Til FOREST REPUBLICAN b MbltakM trtry W.4awUr, ay J. K. WENK. Offlo la Bmaarbangh A Co.' BaJldluj ui rmirr, tionmta, r. Tarm. . . . J9 par Yr. ' ,k" rlMas nmnl for rur pto4 ! tar, aiantha. OnmapeiKunra MlKltvl frea 11 acrU f th. on r try. N. a.Uc. wUt t. lakaa f uninn ratis or ADvmTisiwei On. Bonara, on. inote, aii. lnaw-tlo.. I On. rtqoara, on. Inch, on. month. ,, I 00 On Bquara, on. inota, tbr. months. , 00 On. Hq tiara, on. Inch, on. year ...... HM Two tjqnarM, on. yaar IS OC Quarter Column, on. yaar.... ........ ID 0C Half Column, on. yaar W 00 'On. Column, on yaar. 100 W Logs! aTrttnwiti to, cnti par Uam sou in aw Hon. Marrta. and death notloe. frmtSn. All bill, foryaarly adrm-tlwrnrnt. eiiPaafaa TJBLICAN VOL. XXVI. NO. 50. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1894. S1.00 PER ANNUM. quarterly, lamporary iaTWBMiwm B. paid la adranoa, Job work eaah oa dallvery. RlR"P Ja h ,,JL .JA- Marriage are proportionately nbout twice as numerous in nmnll Western citioa aa. in New York. Tlic Turin Sinclo says that England ct aa though it owned the world, wiiil that it is nbout time for an ex planation. An English newspaper asked for opinion on the wont popular name for a girl and n boy. "Harold" and "Dorothy" got most votes. The scarlet tanagor, by many con sidcrod tho most beautiful bird in America," has within a fow years be oomo bo rare thnt it is seldom seen. The milliners have almost exterminat ed them. One of tho curioNitios of trado Is shown in the foot that a large Nor wegian steamship has boon chartered to carry thirteen hundred tons of pa per pulp to Fleetwood, England, from a wood pulp factory in Maine. For tho year ending Deeoinbcr 31, 1893, we imported 55,504 tons of wood pulp. Au ironical but timely application of a phrase away from its oustomary significance is the command "hold np ygnr hands," directed by tho city police to tramps who attempt to abide ill El Paso, Texas, relates the Atlanta Constitution. This town of agreeable winter temperature, lying a it docs on the southern railroad route from California, was becoming overrun, as other Texas towns have becD, by the ruffian mendicants that for months have been thronging eastward. The evil abatod when the rule was put iu force. Now whenever a tramp applies for relief he is compelled to hold up his hands. If the palms do not fur nish evidence that ho is a genuine work ingman he is promptly set to cleaning the streets. As the methods for en forcing ordinances in El Paso empha size prompitude with plonty of force and fireworks it is not strange that tramps bold aloof from that city and bestow their unwelcome visitations on . other places. Women's colleges, in sundry places, says the Philadelphia Fnblio Ledgor, have broadened out wonderfully since the early days of Vassar. Not to speak of Hniith and Tufts in Massachusetts, Mr. Henry F. Durant, by his ex traordinary gift of fl, 000,000, mad possible the establishment of Wellesley College. In addition to this princely gift, Boston University, with its mil- lions, so broadened its acope that it opened its doors to women, being en ablod to do so by the generosity of Jacob Sleeper. Iu Baltimore the liberality of Mr. Goucher provided tho women's college ; also, Miss Mary Gar rett founded a preparatory school, which is worth everything in pre liminary education ; while Johns Hop kins has granted entrauoe to some ot iU courses. For I'hiladelphia, Dr. Taylor established in the suburb of Bryn Mawr a splendid oollogu at an expenditure of SI. 000,000. In New Orleans exists tho Sophie Newcymb College, iu cuunectiou with Tulane University. Ht. Louis has opened the doors ot tho Washington University, and women members stand ou the aarne footing with men, thanks to Johu 1. Hockcfcltcr.iu the great University of Chicago. - " . For aj-vcral years poaf -prmldv , for several year to come, predicts tho New York Independent, the nows which will tell most in the world's fu ture history is that which comes from Africa. Duriug tho past week there has been au important new chapter added to this history. A French military force has entered Timbuctoo in the very interior aud most inac cessible part of. the South Sahara Neighborhood. Frauce proposes to eoutrol the whole of this territory, aud she reaches Timbuctoo from tho north by way of Algeria and from tho west by way of Senegal. Timbuctoo has been an almost unknown city, visited very rarely, aud generally by Europeaus only in disguise. The iu - formation is too meagre its yet for up to understand ttie full meaning of this occupation. So far as we know the force is a small one, aud a small force ' could have uo ehauoe in case of oppo sition. We have uo question that Frauce intends to make J imbuetoo a treat centre for its influence and power, uor that Northwest Africa will be finally under French ooutrol. It is often said, aud truly said, that France has shown no great aptitude for oolo; uil enterprises owing to a lack of sur plus populatiou. But she has put Algeria uuder civilized conditions, and Frenchmen may multiply more rapidly in the colonies than they do iu their owu country. The partition - of Africa will afford a great outlet for Europera population and enterprise aud will have a, great influence og the world. Since 1810 the world's production of meat has increased fifty-seven per cent., that of grain 420 per cent. The Chicago Evening Tost says that "Chicago policemen do less work for more pay than any other olasa of the unemployed." Professor Riley, the bug man of tho Acrricnltural Department, says that some bugs have all the five senses that man has, and one or two more. An illustration of the severity of the times Is found by the New York Inde pendent in the fact that two physician? lately advertised in a daily paper, of fering $5000 to a man who would sub mit to an experimental surgical opera tion involving some risk. One hundred and forty-two answers were recoivod. After a careful calculation of the risks from all possible data the Lon don life insuranoe companies have fixed tho "war risks" to be paid extra by their patrons ordered on active service at 12.16 per $500. That is to say, the British soldier has but about one chance in 250 more of dying o active sorvico, than if ho staid quietly at home in London. Chicago is worried over the fact that so many of its streets and avenues have the same names, notes the New Orleans Pioayune. Ono hundred and sixty-five names have to do dnty for 720 streets, and the result is not wholly satisfactory. It has twelvo Centre streets, seven Ashland . ave nues, seven Chestnut streets, ten Lin den streets, thirteen Oak streets, thir teen Park streets and fourteen Wash ington streets, besides a number which are less reduplicated. i A few years ago, relates the New Orleans Pioayune, the Mikado of Japan determined to ask his people to help him govern thorn, and with a flourish of trumpets called for an loo tion and organized parliament. Ite reports from that country say that now he is having a hard time to man age the popular representatives. Not long ago the conservative majority ex pelled the President, Hoshi, because he insisted in keeping faith with for eign powers. Thon Foreign Minister Mitau made them an address, showing that the course of the majority would result in losing everything that Japan had gained in thirty years, but they would not listen to reason, and the session was suspended for ten days. It is said that the doings of the Japanes. parliament would furnish first rate ma terial for a comio opera. The minis ters attend the sessions with orders for the suspension of parliament ready signed and sealed 1y the Emperor in their pockets, and when the body be comes unruly the orders are produced, and the session suspended for ten days or a fortnight. The majority of the members are intensely Japanese, op posed to everything foreign, and they have no idoa of parliamentary pro ceedure. It is said that tho Mikado has started a movement whioh is sure to give him a good deal of trouble ul timately. The annual ropoit of fires of tho Board of Firo Underwriters, of New York City, oontains some interesting statistical information. Several tables set forth the number of alarms and the amount of losses for thirty-nine years up to April 30, 1803. From these may be gathered an idoa of the growing efficiency of the Fire Depart ment, as well aa the rate of increase of tires due to the growth of the city. The insuranoe money paid iu 1855 in adjustment of losses was 33.87 per . cont. of tho amount placed. For the succeeding j oars until 1870, when the paid department was adopted, this percentage was not reduced in fact, rose in the last few years of thif period. But since, aifd including 1890, there has been a constant al though not steady reduction. The first year the paid firemen took hold it war 22.23 per cent. In the year ending April 30, 1893, it .was 13.10 per cent., the lowest in all but two years in the history of the city. This is telling testimony to the value of the paid de partment. In 1815 there were 355 fire alarms, iu 1893 29t0, a steady ascent, excepting the years 1863 and 1862, when the number was exactly the same, that is, 700. Fires are most nu merous in January and after that in December. They are fewest in Sep tember and August. The aggregate for the Januarys sinoe 1851 waa 4847, for December 4749, July 4460, March 4328, April 4159, February 4094, November 8887, May 8624, June 3535, October 3392, August 3152, and September 8159. As may be seen, the winter months bfing the most visita tions of fire, except July, whose large number ia accounted J F by Fourth of JiUj fijre, MOTHER'S PAY, Whan the babe lies on the heart Cane depart j Heavenly peaoe, heavenly rest Fill the breast, Whan the babe lies on the heart. When I look on baby's taoe la baby's place, Taxing snarls to smoothness run Magta span, When I see that peaceful faoe. Than queen to people, more to thee I Joy to be ; Than people to their quean thou'rt more Told o'er and o'er In every breath of thlae to me. When thou Host on my heart Hatred's smart Turns to sweet lovo's soft spell The way knows well Through baby's Hps to mother's heart. O'er responsive eyes and Hps Bleep's eclipse Boftly falls, breathing bliss As I kiss Th. tiny, rosy fingertip. While with theo sweet tryst 1 keep, Half asleep, In thy silver, dream-world boat Soft I float O'er slumber's sacred deep. AU the wild world's maddening fray Melts away ; Gladly all the world to lose I would choose Could I take this heavenly pay. Lesser duty's strident scream ' Drops its theme ; Joy and duty are one code, Heaven-bestowed, While I watch my baby droam. ' As I gate on baby's faoe Angel's grace , Falls around. Who from home Cares to roam While she sees the baby's fsce? When my babe lies on my heart Cares depart ; Heaven and home by Heaven's grace Are one place, When my babe lies on my heart. Martha Foote Crow, in Independent. MRS. ARDTO STORY". BY HELEN FOREHT GRAVES. UESS your man won't be home to night," said Seth Shapley. I was standing at the gate, where the Norway spruces cast long shadows on the snow, watching the crim son dyes of the unset, when Seth's cumbrous sled, drawn by two sleepy OXen, Creak Ad nut SLSU "Why, what do yon mean?" said I. "Bridge is broke," declared Seth, "ain't no way of fixiu' it before to morrow noon I" "Can't he come around by way of Millville?" I asked. Seth shook his head- "They've took off the night train," said he. "Warn't enough passengers to pay this winter." Seth looked at his oxen's ears. I looked at Seth. "All alone up there, ain't you?" said he, abruptly. "Yes," I acknowledged, "I am all alone." "Better jest git aboard the sled and come down to our place to stay all night," suggested Seth. "Oh, I couldn't do that?" I an swered. "I expect Bufus's mother down from Montreal at any time now ; and there's the house to look after. Besides, I'm not all afraid. Why should I be?" "Oh, I dunno IV said Seth, cutting a fresh plug of tobacoo. "It's kind o' spooky np there, ain't it, with Betsey gone ?" And then I remembered that my maid-of-all-work had been summoned to the siok bed of some ancient rela tive, a few miles away. My perturbed face must have ap pealed to honest Seth's sense of chiv alry, for ho burst out all of a sudden : "I'll tell ye what, Mrs. Arden, I'll end littlo Folly up to stay all night with you. Polly's only a slip of a thing, but she's a deal o' company, and I'm pretty sartin she wouldn't like nothin' no better." "Oh. thank you I" said I. "It will be very kind of you, Mr. Shapely." And I strolled baok to the house, the crisp wiud blowing my hair back, and tho red sunset gleams lighting up tho frozen landscape as with bars of blood. I was an artist's wife. We had not been married a year yet, and Itiifus had gone to the city to see about some pictures that he was placing on aalo iu a great art room. We had been able to hire Haquette House, as this fine eld mansion was called, at a merely nominal rate, as the wealthy pork-packer who built it was tired of the loneliness of the situ ation and had moved to Atlantic City, where his money would make more show. And Kutus bad the option of paying the rent by painting a set of panel pictures for his seaside dining room. It wkh a larger house than we need ed, but the grounds and gardens were delightful, aud after alf, as Rufus and I reasoned, it didn't cost us auy more than a smaller house would, aud was a doal more artistic. But it did seem rather big and gloomy iu the gathering dusk as I came in that night, more especially as I had never before been alone in it more than a few hours at a time. Consequently I was not sorry a fow naiuuttis afterwsrd to ber Polly Hhup. ley' voice as .at by tho Are. "I came in the west door, " breathed I Polly, flushed with the haste nhe had made. "Did you know, Mis' Arden, the west door warn't bolted?" Polly was a tall fourteen-year-older, with a curly crop of hair and a nasal voice. "Betsy waa careless about the doors," said I, remembering with a guilty pang Rufus had bidden me be very careful about securing the prem ises in his absence. "Bocause," he had Baid, "there's that money Welford wanted me to bank for him in the studio desk drawer, and the diamond necklace in the cabinet." And then, with a sudden after gleam of recollection it flashed across me just where Rufus had stood, by the depot stove, when he spoke the words, and how a stout, short man, in a slouched fur cape and a ragged over coat, had watched us as he waited for a ticket and chewed tobacoo. Could he havo heard the word? And how was he to know that "the dia mond necklace" was only a state trinket of cut glass, borrowed of au artist friend for the decoration of tho lay figure, or that Welford's money was only a few dollars, seat in repay ment of something he had borrowed from Rufus? ' Upon the whole, I was glad that Polly Shapely had come to bear mo company during that long, solitary winter night. Of courso there was no danger, but that "We'll go back and bolt it, Polly," said I. "Oh, I done that!" Baid Polly. "Gracious! ain't them halls dark I I came through the etudy " "Studio, Polly," I gently corrected her. "Studio, then," Polly accepted the emandation. "Tho fire ain't quite out, here. Ain t no danger o fire, is there?" "Perhaps it had better be covered with aahes," said I. "Bun and attend to it, Polly, and I'll see about the tea. "I've got some apples and chestnuts in my bag," cried Polly, "and some o' mother s riz uougnnnts. Hue thought mebbe you hadn't nothin' baked up, seein' Betsey was gone. Gimme a candle, Miss Arden. I wouldn't go through them halls in the dark ag'in for nothin'. I could swear there was spooks a-rushin' arter me." "What nonsense, Polly !" Baid I. But, nevertheless, I handed her the brass candlestick that Rufus had bought at a sale on account of its an tiquity. I was just hanging over the tea-kettle when the scuffle of Polly's footsteps was heard onoe more, this time at rail road rate. "I wouldn't be hired to go through that there study ag'in, Mis' Ardon," said she, slamming down the candle stick on the table. "Why, Polly, what's the matter?" "Them portraits a starin' down at ma 1" gasped the girl. "Their eyes a follerin' me all round I Gracious, what a start it gimme 1" "That's the way portraits always do, Polly," explained I. "You're a goose !" "I can't help it," pauted Polly. "It fa'rly makes me creep. An' the woman in white, standin' up on the platform she turned her head an' looked at me, she did." "What, Polly a wooden figure, dressed like the Lady of Avenel?" aud I burst out laughing. "Why, it's jointed, like a doll!" "Well, I can't help it. It did turn its head. And I wouldn't go back there ag'in, Mis' Ardon, not if yon woe to give me a silver dollar 1" "Well, Polly, you needn't." I soothed her, perceiving that she was really nervous and frightened. "We'll have tea here by the fire, and after ward we'll roast tho apples and the chestnuts. There are no portraits here to follow you with their eyea." And Tolly soon forgot her tribula tions in -the tea, the raspberry jam and the tales I told her of life in beau tiful, ice-girdled Montreal. I made her up an impromptu bed on a sofa in my own room opening from this cheerful, fire-lighted apartment ; but when she was asleep and snoring, I quietly threw a shawl over my shoulders and relighted the candle. "I will see after that fire myself," thought I. "There's no telling what accidents might happen, and we are not insured." Nevertheless, I could but remember Polly's idea of tho "spooks" as I passed along the silent, moonlighted hall to the studio door. Opening it suddenly, the draught blew out my candle ; but the moon il luminated the room with faint silver radiance, aud one or two live embers yet glimmered ou tho deep hearth, the last remains of Bufus's cherished Yule log. Just in the line of the bigmullioned window the lay figure occupied its ac customed place on a carpeted dais close to Bufus's easel, and ehauciugto glance in that direction my blood frozo chill. From beneath the white hood of the "Itady of Aveuel," which had been Rufus's lust historical study, a pair of real, human eyes seemed to Hash a sudden furtive look at me, aud was it only a memory of Polly's panic, a mere freak of my disordered imagina tion, or did the figure really move a little? With electric swiftness, the whole thing rushed across my miud Bufus's careless words at the railway station, the stout stranger in the fur cap, the fact of my being alone aud defenseless in this solitary spot-- Yet, after the lirst fright, my senses seemed to rally themselves into a strange calm. I relighted my candle at the last Yule ember, covered it with a bed of aslies, composedly walked across the floor as if nothing unusual Uai huppeued, aud softly looked the door behind uie. "He", welcome to the tUge neck lace if ho wants it." thought I ; "and the money is safe in a Branal-locked desk. The studio window is a deal too high for him to escape that way, besides being guarded with a strong wire netting ; and I don't see how else he can escape, unless he goes np the chimney." Then I went back to my own room, where the firo crackled cheerily, and Polly snored with soothing monotony ; but the reader can easily imagine that there waa no sleep for me that night. With the orimson flush of daybreak, I was about to rouse Polly np and Bend her down to summon her father, when a loud knocking at the door startled me. It was Rufus himself ! "Well, pussy," said he, "were you nervous almut being left alone? I got Sara Penny to row me over the river, aud came across country in a cutter. Here's Seth Shapley, with his ox team, to take his girl home. Got any fire? I'm half frozen to doath." "Kurus Mr. Shapley 1" I gasped, "don't stop here t Come right to the studio. Here's the key. I don't know, but I think I'm almost sure thero's a man locked up there I" Without pausing to answer their eager questions, I hurried them along the wide, tile-paved hall, and in al most lees time than it takes to relate the incidents the door was unlocked and sturdy Seth had got the stout, rod-faced man by the throat, while Rufus was pinioning his arms. "It's yon, is it, Ben Frowley?" shouted Seth. "Just out o' Danne more Jail for one offense, an' now you're qualifyin for another term, hay? Ye shif'less, thievin', drunken scamp, I know ye !" And in a minute or two they had him, safely secured with ropes, lying panting and breathless on the floor. The stage necklace was in his pocket, and be had contrived to pick the Branal lock in spite of everything and possess himself of the few bills in the desk drawer, while the actual jointed substratum of the White Lady of Avenel, whose garments he had taken to conceal his identity, under the semblance of a draped lay figure, was pushed beneath the dais in wooden confusion. All of a sudden we heard the voice of Polly behind ub. "I knowed the critter moved its head I" said she. "Didn't I tell ye so, Mis' Arden?" And that was the last time I ever allowed myself to be left alone in Raquette House. "Not that I'm afraid," said I, "but but every one knows that discretion is the better part of valor." Saturday Night. Thickness ot the Soap Bubble Film. The most powerful of the modern microscopes will render a point one hundred thousandth part of an inch in diameter perfectly visible. While this is true beyond a doubt, there are reasons for believing that a single molecule of matter is much smaller even than that. One reason for this belief has been deduoed from calcula tions made on the soap bubble. Scientists have made measurements of the thickness of the envelope of Boapy water inclosing the air of the bubble when it had become so thin as to pro duce rainbow tints. At the appear ance of the shade of violet it waa one fourth of the thiokness of the length of an ordinary violet wave of light (one-sixty thousandth of an inch), thus making the thickness equal to one two hundred thousandth of au inch. As the bubble continues to expand a black patch formed near the end of the pipe from whioh the bubble was being blowu. Measurements were then taken to asoertaiu the thickness of the black portion of the bubble, and the experimenters were astonished beyond measure, when they found the thickness (or Thinness) to bo only one-fifty millionth of an inchl St. Louis Republic. This Miner Was Lucky. Michael O'Reilly's lucky star must have shone over him, for he had about as narrow an escape from iustant death at tbeltarus Mine as was ever record ed. He was ascending the ladder-way in the pumping shaft above the 400, when one of the ladder rounds broke, and ho lost his balance and fell into the shaft. He dropped about fifty feet, and in some manner managed to grasp hold of a water-pipe or something of tho kind and clung to it. Otherwise, he would have fallen 200 feet to the six-hundred level and into seventy-five feet of water. He managed to swing to the ladder again. Another miner assisted him to a level. He was raised to the surface, aud Drs. Wells and Mo-. Crimmou were summoned. They found that, aside from a fracturod ankle and some painful bruises, the man was not seriously hurt, but the shock hail been great. He was carried to his home, iu Dublin tiuloh. Mr. O'Reilly has a wife and ono child. Butte (Montana) Inter-Mountain. A Fish With a ICulilier Kuuil. Forest aud Stream speaks of a curious find iu the Cape Anu fish mar ket, at Gloucester, Mos-t. It was nothing less than a mackerel with a rubber band around tho body. The baud had beeu put ou the fish when quite small, and stayed there ia spite of the rapid growth of the wearer. The fish s body uuder the bantl did not grow, which caused a depression iu the full-growu body of about three inches in depth. The depression was covered with a healthy skiu iu uo way unlike that on the rest of the body. Tho fish measured iu length fourteen inches, diameter of body each side of the depression, seven aud three-fourths inches, diuiueter of depression, five iuehes. The tisli was uudoubt 'illy iu a healthy condition, aud the ba ; I waa souud and coujd be stretched, like ijuy other baud. A BIG BURDEN OF PAPER. arErioN 01r HOW TO dispose of OLD MONET ORDERS. The Government Cannot Afford t Destroy Them A Kemarkable Case of Counterfeiting Orders. WHAT is Uncle Sam going to do with all the old money orders? They have been accumulating on his hands for nearly thirty years, and not one of them has been de stroyed. More than two billion dol lars' worth of them in value originally represented are now stored away in the various buildings belonging to the Postoffice Department at Washington, occupying thousands of cnbio feet of precious space. To hold them all would require several ordinary-sized houses, and still they continue to pile up. It is the same way with many million dollars' worth of postal notes. Ulnasmuch as they are vouchers for money paid out, it would hardly do to burn them. The Government, in re lation to the money order system, acts as a sort of trust company. Citizens place their cash in its hands, and the canceled orders are evidence of the fulfillment of the trust. Besides, things are constantly hap pening which rentier it necessary to refer to the baok-number orders. A man writes to the department, saying: "I am the administrator of the estate of John Jones. Among his private papers I have found certain money or ders, dated some years back. Pleaso send duplicates, in order that I may cash them." Now, it frequently hap pens that the orders discovered in such ways are from ten to twenty years old. By turning to the files it can be ascer tained in a moment whether these se curities have been redeemed or not. Or perhaps William- Smith will write : "Two years ago James Robin son, of Podunk, sent me a money or der for $50. I did not receive it. Kindly furnish me with a duplicate." The order referred to is looked up and found in the files canceled, beariog William Smith's signature to tho re ceipt. Smith, on being informed of this fact, deolares the signature a forgery. A postofhce detective ia then put on the oase and investigates it. May be he decides that Smith's claim is good ; but sinoe the money order system was founded in 1865 there have not been more than 200 casea of for gery of this description. When a money order is missing a dnplioate can always bo obtained. Three hundred Buch duplicates are is suod by the department at Washing ton every day, on an average. The originals disappear in all sorts of curious ways. Farmers, through mis take, frequently keep thorn as re ceipts, instead of forwarding them through the mails. After awhile the unsophisticated agriculturist is dunned for payment by the keeper of a store in a neighboring town. "Why," he savs, "I sent you the money by post some time ago, and here is the receipt in my pocket." With that he exhibits the money order. Hut it often nap pens that the payee, learning that cash awaits him at the postoflice, ap plies for a duplicate. Railway postal clerks sometimes steal letters ami fiud money orders in them. To get rid of them, they burn them. Then the own ers ask for duplicates. In the history of the money order system only two instances of the cnun terfeiting of these securities have beeu recorded. The first and more remark able case was in 1873. John N. Young, who had been employed iu the money order division of the Chicago i'ost oflice, thought that he had discovered a wiv to cet rich easily. His tcheme, being without precedent, might have been fairly successful, H he hud worse j it skillfully ; but he carried it out very clumsily indeed. For $M he hired a drunken printer to set up typo for an imitation of the regular money ordei blank. This was not difficult, inas much aa the kind of blank used by the department has always been severely simple. However, tho type setting was so badly done as to call attention almost immediately to the fraud. Nevertheless, the swindler mauaged to obtain cash for a number of his orders. They were for $50 each the maximum allowed at that time. Allot them bore the stamp of Oshkosh, Wis. They were to be paid to fictitious names iu Indi anapolis, Iud., Springfield, 111., and other cities. Young managed to steal a number of official envelopes aud "ad vice blanks" to help out his game, but he had none of the regular postoflice stamps, and so was obliged to employ ordinary postage stamps for making his letters of advice to postmasters. This was calculated to excite attention. The rogue applied for the money at the different postofiices under the riot i tious names which he hail employed. He would have been caught iu Cincin nati, but tho postmaster, who had been warned iu advance from Washington, stupidly lt him get away when he pre ented his bogus orders, telling him to call again. Of course he did nut come back. Finally he was caught iu Florida. Ou his way north ho jumped from the train, but was subsequently recaptured and eventually Isu led iu the penitentiary. Washington Star. The Best Hauaaas. In selecting bauauas it is well to re member that the fruit which is largest, the deopest yellow, aud the least augu lar is, as a rule, the best. tue who has become bauaua-w isc through look ing into their culture in Jamaica (where most of the bautnas I list come to our market are grown) denies the current belief that bananas are l ipeued on the plant iu that cuuutry, ami there fore much superior to those that are cut green. Detroit Free Press, Cnda forbids the adulteration of ftttet, u4 C's4 i right, LOVE THE MAGICIAN. Ring bird, ripple rill ; Purple Is the distant hill ; Bky Is bright, and da ia clear. Love Is here. Frown sky, vanish hill j Mute the bird, and dry the rill ; All the day Is drear ond dead. Love Is Ad. George B. Gallup, in Munsey.'s1 HUMOR OF THE BAY. Books of travel Thousand-mila tickets. -Truth. Consistency is a jewel often sold to pay the price of success. Puck. A mistake is apt to attract more at tention to us than a virtue. Ram's Horn. The trouble with many men is that they will snatch defeat from victory. Puok. "I always did enjoy an intellectual feast," said the cannibal, a he ate the Yale man. Life. When a man pawns his honor ha finds that the legal interest on perjury is tremendously high. Truth. Judge (to tramp prisoner) "Fifty dollars or thirty days." "Time's money, Judge. Gi'me thirty days." A newly discovered weather prophet says that an icy pavement is a sure sign of an early fall. Hartford Jour nal. - A Kensington doctor suggests that a good thing for the Cramps is a con tract for a new warship. Philadelphia Record. Christie "That young Mr. Sapp talks just like a book, doesn't he?" Kathryn "Yes, a blank book." De troit Free Press. He "There goes Hatton in his now . overooat. What do you think of him?" She "Ho is simply out of sight." Washington News. "Goodluck has had his salary raised ; was it for extra work?" "Yes; he always listens when the proprietor tells his baby's smart sayings." "How are you getting along learn ing to operate your typewriter?" "First rate. 1 can almost lead soma of the things I write." Chicago Reoord. Husband (irately) "You think you know everything, don't you?'' Wife (softly) "No, dear ; I never did know why you know so little." Detroit Free Press. "I am sorry, but the picture looks like a perfect failure to me." Artist "Great Scott, what a perfect success I must have made of it I" Chicago Inter-Ooean. She "I don't like that Mr. Smith; he is always riding aoino hobby or other to death." He "Ah, why don't you oall the attention of the S. P. C. A. people to it. " The differenco between the wealthy idler and the leader of au orchestra i that the former's solo ambition is to kill time, while the latter beats it. -Philadelphia Record. Mamma "What are you and Fred die quarrelling about?" "We were playing keep house and Freddie oame home and found dinner wasn't ready." Chicago Inter-Ooeau. She--"Is it true that ft lover never eats anything?" He "Not after he becomes engaged. " She "Why not?" He "He never has any money to spare." Brooklyn Life. Benediot "Why won't she marry you? Is there another man in the case?" Singleton "I'm afraid ther is." "That's so? Do you know who i. is ?" "Yes her father. " Maude "Why dou't you give youug Sewers some encouragement if you love him?" Nell "Oh, he ought to be able to press his owu suit. He's a tailor." Philadelphia Record. Bunker "I was fool enough yester day to tell that doctor of yours that you sent me." Hill "What difference did that make?" Bunker "He madu me pay cash." New York Herald. Elderly Maiden "This is so unex pected, Mr. Wellalong, that--that you must give me time." Elderly Lover "Time, Miss Rebeoca? Do you thiuk there is auy to spare I"--Chicago Tri bune. Forgot herself : BriifRB- "You knew Mangle recently married a widow and went ou a wedding trip, didn't you? J bw him yesterday ou his return." Griggs "Anything happen while he was away?" 15riggs--"i'es. lie says that in a tit of absent-mindedness she proposed to hiiu again. ''--Brooklvu Life. "Here," said tho very youuv; man, "is a clmmeleou." "Oil, Mr. Ctllow," she exclaimed, "this is very kind ol you. I shall take goo I care of it. " "1 hope you will keep it to remind you of me." "I shall take the greatest pleas ure in doing so. (After it pause) What a pity it doesn't stay green ell tho time." Washington St:ir. Mr. Gotham "So you ure going to settle in the United St it'-sV" New Ar rival (from South America) - "Yea, sir; they've got to drawing tilings a little too tine iu South Aiiii i u-u to suit me. Why, sir, it's got so now ttmt a man cau't even get a joo at overthrow ing a government unless he delon (s to the Revolutionist' Uuiou aud hai paid his fees regularlv for i nioutlii. " New York Weekly. "I have got a ilrst-ratc place for you," 6aid the employment agent. 'Tiie woman who wauls u c .!; '.is'.l Ki be a Irred girl liei'oclf, so there's no doubt but tlr.it she will be iv un you." "Easy on me?" hi-romi.'.l ihe applicant for a ptuco. "Noi an; i she would. Why, site woe.'dn't do a I nn,; but sit up of liight-i '.liinViiii out to get even on lit j fo;' the wiiy . i treated when she lrnl to iiw on. h -r-uelr. You don't kilo v a.' i i J -i: ' 1 i' wouieu us a last yeai liifw i.tsl." yi!iiu.ti'i.iiiti '.uruu.'.