THE FOREST REPUBLICAN U Mblltktt Trj Wtosesdar, kf J. E. WENK. Offlotln Bmaarbangti & Co.'sWulldlu;; lm man, tionhta, r. Fore RAT3 OF ADVERT. SinCl ICAN. One Sqnara, one inoh, on insertion. , I 1 90 On. Hqunrs, on inch, on month . . , I OO On Pquare, one inoh. three months. . 0"J One Square, one inch, on year ...... WW Two bunre, one yenr 18 00 Quarter Column, one year WOO Half Column, on year . . 00 00 On. Column, on year. - . . 100 Kl Ley al advertise mnU ten eeats par lis soli insertion. Marriages and death notices (rati. All billsforTearlyadvertissments olW Torms, . . UAO pi Mcnkwrtptlnt nettrW ff t tktrtar Mrlod Us tkrr BionU. Correspondence oll!t4 tram aj pert f th country. N tic will k uka of unratui WUlBalCatima. VOL. XXVI. NO. 33. vTIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, DEC. 0, 1893. S1.50 PER ANNUM. quarterly, temporary aaveruseineuia i be paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. REPUBIv ST Malaria is reKponsihlo for half the deaths of nil mankind, according to an English physician, It is sold (lint two-thirds of nil the rot ton iluek produced in the. world id nindo within twenty milcB of Baltimore, Md. Dr. Burnch recently told tho New York Academy thnt less drugs and inoro hygiene ought to bo lined in tho euro of the Kick. 1 A tnblo showing tho monetary sys tem of tho world has been prepared by Director of tho United States Mint Trenton. The statistics show that tho aggregate stock of gold is $H, 582, 005, 000; silver, $4,042,700,000, and un covered paper, 2,!:l5,87i,O0O. It in stated by tho Chicago Hernld (lint an American house has concluded acoutraet for 2, 500,000 tonsof Japanese coal, to be delivered at Han FranciHCO in tho courso of tho next ten years. Hitherto tho coal imported at Han Francisco has been principally Aus traliau. Tho American Farmer admits that "tho New Zealnnders aro more pro gressive than wo are. They have passed a law giving women, married or single, all the rights and privileges of citizenship. Every woman in New Zealand is now as good as any other innu, and better if sho behaves her self." Tho effect of a newspaper paragraph may be far-reaching in its legal conse quences sometimes especially in Fraiice. AT. Cornet, overseer at tho West of Franco Engine Works, was severely attacked in tho columns of a railroad newspaper L'Echo des Chem ist lo Fer (Eulish, "Tho Railway Echo"). . Ho took these criticisms so much to heart that he committed sui cide, leaving a widow and child. Tho raid widow brought suit for damages against L'Echo, holding that her hus band's death was the direct result of tho criticisms in that paper, and the court, concurring in that view, award ed tho'full amount claimed, ten thou sand dollars, and condemned tho news paper in tho entire costs of the action. In his annual report Brigadier-General Carl i u, commanding tho Depart ment of the Columbia, says that the experiment of making the Indian a soldier is a decided failure so far as his experience goes, and ho has recom mended the discharge of the few Indian soldiers now in his department, less than a company. General Carlin re ports thnt thero has been a decided increase in desertions during the past year, due, in a great measure, to the unpopularity of the ten year service law, and ho recommends tho ropeal of that law. Ho also recommends that tho small posts in his department be abandoned and the troops concentrated at a general post at the principal rail road center. The varieties of sleigh bells this sea son will bo larger thau ever, announces the Chiougo Herald, and manufactur ers will cater more to luxurious tastes. As ouo can now pay $50 or more for a whip, bo can he give $40 for a body ttrap of bells. For that he can get a strap covered with Alaska sealskin, with sixty silver, brass, gold or nickel bells, the metal not being, of course, so precious as tho names indicate. Somewhat cheaper straps iro made of beaver or mink, wool seal, kangaroo, ooze calf or Persian lamb. Or if the pleasure-seeker wishes, he can imitate the tastes of the Russian, tho Lap lander or the Tartar. In foxtail plumes ho can find tho upright, the drooping and the hanging plumes, or some elegant horse hair plumes, for $30 per pair. That grand being, the American heiress, specially created for the re lief of embarrassed nobles, says the London Speculator, has attained al most to the summit of her ambition, She has not won a throne yet, though she may, if the King of Servia is a wise man; but she 1ms almost up proached that surpassing altitude. Ac cording to the Pall Mall Gazette, Prince Iseuberg-Birusteiu has been ac cepted by Miss Pullman, daughter of the lord of the diuing curs, and the hereditary prince is not only the eldest son of a mediatised prince, one of the even-boru who might niurry a Haps burg, but is hiuiHelf an imperial high ness, his mother having been an Aus trian archduchess. At least so says the Almnhaeh do Gotha, which is a iinal authority, American brides who have only won Oolouuus, Borghesos or English dukes, will feel quite eclipsed and take no further pleasure in diu moiids. The passion for rank is cer taiuly not coutined to England, though here it is so strong that ever, the Queen felt promoted when she was saluted Emprebb. LITTLE ALL-AI.ONEY, Mltle AU-Aloney's feet I Titter-patter in the hall, And his mother runs to meet And to kiss her toddling sweet, Ere perchance he fall. He is, eh, so weak and small 1 ' Yet what danger shall ho fear When his mother boveth near And Be hears hor cheering call "All-Aloney?' Little AU-Aloney's face It Is all aglow with glee, At around that romping place At a terrifying pnee Lungeth, plungoth he And that hero seems to lie All unconscious of our cheers Only one dear voice he hears Calling reassuringly i "All-Aloney !" Though his legs bend with tholr load, Though his feet they seemed so small Thnt you cannot help forebodo Some disastrous episode In thnt noisy hull j Neither threatening bump nor full I.lttlo All-Aloney fears, But with sweet bravado steers Whither comes that cheery call I "All-Aloney !" Ab, thnt In the years to come. When ho shares of Sorrow's store, When his feet nre chill nnd numb, When his cross Is burdensome, Mkil his heart Is sore ; Would that be could hear oneo mora The gentle voice he used to hear Divine with mother love and cheer Calling from yonder spirit shore I "All, all alone !" Eugene Field, in Chicago Record. REGINALD. nr emma a. orr-En. RTHUR CRAIG tossed his cigar away and strolled around to where a red-and-blne ham mock was slang be tween two o a k trees, in the big lawn which was the great attraction of the select summer hotel though it was summer no longer ; there was an autumn scent in the soft air. , But Lucy Wiuslow was staying here still, with her brother's wife and her little nephew ; therefore Arthur Craig stayed on also. She was sitting in the hammock, with little Reginald beside her. Reg inald always was besido her; their fondness for each other was great. It had been a sourco of affliction to Craig all summer. He told himself that ho wasn't jeal ous of Reginald, but if a fellow could get a chance to see a girl alone once a week or so, it would be a relief. Lato ly he had particularly wished to sec Miss inslow alone. "Hello, Arthnrl" said Reginald. "Oh, Reginald, snid his pretty aunt, nushing, " say Mr. i:raigl" "That fellow that was down here to see him called him Arthur, and I'm going to, said Reginald. He was eight years old, and had the oiue-eyeo, iair-SKinneu lace ot a cherub. But no cherub was ever so pert and precocious as Reginald. "Let him, Miss Winslow," said Craig. He dropped down on the grass at her feet and looked up at her. Surely she must know by this time "Say," said Regir.nld, "you said you'd take me boating on the river again and you haven't." 'We've been several times, haven't we?" snid Craig. How sweet she looked I "Oh, well, Aunt Lucy's always been along I You said you'd take me, and you got to !" 'Reginald, dear !" his Aunt Lucy remonstrated. "So I will," Craig agreed. "Hid you read that poem I gave you, Miss Lucy?" "Veup, sho read it," said Reginald. "Read some of it to me. It ain't any good. Got a nice cover, that's all." Lucy laughed softly. "It is a beautiful thing, Mr. Craig," sho Baid. "I enjoyed every word of it." "You you saw tho passage I marked?" Craig's face was flushed and eager. "Yes!" Lucy murmured. She looked closely at Reginald's tailor-hat, in her lap. "I'll tell you, Arthur," snid Regin ald, swinging his lithe little legs, "if you'd rather takemedown to Murphy's and buy me two ieo-oream sodas choo olnte first and then strawberry in stead of taking me out in the boat, w'y, you can it won't make any dif ference to me." "Oh, Reginald!" Lucy begged, with a distressed luugh. "Now, that is magnanimous!" Craig responded. He wondered if his hearty wish that Ecgiuuld was soinewhero else was apparent? "I think I'll accept that alternative. That passago I marked, Miss Wiuslow I didn't do it idly. There comes a time in a man's life when he feels a a love like that for some woman." Did she know all he meant? Her face was downcast and averted. Reg inald, however, wasstariugfull at him, and Craig's inward chatings intensified. "Suy, you want to make a trade?" Reginald demanded. "I got a k'loid oseope, and I'm sick of it. I want a printing press. 'Cuuso you haven't got any, but if you'll buy one and give me, I'll give you my k'leidoscopo and mebbe fifty cents or so besides. Say, '11 you do it, Arthur?" "I'll think about it. Do you waut to run over uud see if the mail is in, Reginald? I'm expectiLg a letter." Reginald reflected and shook his head. "I guess I'll wr.it till byine-by," he said, "und you cm go with me and '.ve'll stop ut Murphy's." "Miss Wiuslow," snid Craig, des perately, "I don't know whether yon know whether you have guessed-! don't know, Miss Wiuslow, whether you you have Biispeeted " "My goodness 1" said Reginald, with a high-pitched cight-ycar-old laugh ; "what nre you trying to say, Arthur?" Craig looked at Lucy. Wns she laughing at him, too? jlis face grew warm with tho sudden wretched sus picion thnt she wns. After all, wan be not a fool to think for a moment that she could care for him? Of a sudden ho saw matters in a new, a painful light. If sho had cared for him, would sho not havo managed now and then that they might seo each other alone? How rarely had that occurred now continually had that little nninhTnce of a nephew dogged them ! Had Bhe con trived it? Had she mode Reginald a defense, a guard against unwelcome advances? He was all at once misera bly certain of it. He was warm with mortification, and cold nt heart with keen unhappinness. Ho had been stnpidly slow of percep tion, that was all. Rut thnt was a thing which could be remedied. Ho rose from the grass, and looked down at Lucy Winslow with a set smile. "Well, I don't believe I know my self what I'm tryingtosay, Reginald," he answered. "I needn t say good-by to you just nowt Miss Winslow, for I'll be here a day or so yet. But I'll bo off about Thursday, I guess, and after a month or so at home, I expect to go out West on business that will keep me there indefinitely, I imagine. I shall think of this summer often, and with pleasure, I assure yon." He bowed, and turned away. He took himself and his bitterness up to hisroom. He felt that ever hour until Thursday would be a period of anguish ; and he began to put things into his trunk in helter-skelter fashion. Ho had half filled it when Reginald walked in, without knocking. He sat down in the largest chair. "Ho?" he remarked, scoffingly, "that tho kind of a trunk yon got, with cloth all over it? Mine's got wooden slats on, and tin and brass nnils. Whnt's that thing? Opry glasses, ain't it? Say, '11 you give 'em to me ! "Yes, take them," said Craig, wear ily. Reginald spent several minuteB in ex amining objects in the room through the glnsses, for which he saw lit to re turn no thanks. "Say," he observed presently, turn ing them upon Craig, "she's crying. That's what I come up to tell you. 1 thought mebbe you'd like to know." "Who's crying?" Craig demanded. His heart stood still. "Aunt Lucy's crying," said Regin ald. "Sho began to cry soon s yon turned round, most. 1 told her somebody'd Bee her, but she didn't ftop, and I wnsu t going to stay there and her a blubbering, and I thought I'd come up and tell you." Reginald looked up with his angelio blue eyes and his cheruluo smile. oay, lm going to see what's in that plush box. Arthur. You care Craig strode from the room. He got down the stairs two at a time, and rushed around to the red-and-blue hammock between the shady oak trees. "Lucy!" he said, bendiug over her. "You are not you can't be crying because 1 in going away, Lucyr There was a hot flush in tho tearful face she raised to him. "Oh, Lucy," he implored, "don't bo ashamed of it ! If you are crying about mo, don't you know I am tho happiest man on earth? I was bo cer tain yon .didn't care for me, and had tried to ward me off with with Reginald, you know, because he was torever around. But if you can cry because I am going away, Lucy, then I can finish what I was trying to say to you. Y'ou know what it was." Lucy caught a sobbing breath. "But you are going out West !" she faltered. "Yes, and you with me !" Craig re torted. Nobody was near them, and he sat down besido her, his hand warmly clasping hers. "How did you know I wa9 crying?" Lucy queried, suddenly, after ten minutes of glowing hnppiuess. "Reginald came and told me. Reginald is a trump," said Craig "a jewel !" "There he comes," said Lucy. "Oh, Arthur, he's got your your smoking jacket on !" "It's my bath:robe," Craig re sponded, with the composure of a perfect, all-satisfying beatitude. "I don't mind it in the least !" Saturday Night. (us For Cooking. While electricity is trenching so seriously upon the field of gus light ing, uuy recent application of gas which leads to an extension of its con-f-umption is of importance to gas pro ducers. Some foreign companies seem to have done this quite successfully in at least one direction. At the recent Dundee meeting of tho North British Association of Gas Managers one mem ber, Mr. J. Bulhiutyne, of Rothesay, stated that the company had gained an increase of consumption of at least fcity per cent, in about six years, due to cooking by gas uinong its custom ers. The gus company furnishes the cookers to its patrons nt a rental of ten per cent, of the list cost price per annum, which charge also includes putting them in, taking them away and keeping them in order. About eleven per cent, of the customers are supplied. His and other companies have not only found this a profitable part of their market, but it has the added advantage of being nearly a day light consumption, thus tending to equalize the deimyi 1 onthn plant. Engineering Record. SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL. Clouds aro on the averago about 600 yards in thickness. American tools aro for better thnu those of European make. The largest fish known to Rei neo in tho basking shark, an enormous but harmless variety. A steel ship has been constructed in Cardiff, Wales, with tho standing rig ging, as well as the hull, all of steel. The largest known species of night flying insects is the Atlas moth, a resi dent of the American tropics, which has a wing spread of over a foot. Human hair varies in thickness from the 250th to the COOth part of nn inch. The coarsest fiber of wool is about one 200th pnrt of nn inch in diameter ; the finest only the 1500th part. South American ants have been known to construct a tunnel three miles in length, a labor for thorn pro portionate to that which would bo re quired for men to tunnel under tho Atlantic from New York to London. Many larvsa of beetles and other insects are used for food ; the bee gives honey and wax, the coccus manna nnd cochineal, the Spanish fly a blistering drug, the gall insects an astringent, and the silk worm an articlo of dress. In Japan there are now twenty pub blio electric companies in ojieratiou. Further companies aro proposed, and there is a considerable demand for electrical engineers. Nearly all of tho companies are conducted by Ameri cans. , A New England firm is introducing an automatic gas lighter for street lamps, which works on tho prin ciple of an eight-dny clock. It is explained that the only attention the lighter requires is a weekly winding of the clock movement, and that it lights the lamp at the required time and extinguishes it at daybreak. Safety matches that can be used without a box are to be placed on tho English market by a German inventor. The idea is to tip the two ends of tho wood separately with those composi tions which in the ordinary way go one on the box and the other on tho match. To use, break the wood across the middle and rub the ends to gether. An agent of tho Suez Canal Com pany has invented an apparatus to split the electric lights that illuminate the canal into two divergent streams, one sending out rays one way, the other in the opposite direction. This enables ships to approach each other and meet with perfect safety. Formerly the lights blinded pilots so that they could not soe vessels coming in the op posite direction. A physician points out thnt fat people endure most kinds of illness much better than thin people, because they have an extra amouut of nutri ment stored away in their tissues to support them during the ordenl. Moreover, there aro many other con solations for persons of abundant girth. They aro generally optimists by nature, genial and jolly com panions, whose society is universnlly preferred to that of people with angular frames and dispositions. At a recent State fair an inventor exhibited a machine that he had con structed for converting grapes into sugar and syrup. Experts who wit nessed the operation and others affirm that the process is a complete suc cess. The experiments were mostly confined to Muscat and other sweet grapes known to carry a large amount of sacchnriuo matter. Heretofore tho difficulty has been in granulating grape sugar. But by this new pro cess it is claimed that granulation is perfect. Tombs ol the Danish Kings. In tho resting place of the old kings of Denmark, the Cathedral of Rokes kild, a reoent visitor notes thnt there is a column against which a number of monarchs have been measured, and upon which their different heights are recorded. One of them is Peter the Great, and we learn by this means thut the shipwright Czar measured no less than eighty Danish inches, equiv alent to something like six feet, ten inch t s in our measurement. Only one other of the sovereigns was taller, and that was Christian I of Denmark, who, according to this authority, was just a trifle over seven feet English. Tho Czar, Alexander II T, is about six feet ouo inch, and is aout a couple of inches taller thuu Christian IX of Denmark, and about foiir inches taller than King George of Greece, neither of whom, nevertheless, is what would be called a short man. It is worth noting that in the same ancient cathe dral where this column is to be seen, Suxo Graiuuiuticus, the Danish histo riuu from whom Shakespeare borrowed practically the entire plot of "Ham let," lies buried. Loudon News. Sewing In Public Schools, The course of study in sewing in the Boston public schools is interesting for uu amateur of sewing to consider. To read of "thimble, emery, scissors," set off neatly as articles of study, und and to gaze upon sprinted curriculum of "basting, baukstitchiug, overcast ing, half-backstitching uud combina tion of one running and one-half buck stitch," is to renlize most intensely the advantages Boston offers to her daughters. In tho fourth year are taught, among other things, stocking duruing, straight uud bias felling, whipping and sewing on rulhYs, hem stitching, bliud stitching, tucking if uot taught previously, gathers over handed to a bund, sewing on hooks and eyes uud buttons, eyelets, loops, and in tho fifth year there is u system of dress cutting by which girls uvo taught to take measuit :s, druughr, cut and tit a dress waist. --Boston Transcript. BIRTHPLACES OF FOOD IHE NATIVE LANDS OF TUB VAHI- OU3 GRAINS AND FRUITS. Most of Them Have Kvolvrd From a Wild State The True Home of Indian Corn The Cherry's Origin. THE grains and frnits nscd r l r 1 11 iJ .-. I difi Q exi loon oy innu origmaieu : i liferent latitudes, and first existed in a wild stato some being indigenous to the tropics and tome to temperate zones. As they be came improved and differentiated they were distributed in different countries sccording to their utility and the ipread of agriculture. It was but nat ural that the first gradual changes from a wild to a cultivated state should have taken place in general in warm countries where the climate and the advanced state of civilization conspired to effect amelioration. For instance, tho grape is indigenous to America, and had existed here in a wild state long ages before tho conti nent was disooved by Columbus, but it was first put to practical use in Egypt and Central Asia, to which lo calities its origin is sometimes attrib uted, and whence it wns in reality distributed throughout the Western world. A similar remark may bo made of rye, one of tho less valued cereals, which is a native of tho temperate zones, and spread thence toward the South. It is supposed to have been unknown in India, Egypt and ancient Palestine, and, though it was more or less used by the ancient Greeks and Romans, it was from the north of Europe that they received it. Nearly all the grains now in use are of unknown antiquity. Wheat was cultivated in eighty-six latitude as far back in the past as we have authentic, knowledge. Barley is thought to have originated in the Caucasus, but it wan known and used everywhere in the most ancient times. Oats, like rye, was unknown in ancient India and Egypt and among the Hebrews. The Greeks and Romans received it from the north of Europe. Had there been an early civilization on this continent tho wild oats found here and there would probably have developed into the useful cereal now considered abso lutely essential for the proper nourish ment of horses. This continent it credited with having given Indian corn to the old world, but this useful cereal was doubtless known in India and China many hundred years before tht discovery of America. Cotton wai used for making garments in India at a date so remote that it cannot even be guessed at. The fact is mentioned bj Aristotle. The first seeds were brought to this country in 1621. In 1606 the cul ture is mentioned in tho records of South Carolina. In 1736 the culture was general along the eastern coast ot Maryland, and in 1776 wo hear of it ns fur north as Cape May. The use ol flax for making clothing is nearly si ancient as that of cotton, and perhapt more so, plants of soft and flexible fiber having been without doubt among tho first vegetable productions of th ancient world nnd their practical valiu discovered Boon ufter the invention o! weaving. The cherry in its improved condi tion is of Persian descent and is an other fruit that might have been im proved from our wild varieties had out civilization been contemporary wit! that which preceded Egypt and Baby lon in tho valleys of tho Tigris and Euphrates. Peaches, plums and cher ries were all known to the ancient Greeks and Romans. The apple, the most useful and satis factory of all the fruits of the temper ate zones, has been known from tim immemorial. It originated from souk of the hardy wild species that are found sometimes almost as fur north as tht Arctic c '.role. It is a fruit that like; tho cold, and is found in the greatest perfection in purts of New England, Now York and Michigan, where th. winters aro severe. As it approochei tho equator it loses its finest of taste, while still preserving its beauty. I. is a notable fuet that, owing to care ii the culture, and in part to a preference for the climate, all tho fruits mentiouoi in this list are found of better qualitj in Europe and America thau in the lo calities where they aro thought tohav. originated. Tho oranges of India, Burmah and Cochin China are abso lutely tasteless and those of Malagt scarcely better. Tho best grown ir Spain come from the region of Valen cia, where they have been introduced at a comparatively recent date. So o! tho cherries, apricots and peaches, which have uttuined a perfection ir Europe and America of which the an cient Persians never dreamed. Al. these fruits appear to increase in siz and improve in flavor in latitude) where tho winter is sufficiently severe to check the growth of the tree ami give it a needed rest. It could Hot be expected, for tll reasons alleged, that Ann-lieu, in habited until a recent date by suvugc tribes only, should furnish to t lie world products thut require tbousundt of years of care and culture to givt them their perfect development. Th potato, however, is an invaluable boon conferred by the new world on the tdd. The touuit ) is also of South American origin, and, though it playt a much less important part in alimen tation, it is uu article of food that Americans would not willingly purl with. As to the fruits in conmiou use, though America has done much to im prove them, there is not one of them of which it can reasonably claim to b tho place of origiu. Sau i'rancisci Chronicle. u lira.il not one per cent, of tho mule or female scrvuuts w ill sleep in their master's house. They insist oil leaving nt th hi test by 7 o'clock iutiit evening, iindwill uot return beforu 7 or c :a th uiofuiu;.. WISE WORDS. Love gltlns every time it is tcstoi!. Home is the fortress of the virtues. The truthful mnn is dead; been dead a long time. The real ruler of the man is within him, not without. The man who throws a stono at an other hurts himself. It is time wasted to arguo with a doubt. Kick it out. It's the youngest man who thinks ho has the least time to spare. The whisper of a slanderer can bo heard farther than thunder. There is no good quality which does not become a vice by excess. A woman is seldom quite bo happy as when Bhe is thoroughly miserable. Finding fault with another is only a roundabout way of bragging on your self. Some people are kept poor because they will not believe it is blcBsed to give. The man who is afraid to look his faults squarely in tho face will never get rid of thorn. No man is perfectly consistent. Ho who is nearest consistency steers tho crookedest course. The Ethics ol Weariness. In a lecture at Cambridge, Englond, on the subject of "Weariness," Pro fessor Michael Foster Baid undue ex ertion was exertion in which tho mus cles worked too fast for the rest of tho body. The hunted haro died not be cause ho was choked for want of breath, not because his heart stood still, its store of energy having given out, but because a poisoned blood poisoned his brain and his whole body. So also tho schoolboy, urged by pride to go on running beyond tho earlier symptoms of distress, struggled on until the heaped np poison deadened his brain, and he fell dazed and giddy, as in a fit, rising again, it might be, nnd stumbling on unconscious, or half un conscious only, by mero mechanical inertia of his nervous system, falling once more, poisoned by poisons of his own making. All our knowledge went to show that the work of the brain, like the work of the muscles, was ac companied by a chemical change, and that tho chemical changes were of tho same order in the brain as in tho muscle. If an adequate stream of pure blood were necessary for the life of tho muscle, equally true, perhnpB even more true, was this of the brain. More over, the struggle for existence hu t brought to the front n brain ever ready to outrun its more humble help mate, and oven in the best regulated economy the period of most eflectivo work between the moment all tho complex machinery had been got into working order and the moment when weariness began to tell was bounded by all too narrow limits. The sound way to extend thoso limits was not so much to render the broin more agile as to encourage tho humbler help mates, so that their more eflicient co operation might defer the onset of weariness. New lork Press. A Remarkable Career. A remarkable autography goes with damage suit for $5000 filed at Wash ington, D. C. The complaint is against a Washington street railway. Tho complainant is Henry Johnson, who says he was badly cut and bruised by the cur starting while ho was getting off. Attached to tho complaint is the affidavit of Johnson that ho was born in Georgetown on Christinas day in the year 1800 ; was hired out to Geueral Walter Smith, who comminded the militia at the battle of Bladonsburg ; was captured by Captain Patrick, and was present and saw them burn tho Capitol, and when ho was seventeen years old he went with Commodore Porter as a cabin boy on a four years' cruise. In 1824 ho went as a footman with his old mistress to meet General Lafayette, and escorted him to Gen eral Smith's in Georgetown ; was with General Macon in Florida during the four years' war with tho Indians; had waited on General Scott, Gaines and Jessnp ; lived with Geueral Totteu, and waited on Daniel Webster, Clay and Calhoun when living with Mr. Nicholson at Goorgetown Heights. Was with Captain Herndou on the George Law, thut was burned, and when the women ami children and crew were off he stood close to Cup tain Herndon at the wheelhouse, and he saiil to him : "You go and shift for yourself," anil he begged tho captain to come with him, when ho replied: "No; I must stand by my bhip. " Then struppiug himself to a door he was thrown into the sea and saved, and saw tho ship go down with the captain. The Cats Ate the Crickets. There is a man in Hurlem who has a much respected aunt. The aunt is wealthy and eccentric. She came to live with this Hurlem resilient, and having been reared in the country and having recently como from there she missed the rural hum of insects uud the agricultural noises of a country residence. Being anxious to -please his rela tive and make her reconciled to city life this llarlom man hired a numln i of boys to secure crickets for him. He bought twenty caua of crickets oud turned them out to pasture iu his buck yard. For several nights the cheerful chirping of the crickets proved very soothing to the aged uutit. The various cuts iu the neighborhood soon became awaro of the unusual number of crickets iu this buck yard. Cats are fond of crickets, and now the Hurlem man has cuts uu I no crickets iu his back yard. He suvs that all tho cats iu Harlem have made his yard a trystiil plans and the uunt threatens to move buck into the country. New York Herald. THE SILENT BATTLIi. Rhnll I toll you about the battle Tlint wns fought in the world to-dny. Where thousands wmit down Ilka heroes To death in the pitiless fray? You may know some ot tho wounded ' And some of the fallen when I toll you this wonderful Imttle Was fought In tho hearts of m'n. Not with the sounding of trumpets, Nor clashing of sabers drawn. But, silent ns twilight in autumn, All day tho fight went on. And over against temptntton A mother's prayers were cost That had come by silent marches From the lutlnby land ol tno past. And over the flold of battle Tho force of ambition went, Driving before it, like arrows, Tho children of sweet content. And memories odd and olden fame np through the dust of years, And hopes that were glad and golden Were met by a host of fenrs. And the heart grew worn and weary And said : "Oh, can It be That I am worth the struggle You are making to-day for me?" For the heart itself wns the trophy And prize of this wavering fight ! And tell me, O gentle reader, Who camps on the field to-night? Alfred Ellison. HUMOR OF THE PAY. Kisses are tho coupons of love. Don't be a valet to your hero ; it may disgust him. The most lovsaile of dumb animals is a good listener. Puck. After all, the love knot is the top knot on the head of human happiness. Puck. A cynic observes that the most popu lar air with the girls these dnys is a millicniire. A girl will never forgive a fellow whom she has jilted for making a suc cess of life. ruck. When a man gets a hearing in court, he is likely to hear somet hing that ho doesn't like. Puck. It is tho man who wears Congress gaiters who wonders how tho ehoe string sellers mako a living. She told the young mnn oftentimes Blie really couldn't love him : Six feet, Bhe : but live foot, he Of course she felt above htm. Detroit Tribune. Solemn Stranger "All flesh is grass." Deaf Man "Hey?" Solemn Stranger "No, grass." New York Press. The bulldog has a pretty tight grip in this world, though ho often escapes trouble by tho mero skin of his teeth. Truth. Gunson "Another increase in your family, eh? Son or a daughter?" V. ilbeo (gloomingly) ' 'Son-iu-iaw. " Kuto Field's Washington. "I've conio out of this tight squeeze in pretty good shape," said the new half-dollar, fresh from tho stamping machine. Chicago Tribune. "Man wnnls but little here below," Jlut 'tis this fact tlint daunts IIm's sure to get a little less Thau the littlethut ho wants. Washington Stnr. Some of the fushiouuble bcIiooIb nre making world-wido reputations by teaching the young lady students to Bpell their names wrong. Galveston News. In tho American Colony: Sho "Is Misa Bond engaged to Prince Sans bou?" Ho "Not exactly. Ho has an option for ninety days, 1 believe." Harlem Life. When a woman has quail for dinuei sho wants to invito iu a neighbor, so the neighbor may know it, but a man doesn't want anybody thero but him self. Atchison Globe. Customer (in bookstore) "I would like to get some good book on faith." Clerk "Sorry, sir, but our rule it to sell nothing to strangers except for cash." Buffalo Courier. Miss New combe ' 'Hcems to bo rut her a good year this for fruit, Giles? Aro nil your trees as full of apples n that one!" Giles "Oh, nuw, miss, only tho apple trees." Judy. lie had a sorrel trotling-horse Which was so pesky slow Hu named him I'liiui-sc, utter a while, because he wouldn't go, Detroit Free Frees. Van Noodle "D'yer know, Miss Tltngbit, thut old duller ChapwitU called mo a muff the other night?" Miss Tungbit "Indeed Why, I think you more closely resemble a boa." Brooklyn Life. Jack (who has popped) "It takes you a long time to decide." Nettie "I know it ; and I've about Concluded to wear a deini-truin of white chiffon over w lute silk and have no brides maids." -Texas Sittings. Mrs. lUllus (after tht- company had gone) - "Johnny, you shouldn't have eatoii those preserved fruits. They were not intended to be eaten. They were put on the tubleto till up." Johnny Billus -"Well, that's what I used 'em for, ii -t i ii i ii a . " Chicago Tribune. Two ciiliinena short time ago had a fishing mutch for hu!i' u sovereign and drinks. Suddenly one of the jurvies fancied he had a bite, uu I, being over anxious, hud the misfortune to fall into the river. On his regaining tho shore, his rival shouted out : "VII bets arc off, .1 ini ; none o' yer di iu' in after 'cm. " - Tit Hits. Lulidjii'iivc Is the only one of the old Teutonic titles that siirsivcs. It was invented in MHtt by Louis of Tliiiriu giu, to distinguish himself from the crowd of lil'ufs w ho tilled the Germau courts. Mexico's standing army number It, 0:10 ui-n, or r.boiit double that o.c tho I'm' l st-it-s.