as at hw / Jo Tet Ky 3 hr S 3 5 | - THE REMOVAL OF NAPOLEON'S BODY ack # TO ITS LAST RESTING PLACE. Re Wonderful Preservation Throvgh Nine- ' teem Years’ Interment Spectators Moved | Church of the Invalides. on St. Helena; as tho place had corie to be called, was surronaded by an iron | © railing set in a heavy stone curb, Over | mid bare a L the grave was a covering of § inch stone HELENA 10 PARIS | THE DRIVER HAD A MATCH. And the Passenger Had . Cigsr, In Fart - Several of Them. A prosperous looking business man i boarded the front platform of a cross. | town car, and drawing a well filled cigar i | case from his pocket selected a choice looking Havana. The driver ‘"gized up” | A igor caso, and hi | $n Tears—Impressive (eremanies at the the man and the ciga +. and his month began to water. The stwoker, aft- La | er biting off the end of his cigar, hegnn The grave in the velley of Napoleon, | fambl Failiaz to find for a mnteh one which admitted to a vault 11 feet deeb, | 8 feet Jong and 4 feet 8 inches brodd an was apparently filled with earth, | digging down some seven festa Jaye Roman cement was found. This I» er of roused fnches thick and ful ris from clamps. Frtock 41g Bons io) this layer. The stone 1pgtho 51nd ing the lid of tie intinar sar ‘was exposed, inelored in aby man cement strongly gla walls ¢f the vanlt. wt Wi gta ail, 1 rd I 2m quite nemoker myse ld. 'Cinprse I can't ew ka on the oar, bar then Te bi FEST" THE ORIGINAL ARYAN. arm the ancient Aryan, And you have done me wrong. 1 did not come from Hindustan— 1 never traveled from the east You'll find your ancestors deceased Inside your own old caves. There my remains may now le soughty Mixed up with mastodons, Which very long with flints I fought Before I fought with bronze iriver and asked | “ih In #imple skins | wrapped me round Bre mate | ionrned to make +opelf alu gtrenoth of this $20 Chri isd Lief. { Tay ve mixed mo vp Ll hardly ean report . Chethor | first wae tnl] and {0r Or 1 was dark and short i | pot even a dollar to investin thi | tain Folger, to whom ba made ki HOW CHRISTY PAID A The Minstrel's Generosity fo a Man Whe : Had Befriended fim, 1 The head of the famous Christy min strel troop was not Georjge, but EP; Christy, who originated the compary some time back in the forties, and the! following story of the latfer is intereat- ing: : mo ia Christy, then a young man, was a passenger on a Lake Erie steambont commanded by Captain Folger acd bound to Buffalo, where the first show : was to come off. But the minstrel bad hire tar | wii his wants, grnerons!y hatded him a 350 bill, telitng him that hit wag we oe to it, and that he nead nit trouble b ut paying it back. On ty bes of :n cellar for the performance, ( ine thn an bel | ness and in a fow years Hecame supa: | ful and rich. | Captain Folger. Losi 1 op. So he came to ! ho eould obtain a eitnstion ns master] herd of buflalo, which was at Omaha | In the meantime misfortunes overtook iis employment on the lakes, he resolvell to try agen | the salt water, on which he was brought | Now York to see if) 5 i They foed where the stiow is MIR wet id nfs BREEDING BUFFALOES. Some of the iybrids That : Ave Fine Animals, ; A faricus Mootana character {5 Char- lie Allard of Ravalli. Mr. Allard is fa- mons mainly because he is one of the owners of the largest bord of boffalo in Ave Produeed ' the conutry, and no man living has . given to then now rare animals more patient stady and attention than be. The oldest storms of wintar do not them, '' he says, shaggy coats are tronbio thick, wind proof. During the heavy snows and blivzards thiy climb the hills, and tarping their hroasts to the! wind defy the storm. thinnest dis HT fesvon hefira ivd 8D t rangp Fo Trangi pe 1333 of Ju prong en wt SESTY it tha hott mea. They yorgh osoyreel ay CNAZIES i of flesh ti pv are in the fall, a buffalo steak: is about as’ever a man made a meal of. tivo years go I purchased the Jones Forse: tam | Calin 1 § “for their} # ztonm ard | od em ty Keep | i wi al ~4 fie wanorsel | About i 5 {7000 A, M.— Train a CAN EFFEC] i, we. iti gt A $7 Philadelphia aid {Sue Taian, Train EA 08 A M.-Traind la is dl sunbury, Harrisbtoyg wud tur aediate Wee dons, arriving a! DR {linet prim, a p. My New York, #388 p.m; Haithnore, 45 Mig Washington, 790 p, tn. Pulimen Parlor esr fromm WT aoa ol pisienger sive rromm Kune to Philldel pliln. ? EE MC Trein §0de0y gout Buhay, we Hurristarg and ftenisedin te siathons, writ» ie at Phlinidtelyisin wi B06 Mm, New Yori THR wma. PU sear Sieefitg cave brio He Sa 10 Prisisishig and Kew Youd Prtatled hits pasam: yreomn remain freien 7 undo ried watdl 700s, ga lt WP, eT for 2 My gia SUMING watt (RE Bad : Pritidacaey pais, B72 3. 51% week dave and timors, 42 Faint Erie and Wi i whewrpen ous % Hg : $4 “7 3 FORTS ir gtad : fis 4s #reper tr Mare g. aw & fro Erie (o Yin oes BG § $544 port bo Meadtinom A aad ias veg WwW WESTWARD | Asily eReeal <n for Ridgway, DoBode, (Cermaont and f8 : mediate stations lamves ilidgway « 35° mm, a : : wor AL MTree wm ani EM ee mass 18 mediate poids. : 8.87 P.M —Tiiin 1], Ailiy eXiem sousiey Kane snd intermediste talions. - these varions covering been sented with . eament and bound by ‘roa bands that | took the large party of ‘workers hours to resch the coffin | or, failing that, as mate of a pealaring | vesmel, ; a He bethonght - 3 0s ota a 1 om gr XY jo it all the more when gt off. HY suppose §0," said the mci wh gentmindodly. | There were 31 of them in the hard, and | . ; ive paid (for I have a partner now) £18, - hime)'f of Christy, | 600 for the lot - But om two thinge | (who my stand TThrotgh all thes» noise and strife— 1 didn't come from Asin, and weir | Marchiel Pablo, a well | y, haw joined me in the | ; ne ~Dunch * 1 ls. Under the dome, in the place of the A ; peesent to you the body of Napoleon, i : Zz jimmie with white satin, wh . tion of titude itself was fail] @e, and but for we still saw Napoleon lying on his bed It waa 8 o'clock in theafternoon when ed,” gays an eyewit wes ve one of lead, which was in good cond and inslosed two of hig nn ‘ene of wood. The Lut eoflin wa become dof had fallen it like ov slightly 4 slp is aif Lisl a3 wad by ; eal tif fanxiety and present avs 4 was to GEDINS of the Er standin geareely Lope misshapen adn ahle part of the costume t identity of the body Gaillard raised the set 0 at ine describable feeling of syrpatsa and alive tion was expressed by t many of whom burst i emperor hizasclf was sef The featnres of the face, th : were perfectly recognized; tie hands ox tremely lpantifel; h 1 Er tame had sudered 1 Yierle, snd th - oolors were easily distinguished The at be 83 iq rp a 4 the fragments of satin Jig rg wh oh cov ered, a8 with fine ganze, pevorai parts of the uniform. we might have believed of state. ”’ ee = The climax of the preant in Paris was the temple of ths Invalides. The yas church was draped in the mos! - ¢ and lavish fashion and adorned with a perfect: bewilderment of emblems. The light was shut out by ‘blazing wi of violet velvet; tripods colored fismes, and thou- sands upon thousands of waxen candles tn brilliant candelabra lighted the tem- * * * a altar, stood the catafalque which was to receive the coffin. the archbishop of Paris, preceded by a pple cross bearer, and followed by 16 incense boys and kmg rows of white clad priests, left the church to meet the They retamed soon. Fol them was the Prince Ge Joinville and a select fow from the grand cortege without. In their mi¢st Napoleon's cof: The king descendet from his throne and sdvanced to meet the cortege. _“Sire,'" said the Prine de Joinville, *] which, in accordance: with your com- “Tha ontermest eoflin wag slightly in. , | prooceupied ogo thankial for | gaid the businces mn ho - + “Many gentlemen mauled 2 pont of giving me a eigar, eno rides reg lar. I ain't had my af sper smoke yet!’ “Oh,” said the busines manner. CY 8, Fir: | said before, : § has nn eigir aul nod “Certainly 1 Peed (7 fal no teiily. Bat whiit has that to do with what you have been talking abot?’ "Tribuna is pt So | gilenvo—-New York SONG PIRDS. of Different Comatyies. India has the jocose bilmls, mfton called nightingales from their renpirk- ably sweet voices. The Birdoos train then to sit oft their hands and be carried about the bazaars. The black fuced thrush is a very fine songstir and cin imitate almost everything he hears. Janghing thrash has a load, powerful song and some melodious nctes. He is sometimes called the greater Peking nightingale or Japanese mocking bird. look at, and very lively in bis motions, but is overrated as a singer, kis nots rs- sembling our Baltimors oriole’s, only shriller, with little varistion. Australis has the piping crow, which His song is rich and varied, the notes re- sembling a flute. He can he taught to speak and imitate many birds as well. From Africa are shipped large pum- bers of little birds to this country called handsome and often very odd. They lack voice, only ane, the strawterry finch, having asong of any power. They are cunning, however, and pretty to havein an aviary. A geatleman in New one cf the canaries sings n small finch will fly to his side, snd pliing hin head mands, 1 have brought back to France." #1 peceive it in the name of France,” replied Louis Philip © Such at least is w at the ‘‘Monitens'’ affirms was said. The Prince de Join- ville gives a different version: ‘It ap- that a little speech which I was to ave delivered when I met my father, and also the answer he was to give me, bad been drawn up in epuncil, culy the | sathorities had omitted to inform me concerning it. So when I arrived I sim: Yy until the casary drives him sway. in this same happy family, will take all the threads given him and weave u close petwork down the side of the caye and out on the perches. His owner says that if he would give him enragh muterial the bird would weave until be shut ous the daylight. —Philadeliphia Times. Wonders of Minute Astmal Life. The following, which might vey #p- ‘alls when they or dine i | ow a $3,300,000 Bid by sn | going on. a6 the edgy of the excited crowd bid- | | then ha toll me the story as I tail it The white eyebrowed or speotuled’ : i 5 ding in the road. There were a number | is more of a shrike than a true row. African singing finches. The plumage is York has an aviary cage containing some 35° varieties of sumsll birds, snd | among them many African fincher. As against the singer's breast listen cloves | - oy ; % He ted When: # lien: tenant be had once been placed under A weaver bird with & thick red bill, ¥ Bae po higher ile | DECEIVED BY A DUDE. Unknown Msn Was Taken Sorionsy. Samuel FP. dipd O Restore vd rebently her of J af 98 | at Wooster rN met al tho sia hort time before mada a great bit by his political speeches at Cleveland and Philadelphia tion ail over the country. and was attracting atten. Cleveland. - Young Schoohers was in Hawwent to Cleveland to hove i commend dim. At thsis par- | sn | tieular time be was trying a case at! The rest of the jonrney wis mads ia | these days a veritable dodo apd very | | Epruey. ; A time, | { RR ; { avi 1a ¥ pa a celebs ; Something Aboet the Feat hood Warblers - as he always left Waoaster 10 celebrate, and was having a good, glorious time on | this particular occasion. Ile was small gid wiry in stature and always carried a silk ombreila It bappened that he met MéSweoney in the rotunda just 88) he had finished an argument and while | gided npon the sale of the Lake Shore railroad was of cates reprosented— foreign, Van- derbilts, Goulds and others The bid- ding had reached $8,100,000. In a spir- The Japanese robin is a pretty bird "0 it of devilishness young Schuckers bid. $8,500,000. In a moment a rush was made toward the new bidder, and a do maod was made to know what syndi- cate he represented. His only reply was, with a wavs of his silk umbrella, “(Go away from me.’ Tbe excited rep- ressmtatives of the other syndicates ask- ed for a recess, which was granted, and in 20 minutes they came back, when the | bid was raised to $4, 000,000 and sold. Myr. Schockers’ sprucy appearance and being in contpany with the great crimi- | nal lawyer had led them to believe he represented some secret syndicate who were trying to gain possession of the valnable railroad property. — Cincinnati | Commercial Gazette. Napoleon's Mewory, Napoloon had a wonderful memory. eomncil with bis Intimate knowledge of Roman lew and was asked how he had sy yrised bis | or, be onos surprised bis | . They stopped for a moment | § £ | arrest and was in prison for two weeks. | During that time the only book at his | command was a treatise on Roman law. | He sat down and in two weeks mastered | the volume so completely that 20 years | later he could repeat long passages from | its pages. He never forgot a face cra, | name and would often greet private sol- | keep a daily record in regard tov diérs by their names, sometimes allud- | ‘which fluds 11a way into England. ing to the march or the battle where ho | charges, and they are of coursa in whom he supposed might possibly know | known cattismi sore ghipowner 9 whom he ennld ret The mpstrel receive tailed i iy in that . List sraiialiv, bot tanoey him post © Bo bad no acqusin bukiness, “Why dant W ; : tr the money or, and yom shall sal ber Ly all have | I stand the Josa This is wnverdation, word for word, as Ca Folger wld it to me I had just retorsed froma an East Indian voyage in the Vandalia, a ship of abou 400 tone Ove day Captain Folger came ont hoard at the dock! and fotrodoesd | hime if. the ship prued thie $20 ses its 4 : I will gw If sha makes anythil it. Hf she do 3 ¢ & It so hap- 000 wasitho sam I had de After a little dickering hel offarcd me $18,000, and 1 acoepting it. To my astonishment, he referred me to BE. P. Christy as the purchaser, and and asked the price We went togetier to soe Christy, and the result of the interview was thet | gave hima bill of sale of the Vandalia, taking his pote in payment, the nots to be paid in installments, and every morn. ing after cpa of bis eutertainmouts 1 called spon him aud peeeivod a batfe! of bills, quarters, shilhings snd six pences uti! the indebledvess was can ogled. Captain Folger made a roocest{nl voyage to California iu the Vandalia, The ship wav thea sold, and Christy bought a lurper and mor: cpenidve ship, on tourd of which Captain Polger | business and for the past | entire charge of them, £0 that [ do not’ quantities aud th Hea sald he would like to buy | eventually d.ed at Calcutta —Jobn Cd | man in the New York Herald Watch Competlticaa. Very few penple know that thera sre. | in connection with the Geneva watch) trade, competitions {pvolving very large | some of money, 8 goodiz proportion of | A oertain number of watchmakers at peminate certain dealers in who shall hold competition | watches made by the furmer, and the) names of such dealers are sgroed to tal the whole of the said makers. Prizes ranging from £300 downward are j1von to the makers whose particular wat: shall keep the best time and remal. 1 the finest condition daring 12 mouine | The English dealers swho hid iho Le watches during the 13 montis eS { { boare “ or gain of time eridenes! Ly UO Pd 1 late honor bound to keep so | said, | ventions in one—-thas in, two save wre know just exactly how abont 146, 1 shoald inde, now FEE) meat Ik are pr ¥y i wi - from ninleume, wanting thers in atl geh we 1a dis- singly wa have no {ad igi it pose of one or prirs to sell. “A gol haflalo hide is worth pow in tho market, and heads 1 from £200 15 8000 when moauntol and ~ i 21040 yt see AEE ‘the vaiue of these is steadily incr asing, | rock and #0 that bulale troeding is as investment as real estate. Our herd is There is s small one in the Texas thvan, with the few tiint roam in the national park are the { sole rempants of the thousands which roamed the prairies hut a fun years aga. '— Annconda ( Mon. ) Standard “We are progressing, progressiog."’ said Thomas A. Edison to a Herald representative when informed that bis re’reat bad been invaded for the purposs of getting informaiton con- | cerning tho latest and greatewt of his inventions, thé one which is being | eagerly awaited and which very few ‘have had a chance to see—that is, the combinaticn of the phonograph with the kinetoscope, the contrivance te which Mr. Edisos spplied the tert | kinetograph on this ococasion. “The object of this machine,’ be ‘is to afford the spectator two in. fimultanecualy appealed to. Suppose, we will say, an opera is to be reproduc ed. The phonograph already repeats the sound. The kinetoscope afterward af- fords a view of the movements Now, however, we wish to combine the two and comYine them far more effectively | than ever their distinct elemunts have heretofare been rendered by separate in- struments, : hs “Thus, if one wished to hear and ses the concert or the opera, it would only be necessary to sit down at bare, look upon a soqne and see the performance reproduced exactly in every racvement | and at this same time the voices of the players aud singers, the music of the orchestra, the various sounds that ac- ‘company a performance of this sort, will be reproduced exactly. The end k § i ine: | Xo about the anly cone I know of any] { sign, { panhandle, ond Cen ge MER fave ED % i 3 . year his bad | PHBOUGH TRAINS FOR LEFT. FROM THE EAST AND SOUTH. many we have— | RAYW 11 wwmoen: $Taliadeiptia sos ai Wha A hv wud byl Washington Ms vy Be Dot 08h 8 mL Wilkestamres, In 0 mag aaily exonpt Hej « Any, errivitg at Beiteoos atl = p m. «rij Pi i perior bat from Philledey hia Willers, it, Tork A ® tartar, fos Fadialid te FOU NRON BU kG B i Dally exve rt Bair AY TRAIN 49 wy Mei oa 3 TRAIN 20 mmves (Térinon! of dvitg at Jonpsoni seg wl Ridgwny sit 2280 nosn He. BY, We iia RO PLAN a 3 - ££ § 3 Beeeh (reck Hailroad NV. 0. & | B. R. BR. Co, Loses, CONDENSE : TIME TALS, Hendd Lip Bend Down Exp Mail Exp Nai No, 4% i "Riv NO PM pi TAM PW : BAT... o acon Fad, 4, LES Atstien.. Lv i —- WastONIT isin emis 6 wus 2 t Tn 5 meni ww Jang pe pt £ i i a ab HY Ni he 1 1B LY... Chew thoi dal MD necasin iri wed ee 3 8s EFF § Aisi ar aman] 9% cuchsBrs 85 suBEsE 8 |UwEes|clvE| “am Wnllamdon yr min Mines... on MND cerrinerer IR Point pet oatg oy @ Wune........... Leo ET - “iy pe A: ®i eS ga z syd - » Pp Ea ria w. Youngixe (Wav b Jersey Shoresjunction stove WHT lL moaport. Ar i jEhvecemma $SPISAILARS 5 Plunnezeve ESao . 2 TusHENERESY } i | i | ———— st tnt ST AI " HAM MOOR TW a hid As. WILL SRRN Ld sf ry a 2 er 32 - Lovie, N ¥ vin we REY Cee aaa i TA Lee NY vin PRIVa ATT FE GW ANIIFWS { Foot of Liberty SL ry AW. tWeaRkdnve FAO vu Nundays, JMG A a NuDdays . Thiough Pullman Buffet Sleeping Ler be tweets Utearfele aod Phitedeiphios fay on capt HaLay, on (haus Band i Conte tonm— At WHR ga0rt wwe 17100 bakit pid diad Handing Heiiroud Al Jersey Sno anction with the Mat Bead Ry ac Mil Hat with Central Ruditvea of Vealisyivanin. AL Philipstsang with Pan's BK at 1 lame Ge with the Safniu, Roel and. F1isba ng neil way Al Mutstley und ton with Undies oti Clanrtielt Avion OF the Feeney ran otal Al Maha ley with the Pos vanle Atal Nov Westen P - ar FEHKRRINAN A PALMER, Gon! Paar Agt SALLE Aa AL Phuisude olthi. Poe » & Coemaly. © ge Ad Sb es A 0 ee wi a — :yIDGWAY AND CLEARFIELI i & tL : a ' bad seen them before. He kept in his | DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY head all the details of his military : ; movements, and it wad said of him that | Jog witch g thery No Ireland micre i fealy i watch in the ooapsRtasn of . “The during the march to Italy and Marengo | : Grd ded cope he knew where every und of the sap page or distinctiva mark ofher too up ¥ po , culiarities cf construction by wot tained.’ teaches us that there arc animals so won- : derfully minute that if n thouswad of- piiaator uaa hiy wan Igented pame of the maker ‘an Lo Llentia es the. bolder. Ths wadehes am of i them were ranked abrenst they could It 1s suid that be remembered tho name psual kind wavufaciared fur © oar ply saluted with my sword, and then stood aside. 1 saw indeed that this silent salute, followed by retreat, had thrown | | ‘something out, but my father, after a - moment's hesitation, improvised some ‘Monf- Beside the king stood an officer, bear- ” a cushion. On it lay the sword of Ansterlitz. Marshal Soult handed it to attained is a perfect illusion. Ope really ' huars amd sees the play, bLexuinse the | sonditions necessary to the swititbie tw ' pressions upon the eye and ear are ob. on, WT 4 FAI — propristely bear the heading of “A Won- der of Wonders,"’ is from the pen of Bir Robert & Ball, F. R. 5, astruncroer ee and not to tamper with fie wa! - cn Cen . “2 i werd Tg NEN Lemke viInwa i E b » o | bong Ane wot oi -» Ni Irinnd Bu. Mii Haver Umoyland Shorts Mil. Rive Rock vi rard Bas . - A 5 : CBrOCK WIG vo Me Minn mang Hurvey Tefks Falls i . IMriaas -— As Unlusky Draw, Don Simplicio, to dispel thu clouds of melancholy that cast a gloon over is , spirits, bas taken to theater going “t! <Renani’’ was produced, and everybody 344-1 14 &l easily swim, without being thrown out of every officer to whom he ever lasuect of order, through the eye of the finest ® vommission. Ll : cambric ceedle ever made. Yet (meh of A the minute creatures is 6. highly ¢rgan- | » SEESBRENS EEEEEEEvcs FLEES re rexiiiition fir of euch nif of theo (ar. | purposes amd not | watches, and the be wR » mes ERBGH" — ® - - Orderly Music. : —————RREREE &w — Cad ae pt LY the king, who, twning to Bertrand, said: - *General, 1 commission you to place the emperor's glorious sword on the _ diers of the Invalides, who stood in| 4 en ~ @ominant tribe of Saxons who And Bertrand, trembling with emo- _ tion, laid the sword. reverently om his * idol’s coffin. The great sudience watch: . ed ghe scene in deeprst silence. The auly sound which broke the stillness was the half stifled sobs of the gray haired sol- places of honor near the catafalque. "The king and the procession returned to their palaces, ard then followed a jo funeral muss. —Ida M. Tarbell in MeClure's Magauine. The Chief End of Maa. Mr. Cuyler tells the story of a little “boy, the son of good Presbyterian par- ents, who was asked the question in the catechism, ‘‘What is the chief end of man?’ and answered it: ~~ “Man's chief end is to glorify God ' and annoy him forever.” “There are too many men,”’ says Dr. ~ Cuyler, ‘‘who act as if that were their chief end.’’—Ram's Horn. England was so called because the conqu it were called the “Angles,’’ or *‘En- In 1303 a sheep sold in for $1, a pig for $3. : : : jzed number of particles, capable of moy- ing about, of finding and devouring food | and. of behaving in all mspects as be- ormes an animal as distinguished from 2 fragment of anorganised ." The human mind is utterly incapable of real- tures and of fully appreciating thelr | Slestined to lead. The Becret of French Cooking. The gentle heat is sid to be the secret | of the superior deliciey and richness of | French cocking. With x gentle heat and | tight ‘covers we muy have just the | ymount of juicn we like in our vegeta | bles. A glance will decide this, or per- | haps the ear, if the band at the same | time rests on the cover. Many kinds of | meat may be cooked in this way to the | best advantage. A rump steak, three or four inches thick, kept closely covered ' and cooked in its own juices alone, will | be far more. tender ‘thin when put into | the oven, and this without basting and | without fat, the latter having been trim- . med off closely. —New York World | ‘The Duke of Marlborough had a voice | that, it was said, could bs heard above , the roar of artillery. lS GH W—— e——— EAE i table wax, the product of the candle izing the structurs of these little crea- | marvelous adaptation to the life they are The Chinese make candies of a voge- A colonel in the Frefich army, who | winper receiv: 3 cue: ' had & great eye for nestness, but not much of an ear for music, took occasion | one day to compliment his bandmaster 1 an the nppearasce of bis men. “Their | uniforms tre Real,’ said the eolcnel. | Wen oon “and their instruments are nicely pol. ished and kept in order, ¥ut there is ane : ; : ‘ pis knife and vsing b improvement that I must insist upon “What is ii, colonel?” “Yon must train your men, wien they perform, to lift their fingers all as he often, as exactly the same time and at regularin. tervals on their instroments, so—aone, two! Ona, two! ‘—London Answers, fare to Be the Case. “] can’t tell you,’ said the experi enced suburbunite in reply to the ques ~London Standard, ; Napoleon's Manav rs. Napole a was ro! & and whi as fass as oo conld shoveling the fogd in: Lis ‘natu ar {at { v and sw i his flugers wii they came into more donvegient ployment. When taking to his offic om a fricudly favor, pailed their whiskers or pinched their ears To women he was almost invariably of | TART fepsive, sometimes uttering language so ! poarse as to bring a tush of shmma tu tion of his new peighbor, ‘‘when the | pext train goes, bot 1 can tell yoa what yanr chances of catching it ars.” “What are they”’' iuguired the new neighbor eagerly. eo ““Well, if you run as hard as you ean,”’ said the experienced resident, ‘you have 15 minutes to wait, and if you merely walk you'll find the train : just pulling out. ''—Chicago News Mozart had a very sweat voice, though it was by no means strong. His conver- their cheeks and the tears to their eyes The Eyes The eyes are placed in cavities in the head and are protected by ridges of bone ‘above and beneath so that a very strong ! blow in the face rarely does more than contuse or blacken the surrounding mus cles. If the eyes were placed on the out | i gide of the round skull, many persous woueld have these valaable members -erushed by falls or blows. sational tones were well modalated and pleasing. : - Catherine the Great | never targos 2 | face or 8 Dame a - New Zealand commemorates the ivve of the Dutch explorers for their native country. There is a district in Holland known as Sealand. Linsey woolsey was first made at the town of Linsey, in Suffolk, Fugland, about 530. spoka highly of tie performance, our hero among the rest “But there is one fault about it,’ L. said on coming out of the bouse ove | ‘evening, “What is it?’ = “I'l teil you. Inthe thirdaed, when | the conspiracy takes place, they drags Jota to ascertain which of them isto Kill Charles V. Naw, what was drawn the first night’ Ernani. And the sce it Ernani. And the third? Ernani again. Always Ernani. Six nights running! Now, that's unlikely on the face of it For the same name to be drawn cnee or twice may pass, but six tmas running —that is too much.” His remarks were received with al ale dulle Donne. regular ovition, -—Uiorn scott's Favorites. Scott believed that ‘‘ Waverley” was his best novel and the ‘‘Lady of the Lake'' his best poem. He and the Bal lantynes had more than one lively dis cussion on the subject, but he would never admit a change of opimion. He knew the ‘‘Lady of the Lake'' by hears and once repeated the whole to prova ‘the fact ] A Crime. . . “ls is true that Mand Makefaces was arrested for intimidating voters?’ “Yes She threatened to kiss every man who would vote for Johnsom,’''—— Indianapolis Journal Re mile to Rels dv i TRAINS Lia Kast Tard Tain THT wm {rma 6 LB pm ’ BoPhyag we ¥ He » REE ~ yf { kearih& Ep BUFFALO aod witer Fel, Livi 9G wh mrrrve pind depart far sep sandy, we foil ows CRALIXS DFPALY via mi Falls Crvwk 35 CCRIWREEV ie Rd esr oR so Bradford, Sule aad fue 900 Panssomwnefact Pu oo gas Papxsutewney urd Big Loa. 1 63pm. Falls wei, aa Clamsthait on" Wi 216 Ridgway son Bi. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers