THE FOREST REPDBLICAN b publishes mrj WtdiexUr, ay J. B. WENK. Offioa In Bmaaxbauch A Co.'a Bunding BLM RUR, TIOIfUTA, Pa, Trm, i . . Uo pirTur. RATES OF ADVERTISING! ; One Square, one Inch, one insertion. .1 10" One Square, one inch, one month ... a 8 00 One Bquare, one inch, three months. . 6 00 One Square, one inch, one year... .. 100 Two Square, one year 15 00 Quarter Column, one year 80 () Half Column, one year 60 00 Una Column, one year . . 100 "0 Legal advertisement ten cent per line each insertion. Marriages and death notices gratia. All Mils for yearly advertisements eollsesed quarterly. Temporary advertisements must be paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. Forest Republican. Ke nkeertpttoas leeelTea ft a I arte Mrloe tkaa tkree mentbe. womapotidmx toilette frem al arU f tht VOL. XXV. NO. 25. eonntrv TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12, 1892. '""T neaeuce wui ukea ( uea $1.50 PER ANNUM. WNainanlcaUou. ayowot Statistics show that trade does not decline fn Presidential years. The United Spates spend $125,000, 000 a year for public chanties and char itable institutions. Within the borders of the Stato of Muino are wild lands ot a total estimated value of $32,000,000. A queer illustration of British back wardness is found by the San Francisco Examiner in the fact that this year sees election returns exhibited to street crowds by the stereopticon for the first tima iu London. The English Hackney horse, which is rapidly coming into favor in this coun try, is in England superceding the Cleve land bay stallion as a siro for carriage horses. Tho Hackney is a thoroughbred of tho linnter type, with more bone, stoutnoss and action than the Cloveland bay. In Japan a play culled the "Extermin ation ot Christianity" is on the boards. In the slaughter of make-believe mis sionaries to the shrieks of the orchestra is wildly applauded. However displeas ing this circumstance may be, the San Francisco Examiner thinks it is less to be deplored than the more practical method of China, in which real mission aries are used. In view of the recent complaints about the "injurious action" of tinned gaodj on the human economy, it is interesting to noto in the Now York Recorder that recent experiments by Lunge and other well-known Carman chemists have de monstrated the fact that aluminum is piactically uuattacked by fruit juices, condensed milk,' and the various aeon stitucuts of preserved meats and vege tables. There is n patient and industrious man named Itila Kittridgc, of 13 jl fast, Mi., who is putting Mr. Glidstone's great speeches on postal c irds, which he sends to the "Grand 0ld Man." On some of the cards he manages to get 20,000 words. Mr. Gladstone is himself ad dicted to the postal card habit; but when he gets some of these missive), he must feel that ho has the disease in a very mild form. Mr. George Bird Grin Dell, of the Forest and Stream Publishing Company, a enthusiastic hunter of wide experi ence, gives, in Scribner, a graphic nar rative of a now extinct sport, and writes with force and feeling respecting tho shameless slaughter that has made the title of this article, "The Last of the Buffalo," so 'appropriate. He says: "Of the millions of buffalo which even in our own time ranged tho plains in freedom, none now re.nain. From tho prairies which they used to darken, tho wild herds, down to the last straggling bull, have disappeared." The American bog is still engaged in pushing his nose into other countries, announces the Chicago Sun. Persecu tion, proscription, libel, infamous slan ders, and even bayonets cannot keep him from inserting bis savory snout into a foreign land, and when once he lifts bis small, twinkling eyes upon a people they Immediately become charmed with his toqthsome possibilities and are the will ing slaves of his porkshlp. The latest conquest which the Yankee hog hat achieved is that of Mexico. According to a dispatch from Kansas City, Senoi Enrique Torcz, a Mexican merchant, has been in that city making arrangements for shippiug hogs to Mexico for . slaugh ter. What the New York Pos: consMors a fraud of a peculiarly abominable char acter has cotrie to light in Germany, where a number ot workman and en gineers employed at the great Bochum Association for Mining aud Steel Foun dry have been arrested on a charge of selling defective rails, wheels, axles, etc., by means of a system of forgery. This material was supplied to the Ger man State Railway, and then iome for eign corporations. It appears that the State Railway employed an impoctor to stamp such goods as had withstood the regular tests. The incriiuiuated work men are accused of baviug made false stamps, with which they marked mater ial which had not been examined; with repairing holes, cracks, and other de fects iu the rails with a particular cement, and so giving the inferior and useless material the appeirunce of fin ished work, and with substituting re jected rails for tuose which the officials had haurivid over to be slumped as sat isfactory, and marking the good rails with the forged stumps. The incentive to the frauds was tho fact ilb work men are paid a premium t'u the i mount of worfe Y'fcd ly tho inspector. How oug they have been indulging in these dishonest practices, how general t'uo distribution ot defective material has been, is still as uncertain as the possible consequences of the rascality. v RUST, Water the roots of a row when the sun that has scorched each patal Sinks beyond distant hills, a circle of burning gold; Give to the steed a stall when the flight that has proved his mettle Is past, like the cyclone's breath, or the spell of a tale that's told. Nourish the root of a lite when the hope that lured It dioth Blow beyond hills that rise all darksome, and far, and grim; Give to the soul that flew, more lofty than eagle-wing flieth, A rest when the plumes droop tired a rest In life's twilight dim. Mary C. Preston, In New York News. ZULEIKA'S WILD RIM ' . A TALK OF TUB DKSKHT. HO can the horse- of Mirouan, sitting erect in his saddle, with lance at rest? As soon as ho came in sight, the date merchants pointed him out to one another and spoke together in low tones. It is the invincible Ei-Malek, chieftain of a fierce mountain tribe, who venerate him as a saint Since ho lost his eldost son, two years ago, El-Malek speaks but little aud ne ver smiles. His beard haR become al most white, but his arm has lost nothing of its power; be handles his deadly lance as if it were a reed, and when he urges bis faithful horse Ycsmf across the desert terror follows ns his shadow. Yussuf, like all the hoiacs of the South, bos a strong back, slender logs, and large hoofs; like the five favorite mares of the prophet, ho is descended from Solomon's famous stables; his coat is snow white, and his long, flowing tail is soft as silk. Yussuf understands aud obeys bis mas ter's lightest wish. Erect in his saddle, El-Malek follows with a keen glance among the motley crowd a man iu a gold embroidered bur noose, who has just come to Mirouan. The tradesmen, also, point at this man with their finger, but with a scornful air, as though indicating one stricken with the plague. This man is Hassan Bey, the insolent chief of the Ouled-Naylt, who, jealous of his brother Ahmed, killed him with arrows shot from afar; be boasts of this deed, and laughs when he sees the crowd move away from him. He bad built upon the D'jelcfa plateau, in the ccutre of his tented village, a stone house, which was also a fortress. For many years he had passed his nights watching the Arab girls dance to the sounds of the derboukas; but, one evening, passing near the fountain, he had stopped to look at tho young girls fifting their copper urns. And now he has come to Mirouan to buy bridal ornaments, for Hassan Bey, chief of the Ouled-Nayls, is to marry the beautiful Zuleika. Zulcika is only a weaver's daughter, but she is very beautiful. The poor child wept, but she went in vain, for the weaver is a miser, and the chief of the Ouled-Nayls is not the man to allow himself to be thwarted in his wishes. She must marry Hassan Bey, the fratri cide. Who would prevent it, since God per mits it? El-Malek had beard this story only an hour before he reached Mirouan, and he had said to himself : "God will not per mit it, for I will prevent it." Zuleika had placed her urn upon the ledge of the fountain, but had not thought of filling it. Her companions, one alter the other, had gone away, but she still remained, it was the last time that she would come to the fountain, for to-morrow Hassan Bey would carry her away to his battlemented house, which was sombre as a tomb. She lifted up her little bronzed hands to heaven imploring that death might be sent to her. But from the leaden sky no consolation came. Instead, Hassan Bey appeared, riding upon his flame colored horse, and escorted by his warriors. He knew that she was at the fountain, aud wished to see her there where he had met her for the first time. She was compelled to hear his lying words. The youDg girl turned her eyes away, and, as she began to fill her urn, her tears mingled with the water. "Zuleika!" Who calls? Certainly Hassan Bey cannot have disguised his' ' voicn with such a grave and manly toue. Who is this man, with the white beard, sitting erect in his saddle, lance in hand, look ing at her so compassionately? "Zuleika!" he called once more, pointing to Hassan Boy, who was ap proaching. She looked up, and suddenly her eyes flashed with a new light, for she lell that this man had been sent by God. "Save me!" she cried; "save me!" El-Malek held out his baud aud aided the young girl to mount before him. Gently holding her frail form, ho mui mured: "Do not be afraid." Theu, as though calliug upou a brother, El-Mulek said: "Yussuf!" The noblo animal neighed, and started off like tho wind. After Yussuf rushed Hassan Bey, with furious clamor, followed by his warriors. Some ot them made as il to draw their bows. "No I" cried Hassan Bey, "du not shoot. I want them both ulive!" Urged on by gentle caresses, Ynnuf flew faster and yet more fast. With loud yells Hassan ISey spurred his hone on, riding ahead of his escort. "They shall not escape me!" lie cries, trem hliu-r with rage and auxiety. "Com age, Yussuf," murmurs El Malek; "you are culled the wind of the desert. Show that you deserve your name, my beauty." Tho day udrnuces, the sky teems to be on ere, but Yussuf does uot falter. uiltcatcd, at firs-, by this furious flight, j Zuleika now began to breathe more freely; so much ground already gained In the direction of El-Mulck's -mountain tribe meant possible deliverance. The child added her gentle exhortations to El-Malck's encouragoments- Hassan Bey's cries seemed to grow more faint. Had he given up the chosef But whence come these clamors that seom to start from tho heights above them? Have his followers climbed the rocks and found a shorter way? It is not the chief's escort that utters these cries. They come from a cabin high up in the mountain; the occupants are watching the exciting chase. Will El-Malek find allies among these people, or will he meet new enemies? His tribe is not far away; if he is recognized tho fugitives are saved. Arms are raised; they are called I No, the bows send forth their arrows t Yussuf utters a painful neigh and El Malek responds with a cry of anguish. An arrow has struck the horse's flank and another has pierced the rider's shoulder. "Faster, Yussuf I Fastorl" beseeches El-Malek. With a desperate effort, Yussuf straightens himself out aod flics under tho whizzing arrows. He bounds like a gazelle that feels that the lion is on her track. "Well done, Yussuf" Now there are no more arrows to fear ; a wall of rocks crowns this height. But death is only staved off blood is streaming from the side of the noble beast; he begins to slacken his pace. El-Malek plies his spurs in vain and Zu leika wastes her caresses aud praise, for tho poor animal's hoofs slip in the nar row path and he staggers. El-Malek'i arm trembles; he is beset with fever; the cool of the falling night does not suf fice to refresh his brow; the profile of the violet mountain and the confuse 1 shape of the turpentine trees, with their blood-red clusters suspended over the abyss, are mingled before his eyes. He is blinded by vertigo. He cannot stop to drink at the brook which flows in" the ravine, though a swallow ot water would, perhaps, save him. Hassan Bey has seen traces of blood upon the rocks, and his cries of hate have become cries of joy. "We have them," he cries; "they are ours I" And yet his voice trembles; he fears the final struggle and El-Malok's terrible lance. , Night has again passed and the light of morning chases the jackals that have come, scenting their prey frjra afar. Yussuf still runs, but much more slowly. Two days' journey separates him from the tribe of which his master is chief. Two days! and Yussuf has but a few hours to live! He feels that with his last breath his beloved master, too, will die. The path becomes narrower. Yus suf reaches the ridge, and, reeling, stops. "The end has come!" murmured Zu leika, terrified, and for the hundredth time she besought El-Malek: "Do not remain with me. Your horse can still save you alone. Fly 1" "Yussuf can save neither you nor me." "Then kill me." "I have promised to save you!" "God bos not wished it to be so. Save me from this man I" "That is what I am going to do. ! Alight." "Ah, yes; I understand you death is at the bottom of this abyss, I shall seek it." "You do not understand me. Look I" and, with his hand, El-Malek pointed to the north, to the other slope of the mountains, which could be seen through the hollow of the rocks. "You see," he said, "that mirror that shines down there? It is Luke Zabrez. The mountain on the other side of tho lake is the Djebel Sahari. There is the tribe of my fathers, there are camped my. people. Hasten with all your strength. Order tho first herdsman you n eet to call iu my namo to his nearest neighbor, so that, from summit to sum mit, my name rr.ay wake my warriors. Cry to all the echoes of the mountains: 'El-Malek shall not die unavenged!' Go!" "But it will take two days, at least." "God be with you!" She kissed the hand of tho chief who had saved her life; theu she ran down the road as quickly as her failing strength would let bar. El-Malek plaoted his lance in the ' ground aud supported himself against I it, erect in bis saddle. He talked for a ' long time to Yussuf, and the auimal I shook his bleeding head. "Halt r ordered Hassan Boy. Reach ing a turn iu the road, he had seen El Mulek pluuted across the defile, and this uiw attitude astonished and disturbed him. "Does he pretend to oppose us now? Let us wait, aud iu the meantime breathe a little." The iidvico was good, aud no one ' gaiusaia it. iuen uuu norses sought a spring. Hassaa Bey, however, did not take his eyes oil the redoubtable mau who sat there ruotiouloss upou his horse between the two walls of rock. "Aud now that all have reste 1 enough, forward !" No one stirred. So long as it was a question of pursuing El-Malek, the chief's followers felt brave enough. Now that they were culled upou to at tack him face to face, the boldest were afraid, llossau Bey himself trembled. "Let hiiu begin," said oue, "let him come on." "Very well," growled tho chief. The day declined; tho redoubtable 3cutiuel, who hud gleamed white in the burning sun, now stood out in block silhouette ugainst the starry sky. Neither horse nor master stirred, aud the lance still stood pluuted iu the ground. Tho nio'-n rose, aud it was an awe some sij,u. his motionless warrior uudet the pale light; ho watched the enemy with .us steady eyes still open like diumoudb. "He is covering Zuleika' retreat!" Hassan Bey had sal ' U himself at the very first. He ell iuut it would soon be too lato to continue the pursuit. And yet he remained in his place, changed into a statue, powerless to conquer the fear that emanated from this grand guardian. After the rosy dawn, the leaden sky; after the red twilight, the blue night; then the aurora again; and the sentinel, still motionless, as well as those whose way he bars. Somotimes the shadow of an eagle makes a fleeting spot on the rocks; then the shadows increase, and great birds come from all corners of the heavens, drawing closer their rapid circles; now it is no longer eagles, but vultures. They almost touch the lance of the cavalier, but he did not appear to see them. One of them perched upon his shoulder. El-Malek did not stir. "He is dead!" cried Hassan Bey, mad with anger and spite; and, turning to ward his men who still hesitated, h gave the order: "Forward!" Neither Hassan Bey nor his men ad vanced twenty paces. The noise that put the vultures to flight was the the gallop ing of the Bedouin horses that had com from the Djcbel-Sahari. The threati that Hassan Bey uttered to keep up hit courage were never finished ; an arrow pierced his throat, and, lulling from hit horse, he rolled into the abyss. "Each one for himself 1" cried thi Oulde-Nuyls. And while they rushed down the path at full speed, without daring to look back, Zuleika, sobbing, kissed the icy hand of the chieftain who had protected her iu death as in life. From the French in Argonaut. A Cloud of Swallows. Two days after leaving Port Said, E ypl, says a correspondent of the New castle (Eng.) Chronicle, we had some very unsettled weather. Date, April 30, at 6 p. m., latitude thirty degrees north, longitude twenty-three degrees . east, Looking southward, I observed what ap peared to be a small black cloud, rising and comiug steadily toward our steamer. When I looked again a few minutes later, instead of seeing the cloud I saw some hundreds of swallows. They flew around our steamer several times, as though undecided whether to stay until tho storm passed away or not. At last, just before dark, several of them alighted on . the. stay rim of our main funnel, which was soon one black mass of birds. The rain came down in torrents, and it was pitiful to see those frail creatures, struggling with the wind and rain. Those of them that could not find a roosting place soon commenced to fall on deck quite helpless. I picked up all those that fell on the bridge deck and lodged them in the chart room. Those birds that fell on the fore deck were sheltered in the forecastle by the crew. The next day came in bright and clear, with a liiht westerlv breeze, and all the swallows took flight just at sunrise, fly ing in a northwesterly direction. The captive birds were soon set free, and they followed in the wake of the others. I may say all the birds we had were able to fly, except one, and it died during the day. Several dead ones were found on the decks at daylight. These birds had beautiful plumage, and I fancy they looked rather smaller than the swallows I have seen in England. The captive birds had golden-brown feathers just above and below the beak and white breast; back black feathers with a bluish tinge; wings and tail brown, and four round white spots across. Prodigious Memory in a Child. An infant phenomenon has been dis covered at Plaisance, a suburb of Paris, in the person of a little girl called Jeanne Eugenie Moreau, aged only five, but endowed with a most extraordinary memory. She is a walking encyclopedia on all matters appertaining to the history of France, aud especially of the great Re volution; is an adept also in natural history, and at the same time answers without hesitation or error practical questions about cooking, gardening, and household management. The youthful prodigy was born in Paris in January, 1887, her father, Phillipe Moreau, being an humble labor er, but descended from a revolutionary hero whose name figures in the auoals of 1789, and who was decorated by Gen. Lafayettu after the taking 6f the bastile. Owing to the poverty of her progenitor, Eugenie Moreau was adopted by a widow Madam Calley-p-who, noticing the re tentive faculties of the child, cultivated aud developed them with assiduity until the phenomenon has become capable of passing a stiff competitive examination aud of putting to shame many a school boy and school-girl of maturer years and more expensive educatiou. The fate of Eugenie Moreau will no doubt be that reserved for all intellec tual prodigies of tender years. She will be exhibited to scientific men and re ported upon, she will probably receive an offer from an enterprising showman, and in all likelihood Eugenie, should she survive academical testings and public examinations, will eventually settle down to the life of a schoolmistress a calling for which her muivelous memory will pre-eminently fit her. Loudon Tele graph. Matching Teeth, Perhaps the greatest difficulty that deutists meet with is the matching of false teeth with the natural teeth of their customers. The tooth factories supply dentists with riugs upon which are strung thin metal bars, each carrying a tooth at its extremity. There are twenty live of these sample teeth, that run all the way from nearly white to a shade that is almost olive. Some of the twenty live usually almost mutches the patient's teeth, and, at any rate, enables the den tist to mttch the teeth by application at tho factory. Lunipli.'hters to the tjuecu. The "vttxfittcr" in Queen Victoria's household arrauges the candles on the dinner table, ior which he draws $300 year, but he does not light them. That duty is performed by two lumplighters, drawing a salary of $500 each. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A storm travels at the average rite ot fifty miles an hour. In ten years the descendants of two rabbits will number 70,000. A typewriting machine which will print on the leaves of a blank book of any thickness is the latest invention. A French artist has succeeded in photographing a flying insect. The time of exposure was but l-250th of a second. A plant for the manufacture of hand grenades has been erectod in connection with the National Artillery foundry of Mexico. African travelers tell us that the white rhinoceros frequently dies from eating poisonous plants which have no effect on the black oue, probably because the fine scent of the latter tolls him it is dangerous. Aluminum is found combined with 195 other minerals, and therefore con stitutes a large part of the crust of the earth, but until recently has been very expensive because of the difficulty in separating it. A company in Louisville is manufac turing watering carts driven by electric ity. A long pipe pierced with small holes diffuses the water, and in case of meeting other vehicles the pipe can be swung alongside of the cart. Observations at thirty-eight stations in the Adriatic, Mediterranean, Atlantic, Nortlfy and Baltic, have shown, according- Xt. A. Supan, that all the seas of E Nie, contrary to an ol t hypothesis, . practically the same level. In order to prWent persons under standing telegraphy from reading the messages in offices and hotels, as they are received by the sounder, a secret telegraph receiver has been devised, fitted with a resonator ot aluminum of extreme sonorousness. A Tennessee inventor has patented a gauge for determining the age of horses. The device consists of a steel plate, hav ing a tapered body portion, one of its longitudinal edges being marked by lines and figures. By applying the scale to the teeth of a horse, its approximate age is said to be determined. Dr. Da reste has demonstrated that monsters and monstrosities during ani mal development ure not the results of pathological changes in the embryo, as hitherto supposed, but modifications of the processes of organic evolution, such as bring about the difference between individuals and races in mankind. A new fly trap is run by an electric motor, and consists of a belt of sweet ened paper, about fourteen inches long, passing over two pulleys, onu of which is covered by a cone containing a brush. The paper moves slowly, and as it passes under the brush the flies are swept into the cone, from which they can find no exit. Currents of water serve to a vast ex tent the purpose of distributing seeds. Walnut, butternut and pecan trees are found close to streams, where they drop their nuts into the passing flood, to be carried far away and start other groves perhaps hundrodsof miles distant. Tree seeds of many sorts are carried by oceanic currents. Among marine architects it is be ginning to be a serious question if iron is not better than steel for shipbuilding purposes; and the cases of the old Sarah Sands, Great Britain and Great Eastern are quoted as proving that iron-plated ships, with thoir increased thickness and better riveting are much stronger aud more lasting than any steel-constructed vessel yet put to a breaking up test. Tho Delaware Indian as au Artist. Much might be said of the skill of the Delaware Indian in all of the many phases of his industry, but I propose only to speak of him as an artist. A love of bright colors was always, and is, a prominent characteristic, and probably tbe first attempt at personal adornment was the attachment to the person of feathers and small stones of bright hues. Mica aud quartz crystals are common iu graves. The glitter and glistening ol these would be sure to attract, lint what of the next step, that of shaking Iroin formless masses objects that strike the fancy of the wearer? To shape a pebble that it might better meet the needs of a club-head or hatchet called for little skill, and the labor of making an axe bai recently been shown to be but slight! but the idea of symmetry was developed and cultivated until a weapon was finally produced that can not be im proved upon. The same is true of chip ping from flint points for arrow-shafts. A mere splinter of stone, if sharp aud narrow, would be as effective as any shupe that could be devised ; but such chance splin ters do not appear to have been used, except directly after tho in vention of the bow and arrow; a, id, so far as is now discoverable, a series of artistically designed patterns have been in use for hundrodsof years. Popular Science Monthly. . A Grain Pipe Line. A Chicago woman, Mrs. N. E. Bess ley, has invented a scheme for carrying small grains through pipe . lines. Hei scheme is to lay pipes from Chicago to the Atlantic coast through which grain is to forced by pneumatic pressure at the rate of twelve miles au hour. Tbepowei stations are to te placed tweuty-livt miles apart. Sho suys that the grain will be subject to no friction, and that the cost of transporting it f i on Chicago to New York would ho umVi three cents a bushel. A working in .l of the contrivance is to be erected .. Chicago this fall. Portable Electrlo Lanterns. In trying to solve the difficulties ol searching lor tho wounded ut uighl alter a great battle tho experiment has been tried with fuir success at (Jrau of send ing out men armed with portable elec tric lanterns, which were fod by accu mulators coutuiued iu their kuuu&auks, A GREAT NAVAL REVIEW. PREPARING FOR A BIO GATHER ING AT HAMPTON ROADS. Tli 1)1 (Tor cut Governments That Will Send War Vrsftcls Grandest Dikplny ot Modern Time. TT LREADY tho naval authorities arc beginning to prepare for the great naval review that is J" to inaugurate the celebrations in honor of the Columbian year, next April. The appropriation made by Congress ($"0,000) will Hot cover the expenses of mobilizing the fleet, let alone the ex penses of maintaining it for several months, on uur coast, so Secretary Tracy will havo to draw liberally from the regular naval appropriation for the running expenses of tbe navy. Invita tions have been prepared for all tho countries of the world to be represented at tbe international review. It is ex pected that all the maritime powers of the Southern Continent will accept. "Over on the other side" tho nations will watch each other. Of course Rus sia and Germany will scud a fleet out of good feeling toward the United State?, aud if Italy properly honors tho mem ory of her son Columbus she will send some of her teii-thousaud-ton battle ships. The English uavy, largo as it is, is very well divided over the world, so it is not probable that she will send a very large fleet, and upon her action in the matter depends largely the action of France. It is understood that Jupan is to send a cruiser, of which she has some fine ones, across the Pacific and around the horn to take part in the first interna tional review held in tho country that first visited Japan to secure a mercantile treaty, and that Turkey will unbend from her religious rigor enough to send over one of her fine war ships. This vessel will have a distinguishing feature that may be new to many Americans. As an article of the Mohammedan religion makes the bell sacred it cannot be used on board Turkish ships, as it is upon others, for striking the hours aud sound ing fog signals, aud by a special suspen sion of the navigating rules a drum is used instead. Of our own warships all the new steel ships will be iu the review except the lit tle Petrel, which is out in China, probably to spend the rest of her life there. Sev eral of the ships now under construction will be in commission by that time, but it is doubtful if tho big cruiser New York will be finished in time to partici pate. In case the Cramps do get her completed by March she will probably be Admiral Gherardi's flagship during the review. The Montgomery, Detroit and Macbias will be in commission by that time. The other ships taking part will be the Baltimore, Philadelphia, Charleston, Chicago, Boston, Atlanta, Miantonomoh, Concord, Yorktown, Ben nington, Vesuvius and Kearsarge. If the regulation fleet formation is con formed with the sixteen vessels will form a fleet, with Admiral Gherardi as commander-in-chief; then there will be a division of the fleet into two squadons, with a commodore or rear admiral in command of each; tho subdivisions of the squadrons go under technical namo of division and are composed of four ves sels, then the divison is again divided into two sections. When all the ships anchor in Hampton Roads next April it will be a grand array, and the visiting and wining and dining, the balls, parties and receptions will bo something for officers to romotu ber and tell of for years, whilo the din when all the ships salute somo new comer will dwarf a large-sized bombard ment. And an "officer of tue deck" on any one of tho ships will have to keep his eyes open for commanding officers' pennants, signals and all tho routine of a warship if he docs uot wish to receive the augry "bonedictioa" of bis captain. After tho mobilization of the fleets at Hampton Roads they will proceed in company to New York harbor. In column at cruisiug distance, 400 yards, fifty ships, which number seems quite probable, will make a parade twelve miles loug, and by tho time the lust oue has passed, the leader will be "bull down," only a patch of smoke or a light network of rigging. It is to be earnestly hoped that the review will bo the grandest naval display of modern timos, all calculated to increase the friendship of tho nations. Washington Star. 'Sick" Pearls Iu a Submerged Cn're. At the foot of a clill under tho win dows of the Castlo of .Miraiuar, formerly the residence of the Mexicau Emperor Maximilian, at a depth of uigjity feet below the surfuco of the clc tr waters of the Adriatic, is a kind of cage fashioned by divers in thu face of the rock. In that cage are some of the most magnifi cent pearls in existcnoo. They belong to the Archduchess Hilnor. Having been left unworn for a long time, the gems lost their color and became "sick," uud the experts were unanimous in de claring that the only means by which they could be restored to their original brilliancy was by submitting them to a prolonged immersion in 'he depths of the sea. They have been lying thure for a number of years, aud are gradually but very slowly regaining their former uu rivulled brilliancy. Statistics on Growth. The year of the greatest growth in boys is the seventeenth; in girls, the fourteenth. While girls reach full huight iu their fifteenth your, they acquire full weight at the age of twenty. Boys are stronger thau girls from birth to the eleventh year; then girls become su perior physically to the seventeenth year, when the tables are agaiu turned and remain so. From November to April children grow very little and gaiu uo weight; from April to July they gain in height, but lose iu weight, aud from July to November they increase greatly in weight, but not in height. British Medical Moulhly, HATH A THOUSAND EYES. The night hath a thousand eyes, And the day but one; Yet the light of a bright world dies With the dying sun. The mind has a thousand eye., And the heart tiut one; Yet the light of the whole worl 1 dls, When love is don . F. W. Bour.lillon. nUMOR OF THE DAY. Knights of labor When the baby's teething. New York News. "Every man has his price." "What is Jobson's?" "He gives himself away." Puck. When a grain field has got about all it can hdld it Is ready for some mower.--Texas Sifting. The aotonaut loves his balloon, In fact, he's completely taken up with it. Binghamton Leader. "How's trade?" inquired Chuinplefch of his tailor- "Oh, just sew sew." Kate Field's Washingtou. After the pickpocket has succeeded in gotting his lur.d in hn takes things eas ily. Binghamton Leader. Before Marriage: lie "Kiss me, Car rie" Alter marriage: She "Kiss me, Harry." Boston Transcript. A girl may not want to wear her love on ber sleeve, but she usually likes to have her lover there. StaUsman. There is a fat mau down in tho Neck who is so closo fisted that ho even hates to perspire freely Philadelphia Record. Amenities in Wyoming. Bella "How old is Miss Simpson?" Stella "Old enough to vote." Chicago News-Record. "How are you getting aloni;?" askc l tho farmer of tho miller. "Same old grind," was the hitter's reply. Detroit Free Press. A late fad is to make ice cream in the shape of billiard balls. The boys are ex pected to take the cue at once. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Clara "I want something to match my head to-night. What would you wear?" Mamie "Something light." Detroit Free Press. The stoiy that the brewers throughout the country are purchasing grasshoppers to get their hops for making beer is said to be incorrect. Carlisle Herald. "Docs a man have to be a Christian to get through college, nowadays?" "Not at all, but h '?ut be a nuncio man, without doubt. Boston Courier. "Do you refuse me ou account of my age? I am only fifty-five. " "That's just it. You may live fifteen or twenty years yet." Indianapolis Journal. He "Congratulate me. I have just resisted a temptation." She "What was the temptation?" He "To pio pose to you." New York Herald. The gentleman, so oitcu mentioned in novels, who riveted people with the guze,. has now obtained permanent employment at a boiler manufactory. New Moon. Bella (explaining with difficulty) "Er do you follow me, Mr. Masher?" Masher "Urn! I'm after you, Miss Fadds, it that's whai you mean?" Tid Bits. "Mercy I" cried Juliet. "This glove is tight." "I, too, should be intoxic ted," rapturously responded Hi "were I a glove upon that hand." lia pcr's Buzar. The tenor who attempted to whip tho editor ot the Dramatic Gazetto tor a sharp criticism, wheu ho got through had uo ear for music. The editor had both of them. Now York News. Mr. Bullion "You aro fur too young to marry my daughter. You are only eighteen." Tom "Yes, sir, but .Miss Julia is thirty-four, so the two of us would average about right." Jester. A barrister observed to a learned brother iu court that he thought his whiskersvery unprofessional. "You aro right," replied his friend; "a lawyer cannot be. too barefaced.'' i'it-liits. Mike "it's like owld times to see you again, Pat. Why did you niver wroite me a letther since last we met?" Put "Oi didn't kuow yer address, Muike." Miko "Thin why in the naino o' siuse, did ye uot wroite fur ill" Harper's liazar. Always puss tho fruit to cveryhly else before helpiug yourself. L'oui uou politeness will induce your company to leave the choicest specimens upou tho plate, aud wheu it comes to your turu you cau cat theu without exciting 10 uiurk. Bostou Transcript. Pupa "Well, Tommy, and how did you like it?" Tommy (who hus been taken to churcu for the first Inui) "Very much, iudee.l. Everybody had to keep veiy quiet, but one man sio d up and talked thu whole time, uud at last we all hud to get up and slug to keep him quiet." Pick-Me l'p. .Mudgo "Jud'e lblligus is a remark ably easy mau to net acquainted with, don't you think?" Vubsley "I never noticed it." Mudge "lie is, though. 1 hadn't known him for over an hour lie fore 1 borrowed a dollar of him, and iu sido of the next hour we got o well acquainted that he refused to h ud mo uuotber oue." ludiunapolis Jouk.jI. Mother (iuose. Mother Goose waa a real character, and was nut au imaginary personage, as we used to suppose. Her maidi u namo wns Elizabeth Foster, and she was torn oi 1001. Sho married Isaac tioo.-e iu 10113, aud a few yens ufterwaid becamo a member of the Old South Chinch. Sho died iu 1757, uged inneiy-two yi us. The lirst edition of her songs wa-. pub lished in Boston (lTlOi, by her sou-ui-law, Thomas Fleet. Tlie house in w ii;c.i a great part of her lile was spent was a low, ouc-story budding, with dormer windows aud a red tiled roof, looking something liku uu old ilulisli couuiry collate. THE NlOHT A 1