THE FOREST REPUBLICAN Is nblMK TR7 WwlitxUr, J. E. WENK. Offlo tn Bmaarbaufh ft Co.'s BuUdlng KJI iTHJtT, TIONEflTA, fa, Terms. ... tl.BQ pr Year. RATIS OF AOVCRTISinOi One Rqaara, on inoh, on. InMrUoa. .1 One Hquara, on Inch, on month. . On Kquare, on in oh, three months.. On Pqunre, on inch, on yaax... . . Two bqusrn, on year Ouarter Column, on rear. ....- HOR LICAN. loo oi WOO lS OC 8f Dr- Half Column, on year SOW Una Column, one year. 100 Legal adTSTtiMinant tra ent par Ua cmch Insertion. Alan-lacei and duth nottoM mtla. All bill for yearly adTertuemente tire Bi.nth. Oormpondene Ml!clU4 frm al hiu th, eoortr. N. ..lie. will k. Ukn rTanrinoiu quarterly. Temporary advertisements b paid In advance. Job worko.ti on delivery. VOL. XXVII. NO. 0. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1894. S1.00 PER ANNUM, REPUB Ohio possesses more colleges than any other State. Tho United States is the only conn try spending more for education thuD ' for war equipments. A stonolcss peach has boon cnlti rated in California. It has an insipid flavor, and is of no valuo except as a curiosity. The Anglo-Saxon raco is in posses sion of ono-third portion of tho earth and rules over 400,000,000 of its in habitants. Ex-rrosidont Orton, of tho Western Union Tolograph Company, doolared that the English language was twenty five per cent, cheaper for tolographio purposes than any other. fly order of the postal authorities tho final "h" in the spelling of towns and oities ending with "burgh," has been dropped in oflleial communica tions. Tho genoral publio ceased us ing "h" at the end of rittsburg and Harrisbnrg twenty years ago. The popularity of novels is proba bly nowhere so great, declares the New York Tribne, as in Australia. It is said thst ninety per cent, of tho fe male and sovcuty-five per cent, of the inalo frequenters of tho publio libra ries road novels almost exclusively. It. Lahann, a Danish resident of Monmouth, 111., took out naturaliza tion papers twenty-six years ago. A few days since ho had occasion to ex amine the papcrs.and found that ho had renounced his alligance to Quoen Victoria, instead of tho King of Ben mark. So it appears that ho is not a citizen, Bud as ho wants to be Mayor of tho town, ho is very much disap pointed. Tho new catalogue of tho romances in the British Museum begins with tho record of the unique and priceless manuscript of "Beowulf," and tells of tho escape of tho manuscript from the conflagration at Ashburnham House in 1731 ; aud of its still having a fair pretonsion, despite all the scholars, to bo tho very oldest poem in any "modern European language a monument of English which is asserted to bo hun dreds of years older than tho first lit erary stammerings of tho Romance language, and probably much the senior of any Teutonic literature. The gentlo art of shoplifting is on the increase, according to Mr. Whito ly, tho great London provider. It is iad to think women of the middlo and upper classes are said to be the chief offenders, although it is difficult to credit such a statement. One of the commonest tricks is to have several largo pookets in a dross into which things can be pushed easily without inouring observation. Very often long, loose cloaks are worn. It cannot bo urged that kleptomania is the rea son for these thefts, because the shop lifters usually hunt in couples, one engaging the attention of the atten dant while the other does the thieving. For every man caught at tho work there are three hundred women I Russia is evidently not a paradise for photographers. Every amateur photographer in that country has to communicate with the police and se cure a license. If he happens to be Been photographing in the vicinity of a fortress, he stands a chance of being dispatched on a free excursion to Si beria, whence return tickets are not supplied. Of every picture taken a . copy must be given to the police and S another copy filed for reference, and tho police have the right at any time of the day or night to enter your dark room and examiue everything therein, as well as to soarch all your photo graphic paraphernalia. Furthermore, all dry plates have to bo imported, and each box is opeuod and every plate examined. Says tho New York World : "It is now pretty generally known that there is to be a great celebration at the close of the nineteenth century, and the ushering in of tho twentieth. A great deal of effort is being made to carry out a very unique, though grand plan. It is proposed that tho Colum bian Liberty aud Peaco Bell be rune; on the spot where the shepherds heard the chorus of angelio voices proclaim,: "Peace on earth, good will towards men." The idea is to have the bell oonneeted to all parts of the world by telegraph and cable. Then, at a spe cified timo, all telegraphic business is to be suspended, every congregation in the religious world to be assembled in its place of meeting, each having a wire oouneoted with the Jerusule.-x wire, and simultaneously the bell bo rung and tho message of "peace" bo '-w4.ww Uie earth. CARPE DIEM, The tnfags to come are bubbles, That we have bad Is ours j The frosts may doom Hope's dearest bloom, But never Memory's flowers To-morrow Is a maybe, But Testordsy has been , And dear To-day is hero to say, 'Who use me well are mon !" Charles F. Lummls, in Harper's Weekly. A GOOD TURN. ST WAITEB LBOlt SAWYER. ASY-GOING Mr. Balcom rose early that morning, and hurried off to the city as soon as ho had swallowed broakfast. That was not his way, and Mrs. Balcom wondered J but, be- iVn W f, ! u'l nga good wife, she f All BB'?et' no questions. isoiore sue can fullly acoo m m o dated herself to the novel event, tho man- of-a 1 1-w o r k gave her another surprise, presenting a telegram which set forth that his sister was ill and noodod him; Of course Mrs. Balcom lot him go. It did not occur to her that tho double doparturo loft her and tho children unprotected, and if it had she would have smiled at the idea of danger. She did not know that there was a burglar in town. Mr. Balcom did know. As ho came up from the train the evening before, his neighbor Jones had stopped him to whisper that the Hartshorne house had been entered and judiciously ran sacked. The Hartshornes were in Europe. Their care-taker had been sojourning in that other foreign land. a drunkard's paradise, but as soon as he came out of it he discovered the robbery and hastened to ask Jones's auviee. Jones, wno una a nervous mother-in-law, suggested that the mat ter be kept as quiet as possible ; and he wanted to know if Mr. Bulcom "You did just right I" Mr. Balcom interrupted, when the story had gone thus far. "TheBe country constables would frighten every woman into hy sterics, but they wouldn't catch a bur glar onoe in a thousand times. Frofes' sional, is he?" "So I suppose. He seems to have gone into the house and through it as though he knew his business. "I'll baok my burglar-alarm against him!' Air. Balcom chuckled, conn dently. "How about Ben Ezra?" tho neigh- Dor asked. "No foar of him. You see, my stable is as well protected as my house, " Mr. Balcom explained. "Fact is, I'd sooner lose half there is in tho honse than that horse. Little olT his food, the poor fellow is. I had a veterinary out yesterday to look nt mm, aud can t drive mm lor a week. 1 guess 1 "I suppose we ought to do some thing," Air. Jones ventured to hint, He knew that it allowed to go on Mr. Balcom would talk about his horse until the burglar aud tho listener died a natural death. "Oh, of course wo must trip the fol low before he goes any further. Toll you what : I know a private de teotiye who was on the Boston force for years long enough to get ao quainted with every rascal in the country, I'll bring him home with mo to-morrow to look over the ground. It would be better to pay him a nun dred than have tho thing get out and eoare tho women. "Yes, indeed 1" said Mr. Jones, fer Tently. Bo it was decided. And after the neighbors had exchanged the usual remarks on the dryness of tho seaton and the need of ram, Air. Balooin sauntered homeward, calm in that contentment which a managing man has a right to feel. Ho kissed his wife and children and then he went out and caressed his horse. With the burglar's accomplishments in mind be looked carefully to the locks and the alarmB. They were perfect aud in order. He went to bed in peace. That night, however, he hud a hor rid dream. It seemed that Ben Ezra was stolen ; that he had expended his fortune lu seeking the horse: that finally, when he had sunk to a beggar outcast, he found the wreck of Beu Ezra hauling a garbage-cart I Tha dream so wrought upon Mr. Balcom that ho awoke in a cold perspiration, Ho rushed to the stable aud proved it only a dream. But it might be warning I That superstitious fancy lingered with him through the hours of dusk and dawn, and the early glare of an August sun did not dispel it. hurried him to the city, as has been told. Looking at it in the light of his ne knowledge, Mr. JJaleoui oould sec many reasons why Maple Fark should attract a burglar. Its isolated and un guarded location is one ; the small ness and sleepiness of the town that it fringes is auother. Seekonket has only two constables aud one hand firej fire engine though, to be sure, it has four churches aud the aristocratic residents cut themselves off from all these blessings by buildiug on the farther side of Greeuleat's Hill. As Maple Fark holds aloof from Seekon ket, so Seekonket keeps away from Maple Park ; aud Mr. Balcom won dered, the longer he thought of it, that some frowsy Nupoleou did not organize his army of tramps aud ob literate Maple l'urk, sure that the deed would never come to light until q wandering peddler passed that way 1 Mrs. Balcom was not imaginative,' and no such terrors ever oppressed her. If she had formulated hor rule of life she might have said that uu- pleaaaut things were bust let alone, to bo disposed of in a bunch at tho day of judgment. She was young enough to enjoy her money, ond old enough to appreciate her health ; and since her daughters had not reached a mar riageable age, noither her health nor her money seemed in danger. Of course she should have been, as she a happy woman. She spent her day as tho truly happy must in small activities that amuse one and. make one fool useful but not fatiguod. So accustomed was she to a routine of quiet, that when Abbio tho cook ap peared excitedly before her she was slow to realize that this particular doy might prove an exception. "Tho stable s afire, Aliss Balcom ! the cook proclaimed. Is it? the mistress absently answerod. "Tell Henry to put itont, please. Oh, I remember ; I allowed Henry to visit his sister." She closed her writing-desk and stood consider ing. "3an't you throw some water on it?" sho asked, presently. It's the roof. I s'pose it caught with a spark from one o' them pesky ingines bein's 's everything 's dry as tinder. Ain't nothin' to git scairt about, 'cause the wind's away from the house, what little the' is. But tho hoss is in tho stable, yon recolleo'." "Oh, my I Aloved beyond her wont, Mrs. Balcom swept electrically through the kitchen aud out of the back door. "Oh, my 1 sho repeated as she came in sight of the blaze, Ben Ezra will be burned, won't he? What will Mr. Balcom say? What can wo do?" D' know," was tho depressing answer, "1 sent Jane to the corner a'ter the firemen J but the land knows how long it'll take to git 'cm here." Bon Ezra must come out I Mrs. Balcom asserted ; but there was an accent of despair in the words, deter mined as the sentiment was. "Can't break that door down ! 'n that air payteut lock on Mr. Bal- com's got the key with him." Mrs. Balcom stared straight be fore her like one fascinated into help lessness. The servant's conscience would not let her rest until she had kicked the door and thrown herself against it. It did not even tremble. Sho mopped her flushed face with her apron and, shaking her head mourn fully, drew back beyond tho heat of the flames that were laying bare the rafters. "Ben Ezra must come out!" Mrs. Balcom said again. The horse's agon ized whinny had broken the spell that was upon her. Her eyes filled at tho sound, and Bhe ran forward aimlessly and glanced desperately about her. "Man I You man!" she cried, all at once. "Come here and get our horse 1" Though the stranger had seemed to spring from the ground, he Bhowed no alacrity about coming further. He took timo to survey tho landscape be fore he climbed the fence. He looked post the women, not at them, as though he feared a possible somewhat behind. And when he had advanoed to where they stood, though he abruptly took the manner of haste and impatience, his shifty eyes seemed to cover every point of the horizon. "Now, then," ho demanded, "whero's your ax?" "In the Btable, I suppose," was Mr. Baloom's dejected reply. " 'N' it's a paytent lock I" tho cook chimed in, tragically. "Hey?" The stranger started and stared at them suspiciously, but the wretchedness in their faces appeared to reassure him. He turned again to scan the hill road. Then he ran up to the door. "Huhl That thing!" tho women heard him say, contemptuously. Through the waveless atmosphere of the August noon the smoke floated lazily off aud left the vision unob soured, and the spiteful snap of flame overruled every other noise. Tho women looked and listened with an intentness that would have been pain ful had it long endured. From the bag he carried tho stranger took a glittering something which he applied to the lock. Instantaneously, almost, the door swung open. Stripping off his blouse, the man passed through, and when he reappeared the horse, safely blinded, uninjured, was with him. Mrs. Balcom fluttered after as ho led the trembling brute to a safer plaoe. Events had shaken her accus tomed calm. For once iu her life she could not meet the occasion with graceful words. "Oh, I don't know how to thank you 1" she faltered, at length. "Mr. Baloome values Ben Ezra sol I'm sure ho'll " Why, hero he comes 1 Oh, James 1" she cried, as her husband hatless, costless and visibly perspir ing took the fence at a bound and dashed up to the group. "Oh, James? If it hadn't been for this this honest workingman, Bun Ezra would have been burned." Mr. Balcom's eye was on his favor ite, but his hand went into his pocket and brought out a roll of bills. "Thauk ye, boss, the strauger said, sourly. "Not enough !" Mr. Balcom found breath to add, "Call to-morrow at my office give you as much again !" The thought of another duty occurred to him at the same instant, and it made him face toward the road. "All right, Parker!" he called. "No hurry." "All right!" The mau who had just come into view moderated hit pace. After the first keen, comprehensive gluuoe in the direction of the others, he conspicuously ignored them, aud looking at the stable deluyed his ap proach. Mr. Bulcom returned to the fondling of Bun Ezra. The horse's res' cuer had beeu standing at the corner of the house. No oue saw him slip around it. "Sound as a dollar, Parker!" Mr. Balcom said a moment later. There 'was a suspicion of tears in his voioe, and he blow his nose energetically be- for ho trustel tirwsuft tu -speak apain. "Thinks to this worthy man Why, where is he?" Mr. Parker smiled serenely to him self as he began to lift Ben Ezra's leg but he said nothing. "Gush ho must 'a' beon in a hurry," tho cook put in J "he went off V left his satchel. I s'pose I better lay it away, hadn't I, 'fore those 'ere firemen go to trampin' round." She offered the stranger's bag to Mr. Balcom, but Air. Parker took it from his unresisting hand and coolly pulled it open. Then, while the hand-engine men yelled and fell ovor each other preparatory to deluging tho neighbor hood,, he drew Air. Balcom to one side and hade him look in. "For," said he, "you won't often seo a neater sot o' burglar's tools than that is 1" Air. Balcom seemed less horrified than he should have been ; but it was evident that he was puzzled. He looked from the bag to Parker and back again, like one who wishes but half fears to speak. "Well," he suggested at length, "he isn't likely to hang around Maple Park any more, is he?" "I guoss not I" the detective made proud rejoinder. "He knows me knew me's quick 's I knew him I" "Yes well you see "Air. Baloom buttonholed Parker, in his turn, and led him still further from the crowd. "Of course I'm responsible I pay all the bills," he went on, with dis jointed earnestness. "I you don't you understand, I haven't anything more for you to do here? Why, hang it all, man, he saved Ben Ezra!" "Oh, I know how you feel," the de tective answered. He spoke as though he really did. "I like a good boss myself. See? There's a train back to town 'bout twenty minutes, ain't the'?" Leslie's Weekly. A Monkey Farm. "The fanniest thing I witnessed dur ing that brief but exciting period known as the boom, in Birmingham, Ala.," said Dr. Everett, at the Lin dell, "was the formation of a company to establish a monkey farm. About the time that excitement was at its greatest height, two bankers from a country town came with $40,000 in cash, and were very anxious to get into the little group of capitalists who were making big money. They haunt ed two or three of tho leading invest ors until finally Dr. Jackson, who stood at the head of the local financial world, told them he had a friend with a scheme in which he himself was put' ting $20,000, and if they really want ed to invest he could, as a personal favor, scoure a like amount, if one half was paid down, the other half to be paid in at a meeting to be held in a few days. The banker wrote a cheok for $10,000, and felt jubilant that at last he had been admitted into the charmed circle of financiers. "In a few days he was notified to attend a meeting of the stockholders, which he did. Then the promoter of the enterprise explained it. His plan was to buy an island near Mobile. Send an expedition to Africa and South America to secure monkeys. Stock the farm with 100,000 monkeys and raise them for the market. An elaborate array of statistics was given, showing the oost and market prioe of monkeys and nguring out immense profits, but it was necessary that the entire amount subscribed should be paid in at once. The banker jumped to his foot. 'I don'd vant no monkey farm. I knows nodings about dose monkey business. You can keep my $10,000 if you release me from dot subscription.' This was done, and he swallowed his chagrin and disappoint ment at the loss as best he oould. In a few weeks the money was returned to him and it was explained that it was all a joke, but the banker had $200 dinner to pay for." St. Louis Ulobe-Demoorat. Growth or Hair Alter Death. T. L. Ogier, an investigative writer of Westchester, Penn., says: "I, for one, place no faith in the superstition of hair growing after death. There is no growth of hair after death. There may be, however, a shrinkage of the tissue of the face and body which will force the hair of the face through skin so as to give the corpse the appear ance of having a beard two or three weeks old ; it is not a growth, it is only the result of the shrinkage." In this department of the liepublie I have giveu many "notes" which sup port a contrary view to that giveu above, and have but lately added to my stock of information on that point. This late addition is from Elizabeth Prisleau, and is as follows : "Lord Howe, who served in America in 1758 and was killed in tho French Indian wars, was buried at Albany. Just prior to his death he had had his hair cut short so that it could not be come wet from exposure and cause colds. Many years afterwards, when his remaius were being removed, it was found that his hair had grown sev eral inches, aud was smooth and glossy." St. Louis liepublie. ltut's Xest in a Clock. A resident on the hill had a some what curious experience the other day of tho boldness of a rat. Coming down one morning to the diniug-room he fouud that the clock on the mantle piece had (-tupped, and. thiukiug it had run down, he wound it up and put the hands to the proper hour. Noticing that it struck iu a peculiarly muffiud way, he took it down to ex amine the works aud was astonished to find tlie strikiug apparatus encumbered with petals aud stucks of flowers and bits of paper. A further examination disclosed that these odds aud ends formed the nest of a rat, which was still snugly cusconsed amoug the work i, neither the noise made by the clock as it was set ;oiu.j or the strik ing of the hammer having apparently disturbed it iu the least. KoLrn (Japan) hioiaiole, SCIENTIFIC A5D INDUSTRIAL. A locomotive is mado of 5410 pieces. "Powollite" is a new mctallio com pound. Strawboard is used in tho manufac ture of passenger car wheels. Tho Health Commissioner of Brook lyn has started a crusado against un sanitary Sunday-schools and dancing academies. Tho Liverpool (England) electrio railway, which has bcon in existence about a year, has proved completely successful in operation. It is five miles long. Edison has perfected and taken per fect plates with his kinetoscope, an instrument by which a serious of pict ures can be rapidly taken of a person or object in motion in what is practi cally a single picture. A new enemy of tho vine in Franco is a galleyworm, or myriopod, which has been observed by AI. Fontaine to invade the buds in numbers ranging from five to ten on a bud, forming balls of the size of a small pea. It is anuounced that Faris is to build,, for the purpose of handling World Fair visitors in 1900, a tubular railway eight miles long, in which trains will run on two minutes' headway. Electricity will be employed for mov ing tho trains. In water in which decaying vegeta bles have been infused the microscope discovers things so minute that 10,000 of them would not exceed in bulk a grain of mustard, though they are sup plied with organs as complicated as those of a whale. As a the result of a series of experi ments, Professor Baily, of Cornell, has proved that peppers can be graf ted on tomatoes and vice verso. In the use of material for herbaceous grafting the wood should not be too young, but rather approaching matur ity. Dr. von Blarcom, one of the most distinguished physicians in Berlin, ex presses the opinion after careful in vestigation that coffee long boiled pro duces more indigestion than any other substance taken into the human stomach, and that a simple infusion facilitates digestion. An instrument has been invented for sounding the depths of the sea without using a lead line. A sinker is dropped containing a cartridge, which explodes on touching the bottom ; the report is registered in a microphone apparatus and the depth reckoned by the time at which the explosion oc curred. In the course of some experiments on the eject of changes of temperature in the pupal stage of butterflies by Mr. Merrifield, some Vaneesaio showed tho gradual disintegration by exposure to a low temperature of tho eyelike spot on the fore-wing, which, iu the ex treme specimens, ceased to be an ocellus. Experiments have been tried with to ascertain if color has an effeot on oer tain forms of disease. In making this test a number of smallpox patients were placed in a room to whioh only red light was admitted. Tho patients were for the most part those suffering from unusually severe attacks, and about half of them being unvaccinatod children. In spite of the violent form of the malady, they all made speedy and safe recoveries, with very little fever and but few scars. Benedict has relieved a case of writer's cramp by injecting carbolio acid in the neighborhood of a scusitive point in the course of one of the flexor tendons of tho related foroarm. Langea has succeeded in overcoming writer's cramp by having the pen hold between the second and third fingers in suoh a way that the holder rests upon tho latter at an angle of from 110 degrees to 125 degrees, while it is supported below by the thumb, tho index finger resting lightly above. Those who have mado a study of bird habits say that birds of almost all sorts are rather the frieuds than the euemies of farmers aud gardeners. Not only do the soug birds by destroy iug insects earn their right to e-t a few berries, but even tho crow that generations of farmers have scared aud killed, is said to prefer insects to ooru, and often to bo iu tho very act of de stroying pests whuu farmers suppose him to be maliciously bunt ou undo ing the work of the sower. A Duck Drowuei! by an Oyster. Captain Edward A. Caulk of tho steamer Tangier yesterday saw a dead "fisherman" duck floating on the water near Claiborne, Md. The duck was picked up and the cause of its death then became apparent. The fishernmu duck foods ou fish and oysters. Tho duck which was found dead had evi dently stuck its loug aud narrow bill into the opon shells of a feeding oys ter. The oyster shut its shells together on tho bill. It is supposed that the duck tried to. shake oil' tho oyster but failed, and that the weight of the oys ter hanging to the bill finally pulled the duck's head under water and drowned the fowl. The oyster was not heavy enough to pull the . duck's body boueath tho water. Baltimore Sun. A Worthy aud Wise Sentiment. Before Cardinal Manuiug, of Eng land, died, he delivered two messages to the euro of a phonograph. One was for tlie people uu I the other for posterity. The latter was us follows: "To all who com after lne : I hopo that no words of mine, written or spoken iu my lite, will bo found to have douo harm to any one after 1 am dead. Henry Edward Mauuiu',-, Car dinal Archbishop." Not au original sentiment, but a worthy aud wise one, aud one to which men of lesser note . than a cardinal might well aspire. I ficw York Observer. THE LOW PRICE OF WHEAT. SOME INTERESTING AND VALUA BLE IMFORMATION. Increase tn Wheat Contributing Coun triesWhat Farmers Must Do to Meet Competition. "W1 ILL wheat ever again bo a profitable crop for ex port ?" a correspondent of the New York Tri- bnno asked a prominent official of tho Agricultural Deportment at Washing ton. Tho latter answered : "In the first place, wheatis now and for many years to come will be a crop which invites competition from coun tries in which farming is poor and land or labor abundantly cheap. It is es sentially a crop of cheap lands or in ferior tillage, or both. In India, in Egypt and some other countries the la bor is cheap ; in Australasia, and here tofore in our own Northwestern terri tory, while tho labor is high, tho lands are cheap and tho farmer, moreover, ruthlessly robs the soil. Now in South America we find cheap wheat lands, and, compared with our own, cheap la bor. So in Southern Russia, where there are comparatively cheap lands and positively cheap labor. "In arecentstatementof tho world's wheat supply issued by tho Depart ment of Agriculture are found a dozen countries contributing whoso existence is probably ignored by the majority of American wheat raisers, aud of whom little is known even to American com mercial men. Among thorn wo may mention especially the Caucasus, lia mania, Bulgaria, to say nothing of European Turkey, Turkey in Asia, Ser via, Porsia, Poland, Cratia and Sla vonic, and in Africa, Egypt, Tunis and Algeria. In the aggregate tho couu trics mentioned have contributed a yearly average of ovor 290,000,000 bushels to the wheat crops of the last throo years. The aggregate popula tion of the first three countries named is in all about 12,000,000, and of this a large number are not users of wheat flour, usiug for their own wants rye. Henoe the average home consumption per capita is not more than two-thirds as much as ours, and yet these threo countries produced wheat in the years given as follows : In 1891, 160,575,000 bushels; in 1892, 171, 9G0.000 bushels, and in 1893, 1415, 529, 000 bushels an average of 159,088,000 bushels, with probably a home consumption barely exceeding 40,000,000 bushels. A few years ago tho products of these coun tries, or at least their exportable sur plus, was too insignificant for record. "The London Miller states that tho total figures for Bussia show the ship ments from that country for January, 1894, to be 810,000 quarters, compared with 210,950 quarters in January, latra, and 575,950 quarters in Janury, lo'Jl In 1892 they were prohibited. "Another factor, and one that promises to count more than all the rest in the next decade, is to be fouud in the rapid increase in the wheat crops of the Argentine Republic, an increase whioh promises to bo phe nomenal. According to tho paper al ready quoted, shipments from Argcn tina to the United Kingdom were, for tho six weeks ending February 10th, over 280,000 quarters, or at tho rato of 2,444,000 quartern (over 19,000,000 bushels) per annum ; but, adds the paper quoted : 'March and April ship ments will show a material iucrease.' Tho director of tho Department of Agriculture of Argentina, recently in this country, assured me that within ton years that country would export moro wheat thau is now exported by the United States. Aloroover, (Jhile, Australasia aud the great Northwest territory of British North America seem likely ere long to show their ability to supply any deficiencies which may occur iu tho other countries namod. "Acoording to tho Department au thorities the wheat supply of the world for the threo years 1891, 1892 and 1893 was respectively, iu round numbers, 2,3(50,000,000, 2,303,000,000 and 2,3(50,000,000 bushels, au umplo supply for the world s demand, with a very considerable surplus in 1892, to say nothing of the alleged undercut! mutes of the Department iu tho yours 1891 and 1892. It is true that without a marked iucrease in the supply there has been a steady diminution iu price, but that is readily accounted for by tho large availablo increase from coun tries not formerly contributing in any marked degree, but which, by tho de velopment in means of transportation, as iu the case of tho Caucasus, or owing to changes iu their political status, as iu Bulgaria, aud from other causes, have now permanently joined the ranks of exporting countries, and are able to sell ut low prices. "Tho situation iu this country can only be met by a general reduction in acreage aud a considerable iucrease iu yield per acre. Our farmers must learn to attain the yield which prevails iu the more civilized couutries of Europe, instead of lagging among the more backward. Our pitiful thirteen bushels to the acre must bo increased to eighteen or twenty, and our wheat acreage reduced from 3(5,00(1, 000 or 37,000,000 acres to 20,000,000. At eighteen bushels to tho acre, an aver ago more than equalled by Franco aud greatly exceeded by Great Britaiu ami Belgium, tho farmers ou the cheap lands of the Northwest can imiko a small profit with wheat til fifty or sixty cents a bushel, where a yield ol thirteen bushels means au actual loss, lu this reduction iu wheat ucroago, tho older States, notably Ohio aud Indiana, which together raised nearly 75,000, 000 bushels last year, must take tho lead, their opportunities for diversifi cation being greater thau those avail able to the fanners of Minnesota aud tho Dakotas. and tuo other newer States, " BONO. There's beauty In the dawning light. And twilight fair or starlit night Has each Its charm and graoe But lovelier still on earth to me, The fatroet thing my we can see, The beauty of thy face. Thoro's ealmn9 on the ocean's breast, As deep and blue it seems to rest 'Neath bluer heavens above But deeper, ealmer still to mo Than ever sea or Bky can be, Thine azure eyes, my lovo I Thoro's muslo in the running stream. And muslo when the woodlands soom Awake with songs of birds ; But sweeter, dearer still to me Than nature's voloe can ever be, Tho music of thy words. O. Roxby, in the Ledger. HUMOR OF THE DAY. More dead than alive Heroes. A repeating rifle Plagiarism.? Truth. Tlie rule of the minority That of tho first baby. "One-half the world doesn't know how the other half lives." Neither does the other half. Life. He "Hero comes Mrs. Gadabout. That woman goes everywhere." Sho "Yes, except home." Harper's Ba zar. Va "Why is the loader of the choir like a pine tree?" Pa "Give it up." Va "Both give the pitch." Tho Hullabaloo. Man shows his teoth and growls; but woman shows her toeth and smiles ; with far better chance of attaining hor object. Puck. Few people can stand prosperity J but they are legion compared with the people who never have a chance to stand it. Puck. Nervous Wife "I hear a burglar." Nervous Husband "Woo ! I'll craw) under the bed and see if he is there." Now York Weekly. "Er has young Hill come into his money yet?" "Come into it? Great Soott, man 1 He's gone clear through it. "Buffalo Courier. There is nothing like a certainty and yet most peoplo prefer the Un certain prospect of starvation to the certain prospect of death. Puck. Tho whole system of right and wrong hinges on the question whether a disagreeable thing disagrees with us, or wo disagree with tho disagree able thing. Puck. Teacher "Now, remember, that in order to become a proficient vocalist you must have patience." Miss Flip kins "Yes; and so must tho neigh bors." Washington Star. "You say you have been in Kansas City. I suppose tho place was built almost wholly ou bluffs." "I guem H was. There seemed to be little money around." Buffalo Courier. Mr. Gusher (a self-satisfied bore) "I can tell just what peoplo are) thinking of me. " Miss Pert "in dood t How very unpleasant it must bo for you. "--Brooklyn Life. An Irish lawyer said to a witness : "You're a nice follow, aiu't you?" Witness replied : "I am, sir, and if I was no on my oirth I'd say the same of you." Oakland Enquirer. "It pains mo very much to spank you. Johnny," said his mother with deep feeling, "and I shall have to turn you over to your father. His hands are harder." Chicago Tribune. Elder Sister "I'm writing to Amy j is there anything you'd like to say to her?" Younger Sister (who hates Amy) "Yes, plenty ; but you'd bettel only give her my love." Tit-Bits. Employer "Boy, take this letter, and wait for au answer." New Boy "l'es, sir." Employer "Well, what are you waiting for?" New Boy "Tho answer, sir." Harper's Bazar, "Graudpa," said Tommy, examin ing critically tho bald head of his an cestor, "may 1 ask you a question?" "Certainly, Tommy." "Do you comb your hair with a razor?" Texas Sitt ings. "That's what I call hush money," rsiuarkod the daddy when he planked down tho cash for a bottle of paregoric to take home for use among the in fantile portion of the family. Brook lyn Life. "I am collecting bills for Sugar, SieoArCo." "Collecting bills, are you? Very well ; I have two or three of their bills which you are welcome to add to your collection. " New York Weekly. Mamma "Why has Lucy gono home so early? I thought she was to stay all day?" Mary (confidentially) "Well, mamma, I just found she wasn't a friend I could quarrel with. "Kate Field's Wushingtou. Clergyman (visiting prison) "So) you were arrested for passing bad) money, my mau!" Convict "Not exactly, sir! You see, if the money had passed, 1 wouldn't have beeu ar rested." Philadelphia Record. At the Great Chess Match : Dr. Schweitzer "t'layiug chess is liko making lovo the kui,'ht tries t talte tho queen ; you are mated by the bishop; then o!i to the castle- in tha air--and, alas ! everything is iu pu.vu !" -Hullo. Freddy "Why won't you tight mo if you i'..i.'t afraid to?" Willy ( noy iiirf oil) "I aiu't afraid, only 1 ain't going o have nil the boys iu tho block savin' I fought a feller just lie cause I kuew I could lh-k him." --Cui-cugo Record. "What makes you look so uncom fortable?" said one young writer to another. "I'm thiukiug about what I shall put iu my next article. " " 1'hiuit iug!" "ies." "Uood gracious, uiuu I ion mustn't do that. You'll spoil jour etyle," M'si-uiutou Star.