THE1 FOREST RIPDELICAN 4b ratxiak mrf WaeaMaay. y J. E. WENK. "OWo In Bmaarbaojh Co.' Vofldlu; bui rrurr, nomwr, r. Tar ma, . . . 0I.BO par Yaiir. n nkwrtptlM naalvaa f skarVa, avrlo lt Urn aiaiittia, Oorrafpename KtltUW In al aarto af Ik RATIS Of ADVERTISING I ' Ona ftjnara, ona Inok, one lnartio,. t Om hquara, on Inch, on. month. ,, I 00 On. Hquare, on. Inoh, tbrae months. . O On. Hquare, on. Inch, on. year , W 00 1 wo Kqur on. 7 Mr 1ft 00 Quarter Column, on. year. , ., f 00 Half Oottamn, one year MOO On. Column, on. Jar. 100 K Lacai aovartlaaourita tea ent par 11m amok laaartkm. Marriages and death notices grattl. Ail Mil (ur yearly advertisement" nOaiM aairtxriT. Tamporary advertiasineBM acart b paid ia advanoe, Job work oeah on delivery. ICAN. VOL. XXVI. NO. 28. '""""T- hun u M lafcaa l aa; TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1893. S1.50 TElt ANNUM, FOREST D TO T Tlio political situation in Europa continues to grow darker. I . " Tlie Japanese eat more fish than any other people in the world. With them meat entiug is a foreign innova tion, confined to tlio rich, or rather to thoifo rich pcoplo who prefer it to the National dirt. I - The farmer who is feeding his wheat to his horses should, in the opinion of tho Courier-Journal, hold both his wheat and bin horses until ho digests the fact that wheat will bo wheat in tho world's markets during the year uhead of us. Tho new warships are a credit to the Nation. Recently the Philadel phia mado the run from Rio do Janeiro to Callao, a distance of C000 miles, in twenty days and eighteen hours, with out stopping anywhere.for coal. This was a speed of 242 miles a day and a continuous run of twenty-one days without stopping at any coaling sta tion. A poor old man, who onco was a well-to-do merchant iu Wisconsin, and likewise was of much State renown as a pnblio speaker of force and persua aiveness, has been taken to the alms house in Baralioo, weak in mind and poverty-stricken, and past eighty years of age. "The poorhouse is hospitable when all other friends fail," is the comment of the New York Times. Doctor J. T. Boyd, of Indianapolis, has added his voico to that of Lieuten ant Totteu, and declares that - the end of the world is at hand. In support of bis theory, ho says that tho British Chronological Society, composed of noted scientific men, his arrived at the same conclusions as those reaohod by Lieutenant Totton and himself, and that all prophecy points to 1899 as the date of final smashnp. Some idea of the enormous propor tions the business of hotel keeping has assumed in this country may be gained, declares the New Orleans Picayune, from the fact that there are in the United States upward of 60,000 hotels, exclusive of what may properly be termed inns and taverns, and what are commonly known as apartment-houses, although the latter are in many in stances conducted as hotels, in that they have a common kitchen and dining-room. Deer and boars are reported to be mora plentiful now iu the "great woods" of Oxford County, Maine, thau at any other time during the present generation. These woods extend, in a belt from four to six miles wide, from Dixfleld away up into the un trodden wilderness of Northern Maine, and much of the area has seldom been viaited by sportsmen. Driven from the hunting grounds about Rangeley Lake the game took refuge in these woods, and have multiplied there un molested. The New York News observes: Now .the surgeons have cut out a man's spleen, uud yet be lives and has red blood, and will, it is said, recover. No ona has ever known absolutely what is tbe ofiloo of the spleen. The organ is not a vital one, but is ofteu much dis eased and very painful. Tho opera tion to remove it is techuiouUy called splenectomy. Many years ago a writer in Chambers's Miscellany eon tended that tho spleen was tho manu factory of the white blood corpuscles. If that were so, tbe red corpuscles in the veins and arteries would have soon faded in vividness in tho patient, Athlete Short, of Yonkers. Are the spleen and tho vermiform appendix, which are declared to be useless, left as hiuta of the evolutional y process? Was man differently constituted why 11 they were useful to him, instead of being aa now unnecessary? Who cau aay? George. Vauderbilt is one of nature's queer freaks. He is the leant kuown of any of tho enormously wealthy meu of New York. He must bo worth at least $35,000,000, but he might walk the length of the entire city without being recognized by half a dozen per sons. Ho has never been prominent in any public movement. He has never attended a public function where crowds of people congregate, and when he goes to the theatre or to the opera be hides himself iu tho rear of a box, says the New York Herald. Young Vauderbilt has many fads. First of .11 he is a bookworm and is iu a way a' womau-hater. Formerly he was rated aa being, next to John Jacob A slur, the wealthiest young bachelor iu ihe Uni ted States, having $1,000,000 in hi own right and control for every past year of hiti life. Now, as Joi.a Jacob tutor is a husband ami father, Georyo Vanderbilt stands at the head of his class alone. Tho creation of money order offices in the small postofflces is advocated by the Springfield (Mass.) Union on tho ground that such offices would greatly facilitate the transaction of business in rural neighborhoods. 11 . '! A business man of Canada, of an en terprising nature, has established a "floating bank" on Kootenai Lake, Canada. It in in a steamer which journeys from place to place along tho lake; thus enabling its owner to sup ply the inhabitants of the lake villages with banking facilities. Doctor Oliver Wendell Holmes says that tbe largest elm ho ever saw was in Oxford, England, and measured twenty-five feet in circumference. There was an elm of about the same size in Springfield, Mass., some years ago. The Doctor estimates the life of the American elm at between 200 and 800 years. If any survive to be 800 years, he thinks, it is as wrecks, liable to go to pieces in tho first heavy storm. ' Tho method of harvesting wheat on the great bonanza ranches of the Da kota is said to have amazed tho for eign Agricultural Commissioners at the World's Fair. To clear up 610 acres of wheat in one day with 150 hands and forty-five harvesters is a feat which has bocn paralleled in Cali fornia, Nebraska and other big West ern grain States, but it is doubtful, thinks the San Francisco Chronicle, if any part of Europo can show such rapid work. Lifo insurance companies are becom ing the holders of enormons masses of capital, notes the New York Tribune. Statistics made public at the last meet ing of the National Association of Life Underwriters show that the companies taking no account of assessment cor porations and societies, hold assets to the value of $860,000,000, that they recoive from policy holders about $175,000,000 a year, that thoir gross inoome is nearly $220,000,000 annually, and that they pay about $100,000,000 annually to the insured in the form of death losses, surrenders and dividends. Though most people are equipped with thirty-two teeth only, the Shah of Persia appears to be more amply provided for, as we are told that he has just had his fortiethmolar ex tracted. The phenomenon is thus ex plained. The first time his Eastern Majesty suffered from a decayed tooth and had to have it removed his loyal subjects offered him as a solatium a number of presents amounting in all to ten thousand gold sequins. Hav ing thus discovered a new source of supply for his privy purse, the Shah, whenever he feels the want of those little presents that help to maintain the glow of friendship, causes the fact of his having another bad tooth to be proclaimed by a flourish of trumpets i i all parts of his empire, and the presents begin to pour in. Great Britain has undertaken an other great enterprise in Africa, which will probably have an immense effect in the extension of its empire and tho civilization of the dark continent. It is to erect a telegraph line from Alex andra, in Egypt, directly through the heart of tho continent to Capo Town. The preliminary surveys bavo already been made. The line will traverse. Egypt, the Soudan, tho region of the great lakeB, and the East Africa Com pany's territory, German East Africa, the Portuguese possessions, Mashoua land, Khama's country, Bechuanalaud, the Transvaal, the Orange Free State and Cape Colony. - Contracts have already been signed for constructing the lino for more than half the dis tance, and work ia being rapidly pushed, so that the whole is expected to be in working order early next year. The Atlanta Constitutiou says: Congressman Brosius, of Pennsyl vania, is a man who has a vivid recol lection of his experiouej during tho war. He came near losing his life in tho fight with Pickett's forces at Green Plains. He was one of the 300 men who charged across a wheat-field, a third of a mile in width npon a Con federate rifle pit and of the number only 125 came out alive. The Confed erates waited until tbe stormiug party wai within twenty-five yards of the pit and then they opened deadly fire, he tells. Brosius, who was a boy of nineteen, stopped to pick up a wounded comrade, and as he did so a rifle ball pierced his shoulder, shat tering the blade and making him a cripple for life. He still carries a mememto of that day in tbe shape of a pocket diary, which he wore in his vest. There is the mark of a bullet iu it that would have gone through the young soldier's heart if it had not been btopped by the book. HACK AND 1IEW. Haok and How were tbe sons of Go J In ths earlier earth than now i Odb at His right hand, one at Hts loft, To obey as He taught them how. And Haok was blind, and Hew was dumb, But both had the wild, wild heart 1 And Ood'i calm will was their burning will, And the gist of thoir toll was art. They mado the moon and the belted stars, They ant the sun to ride ; They loosed ths girdle and veil of ths sea, Ths wind and the purplo tide. Both flower and boat beneath thoir bands To beauty and speed outgrow The furious, fumbling hand of Hank, And the glorying hand of Hew. fhen fire and clay, they fashioned a man, And painted him rosy brown t And God Hlmsolf blew hard In bis eyes , "Let thorn burn till tney smoulder down !" And "There !" said Haok, and "There!" thought How, "We'll rest, for our toll Is done." But "Nay," the Master Workman said, "For your toil Is Just begun. "And ye who served Me of old as God Bhnll serve He anew as man, Till I compass the dream that is In My heart, And perfoct tbe vaster plan." And still the erafstsman over bis erat, In the vague white light of dawn, With God's calm will for bis burning will, While the mounting day comes on, J earning, wind-swift, Indolent, wild, Tolls with those shadowy two The faltering, restless hand of Hack, And the tireless hand of Hew. Bliss Carman, In Atlantic. EYRYBOI)rS GOOD FRIEND BI JOHNSON BURT. HAT was the name by which he was mo e t frequently designated, al though all of his acquaintances knew very well that his visiting card bore the words, "Mr. Robertes Brune." Ho dressed well, carried in pnblio a cheerful counte nance and an in quiring eye, and, aa to business, his desk was in the of fice of a private banking house near Wall street, and ho was supposed to be a silent partner of the bankers them selves. He belonged to two or three clnbs and spent much timo in each of them, which is not tbe way of city men of brisk business manner, such as Mr. Brune possessed ; and scores of strangers, brought into one or other of the clubs by city acquaintances who did not know what else to do with them, gratefully remembered Mr. Brune as one of the evening's chief sources of enjoyment. He had a way of becoming acquainted quickly and of making new acquaintances feel en tirely at ease with him, and he also had a way of remembering a call or two ho had to make, and in which he would invite a new acquaintance of the proper sort to join, which was so nnlike the custom of New Yorkers in general that men from other cities And without New York connections were likely to feel under obligations to him and also to believe that they had mado the entree of metropolitan society. As time went on, it was remarked at tho clubs that Brune himself intro duced many men from out of town, but as all of these were anxious to re pay all courtesies they received, and were fairly able to do it, the members who took most notice of Brune' hos pitality mado no objection, for they were the professional club loungers a class of men who never fail to enjoy entertainments for which other men pay. There pours into the great city a Btcady stream of men and families who have made money elsewhere and want to spend it where t he most pleasure can bo bought. To all those who fell in his way Brune was as hearty as if they had been old friends. He did not introduce them to members of the "Four Hundred," but he explained to them, conuuontally, that his own frieuds were not of that particular set because 4hey did not care to be in it, and that they were quite as good and leflnod as most of the people whose names appeared oftenest in tho fash ionable news of the daily paers a statement which nobody could deny. He would take unwearied pains, too, with families who desired to make the city their home ; he would take them to real estate agents who could be trusted to deal fairly with them, and he knew tho best decorators and up holsterers, and dealers in furniture and pictures and bric-a-brac, and he would introduce newcomers iu a man ner which would make them truly gTateful. He would also introduce thorn to Holdom & Trust, the bankers with whom he had his office, taking care first to assure them that there was a great difference between banks iu great city ; the bigger institutions were mere machines, while Holdom A Trust was a concern modeled after the Eug lish banks, where the accounts were few but large, and where any customer was made to feel as much at home as if he were in a friend's parlor which, indeed tbe business office of the firm greatly resembled in its appointments and quiet. No oue ever seemed to find reason to complain of Brune ; ho never took his mule acquaintances to gambling houses or got them drunk, and ha never made love to tbe young ladies of their families that came to tbe city. Indued, to his newer acquaintance this seemed his only fault ; for a num ber of young women who had broken with their original cavaliers, ss be oame damsels who aspired t J become city belles, fouud Bruno much more to TV fir? 1 their liking than most of the city youths with whom, through his kind offices, they became acquainted. He had so much of what women call "style," and ho knew how to say nice things, and to suggest new ways of killing time, and to occasionally pro vide pleasant surprises that cost money a faculty which is quite as rare among citv youths, in proportion to thoir numbers, as in any country village. To be the wife of such a man would be to become a social queen so thought some pretty young women whose knowledge came principally from their day-dreams. But Brune seemed provokingly blind to all intimations that there were hearts at his feet, waiting only to be picked up ; even when rallied on be ing a bachelor he would escape by laughing and saying that he was really too poor to marry and do justice to a wife. This appeared strange to many who saw bow freely he spent money when he wished to entertain a party ; but ho was always able to say truly that a bachelor's personal expenses were comparatively trifling, while to maintain a home in good style in the city cost a great lot of money a statement which heads of families, whether new or old, were always ready to verify from tho depths of personal experience. The truth was, that Brnne had started in lifo with a firm determina tion to marry rich or not at all, and he was keeping himself faithful to that purpose. It cost him terribly, be sometimes told himself, for he was really a susceptible fellow and his heart got a new scar about onoe a year ; but he wasn't going to win a girl merely to have her taken from him by a matter-of-fact father, who didn't want his money spent by his daugh ter s husband. He was in the market ; if any rich man wanted him for a son- in-law there was a proper way for tho rich man to bring the affair abont provided the daughter was pleasing, Indeed, Brune was obliged to elude one brilliant opportunity to marry money, both father and daughter be ing willing and anxious ; but the lady was a kittenish creature past forty, while Brune himself was little beyond thirty. But the god of lovo and the goddess of plenty kept their eye upon him, and there came a time when they seemed to join forces. Miss Adah Moorhart, a handsome damsel from the far West, had set her heart on becom ing Mrs. Brnne, and, as she had been accustomed to having her own way about everything else, she did not in tend to be thwarted in her one great est desire. She had an able ally in her mother, who held the family pnrso- strings and wanted just such a man as Brune in the family, her own husband having amounted to nothing since he inherited his father's money. Being a prudent woman, she had interrogated her bankers, Messrs. Holdem & Trnst, very closely about Brune's business and financial standing ; but those gen tlemen declined to say more than that Bruno banked with them ; his account, though not very large, was never over drawn ; he had a few thousand dollars' worth of securities in their safe ; his business was a commission business, which, in New York, was a term which covered almost anything; but they ohanoed to know that Bruno's own branch of it was of a confidential na ture, and that all the checks he depos ited with them were drawn by houses of good business standing. Behind all thu there seemed some mystery which Mrs. Moorhart was determined to solve; but the bankers pleaded bus iness confidence as their excuse for not going into particulars, unless author ized to do so by their customer. From that day Brune's fortune was made, as he half suspected when his bankers told him of Mrs. Moorhart's visit, for a woman of strong will and abundant leisure will expend a lot of both for the bliss of fathoming a mys tery. Certainly there could not be anything wrong about Brune, or some one would know of it ; no one who knew him said anything but good of him ; besides, had he not always been known as everybody's good friend? Mrs. Moorhart triod to make her home even more agreeable to him than it had been, while the daughter let her glorious eyes rest upon him from timo to time in a manner which no man with eyes of his own could fail to un derstand. "Mr. Brune," said Mrs. Moorhart one evening, after her daughter had entertained Brune greatly by telling of daHhiug horseback rides through the wild country a sport she longed to enjoy again, she said, yet dared not hope for uutil she could go back again to look over ' the family property "Mr. Brune, that property troubles the dead girl more than a lit tle, and I would like to consult you about it, if you'll allow me. You're everybody's friend, you know." "I am eutirely at your service, my dear madam. " "I heartily wish you were," replied the lady with a sigh. "Much of the Western property which my husband inherited belongs to Adah she is not here, is she?--no, I thought not. When she came of age, I insisted that my husband should divide the estate, aa well as the personal property, and give her a share, she being our only cliibl ; I wanted her to learn tbe value of money, and how to take cure of it, iustead of growing up a silly, fashion able girl, only to squander tbe property of her husband should she ever marry. Of course she will inherit all that remains, iu the course of time. Shu managed it with capital ability while we lived West, where she was practically on the ground, but sincH we have been Kant it has uot yielded as largo au income aa it should. It is very hard to secure good agents there ; all nu n of ability are rtu.tlas until they get into business for them selves. I would like our portion ot tbe estate properly lucked after, too, and we are so desirous of focling at ease about it that wo would bo glad to give a competent person a third of tho entire income for his services. I sup poso it would be presumptuous to hope that you could afford to give np your business here for something that would bring you not more than twenty- five thousand a year a sum which wo would gladly guarantee you ; but if you could entertain tho idea, I assure you that yon could easily upend a largo part of your time in the J-jast. "My dear Mrs. Moorhart, sanl Brune, trying to keep his heart out of his mouth, "I am more flattered by your offer than words can tell. But really, I'm afraid you overrato my business ability. Wero I to fail, I would feci unspeakably unhappy ; 1 ould bo terribly humiliated should Miss Moorhart find it necessary to dispenso with my services, and, worse still, to bo found fault with by her, of all women in the world." "I should imagine," said Mrs. Moor hart, slowly and with a confident look, "that you are clover enough at busi ness to make your position so secure that Bhe could not afford to dispenso with your services, and that I wouldn't dare do so. "My dear modani," protested Brune, 'I beg you won't think that I could plan to take any advantage in business of a lady of two ladies, indeed. "I didn t suppose anything unfair, was the reply; "all's fair in there! I ve said more than I intended, but I've supposed that you held my dangh ter in high esteem." "Higher, my dear madam, than I ever had for any other woman. But " "Yon must be less observing than your sex in general if you have not learned that Adah, who is no flighty girl, returns your regard." "I am deeply grateful for your con fidence, my dear madam." "May I ask whether any other woman Btands in the way of your act ing upon my suggestion and becoming my daughter's business manager for life?" "None none. By your kind per mission, I will speak to her this even- . 11 a ng. "Yon will make her very happy. But perhaps my suggestion will lead you to neglect business interests of your own." "My own business," said Brune, slowly, "can be dropped at any time without loss that is, any loss to be thought of for a moment while I have such a wife to look forward to." "I have never known just what your business was, but " "It is merely a goneral commission business," said Brune. "Selling, or buying?" "Well, neither, strictly speaking; that is well, I assure you there is nothing wrong about it, for 'twas through it that I came to be oallod 'everybody's good friend.' " Mrs. Moorhart bit her lip, and then smiled as she asked : "Will you promise to tell mo all abont tho business as soon as you aro married?" "Upon my honor." "Insist upon an early marriage, then all men do, I believe and I will see that Adah accedes to your wish. " The wedding was a splendid affair, aocording to the newspapers; the bridegroom alone had so many friends and well-wishers that not all of the in vited could get into the church. As to the presents, they were as numerous and handsome as might be expected by a bride who was rich and handsome and a man who was everybody's good friend. When the happy couple re turned from the church to the house, the bride's mother didn't fall in tears on her daughter's nock ; sho led her son-in-law aside and whispered : "You promised " "Yes, to tell you abont my business. Well, it's been to be everybody's good friend, and be well paid for it, though none of thorn suspect it. Holdem & Trust pay me one per cent, on the de posits of everyone I've introduced to their bank, yours included ; real estate agents, furniture dealers, grocers, merchants every one, in fact, with whom my friends do busiuess on my introduction pay me a commission on my friends' business. It's a lino of trade I never thought of getting into, because I didn't know it existed ; but after I'd had some commissions pressed upon me, I resolved that tbe business and I were made for each other. Of course, any commissions I get here after on your trade I will return to you. Perhaps, now you know all, you regret having selected me to manage1 your daughter's affairs. " Mrs. Moorhart gently boxed her son-in-law's ear and said : "I'm more thau ever satisfied that yon're just the man for the place and dear Adah will agree with me. " Onoe A Week. Looking Glasses in Coffins. Oue of tho ancient customs con nectod with Swedish funerals was to plaoe a small looking glass iu tho collln of an unmarried female, so that wheu the last trump sounds sho might be able to arrange her tresses. It wac tho practice for Scandinavian maidcuv to wear their huir flowing loosely, while the matrons wore it bound about the head aud generally covered with some form of cap. Hence the unmar ried woman was imagined as awaken iug at the judgment day with more un tidy looks than her wedded sisters aud more in need of a glass. Westminster Review. Central Park is badly tunneled by moles aud New York park commis sioners have appropriated $'250 to pay for tbe services of a mole trapper for three months. This man cleared the moles out of the park seveu years ago. lie buries loug wire traps iu their holes. Ho has drivuu the destructive auimal out of I'ruspoct Park and Greenwood Cemetery. AN ANIMAL'S EDUCATION. HOW FOTJR-FOOTED CTR(TO8 VT.n FORMER8 ARB TACOHT TRICKS. A Itlng MaMcr lrorlbs the Way In Which Horam, F.lrphanta, Ion and rip; are Trained. PEOPLE who go to circuses and and see horse, elephants and dogs perform wonderful tricks must often ask themselves how the animals aro taught to do thcra. A leading ring master supplies interest ing information concerning horses. "The horse." ho says, "contrary to general belief, is tho most stupid ani mal on earth. He has ouly one fac ulty memory. Having forced trick into his head, you must nso the short whip when he resists, and give him a carrot when he obeys. Whips and carrots form the secret of the trainer. Tho horse must be from five" to seven years old. Before that age ho is too spirited, after it his muscles are not elastic enough. "The first thing to do is to accus tom your horse to the ring, to mako him run round regularly t aud then to stop at a given signal To accomplish this the animal is brought into tbe ring. The trainer holds in his left hand a tether, which is passed into the oavesson, a kind of iron crescent armed with sharp points fixed on tho nose of the horse. In his right hand he holds the long whip. Behind the animal on assistant with a stout, short whip is posted. Tho troiuer calls on tho horse to start, and pulling his tether and smacking his long whip forces him to gallop round. If he re fuses the assistant uses his whip also. If he is obedient he is rewarded with a carrot. To make him stop short the trainer cracks his long whip again, while the assistant with his short whip throws himself suddenly in front of the animal, and tho result is obtained. "Tho horse has a greot objection to kneeling or lying down at any mo ment. This feat is taught by means of iron bracelets placed on his ankles and attached to a tether held by tho trainer, who, by Buddon jerks or pulls as he is moving, makes him fall or kneel. The animal remembers the lessons, and, by dint of whip and car rot, ultimately performs them at tho mere command of tho trainer. Tho horse is taught to dance to music in tho samo way with tho foot brace lets." With rospect to dogs, a celebrated trainer, who is now exhibiting a troupe of them, says their education is a work of time and pat ieuoe. Some times it takes two years. "I nso neither sugar nor whip," ho iuforrus us. "I take my dog in my hands, tolk to him and try to make him under stand what ho is to do. I jwrform tho tricks myself, and tho dogs follow aud imitate me." At present he is show ing a carriage dog which performs on tho single wire. "I will tell you how I taught him to become an equilibrist. I made him first of all walk on a plank which was balanced to and fro. Tho plank was gradually reduced in width every day and tho movement accel erated. At length tho plank dwindled down to a narrow slip; this was re placed by a long, round stick, and ul timately tho dog found himself on the single wire." Strange to say this dog is blind. Scent is the great quality which enables dogs to perform so mo tricks. For example, the poodles are taught by their scent. Tho trainer touches tho dominoes which tho dog has to play, and the animal, smelling them, picks them out from the rest and plays them. The pig is said to bo tho most diffi cult animal to train. A clown who ex hibits a troupe of performing porkers does not believe in learuod pigs. They are to be taught only by their weak point, their gluttony. "When I havo got my young pig," ho says, "I begin on tho principle that I shall obtain nothing from hiin without satisfying his appetite. I feed him myself, and during a few days I vary his food in order to find out what he likes best. As soon as I have discovered his favorite dish I duprive him of it completely. This dish is my great talisman. Tho chief pig I am now performing with prefers beef fat. I put a piece iu my pocket. I jump over hurdles uiid the pig follows me, doing likewise, iu this way he learns his exercise aud gets his fat. I decrease the piece of fat every day aud at lust I give him nothing. Should he refuse to work I thrash him till he does, and having completed bis performance I recompense hiin with his favorite meal." Tho elephant, on the contrary, is ex tremely intelligent, aud his education would be easy but for his cumbersome weight, which forces tho trainer to have recourse to cruel means. For iu stance, to make him raise and hold out his foot an iron ring with sharp points is placed on it, and being drawu by a rope the points enter the Hush. Tho elephant, feeling the pain, lifts up his foot and keeps it iu the uir till the pain ceases. After a few repetitious he re members tho paiu, and at the sight of the iron raises his foot. His instruction, thanks to his intelligence, is soon com pleted. Some elephants are taught iu less than a fortnight to play on a drum, work a tricycle, aud beg on their bind legs- New York Advertiser. I'slnj Cameras to Chock Cruelty, At a meeting of the Directors of tho Massachusetts Society for tho Preven tion of Cruelty to Animals, President Angell exhibited pictures taken with kodaks. He proposes to uso tho ko dd.s to show not ouly high check reins aud horses mutilated by docking, to gether with owuors who drive and ride them, but also all kiudsof cruelty that can be found ou cattle ears, iu cattle yards, slaughter houses, markets, horse-racing, polo games aud other wise. Boston Transcript. FORTITUDE. The sonl that suitors and for pain fs stronger Grows groat with strength above the strength of Fate ; Though years be brief, or though forever longer They wax In pain that knows no end or date : Thongh Time he woeful ; though Time's god's aro ru"l, Ills heart te still for love and truth a shrine WbTe, unnonsnmed of fire, the altar fuel Burns ever with a light and life divine. William Vincent Byars. Hl'JIOn OF THE DAY. Every man with a bright son be lieves in heredity. Atchison Globe. There are always some rare bargains at the meat market. Galveston News. If you want to know a woman's fault, ask her dearest female friend. When tho dealers put down tho prices on peaches the women put them up. Boston Globe. 'What are you wearing glasses for?" "For my eyes, stupid. S'poso I'm wearing them for corns?" When the colleges open it will bo ' brawn versus brain, and may thb best man win. Rochester Post-Express. II n wore a wide hat and a sash, And stared in away that was bold, But the girls every one adored him. For you see he was four years old. Chicago Inter-Ocean. ' Many a girl makes a bad blunder in not taking a man at his word when he says, "I am not worthy of your love." Puck. "Tho pleasantost way to take cod liver oil," says an old gourmand, "is to fatten pigeons with it, aud then eat the pigeons." "I am told that Carson always heaps roals on his enemies' heads." "Well, he is rich and can afford to do such things." Truth. Friend "Well, Tommy, now that you've started to school, what do van like best?" Tommy "Recess." Chi cago Inter-Ocean. Hark, from the tomlis a doleful sound Comes to us, one and all ; It Is a maldn down the at met, Who sings, "After the linil " -Detroit Free Press. Jiggs "The last I saw of Gayboy ho said he was out for a timo. I wonder If bo got it?" Jaggs "Yes; the judgo gave him ton days." Buffalo Courier. Everything American goes in France. They oven want American ser vants there, and have not yet learned that there is no such thing. Boston Journal. Mothor "Children, have you said your prayers?" Tilly "Yes, mam ma." "You wero very quick about it" "I prayed oue-half and Daisy the other." Texas Sittings. The Debutante (aside) "How many verses shall I sing?" The Professor "Do yon want an encore?" Ths Debutante "Of course." The Pro fessor "One." Boston Budget, Khe was airy A a fairy. t And no man she'd ever let Tofhflik. I gu", ' ; ill heavlneea, ' iv Vntil she took to baking bral. Ilurra'o Courier. "I read an account of how a girl fell over forty feet without killing herself." "Good gracious! How did sho do it?" "Tried to get out of a moving street car with exactly twenty man iu it. "--Vogue. Hostess "Ho you are poing to I married, Ethel?" Girl Fri-nd "Yes." "I thought you said you intended to remain single." "I did ; but I've been taking lutwans in the cookinq school, and I don't waut to wasto thtm.'V Chips. Mrs. Fangle "Have yo'l secured a lodger for your second floor yet, Mr. GoHliu?"Goalin (horrified)--"Ihavmi'l been looking for a Io.Ilmt, madniu. " Mrs. Fangle "Why, I'm certain my husband told me you had roomi to let in your upper story." Waif. Her Friend "I thought you wers going to marry a man with a til'e or forever reinaiiisiiigle." Mrs. Nuaeddo - "He has a title, 1 bog leavj to in form you." "What is it. pray?" "Pucksy darling. I gavo It to bliu myself. " Indianapolis Journal. "You quite devoted yourself to that frightful-looking Van htick on the train the other day, I' litU; what ou earth made you do tint?" "Well, it was absolutely necessary to pay some attention to hiin. You don't sup pose I wanted people to think he art my husband 1" Brooklyn Life. For two bouts tho fashionable lady kept the draper exhibiting ln (.-oadt, and at tho end of thst pri.l elia sweetly asked : "Are you quite auru you l.-ve howu Jim fver thing you have?" "No, inaduii,"' ,ul tbu draper, with an ineinuat mi; smile, "I have yet an old account in my Imlg. r which 1 shall very gladly show yon." Tld-Uits. A misguided individual came up to a young lady the -tlier day aud con gratulated her upon l.cr 1114 1 ; tneitt. It may bo rations! to cougrut'ilaiK a girl that it is uo wir-e or oue of uu certniu years 0:1 hot iniiiii( her last trick, but neither would be adviublc. Tho best that an enuxed girl's frivu l:i cull do is to extend to her their best wishes and try to a i'.h'iold the kik'l The mau is the one to be congratulated, for ho plui";e iut matrimony with both eyes c peu, Mi l it is his ou fault if ho does not tiud the bhs i for which he sijha. Brooklyn Life. Every American l'l evident h is hue from three to tbiity to towi.;. named for him. There aio thirty cities uud towus named after Alexander Hamil ton, thirty Clintons, t. nt v-four Websters, twt-utv Beutoiis, tbirt n Jalhouns, sevin Clays, nineteen J.iiueys, tweuty-ono D.'Ufc-lasts,tenty blaiues.