Terms, 82.00 a Year, in Advance. Bellefonte, Pa., January 24, 1890. Ebp1ToR. P. GRAY MEEK, - A — EE am Kisner Re-elected. At the annual meeting of the Demo- cratic State’ Committee in Harrisburg, on Wednesday, Errior P. KIisNERr, Fsq., was re-elected Chairman of the Committee, to- direct the party move- ‘ments during the coming gubernatorial struggle, and BeENsaMiN F. NEap, Esq., was re-elected Secretary. There was no serious ‘opposition to Mr. KisNgr being again at the head of the Commit- tee, or to Mr. NEap's continuing in the clerical duties connected with its work. Having stood the brunt of dis- aster during the last two campaigns, which befell the party through no fault of theirs, they were entitled to a continuance of the party's confidence. Scranton was chosen as the place for ‘holding the next State convention, and ‘the time was left to be determined by ‘the Excutive Committee. ~——————————————— ‘Something for Pennsylvania to Be Proud Of. Who says that Pennsylvania's rep- resentatives in the United States Senate are not statesmen of the first magnitude? The fact that on Tuesday QUAY present- «ed a bill'to give certain arms and accou- trements to the Gettysburg Monument Association, and on the same momen" tous occasion CaMERON offered a bill equalizing the pay of certain officers in the navy, ought to convince the people.of Pennsylvania that they are represented in the higher branch of Congress by intellectual giants who are capable of taking hold of and wrest- ling successfully with state questions of the deepest import. After such efforts, invelving physical and mental exhaus- tion, both of them should take a rest. Caugrox should retire to Lochiel for at least a month and Quay should go fishing in Florida. Egual to the Emergency. Duringthe past year that great corpo- ration, the Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany, had an experience that was very mueh out of the ordinary routine of its operations, it having had the forces of nature to eontend with to a degree far beyond anything thatit had previously been called upon to encounter. The story of the June floods has added a sad page to the annals of public disaster, and no other interest bore the brunt of their fury to a greater extent than did the great railroad that traverses our State with its main line and its numer- ous branches. Miles of its main track were swept away by the resistless waters; embankments were demolished and cuts filled up, and substantial bridges were removed from the abutments upon which they had been placed with so much labor and expens?, and became the prey of the fiood, The sum total of the damage in the Juniata and West Branch Valleys appeared great enough to suspend travel and trafic for months, yet we have seen how speedily the re- cuperative power of the great corporation manifested itself and how soon the pulse of trade beat all along its restored tracks. ‘With the resources of power and appli- ance which the company had at com- mand, the public accommodation was interrupted for a period so brief that un- der the circumstances it was really mar- velous. Yet injuries were done which were of such a character that the work of repairing them has extended up this time, but it is announced that they are approaching completion. ‘We learn from the Johnstown papers that the famous stone bridge at that place, which was so badly damaged by water, fire, and the explosion of dyna- mite, and the reconstruction of which employed the attention of engineers, di- vers and laborers for months, is nearly completed. The reconstructed round ‘house at East Conemaugh is un- .der roof. The work done at bridge No. «6 was of an extraordinary character .owing to the difficulty experienced in .securing foundations. In the excava- tion for the second pier nine steam pumps were kept in constant operation, and the expense of the excavation of this one pier alone amounted to $8000. As an illustration of the quantity and char- acter of the flood-deposit at this point it is stated that at a depth of twelve feet ‘below the surface and within eighteen inches of the solid rock such incongruous articles us railroadspikes, hoopskirts and preserving jars were found. It willtake all winter to complete this bridge. The stone-work of the viaduct has been com- pleted, consisting of two eighty-foot spans ningty feet above the water, and containing fifteen thousand yards of stone, When this great structure is finished it will have cost about $180,000. In adition to this the new stone bridge at South Fork, consisting of four sixty foot spans, is about completed. From these details the public can form an idea of the emergent difficulties with which the devastation of nature challenged the resources and power of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and taxed the capacity of the able men who manage its operations. That they have brilliantly met the emergency and mastered it is the verdict of the world. — A tin-plate having been successful- ly made at Pittsburg, it was sent to the congressional committee that pretends to be revising the tariff, to serve as an argument in favor of supplying another infant industry with tariff nourishment, and itis to be expected that all the house-keepers and fruit canners of the country will be compelled to contribute to the sucking=-bottle of this hungry and howling brat. — The Bank of England is going to relieve a stringency in the money circulation by issuing silver bills simi- lar to those used as a circulating me- dium in the United States. The Eng lish are beginning to see the advantage |- of utilizing silver as money to a larger extent than they heretofore have done, and in this they are adopting a cou- venient Yankee notion. a —_.—— e—— The Pennsylvania Republican Represencatives in Congress, with two or three exceptions, did a discreditable thing in voting against New York in the test question that came up before the House tne other day concerning the location of the World's Fair. They had a right to prefer Chicago if their preference sprung from an honest sentiment, but when they displayed their opposition to New York simply from a partisan motive their action was indeed contemptible. A Much Needed Monument. It must have been something like a slap in the face to the majority in the lower house of Congress when Repre- sentative Amos J. Cummings, of New York, the other day, introduced a bill for the erection of a monument to the late SayveL J. TILDEN, in the rotunda of the capitol, with the following in- scription upon it: “Nineteenth Presi- dent of the United States—Elected but not Seated.” Of course the body to which this bill was offered and which belongs to the party incriminated in the great po- litical erime of 1876, will take no ac- tion upon Mr. CuMMINGS proposition, but the time may come when some memorial of this kind will be set up to stand forever as a reminder to the America people of the necessity of guarding against theft of the Presidency it they value their free institutions and would preserve them from the injury that is sure to come when fraud and corruption gain control of the govern- ment, as was conspicuously the case in the elections of 1876 and 1888. ——— Tariff Education Progressing. What is reported as the largest meet- ing ever held in Northern Indiana, in a period of political rest—that is with no active canvass pending—was that of the tariff reformers at Wabash recently, at which some 200 farmers who voted for Harrison and “protection” enrolled themselves as new members of the Tariff Reform association of the Elev- enth Indiana district. There were other exceedingly interesting features of this meeting, such ae a character- istic and pointed tariff reform letter from GrRovER CLEVELAND and one from Governor CampBELL of Ohio, the letter saying : The tariff will be an issue in every election until one of the two parties keeps its pledges of reducing tariff taxes. The late election in Ohio was carried on the issue of tariff reform. We propose to make the congressional fight on the same issue next fall. In 1891, just a year prior to the presidential election, there is another gubernatorial election. That will be fought on the issue of tariff reform. We should commence an educational campaign on this question right off, and keep it up. Republican organs, we believe, in- sist that the tariff was not an issue in the Ohio election, and that Governor CAMPBELL is a “protection Democrat 1” Suffering in the West. Many Thousand on the Verge of Star- vation. . CuicAGo, Jan. 22.—An Associated Press reporter, just from the North- west, brings with him a tale of horri- ble suffering and desolation in South Dakota. The stricken area includes the following counties: McPherson, Campbell, Wallworth, Edmunds, Pot- ter, a part of the Brown, Spink, Hyde, Hand, Beadle, Clark, Kingsbury, Min- er, Davidson, Gerald. The successive failure of four years’ crops has reduced those formerly well to do to a condi- tion of direct distress. Many thousands of families are entirely without the means of any kind and women and children are unprovided with clothing with which to withstand the rigors ot winter. Flour especially is needed in Kingsbury and Miner counties, and clothing for women and children. Pro- visions of any kind, just now, would be a godsend to thousands who are in a semi-starving condition. ——J. H. Rishel, of near Axe Mann, will sell valuable farm stock and imple- | ments on Thursday, March 13th. See advertisement. {is to be always prepare d fer it. Women Want Local Option. That Is Part of the Platform Adop ‘ed by the W. C. T. Alliance. PITTSBURG, Pa., Jan. 19.—Mrs. H. €. Campbell, Mrs. Ellen M. Watson, Mrs. Joseph D. Weeks, Mrs. R. D. Bowman, and Mrs. B. C. Christy, who attended the Philadelphia Con- terence of non-partisan temperance women, returned home on Saturday much encouraged at the result of their meeting. They brought with them the constitution and by-laws of the new State organization and the resolutions adopted by the conference, none of which were given out for publication in Philadelphia. The organiza‘ion is to be called “The Women’s Temperance Alliance,” and the most startling feature of the platform prepared is that the Alliance resolves that earnest and in- tellingent effort shall be made to se- cure the adoption by the next Legisla- ture of a Local Option law, so that the twenty-nine counties which gave a majority for the Prohibitory amendment, and ali the other counties of the State, may, by popular vote, have an op- portunity to prohibit the granting of licenses to sell liquor. A Bloody Fight at a Grave. Wilkesbarre Stirred Up Again by a Po- lish Church War—A Bloody Riot. WILKESBARRE, PA., Jan. 20.—A bloody riot took place between the two warring factions of the Polish church at Plymouth this evening. The Lituanians’ faction endeavored to bury one of their number ir the Polish cemetery. The Poles resisted and a fierce battle took place, 30 men being] wounded. The ground surrcunding the grave was covered with blood. In the melee the coffin was upset and the corps rolled out on the ground. It was jammed into the grave, where it is now being guarded by officers of the law. The Poles are very indignant and threaten to dig up the body and throw it out of the cemetery. The sheriff has issued a proclamation calling on the good citizens to help main- tain the peace. Several of the riotous Polanders were arrested and locked up. The police had to use violence. It is feared the Poles will overpower the guards. Many of the persons shot dur- ing the riot are seriously injured. The officers will remnin on duty all night. A Bad Boy and a Foolish Grandfather. From the New York Herald. Baby McKee is daily proving him- self the infant terrible of the Executive Mansion. A distinguished New Yorker who dined en familie at the White House a few days ago relates an in- cident which proves the correctness of this declaration. The young man during the interval which followed the serving of the soup leaned forward in his high chair and amused himself by pounding the table so savagely with both fists that the wineglasses in his immediate vicinity danced a merry refrain. The noise was so deafening the New Yorker ‘said, that ou could scarcely hear yourself talk. The President who sat beside Bennie, laid his hand on the youngsfer’s arm and mildly requested a cessation of the noise. The young man gave the Chief Magistrate a defiant look and proceeded forthwith to outdo his previous per- formance by straightening up in his chair and laying both heels on the festive board. Calmly and deliberately the terror of the White House lifted first one foot and then the other, bringing them down alternately with the inevitable dull thud on the Presi- dential mahogany. Meanwhile the family sat watching the operation with undisguised admiration. Finally the President broke the silence by turning in the direction of his guest and ejaculating. ‘Isn’t he cunning? See how he minds me!” A EAR A Daring Robbery. Big Haul Made from a Montreal Dia- . mond Store. MONTREAL, January 21.—Last even- ing, while the streets in the :neighbor- hood were crowded, two men walked up to Walter’s diamond store, in Notre Dame street, and tied the doors with a rope. Then they rushed to the plate glass show window and smashed it with a heavy hammer. One snatched a tray of diamond ings and the other swept every piece of diamond jewelry in the window into a bag. The only occupant of the store was ‘Walker himself. He attempted to open the door. Finding it was fastened he rushed behind the counter and began shooting through the window, but the thieves had made off. The crowd stared in astonishment while the men were grabbing the jewelry, but as soon as they began to run several people started after them. The man with the tray was chused half a mile, being collared on a wharf by a messenger boy. The thief produc- ed arevolver, but it was knocked from his hand. He had the tray of diamonds under his coat. At the police station he refused to give any name. The dia- monds in the bag are said to be valued at between $15,000 and $20,000. The tray contained only cheap rings. Will We Have Cholera Too ? Some ofthe able medical authorities say that the cholera, now prevalent in South Western AsiaandSouthern Russia, is following in the wake of la grippe, and that the world should be prepared to fight a cholera epidemic next year. In view of this fact it is said that the city of Paris has already begun to clean up. Other medical authorities assert, how- ever, that the cholera wtich follow- ed la grippe in 1837 was merely a coin- cidence and that that was theonly time it was ever known to follow it, although grippe bas been a frequent visitor. So there is no special cause for glarm, but the best way to prevent the ¢oming of the cholera or any other disexe, in Beh et everybody at all times keep their prem- ises clean and healthful. — Dignity is a good thing; but if you're in the rear of a big erowd and wish to see the procession, don’t stand on it. Geton a barrel.-—Pudk. A Transparent Sham. mp — Pittsburg Post. To see Republican papers of this State that have swallowed with a relish or under compulsion the Camerons and Quay as senators, growing virtuously indignant over the election of Brice in Ohio, is a glorious illustration of ignoring one's own sins to mourn the lapses of others. It is about as touching as a Wanamaker sermon on money in politics, or a discourse from Dudley on the bribery of voters. it is our own judgment the Democrats could have done much better in Ohio than they did ; there were older and better soldiers to honor with the senatorship. But Re- publican indignation at his election be- { cause he is a very rich man is simply a bit of transparent sham. We failed to notice any indignation on the part of these papers when Leland Stanford was elected a senator from California, al- though he is reputed to be worth any- where from $50,000,000 to $100,000,000. Nor when millionaire Farwell was elec- ted from Illinois. Nor when millionaire McMillan captured the prize in Mich- igan. Nor when Silver Kings Jones and Stewart were sent from Nevada. Nor when any others of the long list of millionaire senators, especially from the new States, were elected. Why? Be- cause these gentlemen are all Republi- 'cans. But a Democratic millionairesen- ator is something that shocks the ex- quisite sensibilities of the newspapers that fetch and carry for the Republican besses. If the millionaires were eliminat- ed from the senate there would be a lot of vacant seats on the Republican side of the chamber. Counting corporation attorneys, the Republican force would be cut dow n one-half. Beet Root Sugar in Pennsylvania. Berks County Farmers Still Hope for a New Industry. In view of the small profit there is to Pennsylvania farmers in raising wheat and other cereals, the raising of beets for the making of sugar, as proposed by Claus Spreckels, has excited considerable interest among them. Secretary Fox, of the Berks County Agricultural Society, in an interview recently said that the society was induced to interest the farmers in the project of raising sugar beets through a letter which had been received some months ago by Albert Thalheimer from Claus Spreckels, in which he agreed to erect a sugar re- finery in the vicinity ‘of Reading pro- vided a guarantee was given that 5000 acres of beets would be cultivated an- nually for a term of years. ‘While it was not deemed possible to secure such an acreage the first year it was believed that the farmers would make a beginning, and having found the soil ad climate favorable would be willing to enter into contracts to grow large quantities by an other year. Mr. Fox does not believe that the enterprise will be abandoned, but 1s of the opinion that farmers of other counties hearing of what was being done in Berks had written to Mr. Speckels for information, and that to end the correspondence the circular had been issued announcing that no beet- sugar factory would be built in the East at present. : Funeral of Walker Blaine. Haus Loss Is the Greatest Trial of the Secretary's Life. ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—All Wash- ington attended the funeral of Walker Blaine Saturday. The services were most impressive, and the cortege which followed the remains to their last resting place was the most imposing seen at the national capital for many years. The secretary of state, with the members of his family, the president and Mrs. Harrison and members of the cabinet and diplomatic corps, were resent at the private ceremonies at the laine mansion, on Lafayette square. Shortly after 11 o'clock a. m., the pro- cession reached the Church of the Covenant. The remains, incased in a rich casket of black, were borne to the church by Assistant Secretary of State William T. ‘Wharton, Judge John Davis, Sevellon A. Brown, Marcellus Bailey, M. L. Ruth, Corporation Counsel Almet, F. Jenks, of Brooklyn ; F. B. Loring and William Haywood. Following them were the secretary of state with Mrs. Blaine, James G. Blane, Jr., the Misses Margaret and Harriet Blaine, Mr. and Mrs. Emmons Blaine, and other re- latives of the family ; the president and Mrs. Harrison, the vice president and Mrs. Morton, Secretary and Mrs. ‘Windom, Secretary and Mrs. Proctor, Secretary and Mrs. Tracy, Attorney General and Mrs. Miller, and Secretary and Mrs. Rusk. The diplomatic corps, senators and members of the house of representives came aflerward. Walter Damrosch presided at the or- gan. The floral decorations were superb. The organ was nearly con- cealed by tall palms. Wreaths and bunches of white flowers were entwined among the branches. President and Mrs. Harrison contributed a wreath of pure white roses, the vice president and Mrs. Morton a Greek cross of the same flowers, while the various foreign legations and many senators and con- gressmen testified their love and es- teem for the dead by placing floral tributes upon the bier. James G. Blaine, Jr. told a corres- pondent that his father was undergoing the severest trial of his lite. He was bearing up splendidly, however. Secretary Blaine was very much affected by the brief but sad ceremony. Almost throughout the entire service his silver crownad head was bowed. Now and then he lcoked up at Rev. Dr. Hamlin, who, from behind a screen of palms and tropical flowers, read scrip- tural coLsolation. As his eyes sought the black casket beneath the festooned roses and heaped up lilies and violets, the great man sobbed as though his | heart. would break. Many wept with sympathy for the statesman in his grief. The church services ended, a | procession over a mile in length follow- | ed the body of the secretary’s favorite ! son to Oak Hill cemetery. As the cof- fin was lowered into the grave the secretary and Mrs. Blaine were so over- come by emotion that both turned away, as if they could not bear the sight. Starting the Oxen. An Elder Who Did Not Reject Aid When it Was Providentially Sent. Elder John Stephens held a pastorate in the Free Baptist church at Gardiner 40 odd years ago, says the Lewiston (Me.) Journal. Nature had dealt gen- erously with Elder John. His big heart was incased in an iron frame of mammoth proportions. Remarkable alike for sincere piety and genuine humor, the good man so tempered his teachings as to make them acceptable to ssint or sinner. Riding one day along the road to West Gardiner he overtook an ox team that was stuck in the mud. The discouraged oxen re- i fused to pull, and the driver, who had sworn till the air was blue, was prepar- ing to reel off another string of oaths, when the parson stopped his horse and said: “Try prayer, my friend. Try prayer.” “Try it yourself,’’ retorted the vexed teamster. “I'll do it,” said Elder John, and drop- ped on his knees in the wagon. For a while he prayed around his subject as if afraid to touch it. Gradually, however, his faith strengthened, and in a voice which bade fair to arouse the neighbor- hood he besought the owner of the cat- tle on a thousand hiils to move the hearts and legs of these stubborn oxen. The prayer was unconsciously long, and no sooner had it ended than the impatient driver prepared to start his team. “Stop,” said Elder John, descending from his wagon, “as I have done the praying I feel that I ought to do the driving. You hold my horse and give me the goad stick.” The man consented to the arrange- ment, and with a grin waited to see the parson worsted. At that moment an- other ox team was seen approaching from another direction. “Hullow, neighbor!” the practical parson shouted to the newcomer, “Lend me your cattle for a moment.” “Hold on !” cried the owner of the mired cart. “That’s not fair. If you can handle this team better by praying than I can by swearing, I want to see you doit; but no doubling up, mind you, no doubling up.” Elder John’s robust figure was drawn to its fullest height, and his voice was like the roar of the ocean as he answer- ed: ‘My friend, the Masier I serve is abundantly able to move this load with a single yoke of oxen—or without any oxen at all; but when in direct an- swer to prayer He sent me an extra pair of cattle, I'm going to hook’ em on.” No further objection was raised, and with the aid of reinforcements the load- ed cart was easily drawn out of the mud. Work of the Flood Relief Committee. At the meeting of the Flood Relief Committee held in Philadelphia on Thursday afternoon the following inter- esting facts were made public: The total cash received by the com- mission was $2,982,072.68, of which amount $1,225,872.83 came from every section of the country and the world ; $600,000 from Philadelphia; $560,000 from Pittsburg and $516,199,85 from New York. Johnstown and vicinity re- ceived $2,280,393,69 of this amount, | The other expenditures were as follows : Relief for other localities $232,274.45 ; distributed as expressly directed by don- ors, $2,271.85; office expenses at Harris- burg, $1,398.42; general expenses, $1,- 818.70; first payment on annuities to orphans, $16,100; making a total of cash expended of $2,683,747.11, leaving a balance on deposit at Harrisburg of $219,385.57. In addition to this bal- ance at Harrisburg there is an undistri- buted fund in Johnstown at present of $36,584.03 and there has been appropria- ted to other parts of the State $17,735,- 55. After this is taken out there re- mained at the time of the meeting an available balance of $236, 974.05. This was reduced at ‘the meeting to $70,681,40, by the payment of claims amounting to $22,442.65 and other appropriations. THE ACTUAL LOSS OF LIFE. The commission has made a most careful investigation to ascertain the ac- tual number of lives lost in the disaster, and now at this late day they are of the opinion that 2,500 is the highest figure at which it can be placed. Te has been definitely ascertained that 2,280 persons disappeared from the valley of Con- emaugh. The bodies of 1,675 of this number have been recovered and identi- fied, 644 bodies have been recoverd and are unknown,and the remainder,605, are missing. The commission has gathered the bodies of all the unclaimed dead that were buried hastily at the time of the flood and reinterred them in the Grand View Cemetery at Johnstown. For this purpose a plot of ground con- sisting of 22,000 square feet has been purchased. In this plot there are now buried 741 bodies, of which the names of only 87 are known. During this work of reinterment especial efforts were made to identify the bodies and for this purpose special trains were run for miles around to Johnstown by the railroads and fifty-two additional bodies were recognized. The bodies that were recovered were picked up all the way from the Conemaugh to Westmoreland county and one was found down the Mississippi river at Cairo. Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. MIFFLINTOWN, Pa., Jan. 15.—The | report of the General Fruit Committee of the State Horticultural Association, now in session here, states that owing to the late frosts in the spring and the ex- ceedingly wet summer and fall, most fruits were a failure. There were some favored localities, however, where very good crops were realized. The apple crop was poor in the greater portion of the State. There was a moderate crop of pears of inferior quality. The peach crop .was a failure save in Franklin county and portions of the Juniata valley. There were no plums and very few quinces. The cherry crop was poor. Small fruits would have been a good crop, but too much wet weather caused much loss. was fairly favorable for vegetables, al- though too wet for some things. ~ Re- ports from all over the State show that the mild weather has advanced the fruit buds, and there is danger of the crops this year being ruined should there be a decided fall in temperature. The season ! ' and the capital invested is from $60,000- Few Fools in Flerida. 4 Dasgusted Northerner's Surly Re- Jfusals to See the Good Points of the Peninsula. “I took a trip to Florida for my health during my Christmas holiday,’ said a lawyer in an up-town cafe the other night as he sat sipping black cof- fee with a friend, “and just got back in time to catch the influenza. TI wish T could go down again until the epidemic is over, but T can’t spare the time now. 1 enjoyed the trip immensely. A queer country that—where their principal stock in trade is climate and the princi- pal industry keeping hotel. I did a little exploring of my own, outside the regular beaten paths of the ordinary tourist, and I found the native ‘cracker’ every bit as peculiar as the State he lives in. At one of the hotels one day I met a disgusted Norherner, who had invested in some town Jots through a glib agent and had come down to find them. «What have you got that’s fit to eat?” he said to the negro waiter. “Bacon, sah,” said the waiter, ‘an’ hominy, an’ sweet potatoes, an’ coot ie.’ P “Coot pie, what's that?” said the stranger. “Coot pie, sah, don’t know what coot pie is, sah? Why it’s pie made o’ coots.”’ “Of course I know that, you dolt,” said the Northerner, ‘but what are coots 7’ “Coots, sah, very fine game, sah, sumpen like a duck.” “Had it wings?” “Yes, sah.” “Then don’t give me any coot in mine. Anything that had wings and could fly and didn’t get out of this blasted country I despise too much even to eat.” “This gentlemen, you will easily per- ceive,” continued the lawyer, ‘‘had be- come rather soured, the natural result of investing money in the sand lots of a paper town. The State really has natural advantages, which are being developed slowly perhaps, but surely. This man, however, having been de- ceived could see nothing good inthecoun- try orits people. Icameup to Jackson vill on the train with him from the southern part of the State, where we met, and derived not a little fun from his sardonic humor. So did the others on the car. “At one little station in the woods the train stopped a long time, and we began to look around for diversion. Close by the side of the track, opposite the station house, was a patch af corn —two or three acres—an exceedingly thin and sickly crop, the soil being little better than sand. A tall, gaunt boy of about sixteen years, dressecd- from head to foot in red jeans, was lazily hoeing and weeding between the rows. “Look at that wretched crop,” said the Northerner. “Dirty seed, no man- ure, poor soil, baking sun, hoe-culture; not even a plow to stir the land deeply, let alcne a ‘cultivator’ to weed it quickly and often. The weeds will have choked the south half of the crop before that lazy fellow gets the north end clear of them.” “Boy,” he called, ‘young fellow! It seems to me your corn is rather small, isn’t it?” “The boy looked at him for a moment, spat reflectively, and replied: ‘Yes, mister, pop planted the small kind.” “Oh, is that so ?’ said the questioner, ‘but it’s rather yellow, isn’t it?’ “It 1s, mister,” replied the boy. planted the yeller kind.’ “Well, I'll bet you ten to one,’ said the Northerner rather testily, as some tittered at the boy’s answers, ‘that you won’t get more than half a crop.’ “You, er richt, mister,” drawled the boy, “just half a crop. Pop planted it on shares.” “The train pulled out just then and the car rocked with our laughter for a mile or more.” ‘Pop Habits of Ostriches. A Pugnacious Bird, Ever Ready for a Fight. There are certain old traditions about the ostrich which, I have been told by the owner of the California ranch, are fallacious. He say that the ostrich does not bury hishead in the sand and imagine he is unobserved by his enemies. On the contrary, he is a very pugnacious bird and always ready for a fight. Nor does the female ostrich lays her eggs in the sand for the sun to hatch them. To do them justice, they are quite domestic and deserve a better reputation. Nor is the ostrich ever used for riding, as he has an exceptionally weak back; any per- son might break it with a blow from an ordinary cane. His strength lies in his great breast and his feet. He has one great claw and a very small cne, and with a terri- ble precision he can bring down the large claw with a cruel force that will tear open anything not mude of sheet- iron. Savage birds at best, they are danger- ously so during breeding time. The 22 | birds brought to our California rach | trusted to their instict and lsid their eggs | during the California winter, which cor- { responded to their summer south of the j equator. It being the rainy season, | their nests were filled with water and | the eggs were chilled ; so the first season of their American sojourn was a failure. { The ostrich makes its nest by rolling , in the sand and scoOpingout a hole some | six feet in diameter, and, excepting an | incubator house, the California ranch | requires no buildings for the use of the | birds, though the land is divided off into | pens, fenced in each about an acre in ex- | tent, for the use of the breeding birds, | every pair occupying one such inclosure. . The ostriches "live upon alfalfa and (corn. Alfalfa is a gras cultivated all | over the ranch. It resembles our clover "and grows to a crop some six times a | year.—St. Nicholas. — There are in Florida about 10,000 orange growers. The acreage is 100,000, 000 to $75,000.000. Three seasons ago there were produced 1,250,000 boxes; two seasons ago, 2,100,000, and last season about 2,500,000 boxes. TItis es- timated that the crop of 1890 will be over 4,000,000 boxes.