THE FOREST REPUBLICAN b Dmbllsksa every Wdelj, ky ' J. E. WENK. OBoi la Bmearbaugh oV Co.' Building I xut mur, noNssTA, r. RATES OF ADVERTISING.' One Square, one Inch, one insertion..! 1 Wj One Square, one inch, one month .... JW One Square, one inch, three months. . 6 Off ( n Square, one inch, one year 10 (KJ Two (Squares, one year 16 Off Quarter Column, one year. JJ Hall Column, one year. 00 W One Column, one year . 10 w Legal advertisement ten cents per line each insertion. . Marriages and death notices gr.itifc ' All bille for yearly advertixsments collMtM quarterly, Temporary adverti'ement muM be paid In advance. Job wore cash on dsliverv. ' For TJBLICAN ftrmt, i tl.BO pt)r Yoar. aabserhHloas receives! for a akertar iwrlod iliMn ,tnre months. Ontrapondenre solicited frem B parts sf the eonntt?. N runlet will be Ukea. unrmoiu VOL. XXIV, NO. 32. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, DEC, 2, 1891, $1.50 FEIt ANNUM. Rep est Germany la determined to "lake a fins bowing at the World's Fair. I ' I : 'The liothschilds aro predicting, tlial France alone will have to pay America nearly $10,000,000 in gold for wheat this year. i A frost insuranco company is being formed In France, and it promises to be uccefiil venture. It is estimated that tlio loss to agriculture by frost la Franco is about $15,000,000, and thu company rvill in suru against this. A part ; the 15,000 annually appro riatd by Congress for agricultural ex ertnicnts iu each oi the States is applied iu Michigan to determmo whether or not tho light, suudy pine barrens of the northern part of tlio Stuto can be culti vated profitably. Thus far, asserts the ' fow York lnt, experiments do not jus tify tho State authorities iu advising far mors to occupy these large tracts for ag ricultural purposes. ' According to tho San Francisco Bulle tin tho census report will show theso fig , urcs concerning fruit trees in California: "Of almond trees thoro were during tho census year 330,4(51 bearing trees and 405,464 not bearing; of fig trees, 140, 778 bearing and 231, .ICO young trees; lemon, 32,137 benriug, 121,252 not bearing; ornugc, 523, l'JO bearing, 1,- 641,400 not beariug; olive, 2J9.411 bearing, 233,843 not bearing." 1 A remarkablo career iu tho touching professions was brought to a close a few weeks since, learns tlio Bent in Trail tueriyt, by the resignation of Miss Lucy D. Bliss from the principalship of tho Plain Primary School, Stockbridge, Mass. Miss Biiss began teaching iu town when sixteen years old and taught continuously, with tho exception of ono year, for about fifty-four years. Threo generations of Stoekhridgo have begun thoir school life under the instructions of Miss Bliss. ' The NashvillB (Tenn.) American pub lishes a summary of the cost per day of koeping convicts at some of the princi pal peual institutions of tho country. The daily nvorngo cost in twenty-two prisons is 45 C5-100 cents. The cost at the Virginia Penitentiary, which has 905 inmates, is tho lowest, being 18 73-100 cents. Albany Penitentiary and Sing Sing Prison come text in the order of cheapness, tho State of New York being at an expense each day for each convict confined iu thitu of about thirty cents. Tho cost at the Nevada Stulo Prison iu Carson is niucty-sevou ceuts per day, the highest in the list. The carp may now bo considered a New York fish. Tho Mohawk and othor streams of Central New York are full of earn, somo of them wclilima- ns much as fourteen pounds. During the lust nine years tho Kirklund FishStockiug and Protection Society has placed 383 Ger man carp in thu ponds and streams of tho town of Kirkland, N. Y. The Sec retary of the Society in a recent report says: "Wo have demonstrated that carp can 1x5 successfully propagated in this country, and with proper caro can be made a valuable source of revenue to the cultivator and a heap and daiuty articlo of food for all classes." A giant carp was taken through tho ico of the Mo hawk above Uticu last wiuter, and the mill-pouds in the valley where young carp have been placed aro already afford ing excellent sport. Shipowners are much concornod about tho report of General O. M. Poe, of tho United States Engineers, that the waters of the great lakes are becoming lower every year. Tho following figures for five years show the gradual fall: Juno, 1886, Lake Ilurou was 583.13 feet above the sea level; Juuc, 18S7, it was 582.38; Juno, 1888, 5S1.79; June, 1889, 581.04; June, 1890, 581.01; June, 1891, 58 J. 40. The mouth of June is taken because the water is then at its highest. Iu February tho minimum depth is reached, uudtho shipowners ex pect to fee many exposed pluccs -iu that mouth next year. Tiiey are, of course, more troubled about tho rivers empty ing into the lakes thau ubout those water themselves. The Sault Caual now shows u depth of fourteen feet four iuches ouly, aud at G rosso Pointe, the entrance to the Djtroit Hiver, inauy vessels have grounded this seasou ou ac count of tho low water. Iu the old days of Bhallow bouts aud tint-bottomed steamers tho plummet was still used, but uow that their places have been taken by vessels with deep holds, thu state of the water is a matter of gravo considera tion. General Poo says that the rain fall in tho lake country during the last five years has beeu below tho normal, and that this accounts for the low water tlie likes. The shipowners, who eso great bodies of water by ' -ins, are hardly reassured, ' " whether ill to build "WHEN MY SHIP COMES 1N. "When my ship cornel In, runs the young man's song, "What brave things shall I do With the strength of my wealth and the Joyous throng Of friends stout-hearted and truel" Be watches and waits 'neath storm and sun By the shore of his life's broad sen, And the days of his youth are quickly run, Yet never a sail sees he. "My ship has gone down!" in soberer strain Sings the man, and to duty turns. He forgets the ship In his toil and pain, And no longer his young hope burns. Yet again by the shore he stands grown old With the course of his years well spent, And gating out on the doop behold, A dim ship landward bent! No banner she flies no song are borne From her decks as she nears the land; Silent with sail all sombre and torn She Is safe at last by the strand. And lot To the man's old a has brought Not the treasures he thought to win, But honor, content and love life-wrought, And he cries, "Has my ship come InP' .If. A.deW. IIotf,Jr.,in Harper1 tWeekly. MALCOLM'S IDEAL, BY ANNA SHIELDS. "She must be tall, Bab; sho must bo graceful as a willow branch, with eyes of midnight darkness, classic features, hair liko tho ravon's wing." Bab, who was stirring cake, looked up at tho deep window-seat that separated tho old-fashioned kitchen trora thu garden beyond. Seated there, swinging one foot id'y, sat Malcolm Hoyt, describing the future Mrs. Malcolm as she existed in his youthful imagina tion. "Well?" Barbara said, presently, after a glance from the tall boyish figure and frank, handsome face, to a smalt mirror that reflected hair of burnished bronze, tho true auburn, and numorous freckles. "Weill Tall, dark, classically featured. Any other perfections?" "Accomplished, of course. Sho must dance like a sylph, siug like a nightin gale, draw, play ou the piano " "Make cake?" suggested Bab, vigor ously stirring her batter. "Why, no Mrs. Hoyt will not need to make cake, I thiuk. Not but whnt it is very jolly to know how," he added, hastily, "but Mrs. Clark might resont any invasion of her c?pe:ial depart ment." "Yes, I see," said Bab, dryly. "You don't want your wife to be a kitchen-maid.-' Malcolm blushed furiously; lie was not quite twenty-one, and had not for gotten how to blush. "I don't mean that at all," he (aid, and then laughing heartily, added, "don't you think we are talking con siderable nonsense, Bab?" "I don't know," said Bab, slowly. "You say your father wants you to mar ry, and as you are in quest of a wife, you might as well have somo idea of what you would prefer." "Just like choosing a necktie," said Malcolm, "though I thiuk I should feel more interest iu tho necktie. By tho way, what is your ideal, liab?" "I haven't considered," said Bab, bending her face low over tho pan into which sho was pouring the cake. I "Nonsense!" said Malcolm, j "As if a girl ever lived to be eighteen without an ideal." Then Bab violated tho truth with a flaring voice, aud blight eyes, for she 1 laid I "My ideal doesn't sit on kitchen window-sills aud talk nonsense, at any rate." "You don't know what he might do under sufficient provocation," said Ma' colni, teosingly. "I have seen Steve Hale look longingly at my perch within the last teu minutes." "Stephen Hale!" cried Bab, scorn fully, and lifted the pan to carry it to tho ' room beyond, where the tiro was lighted In summer. I Her heart was swelling with indigna tion. She was only a farmer's daugh ter, she told herself, and Malcolm Hoyt ! was heir to a magnificent estate and tor- tune, college bred, and could marry in aristocratic circles. But to think she ! jould look at Stephen Halo, her father's i "help," a man who could not read I It was insulting, little Barbara thought, ind she took an unreasonably long time to adjust t'-e cakepan on tho oven-bars, ' tnd pile on fresh wood iu the stove. I "Good-bye!" shouted a cheery voice, presently. "I'm oil to tho postollice, but I'm coming to tea to eat some of that cake. "I've a great mind to scorch it," thought Bab, spitefully. "I would too, If it wasn't father's favorite." 'I do believe she is fond of Steve,' thought Malcolm, as ho swung himself into the saddle. "She blushed as red as a peony when I mentioned him. I sup pose it would bo what my father calls a suitable match, but she's a thousand times too good for him. Why, she's as good a Latin scholur as half our col lege fellows, aud she sings so beauti fully, that it is a burning thame she has had nothing but a concertina to accom pany her voice." Then his reverie took another turn, and he thought; "I won der if father is ill!" It was the nineteenth century, and Mulcolm was an ouly child, deuied no indulgence from his iufancy, but he never thought of his father as thu "gov ernor" or the "old man." His mother was but a memory, for when he was five years old, her golden-haired beauty wai hidden under the daisies. Ha liked to think his great, blue eyes aud crisp, bloui curls were like those in his mother's portrait, but imagination was more potent thuu actual memory iu le ralliug her. "I wonder if "father really is ill!" he thought, jogging along slowly, "lie seems so anxious to have me settled. And that meaus iuurru?iV llesuciu. to think 1 will weary of de.i"ld home, ii I have OO fiuly ties tu bind-'i there." quisitc, graceful and accomplished be ing he had endeavored to describe to Barbara. It was odd that even with this mental vision before him he thought what a home Bab would make of the stately pilo that was to be bis inheri tance. "There is not much that is home-like about it now," ho thinks, "for Mrs. Clark is ton old to fuss much, and I im agine the servants havo it all their own way. But how Bab's little trim figure and red hair would lighten up those big gloomy rooms." A week later, ho is on his way to New York, to visit his aunt, to see society, and) by his father's express desire, to find a wife. Heart-whole, fancy free, he mingles with the guests who gather at Mrs. Markham's, his aunt's; escorts his pretty cousin Mabel to opera, theatre, concert; dances gracefully with ono belle, takes another out to supper, makes himself agreeable with a third on a sleighing party, escorts a fourth for a promenade, and so on sixth, seventh, eighth, num bers indefinite, coming under his care pro tern., but not one stirring his heart ns Bab's cordial greeting did when be returned from college. Bab ! There is scarcely a frolic of his lonely childhood that is not associated with Bab. How many times has her mother called him in from snow-ball fighting or coasting frolic, to eat crisp, hot doughnuts or gingerbread! How many candy-pulls has he had with Bab at one end of tho sweet, sticky mass and himself at the other! Bab is not his ideal. That was tall, stately, brunette! Bab is short, merry, brown-eyed and with hair of burnished bronze that Malcolm irreverently calls rod! And then, although thero is no foolish pride about Malcolm, ho has cer tainly moved in more cultivated and ro ll und social circles than Barbara ever saw. He wonders how Bab would look in clouds of tulle, her round white arms circled with bracelets, her glorious hair starred with gems, and mentally decides that she would look "jolly!" A letter from home reached him in the middle of November. "Dear Mr. Malcolm: 1 think I ought to write you about your pa. He won't com plain, and he ain't to say sick, but he's pin inz. and very weak. Barbara Croft is here evrirv dnv. reads to him. ainiza for him. olavs chess and brines bim all sorts of good things she cooks to please his appetite. Hue's the best eirl in the world I ' 'think, but she ain't like your pa's own. He frets for vou. though he won't sav so. aud I think. Mr. Malcolm, if you'll excuse the liberty of my saying so, the time is coming when you will be glad II you come home to cneer mm. "Your obedient servant. "Mart clabkb." "My dear old dad I" thought Mal colm, tearing down stairs with the letter in his hand. "Ho is sick! I was afraid he was last summci, and hero I've been fooliuj away for months while he has been fretting for me!" His remorse was deeper than his neg lect warranted, but ho loved his father, tho ever induhrcnt friend of his life, his one tie in tho dear old homo. And so, making graceful apologies to his aunt, he started at once for Dcerfield. Mr. Hoyt was in the library when ho drove up to the door, and through the window Malcolm could roe the ruddy light from the grate, the deep arm chair, tho figure of his father rccliuing there. But, pausing on the porch, he saw more. He saw that tho dear face was hollow- eyed, haggard, fearfully chaugod. He saw a trim littlo figure bending lovingly over the sick man, coaxing him 'o eat tho dainty luncheon on tho table beside him. Aud ho saw Bab more than onco draw back to hide quivering lips aud eyes filled with tears. "How good sho is," Malcom thought, "to leave her bright home, to comfort a lonely old man." And he stepped soft ly, not to disturb the pretty scene, and went to the back door to send Mrs, Clarke to give notice of his arrival. He was diappointcd when he went in to fiud bis father alone, but he forgot all else in his sorrow at finding such t chango in him. "Why have you not sent for me be fore?" he asked, reproachfully. "I knew you were enjoying your visit, my dear boy. Your letters were liko (fleams of sunshine; Bub rea l thein over and over to me, but I would not lot unv one write but myself, for fear of troubling you." "But you were lonely?" "Yes, very lonely, though Barbara has been very kind. Sho is the gentlest of uurses, the most patient of com panions," then, a little wistfully: "Havo you no news for me, Malcolm?" "None, but what I have written!" "I so wish to see you settled in your home, before I mean, soon." "Married! But if I fail to find my ideal?" "Ah, wo all fail in that." "But father, you would not have me marry without love?" "Noverl" "I saw nobody I loved York." "But, nearer home?" iu New "Your tea is ready, Mr. Malcolm," said Mrs. Clarke at tho door, and Mal- culm obeyed the summons. The subject was not renewed as father and sou sat far iuto the night conversing. Thero were man gutters needing super vision, and again Malcolm reproached himself that all tho care of the estate had fallen upon bits father's feeble bauds white ho was plcasure-seekiug. "But I will never leavo him again," he said to himself us he assisted his fath er to his bed-room. A whole week passed busily, and there came a few days of warui weather, such as November finds often iu her dreury weeks. Barbara was ii the garduu, walking up and down, thinking. Of what ? Of Mrs. Clarke's announce ment a whole week before that had sent her skuriyiug home like a frightened rabbit. Was Malcolm so engrossed with his idea that ho had uot eveu one hour for his old playmate? It hurt her to think so, ind she misled, too, the daily cure sho had voluntarily assumed during hm A "lue !" iUe thought, What happened next was a cruaehinr of gravel under quick foet, and a voics saying: 'Bab, I have come to see why you have deserted my father." It was so sudden that Bab crimsoned as she replied: "He does not need me, now that you are at home." "He asks for you every hour. But, Bab, I did not come onlv on filial duty. I came to say somebody else needs you, longs for you, loves you I Bab, darling; won't you come to the old homo for life! Won't you be mine, dear, my wife my darling?" She could only answer by shy blushes, by vailing the soft, browu eyes to hido their happiness. But Malcolm was sat isfied; and when she askod, presently: "But your ideal, Malcolm?" he answered, triumphantly: "Sho is here in my arms, Bab my first aud only true love." JVt York Ledger. American Pearls. Not all the pearls .come from the Arabian seas or from tho South Pacific islands. A considerable supply is de rived from a mussel found in a number of American rivers. When Do Soto mado his expedition westward from the Florida coast he found that the Indians possessed an abundance of pearls taken out of the rivers. The Tennessee is particularly prolific in these pearl mus sels. They are also found in the rivers of Texas and other States. Sugar Hiver, in Wisconsin, recently attracted much attention on account of its pearls. Al though most of tbem are white, they are found in various colors, such as pur plo, pink, golden yellow, bronze, green, gray, black and all the intermediate ' shades. Somo combine two colors, as a deep metalic purple, over whfoh plays a lovely pink-red light that seems almost to stand out from the surface of the . pearl. Another will be of a rich gray j tint, with greon reflections. Still another is black with dark purple. In brilliancy I of lustre and fairness of texture they can- : not be excelled. In variety and richness of coloring they surpass tho Oriental ' pearls. Quite a number have been sent to Europe, where they have found a ' ready market at good prices. Single ( specimens have sold at $2000 and more. When a number of theso pearls are ar- I ranged together iu a brooch with small' diamonds to throw out their colors the ' effect is superb. Something over $100,- ' 000 worth were found on the banks of Sugar River within the limits of one 1 small township lost summer. Hew Orleunt Picayune. The Cowboy's Quirt St. Louis sends out every year about 30,0U0 whips of a peculiar character known as the quirt. No one but a cow- . boy, a wild Westerner or Mexican has any use for such an articlo, but a-.vny out ' on the plains it is indispensable, as it an- ; swers the purpose both of a whip and a ' life-preserver. A quirt is a solid leather i whip, with the handle loaded with shot and so heavy that the thickest skull will j yield to a blow from it. Missouri holds a practical monopoly in the manufacture of this curiously named article, St. Louis ! making the most and others coming out of the State Penitentiary nt Jefferson City. At least 350,000 leather whips are made in St. Louis or near to it, and it is often asked where they all go to. i As a matter of tact, this city stands nl- , most alone in this manufacture, for while light buggy whips aro made iu vurious places, leather whips are not made in large numbers outside of Missouri, al though there aro factories in New York,' Philadelphia aud Wo3t Virginia. One reason why St. Louis holds the fort is that this is one of the cheapest, hido mar- i kets in tho world, and instead of buying tunned leather the plan here is to buy green hides and literally make the whip! out of raw material. Ht. Louii Glubi Democrat. Heniiiif One's Self Speak. "It is a singular thiug," says a phy sician, "that a man does not hear his own voico exclusively through his ears. The prevalence of throat deafness is a proof to the laymen of the connection between the ears and throat, and this in ability to hear one's self speak just as others hear us is another instance. Iu some peoplo this peculiarity is very marked, and in my case, if I speak iuto a phonograph and let tho machine grind out the touuds again, I don't recognize the voice at all. In regard to singing, the varying ability to hear one's self with the ears pluggei up with cottoa mikes itself evident, for whilo oud member of a chorus will only hear tho blending harmony, or discord, another will hear little beyond his or her vwn voice, and makes occasional bad breaks in conse quence. I know a mau who used to sing a very fair baritone, but whose voice is now ouly adapted to the weakest falsttto. Yet he doesn't realize the chauge, and I believe ho honestly thinks he sings as well as ever. This apparent impossibility may be a dispensation of Providence to prevent men with excep tionally ugly voices beiug driveu to suicide. L'hirayo Harold. Fairies iu All Countries. Below I give a list of the names by which the fairies have been known iu the various countries: Fairies, elves, elle-folks, fays, . urchins, ouphes, ell maids, ell-women, dwarfs, trolls, horns, uisses, kobolds, duendes, brownies, k necks, stronikarls, fates, wights, uu diues, nixies, salamanders, goblins, hob goblins, poukes, baushees, kelpiesr pix ies, peris, dijiuns, genii aud guomes. St. Lou it Jlepullic. The Earth and Mau Compared. If it were possible for mau to con struct a globe 800 feet in diameter, aud to place upon any part of its surface an atom one-four thousand three hundred aud eightieths of an inch iu diameter aud cue oue-huudred anj veutieth of an inch in height, it would correctly denote the proportion In in li-'ara to the earth i upon hicb. ' d. Imuh lis- SCIENTIFIC AMi NDUSTRIAL. A pneumatic shoe sole is sew. Sydney, New South Wales, has a 12, 000,000 electric light. I A company has been organized at Grand Rapids, Mich., for the manufac- , ture of paper matches. . Many metals, such as gold, silver and I platinum, are now caused to volatilize ' by means of the electrio current. j Concentric wiring for electric work is rapidly gaining ((round, it being re- i garded as safer for lighting purposes than . the two wire system. ' I The new system of transmitting ' power by means of compressed air, which was recently tried in Offenbach, showed a loss of but thirteen per cent. -iu the daily output. j The recent losses by fire in the cargo of ships carrying cotton has shown that Cottonseed oil, when held in the cottoa ! bn the outside of the bait, rapidly oxi dizes and generates spontaneous com-' bust ion. A disinfectant which combines cheap-- I oess with general worth is found in permanganate of potash. One ounce will 1 make a bucketful of disinfectant. It is , a crystal and can be kept in this state un til ready for use. j The Cambria Navigation Company, of Wales, has recently build for one ot its ' coal pits a ventilating fan which is 1 claimed to be the largest ever construct ed. Under favorable conditions the fan ' will deliver 500,000 cubic feet of air per minute. As an antidote for a consumptive ten dency cream acts like a charm, to bo used instead of cod-liver oil. Also aged people, invalids, and those who have feeble digestion or suffering from dull-; 1 ness as well as growing children, will be 1 greatly benefited by taking sweet cream in liberal quantities. An ingot of nickel steel weighing more than twenty-five tous has been cast 1 in the Homestead Steel Works, and it is to be rolled .into a single armor plate for the United States monitor Monterey. ' It is the largest of tho nickel steel ingots yet cast in the mill, but nn effort is to ba ' made to cast an ingot to weigh more , than fifty tonj. France is fortunate in possessing 1102 mineral springs, of which 1027 are turned to account, and Algeria has forty , seven in me. Of the total in France 319 are sulphurous, like that of Amelie-les-I Bains; 354 are alkaline, such as Vichy; 135 are ferruginous, for instance Orez j za, aud 219 aro of various sorts, some containing common salt, others sulphate ! of sodium, and a third group sulphate of lime. A California physician has invented an attachment for gas burners to stop the flow of gas automatically when tho gas is blown out. The device accom plishes its purpose by means of the ex pansion and contraction of a liquid in a hermetically sealed receptacle, so that when tho gas is extinguished the contrac tion of the liquid operates leverj which control a safety valve, thus closing and shutting oil the ga. The Prussian Government has made a report upon its buildings struck by light ning between 1877 aud 1886. Thero wore 53,502 buildings used ior official purposes iu Prussia; 264 of these were struck, or one-half of one per cent, per thousand annually. Of the total num ber, fifteen only were fitted with con ductors, and only ono of these escaped injury. Generally the conductors were found to bo either dangerous or useless. Iu six they were not touchel. Maps Used as Trumpets. A man can be more politely insulted in Paris than in any city in the world. A gentleman who uudertook to speak in public there recently expressed himself iu such a low tone of voice that the audience were unable to hear him. He was lecturiug upon a geographical sub- irf. unit r(,tiitt itf A mm, A i.itlt. thi-pe feet square had beeu generously dis- tributed. 1i-Rntlv one nf thn sodience rolled his map iu the form of a very long at tenuated lamplighter, inserted the smill end in his ear aud turned the other end toward the speaker. It was rathor a ludicrous performance, but not a laugh was heard among the polite assemblage. Iu two minutes, however, ever, map in the audience was turned into an ear trumpet, and the speaker saw himself confronted with a sort of mammoth por cupine, whoso uearost quills almost , touched him. He at ouco spoke louder. 'eio Yurk J'elajram. A Straugo Fish. The receeding tide left a fish en tangled iu the weeds at the head of Cache slough, at Dixon, Cal., one day lust week, aud it was captured, but tho most experienced fishermen in this vicinity cannot say positively to what species it belongs. It was apparently a youug fish aud weighed eight or nine pounds. Tho muzzle projected over the mouth, tho nostrils were situated ou the uuderside of the muzzle, tho gill opcuiugs were lateral in fact, so much of iu descrip tion tallied exactly with that of a young thark. It also has a double row of teeth and a long black tongue. No one there abouts seems to know whether or uot a shark has a long tongue or ever visits fresh water. San Prancitco ICzautiutr. Gorgeous Palace of un Empress. The Empress of Au-itrin's new palace at Corfu ha cost six bundre 1 thousand dollars. The bill for tho wood carvings in the Pompeian suite of seven rooms, which is the greit feature of the house, amounted to fifteen thousand dollars. It may be hoped that the Express will be more satisfied with this abode thau she was with a villa she built a few years kgo in the neighborhood of Vienua, for alter it was finished she took a dislike to the place, and has never lived there, al though upwards of four hundred thou sand dollars had been expended ou thu houae uud grounds. Oncc a- Wick, 'A JAPANESE AMUSEMENT. WKESTLINC 18 THfl LEADING SPORT OT THE EMPIRE, A Contest Between the Typhoon and She Stone Giant In Yokohama Excitement Amonjr Spectators, Wrestling is the leading sport in Japan. In the big cities the wrestling ground is square and surrounded by two roped galleries. Women occupy the up per tier. The ring is about twenty feet in diameter and raised about two feet above the ground floor. It is strewn with sand and surrounded by a dmlblo embarkment of bags of straw. It is cov ered by a toof, decorated with lanterns and flags and supported by four slanting red pillars. A contest between tho Typhoon and the Stone Giant in Yokohama was wit nessed recently by a correspondent of the Seattle Pont-Intellijencer. The wrestlers were accompanied by frieuds and several coolios carrying lacquer boxes containing tho costumes for the ring and toilet articles. They aro fa mous wrestlers aud were dressed Iiko noblemen. Whilo undressing they talked together in a friendly manner, smoked cigars and drank imported beer. The ring costume consisted of large silk handkerchiels with fringed edges tiod aronnd the loins. They were immense fellows solid, broad aud muscular, but not tall. The Typhoon was about four feot and seven inches in height, and the Stone Giant was a littlo more than five feet. Both had straight, thick, jet black hair dressed in the o'd-fashion style, and the barbor bad great difficulty in fixing the hair firmly at tho nape of the neck. When noblemen, who pat tronized them, entered tho dressing room they jumped up,niakiug tho joints crack and stretching their limbs. At the sound of a drum on tho tower at the entrance to tho grounds the wres tlers put on velvet aprons and several belts, tokens of former victories. With pendent arms, preceded by the four judges and followed by a filo of other wrestlers and several attendants, they en tered the enclosure and marchod around. The spectators had reached a high pitch of excitement. They shouted loudly, clapped their hands, and wrapped on tho balustrades with their fans. After tho parade all seated themselves around the ring, the opponents facing each other. Each of the judges stepped to one of the poles and squatted down. The attend ants placed a bucket of water and a ves sel containing salt on the top ofthe em bankment. The wrestlers took off their aprons and belts, jumped iuto ring and truck many athletic attitudes that caused applause and enlivened the betting. Refreshing themselves with a drink of water and a pinch of salt, thjy squatted on the sand, facing each other as a kiud of salutation, aud then rose with their arms extended and their fingers bent to catch hold of each other. Then they be gan to stamp the ground and repeatedly rushed at each other to get a firm grip. Stone Giant's only endeavor during tho whole fight seemed to be to press down his oppoucnt by his weight, aud to push hiui out of the ring. But tho dark olive body of the Typhoon always injinagoJ to struggle away from the lump of flesh that threatened to crush him, aud ho tried to improve his grip at every op portunity. At last ho seized his op ponent by the leg rnd made him hop backward. The spectators reared with laughter. They had got near tho em bankment. Stone Giant once more threw himself on the "dwarf," as he called him, angrily, and almost succeeded iu bouncing him over the line. Tho two judges nearest them stood nt the line, for as soon as one stepped over it tho match was over. I Typhoon becatno euraged, but all his twisting, wriggling, pushing, an 1 other tricks were of no avail against the 2't') 1 pounds. So they fought for twenty, , thirty, forty minutes. Typhoon was cettiusf tired. Several times ho wa pressed to the ground, nud it became more auJ more d'lnc,l!t to ''o1'1 l,lcJ ! other, as they perspired freely. During all this time their movements had looked somewhat theatrical; it seemed as if they had learned to pose for and exaggerate every situation of the combat. B-.it uow they were in dead earnest, and they wished to come to a close. For an in stant Stone Giant lost his foothold, ami Typhoon, getting all his strength to gether, lifted him up from the earth ami hurled him over thu emliaiikiucut. It was a marvelous acrobatic feat. The judges rose aud tho manager pro nounced Typhoou to bo the victor. The spectators got up from their seats, shouted, and threw presents into thu ring. He bowed and bowed ugaiu, put ting both hands ou his knees. .Many scraps of paper tame flying down from the tiers iu which tho presents of sums of money were announced aud the addresM-s where ho could scud for them. Attend ants picked them up and Typhoon inarched otf with his suite. j Muiuniilb-d Indians. I Dr. W. M:ow, uf Pendleton, Ore gon, who is the guc-.t of Dr. Calvin J. I Morrow, of this city, has with him a I couple of mummified bodies of Indians, fouud by him ou Long Island, an island in the Columbia H ver, which was used . as an Iudiau burying ground in centu ries gone by. One is the b dy of an age I aborigine all twisted a id gnarled, llo was probably fifty or sixty years of a'o when ho died, and has the appearance of having died of starvation, which probt bly accounts for the prosei vatinu. The other is thut of a child, who was proba bly about eight years old. Physician who have examined the bodies cannot account for tho preservation of tho bod ics,as thero is uo evidence of auy attempt at embalming, and the moccasins iu which the feet of the old Indian aiu en cased seem to have escaped the ravage of tune even belter than thy body. Leziwjlon (Mo.) InteHijennr. The greatest hi riding record it. 7 13 aud ouo-halt hours. ili. lance bicycle miles in tifiy lour NEVER GIVE UP. J Krrer give op I It Is wiser and better i Always to hope than once to desjuilr; ' Fling oft the load of doubt's cankering fetter. And break the dark spell of tyrannical care. Never give opt or the burden may sink yon; , Providence kindly has mingled the cup; And in all trials or troubles, liethink you. The watch-word of life must be, never give up P Never give up I There are chances and changes Helping the hopeful a hundred to one; And, through the chaos, high wisdom ar ranges Ever success, if you'll only hope on. Never give up I for the wisest is boldest, Knowing that Frovidenoa mingles thecup And of all maxims, the best, as the oldest, Is tho true watch-word of "Never give upf Never give upt Though tho graps-shot may rattle, Or the full thunder-cloud over you burst; Stand like a rock, and the stor.n and the battle Little shall harm you, though doing their worst , Never give up! If adversity presses, Providence wisely has mingled the cup; And the best counsel in all your distresse?. Is the stout watch-word of "Never give np!" Martin F. Tupptr, in New York Weekly. HUMOtt OF THE D.W.' Benjamin Franklin wa the original lightning calculator. Crops that grow by the electric light Wild oats. Dotlon Journal. "Ask poppor," said thu fire-cracker fine when a match was suggested. That money talks I don't deny; To me it always says, "Cloud-by." fucfr. It is odd enough that burglars take such risks in a safe opeuiug. Jlillimore American. The head waiter reminds one of mat rimony. He is a high menial, it will bo remembered. A stingy man can be relied upon to keep everything but his promise. Elmira Gazette. "Capital punishmcut," as the boy said when the school-mistress seated him with the girls. Bazar. A man finds tho poorest companion ship when ho "entertains a suspicion." Waeh ington Star. Your friends may not know mucli, but they know what they would do' if they were in your place. Atchiton Ololie. Stranger (brightly) "Fine dayl" Chronic Grumbler " Ye-es locally probably raining somowherc." I'uci." Now is tho time when the sin-ill boy of the family is caught poaching on. his mother's preserves. Baltimore Aineri tan. All animals have their good points, but for abuudauco of the sumo none can compete with tho porcupine. Te&ii bijtiny. It isn't so much that a man objects to pay tho dabt of - nature; it is nature of the debt that trouble him. lhatoit U'rantcrijit. The peacock may not be inclined to gossip, but he loves to spread a highly colored tale about tho neighborhood. Elmira Ouiette. A man can always keep himself iu good credit so long ns he doesn't ask for it. Paste this in your hat and dodgo tho fatal request. Puck. "If I were only iu politics," mused the car-horso as he started up tho hill, "what a lot I could do with the pull I h a ve . " Haiti more A in trica n . "I don't look liko a very formidable fellow," soliloquized the houest milk dealer; "and yet I'vo madu lots of bigger men take water." Life. Blinkers "Hello, Wiukers. I hear you married a woman with an independ ent fortune." Wiukers "No-o; 1 mar ried a fortune with an independent woman. Mudgo "I hear that Thinning's girl has induced him to give up his cigars." Yabsley "H'mh! That's more than auy of tho boys could Clo."InJiauajiolu Journal. Peoplo who are constantly saying "what is due to society" often forget al together what ii due to themselves, to say nothing of what is due to tho b itcher aud baker. "Sir," said tho tailor, "my suits talk forme." "But, my dear sir!" expostu lated tlio customer, "can you expect mo to bebevo statements made out of tho w hole cloth." Baltimore American. He "You say you love me, but can not be my wife. Is it because I am poor? There are better thiugs iu this world than money." She "quite true, but it takes moucy to buy them." JSntoit Jm l-jct. TUB HA1.0 MAM KKJOK KS. I love the crisp, cool nutu-itu d iy, Th"y fill my soul wit'i nloe. For I lien in pe icj 1 go my ay Witu not a tly on me. 01. Ian "KeiMjmbcr, my son, to al ways keep your expenses w ithin your iu come." Young-uu "lint a belter plan than thut. I propose bringing my iu- come u j) to my expenses.'' I ii.ii..-oh Jijuraa . "Diugiiss is a mail of expensive' habits, is he uot, Shadlmllf" "Yes. 1 in; Jss's habits since 1 have been ac quainted with hint have cost me lao", without counting a cent for iuterest." Cii'-no TriO'iim. He "I wi-di you would sing that de-.,' old song, "Backward, Turn li H-k .u J, O Time, in Thy Flight." Swet ,tiiii .41 ...l.rl.f IUl. I11..II,... Ill, I.U till .ill - but I w ill turn the clock bacii if that will do." Attc Yurk Pitu. "Does his in-anity ussuaio a violent form.''1 luipiired the physwiau.' "No, ir," responded the relative iu char ;c of the iinfortuuule man, "Imt he'sal.vavs helping himself to u hati llitl of so:iu' Hung or oilier whenever he pr -s i pel nut stand. lie imagine lie's a polnu luuu . ' ' t U t'-U'jo I I'ibuiLe,