THE FOREST REPUBLICAN It publlfhad every Woilnoedar, by J. C WENK. OfHoe la Gmearbaugh & Co.' Hul ding ELM STREET, TIONESTA, IA. RATES OF ADVERTISING, d o On Sinare, one Inch, one Insertion 1 M One Square, one Inch, one month ' 00 One Square, one Inch, three months One Rqnare, ono Inch, one year 1 00 Two Sqnarea, one year i " mt&i mtnwmmi i) 4 ) Qoarter Column, one year " M liail WUU J One Colnmnjjone year 100 w Legal notice at eaUbUfhed rate Marriage and death notices gratia. All bllli for yearly advertlwmenta collertwl tpar teny. Temporary advertisements must be fid u advance. Job work caah on- delivery. Terms, - f I. BO per Year, -. ..- Wo snhaeriprlons received for a shorter period than three mnntha. lorrenpomlonco aoltclted from all parte of the Country. No notice will be taken of anonymous communications. VOL. IV1. NO. 51. TIONESTA. PA.. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 2, 1884. $1.00 PER ANNUM. PAYING. THE CHUHCH DEBT. "Oh! husband, I heard such a eerroon to-day, Fy dear Mr. SUgginB, who aaid we would pay I-ieit Sabbath the debt on our church, and, mid ho, - - 'Whoever subicrnxw Oh I how happy he'll bo.' , " And all may this glorious privilege share By naming the sum he surely can spare; You jut sign a slip and you weekly can pay Ohl can you imagine an easier way I " And dear Mr. Stigghis said all can afTord To give back what only belongs to the Lord, Who will ropny treble beddes If we should Junt sacrifice something, we'd feol the more good." "Yea, wife, of that privilege all should par take, A sacrifice for such a cause we must make; I, being u ls.'lflsh, will let you, I guess, Feel goxl s we'll wicrittca your new silk dresj." "Oh! husband, I couldn't." My six won't sufllce. Our pastor meant you would with joy sao- riflee A few of your pleasures. I thought you'd be g'ad To give up your pipe and your paper to bad.'' . v. Xorristown Herald. . " i 4 ONE YEAR AGO. i What stars have faded from our sky, What hope unfolded but to die? What dream so fondly pondered o'er Forever lost the hues they wore! How like a death knell tad and slow, Toils through the noul 41 one year ago." Where Is the face we loved to greet; The form that graced our fireside seat. The gentle smile, tho winning way, That bloasel our life path day by day; Where fled those accents, soft and low, '' That thrilled our hearts " one year ago." Ah! vacant is the fireide chair. t The smile that won, no longer there; From door and hall, from porch and bail The eoho of that voioe is gone; And we who linger only know ; -How much we lost "one year ago." Beside his grave the marble white Keeps silent guard by day and night? Serene he sleeps, nor heeds the tread ; Of footetc'i o'er his lowly bed; His pulseless breast no more may know The pangs of life " one year ago." But why repine? A few more years, A few more broken sighs and tears, And we. enlisted with the dead, Shall follow where his steps have led; To that far world rejoicing go To which he passod " one year aso." . Mr. John M. Conway. A RAFFLE FOR FREEDOM. The subjoined account of an incident alleged to hnve occurred on a Mississippi steamboat a short time before the war is from a Germnn sketch of American travel. I ascended the Mississippi, snjs the writer, on a steamer, on board of which were Judge J and General K , of Pennsyl vania, with both of whom I was slightly acquainted. "A hard set, these Natchez men," said the captain, who met us on the cabin stairs. ''There's some of them down in the saloon playing a high game. How men can be such fools, I could never ace!" "Let's go down and look on awhile," suggested the judge. In the saloon wo found four men seatod at a table, around which a crowd of specta ' tors were gathered. The four were the 'heavy players. " The game was 4 'poker, " and the money changed hands rapidly. We had not been looking on long, when ono of the players, a middle-aged man, who, I learned, was a cotton planter, bet his last dollar against the hand of one of his antagonists. The latter showed four kings, while he had onlv four queens. He was "cleaned out," and" rose us though he were goiag to leave the table. "Are you broke, colonel?" asked one of the men. "Dead!" was the laconic reply. "Never mind; I'll lend you." "No: I can make a raiso, I reckon. Here, Pomp !" "Here, luassa!" responded an old negro, as he emerged from ono corner of the sa loon. "Bring that girl and her youngster here that I bought in Natchez. AVait a few 'minutes, gentlemen, I'll raise some money." The old negro went on his er rand, and soon returned with the "girl and her youngster." The "girl" proved to be a stately mulatto woman, about thirty five years old. Her "youngster" was a flue, intelligent-looking boy, eleven or twelve years old, whoso complexion showed him to be much more nearly allied to the white race than the black. "Here, gentlemen," said the plunter, as they entered; "You Bee this girl. and her boy two as fine niggers as you can find anywhere. I paid eight hundred dollars for them yesterday in Natchez. Who will give me six hundred for them?" "Will you sell them separate?" asked someone. "No, can't doit; I promised not to. The girl swears she'll take her life if she's separated from her boy, and her old master said that he was sure she'd keep her word. But don't you all see that the girl is worth more money than I ask for both of them? Come, who'll give me six hundred for both!" The planter waited for a reply, and then said : "Well, I must have some money. Come, what say you to a raflle thirty chances, at twenty dollars a chance? Out with your cin-h, gentlemen. The first on the list hiA the first throw!" This propo sition created a decided stir among all present. The tliree players at the table led oil by taking three chances each. Their example was followed by the spectators, nnd -iwonly chances were taken as rapidly a the planter could writo down the names and take the money. Then there was a blight pause. Tho planter himsoil now took two chances, and ho was followed by his three fellow-players, who each took one chance more. Finally, three more chances were taken by the spectators, when the planter cried out, "Two chances still, gentlemen! Who will havo them? General K whispered something in Judge J 's ear, and then went to the table and laid two ten-dollar gold pieces on it. "Name, sir, please." "Never mind the name. Put it down for the woman." "Eh what! for the girl her self?" "Yes, certainly, let's give her a chance." "All right! One for Ninette. And now" "Thnt's for tho boy," said Judge J , quietly, as he laid twenty dollars on tho table. "Good I bravo! bravo !" cried tho planter and several of the bystanders. ' One tor Tommy, which makes tho thirty. Now, gentle men, lot's seo whom luck favors." The dice were brought, and tho throwing be gan. Each chance entitled the holder to three throws. Thirty-six was the high est thrown until the holder of the eleventh chance threw. He scored forty- two. Then a less number was thrown, until No. 21 scored forty-nine. The ex citement now became intense. Forty nine was hard to beat; the highest throw possible being nine sixes fifty-four. Again and again tho dice rattled in the box, until it came to No. 29. "Comc, Ninette; it is your turn nowl"?As the poor woman came forward, her hands crossed and pressed convulsively against her breast, it was truly painful to witness her agitation. "Won't tho gentleman who took the chance for mo please throw I" sho asked, in a low, tremulous tone. "No; let your boy throw," replied the gentleman; "per haps he would have more luck than I." "Come, Tom," said the planter. Tom came forward and picked up the box Tho wouian pressed her lips firmly to gether, and clasped her hands as if in firayer. Tho boy trembled iiko an aspen eaf, but shook the dice, and threw three. For a moment he stared at the dice as though he could not believe his eyes, then he put down the box and stepped back, pale and dejected. "Come, Tommy, throw again," urged tho planter. "It's no use, master; I couldn't throw forty-nine now." " Very true, but you have your own chance. Throw that." " Certainly," said Judgo J . " That ono was your mother's. Now throw for yourself on the chance I gave you. Have a stout heart, my boy, and may heaven smile on you." Again the boy returned to tho table, and took up tho box. He pressed his lips together, and did his best to control his ticmbling limbs. Not a sound was to Lo heard in the saloon but the rattling of the dice. i or a moment every man seemed to hold his breath. He threw; " Two fives and a six sixteen," said the plunter, puttin down the number, while a murmur of satisfaction ran through tho crowd One of tho bystanders gathered up the dice and put them in the box, and the boy threw again. "Two sixes and a hve seventeen." Tho excitement now knew no bounds, and the " bravos" resounded on every hand. The boy, as ho took up the box to throw for the third and lust time, was as nearly color less as it was possible for him to bo with hi yellow skin. Out rolled the dice and up came three Bixes, which made fifty-one, "Tommy, my boy, I congratulate you," cried the planter, "lou are your own and your mother's master 1 Fill up the necessary papers, captain, and I will sign them. I hese gentlemen will be the wit nesses." I will not attempt to describe the scene that followed. In the general satisfaction, one of tho men in the crowd proposed a subscription for the freed negroes. The proposition was received with such favor that in less than five minutes fifty dollars were collected. Twilight Phenomena at the Equator. Twilight phenomena of a similar char acter to the appearances lately so preva lent were, according to letters, observed in the island of Mauritius. This is es pecially remarkable as in that island, situated twenty degrees above the equa tor, night, as a rule, follows the day without any noticeable transition. , On several evenings, however, there was a splendid glow in the west quite half an hour after sunset, and when night had fairly set in this glow soon extended over the whole sky, lieing reflected on the clouds and covering tho island with a purple tint. The sea is described as ap parently on fire, the vessels and their masts looking black, and standing out in bold relief. Tho eaino phenomenon was observed before sunrise. A Lady Made a Citizen. j Mrs. Emily S. Smith, a widow, has been made a citizen of tho United States in the municipal court at Milwaukee. Mrs. Smith was born in England in 1840, and came to America when eleven years of age. She has resided in Milwaukeo for the past twelve or fifteen years. The lndy went to Dakota last spring ana took up a homestead near Harold, and in . . ' a At. order to acquire a penect uue 10 me land she was advised to renounce for ever all allegiance to Queen Victoria and become a naturalized citizen of the United States, her husband having neg lected to take out his second papers. The clerk of the court says this is the second instance of the kind during his incumbency of the office six years. The Value of the Farms. The farms of the United States are worth 110,197,000,000, whilo all other real estate, including the dwellings and warehouses of. the city, the capital em ployed in business and the water power besides, is but $9,881,000,000; railroads and their equipments are worth but 5,53, 000,000; and mines including petroleum wells and cold and silvei bonanzas and stone and other quarries, are worth but I7&0.000.000. AMERICAN NEWSPAPER WIT A BATCH OP HUMOROUS ST OBITS raou various sources A Hew Papa Sufficient Ca ne Wont Than JTlormonlNiu Swclle Ilcoom. Ing More Swollen lllluola loetrr. A NEW rAPA, Little Pet "Do you know that we are to have a new papa ?" Little Jack "No; I dess you is 'eta- Little Pet "No, i ain't." Nurse said mamma was goin' to bo married ogaiu aud that would give us a new papa Littlo Jack "Who is it!" "Little Pet "That Mr. Simpkinswho never brings us any candy." Littlo Jock "Is ma doia' to mako him our papa ?" Little Pet ,4Yc8." Littlo Jack "Serves 'im right." Phil adiljhta Call. SUFFICIENT CAUSff ' One fine morning Adolphus is observed upon the street deporting himself in a manner becoming a gentleman of elegant leisure. 44 1 thought you were selling goods for Catchem and Clothem," remarked a fiiend. 44 1 was, but I don't stay there any more." 44 Why, what's the matter?" 14 They cut down my salary, and I re fused to remain any longer." 44 How much did they cut down your salary?" 44 they cut it all down." WORSE THAN MOBMOIflSM. " Talk about Mormonism," said Bul ger; 44 1 don't see what right people have to howl about it when such things as this are permitted in Pennsylvania," and tie pointed his finger to an item in the paper ne naa in nis hand. 44 What is it?" inquired Sucker. 44 Why here it tells of one man who has married no less than 1,500 women." ' " 44 Incredible." " But it is so. His name is Mayes and he marries a new woman every few days and yet the authorities don't interfere." 44 Horrible! How docs he evade the law?" . 44 He doesn't evade it. ne is a justice of the peace, and his place is a sort of Gretna Ureen for Ohio and West Yir ginia runnaway couples." "Oht" said Sucker, and then went off muttering something about people being too smart. bijtingt. " - SWELLS BECOME MORE SWOLLEN. He was a fit subject for guying. His pants were put on in such a way that the hip pocket was most convenient. His coat, of ancient cut, had lost one tail, but two brilliantly polished buttons still adorned it. Through the holes in his quasi-Panama hat the cold wind was playing with his long gray hair. En tering a broker's office, he said, quietly : 41 "VV on't some of you young gentlemen help an old soldier?" The boys let out on him. "By Jove, donchew know," said one, "looks as if he'd fallen oil the elevated tramway." 4 'I say, old chappie," drawled another, "fa-aucy bra-ndy is the only enemy aw you've evaw faced," and so on through the crowd. The old fellow suddenly straightened himself up. The memory of days long passed seemed to rejuvenate him. Draw ing off a tattered glove from one hand and a stocking from the other, he" sailed in. Ono swell went through the glass partition into tho private oflice, another smashed the ticker in his flight, a third tried to hide himself in the tape basket. As the old chap walked out he pickedup a pocket-book some one hud dropped, ana muttered : "It's funny if a man who fit with An drew Jackson can't git away with people who only pcrtend to be British." JVtw York Journal. l'OETKY IN ILLINOIS. "I want to see the poetry editor," said a young lady, who stepped very briskly Into the room "the gentleman that puts all those lovely pieces in the paper every Saturday. Don't you thiuk they're sweet ?" The horse reporter nodded acquies cence in tho saccharine character of the efforts alluded to. "I would like to see him personally.'Jyiio mistaking you. How is your father?' " conunueu uie young lany, - oecausei would be so nice to talk with him about Tennyson and Longfellow, aud all those other dear old things, wouldn't it?" The personal friend of Maud S. again inclined his head. "You don't think he'll be in again this afternoon, do you? I'd like awfully to seo him. But perhaps you can help me. I'm in an awful fix." "What's the matter?" asked the horse reporter. "Why," continued the young lady, "I livo over on the West Side, and we've got a literary society, and at the next meeting I'm down to read a paper on 4Poetry as an Art,' and " "Is poetry an art?" asked the horse reporter. "I thought it was an affliction." "Well, I don't know about that," said the young lady, "but, anyhow, I've got to get up this paper, and it occurred to mo that perhaps one of you editors could assist me. I want to get some extracts from the works of our best-known poets to illustrate what I shall say. Now, there's Mr. Tennyson, tor instance, he's written some fine poetry, hasn't he?" "Yes. Alf has occasionally shot some pretty fair verses athwart tho literary horizon. " "Could you give me a specimen of his style?" eagerly asked the young lady. "I never read a line of those big poets in my life nothing but what the 1'ribuiie poets write." We have got some daifies from Daisy- ville on our staff," said the horse reporter, "but li you want a few gems from the old masters I suppose you can have them. Tennyson's 'May Queen' is one- of hit most popular poems. Want some of that?" "Why, yes. I should think two or three verses would be just the thing." "Well," said the horso reporter, "it goes liko this ;" 44 'Yon must wake and call me early, call me earlv. mother dear: To-morrow 11 be the bosj old day for pop and ginger Deer; And when they strike the pie, mother, I'll say my littlo say For I'm to be Queen of the May, mother, Tm to be Queen of the May. " There's many a nifty girl, they say, but none lava over me: There's Margaret and Mary, and crow-eyed l.u.'y JUeo; But you bet your life I take the cake, and of biscuit sweep the tray : So I'm to be Quen of the May. mother, I'm - to be Queen of the May.' "Do you think that is enough!" asked the young lady. "Oh, yes; those verses will give 'em an idea of Alf's gait. Variety is what they want, you know. You ought to have something from Bryant. His 'Indian Girl's Lament' is pretty well thought of." "Is it? I'm sure I don't know. I shall leave it all to you." "Well, I can give you a chunk of it." "Do, if you please." "This is the way it starts:" 44 4An Indian girl was sitting where Her lover, WalkingFlea-Patcb, lay; Beside her stood a spavined horse That sadly chewed some musty hay. Upon a stump herself she flung, And then this simple lay she sung: " I've p'aced the bottle at your head, Oh Walking-Flea-Patch, so that when You strike the town and paint it red You will not miss your Laughing-Hen, Who, sitting in the wigwam will j Adore her noble warrior stlU." 4Now, you . see," 6aid the horse re porter, 4 'those selections cover the child ish glee and loving trustfulness rackets. What you want to finish with is some thing pathetic something that will mako the young women snifllc. Hood's 'Song of the bhirt' ought to do that nicely. Suppose we sling 'em a few lines of that." "Very well," said the young lady. "You know I dopend wholly on your judgment in this matter." y 44 Well, here it is:" 14 TVith fingers weary and worn, In a hue five-room fiat, A woman M with eyelids red f Trying to trim a hat. Rip. turn, twist, Then give it a spiteful flirt, While beside her lies like a gh-jstlv thin Her huibanu s uuttoniess shirt. Oh. girls with brother dear ! Oh, gir.'s who hope to be wives I Remember that shirts with buttons are The dream of men's hard Uvea 1 Rip, turn, twist. Till your bands are weary and worn But the wind will sweep with a wailing sigh Through the panta that are ever torn."' "You're very kind," said the young lady, going. "Don t mention it. Come in ngain when you think we are all out." Chica go Tribune. The Fremont Family. A New York letter says of John Fremont and his fumily : The residenco of tho Frcmonts is a modest white house, perched high on the inside of the broad road that winds through trees along tho New Brighton beach, and its front windows command a wide reach of the New York bay and the estuary of the Kill von Kull. 1 hero are two sons and a daughter in the house of Fremont. The eldest son, John Charles, or "Jack," as he is familiarly called at home, lives, with his handsome wife and two sturdy boys, up the llud son. He is in the navy, and his duties are connected with the arrival and dc parture of ships in this harbor. His younger brother, Frank, is a lieutenant in the army, stationed up in Montana Territory, whither he has taken the young wife he recently captured in New lork a daughter of John D. Townsend, the lawyer. Both of the boys closely resent bio their father. "When Frank weut West," said Mrs. Fremont, "I suggested that he stop and call on General hibley, in Minnesota, who had never seen him. He did it; called in citizen's dress, and said: 't"eral Sibley, who am 1?' 'You are a FiWiwnt,' said the general; there's Tie sons are both tall, lilack-IwureU, black-eyed, and "bearded like u pard," and they both, like their sisters, show strains of their Gallic blood the influ ence of their grandfather, the poor, scholarly French gentleman who came to V lrgimu at the beginning of the century and found their grandmother in her teens. Mrs. Fremont, that "Jessie Ben ton." the mention of whoso name notable in the campaign of 1850 always evoked a cheer, holds her own remarkably well It doesn't seem possiblo that sho could have made her famous runaway match nearly forty-three years ago. bhe was a handsome blonde when she ran awav from the headquarters of "Old Bullion," in Washington, and joined the fortunes of the young explorer; now her hair is as white as snow, but she shows few in dications of ageing, aud talks as brilliantly as ever, Color Blindness. Little Nell "Mamma, what is colo: blind?" Mamma "Inability to tell ono color from another, dear." Tittie JSeii "I hen I dess the man that made ray g'ography is color blind.' Mamma "And why, pet?" Little Nell" Tause he's got Green land painted yellow." 44 A chip of the old block" The tuiHs iug arm of the Venus da Milo. SELECT SIFTINGS. A grain ct strvchnine wIH "embitter 600,000 grains of water. In winding up the clock in the tower of Trinity church, New York city, the crank or handlo has to be turned round 850 times A naintinir of the Lord's Runner mide by a French artist of the revolutionary criod represents the table as ornamented y a tumbler filled with cigar lighters. The name of Agate is derived from the river Achates, in Sicily, near which these stones were found in abundance by the ancients. They are now found in Scotland, Saxony, end Hungary, and are also brought from China and the East Indies. The thimble was originally called "thumb-bell," because it was worn on the thumb, as sailors still wear their thimbles. Though first made in Eng land, in 1095, thimbles appear to have been; known to the Romans, as some were found at Herculancum. From the army and navy diet scales of France and England, which, of courap, are based upon the recognized necessitfts of largo numbers of men in active life, it is inferred that about two and one-fourth pounds avoirdupois of dry food per day are required for each individual. Of this amount three-fourths are vegetable and the rest animal. At the close of an entire year the amount is upward of 800 pounds. The Norwegian shoe, or skee runner, Is used in Colorado for long journeys over glassy snow, r when going up or down a steep mountain. Every ono has a pair of those ungainly shoes men, women and children. Those who have mastered tho art of snowshoeing can go very rapidly on them. There is a Nor wegian there who 13 willing to wager that he can travel htty miles across the country in ten hours, but that is much faster than the majority of skee runners. In this country a city is a municipality, having a local government and a mayor as an executive; a town is a municipality comprising ono or more villages. In England, however, a city is usually a corporate town, which is a bishop's see, and has a cathedral church; a town is an assemblage of houses, usually having a market, or a subdivision of a county. In early times the word town was applied only to such a collection of buildings as was surrounded by a wall. A village is the some in England as in this country, ' The larvae of butterflies and moths are called caterpillars; those of beetles, grubs ; those of flies, maggots, and those of mosquitoes, wigglers. ine term larva, pupa and imago are relative only. Whilo the grub and caterpillar are quite different from the pupa, the bee state is reached- by a very gradual change or form, so that it is difficult to say where the pupa ends and tho imago ends. In fact, a large number of insects reach ma turity through an indefinite number of 6light changes. The humble-bee molts at least ten times before arriving at the winged state. - WISE WORDS. Bo deaf to the quarrelsome and dumb to the inquisitive. Do not be too generous with your temper. Keep it. Contacts with the world either breaks or hardens the heart. The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who feel. Great things are not accomplished by idle dreams but by years of patient study. A thorough scholar carries a key with which to unlock every door in the man sion of knowledge. Tho mistakes of women result almost always from her faith in the good and her confidence in truth. Experience shows that success is due less to ability than to zeal. The winner is he who gives himself to his work, body and soul. To tell our own secrets is generally folly, but that folly is without guilt; to communicate those with which we aro intrusted is always treachery, and treach ery for the most part combined with folly. True repentance consists in the heart being broken for sin and broken from sin. Some often repent, yet never re form; they resemble a mun traveling in a dangerous path, who frequently sturts and stops, but never turns uside. Italian Air Made to Order. A very remarkable discovery is report ed on the authority of a fellow of the ltoyal Meteorological society, to which the attention both of the faculty and of the society cannot be too speedily direct ed. Dr. Carter Moffat, cousin of the late Dr. Hubert Moffat, claims to have in vented, after nine years' study, an instru ment known as the aminoniaphone, which contains an absorbent material saturated with peroxide of hydrogen combined with condensed ammonia aud other ingredi ents, through which a current of air is drawn into tho lungs. This is said to be in reality a highly concentrated artificial Italianized air, in an extremely portable condition. Dr. C'urter Moffat's voice was originally very weak, harsh, and destitute of intonation. By the use of the ammo niaphonc it has now become a pure tenor of extraordinary range, lie noticed that after experimenting ou himself for only fourteen days an expansion of the chest took place lu the extent of over half an inch, with a feeling of increused lung space and powerof voice, which has since been maintained. Experiments have been made upon choirs in Scotland, with ex traordinary results. As there re a good many choirs in England, to say nothing of the opera companies, which stand in great need of improvement, the ammonia phone is certain to he in grout demand. J'uU Mull UttutU. HOPE'S EONO. The golden dreams of youth Assume a gutee of truth Which age keepj never, For Hope's voice aingeth ever. "Oh, youth and strong endeavor. Can win the highest good forever." Love's subtle intuition Divines life's clad fruition, Distrusting never; And sweetly Hope sings ever "True love and sweet endeavor Shall hold the highest good forever. Love's sacred tryst is broken, Heartbreaking words are spokoi Her bonds to sever; But still Hope singeth ever, "Brave heart and strong endeavor Must find the highest good forever." Pale hands are crossed in death; Gone is the quivering breath; And still a low voloe never Estops echoing, echoing ever. "Brave heart and strong endeaTor Have won the highest good forever." Helm M.. Winslow. HUMOR Of THE DAY. "Women generally are clothes obserr era. It seems strange that no matter how much gold a man may steal he is only sent to the penitentiary for tho guilt.- Sifting. i ' A Somerville young lady is said to pos sess a mania for starting fires. She will get over that when 6he is married. Pftii addphia Call. A little girl in church, after the con tribution box had. passed, complacently said: 4 'I paid for four, mamma. Was that rightV-Anontnwu. "But," said the' serenaded man, "1 must go out and make a speech. Some thing must be done to stop the playing of that band." Jhtton Pod. An exchange says that Noah was the first pitcher on record. He "pitched th ark within and without." The game was finally called on account of the rain. - An Indiana jail-bird recently scraped off the back of a mirror and swallowed it. It was a cold day for him when the mercury twent down. Burlington Fret Press. When you see a policeman heading cow for the pound it's n6 use to tell him that there are 15,000,000 cows in the United States. He doesn't want but the one. Detroit Free Press. ' A writer in the New York Sun con tends that the goose is an older bird than the American eagle.' Our experience leads to the belief that it is a good deal tougher. Troy Times. The United States has 16.24 medical practitioners to every 10,000 of popula tion. And yet it is quite a common thing for an American to live to a com paratively ripe age. Boston Transcript. "I Climb to rest," is the name of Lucy Larcom's latest poem. Whence the inference that her poetry does not pay enough to permit Miss Larcom to room on the parlor floor. Hochester Express. "Well, sir," said Farmer Furrow to a friend, "I was never so insulted in my life. Why, I was down in Washington lust week and one fellow had the impu dence to ask me if I wasn't a Congress man. New York Journal. It is not so strange that the annexation of Canada to the "United States is not strongly advocated by men in positions of public trust. They kind of like to think that in case anything happens Canada is a foreign country. LinceU Citizen. "What influence has the moon upon the tide?" asked the professor. The class wag replied that he didn't know exactly wha-. influence it had upon the tied, but that it had a tendency to make tho untied awful spoony. BurlingUtn Free Press. "Who is the first lady in the land?" nervously inquires a contemporary. When you come to Philadelphia, if you will slick yourself up a little and comb the burrs out of your hair we will take you up to the house and introduce you to her. Philadelphia Call. "Was Early Man a Savage?'" asks a magazine writer, That depends. If the early man was dressed to catch the 4 A. m. train, and his collar button fell be hind the bureau, tho probabilities are that he was as savage as they make 'cm. KurrUtouin Ilcrald. A neat story of the late Baron Roths child is told in the French papers. He was very busy one morning, when the Vicomte de L. P. was admitted into his office. The baron, absorbed in his reading, said without lifting his head: "I am at your orders, sir; take a chair." 44 Pardon me," was the answer, "lam the Vicomte do L. P." "Ah," said the baron, not looking up, "take two chairs, then." A certain member of the Detroit fnu nicipal government is the possessor of a splendid growth of beard and long, drooping mustaches. Recently he dined away from home, and at the table sat one of those infants you have all read about. After stariug for some time in open as tonishment at tho guest, the interesting youth roared out at tho top of his voice : "Ma! ma! he has got a mouth; I saw him put a cracker in it!" Bttivit Jour nal. Maid of Texas, ere I go, Tell rne if your clock is slow; For I have a train t catch, And must quickly raise the lutch. re I dart into the niht, Ttjll me, is your timepiece rinht f Hark I I hear the bull dog's bark. And the night is cold amldtu k. Maid of Texm 1 must git, "Y er, before I rise and Bit, Tell uie, maiden, tell we true, Sv hat nmuhor w your iap sh"ei .'