X i FOREST REPUBLICAN to Mblfehei ntrj Wa..4f, r J. C. WENK. Offlo la Bmerban,h A Co.', Bulldl.,, mji min, tionwta, r. RATIS OF AOVEftTISIMOi On Bqnnr. on Inch, on innnrtiTii. , 1 Oft On Square, on Inch, one month. . , 100 On Pquare, on inch, throe months. , S 00 On Square, one inch, on year... JO 'W 1 wo Nqnarn, on year IS OC Quarter Column, on year ..,. an 00 half Column, on year BO 00 On Column, on yar . . 1(W 0 Laval atrertiwiwibi tin orats par Una sch insertion. Marriage and death notions gratis. Ail billifor yearly advertisement cotlt-' TT- FOR ICAN. I. BO por Tear. quarterly. lamporary advertisement i aoamiaaicauoa. D paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. EST Of JJJLv VOL. XXVII. NO. 17. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 15. 1894. $1.00 PER ANNUM. In nil of Persia there mo only twenty miles of railroad. i . ..... j The overhead trolley ha succeeded in providing itself more dondly than the nnderfoot banana peel, remarks the Washington Star. A newspaper man, who recontly took a stroll across the Brooklyn Bridge, hoard ten different languagos on the way, besides profane lan guage. The British and Continental press generally agree that the eleotion of M. Casimir-Pcrier to the French Presidency is a conservative and moderate republican victory over the radicals and socialists. Secretary Morton, in the interest of farmers, urges bettor protection for tho birds. "It is a melancholy fact," he says, "that our women and our boys are the birds' most destructive and relentless euomios." " Dr. Dalo, of London, who has been been writing book reviews all his lifo, says that he beliovei most books are -written by people who are not quite right in their minds. He thinks that this is about the most harmloss occu pation for such people The Bultimoro Bun calls attention to thefaot that wheat sold for a oont a pound in the Baltimore market the other day while oats sold for cent and a half a pound, oats selling for fifty per cent, more than wheat. The Bun remarks that this is probably unprecedented. , ' By irrigation 25,000,000 acres are made fruitful in India alone. In Egypt there are about 0,000,000 aores, and in Europe about C, 000, 000 acres. The United States have just begun the work of improving waste area and have already about 4)000,000 acres of irrigated land. Malhall estimated that the agri cultural earnings of the United States are $3,490,000,000; the earnings from manufactures, 84,330,000,000; from mines, $180,000,000; from transporta tion, $1,155,000,000; from commeroe', 8160,000,000; from shipping, $00,000, 000; from banking, 8200,000,000. ' Buffalo, K. Y., has 40,000 Poles, living chiefly in a quarter of their own where English is little spoken, and many business signs are in Polish or Russian. The colonists retain many of their native characteristics and slowly conform to Amerioan ways. The colony is one of the largest for eign elements to be found in any American city of the third class. There will be no nonsense about duelling in the Russian army hereaf ter. The Czar has issued a deoree ap pointing a court of honor to dotor mine in each case whether a duel is the proper thing. The decision is to be final, and under it any officer who refuses to accept a challenge will be cashiered in disgrace. Officers who are not adepts with the foils will now have to guard their tongues. Fresh finds of rich beds of gold and silver are the order of the day. The latest announced is in a despatoh from Manitoba, to tho effect that an immense bed of aurifereus ore, a mile wide and two miles long, in one tract, has been discovered between" Rat Portage and Port Arthur, seventy miles south of. the Canadian Paoiflo Railway, which assays an average of $3 in gold and 84 in silver to the ton of or The miners who goto the new camps in West Australia and New South Wales will, in the opinion of the San Francisco Chronicle, earn all that they get. No mining in this country is at tended with such dangers and hard ships except in a few places on the Mojave and Colorado deserts. At Coolgardio water is so soaroe that it oommands twelve cents a quart and all provisions are extremely dear. Camels ate used for transport, as the desert heat and drought prove fatal to horses and mules. t .- -Says the Boston Advortiseri There is growing a strong publio opin ion that the law in its modern opera tion has been abused so gravely that a good, shrewd lawyer with no oase at all can save a clieut from proper pun ishment for months and even years al though it is patent to everyone that no valid reason exists why justioe should be delayed a day. Legal "pleading" is now such au intricate and mauy-resourood art that plain, old fashioned justice must stumble and gropo through wearisome and de vious pathways before she can dutch au offender who has sharp-eyed coun . sol to guide him. WHIN THE HEART'S IN I "PR PRIME The Ban's on bis throne, and the Wind on blstonr Like wandering mlnstrsl o'er meadow and moor The day and tbe senson are both In their prime, And youth's at Its sweetest and tenderest time. The bnds are In bloom sad the birds sing their best, Tbe trees are In I oat and the orohard Is dressed With clustering fruits, for the year's In Its prime, And youth's at Its ripest and tenderest time. Too soon shall the elouds oover sunshiny r. Thevoloe ot the minstrel be hushed to a sigh , Too soon shall the day and the season de- ollne, And clustering fruit shainfr melted to wine. Tbs petals shall fall and the songsters de part, The foliage fade like the youth of the heart i For swift runs tbs current of pitiless time, And always the swiftest when 'life's In Its . prime. The birds and the blossoms and fruit shall appear. With summer's return and tbe turn of the year, The breeaes shall be sweet and the sun be as fair ( Alas I bat the prime of my youth Is not there. Eaoh month of tbe year bas Its prime, but lu truth There's only the prime In the season of youth. Though hearts love again,' und shall lovs for all time, ' There's only one love when the heart's In Its prime. Mary Berrl Chapman, In the Century. THE MAPLE SUGAR CAMP. BY ACT RANDOLPH. DIAMOND, Jack? A real diamond 1 Ob, how bright it is like a spark of white fire 1 Like a star, dropped down out of the sky I I never taw a dia mond before ; and to think that it is mine t 4asf Dear J a e k, I ,55:-ir eouldn t possib 1 y Jij-f isszz love you any more than I did before, but I do love you, oh, so much !" The little bit of love making took place under the frost bonnd apple trees of the Back Orchard, wiiere Esther Elm ford was standing, with a white woolen hood wrapped tightly over her curls and a blnck-and-soarlet plaid shawl enfolding her, mummy fashion. She was a tall, rosy-cheeked girl, with a complexion born of moun tain breezes and eyes that shone with ruddy health no ideal sylph, but rather a rosy, wholesome, dimpled human girl like Wordsworth's hero ine "Not to sweet or good For human nature's dally food." And as Bhe looked at the tiny, glitter ing stone, the sparkles under her eye lashes were a dead match for it. "But you must not wear it every day, Essie, you know," Baid John Jef ferson. "Why not?" Her countenance fell. "You wanted onr engagement kept a secret," you know." "Sol did. Anything but the gos sip of tho whole combined neighbor hood !" cried Esther, with a moue of distaste, Well, anyhow, I can put a black velvet ribbon through, it and hang it around my neok I" "But you haven't paid me for it yet." "Paid you, you mercenary fellow!" "One kiss, Essie! I don't often get a chance to claim it, you know." She poised herself on tiptoe to ac cord the demanded royalty, and then ran, laughing, away toward her home. "How generous he is 1 Bhe kept re peating to herelf. "A real diamond!" When she got back to the kitchen of the roomy old farmhouse, where Mrs. Elmford was frying crullers in an atmosphere of fragrant blue smoke, that lady cast a discontented glance at her. "Seems to mo you've been a long time gettin' that spotted calf into the barnyard," said she. "Was I long, mother? But he got clear down the lane, and the orchard gate was open," equivocated Miss Esther. "The Striker gals stopped here for you. They was goin' up to the Ma ple Sugar Camp with a lot o' fresh baked bread and pies for Tom and Leonidas, and they waited for you till they -was clear out o' patieuce," added Mrs. Elmford, fishing another tin skimmer full of crisp brown beauties out of the bubbling msss of fat and landing them in the blue stone jar, afterward to be liberally sprinkled with white sugar. "Oh, mother, can I go?" said Esth er, eagerly. "I'm sure I could over take them in five minutes." "I've no objection," said Mrs. Elm ford." And you might take a basket of these 'ere orulls to your Uncle Peter. He's dreadful partial to fried cakes, and he thinks there are ain't none like them I make arter Mother Elmford's receipt." Esther was right. In less than the specified five minutes she had man aged to overtake Alioe and Jessamine (Striker, with their baskets of fresh provisions to the dwellers in Maple Sugar Camp, on Uiant Hill, where the supreme process of "sugaring off" was jubt then in full blast. But in the two minutes during which she put on her fur-bordered hood and tleecu lined mittens upstairs, she had slyly slipped tho diamond ring on the first finger of her left hand. "I shall be wearing it," he-id-4o herself, "and no one be any the wiser." The Striker girls welcomed her joy ously. "It's so nioe to have yon," said Alice. 'Jessamine declared you would not go, bnt " "Why shouldn't 1 go?" said Esther. "Don't I go np every year when they are sugaring off?" Jessamine Striker began to giggle. "Yes," said she, "but our Leonidas has never been there until this season, and Mr. Jefferson has never been so particular in his attentions to you be fore." Esther crimsoned to the roots of her hair. "What ridiculous nonsense!" said she. "Oh, is it, though?" retorted Jessa mine. "When all the -world knows that Jack Jefferson is as jealous as Othello." Esther walked on, with silent dig nity. In her secret heart sho was be ginning to regret that she had put her self ont to accompany these silly girls. "Don't mind Jess, dear," said good humored Alice Striker, slipping her hand through Esther's arm. "She will giggle at everything it's her na ture. Isn't this a charming morning? I heard a blue-bird in the swamp down by the rfver, and there's a lot of yel low jonquils in bloom in Anne Rebec ca's window-box. The snow is thaw ing in the sunshine, but the walking is good yet, and Leon says the maple trees have never given a better yield." Up at the sugar camp, all was life and animation. Blue threads of smoke wound upward to the sky from the chimneys of the two or three board shanties, thatched with strips of bark and trusses of straw, where tbe "hands" kept house in a gypsy fash ion. The great kettles where the sirup was boiling down to the requisite solidity were watched by select de putations, lest the fires should slacken or the saccharine masses scorch, while others were attending to the im promptu stone chimney in the open air, while the carcass of a wild turkey was whirling around and around in front of the blaze, impelled by a most ingenious rotary spit, and a nest of potatoes Was baking in the" hot ashes below. The girls were joyfully wel comed. Unole Peter chuckled aloud at the sight of the cruliers made after his mother's time-honored recipe. The two young Strikers extended a hospi table invitation to their meal, even now in process of preparation. "Leon shot the turkey yesterday by Lone Lake," Baid Tom. "And it's a prime one, you bet. Rather nicer than the salt cod-fish we had reckoned on." But Esther declined to say. "I'll just take a look at the sugar kettles," said she, "and then hurry back to mother. We're going to have the parson's folks to tea, and there's a deal to do." Leonidas Striker escorted her to the largest kettlo of all, ordin. rily called "Big Ben," and gave her the monster stick to stir the bubbling waves of sweetness. "There," said be, "you can say you've helped to sugar off this year. Isn't it a splendid yield? And maple sugar's going to be high this season ! Oh, you'd better stay, Esther, there's a lot of young folks coming up this afternoon, and Darky Jones is to be here with his fiddle 1" "Ob, I oouldn't, possibly 1" Baid Esther. In truth and in fact she had not been quite at her ease since Jessa mine's unlucky allusion to Othello in conjunction with Mr. Jefferson ; and she did not breathe freely again nntil she had reached home, where her mother was just clearing away the dinner dishes. "Has any one been here?" said she. "Who should be here?" counter questioned Mrs. Elmford. "I don't expect Elder Morris's folks until four o'clock. " As Esther took off her things in the little chamber upstairs, where the shingled roof sloped down to the eaves, she glanced down at the en gagement finger. Terror of terrors, the sparkling little ring was gone! . It was past four o'clock. Mrs. Morris was droning away iu the sitting-room about the last 'missionary box which had been sent out to the Hougara Indian Reservation ; Miss Adelgitha Morris was admiring her hostess's most recent crazy patchwork ; the two little Morrises were playing checkers, and the good elder himself was laying down tomes of theological law to Farmer Elmford ; while Esther, with tear-swollen eyes, was mixing a batch of biscuits for tea in the kitchen. All of a sudden she caught sight of Johu Jefferson riding past on his gray pony, with averted face. In an instant she caught down the shawl that hung on the peg back of the buttery door, aud mullling it around her head and shoulders, darted across the snowy back-yard where she could intercept her lover at the curve of the road. "Jack ! Jack 1" she cried, piteously. "I've lost it! Your ring! Oh, Jack, do say something to comfort me ! I am so unhappy. " Mr. Jefferson drew up his steed and faced Esther with a scornful light iu his eyes which she had never seen be fore. "Yes," said he, calmly; "I knew you had lost it. I know how you lost it. I know to whom you have given it." Essie stood dumb before the cruel emphasis of his words. "I was at tho Sugar Camp an hour ago," said he. "Homo one told ine you had gone there, and I was going to bring you home. Aud I saw your ring on Leonidas Striker's watch guard. Wasn't that rather soon to transfer your last lover's gift to your old swain? Would it not have beeu better taste of him to display your pledge a little less JVUblicly ?" "Jnck, Jack I" pleaded Essie, hold ing up her hands, as if every word were a blow. "I need detain yon no longer," he said, as he bowed frigidly and touched the neck of his horse with his whip lash, and the next minute he was gone. Poor Essie dragged herself back to the house, the tears freezing on her cheek and her heart colder Btill. Was she the victim of enchantment? What did all this mean? Tea was over at least, but Esther Elmford did not know whether she had eaten hot biscuit or cold, hasty' pudding. She had listened, with a vague, unmeaning smile, to Mrs. Mor ris's prolonged account of little Tommy's last siege of diphtheria and Miss Adelgitha's proposed visit to New York. It was almost as if brain and nerve were benumbed, when Jessa mine Striker's clear, sweet voice struck across the current of her hopeless apathy and she found herself in a con fidential corner of the best bedroom upstairs, with Jessamine eagerly har anguing her. "Tho strangest thing!" cried Jessa mine. "He found it in the maple sugar kettle. Alice bad made some flannel cakes, and he dipped out a dipperful of the hot sirup for ns to eat with it, and Leon came within one of swallowing tbe ring. 'Whose is it?' said he. 'Why, Essie Elmford's, of course,' said I. 'Didn't I see the sparkle of it when she took off her mitten to unfasten the lid of the bas ket that held Uncle Peter's crullers? And it must have slipped oft her finger,' said he, 'when she went to stir the sugar in the kettle.' So he hung it on his watch-chain for safekeeping until we came home, and here it is." Esther murmured a word or two of thanks. "I was very careless," said she. But even after Jessamine was gone, she sat staring at the pretty trinket which had so nearly been bailed down into maple sugar. What was the nse of it now? What was the use of any thing?" . "Esther! Esther!" her father called up the narrow wooden stairway. "Here's Mr. Jefferson wants to speak to you ! How strangely all these thing seemed to euoceed one another, like tbe dull lapses of a dream. She knew not how, but she was standing, with Jack's arm around her, her troubled eyes looking np into his. "My own darling," he whispered, "can you ever forgive me for being such a brute? I have just seen that Striker fellow. He's not such a bad lot, after all, and everything is ex plained. Sweetheart, say that you forgive me ! I never shall forgive myself." And all the horrid nightmare feel ing was over, and the engagement was a secret no longer, and poor little Esther Elmford was happy again. "But I don't think,"said she, "that I shall ever want to taste maple sugar again. Not just yet, at all events 1" New York Ledger. A Smokeless Locomotive. Recently in Austria a most success ful and satisfactory trial was made of a smoke-consuming apparatus to loco motives and doubtless suitable for all other steam engines. A number of practical and scientific guests made the trip between Vienna and Zaaim, a distance of about sixty-two miles, be hind an absolutely smokeless locomo tive. Open cars were used and even at a speed of over forty-five miles per hour, nothing but clear-water steam was emitted, and no smoke, sparks or cinders, and even the gue6ts riding on the locomotive, found at the end of the journey that their coats, linen and hands were as clean as when they started. This apparatus is an auto matic device, attached to the outside of the boiler, which supplies the fire with just enough air to consume the smoke and gas. Over the fire a steam veil whirls and mixes the air aud gas, and this burned gas is forced agaiust the boiler and every partible of heat is utilized. It is claimed that a sav ing of from ten to twenty-five per cent, is effected iu heat-giving ma terial. This device has been in con stant use for over two years and has been found entirely satisfactory. The invention is astonishingly simple iu construction and operation and soon saves its cost. A special advantage of the apparatus is that it can be readily attached to any locomotive or station ary boiler without the slightest alter ation of the general system used in either. Atlanta Constitution. Has a Peculiar Malady. The fourteen year old son of a man named Emery, at Buffalo, Ind., is af fleeted with a peculiar malady. Al though apparently otherwise possessed of ordinary intelligence, he has always had a mauia for snakes and wants to catch and play with them whenever and wherever found. Last Thursday he was bitten by a viper aud, although his life was saved by prompt medicul attention, he is frequently seized with spasms in which he has the exact char acteristics of a reptile, dartiug out his tongue, snapping at people, and worm ing his shoulders about in imitation of a crawling snake, until three men are unable to hold him. Chicago Times. The World is Washing Away. An interesting calculation has re cently been made publio through the French Academy of Sciences. It is to the effect that taking into consider tiou the wear and tear ou the solid land by ooean lushing, river erosion and wind and weather, to say uothing of probable volcanic aotiou, the world will, by the end of the year 4,500,00 ), be completely washed away, and the ocean will roll over the, present foun dations of the great continents. Now York Telegram. SCIENTIFIC A5D I3DUSTRUL, There are 4500 species of bees. A locomotive lasts fifteen years and earns about $300,000. The Earl of Dunmore proposes to cross Bering Strait on the ioe next winter. Steel barrels, made from sheets ranging in thickness from one-six-teenth to a quarter of an inoh, are coming into nse. Leuenhoek says that 4,000,000 webs spun by young spiders when they first begin to use the spinneret are not, if twisted together, as great in diameter as a hair from a human head. The fibre of the nettle hemp is claimed to be four or five times as strong as silk and not inferior in lus tre. The production of a nettle hemp thread as fine as. No. 100 is now re ported. No science, unless it be that of the electrician, can boast such a wonder ful growth in the past quarter century as that of bacteriology, which has de veloped with remarkable rapidity since Pasteur made his initial investi gation. A company formed some time ago for the purpose of constructing an electrio railway on the Jungfran, Switzerland, now propose to establish a scientific observatory at the uppor end of the line, at a height of about 13,000 feet. The latest theory eonoerning the cause of the aurora borealis has been deduoted from a careful analysis ot that light thrown through a spectro scope. This unique experiment dear ly establishes the- fact that it is oaused by an electrioal discharge among the particles of meteorio iron dust con tained in the atmosphere. Harvey Bejim, a medical stndent in Ann Arbor, Mich., has succeeded in joining two living dogs together, like Siamese twins. It was done by graft ing strips of flesh from one body to the other and retaining them in posi tion for forty' days. When one dog barks it appears to give his oompanion intense pain, and vice versa. An English company is introducing a new method of horticulture. Glass houses are mounted on wheels running on rails in such a way that the houses with or without heating apparatus may be moved in succession over crops to be forced, proteoted or ripened. It is claimed that the work of the hothouses can be greatly in creased by this plan. For the lighting of Antwerp the novel plan is proposed of distribnting water from steam pumping stations at a pressure ot 775 pounds per square inch, and using it at small district sta tions for driving dynamos by means of turbines. These stations would supply local consumers through a low pressure, two-wire circuit system. The cost of coal per sixteen candle power per hour is placed at only 2 cents. George Jimson, of Jimson's Grove, Wis., astonished his father, mother and seven guests by eating and swal lowing in rapid succession thirty-one spheres of what appeared to be thin glass. Old Mr. Jimson was about to send for a physioian, when his son showed that the spheres were merely frozen bubbles of water, made after Professor Dewar's method. The elder Jimson was greatly relieved by the disoovery. To Get Rid ot Piles. Flies are the pest and worry of all tidy housekeepers, and how to rid a room ot them is an unsolved problem to many. This is quite easily accom plished by taking advantage of the ilies' habit ot flying to the window or place from which light is admitted, and to aooomplish this, darken all the windows with a heavy shade, or any material, cutting a hole in one of the shades, over which is firmly pinned a sheet of the common transparent fly paper, and, if possible, have this located at one of the east, south or west windows, from which the most light may be obtained. It will be but a short time ere the flies in the room will be sticking to this paper in their effort to be noar the light. This is far easier and more cleanly than plac ing paper about the room for them to aooidontly light upon, or killing them with poisoned liquid or pyrethrum uowder. St. Louis Ulobe-Dohioorat. Engineers Fight, A remarkable case is soon to be heard at Longtown. George Oleu denning, a stoker on the North Brit ish Railway, has Kummouod Johu Blythe, an engine driver, for assault, and Blythe has taken out a cross sum mons for Glendeuuing for a similar offense. The two men wore iu charge ot a panscnger train to Carlisle, They quareled, aud while the engine was running at the rate of fifty miles au hour they fought ou the foal plate. Oleudenning asserts that Blytho knocked him to the engine floor aud battered his head agaiust the lever, Ou the other hand, Blythe maintains that Glendenning was the aggressor. This new peril to the safety of passen ger trafho is attruetiug much atten tion, and pooplo who write to the newspapers are suggesting various means for the prevention of quarrels between engine drivers and the stok ers. Now York Advertiser. The Ibiclllns of (he Influenza, The microbe of tho "grip," other wise the "inlliien.a bacillus," was discovered by Dr. Canon, of Vienua, who first detected it iu the blood of one of his patients. It is a curiously shaped organism, many times smaller than the microbe of any other kuown genu disease, and was only revealed to tho human eye by using a micro scope with a magnifying power ot 1000 diameters. St. Louis Republic. SUNSTROKE AND DROWNING INSTRUCTIONS ISSUED BT THE NEW TORI BOARD OF HEALTH. What to Do Wlin People are Over come by Heat- Reviving Persons Kesrued From the Water. THE following instructions for the treatment of persons who have received a sunstroke, or (, who have beeu taken from the water in a drowning condition, are issued by the New York Board of Health, and as they are appropriate to any locality we publish them in full: SUNSTROKE. Any one overcome by the heat should be immediately removed to the nearest shade, and the collar of shirt or dress should bo loosened. Seud immediately for the nearest physician, and give the person cool drinks of water, black tea or cofiee, if able to swallow. If the skin is hot and dry, place the person in a sitting position against a tree, wall, or anything that will be a support to the back ; sponge with or pour cold water over the body and limbs, and apply to the head pounded ice wrapped in a towel or other cloth. If there is no ice at hand, keep a cold cloth on the head, and pour cold water on it as well as on the body. If the person iB pale, very faint and pnlso-ieeble, lay him on the back, let him inhale ammonia for a few seconds, or give him a teaspoonfnl of aromatic spirits of ammonia or tincture of gin ger in two tahlespoonfuls of water. Use no cold water upon the head or body, but rub the hands and feet and apply warm applications to the same until the circulation is restored. DBOWWINO. 1. Loosen the clothing; place the face downward, with the forehead resting on one of the wrists, and the face turned to one side. Open the month ; seize the tongue between the fingers, covered with a handkerchief or piece of cloth, and draw it forward between the teeth ; clear the mouth and throat from mucus by passing the forefinger, covered with a handker chief or piece of cloth, far back into) the mouth, thus opening a free pass, age to the windpipe. 2. Turn the body face upward, shoulders reating on a folded coat or pillow; keep the tongue drawn for ward ; raise the arms backward and upward to the sides of the head (this expands the chest and allows the air to enter the lungs) ; then slowly move them downward, bending them so that the elbows will come to the sides aud the hands cross on the pit of the stomach, and press them gently but strongly against the sides and chest (this forces the air out of the lungs). Continue these two movements (which produce artificial breathing) very de liberately about ten or twelve times in a minute, and without ceasing, until the patient breathes naturally, or un til satisfied that life is extinct. While this is being done a little friction on the chest may be produced by rubbing gently with warm flannel, and the body may be stripped and wrapped in dry blankets, Alter natural breathing begins, con tinue very gently, for a few minutes, the two movements which produced artificial breathing. After natural breathing is fully re stored, give the patient a teaspoonfnl of brandy, hot sling or tea, two oi three times a minute, until tbe beat ing of the pulse can be felt at the wrist. Rub the arms and legs upward, aud the feet and hands with warm or dry flannel. Apply hot cloths to the body, legs and arms, and bottles of hot water to the feet. CAUTION. 1. Do not be discouraged if anima tion does not return in a tew minutes. 'The patient sometimes recovers after hours of labor. 2. Do not allow the tongue to fall back and close the windpipe while the arms are being worked. 3. Do not rub the legs and arms un til natural breathing is restored. 4. Do not put any liquid in the mouth uutil natural breathing is fully restored. 5. Do not roll the body nor handle it roughly. d. Do not allow the head to hang down. Something Curious. By a very simple rule the duration of night and day can be determined at any time oi the year. All you have to do is to multiply the time of the sun's rising by two an 1 it will give you the length of the night. Multiply the time of setting by two aud you get the length of tho day. It is easily demonstrate 1 at the time of the year when the sun rises and sets at i o'clock and day and night are of equal duration. It is just as true as the days lengthen ami shorten. Thus, as winter approaches, take a day wheu the sun rises at 6.30 aud sets at 5.30. Apply the rule aud you have a night of thirteen hours and a day of eleveu hours. This rule will be fouud absolutely accurate at any season of the year. Atlanta Journal. A 1'alaliai Kara. In ex-Vice-1'resideut Levi P. Mor ton's farm at Lllerslie, N. Y., the cows have fresh water constantly before them iu iron buckets, over which there are wooden covers to prevcut hnv or feed from getting iu. The ct. tils are provided with self-cleaning stable grating which covers the gutter behiud the cows au I allo ts theiu to stand ou a level surface. There is an overhead trolley track with four lines on each floor. Carriers carry the cars with feel to the Cuttle and also manure to the uiauure shed, where it is dumped iu wagons aud then spread upou the laud. New York World. ITS ORIGIN. There was a poet who would sing la IlRht, bewitching rhyme, OI any man or anything, At any place or time i And when an editor one day Had caught him unawares, Hp wrote a verso about the way He Went Down Stairs. And ever since that time, the bard. When Inspirations flow Is said to find It very hard To keep from writing so t And every poet, young or gray, His tribute fondly bears, To him who wrote about the way H) Went Down Stairs. Washington 8tar. IICMOR OF THE DAY. Love is a charming hostess, but an exacting guest. Lofty idealists are usually men who are too lazy to work. Puck. Truth is mighty; but it will not prevail in a horse trade. Puck. People do a great deal of talking about the lost art of conversation. Puck. The great beauty of adversity as a medicine is that it is not sugar coated. -Puck. Yokes "Is Miss Crnmmer eraaaei- r . .. i o' n "Mr-it ..i.., !..,.,. Truth. Executive ability is the faculty of getting some one else to do your work. Puck. The best way for some people to fcrge to the front is for them to take a back seat. Dallas News. When a man makes a blunder ha can't blame on somebody else, he decides to say nothing about it.--Atohison Globe. The Kentucky six-footer whose bride is only three feet high is no doubt very proud of his better half. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "Talk about your mosquito coast 1" said the man as he tenderly rubbed the shining surface on his bald head. Cleveland Plain Doaler. Lady "How is this insect powder to be applied?" Assistant (absent mindedly) "Give 'em a teaspoonful after each moal." Tit-Bits. He "I've bought yon a pet mon key to amuse yon, darling." She , "Oh, how kind of you! Now I shan't miss you when you are away." Tit Bits. "I wish you would give ns some thing more on current topics." "Here's the very thing; an article on the overhead trolley." Washington Star. Good intent is but added exaspera tion whon its consequences are disas trous. The man killed accidentally is just as dead as the man murdered. Truth. Mr. Flitty "I had all the conceit , taken out of me yesterday." Miss Victor "Really ? How did they carry it off? Ou a freight train." Detroit " T Free Press. Professor (to class iu political econ omy) "What is the hardest tax to raise?" Student (whose mother is housecleauing) ' 'Carpet tacks. " De troit Free Press. "The teacher Bays your Freddie wastes a great deal of his time at school." Mother "Well, I'm glad to hear it, for I was afraid he dide't go half the time." Chicago Inter-Ocean. Servant "Please, mum, Mrs. Next doo wants you to lend her some read ing suitable for a sick person." Mistress " Certainly. Give her those medical almanacs." New York Weekly. Wife "How people gaze at ray new dress! I presume they wonder if I've beeu shopping in Paris." Hus band ".More likely they wonder if I've been robbing a bank." New York Weekly. "Don't you consider Miss Bondby rather dull?" said one society man. "Well," replied another, "after the maimer in which she cut you this morning I eau't say tliat I do." Washington Star Lord de Void (to Miss Bildd, whom he meets traveling ou tho ooutineut) "I thought ouco that all the pwetty Amerwicau girls came nbwoud, but wheu I weut to New York I decided that they all stayed at home." Judge. Miss Kkrumohus "I was so digust ed to see people tnko up their ear of corn iu their fingers. I always usa kuiie to uetach the corn from the ear." Mrs. Homespun " Well, I suppose a knife auswers right well where one has tio teeth." Boston Transcript. Kdith "What a quick turn for repartee Harry Priuce has!" Mabel "But he never says suything to wound oue's feelings." Edith "And then he's so gallant t You should think the world of him. He was so prompt in your defeuoo the other day ! Homebody remarked, 'There are no frills on Mabel Stone,' aud Harry replied, 'On the contrary, she is distinctly plain.'" Boston Tran script. A Wellesley College girl tells of a bright saying of oue of their number. The class was selecting a motto, and "To thy own self be true," was sug gested, after a number of others lui I been disapproved of, and mat with quite a favorable roeeptiou till a youug lady arose, and said she hardly thought that appropriate for a youu j ladies' seminary "For it shall fol low, as the night the dty, thou wilt not then be false to any iuu." Amidst gro:it applause they diseurdod that motto. Housekeeper.