THE FOREST REPUBLICAN U pobltahcd rry Wednesday, bj J. E. WENIC. Offlo la Smearbaugh & Co.'a Building tXM STREET, TIONESTA, Pa. Terms, ... fl.eo per Year. No tnbterlptlrmi ret! red for a shorter period xban three months. Oorreapotxlenr aolleltcd from til parts of the TonnlfT. No nolle will b taken of anonjmoiu "nwaMialcatlon. RATES OW ADVERTISING. I'r.e Sqnare, one Inch, one Insertion, I t i I'ne Square, one Inch, one month I 0 (me Square, one Inch, three month. r i W (me Stiiare, one Inch, one year , ION Two Square, one year If 00 Quarter Column, one 5 far. 00 Half Column, one year M OS Cne Column, one rear .19 to I-eeal adrertiaenenU ten cent er Hat eaaa 1 vrtinn. Marring end death notice! gratia. All bill, fnr yearly advertisements collected qnar. Ir-rly. Temporary adverUeemeata nut be palu in advance. Ju work cms. on delivery. M VOL. IIX. NO. 40. TIONESTA. PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRDARY 2, 1881 $1 50 PER ANNUM C It Is said that a largo proportion of our tandard silver dollars are hoarded by Chinamen on the Pacific coast to take horn vith thorn when they return to the OJesAial kingdom. Mr. Mercier, tho Alaskan explorer, ays that r-r0 miles from tho mouth of the Yukan river is a place where a gigan . tic glacier is about eighty feet abovo tho "surface of the water, sixteen feet deep nd.fifty yards wide. On the surface of this frozen stream is a bed of nntodilu vian forest remains, six feet deep. The Ire from tho glacier is constantly bond ing vcr and breakaofl. The territory embraced by railroads thirty years ago had the Mississippi 2?iref for its western boundary as fnr eouth as Louisiana, the western bound ary o'f that Stat then being tha limit. The area covered was !if)7,000 regular mllcs or 531,000,000 square acres. Now every Btate and Territory is accessible, and tho extent covered Is 8, 580, ,000 equaro miles, or 2,291,300,000 square acres. ' I How great and varied are the resources cf some of our railroad corporations may "bo iudged from tho statement that a "Western compnny has completed ar rangements to establish a weather service over its entire system similar to that in use by the Federal Government. Trains will be equipped and operated according to the weather reports, which aro to le made from stations along the line to tho headquarters of tho road. Those re ports, it is expected, will aid materially in tho safe shipment of live stock and perishable goods. The products of Florida Industries, with a population of 805,000, amount in alue to a little over $41,000,000. Here is jlist of the products of her indus tries : Vanilla, poultry, peaches, cow peas, honey, swine, sheep, alligator bules and teeth, . strawberries, nursery trees, brjeks and artificial stone, moss, beef, cotton seod, sponges, oyBtcrs, fish, turtle, cigars, vegetables, corn, wheat, t3,Ytobacco, hay, fodder, hides, milk, utter, limes, lemons, pineapples, pin irs, grape?, oranges, arrowroot, wine, orses, mules, cattle, wagons, plows, 'ar, molasses, ice, lumber, cotton, 1 r, naval stores, etc. So says tho 'Ida Dispatch. he New York Commercial Advertiser rks editorially: "Tho industry of ng" sea island cotton along tho At :c coast which began with favorable pects a few years ago, has turned out .e nearly, if not quite, a failuro on count of low prices. The fibre of ais kind Of cotton is much longer than hat of the ordinary staple. In the meantime the price . of the products manufactured from it has remaked sta tionary or has been raised, eo that the loss falls wholly on the planter, and there h danger of the industry dying out. Such an outcome would be so liously felt in this city, which receives the bulk of sea island cotton' shipped from southern ports." The experiment of taking the jacket off an 8-inch gunwns successfully per formed at tho Washington navy yard a - short time ago. Such a thing was nevei rflfiuirerl unci np.r iiftum nt.prl in fblt country before. Large steel guns are not made in one solid piece now as the formerly were. The groundwork of t cannon is one long tube, of not more than one-half the external diameter thai tho finished cannon will have. This tub is strengthened by jackets and hoops which fit the tube so closely that the joints are firmer than a solid casting would be. These jackets are simply other tubes of larger bore pressed ovei the inner tube. They are pnt on red-hot, and iu the cooliug shrink so tightly as to be equal to a solid piece of metal. The editor of the New York Sun Bays. A correspondent wants to know which city, New York or Philadelphia, manu factures the more goods in amount. New York does. This marvelous metropolis ranks first among the manufacturing towns of the United States, as she dos in so many other respects. Philadelphia used to lead in manufactures. The last census showed tho relative position of the two great cities : AViw I'orJc PhilaiUlpha, Number of estab lishments 1!,3: 8,507 Capital f 181,20J,:ij) $187,143,857 Average number of hands emuloved. 2-7.:S53 185.527 Total amount of wages tlt7,O"i0,021 tM.'-'tWJOC Value of materials. f-'KN, 4 Jl.O'.U tl'J!, 155.477 Value of produc ts. . J47J.'.l:iU,4;i7 t:e4,34S,U35 In other words, with about $11,00),- 000 less capital invested than Philadel phia, and with about 42,000 more work ing men and women, New York pro duced in l&bO about $473,000,000 of goods from $288,000,000 of material! while Philadelphia produced $;124,000, CO") fjom $199,000,000 of material. THIS LIFE. This life Is like a troubled sea, Where holm a-weather or a-lee The ship will neither stay nor wear, But drives, of every rock in fear. All seamanship in vain we try, We cannot keep her steadily; But just as Fortune's wind may blow The vessel's driven to and fro. Yet, come but Love on board, Our hearts with pleasure stor'd, No storm can ouerwhelm, Still blows in vain The hurricane While he is at the helm. Dibditi. THE MATE'S STORY. HOW CHINESE PIRATES WERE KEPULSED. In 1875, owing to the wreck of a Bos ton brig in the China Sea, I was left in Hong Kong 111 pretty bad shape. After I had carried a flag of distress, as you might say, for two weeks, an English man offered to let me work my passage to Liverpool, but as I was about to ac cept it I ran across a countryman who had a berth for me. One of the largest trading houses in Canton at that time was composed of three Americans, and they owned two small steamers and three or four sail craft. These vessels were employed in collecting goods from tho Various islands to the southeast, nnd some J of the voyages extended up the Yellow pea as 1 ar as lengcaow. Just at that time the firm had come into possesion of a new steamer, nnd she was about to make her first voyage. There had been troublo with piratical craft, and the steamer had been fitted out to take care of herself. She carried two six-pounders, twenty American cavalry carbines, a score of revolvers, and was fixed to throw hot water over boarders. Her compliment of men was fifteen, of whom the cook, steward, and three firemen wero natives. All others were Ameri cans and Englishmen. The supercargo was an American, who could rattle off the Chinese, language as well as tho best of 'em, and the Captain and some of the others could "smatter" more or less. j Our first voyage was to be up the Yel low Sea, nnd we carried a loud. pi Ameri can and English goods. Tlio cargo well deserved the name .of "miscellaneous." There were muskets, fish spears, sole leather, tinware, looking glasses, cali coes, buttons, stoneware, lamps, fish nets, groceries, axes, and almost every thing elso you can think of, and the supercargo also carried money to pur chase what wo could not trallic for. We were to pick up in exchange whatever foreign markets called for in Canton, which included teas, rice, several species of nuts, dyestuffs, roots, barks, skins, etc. ' I was in luck to secure the place' of mate, for Captain TabQr was a splendid follow and tlio crew wasone which could be depended on. We hud three or four men who understood the handling of the six-pounders, which had been sent over from tho. United States, and with the supply of small arms at hand we felt our selves a match for anything except n regular gunboat. We got away in good shape, rait up between the coast and the Island of Formosa, and then steered to the northeast to letch the Lioo-Kioo Islands which are seven or eight in num ber, and deal in ginseng, 6arsuparilla aud other medical roots. We stopped a day at Ke-Lung, which is at tlio northern end of Formosa, and almost opposite Foo chow, on the mainland, and while here it was noticed that the native members of of our cre.v were very thick with a lot of suspicious characters who were hanging about us the greater part of tho di. Tho supercargo overheard them discussing our voyage and making many inquiries, and when he spoke of the matter to the steward that pig-tailed gentleman ex plained th t all our natives were related to the strangers who had been hanging about, and of course the latter took an interest in them. I didn't know Chinese character as will as some of the others, and was therefore somewhat surprised to hear the Captain and supercargo discussing the impudence of the natives aboard boloro we had left Ke-Lung by fifty miles. The firemen had given t tie engineer trouble, and the steward had a certain sort of impuden e iu his obedience to commands. I did not know until now that a gang of twenty or more of the fellows at Ke-Lung had attempted to induce thu Captain to give them passage to the isluud of Tseeusun, which we meant to visit. They had offered big passage money and were willing to put up with any accommoda tions, but he mistrusted them, and firmly declined to have one of them aboard. The steward and firemen were soundly berated by tho Captain and threatened with irons if any more trouble occurred, and there thu mutter was dropped. At the close of the second day we dropped anchor off a small island to the south west of Tseeusun called Kung wall. There was no harbor, but the depth of the water enabled us to get within a cable's length of t lie beuch iu a compar atively sheltered spot. Captain Tabor had traded at this inl and a year before, ami he kusw that the natives were all right as long as they were kept in awe by a superior force. There was u trader on the island who had a large fctock of roots, ami after a palaver lusting two (lays and nights the supercargo finally ma le a hurguin with him. It was ol. served by the Captain that some change had come over the mi tives, for 011 his previous trip they had been eager to cloe a bargain at any figure named. The natives iu our crew had beru permitted to go adio e, aud a doen or so of thu leading men of the island had c uie aboard and inspected us. It was niht of the second day before a tradu was agreed upon. On tho following day we were to bcain lauding aud receiving good There was a big crowd of natives on shore opposite the steamer, and they had canoes, catamarans, and dhows enough to have emb iiked HOO people. Just be fore night closed in we sighted a largo junk coming down from tho direction of Formosa, but gave her no particular at tention. At about 9 o'clock she camo jogging along at a tramp's gnit, and dropped her mud hook within '200 feet of us. I gave her a looking over with the night glass, and as only five or six men could be made out on her decks, it was natural to concludo that she was a trader. I'cing in port, with fair weather for tho night, the crew might expect that only an anchor watch would be main tained. The men must therefore have been somewhat surprised when Captain Tabor invited our five natives to go ashore, and spend the niht with their friends, and announced to the rest of us that we should stand watch and watch. The cook was tho only native who did not go. He declared that ho had enemies ashore who would kill h'm, and he wi s therefore allowed to occupy his accus tomed quarters. There wero ten of us besides him, and soon after the junk an chored, the guns were cast loose and loaded with grape, the firearms brought up and made ready, and the engineer was instructed to keep steam enough to permit us to move. Tho cable was ar ranged for slipping, and then five men turneuWn "nil standing," and the other five of us stood watch, lie fore this oc curred the Captain said to me: "Mr. Graham, this may be going to a good deal of trouble for nothing, but tho man who deals with these natives has got to be prepared for ony emergency. I will therefore head the second watch. Keep your eye on that junk, and permit no boat to come aboard under any circumstances." I distributed my men over the vessel to tho best advantage, and reserved to myself the right to act as a free lance. That is, I went from one part of the ves sel to another, and kept one eye on the junk and the other on - the beach. All was quiet up to half-past eleven o'clock, when I made two discoveries in quick succession. The' cook had prepared a large dish of coffee for our use during the night. We had a largo urn on a stand intone.-corner of tho dining room, and a lamp underneath kept the coffee hot. The same thing is in use in Amer ican hotels and restaurants. I was on the point of entering the cabin to secure a drink of the beverage when, as I passed an open windo v, I heard the cover of the urn rattle, and then caught the footsteps of some one in retreat. It could be none other than tho native cook, I argued, but I did not go to his quarters to verify or disprove my suspicions. I entered the cabin, turned up the light, and carefully examined the urn. The rascal had cer tainly "dosed" it. There was a giayish powder on the cover and on tho edjro of tho urn, ana in his baste he had spilled some on the floor. A look insido showed numerous bubbles on the surface of the'' liquid, but these broke and dis appeared while I was looking. The rascal could have but one object in his actions. I arranged the can ao that no one could securo a drink, aud then started to noti fy the Captairi. As I passed along the deck I looked for the junk, and in an in stant ?aw that she had decreased the dis tance between us. Tho tide was setting in, and she was either dragging her anchor or had purposely raised it and allowed herself to drift. The Captain was up as soon as I touched his arm. and when I reported my suspicions of the cook and the junk he replied: "Call all the men nt once, but make no noise. That junk has got fifty men in her hold, and tho natives on shore are in with a plot to capture us. Take a pair of hand cuffs and have the cook secured in his berth." After I had called the men I went to make a piisoner of the cook, but he was nowhere to be found. Ills object in re maining aboard up to that hour was to drug our coffee and note what prepara tions wo were making. When ho got ready to go ho probably swam to the shore with his news, but ho could have reported little more than the fact that he had drugged our coffee, which all who wero awake at midnight would probably makcuso of. When the men had received their orders we paid our attention to the junk, and one of the guns was quietly rolled across the deck and trained upon her. When the night glass was di rected to the shore we could make out th it many ot the nitives wero moving about and evidently geiting ready for some expedition. There was no question now but what we were to be attacked. We had a good pressure of steam, plenty of hot water, and tho hose was attached and a man as-igned to take charge of it. It was an hour and a half after mid night before there was any decided move 011 tho part of the enemy. Tho Captain of the junk could not have had a night glass, and perhaps ho reasoned that we ere as badly off. lie kept paying out his cable foot by foot until ho was so closo onto us that I could have tossed a biscuit aboard of him. Owing to the M-t of Mie tide or some cross current, he dropped down to us stern first, while we lav broadside to th beach. 'he tcrn of tho junk was pointed amidships of the steamer, and our gnu would lake his whole deck ut every di-charge. At 1 o'clock two men left her in a small boat nnd went ashore, and 1 hen forty or liftv n rm cd men came out of the hold and t iok their stations on deck. A few hud muskets, but most of them canicd kni vei'und a sort of hand grenade. These bomb are tiiltd with a villainous com pound, which is let loose as they are broken, and the fumes aro more to be dreaded than a bullet. Their plan, as we kolved it, was for an uttack on both sides of us at once. A fleet would come out oil us from the khore aud the junk would drift down on us nt the same time. We had the 1 ablu ready to blip, bent the engineer to his post, and then waited. At about half j ast one. while the tide had yet half an hour to run, we saw the, shore boats make ready. At leest 200 natives were ready to come off. They knew that tho co.k had d nigged or Eoisoned our coffee, and therefore sent a oat in advance of the fleet to see in what shano wo wero. The boat camo up vary softly and rowed t-.vice around us before the. Captain hailed and let them know wo were wide awake. Some sort of signal was given from the boat, and tho fight opened at once. Just the mo merit we saw the people on the junk get ting ready to drift her down upon us we gave thent the grape from the six-pounder. They were not pistol-rhot away, with most of the men crowded aft, and I verily believe that tho one dis charged killed or wounded twenty men. I was at the gun with two others, and a man armed with a carbine was near us. He fired six or seven shots while we were loading, and three or four musket shots were fired at us. Our second shot drove all who were left alive below hatches, and. believing that the carbineer could keep thorn there, we ran tho gun to the starboard side to beat off tho boats. It was high time. While the first dis charge of tho gun had done for a score of them, they were a reckless and des perate lot and would not retreat. They were provided with bombs, spears, blow g'ins, and muskets, nnd the man who was to sprinkle them with hot water had been shot dead at their first fire. As soon as we got our gun over, some one picked up the noz.lc of the hoso pipe and turned it loose on every boat within reach. But for tho hot water the fellows might have carried us by boarding for two hundred to ten is big odds. Such scroaming aud shouting and shrieking as they indulged in when tho boiling hot water spattered over their half-naked bodies was paniemoniuin of itself, and all tlio time we kept playing on them with the guns and the carbines. The fight could not have lasted oversovenor eight miautes, and as soon as they began to draw off I ran my gun to the port side, loaded with shell, and sent the missile right through the junk's stern. Half a doen fellows rushed out of the hold and jumped overboard, and I gave her two more. When tho third was fired thore was an explosion, probably of a barrel of powder, which lifted her docks thirty feet high and split her wide open. She sunk right there before our eyes, and the wails ot the wounded wretches who float ed about for a minute or two were dread ful to hear. Captain Tabor felt that such treachery as the natives had shown deserved the severest punishment, and we turned both guns loose on the village, and fired riorty or fifty shells. When daylight came not a human being was in sight. Portions of tho junk had been driven on the beach, and the natives had fled and left everything behind them. The sharks were probably attracted to the spot by the sounds of firing, and they certainly had a rich feast. I never saw them so thick before nor since, and as they fished up the bodies from the bottom around us three or four would seize and tug at a single 1 no nnd quickly tear it to pieces. I was sent ashore with a flag of truco, with four armed men to make it re spected, nnd on the sands I found the bodyofono of our firemen, and not fai off that of our cook. After some hard work: I induced the head man to come in out of tho forest and talk to me. His name was Wung-IIang, and a more hum ble man I never met. He had laid it all to the people on the junk. The natives among our crew had conspired with the fellows at Ke-Lung to secure passage aboard and overpower us. When this game could not be worked, owing to the refusal of tho Captain to take them, they followed on after us in the junk, and found a cheerful co-operator in old j Wung-IIang, the trader. He denied taking any part in tho affair personally, and added that ho did his best to dis suade his people from making the attack. His loss, according to his own figures, was sixty odd killed, while almost every one elso was wounded or scalded. Five men got ashore from tho junk, which had nearly fifty men aboard of her. We were in a situation to take every dollar's worth of goods tho old rascal had in his store-houses', but Captain Tabor had no intention of blasting his prestige in that fashion. We hold, tho trader to tho contract already made, and landed our goods nnd put his aboard. j He had been soundly thrashed, and like 1 plenty of other men under the same cir cumstances he respected tho thrashers. He suppl ed us with the best of pro visions, detailed natives to do all our work, and wheu we were ready to leave he supplied us with five natives, and gave l aptain Tabor full power to decap itate them at the first signs ot disobe dience. During th'j next three years, or until I severed my connection with the steamer, wo got around to the island about once in six months, and old Wung Hang always had a good bit of cargo ready for us, and would deal with no one else. Xeio York Sun. A Fair Report. The following report of the financial standing of u gentleman, furnished a friend by Abraham Lincoln, is probably more leliable, suys Youth' ('miiniiiinn, than many of the reports furnished to day by some commercial agencies. His estimate of th! value of thu wife and baby will strike the ordinary father as being very fair: " ours of the lllth instant receive !. I am well acquainted with Mr. , ami know his circuiuslau es. Kiist of all, hu lias a wife and haty. Together they ought to be worth liny thousand Uohursto any man. Hwondly, hu bus an oilii e in w hi h I limn ia a talilo worth 0110 dollar aud liftv cents, arid three chain worth, nay. one dollar. Jjit of all, there is in one corner a large rat hole, w hich, will hear looking into. Itespe -tfiiUy yours, A. Lincoln. A Michigan ex soldier lias decliued to receive his pension any longer bo cause he has got well. It is rumored that he will be given another pension now ou the ground of insanity. (.', TWO INVENTIONS A WEEK. THAT 13 THE AVERAGE FOR WTJ.ICII ONE MAN SEEKS PATENTS. Millionaire Went Inslionon and HI Peculiar It ion Mra. Went Inghnuaa and Her I.avlnh Kipriiilittircn. Edison has, in the opinion of many, been c lipsod by tho versatility of a Pittsburg genius, says a letter from that city in the Chicago Tribune. Tho one name that ismoro familiar, perhaps, than all others in tho patent office at Washing ton City, is that of Mr. Ueorgo Westing house, tho millionaire inventor whose wonderful workshops make up at least one-twelfth of tho industries of this city. His air-brake mado him famous several Tears ago. Hut it is since then that his inventive mind has been more prolific. For the last year his patents taken out in the government otlico have averaged two a week allot them of tho most valuable kind. ( f a man whose ability to invent can stand such a constant drain; whose inventions require tho constant employ ment of 5,000 men to manufacture; whoso profits from his various patents have swollen to between $'1,000,000 nnd $,OHO,000 in a decade of years many interesting stories can bo told. Last week one of Mr. Westinghouse's clerks, John Sprage by name, struck a novel idea to break the intensity of tho incandescent electric light. It was to simply havo tho egg shapod globe made of heavy wavy glass. Mr. Westinghouso happened to notice the experiment, ' I 1 1 .1 f .1. quicaiy recugnieu mu uumy 01 ine con trivance, nnd gave Sprago 1,001) for his idea. Of course in this way Mr. Wests inghouse has bought up n number of small patents which appear to tho public as his own, but the great majority of them are evolved in his own brain. His most important inventions nrointhrco lines viz. : the air-brake for locomo tives and switch and signal apparatus, safety appliance for natural gas, high speed engines and dynamos for the man ufacture of electric-light. Tho King of Belgium recently sent Mr. Westinghouse a bundle of parchment stamped with gold and scarlet seals and bound with yards of tape, in which the inventor found himself titled for .life as "Sir Knight Ocorge Westinghouse," he being knighted for tho many lives saved through the instrumentality of his air brake. Workshops to make the brako arc maintained in Pittsburg, Paris, and licrlin. Almost every railroad operating in the I'nited States, Europe.on the Con tinent, in the countries of the Orient or the Occident, pay Mr. Westinghouse a royalty for tho use of his way of utilizing air. It will thus be seen that his profits from this sourco are princely. No other man in the I'nited States can show tho name of every railroad on the pages of his ledger as debtors. Mrs. Westinghouse is ono of thu re mat kable women of Pennsylvania. Sho spends money with n lavish hand to at tain her happiness. Among tho pur chases her husband ouco made was a cream-colored hocso with beautiful white mane and tail. Mrs. Westing house went into ecstacies over the ani mal. She wanted a mate for it. Nono could bo found iu Pittsburg. So she hired a trustworthy man and sent him out to search for the mate of tho cream colored horse. Ho was to tracl until he found it. This took him a year, but ho came back with tho exai t mate. ' No prettier team was ever seen on the streets of Pittsburjf than those two horses. A bhort time afterwards one of them died. Mrs. Westinghouse's gricf was uncon trollable. She engaged a taxidermist at an extravagant price mid had her dead pet stuffed. Hoofs of solid silver were placed upon his feet, and the whole, fastened to an elegant mahogany bed, now btands in the stables beside the live mate. They tiro there today and can be sei'n by visitors to llouu wood, the name of the inventor's splendid palace. It is reluted of Mrs. Westinghouse that on another o casion nhe wn conspicuous in an equally prodigious expenditure ol money. It was while she was summering at the Kaaterskill Hotel, 011 the top of tho mountains, that she gave a splendid reception. It was over at last and she was about to reliie in the morning whe 1 she was struck by tho weary, ha.'uurd looks of all the servants who hud been compelled to do extra work on her ac count. Her generous heart responded, and she felt for her purse to rewurd them. It hail been left in her room, and so go ing to the clerk of the hotel she reqius ted the loan of $1,500 until morning. ' I have only pot $i,10 here," replied the clerk. "Well, give me that," said the dashing MOinan. And this whole mm she is reported 1 1 havo thrown atound among tho servants. There is at present being built at Pull man, III., a magniliccnt private car for Mrs. Westinghouse. She travels a great deal, and her husband proposes to have something for her that will outrival in elegance the cars of Pullman, andcr bilt, or Gould. Only tho other day Wil liam Timmius, a laboring man, invented a new kind of brako for railroad trains. Mr. Westinghouso offered him f 75, 1100 for it, but the shrewd lilt le Kntdisliuuni held on to his contrivance and expects more. His Preference. Somehow or other I don't think I'd care to be the prettiest girl in the world," he remarked. Sho "Why uot?" lie "Heeauso I d rather be next to the prettiest." Sijtimj. The London l.anct t records the case of a girl who had attacks resembling delir ium tremens f rom tho act of chew ing tc i leaves. Seimr bslieves that iniiiiy per sons could be cured of their dyspi p ia ami of palpitation of the hear, by dis continuing the use of this favorite bev raire. TO MY WIFE. rVTiv need you care, dear wife, or heed ! The passing of your early grace f What thoiiRh the lilios supersede The springtime roso.s of your faisat What though the aiuro of your eyes Has mellowed to a softer blue? The fairest tinti that duck the skies Are caught from twilight's fading hue. Why should the rlenad fruit regret Its summer bloom, howo'er so fair? Why need you sigh, though Time should sot His crown of silver on your hair? The sweetest fragrance of the rose Is from its fading petals pressed, And Nature spreads her earliest snows Above the flowers sho loves the best What care we for tho vauishe.l years, Rave for the fruit their summers brought: What care we for our fallen tears, Save for the rainbows on them wrought; Why should we mourn tho joys we shared, Orsoe them perish with regret, Since on the fruit our hearts have fared, And memory keeps tho rainbows yet? What though our winter time has come, Aud summer's buds and blooms expire? Love hath an ever radiant home, And bids us welcome to its fire. Ho dwelt with us through all the spring; We sheltered him from summer's heat; Now at his hearth we'll sit and slug, And let tho wintry tempest beat. Lee O. Harris HUMOR OF THE DAT. Fine language Ten dollars and costs. The timo when the cold water party largely predominated During tho flood. Call. If every man was ns big as ho fools thore couldn't be standing room in this country. .eminui Independent. A man is like ara'orboeause you can't tell how sharp he can bo until lie is com pletely strapped. Uantville Breeze. Tho greatest reformer of tho ago was. tho inventor of tho bustle, which has re-formed nearly every woman. Phila delphia Jerald. An, exchango observes: "We owe much to foreigners," from which we infer that tho editor has not paid his hired girl. Aiew llacea jW. Tho epidemic of pugilism is calculated to mako tho weary newspaper reader wish that even the baseball season might coino Agan.w-P,'itlnddphiit Tim". A writer says that "kind words are never lost." How is it whon your wife puts them in a letter and iiivcs them to you to mail? Ihirlinylon Free J'les.t, The question of the hour may hold Much mad contention in it, But, is reduced, w hcu all is told, To moment and to minute. t Nifiingn. A Maino minister was recently treed by a bear and kept there for an hour. Ho says he will never preach a long ser mon again in his life. liurliinjton Fre l'rtt. Why, Chawley," drawled Gusdo Flip kins to his chum, C. Percy Oiddibraino, "whore's your watch?" "Oh, 1 couldn't stand it," ho rcp.ied, "tho beastly tick ing shattered my nerves." Tid-Uits. Mrs. lligsby My husband just detests cabbage. Why do you suppose he is so prejudiced against it.' .Mrs. lllobson I imagine ho takes too much of it in his cigars, my deor. Jlirliiitjlon Fret l're. Doctor "What ails you, sir?" Patient "I don't know, doctor; I have such a hu.zing sound in my cars all tho time. Would you like to look at my tonguo?" Doctor "N'o, never mind; bring your wife around some day; I'd like to look at hers." StntrmiKiit. "Would you say tho poultry is very tender or the fowl is ery tender?" asked the Ixtnrding house mistress of one of her victims tho other day at dinner. "Neither," was the reply. "What, then, would you say." "I'd say the chi. ken is mighty tough!'' camo from tho boarder with emphasis. statmman. king Kalakuua's kingdom. From Mr. F. S. Poole, of St. Louis, who has for many years been eng tgod in raising rice in tne Sandwich Idands, I got a glimpse yestorday of King Kala kaua and his king lorn. Everybody will remember the M ir that was mado whon the Sandwich Island monarch traveled through this country several years ago. King "Calieo'jfc w as on every tongue. Mr. Poole tohffne that King Kalakaua, although once very wealthy, has been so open hamicd 'ud prodigal that ho has lilUe money left. He has I 11 reigning lor fouit. eu or fifteen y,- irs. and w hile a man of some aluliiy he bus not been able to hold his position except by tho con stant expenditure of money. Tliey have elections on the i-l mds, compare 1 with which those in tho I 11 t d States are tame. Thu islanders aro natural orators und will cIim us, the isu s of the day by the hour from any point of vantage, whether the he id of a siiar barrel, a table or a door lcp. They move largely 011 tin; impulse of the moment andean be swaved under cxeiteiiicut for any hide. The king lorn i divided between the "iu" und "outs," that is, the Ad ministration and the unti Administra tion factions Willi tho exception of tho treaty xxith tho I idled Slates, the Sandwi. h' Islands have a protective tariff often per (cut. against ull countries. .V '0 ) ui i 'I ri'iHht. Momentous Herds. What spil.-i ill Inlin e steal unawares Wlieiever In CIS conic. And tii- II"' mini. I. si laaiii and scares The luuiB't ti-liiij;diiiiibl U e had oiiu iniiiulu ut thu K'''e, li. tore thu others 1 uine; To 11101 row I' would U- too lute, Aud lew would he llm oluuiH 1 I'K'rd ut hr. sin- ii'un e. 1 ut lue; A llm time s.ed hv ; ' llow warm It I- t xUv,'' wild she; " It lisilvs likn lam," bitid I. Cr arurv.