THE FOREST EEPDBLICAN b pabllsh very Wdamij. by J. E. WENK. Offlo In Bmaarbaugh A Co.'m Building LU rTEUCT, TIONBBTA, Tm. Terms. - . (Uo prTar, RATES OF ADVERTISING! One Square, on. inch, one insertion..! One Hquare, one ineh, oni month. . ., One Pquare, one inch, tnree months . , One Square, one inch, one year..,. . , 'J wo tSquares, one yeir (Juarfer Column, ono year HOR 1 oo 8 00 li OU 10 00 15 00 PUBLICAN. sow Half Column, one jenr fiO 00 One Column, one year . . 100 "0 Legal advertisement ten oenU per Una each insertion. Alarriages ami death notice gratis. All bills tor yearly advertisements collected quarterly. Temporary advertisements must be paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. ,." "frt!,,lt, ncmirU far skrt rim UK three month. Oormapondmee toilette frn al atria af tha eourmr. X. Mile will Uk .rul..;; VOL. XXV. NO. 21. TIONESTA, PA WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 14, 1892. $1.50 PEll ANNUM. EST RE Canada has about doubled its railway mileage iu ton years. One child In every five in the north ern half of the United State dies before it La j lived a year. Tho number of Bros in London has in creased fifty per cout. since 1S82; twenty-five per cent, of the fires occur in un insured premises. The Farmers' Review says that the United States produce 300,000,000 pounds of wool per annum and use twice that amount. The Now York World cites as an in stance of the vostness of tho insurance business that the premiums paid in Louisville, Ky., alouo this year amounted to $1,000,000. The aim of tho University Settlement Society of Now York is to aid tho citi zens of a neighborhood, "without in fringing ou their self respect,'' and no patronizing airs are assumed. Twenty million dollars is tbav ,ti mated worth of flax products imported into this country Inst year, and our farm ers aro said, records the Now York World, to have destroyed 1,070,000 tons of flnxstraw. A joint cammitteo of the two home! of the English Parliament has reported electricity a suitable and efficient source of motive power, and reccomended that .electric railway construction be encour aged throughout England. What is now North Berwick, Me., was known as Jsughty's Falls thirty yeors ago.- A postitwork says that occasion ally letters are even now addressed to Doughty's Fulls, smd that he has had one such in his hands within the lasl month. The Chicago Herald is astonished thai Although the United States is a count rj possessing immenso timber tracts, it ap lears that it imported wood and wood roducts to the value of $21, 772,185 in e year ending June 30, 1891, and in same time exported similur article the value of $44,811,004. woman voted at tho recent Parlia 'meutury clooiiou at Birmingham, Eng 3 land. Home question arose as to the .lidity of tho vote, but the mavor and town clerk agreed with tho Liberal agent that as tho lady's namo had some how got upon tho register the returning officer bad no optiou but to reccivo her ballot. Says the Galveston News: "Tho peo ple of the United States ara thoroughly organized in one way or another. It would not take a week to convert those standing armies into very active and ef fective armies ready for battle. The or ganization begins with political parties and runs all the way down to amateur baseball clubs." II costs $105 pur ton to transport dry goods from New York to Sua Francisco by rail, the time being from twenty-two to tweuty-six days. The samo goods, if brought via Panimu, part rail and part steamer, pay $34 per ton, the time being about forty-live days. ' By clipper ship round the Horn the same goods can bo laid down of a cost of $20 per ton, the time being about eighty -five days. The Secretary of tho Treasury has re quested the Sucrutary of State to iu struct the United Statos consular o!fl;jrs everywhere to refuso to certify invoices of goods on aud after September 1st un less the merchandise is invoiced after tho metric system. This action is taken on information received from the consuls at Paris an1 (Lyeus, who say that tho "aune" l ietn of measurement now in use in France oa invoices of goads in tended for the United States, facilitates frauds on tho Custom House, and that the metric system would greatly simplfy commercial transactions aud facilitate a somparisou of invoices and prices. A man up from Venezuela, where they have- beeu cutting one another's throats in a revolutionary matinee, says of that unhappy country's warriors: "Falstall's ragged regiment wasn't iu it with the soldiers down there. They are tho hungriest looking creatures you ever saw. I've given pennies to tiiein on the street. They wear linen breeches and an uudershirt, aud wheu they come into town tuey wrap their blankets around them to cover their nakedness. They carry old fliut-lock muskets. There are a few liemiugtons aud Winchesters, but mighty few. They have machetes. A machete is a sort of big butcherknife without a point. It is about three inches wide aud thirty inches loug, aud pretty heavy. Tuey cut wood and kill snakes and enemies with machetes. Some of them have shoes, but the most of them wear a leather sole with a strap across the heel aud toe. The bare heels aud toes stick out," W4 BUILD THE LADDER, Heaven Is not reached at a single bound, But we build the ladder by which we rise From the lowly earth to the vaulted skies, And we mount to the summit round by round. I count this thing to be grandly true, Tbat a noble deed is a step toward God, Lifting the soul from the common sod To a purer air and a broader view. We rise by the things tbat are under feet, By what we have mastered of greed and gain. By the pride disposed and the passion slain, And the vanquished ills that we hourly meet. We hope, we aspire, we resolve, we trust, When the morning calls us to life and light; But our hearts grow weary, and ere the night Our lives are trailing the sordid dust. We hope, we aspire, we resolve, we pray, And we think that we mount the air on wings, Beyond the recall of sensual things, While our feet still cling to the heavy clay. Wings for the angels, but feet for the men I We may borrow the wings to And the way; We may hope and aspire and resolve and pray. But our feet must rise or we fall again. Only in dreams is a ladder thrown From the weary earth to the sapphire walls; But the dream departs and the vision fall?. And the sleeper wakes on his pillow of stone. Heaven is not reached a single bound. But we build the ladder by which we rise From the lowly earth to the vaulted skies. And we mount to the lummit, round by round. J. O. Holland. THREE AGAINST TEN. AN EPISODE OF THE SEMINOLE WAR. ROUND a bend oo, the Ock lawaha, just at sunset, there appeared ad ug. out paddled by two stalwart fellows in a sort of homespun uniform, while a boy dressed as an officer sat in the stem. Fiva minutes before the crocodiles and cranes, water turkeys, bitterns and herons had had the black, oozy river all to themselves as it slug gishly made its way through the swampy palmettos and cypress. The boat bumped aloDg slowly, strik ing against cypress trees and fallen tree trunks. Tho paddlers looked anxious for the chance of finding a comfortable camping grouud wns growing slighter before young Will Loring began to be sick of his escapade. He had left the camp eight miles away without orders and taken two of his company with him to do Indian scouting on his own ac count. Little more than a year beforo he had been a schoolboy, playing soldier in the streets of St. Augustine with other youngsters. When' the Seminole War of 1835 broke out, sweeping with a wave of nre ana massacre across the State, he ran away from home and joined a com pany of volunteers. His daring aud coolness at the battles of tho With lacoochee and Alaqua, in connection with the social importance of his family. had given him his epaulets at an age when other boys of the same years were still in terror of the schoolmaster s birch. "Wall, Lieutenant," drawled one of the men as he peered wearily into the depths of the dark cypress arches, "we're in a 'orrid fix, I reckon. If we keep on we 11 run plum into a nest of then lnjin devils, dead shore." Both the soldiers were Crackers, bred in the woods and swamps, good shots and skillful hunters, though thin, slouch ing ngures were not ornaments to a dress parade. "Keep on paddling," said young Lor ing in low tones, but with an air of stern ness, which did not set well on bis smooth face aud mischievous black eyes, "and await my orders." Then feeling that be had asserted bis authority, he continued with a burst of boyish, conn dence, "I tell you what it is, Scraggs, we'll have to get back to that hammock, about a mile up the river, where we can find pine knots to cook supper; don't you think so?" "Bless you, Lieutenant, d'ye hanker to lose yer skelpf No supper to-night but a drink of swamp wuter, and a chew of raw bacon. I'll bet there's a hun dred of red varmints in two miles on us." "You're not afraid, Scraggs, are you?" said the youngster with a lordly air; "a fellow who can bore a potato tossed in the air at a hundred yards with a rifle ball, ought to have plenty of spunk." "A leetle more skeery than I war forty year ago," answered the Cracker, with a twinkle in his eye. "Uowsoruever, as men of ray inches do, I reckon I've got as much cl'ar grit as most on 'em." 1 bis talk had gone on in half whispers. The darkness was increasing every min ute. The boyish officer in spite of his airs was evidently uneasy, for his eyos shot continual glances ahead and on both ides iuto the swamp, as the dugout glided at a snail's pace. They weie nearing another bend in the stream, when through the tangle of leaf and vine there was a red gleam like a huge firefly. Without waiting orders Scraggs whirled the boat back with a powerful paddle, and turned to his officer with eyes al most starting from their sockets, shaking bit bead iu warning. "Injuns, Injuns, Lieutenant Will, a dozen on 'em," he whispered. "I seed the hind end of two canoes jiss roun' the bend. Thar must be a hummock whar they're camped. They're jiss got through eatln', an' are stampin' out the embers. Sh don't speak. I'll work the old scow deep into thu cypress. We'll see what tricks they're up to, see in' we're hyar and can't get away very easy. But by Jimmy, my skelp kinder crawls as if 'twould not bo thar to-morrow moruin'." Young Loring noddod, and tha pad dlers cautiously forced the boat fifty feot through tho mouth of a black arch into the heart of the swamp. Hidden here they were nearer tho savagos than before, and could hear their movements. It soon became clear that the party of Scminoles had do purpose of leaving their camp that night, and no suspicion of white men close at hand. One by one they dropped asleep, and their slumber chorus, which sounded not unlike tho frruutiu" of tho alliuators in the swamp, was music to the prisoners squatted in their gloomy covert. Three hours had passed, and the grow ing light that silvered the lagoon outsido of their retreat proved tho moon well up over the tops of the trees. "Now is our time," whispered Scraggs, "to get outer this hole and puddle up stream for a sale lundino place and vamouse back to enmp." Lieutenant Lorincr answered not a word. His boyish mind was deep in thought a daring thought which thrilled him with excitement. If he returned to camp as he left it there was sure to be sharp reprimand, perhaps a court martial for absenco with out leave. The excuse that be was an irresponsible lad would alone save him, and at that fancy his heart had waxed hot with shame. But to go back as con queror and hero ahi that was worth risking bis scalp for. "Are ye asleep?" whispered Scraggs again. "No," was the reply; "I am going to take these redskins back to camp with me. So, Scraggs, you two can just tie your hair on, for it will soon be in peril." The men jumped as if they heard the whizz of Seminole lead. "You see it would be a shame to sneak back empty handed. We can't exactly take their scalps, but we can take themselves as a present to the General," said the ingenious youth. "The Indians are fast asleep. We'll paddle up and take their canoes. Then I'll land on the hummock, you know, and pick up their rifles. Then in the morning we can or der them to surrender on peril of being shot down, for we shall have loaded guns, and they'll hive none." Ths two Crackers groaned over this piece of youthful strategy, but Scraggs respondod "All right, Lieutenant, I s'pose we've got to die some time." The dugout loft its covert and glided silent as a shadow into the open stream. A few strokes brought them in full sight of the Indian camp. The island where the savages lay was well-shadowed by tho trees, but their forms could be dimly seen stretched on the earth. Silontly the little party detached the two canoes and towed them to a secure position, where they fastened them to a cypress tree fifty yards from shore. As the boat approached the shore on its second more dangerous mission young Loring slipped oil his bcots and stepped into the ooze, regardless of moccasins and rattlers. Scruggs and bis comrado coverin" the advauce with leveled guns, felt their stout hearts quake as their boy leader crept in among those sleeping figures of bronze. A stumble or the snapping of a twig might mako the difference of life and death. The lad moved as if he were cat. Tho coarse hummock grass, armed with minute thorns, cut into his flesh, but he scarcely felt them. Tho sleopim redskins lay partly in the moonlight and partly in the shade of the trees which roso in the centre of tho hummock, each one with his rifle by bis side, tho fierce copper face chiseled as if in metal. Had the Indians disposed of their guns as the whites do, by stacking or resting them against a tree, tho task of securing them would have been less risky. But they bad kept their arms within reach, and some even had their tomahawks loosened from the belts as if for instant use. The Indian rarely sets a guard at night, unless iu the immediate presence of au enemy. Here iu the depth of a trreat cypress swamp, impassable to troops, a surprise would seem impos sible. Yet even now the cunning and suspicion of tho race had not forsaken them. The nerves of the young officer were strung to the highest tension. One by one he stealthily lifted the naos from the earth till he had what he could carry. These he boro to the low bank and passed to the men ou guard in tho dug outs No word was exchanged. Again he returned to the dangerous sleepers, a distance of about a hundred feet from shore, for a second loud. A biawuy sav- e tossing in his dreams gave a fierce gruut aud threw out a baud, which touched the young thief's ankle as if to clutch it. The moment thrilled him with all tho agony of discovery, but he stood stock still waiting for somethiug further. It was a false alarm, but cold sweat poured from his face. Another of the savages had his haud on tho stock of his gun, and the piece had to be geutly slid trom under his lingers. Aguiu, the third time, he went back to complete his work. Tho moon was now high up in the "sky, aud poured a flood of light on the little, islaud. Tho recumbent Indians were cut out like monstrous silhouettes against tho grouud. The boy's swimming bead warned him that his strength cculdu't last much longer. But he resolutely went at his task, though his throat felt as if squeeze J by au irou grip. He had gathered the last armful, wheu one of the red men in his dreams raised himself oa his hauuehes aud sat with chiu resting on his knees. The moonshine flickered os. tig face through the quivering foliage, acd his sunkeu eyes appeared half open ao fol lowing his wuiie enemy, iuo mui Scraggs, too, observed this mov , and his tanned cheeks turned wh chalk, as his linger was about to p his rifls-trigijor. But he waited, and to savage slocper made no further sign. At last the work was done. The tort minutes had seemed a year. The lad stag gered to the boat, staggering as if with an ague. "I must speak," he panted, "or I shall yell. I thought twice I'd have to whoop or go into a faint. But, Scraggs, I pulled through, didn't II Help me in." "Wall I You've got the guns, shore," said Scraggs, "and drat my stein cf the biggest bully in Jessup's camp would a done it." No time had been lost while Scraggs was relieving his mind; the dusout was skimming out into the stream with lively paddle strokes. The plan was boldly executed in the moruing. With the coining of light the Semiuoles discov ered the robbery of their weapons and rushed to the edge of the swamp with frantic yells, brandishing their toma hawks. But the marauders were far be yond the throw of axe or Knife, and sat with levelled rifles. Then came a shrill voice, demanding in Spanish the instant surrondor of tha little Sominolo band, for at that timo nearly everyone in Florida knew some thing of this language. After consider able parley the red men agreed to throw their knives and tomahawks iuto the marsh. They were taken aboard in pairs and their right wrists tightly fastened together with stout strips of Scragg's homespun shirt. Tho dugout towed toe canoes up stream, whilo tho young officer sat in the stern and guarded the captives with loaded pistols. So the daredevil returned to camp tho same afternoon, and instead ot a rowing he was covered with praise and honor by General Jessup and his little army. This boy afterward became a dis tinguished General Major General William W. Loring who led armies in the far distant East as a Pasha iu the service of the Egyptian Khedive, as well as in this country. But iu his long ca reer he never did anything moro daring and heroic than the feat planned and executed by the boy of fifteen, the sub stantial facts of which were tald me by the General himself. G. F. Ferris, in St. Louis Republic. Uses of tho Umbrella. "An umbrella is one of tho most use ful articles that a man can carry with him," said Lamar J. Saunders from Jack son, Miss. "One can be used a dozen different ways. When tho sun is shin ing hot, or wheu i is raining, a man without an umbrcha must either remain indoors or suffer. As a weapon of defence there is nothing better. You can keep a man at his distance with one better than you could with a stick. You re member what a conspicuous part tho um brellas played in the tragedy at Home stead the other day in the bauds of the infuriated women! Next to a shotgun or a pistol there is no more dangerous weapon. "I remember one time I was in a hotel that caught afire in the morning. Tho guests were awakened by the stifling smoke and noise. My room was ou tho second floor and by the time I had slip ped on my trousers the fire had gained such headway that all avenues of escape were closed. But there was my um brella and a window and the rest was easy. "Another time I was walking through a pasture when a bull with his eyes ablaze with fire made for mo. I kept my censes, and when he got within about fifty yards of mo I ran towards him, opening and closing tho umbrella as fast as I could. The bull wheeled around and ran from me faster than he ever rau beforo in bis life. "And forfrigntning dogs I had rather have an umbrella than an arsenal." St. Louis Republic. ' r Reversible Suakeg in India. A snake not often heard of, at least in America, is the liver-colored snako with two heads, or perhaps they should bo called mouths, though it does not have two mouths at tho same time. They are reversible mouthf , occupying the opposite end every six mouths. It lies with the two ends crossed in each other, as with folded hands. Every six mouths the chauge of the seasons reverses the func tions of the two ends, the head becoming the tail aud the tail becoming the head. The mouth at one end heals or closes up all but a small opening, while tho oppo site end becomes thu mouth for thu uext six months. A friend of mine in India who told me about this remarkable snake said ho refused for a long time to believe that the functions of the two ends were re versed every six mouths, but one day he found one of these snakes in thu jungle and carried it home, whero he had a physician examine it. The result was thu physician confl.-ine 1 the stories of the creature, and my friend was skeptical no longer. I learned no other name for this singulur reptile than that of "the liver-colored snake.1' Hartford (Cuuu.) Times, Cooklui; Willi Ice tar Fual. The genorally accepted theory of the cooking of meat relates to the application of heat; but Dr. Sawiczevosky has called attention to the fact that ahno it precisely the same chemical aud physical changes can be accomplished by the exposure of auimal flesh to extreme cold. Indeed, thu sensation experienced by touching freez ing mercury is very much that of a severe bum. Then the experimenter referred to ap plied his method to tho preservation of meats, first by subjecting them to a tem perature of thirty-three below zero, Fahrenheit, and tiieu sealing them up hermetically in tin vessels. Animals and substances whic1! had been so treated aud for some time kept iu these boxes, ou exumiuatiou proved to be extremely pala table, aud, being partially cooked, re quired very little heat to prepare them for the table. An establishment iu Hungary is now engaged in the preparation of meat by this method on an extcusive scale , New V 'W Wwld, SCIENTIFIC ASH INDUSTRIAL. Cooking by electricity is increasing. The drcno lice's eyes each contains 1300 mirrors. The common caterpillar has 4000 mus cles in his body. Artesian borings-have recently proved to bo very successful in the Saliaran Desert. A steam launch has just been built which makes a milo in two minutes and one second. A London firm finds a windmill tho most economical means of securing tho motivo power necessary to run a dy namo. It has been compiled by competent authorities that in a single cubic foot of ether there are locked up 10,000 feet of energy. It is calculated that in London nearly 100,000 tons of sulphur are produced annually by coal consumption aud thrown into the air. Recent experiments iu Franco on tho velocity of propagation of electric waves givo a mean velocity which is almost ex actly that of light. The best way to clean wells and cis terns of foul air is to throw down a peck of unslacked lime. Too heat so caused carries out tho foul air with a rush. Experiments made by n Hungarian physician on animals seem to show that permanganate of potasn acts as an cm cient antidote in acute phosphorus poi soning. According to Dr. liaison, the red iu flowers iss single pigment soluble in water and decolorized by alcohol, but curable of being restored by the addition ot acids. The dynamo is replacing the battery to such an extent in telegraphy that its use will, it is thought, be universal in a few years. It is both cheaper and more efficient. Investigations of rain drops lead to the ccnclusion that some of the large drops must be more or less hollow, as they fail when striking to wet the whole surface enclosed within the drop. Many of tho small lakes of tho alkali and saline regions of California, Nevada and other parts of the world are sat urated aud deposit their salts when any of the water is removed by evaporation or when salts are added from the inflow. A watch for the blind is among tho newest inventions. A small per; is set in tho middle of each figure. When tho hour hand reaches a given hour th'e peg for that hour drops. 'rue sightless own er, when he wants to know the time, finds which peg is down aud then counts back to twelve. A new alloy for use iu the manufac ture of wire sheets and castings has been introduced by a New England lirm. The wire made of this material resembles or dinary copper wire on the outside, has a pinkish whito tinge at the surface of fracture, and is very stroug without losing much ductility. There is still a chanco for invention in electric railway controlling switches. The awkwardness of regulating a car's speed by a brake which turns one way and a rheostat crank which turns the other is evident. Sooner or later a lever urm or some similar device will replaco some of the confusing number of crunk motions with which manufacturers at present equip their cars. Tho color of the water of tho Medi terranean Sea varies considerably. Du ring stoims it is deep green and some times brown, and when culm of a deep blue. In the Bosphbrus and among tho archipelago it is of varyiug tints, in somo places being of a liquid bluu grad uating iuto a brighter green, and in others assuming a blue so deep as to al most approach a purple. Rubber Tires For Carrlngeg. The st'ccess of rubber tires ou bicycles has frequently led to attempts to increase the comfort of buggy and carriage rid ing by fixing tires ou to wheels, but iu the majority of instances the attempt was not a success, as tho tire either came off or woro out iu a vciy shor; space of time. Since, however, pneumatic tires have displaced the solid ones ou bicycles, the attempt is being reuewed, and bug gies aud other vehicles are likely to bo seen ou tho boulevards in large num bers before long as noiseless and free from vibration us bicycles. Carriage builders believe there is an immense amount of money to be made out of Vehicles with rubber tires on the wheels, aud they are likely to keep ou experi menting until they finally succeed iu producing the desired article. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Bees and Clover II pads. Each clocr head is a compound ag gregi tiou of flower spikes or tubes, the whole number averaging about sixty-live. Each of these contain sugar not to ex ceed the tive-humlredth part of a giain. Therefore the probosis of a honey bee must be inserted into 500 of these clover tubes beforo one single gruiu of honey can be obtained. Think of thu labor in volved in the mighty tusk of collecting ouo pound of such sweets. There are 7000 grains iu a pound, and us honey contains three-fourths of its weight of dry sugar, each pound of clover honey represents the insertion of the bee's pro bosis iuto not less tliau 2,503,000 clovel heads. The Horse iu a Fire. Few kuow that it is characteristic of the horse to become freozie I when sur rounded by tire. No appeal to his in telligenca is of avail during the efforts made to reiuovo him from the preseuce of flumes. He is terror-stricken, aud seems to be in the tamo condition of uiiud as moot humau beings are when iu a pauic. It is therefore useful to know that by a very siuipMexpudient tho hursts can be easily muui.ged in case of tire. All that is uece-ssunV to do is to put a saddle on him, aud heyaubu led without the least difficulty froiA his tubl. Uur Animal Friends. 'THE rETRIFIEl) FOREST."! TIIE WONDER 9 OF CHALCEDONY PARK IN ARIZONA. Thousand nt M In My Tree- Turned to Solid Stone Mi id ids ot I'l-eclous (irtii All l;n lntnlril Spot, T T" C. 1IOVKY describe in the ljj Scientific American a trip to I Chalcedony Park in Ar.ona. (J" Ho says: From the very start the foad was lined by specimens of agatized wood. Now and thcii n petri fied log, or solitary .stump, Wero harbin gers of what was to be .-ceil further on. Tho term "park" is a misnomer; for there is no natural park hero, nor has tho band of man done anything but to shatter tho marvelous rein s of d itele-s antiquity. The people of the vicinity always speak of it as ' tin- Pel rifled Forest." But that again is m;lc.idiug; for there is no forest, whatever L e :nay have been fifty centuries n','o. It , rr. tainly seems as if tho place ought to I..; made a National park, and should b. both better protected and more easy of acPra it is, tho enchanted spot licsot .uticy of vandals, tho only precaution against spoliation being a railroad rulo against shipping specimens irom it in bulk. How shall the Chalcedony Turk lie described? At first odo cots the im pression that it is a small affair, of per haps fifty acres. Then ho says that it must be a hundred. And after riding over its amazing ruins for many hours in succession, he concludes that the area includes a thousand acres; and finally he hardly questions the bold cstimato of Mr. C. F. Lummis that the extensive forest now hardened into stone formerly covered "hundreds of squaro miles;" and accepts without dissent the assertion of Mr. G. F. Kuuz, that thcro may hero be seen at a glauce a million tons of precious stones. A matter-of-fact visitor might say that the sceno reminded him of a vast logging camp, where the lumbermen had tossed tho liuuo logs from their sleds at random, ami then had gone away, leaving them to become rain-soaked and moss-grown. The trees when standing were fully two huudred feet high; for even now their prostrate trunks measure, when un broken, from ouo huudred to ono hun dred and fifty feet. Tho peculiarity already hinted at is that these mighty truuks are as regularly severed iuto sections as if the work had been done by a cross-cut saw. The lengths vary from disks like cart wheels to logs twenty or thirty feet long, or longer. Twigs nrc found an inch through, and truuks ten feet thick. They lie at every angle; parallel to each other, and at right angles; singly and iu great groups: dowu in gulleys and perched like uuuuou on hill tops. And all these myriads of trunks, stumps, logs, bruuehes and tiny twigs are solid stone. Aud on inspection they prove to bo precious gems of almost every known variety. Those that romaiu in tact have been weathered to a dark rod, rich brown, or sober black. But Time's relentless ax, aided by tho geologist's hammer, has niado havoc with so many of them that tho ground is thickly strew n with their fragments, from rocks like bowlders dowu to chips and minute splinters, that show their brilliant colors under the lierco Arizona sun with kaleidoscopic effect. At every footfall you tread on gems, some of which might grace a ducal coronet, while tho most plum and least attractive would lie worthy ot au honored place iu the finest cabinet mere aro no ruiues, rappliires nor diamonds hero (as has bceu incorrectly reported), Dut the Hiiiethyst abounds, ami the red und yellow jasper, chalce dony of every hue, the topaz, the onyx, the carneliuu, and every iuiagiuable variety of ogatc. Nor log, nor frag ment, is limited to a single kind of gem. Many aro massive niosuics of ull tho kinds named above. The material breaks pretty easily into cubical forms, but it is extremely hard, und takes a brilli itit and durable polish. Hoir Dust (jets Iu. When thu uir around us becomes con densed shrinks into u smaller volume it becomes heavier, puts greater pres sure ou the surface of the mercury aud makes it ascend iu thu tube; then thu mercury is said to rise. When thu air expands swells into a larger volume it becomes lighter, the pressure ou tho mercury is less, the mercury sinks iu the tube and the barometer is said to fall. Therefore every change of height of tho (juicksilver which wo observe is a sil'ii und meosuro of a chatigu iu the volume of uir around us. Further, this change iu volumo tells no less tipuu tho air inside our cuses ami cupboards. When the barometer falls, the air around expands iuto a larger volume, und the air iusido the cupboard ulso expands aud forces itself out at every luiuotu crevice. When thu barometer rises agaiu, the uir inside thu cupboard, as well us outside, condenses and shrinks and uir is forced back iuto thu cupboard to equalize thu pressure, und along with tho uir iu goes the dust. Thu smaller the crevice the stronger I hu jet of uir, the farther goes thu dirt. Wituess tho dirt tracks so olteu seen iu imperfectly framed engravings or photographs. Re member, lu lies und gentlemen, w henever you see the barometer rising, that uu ad ditional charge of du.-.t is entering your cupboards ami drawers. Detroit Free Press. I ni quo May of Cutcliiii Seal. Mr. Dyer, wiio lives on a small island near Seveu Hun lied Acre island, lules borough, -Me., Iris a unique way of catching .seal. lie takes a pole seven feet iu length, to w Inch are attached a number of common co .li,li hooks wilh lanyards several feet in height. Thu hooks me I a le I wilh a Liniu.'. 'I'll in contrivance is unciiorcd and booted, the hooks being just below ihu surl iee. The seals in swallowiug the Inning Imonii. hooked aud are cuught. .Mr. Dyer ha taken a laue number iu this in u.ui r, ew Voik Post, THE EARLY OWU I An Owl once lived in a hollow tre And he wns as wise as wise could ba The branch of Learning he didn't know Could scarce on the tree of knowledge grow. He knew the tree from branch to root. And an Owl like that can afford to hoot, And he hoote 1 until, alas I one day He chance I to hear. In a casual way, 1 An iuslgi ant little bird Make use oV term he had never heard, y He was flying to bed in the dawning llhfc When he heard hor singiug with all her might, "Hurray I hurray for the early worm I" "Dear meP' said the Owl, "what a singu lar term I I wonld look it up If it weren't so late; I must rise at dusk to investigate. Early to bed and early to rise Makes an Owl healthy and stealthy and wise I Po he slept like an honest Owl all day, I Aud rose in early twilight gray. And went to work in the dusky light 'i o look for the early worm all night. He Ht-'uvhed the country for miles around, lint the early worm was not to be fouu I. So he went to bod in the dawning light, And looked for u i "worm" again next night. And again and again, ami nain and again. He sought and he sought, but all iu vain, Till he must have looked for a year and a day For the early worm, In the twilight gray. ' At last iu despair he gave up the search, And was heard to remark, as he sat on his perch I!y the side of his nost in the hollow tree, "Tho thing is as plain as night to me Nothing can shake my cinviction firm. There's no such thin.; as the early worm." Oliver Herford, in St. Nicholas. HUMOR OF THE DAT. Brightest idoa of the century Tho electric light. Dallas News. The man with a pocketful of rocks can afford to throw stones. Boston Transcript. Tho shoemaker is a man who fre quently gets "beaten out of his boots." Statesman. In baseball it does not follow that tho heaviest nine will gravitato to the bot tom. Boston Transcript. It's only iu the order of events that when his boat girl shakes a fellow he's rattled. Philadelphia Times. His Chance: Edith "How cheap I fecit" Young Scapoly "Edith, will you bo mine?" Kate Field's Washiug. ton. Couuting the chickens before they ara hatched is the highest way of showing couliduuco iu the reliability of tho heu. Baltimore American. A man always knows what ho would have done iu another fellow's place, but the other fellow doesn't always believo it. Louisville Courier-Journal. "Give mo the treasury, pie ise," he cried. To a maid with a dark brown curl; Til do it with pleasure, sir, she replied, For sliu was u telephone yirl. Washington Star. A young woman who went out sailing at Atlantic City the other day described the bow and stem ot tho ynoht us "tho point uud th blunt." Philadelphia Rec ord. Edison has putonted COO inventions, but he bus to slap at the summer lly just as vainly us anybody else. Genius can not do everything. Baltimore Ameri can. Gushing Girl "Now, don't you put my mime in your paper; don't you dare." Experienced Reporter "Very well. Row did you say you spell your namei" Washington Star. "Jack Wilkins broke his bicyclo yes terday." "Lucky fellow," replied Willie Wishingtoti. "Aline is a wild a, it was the first day I twiod fi wide it." Washington Post. Things ouo would rather have ex pressed otherwise. (Lady Festus at home, 2 a. m.) Hostess "Only just come, Sir George! How good of you to come so late!" Punch. "You can't claim," said tho mau who doesn't care for tho rod and line, "that fishing affords exercise." "Oh, yes it was the reply; "for the imagina tion. V ashiU''tou Star. "Thu stylo of writing that you do must be very hard work." Herbert "Well, it is; but what made you think of iff" Gladys "Why, it makes me tired to read it. "Chicago Inter-Oceuu. "Ah, Ilardup! I hear your uncle is de-id. Rather an eccentric man. Was he alto ether right iu his head:" "Well .1 1 couldn't say, you know, till tho will is read.'' liostou Commercial Bulletin. Mis Thin "Don't you think my new di 'es is just exquisite They all say so." runiiiu "Oil, lovely! I think that dressmaker of yours could muko a clothes-pole look quito graceful." Brooklyn Eagle. Tramp "Madam, won't von please help a poor sick inaui'' Woman of House "Why, vou don't look sick." 1 ramp "Yes 1 be, too, mi lain." Woman of House "What are you sick off" Tramp "Work." A poor old toper, who was in the habit of getting lost on his way homo, was asked how lie could afford to keep tho dog thut was always with him. "That dog," he said, "not only boards himself but buds me." Boston Post. Rivers "I hear Cliollv Li'htrtate is not going to Europe, alter all. lias hu changed his miudf" B.iuks "II in uiindf" Great tklottl His miudf ' lie simply isn't goiug ou account i total lack of change." Chicago buue. Young Author "What did you of uiy uew novel?'1 Cynical L'u "Oh, it is all well enough, 1 sup but for general use 1 uiu inclmo. think tome other opinio would cheaper uud easier to take." Somei y; Jouiuul.