THE FOREST EEPDBLICAN li published ever Wednesday, by J. . WENK. Oflloe in Bmoarbattgh & Co.'a Building ELM STREET, TIONE8TA, P. Terms, tl. SO per Year. No f nbscrlptlotii received for a shorter period than thrre months, . Correspondence solicited from alt parti of the Country. Ne notice will be taken of anonjrmone Tuamnnlcatlone. RATES OF ADVERTISING. One Square, one Inch, one Insertion. 1 o One Square, one Inch, one month I on One Square, one Inch, three month). I Q line Square, one Inch, one year 10 00 Two Sqtinrra, one year li 00 Qnarier Column, one year. to 00 Half Column, one year .. m M One Column, one year .............M0 0 I.eval tirrtiieiinU tea cull (,er llae eaea la ertion. Marriage and death notices eratla, All bills for yearly adrertteementi eotleeied qnar. terly. Temporary adyertisementa moat be paid In advance. Job work cash on dellrery. VOL. III. NO. 45. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1887. $1 50 PER ANNUM " I i. In Paris work has begun for the great World's Fair, to bo held in 1880, and workmen's shorts have been erected all around the park on the side of tho .Champ de Mars. Tho great tower to be erW-tcd on tho Exposition Grounds will bo 084 feet high. A botanical curiosity in a garden at Ealing, England, is a rose tree whose , blossoms nro entirely green, the flowers, in fact, being composed of similar loaves to the ordinnry foliage. This is evi dently a reversion to the earlier stage of terrestrial plant-life in which flowers had cot yet bocomo specialized organs. One of the most remarkable features of tho trade of 18811 was the extraordinary failure of tho Eastern mackerel catch. The total amount taken in 1S8G was 81, 05:1 barrels, while tho catch of 1881 footed up 839,043 barrels. . There were also only 823,000 quintals of codfish 4 iken-iiv 1880, against 002,455 quintals in 11:85. " Tho American exhibition which is to bo held in London in May next promises to receive tho practical support of many of the leading manufacturers throughout his country. Six or seven railroad rapanics will make exhibits of tho iAural products along their lines of r rj and several States have arranged to fJ collective displays. In tho matter of ingenuity tho Ameri can people lead tho worlV More appli- cations for patents nre received and more patents granted at the Patent Oflice in Washington than in any two countries of Europe Great Britain comes next on tho list, I France third, and Germany ' . fourth, it wns not until 183G that the Patent Office was organized as a separate bureau yith a Commissioner and suitable assistants for the proper discharge of its - duties. It is rather a singular fact that during that year only one application for a patent was filed. Tho next year the number increased to,100. The increase has steadily grown, until in 1880 the ap plications filed numbered 21,707. The -whole number of patents granted since 1830 is, in round numbers, 355,000. Even the Holy Land is being deprived of all Its picturesquencss. A big soap fac tory has been built where of old stood the town of Shcchem; Bethlehem has been rebuilt and gas introduced, Naza reth has become the headquarters of a large company of olive oil speculators, Ciesarea is being rebuilt in modern style, Mount t'armel hns been bought up by land speculators, a glue factory is going upat Bamoth Gilead, while Jeru salem has been delivered over to all sorts of occidental improvements, including clocks on tho public buildings, a strect cleaning bureau, the Parisian fashion journals, and even an occasional bicycle and telephone. Tho world is being too rapidly civilized into a cosmopolitanism which leaves no room for individualism or picturesquencss. One of the most remarkable formations of common salt in this country, and in deed in the world, is that on the Island of Petilo Anso, 125 miles west of New Orleans. It was discovered in 1802 while ' sinking a well, and was immediately seized by Jefferson Davis as a Confeder ate supply. Tho salt is uuderground at a depth ranging from ten to twenty-three feet. One hundred and fifty acres have, up to tho present time, been traced, and a depth ot 140 feet been reached. The salt is taken out in massive crystalline blocks, and is of the clearest white ap pearance It is nearly chemically pure, contains 00.88 per cent, pure salt, the remaining fraction of a per cent, being gypsum and chloride of lime. The mines are owned by the Avery family, and are worked by a New York firm, which pays $3,000 per month as a royalty for the privilege. Natural gas wells are being utilized in the Wet. An editorial in the Age of Med gives BDmo.valuable points gathered from Prof. John F. Carroll of the Penn sylvania Geological Survey, lie had just returned from a tour of visitation to ull tho points in Illinois where there have tjcen any indications of natural gas in any considerable quantities. ' It was learned through him that a considerable number of the houses in Cerro Gordo, a town twelve miles from Decatur, are be ing lighted and heated with natural gas, which is obtained from a depth of not over seventy fret. All over the central part of Illinois euil'.cient quantities of gas for household purposes may be ob tained by drilling to a depth of from fifty to 125 feet. In this connection it was noticed that a gentleman in Guthrie County, Iowa, while boring for water, at at a depth of 140 feet struck a strong flow of gas, which has continued to flow out of the two-inch pipe so strong that a matt cuiiiiut stop il by prettutujf on the od with all his strtuytli. SINK NOT. Sink not I sink not beneath the scorn That Is upon you east! Remember you to cares were born, Theee will not always last Up with the sun, and work away The Jt will come about, And Ifyou train yourself to-day Tou'll put your foes to route. Oh, keep a faithful, willing heart! And bravely burdens bear ; In life this Is the greatest art, To lessen evry care. Blnk not! sink not beneath the load Upon your shoulders cast; The cares you have upon life's road Shall not forever last. Howard C. Tripp, in Current "ALL CUT." "Good-by, dear Mary. I hate to have you go. It's like going into another world, so far awny. Tell John I never shall be satisfied till he settles East. I never have quite forgiven him for mov ing to California." "Oh, mother when he's doing so well. I didn't want to go, but he did not get on here; a small salary, and no prospect of a better, and tho children coming 1" 'Well, well, it was natural, and" you can't feel it as I do, being younger; but you want to see tho children some I" "I guess I dol" "And by that you may guess how I want to sec you." And tho old lady wiped her eyes. She was a stout woman, m a plaid flannel dustcloak and poke bonnet. The cloak was odd and conspicuous, but Mrs. AVat rous did not care for that, she wanted something soft to cover her dress, somc- imng mat sue could shake out of tern- ! porary creases, and keep on the hat-rack for daily use; that clonk covered her morning dress when she went out for daily supplies, and hid the worn sleeves and frayed waist of her old black silk when she took a shopping tour, or a drive with some kindly friend ; for Mr. Wat rous did not keep a horse. It was a use ful garment, and her husband always called it "Charity' because he said it covered a multitudo of sins in his wife's dress. Mary Watrous, the only child of this respectable couple, had married eight years ago the teller in the bank where her father had boen cashier for many years. At first John Dutton bad been content with his position; but after his three boys were born he began to reflect on the future, and having a good oiler from a cousin of his in ban Francisco, a successful merchant there, ho put his small patrimony of live thousand dollars into Sam Button's business, and now Dutton A; Co. were making money steadily. This was the first time Mary had been home to see her parents after a three years' absence, and she had a new grandchild to exhibit plump, rosy lit tle .Molly. The three boys were left at homo with their father, under the nurse's charge; .Mary thinking that she could take care of Molly, bitter than John could look after the boys without Katy's help. .Mr. Watrous had gone to get tho bag gage checked, ami Mrs. Watrous stood by tho car, which waited on the track to bo coupled to the express train just whistling in the distance: a train that made no stop in the next hundred miles. As Mrs. Watrous wiped I ho tears from her kind eyes, Alary held up .Molly to the window to comfort the mother's heart with that lovely baby face set in yellow curls, lit by soft hael eyes, just like her mother's, and sparkling with dimples. . "By, danma!" she shouted, kissing her fat hand, and smiling, She was de lighted to go, for she liked to ride for a time. Grandma looked up with her heart in her eyes. "You darlin' baby! Good by, good by. " "Hullo, Molly!" put in Grandpa's crisp voice. "(food-by, danpa!" baby responded, with another kiss. "Here are your cheeks, Mary. Good by, again, dear. Mother, arc you ready to go? 1 must be at the bank." ' 't h no ! I must stay and see the last of them." "He careful, then, old lady. Don't get on to the track, or knocked down by the train. Counted your checks, Mary? " "Yes, father. Good-by." And off trotted .Mr. Watrous, quite as grieved to part with his "girl' as he still called her, us his wile felt; but, man like, unwilling or unable to express it. Just behind the car, perhaps a rod from it, stood the engine of a local ac commodation train, spitting and hissing ready to leave as soon as the California express i-hould draw out. Airs. Watrous was still close to the car when the fast train came in. passed h( r, and then was switcl cd on to.the rail and coupled on to the waiting car, tlm was holding Mary's hand when the two met, and the jar disturbed her; she started and almost fell. "Oh, Mother! do bo careful," were Mary's last words, as she let go the cling ing fingers and gave a long, last look at the dear face, sti earning with tears. In another List. int. just a she had re placed Molly on the seat and shut tho window, she heard a scream outside. She sprang up and saw through the door, near which she was seated, her mother, lying prostrate on the track and the other engine coining from the sta tion, though slowly. '1 he express train on leaving this station at once took a curve to the south, so ull that .Mary saw was a part of her mother's body, in that unmistakable cloak, and two or three men running toward the track; but she saw enough. She dropped in a dead faint, hit her head against the corner of a seat, and lay insensible for hours; Alolly sortauiing at the top of hr voioc, and all the women in the car devoting them selves to her and her mother. At last Mary came out from her long swoon, and was able to tell the shocked passengers what she had seen, just as they reached the first stopping place. She insisted on getting oil there, though she trembled all over, and her head swam with the blow which it had received. There would be no eastward train for three hours, tho conductor said, and in that time, she thought,her self-possession would return. The conductor took Molly out, and into the station, and Mary was helped by a kindly passenger, who spoke with authority to the woman in charge. He was a director on the road, and, consequently, Mary was we cared for seated in the one rocking chair, a cup of hot tea brought her, and Molly beguiled by the woman's little child, who always accompanied her mother to her place of work. Left to herself Mary began to recall the fearful sight, to shudder, to remem ber her mother"s words: "I must see the last of them!" Poor mother! she had in deed seen the last of her daughter and pretty Molly. And oh! why had she; fainted? liut for that she might have I persuaded the conductor to stop right there and let her get off. Now, she could not return to her father till he knew all, and had to bear the shock alone. She had three hours to wait here, alone, impatient, distracted; and she could not reach her father before 6, his dinner hour. Then she thought of him, of the sud den horror that had smitten him, and, woman like, her thought went on into tho future. Would he care to stay in L ? would he not come to her? But her house was small, her children grow ing; how could she make him com fortable? She would telegraph to John; : her trunks coming before her would j startle him. Then she reflected that he would not know the trunks had come unless she were there too. But he knew 1 she was to leave L to-day. She raised herself feebly from the rocking-chair, ! and asked the woman in charge where j sho should find the telegraph office. j "Well, I can tell" you, but it won't be i of no use. Tho' was a tornado swep' over the county yesterday afternoon at : least over the south part of it and the , wires betwixt here and Sent Lewis is all j down." Mary sank back in her chair;! she could do nothing for John : he must ' put up with his anxiety. An hour went by, local trains came and went, the usual sort of travelers came and went also. Molly began to cry; she was tired and hungry. Alary crept over to the restau rant, now open to feed tho passengers of a northern accomodation train who dined there. She got some bread and milk for tho child, and tried to eat something herself, but food choked her; she could only swallow another cup of tea: she took Molly on her lap and the child fell asleep then; tho baby head j resting on her bosom comforted that sore heart, yet she cried bitterly over it, rec ollecting how often she had sat in her ! own mother's arms in her childhood, I and, resting on her shoulder, found that ; blessed consolation that only a mother's j arm can give. Oh, what should she do without mother! If she had only died I peacefully in her bed, with tender minis j try about her, loving words of faith, i tears of parting, looks of farewell; but j to be so snatched out of a happy life, so i rent from all this world in one crashing ! moment. Oh I if ever she reached her j California homo in safety, she would i never tempt a railway again ! What if j thero had been an accident to the cars, i and she had seen Molly crushed to death ! and could not lift a hnnd to save her? j She clasped tho child so closely at that I horrid thought that she cried out in her I sleep. Mary hushed her, and tried to I control her thoughts. She endeavored to recall the consolations of her earnest re i ligious faith; but the words even of. i Scripture fell lifeless on her memory. ! Poor human nature is so weak, both in ' mind and body, that a blow staggers it, ; and shakes even the foundations. She ; was stummed, hurt, desperato; neither j submission nor resignation came at her '. call; she could only whisper a helpless, vague appeal to God, like "Children crying in the night, I And with no language but a cry." Presently Alolly woke up, cross, hot, ; and quite intractable enough to occupy her mother for the next half-hour in soothing her fretful temper, washing the i warm face and hands, smoothing the damp curls, and beguiling her sorrows I with a red apple from the lunch-counter, j Then, after a little while, the window ; of the ticket-office opened. Alary bought ! her ticket to L . drepped a dollar i into the station-maid's hand, who re I ceived it with an astonished stare, and ! a grim "Thankye," and then, grasping little Molly's hand, went out into tho I fresh air and paced the platform till the porter shouted : ! "Western .Jr-prcss! Parsengers for i the East'ard, all aboard !" Once homeward bound, it seemed as if ' her grief and terror were renewed. Alolly stent; but in spite of all her efforts, Mary could not help recalling the last thing her eyes saw before she fainted, and her soul cowered before what she must meet now. , The way seemed interminable; there was a delay at one station waiting for a freight train that had jumped the track ! in the morning, and was neither ofT nor on as yet: and that delay involved anoth- er further on. when an excursion party of railway directors and their fricurts were : due, and had tho right f way. It was ! dark when Alary reached L , but the I took the first carriage that offered, and j lifting in sleepy Mollv, torn herself by ' conflicting emotions of grief, dread, and i anxiety, she at last arrived at her father's j door. I She paid the driver hurriedly, and j with Molly in her arms rushed iu at the I front door, which happened to be un : locked. A bright light streamed from thf glass door of the dining room at the ieud f the hall. Breathless, panting, pale us a sheet, and with a face of woe, ehv flung open the door, dropped Molly from her grasp, and, with a wild shriek, flung herself into her mother's arms. Yes; thero was that deplored mother, stout, hearty, uninjured in life or limb, just rising from the dessert that lingered on the dinner table, to see who camo in at the front door in that eager, familiar fashion; and there sat her placid father, with the remainder of a big pear on his plate, his eyes as wide as eyes could onen, his mouth agape, struck dumb by her entrance; for he had just said: "I hope Alary has got to C by this time, and taken her section in the sleeper. I telegraphed them to reserve a whole section ; she will be so much more comfortable with Alolly along." And hero she was! weary, weeping, pallid, almost hysterical. "Why, Alary Dutton!" exclaimed her mother, after Alary had sobbed out her piteous story. "Why. I never in the world thought you was looking out, or I'd have tele graphed to the train. You see that other engine was very near, and I'd got my eyes sort of dull with crying, and for a minute I stood still to get my balance, that coupling of the cars shook mo so, you know. Then I saw the engine begin to come, and I started across; it was foolish, but there was time enough, only my cloak had got unbuttoned at the top, and slipped back so it was caught in a splinter on tho end of a tie, and that sort of hindered me. I stumbled, a woman screamed, for she thought I was going to fall; but I didn't. I caught myself up, the cloak tore off my back and fell down; for in the pull the other button went, and I got over the other rail only just in time, and then I did fall, but not to hurt me, for a man had run forward to get me off the track, and I fell right against him. There's the cloak, pretty well run over." Alary turned. The torn and dusty rem-, nants of "charity" hung on a chair; for Airs. Watrous had brought them out to illustrate her story to her husband. Alary seized the ragged mass with eager fury and thrust it into the open fire, forcing it under the flame with the tones. "Oh, Alary!" ".Mother, I can't help it. The thing; ought to be destroyed out of sight. I never could look at it again. Think! It made me believe you were run over; gave me all this agony of a whole day, this new journey, and brought me back, expecting to find you killed by the train." "Well, dear, I was; all but." Air. Watrous roared, Alary burst into tears, and mother placidly re marked : "A miss is as good as a mile, isn't it?" Nobody answered. Itone Terry Cooke, in Independent. The Gold Lost iu tho Sea by Wrecks. The memory of the loss of 200,000 of silver and gold will survive the drown ing of l,0uo soulj in a coup. There was the Lutine, for instance. She was of thirty-two guns, commanded by Captain Skynner and she went ashore on tho bank of tho f ry Island passage on the night of October 0, 1700. At first she was reputed to have had six hundred thousand pounds sterling in specie on board. This was afterward contradicted by a statement that "the return from tho Bullion Oflice makes the whole amount about fit 0.000 sterling." If," I find in a contemporary account, "the wreck of the unfortunate Lutine should be discovered, there may be reason to hope for the recovery of the bullion. In the reign of James II, some English adventurers fitted out a vessel to search for and weigh up the cargo of a rich Spanish ship which had been lost on the coast of South. America. They suc ceeeded, and brought home 300,000, which had been forty-four years at the bottom of the sea. Captain Phipps, who commanded, had 20,000 for his share, and the Duke of Albemarle 00, 000. A medal was struck in honor of this event in 10N7. .There was a very costly wreck in 1707. Sho was a Dutch East Indiaman, and foundered in a storm within three leagues of tho Texcl, taking down all hands but six and 500,000. Tho prico of four such Armadas as that of 158s went down in the hist century alone in the shape of gold, silver and plato. She was the annual register ship, as tho term then was, and had in her 500,000 piastres and 10,1100 ounces of gold on account of the King, and twice that sum on the merchants' account, making her a very rich ship. Sho foundered, and no man escaped to tell how and when. In tho same year the Dutch lost the Antonietta, an Indiaman, and with her sank 700,000 sterling, beside jewels of great value. The Koyal Charter is tho most notable modern instance of the wreck of a "treasure" ship that I can iust now call to mind. She left Aub- ( tralia with -350,000 in her. of this sum, says Charles Dickens in h s chapter on this dreadful shipwreck in the "i nco n mercial Traveler," 300,000 worth were recovered, at the timo of the novelist's visit to the spot where she ha J driven ashore. "Tho great bulk of the re mainder," writes Lickens, "was surely and steadily coming up. Some losi of sovereigns th'-re would be, of course; in deed, at first sovereigns had drilted in with the sand, aud U'cn scattered far and wide oer the beach like sea shells but most other golden treasure would bo found. So tremendous iiad the force of the sea been when it broke the ship that it had beaten one great ingot of gold into a strong and heavy piece of her solid iron work in which also several loose sovereigns, that the ingot had swept in before it, had been found as firmly em bedded as though the iron had been forced there." This is a curiosity of disaster, but mightily suggestive of the sea's miserly trick of concealing her plunder. Louton Tchyruph. Thousands of people think they aie wearing kid gloves when th-v have ou only the skiu uf the innocent lamb. SOME ODD OCCUPATIONS. QUEER WAYS OF MAKING- A LIVING- IN NEW x ORK. A "Clean Towel Company" Two Hangmen Dojr Doctors Wealth, in Ileftiso Painting Rlack Kyca. New York, writes Julian Balph in the Mail and hipre, has not attained the unique distinction recently boasted by Paris of maintaining a beggar factory for maiming little children, so as to render them objects of pity. Neither has it yet reached up to London in the posses-' sion of "necessary stores," wherein every earthly thing in use by man is kept on sale. " But, after all, New York is big enough to supply many ingenious per sons with very curious o cupations. Tho scheme of our "clean towel company," newly started for supplying business o.lices with clean towels and soap, we ought not to boast of, since we borrowed the notion from Chicago. We are alone, however, in patiently permitting an audacious Teuton, near Chatham Square, to keep hand organs in mischief by repairing them. He assumes to re plenish them with new tunes, but, of course, that is fiction; for no hand organ was ever heard to play any but bald headed and middle-aged music. New York maintains, also, at least one estab lishment for fitting little children for the stage and ballet. The accomplished woman in charged of this used, whether sho still docs or not, to certify to the beauty of the "understanding," so to speak, of females who applied for a chance to exhibit themselves in theatres where spectacular pieces were to be pre sented. Two courageous New Yorkers follow the useful but unpoctic business of hang ing their fellow-citizens. They are not prejudiced in favor of New Yorkers, but are easily persuaded to hang men elsewhere throughout the Union. It is always pretended that no one knows their names and that only the Sheriff of this county has their addresses. One is a Hebrew, dubbed "Isaacs," and the other is a German, called "Menzeshei mcr"; but the city always lumps them both under the one name of Joseph li. Atkinson, and under that name they draw their pay. They rig the gallows and finally cut the rope. One other sanguinary citizen, in Twenty-third street, swings a shingle declaring him to be "The Destroyer of Aloths." Four prosperous citizens earn their livelihood as doctors for the lap-dogs of rich women. As a rule, the only medi cine they use is starvation. They fling the dear pets into barred boxes and de prive them of food for four days, having found out that the usual trouble with pet dogs is that they are fed extrava gantly and improperly. Just cast of tte Bowery, in a tenement house, resides a man whose business it is to rent himself and his Punch and Judy show to chil dren's parties in the brownstone wards. A person on the Bowery keeps six or eight girls busy framing wreaths and pictur s of tombstones, whereon are set forth the virtues of deceased rsew Yorkers. He follows where the death notices in the papers lead him, and works upon the feelings of the grief- strickcn families. A rich Italian employs a horde of his countrymen to trim or balance the loads upon the scows of our street sweeping department. Those trimmers save for him all the rags, fat, bone, metal and other controvertible refuse flung into the householders' ash barrels. Another man is making a fortune by carrying off all the waste and refuse the city will not re move, such as builders' leavings, dirt from cellar digging, and so on. The builders ay him to take it, and then he sells it in the suburbs for falling in sunken lands. Only one man in town pretends to keep photographs of all the notable persons in the world. There is not room for two iu tho business. Another citizen sells to public men and corporations clippings from all the newspapers that mention them, at five cents, a clipping, od led to a subscription fee each year. Yet an other citizen hunts up coats of arms and pedigrees for all who think theirs have been overlooked, or that they may get them from l ami lies of the same, or near ly the same, names as their own. This is quite l-.nglish, and therefore popular. It is said that the carriage-makers are giving away coats of arms like chromos. Lawxer Kd. Price, the ex-pugilist, lias a monopoly as the attorney for the Chinese. The laundry men all seek him when in trouble, and always pay him in silver dollars. The trade in painting black eyes with a mixture of six parts white paiut and one part red now boasts sev eral establishments. It is not populariz ing the black eye, because it only covers up the scaud.d without removing tho recollection of the accompanying "lick ing." Ono New Yorker has posted himself about all the unclaimed estates in Christendom, aud thus profits by a weak ness more general than most folks im agine. Another New Yorker searches the streets at night with a lantern for coins nn I purses dropped during tho evening. A woman near the City Hall takes cure of the babies whose widowed mothers have to go out to work, and who check them, like umbrellas, in the morning, an I call for them in the even ing. .Many w mien in the Last-side tene ments take caie of a bahy or two for their neighbors, but this down town one is, I think, the oniy regular safe deposit company or storage warehouse in town. There is no matrimonial agency or hus bands' exchange newspaper here just now. There hav.- I een many, but all have failed. Tli; t s heme is not so profitable as that of a man I met the other day, who told me he trained valu able dogs to come straight back to him as often as he sold tin in. There is a revival of (Jueen Anne dances among the ilevoteus of Teipni chore in England. THB HEA SON. My love's a maiden fair, And she's sweet; She has a modest air And she's neat; Her hair is golden brown, And in ringlets it hangs down; 8he's pretty from her crown To her feet But 'tis not her charming face, Fair to see, Nor her modesty and grace, I am free To confess, nor any wiles Hhe employs, my heart beguiles. But sha keeps her sweetest smiles All for mo. Boston Courier. HUMOR OF THE DAT. Passing around the hat is one way of getting tho cents of the meeting. tft ing. There is one branch of labor which must always be done by hand picking pockets. A new kind of stove is called "The In fant." It ought to be painted ycller. lio-hctter Poit-E-rpres. Firemen nre rather discouraging fel lows; it is their business to throw water on things. Lowell Citiirn. The men of energy and pluck Have found this maxim wise It never pays to run lor luck Unless you advertise. Springlic'.d Union. A new book is entitled: "Hold Up Your Heads, Girls." We trust they won't as long aa they wear the present style of hat. Bout on J'off. A Charleston paper spooks of nn opal "as large as a small hen's egg." We should think it would be difficult to set. Boston Bulletin. Flla Wheeler Wilcox says sho can see more light than darkness in the world. So can we, Ella, when the sidewalks are ono sheet of ice. Burlington Free 1'ress. Softly the snow, in solemn night, Covers bad things, like a pure, sweet mind, Covers each house with a mantle of wbite, But it never covers the mortgage, we find. iiiodair!iun. The income of Madame Patti from her present six mouths' tour in this country, will be about $ 150, 000. A good har monica can bo bought for til teen cents. Tid-BiU. A New Haven man boasts of a cat that sits up like a kangaroo. We've never no ticed how tho cat on our back fence sits up; we only know that he yells all night like a hyena. Philadelphia Call. A Alichigan woman kicked a bear to death. She had an awful sore throat, which accounts for her deviation from the usual method of scaring them to death by screaming DantiUe Breeze. Jogg "Ah, old man! How is every tying? Got nicely settled down?" Hogg "Oh, yes, I settled down quickly enough. The trouble is that all my creditors aro trying to make me settle up." Loieell Citizen. He had just reached the stage where he remarked: "Oh, thou art fairer than the evening air, clad in tho beauty of a thou sand stars," when a mother's voice was heard exclaiming: "Lucee, get your beau to carry out the ash barrel." Iete York Journal. First tramp "I never failed yet to make money out of any thing I tackled." Second tramp "You ought to be rich." "No I oughtcned; lam as poor as an amateur violin", performance." "How is is it possible, if you make money on every tlfing you tackled, that you are in suoh reduced circumstances!" "You see I make it a point never to tackle any thing. Hiftinga. Stallion Against Bull. A singular combat took place recently iu a cattle car on the Air-Lino Kailroad between an Alderney bull and a Norman stallion. Tho two animals were boxed iu a car at Dcpaw, Ind., for shipment to Louisville, K v. A strong partition was built between them. The train was run ning near New Albany about 4 o'clock in the afternoon, when a brakeman, pass ing over the car, heard a furious bellow ing beneath, and, climbing down the side of the car, found that tho partition between tho two animals had been broken down and tho infuriated brutes were engaged in deadly conflict. The train was stopped and tho crew gathered around the car, but no means could bo devised for stopping tho cucounter. The iron heels of the horse were planted with telling effect upon the bull's head, and the horse was gored in a horrible manuer. Finally the stallion got in a blow be tween the bull's eyes, and the latter fell dead. The horse was so badly injured that it also died. The "Business Hand." A superintendent of mails says that tl so-called business hand gives tho N officials a great deal of trouble. "It he declares, "nearly as troubleso the illiterate hand. If inetho I. in business, then a business i in every sense, should be Uv aud of such a nature as to iit l doubt whatever. Instead of tha I only the first letter or two h'git, the remaining ones supplied by a i scrawl." A'tio York TrUune. Sharp Practice. Petted Brido "Here is the bill that fur cloak that I told you about. for It 8 lovely. " I ml ul en t Husband (looking at bill) "Croat Scott! You said you could get that cloak for a mere song." "So I did." " Do you mean to say that amount represents a mere song?" " Yes, a Patti song." Tid-Bite. It is estimated that the sum annually received iu the South for the uoltou crop amount tn t4U0.00Q.00Q. i-. -