THE FOREST REPUBLICAN I published rrtrj Wsdneaday, ky J. E. WENKi Offlos) In Bmearbaugo & Co.'s Building MLM STREET, TIONK8TA, ra, Ttrma, ... .BO pr Yar. RATES OF ADVERTISING. On Snnare, on tneb, on Iniertlo 1 0 On 8qnare, on Inch, on month I 00 On Square, on Inch, three month. I 0 One Squire, on Inch, on year 10 00 To Sqnarea, or jmi It 00 (Joiner Column, one year 10 00 lltlf Column, on J ear to 00 On Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cent) per line nch In sertion. Marriages nd death notice gratia. All bllla for yearly advertlsrmenta collected quae, lerly. Temporary advertieemeuta muat be paid la) advance. Job work cash on deliver. b OREST PUBLICAN. No anBucrlptlnns racalred for a shorter period umn thrr. month. Oorreipomleiic. nollclted from til narta of the country. No nolle will bo Ukon of anonjmoiu natinnnlcatlou. VOL. XXII. NO. 38. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 15, 1890. S1.50 PER ANNUM. -Re Lynn, Mass., is llio first city in tlio world In tho manufacture Of boots nml shoes, nml particularly those for Indira and children. Not including Alaska, Brazil is larger in extent tlmn the United States; it pos sesses within its limirn nn urea of 3,2H7, !fi4 square miles, with a population of 13,333,25. . In the report of the directors of Eng lish convict prisons is a curious nccount of the, devices to which prisoners resort In order to obtain admission to the in firmary. It seems that prisoners almost invariably cxnggorato their symptoms to such an extent tlmt detection of the im posture becomes easy. A number of the fast Atlantic Ocean record breakers have been laid up (luring tho winter months. It is said that they can only bo run at a profit during the summer, when tho travel is great. The City of I'aris, which has broken nil records, however, will continue to run throughout the winter, next spring and ilinmcr. During the past ten months England 4ns imported 301, 2 It) hundred weight canned meats from the United States, f2,2H hundred weight from Australia, 22,3SH hundred weight from Belgium and 122,42(1 hundred weight from other countries. The receipts from tho United States were Da.lillO hundred weight greater this year than last. Captain M. V. Hates, better known as Barnum's Kentucky Giant, was married recently in Troy, N. Y. llo stands seven feet eight inches in height and weighs about Mil pounds, while his brido is nearly three feet shorter, aud weighs n littlo more than 100 pounds. Both "arc in comfortable circumstances, and Bates owns several flue farms. One of the forcigu Catholic divines who rode on tho Congressional limited from New York city to Baltimore thought that one of tho strangest sights he had seen in the country was tho eating of dinner ou a train going at the rate of sixty miles nn hour. AVe are known abroad as a nation of fast eaters, remarks tho AVashingtou Star, but foreigners arc not prepared to see us eat at the remarka ble rate of a mile a minute. - Tldung erous necidcut in British ColututAii waters to the Amphion, the finest vessel in tho large British squad- jou, seems to show one thing very con clusively, and that is that the rules of the nervier compelling officers of war ships to pilot their own vessels in inland .waters ought to bo changed. Had there been u pilot on board thoroughly famil iar with the winding passages through the maze of islands, the violent tide rips or whirpools, and the other things which render navigation between A'ictoria and i Vancouver excessively dangerous in time of fog, tho lives of tho Governor-General, Lord Stanley, and his party would Bot have lieon endangered, and tho com mander of the Amphion would not have been uuhnppy to-day. Tho big ship Ureal Eastern is receiving her coup-de-grace on tho bauks of the Mersey, in England. She has been dis mantled aud her stranded hull is beiug broken up forVld iron. The old lovi athan of the deep has had an unsuccess ful career. Her launching thirty years ago Wiis attended with a frightful disus tor, ten men being killed by the explosion of her steam box. Sho was never a suc cessful sailer, and proved a disappoint mint to her builders as an experiment iu ship construction as well as unprofitable to her owners. She was I!!' I feet long, eighty-three feet wide, sixty feet deep and 22,500 tons burden. In the opinion of tho AVashington Star, her fato proves tho impracticability of ships of her size, uud it is safe to say that we shall not look upon her like again. A short time ago the papers had an ac count of u man who showed his wonder ful powers by mesmerizing, or hypnotiz ing a person, but was unable to restore the subject to her normal condition. Fortunately, obs rvos the Chicago Herald, there was an experienced hypuotizer near by to undo tho work of tho exhibitor. Bilt there might not have been, and the subject of the experiment might have re mained mesmerized for a week, or until assistance could be had. Thanks to the work of some French and other European scientists, hypnotism is now one of the re-ui!zcd means of relieving disease. It is huWestablished on a scientific basis. Like all other means of treating sick peo ple and disease, it is a dangerous thing 'when used by unskillful aud ignorant per sons, and its use by such persons can but tend to bring it into disrepute as a dilu tive agent. Tho exhibitions of mesmer ism should be discountenanced as against the feelings of humanity aud public pro priety. A public exhibition of the effects of hashish would probably bo interest ing to a few people, but would at tho Same time bo dangerous. The fc line iu true of mesmeric exhibitions. LET LIVING WORTH E SUNO. 'Tfs well to nay the kindest word Of those who've gone from earth, And eulogies are of ton heard That emphasise their worth j But bettor fnr, it seems to mo, AVe'll find It now and then, To let our living heroes see They're loved by fellowmen. AVait not until the heart Is still, That has lieen proved most true, But make it feel by deepest thrill How dear it is to you. To flattery base should none descend, Nor need we yet be dumb. But give good men, before their end, A taste of joys to come. Then let us speak with hearty praise Of noble work well done. And crown the victor with the bays He valiantly has won. 'Twill cheer him on to higher aim, To find his merit known, And help achieve still greater fame Than he could guln alone. And others on the sea of life Wny they lie old or young Fartukers in the eager strife, Whose deeds are yet unsung. Perceiving that men recognize Howards to merit duo. Ami, deeming honest praise a prize, AVill seek to win it, too. Frank J. lionnclle. INDIAN JULIUS. HY lll'TH HANSOM. 'Is this Pembroke's Tavern?" said the tallest and largest of the little group of Horsemen collected at my door. 1 was not in the least startled or sur prised. Questions like this were an ordi nary part of my everyday existence. Our little cabin was tho largest of any in the neighborhood nor was it in any degree palatial at that aud it stood just at the fork of the roads, where it was the most natural thing in the world that a "tav ern" should be located. Matthew had chosen this particular spot because of a clear little spring that bubbled up in the woods close at tho rear, and a knot of magnificent .madronn trees, which flung their shadow'ovcr our roof-tree. A neat littlo picket-fence, as yet guilt less of paint, inclosed our small-domain, and the cinnamon rose-bushes I had planted were in bloom for the first time, sweet reminders of iho Eastern homo we had left behind us, three years ago. I sat in the doorway, pulling wild strawberries as the three meu rodo up, anil answered composedly; "No, it isu'ta tavern at all." "Air. Pembroke lives here, don't he?"' the man somewhat sharply demanded. "A'es; but it is a private house." "Couldn't you give me and my men some dinner, madam?" "Not to-day,"' said I, succinctly. "My girl has gone away, and Mr. Pem broke is not nt home. I am not prepared, for visitors." The men exchanged discontented glances. "Then," said another, "we must keep on to Grill Station. Is it much further?" "Nino miles," said I. "Is it a good road !" "Yes, nearly all tho way." As I watched them ride away, I ob served, with some surprise, that Indian Julius, a good-for-nothing redskin in the neighborhood, was riding an extra horse in the rear, with a dirty blanket twisted around his lank form. Noione knew the neighborhood better than Icdiau Julius, and n vague wonder crossvd my mind that, with such a guide, they should find it necessary to ask any questions of me. I knew, however, that Julius was sub ject to tits of sullen sileuce, sometimes lasting for days together, during which it was impossible to get a word good, bad or indifferent out of h?m. He was u well known vagabond aud skulker in the neighborhood, aud had a wife "Old Cleo" whose reputation was even more shady than his own. Hut he had whittled out many a wil 1 iv whistle for our littlo boy, and brought uests of birds eggs to the baby, and somehow I had a soft spot in my heart for Julius', in spito of his numerous backslidings and shortcomings. 'Never let that old rascal cross the threshold again," said Matthew to me, after losing his best white Brahma rooster once, aud learning that Julius aud Cleo had had a chicken stow at their shanty on the evening of the same day. "Bask ets, indeed ! And re-caning chair bot toms! . The man ought to lie iu the peni tentiary!" So that I was surprised, and not par ticularly pleased, iu about two hours' time, to see Julius come shullling back ou foot, with the cud of his blanket trailing-abjectly iu the dust. He paused at the gateway. "Pretty flowers,'.' said he, staring at the cluster of pink cinnamon roses. "Nice for little pappoose!" I took no notice. Dinner was just on the table a savory rabbit fricassee, with a strawberry pie, and baked potatoes bursting out of their jackets. I was set ting little Mat ou his high chair, aud tying a bib around his plum) neck, pre paratory to the meal. "Babbit smells good," said tho Indian, sniffing the air. "Old Julius hungry. He had no breakfast." Little Mat looked imploringly up at me.' "Mother," said he, "give Old Julius some dinner, please. Old Julius mended my little cart." I took out a liberal portion of the fric assee, with two or three potatoes and a monstrous cucumber pickle, such as I knew his soul delighted in, and beck oned to Julius to seat himself on the doorstep: and there he made such a meal as only au Indian can, ending with a huge cantle of strawberry pie and a wedge of cheese big enough for three. "Now, Julius," said I, "you must split me some kindling wood to pay for this." Julius's copper colored countenance fell; he drew his hand across his berry stained mouth. "Me split him," said he, resignedly Give me big hatchet." "Julius, whit were you doing with those men?" I asked, suddenly. "Me ride horse," the Indian nnswered. "Him buy horse. Mc ride to Grill's. Him put horse on train." "AVho were they?" "How Julius know?" he retorted sharply. "Him no talk to Julius. Him say, 'Get up, you Indian brute!' Him give Julius five cents five cents!" (with scornful accents.) And Julius swung his hatchet in a sav age circle round his head, before ho set to work. After his usual fashion, it took him nearly all the afternoon to split a ludic rously small pile of wood; and when, nt five o'clock, I came back from gathering up tho linen which wns blenching on the grass beside the brook, ho wns gone, and littlo Mat had wakened tho baby with shrill blasts on his beloved willow whis tle. "Mother," said Mat, "Julius lost his pocket-knife. Ho looked all over the house to find it, aud it was under the bureau in your room all tho time. I was glad he found it, because it hnd only one broken blade, and Julius thought a great deal of it." I stopped short, with the baby in my arms. "Under the bureau in my room!" I repeated ; and then it came over me what a fool I had been thus to disregard my husband's injunctions. The field indeed had been quite clenr for operations. Old Julius had doubtless reaped a rich har vest. I went hurriedly to my bureau. The key was still under the embroidered cover, as I had left it. I opened the upper drawer with trem bling hands. It was as I hnd supposed the diamond ring that. hnd been my mother's before me, and whicn I senrcely ever wore, iu this wild Western home, was gone; so also was a small leathern wallet, containing seventy dollars in bills and papers of no little importance. A chamois-leather bag of silver-table ware, spoons, forks, butter knives, etc., had also been abstracted. I was still standing, stricken dumb with dismay and nnger, when the sound of horses' heels rang on the road outside. I rushed out, as I supposed, to meet my husband, and put him on the track of tho wretched old red-skinned thief. But it wns not Matthew. It was tho three equestrians, returning from Gull's Station, or from somewhere else. "Madame, do not be nlnrmcd," said tho big one, with ostentatious courtesy, "AVe do not intend to hurt you or the children, but it is essential that you allow us to tie your hands." "To tic my hands!" I gasped. "AA'hnt for?" He shrugged his shoulders. "So that you will not iutcrfere with us," he said, quickly seizing both my hauds and skillfully winding one of my own kitchen towels bandagewiso over them. The baby set up a piteous wail. One of the brigands took her, not unkindly, from me, and laid her iu her wooden cradle. "Let her cry!" said he. "She'll soon stop. Crying is good for the lungs. And in less time than it takes to de scribe this strange scene we were tied hand and foot, little Mat and I, and locked into the sitting-room, whence wc could hear the steps of our unwelcome visitors as they systematically went through the house. Little Mat looked at mo with wide open eyes of terror. "Mother," said he, "are they goiugto kill us?" "No, Mat," I nnswered "not if we keep still. Aud it would do no good if we hallooed our throats out. No one could hear us but the birds and the squirrels." Little Mat uttered a choking sob. "Oh, if father was only here with his revolver!" said he. "Oh, if I was only grown up!" Aud my heart echoed every one of his words. The baby, sensible little lass, had left off crying, and now lay cooing in her cradle, trying to catch a western sun beam which lay, like a thread of gold, across her patchwork quill. Mat and I were eagerly listening, when once more tho bent of horses' hoofs sounded on the road, and from the win dow we saw tho three meu rido swiftly away. Once more we eyed each other in mutual apprehension. "And they've left us here, tied!" gasped tho little fellow. "Oh, mother, mother!" remembering some story of hideous guerilla warfare that he had re cently overheard, "do you suppose that they have fired the house?" "No, Mat why should they? They have taken what they wanted and gone. Wo must, wait here until somebody passes, and then make them hear, if we can." "But tho windows and doors are all shut, and uo one ever passes here after sundown. Oh, mother, if I could only get these strings uutied !" And ho gnawed fruitlessly at them with his small, white teeth. My heart sank as I recognized the truth of his words, but 1 struirirled j bravely to keep back the tears and sobs. At that moment the bolt in the outside i staples was slid cautiously back, a j course, black mat of hair was thrust iuto the room. "Oh," cried little Mat, with a gasp of delight, "it s Indian Julius! Oh, Julius, come and untie us!" "AVhite squaw and pappose tied up!" grunted Julius. "Mo untie him. .Me cut knots with me knife. Old Julius know they come. Ho hear talk ; they catch ho listen. They hold pistol to ho i ear, and miiKe no promise, mg swear, he no tell, or they skin he alive. Old Julius no tell" (with a chuckle), "no break big swear. But white squaw's wampum sufeinOld Julius's pouch. Old Julius he hid down iu swamp; he lie flat behind log, and come buck when man all gone." I had shrunk at first from the beady glitter of the old mail's eyes, but wheu I realized the pacific nature of hiseiraud, I tlet him upproucb me with his kuifu ami cut asunder the bonds which hnd been so ? skillfully tied. No soouer did he see mc released than he thrust his hand down iuto one of the recesses of his dirty blanket, and brought, t) light, first my diamond ring, safe and sound in its case, then the leather wallet, then the chamois bag full of silver, nnd laid them on the table beside me, their contents quite undisturbed. "Old Julius bring he back," said he. "Give he to white squaw. White squaw good to Julius she gives he strawberry pie. Now we untie little pappoose." Thus we were free again, to discover, much to our delight, that nothing of any considerable vnluc, except a revolver that belonged to my husband, had been taken by the wretches. I need not say that Julius got nn ex cellent supper and a string of gay amber beads which ho had long coveted in be half of old Cleo. "But white squaw rememoer," said Julius, impressively, as he wiped his greasy mouth aud hung the beads around his neck, "next time man on horse come here, white squaw no say Mr. Pembroke gone away." AVith which piece of good advice he shambled off over the hill. I must own to beings little nervous as the dusk settled down upon us and the whip-poor-wills began to sing in the woods, but, to my great delight, Mat thew arrived several hours earlier than I had expected him. "Some one told mc," said he, "that 'Red Jake' and his gang were in this neighborhood, and I could not help feel ing uneasy when I remembered that Gretchcn was away, nnd you all alone with tho children." His surprise nt. hearing my story mny better bo imagined that described, aud he swore a great oath that he would never leave me thus unprotected again. But after that our house was overrun with baskets of Clou's making, and old Julius never lacked a job of wood-splitting or a meal of victuals. "There's some good in the old scoun drel, after all," said my husband. Sat unlay Ni'jlit. The Earth Increasing in Size. The earth, traveling in its orbit around the sun, uud onward with the entire so lar system around some unknown nnd still greater centre of attraction, is con stantly traversing new regions of space, which it depletes of meteoric dust and meteorites, thus steadily no matter how slowly increasing in diameter. Now let this growth continue till tho earth has just twice the attractive power which it now possesses; we should then have twice the number of meteorites nnd double the quantity of dust falling annually upon it than now. Fortunately for our heads the earth has not as yet attained very formidable dimensions, but we may look upon it as an established fact that it constantly gains in weight and that in proportion to such gain its attractive power steadily increases. The attracting force of the sun is so enormous that a perpetual hail of meteor ites and a torrent of dust particles must rush upon it from ull direc tions, and some of the foremost obser vers are now of opinion that these falling bodies are the sole cause of the sun's heat. In the light of this theory, our earth is a young aud growing, not an old and dy ing planet, a planet with a future, which ought to be cheerful news to all of us, although we shall not live to reap tho benefit of it ; and the snu, far from being on its last legs as an expiring luminary, is steadily gaining iu heat and lighting capacity. American (ieoloyist. The Paris Sewers. After one of tho congresses recently held in Paris, a large party interested in hygiene, led by M. Bcchmann, Eugineer-in-Chief of Paris, visited the large sewers that run from the Place dc la Madeleine to the Chatelet. In barges and iu a sort of tramway they traveled through under ground Paris. The sewers were illumi nated by many lamps and also by elec tricity. "The barges were supplied with cushioned seats, the ladies came iu elegant toilets, and, so that they should not soil their dresses, the steps down into tho sewers were carpeted. As au en gineering feat these palatial sewers, as they have been so justly described, arc certainly most remarkable, and well worth a visit. From the Chatelet the members of the congress were couveyed iu comfortable brakes to the sewage furm of Geuuevillier. At Clichy they stopped to see the pumping machines, which lift a third of the sewage and send it over over the river iu an iron pipe to Geuue villier, where it is used to irrigate 750 hectares of market gardens. Two-thirds of the sewage of Paris still falls into the Seiue at Asuieres, and the members of the congress were able to witness how it fouls the waters of the river. They then went over the sewage farm, admired the vegetables, ato some of the fruit, and drank the beautiful, clear water derived from the sewage of Paris. It contained, they were assured, a smaller number of microbes thau the best spring water sup plied to the town of Paris." Another Wonderful Bog. A man who drives a preizcl wagon around town has a great curiosity aud I patent advertisement in the shape of a I yellow doi . This dog is a sort a Scotch I teuier, aud he is wonderful because ho I does not sit in the seat with the driver, like ordinary dogs, but he jumps ou the horse's back, runs up toward his should ers, and, with forefeet on the horse's col lar, he rides through the streets us though perfectly at home in his strange position, f The horse trots along with a lumbering! gait, which must be most uncomfortable to his canine passenger, but the dog holds his "seat," sometimes on three feet, some times on two, and seldom on all four. Ilo seems to like it, too, and appears to en joy the wondering stares and amused .' I glances of people w ho see him in his great 1 1 feat for the first time. The driver ap- ' pears unconscious of the sciisatiou his pet is making, but all the sumo ho enjoys it las much us the dog does. ihicmjo World. . CROPS WITHOUT WATER. RESULT OF EXPERIMENTS IN THE AMERICAN DESERT. All That Wax Don AA'os to Hold the (; round Down Willi Matted Straw nnd to Plow Deep. To make a barren waste produce food plants profitably without supplying wntcrs such was the problem with which the botanical division of the Agricultural Department found itself, a while ago, confronted. Accordingly nn experiment stntion was started by the division last nutumn in southwest Kansas, not far from Gnrden City. This particular location was chosen because it conditions were typical of the arid region generally. Two hundred and forty acres were bought eighty ncrcs in one spot and 160 in another. The land was mostly open prairie, the surface a stiff clay "loam, the top of which was baked by the sun into a firm crust almost as impervious to rain as so much slate. About twenty inches of rain fell, it was learned, in a twelvemonth pretty nearly the average throughout the desert belt, and, of course, it ran off without enter ing the soil. The superintendent of the stntion and his men set to work to see what could be done with the eighty-acre patch. To eight acres of the space, how ever, they mainly confined their prelimi nary experiments; the rest, for tho most part, they planted with forage for the mules nnd cattle, cmployiug irrigation to help things along; but the eight ncrcs were not irrigated noi supplied with water in imy manner artificially. The eight ncrcs, ns orginally found, were covered with burr grass aid a prickly perennial weed with a long botanical name that is regarded out AA'est as a worst curse than the Canada thistle, being even more difficult to eradicate. All this was cleared off in the early part of last fall, the soil was plowed and har rowed until thoroughly pulverized a foot dee), and last spring it was planted with grasses and forage plants. It was found that the wiuter's frosts tended to disinte grate the baked surface crust nnd reuder it readily arable. Only eight acres were treated in this way, because there were only seeds enough of the sorts desired to plant that amount of space. Tho notion of tho Agricultural Depart ment has been that the food plants best adapted for agricultural use iu the dry belt had been already placed there by all wise nature, and so, inasmuch as no seeds of such plants were purchasable, men were sent over the prairies of western Kansas nnd Colorado In September and October of last year, with sacks over their shoulders and sheep shears in their hands, to cut off the tops of the ripened grasses and things, for it was desired to plant these germs nnd find out what they v ould do with cultivation. As forty kinds of grass and forage plant seeds were im ported from abroad, including eighteen or twenty varieties from India. . These were all planted last spring on the eight acres in the dry pulverized soil, together with nbout a dozen species collected by the grass gatherers from the prairies. The latter species were nearly all represented likewise by eleven varieties of grass planted in the shape of sods, from one to five square rods of each, got within the neighborhood of the station. Such was the work of the spring last year. The prickly weed persisted in reappearing nnd gave an immense deal of trouble. Men had to go over the land constantly with gloves aud pick it out by hand. No water was contributed artificially to the ordinarily parched land and the experi mental parly devoted its nttention to put ting up buildings for lodging the party nnd for storing seed while it waited to nnd out what would come up without water from soil that for lack of water had never produced anything before. Part of the eight acres was covered with matted straw, after the pluuting, and part was not. Tho part left uncovered produced very little, for as is usual iu that region of wild-swept plains the powdered surface soil, with the seeds put iu it, was blown away. But the part cov ered with the straw produced, without a drop of water supplied save the scanty rains, a far more abundant crop than was raised, with first-rate irrigation to help, on the rest of tho eighty acres which had been sown to feed the mules and cattle of the expedition. Iu a word, it has been discovered that tho average soil of the great American desert can be made to produce plentiful harvests of grasses, forage plants, and, if those, then ulso meat, corn uud pota toes, without any more water than is sup plied at present. To accomplish the re sult two things are needed the ground must be pulverized deeply, to make n bed for holding the water that falls in ruin, and tho planted surface must be covered after the sowing of the first crop with matted straw. Subsequent crops will require no straw, for the reason thai the matted roots will keep the dry earth from being blown away. This is an addition to human knowl edge which in the opinion of the Agri cultural Department official who talked to a Washington Star reporter should tfirow open to agriculture hundreds o! thousands of acres hitherto deemed worthless uud add hundreds of million of dollars to the taxable valuation of tin country. Next spring the entire 240 acres of tin Kansas station will be planted with ex perimental crops iu glasses and forage, withoirt a particle of irrigation; then will he plenty of seed then on hand for planting the whole tract. The chic! trials plants in that region have to bear are the cohl winds of .March and April, which sweep away with hurricane force the plowed soil, and the hot winds, like the birrocco of the Sahara, which pass over the land in July and August and sometimes blight the ripened crops with in a few hours with their withering breath, even drying up the tops of plants and destroying the seeds. The Agricul tural Department is at present occupied ill extending this important work by eu gugiug the assistuueu in it of the State experiment statious of Utah, Colorado; aud New .Mexico, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. THE ruMrKtw PIE. Take a sharp knife the best of Its kind Ami pare oir the pumpkin's golden rind; Then cut into culie-shaped blocks of buff, And slowly simmer till soft enough. Run through a sieve the best to beliouglit Till you have of the sifted pumpkin a quart. Oh, the "cropplc-crown" hen will mourn to day For her rifled nest in the scented hay. For ere your pumpkin pies you can bake Out of her nest you must nine eggs take. Beat volks and whites in a separate dish Till tioth are foamy and light as you wish. AVhite sugar, one cup nnd a half you take. And two quarts of milk your pies to make; Then of cinnamon, nutmeg, and mace, each one; You take a teasKKnful ere you are done. Next spices, sujrar. eggs, pumpkin and milk. You must beat together till "smooth ns silk" (That is the curious, homely phrase, My grandmother used ill those good old-time days.) Now a doron of raisins, more or less. To each pie will add flavor, you must confess. The whole must be baked in a shell-like crust, And, just as it hardens, with sugar you dust. If you follow this rule, when done you'll cry: "Here's a genuine, old-time pumpkin pie!" Hoinl Jlovm'kerpili'J HEEK-STEAK PIE. Take two pounds of steak; this need not be the choicest cut, but should be sweet nnd tender; put it in a kettle with water enough to cover, and cover the kettle; simmer for un hour and a half, then take out the meat, cut it in f mall pieces, taking out bone and gristle. Have a pan lined with crust made of short biscuit dough, put the meat into it, sea son with salt, pepper and bits of butter; stir a little corn-starch or flour in the gravy in which the meat was cooked, to thicken it slightly, pour over the meat aud put on the top crust. Bake an hour. Prairie Fanner. APPLE rt nuiNO. Pare, core, aud quarter sour apples. If they have to stand awhile, put iu an earthen dish and cover with n wet nap kin or towel; never throw into cold water as some cooks do. Put a layer of these apples in the bottom of a buttered pudding mould nnd sprinkle over it n bit of salt. The salt, will give as good a flavor us butter would give, and is less bother nnd expense. Above the layer of apples pluce a layer of stale bread, in slices or pieces (fragments may be used or pieces of dry toast left over from breakfast), which have been soaked iu water till they are moistened through. Continue this arrangement till the mould is full. Put over the top layer of apples a thick layer of stale bread crumbs soaked in melted butter. Sprinkle the top layer of crumbs with sugar and put into the oven to bake. Cream some but ter thoroughly, add lino sugar, aud cream altogether. Use one-half as much but ter as sugar in this sauce. Add a table spoonful of cream, and vanilla to flavor. Cream nil again, aud set? away to get cold. Amerinm Cultivator. HOt'SF.HOI.D HINTS. Hot dry flannel, applied as hot as possi ble, for neuralgia. AVhen not iu use the umbrella should be left loose, unconfined by clastic ot silkeu bund. Broken limbs should be placed in nat ural position and the patient kept quiet until the surgeon arrives. liancid lard is improved by tryiug it over with a little water in tho kettle, adding slices of raw potatoes. It is said that the juice of a lemon squeezed into a cup of coffee will afford immediate relief iu neuralgic headache. Do not blow tho food to cool it fot children; tho breath is often impure uud will make the food injurious to the child. The light, soft wool goods worn by gentlemen in the summer make pretty skirts for little girls as well as for the littlo boys. Heumiorrhages of tho lungs or stomach are promptly cheeked by small doses of salt. The patient should bo kept at quiet as possible. When white candles appear on the table shades of any other color may be used, but when colored candles are choseu the shades arc usually of the same hue. It has been decided that shirting gingham makes the best kitchen aprous, as it is durable aud not easy to tear. It is very wide; one breadth is enough for the ordinary apron. Cloth jackets or ulsters may be cleaned of grease by covering the spots with French chalk, placing a piece of blotting paper over it, and then pressing with a hot iron. Hub with a dry tlaiiuel aud brush well. AVood, grasses, flowers, moss, etc., are stained by laying tho object to be colored in the solutions, or painting them over, or pressing the coloring liquid iuto them. The colors mostly used are magenta, methyl violet, malachite greeu, and aniline blue. To make a gargle for sore mouth and throat, take four large spoonfuls of good cider vinegar, four of water, a teaspuou ful of common salt, and a very small portion of red or black pepper; gargle every hour. It is worth more than all the chlorate of potash iu the country aud it cannot harm you. Kuiu water and soda will take out machine grease. To remove oil and var nish from silk try beuziue, ether and soap very cautiously. To take out paint, mix equal parts of ammonia aud turpen tine. Saturate the spot two or three times, theu wash out iu soapsuds. Paint can sometimes be rubbed out of woolen goods after it has dried. The most fashinuble lieu iu New York State is said to live in the town of Waldoboro. She started in life a plain, dark-brown pullet, but soon exchanged this for a black and white suit. The next time she shed her feathers she came out hs white as snow , and this fall she aiiiicars iu a black, white aud tan dress. LISTEN I AA'hoever you are as you rend this-. Whatever your trouble or grief, i I want you to know and to heed this: The day draweth near with relief. No sorrow, no woe is unending, Though heaven seems voiceless and dumb; So sure as your cry is ascending. So surely an answer will come. I AVhatever temptation is near you, Whoso eyes on this simple verse fall; RememlMT good nnge's will hear you And help you to stand, if you call. Though stunned with despair I beseeoh you, AVhatever your losses, your need, Believe, when these printed words reach you, Believe you were born to succeed. You are stronger, I tell you. this minute, Than any unfortunate fate! And the coveted prize. you can win it; AVhtle life lasts'tis never too late! Kilo Whrelrr Wilcox HUMOR OF THE DAT. Don't hit a man when he is down; he may get up. Protection on glassware extends to where it gets into the hands of the hired girl. Beauty may be only skin deep; but the plump girl gets the most sleigh-rides. Puck. In the race of life it isn't the fast men who come out ahead. Uimjhumton. lie jmliVtran. Hush-money, when used, is more apt than any other money to make a noise. Pirnyune. Nature has made some men tall, aud laziness has made them short. Uurlim ton Five Press. The youth who becomes ill from in dulgence in a "snipe" has a siub-boru umlady. D'niyhainiuu lit raid. Two of the wealthiest men in the AVcst are said to have been messenger boys. It pays to go slow, after all. frt-tttsinait . Yes, there is plenty of room at the top, and there always will be unless fa cilities for getting there are improved. Hi ugha niton lferahl. Little boys generally look on little pirls as a nuisance; but when they grow older the reverse is geuerally the ease. Mil tea nice Journal. She "You have often heard, of course, of the mermaids singing? I wonder what tune they sing?" lie "Nep-tunc, V lie "Nen-tuuc. I suppose. "'Yon 1 TjnrreitC! A nu riea n . say vonr husband is a grent whistler!'' "Yes, indeed; you ought to hear him some time when iny milliner bill comes home!" Statesman. Love will go where it is spnt: At least, so sny the scholars. But often love, 1 fear, is bent On going where 'tis dollars. Boston Transcript. A Moruiou has been committed to jail for contempt of court for refusing to tell how many wive he had. Evidently his misery was more than he could confess. Ilochcstir Pust-F.qircss. Landlady "What's the matter, Mr. George? You look down in the mouth." Mr. George "Just so. I've almost swallowed a feather from that chicken soup." AVmi York Journal. SmilTkius "Aw I a want you to trim and curl my mustache, barber." Hairdresser (who doesn't like being called "barber") "Ccrt'nly, sir. AVhen shall we send for it?" Once a Week. jeweler (to Chinese laundryman) "AVhy, John, you'll ruin that watch by allowing it to lie in the suds." Liumdry ninn "Me puttee him iu soak, ullec samec 'Melican muu."' Jt fchrt' Weekly. "Alas!" cried the captured fish, "How little did 1 opine The worm that looked so delici ous could have such a horrible spine?" AViu 1 oi fc Herald. A. (to his friend, the famous painter of battle scenes, who covers up with smoke nil things that he does not know how to paint) "Aud what are you going to do when they use the smokeless powder J" Flicjeinle Mactter. Eighteen centimes ago a prophet had no honor in his own country. Nowa days there is mighty littlo honor about them anywhere." if there were they wouldn't be trying to make people be lieve they could prophesy. Danst'dle lSrccz '. Muskruts in the Northwest are build in it houses three stories high with man sard roofs aud bay windows and steam heaters in the cellars. Some persous may thiuk this is a sign of a hard winter, but it isn't. It is a sign that somebody is Iviug. And York Stirs. Chicago Girl "Oh, just been out shooting Great snort, 1 tell you." Auntie, we've at the target. Boston Girl "Yes. indeed; 1 fully coincide with Belinda, although the diversion is some what arduous. 1 succeeded iu perforat ing the bovine optic three times iu succession." t. Bay Horses. Did any one ever see a man or a woman with "bay" hair.' asks the 7wse World. No more than he saw an auburn horse. The word bay does not of itself signify a color, ami its use for the purpose of designating the tolor of a horse is pure ly traditional. It originated iu Eugl.iud ill u district w here the breed of horses was mostly several sh ides away from the brown and yet loo brown to be called red. There grew iu this district a great many bay trees, to the leaves of which the horses exhibited a decided affinity. The bay lice had long been cherished among the natives for the medical quali ties of its leaves aud berries, and, iu a way, was sacred to them, having had a place in many of their legends ami super stitions. Every breeder of horses was sure to have a number of the trees, uud relied upon them almost exclusively for the medicines wherewith to cure hi horses. The leaves were used ill oineu tations uud the berries iu clysters. Tho horses coining from this district, reared among the buy trees, became known as bay horses, and the uniformity of their color led to the comuiou use of the term.