Nevada, 8, If the deposits in sav. ¢ Any indieation at all, ifr and prosperity. The this class In New York City | resources on hand of £500, | f the Argentine fe Italian sbipbuiiders for ships of war of £300 tons Commercial says that ftical rumor begins “It Is the highest authority by ean be set (Own at once as nvention based on no au ‘who ought to “enjoy | wm Bot betray it; if be traitor and a sneak, is not probably does not have, the Tast fen years sily Hotable. There v Den ee ats of Amer. and, in many in trafuers have been tend the stables of sparrow, “which has enemies fn the Eastern tes, hus invaded the region: | For some tine. % bem yet, American tralving, American and, wall we add ¥ pr 1 In the Bate " of Georgia, where are re than 80) pupils, whose p from sevesteen to sixty s before lust more than dents were over forty, over Bry years old hele children; Beart-hunigry for knowl Is free, but the tale of covers many a frag after year that his young Pp : ether there is not a certain ! years when 8 sp no longer ‘preach, when a rich mao begin to give away his money, 1 n ought to hand over his ind granaries to his sons and when an editor ought 1¢ Fitin anything but reminis hich he is pretty sure nobody Ont. in Minnesota the other party, returning from inter camp, was found to consist one contractor, aged Seventy-eight; r contractor, aged sixty five: ons ted seventy -pige; one horse, hree, ard another horse, | t - me eT thelr own South I have been spending a bit of the torrid season with my friend Judge Thomas Marshall Blackenham of Ty | gart Creek, Kentucky. : After dinner today the Judge led the Way to the broad veranda. The Judge : : - | ponderously seated himself in a shriek. of wage earners In the | ing rustic rockingehair fat right leg across the left backward and rested a chunky (that held the handle of a palm Isaf) on the center of his protuberant girth. Boon throngh came the imperious Blackenham valve of but there ix no help for it too, when she was young sub | had gone to school at Lexington a few i defilement. Though rieh in ail the al | luring grace of manner and physical | the sterner sex. We young fellows in | hater. mantied cheeks, Ber sparkling blue | "| ayes, her form filling all the rules of | | perfect symmetry, her step light as if © | tall you. very ‘motion. | was all the company she required, I® now a restaurant keeper in Chicass | 8 church member, thought the shore | i kmemd, ment to bouse was jammed by x curious | : 1 the oni h ri man has plowed with throng, y ose he would hav: given a cuss the rest. pooled his Hetle stock #2 up & stom, ‘mever entered the store, ‘mantly seni RY your souse a plate in the water and dismise Jf. Dio it all over a "That's tough on Lilie, hot aa it ia Judge in smiling attr actions” re, Judge freedom of intimacy. “in your wi Barmontous union. How could you, | “with your careless habits, ever win a | woman of such pupctifious precise . ness?’ toward me. He affected indignation. "What do vou mean, suh? While prob ably I am no prize beanty now, | was | the Lochinvar of this state. | waz the glass of gallantry, the beau ideal, the | tossing blossom of Kentucky chilvalry, sah! “Twas her wow a jucky woman, sub; ves sub, though at one time, suh, | she didn't have the propah apprecia- tion of it, probably” ! “She was the reverse of practical, | Sova | terme. and when she returned her lit tle brown head fairly swarmed with C wouldn't be long about it ving In Kansas | Cy I romantic ideas. A dishrag in her white bands then would have seemed | attributes of perfect femininity, she Seemed to possess no inclination for the community who aspired to hold Bea. on a level with bers were great ly nonplosed at her fri gid bearing, We couldn't believe she was & born man. Her glowing lips. her pink: i she trod an unpalpable substance all | conspired to resent such a charge But she gave scant attention to us, | : “Tom Baker bought a span of fine bay horses and a buggy 'o marth + { Every day he would dash by her house . | Bis grand steeds smiting the hard road | or That Gaiant Kn with rapid, ringing hoofs, his bogey | wheels richly humming. the black top | eatehing and throwing sunlight at "Twas ail vanity and | vexation. Rbe scarcely gave his showy | equipage a glance, or if she did deign | 8 Jook it was to wonder why a young | man of his lean means should incur so much expenses to advertise himself a | tool. | price and left for Frankfort, whers he | | Badsthworth street He soon sold his rig at Ba | il pow a popular saloonkeeper. : “Milt Turner bought a suit of clothes | on a credit—worlh seventy-five dol. lars. The next Bunday when Ho thought she was badly in need of his | sompany home, she fold him her pa He “John De Laney, knowing her to he cut to her heart was the miniateriyl | path. Accordingly he went to Cinetn- | nati, and for six months gorged his | mind on theology. He returned with oF A smooth face an affectedly mesh, bur 1 | withal, superior clerica: smile, a long- | up parson volce. He made an appoint. i ‘preach. but lo! though the “What do vou wear, suhT* pently absent. esteemed gambler of New York "Jim Stevens. more practical money with all be could borrow, and Alas! ‘twas a bootiess venture. for Flossie bur indig. £5 “During this ridiculous contest of , 1, Judge Blackenham, | a judicious silence. | aly uaing the Inculties the judicial the heated silence | Mrs. | “Do all that over agein, my lady! 1 turn it over a time or two give it a 2 SY, slap and a swipe with the drying ra ‘spoke the | “her | mother would never abate one jot or | tittle of her stringent housewifery ex- | “What a wonderfully lueky man you | I sald, with the frank fo the beautiful and practical have met in The Judge rolled his sunest face over | af Rewspaper, : foward { dollar Bi mine, Ctneky Desdubist { ticle, topped with fireworks beadlines ; bristiing grown of aide and wiory TS Erenyts rine i dtmraoes Bel ween Tie oa mast favors Poiptdtee RR talled, blask coat and a nicely gotten i py by fons Lo taetpaad i and ia rey 0 as a : Lar kle. on whom it sits : “When | met Flossie at chiareh there | Bow- | Hittie thar flow upward from a very warm heart | F | She took a proffersd arm and leaned on it with that air of delicious depend. | 502 heart of the | "4% - LAesdamy of Inscrip to exhort. was promi. | He is pow a highiy | fed to me. smiled, tha ! ol Blake pot only | back a dress pattern Bought there by her father (and which | Stevens had selected) with the dispir- | fing message that there was no ne- | gress in the family who could ap- propristely wear it.” BY JAMES NOEL JOHNSON. (Copyright, 182. by Datly Story Pub. © | on my shoulders. I was analveiong the sitbation—<irawing intelligent deduce. tions from the failures of others | made goleeless, but exhanstive fnquir- EE ais anomalous beauty. | Anally learn. Led she was an unguenchable reader of | threw his pushed fiat: herole literature | wont to town and serrate learned from the woman who tent the book store the | those high-spired novels tnat i tuted Ber Sona mod, and 1 pizht I would Spent nove rushed Bevrabit this LOY nandasiie Thee coc and chan “I ono hed the Avy tha would gules the door of her indiffer. ] ra wf if “There now!” she esslalmed ting her brow, No more romance for me” enone. IT would be a novel hero, “I had a cousin ¥, and this her I went on months’ visit a fes into the habits and secret tastes of | titiow of ail Cotiege in ho oi Provoss Catetes Philadelphia . Broker In His Own Trap. The University of Pennsyivania has pot a large endowmont. and that it finds the means to pay ita current ex- | ponses and put up new buildicas is due in great measurn fo 4 provost | Charles ©. Harrison. His little black sulbeeription book {8 well kaovwn in many & downtown ofire loo well . kpown, a prominent broker told him dally mental and emotions) tay and | not long ago. Mr. Harrison was plead. it persistently with him for oo sub- oviption. but in vain. Finally the broker sald: Hee here Mr Harris | you something on oon iti ge £3 : t 1 was unre provost, | never come into my office again i 1 ask you to do so.” arm, “Nery well Mr, =oseid Taare i” “The condition is that you + HE aw “Certainly, Mr Tow © apres tn that.” heard a knock at his door. "Come in) e sailed, son. He bad his black book under his “Good morning, Mr To" he anid; university matter 1 gmee-s’ “look here, Mr. Harrison” or continned, “Shy when 1 knocked? anit. | and iva thousand. Tines ; RA A A Mane Si Ae re | WAS NOT WORKING WITHOUT PAY. "Whe there 1 contrivad, on paper. | blank on roe glide “1 newt day didn’t forges % Lie edie #iippise and how he had come be modest, vl wt thant tor shan or SHY nat Hin hy ng Sian iL Heroes know. must He was & perm and 1 knew | Wall, had the following are DARIN “5 OG LEED Ad THOR, MARSHALL A Jaws ing inty Youity © Recaro Hero in Kansas BLACKENHAM, ity {From the Kansas Clty Jaurnsi) Kentucky, the home at artarty ohile #iry, Has anolber gem 10 wear in her ih the of Thos Riscoxenhany uf Lewis Counly Last evening, while Mex Fin RK owerithy wud bea tir £3 yes Marshal Edwards widow of Bom Troan # real ahs Was set ou robbers AL the Bes w Whure the mise her Thora siren Jnmps, 3 oy #% petration of eilia rgd Mew F wards wae Within ux black of her Re asd sever anticipaist age fod § “ine Wak awl 1a Armvermng iha he gtreel in CHES g z Coe, When oa : id BENE, tha men BREAN weigwd her. Cme threw a elo Dut pot Before she Plersing stream risen frome the ea un Apraig Hw 4 sued deft he fate nai ey] ny tasking fought Eye Hhetg a Hummers he turned In oan endenvor to eREDe dane ta A eglden Powith oa ft eg The nuixs ot brodgnt velloemesn th the af fhe assgliants were ; them in “UPILber” wha Ras ser 3 veal ta BH Penk Logie he wanted badly 343 hia Tor dere BY Aslan, who ht of Sodern Olive tha | . & : a8 By theres masked ] {to became a hero of the first water [| Lwent to a job prigter with a plece of | and Make a Mottie Thinking to please the visitors whe | : do not! seem to control them. some to look round his works, a cer taln glass manufacturer allows them Cail to try thelr skill at bottie-making. e}inping te the | them are very eager to undertake 6 experiment which ihe majority of it im only pecsssary to blow through a specially prepared pipe. and a bottle | Lar glass in te smooth state can : produced br a yey friend of | 3 & L watohing in 8 dong and $ nivad tl Nis but ip wit | i gold plees, veteran | at made hy her Eg iial trea eo 58 2 aa 2 Ay Lae ok | rire aheriil's posse | EXiept K, and favar deriva ned af welcotne sturped 1 ea 8 with 4 6 a haven “Wien le ba ming, i the imporian whey oy Toe 5 bgt of the Hhe & Spa Ra na snl tromabieg emitted wag pO ice on her, while her eyes yy d ence so grateful to the true hero, “After we had heen married two weeks I told lier about my She gazed at me 8 long time, pression a compound of mi ishment and Bock contempt | “Finally, she made 8 mol throwing something away. *“There, ting her brow. reading for me. No more As for vou, i | Mm" a pH hae oh = i anne A abou | ruse. her ex- | rih, aston. | wn as i | Monica that now!’ she exclabmed, knit- | romance | Mr. ; ‘Blackenham, I want you to study law pipe?” queried the other, 3 i x. ob Puale nase | dignity that | thags man be mara ohiiad, Some butdreds of sbool board boys | ] . | were In the works the other day, and! could trust MAG. | any one youngster refused to put his +h LT SARE CT TE vi Tw the next fuwns of (he East Ken month fo the blow pipe He stood {there with his bands in his pockets, comical | the others with a of contempt, “Us a rare fine dodge” he remarked to his bosom companion, xs they left the works together, "hot the old rascal didn't take me In by IL” “Why didot you have a go at the is astonish ment. “I wasn't such a fool” was searntul reloinder, “Iwn’t you see his little game? You chaps have Deen sradiing your cheeks aud wasting vosuy breath MAN CcAn turn ont in a wisek. about saving labor! Pat Tp a good “"Bian* Tae Rev, “in ehureh, cublaet wen Lying” ih tains pride sometimes srevarieation best glel tO church and, the time for “callsption” rathe 4 Him same. round Proguming gagement to marry that a restraining amd aon thee adm her Sanes. "Why, vagant, Goorge' she sxelatmed “Ob that's pothiog, 1 always $5 when | go to a strange chareh Just thes the deaoin and George thing weermed Divorable, heamed with a ¥ droped a taded wil Fa Rien The coileetion wn J0RT 5 hada’ Canees’y of the today,” said mah to sar ad} TST, en ris fpvmanse Saraophasan aks remiarkabie specimen art which bis avery poms wis di recently Ly BP EIBiey aint white marhie mented with engravings served at one lime as the some Carthaginian ruler all in evidence ands to show Heron de Viliefosss gave This HEht at wialch 3 fashioned amit beantifuily That tanh yi inst meeting of the Freneh Petters and maintained that it was by “ar the most notably specimen of an {ent Carthaginian wrt which has yet! t the bay cof tings been found It was while sxeavating Punte necropolis near the hill a P. Delatre came this roval tomb. As to is future des. | tination various rumors are afloat, but it is most likely that it will be remoy- | tl to some French museum, I the 1 fe hauled up by the nets of ths Naples { shapad bodiss abit the sire and shapn (same family as the starfish and sea rareifing, and feed on small crabs ang other floating Animal life that they | CRN CApluPre. i the walls of thelr alimes ar secrete strong jules that Lil and die | (salve the Bhers of the animals whieh | shave hesn 1 wii] Hive it | They suck in the sand a the | those which are of no we mise © anti {often found mors than a variety, kpown as the 7 said the provost promptly, and walked out smiling with a check for | Alive the tentacles of the tall are soit 31,000, ; A month or so later the broker | arms of starfish pad the spines of sen and in walked Mr Harri | ¥rebins with which we ars more fi: . ek sind | millar., 3 i and pliable and adhere fo the rock, {bat with death (hey harden like the | | sme, or ielly fish, ap we o “I want you to help me with a little | growing as large ns two feet in diam: | jeter and weighing Aly pounds. Some of them whine at wight the hrok- | na Cowith oa greenich Vight and are known | “when | gave that jasg| “3 % Bieeil | thousand dollaem wasn't it on the ex- °° Abele : press condition that | i come into my office ngaln antl | vited you | o. ole the ne! i gy © returned the provest “i pes Aviat; i pelievs Hn was tha | But didn’t yon say ‘Come in’ just now | (the floating plant 1: (he Saragossi gnderstanding. | co of the troples fwo dense thal a pleks © They say the check this time way: Philadelphia | | boats cannot : them, | been axplained Pwd oecur at no pariienlar season of How Ons Hoy Declines to Blow Gin | flawnces, ceolony begits very slowly, but makes severul miles a day. tha | all the aflernoon, and youve bhiown as many Lotiies a8 4 Talk | Why, he'll make | i hig fortune (na year iT he poss ond “Hike this” ! upon i power of i : ducing #1! sorts of warts and wrinkles Alexander Allison, Jr | er!) pastor of the Bomthwestern Presbyte. | i in ® recent sermon on the iastrated hls tex | somerous stories. and one pf these showed how even Crane tn church, a teady | A young ma when | : 8 thelr hase hy a tenn torals displayed a $3 upon the on. | had heen the young lady placed | vf i don't be so extra. | | The Lye : came with tae! fish ean, ! and the! pense of | Then the minister made | srenta far the week. and | th the shally unexpected | dave enilestion. | be ! the a well-known af : orna- | it of | obtain- | al account of this discovery ati LS tions and Bolles hide itself Saint | REroRs ih 4 i are Biled with Wm ha Peculiar Forme of Life thas CERTAINLY DESERVED. THE OHEOK. i | | Ons of the moat curions forms of en are “sen cucombors slag of the vegetables of that name of i pulpy flesh covered with a leathery skin and small ealearsous scales of rarbonate of Hme. They wiong to the Ther have no testh bak vOCRLAIN vanglit with 1 Mr sucker mountain, i mad and digest the sourieliing particles while § tir them gra Yer cai grid sae t long One| iar] plan | animal is cot and Grogght 23 eiocted, Sea ciiumbers mon in the Bay of Nap ei” has 3 tas When the The Bay of Nanles ghounds in medn. 411 them often and sixty | {nbght lanterns) by the natives, The Jelly fh sometimes Iigratinny ia grest _Kroups, of rent Tikit ; These shoals of medusae, as they aie called, may te f timber plunged in among them will be held upright ar if stuck in marl and andinary rows fons thelr way through migra tivgy have never They are irregular Their the year and oader sno particalar fe They ars act affectad by heat ar cold and the cirrents of the dees the bead chief or lesider of a lolly Sly sues fils orders which are communl IGM PE EOATR tated somelinw froin one to another. and, at the time apoeinted. the entire mavie It travels somitured with other Ash, toy The Yaetopau vulgaris =the devil fish of the ancis; ix very odmmoen fn the Bay of Nupet Examples are hauled up In the nets every day, It fo the gaerriida ol shes 1 hides itself revices of the rocks vind olten piles TRAE sini nn watta for Hy sgonen nto ow sancerie Heel! HOWRY and pass by. Ths Tanat 1 it ean pounee nt fishes that also has the BIO R z color and. prow its npon its otherwise smooth skin. to decaive ite nelighhers These trait of character rot commendable Wy Ak arm When | ehind whish : niite f aid pot blow the door off. escent tint. Sometimes it looks like a foating opal. : Another characteristic is a me filled with & black fluid known as sepia which can be Alscharged instantly into iho water. A small quantity will cre ate a black cloud sufficient to envelop the animal and allow it to escape from its purmmer. This ink is extracted, dried and sold to artists. It is the sepia with which pletures are painted. The cuttlefish is quite an srticls of | vemmorcs in Naples, Tor, in addition to the seqiin, the backbose is need for pedishing wond, as 3 tooth powder and for sharpening the bills of canary Phinda Hoth the cuttlefish and the octopus grow to 8 large size and many horrk fying ingends are old of them. HOEY fe : NOT FIRST oN THE MOUNTAIN TOP SR - Ublgeitons Advertising Man Find Nob Neglected the Opportanity. Some years ago, when the North- western State of Washington was not #0 thickly populnted as it is now, » young lieutenant on the revenne cuts ter Rush. then stationed In Puget Bound, bad an experience which he sometimen relates gow, although it is at his own expense. “1 was told" he sid. “that the neighboring now capped mountain, Mount Rainer, had never been climbed by any white man, or, af least, that none had ever reached ite top. | was younger then than 1 am now, #0 1 de | termined to gain the honor of planting the first American fag on Rasiper's wp. Several seamen voluntesrd to ace company me. and alter spending some days in making our preparations we #et out. Three days of weary march ing and climbing brought us to the top. With a hurrah we rushed up on a large” cliff. the highest point, and then prepared to pat up oar pole. Bude : sletily wy attention was atiracted to ap olony takes a notices ts move, he fe | oid staff stuck into a crack. Near iw top was nxtlsd a small card, on which in pisin type, was printed; "James Ruggles, agent for Thompson's Elixir { for thet Tired Pesling’ RCS AE, SNA i fiafe Protected hy Contents After standing for a dozen years by the side of A mammoth elm tree near the Henry Fenner ledge property on Cranston street, Providence, R. 1, grim, rusty old safe is about to be re moved. The owper, I. R. Titus has disposed of it 10 a resident of the neighborhood, whe intends to tamper with it aud eventually take ft away. There is a little story about the ans vient safe. It coninios dyoamite, just how much ix not Known, but Mr. Titus thinks not more than three or four pounds. It was used for several years to store the high explosive used ip | blasting the rock, and when the Titus interests discontinued the stone guar rying bLusipess at the Henry Fenner ledge the safe contained several sticks The loek became unmanageable seven or eight years ago and has refused to do service since. Hence the vault re wained tightly closed, a rather omi. nous spectacle, standing as it has in the cpon and known to harbor within the rusty {ron walle a goantity of dyna Far obvious reasons the owner The new propristor of the souvenir of the old Fenner ledge days will com: The body of the ectanne looks Uke 8 round bag and senting 1s vital op gang. At ove endl i has oa hoad Hk that of a toad, with Two large inguiring eves, and branchitiz onl from various mene operations by removing 5 see © tion of the doar by drilling and taking * 1 awny the Sanguioun sxplosives LR RR A Er 01d American Bottles I'n early American glassware the his parts of the body gro edb arma united in the foot of a dv ten rows of afmn and in is the mouth, powerful ifgws and a flap which siternitely opens ami shuts, arms are aged for swimming, ernwiing, climbing and for eatehing gud holding the prow and other ani Ara caught by its snckers, the mouth by menpe of they srms rie quickly Rilled and digested 4. Aedes the middie of the body cae ables whi mand i by COTO BUS ust Ars Ar URW nena gull my fia: A near relation of sepin or cuttlefish, vi much shorter preted in Bite army | a of the aed ary mach in haracterise | fie ability tod ge ite enlor at parent water of wonderial play animal is very hangs in color | ivh than thos but they do busine The cate ettlafipl the same way tie of the aml ty Pas will, and in the trans of Naplea the in the : much admired. This 8 due to large calls ip the skin whivh | Ads Sache coils oon. | tract or expand the colors of the Aulds j change and grow lighter or darker ! { like the blush upon the chesk of a | maiden, and give the animal an opal: srety wkmilar to that | Each arm bas £i: es n by i indeed ape the orade yegreen and “ | brown amber bottles made early in the furnished with a pair of | i Fide membraneoun | It pats crab | Pi {rs sarvied ny i 44:4 Ei Pautrank in value, to a patriotic Amer 3 £ Wao ihe getgpud is the | save Hermann Grau, tory of our national art progress has bean written, Chole anid precious nineteenth centiry-—the parirait bot bearing busts of Washington, Franklin, fafayette, De Witt Clinton, | Zachary Taylor. Kossuth, and Jenny | Lind, Local decorative subjects on many lines of dea were treated by the American bottle makers; and the most exquisite Venotian bottle eannot an colledtor, the primitive old fasks. grnamented with Indian, Masonic sme : hiems cannon and steamships or such C antdeoor themes as the seasons, birds | fruits, | fahere tropa, TEN, shearer of wheat, the the gunner and kis Brat bievels, The raliway, with a oar a historically tele Pon an glass Sash, as well as the en Peak pilgrin with his harden on’ Century. Bln — Agee gid Alflericar a horse hin ae a5; thi tT ¥eg x IER Names Told Ton Mueh, One dneomsiderate father, interested Lin affairs of state, named his children, chaneeit 10 be all girls, after the various presidents in whom he was | interested xt the time of the infant's the salivary | Birth, Daring their childhood the iris rejoiced in the names of Linealn. Johnson and Grant for middle names, They always wrote their names out ia fil taking great pride in them as their father had done. Gradually, as they grew older, they wrote only the Phitials, and at the present time nat ome of the daughters in that family has any middie name at ail a Patti's First Conosrt. “1 paid Adelina Pattd a pound of candy for singing at ber first concert.” the oldest oper atic manager in America. “Little Miss Fatti was at that time 7 vears of age and her concert was hell in Willard's hall, Washington, D. ¢.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers