THE FORIST REPUBLICAN U abUsa.4 rrtrj Wtaaesoay, ky J. E. WENK. Offloa. la Smearbanjh ft Co.'a BuUdlu kji itbut, tionjmta, r. Trm,' ... .sq pr Yar. RATX3 Of ADVERTISING EPUBLICAN On Bqnara, on inob, en Inanition. . On Kquar, on inch, on month . . , On Kquare, on inoh, tbrt months. . OnsHquar, on inch, on ear... ., Two Hqaarxi, on year , Quarter Column, on yar. Bait Column, on yaar On Column, on vaar. . . ion 00 DO 1010 18 0C en o. eo oo loo w Lal artTartlMnuota tn Miti pr lis bcd taint ton. Marrlajre and rt.sth notion (rati. All bill foryearly advertisement eoOwiiil quarterly. Temporary advertisement arJM M paid in advano. Job work naih oa deltvwr. ,k"Wertl,,lo "l'e4 f 1 ikwtw anto tkra n.ntha, OornapondtiK MllelU4 fra al aart f tha eoartrj N. n.tlc. wtll Uka funrmoiu R EST VOL. XXVI. NO. 48. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1894. S1.00 PER ANNUM. 7 v There is a movement in llio dircc ition of woman'n suffrage in France. About $200,00(1,00!) worth of regis i tercd United States bonds nre hold by I private individuals. ( In order to protect an invention ali rover thu world no loss thun sixty-four patents aro required nt n cost of about $17,500. , The railway miloago of Europe, lAsia Hnd Africa now aggregates 151), 055 miles. The railways of tho United States roach 1 8, 5s7 inilcH. Now Zealand iH bent on preserving her remiirknbli! wild birds and other animals, and has net apart two islands on which all hunting tin 1 trapiu in forbidden. Scarcely a stream issues from the lower h1icr of the Andes, either to the Amazon on tlto cant or tho I'aoillo on tho went, thu Hands of which are not auriferous. Tho amount of gold in tho country must bo almost fab ulous. Thomas Godbopraised, of England, nfter tho rush and excitement of tho World's Fair, sought rest, appropri ately enough, observes tho St. Louis Republic, in' l'hiladelphia. But ono of tho live reporters of that city found him out and wrote him up. Of course his nane pons back to Round-head days. A widower's association has been jformod in Dresden, Germany. No man can join unless his wifo is dead, and if ,he marries ngain ho becomes an hon orary member merely. One of the chief purposes of the association is to lielp newly-made widowers by looking after their wives' funerals and earing for their children. Samory, the great Mohammedan chief of iuterior Africa, is about tho last somi-savogo of tho dark oountry to yield to civilization and tho force of arms. The French have been gradual ly driving them into closer quarters and now tho British aro conducting raids against his warriors. Samory is the greatest ban. lit king in the world. Metropolitan fashions have long pro vailed throughout the country. In no one thing is this more plainly ap parent than in the uniforms of police men. In the smaller cities, and even jn small towis, the policeman nowa days wears a uniform like that of his . city brother. He may not have the city brother's reposo of manner and . cool jauntiness of bearing, but his clothes are strictly up to date. The railway compauies of the L'nitod States have no reasonable cause, as serts the New York. News, to complain of their business for the fiscal year. Including all the bankrupt and non paying lines tho aggregate net earn ings were more than three huudred und fifty million dollars. This is equivalent Ho about throe and one half per cent, of tho capitalization, a very good rate of interest in view of the fact that the roads are generally capitalized at from two to five times their actual cost. It is estimated that thero are 10,000 booksof poetry intho National Library at Washington. Tho rules of tho library require tho keeping of every copyrighted book, so that the collec tion must include an enormous amount! of trash. The San Francisco Chronicle believes it is safe to say that nine tenths of this verso represents work which no publisher would issuo with out advance payment of cost, and which is absolutely worthless. Therd ought to be some provision for weed ing out this trash, which is not worth shelf room. It illustrates the need of a Pacifiii cable that the news of tho two most important events in tho Hawaiian epi. sodo passed between Washington and Honolulu only after traveling back ward round the globo some 21,000 miles in order to compass a direct dis tance of some &000 miles. The news of the decision of President Cleveland to attempt thu restoration of the Queen reached Hawaii first by steamer from New Zealand, having traveled by telegraph under the North Atlantic audltirougu tho whole of Europe, Asia, and Australia to reach the port from which the steamer sailed. Simi larly, tho first news that tho Provis ional Clovermeiit refused to accede to tho President's demands leached Washington by steamer from Hono lulu to New Zealand, and thence by telegraph back over tiie same rouud a'mt route. A cablb li-VH) miles long, fioin Honolulu to Sun Francisco. would have saved '2J,'lMt miles of tele graphic and st emu "hip travel, am about lv weeks of timo in each iu Only about four per cent, of tho Hea-going vessels constructed at tho present time are of wood. Tho development of collego , sports is indicated, thinks the Chicago Her ald, by the fact that Harvard now has a salaried manager. In Canada positions in the Civil Ser vico are obtainable after examination and aro held during good behavior, which, as a rule, means life. In Japan a man can live Iiko a gen tleman for about $250 a year. This sum will pay the rent of a house, tho salaries of two servants and supply plenty of food. Tho Hungarian Government has re cently passed a law providing for tho payment of indemnities to prisoners innocently condemned to penal servi tude, and to their families in cases where Biich priBouers havo been found to have suffered capital punishment. The Argentino Republic is rapidly becoming a prominent competitor in tho business of supplying grain to the European markets. Shipowners of Nova Seotia and Now Brunswick are taking advantage of tho trade and find ing employment for their vessels at remunerative rates between the River Plato and Old World ports. Tho low price of w heat this year is due, maintains tho New York Witness, to tho fact that ft very largo surplus was held over from the big crops of the past two years. Tho farmers of the world are producing more wheat than tho people of the world can buy, thongh not more than could be con sumed if all tho people who need it were able to pay for it. A curious lawsuit has just been con cluded at Brussels. A widow named Moeus died intestate, leaving a large fortune. A dispute at onco began among her relatives and a lawsuit to settlo the various claims was institut ed. At tho trial it was proved that no fewer than 8500 persons were related to the testatrix. Judgment has been pronounced in their favor that is, in javor of relatives, even twelve degrees removed. The reclamation of tho arid wastes of southwestern desert lands proceeds luarvelously apace. Another reclama tion company was incorporated at San Bernardino, Cal., a few days ago, with" a capital stock of $2,500,000. A dam is to be erected at Victor Narrows, on the Mojave River, in San Bernardino Connty, fifteen feet in height, wnich will make a lake nine miles long and about three wide, w hose Waters will bo used to irrigate about 200,000 acres of laud on the Mojave Desert, which will then be especially adapted for growing raisin grapes and alfalfa. According ti the Sviet, a St. Peters burg paper, Russia, unlike other Eu ropean countries, incorporates in the army only one-fourth of tho young men who are drafted every year when they reach the legal age for military service. The recruiting in 1892 en listed 768,072 conscripts, but onlv 200,200 were actually sent into the ranks. Of these 1!)!,000 were Ortho dox, 16,000 Israelites and 0000 Mo hammodans; tho Russian army is therefore composed of men belonging to tho National religion. There were also in tho cont ingent called to service in 1802 193,000 men of puro Russian origin, 17,000 Poles, 4000 Germaus, 16,000 Jews, ;)68ti Bashkiros, and a small number of Lithuanians, Tartars, etc., bo that tho Russian army can be considered as being quite homogene ous iu regard to its nationality. Every little while tho police arrest a man with a kit of burglars' tools in his possession, and one naturally won ders where they all come from. It is easy to buy a gun of any description, and tho most reputable citizen would not be ashamed to be seen purchasing the most wicked-looking knife ever made; but who would know where to get a sluug-shot, or a jimmie, or a de vice for drilling into a safe, or any of the many tools used by the profes sional burglar iu the pursuit of his calling? Thero probably aro places in many lurgo cities where these things aro made and sold to the users, but such places aro scarce. Onco in a while the police find such a factory, aud then things go hard for tho pro prietors. It may seem h little strange to learn that moot of the tools used in burglaries are made by mechanics who aro looked upon as respectable men iu tho community. When a burglar wants any partielilar tool made he goes to a mechanic who cuti do thu job, an I pays hint perhaps live times what it is uctiwlly worth for making the tool and keeping all 11 about it. HOW-DE-DO. Bay "how-de-do," an' gay "goodtiy," Meet an' shake, an' then pass liy s Ain't much difference twlxt the two, Bay "goodby" or "uow-de-do." "How-do-do." with chilly heart, Ain't much dlffornnno, meet or part Jes' a look, an' jes' a bow, Sometimes only Jes' a "how ;" Ain't much difforence which they ay, "How-de-do" or tother way. Meet a friend yer grasp his hand, An' jes' stand, an' stand, an' stand Glad yer mot an' hate ter part, Kln3er trembly in the heart. Neighbors lived on "Moody Hill," He was "Tom" an' you was "Bill," Kinder stop an' look an' say "How-de-doV" an' then "good day 1" Been away from home a spoil, Swing the gate back, stand, an' well, Kinder don't know what tor do, Heart thumps like 'twaa bust in' through. Bald "goodby" a year afore Betsy standing in the door Said "goodby," but "how-de-do," Seems the strangest o' tho two. Brace right up an' waltz right in, Shake tho tremble from yer chin, Betsy's waltin' there for you, Waltz right in with "How-dc-do?". " The Housekeeper. THAT DOG JAGS, BX EDNA 0. JACKSON. uvii Jags was hungry. In fact, he was almost starved. His riDB were o u t- ainethis hide and there was au un quenchable 'crav ing inside of them for bones. -It seems funny when mm one thinks of it, whn there was nothing to him bnt bones, lie raised his head from his paws and snapped eagerly at a great, bulgy bluefly that buzzed lazily around, and swallowed it with a gulp. But one fly is not muoh when one has a hollow within him that feels as big as a church. Those hollows were common in Rat Row. It was the river street of a large city, where squalid men, women aud children fought, quarreled, cursed and stole their wretched lives long to keep that inner void just sufficiently filled to ward off the Potter'a Field. "Stole," I said. The younger habitants, per haps, limited their achievements to this. As for their elders well, if a man with a comfortably filled stomach Btrayod into their power and would give up his "ticker" and other valu ables like a gentleman and evince no disposition to "squeal," all right, perhaps; if he rebcllod, the river was handy. Then a fresh flow of fire water, more desperate fighting, curs ing and cutting for a day or two. Sometimes a rush of patrol-wagon and armed police, a bleeding body carried away, a living, sullen, horrible one or two to answer for it it was an old story to the blue-coats. Thus, Jags was a dog of the slums, kicked, cuffed and starved, with good points in him that once led au uptown clubman to coax him off the street when Jags inadvertently wandered, foraging, to a respectable quarter. For three days Jags was fed, petted and began to grow handsome. The first hour of liberty found him fawn ing joyfully at the feot of Blinks, the most brutal of all the Rat Row brutes, whom Jags followed with a worship ing fidelity only found in some women and most dogs. He was ready to starve with his horrible idol rather than desert him for soft treatment and uulimited bones with meat on them. "Hero ye be, be ye, ye cuss? Thought ye'd mosey, did ye? Been feed in', has ye? Thought ye'd sneak ! Tako'that 'ud that 'nd that!" "That" was a series of brutal kicks that made the poor dog yelp out in piteous agouy. When they ceased one of Jags's beautiful, loving brown eyes was gone, knocked out of its bloediug socket by the master for whom ho had sacrificed wealth and comfort. That was merely a variation of the tortures that Jags's master habitually put upon him. If it ever occurred to tho dog that he had anything to for give ho did so, freely, generously and lovingly, creeping all the more adoringly to the feet that kicked him. If he ever thought, wistfully, that his master might have done a more merci ful thing and relieved him of a real trouble by kicking out his stomach, he never said ho. Just now he dragged his bony length to the side of Blinks, keeping a watch ful eye for kicks, and breathed along, sobbing sigh of relief when he got closo to his idol without awakening him. The man was seated on a broken chair outside tho tottering tenement house where he aud Jags had a kennel. HiB bloated red face was turned up ward to the sun, his breath reeked bad whisky, the soft summer breeze stirred his loathsome rags. One wonders how even the breeze could touch him. Blinks was happy. Ho was "full," not of that unnecessary luxury, food, but of vile whisky. His slumber was boou disturbed by a splash, a chorus of yells from the gamins on the river bank, a. el w ith bare, red arms dripping with soap suds, her frowsy hair Hying in the wind, Betsy O'Kiley rushed from her wash-tub. "Thobal.by! Tliedarlint! It's drowiidid he is intoirely ! Howlv Mary ! Run, ye luurtLeriu' divils ! Save 'im ! Hilp !" It would not havo created much of a sensation in K:it Row society if a half dozen Utile ''rats" had been swept away altogether by the river. A few drit'iiled Women lounged to doors JMVV lined ag WiHal , mangy or windows, two or three blear-eyed men, among whom wasBlinkB.lurched lazily toward tho place whero tho small, dirty figure had gono nndertho muddy water, giving it plenty of time to drown in tho moat leisurely way before their arrival. Only the screech ing mother and the dog were really alive to the situation. Jags was weak from long fasting, bnt the instinct inherited from a long lino of noble ancestors nerved him. In a flash, it seemed, his gaunt body was in the water and out, and Betsy had snatched her soaked "kid," drained the water out of him and ad ministered a ringing Blap. "Yespalpane? Will yez bo kapin' away from the wather will yoz?" Tho child replied with a vicious squirm and an unchildliko curee. Betsy went back to her washtub, while Jags crept patiently to the sido of his master who, with another, had dropped from sheer exhaustion ou the" yellow earth. No one thought of praising or thanking Jags. Such small, sweet courtesies were not customary in Rat Row. Only Blinks's companion, who seemed more alive thon his surround ings, looked approvingly at tho dog. "Fetch n carry?" ho said laconi cally, nodding in Jags's direction. "Like I" drawled hiB matter, with a laziness strangely at varianco with tho lurid comparison. "Hyar, dawg! Git it I" Jags looked np imploringly as a stick flew far into the water. Ho was willing enough, heaven knows ! But when one has had only one fly to eat for twenty-four hours, and had just dragged a heavy squnming body from the woter, he may be pardoned for feeling trembly and averse to unneces sary exertion. "Git it!" snarled his master. Thero was a kick in the eye, Jags went meekly out into the turbid water and came trembling all over to lay the Btick beside the tyrant. Again it flew out, farther than before. This time Jags was almost swept down tho river. "Let np !" said Blinks's companion ; "the dawg's nigh croaked." "Lazy, cuss 'im!" drawled Jags's energetic owner. Jags gave a whine of almost human entreaty when the stick was thrown again, but tottered away to almost certain death. Amicable relations are easily dis turbed in Rat Row. Big Andy caught Blinks by that part of his garment where the collar should have been and shook him into a stupid protest. "Blame yer mizzable hide !" he shouted furiously. "Call 'im back or I'll fling ye in arter 'im !" Blinks fell limply to the ground and obeyed. But Jags had already turned to defend his master and bounded back with a growl at his assailant. "Cussed if the dawg wouldn't fight fer ye now, ye sneakin' hound 1" mut tered Big Andy with an admiring grin at Jags. He went into his own nest in tho tenement house and flung Jags a bone. "Hyar, dawg I Put that down your neck !" Jags snatched it with the fervor of starvation, but his master was filled with a sullen spite against the inno cent cause of his shaking, and, look ing to see that Big Andy was at a safe distance, he called : "Hyar, ye imp." The dog came, clinging desperately to the precious food. "Drop it!" The poor animal obeyed, eyeing it wistfully the while. "Now, come git it!" Jags bounded joyfully forward to meet a kick that made him howl. Re peating this amusing performance un til he was weary, the human brute finally threw the bone into the river. Jags started weakly after it, but obeyed with something like tears in his one pathetic eye when commanded to lie down. Well, ho had been hungry before, aud if his master willed this, he must know best. It has been seen, long before this, that Jags was an ideal Christian. Hours after this even Rat Row was wrapped iu Blumbcr tho heavy Bleep of the drunkard or the leaden one of exhaustion and weakness. Blinks, af ter taking several more drinks from a flat, black bottle, staggered into Borne, corner of the Old Mill, after ordering Jags in language savoring of brimstone to stay out, when tho poor dog tried to follow him iu. The stars shone as serenely down on the foul smelling city slums as upon the clover-sweet meadows far away. The river murmured aud gurgled along tho black piers. Sometimes the "chug-chug" of a steamboat came clearly through the night; then its hoarse whistlo one long-drawn, three short, another long woke the echoes and it puffed past, its high, colored lights and trailing smoke making it look through the darkness like some fiery-eyed demon of the mists. JagB, lying prone ou the rickety steps of the Old Mill, moans and cries a little in his sleep as vague realiza tions of his wretched life und empty stomach visit, his dream. Suddenly he starts tip, uose iu air, and listeus. There is nothing uuusual, Jugs! The river gurgles on softly, the stars twinkle undimmed, there is no variatiou of bi-ht or sound that hu man mind cuu detect. Not huiiiuu mind, perhaps, but dog instinct Jags quivers, he sniffs tho air and walks about uneasily. He stops and whines, tries to push iu the barred door aud fails. Then he bleaks into a long, plaintive howl. Surely that will awaken some one iu that narrow street, that crowded house ! But there comes no other sound but the rippling river, the ro:ir of the far away, bleep lea streets. Again and aiuiu ho howls. Silence! What is that? A mere bhadow of a sound, faint, stealthy, as if somo one had stepped lightly on a dry twig aud snapped it. It rouses Jags to frenzy. Scores of human beiimt-', men, women, liUlo children, alutpiug calmly iu a tinder-box, that tinder-box on fire ano only he, Jags, a dumb, helpless ani mal, to know and savo them I And hs his idolized tyrant, in there I Jags throws himself against the dooi with a yell of agony. It falls open. A. thin puff of smoke waverB to meet him. Barking, howling, fairly shrieking, JagB tearB straight for the room whora he and Blinks have their kennel. Hd isn't there ! Out again, jumping against doors in his frantic search, choked with smoke, rushing through curling tongues of flame, goes the dog. Are they all dead in there I His mas ter, where is he? It is well that one in that vast hive is not too tired nor too drunk to awaken. Big Andy rouses to realize that the dog is making "a fuss," takes in the situation in a flash, and bounds out of tho smoke filled room. "Great God! The house is on fire !" "Fire, fire, firel" Somewhere a wire vibrates above the city streets. A great bell tolls out on the night. Clang, clang, clang t Rattle, rattle, rush 1 Streams of sparks in the wake of flying engines. Sharp and clear tho engine ond patrol gongs strike, in time with rattling hoofs and wheels. Over all booms Blowly and solemnly, with pauses between the strokes, tho great bell. All this time a dog was flying, with feet scorched now by the heated floor, from room to room, hunting for ono object. Ho finds him at last, in the second story, coiled np in a drnnken heap on the floor. He (-prices upon him, tugs at his clothing, barks, whines and tries to drag him toward tfte door. At last tho man awakes, stolidly, stu pidly, then to a vague terror and ab ject fright. Ho bounds to the door. It is a wall of flames. Ho reaches tho window ; no thought of the creature who Baved him comes to the brute's mind. He raises tho Bash and leapB out. It falls behind him. Jags is im prisoned in a tomb of fire. The people have swarmed out, dirty, dazed, half-dressed. Tho cordon is thrown out ; tho engines throb and scream. The firemen work quietly, streams of perspiration dripping be neath their helmets. Floods of water glitter like liquid fire in the red flames. The Old Mill is doomed. "Is every one out !" asks the Chief brusquely, gazing ux) toward the tot tering furnace. As if in answer there is a crash of breaking glass ut a second-story win dow and a living thing appears there, pitiful, pleading, ablaze with little tongues of flame. It whines implor ingly. Big Andy has private reasons of his own for preferring to remain incog, among a swarm of policemen. But) now into the full blaze of light ho dashes forward. "The dawg, the dawg that sayed all our lives I Git 'im, boys ; git 'im out I My God! I hain't got no money, boys, but look hyar ! They's a re ward of $500 out fer me ! I'm Big Andy, the safe-cracker. You know me! I'll give myself np to anybod that'll save that dswg. I mean it, boys !" There was good in Big Andy ; ho was sobbing aloud. For the credit of human nature be it said, no one ever claimed that reward. A quiet order through the Chief's trumpet, and a stream of water from the hose drovo the crazy window in. The dog sprang to the sill and tottered weakly. A fireman ran lightly np tho ladder and carried him down to the cool earth. There he foil, bleeding aud scorched. He roused himself to gaze longingly around, dragged his mangled body to where Blinks stood, staring stupidly, aud laid his head, with a faint moan, against his master's feet. "Speak to him!" bawled Big Andy furiously. "Pet 'im, or I'll kill ye!" Perhaps something human stirred in theheurt of the lower brute. He stooped aud laid a not ungentle hand ou tho bleeding head, "W'y, w'y, Jags, ole fel I" But with a rapturous look of grati tude from his one loving, beautiful eye, the dog had gone. Where? II there is no dog heaven, what will thu Creator do with the faithful, martyr soul of Jags? Tho Voice. A Snake Story. "I never realized tho strongth o( tho instinct of self-preservatiou iu man," said John F. Thompson to thu corridor man at the Laclede, "until I witnessed a test of it ou a steamboat. Among the passengers was a man who had a black rattlesnake in a box with a glass top. The snake was a very vicious one, ami would strike tho glass whevever any one approached. Tho owner of the reptile challenged any one iu the crowd to hold his finger on the glass and let the snake strike at it. There could not be any danger, and there was not a man who did not think it au easy thing to do. "One big fellow, who looked as if he never knew w hat nerves were, tried it, and, after repeated attempts gave it up. Then every passenger ou the boat attempted, and failure followed in each ease. It simply could not bo done. Instinct was stronger than reason ami will power combined. " St. Louis Globo-1 femoerat. Increased ('so t Muttot,. It is not altogether tho cheapness ot mutton that is leading people to use it more freely. They have learned that it is au excellent and healthful meat aud the consumption of mutton in thu United SPttes is six times as great in lH'JIJ as it was in 1KS7. Wo are undoubtedly killing offsheep faster than their natural iuereuse. "This' must load to increasing scarcity of fat' sheep for mutton, aud higher prices for the mutton whou marketed. Sheep cannot be increased very rapidly ut the best, aud if our stock becomes de pleted it takes several years to build it up i;iu. Bootuu Cultivatur, rRGPHETIC GROUNDHOGS. A CROSS BETWEEN A HOUSE AND A MONKEY. Their Habits, Home ami Food and How They Live Through the Winter Queerest of Mammals. WHEN the legendary and prophetical groundhog comes out of its hole and looks around for its shadow, if he sees it, which will natur ally be the case if the sun shines, he returns to his underground habitation tor another long rest, being convinced that winter is destined to linger in the lap of tho forthcoming spring. This interesting animal is equally well. known as tho "woodchuek." But it has a great many other names be Men. In fact, people would seem to have exhausted ingenuity in devising varied designations for the beast. Linnaeus, tho famous founder of the modern school of natural history, en titled it "mils monax," which, being interpreted, means a cross between a mouse and a monkey. The Canadian French speak of it as the "sifflonr," or "whistler." This is on account of the whistling noiBe which it sometimes utters when startled. In tho great fur-bearing region about Hudson's Bay it answers to the name of the "thickwood badger," while to the westward the hardy inhabitants of Alaska mean woodchuek when they exclaim "tarbagan," and the wild Chippewas likewise whon they grunt "kath-hilloe-kooay. " The animal's habits do not vary with the multitude of his titles. He lives in a burrow remarkable for its extent. It is dug in the slope of a hill or by the side of a big stoue, making an ex cavation twenty or thirty feet long, which descends obliquely four or five feet, then gradually rising to a large round chamber, whero the groundhog family sleeps and brings np its young. The little ones are born three to eight at a time. AVhen the farmer, with his horses and mowing machine, chances to slump into one of these holes, dis appearing from view until excavated by charitable neighbors, ho is apt to feel annoyed and to revile the whole woodchuek tribe with discrimination. It is largely on this account that bounties for killing the creatures have been offered in New Hampshire and other Stati, as much as ten cents for each tail being paid. Hunters will not kill them, for the fur iB worthless and the flesh by no means palatable. It is not true that iu certain parts of the country farmers have found it necessary to shovel paths through groundhogs iu over to reach their barns. Save in the way just mentioned, the woodchuek does little or no harm to anybody. He is strictly a vegetarian, feeding mostly on clover and grass. Rarely does he enter the garden, pre ferring the open meadows and rocky hillsides. The first rains that fall copiously after haying is over cause the fresh green grass to spring up anew. This second crop in many places consists largely of red clover, which tho groundhog regards as a most delightful delicacy. It eats so much during the latter part of August and the first half of tho following month that it becomes exceedingly fat and iuert. About September 30 or a little later it goes into winter quarters, aud it does uot come out agaiu to stay un til tho middle of March. This ereaturo istho most remarkable existing example of a hibernating mammal. It lays up no store of pro visions as the squirrel does. Its food is of such a nature that it does uot keep, and so the groundhog must sleep to save itself from starving. It disappears with astonishing precision within a few days of the autumnal equinox ard remains underground un til about tho time when tho sun cuts the plane of the equator at tho vernal equinox. Often the weather is vury warm when it retires, and it w ill come out in March whon snow is ou tho ground making long journeys to tiud places where patches of the coveted green grass has been laid bare by thaw. At the euil of the winter the animal is thin and doubtless feels rather seedy, having lived on its own tishues aud without subsisteiH-o for so long a time. During tho term of hibernation physical waste is reduced to a very low point, tho heart's actiou slacken ing and the breathing becoming so slight that it cau only be detected by delicate instruments. Even when kept iu a warm hotis, through the cold season a tame groundhog becomes torpid at the usual date and remains So until the hereditary habit has been carried to tho customary term. In this latitude tho hibernation of the auimal is not so complete as farther north, and u few hundred miles far ther south it iu interrupted by period, of wakefulness, during which the woodchuek I'oes abroad and gets its meals. The piaetie of hibernating is merely a devico of uature for en abling the a:iinal to get along without food at times wheu there is no food to be had. Otherwise it would perish and the species would become eitiuct. No use for the groundhog worth mentioning has ever been discovered. It is otherwise with another queer mammal the porcupine. Porcupiuea have been used as fuel, for whioh pur pose they are said to bo superior to wood. Some time ago at tho Wilmot luiuo iu Minnesota the porcupine came to be regarded a.i such a nui s iuee, being very numerous, that one day the foreman threw a cuuplo of dead ones i:.t'j the firepln.-e of the btcam drill. To hit surprise the b team and up to eighty pounds in a thort time. From that time ou the miners ueie instructed to ki!l u:i.l bring iu every porcupino they could catch for u.-.e in the l'urusce. Such, at all events, is the story. Wa.hingiou Star. A' SONO OF LOVE1; What, swoPt mistress, should there be 'Twixt thy heart and mine this day? There no barrier I see Which Love may not kiss awny. Do thou waft one smile to me Love will find his way to tbee 1 If a rose should bar bis path Thorny, with a jealous frowr. Love such winning favor linth He WQuld quickly kiss it down ; Then would sweetly, tenderly Bear it on his breast to the?. Love will come his own to greet, ThouKh no light bis day adorns, Through a world of rosi-s, sweet Through a wilderness of thorns I Do thou waft one smile to me. Love shall find his way to thee ! -Frank L. Htanton, in Atlnnta Constitution. HUMOR OF THE DAT. A backslider The crab. Hallo. A spark of genius Winningan heir ess. Truth. The man who agrees with us doesn't come around near often enough. Ram's Horn. The stock exchange is where hope is exchanged for experience. Florida Times-Union. A man with an elastic imagination is too liable to use it for a conscience. Rochester Democrat. This is a world of compensations men who lack long heads generally have long faces. Truth. The worst of the rosy colors in which some things are painted is that they are not fast. Puck. "How much is this dress worth?'' "I really don't know what it's worth the price is $3." Hallo. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but it's tho uniform that takes young women's eyes. Judge. "Johnny, add seven apples to two apples, and what will yon have?" "Colic, sir." Harper's, Bazar. A dog's tail is not necessarily a "has been" because it always points to tho past. Bimghamton Republican. One reason why somo men are so lean is because they have thrown ail their fat into the fire. Dallas News. Tommy (with pride) "My pa's a banker." Willie "An' my pa's re ceiver for his bank." Chicago Rec ord. "The foreigu husband is the absorb ing idea !" said the American million aire as he wrote the wedding chock. Cleveland Plain Dealer. He "Do you believe in such a thing as lovo at first sight?" She "Certainly. A hasty glance does not discover imperfections." Boston Transcript. Hungry Higgins "Wot's right nowadays--t'auk you, or t'anks?" Weary Watkins 'T guess tanks would hit us about riglf." Indianap olis Journal. The man who is always careful to keep out of debt is seldom so well supplied with tho modern conveni ences of life as his less considerate fellow. Puck. He "What would you do if I were to kiss you?" She "Are you vtry curious to know?" He "Very!" She "Well, you might try and see !" Boston Traveler.. "It makes no difference to me." said the old theologian, "whether I came from a tadpole or a monkey. How to get out of the scrape is what botheu me." Newport News. Iu the cannibal islands. Mother "What is the matter with you, my son? Havo you eaten anything that disagreed with you?" Sou "That is why I ate him." -Bostou Transcript. Tommy -"I guess he must be the best dentist iu town. " Papa -"Didn't he hurt you?" Tommy "No; I just went up to tho door ami my tooth stopped hurting." Chicago Iiiter Oceau. "Did you get anything from that mau you jm-t applied to for help?" "Only good advice." "What advice did he give you !'' "I said 1 was cold and ho told mo to go to blazes. "--New York Press. The scarcity of food iu Rage lias compelled the boseiged troops to re sort to canines dished up iu various stylos. There is a havoc among the dogs of war in that locality. l'hila delphia Ledger. First Belle -"Then both Herr Schulze and llerr Leliuninu had made her an offer of manage; which was the lucky man?" Second Ditto "llorr Schulze, Herr Lohm iiiu married her." Ohcrluudcr Bote. "Have you had your new house in sured, Mrs. Dwight?" "Yes." "Your husband is afraid of tire, thou?" "Mercy, y i s ; he will leave the house any time before ho will make one. " -Chicago lutei-t )ecuu. "ilow do you know that DeVore is Hot in love with Mabel Sweet briar?" "liccaiiKO I lieai. I him tell her the other evening, wlieii they oume from church, that he knew of a short cut home." Detroit Free I'ress. "Diil o:i kii w that Miss lijoiies was going to marry young Smith?" "1 know it ; but 1 cannot understand how u girl as intelligent as she is cau con sent to marry a man t-tupid ouough to want to marry her." Brooklyn Lite. "Angels have wing-', haven't they, grandma?" ' I've always heard so." "I heard I'liclu Gerald tell Mademoi selle she was au angel- in the shrub bery this morning - and she hasu't got wing." "So, but she'll lne to lly." Punch. "An' is vour man wovkiu' now, Mrv Mullay ?" ' 'ib' is that, Mrs. Tooloy. " "I'hwat do lie be doiu', Mrs. Mullnyy" "('oachiii' convicts, Mis. Tool, v." "i'hwat's that, Mr. Mullay?" "Dri in' the Black M.iris, blmre, .Mr-. Tooloy, "'-Eliuira Gazette.