RATES OF ADVWTISIIIO. Om Ssura, eae taeh, n luertn-s On Sqoara, on loch, OB. KKil ...... One Rqoare, on. inch, thiea moataa......... On Bqtura, one loan, en yew.. " Two Sqnaroa, on. yer. ... 1 Quarter Column, on year. Half Colema, one year..... ... One Column, en year.. -I Lettl tdrrtUf nf U ants f Baa aack fcn aertloa. MarrlateaaatBnaUoeiiala. An ktns for yearly trrtlU eallaeta aw. terty. Temporary advarttaaaieBle auat pel la advaaea. Jet work cash an Aaiivsry. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN Is published every Wednesday, by J. E. WENK. rtffloela Bmearbaugh & Co.'e Building WJI 8TRHET, TIONE8TA, Pfc ORE EPXJBLICAN. "Terms, 1.00 par Tear. O.TOmttrfntlAnr anil,.!,-. . VOL. XXI. NO. 42. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 13, 1889. $1.50 PEIl ANNUM. eltttr. ho node WW b Z AI. M ,ha Rl ST A correspondent of tlio Chicago . r alt urges thV tho ordinary doctrines of law be (aught in public schools. Tho peoplo of France havo $'.'00,000,. K)0 invested in tho Panama Canal, nnd 4ho chances ore they will never got back cent. "Pino straw barring," jayg tho Flori jit Djtpa'rh, "is pronounced, nftnr a thorough test, to bo superior to juto in every respect." The Argpatino Republics is forging ahead at a tremendous pace. The only purallol I to to found in tho history of the I'njicii states. ' '"fcero are about 3'i,000 deaf and dumb fple in this country, and they increase, - af onurso, as tho 'ipulation increases. "The'greatest educational ccntro for them is in low York city. Tho French chemist who discovered olcomurgeriuo has now invented a pro 6css for treating steol by which steel bronzo and bell metal can bo made at fabulously low prices. j ( Tho now public library building in Boston is, designed to accommodate tho most co.nploto collection of books in tho L'nitqri States. It will have shelf room for f., 000,1)00 volumes. ' A new phrase. .waWttJOHlaU Comnton, a liadicul peer, who rrvre cently a Parliamentary candidate in Lon don. "Three rooms and a cat" was, ho said, the existing stundurd of comfort for the working clusscs. Tbf"t Mil tb city population of tU'j country hud inereu.ud iioin four per s ent, for tho wholo in 1S00 to twelve and ahalf percent, in 130, nndtwenty t aro and ahalf per coot, in 180, wag irnadu the basis for gloomy prophecies of 'discaso, poverty and anarchy. Telegraph operators, it seems, aro de veloping adiseaso of their own. due or two eases have recently occurred in which the fiugcr nails have dropped otT, lino uftor another. This affection is sup posed to bo duo to tho constant hammer ing and pushing with tho finger ends re quired, by tbo working of tho Morse sys tem of telegraphy. ! Indianapolis is to have a soldiers' TJionumont that will bo '205 feet high, and is expected to cost $;)r0,00(. It will bo constructed of limestone from IncUaua quarries, and, if the hopes of its designers and builders aro carried out, will be the finest and costliest sol diers' monument in America. The work will take three or four years to complete Tho little town of Brooklinc, Mass., " which is nourly surrounded by Boston, is valued for purpnsej of taxation at l107,'-l.-l,llS, which is moro than ouo nnd a half times as much as tho valuation of tho wholo Stato of New Hampshire It is tho wealthiest town of its size in America, and ma nly becauso it has tho reputation of being a taxpayer's para A correspondent of the Philadelphia J'ress writes from Washington: "The question of puro lard would appear to ' be interesting tho country just now to an unusual extent, as about two hun dred petitions have been presented in Congress asking for the passago of a law to tax adulterated lard, as was dono in the case of oleomargariuc. Tho petitions are being sent from tho granges in various States.- Bcffium,' Austria, Italy, Denmark, Germany, and several Swiss cantons, have prohibited the public exhibition of hypnotic or mesmerio performance.''. France will probably soon follow, as the! moastiro is recommended by tho French association for the advancement of sci euce. There is a growing conviction tht tho practice of abnormal phenomena tends to make them normal or permanent characteristics of tho patient. There is much that is picturesque, doubtless, in the war now in progress in Egypt, observes the Washington Stur, but not a great deal that is of in terest to Americans, except as the results may eifect tho fortunes of Kiuin aud btauley. o ug is tho influence of propinquity and kiudrud that the siuk ing of a tug on the Potomac with two laborers on board would stir moro deeply die hearts of tho newspaper readers of Washington 'than tho brilliant tight at Kuakin in which -100 Arabs wero killed. Pays tho New York Herald: "It is one of Jho oddest of geographical ca pricoj that in tho course of nature tho strip of land in Central America, ouly about one huudred aud lifty miles wide, . sh nild scpaiato the two oceans. You would naturally suppose that either tho Atlantic would Iiavu worked its way to the Pacific or the Pacific tt tho Atlantic. Tho early explorers, believed that this inut be the case, for they sailed on and ou to find the expected outlet, but were at last compelled ' to go round Cape lloni. nai nuiurp leuism to do we must do for ourselves. Since the Panama i.mr.ii. ..Mr ..1......1. 1 1 J - " v -l tbe moro necessity tor undertaking to ' rce the Isthmus by the Nitarauan of survey." MARTHYS KIS3, When I went sveonrtln' Mnrthy, I was poor as poor could be, But that didn't set her ag'in me, For she had faith in me; She knMv I had grit an' courage, An' wasn't the kind to shirk, An' sho was ready an' wlllin' To do hor sharo of work. I remember our weddin' mornin', An' how she said to me: "You're poor an' I'm poor, Robert, That's easy enough to see; That is, as some folks reckon; But onr hrarts are rich in love, An' we two'll pull together, An' trust In the Lord above." Then she reached up an' kissod me, An' said, as she did this, "There's always more whore that come from' An' there's help sometimes in a kiss." I toll you what It Is, sir, I felt as strong ag'ln, After that kiss she give ma, An' I jest h i 1 out to win. An' I did It. We've money a plenty, An' the comforts it can give; We've a home, an' we've got each other, An1 a few more years to live. . Whenever my hands got weary I'd think of the woman at bom?, An' somi'how 't would moke work easy An' light, till nlght'd come. I toll you that kiss of Marthy'j Was better than bags of gold. There's riches some folks can't reckon An' things that don't grow old. ' I shouldn't lipj been without it, . The man that I've got to be, " . " An' Marthv shall hn va f Via OMIif. mo. 'JWi mi on matte. IN BORROWED FEATHERS. It was a rnloy evening, and Ilatt'e Murray's well-worn blue merino cown was liberally besnrinkled with bright drops as sho came into Daphne Walters' room at the "Old Pcd House." That was the name by which it went, although the red paint was long ago washed otf its crumbling shingles. It had beea a hotel once in tho old post-revolutiouary days, when four horse stages went rumbling by, and cock hatted travelers trotted past with saddle bags strapped behind them. It was now a cheap boarding-house, kept by Mrs. Sandison, where most of tho girls boarded w ho worked in I.is combe's Silk Millshult a mile down tho river. X Hattio Murray did not live there, be causo her lather owned a dreary sheep farm on the Hats beyond, and she helped with the housework morning and even ing in lieu of her board, aud she had run over in tho rain for an evening chat with tlio girl who stood at the next loom to hers. Sho was a blue cved, yellow-haired girl, like a French "doll, with pretty teeth and a simpering way of showing them; and slender as wero the wnges she earned, she always contrived to be showily attired. She worshipped dress as a Parfco worships the sun. Daphno Walters was quite a different sort of person olive complcxioned, with sombre, glittoring eyes, and a dim ple nestling close to the corner of her lips. She wore a brown serirc pown. which llattie was quito sure must havo be longed to ".Mrs. Noah;" nnd in place of tho cheap imitation jewelry which sparkled all over Hattie's trim person, her pla.u linen collar was fastened by a bow of narrow brown ribbon. She looked up with a smile, and pointed to a wooden chair closo to tho table Leside which she was working. "Why, JIattie," said she, "vou are all dripping with rain!" "Oh, it's nothing!" cried Hattio, flinging olt her hood and shawl. "What are you working atTha old thingr" with a contemptuous' upward tilt bf her pretty little noso. Duphne looked down at the garnet cashmere dress, which sho was re-trimming with bows of fresh red ribbon, and smiled a little. "It may bo old," said sho, "but it is the best I have got." "Y'ou are not going to wear that to tho husking dance?" "It's that or nothing, Hattie," Daphne answi red, composedly. "Do you sup pose I can arTord white silk toilettes or wine colored plushes out of my ten dol lars a week?'' Hattie's face clouded over. "It's a shame that old Liscombe pays us-such starvation wages!" pouted sho. "liut that's just what I've come over to talk to yon about. Daphne. I've been to New York to day, in the cheap ex cursiou steamboat." "I noticed that you wereu't at tho room." said Daphue. "ia Buck nor took it." "Such a time as I have had!" cried eager Hattio. "And such a lot of new ideas as I've picked up! Put away that dowdy - old cashmere, Daphno. You won't took twice at it when you hear what I vo seen. I've been to the Holton Street Bazar." "Well, what of that?" calmly ques tioned Daphno. "Have you never heard of it?" "o." Hatt'o lifted her hands and eyes in a protesting manuer toward the ceiling. "To think," said she, '-that any one can be so ignorant of what is going on ! Well, my dear, it's a place where you can buy or hire, if you like that better tho prettiest, most stylish dresses you ever saw for a mere song." "You must have been into the do mains of the 'Arabian Nights,'" said Daphne, drily. "it's a second-hand place," explained Hattio, "where tine ladies dispose of the things they have worn only a fow times, and one can get superb bargains." Daphne shrugged her shoulders. "Wo .should look line, hhouidu't we," said she, "in dresses that had been worn by line Indies." "Wo cou!,l alter them over." "Ny, thank you I" saul composed Daphne. "I prefer the old garnet cash mere, with tho knots of new ribbon." "Oh, but," pleaded Hattie. "you don't know! There's the loveliest yellow moirc-nutiqiio perfect, only for a wine stuiu on the fi out breadlh, aud that could be covered up by changing the draperies at the back. You are such a brunette, Daphuo, you'd look superb in yellow ! And it coot a hundred and twenty dollars when it was now ; and you can buy it now for thirty-five, pnld ia in stallments of live dollnrs a week." "Why don't you say thirty-five hun drcd"snid Daphne. "I am as able to pay one price as another." "Or you can hire it for one night, with boots and gloves to match, for ten dol lars, and you to pay the expressago both ways," added llattie. Daphne shook her head resolutory. "How should I look," said sho "I, a poor factory girl wearing yellow moire antique? Did you over read tho fable of 'The Daw in Borrowed Feathers ' Hat tie!" "I've hired a dross to wear!" defiantly cried Hattio "a beauty 1" "Tho moro goose you!" 'Pale blue," said ecstatic Hattie, "trimmed with crystal fringe and loops of crystal cord. Kudolph Tuxford likes blue. I heard him say so once." Daphne colored a little, but said noth ing. 'And I supposod,of course, you would send for the yellow moire, ' went on Hat tio. "Thcro wouldn't a girl there be dressed like us." "No, 1 should think not!" said Dnphno. "Ton dollars isn't much for a party dress!"' urged Hattie. "But you owe tho jeweler for that sot of cameos yet," reminded Daphne. "And you haven't paid tho last install ment on that imitation sealskin jacket that you wore all last winter." "There's no hurry about that," said Hattie, wi'thatos of hor head. "No girl can expect to get settled in life if she has no enterprise at all." Daphne was silent. She sewed busily on. "You won't take the moire dress?" "No." "It would make you look like an Eastern (jneca!" "I would a great deal rather look like an American factory-girl '." said Daphno. And no amount of persuasion could induce her to abandon th's position. llattie went home, almost crying with vexation. "And Madam Lcroux was going to let mo have the blue Bilk a dollar cheaper, if I got a customer for the yellow moire, " pondered she. "Daphne is too mean for anything!" .i "You aro really going to this country husking ball, liudolphi" cried Miss Tux ford, scornfully. "I am really going, Adele!" Miss Tuxford raised her pretty blondo eyebrows, as sho stirred, the chocolate in her decorated china cup. "Is there any especial attraction?" sho asked, archly. "If you'll come with me, Dell, I'll show you plenty of pretty girls," laugh ingly retorted Mr. Tuxford. "Am I to have a sister-in-law from the country?" asked Adele. ' "I haven't quite made up my mind yet, Dell," composedly answered her brother. "Upon the whole, however, I am rather inclined to fancy the idea of settling down in this quaint old red brick house that Cousin Arial Tuxford has left mo. The girls around here are charming and original, even If they, haven't had boarding school educat ions and, you see, they have not been brought up to expect seasons at Newport and summers at liar Harbor." "To me," said Adele, "tho place is inexpressibly dreary." " V ou had better come with ras to tho busking-ball," said Hudolph, laughing. "lhere s a young mill-owner, tnat re minds one of Edgar Havenswood, in a modern-cut suit of clothes, and " "Nonsense 1" said, Adele. But she made up hor mind to go, all tho same. She was flirting, in a pretty, dignified way, with Harry Liscombe, tho son of tho silk mill owner, and the original of tho "Edgar Knveuswood" idea at tho husking-ball, when suddenly she lifted up her eyes from behind her jewclod fan. "Who is that littlo creature in the bluo dress, Mr. Liscomboi" said she. "Aud tho incomprehensible satin boots that don't fit her? nnd the blue gloves that aro not a match for her gown;" Harry Liscombe looked around. "Oh," said he, "I sco whom you mean ! She is ono of our mill-girls. Isu't sho pretty?" "-di, she's pretty enough; but that dress;" Adele burst into a soft, well modulated fit of laughter. "It's one of my old toilettes that I gave to my maid Lisette a month ago. And I suppose Lisette has sold it to one of those second hand harpies that are always preying upon society, and this poor creature has by some chance stumbled upon it. Upon my word, this is too ridiculous!" Old Mrs. I'ottswho sat against tho wall with her two stilT.elderly daughters, who i:evcr got any invitations to dance, heard It all. Sho told Miss Maurice, who made a funny story of it to amuse tho doctor's daughters, and in less than fifteen minutes it was through the ballroom like an electric current. People were looking, smiliug, whispering. "Come away, Hattie," whispered Dor co, her elder sister. "Every ono is laughing at your second-hand dress." llattie colored to tho very roots of her fri zed yellow hair. ".My second hand dress!" sho faltered. "And how do they know it is second hand !" "It used to be Miss Tuxford's," said Dorcas. "She gave it to her maid. Her maid sold it to your Madam Leroux aud Oh, do come away, llattie! I feel so ashamed ! See how people are star ing I" So ended Hattie Murray's evening of pleasure ; and as she slipped like a guilty creaturo out of the room, she saw Daphne Walters' being led to the head of the second cotillion by Mr. Tuxford himself. "In that old red gown, tool" she said to herself, as she burst into hysterical tears and sobs out iu the dressing room. That evening was the turning point of Daphne's destiny. Hudolph Tuxford's heart somehow became entanglvd uuder the dark meshes of her long eyelashes in the loops of the garnet ribbon which brightened up her last year's cashmere dress aud tho haughty Adele had "a mill-girl" for a sitter-in law after all. And u sister-in-law, too. of whom it whs not necessary to be ashamed. For, as she admitted herself, Daphne had tho dignity of a Mine ess. "She would be a true lady," acknowl edged Adule, "whatever her station in life!" hut poor, pink-cheeked, f. axon haired llattie I She stand still before her loom, watching the whirring wheels, the revolving banjJs, but her restless little heart is ever chafing at her destiny. "Daphne rolls by in her carriage," thought sho, "whilo I Oh, if it hadn't been for that hateful second-hand dress for the mocking laughter of those fine ladies !" Hut llattie Murray wa, wrong. Daphne had conquered through her own noble nature, which spurned aught like deceit or false appraranrcs. It was not Daphn9 that had conqucrod; it war Truth. Saturday Night. WISE WORDS. Women teach us repose. Silcnco is the rest of mind. The world itself is too small for the covetous. Nothing great was ever achioved with out enthusiasm. All is not lost when anything goes contrary to you. Laziness travels so slowly that poverty soon overtakes him. Some people only understand enough of truth to rejoct it. What we ought not to do we should never think of doing. Silence is the wit of fools and one of tho virtues of the wise The saddest thing under tho Bky is a soul incapable of sadness. Few persons live to-day, but are pro paring to do so to-morrow. In youth, one has tears without grief, in old age, grief without tears. The barren tig-tree was not cursed be cause it bore bitter fruit, but because it bore no fruit. A man who is always forgetting his best intentions, may be said to be a thor oughfare of good resolutions. A cynical Frenchman once said there are two parties to lovo affairs the party who loves, and the party who consents to be so treated. Others proclaim the infirmities of a great man with satisfaction aud com placence, if they discover none of the like in themselves. Writlnir Famous rooms. Gray's immortal "Elegy" occupied him for seven years. Bryant wrote "Thanatopsis" in tho shade of a grand old forest a fitting spot lor such a theme. Cowper wrote ono of tho drollest nnd quaintest English ballads, "John Gil pin's Hide," when ho was under one of those terrible tits of depression so com mon to h'm. Genoral Lyle wrote his beautiful com position, "Antony and Cleopatra," which begins, "I am dying, Egypt, dying," on tho night before liis death. He had a premonition that ho was going to die the next day. The noted poem, "The Falls of Ni agara," was written by its author, J. G. C. Brainard, the editor of a small paper in Connecticut, in fifteen minutes. He wrote it under pressure in response to a call for "more copy." "Aftsr the Ball," tho little poem which has made the name of Nora Perry known in the world of letters, was jotted down on the back of an old letter, with no idea of the popularity it was to achieve in the pugos of a noted maga zine. Thomas Mooro, while writing "Lalla liookh," spent so many months in read ing up Greek aud Persian works that he became an accomplished Oriontnl scholar, and people found it dillicult to believe that its scenes wero not penned on tho spot instead of in a retired dwelling in Devonshire. Poe first thought of "The Bells" when walking the streets of Baltimore on a winter's niuht. He rang the bell of a lawyer's house a stranger to him walked into the gentleman's library, shut himself up and the next morning pre sented the lawyer with a copy ol his celebrated poem. The "Old Oaken Bucket" was first suggested to the author, Samuel Wood worth, in a barroom. A friend with whom lie was drinking said that when they wero boys tho old oaken bucket that hung in his father's well was good enough for them to drink from. Wood worth immediately went home and wrote the famous poem. "Old Grimes," that familiar "little felicity in verse," which caught tho popular fancy as far back as lH.';t, was a sudden inspiration of the late Judge Albert G. Greene, of Providence, It. L, who found tho first verse in a collection of old English ballads, and, enjoying its humor, built up the remainder of the poem iu the same conceit. Tin Library, Forgery By Tracing. Young Mr. Tinkler, of Cincinnati, made a fatal mistake when he forged his employer's name by tracing his signature over a piece of carbonated paper. An expert says: "If a mau writes his signa ture, however trembliug or even para lytic his hand may be, there is a definite continuity of the stroke. If one attempt! to write with a pen over a traced signa ture there is a hesitation iu tho progrcst of the en, which muy not be observa- I blc to the naked eye, but is always to bt detected under powerful magnifying. In tho great Boston will case the first oc cassion where forgery by tracing wai brought to public attention the traced siguaiure was photographed upon a luss plate, and then, by means of a camera, thrown in greatly magnified proportions upon a screen for tho benefit of the jury. Thus tho erratic, rail fence progress ol the pen work was cleirly exposed." Tinkler's forgery was detected in this way after he had secured several thou sand dollars. The forger went to Lou- I don and pluycd the fool. He lodgod at a first class hotel anil patronieU a fash ionable tailor. The detectives found him and brought him back. His case is hope less. Atlanta t'oiiiti'utivik Planls and Pianos. A piano tuner who says that pianot frequently deteriorate because they art allowed to become too dry, prescribe! this remedy : ".eep a growing plant iu the room, aud so long as your plant thrives your piano ought to, or els( there's something wrong with it. Just try it, aud see how much more water you'll have to put in the flower pot iu the room where your plant is than in any other room. Some people keen I huge vase or urn with u sopping wet sponge in it, near or under the piauo, and keep it moistened just as a cigai dealer keeps his block. They keep th I up all the time the fires are cu," FROM RANCH TO TABLE. THE TRANSPORTATION, SALE AND SLAUGHTER OF CATTLE. Carrying Mvo Stock in "Stable" Car Methods or Killing Dis tribution of tlio Dressed Heef. It was formerly the custom to ship all grades of cattle in the old square boxes called cattle cars, into which the animals were crowded without any regard to bruise, breakage, or death. This system has been changed to one of shipment iu "palace" and "stable" cars, and now all the best grades of cattle are brought from tho great Western ranches to Chi cago in this manner. These stable cars are TO feet long and 8 feet 4 inches wide on tho inside, with portablo partitions, dividing the cars into three compartments. Each car is furnisSJd with hay racks and water troughs. Thcro is no crowding, and the car usually contains from 1 to 20 steers. On being unlouded, the cattle aro han dled with the utmost care and are driven to the pens in the division yards, where the commission merchant orders them to be watered and fed and places them on sale under tho most advantageous con ditions. Each of the great dressed-becf firms of Chicago employs a number of buyers, on each of whom there is invari ably a weigher in attendance. After being purchased, the cattle are weighed and then driven to the viaduct or slaughter house Under the authority of the Chicago Health Department, tho inspection at the stock yards is very rigid. The Illinois Humane society also has an otlicer stationed in tho stock yards, who takes every precaution to prevent cruelty to the animals. When tho cattle are brought into the slaughter house they aro treated to a cold-water bath by means of a hose. This has been found to be a very eilectual means of reducing the tempera ture of the animals and getting them in the ben possible condition for killing. In rotation and by sure stages, through along lino of pens, the cattle approach tho fatal felling pen, where they aro rapidly dispatched by a man who handles the ritle with the unerring aim of an Indian scout, or the spear with the dexterity of a Cossack lancer. Aftei being killed, each steer is hauled from tlio felling pen to the "skinning bed," where he is bled, tho head being severed from tho body and the carcass hoisted by tho hind legs to iron runs or rails overhead. Then it is allowed to hang for 10 or IS minutes, so as to give tba blood every chance to drain from the body. Coagulation in the veins, which was so common under the old system of bleeding, is thus avoided. After tho bleeding, the carcass is lowered to the floor, tho entrails are removed, the bullock is "sided," and then the body is once more hoisted to the runs. Here the skin is dropped and the flesh inside and out is caiefuily wiped down with a clean cloth. The next step is to cleave the carcass in twain and to run it into the cooling room, whero it remains from yd to 48 hours if heavy and 24 hours if light. The cooling rooms, devoted to the ex clusive use of shipping beef, are four in number. Each measures r.20 feet square, and has a capacity of U00 car casses, or a total of yoOO for the four rooms. The temperature of the cooling rooms and the refrigerator cars is kept as nearly equal as possible at from HIS negroes to ;io degrees, ana by this uni form temperature the best results are attained. Between tho coolinir n-cm. and tho platform where the refriperator cars are drawn up is a shipping-room The beef that is ready for shipping is run out into this apartment, where it is weighed, quartered nnd inspected. The inspection is very rigid, aud nothing blemished is permitted to go out. The refrigerator car is feet long and 8 feet 2 inches wide on the irsido. It is 7 feet '2 inches from the floor to the cross beams ou which the hooks are fastened, aud 1 foot 2 inches from the cross beams to the roof. This latter space admits nn uninterrupted current of air. The cur is supplied with galvun ized iron tanks at eai h end, and they are filled with a mixture of pounded ice and coarse salt. This produces a temperature of from a J degrees to H8 degrees in the closed car. The chilling influence of tho tanks forces a circulation and rarities the nir. When loaded, the refrigerator car contains from thirty to thirty-three carcasses, averaging about UoO pounds. All tho hind quarters are hung in one end of the car, and tho foicquarters in tho other. The cars aro iced tho day before ship ping, are re illed just before loading, and are iced agaiu every twenty-four hours at regular stations ou the journey East. Experiments have proved that iu this way beef can be kept sweet for two or three weeks and will tasto quito as well at tho expiration of that time as meat killed and eaten uithin two or three days. When the cars return empty they are Eiue tracked at the packing house and there undergo a scrubbing and cleaning with boiling water, the hooks are washed and polished, and the car is allowed to stand twenty-four hours with open doors before it is again loaded for the Eastern market. The distribution of tho dressed beef throughout tho East is by agencies or depots at numerous points aud including all tho largo cities. These depots aro constructed and run on principles dupli cated from the Chicago establishment. The beef is sold and distributed through out the surrounding country until every town or viliugu that is accessible iu tho district is supplied. The business is already enormous and is still increasing. There aro ninety-one fully-orgauied commission firms doing business at tho Chicago I nion Stock Yards, iu the re ceiving, handling, and selling of live btock. L'iianjo irurir' Journal. Drink .Made From Iho Kata-Uoot. The kuva-root of tho Society and South Sea Islands is the buds of the in toxicating driuk of those regious. Wo men uud girls are employed to ( hew Iho root, and when well masticated and mixed with saliva, it is ejected into bowls, mixed With coca-juice, and left to ferment. BotU natives und whites of the lower classes are tcry fund of it. Tho natives use it as tome among us do wine, uuder the idea that it will help them along iu importuut undertakings, J'fjjutar .Vieitv Muntlil.j. Arkansas has l,N00,QO0 acres of pruirie ia nU HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Carvers' Secret Service Motto. It cannot be denied that there is a smack of selfishness in the "secret ser vice motto for the carver" recently con tfocted by an epicure of this city who entertains much company at his table, nnd who always carves the mcBts served to each or his guests, it is lounciea on a principal that no solid saint would. practice. Here it is: Secret Pervice Motto for the Carver Socnrvethnt every guest at the tablo shnll think he gets the choicest piece, which, however, you reserve lor your self. Aew York Hun. A Dainty Dlnh of Apples. A dainty and unusual dish with apples is the following: Stew half a dozen large apples as tor sauce, nnd while still warm stir in a bit of butter and sugar to taste flay one cupiui. l et mis get com, then stir in three eggs well beaten nnd a littlo lemon juice. Put a little butter intn a frvintr nnn. and when it is hot add a cupful of bread crumbs and stir until they color toanice brown. J hen sprinKie a part of these bread crumbs upon tho bottom and sides of a buttered pudding mold, fill the mold with the stewed apple, Bprinkle tho remainder of Tho bread crumbs on top ana uane twenty mlnntna Turn out nf the mold and servo with a sweet sauco if liked. Sew lork World. Goslings in TetnptliiK Form. Goslings prepnred in this way aro ex cellent. Put ono ounce of salt pork in dice in a saucepan, aud set it on the fire. When the pork is molted put it in the gosling, cleaned and trussed in the same manner as a chicken, und brown it. Put one ounco of butter in a sauce pan; thoroughly mix with it one table sDoonful of Hour aud set it on the tiro. As soon as the butter is melted put the. gosling in it, with one quart ol peas that have been blanched for two min utesthat is, boiled lor two minutes; then plunge in cold water or broth a bunch of seasoning, composed of four stalks of Tiarslcv. one of thyme, one clove and one of bay leaf, with salt and nenncr. Simmer until cooked. Uomove the fat and tho seasouingand servo hot. If tho broth or water boils away, add a littlo more. Iiroo'Jyn Citizen. Cheap rood Is Itaih Economy. It is false economy that induces pco Dle to use cheat) butter, cheap meat. chcan. flour and other cheap articles of food. In nine cases out of ten cheap articles of food are either damaged oi adulterated, and aro dear at any price They are seldom what they purport to be, and if not really dangerous to use, generally prove unsatisfactory to the purchaser or consumer. Of all cheap things, cheap articles of food should be most carolully avoided. Bread that is heavy or sour has passed the bonds ol redemption. Butter that has become rancid cannot be regenerated by the nd dition of coloring. Meats that i.rc tainted can by no chemical pro ess be restored to their original condition, and the secret of infusing freshness into stale vesetables and decayed fruits remuins un discovered. To use low-prii cd stull foi food is not onlv cxtravniraut and foolish, but criminal. It is a flagraut violat.on of the laws of tdivsloloiry and hygiene, nnd a reckless defiance of disenso and death. Beware of low-priced articles ol food. Aeio lor.'c Uraphu. How to Make Itice Cake. Wash a pint of rice and removo .nll .-pecks nnd imperfect grains, boil it in three quiutc of hot water twenty min utes, drain, nnd as the water will be found very nutritious use In soup m.-Kin,';. Add to the rice a pint of wann milk, half a teaspoonful of salt and two ounces of melted butter. Bent up separately the whites and yolks of two egg, udj the yolks to the rice and stir thoroughly. Sift into the mixture half a pint of llo.ir. Next add the beaten whites of the etrs, nnd if the batter is yet too thick, thin it slightly with a little more milk. In order to make the cakes light, beat the batter thoroughly. Grease the griddle slightly after each batch of cakes. Serve them on hot plates and send hot plates with them to the table. If tho cakes are closely covered whec sent to the tublo they will be somewhat heavy from the steam that may rise from'them and cannot escape. The cake cover should, therefore, have a holo :a its centre. Household Hints. To remove spots from marble uso a paste of whiting and benzine. If the cover is removed from soap dishes the soap will not get soft. A sty on the eye will sometimos yield to uu application of very strong black tea. Try a wineglassful of strong borax water in a pint of raw starch for collars and culls. When fiatirons become rusty, black them with stovo polish, and rub well with a dry brush. After washing a wooden bowl placo it where it w ill dry o pially on all sides, away from the stove. To make good whitewash use skim in i) K with limo instead of water, and it will be more durable. Silver can be kept bright for month by being placed iu an air-tight case w ith a good-sized piece of camphor. Fruit ftuius ou white goods can bo re moved by pouring boiling water directly from tho kettle over tho spots. Hive syrup is good for croup or in flammation of the luugs. It must be kept iu a cool pla c, for if it sours it is veiy poisonous. Do not keej) ironed clothes on bars in tho kitchen any longer than is necessary for thoroughly diyiug. They gather unpleasant odors. If you want poached eggs to look par ticularly nice cook each cIjlj in a uiu lin itug placed in the bottom cf a sauce pan of boiling water. I so squares of dull colored felt pinked at the edges, under statuary oi any lunvy ornaments that aro liable tr. mar a polished surface. Eiputl parts of white shellac and al i hoi are a permanent fixative for crayou and ihareoul sketches. Spray it on evenly w ith nn artist's aiomiei. For cleaning brass use u ihin paste ol plato powder, two tablespoonsl ul ul inegar, four table.spoonslul cf aliohol Bub with a piece of llauuel. polish with chamois. DETTEH THAN GOLU Better than grandeur, better than gold. Than rank and titles a thousand fold, Is a healthy body and mind at ease. And simple pleasures that always please; A heart that can feel for another's woe, And share its Joys with a geniol glow; With sympathies large enough to enfold All men as brothers, is bettor than gold. fietter than gold is a conscience clear, Though toiling for bread In an humble sphere, Doubly blessed with content and health, Untried by the lust or the cares of wealth; Lowly living nnd lotty thought Adorn and ennoble a poor man's cot; For mind and morals, in nature's plan, 1 Are the genuine tests of a gentleman. Better than gold is the sweet repose Of the sons of toil when their labors close; Better than gold is the poor man's sleep, And the balm that drops on his slumber deep. Bring sleepy draughts to the downy bed, Where luxury pillows its aching head, But he his simple opiate deems A shorter route to the land of dreams. Better than gold is a thinking mind, That in the realm of books can find A treasure surpassing Australian ore, And livo with the great and good of yore; The sage's lore and the poet's lay, The glories of empire pass away; The world's great dream will thus unfold, And yield a pleasure better than gold. Better than gold is a peaceful home, When all the fireside characters como; The shriuo of love, the heaven of life. Hallowed I y mother, or sister, or wife; However humble the home may be, Or tried with sorrow by heaven's decree, The blessings that never were bought nor sold, And center there are better than gold. 1IU.HOK OF THE DAY. A land of distrcsB Wald. On strike A parlor match. A shepherd's crook A sheep stealer. The seaboard Salt pork aud hard tack. With tho buildor it's cither put up or shut up. In tho matter of fans tho Chinese take tho palm. The "nimble shilling" must be mado out of quicksilver. A beetle cn draw twenty times its own weight, r o can a mustard plaster. Now Fay tho bees after tho hive is prepared for them: "We'll mako things hum here." A spirit thermometer is best for cold weather purposes, because there is always a drop iu it. Shrewd inquiries are being made as to whether the cup of sorrow has a saucer. Can any one tell ' Jay Eye Sco will probably remain on the turf instead ot going under it. A'eio York lltral I, When it comes to a question between pies and piziu it is hard to decide Hi'hmvnd JJeith. Uncle Sam may laugh at Canada, but ho can't cutch a nation by cachiuuation . Detroit Free Fres . If he who hesitates is lost, tho man who stutters must have great dilliculty in finding himself. HomercM: Journal. 'l is a human act to kill canines By electric shocks, we own But then it gives a wicked tasto To the sausage ot Bologna. Bobbv "What did you say, pa?" Ta "Never mind." Bobbv "I don't of- a tener ihaa 1 have ta, do IV'Binijhamp- 7 ton It'iMki:. "So old Brown is dead, eh? Weir, well! Did he leave anythingi" "Yes. It broke his heart t j do it, but ho left everything." Htryer'i i'auir. A clergyman who married a couple ot deaf mutes in Brooklyn the other day made a bad break when he wished them "uuspeakabio bliss." The Cartoon. He who fights and runs away May live to ttvtbt another day; But he who never llgbts at all, Yet swears he whips, hus lots of gall. Tennyson compare men to trees, and perhaps he is right about some men, who -aro all limbs, whose boughs arc awkward, aud who-o general reputation is some what shady. jViio 3'cir Hun. Little Boston Girl (us tho hair-brush is reached for) ".Mamma, the consecu t vcuess and tbo provaleucy of theso iu tormiunble castigatious ure slowly sap ping my very life!" Time. The United States Post Office Depart ment is pretty woll supplied with regula tions, there is one more we should liko to see adopted about this time "Post no bills." Uurliiittoii Frta I'reti. y -He said in tones of sorrow, io "friends in ne i" (or me! Tho friends that want to borrow 1 do not wish to w. Hostn t'oiiri.T. He Misunderstood. liobinson- -"How does it come that you aro always in the courts:" I a wyor "That's my busi ness." liobinsou "Oh, well, 1 wouldn't get so touchy about a littlo thing if I wero you." l ime. Baker "What is tlio price of flour today:" Assistant "Somewhat high er." "Well, go down and tell the fore man to chuck iu more easl. Thank my stars, c 1.1 Hutch can't get up a corner ou wind."--VuWfy'i'f Uu-orJ. "Why, Mrs. l'o aucey, what is the matter with your daughter l lorencef Mil- looks completely used up und dono for." "i h, she's all riht, Mrs. uu Tyke. She has just giaduuted from a 'shing school." SprtnijiieLl I nion. Ik that she loved hlin, for nheu it was .e Alio uih over the earth stood the moon. As ho took up his hat and strolled out, to the t;ate, She oske.L "Are you uouig so sjon. Mtr emmt 'irave'tr. When Chaplain McCabe was iu Kansas on a tour endeavoring to raise fl, (M)i,i)('t) for missious, a littlo boy heard his appeal, aud thiuking of thu large sum lie had to ruise, determined to help bun Tlio tit tit chance he had curly in tho week he gathered a basketful of chestnuts, whith he sold for live icats. Ho sent this to Mr. Mct'ahe with the note: "It you want auy moro let me know."-Clt'uaijj Jlrld. St. Paul, Slinn., parties piedict a de crease iu tho log crop on tho upper Mis sissippi, the coming seasou, ol about twenty per cent, from lust season's tut. 1 t