4 , . - v.-, ,, .. - : . . - - y TEKMS OF SUBSCBIPTIOX. One Tear , Six Months. . ,t2 00 1 00 Special Requests., ' - i ' 1. 1st writing on business rje sure to give the Postoflice at whish yon jrei your mail - 2. In remitting money, always give both name and Postofljce. 3. .Send matter for the mail department on a separate piece of piper from an thing for publication. 4' Write communications only on one tide cf the kteU THE BROOK- BT JAMES WHITCOMD XH.ET. LitUt, brook I Little brook! ' . You have Btich a happy look ' Bach a very merry manner, ae you swerve anfrcurr and crook And your ripples, oue and one, ' Reach each other's hands an Ct run iako laugmag nttie cnuaren in uie sun. 'Little brook, sing to me ; ; Bing tbout a bumble-bee fm, t 1." 1 T wtvi . VI.- UT1 1 1,' ,1 innm. A.llab i i Vlil 111 UUii OUU LUUiUlbU Li liiii- blingly, . - Because he wot the film . Of his wings, and had to swim, at him. Little brook sing a song VI a leal that sailed along JDown the "golden-braided center of your current wif t and strong, ' '. ' And a dragon .fly that lit On the tilting ilm. of it. And rode away and wasn't, scared a bii . . And sing how oft In glee Came a truant boy like mo, Who loved to lean and listen to your lilting melody, " Till the gurgle and refrain 'Of your music in his brain Wrought a happiness aa keen to him as pain. . Little brook laugh and weep Do not let the dreamer wecjf; . ; Sing him all the songs of summer tiK he sink in eoft est .sleep; And then sing soft and low Through-his dreams of longf ago Sing back to him the rest 'he used to know 5 ; IN A SINGLE XI GUT. " What a beautiful young woman I And yet her hair is white as snow." -"A.nd her complexion fresh as is a ohild's. . Strange, is it not ? " Thus two loungers on a hotel porch. But they did not know the. history of that snowy hair. I , " ' From the time Harry "Wells fell in lore witn jviamie (Jlausen at cnurcli socials; until their marriage in the First Presby terian Church, the entire community gave iniaue, consideration to their affairs, Mamie's father, John Clausen, was a prominent commission merchant in a Pennsylvania town, generally consid ered wealthy, and always lived like a man of means. Mamie was pretty, dash ing, a local belle, and a general favorite. Harry's family lived a few miles from town, and they, too, were people of re- -.JJUlitliUU 111 I lit? UUUUUJf. , The marriage was in every way a suit-! able one. Harry was educated in Prince" ton and although he had at one time the reputation of being wild he had sobered "down and was such a frank, manly young fellow that he was generally forgiven ". any, indiscretion. xne marriage was tne occasion oi general rejoicing. Mamie's father gave. her, an unusually good send off, and the j details were sent far and wide through the State. , Harry had studied law for - tt- l-i -i 1 n nn1 oofflorl t rrnrl1 i'iiIa o nniUUD tUJU iU UIUUM V . I 11 111 U W country notary, drawing, up deeds, and doing hack-work of .'that, "sort.. They lived about four miles out of town and two miles from old John's. - He had built them a pretty modem cottage on a de tached portion of his farm. Harry had his office, an ornamental little structure, a few rod3 from the. house, and there thev lived as harroy as two birds. Gradually Harry picked up "business, anrl finollv tl-ii-rvnorK Tiiq fntViAr li Vw- came trustee for some minor heirs, They were an odd lot of children, with !a half-crazy mother and no end of coal tands and mining investments. It was a good thing for Harry, although it gave wrk. The worst thing was that it .vi:.,i i.: i i .i then and. leave : Mamie. Wheh Harry t iad to go away, Mamie would get in her i Dhaelon and drive to town and there were always some or tne young people ready- to go out and keep her company. - aacuirjf Txinnjo msiaieu Luau sue musinoi - XT r ' l " f . - o ...v, Pennsylvania has a pretty rough ele ment in it, and there is a general sense of uneasiness. One August afternoon Harry had an unexpected summons to go to Scranton about a suit connected with the minor heirs. He had recently sold some of their property, and had been making vitriuua trjiieenona, wmuii Jicit jui xiia hands about forty-five hundred dollars. When hs found that he had to go off at a few moments' notice, he wrapped up a bundle of papers and this money, ana took them into the house. Mamie was making preparations for a picnic they were to tra to the next dav. and fbesrered . ; " o .7 " " " But, my dear child, 1 haven't time ' J- , . i 7 i i. 1 cvuii, iuu io iuwn ana put iiiu&o iu mo :bahk, so you'll uavo to take' care of theni. I'll try and get back in two days at the furthest and meanwhile nobody will, know that the money is here." t - , Then he explained to her the value of the papers, and handed her a canvas bag iu which was the $4,500 belonging to the minor heirs. ' " (Where will I keep it, Harry ? Be- icc" tu mattresses i " Just like a woman 1 No. : Ent I de- claro I don't know where to tell you. The most insecure place apparently ia often tle most secure. Any place, dear, but; between the mattresses. I leave xnaBio you. -but yoa must guard it. if necessary, with your life ; for, remember the money is not purs, and at all hazards Jam responsible. I don't really sup . . ' r--z"v "" 3 :. - ;.v , v . . ... v: .? '.. , . : . Ml - ' ' -, i--! ..-' ''.:''; ( um ? a. . I H i '. . . - . . Ci ESTABLISHED 1S48. pose thera is the least danger, for no one knows I have it. But one ought to take' proper precautions, and I beg of you not to admit any tramps while I am gone. Tell Sarah not even to allow them to eat a biscuit." - "All right, dear; we won't let the tramps have a drink "even, and I'll take care of the money, yoi may be sure." Harry bade his wife good-by, and Mamie gave up the picnic. At the end of two days she received a telegram from him, eaying he had been detained, and telling her to get some one to stay with her . two days, when he would be at home. She drove into town, and one of her old friends went 'out with her. At tho end of two days she had another telegram Baying that hs was detained until the next day. Her friend went home, and in place of Harry caino a third telegram, ani so every day for ten days he was expects J home, and every day came a' disappointing telegram. By this time she had become accustomed to her charge, which she had set like a bag of seed beans in a corner of a dark closet opening from her room. Tne afternoon of the tenth day was a hot, murky afternoon. Mamie had gone up stairs to take a nap and refresh be fore dressing to meet Harry, who was expected home after the longest ahse-gee he had ever made from her. After a time Sarah came up and told her there was a tramp down stairs who wanted something to eat and who woidd not be driven off. "You oughtn't to leave him a minute alone, Sarah. Go down and watch him and I wil! come down and send hirn off' , She dressed herself quickly ami went down stairs, surprised to find how late it had grown. When she reached the kitchen she found also a messenger with a telegram, which announced another disappointment, but the next day with out fail, Harry wrote, he would be home. ,As Mamie turned into the kitchen she heard the tramp and Sarah in evident dispute. ' I "Yes," said the fellow, "when that time comes your mistress will have another iioning-table, helping you, in stead of wearing her Sunday clothes every day." . "An' spoilin' everything for me to do Over. I think I sea her.. I've work enough to' do," answered honest Sarah, not indisposed to have a chat over her work. Mamie found a graceless-looking fel low, unshaven and ill-dressed, who, with ft certain gentlemanly instinct, roso up as she came in. "I suppose my girl told you we had nothing for you, and that it will be . a great kindness if you will leave as soon' as possible." "Yes, she did just that madam, but I took it upon myself to believe that it wasn't so urgent. The. truth is, I'm very hungry and dead tired, and I didn't believe but that you would give ma something to eat ; at least I've waited to ask you in person.". Women are soft-hearted creatures. Mamie went and got him something to eat herself. The darkness that had been increasing 'for some time came down rapidly, and there burst out one of those terrific thunder-storms that gather so rapidly and with sucb force in that country. After it3 strength was spent there fell steady sheets of rain that brought the creek over the bridges before morning. - ' . "Madam, it's no use talking. You can't send a fellow out in such a storm,'' said-the tramp, as the three stood On the porch watching the storm. " I'm sorry, , but I've no place for you." . ' . ; " What ! in a house like this? It's a. pity there isn't a cranny for a stowaway. I was walking around it, waiting for the girl, .and it seems to inejit ought to hold three people. " I "Yon are very impertinent. I tell you I have no place for yon, and the 6torm is already breaking away. " Even as she spoke the'i'ain camedown in blinding sheets, and lightning streaked tho heavens. 'Well." -he said, carelessly, "we don't go much on manners on the road, but I know I wouldn't send a dog out such a night as this. I'm not a particu lar chap, leastwise not nowadays, and I'll have to insist on your giving me some sort of shelter,- if it's only your dog kennel." The man spoke with decision. Mamie felt that after all they were really in his power. "I will keep you on one condition," she said. " There's a lofc to the house, a sort cf garret, which is very comforta ble. It is closed with "a trap-door, and you may sleep on the lounge there if you will allow us to lock the door on the out side. " j "Bless my stars and gatters !" he said, looking at her seriously,; "I don't care if you lock the door." They took hi up-stairs, and he climbed up the steep attic stairs. The women shut the door as he politely bade them good-night, and thtey fastened the padlock, : hearing him J chuckle to himself as lie kicked off his boots,. ; PUBLISHED AT RUTIIERFOTiDTOX, K.,' C- EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. " I'd take the key, mum," said Sarah. Mamie took the key with her, and the two descended to shut up the house. After they had made everything secure, they went back up-stairs.. "You must . sleepf in' my room to night, Sarah," the mistress said. Sarah dragged in her bedding, and made a pal let on the floor, and then, after the cus tom of women, theyexamined tile clos ets, looked under the bed, and piled the chairs against the 'locked door. The rain was still falling! heavily and tho night as black as ink.) The mistress and maid went to bed, and although worried j and anxious went to sleep. After midnight Mamie found herself awake, and a bright Jight sliining in the room. Blie started up, and eaw that it was the moonlight! j Tho storm had cleared away at last. She got up, unable to compose herself immediately, and went to the window. The' moon was shining brightly. ' As she stood, look ing at the peaceful scene before her she saAv away clown the road," for it was bright as day, several horsemen. It was such an unuaual sight at this hour that she stood watching them as they came nearer. To her surprise they turned up the lane leading toward her house, and on reaching the gate came into the yard. Sho was almost r.aralyzed with fear. - Tho truth liashed across her. They must have learned that she was j alone that she had this moneV. and they had come to get it. For a moment she was paralyzed. She remembered Harry's last words : "You must guard it with your life if necessary." She ran to the sleeping Sarah and wakened her. She got down Harry's rifle. The sleeping -girl was soon thor oughly awake, and she explained to her their situation. j, - "It's the tramp that's done it." "The tramp? No. Sarah, the key, the key of tho attic." . She flew up the stairs, unlocked the padlock and opened the trap. Tho man sprang up at the sound. "Come, come with me." His own senses alert, ana nearmg tne noise oi the horses below and steps about the house, he followed her without a word. At the foot of the stairs she stopped.. "I have a large sum of money in the house, and those men have come to get it, thinking that I am alone. If they kill me that money ijiust be guarded." "Yhat have you?ipistols, shotguns?" he whispered, taking in the whole sit uation, h "Here is my husband's rifle. It is loaded!" j " Hist ! Where are they going to break hi ?" The steps came boldly on the piazza to the fre&t door. "Get behind mo, I will fire at the first man who enters. How many bar rels are there ?" ! ' , j "Six, all loaded."j' i I " Very well. Keep this cane in yciur hand for mc, in case1 1 need it." There was no storming ' of shutters. They heard the key applied to the door softly. It opened, and a man followed by two others confidently entered. The first figure walked directly to the stairs. He had taken but a step when three shots came in rapid succession. There was a heavy thud ; this man dropped and the, other two turned and fled. Sarah ran to the window j and two horses galloped down the lane. j " Don't faint, madam ; there is work yet to do," said the tramp. j Mamie caught hold of the rail for sup port, and then wnt into the room. ; " Get a candle, Sarah." ; They lighted a candle and gave it to the tramp, who went down stairs, the two women following with brandy j and ammonia. The man had fallen back ward, and lay with his face up and head toward the door. ; "Aha!" said the tramp, curiously, holding the light up and 'peering into the dead man's face, " he's fixed. Shot through the head." . ,! Mamie advanced and gazed , at the white face, across which a thin thread like stream of blood was trickling. She fell back with a wild shriek. . It was her husband's dead body which lay before her. UNeiv York World. ' HOJiACE GREELEY AS A FRIJTTEB HOT. ; ; Here in Poultney the New York Tribune was founded. 'Here it3 founder washed the forms, and carried waiter, ani built the fire$, and didn't sweep 'out the-news room, and didn't carry out;the ashes, and forgot what he was sent-af ter and let the paste sour, and lost the let ters he was given to mail, and upset the lye, and tried the usual experiments with the fancy job type and the finest colored inks in the way of fearful . and wonder ful visiting card3, and in all ways con ducted himself even as the devil always does about a print shop. Here Greeley passed some years of ihis boyhood.! I wander about the' village thinking about the good old man, and trying to think of the young printer, dusting out his cases with a pair of leaky bellows, or "soldiering " for a big pick-up that was the next to the last fat thing on the hook, just under a long take of solid nonpareil. Burlington Hawkeye. A GfiKiiAN professor claims to be able to tell a man's character by feeling of his nose. A nose, which feels like sheet iron ia a eign of a statesman. www A Family Kcwspaper; Devoted tollome ljforesU CjL TOUT AT I. A ST, As Mrs. Oatea was going up $hB steps , of the theater she saw a 12-yeaxyoldToy I struggling .in. the hands of th police. The lady is naturally of a Byiipathefcio j turn, and stopped the police tor see if bo young a lad could not be kept qfit of th city jaiL fix ' - "Don't take that poor little boy to jail," she said, " I'll pay his fine!" . - " Hasn't been fined yet," said Offloer Solomon. 4 V, I "He looks like a good boy, 'V. continued Mrs. Oates. " If you let him gI'U give him something to do as a supe.I . Pray what crime might so nice & little sboy commit?" , , i'i i r . " Defacing posters," report the offi cer. -'' f$b Mrs. Oates, who was betiding ove$, the boy and aboiit to stroke his curly,, head, assumed ah erect, not to ey tragic, position immediately. , ; " Whose posters r flD ; "Those pictures of Alice Oates in red tights and tassels all along the side of the leg. He cut both legs 'pH with a jack-knife. He cuts up all the pouters that come along." .'Ill ) "Say no more," hissed the 'actress, "away with him to the lowesungeon. I know him ; he cut my headland arms j off ia Chicago, carved me to piece's in New York and cut all my legs off all over San Francisco. Here,; you pretty policeman, here's $10 for catohingthe confounded little scamp. . liopei he will goto the penitentiary; will he?" " We swear it," said botHjiioffioers, holding up their right hands, t "You are a nice chap, int you?" continued Mrs. Oates, putting: her arms akimbo as in "Madame Angot ;"j" a nice boy to grow up in a Christian Jcouijtry and walk the high road to Uie fallows. Where do you expect to diaJien you go to ? Beside trying to ruinnie in the estimation of the public, sef'Vfhat a 'lot of trouble you have put these, good, kind policemen to. You can go, sir.v ? On receiving such a scathing' lecture, the boV blubbered heartily and went sobbingo jail. Salk Lake :Zibune. 'hi FACTS AND FIGURES ABOVTNEWS ' ' PAPERS. 1jff H- The English-speaking peo of Jthe earth, numbering not more .than one sixteenth of the entire popuIajdn othe globe, publish over one-half of the news papers in existence. The total nuraber of publications of all kinds we. find d be 34.274. Of these 4,020 afeo'' dafjies, 8,857 are tri and semi- weeklies, 1.7;88D. weeklies, 4,836 monthlies, and 3672 semi-monthlies, quarterlies' annjials and various other irregular erioda of publication. These are" sdistribt)ted around , the hemisphere i s l folfews: Europe utilizes 19,557, Nortb America, 12,400 ; Asia, 775 ; South America, 590; Australia, 661, and; Africa, h origina' home of the Fifteenth rafoendnxant, brings up in the rear witr 182. The total circulation per issue of vtjtese papers lis found to be 116,400,0dQ,. yhile;the total number of copies printed: ahniyilly reaches the enormous and almost incon ceivable amount of 10589,49448 copies. ,v f. Germany publishes the greater quan tity of papers, the publications of Jhat country reaching 5,529 in nttpbeB vith an annual circulation of 1,748, 000,K)0 or about thirty-eight to each inhabitant. Great Britain has less papej in num ber, 4,082, but the ciKulatioB is great er than those of Germany, reaching 2,202,000,000 per annum, jgivjng sixty four copies each year to eai b of herteiti- zens. France, has 3,2G5 periodicals, with an annual circulation icj , 557, fOO,- 000. j While the United States? &an show no daily paper with a circulation, of over 125,000 copies per issue, l.find that Paris contains one daily paper, entitled Le Petit Journal, which has daily cir aalation of 580,000. It contains alf the news of the day, beside plenty of gossip and society news, and sells for 1 soi, or a cent. In London appears a jsaper called Lloyd's Weekly, a twenty-ejght- column sheet, which enjoyp tlie wonder ful circulation of 612,000 epmes per is sue. This paper is sold iox;-1 penny. English money, or about 2 cents injthat of the United States. H. 1 JIubtyirdf in Boston Globe. r . A TO MAKb A POJUap. Cut off the legs and wjgs oi tyotu drake at the first joint. CVtibff the bill where the feathers terminafe. Split the skin under the head d6wn: o.where the neck begins. Gut through; -flie skin on the back, near the wing, jipito-the be Erinning of the neck. Thefc begin &are- fully to draw off the skin. ? Oa reaching the neck, gently draw t&e.-Bkin fcver, after having skinned the headiand $ut it off,, care having been tahenj to put around the eyes. To prepare the- fjdn, ay it on a warm stove, with thebaye skill op, and dry slowly. Lay on magnesia to absorb the oil, and frequently lay fresh brown paper on it ; a wawrtf (no hot) flat-iron to be placed on i die paper. Should any stain get on thj 5 feathers, a rag, dipped in a little ainmoni and water, will remove it. The rast makes a beautiful pompon, and the? soft; wing feathers next the body maybe usd for ornaments, Louisville Cpurier-Iour- nal. U ' acil Graeral lews. eatiTjIeil fashions. Wedditifft and Other Social Entertain ments Fiftfi Years Ago. From the New Tork Poet In the early part of this century wed dings in New York were not the elabo rate affairs they are now. The festivi ties began and ended with the marriage ceremony. There were no ushers, nd rehearsing at the church beforehand, no reception after the bride and groom re turned from a trip of a few days sel dom a few weeks for the gentleman could rarely leave his business. There wera bridesmaids arid groomsmen, no best man. Weddings usually took place' in the evening at the bride's residence. and not infrequently . the happy pair went directly to the house that had been hired by the' groom and furnished by the bride's family. The bride's trous seau at that time was simple. She never wore, a veiL This waa introduced some years later, was only one yard square, of a simple net, covered with thread embroidery, and was pinned up on the head behind. Since then veils Ave increased in quality and quantity. till they are now priceless heirlooms among the rich families of the country. The bride's dress was mull or embroi dered muslin, short, as was the fashion, both in skirt and waist. Pearls, not dia monds, were the height of her ambition, though diamond rings were beginning to be worn. The entertainment, or re freshment, . was also much simpler. There was a wedding cake, with a ring in it, to be cut by the bride. Sherry was used in much greater quantities than any other kind of wine. Cham pagne was a luxury only used on grand occasions, while at, ordinary parties porter was frequently seen. The cater- ers were two or three colored men, who were found sufficient for every emergen- j cy, French cooking not having as yet; come in. Dinner parties (except the' elaborate) were all in the daytime. Asi for parties, every one was invited for 8 o'clock and expected to leave at 12. Entertainments fifty years ago had not ' seen the waltz that was introduced- a few years afterward. Country dances,! "The Boulanger," a very pretty wheel figure dance not unlike the court quad-! rille, were the favorites. A obtillion, not' the elaborate German now danced, was also in vogue. The dresses were short,! showing the white or black-tied satin slip-i per. The waist and sleeves were short,! to correspond with the skirt. One of the party dresses of the period was of white satin with a cerise-colored crepe lisse overdress, hanging loose. Flowers were not ijsed as now. H, a gentleman sent them to a lady it was thought hia' intentions were very serious a sort of floral declaration. If a lady had morel than one bouquet, tbey were tied to her; side, trophies of her fascination, by a! ribbon. A bouquet costing $5 was con-S sidered as the height of elegance in! those days of primitive simplicity. Thej satirist in New York when the waltz waa first introduced had as ample a field f orf his observations as now. li some of the: writers of the day compared it to the tarantula, what would they have called lome of the dances of to-day ? " The Widow Flapjack lost her wedding; ring. She was inconsolable for awhile,! and went about wringing her hands and saying : "There, now, I wouldn't hav.' lost that wedding ring for anything.: I'll have to go and get married again,! for I'm bound to have a wedding ring.1 I can't get along without it." Austin Siftings. Dabwin, in his new book, estimates that there are in gardens 53,767 worms to the acre.- This tallies with our count when we were digging in the garden and didn't care a nickel about finding worms ; but when we wanted bait for fishing the garden didn't pan out a doz en worms to tho acre. They, had all emigrated to the garden of some other fellow who never goes a-'fishing. Nor risiown Herald. I . It altered the case : Two physicians met on the street. " Good morning Doc," said one, "what makes you look so pleasant ? " " Oh, I don't know. Do I? Well, I lost a patient last night anl" "Really, that's nothing to look pleasant about. That's unfortunate for your reputation." "Reputation be blowed. Had to call three times a day, and he wasn't worth a cent." " Ah:! That makes a .difference. Have a light." And the two went up the street smoking. j . j A lot of farmers w&o had been listen ing to a railroad land agent's praise of Arkansas valley soil at last asked him sarcastically if there was anything that wouldn't grow there. " Yes," said the agent quickly, " pumpkins won't." " Why not? " " The soil is so rich and the vines grow so fast that they wear out the pumpkins dragging then over the ground." 1 1 Ex-Gov. Washburn, of Maine, affirms that crime is lessening instead of in creasing, and that, though the marvel ous accumulations of wealth will effect many changes in society, yet the masses will constantly rise to higher life. Aris tocracy may grow as a rank weed here and there, but the good wheat the, people will choke it out. J. ill-''-' :i I TERMS S2.M Perlium. 3 A DRUGGISTS A D TEX TURK. Mn Smith stood behind the counter of his drug store and gazed complacent ly at his clerk. It was about 9 o'clock at night, and the little store,; which waa established at Cherry and Roosevelt streets, A. D. 1795, was wrapped in silence. The door opened, and a young man with an ingenuous face came in and smiled, and said : ".Mrs. Kinney wants a topttie of cod-liver oil, an' I'm to take it to once." " Who's Mrs. Kinney, and where's the money ?' asked Mr. Smith, rolling up the bottle. .' " " Why, don't you know Mrs. Kinney? She lives dtfwn on the corner below. Shell pay you to-morrow." remarked the young man. That's all right." " Oh, no, it ain't," said the druggist. ".My clerk will deliver the bottle, and you can show the way." The young man said he was agreeable, and the two set out into the night. ; Sir. Smith stood at ease behind the counter and looked at the eight-day olock. The door" opened, and another young man came in and smiled. Mr, Smith looked at him inquiringly. The young man waltzed around the stove whistling " The Sweet Sixteen." Then he picked up a chair, and, clasping it in his arms as he would his partner, waltzed around the stove again, and then out into the chilly night. ; : " Police 1 " said Mr. Smith, vaulting over the counter.- He chased the young man through the dark and chilly night, and laid hold of the chair. The young man held on, still smiling and waltzing. . At this moment a lithe young man without a smile slid into the store, emp .tied the money-drawer, and slid out again. The smiling young man- sur rendered the ohair to Mr. Smith, who entered the store just as his clerk re turned. Then he found that his money had taken wing, and said to the clerk : " Did you find Mrs. Kinney ?" " There isn't any," was the reply. " Have you got the bottle ?" " Yes. Have you got the chair ?" ! " Yes. Let's shut up for the night 1" New York Sun. THE DIFFERENCE IN HUGQINQ. An Eastern paper, to encourage hug ging in the locality in which it is pub lished, says : " A Wisconsin man, while "hugging his girl of an evening received a telegram stating that he had fallen heir to a fortune.'' The Eastern paper is ; right in its efforts to stimulate a healthy sentiment in favor of hugging, but it does wrong to hold out such in ducements, as it will not be- one time in 10,000 that a manf while hugging a girl, will receive such 'a dispatch. He will oftener receive a dispatch bound ,in leather from the girl's father, which will inform him that he has fallen over a fence, and is heir to a lame back. There should be no money consideration in a case of hugging, and no hope of falling heir to anything. It is fortune enough to a man to have a girl to hug. Hug ging can never become what it should be, our great national recreation and enjoyment, our picnic, as it were, until all thought of outside matters is elim inated from it, and the hugging is sim ply done for instance, because there is a good opportunity, and no one to say nay. The difference in : hugging ! can readily be seen by those who have done a little of it themselves, if they go to a theater and watch the actors and actresses. It is not once in a hundred times that hug ging on the stage is done because both parties like . it, but is always done for money, at so much- a week and ward robe furnished. j The actor comes up to the scratch like a hired man, and 'puts his arm around the actres3 as though he was holding up a tobacco sign, and the act ress smiles a two-f or-a-quarter smile and looks as though she was taking pills We have often seen a couple of lovers in tho audience, who probably know scien tific hugging when they see it, look at thi3 stage hugging and curl up their lips with scorn, and look at each other as much as to say "If it was us on the stage playing that scene, we would just break the audience ail up." Occasion ally a couple of stage lovers do un bend themselves and get in a hug ox two that break a corset string, but in those cases one; or the other blushes and looks around at the wings to see whether the actor's wife or the actress' husband is looking. - i ; There has got to be a certain amount of fellow feeling between the hugger and the huggee or it is a. mere matter of form, and not worth the price of admis sion. Sometimes we think we would like to go on the stage and give some of those actors a few points that would be of great benefit to them in their busi ness, but if we should offer to do so they would probably impute cannister mo tives to us, and hit us with a stuffed club. It is not that we would ca5re for the hugging, but the advancement of art- -Peck's Sunx At a German ball : ! Lieutenant "Did you not tell me that your father has an estate in Silesia ?1i Young lady "Yes ; and two in Pomerania." Lieu- j tave no time." "So I have heard," re tenant "Andean you still doubt my J plied Fogg ; "but we will overlook that, love?" you know," Boston Tramcript, ADTEBTISIXO SATES. One iech, one insertion..... H 80 One inch, each subsequent insertion... 60 Quarterly, Semi-annual - or Yearly con traeta will be made on liberal terms. 0 Obituaries and Tributes of feiceet charged.for at advertising ratet. No communications will be published nn less accompanied by the full name and ads dress of the writer. These are not requested for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. All communications for the oaner. and business letters, should be addressed to THE BANNER . Rutfrerfordton, N. 8 A XrOTEZ STEAMSM1F. In a new steamboat now building upon the Hudson, an attempt is being made to produce a boat that shall be self righting, that shall be, very fast, and I that cannot sink unless entirely torn to pieces. The boat is comparatively small , as it is intended only for an experiment al or model boat. If successful,: it is in tended to build ocean steamships upon the same principle. It appear! that the inventor's aim is to make a self-righting boat by carrying the sides over the deck in the form of a dome. The side frames are made continuous and meet over the center of the hull, or, in othei-words, the frames begin at one side of the keel, rise directly at an angle of about forty five degrees to the water line, and then etirve inward over, the deck and back on the same lines to the keel. A Bection pf the hull taken in the center is thus of a wedge shape, with a sharp edge below and rounded top , above. This wCjja form is preserved through the entire length of the hull. There are no hollow lines in the boat, and the sharp, over hanging bow is intended to part the water near the surface and to form a long, tapering wedge. The widest part of the hull is exactly at the middle, both ends being precisely alike. This is quite dif- f erent from the fiat bottom and straight sides, with ' comparatively bluff, or rounded bows, of the ordinary ocean steamship. The boat is intended to be much deeper aft than forward, and the deck will be much higher aboe water at the bows than at the stern. There will be no houses or raised construc tions of any kind on the deck, except the dome-shaped pilot-house, the ven tilators, and the smoke-stacks. Inhere will be an open railing around the cen ter of the deck, so that it can be used as a promenade in pleasant weather or whenever the seas do not break over the boat. The object Qf this ; unbroken dome-shaped deck is' to enable the boat to throw off all waves that break over the bows of sides in rough weather. It is thought that, instead of shipping tons of water and retaining it on the deck till it can be drained off, the boat will shed or throw off the water from tho long, sharp bows and open deck, and will at once relieve herself of the weight of the water. Waves striking the round ed deck will, have no hold on the boat, and their force will thus be spent harm lessly. The sharp .wedge -shape and rounded top -of the hull, and the fact that even when fully loaded the center of gravity will be below the water-line, makes the model self-righting. Century Maaazine. lOW RAGBAG ENJOYED BIS PRAC TICAL JOKE. After Mr. Ragbag had gone to bed the idea of a very funny joke occurred to him. It seemed so funny that ho went into a paroxysm of laughter and twisted and squirmed so that he pulled the bedclothes all out at the foot and had to get out to tuck them in again, and got awful cold, and made as much noise as to awaken his wife in the next room, and she, on hearing the cause of the commotion, told Ragbag he was a fool, and ' advised him to go to bed. He did so, but lay awake half the night thinking of the joke, and. the next morn ing Ragbag hastily swallowed his break fast and hastened out on the street to ' play his joke. The first man he met was . Gallagher. Now, Gallagher's business . compels Thin to carry about 100 keys, and Ragbag knows this. Gallagher waa just the man Ragbag wanted to see. Rushing tip to Gallagher, - he said : "Ah, Gallagher, have you lost a key ? " "Don't know," replied the victim; "leimeseeit''? Said Ragbag: "First see if you have lost one. " So Gallagher took off his gloves and went to work. He searched pocket after pocket, and examined each and every bunch of keys carefully. It was sharp weather, and his fingers got cold and numb.1 But he kept at it. One hundred keys were a good many to keep track of, and Galla gher had to think of every lock about his establishment, and then look for. that particular key, and it was a tedious job. And it wasn t satisfactory, either, for Gallagher couldn't quite makeup bis mind that one key was not missing. He demanded a sight of the key found. Then Ragbag's self-control gave way. With a howl of laughter, he cried : "Why, I haven't found any, I just asked if you had lost one, as a matter of curiosity." It didn't take three seconds for Gallagher to decide what to do. -The enow for forty feet around was clawed and kicked into a cloud that filled tho air. Folks looked out of the windows and howled to see the fun. And when Ragbag re-enter 3d the house with his clothes torn, ear chewed and eyes blacked, and explained that he had been, playingdiis joke, his wife was more than ever convinced that he was an. old don key, and told him so. Somehow, humor is at times fearfully discouraged in this country. Boston Post. "Won't you play us something, Miss Hammerandbang?"; asked . Fogg. "I should like to ever so much," she said, ft i 4 t