wo +r A EA : SUMMER. WISDOM. 7 The ian whose rule # is to take The weather as it comes, Without a word of fuss, finds life X ndding full of plums. : ~ He oesn’t care how low or high ¢ - The mercury has got, = "% =: Apd even when it's mid July x - He hardly knows it's bot au = Pmt he who when the mercury = 1 : Goes up to eighty-five _- -*™ Makes such a fuss that every one + = kc 3 Regrets that he's alive. Thus makes himself unhappier Than he was meant 10 be. i And feels the eat at seventy-two . . As if ‘twere ninety three. _ Bp take a warning from these lines—~ It’s good advice, though free— And when the hot days really cong Don't watch the mercury. Just go about yourdaily tasks Regardiess of the heat, | - And you will find that every day Your life will grow more sweet. Somery He Journal. A MARINE WONDER. The Mighty Barrier Reef a Monument te Minute Insects’ Industry. One of the marine wonders of the — GRANT'S DAUGHTER NELLIE. : L old folk's estimate of Sartoris’ character { | miliation to which he subjected his wife. ! the furnily of the drunken husband nt- Lor to accord her that a r T | A Mesutifal Story ry Hinstratisg the Gene eral's Attachment for Her. The raomored engagement of Nellie | . Grant Sartoris to Gen. Kyd Douglas re | calls to the public mind the beantifolly | tender attachment which General Grant manifested for his danghter. The mmion | with Sartoris was opposed to the limit. “by the young lady's parents; subsequent ‘events prove all too clearly that the ‘had been correct. Sartoris was adronk- ard, and there is probably no language adequate to portray the misery and ha- { To add to the wretchedness of her life, terly dec lined to receive the young wife recognition tw | | which, as the daughter of Gen. Grant, | ' khe had been acenstomed and was en | have kept | titled, Mrs. Sartoris may silent: her womanly pri 1s probably pre | | vented her from telling her pare mts of world is the great Barrier Reef of Aus- | tralia. This stupendous rampart of coral, stretching in an almost unbroken | line for 1,250 miles along the northeast- | arn coast of Australia presents features | of interest which are not to be equaled i the in any other quarter of the globe. No- | where is the action of the little marine insect, which builds up with untiring in- dustry those mighty mountains with which the tropical seas are studded, - more apparent. By a simple process of sac rétion there has been reared in the course of count less centuries an s&damantine wall against which the billows of the Pacific, sweeping along in an uninterrupted . course of several thousand miles, dash themselves in ineffectual fury. Inclosed within the range of its projecting arms is a calm inland sea, dotted with a mul titude of coral islets, and presenting at every turn objects of interest alike #0 | the unlearned traveler and the man of science. ; Here may be witnessed the process by which the wavy, gelati mass hard- ens into swne, then serve®aé a collect ing ground for the flotsam and jetsam of the ocean, and ultimately develops into an island covered with a laxuriant mass of tropical growth. Here, again, - may be seen in the serene depths of pla eid pools extraordinary forme of marine life, aglow with the wost brilliant col ars, snd producing in their infinite va- _ riety a bewildering sense of the vastness | of the life of the ocean. ean. —London Public Opinion. aa TO CAN STREET CAR HORSES. Canned Horse Is On Sale asd Papular in Many Cities of the East, The canning of horse meat for domes. tic and foreign consumption has beew inaugurated in the Northwest. Mr. M. Herrick, of The Dalles, who owns & salmon cannery, has converted part of his establishment into a horse neat can- nery. He has canned in all seven horves, ‘and they have yieliad an average of 800 of flesh. - Mr. Herrick hae disposed of a number of cases of canned meat in this city, and they have been eaten here. ' means more to humanity than a thou { sand Vicksburgs, a thousand Corinths, a Patrons of | the establishments where five-cent meals | have made any complaints about it. A ol I on A ary writers. Bismarck says that he “thinks he may pounds each, - that amount. : number of cases have been sent East, . are served probably could acc unt for | . some of the meat, and Hf = they never! leaves of the plans which it ! are the analogies upon which ‘ manded Hastings. danghter so mary, very many leagues Arizona and New Mexico with the regn- | the dreadful mistake she had made. Bnt : ramors of her misery came from over | {the sea, and they caused Gen. Grant constant solicitnde, i Ope time Hugh Hastings went down to Long Branch to visit the Grants. He | was told that the general was sitting on | tocks overlooking the ses, and | surely enongh he presently dix overed | { (rant perched on the rocks and gazing | in apparent abstraction over the wa- ters. Hastings stole softly up and put | his hands over Grant's eyes, saying: “Now, guess who it is!” : But Hastings drew his hands back al- | most mmetintely; they were wet with | tears; Grant was weeping. Hastings was too surprised to say any- | thing. Grant looked up. : “Hullo, Hughy,” said Grant kindly. “Yom are crying, general! What has happened? What is the matter?” de (Grant came pretty near Ureaking down, but by a heroic effort he pulled himself together. “We get bad news from England,” said he. ‘‘Nellie is unhappy. and 1 can't help thinking about it—thinking about it all the time! Iam in trouble, Hughy, the greatest trouble of my life!” It were difficult, perhaps impossible, to fancy a more beautifully pathetic picture than that of this foremost man of his time stealing away by himself and communing with his love for that away. It appeals more directly and it i thousand Appomatt ftozes!- ald. ; eT “Why the Zunis Fear the Rainbow. ma Capt. Trevitt W. Lox Ane | geles, Cal, for many years stationed in Chicago Her- Okey, of lar army. told about the myths and superstitions of the Zunis Indians to a group of friends the other evening. “In the Zuni mind.” said he, “the rainbow has ever been a etna animal, having the attridmtes of a hnman being and also the body and some of the fanc- tions of a measuring worm. Obvious- | ly the striped back and arched attitnde of the measuring worm, its sudden ap pearance and disapj=arance among the inhabits | this per- - sonification is based. As the measuring | sud it is expected that guite a market | will be found for horse beef inside the ! bow. which appears or tr United States. . The flesh resembles beef in appearance and cannot be told from it by taste. nl | 18 sup wise by tie Bil The | . grain of the flesh is fine, and. upon open- | Ing cans, it certainly looks good enough to eat. the canned horse, and are unanimous in pronouncing it good, though there was pot one of them but confessed to a ( | droughts, under the i} ns of people have sampled | plants wither away, | the ravages of the me C pomenon prejudice sgainst the eating of horse » The only trouble Mr. Herrick has met with in canning is that the flesh cannot Of this the cessation of the be packed into cans tightly enough by | hand. The difficulty will be overcome ' by using machinery such as is used in | ~ packing corned beef. The first horse ‘killed made six cases of forty-sight but others ran alittle under How She Got a “Safety.” t | derives ite brilliant doloring, Fis believed | gets its | from the leaves and fH A school girl who made a good record | ~ Chicago paper from a new baking pow- _*s}irl wanted to sell baking powder. To uh the high schiool and will graduate with | high honors read an advertisement in a | worin consumes the herbage and canses them to iry up, &0 the rainy rain, | irded Boe | "iy 1 4 of adn, and if the pinnts ] lv after the » hk 7A? : : rr . dians to canse a cessation & mseqaently oF to be smginagtor of “Jt will be seen tha he visible phe- sled the rain bow gets by | personality of the measnr- | VOFIL in tm ion as a god. Tall con the analogy the ing worin, while from the the rajubow getsits fnnor pearance of the rainbow is addacelas A ot The fading of the flowers is at- | tributed to the rainbow, which, comenm- | ing their imperceptible existences, thos | 11ST as WTI stripes that the measuring green, yellow 3 “%r » hiiia ER vours."—Chicago Times-Herald, The r ust Week at Calcasien, Onur good Prof. John 8. Jones mvited | us to the residence of Charlie Hunter to | der firm, reading - something like this: g g ; any girl who will send us $-— for three dozen cans of our rapid selling baking powder, and show that it has all been sold. we will forward at once a beaut: ful ‘safety.’ — & Co. street, Chi- She sent the money; and by hustling like a house afire for three weeks and ving. the door slamomed in her face no than a dozen times, she managed to unload the stuff. Forwarding the list of sales. she waited in breathless antici- pation the arrival of her beautiful bi- cycle. It came—the *‘safety” did—in an. envelope, and it was one of those brass * pins, horse blanket size, like mamma used to keep up our style with.—Man- kata, Mion., Review. Gen. Wade Hampton's address at the unveiling of the Confederate monument in Chicago on Decoration day was, in part, a eulogy of Lincoln. “The untime- ly death of President Lincoln was re- garded by all thoughtful men of the ‘South as one of the most .erious evils which had befallen our section,” he said. “We know that during the war he de- voted every energy of mind and body for the resioration of the Union, and that . yesult accomplished, we felt that his big brain and his kind heart would prompt him to deal kindly and “leniently with his felow. citizens of the South.” Conan Doyle, " Stanley Weyman and 8. B. Crockett are said to earn the larg- est literary incomes of any contempor- live to be one hundred years old if he likes. EE. RRL 5 Te Bebe ses something new, one. Well, we'l no; right now! see his new “Prince Albert”; and more to see how he looked standing on the floor by his best girl, M. P. Go it, Jones; we've been through the mill. i C. M. Mitchell and Garrison Jac ‘kson | will be on the night watch at the * coal | chute’ this month. 8. P. engines cannot | go by now without getting their full | share of the ‘black diamonds.” “Juck i and Mitch” make a fine team Wherever] you put them. What was it? says | 1 tell you next tine. No, | . A little stranger arrived at the rosi- dence of J. J. Moulton last Tharslay and deposited his bag and baggage with- ont leave. Hello! What is it? Fine boy, cries our friend. Ah there! J. J., we'll take one on you. = : Sickness in tho editor's family ac- counts for our lack of news this week, As our wife is reported better we raay be able to ‘‘swing around the circle” next week. : Who can guess why Mr. H. Porche ! refuses to drink beer. He claims itisa refreshing beverage, yet refuses to drink | it himself. We have our suspicions, — Calcasien (La.) Blade. Revised to Date. Gabriel— What on earth have you been | doing to this page in the ledger? St. Peter —(Foing over Napoleon's ord in view y of 1 recent dev elopments. 8 rec- | Tough: : ~ Willie Grow--Do you object to cigar- | ottes? t Ethel Knox—No, indeed; people who smoke them, A TURIN Te, JUSTICE CAUGHT NAPPING Judge Irvieg signed His Ows Death : Warrant for a Dollar. A prominent Jawyer of New Jersey tells a story of New York city judges of forty vears ago that always fatchesa Amide. Juige John T. Irving. the np right sad oonscientions brother of Washington Irving. is the hero of the allogad incident. It cceurra] ‘in the days when judges received 3 s foe of $1 for every paper they signed. Ome diy two prominent New York lawyers, ao the story runs, were in : Julie Irving's court when he was busily engaged in <igning papers. There was a long Ime of lawyers filing glowly in front of his desk. and as each passed np his papers he time lxid down a corresponding number of dollars. The jwige would glance at the papers. make a so rawl ‘on each and take up the next package, the pile of thinned out of lawyers looking on said to two lawyers COMPANION: “I have the highest nr judge's integrity, but I'm satisfied ho doesn't know half the time what be is CHAMPION TENNIS PLAYER PIM. 5 figning. Why, watch him. It is im Dr. Jeabeos Fim. the J ral sh and Irish tepmis champion. meee od added to bis possible for bim to get half of an den laurels by visiting Ame defeating ro riy 335 the bes ayers, Champion of what ison the paper. If he examined E. 1. Wrenn excepted. Ww repm was voi in form > did not pins Pim 3 eagy vies each ine ilaspde hn 2 never set don tories over such men as 1. H. Hover, M. GG. Cha WW. A. Larnéd ind Claroce | ACT ONE Ci0wLY 1e'd never get Gone; Hobart demonstrate that be is one of the world's greatest players, pa he should be more careful, never. # IE PRR The other lawyer declared the canght at a glance the important sep tence or phrase of each. his respect for © the "tacky family, i "Well, I don't believe it.” | the other. 1 feel | ter intentions. that that one dollar fee | ‘acts as incentive and canses his honor i to slight his work, and I'm going to prove | what I say.” exclaimed | sure. in spite of bet- » . and presently returned with a legnl | | form signed by the sheriff. and which set £ | Irving was to be hanged by the neck mi- til be should be dead. The lawyer then | took his place in the line filing before | | the judge's desk. i When it came his tarn he hald up the paper, folded be { hand. - His honor anfolded his paper and hor | riadly’ plunged his pem in the i There was a splatter and a scrawl, and - Jodge Irving had signed his own death warrant. That night the Jawyer went i 40 a social gathering. which Judge Ir | ving was to attend, with the Seath war rant in his pocket. When 1} himself in a corner with i said “Indze, w. 0 Bradic ¥. Eepath HSD, and P Ww. 4 et Desires . : . { : navers to-day and 1 eonlda't for the Life exndidites wy Kent ae ky 8 guben RALOTiAg tonmTest ‘ gf g : r.x * ; ; is 54 ri is » lawyer. Las been attorney gen =a] 17 5 . 1, of me understand how yom ean Ted tall and is the best hand shaker in the Bourbon state. Bradley 1s 45 vou £ ix them all. Do yoru really read them? 2h has byes three a delégate to the Republiass national conn PORLioN, Was baie n | “Why. certainly. It's a matter of Suckner for the governorship fn 15°57 and was uppoin nted mumster to A rea. habit, you know. I have acquired it ay : i years of practice. I can ata glance de in 1559, but declined the mission. , tect oh really important sentemce or word.” “Well,” sail the y Jawy py 0 prod ned ag OWES whic] ha it le- the death warran zk foldin x it in swith h a manner that the ame only was a “i= that yoar ai y 3. - os geste. stand and i then It Givwx as Wich Coneern ta the Ladi Thare as Elsewhere T, tT 5 ow y wit THA gs TOE iv ad , & the play * “1 a } hie - tk Wears - Is near 1%. Pyro y., A —1ife. i “2 iid pride iM \ { ee " 1s regarded TIT FOR - “W on't you please take off vour hat ws that | can ‘Yes, i you ii stop tilking to your escort so that van: rn Well, here she joes—to | narriage tl Ol KIOW eg 1 Thamy om ii only to the 1 pinafore of Limes or re content thin Ww hite cotton bat in in the milena 2 TREY ar oth nukle mniberry #113 «¢ 1 native “tres, and wrapr ro or roand the y. manafactare of this cloth, ied tappa, 18 one of Le leading industries in Fiji. the bark being beaten w ooden mallets mo thin sheets, which are joined together as re- quiral. When taking part in the moke- meke, or native lance, the girls Weir a thicx pe tteaat Of grass, black and Se! Ww tappa ning bare be bair frequently nosOme- depicted In As Hilew short, druid adorned with ‘streamers. the bodies from the decorated with fo frizzed ani what SYTIAnL = 3a Wis SRE “Th Wears and plaited in a fashi ne th at Tei ing Lputes, Unfair Advactage. T 2.11 y hateful fellow Nataral. was the man it the hotel this Bibbs — Who gave a morning? | hbbs—Anoid! VERY STYLISH TOILETTES. ‘sathor SSY green, brow n stn od and dotted ehaihs The skirt is laid Soata. lar and belt are of tan china silk. The rest of : i ei ia In the cenfer is an alapaca cloak The oldest known phint used 18 ASPETRYTS £7 1 Je THE 1 rerary fries “How to Get ? 7 bof 2 Rae) THREFE Rich in the At the left is am. in plaits and the vost roa, stock ¢ the o sage iz of ecrnl vor DIOsS green silk for food and at the n oh tis an aired ive outdoor eostuine. a »™ Sui ¥ | mt. Ce NN TET TB Te err NE Re at the same | greentacks gr a steadily as the line | Une of the jodgs | | forth that on such and such a day and at | a oertain hour and in a certain placs, | tween his fingers ina nonchalant maa | | per, and laid down his 81 with the other | ink. | ha found § the judge ha! I waz warrking you signing’ of Jud ge Ir- : DInes WE SELL AMERICAN MANUF) FIND A READY SAL Shoes, Woeolens sad ry Unexpected Result of the Hard Times Our Tools and Machisery in Foreigs Lands. Englishmen Use Our Bikes | A remarkable phase of the recent bus. iness deprescion has been the singular impetus which it has given to the ex- portation of American manafactures Americun manufscturers found that on acconut of the hard times not dearly so mary Eels wars being r consumed in this & All branches of trade were overpro doced and the mannfactarers were face to face with the problem as to how to et back the money they Had locked op F goods. Many of them went prompt- ly to work 1 find new raraote, A Le digspateh saves the seri- ons feat the bootmukers strike in the rapii growth of American competi tion . Torree toms of American boots and shoes have been delivered in o & gle day to Leicester dealers at price: cheaper than they cond be from the manufacturers thers Corn menting on this Aispatch. the London Dusily News za that at this rate thers will ' soon be Jittle left for the English mana factarers or operators to contend for. And this iz entirely true. American ingenuity has invented and perfected the finest boot and shoe making ms ! chinery in the world. Furthermore, wi ‘have the ras material comparatively ‘close at hand. and while we pay more fo { labor it is generally considered that this difference in wages is entirely made ap in the difference of skill and the com- TY try. ” ater sre of wn inl at 2-3 i ron} : | With that he strode out of the room. | putative amount of wots A the American and the Englich operator. To such perfection has boot making i» this country been pushed that to-day wo {have machines which manufacturers declare turn -out finer shoes than those | wirich are made by hand. : | Bat perhaps the most remarkable de- jYelopment of export trade from this country has been that of fine tole. Saiki the or of the Metal Worker: , "Probably the finest ihatica in the - world are paw to be found in New Eng land. ar nd in the making of tools, especi- ally high ticed instruments in which great se sion and acenracy are. re quired, we Isad all other countries. If is the testink sny of inventor Hiram 8. ‘Maxim t that he could not fin 1 a square that wax really square in all Earope, ex cept those which were made in America, And so in other lines, such machines as tarning lathes. planers and shaping ma shines. drill presses, micrometer calipers scales and 1 coming aimost iy CAT ally from the United Slates } The sewing machine was one of hie first of American manafaciured prod: wets to be. introduced abroad, and is so early acimired precedence ihat 1t has heid the [wid ever since. There are com} cplaratively few sewing machines madd “in Europe except those made by branches ‘from American factories and by Amer ICR mach. Some bingen the -_ sort is trae of printing presses. ATIOWS ot @ is the type writer. Tuer is b-day pr LICaily no Epis «Hine on the English market ith the American product; 3 as Aas al TE Tak Ta eR, GeTY. Another aot ya Desig ii INA dine. no such an mm Enrope as esd aes A%e a Ube da ine that Dag & LANOpeas VU EAT Ge Or TWO ura the Enag : Weil Wers- Amervail thie AMericas iF Re 4 HE alii nde rim her of Ais Conn. II'y an : aul Hae eR UAE TREES have os” ” 1 Amer when Fy 2aTs ag wala ll they Wert These Jemarid any off. BO. Cale ters, : Le selling Earope “TB Al ight dollars 5. piece Xm ranen nowed the mann facturers could mage. nieters and put it upon “the wisn arge quanti ties for a «iar 31.05. nen taey offered a ‘consiiitaent of machines their Enropean agent. be wis utterly dumbfoumial; neveriheless, Le under took the. r sale. and before ios consign Ment rem «i RJA LL Aitaue BEL RB heen dispose of Of late voars Ameri all fole 28 evoio aH BAave Laan precuds] 3 ta id of & MOST ev 3 IVY. iaxyale @ seal 5 most e3 valy in Africa. This is als: the case with American Ggrncualturs machine Almos have of ils vears agencies, oud the sale aannal each a large Bi Within “uv year & pn and mow ipany 1 3 ¢ er tT 53 osyrl Yomi ei (UL To La earioad larger Azer oan houses | CRICpeRn they: i fhe esl Od gure sainent reaper 4 ship . §—inf ma- chines t BLK Ses, and other large sr the Balte and to Al Davi sent consi LTS The Ame mean prod to the Ensimh be thence the world ften shipped or Continvntsi market esnipped Re Au parts of THO Invalid = Doctor. 1 “should ie ot foar leath ‘hat 1 am so afraid of being buried aiive : Physic ian— You need have no fear that with me attending you. —New Weekly, Butcher iW a you hase steak, Miss? Young Housel what shape it is 0 i's "arve Front | ceo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers