m FOREST REPUBLICAN U pabllihad crtry Wadnosdaj, F J. E. WENK. Offlo la Bmearbaugh & Co.' Building TtM iTRKBT, TI0NR8TA, Tfc Trm, ... $1.80 pr Year. Ka nbicrlptfona received for ahortar period t thrr monthi. torrioniina aolletted from an porta of the oorvtry No noUco wlil bl takaa of anonjmom awmanlcaUona. RATES OF ADVERTISING. On Sonars, on Inch, one Inxrtlov $ 1 M 0 fcjnare, on Inch, one month ... IN One Square, on Inch, three months. 09 One Sqnire, one Inch, oi.. year 10 00 Two Squares, ore year 1 00 qoerier Column, one rear M Half Column, one year MM On Column, one year 100 ot Lfl advertliemenU ten ccnti per Una aaea In sertion. Marriages ind death notices gratia. All bltln for yearly a1vertlf mente collected quar terly. Temporary adrerujemanui mow be pud la advance. Job work caah on deliver. Forest Republican. VOL. XXII. NO. 48. TIONESTA, TA., WEDNESDAY, MAKCH 20, 1890. S1.50 TER ANNUM. ! Tho growth of cities In tho United States is not among tho least of tho mar j vels of its development. There aro now 350 of them, with nn nggrcgute popula tion of nearly 16,000,000. ' During tho year 1RSD thcro wcro enr rietl over tho elevated railroads of New York city 182,413,087 passengers, not ono of whom was injured by carelessness or other fault of the muni.gemont. This is certainly n wonderful showing and af fords a marked contrast to tho accidents associated with surface travel. During recent German manoeuvre it was found that with bodies of troops 400 yards aimrt, ono body in tho woods, tho sound of their firing could bo heard, but thoro was not smoke enough to lo cate them accurately for a return fire to bo effective. It is suggested tint the balloon will become necessary for rceon noisanee in such cases when smokeless powder comes to bo generally used. Humor has it that there is soon to be a "worls striko" of seafaring men, to af fect tho merchant marine service or ull countries, but especially that of America, England, Australia and tho China Seas. It is said that tho members of tho Sailors' and Fireman's Union, numbering more than a quarter of a million mcu in tho trade between the ubovc-mentioned sec tions, havo managed "to collect nearly a million cf dollars with which to support tho strike. Tho Quebec Legislature has passed a bill offering 100 acres of land to every mau who is tho father of twclvcchildrca. The persons entitled to this novel bonus appear to be numerous. AtTreis l'istoles there arc two families, named Koulctte and Bclzil, who each have fifteen living children. Another named Giugras, iu Hellechassc.has had no fewer than thirty four children born to him. Still another named Crctien, in L'Islct, has twenty seven, and one Villancourt, in Kamour iskn, has just had his thirty-seventh itlfaut baptized. The youug Emperor of Germany has ordered tho suppression of all words of French origin in tho addresses of letters. At tlin .mm 41... ,.f ..II " "uniu nntw uiu -.UI VI Mil lUU Uussias issues from his bomb-proof an ukase to tho effect that all letters for foreign lands shall bo addressed ex clusively iu French. Tho New York Cymmrrcinl Advertiser suggest to their mightinesses a compromise : "Let their ubjects learn and use good American. They will havo to come to it at last. It is tho language of tho future, and tho sooner that is acknowledged the bcttei." There has been an cxanfple in Man chester, England, recently of the folly of parents exposing their children to disease with tho idea that they must havo it nt sue timo or another, and that as they must have it the trouble may as well bo over with. Some Manchester mothers had this notion' iu regard to measles, with tho result that iu two weeks forty four children died. Tho mothers de liberately placed their children in tho way of taking the disease. Tho largo mortality was probably due to tho fact that la grippe was prevalent at tho time. The Chicago Herald declares it to bo tho very acme of unwisdom to expose a child to any disease. Thanks to tho missionaries, inner Africa is now able to do a good deal of her own printing, as tho Portuguese found out iu October last. They re ceived, tho New York Sun asserts, a printed declaration from Consul John ston announcing that a large part of the Shire River region had been placed under tho protection of Great Britain. The typesetting and press work had been done by black boys at Blantyre, tho now famous mission station in the beautiful Shire Highlands, where tho wilderness has been inado to blossom, hundreds of acres having been turned into planta tions and grain fields, while scores of children are studying in the school and learning trades iu the workshops. It has cost $200,000 thus far to bring about this transformation. Oiie thing which harasses Americans in England perhaps more than anything else, observes tho New York World, is that they have so frequently to pay for something which should be supplied free and supplied freely. The performance at the theatres is a familiar illustration. The latest story of returning travelers, however, has to do with tho lights iu the underground railroad cars. The passenger - can turn one on nnd read his fuier if he puts a penny in the slot. If f, grudges tho penny lie cannot have tho luminatiou. The light is arranged iu a weep box just back of tho passenger's head. It is au electric light and will only illuminate the paper or book im mediately in front of it and will only illuminate it for fifteen minutes. At tho end of that time, if a second penny does not come iu, ti-e light goes out. In this way the radiance remains fixed, ulthough oljviously tlie pauseujjer's pockets glow lighter all the time, HOW THE SUN WENT DOWN. We were together, my love and I, We roamed the meadows and lifo was sweet; Never a cloud In the summer sky, And flowors a-blowing about our.feet. Our hearts were glad for that one glad day, So bright it seemed of all joy the crown; But the beautiful brightness passed away, Oh, how quickly the sun went down. Golden light upon land and sea! Golden light for my love and met Never can dawn a day so bright, Linger a little with us to-night! We have boon parted, my love and I, Many a year by timo and tide. Not till wo reach the home on high Shall I stand again at my lost one's side. The flowors are failed, the world is cold, The trees are naked, and gaunt, and brown, And youth has fled and my heart Is old, Oh, how slowly the sun goes down! Evening shadows of dreamy gray, Praw your veil o'er my weary way t Till day shall break and the shadows flee And morning bringeth my love to me. Florence Tyler, in Once-a-Wtck. DOLLY'S CONFESSION. BY 1IK1.KN FOKRKST GRAVES. The clear February sunshine lay like a river of gold across the dark, rich lines of the Axminster carpet as Dolly Damar drew the decorated window shade. "It seems a pity to shut out God's sun shine," murmured she, "but Mrs. Lcd yard is always cautioning me about let ting that carpet fade." And she took a farewell glance out over the snow enameled avenue, where gaily caparisoned sleighs skimmed to and fro and parties of promcnadcrs occupied the pavements before she returned to her hum-drum task of dusting tho drawing room. For Dolly Damar was '.'only the up stairs girl" in Mrs. Lcdyard's pretentious establishment. She was a farmer's daugh ter, who had received an education above the average ; and when old Hiram Da mar's death had broken up the house hold, she had come to New York, hoping to get a situation as nursery governess or companion. Disappointed in one after another of her aspirations, she was at last glad to se cure a place as parlor maid at Mrs. Led yard's, where she was to-day, singing as sho dusted bric-a-brac and polished plato glass for Dolly was a cheerful little maid, and had an in Vetera to habit of making the best of things. Crash 1 Dolly gave a start and turned around. Little Gladys, the youngest child of the Ledyard flock, ii tampering with a china shcphcidcss, had knocked it over. It lay in a score of glittering fragments on the floor. "Oh, Miss Gladys!" cried the upstairs girl. "What have you done?" "Dolly, don't give me away," stam mered the slangy daughter of tho house. "Tell ma it was the cat." "But Miss Gladys, that would bo a lie." "No, it wouldn't. It would bo noth ing on earth but a tiny little whito fib. And ma will be so mad! Oh, Dolly, do i let her think it was pussy!" "I couldn't, Miss Gladys. Please don't ask mc!" pleaded poor Dolly. "I must speak the truth if sho asks me." Miss Gladys Ledyard swung, mutter ing out of tho room. "I'll bo even with her yet!" said she; "the mean, hateful tattle-tale!" And wheu Mrs. Ledyard caino home from her sleigh-ride in the park, Gladys was beforehand with tho "mean, hate ful tattle-tale." Mrs. Ledyard sent for Dolly, taxed her with the misdemeanor of breaking it Dresden shepherdess worth twenty dollars, and then eudeavoriug to conceal her mishap, while Gladys stood grinning by, and then discharged her, first warning her that it would be useless to expect a reference from that number on Fifth avenue. So poor Dolly went back to the intel ligence otlice and sat there day after day, until all her slender stock of pa tience, and still more sleuder supply of money, were exhausted. No ono would engage a girl without any reference from her lust place. Day by day her heart sank lower and the future became darker, until her landlady's daughter, a stylish, black-eyed girl, who was lady's maid in a handsome hnuso ou Mallulieu Square, heard of her dilemma. "No recommend, eh?" said sho. "I can set all that square ! I'll give you one?" "You?" "Yes, I. Why not? It's often done. I know two or three girls who have helped each other out of a tight place I like that. My family is going iu the country for tho Easter holidays. Send your peoplo to C Mallalieu Square, Mrs. Nyton's, and I'll bo Mrs. Nvton, and ! give you an A No. 1 character!" I "Hut, Ellen, that would be untrue!" "What would be untrue 1 That youi are honest, willing, capable r "No, but you are not Mrs. Nyton!" "I shan't say that I am. I merely say what I know to be the truth about you ; aud if you succeed in getting a good place, all that I ask is a dollar or two out of your first month's wages. It'll bo a sort of masquerade !" And Ellen showed her broad white teeth in a laugh. "It's a pity if we poor girls can't out wit the fino ladies now and then. Auy time after Monday, Mrs. Nyton will be at home." Dolly hesitated long, argued the poiut feebly, but finally gave in, and little Mrs. Edgecumbe, of Lilliesleaf Farm, was more thau delighted with tho "refer ence" she obtained for her new maid iu the Mallalieu Square muusiou. "Smb. an elegant house!" said she, "and a tea-gown of olive plush, such as I never saw out of a fushiou-plate. But I was surprised to hear Mrs. Nyton speak such dreadfully bad grammar!" "Probably," said Mr. Edgecumbe, "she is endowed with more money than brains. "Most likely," said th) little house- ! wife. Dolly Damar was quito happy at Lilliesleaf. It was, strictly speaking, a bec-farm., but they kept cows and poultry as well, and Dolly was delighted to get back to the pleasant cares thnt had been so familiar to her in the old life. John Gardiner, Mrs. Edgccumbc's brother, the village pastor, boarded there, and they soon discovered thnt Dolly was no ordinary uneducated "kitchen help." Tho throe children were blue-eyed, sunny-lcmpcred little cherubs, the wages were generous, and Dolly found her self nt last iu possession of a home. After tho housework was done of nn evening, she could help Mrs. Edge- crumbe with tho family mending, copy music for Mr. Gardiner's choir practice, or write to tho dictation of Mr. Edge cumbe, who was painfully preparing a "Text Book on Ilee Culture," and day by day she grew, shcscarcely knew how, brighter and happier. She had cxpericnued a pang of remorse when she sent Ellen vGibbs a two-dollar bill in a letter, out of the first instalment of her wages, but that was soon over; until, one Sunday afternoon, sitting iu charge of her class in the little church, she heard John Gnrdiucr's talk to his Sunday-school about the. divine attributes of truth. Like a keen-edged I poniard, it stung her to tho heart. "And I," said she to herself, "am a liarl What business have in this happy home this pure, peaceful atmosphere? Oh, I wish how I wish I never had listened to Ellen Gibbsl And yet, if I hadn't, I must have starved or drowned myself. Oh, dear, how hard it is to know what. is right?" She went) home and packed her poor little trunk. "My second month is up to-morrow, Mrs. Edgecumbe," said she, iu a falter ing voice, "and I am returning to New York." "To New York? Oh, Dolly!" cried the little woman, throwing up her hands iu despair. "What is the matter?" "Nothing," said Dollv, valiantly swal lowing her tears; "only I must go." "Has auy. one olleutled you: "Oh, uono!" "If you want higher wages " "No, Mrs. Edgecombe; you pay mc all I earn now," protested, Dolly. " 1 lieu w nat is it, Dolly ! Dear, Dollv. do stay. You are like one of ourselves," pleaded Mrs., Edgecumbe. But Dolly I only answered with, her tcais. "I can't think what ;has chanced her so, ull of a sudden, "(said Mrs. Edge cumbe. "The children have coaxed her dear littlo things! and, Mrs. Edge- cumbo has offered her a fbctter rate of compensation, but it is of no use. Per haps, John, if you wcro to speak to her" Mr. Gardincrsat silently'baJancing his pen, regiirdless of the big roiuwl blot that had fulleu on the "Thirdly" of his next Sunday's .sermon. It was a strange re velation to him, the chill feeling that came across his heart at the idea of,Dolly Dumar's goung away. "Yes," said he, "I will speak,' to her. Somehow, it. seems as if wo couldn't spare her." But even to his kind reusouingsi Dolly only replied by tearful silence. "I must go," said she "I must! And you, if you knew all, would say the same .thing." "I doa't kuow what I slmll do, I'm sure," said Mrs. Edgecumbe, lapsing into deep despuir. "I never shall have cour age to faco an intelligence otlice again. C'assio Morton has just been here, telling me the strongest stories ubrnit those places. It soenis, she knows ot a womau whose whole business it is to actus 'refer ence' to girls- who can't get airy, or don't deserve tlu'tu. She has hired a gaudily furnished flat, and sits up there all day,, ucting tho part of the last lady wiUi whom tho girls lived, atsomitch a he:ul. Just fancy what a deception! The po lice havo broken uji this place, at tho complaint of some lady who found' her self tho victim oCu dishonest maid whose recommendation was obtained iu . this manner, but who knows how many'oth ers there may be?" Dolly sprang to her feet, vcry.pale but firm. "Mrs. Edgccinnbe," said she, "that is what I did! That is tho oxason I am going away from you. 1 ciut't live on here and bear- tho burden oft my gilt any longer!" Aud she confessed it all, .beginning at tho story of the Dresden shepherdess, and cudingwith Ellen Gibbs's fitting up in the vacant boudoir of tho lady who hud gone to spend tho Easter' holidays at Tuxedo Park. "Now yon know all," said she. "Please let me go at once, for of course you won't be willing to havetue sit down to the table with the dear little childreu again." And her words died away in a great buret of tears. "Not willing indeed!" cried Mis. Edgecumbe. "Of course I wou't be willing to let you stir a step from Lib licsleaf farm. Is that all. that troubles, you, Dolly!" "Isn't that enough j" wailed poor, Dolly. "Quite enough to tmtisfy'iue that you must stay," said Mrs. Edgecumbe. "Why, Dolly, child, you're like my owu sister now. Do you think I will let you go back into such temptation u:aiu? Never! Talk to her, John. Make her understand that we like her better thau ever for having told us the truth dear, brave girl!" And Mrs. Edgecumbe ran out of the room to tell her husbaud that ull was right. Dolly looked- ti uidly at Mr. Gar diner. "Well;" said he, kindly. "It is for you to decide," whispered she. "I will do exactly what you say." "You'll promise me that, Dolly?" "Yes," she avowed, artlessly. "Dear l ttlu Dolly!" said he. "You have done very wrong, but yoil have atoned for ull that by your free and frank confession. My verdict is that yon re oiaiu here." "Oh, Mr. Gardiner, lam soglad!" ' "Stop," said he. "I am not quite through." "Ohl" sighed Dolly, blankly. "There is something else I want you to do." "By way of penance?" Dolly's blue eyes sparkled; her old playful spirit was coming back again. "If you choose to call it penance, yes. I have discovered something within the last Lour, Dolly. I hove discovered thnt if you went away a great portion of the light nnd sunshine of my lifo would go also; that I love you, Dolly, and this thing that I ask of you is to bo my wife!" Dolly hid her burning face among the leaves of tho big geranium in the win dow. "I think I must be dreaming," said she. ' 'Because how can I have de strved such happiness as this?" "If we nil got only what wc descrvo in this world," said Mr. Gardiner, "we should some of us fare pretty hard ! That is the clerical side of me. Anil now, Dolly my owu darling littlo Dolly," taking her tenderly to his heart "here is the human side of me I No happiness in all the universe can be too much for you, sweet one! And I love you all the better, in that you are no more absolute ly perfect than myself." And this "situation" ns minister's wife at Lilliesleaf was the last that Dolly Damar ever took, and if any one else wants a "reference" for her they must ask tho Kevercnd John Gardiner! Saturday Xi'jlit. Farmhouses In Holland. The houses in Holland, a correspond ent says, are mostly of brick, square in shape, one story high with peaked red tiled roof. Tho thatched roof which is so usual in Belgium is hero seldom seen. The houses ure usually neut looking, both outside and in. On opening the door you are shown into a large room with kitchen utensils in the glory of highly-burnished splendor hanging about a stove or cooking range, with hero a table, a settee and a few chairs, with a strip of carpet laid ou a brick floor. Hanging down this long room is a row of cow stalls on an elevated brick-paved platform, with a trench buck of tho stalls ubout two leet wide and two feet deep. This room accommodates from twenty to iifty cows on a well-to-do farmer's place, nnd wos a curious sight to us. These stables nnd kitchen combined are scrubbed clean and whitewashed and are as clean as any ward in some of our best hospitals. In tho spring, when the cattle are turned out to grass, the stalls are scrubbed nnd scoured, the brick pavements painted and tho walls and ceilings whitewashed. Lace curtains arc arranged lit the win dows; often flower-pots or little jardiniers are kept there duriug the summer, and the room smells us sweet and is as clean as the milk house of the most fastidious farmer's wife. After the cowg are housed in tho fall, they remain in until spring. You see no cow yards. The cattle are either in past ure or in their stalls. When turned out, they aro blanketed with sail cloth curi ously held in place by robes running un der and around the legs. Thh large room meutioncd above is occupied jointly by the cows and the servants. Opening from it you enter a dining nnd a sitting-room, generally car peted, and, unlike the stable and kitchen, has wooden floors. From this you enter the bedrooms. Tho beds uro generally in nn elevated alcove, with doors in front, cutting it off from tho room. The bed is generally a bunk. In this province bedsteads are seldom used. I was shown into a bedroom furnished with a washstand, a tablo and some chairs, but there seemed to be no bed. Investigation of what appeared to be cup board doors in the wall, only about the size of ordinary sideboard doors, showed the bed in this cupboard, or closet, so high from the groujid that steps kept in side for the purpose had to bo used to g-'t in. A New Industry for Children. A novel industry for children's tiny lit tle lingers has somewhat recently been in troduced into Eugland, and is quite as fascinating to the little workers as it is remunerative. A company has been formed for the manufacture of toys, which were formerly imported into the couutry at tho almost incredibly large sum of $2,000,000. When it was learned that most of tho work cf manufacturing the toys was accomplished by little chil dren, who enjoyed their employment so much that they preferred jt to play, this company established their manufactory in the midst of a crowded district of Bir mingham, and advertised to teach chil dren the work free of cost. As soon as the people learned of this offer, women and children besiged the place in such numbers that the street was literally packed with applicants, and the police had great difficulty to force their way through the throng. The children after learning how to do the work are allowed to take it to their homes, and, sur rounded by new comforts and luxuries purchased by tho proceeds of their fasci nating employment, amid the retiniug in fluences of home, hundreds of busy littlo hands are employed in delightful work. To call out the most intelligent workers iu the trade the company issued a list of prizes to be competed for by the children under twelve years of age aud awarded to the child who shall construct the .best outfit for the company's paper doll. The largest prize is 5, the smallest and other prize lists are to follow presently. .AJ'o Yurk S'tit. He F.uts Lump Chimneys. A muu w ilked into a quecuswarc house iu Asheville recently, unci pur chased a lamp chimney. He took from his pot ke; a handful of crackers, culled for a cup of water, and before the eyes of the astonished clerks proceeded to make a uual of the glus. It was apparently relishvd, und after finishing his strange repast, he thanked the attendants for their kindness aud withdrew. Anitcillt N. (J.) (,'itucu. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. f MAKING BTOCK. There is a great deal of unreliable in formation going the rounds of many papers, professing to' tell how to run a stock-pot. Such as, for instance, that a vessel can bo kept on tho bnck or the stove, and bones, scraps of meat nnd vegetables put into it after each meal, nnd kept constantly simmering, and thnt from this mess good soups can be ob tained. If there is a family of any size, thcro should be enough of the bones and remains of poultry and meat and game to make a soup at least four times a week without buying fresh meat for the pur pose. The most satisfactory way to do this, however, is to keep a dish in your larder or ice-box, to receive such bits and the cold gravies for a day or two, and then make as much broth from them ns their quantity will allow. In a boarding house, or a very large family, it may be possible to keep a stock-pot constantly simmering, but tho broth should be strained oil and the bones and vegetables thrown out every twenty-four hours. Vegetables should not be put into it un til un hour before tho soup is to be re moved. If soup is to bo boiled three hours, use ono quart of cold water to every pound of bone nnd meat, in tho proportion of one of the former to three of the latter. If it is to boil six hours (and where time is no object this should always be allowed), add two quarts to every pound of meat; this will reduce to one quart by boiling. The boiling must bo slow and steady, and tho skimming must bo thorough. Inattention to these details clouds the stock nnd makes it dark. About ono hour before the stock is done, add the usual bunch of soup herbs, one carrot, one turnip and one onion stuck with three cloves. This is the proportion for four quarts of plain stock. Simmer nn hour longer, strain into an earthen jar, and leave it stand to cool, uncovered. If there is time to let it get perfectly cold, the fat may be re moved in a solid cake; if not it may bo skimmed oil, and in either case it is ex cellent for frying. Many housewives do Dot And it necessary to use a bit of lard, preferring beef suet tried out aud mixed with clarified fat from tho top of soups. American Agriculturist. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. To freshen salt fish soak them in sour milk. The best of tea makes but nn indiffer ent concoction unless tho wuter is fresh. Anything mixed with wuter requires a hotter oven thau anything mixed with milk. Beets should be boiled one hour iu summer; one hour aud a half, or even two hours, if large, in winter. Apples will not freeze if covered with a linen cloth, nor a pie or custard burn if in tho oven with a dish of water. When several cups of tea of equal strength are wanted, pour a little iuto such cup aud then fill in adverse order. The tea first poured from the pot is tho weakest of the decoction. All vegetables should go iuto fast boil ing water, to be quickly brought to tho boiling poiut ugain, not left to steep in the hot water before boiling, which toughens theia and destroys color aud flavor. Paper may bo perfumed by laying a perfumed sachet with tho sheets and en velopes, or dry sachet powder may be spriukled in the box, luying an extra sheet of paper between tho box and paper. There is nothing that removes impuri ties from floors, etc., so rapidly as boiling hot soda and water, applied with a long ladled scrubbing brush and rinsed oil ouce with clear water and dried with a clean cloth. When the skin is bruised it may be prevented from becoming discolored by using a little dry starch or arrowroot merely moistened with cold water and placed on tho injured part. This should be done at once. If black dresses have been stained boil a handful of fig leaves in a quart of water and reduce it to a pint. A sponge dipped iu this liquid and rubbed upon them will eutirely remove staius from crapes, bombazines, etc. The practice of rubbing the face with vaseline or other cosmetic sometimes makes the hair grow where it is not be coming. Camphor applications, liko other irritants or stimulants to the skiu, will cause superfluous hair. No matter how large tho spot of oil, any carpet or woolen stud cau be cleaned by applying buckwheat plentifully and carefully brushiug it into a dust pan af ter a short timo and putting it ou fresh until tho oil has all disappeared. Hub chalk ull along the edge of the door that "sticks," then close it us near ly as you cau. The chalk will only come oil ou that portion of the door opposite tho part that needs planing to ease the door. So you need not waste your wood aud time iu plauiug awayuny other part. It is a little difficult to determine ju-t wheu custard is sullicieutly cooked. This will settle tho poiut: Take a spoouful of the mixture aud let it run back into the dish. If it leaves the spoon entirely moro cooking is necessary. Should there be little specks upon the spoon it is quite time to remove the "soft" custard from the stove. A good cough mixture is made by tak ing two ounces of balm of gilead buds and boiling them very slowly in a quart of boiling water. Let it simmer to one pint, then stiai.i it and add one pound of honey in comb, with tho juice of three lemous. Let all boil together until the wax in the honey is dissolved. A German test for watered milk con sists iu dipping a well-polished knitting needle into a deep vessel of milk aud then immediately withdrawing it iu au upright manner. If the milk is pure a drop of the fluid will hang to the needle, but the addition of even a small propor tion ot water will prevent the adhesion of the drop. Mrs. Dios likes, of Columbus, Ohio, is foujlu-u yea-s old and widow. MANUFACTURE OF CORKS. INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT A LIT TLE KNOWN INDUSTRY, i. Cork is tho nark ofa Species of Oak How It is lioiloil, Softened and Punched. There is a veil of mystery hanging over a cork manufactory which is ditiicult to pierce. Of the twenty factories in this country none will receive visitors. Their employes labor behind barred portals and only dilfer from State charges in not wear ing barred clothes. Of these twenty fac tories four aro in this city, four in Bos ton, three in Lancaster, Penn., three in Canada, one in Baltimore, ono in Pitts burg, one in Norwich, Conn., and the rest in unfrequented places. Six import ers feed these concerns with stock. A cork factory is an odd place. Scarce ly a sound comes from tho buildings where the industry is carried on. Noise less machinery whirls with great rapidity the only sound heard is that of escaping steam. Cork is soft and elastic, as every body knows, and is the bark of a species of oak which grows abundantly in Portu gal, Italy and Spain, principally in Spain. Tho trees grow to a prodigious size and live to the ripe old age of 15(J years. At fifteen they begin to bear nnd continue to furnish new crops of bnik every five years. The harvesting occurs iu the early spring. At that season of the year a largo number of laborers are turned loose in the wilderness and the barking begins. Incisions are made around the trees and the bark is stripped off. It is then boiled to take out tho sap, after which it passes through the pressing pro cess. When dry it is cut, scraped, trimmed and put up in bales like cotton for shipment. The bark vnries in thick ness from half an inch to five inches, and tho price fluctuates from three to thirty cents a pound. At the factories it is placed in a square box aud steamed to soften it, so that it can be easily worked. Then it goes to the saw and is cut into long strips. These saws are different from ordinary saws, in asmuch as they have no teeth. They nre provided with a razor-like edge instead. They make 2000 revolutions a minute, and if one should be so unfortunate as to feed his finger instead of cork, atupuU tion would be just as complete and clean. From the sawer the strips go the punch ing machine. This is a simple piece of mechanism, furnished with punches of all sixes, from three-eighths of an inch to five inches iu diameter. It is operated with a lever aud docs its work as fast as a man can handle it. The stripes are punched with the grain and it requires no littlo judgment to guard against im perfections in the bark. It is here that the greatest waste in the material is ex perienced. From a strip of burk a trifle over a foot long only a dozen corks cud be made, and half of the material is lost. But tho waste docs not end here. It goei tagging the cork all over tho factory. Even those that arc so successful ns to be moulded into a useful form havo to be sorted and a goodly number are rejected. So that waste is one of tho characteristic features of the manufacture of cork. Within the last few years, however, uses have been found for these scraps which have considerably lessened the manufac turer's loss. Alter being punched iuto circular form tho corks go to the tapering machine, where their final preparation comes. This is by far the most interesting part of this interesting industry. Not so very many years ago tho ouly tapering machine known was an ordinary man and his knife. Now hand-made corks are unknown. This finishing machine it nothing move or less than a lathe, the knife of which moves after the manner of an old-fashioned apple-peeler. The corks are put iuto an iron hand, which conveys them to a imaginary mouth, when up comes tho knife und the shavings fly. Tho finished cork then drops out of place to make room for another. When run ning tho machine resembles a hungry nun. Its capacity is about 100 gross per day. But bottle stoppers are not the only things which nre made of cork. Many specialties, such as cork washers of vari ous sizes, caps for pocket flasks and-kero-sene oil cans and sliced corks are manu factured also. Sliced cork is used foi insoles. It is also used in silk machinery where friction occurs. The cork washer uro fast taking tho place of rubber ones nnd nre now considered tho only thing with which to pack valves, as the trouble some oil, which cats up rubber, has no effect ou cork. Before uses were discovered for thu waste some huudreds of tons were burned up every month, and thousands of dol lars were lost in this way. Things are different now, however. All the waste is shipped to this city and made into life preservers, cork jackets, cork sprinkled paper, in which glass is packed, and lin oleum. This pulverized stuff is also ex tensively used to pac k Malaga grapes in, being handy, safe und light. Bed mat tresses und yacht cushions ure also made of tho shavings, and ure superior to those maila of other materials. In fact, they arc so superior und come so high that but few can afford the luxury. Every wcll-furiiislied yacht, however, is thor oughly equipped with them. A'cio l'vrt Trintne. The Bookcases Were Too Large. A story is told of a gentleman who is now and has beeu for some years past en gaged in rearing an elegant mansion of stone a dozen miles or so out of liostou. Much care has been takeu and no ex pense spared in its erection. The other day he went out to see how the work was progressing nud'.visited the library. It is a uoble room,) aud it has been sur rounded by elegant .'bookcases of carved oak iu claborateljdesign. The owner gave one glance al iut the spacious and beautiful upartmcnlkand then exclaimed to the contractor : I "What made you build the bookeaeslso high? Cut them down two feet am'put cupboards undi r-tii-ath! Do you tliink I am going to buy Ih.oks foralljthoset-helvesi" Jintvii Ad ttrtixr. r V .j WHEN THE TRAIN COMrS IN. . There are eagor faoe near, And a half-sulidued cheer. As around tho curve the enrs unsteady spixj While impatient feet await For the opening nf tho gate. At the station when the train comes in. There is handshaking and kissing, And inquiries for the misin?. " . And a searching here and there for friends or kin; There are sad and tearful sijhs. And a waving of good-bys, At the8tation when tho train comes in. Then from out the bagige car, Oh, so careful, lest to jar, , Comes a long and narrow box amid the din. As tho mourners gather round. There's a sobbing, wailing sound At the station wheu the train comes in. Then tlie ringing of the bell, And tho wTiiV's. c!?3"!.y tvll,. ... They are ready a new journey to begin. For it. brooks wt to be lute, There are other hearts that wait At the station when the train comes in. Hetc F. O'.Y.'i", i,t Fntiiilu Alttui.x. Ill'.MOH OF THE DAY. Herd on a train the inmates of a cat tle car. Merchant Trartltr. Furniture dealers always have plenty of spring goods on hand. Laurence American. "In what class of factories do tho most strikes occur?" "Iu clock works, I believe.'' Eych. The commercial drummer is probably so railed because he performs- so skil fully on the merchant's ear-drum. Binyhniiiton Leader. "Never judge a man by the umbrella he carries; he may have just left an old cotton one for it at tho restauraut ho last patrouized." Judye. She "1 like to think of my girlhood days." He "Does it not require an ef fort to carry your miud so far back to tho past?" Yankee Blade. "I'd rather be a wild turkey and live on the prairie," said a littlo boy, "than be a tame turkey nad be killed every year." Xfto York Xeics. Wife (in a tiff) "What do you men know about a woman's dress? ' Hus band (in a hollow voice) "The price, madame!" Lc Figaro. The life of a locomotive is from fifteen to twenty-five years. Perhaps if it would give up the bad habit of smokiug it would run up to fifty. Judge. Stranger (.trying to be friendly) "How is your health!" Dyspeptic (gruff ly) "How do I know? I haven't had any for the last five years." Time. Although it may not be a vice I'm sure it is a shame, That we should always find it nice To have some one to blame. -Veio York Sun. A boy baby generally talks before a girl baby, it is said. But we've noticed that the girl usually makes up for all tho lost time before she leaves this sphere. Statttwtiiii. First Tramp of the Gaug "Say, fel lers, here's an apple. Shall I cut it up into quarters?" Second Tramp "No, cut it up into fifty-cent pieces.-' Bur liiKlton Frie J'eng. Some day there will be trouble be cause the purchaser of a load of coal in sists on taking possession of the wagon and driver for no better reason than that he paid for them by weight. Washington l'oat. "He's un awfully smart boy. I dis charged him from my employ und told him I'd never take him back. Then he eloped with my daughter, and now I've got to support him until he liuds work !" Fjmcli . Sale-nian "That piece of goods will work up into a good serviceable dress if you don't think tho pattern is too loud." Purchaser "Oh, not at ull. The lady I'm buying it for is a deaf mute." JJinghaiittoit leader. "I felt so nervous, maiunm," said a little girl, referring to an accident ou the previous day. "What do you mean by nervous,' my dear.'" "Why, tnumiua, it's just being in u hurry ull over." Siriiii(riil! Jtcjiitlilivan. The Peacemaker "Don't you know it is very wrong to fight, little boy? What does the good book say?" Tommy (who has just polished oil tho class bully) "I diuino. 1 ain't read it no further than David an' Gerlire." Puck. Young Mr. Harduppo "I might have known you were too old to marry me before I was foolish enough to propose." Miss Ann Tique "And yet one would not have to be so very aged to have that much sense, either." Terre Haute Fx. fH'tiiS. Customer "You advertise these gloves, former price 75c. per pair, now one-half oil. and yet you aro charging ?4c. per pair. How is that?" Polite Shopkeeper "They were y7jc. each, now they are i!7c. That's off as ad vertised." Clothier ami Furiiiidtcr. A Lonesome l.lftlo King. The King of Anam, now under the protectorate of France, is a boy nine years old, Thank-Tai by name. Ho lives aim st alone. He studies not a little, however, and lately, when one of his tutors, in reading to him out of au Ori ental book of philosophy, faltered aud stumbled in attempting to explain a pass age, the child-King said to him, seri-oti-ly, but without severity: "Had you not better, before undertaking to explain those books, look them over and see w hether you comprehend them yourself .'" In order to brighten the young King's existence, the French Government re cently sent to him from Paris a number of toys of a very interesting and ingen ious sort. Previous to their arrival, King 1'h .nk Tai hail no othet way of amusing himself thau by watching, hour utter hour, the red gold fishes swimming about in a small pond near his chamber. Cvi ling has become radically a part of the llritisli light infantry work at severul stations in Kngluud, and Mill bg tunic, genetally introduced