THE FOREST REPUBLICAN Is publish every Wtdaesday, fey J. E. WENK. Offloa In Bma-arbaugh ft Co.' Buildlnc elm rnuwr, tionksta, r. EPUBLICAN S Term, I.BO pmr fmr. He sabMrrptloM nedve4 tot a tktrla Mriod than tkrt. month. Mrta ( urar VOL. XXV.. NO. 15. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUG. 3, 1892. ennntt?. N. ..tie. will fc Uka $1.50 PER ANNUM. ouin&ics,uea. 1 n m 1 "A Forest ir r I i An English paporsays that "shortened honeymoons appears to be in vogue." A writer in Orchard and Garden sajt that "the apples from the Blue Ridge region from Virginia to Goorgis will lend the whole United States in respect to line quality.'' Ninty-five per cent, of all the money transactions in the associated banks of New York are ncooinplishod by means of checks and drafts, leaving fire per cent, of the total businoss to be represented by coin or paper money. This tot ought to lire long and pros' per, exclaims Once A Week. At the ago of two years Charles Leo Burdon, of Pro vidence, fell into a cistern and floated around in seven fect of water until his grandfather bffidod him a pole, to which he "caugh ,n." Perhaps, muses the New York Com. moTchfi Advertiser, science will soma dayleach us how to use petroleum in yditary operations, when we will have an agency by which our harbors may be converted into Infernos to consume the navies of the world. Tbero are just 1157 millionaires in New York City, according to the Tri buno's final reckoning. The Vauder bilts couut six, the Goulds four, the Astors three, the Goelcts four, and tho Rhinelandors fivo, while the omnipresent Smith family lead all the rest with eight. "The Bering Sea offers less attractions to Canadian poachers this year than last," argues the Sun Francisco Chroni cle. "Very fow of thorn feel inclined . to take any risks, so we may safely con k elude that the close season under exist ing arrangements will prove a complete success." A company has been incorporated, in New Jersey for tho manufacture of ' membranoid, a fancy leather made from tripe nothing else than tanned tripe. The patent-office authorities Insisted that tripe was tripe, no matter through what chemical process it might have been put, and some tiuio elapsed and there was much parleying before a com promise was ad' cted ou tho name of the product now called membranoid. This new species of leather is suid to be pretty and durable. Miss Angotina Brooks, who is a recog nized authority on all questions of kin dergarten methods, has recently devoted her time to a careful investigation of the curbstone children in this city, says the New Yoik Commercial Advertiser. She has ascertained that there are 140,000 boys and girls between the ages of four and six who spend their Uvea in the streets and never once see the inside of a school. She ia trying to enlist sympathy for these unfortunate waifs which will ultimately lead to 'the establishment for them of free kindergarten school. It is asserted that after this year the United States will not only bo able to stop importing fruit, but will begin to be a factor in supplying the markets of the world. The estimate is that New York will have 20,000,000 pounds of fruit from California alone this summer. .Fast fruit trains now cross the continent ia seven days, aud enable the growers to harvest a riper product than heretofore. Aiizona and Oregon are coming to the front as fruit states; Mississippi is getting famous for tomatoes, and Florida oranges nnd Georgia peaches are always sure of a ready market. The outlook has never been so promising. Frank Leslie's Weekly states that the State of Pennsylvauia shows the largest percentage of foreign born adult males who are aliens, the percentage ia that State beiug 33.13 of the total number, representing 139,52 persons. In the State of New York, 193,014 foreign born adult males, or 23.13 pur cent., are aliens, and in Now Jersey, 41,877 or 28.87 per cent, are aliens. Now York shows tho greatest number of naturalized foreign-born adult males, there being iu that State 4 16,3o3, or 60.74 percent, of the total number of foreign-born adult mules returned. The city of New York shows the lurgest percentage of foreign born of the total population, the foreign element-in that city representing 42.23 per cent, of the total . population as a-ainst 39.68 per cent, iu 1880. Buffa lo shows 35.00 per cent, of foreign-born as against 33.05 per cent, in 1830. Brooklyn shows 32.48 per cent., an iu. crease from 31.30 per cent, iu 1880. Long Islaud City has a forcigu-boru population of 36.67 per cent., while iu 1880 the foreign-bora element iu that city was 31.27 per cent, of tho total population ; sixteen places show a groat er per ceut. of foreign -born population . in 1880 than is shown in the State as a whole, while in 1880 nineteen places were reported as having a larger percent age of foreign-bora population tuau v.'a reported in the Suto as a whole. A SUMMER'S DAY. Black bees on the clover-heads drowsily clinging. Where tall, feathered grasses amttbutter eupt away ; And all through the fields a whitemprinkle,1 of daisies Open-eyed at the setting of day. Oh, the heaps of sweet rosea, sweetcinna mon roses, ' I i great crimson thickets thatfcover the wall! And Books of bright butterflles&iddy to see them, And a sunny blue sky overall. Trailing boughs of th. elms 'drooping over the hedges, Where spiders their glimmering laces have spun; And breesea that bend the! light tops of th willows And down through the meadow grass run. Silver-brown little birds sitting close in the branches. And yellow wings flas.ung from hillock to tree, And wide-wheeling swallows that dip to the marshes, And bobolinks a-axy with glee. So crazy, they soar through the glow of the sunset And warble their merriest notes as they fly. Nor heed how the moths hover low in the hollows, And the dew gathers soft in the sky. Then a round beaming moon o'er the blos somed hill coming, . Making paler the fields and the shadows more deep; And through the wide meadows a mur murous humming Of Insects too happy to sleep. Enchanted I sit on the bank by the willow And trill the last snatch of a rollicking tune , And since all this loveliness cannot be Heaven, I know In my heart It la June. Mrs. A. G. Woolson, in Boston Transcript. LOVE AND LUCK. BY HELEN FORREST GRAVES. " Under a spreading chestnut tree. The village smithy stands " RETTY little Elma ' iElwood was whispering the words softly to herself as she leaned both el l. ...... nn .uA WWSuStZsi dow-sill, and gazed WS.:&H8$?.t:l& out across the rrlow. jjiK'fj for breakfast, Miss W Elwoodl" primly demanded Mrs. Porkins, the governess, as she manciured her nails at the marble wash basin. "No. Come here, Perky," said the audacious girl, "and I'll show you the corner of that picturesque old black smith's shop I told you of the cne I'm going to sketch this afternoon." "It's past eight, MissElwood, and you know jour grandfather attaches great importance to punctuality," began tho governess. "Right there, over-the top of those mountain pines, Perky," composedly continued Elma, extending her slim forefinger in a due northerly direction along the valley of tho river, "you can just see the odd little three-cornered ga ble peeping out through the trees" "And -there's tho bell, now," ex claimed Mrs. Perkins, with a little ner tous start. "And the smith, a mighty man is he." "Hummed Elma, beginuing to tie back her curls with a fillet of blue ribbon. "But not nearly so handsome as that young ap prentice of his, who tixjd tho crooked nail in Swallow's shoe, yesterday. I won der if I could sketch the placeJ To be sure, I have bad only seven lessons, but one must try one's wings sometimes, you kuow." Mrs. Perkins straightened Emma's sash, gave her curls several twitches this way and that, and dragged her into the breaktast-ioom just in time to avert the usual morning lecture from old Major Elinwood on the evils of late risiug. But that afternoon, iu the purple soft ness of twilight, Elma managed to evade her proclso guardian, and slip oil into the woods with her sketch-book. And she was sitting on a moss-cushioned rock, working with all her might, when Louis Dulzell strode toward the spring for a pail of water. The sleeves of his red flannel blouse were rolled high up on the forearm, lie still wore his stained leathern apron, and his short, chestnut curls plainly re vealed themselves through the rifts in bis tattered straw hat. Had be but known it, he never had looked better in his life; yet a deep flush of mortification rose to his brow as he encountered the pretty twelvo year old dutnsel in white, with the shady, rose garlanded hat, aud tbo soft Romau sash tied loosely around her waist. "Good afternoon !"uid Emma, calmly. "Please step a little to one side, Louis, if that is your name. I'm trying to sketch the smithy." Dalzell ventured to glance over I.ji shoulder. "It's beautiful," said he. "You cau almost see the wiud blowing that sweet biitr bushl" "Yes," complacently observed the ar tist, "I think it is rather good." "And the little dog sitting by tho door it just exactly as natural as life!" he added.) Ella frowned. "The little dog, at you call it," said she, "is the stump of the old tree. Don't staud quite so close, pUasel I can't move my elbow." Dalzell colored. Ho took up hit pail and moved ou. "I'm always saying the wrong thing," aid he, in a sort of desperation. Eluut hoped she hud not offended the young man. She rather liked hira, al- I though it was awarkward for him to mis take tho butternut stump for a little dog, and she made up her mind to say some thing pleasant to him when ho enmo back to the spring. But he did not come back at all. Evl. dontly there was some other way between the smithy and the littlo brook. At six o'clock, according to compact, Mrs. Perkins camo for the artist to es cort her home. "And you've been all this time doing that little bit of work?" said Mrs. Per kins. "Oh, I haven't worked all the time, Perky 1" impatiently spoke the girl. "Besides, one can't hurry art." As they strolled slowly down the shady road, Elma suddenly stooped and picked up something. "What's that?" said , the governes?, lifting ber crisp flounces out of the dust. "A horseshoe an old, common horse shoe. Put that down at once, Mist El wood 1" "Wait for a moment, Perky 1" cried the girl, rushing away through the bushes. "I've forgotten something." Half a minute later, she was down in front of the closed smithy, balancing herself on tho identical butternut-wood stump. With a round stone for n hammer, she drove in a rusty nail, and hung the thin old horseshoe over the door. "There's good luck for Louis Dal zolll" she cried, as she sprang lightly backward. "Take care!" said a voice behind her. And then she became aware that Dal zell himself had emerged from the bow ery shadow of the trees, and that sho had nearly knocked him over. "Is that for me?" ho said. "Oh, thanks 1" And placing both bands lightly on her shoulders, he kissed her, driven by somo sudden impulse for which he himself could scarcely account. - Elma Elwood turned scarlet all over; she rubbed ber cheeks to efface all ves tige of the oltense, and Btamped her kid shod foot in the sand with futile passion. "How dare you?" she cried. "How daio you?" And like a flying nymph sho vanished into the dense shadow of tho woods, leaving the young man transfixed with surprise. "Why does she make such a fuss?" he asked himself. "Sbo's only a child but good fatel what a beautiful child!" He reached up and took down the the thin, old horse shoo and put it in his pocket. He and the picturesque, long bearded old blacksmith had quarrelled that day, and be meant to leave Wyndalo with the break of the morrow's dawn. "I'll lake my luck with me," he said to himself. "God bless the child for thinking of me!" Just a year afterward old Major El wood died, leaving his affairs hopelessly entangled; and when the lawyers had squabbled long enough over the busi ness, it was formally announced that there was nothing left for the child to to live on. "What am I to do. Perky?" said Elma, with big, blue eyes of apprehen sion and dismay. And good Mrs. Perkins, who had suc ceeded in obtaining a situation as Eng lish teacher ia a boarding-school, bar gained to forego a part of her own salary lor the sake of having El ma's education go on at Watlcy Hall. "A teacher's life isn't all roses," said she, "but I can't bear the idea of hav ing the poor, little dear bound out to a trade or stood up bchiud a counter. And, really, her voice might be mado something of." All these things happened years ago, and Denveras was not the big city it is now when Mrs. Perkins and her adopted daughtor decided to cast their lots in the shadow of the Black Hills. "Music is overdone in the Eastern States," said the good ex-governess . "But I think we'll make a try for it here, Elma, dear. I'm told that if we can iutcrest that rich iron man that lives in the castellated mansion out beyond. Plaza River, his influence cau do every thing for us ." "Really 1" Elma's dimples danced roguishly. "What a very curious sort of a person an Iron man must be ! I'm very curious to see him, Perky, do you know?" "Nonsense, my dear!" cried Mrs. Per kins. "You know what I mean per fectly well. He's made his fortune in the iron business railways, and that sort of thing. And I'm going to call there this very afternoon, to bespeak his recommendations and good offices." "Oh, Perky, must I go?" "Of course you must go, child I" Elma Elmwood sat trembling iu the great entrance hall of the Moresque mansion, on the south shore of the Plaza River. The sunshine glimmered on the floor of rose aud white marble; giaDt myrtles and blossoming lemon trues filled tho angles, and a low easy-chair on a tigcr skiu by the door, was drifted over with newspapers. Preseutly Mrs. Perkius came smiling back. "He will be with us presently," said she. "Really, my dear, he's quite a young man not at all the bald-pate 1 railroad king I expected to see. And he is most kind aud gracious, and has promised to recommend us everywhere." The door openod and the iron man en tered, followed by two or three magnif icent hounds. Elma sprang up with a cry. "Why," she exclaimed, "It's Louis It's Louis Dalzell!" He held out both his hands. "I can't have changed so very much then?" said he." At the same instant Elan's eyes caught sight of a strange object above the arched doorway a gold-plated hone shoe, worn thin at the ends, with here and there a bent uail in its curve. Liuis's glance followed her own. "Yes," said he. "it's the very horse shoe. It has done it task, Miss El wood it has brought me luck ! Miss Perkius," lie a'lded, turning to the elder la ly, "1 shall expect yuu aud youi young friend to remain here as my guests for the present. I have a large house, and I am a lonely man." "Oh I" said Miss Perkins, her eyes be coming larger than the lenses of her spectacle glasses. "You're not married then'" "No," said Mr. Dalzell. "Beforo I left the East, I fell in love. I shall never marry until I can many that first love of mine." He looked Elma full in the eyes as he spoke. She colored. Her long lashes drooped. At the end of the month Mrs. Per kins aroused herself to the exigencies of the cose. "All this is like life in fairyland, dear Elrna," said she. "But itisn't business. I see by tho papers that several music teachers have recently arrived from the East, and if we are to get to work " "But," said Elma, patting the dear old wrinkled hand, "I don't really see any particular reason for our getting to work." "Eh?" gasped Mrj. Perkins. "You see," went on Elma, "Mr. Dal zell is engaged to that first love of his. He has given me back the horseshoe,and as I couldn't think of breaking the cur rent of luck by taking it from the house, of course I must stay here." "Oh !" said Mrs. Perking. "Then it's true? He's the same young man that kissed you when you were hanging good luck up over tho smithy door the 'un der the spreading chestnut tree young man'?" Elma nodded assent. "Oh!" again uttered Mrs. Perkins. "But you said you never, never would forgive him." "Don't you know, Perky," coaxed Elma, the audacious, "what the Bible says about forgiving people? Anyhow, it's all settled, and wo are to be married very soon, and you are to live here with us always. Does that plan suit you?" And Mrs. Perkins said that it did. How Chinese CaUh Shrimp. "There are some very curious fisheries carried on by the Chinese on the Pacific coast," said an officer of the United States Fish Commission in Washington recently. "One of the most lemarkable is tho catching of shrimp, which is an important industry in San Francisco Bay and adjacent waters. These little crus taceans upon being captured are taken ashore and boiled in big iron vats, aftoi a rude fashion, holes being scooped out of the side of a steep bank for fire places, which are built up with stones. After the shrimp have remained in boil ing water for ten minutes they are spread out to dry upon bare ground. One such shrimp yard at Huntor's Point is about fifteen acres in extent. The Chinese uso brooms, shaped somewhat like hoes, for spreading the shrimp and to turn them at the required intervals. "After being thoroughly dried by ex posure to the sun for about five days the shrimp are crushed by being trodden upon by Chinese in wooden shoes. This process loosens the meat from the shells, which latter are removed by shaking in a basket or by passing tbem through a ciude fanning mill. Both meat and shells are then packed in sacks for exportation to China, where the meats are sold for food and the shells disposed of as a fer tilizer for tea plants, rice and so forth. All classes of people in Chica eat the meats, although regarding them as inferior to the native shrimp, which are compara tively scarce and proportionately dearer. Both meats and shells are fed to fowls, with remarkable egg producing results. "Another interesting fishery prose cuted by the Chinese on the Pacific Coast is for abalones. These beautiful uni valve mollusks are found along the rocky shores, at low tide, clinging tj tho rocks above the water line. Each shell is slightly lilted, sq that the fisherman can thrust a stick under it and pry it off; but, if alarmed, tho animal shuts down its valve, so that it can only be removed lay breaking it to pieces. The meats are taken from the shells and boiled on shore in vats mado of sheet iron. Shells and meats are then packed in sacks and forwarded to San Francisco, whence most of the meats are exported to China, and the shells shipped to Franco, the latter being highly valued for their beau tiful mothcr-of-peurl." Baltimore Amer ican. A Dust Detector. Some curious color phenomena have been observed by John Aitkin when air is suddenly expanded, and have led to the construction of a new instrument called tho "koniscope," for roughly de termining the amount of impurities in the air. The instrument consists simply of an air pump and a tube twenty inches long, provided with glass ends. The air to be tested is drawn into the tube, where it is moistened nnd expanded. If comparatively few dust particles are present, say 80,000 cubic centimeter, the color is very faint, but a blue of increas ing depth occurs as the particles increase in number, becoming a very dark blue with 4,000,000 per cubic centimeter. The kouiscope makes it easy to trace the pollution arising in our homes from open flames and other causes, and to separate pure from impure currents in tho rooms. Trenton (N. J.) American. I! .th Boy and Cub Walled. One of Mr. Lampson's boys came near having a serious eucouuter with bear the other day. While going to work be met a large bear aud two cubs. The mother and one of the cubs took to the woods while the other cub climbed a small tree. The boy thought to capture the cub, and climbed up after it, where upon the cub set up such a wail that the mother soon returned aud started up after the boy. It was now his turn to nail, which he did quite lustily. Owing to the smallness of the tree, the bear could not reach the boy ; but tho situa tion was anything but pleasant during the interval that elapsed before the ar rival of the boy's father. The old bear took to the woods. They succeeded in j cupumiig tuu cuu uy uieau. 01 rope, suu :uuny sacks, and took it home. Lum&s Cut I Wosuiutftou) News. WASHING BY MACI11NEKY, WOBK IN THE BIOOEST LAUNDRY IN THIS COUNTRY. Quick Work With an Ocean Idner's) Wash Steam Power Used Alto gether Pay ol Employe P1D you ever see a big laundry in full blast? It is worth seeing. When tho News reporter visited this Hudson River fac tory, the washing from one of the great Inman liners had just come in. It was the washing for a whole week the washing for 2000 persons. There was bedding, linen, napkins, towels and some few articles belonging to the ward robe of some of the officers. The rest of the wash belonged to the ship. It rolled up to the door in two wagons, and it rolled out on the floor of tho sorting-room and spread out like a dirty snow storm in a high wind. The work ol sorting this wash took just . twenty minutes, and four young women, with bright brown eyes and bright red arms. After it was sorted, the big pieces going with the big pieces, and tho little pieces staying with them selves, it was taken to the washing machines. Once there were wash-tubs. There are wash-tubs now, but they are simply amateur appliances. The pro fessional wash shop employs washing machines, otherwise called "washers." These contrivances are from five to eight feet long, and are shaped like the boiler of a locomotive. Tbey are made of metal and they revolve on their axes, like the cylinders in lawn mowers. They are connected with the shaft by pulleys, and when the clothes are put in, the door closed aud the water let in by a pipe, the crank is moved, and then they begin to revolve with a mighty swishing and slashing in their insides. After a few minutes of this, which is called the soaking, the water is let off and hot water is turned on. With hot water soap is brought in and the crank is turned again. This time it is for keeps, and wheu the washer stops the clothes are clcau. This is the sort of washing that requires no starching, so it goes direct to the wringer. This is the kind of a wringer that the original Inun dryman knew naught of. The wringer up to date is a round box ret upon four round legs, made of gas pipo and hollow. The interior of this box revolves several hundred times a minute. This turning interior holds the wet clothes, and from it dry c.otbcs are turned out. They are not entirely dry, but they are dry enough to go to the ironing room. The revolutions of the interior are so swift that tho water is thrown oil in showers. The ironing-room is filled with iron rollers, set in frames, so that one roller rolls against another, like the rubbor rollers in an old-fashioned wringer. One or both of these rollers is hollow, and is heated by either gas or steam, and the sheets and pillow-cases, napkins, towels and table-cloths pass between these rollers and come out steaming hot, smooth as glass, and white. For some kinds of laundry work a dry room is required. Now this dry room bears about as much relation to the drying-room in the ordinary house as a French bonnet does to a bread bowl. It is a small affair, heated red hot by steam pipes. For starched goods this is used, and does its work in a hurry. The laundry that the reporter visited does not make a practice of doiug family work, although it has facilities for do ing any kind of work. It devotes its time chiefly to hotel, club and steamboat work. It can turn out 100,000 pieces a day, and the average price for 100 is from thirty-five to sixty cents. These figures are for unstarched work, and they are very low. It requires 140 per sons to do tho work. The washing is done wholly by men, who get $12 a week each. Tho rest of the work is done by girls and women, who aie su pervised by four forewomen, who get f 17 a week and their board. Tho workwoman get from sixty cents to tl a day, the folders ju tho ironing room commanding the highest wages. New York News. A Great Tree For the Fair. The tree selected by the Tulare Board of Trade for exhibition at the World's Fair stands ou the land of Mrs. M. C. K. Shuey, one-half mile southeast of Summerbome, on tho summit bclwecu North and Middle Tulc, about thirty-live miles northeast of Porterville. The tree was selected at tho request of tho National World's Fair Association. Mrs. Shuey donates the tree as a gift. It is said to be a magnificent speciiccu of sequoia gigantea, some 30(1 feet in height. At the base it is 7ti feet in circumference, and eleven feet from tho ground it is 63 feet iu circumference. This gives a base diameter of 24 i feet. The section that will be removed for ex hibition will be a portion thirty feet long. This piece will be cut luto two fifteen-foot sections, with a natural slab between them. This circular piece will be 21 i feet in diameter aud 16 inches thick. It will serve as a roof for tho lower section when hollowed and a floor for the upper one. Visalia (Cul.) Times. Wonderful Work of Bees. Bees must, in order to collect a pound o( clover honey, deprive 62,000 clover blossoms of their nectar. To do this the 62,000 flowers must be visited by an aggregate of 3,750,000 bees. Or, in other words, to collect his pound of bouey one bee must make 3,750,000 trips from and to the hive. The euor mous amount of work here involved pre cludes idea of any one bee ever liviug long euougo to gather more tiau thu fraction of a pound of nectarine sweets. As bees are kuowu to fly for miles in quest of suitable fields of operation it is clear that a single ouuee of honey re presents millions of miles of travel. It is no wonder that theso industrious little insects have earned the reputatiou ol beiuir "busy'1 lives. St. Lcuis Republic, SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Bad salt meat is said to have caused cholera on a British vessel. ' It is rumored that Dr. Pasteur has dis covered a cure for epilepsy. Part of a mastodon havo been un earthed near Sherman, Texas. If cork is sunk 200 feet deep in the ocean it will not rise again on account of tho great pressure of the water. Experienced planters in the South now raise the mule cotton plant, being thus enabled to secure the seed without the lint or cotton. Three broad patents on electric loco motives and electric railway systems, ap plication for which have been filed sinco June 3, 1880, have just been issued to Thomas A. Edison. The General Manager of the Wiscon sin Central Railroad is reportod to have said that all the trains on that line will be run by electricity before the Colum bian Exposition is ovor. The greatest enemy of suburban tele phone and telegraph poles is tho wood pecker, whose search for the numerous insects which inhabit the wood often leaves tho pole literally honeycombed. A medical officer of tho French army is credited with a remarkable simple cure for obesity. His plan is to restrict the diut to one dish it does not greatly matter what at each meal, and it has proven very effective. The part of tho lnrynx commonly known as Adam's apple has just been re moved from the throat of a man at tho Carney Hospital in Boston, Mass., the first operation of the kind iu that city. A cancerous growth had started in the affected part. The electrical apparatus for extracting teeth without paiu has an arrangement of adjustable prongs, carrying buttons and connected with a battery. The buttons are placed over the nerves lead ing from the teeth to the braiu, and a circuit is established tho moment the ex tracting instrument touches the tooth. Trials of compound armor plate at Shocburyncss, England, are held to have demonstrated that, when these plates have been submitted to the Tresiddcn supplemental process, they possess pow ers of resistance and endurance much ex ceeding the compound plates tried ia this country in competition with nicklo plate. The longest span of telephone wire in tho world is said to cross tho Ohio Rivor between Portsmouth, Ohio, and South Portsmouth, Ky. The wires spaa the river from a pole on the Ohio side, meas uring 102 feet above ground, to the Kentucky hills on the opposite side, the distance being 3773 feet between poles. Tho wire is made of steel and its size is No. 12 gauge. A Host Wonderful Creature. The chameleon has for ages been an ob ject of curiosity, not only on account of its ability to change its eolor at will, as one might suppose who had read ac counts which mentioned only that one characteristic, but also on account of a remarkablo power which admits of the creature instantly changing its form. At times it takes upon itself almost the ex act form of a mouse; again, with back curved and tail erect, it is the exact counterpart of a miniature crouching lion, which no doubt gave origin to its name, chamol-lcon, which clearly means "ground lion." By inllating its sides and flattening back and belly it takes upon itself tho form of an ovate leaf, the tail acting as tho petiole, the white line over the stomach becoming the mid rib. When thus .expanded it also has the extraordinary power to sway itself over so as to present an edge to the ob server, thus greatly nddiug to its means of concealment. As is well knowu, the least excitement, as in handling, will cause n chnngo in the color. In its nor mal state it is of a light pea green. When excited the grouudwork remains tbe same, but transverse stripes ubout thirty in number appear on the body. These stripes, which are of a very dark green to begiu with, soou chango to inky blackness. The prevailing idea that the chameleon takes upon hhnnulf tho pe culiar hues of whatever he is placed upou is as curious and widespread as it is er roneous. Placed iu boxes liued with red or blue silk, they retain their pea green color with no leaning toward the brighter hues of the surroundings. St. Louis Republic. The Trade iu Old Shoes. There is a largo aud growing demand in big Now York for second-baud shoes. All Jtlong Soveutu avenue' there are deal ens who make a specialty of old shoes. The men usually have stalls in cellar). Their wares embrace shoes of all sorts, from the baby's tiny slipper to tho big, stiff brogans of the laborer. "We get our old shoes," said one of them, yesterday, "from all sorts of places. I usually make a couple of trips a week myself to a lot of stylish Hats iu the upper part of the city. I collect all the old shoes I am able to buy. What do I give? Oh, verv littlo, of couitc. I usually pay forty cents or ao for a pair of rive dollar shoes, but they must bu in good shupe to win such a price, for, you know, we do not get much more than twico that sum wheu we retail tucui again over the couuter." "Who sell shoes to you?" "You would be surprised if you saw the tine, swell fellows that havo to put up their shoes occasionally to help koep n l appearances. We take the shoes, black them up, repair tucui, aud then offer them for sale." "Who bujs them?" "All classes. Yes, we have nice, prosperous peoplo who wear tecou d-lutud shoes, aud think nothing of it. Tlieu tin ru is a class of young fellows iu New York who have expensive tastes and tin. ill capital. Tbey co ne to us, pick out a good-looking patent leather shoe, pay BBVeuty-five cents or so for it, aud HO away rejoiciug. Tbey go home, put tin in ou, and, then, who can tell tJiu eucef" Now Voik ltocoidur. RATES OF AOVERTISINCl One Square, one inch, one Insertion.. $ I (XI One Pqusre, one inch, onn month..., 100 One Square, one inch, three months.. f"J One (square, one Inch, one year... . , Kim Two Squares, one year l.ri Quarter Column, one year 30 fri ' Half Column, one year A0DC On. Column, on. year 100 "U Legal advertisements ten cents per line each Insertion. Marriages and death notices gratis. All bills for yvarly advertisement cnllecfod quarterly. Temporary advertisements must be paid in advnnce. J ob work cash on delivery. O TIME AND CHANGF. O Time and Change, they range nnd range From sunshine round to thm lorl They glance and go as the great wimls blow, And tbe best of our dreams drive under: For Time and Change estrange, estrange And, now they have looked nnd feon ur O we that were dear we are all too near With the thick ot the world between us. O Death and Time, they chime nnd chime Like bells at sunset falling 1 They end the sonz, they right the wrong, They set the old echoei calling: For Death and Time bring on tho prime Of God's own chosen weather, And wo lie in the peace of the Groat Release As once in the grass together . W. E. Henley. HUMOR OF TUF. DAY. Not enough to go around A semi circle. Life. You cannot batch Ideas by sitting on goose eggs. Dallas News. A baseball maxim A run iu time saves a nine. Boston Transcript. If poor relatives had their way thoy would not have rich uncles very long. Dallas News. Young man, no one may be able to tell your fortune, but you can work it out . for yourself. Troy Press. You can't tell how much money a man has ia his pocketbook by the size of tho strap around it. Rim's Horn. Watts "Did your barber shut up on Sundny?" Potts "No. He merely closed the shop." Indianapolis Journal. The summer girl osks the same ques tions at baseball games this season as she did last year. Boston Transcript. The dog that loses his master it with out a friend, and so are some men wheu they lose a dog. Binghuiutou Repub lican. A baby born in Ohio is without hands. When he grows up bo will be ablo to sweep his town for the otlico of Treas urer. Philadelphia Ledger. A man always knows what ho would have done in another fellow's place, but the other fellow docsu't ahv ys believe It. Louisvillo Courier-Journal. Mamma "Don't you know that your father is the mainstay of thu family?" Freddy "Golly, ain't he, though! Aud the spanker, too." Brooklyn Life. Miss Antique "Won't your mothor go with us?" Miss Rosebud "No, she says sho doesn't think she is old enough to chaperon you, dear." Detroit Freo' Press. "Oh, dear!" sighed Henry, whoso clothes nro all mado of his papa's old ones, "papa's had his mustache shaved off, an' I suppose l'vo got to wear it now." Tid-Bits. Fidgety Lady "But -what am I to do? I can't ride with my back to the engino." Sarcastic Youth "Better speak to the guard. He'll turu the train around." Tid-Bits. Train Conductor "All aboard. Hurry up, miss, if you are going by this train." Little Girl "Just a miuutc, till I kiss mamma." Conductor "Jump aboard; I'll attend to that." Oaklaud Echoes. Billy the Beau "Anything uow in engagement rings?" Jeweler "Yes; our new 'Seaside' plated goods are cheap, aud are warranted to out-wear any sum mer resort engagement." Jewelers' Weekly. Hostess "Whathas become of Saudy Smith, who stood so liigb in your class?" Alumnus "Ol he's taken orders." Hostess "He's iu the ministry, then?" Alumnus "No; iu a restaurant." ' Brooklyn Life. Frieud "Docs your son belong to the old or the new school?'' Old Lady (whose son is a physician) "Olj, ho doesn't belong to any school at all uow; he's been graduated for two years." Detroit Free Press. Mrs. Watts "Mary Ami, these lulus ters seem always dusty. I was at Mis. Johnson's to-day, and her stair rails are e'eau and us smooth as glass." .Mary Aun "Yis, mem. She has t'lee schumll boys." Indianapolis Journal. "If you like," said the young man at the desk, "I'll have your poem sub I'littcd to tho editor." "No," sho answered positively, "I'll read it aloud to him. I prefer to liavo tin: editor sub mitted to tbe poem." Washington ttar. "I told you yesterday I would not marry you," said she. "I know it," said ho. "That is why I ask you agnia to-day. You would not be so larking iu originality, I hope, as to repeat to-day what you suid yesterday." Harper's Bazar. Judge "You Btolo tho pocket-book, but how is it thut you did not appropri ate the watch lying by the side of it?" Prisoner "You don't lueau to Bay I was as daft as that? I couldn't have noticed it. You must t-xcusu me, Judiju!" . TcxtuSiftings. He "I thought the bride and groom were going to start rigiit oil ou their weddiug trip, instead of waiting.'' She "They were, lint she had to change her wedding dress lor a traveling gown, and they didn't get stalled uulil liie next day." Cloak Review. Miss Piukvrly "Von act as if you were uucomfortablu.Mr. Tuttcr." Mr. Tuttor "Yes, Miss I'iuki'ily, the fact is, I have I ever beeu able to get a dress suit to tit me." Miss Pinkerly -"Perhaps jo:i don't get there early cuou;;U." Clothier and Furnisher. Ills Loud Ittii'iiftl I "p. A teamster iu i',ustou, Mass., bad ipiito a nurpr'se tho other day. Ho was haul iii' a lo,ul of furniture through thu yard .; a railroad, wheu somebody sh.mted liie. T'. ruing urouud he discovered that his load of furniture was all iu a b!az.. Ho jumped oil the wagon and unhitched bis hoises as promptly as possible, anj nu alauu brought a lire engine that e tiuguiitliud thu bluze, but imt until tue furniture was destroyed and the waguu iindy badly damage I. A spark from 4 iiM-orotive cuu-e I lay trouble. .Nu Oilciius I'icajuug, X J X.