THE FOREST REPUBLICAN It pabll.hwt Ttry WdaadaT, J. E. WENK. Offlo la Bmaarbaugh A Co.'i Building ilm mitt, tionbbta, r, TrrVi. . . . . tl.fco pftif, Oorropondenr nolleltH frem al aaru f ih. RATES OF ADVgBTISIWO. a Sqaara, Inch, on Inaartloa I IN Oat Rqaare, ,nf Inch, n month .T. I M Oa Sq,aar,eaa Inch, thrM month. IN Om Square, aae Inch, on year 1 M Two Pqnarea, on yr IIM Qlrler Colamn, on year MM Half Column, on rear MM Oae Colamn, one jaar .. 1MM Lfl advertuwmtnt tea wot par 111 tack hv Mrtioa. ktarrl(( ad iaath aotlc gratis. All kill for TMrlT lrrtlarmnt eollet saaas terly. Temporary aiirerllMBMiiU moat a ptl 14 aaa. Jot work en a eallvwy. Forest Republican. VOL. XXIV, NO, 10, TIONESTA, TA., WEDNESDAY, AUG, 12, 189L $1.50 PER ANNUM. Tcr t minute, night " and day, tha ' United Si ale Government collects $039 ami spends Ijt-lGl. j A wealthy German offered a prizo o( (i2.r!,000 to nny nstronomcr wlio will sot- , isfnetorily demonstrate to him that tho nun, inoou or slurs aro inhabited. Drill instructors aro boing appointed by tha labor organizations of Australia. The members nro buying guns and am munition. Lively times tiro expected. A. Philadelphia surgeon says that by three strokes of the lancot ho could para lyzo tbe nerves nctod on to make a man get mml, and thereafter any one could pull hi nose or cull his cars, and he would simply Bmilo a soft, bland smile. At Cotta, ia Saxony, persons who did not pay tboir taxes Inst year are published in a lint which hangs up iu all restaurants nnd salon -s of tho city. Thoso that aro ou tho list can gut neither meat nor drink nt these places under penalty of loss of license. Harrison Tudington, tho ex-Governor of Wisconsin, who has just died ia Mil waukee, commenced his CBreer at that point in 18118 as the immediate business euccssor of Solomon Juneau, Milwaukee's first settler. The lives of these two men cover tho whole history of the great North west. . . .. ! Tho Now York Sua (earns that Cornell is going to improvo all tho roads ou tho University property, around Ithaca, N. V., iu sections and by different methods, ind thus furnish a standing object lesson as to style and cost, of maintenance for tho guidauco of attempts to improve the roads of the State. Tho Treasury authorities at Washing ton have just had tlioir attention called to the fact that it would be an easy mat ter to tunuel from a neighboring build ing into their vaults, romovo tho coin ind ship it down the Potomac. Seven ty guards now watch tho Treasury, and very precaution has beca taken to pro rout robbery. Tho Philadelphia Bulletin is authority for the statement that tho phonopraph aas beeu employed in New York to re port tho utterance of monkeys, sclontiflo men have become convinced that their shattering is a language intcligiblo smoug themselves. Their phonographed talk has beeu repeuted to the animals with startliug effect, aud they havo en deavored with their long nrms to draw aut tho ape concealed iu tho instrument. TUo New York World declares that the population of the agricultural dis tricts is less than it was tou years ago, the gains having beeu mada in tho towns und cities. Hut tho mortgage indebted ness is increasing at tho rate of $8,500, ODD per year, and tho loss iu farm values siueo 1881) is estimated at S'JOp.OOO.OOO, or a a average of 7 per acre for tho single State of Ohio. There are States where tho proportiou shows a still wor cunditiou of affairs. The Prince of Monaco having secured a wife with $i300,000 annual lucome bos made up his tniud to be good and havo no more gambling iu his spacious realm ufter tho present leaso of tho Casino is run out, April 10, lH'J'i. But tho enter prisiug managers of tho tables have made arrangements to reproduce tho en tiro establishment, theatre and all, in Audorra, tho little republic in the Pyrenees ou tho border of France aud Spain. Already $1,000,000 of the capi tal stock has beeu taken up iu Paris. "South Carolina, liko most of the Southern States, continues to bo wade up," notes the Boston Tranxript, "mainly of rural communities. There nro but tweuty cities and towns in the State that havo more than 2200 inhabit ants. Charleston, with 51,955 inhabit ants, has a loug lead over tho second city, Columbia, the capital, which hat 15,353 population. Charleston has gained 497l iu tho last decade, while Columbia's population, is 5317 larger thau it was iu ISS0. These two cities contain more thau half tho urban popu lation of South Carolina." Professor Lombroso, a student of criminals, says that out of forty-one an archists whom ho studied in the Paris police office, thirty-one per cent, showed tho criminal type of features. Of forty three Chicago anarchists tho percentage of wicked faces w.is forty, aud that is about the percentage obtuiued trom tho professor's researches among tho politi cal crimiuals of Turiu. ltcgicides or murderers of presidents, such as Fieschi, Guiteau, Nobiliugaud historic evil-doers liko Marat, had nearly all tho criminal cust of features. Nobiliug, Guitoau and Booth, iu tho specialist's opinion, had hereditary tendencies to crime. Certain socialists, liko Karl Marx and Lassalle, are exempted from the doctor's classifica tion, as their features are noble, but theu men men do not favor auarchy. A CHILD'S LAUOHTKR. All tho bells of heaven may ring, All the blrJs of heaven may sing, All the wells on earth may spring, All the winds on earth may bring All awont sounds togothnr; Bwoetor far than all things heard, Hand of harper, tnn of bird, Bound of woods at sundown stirred, Welling water's winsome word, Wind in warm wan weather. Ona thing yet there Is that none Hearing ei'e its chimo bo done Know not well the weet?st one Heard of men beneath the sun, Hoped lit heaven heroaftTj Boft and strong and loud and light. Very wound of very light. Heard from the morning's rosiest h' When the soul of all delight Fills a child's closr laughter. ttolden bells of welcome rolled Never forth such notes, nor told Hours so blithe in tones so bold As the radlnnt mouth of gold Here that rings forth heaven. If the golden crested wreu Were a nightingale why, then Something sson and heard of men Might be half as swot as when Laughs a childof seveu, A. t7, SwinburnK DOWN IN A STEAMSHIP, My father wai a rich man when I left New York. His partner's only daugh ter was to bo my wife when I should re turn. I was a student in a Vicuna hospital when I received a cablo from homo that the old bouse had failed. It proved to bo an honest failure und both families wcro beggars. I counted my pockctbook from cover to cover. I had just enough to leave fieo of debt and get to Liverpool. How to cross? Well, swim if necessary. In the Liverpool steamer office was au old Harvard College mate. This em barrassed mo. Ho owed me a grudge from tho football days at Berkeley Oval. Determined t work my passage over, I entered what I supposed was not the office where my old competitor was man ager. I did uot see him, but ho must have caught sight of me. I was sur prised with the promptness with which I was told to go on board tho C , and something would be found for mo to do. Two days out I was called to tho cap tain's own room, iusulted with the chargo, at first politely put, of being a stowaway, and finally stung to madness bitter enough to obey silently wheu the officer said: "If you really don't want to steal your, passage, go report to the engineer and shovel coal." This I did. My experience I want to describe. It is commou euough to hun dreds of poor scamps this moment ull over the seas. But, God pity them, they have not tho tongue to tell, nor, perhaps, always tho sensibility to feel, what their life really is. Dizzy already with the tossings of the sea I staggered down those series of iron stairways till I stood at last on the ship's lowest deck. Behind me were tho vast bunkers of coal that glistened from a million eyes when tho furuace doors were opened, and theu faded out of sight. Beforo me the hue billows rose, not silent, but roariug monsters, so hungry that the toiling pygmies who fed them jumped to their tasks till the sweat rolled from their bare backs. The heat was, to one desceudmg from the pure breath of tho Atlantic, something fearful. I was dressed iu my ordinary uttiro.uud even au overcoat ut that, so precipitate had been my actiou. Tho smell of bukiug lubri cants aud red hot iron, tho dead air, poisoned with coal gas aud bilge water odors, tho dust, despite all showering, but most of all the sudden transition, from white light to blackest darkness, momentarily proceeding, as this and that furnace dour was opened and shut.almost fulled me to the floor. As I stumbled aud caught my hold ou tho stair rail, again tho hardy fellows shouted: "Give us your shilliug aud no back 1" supposing that I was a curious passenger seeing the sights of the ship. Tho voices of derision roused me. I was no passenger. I was au honest beg gar like the rest; and here I was to bo imprisoued fur a week, watch on aud oil! In a frcuzy I tore oil my clothing till I stood in my trousers and shoes like my fellows. I stated my hiriug to tho fel low in charge of the watch, und lie gave me my shovel with a pitying luugh. I was put at the boiler nearest the stair. The midships would have beeu a less druuken spot, but I leaped at the hardest task. My head grew dizzy. I panted for a full vital breath. The corrugated floor ing, polished till it was glossy smooth iu spots, tangled my poor feet so that I re peatedly fell. Ah, that sense of whirl lug, whirling, whirliug! How little the fair folk iu tho cabins, know of ull this plutonian hole beneath their carpets. lteully, I thought I could describe aomew hat that lurid fautasia amid tl.eso scarlet skiuued, good natured demons, but I cauuot. Vertigo struck mo down iu less thau a half hour. The next I knew I was being revived iu the coiu paniouway, and the ren air was so grate ful. The ship's surgeon asked me if I felt ablo to go to work agaiu, and courteously recognized that I was not a luborer. I was graceless euough to growl out my spleeo aud reassert that I was no stowaway, which the good doc tor did not uuderstand. I turned to the assistant engineer, who stood by, aud asked him to give me a job of which I might be capable. Thrusting his bauds in his pockets, he walked oil with a command to "try him at oiling." Eil U , the head oiler dcar.brave heart- I often go down to the dock to see him wheu in port here, but the en gine is as dear to hiin as a bride or I would loug ago havo bettered his for tunes he took me iu hand. We walked along those mero bird cages of stair-ways aud platforms, a labyrinth of Vasrausiu a forest of steel arms, wheels, shafting nnd stcirra piping. To a lands man, that endless maze of mighty anat omy is at first simply awful. It sobers ono, this sullen, ceaseless throb of tho monster's heart, tho deep breathing of tho steam shests, tho sigh of the crea ture 'i spirit as tho pistons make one movo and yet one more herculean-thrust turn ing the crank shaft, Knrh time, as the piston slowly starts, it seems as if it must be the last, and in finite fatigue prevail. But rid, it goes on, night and day, motion, motion, mo tion. Don't let mo tire you; reader, but I dd wish I could express td you some thing Of the solemn impression that be gan to seize upon me, crawling liko a fly after Ed, the oiler. Then the hiss, the' scream, the little sighs and moans of here and there a jet of truant steam, al most human sounds, issuing from the jungle of polished steel I "She's a tiger, she is?" cried Ed. "Look out I" I heard that kind exclamation fre quently as wo went our rounds. There were others doing tho same work, but I hecamo a chosen attendant of my cat liko friend. He had a sprained elbow and I helped him professionally. He gdt my ktory, We were intimate in two of three days, and I record it with hon est satisfaction, for Ed B was a gen- uind man. It was One day off the Banks that we stopped. Tho chief got a notion that the shaft was not sound, and the next voyage it proved so, for a hair line along and around that huge polished arnl of power turned out an incipient fracture; But it was on investigation decided this VjyagO that there was nothing wrong; Still, there we lay on tho breast of tho swells for more than two hours; Ed came to me nnd said i "Now she's still tho second engineer thinks wo might go into the pit and clean out. the waste and oil puddles. I don't like it, doctor, when she's got steam ou. What if she turned her crank, eh?" The brave boy went jumping down, however down, down, till ho stood di rectly under that massive crank, which had stopped ut the half turn over his head; Tho reader will understand that tho space allowed for the crank to make tho full circuit round below was only suffi cient for the iron to sweep through. Into that now empty space Ed was pre paring to step. It was dark as a grave and about a grave's dimensions. I held thd torch above his head. Men workiug by torchlight in that place resemble imps. We wcro good natured imps, however, and, though very cautious, were chatting cheerfully enough. "I never liko this job at sea," resumed Ed, "nor auy time, except when tho last pound o' steam is out of her, two ot thrco days at dock." "But the engineer knows we aro here," I replied. "Yes, he ordered mo down and there's no need of it and he don't liko me," El got off between his breath, bending to his perilous work in the pit. "Heavens, maul" I exploded, catch ing nt what I thought was his meaning. "That would bo murder!" "Hush, doctor 1 Not that, not that! But if I had refused to come, as ho thought I Would, don't you see lie could break mo that is, discharge me when wo get iuto New York." A few minutes later Ed sent mo aloft for ml extra mop of cottou waste, I was to hurry, for we knew not what miuuto the captain might go ahead. I remember I had secured tho waste, I was picking my way along the enigma of lit tle ludders and platforms. Far below, through the shadows, dung from occas ional gas jets the sleeping mouster, like a nickel plated spider, lay prone, and I seemed to be exploring its viscera like some daring pathologist. Away below me iu tho light of his torch Ed reminded me of a microb. Suddenly tho gong struck from the pilot house. God help me, I cau boar it yet! I was near the engineer's lauding. Quick as a Hash I was on the eugineer, and like a tiger I caftght at the wheel which ho was turning to let on stsaui. "Man I B is in tho crank pit!" But I was too late. She gave one turn, at least. Then the scouudrel or fool, I don't kuow which, yielded to me and we stopped her. But such a cry as cauio echoing up from the very heart of the engine ! "Thank God for that second cry," I fairly sobbed, us it floated up. Thcnal spraug away and down. E l lay iiiseusiblu on the arm of the crank, as if the eugiuo had stopped in pity and held him out to us. He had fainted with pitiu only, for the spraiued elbow had beeu broken. How ho escaped heaven only knows. Now this is the curious part of my story. Less thau a year after, when she was cold and lying at the docks without a pound of steam, that engine killed this same eugiueer. It must have beeu in tho middle ot the night. What ho wus do iug dowu iu her no oue knows. A list by cargo aud tide must havo moved the machiuery a hulf a turu and crushed him. Ed B says that cngiucs havo souls, but seafaring men cherish queer uotious. -Yetf York Preai. Married the Family. A story of u Florida mau who married three wives from one family is goiug the rounds as something remarkable, but there was a family iu Maiue consisting of six girls, and of the six three married meu named Bickwell, three married to the name of Young, oue married a Liver more aud ono never was married. An other paradoxical feattiro is that there were only five husbands iu all. The ex planaliou is that two of tho Bickwell died, leaving widows, aud Mr. Young, who had two of the sisters before, took one of tho widows. Then Mr. Liver more took the other. So that there w.'ie seveu weddings iu the family, and only five meu und five women concerned iu them. Mr. Young had lost oue wife before he Jioju on this tumily. Man cheater Union. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Marmoreino hardens plaster. Electricity is to revolutionize mining. Many of the big paper-mills have turned out paper belts said to be supe rior to leather. The juice of a half lemon in a teacup of strong black coffee, without sugar, will often cure a sick headache. The ekin of a boiled egg is tho best remedy for a boil. Carefully peel it, Wet, and apply to the boil i it draws out the matter aud relieves Soreness; When your face and ears burn so ter ribly bathe them in very hot water as hot as you can bear it. This will bo more apt to cool them than any cold ap plication; Tbe compounding of locomotives will soon be gone intd on a large scale, and triple expansion engines will soon be adopted in the larger manufacturing es tablishments. Tho breaking weight of a bar of iron one foot long and one inch square is 5781 pounds. A piece of seasoned hick ory of the same dimensions would break at 270 pounds. A Philadelphia Company recently made a fly-wheel which weighs 180,000 tons; It is twenty-five feet id diameter, eighteen inches thick, and twenty-eight inches wide, It will be operated by a 8000 horse power. Borers of tho city artesian well at Fort Worth, Texas, are of the Opinion that the drill will soon penetrate a huge volume of boiling water, as tbe tempera ture increases with every few feet they go down, and at last accounts was 121 degrees, at a depth of 2900 feet. Chatiri has proved that a parasite growing on plants of the Strychnos genus contains neither strychnine nor brucine. The mistletoe growing Upon the oak docs not contain the blue tannin of tbe latter, but exclusively a green tannin; In like manner other parasites are shown not to absorb tho peculiar principles of their hosts. Neuralgia in the face has been cured by applying a mustard plaster to the jlbow. For neuralgia in the head, apply the plaster to the back of the neck. The reason for this is that mustard is said to touch the nerves the momeut it begins to draw or burn, and ta be of most use must be applied to the nerve centres, or directly over the place where it will touch tho adected nerve most quickly, Sarno, a German chemist, finds nitric ' acid abundant iu annual plants, and more or less in nearly all families of plants. A singular observance is that where plants formerly supposed to be root-par- asitos, and now called saprophytes, are connected with certain bush roots. Such roots have no nitric acid. For instance, tho cancer root is only found under beech trees, aud yet no connection exists between tho beech and this plant. These roots ought not to have any nitric acid, if Sarno is right. For many years a spring of dirty water ran from the house of a certain M. Korotnell, iu tho heart of Sebastopol, and caused the proprietor much trouble. At times the spring would cover the best street in tbe city with mud; Of lnte the spring has become a public nuisance aud the city authorities compelled M. Korot nell to build a small reservoir around it and lead oil tho muddy substanco by sewer pipes. But as soou as this was done it was discovered that tho substance iu the now reservoir was pure naphtha. For tho last three mouths since the discovery was mado nothing has been doue to util ize this wasting treasure. Convicts Off for Siberia. The Moscow correspondent of the London Aie says: "To-day I witnessed tho departure for Siberia of the first batch of convicts this season. They stood in marching column ut tho railway station, surrounded by a guard of about 100 soldiers with drawn swords. At the head came the worst class of convicts, ubout 300 iu uumber, all having leg fet ters and chains. Many bad tho right half of tho head shaved, an indication of long-service sentences. Thou came irbout 100 without fetters, convicted or sus pected of lighter otleuscs, most of them being without passports, and therefore liable to punishment. Next follow about 100 women, some couvicts and some prisoners' wives. It is pathetic to see little children aud some infants startiug ou this long aud terrible journey of ex ile. Tho dress worn is gray, with ayel- j low diamond ou the back. luo by standers threw money to tlieai to enable them to purchase comforts on tho jour ney." Bright Thoughts and Merry. Frank 11. Stocktou tells with great glee how once, many years ago, he in vented a dish and got $2 for the inven tion. It was while he was sub -editor of JIairth and Home, a weekly paper of which Mrs. Mary Mapes Oodge was the editor. He bad contributed to every de partment save the household department. This put him ou his' mettle. So he liauded iu a receipt of his own concoct ing. Mrs. Dodge accepted it, aud paid for it at the current rates $2. The dish is called "Cold Pink," aud here is the receipt: Take all tha white meat left over from tho Thauksgiving turkey, und ;hop it uy very flue. Pour a thiu crau berry sauco over tho cold meat. Mix well, put it iu u chiua form aud set it sway to get cold. Wheu cold, serve it. It makes a delightful dish. But alas! s Mr. Stocktou himself remarks, there is uever any turkey left over from the Tbuuksgiviug dinner. Kjjoch. Custer's Lust Sword. Tho sword which Custer usod iu his rumpalgu against the Indians, aud which ho lost with his life at the battlo of the Little Big iloru, .s now iu the posses-iiou j of a Chicago mau. Its battered blade is as flexible as whalebone, and it looks us i though, it had boeu through many a j hand-to-huud encounter. It is covered . with inuuinerublu design of drums, I tilths, cannons and oihcv implements of warfare. Jnliuimivlit Journal. Canning Crnb. A thriving industry at Hampton a, Va., is the canniug of bard-shell crabs, which wus first begun in tho year 1878. About the 1st of April the season for these crustaceans opens and continues until June. During that month and July the crabs are found with spawn and unfit for canning purposes. Then in August the work begins anew and from that time until about the 1st of November the canneries are kept very busy. The crabs are caught chiefly with trot lines and note. Beef tripe is used for bait and each line is attended by one mad in a light skill1, The average daily catch per man In Hampton Koads is from fixty to seventy-five dotfen, although 250 donen catches have been occasionally ro ported; Largo boats go out every day and collect the crabs from the fishermen. Upon arrival at the cannery the dead ones and spawners are thrown away; Tho others nre placed in bperi slat-work cars and conveyed to a wooden steamer hav ing a capacity of 250 dozen intd which a car is rolled. Steam is thon turned on and the crabs cooked until they turn red, when the car is rolled out and tho con tents shoveled into baskets. These are delivered to men technically termed "strippers," who remove the shells, small claws and entrails. These meu pass the cleaned portions to a force of women and Children called "pickers," who take out all the meat and place it in large pans. Tho large claws are crushed and the meat deftly extracted. As these pickers receive but from two to three cents a pound) it niturally follows that they must be quick and agile workers. The most rapid pickers can generally prepare about twenty-five pounds a doy, but the average is about sixteen pounds, Tbe hard parts and other refuse are dumped into sheet-iron barrels, placed in scows and sold to the neighboring farm ers for fertilizing purposes. Tho upper shells, which tbe strippers remove, are carefully cleaned and used as receptacles for deviled crabs, being packed up and sold with the cans containing the meat, After being weighed, the crab-meat is taken to tho "fillers," who pack it in ono and two-pound cans. Each pound can is estimated to contain the meat ex tracted from thirty-eight crabs. In order to prevent spoiling in the cans, the con tents must be very thoroughly cooked, and consequently after being sealed these receptacles aro placed in boiling water for half an hour. Then they are taken out aud vented by piercing a small hole in the top of each and immediately re seated. After this they are givon a final hot water bath, in which they remain for two hours. Another process consists iu placing tho caus in a strong solution of chloride of limo wnter. Upward of 11,000,000 crabs are thus canned each season in the Hampton es tablishments, nnd tij'l a ready sale in all parts of tho United States. Detroit Fr I'rett. Jack Tar's Flea In His Own Paper. The sitlors of the United States flag ship Philadelphia publish a little paper which is called "Tho Philadelphia Print." A good paper it is, too. The last edition is issued at Port-au-Prince. Tho whole paper makes ono proud to be an American, and shows that the intelli gence of the days when the Constitution sailed the seas with 300 New England freeholders on her triumphant deck havo not been followed by decadence Among other articles is oue which should com mend itself to the Naval authorities. It is as follows: "It sounds very pleasant nnd one is proud to hear our m;v vessels spoken of as being modern steel cruisers, nil tho material and guns made in tho United Slates, not a rivet that is not American, can steam twenty knots, fitted with elec tricity und telephones, ar.d all have the latest ideas, etc. but with all this can Jack make a modest request, "Iu a number of ways Jack is not as comfortable iu the modern ship ns ho was iu the old navy, or iu other words 'these modern improvements' are a good deal like an Irish promotion, for all these new ideas and modern science take space. .Tuck's living and berthiug quarters iu tbe modern ship are not us roomy or as comfortable us iu the oak sailing urks of a quarter of a century ago. "Of uecesity Jack work is not as clean as iu the old ships, but still his prido is just as great; his ship is his owu private yacht; he owns her while at tached to her, yet no provision is made for cleansing himself after compartment or double bottom work. Much less a bath tub. Iu a number of foreign men-of-war clean bathrooms arc shown both for fircnieu und crew. "Could uot even a couple of shower baths be fitted iu the new ships, espe cially the larger ones, aud then wo would laugh at hard work, for in the morning, and when in tho tropics, our 'shower' will refresh and cool us oil and we'll bo ready for more work." This coining us it does from the sailors themselves, should havo weight. Xta Yurk Tribune. A Curious N'anio Combination. "What is in a uame ?" bus beeu a ques tion suliicieutly unanswered to still re main u subject for discussion, but what is iu two names should have a double interest. If you don't think so, tuko two names as well known us any iu American history aul look at them. Tiiey are the names Lincoln nnd Hamlin. Of course, there is uethiug peculiar about them as they otaud, but set them diller ently and observe tho result. For uu in stance, place them thiswise: HAM LIN LIN COLN Bead up and dowu and then across. 1'ticie is something iu that, isu't there? Now, a ,'aiu AHKA HAMLIN COLN. Cau you lind two other names of two other men w hose official lives and nsuies coiubiuu as these do? St. Lout V&11A lic. The Queen of Spain has umpired the ( 'o'uiub.a-Venezuela boundary case en tirely iu favor of Colombia. HORSE FLESH FOll FOOD. HIPPOPHAOT IS PRACTICED IN VARIOUS PtAOES. rnrlslnns Convert Horso Flesh Info) a Havory DIhIi Rating Kqulue Mont in South America, Alfred Trumble says in tho Epoch that his first impression of horse flesh as au article of diet was that it would have suffered no harm had it been fatter. It is of a darker color than beef, and of a tougher fibre, coming nearer to gamo in quality. In fact, at a dinner given by an enthusiastic hippophogist in London, nt which all tha meats were borso of var ious dressings, I sampled it as venison and as bcar-mcat, and found the decep tion plausible) and I have been credibly informed that at many Paris restaurants, horse flesh is actually served (is venison; so my experience with it may bo even wider than I am aware. It is a curious fact, by tbe way, that the French, who cannot cook a real beef steak to the Anglo-Saxon palate, can convert the horse into a savory dish. Tho opportunity for deception puts their culinary art upon its mcttlo, I suppose, just as if you givo them the primcst green-turtle out of tho West Indies, they will spoil it in the pot, while from a Calf's head, soino veal scraps and tho stock kettle, they will make you a mock turtle snip to delude anyone but a Lon don alderman. Every day, at early morning, noon nnd evening, in Paris, you will Bee poor peo ple gathering at certain shabby cookshops in the quarters of Belleville, Montmartrc, tbe Batignolles aud others of the sections outside the Boulevards, whoro poverty houses thickest each armed with a tin pail, a pitcher or something else calcu lated to carry liquid. These receptacles aro duly filled with thin but savory broth, ladled from huge, steaming cauldrons, nnd which costs only a ceut or two a quart, I have drunk this bouillon, and found it nourishing and good. It is mado of the bones and scraps of horse meat after the choicer pieces aro sold to the cheap restaurants, aud tho very es sence and marrow of the meat are i'x it, for tho boiling is kept up until the bones are fairly honeycombed and the meat re duced to shreds like bits of twine. This broth provides tho principal animal nourishment for tho average laborer in the gay city. He adds to it a few vegeta bles, thickens it with bread, and it, hav ing as tho cook-book might say, beeu "seasoned to taste," makes a palatable and hearty meal. Ouco upon a time, beforo the Argen tine was gridiroued with railroads, a lit tle party of us set off in tho saddle to cross tho Pampas to the fertile, planta tions of Bolivia. Coming to tho end of a long day's canter, wo also cauio upon a tump of curious half savages of whom we had heard, but whom I, at least, had Hover mado acquaintance before. A couple of them wero carving veritable chunks out of tho carcass of a horse, whoso hido was pegged out on the grass to dry. These great morsels of meat, half roasted, without salt, iu the embers of a tiro of twigs and turf, constituted the feast to which the Guachos welcomed us. It was hearty eating, though tho cookery could not compare with that of Paris, nnd it wus tho only meat our rude hosts knew. They lived by the horse and nil the horse, as well as on his back. His hido went to tho traders to clothe them, nnd his He ill went into their bodies to render them worth clothing; and no oue who has rceu them running dowu their game, with their long lariats tipped with leadou balls, will doubt that it was healthy feeding, however deficient iu epicurean charm. I do uot wish to bo understood as dis daining the roust beef of Old England, which, as wo all know, mostly comes from the United Slates nowadays, nor even as preferring the product of tho stall to the product of tho pasture; but I can affirm, with a good conscience to wards my digestiou, that there are less salutary dishes served ut nobler boards thau thoso which nourished us at Tho Honest Mau. As f jr the savor, doth not our old friend Brillat -Savarin tell us "it Is ull a matter of the cook aud the appe tite?" The TI11 Soldiers of Nuremberg. Tho artisU of Nuremberg und Forth have long been famous for their manu factures of toy-soldiers of lead. Tho art dates from the Seven Years' War, und was developed under the influence of the enthusiami aroused by tho career of Frederick the Great. Much pains aro takeu with the sketches of the intended figures, aud eminent artists uro willing to supply the models. Certain fixed rules have to be adhered to iu designing the figures. Iu colors, deep tints must be uvoided, aud gaudy hues preferred. The artists must be arquuinted with tho military costumes of the period to which the soldier they represent belonged. Anachronisms in this matter are fatal. Molds of slate aro used for tho plain figures, and of brass for those in relief. Tho figures, having been cust, are takeu out aud trimmed; then handed over to the women, to be painted; ami then to other women, to be packed iu woodeu boxes. 1'ojjular Seituce Muutldy. Norway's Headsman. Iu Norway au expert executiouer is requisite, ulthougb his services uro sel dom needed. August Cluesou is uow au old uiau, and has held tho ollice for twenty-four years, with occasional assis tance. The laws of Norway are still harsh iu terms, und were liar.-h iu prac tice uot many years ago. Old man Cluesou can remember that, ut Trond hjeiu, ubout twelve years ago, a preuoher named Janseu, convicted of murdering his child, stood iu the pillory all day, with his right hand cut otl, and had his licit I cut oil at sundown. Now, how ever, the punishment is decapitation, without the barbarous exhibition that used to precede it. The death penalty is so seldom resorted to iu Sweden aud Norway that it is practically obsolete. tt. Lou 14 llejjublie. l.ETTINO DOWN THE BARS. ', fair Jane stands near the", woodland where The barn lane joins the Mold; The cows are doming at her call, Tholr treasure whlto yield. ". The sun is sinking through tho trees To give place to the stars, Ami to tha task the maiden bends i Of letting down the bars. '- Young neighbor John, of manly mold, 1 Dut timid as a quail, Climb o'er tha fence and gain bar sido And help" her move the rail. Her warm blush tell a tale; but fear From speech his tongue' debars Till oye meet eyes, then of his lovo Her glance lets down tho bars. O woodland's breath and meadow's breeze, And soft eyed kine and hirds! Know ye the rapture in your midst That cannot flow In wnrdsf Nor wish for wealth, nor thought' of fame. Nor aught the moment mars; these guileless souls find all their world i While letting down the bars. A'ete Yorfc .Advertiser. IIU.H0B OF THE DAY. Erasures on account-books nre sure signs of a bigger scrape comiug. Puck. When a man fights in his mind ho al wnya comes out victorious. Atchison Globe. When one dcuies his own statements he is practising much self-denial. Dal lat Seict. Assignment is tho moral anaesthetic that relieves a mau from payiu'. lluA ington Pod. Mr. Crossly "I tell you beforo I go that I want beef for dinner, and wheu I get homo what do I find J" Sirs. Cross ley "Fault, every time." JVf( York Hun. Ho (accepted) "Ah, what happiness I Now I can call you mine, love!" She "Ah I You haven't got through with your interview with papa yet." Tucas Siftinyt. A Sad Case: Mrs. Murphy "An' sure, Mrs. O'Brien, did your poor man die aisy, rest his soul !" Mrs. O'Brien "Indade not, Mrs. Murphy. It nearly kilt poor Pat to die." Jako Jimpsou "You are the applo of my eye, dear." Cora Bellows "And you are the peach of mine." "Why tho peach?" "You arc such a perpetual fail ure." Ncio York Herald. Mr. Oldgrad (Class of '00) "Ah, thii Is our cluss picture. Ah, old boy, we were younger then than we aro now." Mr. Do Gree "Yes, and kuew a great deal more." Brooklyn Lire. "How will I enter tho money tho cashier skipped with," asked the book keeper, "under profit and loss?" "No; supposo you put it under ruuniug ex penses." Philadelphia 1'inut. They say that a woman cauuot reason, but as loug as she has her faculty of in tuition she seems to get along all right. Besides, sho can usually get a man to reason for her. Somcrcille Journal. Thero may not be any royal road to wealth, but there is a royal road to learn ing. When a man gets rich tho world is willing to regard everything he says as tho utterances of a sage. Sonurcille Journal. She "I am afraid that bell ringing menus another caller." He (imploringly) "You know there is such a thing us your not beiug nt home." She "Yes; and there is such a thing as my being engaged." Genius may bo merely a capacity for hard work, but it is hard to make tho neighbors believe that there is any genius about the young woman who practises tho scales four hour a day. Indianapolit Journal. Emcrsoniu Dorchester "Olivinia Holmes is not tho recherche girl I thought sho was." Itussellina Waldo "What has occurred?" Emersouia Dor chester "J uoticcd to-day that she was wearing her wiuter spectacles." Jem tlera' Circular. Prudence "Why did you hurry around the corner wiieu you met Briggs a moment ago?" "Afraid of him?" "Why?" "Yesterday lie paid me back a dollar ho borrowed six months ago, and I'm shorter thau usual this week." Ac it York Jlccordtr. "Aud what," asked tho youug woman who is sometimes facetious, "is I lie rank of the individual who brings up in tho rear with a bucket and a tin cup?" "Oh," replied tho member of the militia, without hesitation, "he is a lcmouade dc camp." Wanliitrlon Pott. Alice "' met Minnio lteuee to-day, and she showed me the engagement ring that Horace Fledgely gave her." 11 wen duliu "Is it a pretty one?'' Alice 'You remember the one he gave you aud inc!-' Uweiidolin "Let inn think. Oh, yes!" Alice "It's the same ring." Jeicehrt' Circular. They took the Fit 'hbui g from Hosto'j to Troy. At the Falls the luakemiiu thrust his head iu at the door and seemed to interrogate "llousick? Hoosick?" Alfred Kufus looked inquiringly around the cur, und discovering no object iu need of a physician's care, appealed to his father "Papa, who is sick?" J'iarin.i'CutioU k'ra. A small Bath iioulb.y, who had been sent home by his leacaer bcc uiso liis sister had the meislci, was noticed! by that teacher at the next rec .s play ing with the other children iu the school yard. "Johnny, didn't I tell you not to come to school while your sUiers had the measles?" "Yes, but I a, 11 not. going in school ; 1 only eune to play with the boys beforo it begins." Hit It Tiu,:j. A candidate was being examined by four professors. Feeling extremely U'i'V ous his memory failed hi.11 several tiuus. At lust oue of tho prol'issois growing impatient, thundered out: "Way, j ou c inn it quote a single p.is-a'e ot Scrip ture correctly !" "Yes I i in eclaiined the candidate'. "1 jict happen to re lueniber tt passage in the Ki Vi bilious: 'And 1 lifted up my eves i,mI beheld four jjix'ttt kettota,' " Vretdur Auieiaer.