, in Kent. His father and he, on arriving at the church at 11 a. in., found to their surprise the congregation out side listening intently to the fnint sound as of distant cannon coming from the east. Afterward it was ascertained that Napoleon having, on the (for him) un fortunate advice of bis artillery officers, who pleaded the state of the ground, waited till 11 to commence his fire, the first French gun was fired astheNivelles church clock struck II. Nor was Hythe the only place where the French cannon were heard in England. Here, however, la fact dependent on the by no means remarkable axiom that sound under certain conditions travels enormous distances. But the sounds o( which we speak for the most part have ptizzled all who have attempted to ex plain them and lie indeed In that vngtie region which Is inexplicable. Such is the sound of the "Airllb drum," such are the wailing of the bnnshee in some parts of Ireland. New York Post. Kot Conflnad tv One City. I (tin something of a kicker myself, bat I take off my hat to the nervous in dividual who halted me on the street yesterday with: "Say! Louisville is a healthy, hand some city of beautiful homes, lovely women, bravo men, fine horses and good whisky, bnt in no other city half or one fonrth its size in the universe are so many nuisances permitted as in this one. Just think that the citizens are aroused from their beds iu the early hours of the morning when sloop is sweetest, victims of sickness and disease are disturbed al most in the very arms of death, and all day long people in the streets are in dan ger feeling the drums of their ears burst, and not an effort made to put a stop to the pandemonium of unearthly noises in our streets. The charcoal man's Co manche yells, the stale vegetable, fever producing peddler's howls, the parrot tongued peddler of no-account bananas, the er-rags ol' Ton collector, secondhand fruit distributers, big bells in advertising wagons, milk bells, scissors grinders' bells all adding to one common bedlam of unending noises upon our principal business and residence streets. The sick are disturlied, the healthy annoyed, and yet day after day wo never make an at tempt to protect our right to live in peace." Louisville Courier-Journal. The Woman anil the Ron, . A traveler stopped nt a little cabin in the Georgia woods. Ho wore a white rose on his coat one that a little girl had plucked and pinned there as he was leaving home, A woman entered the cabin. She stood and gazed at the roso a moment. Then, darting forward, she tore it from the stranger's coat and stamped it on the rude floor. "Why did you do that?" asked the stranger leaping to his feet. "Hush!" said a man who was sitting near. "That's my wife, an an she ain't right here" tapping his forehead. "We had a little girl once, with blue eyes an hair like a sunset. She wan dered off among the roses one day lost, lost! an when we found her she was where the roses grow, an they was creep in over her. An the wife there went mad, an now she says the roses stole the child an hid her away from ns forever, an she goes about an tramples them just like she did the rose there on the floor!" New York Rocorder. Jt'ebnohadnenar's Dooritep. In the Egyptian and Assyrian' gallery of the British museum and in close con tinuity to the Hittite monuments and the bronze gates of Shalmanezar may be seen an object of more than ordinary in terest a very common looking bronze doorstep from the great temple of E-Log-gil at Borsippa, a suburb of Babylon. This doorstep, ordinary as it appears, is of great historical value, as it not only has the name of King Nebuchadnezzar inscribed upon it, but also mentions bis restoration to health and power. It is no doubt a native offering and an ob ject of great antiquity. Philadelphia Press. Exnrewlva Nickname. They have a ruge for nicknames down at Murblehead. There are so many of them thut now a directory is seriously under consideration. A veteran boat man whose nether limbs describe almost a circle Is given the euphonious appella tive of "Ice Tongs," and answers to it now among his friends congenial as read ily as to his own family patronymic Another townsman walking stiffly along the winding streets with both arms banging straight down before him Is hailed as "Half Past Six," both hands down, you know. Boston Journal In Dr. Nun sen's five years drift across the arctio regions he takes with him a stove which at a cost of 4 cents will cook as lurge a dinner as any party of 20 could eat A supply of paraffin costing this amount will produce an excellently cooked salmon, leg o'f mutton, vegeta bles and tarts. An electric alarm bell for use on trains, tosupersede the unsatisfactory cord com munication, has been successfully tried In Scotland. In addition to serving as an alarm, it can be used for starting trains. Over the arable areas of Wyoming tha rainfall averages 13 inches. It is heav iest in spring and summer, though a month bos never been known to pass without any precipitations whatever. THREE ON A BENCH. TTie Boy Had a Future, the Crank a Faati the Vft(rant Mad Nothing. It was 8 o'clock in the morning. The electric lights were still blazing in the silence of Madison square. A number of shabby figures sIuihIhtwI or moved about on the seats beneath the trees of the park. On a bench beside the little fountain sat a group that arrested my attention. Three figures were reclining here with their heads and shoulders al most touching one another. One -was but little more than a boy. A bundle done up in a calico handkerchief was in his hand, His sunburned face and his sturdy shoulders gave evidence that he was from the country probably a farm hand who had trudged in to try his lurk in the city. His boots were covered with red clay. He was leaning against a thin figure clad in somewhat shabby gar ments. This man possessed a dark and sinister countenance. He was restless, and his hands, which were thin and white, twitched nervously in his sleep. His lips moved spasmodically. His was an evil conscience. There waa plainly a shady side to his past Ufa Here were deceit and honesty side by side. Next to the dark man slumbered a very old and decrepit one. He was clad in a linen duster. A battered gray hat sat on his head, and his toes were peeping out from the tips of his worn shoes. The face of this old fellow was seamed with deep and careworn wrin kles. His hair and beard were snowy white. He was possessed of a palsy that made him tremble constantly as he lay dozing. It waa youth, manhood and old age typical of life. These three reclined here in a stolen sleep. A park policeman came gliding along from the distance through the twi light of the trees. He crept along like a gray ghost on the lookout for those weary souls who were transgressing the law by surreptitious slumber. His eye lighted with satisfaction as he beheld the three figures on the bench. "You see that seedy fellow in the middle?" he whispered. "That's Tony McElroy, who cracked three safes over in Jersey City last summer. I spotted him at once by his mug. He just come out of the pen last Tuesday." The officer seized the crook by the col lar and shook him till his teeth rattled. The noise awakened the boy, who grasped the situation at once. Seizing his bun dle he eknrried like a rabbit across the grass toward Twenty-third street Once feeling himself safe ho stretched his limbs and began to whistle cheerfully. The crook arose and stood in sullen silence a few moments until the police man pushed hiinon. Ho thrust his hands into his pockets, humped up his shoul ders and shntnbled up the avenue. The old vagrant tottered to his feet He was dazed, and it took him quite awhile to collect bis senses. He shuffled across the square with bowed head. He scanned the buildings and the streets about him with a hopeless, helpless glance that was pathetio to see. Then he, too, vanished in the gray of breaking dawn. The boy had a life of hope before him, the crook had a past behind him, bnt the old vagrant hod neither past nor future. New York Recorder. A Lea-end About Lacemaklng. Lacomaking is by no means so old an industry as most persons suppose. There is no proof that it existed previously to the fifteenth century, and the oldest known painting in which it appears is a portrait of a lady in the academy at Venice, painted by Caspaccio, who died about 1128. The legend concerning the origin of the art is as follows: A young fisherman of the Adriatic was betrothed to a young and beautiful girl of one of the isles of the lagoon. Industrious as she was beautiful, the girl made a new net for her lover, who took it with him on board his boat The first time he cast it into the sea he dragged therefrom an exquisite petrified wrack grass which he hastened to present to bis fiancee. But war breaking out the fisherman waa pressed Into the service of the Venetian navy. The poor girl wept at the depar ture of her lover and contemplated his last gift to her. But while absorbed in following the intricate tracery of the wrack grass she began to twist and plait the threads weighted with small beads which hung around her net Little by little she wrought an imitation of the petrification, and thus was created the bobbin lace. Washington Star. The ShIUelah. The shillelah is not a mere stick picked np for a few pence or cut casual ly out of the common hedge. Like the Arab mare, its grows to maturity under the fostering core of its owner. The shillelah, like the poet, is born, not made. Like the poet, too, it is a choice plant, and its growth Is slow. Among 10,000 blackthorn shoots, per haps not more than one is destined to be come famous, but one of the 10,000 ap pears of singular fitness. As soon as discovered it is marked and dedicated for future service. Everything that might binder its development is removed, and any offshoot of the main stem is skillfully cut off. With constant care it grows thick and strong upon a bulbous root that can be shaped into a handle. McClure's Magazine. Only On Tim, Mora. Ho I've asked you three times to marry me, How many more times do you want me to ask you? She (tenderly) Only once, and let that once be 60 yean hence. Detroit Free Press. The legendary Adam and Ere. To the Scriptural account of the crea tion and fall of Adam and Eve the Jewish writers of the Talmud have added many curious particulars. According to theso tnythmnngers, Adam, when first created, was a "giant of giants," ns fnrns statnro goes, his head reaching into tho heavens and his countenance outshining the sun in all its splendor. In one place they tell ns that "the very angels stood in awe of the man which God had created, and all creatures hastened to worship him." Then the Lord, in order to give the angels some idea of his power, caused a deep sleep to come over Adam, and while he was in a comatose condition re moved a portion of every limb and bone! The first man thus lost a part of his co lossal stature, yet he remained perfect and complete. Next, the first "help meet" for the lord of creation was cre ated in the person of Lilith, who forsook Adam to become the "mistress of the air and the mother of demons," After the departure of Lilith, Eve was created and married to Adam in tho presence of Jehovah and the angels, the sun, moon and stars dancing together to the angelio music rendered. Then tho supreme happiness of the human pair excited the envy of even the angels, and the seraph Siunmael tempted them and finally succeeded in bringing about their fall from innocence, Adam lived as a penitent on the very ground now occu pied by the temple at Mecca, and Eve in a cave on the side of Mount Ararat, where, after a lapse of 200 years, she was rejoined to Adam, St. Louis Re public, LoeuiU Devouring- I.ociiiU. In the summer of 1883, in which the excessive heat and drought had brought about the nearly entire disappearance of vegetation in a good part of the country and more particularly in the broken country of Iianda Oriental, I had occa sion to make a journey from San Jose to Mercedes. At one place, Las Piedras, At which tho diligence stopped, I noticed great numbers of locusts of the species Pezotettix vittiger, Pezotettix maculi pennis and Pezotettix arrogans, which covered the ground and rocks. My attention was attracted by tho fact of seeing around one locust a num ber of other individuals of the same spe cies, which were eating its soft parts even whilo it was yet alive and protest ing vigorously. I saw different attacks, in which the conquerors, two or three at a time, got hold of the weaker members of their own kind, throwing them over and opening the abdomen in order in devour the entrails, these being the soft-' er and more savory portions, since they still contained some of the vegetable food. Cannibalism here appeared in its lowest development, and the numerous remains of those which had been eaten bore witness to the extent to which the process had been carried. In tho fuce of facts ot this character, it seems certain that nothing is sacred in nature when the prolongation of life, for the sake of tho preservation of the species, is concerned. Curl Berg in Nat ural Science. The Power of tho Tongue. Go with mo to the halls of Yale and listen to Chatincey M. Depow speak with clean cut phrases of wiadom, salted with sentences of wit. Como back to the city and find him delivering an oration on the Centennial in the presence, of a vast ninltitndo of witnesses, tone and style and manner and figures totally different. See him at the dinner of the New York Press club, where 1100 bright witted, clever beaded, nimblo fingered, honext hearted men applaud to the echo his per tinent, his suggestive, his eloquent sen tences. Jump thence to the superb Auditorium in Chicago, where 13,000 yellersand shoutersand footers surround the 400 or 600 delegates assembled there to nominate a presidential candidate. See how they listen. Watch as they applaud. Tell me that Chaunccy M. De pew, bright, clever, experienced as he is, could be tho force, tho factor in af fairs, tho distributer of ideas he is with out what St. James would call an un ruly evil! The fact is, a tongue, like ev erything else, has its upper and lower, its good and its bad, its sweet and its sour. Howard in New York Recorder. Effect of the Earth's Motion on Illg Shot. That the earth's motion has an appre ciable effect upon artillery fire, deflect ing the projectile from a straight course, may be news to many and as such would probably seem a novel notion. It has, and the exact nature and extent of the effect is an important point of study with artillery experts. An English army expert told of the results of many inter esting experiments along this line in a pajier read before the Royal Artillery institution. Firing from north to south there is a divergence of projectiles to the left, due to the earth's rotation, and fir ing due north the divergence is to tho right, The extent of the "pull" varies at different points of the earth's surface and with projectiles fired at different speeds and elovations. In England a de flection of five inches is found to occur with the projectile of a 13 pounder in a 4,000 yard rauge. Now York Sun, A Wealthy Beggar. A beggar who wag arrested in Lee, Mass., one day last week wag found to have hidden in the lining of his coat four savings banks books representing depos its amounting to $3,0iB, two of the banks being in Boston and two in Providence. He also bad 180 in money in bis pocket and is credited with the ownership of real estate in Boston and North Adams, Mass. In addition to thin wealth, he baa a wife and six children. Right! nt llleyela Riders, When the bicycle first made Its ap pearance upon our highways, it was nat ural, we suppose, for drivers of horses who were themselves put to fright and danger by tho fright of their horses to bear for the time being no good will for the novel vehicle, but now that horses pretty generally have become accustom' ' ed to the noiseless wheel there would ap pear to be no longer any reason why drivers should persecute riders of the wheel. But there are always a few cross grained people who nevor revise their opinions and never forget their spite. A few weeks ago one of these ill bred fellows followed a trio of wheelmen rid ing in the suburbs of Newark, drove them off the road and otherwise mal treated them, for which he has been ar rested and held to bail to answe,it the county court. And now we notice that two suits have been brought in the su preme court for damages one against a person who carelessly left some plank in the roadway opposite his premises, against which a wheelman collided in the dark and was badly injured, and an other by a gentleman who while riding on the streets of Bloomfield was run down by a vehicle and seriously injured. In both these cases damages were laid at $9,000, and the suits are brought as well to test the rights of the bicycle rider to the common nse of the highway as to redress their own private injuries. These are said to be the first bicycle cases ever begun in tho supreme conrt of our state, and their decision will probably mark a new era in tho history of this remarkable invention. Mon mouth (N. J.) Democrat. 1 Fluctuation In tha Iloney Crop. This has not been a good year for the beekeepers, as there has not been half a crop of honey. There is a great differ ence in seasons, so far as honey making is concerned. Though flowers come in about the same profusion each year, they do not contain the same amount of hon ey. Some years they seemed filled with the sweet nectar, and the bees make fre quent excursions and always return heav ily laden, and other years the busy little workers scour the country far and wide and gather little honey. It has been two or three years since there was a large crop of the product, but when there is beekeepers make plenty of mon ey. In a good year an average season's work for a stand of bees is 200 pounds of honey, though a particularly good stand will sometimes gnther 500 pounds. The product sells from (00 to $140 a ton, so that on a good year a person with 100 stands of bees would make from $900 to $1,400. If every season was a good one, a person conld not find an "odd job" that would reward his spare time any better thankeepingbees. Poinona(Cal.) Progress. Ilen.tnmln Day's Silver Star Found. A relio of the war was found recently by Mr. George W. Worley on his farm southwest of Marietta, near Cheatham hill, where there was a terrific battle fought during the late war. It is a bright silver star, as lurge as a silver dollar. The following inscription in plain letters is on it, "Benjamin Dey, Company C, 184th Regiment, N. Y. V." In the center, encircling "Company C," is a crescent. The star had a catchpin. showing that it was worn on the lapel of the coat or vest. Mr. Worley discovered it whilo plowing. It is not in the least corroded and wears a bright polish. Now tho question is: Where is Benjamin Dey? Is he dead or living? Whore in New York do his people live? If they would like to communicate with Mr. Worloy, a letter addressed care of the Marietta Journal will reach him. At lanta Constitution. Still tha White Warahlp. There will bo no change in the color of our naval vessels after all, and thoy will continue to plow "the dark and deep blue ocean" in their pristine white beauty. An order has been issued by the navy department prescribing that hulls of all iron and steel vessels of the navy outside, above the load water line, and the bulwarks inside shall be painted white. Regulations are prescribed as to the kind and character of paints and oils to be used, so as to insure uniform ity. A light straw color is now the regulation color for the masts, bow sprits, doublings, smokestacks and yards. A slab, painted to match the standard color, will be prepared at the New York navy yard and furnished to each navy yard and station and to each vessel in commission. Washington Star. An Electric Quo. Tnrpln, the inventor of melinite, bos submitted to the French war office an electric gun alleged to be capable of dis charging 25,000 projectiles in five min utes and to have a range of several miles. The apparatus is comparatively light in weight, so that it can be drawn by two horses and worked by four men. The projectiles are small shells charged with a secret chemical preparation, spreading death for 60 yards around. The English government is said to be negotiating for the purchase of the In vention, though skeptical of its value. Electricity. How Trees Grow. The last annual circle of wood leaves an accumulation of living cells upon its surface, and toward midsummer these cells produce an abundance of new ones nntil the aggregate la sufficient to form a new annual layer. This process on common trees requires about six weeks, Exchange.