THE FOREST REPUBLICAN b pablUhed Try Wertneaday, by J. . WENK. Offioo la Bmearbaugh A Co.'a Building ELM rntKBT, TIONKSTA, Pa. Term, ... I.BO per Year. No nhncrlptlnnt receive! for a lhortr Mrlo4 tnn Ihrc months. 0rrspond"n oltaltfta' from all parte of the country. No nuttc will Ukan. efiinonymona iimonictloB. RATES Or f On Bqasre, one heb, on tit One Square, one Inch, c .. S 00 One Square, on Inch, tin . ins One Square, one lacb, or ...... 16 OS Two Sqnarre, oae jear... ...... IS 00 Qnarter Column, one j SO 00 Iltlf Column, one jm. . . ........ SS OS One Column, ono row JW 00 lrl advertisements t' Hn eh la oertlon. Marriage and death aotk . All bllla for yearly aitvw n-.-twJ )nn terly. Temporary advorli i M pta b sdraneo. Joe work eah Wit DEAT5 J . There lice in the centre c wi s hvrt A longing and love for I and puns, And if but an atom, or !. ri, I tell you this shall ei 1 , Inre, After the body has (tone i y Yea, after the world ha; 1 away. ! The longer I live ami the -e I me Forest I ) t n VOL. XX. NO. 11. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1887. $1.50 PER ANNUM. Although 0T,7f0 people die every day on the glolw, yet there are 100,800 born, so there teems little reason to fear that tho supply of voter for future elections will run short. An American who happened to ace a man murdered in Havana waa detained ten months "in jail as a witness, and the judgo then' decided that it was a case of sclf-dcfcnso. Cuba, observes tho Detroit Fret Prea; is one of tho plnccs whero a blind man gets along the best. Drummers practice a scheme to cir cumvent that clause of the Intcr-Stato law rotating to charges for excess of bag gage When the drummer's baggage ex ceeds 100 pounds he buy several tickets to his placo of destination. On theso he checks his baggage. Then ha sells the tickets ho doesn't want, and of course be is ail right. ''Long John" Wentwort, the noted Cliicngoan, ex-Congressman and ex Major who is erecting a $20,000 monu ment for himself in Itoschili .Cemetery, Iirs decided to put no inscription on the stono. "Everybody ' will want to know who is buried there if they see no name," he says, "and my memory will thus be kept green by the curiosity of future generations," The King of Cores has become tired of he cares of royalty, and has sent a mo siiorisl to tho Chincso government asking it to abolish the kingly office and substi tute a Governor-Generalship in Us stead. ; The noble families are constantly engaged , in plots with Japanese and Chinese ad venturers, and the King is said to bo in s country is so poor that there is no profit in ruling it. Money is now abundant for .speculation in railways and lands, but the supply must gradually diminish under the pres ent prodigulity. When the pinch and ramp come, a they most assuredly will, hen look out for the crash. The vast el estate speculations of 1830 were the tuso of tho smaahup of 1837. Like Jthe breakdown of 1857 was caused the wild real estate speculation of - 5 and 1850. In many cities and many dons the brake should be put on at be survivors of the Greely expedition now six in number. General Greely hicf of the Signal Service j David L. inard is Second Lieutenant of Cavalry fort Walla Walla, Washington Ter ry; Julius R. Frederick Is sicka.rvi fome in Indianapolis ; T uenry jiieaeroccK is a messenger in the Agricultural . Bureau at Washington; Maurice Connell is a private in tho Signal Corps at San Francisco, and Francis ljry is a sergeant in the Signal Corps at I'ew York. " Tho freaks of lightning aro inexplica- ( bio and apparently irreducible to any sort of system by silence. A thunder storm passed over Binghnmton. Two boys were in the same bed. One was in stantly killed, the other not injured. At Stamford, Connecticut, twelve or fifteen years ngo, three boys took refuge in a 1 barn. They sat close together in a row. 1 Tho centre ono was uninjured, the others .killed. In a tent a sido show to a cir- ' cus were a number of persons, black ' and white. The tont was struck. Every I negro was killed and not a singlo white person. There has boon received at the Interior Department, from the Philadelphia Mint, tho first of tho peace medals struck for ' the use of the Indian. Bureau. It has . been a custom since Buchanan's Admin- ' istration to present these medals to de- serving and faithful Indians who have aided tho Government in suppressing out breaks or by iuflueuclug their friends to curry out the wishes of the Government, j The medal is oval in shape, half an inch in thickness, and three inches in its longest diameter. It bears on one side a representation of a very trustful settler shaking hands with an Indies, with a tomahawk and pipe crossed underneath. The obverse side bears the bust of the President, who is supposed to present . the medal. The medals aro bronze, cost ing tho Government fifty cents apiece, and silver costing $0 apiece. The latter are given to chiefs and head men. Up to this time the Indian Bureau has been presenting Indians with medals bearing President Arthur's likeness, thus economically using up an old batch of medals on hand. The new ones received from the Miut bear an excellent likeness of Mr. Clevelund, whoso somewhat ro bust neck and rounded bead make him an excellent subject for medallion work. The view is, of course, a profile, and his . head, a Washington correspondent says, seems to fill out the medal more symmet rically than that of any other President. Grant's head upon these medals was the next best, and Fresideut Garfield's fol lows a close third. President Arthur's profile was too refined for a medallion ar tist to do it justice upon a die for a mint, while Lincoln's head was the most unfit of all. In the latter's time a ring was passed through these medals so that they could be suspended from tho neck late years they have been put up ! THE PRAIRIE FIRB. Over the nndulate prairia I rode as the day was done; Ths west was aglow but to northward A glare like the rising sun Seen through the eddying ea-mlsta, Broke on the darkening night, And a cloud of smoky blackness Shut out ths stars dim light I fait the sweep of the northor But a deeper, deadlier chill, Btrnck to my heart r m instant With It presage h and 11L Then I drew the cin hter And looked to stirn. id rein, As the nort.iern glare grew brighter And the gusts gained strength amain, Then, as we hurried southward Brighter, nearer and higher Like lambent serpents heavenward Writhed up each flaming spire; Leaping across the benches Where the grass was thin and dry, Rolling in flery surges Where the reeds stood rank and high. A drifting whirl of cinders, A chorus of blinding smoke, A roaring sea of Are Arrows the plains it broke I From the pools the wild fowl darted To circle the lurid sky; From his lair the scared deer started. And swept like a phantom by. On, toward the distint river, Wasted by weeks of drouth, Like a shaft from (he sungod's quiver We sped toward the murky south. To halt was death ; and far distant Lay life and safety and rest; The air grew hot and each instant The foam fell on counter and breast Nearer each moment the fires swept, Thicker the red sparks fell; Higher the roaring flames leapt With the blast of that fiery hen I felt that we soon must stifle In the rock of that merciless hail, And I dropped my heavy rifle In the midst of the narrow trail. But bravely my trusty courser Kept on In his headlong flight - Though his labored breath grew hoarser Tilt the river gleamed in sight, A plunge through the thickset border Of withered gram and reed. And the waters of the river Laved the heaving flanks of my steed. Up to the brink of the river Swept the waves of that fiery sea, With pulses and limbs a-quiver I could neither stand nor fleet I ukw the flames tower heavenward With dim eyesand failing breath; Then all around was darkness A faintneas and gloomlike death) When I woke the flames were racing , Far westward o'er bluff and hill; My faithful steed waa grazing On the banks of our guardian rill; And I offered thanks to heaven, Where the stars shone clear and bright, For the safety and mercy given. . To us on Unit tearf ul night " " Captain C. W. Hall, in Dakota Bell. MULLIGAN'S GHOST, "You, Muldoon, you'd better hitch up the crittors, and take them bass of corn to mill. I jest wsnt you to remember mat oiu j.ytio am t got any call to take his toll out of this here lot. He owes me for a barrel of meal sence last giindin'." "It's moighty Into it is to go to mill now, Misther Bell," Pat Muldoon an swered. He was a tall, gowky Irish lad, with none of the national nnickness and humor visible in his long, solemn face. "It's purty nigh the sunsettnr now, I'm think- in'.- It's four nnlo to mill, and I'll bo com in' buck Ions afther the dark." "It ain't long past four o'clock," said the farmer, "and I'd jest like to know what's the dark goin' ter do tor you! It saves time to send lute; and then I reckon you'll come back a heap quicker fur old Mulligan's ghost at yer heels." Farmer Bell laughed derisively as he spoke, for in all that neighborhood he was probably the onlv individual who did not believe implicitly in Mulligan's gnosi. "Anyway, Muldoon," he laughed, "ef he does come up with vou. vou'll under stand his lingo, for be was Irish too, as well as you, aud ghosts always talk in meir moiner tongue, niavoe, too, as you're a countryman, he'll be willin' to tell you whar he hid all his money, fur not a aune nas turned up. Ask nun, Mul doon, when he comes floatin' up ter you Muldoon shivered, and could not even smile at the farmer's uproarious mirth. "Aod I'll be afther takiu' Lion, sur." he said, as he turned to obey the orders ol his employer. "You'll be after doing no such thin?. Old Lytle complained of the dog last time you took him.' He raised Cain among tin old woman's chickens. You'll not untie '.he dog." Muldoon 's heart sank as he hitched up the mules, with, Lion s impatient bark ana nowl as a discordant accompani ment, lie was aa immense mastin, and accustomed to follow the boy wherever he wtnt. Muldoon felt that the dog would be company and protection in the droary ride he was about to lake through the ghost baunted forest, for he believed Hit v in the ghost. It was not a very Ions- ride, but it lay through a barren stretch of pine woods, rising into hills, which descended into dark ravines thickly grown up with un derbrush and gloomy magnolias. Half way to the mill stood the Mulligan farm, the only vestige of human habitation on his road. Terrible stories were told about that tumble-down cabin, and most of the superstitious neighbors would go a mile out of tho road to avoid passing the place. Old Mulligan had come there some years before. A morose, silent old man, who held no intercourse with his neigh bors, and lived entirely alone. He al ways seemed to have plenty of money, and though no one was ever invited into thehouxe, they ull knew it was furnished ouly with such things as were absolutely necessary. The moody old, man's lan guage, when v did speak, ft as that of au educated man, '- '" -Miirli threadbare, w' It was oio of those men who, when the 1 master failed to appear for two days, summoned up courage to knock at the door. No answer, and not a sound to be heard. When tho men, thoroughly alarmed, effected an entrance, they found old. Mulligan dead, by his own hand an evi dently premeditated act, for he was care fully dressed in a new suit of black broad cloth. On the table near was :)0, wrapped in a paper on which was written t "This will bury mc. Lay me under the oak tree in the yard." lhis was all. Not another line or writing was found in the house, and not another cent of money, though it Was well known he had made good crops and spent nothing. His furniture was of the meanest, yet many valuable books were found, Nothing, however, was discovered What would help to reveal who he renlly was, ana where he came from. If he had friends and relatives, they did not answer any of the advertisements put in the county newspapers; and, as no one in that county was willing to buy the property, saddled as it was with a ghost, tho farm went gradually to ruin. If it had not been for the ghost, the very name of the man would have perished from the memory of tho community. Muldoon would have given much to avoid tho house, but tho only wagon road in that vicinity led directly in front of it. When he arrived opposite it, with a kind of rimid curiosity ho pulled up, and took a long look at the desolate scene. The afternoon sun was shining brightly, but it did not seem to bring warmth to the cheerless place. Fences were rotting on the ground, and overgrown with briers; the doors and shutters of the cabin had fallen, and looked like eyeless sockets, through which you could see the weed-choked fields beyond. A sudden impulse came upon Muldoon to peep in tho cabin, .and see how. every thing looked there. It is an impulse which frequently moves cowards to meet something dreaded half way. An' I'll jest be afther takin' a little peep," Muldoon muttered, as ho sprang irom tno cart, nis neari oeuuog wuu nervousness. "The sun is shinin', and maybe if I see wid my two eyes that there's nothin' in there, I won't be so scared coniin' back." As he stepped on the porch, the rustle of the dead leaves under his feet gave him a strong inclination to take to his heels and fly, but he forced himself to enter the cabin and look around. Noth ing there, but lizards skurrying over the leaf-strewn floor, and cobwebs covering wall and ceiling. The floor was rotting, and the chimney had fallen in. Where the brick hearth once stood, there yawned a black gulf ; and Muldoon, gazing down into its deaths, Heard a sudden stir, and two fiery points of light seemed to spring from the darkness. The bov cave a wild shriek, and dashed out of the cabin in long leaps, which quickly landed him in his enrt. As for ltrnnrlv and Whiskv. the two wretched old mules, if the lash gave them time for thouirht between Mulligans ana tne mill, they must have felt that a wild-cat waMutheir backs. "It Yas tho ghost pcepin' out av the hole," Muiaooir iiitiag'it. "An', howly Moses I how will I pass" tnv Jo-night and pit home aloive?'' The miller was furious at having corn brought at that hour to grind. "I've got through gnndin', and old Pell knowed it," he grumbled. -"It's jist his dratted meanness hatin' to send early he's so 'fraid of losiu' a minute in tho twelve hours. I aint a-goin' to start my mill at this hour, not fur the President of these United States. There, Pat, dump that corn out, and take this here bag of meal. Ef he'll send Monday, he'll git the rejjL He's bo plaguo-takcd mean ! It'll teach him a lesson when he has to make two trips to mill." Muldoon obeyed, but it seemed to him an ago before he got the corn out and the meal in. It was nearly twilight now, and would be almost dark before he reached the Mulligan farm. "Ef Bell don't drive the beotenest old critters," the miller said, examining the mules. "They're plumb broke kown, jest comin' four mile. Look here, Mul doon,! the ghost chases you, you won't have a chance. Jim Collins says as how it follercd him two mile, and it was tho tearinest race he ever tuck, and he wos on Grey Eagle, too." "And then how may the ghost look, Misther Lytle 1" asked poor Muldoon, his teeth beginning to chatter. "Oh, I ain't never seed it; but heaps of folks says as how it changes, sometimes white and sometimes black !" "And, Misther Lytle, I'm terrible scared," Muldoon said. "I see somethin' dreadful by tho chimney like ghosts' eyes, ail fire. Please, sur, let one av the b'yscomo home wid me! ' ""There ain't a one on the place," the miller said. "It's Saturday, uud they all went visitiu'. So you seed somethin' did you? Well, Pat, jest whip up them crit ters, and ef they're spry you'll git past Mulligan fore dark. There's a moon, too." The miller was as firm a believer in the ghost as poor Muldoon himself, and he felt for the lad as he saw him trying to push Brandy and Whisky into unusual speed. But in spite of Muldoon's efforts, it was nearly dark before the haunted house was reached. The stars shone, however, and the young crescent moon threw its feeble beams ou the dark pines, but there were weird shadows quivering over the road. "1 wish I was back in old Oirlund," Muldoon muttered, as he neared the dreaded spot. "The Banshees are da cent spcrits, and jest cry out. They don't thry ter choke the loife outer a poor innocent lad, as they say the ghosts do in Ameriky. Ho wly Moses 1 What is that" lie was opposite the house. There was a loud rustle, and something heavy seemed to strike the ground, and then to his panic-stricken ears came a sound of heavy breathing. He glanced back, and saw a long, dark figure bounding across the door-yard from the house. "The ghost, the ghost!" he yelled; and what with blows rallied upon them, and the boy's terrilic yells, tho astounded Brandy and Whisky, for once in their lives, ran away; but looking back, Mul doon could see a dark figure bounding alter the cart. It leaped up behind, sprang upon him, and the poor lad lost yjusciousness. Brandy aud Whisky a-gul-w road ns ef Ole Scratch day, "and when they cotno up thef was that young ljtot a-layin' in the bottom of the cart like dead, and ole Lion he wor a Sittln' on top of hint; "Ydukee, the dog broke his chain somehow, and I reckon he got tired when he run as fur as Mulligan's, and thought he'd stop on the porch and wait till Muldoon got back. He's got sense like a human being, Lion has. "Well, Muldoon he says as how he seed fire-eyes in a hole in Mulligan's hearth, and he's sure it was the ghost I aint scared ofghosts. and I reckon there's a nest of wild-cats thar. I'm death on them varments, sence they killed my chickens, and Ira goin' this very mornin' to rout 'em out." Farmer Bell did not find the wild-cats, though it was evident some wild animal had made its lair in the hole, but in searching under the fallen bricks and earth, was found a metal box. Forcing it open bank-notes to a large amount were discovered, little injured by the danip. Farmer Bell gave Muldoon a part of the sum, as he had drawn attention to the place where the treasure was found, "Ould Mulligan's ghost, he gave mo two starts," he said the other day. "One kilt me entirely, and took my sinscs away, but t'other has give me a start in a good business. Ef I'm ever a rich man it'll be thanks to Mulligan's ghost." Youth' Companion. . Slaking Mnslc-Boxes. The chief industry of Geneva, Switzer land, is the manufacture of music-boxes, Thousands of men, women and children are employed in the factories, oue oi which wee visited by a young American, Mr. Lee Meriwether. An attendant in vited him to take a seat. He did so, and strains of delightful music came from the chair. He hung his hat on a rack and put his traveling staff in the stand. Music came from both rack and stand. He wrote his name in the visi tor's register, and, on dipping his pen in the ink, the music burst forth from the inkstand. Tho manager of tho factory explained the process of making music-boxes, a business which requires patience and nicety. The different parts are made by men who are experts in those parts, and they do nothing else, year in aud yeat out. The music is marked on the cylin der by a man who has served several years of apprenticeship. Another man inserts in the marked places pegs which have been filed to a uniform length. The comb or set of teeth which strikes the pegs, and makes tho sound, is ar ranged by a man who does nothing else. The cylinder is then revolved to see thnt every peg produces a proper tone. The most dchcatework of all is the revising of each peg' It is done by a workman who has a fcobd ear for music. He sees that each peg is in its proper place, and bent at the correct angle. When the in strument is in its ci.se, an expert exam ines it to seo that the time is perfect and good. Tho best workmen, those who mark the cylinder and adjust tho pegs, earn a dollar and eighty cents a day, after serving an apprenticeship of ten or twelve years. An ordiuary work man earns a dollar a cjay. ' - The Use of Paper Bags. "The days of the market baskets are nuhhcrcd," said a basket dealer to a New York Sun reporter. "Tho pnpet bag is running it out for good. There used to be a time when every family had a market basket, which was carried ou whenever supplies were 4o be purchased. When a man goes to market now ho doesn't take a basket along. At the first stall where he makes a purchase tho marketman asks, 'Largo bag or small bag?' "If the man is on a regular marketing tour .he says: 'Large bag.' Tho dealer Kuts the purchase in a handsome manilla ng three or four feet long, which will hold as much as any ordinary market basket. The bug is made of . exceptionally strong paper, and will hola the weight of anything you can put into it, including a half a peck of potatoes. When tho lost purchase has been deposited in it the buyer has the dealer to tio it up. This is quickly done, in such a manner that a nice cord handle is furnished, and no one would ever guess that the bag contains marketing. It looks more like a bundle of dry goods. Every Saturday evening you can see men going home on the cars with these nice bundles who would never dream of carrying market baskets. Ono day I saw an aristocratic carrier turn pule with rage as a big shad, wet and glisten ing, forced its way through the paper and fell on the floor of an elevated car. Tho fish dealer had neglected to wrap the wet fish up in brown paper before putting it in the bag, and tho wutcr had weakened the bag until the shad broke through. Market baskets are very cheap now." Origin of Honeymoon. It may not be generally known that the word "honeymoon" is derived from the ancient Teutons, and means drinking for thirty days after marriage of metheglin, mead, or hydromel, a kind of wine made from honey. Attila, a celebrated King of the Huns, who boasted of the appella tion, "The Scourge of God," is said to have died on his nuptial night from an uncommon effusion of blood, brought on by indulging too freely in hydromel at his wedding feast. The term "honeymoou" now signifies the first month after marriage, or so much of it as is spent from home. John Tobin, in "The Honeymoon," thus refers to it: This truth is manifest a gentle wife Is still the sterling comfort of a man's life; To fools a tormeut, but a lasting boon To those who wisely keep their honeymoon. Th JijMKh. Fanning Coder Difficulties. In a narrative of Lord McCartney's Embassy to China, it is related that his lordship's attendants, in passing through a part of that empire, saw a man culti vating the side of a precipice, and on examination they found he had a rope fastened arouud his waist, which was secured at the top of the mountain, and by which he let himself down to any part of the precipice where a few yards of available ground gave him encourage ment to plant his vegetables and his corn. Tho whole of the cultivated spots, which were at some distauco from each other, appeared to be not tnore than half ou aere, and near the bottom of a precipice, on a hillock, he hifcl a little hut. ALL ABOUT TILE TEETH A DfiNTISTd TALK ABOUT HVlfAtf MOLARd. Construction of the Teeth Women's! Teeth More Delicate Than Those) of Men Care of the Teeth. A leading Chicago dentist has been talking about human teeth to a Tribune reporter. He said s "To begin with, of the five superior cavities of the head, the mouth is by far the most important be cause into it goes the food by whidn w sustain life. Of all the constituent parti of the mouth the teeth play the mdst im portnnt part in preparing the food for the nourishment of tho body. In mastication different teeth are employed for different purposes. The front ones, or incisors as they are called, are to bite or tear off the mouthfuls of food. Tho back teeth, the biscuspids and molars, or teeth posterior, are to grind the food into the pliable mass ready for swallowing. Now ths teeth, as a rule, arc neglected even by tho most careful persons that is, neglected from a standpoint ol puro Science and the reason ot this is that they don't seem to understand that the strongest of outer substances will give way to persistent friction. The construction of the teeth is made up, in gross, of two parts soft solids or animal tissues and calcareous salts, such as car bonate and phosphate of lime, magnesia, and traces of other earthy salts. That portion of the tooth above the gum con sists of a dense substance known as enamel, which is at first touch within four per cent of being as hard as stone. The philosophy of caring for the enamel of the tooth is very simple. It amounts to this : that if this enamel this strong substance is by persistent cleansing pre vented from becoming perforated by the acids left from the food, the bone of the tooth cannot possibly decay, and if the dentine remains sound the nerve chamber cannot bo reached by air, food, acifls, or other foreign substances all of which, are prime causes of that fearful infliction, the toothache. Not tired yet t Well, the dentine is the principal body" of the tooth, containing about seventy-two per cent, of calcareous matter, and, being just so much softer than the enamel decays much more quickly once it is reached. The next resistant of tho tooth is the ce- mentum, which covers the root In tho interior of the tooth is an artery, which contains the moss of soft tissue known as the nerve. The ide entertained by so n any people that the slaying of the nerve oi a tootn win put an end to all pain, so far as that partlculai grinder is concerned Is erroneous. A exposed pulp of course will ache, and to stop it, it must either be killed or shut out from the air and all foreign substances. The latter effect is secured by filling up me cavuy. nut oi course ine nerve can not stand this, and that is the reason why many dentists kill it. This course is not to be commended, however, because it is so apt to lead to ulceration, which will bring on more wain than ever for the natient. The more workmanlike plan is to construct a bridgo at the cavity and iwt-the filling go in after that. The nerve will then be'alio'Ked freo play, beneath the bridge, ' . rr - "The teoth of wemen are much softer than those of men, there being less cal careous matter interspersed about the soft solids. Nearly two-thirds of my patients are women and children. The teeth of the young decoy faster than the old, because of the smaller amount of lime salts they contain. For this reason too much care cannot be given to the teeth of children. Every child should be taught to hold its teeth of the first importance, and the proper care of them should be instilled into its mind contemporaneously with the alphabet. "It is just as possible to build up the teeth by nourishment as any other part of tho body. The simpler the diet the belter for the teeth. It is the outsido of all the grains, of all the cereal foods that contains the carbonate and phosphate of limo and traces of other earthy salts which nourish tho bony tissues and build the frame of the tooth up. If the teeth of children are not furnished with the pabulum that they crave they cannot bo built up into a permanently sound and healthy condition. The teeth of each generation are weaker than those of the preceding one, which makes the out look fur the future an exceedingly gloomy one. Fine sets of teeth are nearly always inherited, and you will very rarely see a parent who owns' a handsome set of grinders who has not thoroughly imbued his or her children with the principle that their molars are of the first import ance to them. The consequence is that the teeth of the entire family are objects of wonder to the entire neighborhood. Oatmeal is one of the best foods for supplying tho teeth with nourishment. It makes the dentine and enamel strong and able to resist all forms of decay. The same beneficial lime-salts abound in wheat meal. Baked beans, a'so, contain much excellent nourishment for the teeth, and for this purpose cannot be partaken of too of cen. No; I have not heard that the people of Boston are famous for their grinders, but I shouldn't wonder if they were. A man who eats baked beans four or live times a wee isn't likely to have much the matter with his teeth. "Tho teeth should be thoroughly cleansed, not less than three, and if possible, five irsix times a day more if you like. Without this, the particles of food will adhere and their acids eat into the enamel. Good soap is about as good a dentifrice as I can recommend, and in brushing the teeth the movement should bo up aud down from the gum and not across, as is tho customary manner. Care should be taken, too, to brush carefully the grinding surfaces of the teeth." Spoke From Experience. "Don't you think," observed Riche lieu, "tlwt it would be a source of im provement to have a friend who would tell us of our faults, and at the same time allow us to point out his own de fects f" "No, I don't," said Aramiuta, de cidedly; " I speak from experience, too, for my best friend aud 1 once tried it." " Why, what was wrong about it 1" " Weil, you see, we haven't spoken to each cither for two years 1" ptlroit t're Freti. I He who seems than he is, is ux-' pot to himself more 1n he seems. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Unusually low water In Lake Constance has been bringing to light many valuable nd interesting relics of the prehistoric lake-dwellers. A HuftsW engineer says that he has discovered a process of reducing petroleum to the form of crystals, whicn may be easily and safely transported to any dis tance and then reconverted into liquid form. The addition of sugar to mortar greatly Increases its strength. It is supposed that tho wonderful Roman mortar, hard aftdf 3,000 years had passed, owed its excellence to the addition of saccharine matter. The steam power of Great Britain is estimated to perform the work of more than 400,000,000 able-bodied men, which must nearly represent the labor capacity of the entire human race without the aid of machinery. Dr. Vulpinn has reported to the Paris Academy of Sciences that during the epidemic of yellow fever lately prevailing In Bio Janeiro, of 0,524 persons inoculated against the fovcr, only six died, or less than one per thousand, whilo the pro portion of deaths among those not treatea was ono per cent. A late observer, Mr. E. Sanford, re ports having Blade a common snail carry load of i ounces tip a perpendicular wall, its own weight being but a quarter of an ounce. A snail weighing a third of an ounce drew a load of seventeen ounces on a horizontal table, and sup ported four ounces while crawling on the ceiling. It even climbed a thread with another snail on it back. It is said that a Baltimore man has in vented a foot measuring machine which ho fays measures accurately every in equality of the foot, adapts itself to the curves of tho instep, and overcomes the dimculties heretofore encountered in oo taining a godtj fit. The machine repro duces the shape and size of tho foot on a diagram, with the diameter and circum ference of the various parts. Dr. Davenport, the ' atifi'.yst of the Massachusetts State Board of hVMth, makes some returns that will bo of intetw. est to all. Out of twenty advertised cures for the opiumhabit, all but one contained opium. A marvelous cure "double chloride of gold," contained no goldl A large number of "temperance drinks" were also examined. All contained al cohol, and one as high 44.3 per cent. The majority contained over 20 per cent. A preparation analyzing 41.0 per cont. was claimed by its manufacturer "to be a purely vegetable extract." Dr. Oscar Lenz, the eminent scientist, has lately returned to Europe, after travel ing on foot across the Atncan onunem, through regions literally recking with marsh fevers, agues, and small pox. During the entire journey ho enjoyed perfect and robust helth, and on not singlu oooatiinn felt the need of medicine, remediul or preventive. TUU immunity he attributes almost entirely to his correct diet and habits. Haw fruit he eschewed. All water used was first boiled. Not a drop of ulcoholic liquor passed his lips. Rice, chicken, and tea formed his staple fare. He avoided bathing in cold water, exposed himself as little as possible to iBerxinK? Jln0- n1'88 of night, and dressed entirely in flannel." ,. As crabs approach old age and no longer increase In size, their shells, which in youth were shed frequently to accom modate growth of body, are ofteu re tained several years, and.thc creatures be come liable to fall victims to the strangest sort of parasitism. Barnacles and all sorts of marine growths collects upon tho shell, nnd in many cases almost com pletely hido the crab. . A remarkable ex ample of this may be seen in the British Museum, where has been placed an old crab of tho edible species, with some half-dozen oysters of large size fixed to its back, which load, ever incre ising,the old crab was doomed to carry to the end of its days. Another curious specimen preserved is that of a hairy crab, which, though not larger itself than a walnut, is saddled with a sponge as big as a man's fist. Chinese Doctors. A Chinaman who wishes to -become a doctor does not go through any special training or spend money in buying a practice. He has only to purchase a pair of spectacles and gather some herbs, a few spiders, and some snakes, which he places in bottles in the window of his shop. Tho bottles arc his advertisement; they tell all who are in need of healing to come to him. His favorite prescrip tion is a horrible pill compounded of parts of snakes, wasps, centipedes, toads, and scorpions ground small and mixed with honey. Another pill, supposed to l.n nf avtrimi-ilinuMf ..tliixwu in 'nuns ni extreme weaaness, is matte ui tno uoni-a of tigers. The belief in Its merit is based on this strange piece of reasoning: Tho tiger is very strong; the bone is the strongest part of the strong animal; therefore a pill of this must be pre eminently strengthening. These facts speak eloquently as to the state of medi cal science in China. Tile lamentable consequence is an excessive mortality. It is calculated that DD.OdO die daily, and this number is, of course, largely in creased during an epidemic, which is no uncommon visitor. An Almost Human Appeal. Edwin Emory, of East Baltimore, hud an experience of the sagacity of tho dog yesterday. On his way down South Broadway a smull dog ran up to hiin.uet in a strange maimer. Tho little fellow jumped on him aud lic ked his hands and occasionally unappca ami women. Thinking of hydiophobiu, Mr Emory kicked the dog, "which then ran in front of him, and posing in a begging position, began to beut the air with his fiout legs. Mr. Emory insisted ou having nothing to do with the dog, but it lexaled tho act several times. Finally, just ns he was going to knock the persistent little beg gar with sufficient vigor to last for all time, Mr. Emory discovered a large pin sticking in the foot of the dog, uud, with humane instinct, he K...k htm iu his arms and pulled it out. As soon as re lieved, the dog manifested his thanks by licking Mr. Emory's bands, and then dis appeared as fust as he came. Jialtimuit Su. Gordon dimming likened an African jungle to a forest of li-h hooks relieved by au occasional it- h of penknives, Of the struggle ot toward hlghta above, The stronger this truth c o home to me. That the universe rasts c r-1.1 tho shoulders of Love A love solimitless, deep ifvi lroad That men have renamed it and called it God. And nothing that oer was born or voIvnd, Nothing created by light or force, But deep in its system there lies dissolved A shining drop from tb great Lov Source A shining drop that shall live for aye Tho' kingdoms may porUi, and stars may dio. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, in Independent HUMOR OF THE DAT. Fogg says his bed is a young one, as it has only seen four springs. I'ttet. . Tho chicken is a fretful animal; every once in a whilo it is getting into a stew. Merchant Traveler. A young society lndy calls her partner at a recent dancing party Indian, because he is always on her trail. A man recently escoped from a South ern prison on a load of cotton. Tho papers stated that ha got out on bale. Life. "My affection, dear maid, from you cannot range, My heart, like my pocket, can never know change." Tid-Bits. Recent develoomcnts would seem to" indicate that eve a mind-reader finds it impossible to reaTi a woman's mind. Botton Pot. Some old dinner customs still prevail. The Romans used to recline at tlic.r ban quets, and the habit of lying at ptllic dinners still prevails. Motion ISuurlin, The hunETV trnmo admitted o iar ' 1 he teed, behind the pajy lak'h, Presents tliniiileSBi-B known t tjifjrtain promptness and "lJisrroh.,, " Hitings. When a man buys a tract of Arizona land through a real estate agent and finds it notbiug but sand, he is entitled to no sympathy. He gets only his just desert. ' Chicago Tribune. Boarder " Seems to me this chicken must be rather a peculiar breed." Boarding-house Keeper" It is not so tender ns it ought to be, I know, and I can't imagine why, either. It's a genuine- Plymouth Rock." "My I my 1 Camo over in the Mayflower, chl" Otiuiha World. Soft-hearted Old Lady (when she heard the story and assisted the applicant): "Dear me 1 Ah, poor man I you must in deed have gone through dreadful trials." Tramp: "I b'lieve yer, m'um, an', what's wus, u',. I m al'gys convicted," , Punch. . "'.. WISE WORD' Wrinkles are the tor To make pleasure, them. "k "maaJde gr own will. ' - , Nothing is so fearful V tad con- t science. P j Passion Is a bad counselor, and gener- i ally a bad speaker. " ; He that, has not a character is not a ; man; ho is only a thing. -j Genius follows its own path and reaches ' its destination scarcely needing a com- . " j pass. When one has no good reason for doing a thing, he has one reason for lotting it alone. . " x . No man preaches his surmon well to others if he does not tir.-t preach it to his own heart. Tho worst prison is not of stone. It is a throbbing heart outraged by an in famous life. " - . Nothing is ever done beautifully "duch is dono iu rivulship, not nobly, wn V.,toJ-' done in prido. - A happy marriage is a new beginning of life, a new starting point for happi- x ness and usefulness. What it is our duty to do. wc must do because it is right, not because, anyono can demand it of us. He that does a baso th friend burns the golden their hearts together. Nothing has proved in ti.rr In real for a thread that tio i! fatal : r lifo tin. duo preparation for ano' ' UI1im,,)y ,utake of the itturc aud .. ! . . . 1 J ' No man ever lived a i . lit lifo Wliohftll . woman's hive, .'!, and guided -rid, but woman 1 and niuselo love and loveli- and act a part ' a; tho iHiitom j , . miiig to re- vy itself oue j not been chastened by strengthened by Iter co ;' by her discretion. Manilas subdued the has subdued man. have won his victoi-K , uess have gained her It is hard to pets long, for wheu trutb ' nature will always I turn, and peep out - time or another. Nervous "Finely-bred, Int. ! a trainer recently to New York M'tU and I nervous. They are 1 quick to take alarm. , seems to them, iu lie terror, necessary to i harm, from somethir stand. That is w bolt aud run away, awful sugj-.stiuns si i their minds. It i white paper in tin nervous horse a ya front of a baby i dragon ready to ti. on a bycycle, som flying devil with,jf however, he ln-coijf objects, he is ei.W thtni. Therefore, at anything muse, it; let hiiu siiielf seuaitive upper ' lie uiuy not lr continue I your hoi horses," sa i'!er for f -i, "are of . l to no" a U. tO do :,!S of 8' - ;i -'i;j) ' I J J , ""1 i J J