RATES OF ADVERTISING. On Sqaar, on. Inch. on. Insertion ...t tt9 On. Squire, on Inch, on. month ... I 0 On Sqnara, OB Inch, thro months. 100 On. Sqntre, on Inch, on year 10 M Two Sanares, on year K 0 Quarter Column, on year MOS nlt Column, on. rear 80 0 On Column, on year 100 0 Lefrtl advertisement ten cnW per Un eh t Mrtlon, Marriage and death notice gratia. All bill for yearly Tlvertlment. colted quar terly. Temporary adrertlMmenta Boll I). paid U adrane. Job work cub on dallrwy. intnertptlon raelTc4 for a lhrtr Mrlod than three monthe. uorreaponriene. aollclted from al parti of the VOL. XXIII. NO. 10. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1890. S1.50 PER ANNUM. Bnnntrv. innu-y. no n.uc. ww do lak.n of fee a awainanlcations. anonymous THE FOREST REPUBLICAN b nbllibe4 Try WdnesUy, kf J. E. WENK. Offlot In Smearbaugh ft Co. Building JEUt bTBJSBT, TIONESTA, fa. Terms, . . f i.BO per Yar. Forest republican. ' In China there ii now, according to Intelligent estimates, ono missionary to about every 300,000 people. " The Chicago Sun thinks that railroad building will not be likely to take an other boom until the Western country has gained million or two iu popula tion. InshkersofT, a Russian travolor and ethnologist, has discovered that there are 400,000 heathens and 60,000 Moham medan! in the Russian army, and he de clares that Christianity is decreasing as tonishingly in Southern Russia. The Matin, a Paris newspaper, de clare! that the United Stales makes "a grave mistako" in locating the World'! Fair at Chicago, and expresses the firm conviction that very few foreign exhibit ors or visitors will care to attend a fuit 1000 miles in tho interior. An old duck hunter of Savannah says that a Cight of cluck coming south one day, if followed by other flights in the Hrao direction days or weeks afterward, will not vary to exceed twenty-five feet from the path of the ducks which have preceded them, and they will alight in almost tho exact spot where preceding flights have settled. Only six mon are living who were members of a President's Cabinet before Lincoln's time. They are Georgo Ban croft, Secretary of the Navy under Tolk ; A. H. H. Stuart, Secretary of tho In terior under Taylor; James Campbell, Pierce's Postmaster-General; Joseph Holt, Iloiatio King (each of whom was t Postmaster-General), and P. F. Thomas, Secretary of tho Treasury iu Buchanan's day. ' In China, whero everything is contrary to Western ideas, poverty has a greater practical power than in uny country in the world. The Chinese Times, of Ticn Tsin, says that everything may bo for given iu China to a poor official. Pov erty is considered a test of probity, an influence which owes much of its strength to the attachment of the peoplo to every man who comes unspotted through tho severe temptation of Chinese official life. Sweden is not an overcrowded coun try. On tho contrary, it is mora thinly settled than some of our States. Combined with Norway it is the largest country in Europe, except Russia. There is plenty of room for the peoplo; but they do not care to stay there. They prefer to emigrato to our Northwest, with a soil and resources inferior to some portions, at least, of their nativo kingdom. The New York Prttt exclaims: It is an ex traordinary spectacle this Swedish emi gration fur different iu motive and character from any other that seeks our shores. Professoi Rein, a scientist who has been investigating tho material resources of Japan, says: "They reveal a national frugality and economy of a marvelous type. The area of Japan is less than that of California. Its cultivated laud is less than one-tenth of its total acreago, yet its products support about 38,000, 000 people. Iu Japan 2560 persons subsist from each square mile of tilled land." If the laud were divided up among the peoplo a single-taier wouldn't have room enough o:i his own plot to swing his theory without knocking down his neighbor's fences. The San Francisco Chronicle remarks: The man who has secured please of isknds iu the Great Suit Luko ami an appropriation of $30,000 to cross the buffalo to common cattle has worked a very neat little game. The preservation of the buffalo is a worthy object, but it it is rather lute to begin now, when the animal is practically extinct. As for crossing the buffalo with domestic cattle, this scheme can only be in the interest of the boarding-houso keeper who wishes to improve upon tho toughness of the long-horned Western steer and thus secure an iudestructible steak. i Mrs. Ada M. Bitteubender, lawyer at Washington for tho W. C. T. U., has been investigating tho subject of early legislation on tho liquor traffic in the colonies and United States of America. She Mads that two kinds of liquor legis lation kept pace with each other through out colonial life, namely, laws to punish drunkenness and those to promote the domestic manufacture of intoxicating drinks. Some curious penalties for drunkenness are mentioned. The offender was sometimes required to wear on hie outside garment the letter "I)'' or the woid "druukard." Occasionally one was disfranchised. Reprimauds, whip pings and fines, however, were the ordi nary modes of punishment. At the same time laws were euacted making the plant ing of grape vines compulsory, to en courage the wine industry, while especial efforts were put forth to increase the pro duction of malt and distilled liquors. The first law authorizing a liquor saloon, puis and simple, was paoacd iu lb'39. LIFE'S EPITOME. A burst of light and song and story. Of hope and dreams of some-time glory Day's begun 1 A little praise, a little blame, ' A 111 tie floating breath of fame, A littl sitting in th sun, a little sigh and Day is dona I Annie X. P. Searing, in Harper' ' Batar, GA BE HARRIS. The wooden tanks on all the leases In the Harford oil region had been full for many days, and every time a well flowed "off a head" the petroleum was wasted. It ran over the tank's brim, saturated the dry leaves and formed pools on tho hill sides in tho depressions behind trees and stumps. The spring had been early; by the last week of April tho snow was all gone from the roc esses of tho deep forest. There had been but little rain, and the warm sun had dried the rotting timber in tho woods. Tho leaves strewing the ground were crisp and combustible as paper. They were scattered hither and thither by the frequent breezes blowing strong from tho Great Lakes, and they found lodge ment only where they fell into waste petroleum and becime soaked. Never were there conditions more favorable for a terrible, disastrous forest fire. Everybody was careful of fire. Men who in sullen silence, or with angry de nunciation of the Pipe Lino Company, watched their oil run to waste, forbore smoking in the woods for fear of a spark irom a pipe would start tne conflagration they all dreaded. Drilling was stopped ; fires were drawn from tho boilers at pumping wells. The producers had held mass meetings and denounced the action of the com pany; they had even attempted violence. To all complaints the company seemed indifferent; to protect their property they had called upon the Sheriff of the county and his posse, which consisted mainly of mon in their employ. From all the meetings Gabo Ilarris had been absent. In the attack upon the pump station he had taken no part; but every day he had gone to the office of tho "Liues" and asked to have his oil "run." Having made tho request and received an answer, he handed the super intendent an estimate of the amount of petroleum that had run to waste on his lease the previous day. The reply be re ceived was the samo that all applicants were met with : "Wo have no room, but are Increasing pur tankage daily, and hope to relieve you. soon. However, of you wish to sell your oil for immediate shipment we will run it at once." "Immediate shipment" oil brought twenty cents a barrel loss than the mar ket price for crude petroleum, and many of tho producers, pressed by their cred itors or needing money to buy tho neces sities of life, were forced to accept the company's terms. But Gabe, though his credit was nearly exhausted, would not thui yield to monopoly. Rather than sell his oil for immediate shipment he would let his creditors have his property, aud support his family by working on the streets of Hartford. His home he could retain, for the little portable house with its furniture was paid for, and he would not have to pay ground rent, as on tho leases tho surface of the ground had no value, save where the der ricks and their engine-houses and tanks were located. Perhaps he would not have been so courageous had his wife not been of the opinion that his course was right. Her nature, though affectionate aud gentle, was independent and self-reliant. Pov erty had no terrors for her. She had en dured it, had suffered many privations in practising a rigid economy in order to save the wages Gabe had earned as driller, so that some day they might have a leaso of their own. They had secured one; on it had put down three wells, and were meeting with regularity and promptness the notes given for machinery and tanks when the "shut down" came, and their oil joined that of other producers on the hill-side forever lost. She was glad Gabe had not become vio lent and made threats as his neighbors had done, because she thought much talk a display of weakness, and sho would have regretted her marriago had she at last found herself the wife of a weak man. She knew sho could rely upon his silent determination to win in his conflict with the "Lines" without an ap peal to dynamite, which remedy for their abuses was daily threatened by the pro ducers. Meantime Gabe formed a plan. He resolved to run his oil himself, first guaging his tanks in the presence of wit nesses to ascertain the amount they con tained ; then he would turn the stopcock, and set a donkey-engine to work pump ing the petroleum into the main line. When his tanks were empty,, he would demand of the "Lines" a storage certif icate for the amount of the oil run. On a clear, warm morning in May he kissed his wife goodby for the day, and set out on horseback for Harford to make a final demand on the company to run his oil. His lease was at the head of the Ken dall Creek Valley. From the door of his house be could see the Tuna, into which the rapid Kendall Creek emptied. Scat tered through tho valley were several villages, the nearest to his home being Kendall. Ou the bank of the creek were a great number of iron storage tanks, each one painted red, and having on one side the name ot its owner and its capacity stated in white letters, Gabe had often looked at them, and thought, as many another passer had done, what a big fire they would make if the petroleum In one of tbeui should be ignited 1 But that day as he rode toward them his thoughts were far from the subject of a onfiugration in them. Suddeuly his revery was rudely interrupted. The sound of au explosion startled him, aud look ing up, he saw a large, flat object flyiug in the air. Recognizing it as the roof tit an irou tauk, he gave rein to his horse and dashed toward the column of smoke and flame intertwined that he saw rising near the town of Kendall. The petroleum in an iron tank was burning, and he knew with what danger the fire threatened Kendall. The tank was one of a group on the bank of the creek, and if it should overflow, or an other tank be ignited and burst with an explosion of gas, tho burning fluid would surely be borne on the stream among the houses that further down lined its banks. From these houses tho town lay in the direction the wind was blowing, and the wooden, canvas-lined dwellings were as combustible as tinder. If a fire should break out among the houses on the creek, the town would soon be in ashes and many families home less. All of this Gabe comprehended in a moment, and he rode right into the vil lage, shouting to the women whom he saw standing in their doorways and gazing curiously at the blazing petroleum, "Bring all the shovels and picks you can find." Looking back over his shoulder, he saw fire running up the side of the hill, the blazing leaves blown by the wind ap parently in a hot race to spread the con flagration, to carry destruction far and wide. At a glance he saw the direction of the fire was toward his own home and lease toward his wife and children, whom he had left but a half hour before. At tho telegraph station of the "Lines," he drew rein, and yelled to the operator: "Tell Harford we want men with picks and shovels, and we want them quick. Wire the railroad company for a special train." The operator, who had already re ported an iron tank on fire, promptly sent Gabe's message. Before it reached Harford, Gabe was on his way at full speed of his horse. He rode to within a hundred yards of the burning tank and hitched his horse to a tree on the wind ward side of the fire. Then snatching a shovel from one woman and a pickaxe from another he ran to a bend of a creek and began the construction of a dam. Two old men and some boys came to help him, while the women brought picks and shovels and laid them on the bank of the creek in readiness for use by husbands and brothers, who, to a man, were attending a mass-meeting of the producers in Harford. The blazing oil heated the tank, the flames roariug.and struggling to main tain a perpendicular against the wind, growing in force and blowing steadily. Gabe was working with wonderful en ergy, making a sluice' for the escape of the water, at the sometime directing his assistants how to build a dam, which was to be constructed of stones laid ono on tho other and bankeuwith dirt. The old men, whose strength was unequal to the efforts they put forth in the excite ment, leaned on their shovels presently, and took an observation of the progress of the tire, and reckoned .on the proba bility of the small force', being able to complete tho dam before' the overflow would come. "Why, Gabe, how enn you work so hard in "this heat with' your coat on?" one of them remarked, quierulously, as he wiped his brow with a soiled handker chief. "Didn't think ofthat," said Gabe, and in a moment he was at work again without coat or vest .to impede him. "Does go easier," he said, cheerily, as he strengthened the side of ";the sluice with a large stone. "Now, if you old fellows ain't played out, you canshovcl some dirt behind that rock." "I ain't played out," ono of the old men said; "but I'm thiukin" you'd better git fast as your how can carry you, or you won': save much from that'little house of yours up to Summit." One of the boys stopped', in his dig ging, his breath growing short, and looked at the conflagration sweeping up the mountain side. "Gabe, hadn't I better ride up and tell younwife the fire'i comin'1" he said. "No; you stay hero and dig. Mrs. Harris knows as much about tho fire comin' her way as we do. She's got eyes." Yet, with all his cheerful manner and the courage in his vcice, Gabe did not dare to look up from hU work, for fear the sight of the tempest -pf flames that", was rushing to the destruction of his home would overcome hia"1. resolution to save Kendall if possible. "But don't you think yoii'd better go, Gabe?" the old man queried. "Charity begins to home, you know." "Stop pesterin' mo and work, or get out of the road." The old man, offended,' shoveled in a desultory way. "Spoonfuls don't count; 'tain't the little grains of sand we want ' here, but shovelfuls," and suiting actiotn to word, Gabe dumped a pile of sand against the stone he had just put in phice. The' old man, feeling that he was useless, threw down his shovel and walked away ; the other one joined him, and together they went to chatter with the women who were standing in the highway, alter nately gazing at the fire and noting the progress of the dam. "Is the dam done?" asked one woman eagerly of the old men. "Done? It will never be done, for the overflow will come first." "Better get out your things," said the other old man. This suggest iaa stampeded the women. They scattered, each to her home, the children crying after their mothers, who were hastening to save keepsakes and small valuables. Here and there a frantic woman carried a baby, but was heodless of Its cries. Meanwhile Gabe was cheering the boys, some of whom were beginning to flag one, then another of them, pausing to draw a shirtsleeve over his perspiring forehead. "Here, Dick, you carry stones awhile. You help him, Bill. And you two fel lows there with picks, take shovels. We'll beat that fire, or we ain't men." Thus encouraged, the boys worked with increased vigor, aud Gabe saw with growing hope that the dam was assum ing proportions which would offer effec tual resistance to considerable of a "boil over," as the overflow was sometimes called. One again the boy who tad wanted to ride to Gabe's home with news of the approaching tire recurred to the subject. "Tain't too lato yit, Gabe. Hadn't I better go?" "You can go if you want to, Dick, but only not to my house. We need all hands here." The boy shamefacedly renewed his exertions, and the others, in dogged imi tation of Gabe's unflagging zeal, worked with their heads down, Destowiug all their attention to obeying his orders. There was silence among them except when Gabe spoke; but amid the roaring of the fire in the tank they could hear the shrill voices of the women screaming to each other, and presently there came to their ears the welcome screech of one of the little narrow-gauge engines. BuoycJ by a repetition of the whistle, the little band seemed to redoublo their effort. Soon again the locomotive shrieked, nearer to them, and there was silence until the rumble of the train was heard. Then the boys looked up; but Gabe did not pause in the particular task he was engaged upon packing the sand be tween some stones. The train ran Up to a point opposite the tanks, and before it was at a stand-still men carrying picksand shovels had leaped from the platforms and were running to the dam, shouting to the workers to make way for new men. Then. Gabe paused. He looked up the valley, but could not see his home for the dense smoke that was blowing over the summit. He was jostled aside by the new-comers, who came to the work like a ompauy charging a bat tery. Gabe felt that he would not be needed now. He could no longer re strain his heart. It called on him louder, more urgently than it had done when there was time for him to get to his house before the conflagration had reached it, and he obeyed. In the tumult he was not missed, and no one heard the clatter of his horse's hoofs over the stony road. Bending low over the pummel of his saddle he dashed into the smoke. lie could not see, but he trusted his horse, now mad with fright. Presently hu said: "Thank God!" The lessening of the heat on his check, then a breath of cool air, told him that which he had not observed the wind had veered, and had carried the fire off in another direction, west of his house, and it was safe. He knew, too, from faith in his wife, that she had conducted the children to a place of safety. Soon he was out of the blind ing smoke, and the horse slackened the pace of his own accord. Then he dis mounted and climbed tho side of the mountain, where he soon found his family ou a point of rocks. "I saw it all," said his wife; "but I did not know it was you working there all that time till I saw the horse start up the valley. Then I knew." And she kissed him. "But the overflow 1 Did it come?" "Yes. Just after I lost sight of you in the smoke." "And the dam?" "It held. See, Kendall is safe; and there would not have been time to save it after the train came." And in the look of pride and love she gave him Gabe fouud his reward. liar 2er,$ Weekly. Co-OperatiTe and Loan Associations. It is estimated that there are about 4000 co-operative and loan associations in the United States; that their accumu lations of property represent $300,000, 000, and that the amount paid to them for one year in the form of dues alone exceeds $65,000,000. These associations, in their ealier days in Philadelphia, were called building clubs, and later they have been known under the name of building and loan associations. Under any name they mean essentially one and the same thing; which is the forming of corporations in which the members shall loan money to one another on certain fixed terms, and by means of which labor ing men, for the most part in our towns aud cities, may be able to add to the shares which they have purchased in this asso ciation, together with the fines and dues which accure, a sum equal to what they have already invested in them, aud apply it to the building or buying of homes for themselves. During the last thirty years these associations have increased in all parts of the country. The first one was organized in Philadelphia in 1831; the second was formed in 1845, and from 1845 to 1850 about fifty were created in Philadelphia alone. New York Dispatch. Walking in a Circle. Writing of sporting iu Canada, a traveler insists upon the necessity of car rying a pocket compass. Without one, no one can keep a straight course when the sky is overcast. The tendency on these occasions is to walk in circles. It is very annoying, but by no means unusual to find one's self, after two hours' hard walking, at the ex act spot one started from. Indeed, I have completed my circle in half au hour when lost in the woods without a com pass. I have remarked, too, that I almost invariably trend to the light, not to the left, and on comparing notes with other "bushwhackers," I hud that I am not siugular in this respect. Can it be that the left is generally the better leg of tne two, and takes, imperceptibly, tho longer stride t Deformity the Mother of Fashions. Disraeli declares that the origin of many fashions is to be found in the en deavor of the devotee to conceal some deformity of nature by recourse to art. "Patches were invented in England," he says, "by a foreign lady, woo by this means ingeuiously covered a wen on her neck. Wigs were invented by a French barber to conceal au elevation in the shoulder of the Dauphiu. Charles VII., of trance, introdrced the long-tailed coat to hide his ill-made legs. Shoes two feet in length were invented to con ceal a large exeresceuce ou the foot of the Duke of Aojou. When Francis I. was obliged to wear his hair short, owing to a wound on his neck, it became a pre vailing fashion at court. "Detroit Vrt ! . , SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. In Paris all electric wires, without ex ception, are under ground. Cooking stoves, heated by electricity, are being perfected for general use. It is stated that electric motors are now used in more than 130 different indus tries. It is said that the onion is a great cure for insomnia, and about as effective as quinine in malaria. It requires an average of 132 days for the renewal of the nails in cold weather and but 116 in warm weather. An English journal discusses the possi bility of distinguishing "high and low born blood" by tho aid of the miscro scope. A Scotchman claims that he has de tected 30,000 dust motes in the thou sandth part of a cubic inch of the air of a room. The number of eggs in a six-pound eel in November is fully 9,000,000; under the microscope they measure eighty to the linear inch. The Count of Assata, in Italy, has an electric motor in his dairy to do the churning, work the pump and perform various other operations. A German has invented an apparatus for forcing sidewise the swells in front of fast going ships by means of steam jets from a nozzle under tho water at the bow. In the formation of a singlo locomotive steam engine there are nearly 6000 pieces to be put together, and these require to be as accurately adjusted as the works of a watch. In a Minneapolis (Minn.) overalls fac tory an electric motor runs all the sew ing machines aud docs all the cutting, beside warming the irons that press out the goods. At tho Krupp Works at Essen, Ger many, there are 1195 furnaces of various constructions, 286 boilers, ninety-two steam hammers of from 200 to 100,000 pounds, 370 steam engines with a total of 27,000 horse-power. A small instrument has been devised for use in mines to indicate the presence of tire damp, or in gas mains to indicate the escape of gas. The invention is based upon the property certain metals have of evolving heat in the presence of hydrogen gas. For new railroad tracks this year 1,000,000 tons of steel rails will be needed. This quantity of material, de livered, will cost $35,000,000. Fish bars, frogs switches, ties, grading and laying will bring the total cost of this one item of railway expense to about $100,000,000 for the year. California has a fruit pest in the gray linnet, far worse aud more damaging to fruit raisers than the English sparrow. If some means are not systematically and methodically adopted to exterminate this bird there will be very little profit in fruit raising in those sections where deciduous fruits are exclusively produced. A German naturalist estimates as fol lows the number of eggs a hen may lay: The' ovary of a hen contains about 600 embryo eggs, of which not more than twenty are matured in the first year. The second year produces 120: the third 135, the fourth lit; and in the following four years the number decreases to twenty yearly. In the ninth year only ten eggs can be expected. A Horse Dentist. At the quarters of the Salvage Corps tho other day Dr. AVelles, a veterinary dentist, paid" his annual visit. One by one the horses were brought out into the yard in the rear of the house and backed up agaust the fence. The doctor seized the first h.irse by the nose, got hold of the animal's tongue and pulled it out as far as possible. He then examined the teeth with his fingers and ascertained what was to be done. He took from his grip a stick about a foot long, to which he attached a noose, which he twisted around the horse's nose, forcing him to open his mouth. Then the dentist took a long nickeled tubular instrument, to one end of which was attached a chisel, around which was a guard which rested on the horse's lower teeth. A rod was shoved through the tube, causing the chisel to chip pieces off the teeth, thus making them one height. A long file was then brought to play and the teeth sharpened. All the horses were examined and treated in this way. From the mouth of each two small back teeth were pulled. These are termed "wolf" teeth. They often cause considerable trouble to a horse, the pain from them at times being so intense as to make the animal unmanageable. Only one of the horses gave any trouble, and the dentist finished his work on the four in less than an hour and received $8 for his work. Newark (N. J.) fc Cruel Way of Securing Eiderdown. The gathering of eiderdown consti tutes one of the most profitable employ ments of Icelanders. This is especially true in the islands of Fidcy, Fingey, and Ahrey, which are the favorite haunts of the eider ducks. Here they pair and make their nests about the beginning of June. Having chosen the place where she wishes to lay her eggs, the female plucks from her plumage feathers to line her nest, and lays her eggs. Then the eiderdown gatherer carries away both the down and the eggs, in spite of a stout resistance from the unfortunate pair. The process is carried on again and again, until the female duck is stripped nearly bare, when the male comes to ber assist ance and strips himself iu the same way. "Elastic Flannel. Elastic flannel is chieflly made in Wales. This description of flannel i woven in the stocking loom and has a pile on one face on which accouut it is styled Veleurs de Laine aud other names according to the fancy manufacturers. These fluuuels measure - from thirty-two to thirty-six inches iu width and are principally employed for women's drees iug gowns and jackets. They are usual ly made either iu colored stripes ou a white ground, or eke iu plain rose or blue color; foie York Tslyrum, QUEER TROPICAL THINGS. ASTOUNDING GIFTS OT NATOHE IN CENTRAL AMERICA. -A A Returned Englrlkeer Tells or Troea That Give Urrart and Milk and Ants That Distil Money. "Thero are some funny things to be met with in that region," said Major Quiney A. Steele, who has been with an engineer corps, surveying railroad routes in Central America for the past two years, "and among the funniest are a tree that gives a light so strong that you can read or write by it at night, and one that gives milk, and another that provides the way farer with bread. Then thore is an ant that supplies you with sweetening for your coffee, which is an interesting native of that queer country. Tho tree that gives light isn't a large one, but it isn't inconspicuous by any means. The lost place we camped at in the mountains we had a particularly bright specimen of this tree to work by. I could sit ten feet away from it and read fiue print as well as if it had been broad daylight. As soon as night comes tho leaves of this tree begin to shine as if they were so many electric lights. Looking off across country one can see scores of the trees shining .here and there in the darkness like beacon lights set in the hills. They make a very choice article of rum from tho leaves of this treeo by boiling them down and letting the decoction stand in tho sun for a day or two. The native In dians are fond of this tipple, and at least ono of our Indian helpers and guides is usually engaged in snoring off the result of injudicious tampering with this rum while it is a trifle new. "The tree I am speaking of doesn't grow more than ten feet high, but three of them would light up a town. If you rub the leaves smartly between your hands, they will glow in tho dark like a lightning bug. The Indians call this tree the witch tree, and I don't blame them. It gives the best light just after it has been drenched with watei, and so if tho tree begins to grow a little dim on us, all we have to do is to douse two-or three pails of water over it, and it's just like giving a lamp wick a turn or two higher. One of our party had a big idea of going home and organizing a company to introduce and cultivate this tree in towns and cities, and knock gas com panies and electric light plants higher than a kite; but when he found that tho tree stops giving light iu August and doesn't start up again until the next March, he thought the scheme wouldn't pay. "The tree that gave tho bread we used to eat down there doesn't look a bit as if it would do it. But looks are very decep tive under the Equator. The bread isn't exactly bread when we pick it, either. It is a nice stiff dough enclosed iu a nut shell about the size of n goose egg. We crack the nut, take out the dough, knead it a little, and it is ready for baking. By thinning it down to a batter with the milk we get from another tree, our camp cook used to make first rate pancakes out of it. The day I left he strained tho sweetening out of a quart or two of ants, mixed it up with a batch of tho dough, and made sweet cake that would have been good enough for anybody's folks to set before company. "Tho nuts that supply the 'honey, or syrup, or whatever it may be called, are worth a day's travel ou mule back over these mountains to see. They are about the size of a small peanut, nnd on their back is a transparent sac that they distil full of honey until they swell up as big as a good-sized marble. You can scoop these ants up by the neck. They make this honey to feed their young on, but they are so good-natured aud so sus ceptible to familiarity that all you have to do is tickle them on the foreshoulder and they will give you up every drop of honey they have, and then go meekly off to fill up again. "But this accommodating ant isn't a whit more curious than the tree that arts in the capacity of dairy down thero. This tree has a big, tough, leathery leaf, that can be used for half-soling shoes. When we want to milk one of these cow trees we bore a hole in tho trunk, and it lets down a sap as white and as sweet as any milk that was ever stripped from a cow. To get sweet milk out of this tree, though, it must be milked early in the morning. After the sun has been up two or three hours the tree gives sour milk." New York Sun. A Wonderful Invention. Away up skyward, iu ono of the mag nificent trade palaces so rapidly spring ing up along Fifth Avenue in New York city, there is a modest little laboratory of a man soon to be well known in tho world of sciences. "Gianni Bettini, lieutenant de cavalerie," is the very un assuming inscription on the office door. Let us enter and inspect the lieutenant's wonderful talking machine, far more per fect, more simple, and portable than Edisou's. The object of Bettini's machine is of course the same as the phonograph, the reproduction of souud. But in Bettini's the metallic sound is done away with aud tho natural timbre of the voice al most preserved. Whisperings aud aspi rated tones are reproduced with wonder ful fidelity. The inventor claims that it is a general molecular vibration which causes the emission of tones from the in strument, and that the diaphragm is not essential, to prove which, he removes the diaphragm aud stylus, and simply lays the end of au ordinary screw-driver ou the revolving wax cylinder. The table itself appeals to talk, almost as distinctly as when the stylus aud trumpet were at tached. The micro-graphophoue is desigued to be gold, when put upon tho market, aud nt rented. It can be carried iu an ordinary valise, and it is by far the most portable of all the talking machines yet invented. Mr. Bettini, the iuveutor, is a handsome son of sunny Italy, ami one of her stalwart defenders. He is an officer of the, uruiy, ami is now on a leave of abseuce. In persou Mr. Bettini is most pleasing, aud attributes his inven tions less toiuspiiatiou than hard work. Burton 2'ructiUr, THE WORDS OF THE RAIN. , I sat alone in my chamber dim. In a reverie settled and deep, "' When by and by, like si weird, woven hymn,' I heard the wind In its mournful sweep Splashing, as it passed, my window pane wpane e- . J With generous drops of coolfngrain. Oh, ho, I said, I am not alone, I knnw the rain im tjttL-inir tji mo It had such a soul-refreshing tone k In the warm night It was melody, With never a pause in its refrain. Patter, patter, said the welcome rain. Anon a thought fell over my heart, Can I coin that music into words? A longing came that would not depart If I might translate its niystic chords If a gleam would come from wisdom' train. ttdid, and I understood the raiu. "Oh, mortal, my mission is like thine, "1 To scatter good on palaces and cots; j In the dark of night I am doing mine '' Ceaseless and faithful, but thou art not." Then I blushed and said, with regretful pain, "There is truth in the words of the rain." "Mother Nature is kind unto all," Continued the burden of its song, "The sun shines out, and the showers fall, While season follows season along! The laughing fruit, and the springing grain All join in love's anthem," said the rain. "Oh! man, while creation toils for thea. Year in, year out, for ever the same, From dripping cloud to the tiding soa If thou art idle it is thy shame. There's work for all, and for each its plane' Hear then, and heed the words of the rain William Lyle, in Detroit Free Prcos. B . ; HUJIOtt OF THE DAY. Common scents Cheap perfumes. An old bach Loaves baked last week. Claws in the will Fingers of the law yers. Boiton Herald. The weight of an argument doesn't de pend upon the size of the mau. Age brings us wisdom, but doesn't givo us much titno to use it. Puck. Every dog has his day, nnd Sunday be longs to tho growler. Ttrre llaul& Ex preiw. If tho boys dou't kiss the misses, then tho eirls will miss the kisses. Bingham ton Leader. "Is it a crime to be a woman ?" cried the oratorcss. "No; only a Miss de meanor. " ruck. A market reportsays: "Corn isquict." Then it is different from some things that are put into cribs. A horse has the advantage of a man in one thing. He's worth more after he's broke than he was before. The broker who married a pretty, but penniless, girl explained that he had taken her at her face value. "All gone," murmured Ponsonby sadly, as he surveyeil his bald head in tho mirror. "Not even a part remains." Life. Womau "You're the first tramp I've seen about here this season." Tramp "Yes, ma'am; I always was noted for my enterprise aud push." Judye. His first love was full twenty-five; He eighteen when he sought her. When he at forty did arrive. ' He asked her for her daughter. Puck. He (cautiously) "What would you say, darling, if I should ask you to be my wife?" Darling (oven more cautiously) "Ask me and find out." Washington Star. Miserly says if the telegraph compan-, ies charge their wires as they do their customers he doesn't wonder that it gives a man a shock to touch one. Binghatil? ton lirpuUican. When Jack Tar sails the stormy sea, His vessel roels, but not so he; W hen she's in port on even keel, His steps a stagger oft reveal. Puck. Miss Kewt (who wants to bring him to the point) "I think some old bachelors are horrid." Mr. Bachelloor "What about present company?" Miss Kewt "Present company ulways accepted." Judge. An old saying makes it that "he who goes borrowing goes a-sorrowing." It may be so with some borrowers, but in other cases it is the fellow who lenda that generally goes sorrowing. Phila delphia 1'imes. Rev. Mr. Choker "Has your congre gation raised your sulary lately, Brother Thirdly?" Brother Thirdly (from the country) "No, sir; it seldom raises more than half of it iu any given year. Neie York News. "Humph!" said Mrs. DePorquc, as sho laid down her book, "this writer says the dodo is extinct." "Well, mamma, sup pose it does?" "Why, anybody of ordinary intelligence knows that. They uso ditto marks nowadays." Washington JUt. An Adelaide. (Australia) daily paper has in its employ three men named Day. One of them is called Sun-Day, because he is a clergyman; another, being the cashior, is called Pay-Day, while tho third, being a law-reporter, goes by the name of Judginaut-Day. &prin(UM Union. Augora (oat Farming-. Angora goat farming is perhaps the most important aud profitable industry of tho Tasmauiau farmer. This iudustry was introduced iu Tasmania about forty years ago, aud mohair first appeared as au export teu years later, the quantity shioped being 106 pouuds. In 1875 the clip reached 1,157,000 pounds, val ued at b'00,000, while in 18S7, 7,154, 000 pouuds of hair were exported, val ued at over $1,000,000 (tho price of hair having been much reduced by this time), besides skins to tho value of $500,000. A Scarcity of Men. A charming young lady, who doesn't begin to be near the first coi uentone.haa evolved from her iuuer consciousness the following reflection ou masculine Wash ington: Tho saddest words of tongue or pen, 1'u.r. ara too many wunieuaud uot enough Uiaii.