THE FOREST REPUBLICAN U (blitk4 T.ry Wataaaiaj, kf J. E. WENK. OfHoe In Smaarbaujh A Co.'a BullAlui mji nun, tiomkbta, r Tarma, ... l.eo prTn, RATXS Of AOVEftflSIMOi PUBLICAN. On. Rqnu-e, m. inoh, sn Inanrtfaa .1 ar On. Hquara, on. Inch, on. month. . $ OU On. Pquara, on. Inch, tbrae months. , SOU On. Hqu.ru, on. ineh. on. fw,,, , U (M 1 ro HquarM, on ymr lft nt Quarter Column, on. rw,,,. . W 0. Half Column, on. yaar BO 00 On. Column, on. yaar. ICO 10 Lacal adroit UHmct tn enta p 11a. cb insartlon. Alarriairea and dath notion jratl. All bill, for yearly adr.rtii.tn.nt. aoDaoani sjnarurly. Temporary adveruasmaata mat b. paid In advanoa. Job work oa.h on d.ltrary. Oorro.pond.nM Mhcttal rraa al Mrt. at th. eonnwy. N. Mtlu will k uta aiaamrmau VOL. XXVII. NO. 49. TI ON EST A, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAKCII 27, 1895. 81.00 PER ANNUM. EST Tho farmlands of th!" country lira estimated to bo worth 813,279,252, G19. A prominent Guatemalan official unid that though war between Gnnto niulo ami Mexico might bo dolaycd for year, it vrai sure to oorae. Tho IYoriu HoniUl snys it is almost impossible for tho average American miutl to comprehend bow CaHiiuir I'erier, with n Balnry, as Trosidont of the French Republic, of 8300,000 a year, could miilto up his mind to ro ign. According to Iho figures of Chiof 'Engineer Tarsal, of tho Now York City Rapid Transit Commission, tho cost of tho proposed eloctria railway . under Broadway will bo $1)0,000,000, exclusive of expenses for right of way, damages to ltiiKlinKn, cto. Tho proportion to buila a memor ial bridge across the Totomoo Bivor, connecting Washington City proper with the great Arlington estate and National Cenutery, is again before Congress. It is hoped by tho Invent ive Age this motter will bo given tho serious consideration its importanco merits, bucn a struoturo is needed, and that it should be a magnificent piece of engineering monument to the genius of the present day goes without argument. Tho cigarette youth merits almost any treatment that will squelch hi. fatal habit, believe. Tuo Tathflndtr. The Infest method, that of denying him admission to the pnblio fchools unless he gives up smoking has been employed in a Missouri town. This sort of ostraoism may bring pretty effoctivo influenoo to bear through tho parents. But may it not cause some tubborn youngsters to go the other way into deperate paths ? We have in this country many churches with very large member hip, some of them numbering over 2000. But ia Europe the oburohe. boast of many more members than this) 2000 being as . rule but fair-sized congregation. There ia one ohuroh tn St. Tetersburg, Rossis, numbering nearly six thousand souls. The larg est membership, perhaps In the world is that of ohuroh in Eltorfleld. in Rhenish Prussia, which has over six thound. The congregation has six ptstors and two ohurohes, while 'third church is in oourso of erection. SoTeral members of the famous Krum tnaoher family of preachers have been pastors at that churoh. i A remarkable trial has just ended at Bucharest, Hungary. Two boys, one aix years and the other fourteen, were charged upon their own eonfession with attempting to drown child two years old. Their dofense was that the long drought had to bo terminated, and that the orime for whioh they were on trial was the only successful method known to accomplish the end. An explanation of this curious defense is that ihe children of the villages in times of great drought are made to 'throw 'the clay figure of ohild into the water. The boys threw in the child merely because they had no day Sgure. The elder was sentenoed to two years imprisonment and the younger returned to his mother for chastisement. In bis speech in the United States Senate, at the acceptance of the Web Bter statue, Senator Morrill, of Ver mont, spoke of the fashionable garb worn by "Black Dan" whon he dined with him in Washington in 1852. "Air. Webster," said the Senator, "appeared in his blue coat with gilt buttons, light buff vest, low shoes and white silk half-hose, and led the con versation most happily, whether grave or gay." This was the custom of the great American statesman a lit tle more than forty years ago, a period wbioh can be recalled by hun dreds of thousands of our living oiti zeus. What would be thought of any man, even a Webster, who should ap pear thus dren-.ed in our time? Would he not be an objeot of ridicule? asks the San Francisco Argonaut. Tho clothes of the Americau people have been getting plainer and duller right straight along for over a hundred years. Look at the costumes of Washington, Adams and the other great men after peaoe had been won through the Revolution. Look at the rich and gay dress which was worn by men who could afford it when our own immediate sires trod the laud. Then look at the black and white dress of fashion in the banquet hall in this nupioturesque aud blustering age. It is lovely woman alone who dares to make a display of colors, frills, flowers, fringes, spangles, jewelry and ornaments ut this diuuiul time. THE UN3EEN. When eyes am bright with hopn, tho skies are blue, The seas are mothor-o'-poarl, the world Is fair; Bunshtno falls sweet ou drops of llnminil dow, And fnlrlns dwell iu flower bolls everywhere. Whon eyes are dim with tonrs, tho skies nr gray, Tho boos aro foaming floods, tho world In oold; Sud mists creep down and shadow all tho way, And ovory face wo moot seems strangely old. But when tho eyes aro closed to outward sights In Sloop's dear dreamland, glories moot thoir gaze; V.Bions of hopo-llllod nouns and love-fllled nights, Of light ayo radiant, made, of rninbow rays. Thou, whn they look within, tho realms of thought Lie all outspread what has Wn, what shall bo; Mountain and plain Into right foous brought, "Tho Unseen," say you? Nay! what we bout see' Tho Inward sight Is true, and cloar aud strong; Ago dims It not; no blindness comes with tears: For timo is short, eternity is long. And souls are made for aeons, not for years. Chambers's Journal. AN OLD DICTIONARY. ET HELEN POUHBST GRAVES. ES, I know," laid Aunt Nabby, in a voice about as cheer ful as the croak of a consumptive raven. "Tho family is all broke up, and every thing is scattered, And the furniture was Bold at auction, Such a thing never would have at home!" happened if I d been "I dare say not," said Mr. Well wood, tapping the feathery tip of his cigar against the Japanese ash-reoeiver. and thinking secretly what a fortunate tniug it was for the amicable settle ment of the Wellwood estate that Aunt Nabby "Abigail Maria" her name was written in the family record had not been at homo. For she was a yertiable thorn in the aide of her relations this querulous, ill-tempered, domineering old lady, ' "Not that I oare for the old chairs. and tables, and bed-quilts," went on Aunt Nabby, knitting energetically away at the silk mitten whioh never seemed to grow any larger. "Samuel's wife was a dreadful poor bousekeoper, ana lumgg was most used up, any how. But there's one thing I'm de termined to have!" "What is that?" said Mr. Wellwood. more in compliment to Aunt Nabbv's sudden stop than put of any active curiosity on tne enbjeot. ; . "The old dictionary," said Aunt Nabby. 'What! that old thing?" said Mr. Wellwood. "Why, it's the edition of 1810. and all battered to pieces one oover gone, ana nan tne loaves out! "No matter." said Aunt Nabbv. rescuing her ball of silk from the paws oi me irreverent kitten : "1 want it And I mean to have it. And I want you to help me get bold ot it, Mat- tnew. "I don't think it will be possible for yon to find it," said Mr. WeJlgood, thoughtfully. "But I will find it!" said Aunt Nab by. "I must find it." "Why?" point-blank demanded Mr. Wellwood. "Because," answered Aunt Nabby, "I want it for a family relio. I hain't got nothing to remind me of Samuel's who. Ana mat a wnat 1 ve come on East for to get hold of the old dic tionary. I'm goin' out to Felt's Point to-morrow to see Squire Sadler he was the lawyer that settled the estate, what there was of it to settle and he'll maybe know what became of the old dictionary." "I don't regard that as especially likely," said Mr. Wellwood. "How should he know?" "There ain't no tellin' what's likely and what ain't," said Aunt Nabby, resolutely. And here the subject was allowed to drop. But when Aunt Nabby had gone up stairs to bed, with a pitoh plaster in one hand, for her back, and a tumbler of boiliug hot water in tho other for her digestion, and a box of nervine pills iu one pocket, and a bottle of corn curerin the other, Mrs. Wellwood a shrewd, sallow-complex-ioned little woman, who had all thiB time been darning quietly away at a basket of stockings in the corner looked up at her husband with quick, intelligent eyes. "Matthew," said she, "what does this mean?" "1 think," said Mr. Wellwood, "that Aunt Nabby has some sort of method in her madness this time. And it is not for any mere sentimental association that she wants to get hold of the old dictionary." "I remember it well," said Mrs. Wellwood, thoughtfully. "A queer old book, with the edges bulging out, tho title-pago gone, half the cover torn oft, and a round blank ring on the other half, where littlo Tolly once set down a tic-out of hot salvo. Do you suppose, Matthew " "Aunt Nabby knew your Aunt Walkor, Samuel's wife, as she always culls hor--botter thau any one elBe," interrupted Mrs. Wellwood. "She was an ecobutrio old soul. We were all surpriHod, if you recollect, at there being uo money saved up, noue de posited auywUore, Depend Upou it, if there was any money to savo " "It was in that old dictionary! pried Mrs. Wellwood, dropping; her darning needle. "Aud Auut Nabby Knows it. Mr. Wellwood nodded his head, and smoked harder than evor as he stared into the lire, as if seeking from th red embers couuboI and advice. "Whore is that dictionary," said no. "Goodness only knows!" despair ingly sighed Mrs. Wellwood. "Try and think I" eagerly urged ner Husband. "Perhaps Mrs. Grubb would know, said Mrs. Wellwood. ".Sho packed all the things that were left, aud looked nu the house." "Write to her," said Mr. Wellwood eagerly. "Oh, no that would only tie uselessly nrousing suspicion 1 U there yourself. Sarah. Ask her t corao hero and make a visit." "What! Mrs. Grubb i" "Yes, Mrs. Grubb." "But, Matthew, nho is such a dread fill old bore !" pleaded Mrs. Well wood. "Never mind that," said Wellwood impatiently, Hinging his cigar stump into tho rod-hot coals. "Only think or tuo fortune that may possibly re' ward our efforts I Sarah, we must get uoiu oi tnat dictionary. So Airs. Wellwood went to Mrs, George Grubb, aud courteously in uitod that lady to make her a visit, Mrs. Grubb accepted promptly, She had always wanted to visit the city, and here at last Whs a golden op portuuity. She brought her little nephew and her two tall girls with ner. "I know yon didn't specially invite em, Sarah Anu, Bftid she, "but th dears will so enjoy tho museums and the park and the Brooklyn Bridge, and all that sort of thing; and they won t be no more trouble tnau three kittens. There never were such good oniiuren I The three youug Grubbs were some thing worse than a pestilence. Mrs. Urubb was nearly as bad. And, at the end of a week, Mrs. Wellwood felt herself fully qualified to enter a luna tio asylum. But on the last day, whilo George waa smearing himself with bread and butter and honey in the kitchen, and the two Misses Grubb were pounding desperately away on tne piano, in imi tatlon of the hand-organ man outside, Mrs. Wellwood ventured to put the fateful question whioh had so long trembiea on ner lips. "The old ditchnery!" said Mrs. Grubb, who was not over particular regarding her pronunciation. "La, roe I What would any one want o that old trash ?" "Well, nothing much." hesitated Mrs. Wellwood. "But Mr. Wellwood ia rather a bibliopole " "A which?" said Mrs. Grubb, witn one nana back of her ear. "A oolleotor of old books." ex plained her hostess. "Humph I" said Mrs. Grubb, soratching her head with a knitting- needle, "it 1 was going to have books at all, I d far aud away rather have new ones." "Tastes differ," said Mrs. Well wood, with a pang, as one of the piano chords snapped resoundingly and Master George's voice was heard be low in load alteroation with the cook. "But where a the old dictionary?" "Lesbia Field has got it," said Mrs. Grubb. "Mrs. Walker's gTandnieoe don't you know? Leopold Field's girl, bne it factory haud, up to Poke Hollow a dreadful likely girl? Soon to be married to Zeke Hamersley." Are you sure oi it? " said Mrs. Wellwood. "About a widdin'? Oh, yes ! Zeke's folks, they set a deal of store by ijesoia. "No, no," interrupted Mrs. Well wood "about the dictionary." "Sartin sure," said Mrs. Grubb. "I see Lesbia pick it off the floor herself, when I was a-paoktn' the woolen blankets that Mrs. Seeder bought at auotion. Says she, 'I am t goin to hev the ditchnery that Auut Hanner thought suoh a deal of sold for old paper,' says she. 'Til keep it myself. jus' to put me in mind of Aunt Han ner and Uncle Samuel. And she wrapped it in a bit of old calioo I remember the very palm-leaf pattern on it and took it away, under her arm. What is it, Georgie, darling? The hired girl won't give you no more honey? Never mind I Wrs. Well wood'll givii you some damson pre serves, I know." As soon as Mrs. Grubb departed a period of time which Mrs. Wellwood began to four would never arrive she paoked a little traveling satchel to go to "Toke Hollow" aud see Lesbia Field, a relation with whom she had hitherto very little acquaintance. ijesbia was at home a bloouuna lass, with oheeks as piuk as ruses, and sparkling black eyes and she wus evidently much puzzled to aooount for this unexpected notioe on the part of her city relation. But Mrs. Wellwood, while making herself as agreeable as possible, kept her eyes vigilantly on the alert, aud was rewarded at lust. For there, on the top shelf of a lit tle, glass-frontud oorueroupboard. was the old dictionary itself, bulging loaves, missing oover, aud all. "Oh, that darling oldreho of antiq ty I" cried she, nervously feeling of the twenty-dollar bill in her pocket with which Mr. Wellwood had in trusted her the last thing. "Auut HhuuuIi'b dictionary! Oh, Lesbia, I must have tuut !" "Well, isn't it fnnnv?" said Lesbia. laughing over the chicken she was stuiling with bread-sauoe for dinner ; for pretty J esbia was cook, ohumber maid, waitres and nil in that parti cular ebtubliuhment. "I had a letter from Auut Nabby Wellwood. yester day, about that dictionary. She wuuts it. She's coming to-day to see about it." "But promise it to me," said Mrs. Wellwood, coaxingly. "Dear Cousin Lesbia, Mr. Wellwood is so anxious to obtain it for his collection of antique publications." "Oh, it isn't old enough to bo of value as antique!" said Lesbia, who whs "honest onontjh." "But he has set his heart on it," pursued Mrs. Wellwood, growing more earnest, as she heard the rattle of wheels in tho distance, and beheld through the tioy-panod window a dopot wagon, bringing to the scono no other than Aunt Nobby herself. "Do let ma have it, Lesbia 1" Aud she placed the twenty-dollar bill, coaxiugly, in Lcsbiu's hand. "But I f li all bo cheating you," said Lesbin, looking at the bill in amoze raeut. "Do let mo see Aunt Nabby abont it first !" "No, no !" said Mrs. Wellwood, as Auut Nabby's voice was heard with out, in high disputation with the driver ns to whether a coin she had given him in payment was genuine or not. "Give it to me now ! Aud here is my sealskin cape ; you wore just ad miring it. I'll make you a present of it. Lesbia a wedding gift, dear." "You are very kind," said Lesbia, with a radiant face. "And if you really care Jor the dictionary " And so it came to pass that tho dic tionary was safe iu Mrs. Mutthew Well wood's possession, when Aunt Nabby bustled in, full of the iniqui ties of drivers, the inconvenience of traveling, aud the threatening twiuges of her annual rheumatism. "What!" she cried, ns , her eye caught sight of the fat volume in her niece's lap, "you've got the diction ary, after all I But of course you'll let mo have it, Sarah Ann?" "Certainly I shall not 1" said Mrs. Wellwood, exultantly. "Mr. Well wood has sot his heart on possessing it." "And I've just sold it to her," add ed Lenbi'a, ns she assisted Auut Nabby to untie her bonnet strings. The old lady heaved a deep sigh. "Wal, it don't matter so muoh," said she. "The maiu thing was to rind the dictionary. And if you'll just let me copy out the recipe for mak ing waffles, Sarah Ann, tbat's pinned on the page W- first of the W's, you'll see it'll be jest as good as if I had it myself." "The rooipe for waffles I" cried Mrs. Wellwood. "Was that all you wanted of it?" "That was all," said Aunt Nabby, hriekly. "Samuel's wife, she was a dreadful good hand at waffles, and she never would give nobody the recipe. But I knew where she kept it, and I was always tryin' to get ot it. And if you'll just let me copy it out " Mrs. Wellwood crew pale. The coiling of the little, old-fashioned room seemed to swim around her. Was this the end of the dictionary mystery? Had she entertained the Grubb family for ten mortal days, had her piano broken, her china craoked, her nerves shattered for this? Had she paid twenty dollars, a seal skin cape and her traveling expenses to Poke Hollow all for a recipe for waffles? The buzz of conversation went on all the same, and Mrs. Wellwood re covered at ber leisure. She returned to New York that afternoon, carrying tne old dictionary, although Lesbia endeavored to induce her to remain. by the promise of waffles for tea, made after Aunt Hannah s famous recipe. And when Mr. Wellwood disoovered that there were no thousand-dollar bonds, nor hundred-dollar bank-notes hidden in the dictionary nothing but denuitions, ink-blots, and one or two cooking-recipes pinned to the pages, he indulged in execration more deep than loud. "It s all that meddling old cat's fault! said he, referring, doubtless, to Aunt Nabby. "And I'll nevorhave her in the house again !" And he never did. But all that didn't restore th) twenty-dollar bill and the sealskin cap. Aud innocent Lesbia was the only one who reaped benefit from th ) transaction. Satur day Night. The Rat's Sest Exploded. Rats are the cause of a great deal of annoyauce to those who live in tho mountains, and inauy stories could be told of their deviltry. The latest comes to us by letter from Red Lodge. John Andrews, of Dilworth, accom panied by a oowboy, ou their way to the mines of the Clark's Forks, topped at a c.tbin owned aud former ly used by Shelby Eli Dillard, tne journalistic miner. In the fireplace was a mountain rat s nest. Fire was applied to this, aud in a moment a territio explosion took place. Both men were knoked down, and wheu as sistance came soou after from a man following them they were nuable to move, burgioul and medical assistance wus immediately procured, and it is believed that both will reoover. It seems that the rats had procured from some source or other a number of ex plosive caps, suoh as are used by min ers, aud deposited them iu the nest as they are wont to do with everything bright. Buzeman (Montuua) Chron icle. Sufficient Trout. Rolioff, a) Russian man of letters. had been implioated in the conspiracy t 183 and sentenoed to be bunged. He was launched from the fatal ladder. when the rope broke and he was thrown to the ground, severely bruised, but conscious. He picked iiuself up and said, quietly, "They cau do ncthing in Russia, not even twine a cord properly." It was ous tomary in Russia to pardon the oou- emned after a similar fiaaoo, but ou llelift's words being reported to the lute Czur Nioholas and his pleasure emanded, herejoined, "Trove to him that he is wrong." Aud they did.--Detrot Free Trea SCIENTIFIC ASH INDUSTRIAL. Storm warnings wore first given early in the last century. A Washington doctor is now adver tising to cure failing memories. It is said thnt men working in livery stables are exempt from cholera. Aroraatio trees aud shrubs of many Varieties are said to destroy malaria. Sulphur baths for horses are being arranged at a cost of 810,000 in Baden, Austria. It is estimated that tho atmosphere of Mars is one quarter as extensive as that of the earth. A scientist has calculated that a single pair of rabbits, if all tho young were kept alive, would in fonr years multiply into 1,274,840 rabbits. A man in Bremen has inveutod n kind of "oil bomb" for calming tho waves, which can be fired a s'.iort distance. There are small holes iu them, allowing tho oil to run nut iu about an hour. The earth's attraction of gravity is stronger in oceanic islauds than in the interior of continents, a result, it is supposed, of the great cooling of the crust under the seas, tha average density being thus made greater than on land, notwithstanding the light ness of the water. A Connecticut physician who has examined 4000 pairs of eyes reports that sixty-five per cent, of them re quired glasses. That, however, is more a matter of opiniou than of science. Thousands of young people are now wearing glasses who might have done better without them. Compressed air is used iu Taris for all purposes, from running clocks to operating dynamos for electric lights. The central station furnishes air at a pressure of seventy-five pounds to the square inch. It is sent around the oity nnder the streets iu pipes, and is sold to customers by meter, just as gas is. Some time ago the city of Law renoe, Mass., discovered that its death rate from typhoid fever was higher than that of any other town iu New England. After an investigation of the cause the water supply of tho place was filtered through saud, and the mortality from the disease has fallen from forty-three to eight in six months. Coffee has been found by a Gorman investigator to possess marked germicidal properties. Tnre coffee of the ordinary strength in which it is utilized as a beverage killed cholera baoilli in three hours and typhus bacilli in twenty-four hours. The anti-baoterial substances seem to bo developed in the coffee bean by the roasting process. It ia to the manner in which dif ferent colors are absorbed or rollected by a body that its oolor is due. If white light falls upon a red rose bush, the red alone is reflected from the flower, the other colors being ab sorbed. The green leaves, on tho other hand, absorb the rod entirely, and reflect nearly all the green light. A rose in green light or a leaf in red light would appear absolutely blaok, for in each case the light which tho object can reflect is absent. The Balr Book. It ia said a new feminine fad in the West is that of keeping whut is culled a "hair book." This interesting ar tiole is supposed to contain a lock of hair of eaob football player who bus in any degree become famous on tho gridiron field. The firBt young lady who is known to have commenced such a collection is Miss Hellene Will is, of .California. Some time ago Al bert Hall, captain of the football team of Butler University, received a letter from Miss Willis, asking for a lock of bair from each of the members of his team, to be accompanied by their autographs, and explaining the uuus ual request by stating that she has a large acrapbook, in which are placed the looks of hair and autographs of the most prominent players of tho Tjast season. This fad is ilutiiruriius. Luxurious as the hair of the football player ia, he must in time become bald if he is very popular aud all tho ladios of his aoquaiutunoo nndertuko to scrapbook his head. New Orleans Picayune. Heavy-tirade Locomotives, Two big locomotives have been turned out of the Suheneotady Loco motive Works, in fact, tho largest aud heaviest ever built at the shops. These engines are for the Central Tu rn Do Railroad, aud are to bo r.sed in heavy mountain work. They have four pairs of drivers aud two pairs of truok-wheels. One of these eugiues weighs 173,000 pounds The tender weighs, when loaded, 03,800 pouuds, and carries 1000 gallons of water and twelve tons of coal. The boiler is seventy-two iuohes in diameter and contains over 300 lluos. Its size cau be imagined from the fact that a six foot man can stand upright inside ot it. The cylinders are 22x28, and all other dimensions are iu proportion. Albany (N. Y.) Journal. A Remarkable Mouth. February, 180tt, is referred to by astronomers as "the mouth without u full moon." Juuuury aud Murch ol that year had each two full moous, bile the intermodiute mouth did not have oue. Says a writer iu an astrono mical journal, referring to this fact : Do you realize whut a rare thing in nature it was? It has not happened before since the beginning of the Christian era, or probably siuoo the creation of the world? It will not occur again, aooonliug to the compu tations of the astronomer royal of England, for how long doyouthiuk? Not until after 2.500,001) years fioiu 1866 J" Atlanta Constitution. TUE "SWEATING SYSTEM." MANUFACTURING READT-HADS CLOTHING IN TENEMENTS. The Garments Worn by the Majority of Americans Made I'nder Condi tions Revolting to Humanity. THE "sweating system" is prac tically the process by which ready-mado clothing is manu factured in tenement houses. The materials are out and "bunched' for each garment by the manufacturer They are then distributed in large lots to special jobbers, known as "con tractors," each a specialist iu his line ror example, one muxes coats, an other cloaks, another pmitnloouF. whilo some make special grades or sizep. With this distribution tho wholesaler washes his hands of tho business, his ignorance of how and where his goods aro actually made ur being as ideal as lutentionnl. Not far from one-half of tho goods thus distributed are made up iu the contractors' factories. As to tho other half, tbe contractor sublets the work to a "sweater," whose shop is gener ally one of the two larger rooms of a tenement flat, accommodating from six to fifteen or twenty "sweating employes men, women and children In the other large room of the fiat are his living, sleeping and cooking ar rangemcnts, overflowing into tho workroom. Employes whom he boar, Is, who eat at their work and who sleep on tho goods, frequently complete tho intimate connection of home and shop, One fourth of onr ready-made and somewhat Tjf our custom-made cloth ing are thus put together. The people engagod are those whoso families aro most prolific, whofe sense of cleanliness is least developed, who comprehend no distinction between living and work rooms, whose prom iseB aro dirty to the point of filth, and who are found iu the most densely populated portions of the oity. But this is not the worst. Single lumiues, inhabiting one or raoro rooms, generally having a. family as subtenants, or a number of lodgers or boarders, subcontract work from the tenement "sweaters." Thus by tene ment "home-workers" are made an other one-fourth of our ready-made clothing and a much larger proportion of our children's clothing. The homes of these home-workers include many of the most wretched in which human beings exist among ns. The condi tions of squalor and filth are frequent ly such as to make even inspection impossible, except by one hardened to tne work, while tne quarters in which this work is centered are those into whioh tend the most helpless of our population. As to wages in this "tenement homo-work," there is nothing which can properly bo so called. The work is secured by underbidding of tone ment eweat shops, and is generally piece-work, one process ot which may be attended to by the head of the family, and the rest by its other mem bers aooording to their capacity, Those engaged are so generally com pelled to accept rather than to choose their work that it is taken without reference to the possibility of gaining a livelihood therefrom, the miserable workers earning what they can, beg ging to supplement it, and dying or being supported as paupers when they fail. A large proportion nearly, if not quite, one-half of all the clothing worn by the majority of our people is thus made under conditions revolting to humanity and decency, and such as to endanger the health of the wearer. It is in children's clothes that tho worst features most thoroughly characterize the manufacture. But the same conditions so far apply to all grades of clothing that not auy cau be considered as exempt. Tho use of ready-made goods has become so uni versal that no community, and almost no family, is free from danger. Better laws, and more ellicient and tactful admiuiiitrutiou of law, can do much ; organization of those em ployed can do more, the slow better ment of oouditions as tho mass of foreign immigration is better digested by our population will do most of all. But for many years to come, iu our great eeubourd cities especially New York the "sweating system" will re main a reproach to humanity, a breeding-nest of disease, uuleis oue of two remedies shall be appliod. The Federal Government can throt tle tbe evil by absolutely prohibiting inter-State commerce iu articles of clothiug manufactured uuder other conditions thau such as may be ap proved by law. Or the wholesale clothiers iu each of our cities can stamp out the evil promptly, if they reully oare to do so. Tho first alter native is repuguuut to our theory of nou-interfereuce by the Federal Gov ernment; the second is thus far op posed by the general policy of the manufacturers themselves. Harper's Weekly. (Jreat Meal ot the Conlederacy. The Great Seal of the Confederacy is now iu the State House at Colum bia, S. C. It is made of polished bronze, aud is about three inches iu diameter. Ou oue side of it is uu equestriau tttutue of Wunhiugtou, uud on the other the inscription, "Ooufed cratu States of America, 22d February, lHlii. Deo Yimlireee." It uh made iu EugUud, uud reached Richmond only a few days before tho evacuatiou. Iu the general coiifusiou that followed it was overlooked, and aftcwurd fell into the hands of William Earle, of Washington, D. C, by w hom it wus presented to the State abovu men tioned iu 1SHN. New York Dispatch. Tho ayo-uyo of .Muiiuuscar is re markable chietly lor its eye-, which are larger, ii. proportion to its mzc, thun thosu of uuy other creature. BAIN AND SHINE. Can't have sunxhln" at! the time (bit to eomo a rain: The dry land - it gits thirsty. An' the mountain nn' the plain, They ery out fer a drop to drink, An' nil the wiltin' (lowrs Is glad to seo the rain fall free. An' freshen with the showers. Can't liavn sunshine all the time: Olad fer raiu to fall: Fills tho wells nn' make the dolls' Look fresh an' spnrkliif all. The raindrop makes tin' roses grow, An' if the rivers rise. They water all the hind, an' gi Jest singiu' 'neutli tho s'iiosf Can't have sunshine all the timer I llko a rainy day; Fer that's the time fer readiu' bookj Or makin' fiddles play. To home, or toth" groeery store, I'm happy when it rains; Fer they nee.l it nn th" in Miiitains, An' it's weleomo on th i plains! Atlanta Constitution HUMOR OK THE DAY. not and heavy A cannon ball. Boston Courier. Sooner or later pride is sure to Btep on dynamite. Rum's Horn. The mistakes of the past nre tho signboards of the future. Tuck. "Our engagement is quite n secret, you know." "So everybody tells mo." Tall Mall Budget. Content is the feeling wo experienco the first week after our salary has been increased. Tuck. Nobody can help noticing tho short coming) of tho man who is always bo hind time. Dallas News. Japan has found iu China what might be termed a hasty pudding. New York Mail and Express. My friend's conceit usually consists in his inability to recognize the high er order of intelligence. Tuck. Misfortuue seldom gathers friends; and when it does they all stand around and say, "I told you sol" Tuck. Do not keep a good movement on hand when it should be put on foot without delay. Galveston News. Would you keep a woman's lovo Vhn you earn it, Bore's a way I'll tell you of Don't return it! Judge. Scientists beliove it impossible for a man to have a double. If this is so how can a man be beside himself? Life. A girl is a good deal like a problem in mathematics You don't always un derstand her wheu von get her. Puok. He who wrote, "All tho world loves a lover," Fulled to note an exception sad; 'Tis that the lovor is but seldom lovod liy his dear loved one's dad. Buffalo Courier. New Boarder "What's the row up stairs?" Landlady "It's the profes sor of hypnotism trying to get his wife's permission to go out this even ing." Tit-Bits. A barber is the easiest person in tho world at meetiug people. Go into his shop almost auy time aud you will find him scraping an acquaintance. Rookland (.Me.) Tribune. Benevolent Old Man "Here's a quarter. So you were seut to Yule when quite young?" Ragson Tatters "Did I say clat? I meant jail; I can't pronounce do 'j' " Philadel phia Record. Old Mr. Goodfello "Littlo boy, can yon tell me tho way to the ferry?" Gomin "Yassir; jus' follow tho street along where you boar the team sters usin' the wust langwidge." Harper's Bazar. There were 190 lynohings in this country last year, but they didn't get around to tbe man who beats time to the musio by tapping on the rouuds of your chair with his foot. Rook land (Me.) Tribuue. First Footballer "Did Halfback go around aud wallop that editor who wrote 1 about 'The Brutality of Foot ball?'" Seooud Footbullor "No." "Why not?" "Hulfbaok is in the hospital." Good News. Bobby "Our dog's name is Cioero, but siuoe my brother has been to col lege he calls it Kiekero." Johuny "1 s pose that s the way they pro- uounoe it at college. They ro all crazy on football." Good News. "Yes, young ladies," said the pro fessor, "Tallus Athene, the Grecian goddess of wisdom, wus unmarried." And from that day tho goose won dered why those girls wouldu t study. It was a bad break. New York Re corder. A German scientist says that 3000 years hence there will be one mau to every 220 women. This is a loss gloomy outlook thun if there were to be 220 women after every man a condition that alieady exists at the summer resorts. Norristown Herald. As the train drew up at a couutry station on the Southeastern Railway a pleasant-looking gentleman stepped out on tha platform an 1 inhaling the lresU air, enthusiastically obsorved to the guard: "Isn't this invigorat ing?" "No, sir; it's 'Cutorhum," re plied the guard. Wonder. Aged Tortoises. Tortoises live to a eroat aco. In the library at Lambeth l'uluoe there is the shell of one of these animals which w as brought to thut palace iu the year ooo uy Arcunisiiop ijaud, and lived ill the year 1753 wheu it wus killed by the cold Wtother, a laborer iu the garden having dug it up from its win tor retreat uud neglected to repiuoe it. Auother was placed iu the Bishop of London's gardeu atFulham iu 1&1S. This died a natural death iu 1754. Tho ages of the tortoises wheu first placed iu these gardens wero not known. New York Ob&ervvr.