-A-civtii't iiii jT lateH. The lar and rel'aole cirrnlatloa ! tb t"4 bkia t miiii commends It to t hm faTnraMa conslderaiit-n of trlttniwri w bo favors "111 t inserted at tba following low rates: 1 Inch. S time .. I I SO 1 Inch, & months..... ....... ...... ...... 5LS) 1 i neb. t anontne...... .................... . 10 1 lnf-n Ijear... w 3 Inches, month...... ...... .oo nineties,! year ... ln.C S Inches. ( month I .......... ........... 8. S Inches. I year ......... T OO eulnmn, 6 mootht.... .......... la.co "s"j column. 6 months...... ao.ua colatQB. 1 year....... .................. 3VM I column, i months.. ...... ...... ...... 40.00 1 column, I year............................ 7a.M Business Item. Btst insertion, l(le. per line nhstqaeot Insertions, be. tier line Administrator's and tieculor Notices, tt Ml Aodltor's Notices 2. SO Stray and similar Notices ..... s -tesolut ions or proceed lnsrs ol any corj-c ra tten or society and cvmaiu nidations desirnid to call attention to any matter ot limited or indl vulval interest mnt le paid lor as adTrtismems. ftot'k and Job mutiny of all kinds Deatly and tiMiuari; execated at the lovest prtcea. And don'tjoa loncct tt. Or -u'.ition. lit""1 tmiiscriptlon Kate. i. :n :i'lv:itn e $1.5 ; tm t wiilnn :! months. I T , , i.-t i til within B month. V in. ii i, '. I'iiid within Hie ear.. a si r- resilm outside of the count; , .;:i'..r.ji 1 er year "ill t-e charged 6 . eer.: will the atove terms he de i. a'. : !:!' nn lon i eonenli. ineli Jas. C. HASSON. Editor and Proprietor. ;'.t-" .,:r. iu ;i.i.iuL-e uuei mil ei r, l4ie -;tuie (iH.tir.it as tbose h ! e lt.-tmi-Uy understood trou "HE 13 A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE ASD All ABE ELATES BE81DK." 81. SO and postage per year In advance. -v ;- i: er lfere you uov It. If to ,f TTr p V V T "- I ( H.UMJb XXIX. EBENSHURG, PA., FRIDAY. .MARCH 2D, IS95. NUMBER 13. polllirl "rYeeliljr l gffM AMHKIA , HEX A., 01 p $l&.&k ! Ay A, Q A, WVW-V1 We arc v Vv (OST. The reason for this Startling Reduction is that ve must have room. Spring' will soon he here and rattier than carry anything oyer we will sell at a sacri lice. A Genuine Bargain for everybody. - 1 !.. lit-. - ! . 'i'.:-. - -1 :' lit-. i ! Ml' till- l't, . - I ' w n'.i:i'-. - 1 ,i....- I-. - ! i 'v in- . - I ' . i i . .1 ;it-. X.- We Will Now Offer -- -ll'M--. - Ml. . I -h,..--. IT, l,i: Ii A FEW LADIES' COATS TO CLOSE OUT AT $3.0, $4.00, $5.00, $6.00 AND $7.00 ; FORMER PRICES, $5.00, $6 CO. $7.00, $8.00 AND $12.00. CilOrVTSi' 1- I ' J i IN I S 1 1 1 IN ( ;ooij4, i 1 v . i t'lt iii : "f. i'( to sl't o f, r tl , 1 , -t. 1 'i't I t-i l.ii -. .Ii im y or Clt tli. fn In -J(f . op to 1 .IT,, tin- I t st. l ir lla! f m "Of. tol.fO tir tl - ' " 1 1 : t i- :- -i m'i a- any ot ln-r 1 !at in I lit- n lint I lor J.."li. V. :il-o h:i t- a lint- lint- t if 'J i link: 1 1 it-( lit a , -i a In I It M iii mw. Ct nit- t.nt- . r. lt:nl t I : i w t ur Li 't !.-. Economy Clothing and Dry Goods House, Next Door to Bank, CARROLLTOWN, PA. THE ft? a1 HAY- FEVER AND .D-HEAI i.- t a - ', snvlT &r c .' .. .,. rf. Jr. rh.in the hf.iil. aWty tujtamru'ittfln. nemt j-. - . -v ,S'.,,; . ,; ;r.i ,,r sfnl f't vi-til on rf'tt i f ;!''. kiln ELY ERQTHERS. 5S Warren Street NEW YORK. JULi 1 1 i i i (l1 1 f U i ZZ i J'Mtifit. learn, but the i ""?' If el frtt' TflRirrn .1 fcta made, and rti'ln eer before. '3lfJ- If your If" lJEPil.fonJetni. Fti ''AI,ihihK - 1 n t nMati 1 FORART,ST'c 4 Vv JOBF ran rl il . ! ,cau max ! it O i ..... off vill mil Wiii.pp ii.i L nt a NOTICE ,1 FEU :'."'; fiiiincr ricc. s i . .in, ioi in. r in.m ! S.ini; I. .in icr .ri i. I "J.I m l f '.i.iki-. i'.iriin r .i i.r. 14.dii; ,., ,- ,, JO.IH1 tn I1HT 1.1 l.i. Hi 1 ' , -'.-Jf,. :?..".(. :..IH1 ami ::"'. r.(H; t'i ii incr jirict', li.(K): fiii nii r n ii-i-, 7. 1 i ii n-r jiriri', '.i.tui: fniiiiiT .iii-f. S.imi' it mi ' 11'. (H ; 1" (Kl Yea Great Bargains in aces. S 1 'r l S'! (H) S t j -j t''. ': .-' tt - 7.) : .'JO to l..r0 , r7 l-r- r-iOW 3 prdr. AppUfd into the nrtrius it 13 HALLS M ft EENEWER.' Th! trroat pojiularity of this preparation, after its tstof many years, should be an B-isnranr-p, oven to th m-t keptii-al. that It Is reallv Tueripiritms. Tht- who have u-ietl Hai.Cs Hair Kknewkk know that it tliM-s all that is claimed. Jt causes n-w prowth of nair on baltl hoatls provitlt-d the hair follit-les are not d.-atl, whii li is seldom the case: restore, natural color to jrav or fadt-d hair; pre-aervt-s the scalp healthful and clear of dandruff; prevent thq. hair falling off or chanin color; keeps it soft, pliant, lus trous and causes it to grow long and thick. Hall's flAiR Henkwkr produces ita effectii by the healthful influence of Its vegetable Inirredients, which invigorate ami rejuvenate. It is not a dye, and U a delightful article for toilet use. Con taining no alcohol, it does not evap orate fjuicklv anil drv up the natural oil. leaving the "hair harsh and brittle, as do Other preparations. Buckingham Dvo TOR THB WHISKERS " Colors them brown or black, as desirrd, . 1 l . .1 -. k.iatiDa il la ll U T" TT1 1 . Q K " ma h toe iw uj t - produces a permanent natural color; antl, beinx a sinR'.e preparation, is more con venient 01 application uiu auj vuiu. ! rKiriun bt B. F. HALL & CO, Naahna, IT. H. Bold by all Dealers In Uedicisaa,; mmm TRY THE FREEMAN. fsveat". nnd Trtle-M arks obtsinctt. and all TV eel f'iiini-'- tonfm-tfl for Moderate Fr. Our Office is OoposiH U. S. Patent Office, and we rm ---.re !i;'ent in less time than tnor rt-ntnte frum W'arhinLttin. ... . . nl m.Hi. l. drawing or photo., with dccrlp Mon Wt- advi.-. if palmtahle or imL free r chr-e oir f.-f not tin till p.Ht nt is st,-r-jred. h Pamoilet. "How to OMain I'atents." with nam. s if nctiial cii-nt.i in your State, couuty.o towo, sent free. Atltires, C.A.SNOW&CO OoabU Patent OSce. Waabinataa. D- C- OF OUR I II ICES. IVtif Ourl'rict?s on All-W.H.l I l.-mi.-tta, i'mi-M, I jiiiciislt r i innliiiMis. liiic (.':i.-liiii n-s. in all i-ol. l'iui' (. a.-liiiififs. in all I'ulors, ,.. .. ... . ,. , .. I-m Ail - imiI (. liitii, iii till en Kin.- ;in-liain. Il HM, lint- I Mi 'at I in! .Mulin. l int' riil'lfat'lifil Mii-lin, ' 1-iiif 1 '.It 'ai l it'll ainl rnlilfat'litil Colttm rianiu Fini' I '.hit' ('alit ii, .... A full lint' if I'.lankt'ts, -A full lint- if I Ii us' J'.lankt'ts. TTmxr Tin Vnn T.ib-P Thpcp Pripoc WWW J Jl U U U il W AAAWWW A 1 AUU U VIA A Wfc.WAk9 Uil WiU Hi I I' in- rim ir il ("loth. 1 yanl w iilt-, ... - ""n-. ,,-r yaiil. l int- F'lhir i Ml C'loth. X varils will,-, ... ;;;. j. r varil. . in,- KliH.r Oil Cloih. Vanls wi.le, - . . ;-, ,.r Var.L l-'iiif Talilt-Oil Cloth, :L-s.iitt-il, ... "Of. jifr "var.l. THE MARKETS. PiTTSRi-na. Starch 2. WHEAT Nc 1 re-1. Gomlle; No. 2 rt-1. &!'-. 't )RN No. 2 yt '.L.w ear. 49 '.V-; m-.xcj -:r. IV'ilT: Nn. 2 yellow j-h.-lU-.i. i'J 't.'ii.i oats N'.i. i win.-, af.-4-..iT.-; No. 2ii i., :; rii iJ''1 .-; extra N. i white, J6a.jj;2c; mixi.-d. ii 'tt bl.r. H AY v .toiw tirn-.thr. ?12 rm-tl ? 5). N i t tiiii'ithv. ill iVall "Ai: No. 2 tmi i'hv. li ii o 11 ii: mixi' l cl iver aii'l ti:iinhy. ill i" 11 i".; pa-kins'. T.25iT..to: N . 1 fit-tlini; i rairie. Js jJ (a;no; wtiir-iii hav, iI4.uo i l'i.ij. HL'TTKU Elu'in cr.aniHry. 21 1 2.!?; h- fan-y rrcamiry, Jua.'i- fai.-y cm:itry ruli. 17"!!-: low t:r:t'les an.l nmk n. i.lo-. . HKEE t )hi- inii l, lu tlo ."!: N(.- .v York fa;i makf, ll:3't-12c; hrnbt-rt-r. f.ill in ik;. l-o li'i-r; W-.-ciju-mU awiss, li'iiJ Oino wis. Jo 1 1 ; au. tiitiS Stri-tly fre-th Pen.-i'-y lvarua an 1 Olii-i ran', 111. ! J-Je. I't L"IfitY Lar.-e live chirk-n. Bo a "c rer pair; live cli;i'k-in. rnaU. t'Ci'iTi).'; fl-. ks. 7ii-6 toe per pair, at to s:7.-; dri'--fl hi-k-n-t. 14 10c pt-r in;v.n I ; turk-ys. l.ValTir pt-r M-nnii; Lucks, 10 a Ilk: : l:ve lurkeys, liHe per pouiri: l.ve ij'crjc, 'JUc(t$l IW p, r pair. F.At I.IUFHTV. r,i.Mir'-h 2i CATTLE Kt-ctvpts lutht thi- w.ek. an I with a iji.iwl il.-tnaiul the n.arket i ai t'.ve .tiul pri-es a full minrter liiher than la-t t-k Prime. ." ."At 'in 7-i . Koo 1. 5t hi -t 3. 15. s-' w 1 hutihers. ii 2'nil 75: roui;h lat. )3iit2. fair li-ht stei r-. 5r4.:. bulls. sta- an.l cow, t.-mraJio; tresh cows and sprinirers. ilj y."4 35 Oi lit Xi Receipt only fa'.r, very few pr:::: h-r's on the market . deiiiaii'l is lair, and the market a iitt!- -iew at u.-u haiiu'eil prices: l-hilade.phias. $.!.' 5 uo. bet n;ixed. 54H5't4.;M; oe-t Vutk ers. ?4 -i " 4.N ; c.iinnion lo fair Vurker- Ar:d piirs. 'i0 'i 4 70 ; roiiirlis. 1 l i 4 Vi TrllKKl heeeijit fair toil. iy, ami the il-nnn l Is only fair on -Sleep, while lainli- are -t. .n'.y at uni'lianed pri t. Exoort wi-:h.-r-. "i 15 ii a extra, S I '.ki 't.i.U'i : ir " 1. ?4 .-.V'H ii5: tur 5i.t':5 'J; c-ui:iiii-n. $:.." i.lW; bet l.u:i!;-i. 5 " s -Mi.'X) : iroml la:tlbs. 5 oiJ -: 5.5l; eomiu .a tu ta.r lambs. Si 5o-t4 5y; veal cuvi-s, i4 ljJ..ju, heavy au J thin calves. Si .' 2 3X Cincinnati, March '.'fl. H(M;S Market active and higher at 14 40"S 5 jo: receipts. 1.4 : lit ad : shipments. I.'ijyh-ad. t:ATTI.E Market active and higher at S i 10 li'a'l): receipts, head : shipments. Si h.-ad. SHEEP AND LAMBS Sheep. niark--t firm at J.i.il..VJ; receijits. liW head: shipments, none. Lambs, murket firm at $ J.io iJ.O-J. New Yohk. March 21. WHEAT Spot market weaker. No. 2 red, tore and elevator, .V-K-.c; f. o. h.,Ci'-f aS iat; No. 1. northern. t'J)c delivered: No. 1 hard, 7yt- delivered. C:i)KN Spot market easy. No. 2. 50c and nominal, elevator: steamer yellow, occ: steamer mixed, a-'i-. OATS Spot market weaker. No. 2. 3.'i;-,c; No. i delivered. Wvc: No. J. d.14c. No. No. i white, 37c; No. 3 white, 3Hio; track white. !4-'"-4Ic. CATTLE EnrojK-an cables nuote American ett-ers at M su-lV -j: per pound, tiress.tl weiirut : refrigerator teef at 9! u-lue p-r ixiun L Ex jwirts tKlay. 45 beeves, i,6il sh-t-p and 2..4U H'.'.arters of beef. SHEEP AND LAMBS Market quiet but steady. iod sh.-ep, Jo. 13; c od iambs. $ i.OU. HoiiS Market steady at 44.90 si. 25 for ex treme weights. Csetl a I'.aior While Iriik. Sratsa. March Julius Cirkr of Tort Edward has murdered Richard Jack-on and terribly slashed William Palmer, Imt the l itter will probably re cover Barker osetl a razor and almost d.-capitateil Jackson. All are tie-rts. They g it it. to a (juarn 1 while drunk. Charged With Treastiu. C ipf.xh AtiEN, March 1 1 e rr Ni o r r c moell, ethtor of Hfindell. published ;tr Alw-nraa. in Northern Hchleswic;. has i en arrestetl on the charge of treason in continually advocating the reuinoii of Northern Schlesw'ig with Denmark hristlau Scientist Arretted. Is ANfttI.ES. March 27. 'Doctor" Richard Coak, a Christian science Lealer, and Je.-se Satins, who.-e wife re cently died in chirtlbirth as a re.-ult of Christian science treatment, have be tarre&tbd, under charges of niaiitdaughter. T.rs; Tf-IAIV Iiv Cioods. :i" fi'iiH. " ft'iii-. -''-'.If., W till 1 1 -to,-. "Of., Wiillll "ill,-. .""f., Willi 1 1 lillf. "-., wtirl 1 1 Sf. Sf. Of. worth lid-. Wiillll Sf. worth to,-, worth Sf. to j4 a pair. - l, Of., 7-V . nn Pnltpre' flil PIntV,9 i-l A IJusL IN A BLIZZARD. II as Not Simu iii'; Tim ti --Ii for I hp S-rtlM- t Sec- Wli.ll :k i;titl l;it litl Two im-ii v.ho knew him were .-tatul-intr in the lirand l'aeiiio t-xcliaiio'c t;;IUiiio- ; limit llcoru't- Cliampliii. lo i.i.'d in Hot SpriiiiTs. I L- wars t mc t-l' tin- most jjciu-raily known men on the I li ica L'o 1mi;ui1 of trade, say.- the iii, :i". II. Till. 1. " lie t'i:i'i't 1;-1 ntr t any church." : ;, i. I oi:c i f i lit- II ll-II. " Ilf !ii;rht I nn t him on t l::rk street. A ldi:'.:'.aril was. o:i tin- r:iiii;i:'.Lri' iiml jm-. nilc wcr.- nin-tiil-;r to o-et out of the cold. A ra.tr.tretl 1 -t ! lii'liind a storm door, a pic ture of tin- forlorn. Tin- lniy wa- al- III vt l:;:-.-fii-iti-d. Chaiupliii stopjx- I and said to liiin: "My Im.v. tins i hard ImcU: why te'ii't yon put on ynur Sim tl i v i:it '' 'Hain't trot lion-.-. t lit- Imy r.-;l :-.- I. rhampliii took him ly t!it s i-iiii'-'f tin- iiecl; and aliiio-t drao-LTed him i: t. . a clot li'ni'r store- near liy ami Ii.:.! tin- lioy put into a tn-w suit, slii.es, iiosi-.-r. uiiili-rwi-ar and cap. Then. I; l.'iii the hoy a. tlollar. In- said to him: "Youtur man. yon hail Letter run rifiit li .iui- and i'i-t out of thi.s cold. The nn rc.'.ry i- twenty dco-ivcs K l.iw i'.i-ro." '1 In- ch-rk in the store called me a -::'u- and asked: 'Who is thai man'.' Tlii . is th,- third or fourth hoy he has I'l'i U'. lit ill here a lid clot hetl."' 'Yon say he didn't helmi"" to any church".'" asketl the man who had Ii:-ei:e.i. "Ni irr went in one that I heard of." Well. In- won't need any church cer tii'eate in the next world. I reckon it wa: n't -nowino; too hard the nirht ym speak of for the record ine- an-fi-l to see what Cliampliii tljil." FACTS FOPI FARMERS. It is the small iimiilier f itnnl cows, crircfi:!' y attended to anil well fetl, that y it 1.1 t he m. i-1 proiit . A si i: in rack is a nice thino- to have in the i ai i'vard. if you forevt its ex istence a' feed ill"; time. -;:i: any of your cows lirinfrinf yon i.ito tle'ii'. If you don't know is it not time that yo'i should know'.' Mow i:iu.'!i fet-tl can your ltcst eow turn ::-to hnit.-r? She a.ti.'ht r have every o.itiee that she will eat. A i.kan stall makes a clean cow. arti a e! -in cow makes dean milk, ami t h an iniik n ::'.:es p-isid huttt r. Arri:i: you fr"t yotir 1iimh1. says a swine rrro.ver. then every! iiin do-H-r.-ls uj n your feed and care. Tin: lornr winter vt nin s a fTortl the cily ;;i m toyed almiuiaitt time tt think list the farm as a nsoiuy-mak-in i.-.st i. e.i it m. l-". i:ti.l:s in I'cnnsylvania are feetlin-x fhc.'.:i::t.: to ho-s. It is s;iitl 1 hat the t re; is i:.n.'. t:se and the pickiti"; of liii n halt"; pio'iitah'.e. Tir: Ctcmt-.:'. ieut experiment statitn reeo!". r:i ;:'.. p'l'i.ilsof suerphos- ph::'e. A'.'.'' itiTitis t -f l.i; rate t if soda ami ".'.5 i i o :!i.ls of mi!ri:!ie of potas'i for the jTov. th of potatoes. 4uite S.t isfae:ry. The kin"; of the Kel";;aiis went tut f.r a walk the other day. and etitcret. a farm to ask for a ""la-sof miik. When he had mad-.' a remark in Knjrlish to hi- companion, he heard the hostess say to 1.. r husband in l lemish: '"I won der what that loiier-nosi-d Kii-rlishmi.ti will rive us for the milk'.'" Whereupon '.he kin"; took out a tivc-frane ueeeantl ('live it to the woman, saying in I'lem ish: Alhw me to offer you the jor trait of the lony-nosed Eliirlishinaii." DOWN IX A ('KATE If. Wonders Witnessed by a Moun tain Explorer. Intllan I-egrentls t t l--anioUH Kstinct Vol cmuo In tlis Want stniui;r Ani mals round in the Subter ranean ruvrriin. Crater mountain is t.ne of the I'ma tilla Indians' efreat spook dejiots from ancient time. s;iys the I laker City Dem ocrat. Hucks that are now white with t he hoary frosts of many winters rec ollect han'in."; in the trees titrhtly strapped to their linrsiii"; hoards, u hile their mothers roametl the forests in sciircli of efame for the lords, of crea ti ui or wood for the tejH-e. and from ii'-'atiey love tt relate how the jrreat spirit sHike to them with the awful voice of territic thunder in the ImiwcIs of the earth. Many are the stories and legends of Indian lore told of rater mountain. One of the favorite ones is told of a 0,-eat war U-tween the Sho-hoiies ami 1'matillas. When the I'matillas had coin piered their foes they pi-iK-eedetl to slaughter old ami y.miio-, regardless of svx. I me lK-auti-ful Sliosliohe maiden, seeinjf that tleath w as in,- i'able from her pursu ip"; fia-s. plmic;-d heatlloncr into the burniii"; crater, ami instantly the vol canic eruption ceased, much to the consternation of her pursuers, who on the follow in"; day found, on looking down the chasm of inky darkness, a resplendent li.rht with the form of the Shoshone maiden in the midst of the apparition. They told it to their dusky warriors and to this day Crater moun tain i- looked upn with reverence from an Indian point of view. The following is from the diary of J. A. Vri;rht: "Crater moiiiitian is located some eleven miles front the Camp of Cornucopia, on the south side of the r;iii;,'i' whose caps are tipped with eternal snow. Many chasms and lis surcs have in the misty jiast cleft the mountains and left them in the most fantastic sliain-s. Vejrctation ceases to jrow after a certain height is reached, and close under the base of one of the .Treat h aks is the famous extinct vol cano. Ashes and lava are found in o'reat profusion and in such in.lescrile able masses that it makes the ascent one tif jeril and jrreat tlill'u-ulty. How ever, once at the top. a peek down into the Hank, fat hornless abyss su ppl les t he l.i. st morbid minds w ith all t he sctisa tion.ilism necessary for a lifetime. A favorite aiuuseiiieiit was to throw rocks down and listen to the suiids as they : truck on the project inT sides of the dark chimney until the sounds died away. leaving nothing but for the mystified explorer to (,'Ut-ss it hail reached the lottom." Many have Wen the stories circu lated of tin- wonderful cavern that ex tended from the sides of the "Treat chimney. A stout eal le was provided and a basket swuti"; from a pulley, lion. Joseph, with camera ami note b.xik. was carefully lowered some three hundred lind sc vciity-ci". lit feet, when he noticed an aperture in the side of the chimney, and. by sijrnals ajrrceil upon, a iia.lt wuscalleil in tns downward career, and he crawled t hroii";h a cleft in the frreat chimney, and the work of exploration W";an. The lirst siefht that met his astonished raze was a most stuieiuloiis chamWr, from whose miirhty tlome huii"; stalac tites t-f "Teat U auty, which were en haiiee.l by the li;rht of the caudle, ail 1 fairly .--truck terror to hi-, heart, as the llieker'uuf cam lit seemed to msscs.s the power f some unseen hand that made millions of the brilliant stalactites h-.iice in resplendent Wauty. A; Tea I snowy owl blinked at the astonished Jo-eph. The explor-r (rrojieil his way to the far end of tiie chamWr, where he thought he heard the sounds of falling water nor was In- mistaken. for stpn-eziny himself thronirh an niciiiir; he found himself in another chauils i" of (rreat beauty, with it stream of hot sulphur water rtlit:iin;T Into the ea rt !i. 'Mie incrustation from the sulphur water had transformed the cavern into a coral-like substance and left it in such fantastic shapes- He foun.l in the water some lively little lizards and some frojr.s that chaii(Ti- color on the sli"rhte:.t provtK-ation ami two larjrc rats, w ho eyed the explorer with a cu riosity that seemed to bode no (rood, and he longed for his little ;rnn. Curious Oak Tree In i-ori;i!i. A resident of Augusta. Ca.. has an oak tree rrowiii' upon his place which is not unlike other trees of that sH-cics in (Teneral appearance. Instead of pr. dueiii(T the re.iru lat ion acorn, however, it is annually loaded with peculiar formations as unlike tin- natural pne tliK'tion of such trees as one could im agine. As a (Teneral rule the cup of an acorn is as lureor larger than a thim ble, eovcriier at least half of the acorn proper, but in this case the tiny recep tacle is not tarircr than a pea. and. in stead tif Win:r constructed wias to hold but a s.inrle nut or kernel, contains from three to live small tines, the iium Wr seemlier to vary with the tli .tance from the (rrouiul. the cups on the lower limbs Win"; uniformly tilled with three of the tiiiv acorns. l;otani:.ts of na tional repute have pondered this sylvan oddity and old settlers, noted hunters and woodmen in (Teneral have visited the wonder and left without even at tempting to name the variety of oak to which it W-lon(Ts. The Month Wlllio.it a .Moon. A remarkable freak in moon phases was notetl in the month of February, lst'iil, a month which has (rone into as tronomical annals as "the month with out a full moon." In that year January and March each had two full mmms. but February none. A writer in a leadin"; astronomical journal uses the followiii"; lanjruajre in describino; it: "Do you realize what a rare thinr in nature it was? It has not hapH-netl In-fore since the W"-innin(r f the Christian era. or probably since the creation of the world. It will not oc cur arain, accortliii(T to the computa tions of the astronomer royal 'of Kng lantl. for- how lon(r do you think? Not until after two million ami a half years from lsi'i." s&liit Trillion. Snint Trudon. a Christian village on the banks of the Con(To, colonized by negroes educated by missionaries, is the prtxluct of postage stamps. Over forty million used stamps were collected in Krussels, from the sales of which the mouev needed was obtained. The Con- j go state gave the land. A FOREIGN INDUSTRY. We I'm Millions or Split Sieel Kiiif;. ltut Iton't lkr Any. "I've handled ami sold forty thou sand piuss of split key rinefs since lst'iT." saitl the little man in an over cat ami a white sweater, 'ami not one of them was of American make." "Why. how is that?" asked a New York Sun rcMrtcr. "Itecause there are none made in this country." replied the little man, with a smile that lifted one comer of his frray mustache. "No. sir." he con tinued, "the makinjr of split steel riii(rs is an art that W'e haven't (Tot hold of yet, somehow, and I must say I often wonder at it." "Where are they made, then?" "The Wst. sir. are math alxmt fiftr seven miles outside tif Paris, at a little inanufacturiii"; town whose name 1 can t just now recall. The next Wst rino-s are made in Shetlield. Filmland, while ring's of inferior tjuality. made from Swedish iron, are manufactured in Alsace. I don't know that the steel in the French rinfrs is any Wttcr than that usetl by the Shcllicld manufac turers, but the Frenchmen in this, as in st many things, have (Tot the han(r of makiii(T their thin-rs look well. The Shetlield rinjrs are pdislied with oil antl emery, ami that (rives them a dull steely look, while the French ring's are Milislied by the tlry process, with what they call crocus jmwder, a sort of coarse rou;re." "What are the extremes in size of split ri n;rs?" the man was asketl. "The smallest that 1 ever handled." he replied, "were three-sixteenths of an inch across. They are irildctl when they reach this country ami are used in cheap jewelry. The largest key rin-rs I ever sold were two ami a half inches in diameter, and those I sold to the wardens at Siii(r Sin";. Iu fact, they are called pri m r'mjrs. That key rui-r with the two little knobs or Ws-cs ihrouirh which you slip the key. is also a French manufacture, ami indeed 1 have never seen an American key riii"; except that clumsy little thin"- where you have to move around a small round double plate with a notch in it. ami then sprin-Toiit the ojh-ii end of the riii"; through this notch. 1 must say. con cluded the little man. musiii(rly, "1 often wonder why w don't make rin-rs over here. Kven now there's a forty -live jer cent, duty on them, antl they couhl W sold at half their present price antl still brintr a (rood protit. Why. just think. 1 sell over one hun dred and lifty thousand riuirs a year, antl there must Ik- millions of them handled every year in this country." MACHINE-MADE SPEECHES. Turned Out with Marvelous ICanl.lity lv a Kef en t rniclisli Intention. There is no doubt that Wtli the type writing machine ami the phonograph are very inrciiious and useful inven tions, but the chief dilliculty with them, says the New York Times, is that they cannot W made to act auto matically. It is in order to till this want that a distinguished inventor, whose name is for the present with held, has invented an automatic writer, ami. jutl(Tui"- troin the private exhibi tion of the machine which was recently (Tiven in London to a committee of meinWrs of the Royal society.it bids fair to prove the irreaU'st invention tf this or any aire. In appearance the machine is said to lie not wholly unlike a typewrit mir machine. It. however, is provided with a sort of hopper, in which an- placed blocks of type metal, each one of w hich is provitletl with a complete word, in stead of a sintrle letter. When 'his hopper is tilled ami the small electric engine which furnishes the motive power of the machine is s-t in action it instantly Wfrins to print. Of course, what is printetl depends in a pood de cree U(oii the selection of words which are placed in the hopper, but it is un derstood the machine can Ik- used for almost uny sort of composition. At the exhibition already mentioned the hopper was tilled with a supply of words relatiiiiT to the Fnirlish Mtlitical situation, and in ten minutes after the engine hail Wen started the machine hail .-'printetl two-full columns, each of a 1 milt the lemrth of an ordinary col umn of a newspaper. When these were reatl they were instantly recognized to W" a speech on home rule iu the (Teneral style of Mr. Cladstone. The hopper was next filled with a choice selection of the very finest words in the lan (Tuajre. ami the machine thereupon printetl what was at once perceived to I ie an essay after the manner of Mr. Kuskin on political eeotiomy. More wonls were added antl three pajres of what any critic would have unhesi tatingly accepted as a passage from :t new novel by Mr. Meredith delighted the committee. The last experiment was made with the hopper tilled with words taken from the Slanir Diction ary and the result was a story in dia lect which was held to W superior to almost any dialect story hitherto pul lishetl. New Terror for rrench 1 on viet. Life in the French penal colony at New Caledonia has been pictured as so arreeable, Wth bv reason of the cli mate as well as the leniency with w hich convicts have Wen treated, that transportation seems to have lost most of its terrors. Criminals do not con ceal their preference for a lontr sen tence in the Wautiful Pacific island to a much shorter term with hard laWr in one of the penitentiaries at home, antl when jcrpctratintr a misdeed have sought as a rule to rentier their offense as serious as possible, so as to entail transportation if captured. It is with a view of puttiii(r an end to this senti ment that the French (rovernment has now decided to stop sending' convicts to New Caledonia, and is making ar rangements to dejHirt them instead to I'alttHin. the fever-stricken ami most pestilential of all districts of French Congoland in Africa. Mutton In the Sout h west. In the meat shops of towns in New Mexico and Arizona the visitor front the east is apt to notice that the dressed carcasses of sheep have a tuft of wool still attached to the head and tail. This is left by the butcher to as sure the customer that it is mutton and not goat flesh they are buying, for in these territories many Hocks of goats are reared and pastured by the small Mexican ranchmen to W killetl for food for the poorer natives. Roast or stewetl kid, with Chili jepK-r sauce, is an esteemed dinncrdish at the tables of many well-to-do American and Spanish-American citizens. . A JtETiHKD IWKf.LAI.. His Dangerous Career with tho Jimmy and Dark Lantern. lie I nnmnlr rnl a Iturclar Alarm Srnlrai of AsIouIkIiIuk KflVct i-u-is In Western C'nnec-ttcut Thrilling l.i irlc-nee of si IIoum- Itreakrr. "One night late I went into a house in a village in western Connecticut. Uttering by a cellar window, as I usually did w hen I was late, smi as not to disturb the folks. I looked around the cellar ami located the stairs and started up. About three-quarters of the way up they made a sharp turn t the left. 1 had my jimmy in my right hand and my lamp in my left, so as to W all ready. exicctiiig to set my lamp down on the top step and gently pry the door ojh-ii: ami I was going along comfortably enough when just as I was stepping up at the turn a riK stretched across causrht me under the chin and toppled me over downstairs. There was only the stone wall of the cellar tui one side and no rail on the other, so there was nothiiiir to grab to. and I just tumbled down. As 1 bumped along something scattered along down with me. w hang-banging down the steps over me and under me and around me. chasing me all the way down, and when I finally got to tie cellar Wttom that thing was lying avross my chest. It was the coal shovel, which hail evi dently Wen sto.nl up against the roe. and which I hail jarred loose." said the retired burglar to a New York r-un man. Cut the worst thing of all was that my lamp was broke. I hist my jimmy on the way down, but I hung to my lamp: but now the light was out and the glass was broke and the slide was jammed around in fmnt ami I couhl not turn it. I felt around till I found my jimmy, ami then I waited to sec if Ftl woke anylmdy up. I didn't hear anylnHly ami so I started again, and this time I felt my way up the stairs carefully to the door. I found it un locked ami I hat got it ojen about an inch. I should think, when I heard a little bit of a scraping on the other side, ami the next instant the dreatlf ulest racket that anyUdy ever heart!, the falling of a di-hpan that must have Wcu hanging on the other side on the di.r knob or key. and at the same time what I imagine must have Iktii the potato-masher I don't know. Wcause 1 didn't look for it dropped from the top of the door upon my head. "This th Mir to the cellar opened from a little square bailor entry way that had. as I learm-d by feeling, a door to the left, to the kitchen. I suppose, ami one to the right. I guessed, into the front hall. 1 waitetl again, but no sound from up-tairs. so I turned to the right and oHiie.l that door ami stumbled the iirst thing over a chair close by in the hall and almost broke my shins. I felt along and found a row of chairs standing close together from that door clean to the front il.Nir. I sat tlow n in one of them ami nursed mv shin and waitetl. Still no sound, ami I tried again and got alongall right this time and turned off to the left and into the parlor and Kick from that into the dining-room, for a wonder without falling over anything, antl I Wgan to feel encouraged. Hut in the dining-room there was nothing but platetl spoons and forks, which, of course. I eou'il tell by the touch ju-t as well as though Ftl hail an electric light. If they had any silver they had it carried upstairs, as some people do at night. "I turned back into the hall and groped my way through the rows of chairs to the foot of the stairs. To make sure of the first step in the dark 1 step;?-.! high ami stepiH-tl into a pan of water on the Wttom step. That made me mad. but it didn't make any noi.se. ami I stcpjH-d out of it and start ed on up. At aWut the third step my leg struck a string that was strung across these stairs, and set a WI1 a ringing that was hanging on it: and kicking that string started down on me from aWvc. loosened I suppose bv another string tied to the one I had kicked, a shower of tin pie plates, and I hud got my legs tangled up in some way in the string across the stairs, ami as I struggled to get free the WU kept on ringing and the pic plates rattling, and presently I fell over a wash Wilcr that had Wen set on the stairs a step or two up antl brought that down on me. "As I floundered around in this tin ware and strings and lu lls and things I heard children's voice-, upstairs, ami a minute later I heard steps in the hall above, and I could see in the blackness up there the white of a nightgown at the head of the stairs. Then something came slamming against the banisters, hitting me as it rattled down and finally landed with a great bang on the tltK-r among the chairs in the hall. The minute he threw it. whoever he was. he ran, and I Wgan to think it was alKiut time for me to go. too. I had freed myself from the Wllcord by this time ami I got down the stairs ami into the hall again, ami there this time 1 stepjHil on a baseball bat that was what hail come bangiiig down at me from aWve that rolled tint from under me and upset me once more among those chairs. "I got up ami opened the front door it wasn't locked ami got out on the piazza. Ik-fore I had got to the top front step 1 heard a horn blow ing from an upstairs window on the side of the house, ami an instant later a shot from a revolver ami a big Wll ringing. There was a late moon just rising and a little light now. ami as I went away I looked back and saw three children all in white, all leaning out of one window on the second storv. "I didn't wait to inquire alxiut it. hut it was just as simple as rolling off a log. The children's parents had had to go away somewhere fiver night, sickness or something, ami had left the children alone. The young folks had forgot to lock the doors, but there really wasn't any necessity of locking 'cm. with such a burglar alarm sj-stem as that." Her Choice. "Won't you come for row, auntie?" "No, thank you, dear; awkward pura Ls very gooil for young people, but 1 prefer to remain on terra cotta." rick-Me-Up. Many a man might make a Witter Christian of himself if he would con sider the church as composed of mera borship of which he is a sample. A PILL-MAKING CRAB. The Oueer Habits of an Interesting Little realure. Mr. Cillirigvitl. in his "Rambles of a Naturali-t."" gives an entertaining ac count of these tiny creatures, which are ino-tly of als-ut the siz- of a jea. though a few are a- large a- tllWrts. lie found them abundant on the shores of the Malay peninsula, his attention W-ing first called to them by seeing t hc Waeh. after the going down of the t i.ic. covered with loos- ixiwdcry san.l and holes of various sizes. lo Hiking more closely, he discovered that little radi ating paths converged among the litter of sand to each hole, ami that the sand itself was in minute balls. The instant 1 approached a peculiar twinkling in the sand wa- visible, which required a quick eye to r-e.g-nize as the simultaneous antl rapid re treat of a multitude of iny craW into their holes, not a single one remaining visible. Kneeling flown and remaining m t ion less for a few minutes. I noticed a slight evanescent apjH-aranee. like a flash or a bursting bubble, w hieh t he eye could scarcely follow. This was produced by one or more of the crab coming to the surface and instantlv darting flown again, alniitil by m proximity. It was only b,- waiting like a statue that I could induce them to come out and set to work. Coming cautiously to the mouth of the hole, the crab waited to recoil -noiter. and if satisfied that no enemy was near.it would venture about V"-, own length from its lurkingplace: then rapidly taking up particles of sand in its claw s, it tlejHisited them in a gnnive lieneath the thorax. As it did so a little ball of sand was rapidly projected as through its mouth. This it seized with tint- claw and de posited on one side, proceeding in this manner until the smooth Wach was covered with little pellets, or pills, cor responding in size to its own dimcii si.mss It was evidently its method .if extracting particles of food from the sand. I made many attempts to catch one Wfore I succt ctlcd. At last I caught two specimens, which immediatelv curled themselves upand feigned death. I put fine of them oil the sand to see what it would do. .t first it did not attempt to move: but after a little, by a twisting and wrigpling movement, it rapidly sunk into the sand antl tlisap earcd. The other one I put int a hole w hich already contained a crab; but no visible result followed. I then attempted to dig it up again, but in vain. I dug up many holes; but though 1 sHin arrived at the soft, wet sand underneath, never succeeded in procuring a pill-making crab by digging it out. TAKE TIME FOR HOME LIFE. The Mistake That the lnteiielv-Kur -merif-an All Too f Iffen Make. There are no busier jeope in the world than Americans. The ru-h and intensity of our business life excites the constant wonder of foreigners ac customed to more leisurely methods. says the New York I'ress. It is a ques tion if American mei do not work t hard and ti fast iiiu merely for their own giHid. but for the highest g. hI of their families. In their earnest desire to win material Wtictits for their wives antl children they frequently toil with such unwearying industry that eating and sleeping come to seem to them like impertinences, and they are hardlv more than transient visitors in their households. In the old llreek and Roman reli gions the father of the family was the priest of the family. A profound sig nificance underlies this ancient coiice tioti. It is but an eml olimeiit of the eternal truth that the highest moral responsibilities devolve ujn a man in his character of husband and father. That the married man of to-day often finds himself unable to sjcml any con siderable jnrt ion of hi- waking hours with his own family is ow ing largelv to the stress of business life antl to the ambitions fostered in a timntry wlmsf citizens are welcome to the highest x sitions in the land if they can win them. Hut this constant struggle for material welfare should not W jicrmit tetl to increase so far that the ""things that are more excellent" are forgotten or ignored. Sometimes a child dies, and then the busy father may realize that it was in deed a little stranger who came to him antl went away again, lie hail watched the growth of his business w ith intense interest and he knew every aspect of it; but he had not had time to watch the growth tif a child's mind and char acter. The American wife and mother can change in a great measure this or der of things by In. 1. ling up true ideals tf what constitutes success in life and of what makes a home worthv of the name: for the hu-band in a great majority of eases is guide.! by the wife, antl will bring lack to her what she gives to him. If life to her means n.. th ing but money ami stH-ial success she hinds her husband to a wheel that w ill gradually crush the Wst that is in him. Rut if it means a moral development " li'ist- source of power is a sympathetic ami ennobling home life she will take care that her husband has time to live. A Cireat Feed. Several miners, who had leen in the ruining districts of Colorado for years, were -discussing what they, would do if they were to ln-come rich or strike it lucky. "Well." said one "I know what I'll do. I'll go to New York as straight as the cars will take me. antl when I get there I'll make a lice line for Dclmoiiico's ami I'll get the biggest dinner money can buy. I don't care if it costs rue fifty dollars or more. I'll have it." 'Now, w hat do you think you would order if you were to go to IV'lmonifo's for a fifty-dollar din ner?" "Well. I dunno, tint I guess I"d have some ham and eggs yes. I'd have some ham and eggs." New Knclantfa Korfcy Coast. The annual report of S. I. Kimball, the general superintendent of the life saving service, shows that of the T.'.'t marine disasters which occurred dur ing the year ending June .'in, 1 '.. along the pun Hi miles of seacoast of this country and along the great lakes. 1K happened along the rocky coast of New England. Of the sixty-eight lives lost thirty-two went to satisfy the rapacity of the waves lapping the same New England coast. Thirty of the thirty two deaths ficcurred in the wrecks of the ship Jasen and the bark Rclinout on Cape Cod. . t i i I l c .'I 3