THE FOREST REPUBLICAN a prttUhed rrsrj Wtdneidajr, f J. E. WENK. Vffloa In Bmoarbaugh A Co.' Building XLM ITRXBT, TIONK8TA, Fa. Term. ... ti.BO par Year. N tnliaerlptlons rewired for ahortar aerlod lann thro monttia. OrriMpondenr toHcHed from til MrU of th country. No nolle will b tokta of anonjmoui nwwaslcauou. RATES OF ADVERTISING. On 8qn.ro, on Inch, on. Insertion 1 M On Sqoare, on Inch, on month ....T. 1 00 On Square, on Inch, thro month. M On. Square, on Inch, on jcar 10 W Tiro gqnare, on year , It M Quarter Colnmn, on year NN TJalf Colamn, on year MM On Colnmn, on roar 100 N lf al advertisement ten cents per lin aach la ertlon. Marriage and death notices gratia. All bill, for yearly adTertliementa collected qnant terly. Temporary adT.rtlMm.nt moat paid U ad ranee. Job work eaah on delivery. Pore CAN. VOL. XXII. NO. 19. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEP. 4, 1889, $1.50 PER ANNUM. xP lLlDlT TIB IT IT i The present permanent population of Oklnhoma i about 20,000. 1 S" I The boundury question between Ecua dor and Porn will be settled by a con ference at Quito. The civil service rules affect nearly B0,000 officials in the employ of the United States Government. A return show that no Tewer than twenty-nine persons died from starvation ill London in twelvo montlm. In Sweden, Denmark, Bavaria, Baden ind Wurtemburg there is practically no one who cannncad or write. Vh c leader of the Soudnnesa dervishes, Nad-el-jumi, boldly announces that he has set out to conqaer the world.. The Italian murderer of the future has been done for by the philanthropists a) last. lie is never more to be executed. During the Paris Exhibition no less than sixty-nine international congresses -will meet in tho French metropolis under Government patronage. I , onys tne iciroit free lres: "The 1 1- , : ft j . i . tunv ui iiuiitr.viii vuuniiu lu me unueu States continues unabated, and in so friendly a spirit that no harm can result." The New York Herald has discovered that English ladies take, a great deal more i merest in politics limn ino wives . und daughters of American candidates do. . It is. a fact worth moralizing over, opines tho Chicago Sun, that annually o million tous of llnx straw go to waste in the United States, instead of being worked into linen product it Tho possessions of Trinity church, in New York city, foot up to $140,000,000. Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix, its pastor, has nominal salary of f 12,000, but really re ccives as much as he wants. Speaking of the lower classes of jrtpan, Mr. Arthur May Knnpp, himself a mis sionary to tho "Yankees of the Orient," says they oro morally' much superior to tho corresponding classes in tho United States. ' The "grizzly bear is following in the footstep of the buffalo and gradually going hence. It is now only among the most broken country of the territories that he can be found at all, and he isn't half as full of fbrht as ho used to be. Tho incomo of a professional rat catcher averages $1500 per year, an nounces the Detroit Free Press, and there are only ten of them in the United States. Tho average income of lawyers. is only $700 per year, and tho ranks are over crowded . , Mon living in other countries, and owing allegiance to other powers, own land enough in the United States to make about ten States like Massachusetts, more than the whulo of New England, more laud thau some governments own to sup port king. Tho Cologne (Germany) Oatette pub lished column of American census Istatistira which justify the ' prediction tluit before the middle of the coming century the western continent will bo studded with cities of 1,000,000 inhabi tant and upward. The colony on Pitcaiiu's Island in tho South Pacific numbers 120 people, all related by blood or marriago, and the amount of money circulating among them has never been over 80. The one who gets hold of $20 of this is consid ered a millionaire. One Chicago ice wagon, driven by a pale-faced and harmless looking young man, has killed five persons this season, and it may be observed that tho per formance is not yet over. Every coro ner's jury exonerates the driver and cer tifies that he is very careful and consid erate. Tho fire losses iu the United States during the first six months of the year aggregated o-er 70,000,000, against a total loss of but $16,500,000 for the tnruu ' pcriqd lust year. Iu loss of life ntl losses of property through other u:;:i!cins the first half of 1889 has been otable. . The New York Mercury observe : ' "The Quakers are practical, if anything, 8nd, believing that the royal road to a man's heart lies through his stomach, they have determined to convert the noble red man through the cooking stove as a means of grace. Already they have laid before President Harrison a proposition to send women among the Indians to teach them housekeeping, and Congress is expected to make an appropriation for this purpose. It all depends on the char ii ter of the cooking. Heavy biscuits and, :ddy coffee will exterminate the real 's of the tribes to a dead certainty." UNDER A CHESTNUT TREE. When In the drowiy lull of afternoon I lee the lazy abadowa draw their trail Athwart th turf, and hear tho dove' low croon Float from the distance on th summer gale; When from their leafy village overhead The squirrel chatter in their ceaseles play Then, stretched at length upon a mony bead, I love to dream th sultry hours away. Then all the world takes on a lasy mood. And nature seem to pause amid the heat,' And, burled In a thoughtful calm, to brood Above her children crowding at her feet. Out there the shadows sleep beneath th rays That beat upon them with o Here a glance, And Just above them In the trembling hare Tho vagrom puff ball, weave an airy dance. Down by the pool, on whose sedge-girdled breast The merest ripple stirs in oily waves, A minstrel robin lift a haughty crest, And looks and drinks, and drinks and looks and laves. Forth form their harbor, 'neath the willow tree Whore lilies pave the pool dusky green, A fleet of ducks puts slowly forth to sea, Solemn In progress and erect in mlon. - There, on the highway, where It soars the hill. A pair of oxen drag a cart's dull weight, While clouds of crimson dust the other fill And mark the progress of their patient gait; Down in the rye-patch where the'aldera crow The partridge pipes his mate to guard the uen, And where wild roses by the hedge blow The bee and butterfly both sit and rest. The scene is perfect. Not a single chord In this sweet concert jars upon the soul. I II upon my Mother's Ian the lord Of mighty dreams that cares cannot con trol. Strong with her strength I lie on Nature's Dreast . And like Antsus am renewed again; Most solace she gives when she's most at rest Oh ! mighty Mother. Healer of all rutin. J. W. C. Johnston, in Atlanta Constitu tion. BENEATH HIM. BY ELEANOR KIRK. 'I would starve first!" "Then starve!" Uncle Adnniram Barney, as lie was janeu uy all wlio knew hun, had been having a serious conversation with hjs nephew Charles. Charles had lost his temper entirely, and Uncle Adoniram had at last reached tho utmost limitAof for 1 n.. . . - J9 uearancc. i no question under aw&cussion was tho advisability of the yjfHng man's seeking some occupation iri which he wouia ue sure to earn lus livincr. Charles was twenty-ono, and his uncle up to this time had assisted him in every possiuio manner, nut, strangely enounh. though posselSdof a fine intellect, care fully cultivated, had done nothing to enrn uis own living. Ho had been un willing to study for a profession, and at mis time bad small prospect of obtaining u situation, ana smaller prospect ot keep ing a position if ho had found one. "If I could only find where I Belong," naries Degan again. Mi bad cooled down a little, and wasaWosed to argue the point a tnfio further. "I can never make a good clerk or bookkeeper, and you kuow as well as I do that I am utterly lacking in mechanical ability." "And the worst of nil is, Charles, you are utterly inciting in the quality of ap plication," Uncle Adoniram replied. "You toik about your lucks as if they were something to bo proud of. If vou have got fair common sense and a fair education you can make a good clerk or a good Bookkeeper, and you could learn a trade if you wanted to. It is all bosh. every bit of it, and now that you have Some to man's estate you ought to be ashamed of such childish balderdash. I have given you tho best advice I could under the circumstances, and whether you lonow it or not is your own aliutr." "Decidedly," said Charles, rising In a white heat. "I always supposed vou cared something about me ; but when a fellows s only relative, and that relative a rich man, advises him to look out for a situation as car conductor, there can cer tainly be but ono opinion about it." V. "You are right, Churles,"aid Uncle Adoniram, "there can be but one opinion. I decline for your own good, to go qu supporting you; and taking into consider ation your constant failures to support yourself, I advise you to try for a car con ductor's position. You will learn to be accurate und attentive. You will know .whut it is to . work for yoUr bread ; and this, iii my opiuiou, you need to know more than anything else." "Then you don't care for the humilia tion, the social ostracism, tliat will be the inevitable results of such an occupa tion?" the young man inquired as he nervously turned the knob of the door ho had just opened. , "Not a red cent!" Uncle Adoniram re plied. If a man is going to be cut by his friends for earning in the only way that is open to him nn independent liv ing, then social ostracism is the healthiest thing that I cautliiuk of. The only, thing that should humiliate an able bodied man is dependeuco upon others. You have become so accustomed, Charles,- to being looked out for, that the alternative seems very undesirable to yoih" This was "putting it hard," as Uncle Adoniram told himself afterwards ; but the case was desperate and heroic treatment the only kind that would answer. "Your charity shall not be further trespassed upon," was the proud answer. "If I ever take a relative to bring up, Uncle Adoni ram, I will be still more generous, and refrain from twitting him wjth how much he has cost me. Hero is the money you gave me yesterday, and which I was mean enough to take," and the young nan emptied the fiuaueiul contents of his pockets on his uncle's desk . "Since you nave turned nie out of doors, sir, 1 prefer to go penniless. Good morning." Uncle Adoniram was on .the point of calling his nephew back, but thought better of it and sat perfectly quiet as the angry man slammed the door and walked down the street. "TL?re was a good deal of temper about that last performance," said Uncle Adoniram, "but there was some honest pride as well. I don't just see how the boy is going to get along without money; but I suppose he won't starve as long as his watch lasts." The old man was right. Charles pawned the watch which had been left him by his father, and then searched dil igently for a job. He left nothing un done to secure what he considered a suitable situation, but his efforts were useless. There was a call for mechanics and employment enough for professional men, but for him there was absolutely nothing. There were a hundred clerks and book keepers to one situation, a gentleman to whom he applied told him, and with a touch of pity for the evident discourage ment of his applicant asked him a few sensible questions. "Now if you understood stenography," he said, after a careful catechism, "I could show you some court work which would be very remunerative." Charles shook his head. His experi ences were beginning to make him feel very small. "I should be glad to help you," the gentleman went on kindly, "but I really don't see any way to do it. I know of a position you could have at onco as car conductor, but " The young man's face was ablaze, and his eyes looked as if they would strike fire. "But what?" he asked, as his com panion did not finish the scntenco. "If you were a relative of mine," the gentleman replied, "and had tried for other positions and failed as you tell me you have, I should say, put your pride in your pocket and buckle to it. I should tell you also to make use of every spare moment, and study stenography, as if your life depended upon it. " "But when a man once takes such a position," Charles began in feeble re monstrance, his face still scarlet. "He is always obliged to keep it, you were going to say," the gentleman inter rupted. "That is stuff and nonsense. If you have the right pluck and ambition, and application, you can make your job a temporary affair, a bridge across a stream; and if you are above accepting such a position, or too indolent and un ambitious to work into something better if you do accept it, then you are not worth saving;" and with this the gentle man turned away. Charles had twenty-five cents of the watch moOey left- in' his pocket. This was the sum total of his earthly posses sions. The way in which this gentleman looked upon the pride which made him hesitate about accepting tho position of csr conductor seemed the expression of all business men from his uncle to the present one. "Well, what do you say J" the gentle man inquired, returning a moment to speak to him. "If you will show mo how to secure tho situation you spoke of," Charles re plied, with a lip which would quiver a little in spite of all he could do, "I will go immediately and see about it." "Good for you!" said his companion. "I will go with you," and the rich merchant passed his arm through that of his struggling, poverty stricken com panion, aud in this way they sought the office of the great railroad company. A few brief words and the ugly business was settled. The young man would take his place the next morning at six o'clock, with a small but sufficient salary. "I have the best works on shorthand," the gentleman told Charles as they were about to part; "and if you will step round to tno House with me 1 should be happy to lend you the books. My daucli ter studied stenography for fun. It took her one year to learn the system, by study ing a little every day. You ought to be able to beat a girl at the business." Charles snuled. Application? That was what his uncle said ho needed more than any other qualification. Should he take this man's books, and promise him to spend his spare time in the study of stenography.? How strangely his affairs were bcinjr taken out of his hands. The young man had always believed that tho great business of the universe was taken care of, but this was the first time that he had ever felt that his small affairs were in any way managed or directed Now it seemed to him as if his ways were in some incomprehensible manner being ordered. Of coil' e, there was neither generosity nor justim the matter, and everything was all wrong; still some power outside of himself was responsible, and he won dered, as ho looked over tho strange characters that evening in the book his new friend had lent him, which strag gling mark his life was like. They all meant something, that was one comfort some letters, some phrases; but the uag character which stood for him would doubtless be the one of smallest account. It might be an interrogation point, he thought; surely no one asked more questions or received less answers. He had one meal that day. His remain ing twenty-live cents must be saved for breakfast the next morning. How ho was to manage for a full week without any money was a physical and mathematical problem which he was not equal to. "Sufficient unto the day," and "Think not of the morrow," were the last words on his lips before going to sleep; and they were repeated with so much reverence, and such evident desire to get hold of the faith which was dimly dawing upon him, that his good angel must have felt comforted. Promptly at six the next moraine the young man took his place on his car. The first thing to do was to sweep it out. Char lea Barney had never handled a broom in his life, but he gave his mind to the work, and succeeded in apjiearing much less awkward than ho felt. There was a good deal to learn, indeed much more thau h supposed, but he listened to the numerous instructions with atteutiou, and his new work commenced. It was not uuite as dreadful as waa sud- poscd. Still It Was distasteful enough, and the poor fellow wondered if he should ever get used to it. At noon, on his re turn to the car station, he found a letter from his new friend, with an enclosure ol five dollars. "I had an impression" it said, "that you were entirely out of money. I tried onco when I was about your age to live without eating. It didn't work, I'm sure it won't in your case. Come in and see me some time when you have leisure. Keep up your courage and stick to you! stenography." The first thought that went through the young man s mind as he read and re-read this kind letter was that this rich merchant didn't feci himself above asso ciating with a car conductor. To do him justice, ho recognized that this was a very mean consideration. Then he won dered how long it would be before he could return the money, and concluded he could do it in two weeks. Then and not till then, would he call on the gentle man. Only an hour could be given to study in the first twenty-four hours of his new life ; but this time was a refreshment in stead of a drag, and when he put away his book for the sleep he must have, it was with real reluctance. Ue had been employed about two months when one morning Uncle Adoni ram stepped on his car. llis first im pulse was to pull his hat down over hig eyes and avoid recognition if possible, but Charles Barney was learning manli ness as well as application and he imme diately thought better of it. The old man did not look up when hig nephew gave him his change ; but Charles said softly: "Good morning, uncle," and then sprang to his feet. i "Charles!" he exclaimed, grasping the conductor's hand. "Charles, my boy, how do you do?" i There was abundant love and hearti ness in Uncle Adoniram's voice and man ner, and there was something more that was new to Charles. He knew now that for the first time his uncle really re spected him, and out of this a stronger courage was born". m ' 'I have been very lonely without you," the old man said, as he stood on the back platform with his nephew; "and I have been worried about you, too. Why have you not been home, Charles?" ' 'Because I wanted to see if I was really going to keep my position," the young man answered; "and because, uncle, I wanted to rid myself of all feeling of hu miliation before I saw you again." "Where do you staud in the mattet now?" Uncle Adoniram inquired, as he brushed a tear from his cheek. i "Almost on my feet," Charles replied; "Are you looking for anything else; my boy?" "I am studying stenography with all my might, uncle, and am getting along finely. By and by I shall have mastered it, and then I can always find employ-i ment." ! "Your discipline has made a man of you, Charles 1" said his uncle. "I knew it would. Don't stay away from the old man, my boy. God bless and keep you." The young man went home the next day, for he felt that his uncle needed him; but he still kept his position as cat conductor, and studied every spare moment. His uncle read to him, and laughed at tho strange characters he so deftly put on paper, and in this manner a year went by. Then Charles Barney found more congenial employment helped to it by the merchant who had been his steadfast friend, and whose daughter he ultimately married. He had served an invaluable apprenticeship to the) inexorable taskmaster, Necessity, and had been an apt scholar, not only learning dispatch and application, but finding out that a true mau can ennoble the lowliest! labor. Youth1 Companion. i What a Ball Fight Costa. j The cost of one of the corridas may be; safely reckoned at not less than $7500.1 There are generally six bulls killed, anil these average from $53 50 to $500 each.j Horses are contracted for, and are bought at simply "knacker" prices; sometimes' as many as twenty-five are done to death. i There are generally three espades, and those, with their cuadrillas, may be taken,! one with another, at about 1250 each.i Then there is a very large number of as- siatanta and attendants. A very heavy rent is paid for the pluza, and the Govern-; ment tax, or "contribution," is also a considerable item. The "gate" may bo estimated, given a "full house" and it is almost ulways fairly tilled at some 10,000. I am told that as regards the amount a famous espada may make that Guerritu, a very famous espada, though hardly more than a boy for he is still in his twenty-fourth year has already, at only the beginning of the season, signed engagements for sixty-four corridas, at $1100 each! When it is calculated that, at the outside, his following will not take more than about $350 of this, the amount that is left appears a very fair salary for a man or, to speak more cor rectly, a lad who probably had a diffi culty iu attaching his signature to his contracts. All the Year Hound. Largest Area of Plate Glass. Au ambitious firm in Boston recently determined to have the lurirpuf. nn ..f plate gloss in their show window of any iu uio country, sua sent tneir order to a great crystal establishment in Paris. When the question of shipment was brought into the bargain no steamship or sailing vessel could be found which could take the huL'o ulates of iIhkh on li.,i,r.l through its hatches. Therefore the pur chase abroad was abandoned. Then came the SUlrreStion that the Ifluua ritllhl a manufactured in Indiana. The contract was made with Iudiaua manufacturers, and the glass was perfected; but then arose another difficulty. The great crystal pane must be transported upright iu a frame. The height of the bridges abovo the railroads waa found. miwI ir. wy Hia. covered that no railroad in the country would thus transport it to the Hub. Conseuuentlv the ambitious Arm obliged to abandon their projuct, and couwmea ineuiamves wnn peace-meal windows. A BATTLE WITH A HAWK. A FIERCE CONTEST OVER THB fOS SESSION OF A FISH. The Bird Seize a Hooked Pickerel and Attack the Fisherman In Hi Boat Game to the Last. j George Decker, a Monroe County fish erman, was fishing a few days ago in Goose Pond, says a Pocono (Pcnn.) letter to the New York Sun. Ho hooked a pickerel, and while he was reeling it in a big fish hawk that had been sailing around at a great height above the pond all day without favorably locating any prey swooped down and seized Decker's pickerel in its talons. Tho pickerel was at the end of about fifty feet of line when the hawk struck it. As the hawk arose from the water . with the fish it quickly reeled out all the liuc, which was 150 feet in length. Decker braced himself and hungi on to his pole, which was a long bamboo in one piece. When the hawk had run all the lino out, the hook being still firm in the pickerel's jaw, the big bird was brought to a standstill. The line was strong enough to hold out against ail the hawk's tugging at it, and the hook was so deeply imbedded in tho pickerel's bony jaw that the strain, great as it was, did not tear it loose. The hawk's strength started the boat, and the bird was soon towing it across the pond by means of the hook in the pickerel's jaw and the pole in the fisherman's hands. The hawk's audacious act in swooping down upon the hooked pickerel so dum founded Decker that he had been towed Borne distance before he awoke to the necessity of making an effort if he wanted to save his fish and tackle. He had a medium-sized six-shooter with him, aud drawing it, he began peppering away at the hawk. Only one of the shots took effect, and that was the last one. It struck the hawk in one of its legs. With a sharp cry the bird released its hold on the pickerel, aud the latter tumbled back into the water. But tho hawk was not through with Decker yet. Upon drop ping the pickerel the ugly bird darted savagely down upon the fisherman, and attacked him in the boat. This was a movement so entirely unexpected to the fisherman that he was carried completely off his feet by the force of the hawk's assault. The hawk fastened its claws in Decker's shirt at the waist, and began a vigorous onslaught with its powerful beak, seekiifg to drive it into the fisher man's eyes. Decker had dropped his pole, but retained his pistol in his hand. This was empty, however, and the only use he could make of it was to uso it as a billy in defending himself. By raining blows on the bird's head and neck, while he protected his face and eyes with his other arm, he managed to fight the bird off until he regained his feet, when he thought that the bird would either give up the fight or could be easily disposed of. The hawk, however, showed not the slightest disposition to give up, but re sumed its attack with renewed vigor. The narrow boat placed Decker at great disadvantage, as it rocked and tipped at every movement he made,, and rendered his footing so uncertain that he had to guard against tumbling into the pond as well as the hawk's desperate lunges nnd strikes. Decker at last managed to make a successful grab at the hawk, and seized it with both hands around the neck. This would soon have choked the bird to death, but in making the grab the fisher man tipped the boot far over to one side, and before he could recover his balance his pitched headlong into the pond, carrying the hawk with him.. To save himself from drowning he was forced to release the hawk which rose from the water, and Decker struck out for his cap sized boat. The hawk's blood was still up, and as the swamped fisherman was swimming to bin boat the bird swooped down upon him and fastened its talons in Decker's hair, his head being the only part of him above water. Decker's hair was thick aud heavy, and the hawk se cured a firm hold in it and tugged away at Decker's scalp like an Indian prepar ing it for the knife. Decker dived be neath the water, and, seizing the hawk with one band by one of its legs carried the big bird uuder with him. A desper ate struggle ensued below the surface, but there the hawk was so entirely out of its element that by the time Decker was himself forced to come to the surface he had succeeded in drowning his bold antagonist. Decker reached his boat and climbed upon it, dragging the body of the bij; hawk with him. Then for the first he had time to think of his fish pole and the pickerel. He discovered the pole, which was in the water 200 yards from where he hud dropped it, and fnnn the way it was moving along Decker was satisfied that the pickerel hud survived its experi ence with the hawk, and was still alive and active with the hook in his juw. Decker was in the middle of the pond, on his capsized boat, and helpless to get near his rod, or get ashore without swim ming. He took off his clothes and struck out for the fish pole. Sure enough, the pickerel was still ou the hook. Decker swam ashore, hundling the pole with one hand, and succeeded in lauding the pickerel, which was over two feet in leugth. Ho then swam out and pushed the boat ashore und righted it. The hawk, which had made such an unprece dented fight, measured six feet with its wings outstretched. This mammoth hawk had made its haunts in wild hills uround Goose Pond for over twenty years, and hud defied all the skill and wiles of hunters iu captur ing it. Only last season, iu this same pond, Decker had a lively light with uu euoruious snapping turtle, which he hiu' captured on un outline, aud which snapped off the index finger of his right hand (luring the fight The making of leaden soldiers is an in dustry centered in Nuremburg aud em ploying about eight hundred people. A long war brought out the toy at the be ginning of the eighteenth century, and artists were employed to make the lead suldiers faithful representations of rt-gi uieuta aud countries. And the industry prospers most in times of war. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. BEST TIMB TO BATITE. , j . The best time to bathe is just before going to bed, as any danger of catching ,cold is thus avoided, and the complexion ds improved by keeping warm for several hours after leaving the bath. A couple of pbunds of bran put into a thin bag and then into the bath tub is excellent for softening the skin. It should be left to oak in.a small quantity of water several hours before being used. Hew York Tele gram. TTTE KAP AT KOONTIME. I Both the climate of the country and our national habits tend to keep the brain and nervous system at a high tension. We need to see that, without a radical change, there is danger ahead for us. We need to force ourselves to take things more quietly, to think more of rest. But, meanwhile, the midday nap is of vast help. It is wonderful how much recuper ative power there is in a nap of a few minutes. No one who has ever acquired the habit of a brief siesta has failed to experience it, nnd perhaps there is no way in which a quarter of an hour of our time every day can be invested, and with a prospect of a better dividend in health and length of days than an after-dinner nap. YoutK'i Companion. TO PREVENT MOLD IN JARS. i One of the great troubles in preserving fruit in glass jars Is to prevent the forma tion of mold on top and the consequent spoiling of fruit when it rises above the top of the sirup. A very effective, cheap and simple device is a disc of thin veneer of wood, from one-sixteenth to one twentieth of an inch thick and from two and three-quarters to three inches in dia meter for one quart jars, made from gum, beech, birch, elm or ash, as these woods have no taste nor flavor and will not in jure the fruit. To use, dip in hot water to prevent cracking, slightly bend so as to slip in the neck down below the shoul der of the jar; press down on tho fruit so as to allow the sirup to rise over it. The shoulder will keep it down and in place. When you wish to uso tho fruit remove by running a fork under and picking it out. Washington Star. HOW TO PACK FRUITS AXD FLOWERS. Florists and fruit growers .are cautioned by an English authority against the use of cotton as a packing material for fresh flowers and fruits. It is affirmed that cotton "as a packing material for cut flowers or living plants, cuttings, scions, etc., it is the very worst if employed in immediate contact with vegetable tissues." It is advised, to observe the rule, to first wrap fruit in tissue paper before using the cotton, which may then be employed with advantage as a soft padding. But for bowers, plants and cuttings fresh clean wood moss is advised. An English hor ticulturist of experience tells of his suc cess in sending cut flowers. This secret is to pack the flowers firmly and yet havo some elasticity. He packs on a layer of moss the flowers, wrapped in wax paper, and over all places a piece of tho corru gated brown paper used iu shipping bot tles and other glass. New York Herald. Broiled Sweet Breads Let them lio half an hour in tepid water; then throw into hot water to whiten and harden, af ter which draw off the outer casing, re move the little pipes, and cut into thin slices; spread plenty of butter over them and broil over hot coals, turning often. Dried Apple Short Cake Make a short cake of nice, light, rich biscuit dough. When done, split it open nnd butter nicely, then place a layer of dried ap ples, which has been stewed for sauce, over this spread thick sweet cream, then sift on sugar and place the upper crust bock. Very nice. Queen Fritters One pint of water, one-fourth of a cup of butter, eight ounces of flour; boil the water and but ter together; put tho flour all in at once, and stir over the fire till well cooked ; let stew till cool, then add ten eggs, one at a time ; beat well ; fry in hot lard and sprinkle with powdered sugar. Rice Pudding Without Eggs One cup of rice, well washed, one cup of rich milk, one-half cup of sugar, one teaspoon ful salt, raisins if liked, flavor as you like best. Put all together in a buttered dish or pan, and bake in a slow oven about two and a half hours, until the rice is well cooked. To be eaten warm or cold, with butter or cream, also good with any plain sauce. Green Tomato Sauce Cut up a piut of green tomatoes ; take a tnblespoonful of black mustard seed, three tablesponusful of dry mustard, two tablcspoonsful each of black pepper, allspice and celery seed, three tublespoonsful of salt, one quart of chopped onions, one pint of sugar, two and one-half quarts of vinegar, red pep per to taste; beat the spices anil boil all together till done. Graham Bread One quurt of warm water, one-half cup of brown sugar, one quarter of a cup of hot yeast, one tea spoonful of salt, flour enough to make a thin batter; then add Gruhain flour until quite stiff; let stand over uight. In the morning add three-fourths of a teuspoou of soda aud flour euough to form into loaves; put into puns; let riso again anil bake in un even oven. Orange Jelly Take four oranges, one half pound of sugar, one lemon, one-half box of gelatine and one quart of water. Melt the gelatine by softening it iu a half teacupful of cold water and theu dissolvo it by pouring on, after un interval of tweuty minutes, ono and oue-Imlf cups ful of boiling water. Put the sugar into the bottom of a bowl, und strain upon it the juice from all the fruit, then add the melted gelatine and stir all well together. Grate in enough orunge peel to give a zest to the flavor. More than CO, 000 head of cattle will be shipped to EugluLd this season of navigation from Canada, A large cave has been discovered near Las Cruces, N. 31., lti interior of which1 is lined with vein of almost pure silver.' ENOCH AND CYRUS AND JERRY AND BEN. -J jFnoob and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben Were babies together, four fat little men. Four bald-headed babies, who bumped then) I selves blue. And sprawled, grabbed and tumbled, aa ilj 1 babies do Full of laughter and tears, full of sorrow and) glee. And big, bouncing bunglers, as all babies bjj All - in the same valley lived these littl men Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben. Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben Were fast little chums till they grew to baf men. Eight bare little feet on the same errands flew Thro' meadows besprinkled with daisies and) dew; they were aimless as butterflies, thoughtless)' and free As the summer-mad bobolink, drunken withn glee. A wonderful time were those careless days' then For Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry ana Ben. Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben , Grew from babies to boys, and from Awys Into men. ' Too restless to stay in the circumscribed' bound ' Of the.green hills that circled their valley around. To the North and the South and the East.' and the West, Each departed alone on a separate quest, a.h, they'll ne'er be the same to each other. again Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben. Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and B"en, rhough companions in youth, were strangers) as men. Enoch grew rich and haughty and proud, While Cyrus worked on with the toil-driven crowd; (n the councils ot state Jerry held a proud place, But poor Ben, he sounded the depths of dis-i grace. A.h, diverse were the lives of these boys from the glen Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben. Enoch and Cyrus and Jerry and Ben, Who can read the strong fates that encomw passed these men? rhe fate that raised one to the summit of fame, The fate that dragged one to the darkness of. shame I Ah, silence is best; neither glory nor blame , Will I grant the honored or dishonored' name. We are all like these boys who grow to be.' men Like Enoch, or Cyrus, or Jerry or Ben. S. W. Foss, in Yankee Blade. HUMOR OF THE DAT. A driving trade Coaching. An "ax" handle "Please." Behind the b'ars Their tails. Light-fingered gentry Pianists. A poor relation "A sister to you." The court reporter Her small brother.. The great American kicker The mule. "I beg your pardon," said the convict to the Governor. Eternal vigilance enables a man tot carry the same umbrella for years. It is no sign that a hen meditates harm to her owner because she lays for him. When marketing for chickens, always remember thut the good die young. "Charlie Hankinson was simply wound up to-night." "I didn't notice it. He certainly didn't go." It is getting so that a weather-prophet can't even predict a storm of indignation. Washington Critic. He "What do you think of my poem to a Newfoundland pup?" She "Excel lent doggerel." Time. A Montana baker always spells dough ditto, because some one told him that ditto was the complete form of do. Time evens up all things. The man who spent more than he could afford on his early Bpring suit is wearing it yet. "This is my long-wanted full!" ex claimed the tramp gracefully, as the kind ' housewife presented him with an old hat. When a young doctor gets his first case people are always glad for him, but they, are sorry for tho patient. Soinervitle Journal. There is one thing that the invincible Western cyclone has never yet succeeded in raising, nnd that is a mortgage. Burlington Free irest. The wife who can retain a sure hold upon her husband's heart will never nave occasion to take a grip on 'his hair. Terre Jlnute h'xjiress. Wife "I'm sure, now, that you mar ried me only for my money." Hubby ''If that's so, then why don't you let me have it?" A'cie York Sun. "A nymph of the woods," he called her whuu She tripped over mountains, fields and glen: But then alas for Lis fancy free A nymph of the wouldn't she proved to be. Tutor (to hereditary prince who is dropping off to sleep) "Your Highneu is iiululgingiu a little private meditation; I will break off my lecture fora moment." i'esli llii-lnp. ' . The tenor iu a fashionable church choir found to his horror that his voice all at once became unpleasautly thick. He strained it, but without any good effect. ATeK York Tribune. A minister onco excused himself from filling ouo of his regular appointments on the ground that he had recently re turned from his vacation aud felt weary. -Christian Admcate. Clerk "Mr. Daybook, I would likv leave of absence this afternoon to attend the funeral of a cousin!" Mr. Daybook (next morning) "What was the sore, John?" JVi York Sun. Teacher "Now, Betty, can you lull Uie the meaning of professor" Brtty "Oh, ytssuui. Professors is them as rides on four horses in the circus and goes up iu ballooun." Time,