TEE FOREST REFDELICAN It rublljhed rrery Wedaeriay, kf J. E. WENK. Offles) In Bnieoubaugh ft Co.'a Building BLU. ITRKIT, TIOHMTA, T. Terms, . . . tIMO pmr Yr. It. nkmiptlnM mini r RATES OP ADVCRT18I0.' EPUBLICAN. On. Bijnar, on. Inch, on. Insertion On. Bcinare. on. Inch. on. month .. nn Hi i iibm am Innh thnM mnnth. .. 909 On. Squar., on. Inch , on. .ar 10 W Two fifinr. one Tr .............. 11 001 Onurter Column, one year... .. Tlnif Column, on. year.. .......... On. Column, on. year . I Aral advertisements tea osnto pa ach lntwrtlon. Marring, and death notice gratia, , All bill, (or yaarly advert tssmenta collect quarterly. Temporary advertisement mtlav thn Itrn month. Oomaptmdenc toilette frn 18 lutt f h Country. N. -m h. .LTLI VOL. XXIV. NO. 45. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1892. Sl.50 PER ANNUM. b. paid in advance. Job work' ib d.liyerr. FOREST Chicago is wrestling now with the smoke problem, but has not vet solved it. - The products of the farms, mines, for ests and fisheries of the United States are valued at $25,000,000,000 a year. Pennsylvanians are about to erect a monument to Old Hambletonian, the fa ' mous founder of the race of American trotters. Senator Stanford believes that mag netism can be develcped in men and horses by intelligent effort, and in breed ing thoroughbreds on his California stock farm he has made experiments to that end. The boundary controversy between Massachusetts and New Hampshire, nftet 200 years, has been finally settled. The early surveyors, explains the New York Press, did not understand the variations of the magnetic needle; hence the quarrel. In addition to the usual advantages conferred by leap year on cnergetio young ladies, 1892 will give them fifty three Sundays in which to employ those advantages. The year is going to be a crucial one for bachelors, predicts the Brooklyn Citizen. Simon Wolf, of Washington, is prepar ing for the publication of a list of the Hebrew soldiers and sailors who have done service in tho wars of the United States, including the war of the revolu tion. At the last annual reunion of the Eleventh Corps, of the Army of the Poto mac, General Stahl said that half of his old regiment "was composed cf Israclitss with the courage of the Maccabees." Many of the statesmen and public men of Chile are of pretty much the same stock as many of our own people, de clares the Chicago ilorald. Their im mediate ancestors were Europeans, and some of their publio men are born Euro peans. The new Chilean Minister of Pub lic Works, Don Augustin Edwards, was born in Chile of English parents. . He is a groat favorite with the British residents, and a Valparaiso newspapi says: "Those who know him best love to think of him as an Englishman." Science has been meditating upon tho subject of the probable increase of the population in the United States, and it presents us with these startling con clusions: . Since 17S0 the increase has been from 1,260,000 to the neighbor, hood, in 1890, of 65,000,000. I f this ratio of increase is a fair basis for pre diction we shall have at the time when the ten-year-old boy of to-day shall be forty years of age, in 1920, something like 160,000,000 of people in the United State?, and when that mm of forty reaches bis seventieth birthday (1950; we shall have closo upon 400,000,000 population. . Joseph Wallace, in the Popular Scienco News, says that our climate has cer tainly been much modi Sod within the past 2000 years. "There have been fifteen c'iuiatio changes since the begin ning of the glacial age," he writes, "each change lasting 10,500 years, and each change reversing the season in tho two hemispheres, the polo which had enjoyed continuous summer being doomed to undergo perpetual whiter for 10,500 years and then passing to its former state for an equal term." The present epoch of a more genial temperature at this Mason of the year in this northern hemisphere began about 1500 years ago, , and for &000 years to come, writes Mr. Wallace, "we may reasonably expect a gradual modification of our climate." L. J. To illustrate the strength of the prej udice against corn in Great Britain, mention may be made of an instance iu the city of Glasgow, Scotland, where it was proposed by a Member of the Poor House Board to substitute maize for costlier food in that institution. The mere suggestiou brought a storm about his ears, because of his inhumanity in thrusting upon defenseless paupers a food which was only fit for pigs. American canned goods of all kinds are largely sold in Europe, but canned corn is al most never seen there. If a demand for it could be created it would mean hundreds of thousands of dollars yearly to tho proprietors and workers of our canneries. Agents of the Department of Agriculture have been exhibiting the cereal in this form also abroad with the hope of teaching the people to like it. Wherever corn dishes of various sorts have been prepared and distributed by them they have been received so favora bly as to give good grounds for confi dent expectation in this regard. Tho use of the potato, the tomato and . the tobacco plant, all of American origin, has spruad through Europe and added to the comfort and happiness of millions. There seems to be more hope for corn now than there wm for any of tboso CQutiuoduie. at the beginning. GOD BLES3 HER. Bbe never burned with passion's 3rea, Bhe never craved a mawkish fame; Her nerves were never strung on wires, But sunshine followed where she came. Her ways in school were circumspect, And made her seem a trifle prim; Her maiden manners were correct, Her cheerful goodness naught could dim, aJtboughtih. ne'er disdained life's Joys, Bh. ne'er forgot religion's claims; n Sunday school her girls and boys Were all imbued with life's grand aims. In church she ne'er seemed sanctified, And only fit for angel sphere; While others talked of Him who died, She worked in love for mortals hore. She married poorly, in the Knee That life's groat goal is glittering gold; But for her pains had recompense In love of man in God's own mold. And further on in life there cam. A group of children in her home, Who honored e'er their father's name, And from her guidance ne'er would roam, Old age came ou, and children brought Grandchildren to the sacred place Where mother, wife and maid had taught Grand lessons to Ills grandest race. Theu "earth to earth, and dust to dust," Was said at last above the bier W here lay the flower of earthly trust, Whose symbol rose to heavenly sphere. God bless the homes such women make ! God bless the world where such are rife! For hearts would love and never break 1 If but such shrines were found in life. , Earl Marble, in Philadelphia Press. PHILIP'S FIRST SUIT. BY EDMUND LYONS. HAT had become of Mablo Stone? That was the prob lem that puzzled the people of Squa- :jf lacket, and they r it were no nearer to a solution in January 'i! than thev were in jfk July, when, one op j??V pressively hot morn ing, Mabel s place at tbo breakfast table was vacant. and Deacon Stone learned from a servant, whs had been kept swake by a toothache, that his daughter had orison at four o'clock in the morning and gone out hurriedly in to the gray dawn. She had not returned at nightfall, and when it was ascertained that her aunt in New York, whom she frequently visited, was ignorant of her whereabouts, and that her brother, who was trying to build up a medical prac tice in Boston, had not seen her or heard from her, a dark suspicion arose in Squalacket that she bad run away with Philip Mesmer; for Squalacket was a New England town, and every inhab itant in it had grown weary of compar ing his or her own goodness with that of the neighbors, aud arrived at a comfort able if somewhat monotonous conclusion that the home virtues wei'e a little purer and rather more secuioly rooted thau any othes. If there is such a thing as an excess of righteousness, Squalacket knew whit it was, and a ripple of wrong doing ap pearing upon the otherwise unruffled surface of its purity was like a little flavor of onion lurking in a bowl of salad. "Half suspected,'! it animated the whole. So the people of the strait laced town were perhaps unduly hasty in grasping a forbidden fruit when they declared, with something nearly ap proaching unanimity, that Philip Mes mer and Mabel Stone had eloed. To be sure, the circumstantial evidence was strong against the young couple. Philip was only twenty-two, and though all his friends said he had iu him the making of a great lawyer, he had not yet been called to the bar. This would not hare mattered greatly, because his life lay before him, and his crusty old uncle allowed him enough money to cover his bare expenses, with the provision thut it should all be returned, with accrued in terest and by increasing installments, as soon as his profession began to yield him an income. But Philip, though not yet a barrister, was too good a lawyer not to be ignorant of the dangers of delay. He had already, he hoped, carried one suit to a successful issue. It was a suit for Mabel's hand in marriage, and the young lady had rendered judgment in his favor. But Deacon Stone had reviewed this de cision, reversed it, and thrown Philip's case, on motion of appeal, out of court. He said his daughter was his heiress, and, as he was rich, no penniless young fellow, on the strength of his expecta tions, should marry her. Philip, however, was not easily non suited. At a last interview with Mabel, before be weut back to Philadelphia to digest more law, he offered to release her from her engagement to him; but Mabel was not the sort of girl to take advan tage of his generosity, and perhaps he knew that before be exercised it. Love (especially 'ove with a profound knowl edge of lot behind it) is rarely quite un selfish, ry , promised to wait for him, if necessary, until time was no longer young, and he assured her that he would return to Squulucket to claim her as soon as he had mastered the contents of his first brief, which he expected with the uew year; for he was called to the bar about Christmas, acd in Jauuary the case o. Colly vs. West would be tried in the Superior Court, and Colly, who was a riend of his dead father, was pbdged to ictain him as junior counsel to show tho jury that West .'ad cut down a tree which stood evemy on the dividing line of the West nud Colly properties, and laughed derisively and scurriously railed at Colly lor saying that bis half of the trunk should have been respected aud left s'andiug. "And it that uu' a good cose aud a Sure wiuuer, darling," said Philip, en thusiastically, as he folded Mabel in bis arms, "1 wonder what is. Don't you?" Tbcu he kilted her again, and said h Iff WXMi wouldn't weary her with the dry details of the law. It was very encouraging. And thus hopefully they parted. Philip went back to Philadelphia by a night train, and Mabel returned to her father's house.. But the deacon gave her a very bad half-hour after supper. He said Philip was nothing better than a beggar, dependent upon his uncle's bounty; that he was a mean fellow, and too dull to succeed at any bar except a marble topped one with bottles behind it, and somebody with him before it to pay his reckoniug. He said many other things about her lover that Mabel, being a high spirited girl, could not stand at all. She went to her room when she could restrain her tears no longer, and when she had locked her door, and relieve'1 her heart with such tears as she had not shed since her mother died, twelve years beforo,she decided that she could never again have a homo until Philip made one for her. She had promised her lover that she would never marry any other man; but she had also promised her father that she would not wed without his consent. The situation was rather conflicting, and only one thing was quite clear. to her; that was that neither Philip nor the deacon should have an opportunity to urge her to break either pledge. She trusted her lover.and she trusted herself; and above all, she bad a higher trust that her dead mother had taught her. So when she packed up a few articles of clothing in a small hand-bag, counted her savings, which amounted to about seventv-five dollars, and stole away with the dawn unobserved by any one in the house except the tooth-torturod servant, she felt lonely, and perhaps a little fright ened, but not at all the guilty conscience stricken creature that the deacon and most of the pious people of Squalacket felt assured that she must bo as soon as her flight was discovered. Deacon Stone was not, any time, a man of many ideas. He had only room for one now, and that his wayward and rebellious daughter had gone to Phila delphia to join Philip. Ho hastoned there as fast as steam could carry him, and went at once to the law student's one dingy room in Arch Street. He found its occupant wrestling manfully with the Revised Statutes of Pennsylva nia, and the earnestness with which he assured his visitor that ho was quite ig norant of Mpbel's movements as well as bis own distress as he heard of her flight, wculd have convinced an unprejudiced person that he spoke the truth. But the deacon was a man of very fixed opinions. He called the objectionable quality that usually wou for him his own way "de termination." His fellow church members referred to it as "pig-headedness," but that was only when there was no chance of his hearing of the term so applied. He now openly refused to credit Philip's declaration. But the young man listened to his rambling, vehemently told story, and then with the same coolness and deliberation that afterward greatly helped him in the case of Colly vs. West, he pretty thoroughly cross-examined him. He learned enough about the scene in the parlor the night preceding Mabel's Sight to give him a tolerably clear in sight as to tho actual state of affairs, and his knowledge of the proud, self-reliant character of the girl assured him that w:.cn she returned it would be of her own free-will Whatever efforts he made to find herust be advanced with the utmost delicacy, for ho knew that any thing like publicity would deeply offend her. It vai with great difficulty that he finally persuaded tho 'deacon to refrain from taking tho police into his confi dence; and the old man departed, finally, vowing that if bis daughter were not back in Squalacket bofore the end of the week ho would obtain a warrant for Philip's arrest, and raise such a hue-and-cry after Mabel as would lead to her dis covery if she were still above ground. Other andinore important matters must have claimed his attention, for, so far as Philip could ascertain, he made no fur ther attempt to find the fugitive. And so tho dreary weeks lengthened into months. Mabel's retreat was nearly as muoh a mystery as ever not ai much, for Philip received one short letter from her, which relieved bis anr'cty. She was in New York, and was sa.e and well. She refused to tell him her address, but promised to write tc him aain when events justified surli i course say, when the Philadelphia newspapers announced that Colly had won his suit against West. With, this assurance he was obliged to be contented; and in the euily days of December Philip was called to tho bar. But while one man may lead a horse to the water, twenty meu canuot make him drink; and Philip soon fquud that it is easier to become a barrister thau to 1 find clients. The case of Colly vs. West went over until the next larm of the ; court. The parsimonious uncle had stopped supplies, and if the briefless ! young lawyer had not succeeded in ob taining a littlo literary work as book reviewer for a newspaper, the room in Arch street might have wanted a fire. It was warm and coinrortable enough, however, wheu he hurried into it out of the biting air one evening ; aud, lighting the lamp, .ho saw that two sealed enve lopes lay upon the table. The oue he opened first contained a circular from a New York land syndicate, setting forth the great opportunities offered to obtain prairie homes where the wilderuess would soon be made to blossom like a rose. Tho address on the second envelope was in writing that was strange to him. It enclosed a letter from a lawyer, an nouncing the sudden death of his uncle, and his accession to a reasonably large fortune. Aud now where was Mabel I She would not communicate with him, he knew, until good news readied her. She might learn of a successful issue to the suit of Colly vs. Wes but how was she io bear oi this wiudfull unless he told her of it? He was a comparatively rich man now, but he cared nothing for his wealth if Mabel could not share it with him, and, with u great longing in his heart, he took her last short brave letter from his desk aud laid it on the table, while he drew the lamp toward him. It was beside tho other two envelopes, but b. knew her writiug well, aud looked fondly at the address as he picked up one that bore it. Then he opened it, and drew out the despised land circular. How did that wretched advertisement get there? Suddenly the blood rushed to his forehead as he saw that the addresses on both cmvetopes were precisely similar. Not for a moment did Philip doubt that they had both been written by Mable. But how could such a thing have hap pened? The young man had not wasted his time as a law studont. Ho knew how to weigh evidence, and in half an hour ho was on his way to New York. He has tened to the office of the land syndicate, which having a pressure of business on hand, was still open, shewing people how to acquire homes on the prairie.. He had little trouble in ascertaining that a Miss Mable Stone was one ol its army of workers who addressed envelopes, and a young woman who was in the office gave her address to him. He found her with a long list of names before her, and a box cont lining a thou sand envelopes on the table. She was about to adress the first when he entered, and said, quietly, "Let us do it to gether, Mabel." In her amazement she nearly upset the ink ;' but when he had told his story she was satisfied, and allowed him to help her. Splendidly they did it. Before ten o'clock they had addressed a thou sand envelopes, and earned seventy-five cents between them. Then he left her, but on the following day they journeyed to Squalacket together, and Deacon Stone, though at first inclined to turn them both out of the house, was mollified as soon as he heard of the altered aspect of affairs, and was easily induced to con sent to their marriage. A lawyer was a useful person to have in a family, any how, he said, and as he was thinking of suing tho church trustees for applying five dollars of the funds subscribed for a new pulpit to the relief of a widow whose husband had been killed on the railroad track, it was well to be prepared for emergencies. Philip and Mabel were married when the case of Colly vs. West was tried in the Superior Court. Colly's senior coun sel was unable to attend, and the brunt of the battle fell upon Philip. He woo it triumphantly. The jury gave Collj six cents damages, but that carried thi costs. Harper's Weekly. The Eskimos Surely Starvlny. Hitherto the Eskimos have depended for fo:d upon the whale, walrus, and seal of the coast and the fish of the rivers. The first three animals have also supplied them with clothing, boats, and all other necessaries of life. Fifty years ago the whalers, having exhausted other waters, sought the northern Pacific for whales, pursuing them into Bering Sea, and carrying the war of extermination into the Arctic Ocean. At length the few surviving whales have been driven to the neighborhood of the pole, and their species has become well-night ex tinct on the Alaskan coast. Respond ing to a commercial demand for ivory, the whalers' turned their attention to the walrus and proceeded to wipe them out of existence likewise. Sometimes as many as two thousand of the valuablo beasts would be slaughtered on a single cake of ice, merely for their tusks. Thus a walrus is hardly to be found to-day in those waters where so short a time ago the animals were so numerous that their bellowings were heard above the roar of the waves and tho grinding of tho floes. Seals and sea-lions are now getting so scarce that the natives have difficulty in procuring enough of thoir skins to cover boats. They used to catch and cuie great quantities of fish in the streams, but their supply from this source has recently diminished owing to the establishment of great cannaries which send millions of cans of salmon out of the country an nually and destroy vastly more by waste ful methods. Improved firearms have driven the wild caribou into the inac cessible regions of the remote interior. Thus the process of slow starvation and depopulation has begun along the whole Arctic coast of Alaska, and famine is progressing southward year by year on the shore of Bering Sea. Where vil lages numbering thousands were a few years ago, the populations have been ro duced to hundreds. Boston Transcript. Rome Pythagorean Mysteries. Every lover of rare and curious in formation knows that most of the ancients were "dead set" against beans, but no modern unraveller of old-time mysteries knows why. It may be truly said that there are but few philosophers ot the present day that "know beans." Pythag oras admonished his pupils to "abstain from beans," but on what grounds no oue knows. He was also authority far the old-time superstition that any sen tence written in bean juice could be seen plainly reproduced on the disk of the moon! Andrew Ling says that the ancient folk-lore of beans is a most curious aud interesting topic, because it seems wholly out of the question that we should ever understand what it was all about. Demeter was the patroness of all fruits an 1 vegetables, but the ancients considered it impious to attribute to her the discovery of the baan. Heraclides, on the authority of Orpheus, declared that beans buried iu miuuro pilei forth with became humaa bciugs. St. Louis Republic. Advertising Extraordinary. "We have a shoemaker in our town," say t Quebec, (Canada) man, "whose busi is) in selling overshoes had been almost ruined by a hustling rubber house, and who this winter, to get even, had a great opening sale, at which he gave to every purchaser of shoes a pair of rubber overshoes, upon the soles of which was his advertisement reversed, so that at every step the wearers take through the suow tbey leave bis advertisement neatly printed in their tracks. The effect is magical and powerful. You can scarcely look at the suow any place in Quebec without seeing footprints with this man's name glaring boldly from them." Rochester Uuiun. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Artificial marble grows in use. Plants are grown by electricity.' American looms are being extensively used In England. In Franco and Germany horses are now vaccinated for the glanders. It is estimated by scientists that Colo rado's cliff dwellers existod 10,000 years to its extensive use in electric appliances the price ol platinum has ad vanced fully 100 per cent. It is proposed to unite all the islands of Japin by a system of submarine tele graph cables. The estimated cost is $2,000,000. It is asserted in some Italian and other medical journals that protection has been afforded by heifer vaccine against mea sles, whooping cough and influenza. A French physician recommends vac cinating with steel pens, since ono could easily afford to use a f rnsh one each time, and thus avoid danger of infection from the lancet. An automatic eloctric gas extinguisher depends on the variations in the electri cal conductivity of selenium when ex posed to light, and turns off the gas on the first appearance of daylight. It has been estimated that the motive power furnished by the steam engines of the world represents the strength of 1000 millions of men that is to say, twice as many as there are workmen. A method ol purifying water invented by Dr. William Anderson, and success fully used at Antwerp, Belgium, consists In passing the water through a revolving cylinder containing metallic iron in the form of scraps or filings. Electric roads cost loss than cable or horse car roads. The average cost of the eltctrio roads a mile, including equip ment and roadway, is $1(1,697, while the horse car and cable roads, cost respec tively 171,387 and $330,826. A German physiologist finds that be low the age of twenty there is no ma terial difference between the death rate from consumption among prisoners and that among the ordinary population ; but between twenty and forty the death rate is five times as high amonjr prisoners as among the general population. A curious fashion has found its way into the manufacture of table hardware. Tho handles of table knives are now made of china to match the plate. There are sets for each course. Those for poul try have heads of the victims and littlo fluffy chicks and ducks upon them ; those used with the game course have tiny flights of partridge and mlniaturo long legged snipe painted on them. Recent tests in the use of the phono graph in the Deaf and Dumb Institute at Indianapolis, Ind., show that it is useful in concentrating sound upon the drum of the ear, so that many pupils, otlorwiso deaf, can hear it. It is thought by the Superintendent that he can by this means soon teach the use of their voices to many mutes whose inability to speak is due to the fact that they have never heard speech. The Preside it of Mexico. Porifirio Diaz, the man who makes his home at Chapultepec, is rather disap pointing when one from tho North gets the first sight of him. Whilo the palaco is undergoing repairs at an enormous cost he makes his home in the palace, near the heart of the city. It is a plain building outside, looking- much as the other houses do, but on the inside it is magnificently furnished. Diaz is an Az tec Iudian of the pure blood. He is a short man, with black bair, eyes and mustache. He speaks but little English, and never attempts it in the presence of one from the States. He wears a Prince Albert in every day life, with a stand ing collar and broad, flat lio. He wan born in 1850. From the time he reached manhood he was engaged in fighting his way to the highest position iu the re public Twice he flew to New Orleans for safety, onse returning to Vera Cruz iu the guise of a coal heaver. Ho won his greatest honors at Pueblo, when with 7000 men he defeated his opposition and seized the President's chair. The last election resulted iu his fHvor by 12,000 votes. There are no political parties in Mexico. When the day of election came Diaz had his soldiers at the polls and not a vote out of 10,000,000 population was cast against him, There was no other candidate to vote for. One of the first great acts of this man was to free the country of the bandits. They were so numerous aud daring that no one was safe. They would rush into the city, seize a prominent citizen and carry him away to the mouutuiu for ransom with out a finger being raised against them. But Diaz stopped this. Ho made a contract with the bandits that tbey should have good pay serving the Gov ernment and their crimes forgotten if they would leave their life in the mount ains. Tbey can be seen every day on the paseo, where they stand guard. They are mounted on fine horses, splendidly equipped with carbines aud sabres, and are the most courageous soldiers in the world. Any number of thieves may raid a bank in the City of Mexico and escape to the mountains. Give them three days' start and put these bloodhound soldiers on their trail and not one will get out of the republic. The band knows every inch of the ground under the Mexican sun. They are faithful to Diaz. New York Sun. Split the Singer's Larynx. Professor Schuller, a celebrated Berlin physician, recently had occasion to split in balf the larynx of a well known singer. After seventeen days the wound was pronounced heuled, and curiously enough it was found that the singer not only bad not lost his vocal orgau, but that he is now euabled to use it to much better advautage than heretofore. I kuow of several New York singers who ought to go to Professor Schuller, of Berlin, and get their throats cut lengthwise. New York Recorder. CAPTURING A SMUGGLER. AN INCIDENT IK THR CRTTISB OT A REVENUE MARINE VESSEL. A Woultt-bo Spanlah Snuigarler Off the Florida Coast Overhauled by Uncle Sam . Blurjackcls. Within recent years tho smuggling In southern Florida has been reducod to a minimum, the assiduous cruising of the revenue-cutter having charge of this ground making it exceedingly hazardous, yet occasionally a bold craft ventures in making a run, and it was only a year ago that the United States revenue-cutter McLane was so fortunato as to mako an excellent haul. The cutter was standing over late one aftornoon in the vicinity of Punta Rassa, ou the southwest const, when the spars of a vessel were observed in the distance above an intervening key. To one not familiar with tho southern waters the mere sight of masts would simply have indicated the presence of a vessel and nothing more. Tho McLane's officers, howovor, smelled a very suspi cious object in yonder vessel, and particu larly from tbo fact that sho was on that part of the coast. Running quickly in towards the key, and in such a way n to be unobserved until close at hand, tho McLane suddenly rounded off to tho mouth of tho entranco, and dropped a cutter full of armed seamen under the command of Lieutenant Uberroth. A fow minutes only sufficed for tho cutter to pull alongsido the Btrangcr, which on a hasty glance at the stern was was found to be the Spanish schooner Ansonita. The Spaniard a deck was full of red-capped Cubans aud Mexicans, all armed with savago looking knives, ami shouting and jabbering to ono another like so many monkeys. Without any ado, Lieutenant Uberroth and three or four good men swung themselves up over tho Ansonita's side, and demanded tj sec the captain. The scowling Cubans at this made way for a big burly fellow, who had just ascended from the cabin, and was demanding iu gruff brokeu English tho cause of the visit. "You. papers," was the quick rejoin dcr of the boarding officer." Thoro was at onco evident a good deal of hesitancy, and it was apparent that the Spaniard recognized bo was caught. No papers could be produced, and the boarding officer was about to return to the McLano with this Informa tion for his commanding officer, when a sudden movemont among the Ansonita's crew showed that they meaut tight. Tho McLane's blue jackets wore equal to tho emergency, and covering every ono on deck, the Spanish captain was tumbled into tho cutter at tho point of a revolver. Once aboard tho McLane, ho was kept there, nud orders issued to Lioutenaut Uberroth to pick a prize crew, nud convey the captured craft to Key West. This meaut a run ol lzu miles. Returning to tbo Ansonita, tho Cubans wore quickly secured. A few, though, were put to work on tho cap stan bar, a blue-jacket standing by in tbo mean whilo with a cocked rille, aud the nnobor was run apeak, the jib hoisted, and Inside of ten minutes the Ansonita passed under the McLane's stern uudor jib and mainsail, the bluejackets of the latter ship giving a good-by cheer to their comrades. The Ansonita bad cleared port but au hour when one of those ugly Southwest blows, so peculiar to the Gull, suddenly sprang up. Hero was a fix, indeed, for a young officer. It is bad enough to hare a gale of wiud on one's hands, but to have in addition a lot of prisoners, outnumbering the prizo crew, was an uncomfortable thought. However, the prisoners not needed wore secured to the piu rail arouud the mainmast, and two seamen on guard stood closo at hand. A few of the prisoners wore stationed about the decks to haul ropes, but al ways under guard. Ilie Ansonita, on the first appearance of the gale, was quickly gotten uuder closo reefs, aud with a mere handful of tho jib showing, and the lost reef in the uminsnil, with the foresail stowed, sho continued throughout the night, despite the high sea aud tho water continually corning aboard, to log it off to tho southward. It was a trying night, but might have been worse with a less stanch craft. As daylight broke the gule began rapidly to subside, the last reef in the mainsail was shaken out, then another, then fotuo of tho foresail gotten ou her, until, wheu well on iu the foreuoon, tho Ausouitu appeared off Key West Harbor with only oue reef iu foresail aud mainsail. That afternoon she was lying snugly alongside the Government wharf, her prisoners iu the bauds of tbo Uuited States .Marshal, and ber prize crew sleeping us only tired and exhausted men can sleep. Twelve hours later the McLano followed into port, her commanding officer uot having deemed it advisable to force the cutter against the gule which had spruug up. As a feat iu seamanship ami a nice pice of work iu navigation along a meau and ticklish portion of the coast, the affair of the Ansonita is one of which any young otlicer cau justly feel proud. The vessel was dually disposed of iu the United States courts, some technicality freeing not ouly the Ansonita, but her cuptuiu aud crew. Harper's Weekly, Speed of Railroad Trains. It Is often desirable to relieve the tedium of travel by rail by testing the speed at which the train is running along, and inauy persons amuse them selves by timing this speed by coting, watch in hand, the time ut which the various mile posts are passed. There is a rule, however, which gives approxi mately correct results, which uny oue may practice without reference to a time keeper. The rails average about thirty feet in length ; and tho number passed over in twenty seconds equals, roughly, the number of miles per hour at which the train is traveling. Unless the trulu is running at a very high speed, say over sixty miles pur hour, there is no dif ficulty in counting the number of rails passed over, as there is a distiuct click as the joint betweeu each pair of rails is covered by the wheel. New York Telegram, THE HPFY HOUSBWIF&'iSONA MONDAY. -The clothes I rub, and rinse out and wring, And harbor no care or sorrow ; Asm red while they hang in tho freshening breese; That duty's well done for the morrow, TUESDAY. The garments pure I sprinkle and fold. With never a thought of sorrow, And merrily sing as the iron I swing, This task Is soon done for tho morrow. WEDNESDAY. As the dough I knead In flaky loave, ' My soul no trouble can borrow; My hearty darlings they eat and live; Bo gladly I toll for the morrow. THURSDAY. The needl. I ply with whirling wheel. And banish all care and sorrow, While viewing garments so deftly made To cover my loved ones to-morrow. FRIDAY. As the grime and dust I swoop away, 1 My mind no trouble can borrow, For dead!; disease, which lurks therein, is rou'.d to-day, for to-morrow, SATURDAY. The nourishing food I mix and stir, And joyously sing, for no sorrow Enters my life of labor for love, Bweet rest cometh sure on the morrow, SUNDAY. I go to the Blessed One who knows, Every form of earthly sorrow; He giveth me manna for my soul, Blest comfort to-day and to-morrow. ''Enough for the day is the evil thereof:" , This promise a surcease of sorrow; For gulJanae, and streugtb.ench day I pray,- And joy comuth on the glad morrow, Frances L. Fancher.ln Go ley's Lady B-jok. nUMOU OP THE DAY. A nice new umbrella is used up when it is used at all. Philadelphia Press. The thinner a thing is the inoro it is inclined to spread itself. Oil City Bliz zard. Fame comes only when deserved, and then it is as inevitable as destiny, Texas Sittings. Tho typewriter is said to be tho only wowan a man has tho right to dictate to. Boston Journal. The eyes are the windows of the soul, especially when we hare a pain in them, Jewolers' Circular. The bank-wrecker may bo bailed out ; but tbo bank itself goes down-in Redcap sea of distress. Puck. You can't agreo with a bigot without agreeing with him in thinking that you're a fool. Eliuira Gazette. It is well for the small man to ptactiso until he knows how to apologizo grace fully. Somervil'.e Journal. Charity may begin at homo, but it is wiser for subscription-seekers to call at business man's office. Puck. It doesn't follow that because a man if a master of dead linguages bo has a kill ing style of speech. Boston Post. One of tho queoreut things wo over heard was regarding a watchmaker who slept on a pallet Jewelers' Circular. , Both men and women have their fail ings. With men it is the big head ; with women, the big hat. Boston Transcript. The suare of a drum is not duugerous. It is tho suaro of the wily drummer that you want to look out for. Uostoa Posty It does not necessarily follow because a clergyman is affected that his hearers -will be a dec tod by his Bcrinons. Boston Trauscript. After much solicitation, tho Gorman Government has decided not to send the Wutch on the Rhino to tho World's Col umbian Exposition. Jewelers' Circular. Why does she wi-iggle and tquiim around Aud look so ill at ease? Because the minister's looking at ber And she's tryiug not to sne ze. New York Herald. Llfo is made of compe9ntioij3"-By" the timo a man is old rTiougli to realize what a lot be does not know ho is too old to worry over it. Indiauapolia Journal. Mr. Fligg "Tommy, my sod, do you know that it gives me as much pain as it docs you when I punish youi" Tommy "Well, there's some satisfaction iu tbot, anyhow." Tho Comic, "I wish I hadn't eaten that apple," said Fatty, ruefullly. "V:iy, was it a bad one?" "Well, I believe it wanr spoiling for a fight, " and his fuco ttook on a look of pain. St. Joseph Neirs. He "Do you think there is ar4 truth iu tho saying, 'Distance makes ' heart grow fondorf' " She "I'm Su of it. I like you ever a, -,uch bctt wheu you are away." Brooklyn Eagle Mrs. Wick wire "Just thmk of i Mrs. Bragg's husband accompauius L wifo whenever sho goes shopping. Isu't ho goodl" Mr. Wickwire "H'mh: I've got more confidence in my wifo thar that." Iudi.iuapolis Journal. It is a little odd about life iusnranc It is universally admit'.. d that tho r die young, but no company cares to ta a risk ou the bad m m, when if the co verse of the proverb bo truo, be ought t live till all is blue. Boston Transcript. Mr. Blackhills (displaying hU collec-' tion of Indian curios) "Tlwt is a sped men of the war paint of the Sioux. I brought it when I camo home from my last trip." Fair Visitor "Ah, yos, I see; sort of a Sioux veneer." Huston Post. Did it ever occur to you thut Coluiut" bus was in a very uielaueholy statu of mind when be was ou his voyaijo to tho New World? If uot, remember what the old song says, "In 1 -Ilia Columbus crossed the ocean blue.'- Boston Tran script. Not Entirely Sure: Father "Well, Tommy, how do you thiuk you will like this little f.llow fur a brother?'' Tom my (iuspecrlng the new 'ufuut somewhat doubtfully) "Have wcgot to keepliiui, papa, oris Le ouly a .uuipl-f" Chii Tnbuue. t