The Forest Republican It published avery Wednesday, by J. E. WENK. Office In Smcarbaugh & Co.'i Building ... v ILSI STREET, TIONE3TA, TA. Torma, Sl.iio 1'er Year, No subscriptions rncolved lor a shorter fM-iod (hiiD throa month. Oorrenpondenes solicited from till pirtg of the country. No notlos will t9 taken of nnonyinous ooruunuulo.illons. ratis or AOvcristiai OR EPUB CAN, On. ffcroara, on. Inaa, M Inaarttaot. , W On. Squara, on. Inoh, en. month..., I Vt Od. Squara, on. inch, thrae months. CO On. Squara, on. inch, on. ;r, ., WW Two HquarM, on. ymr IS OC Quarter Column, on. Jm...n. ...... W OC Half Column, on. ;Mr BO 00 On. Column, on. yaor . -. 100 Logai ariTsrtlMtnaat. ttm enti par Um anh lnaartlon. Marriairca and daath aotleas gratta. All bUlifOTyfrnrlyadvarttamnMrta eaDi quartm-ly. 1 amporary aavarUaMDato .paid In advanoa. Job work aih oa d all vary. VOL. XXVIII. NO. 38. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JAN. 8, 189G. S1.00 PER ANNUM. F Japan cracked the Chinese nut, atvl now Russia wants to sot the kernel. "Go South, youug man," West, as reported ia the Times-IIcrnld. says the Chicago The Chicago Intor-Ooean in very much concerned because Chioago is eating 40,000 more sheep a mouth than it nsed to. There are some 15,000,000 pupils enrolled in the pnblio and private schools of the United States, mors than twenty-two per cent, of the entire population. . . i The costly experience of the people of Iowa in doaling with speoulatire building and loan associations prom ises to bring about tho enactment of adequate laws for the government of all associations, remarks the New York Tost. Sudden death has carried off two Ycry prominent figures in American literature recently- -Professor Boye sen and Eugene Field. They bad neither of them reached the age of fifty. Cut off in thoir prime, it is . sadly possible, muses the Chioago Times-Herald, that tboy loft their best work undone. A learned German asserts that the aversion against horse meat as an arti cle of diet is a senseless prejudioo basod wholly on an interdict issued by the churoh during the Dark Ages to prevent the revival of heathen wor ship, in which the sacrifice and subse quent consumption of horses had played a cherished role. Tho New York World maintains that horse flesh is clean, remarkably free from disease and contains more albumen than beef does. "Corned horse" smells and tastes like goose meat. In many Euro pean hospitals horse flesh soup is espe cially proscribed for patients in need of strengthening food. Mr. Labouohere says in London Truth: "Lord Salisbury is suffering from a severe attack of ultimatum upon the brain. Ilis condition is the cause of grave anxiety to every foreign Government. There are cow five British ultimatums out, addressed re spectively to Ashanti, Belgium, China, Turkey and Venezuela. The irre pressible anxiety displayed by foreign Governireuts, especially by the impe cunious Republics of Central and fcuuth Amerioa, to have British ulti matum presented to them is easily ex plained. The present val ue of a British ultimatum in tho autograph market is 2500." Rhode Island will join Pennsylvania in an effort to preserve the linos at the famous oamp ground of the Revolu tion, Valley Forge. Rhode Island has appropriated 82000 and provided a commission to erect a monument to the memory of John Waterman, a Rhode Islander, who died at Valley Forge during the encampment, and was buried within the lines. The grave is looated on the Piersol farm, now occupied by I. Heston Todd, about 500 yards east of Fort Hunting don and about 100 yards south of the road leading from Valley Forge to Port Kennedy. Governor Lippett, who is (Chairman of the commission, has written to Governor Hastings, of Pennsylvania, saying that the Rhode Island Commission will visit the place oou and desires to oo-operate with the Valley Forge Commission. President Scbnrman, of Cornell University, in presenting his annual report to the trustees of that institu tion, recommended a provision for the superannuation and pension of pro fessors in the university and the bet ter regulation of salaries. Conoern iog the questions of interoollegiate football and college atbletioa in gen eral the report says: "If the game of football cannot be redeemed from brutality and trickery, publio speo taole, and commercial speculation, it is certainly better that it should go and never return to plague us. But at present the faculty refuses to be lieve that the flower of American youth in different colleges and uni versities cannot, under proper regula tions, oome together like gentloiuen and play football in a spirit of fair and generous emulation. As intercol legiate athletics are to be tolerated only-when they do not interfere with tho work of students or do not dis tract institutions of learning from the purpose of their existent e, so, further more, they must not bo enoourageJ. Tbey should bo forbidden unless play era and managers recognize that fur above records and viutoiies, higher than aporta, higher even than physical culture, are self respect ami courtesy to otherr, gool manners and morale, snd that generous manliness which is the spirit of the avnateur aal the con science of the sportsinau. FOR HER SAKE, AH day loop, with sigh or song Toll I for her sake. 8h )b where the rose Ihrinp, I where thund- " break; From the recklom oity'a mart; Hut a rainbow's round my trnnrtl For I xlng: "The day will die Toll will soon he past, And the atnra lu Low's own sky Lend mn homo at Inst! Home, beneath the tranquil aklog, Where h walta with wistful eyes. "Homo! whore lovn Is kindest, boat, Whom tho hearth is bright; Home! sweetly on my breast Fall her curia of light! TIom! from all the world beguiled By the kiss or a child!" T. L. Stanton ia Chicago Timos-IIorald. UNCLE COTTLE'S WOOING. 'M going to get mar nod, Tim. Uncle Cottle sat very upright in his chair, and spoke with an air of invin cible decision. "What again?" drawled bis nephew, wearily. "Again, air? When was I married before ?" "But this isn't the first timo you've boon going to do it, unole ; that's what I moant," Tim explained.- "Do I know the favored lady?" "It's Miss Sybil Holt, Tim," said Uncle Cottle, confidentially. "The most lovely the the oh-h I I met her theothereveningatMr. Dynbam's bilvcr wedding party, and she--er quite seemed to take to me, I'm older than she is," he sighed, pensively, "but I look a good ten years younger than I am ; den't you think so?" Young Tim regarded him critically, without hazarding an opinion, lie was past middle age, and looked it; a full-bodied little gentleman, with short, dumpy legs and a bland, moon like face, whose prevailing expression was of imperturbable simplicity, "Have you proposed?" "Why, no j I've only scon her once. Besides," Unole Cottle sighed agaia, "I'm so shy.'you know, Tim so infer nally shy ! The only time I ever man aged to propose was when I wrote to that widow you remember,you helped me with the letter and she never ans wered. You didn't sav," he added, "whether you knew Miss Holt?" "I don't remember over to have met her.". "Ah? If you had, you couldn't for get her. She's an aunt you'll be proud of, my boy." "But she may not appreciate the honor of obtaining me for a nephew." "If she refuses me, Tim if I lose her as I've lost all tho others," cried Uncle Cottle, wildly, "1 shall think there's a curse on me, and I'll give in I'll never love again. I'll live and die single I" Young Tim hopefl he would. Uncle Cottlo had been his guardian ever since he was quite a boy, but since he oatne of age, some six yoars ago, he had rather reversed the position of affairs, and looked upon Unole Cottle with the joalous eye of a sole proprietor who didn't want anybody to meddle with his business. "I'm bis only relative," he com plained to his crony. Ted Merrows, as they sat at breakfast noxt morning in the chambers thoy tenanted in com mon. "What's his is mine. He's said so lots of times. If he gots married, though, his wife will expect at least half ; and if he has children there'll be no meat left on the bone for me I" 'They were both reading for the bar, but Ted Merrows put aside his paper for the moment, and placed all his in tellect at the service of his friend. "What's the use looking block about it? He's been going to marry often enough before " "But he's never seemed so deter mined as he is now. He's dyeing his hair and cultivating a figure." "GoneTso far as that I" exolaimod Ted. "Then I'm afraid nothing will stop him." "I shall try, anyhow," growled Tim. "If I can hit on auy thing better, I shall tull him I've found out she's en gaged. I've stopped him twice like that; he's so nervous and afraid of seeming presumptuous. That widow was the moat dangerous three months ago. I really thought I'd lost him that time. He was so bewitched, he was going to call at her house, only I persuaded him it wasn't etiquette, and that he ought to write first and dis close his sentiments, and ask permis sion to call. I undertook to post the letter ou my way home here to the Temple, and I put it in the fire. When he got no answer, he wished he hadn't written felt he had boon impertinent and she was oHeuded." "Suppose bo meets her and men tions it?" "He daren't ; I know him too well. He'd be bo ashamed and panio-strickon he'd run away at the sight of her." "Well, yon havo beon lucky so for. but it can't go ou like this forever," observed Ted Merrows. "Take my tip, and' mako hay while the sun shines," '. "How do you mean?" . . .-VYou.are old enoughto marry, and, as your uuoie s sole heir you a be a valuable Jurtiole iu the matrimonial market ; but if ho marries, you'll find yourself on the self among the damaged goods and remnants. Dispose of your self while you are still hoir and the fitting lord for an heiress. You can't stop the old mau marrying, but you can take care he doesu t spoil you by marrying Oral. "But I don't know anybody I" re inouatrated Tim. "How am I to find the heiress, get introduced and en gaged, and marry her out of baud in-" "You might find one through the matrimonial journals." "Nonsense I Heiresses don t adver tise." "Don't they? All heireseos are not in sooiety ; some of them want to get there, and they advertise. They wouldn't marry a gentleman with nothing, perhaps, unless they hap pened to be old and ugly, but they would be glad to snap tip a man like vou, moving in good sooiety, with a liberal allowance from your unole and hopeful prospects. -Then, if your uncle deserts you afterward, her money will keep the wolf from the door and save you from working your self to death. " Young Tim bad a morbid horror of poverty and overwork, and that story haunted him all day. It shone through his dismal forebodings like the moon through a mist; it seemed almost too Rood to be true. He dined alone that evening at a restaurant in the Strand ; and, passing a news agent's on his way back into the Temple, he noticed some matrimonial jonrnals in the win dow, and went in and bought one. He was somewhat relieved, on entering bis chambers, to find that Ted Mer rows was not yet at home. He opened the journal, and studied tho orowdod columns in private, and lighted at length on a business like advertise ment which impressed him favorably; I AUD, young, dark and good looking, with private Income., wishes to corre spond with middle-aged gentleman of means and position, with view to matrimony. Ref erences exchanged. Replies wero to be sent to a letter of the alphabet at the office of the paper. Tim was not middle-aged, but be oonsiddred that, if anything, that should tell in his favor. He read and reread the advertisement till from fueling tempted to answer it just to test the probability or Ted Merrows s story, he bogan to succumb to fresh fears for his future, and became anxious to answer it for his own sake. "There's no harm in writing," he argued. "If I change my mind or it doesn't seem good enough I can drop it." And while the Impulse was npon bim he wrote. He wrote vaguely of his income and said nothing of his age, bat craved an interview, ll no explained his precise position, he feared she might fancy it was too in secure to render bim eligible; but if he could see her, he flattered himself that the charm of his conversation ani personal presenoe would dazzle her and divert her attention from his less pronounced monetary qualifications. He signed his own name, "T. Cottle," beoause, if the negotiations oame to anything, it might shake her confi dence when he had to acknowledge that be had approached her under a false name ; at the same time, as she hadjvithheld her surname and address, he felt justified in requesting her to direct her reply, in the first instaooe, to the postoflloe in Bayswater Road, to be left till called for. "I can look in for it the next lime I go to soe unole," he reflected. "If it turns out a frost, I needn't tell Mer rows anything; he'd only grin about it. I'll get the letter off before ho gets in." And he ran out and poBtod, it at cnoe. He half regretted his impetuosity when he contemplated what he had done in the cold light of tho next morning. Nevertheless, a oouple of evenings later he journeyed to Bayswater and inquired at the Postoflloe for his let tor, but it hadn't arrived. So he walked on to see Uncle Cottle, but as his uncle was not at home, he told them to say that he had called, and wouldn't wait. His interest in his rash matrimonial project had ooo led considerably ; but going to see his unole on the following Saturday afternoon, ho inquired oasually at the Postoflloe again, and was not altoget her displeased that there was still no letter for him. He decided that his epistle had not creat ed a satisfactory impression, and that he should hear no more of it. Turning the oorner a little beyond the Postoflice, he was surprised to run into Unole Cottle, gorgeous in a new white waistcoat and with a flower in his buttonhole. "Tim, my boy," he ejaculated, "I've been expecting you daily. Sorry I was out when you called last I was out on particular business." "Oh I" Tim had dim premonitions of disas ter; be iuly upbraided himself for neglecting the affairs of Miss Holt. "Yes." Uncle Cottle winked his loft eye and smaoked bis nephew on the shoulder exuberantly. "1 was arranging to get married." "To Miss Holt?" faltered Tom. "No," laughed Uncle Cottle. "You'll never guess. It's the widow - Mrs. Notley. You remember, we wrote to her? She answered my letter that evening, au hour before you called." "But you saiJ," he stammered, "that if Misj Holt rejeoted you you'd know there was a curse on you, and--" "I haven't aakod Miss Holt -be sides, it's three months since I wrote to the widow, so, in any case, she has a sort of prior claim over the " "The other curse," suggested Tim, bitterly. "Here's her letter," said Unole Cot tle, disregarding his interpolation. "Bead it for yourself." He thrust the missive into Tim's hands, and be read it dazedly, as they walked on together. "Deab Bib If you care to call on me I shall be pleaded to see vol. 1 regret you did not give me your addrata, as 1 ahouid nave thought It Implied eituur a want oi confidence In me or candor iu yourself, bad It not been that we arealmoM neighbor, and 1 bad the pleasure of meHtlug you a lew uioutUa fjco, and I know vou by reputation. Pndr the circumstances you will appreciate mv preferring to send this to your private address, which I have taken from tho direa tory. Yours, truly, Macd Netlev." "That's all right, Tim, ain't it?" chnckled Uncle Cottle. Tim realized in a flash that this was his "Maud," and it was his letter she was answering, not his uncle's; but he could not ee.i his way to saying so. "What does she mean about your address?" he said. "Why, I was nervous when I wrote that letter, and I must have forgotten to put my address in ; that's why she didn't auswer before; she couldn't. And it's just occurred to her to look iu the directory. See? I meant to have asked her about it, but she was so nice and amiable and smiling, and I was so -so well, I hardly knjw how I was but there didn't seem any need to apologize, and, in fact, I never thought about it till I was coming away." . "is she yoang?" asked Tim, for the sake of saying something. "I thought at first she was nearly forty, but she's only twenty-nine -she told me so herself. I showed her my bank book and a list of my securities. "'Ob, that's all right,' she says laughing. " 'Then when's it to be?" says I. "And it's going to be next month." "Next "Month. I'm going around to the vioar's now to put up the banns you oome with me. And, I say I she's an orphan, so wo want yon, my boy age don't matter ; it's only a matter of form to be a father at the wedding, and give her away." Tim was gloomy and reckless, and said he would. Why shouldn't he? He had given away bis prospeots; he had given away bis uncle ; he might just as well do the thing thoroughly and give away the widow as well; then ho would have nothing and nobody left to keep but himself. Tit-Bits. Capable ot Littinz 100 Tons. League Island Navy Yard will soon have hoisting shears capable of lifting weight of 100 tons. Contractor John Tizard is now at work with a large force of men erecting these shears, which will be the largest in this oountry, with the single excep tion of those at the shipyard of the Maryland Steel Company, at Spar row a Point, near italtitnore, Aid., which landed the great Krupp 120-ton gun. lue enears at Lieague island are intended to handle heavy guns and machinery. The weight of theso shears is 110 tons, and the two front legs are 120 feet high, while the baok log is 140 feet long. Byjmeansof an immense screw, running horizontally through the base of the back leg, the tap of the shears can be moved back ward and forward forty-five feet out over the water, or twenty-five feet in ward from the edge of the wharf.- The sorew is sixty-eight feet long, eleven inches iu diameter and weighs fourteen tons. The shears stand on the Broad street wharf, each ot the front logs resting on an iron pedestal two feet by three feet, upon massive conorete foundations. A steel rope, 1 inches in diamnter, 1S00 feet longand weigh ing five tons, will be used for hoist ing. There are two separate engine, of fifty horse power eaoh. The shears were constructed by the Tacony Iron and Metal Company and the cost of the whole apparatus, including the machinery, will be between $38,000 and $40,000. Philadelphia Record. Wedded Eighty Year. Marriage does not seem to be a fail ure in Blaok Falls, Wis., in one fam ily at least. It has had a fair trial, too, for Louis and Amelia Darwin were married eighty years ago. And now, although the husband fis 107 years old and the wife 101, they are living happily together. Twelve children have been born to them, five of whom are living. For thirty years Grandma Darwin was 'totally blind. Strange and in credible as it may seem, in her ninety ninth year she recovered her second sight, and was able to distinguish her children. Yet during the peiiod of her blindness she performed her household duties without any assist ance. The old gentleman has been a re markable man. When he was 100 years old he oould danae a jig equal to a dancing master, but the pust four years be has gradually wasted away, until to-day he is but a shadow of his former self. The aged con pie are descendants from a race which, for many generations, was noted for re markable longevity. New York Press. Jioblo Walters. Henry Fleiaohmao, proprietor of the Vienna restaurant, oorner of Tenth street and Broadway, New York City, is quoted as saying that the kind of waiters he wanted were prinoes, bar ons and counts, "for thoy know how people should be waited on." Prince Rohan, ot Austrian-Hungary, who threw money around in Chicago with a prodigal hand a few years, was once in tho Vienna cafe, ami it is said he could fry eggs on both sides or wait on a table with skill. The priuon was quoted as often saying: "I can't be a god, I dou't waut to be a ruler, and that is the reason I remain a Rohan." Prince Rohan finally gave up his position as a waiter, returned home and committed euioide. Chicago Times-Herald. iirai I of Bent' Soses.' For many years the furrier have noticed that all the skins ot polar bears which they have received have beeu mutilated by tho loss bf the bOie. A Pariaian furrier hui discovered that this is a result of a superstitious belief among the K-ikimo that wherever a polar bear is killed his nose must be out off and thrown upon the ice or bad luok will follow the hunter. -New York Advertiser. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. German papers assert that gas pipes made of pnpor are a success. It has been discovered that it is pos sible to become intoxicated on gaso line. It is (aid that Tamango, the Italian tenor, bsa a collection ot butterflies valued at $20,000. Several clay tablets, covered with what are thought to be inscriptions, were unearthed in a Michigan mounl the other day. . Utah beet sugar manufacturers are going into cattle feeding on a large scale. Their bagasse makes a capital feed for cattle. The recent earthquake has stirred np all the gas wells in the natural gas belt, and given them increased pressure and a new lease of life. The village of Artena, near Rome, Italy, is said to be a "community of criminals. Its inhabitants perpetrate more crimes than any other known people, except, possibly, the Eurde. There are more than twenty species of fur-bearing animals known to in habit the Hudson Bay country, rang ing in size all the way from the meadow monse and Band rat to the caribou, musK ox, bison and polar bear. M. Pictet has discovered that four parts of carbonio acid and six pirts ot sulphurous acid combined to form a gas that will kill any microbe in the world, and penotrate into a book. It is called Pitet's gas, and is the greatest antiseptio known. M. Lagneau has ascertained that the military mortality per thousand is as follows in France and the French col onies: France 7, Algeria 11, Tunisia 12.20, Martinique 50, Cochin China 21, Tonkin 77, Madagascar 75, Sene gal 74, Guiana 237. Naturalist W. Victor Lehman, of Tremont, Penn., ha3 just sent to the Smithsonian Institution at Washing ton tho first fossil insect ever found in the Southern Pennsylvania coal field. The specimen was found in the coal mine and is a very rare one. The St. Lawrence River is subject to a mysterious tidal movement. It falls regularly for seven conseoutivo years, and then rises during a like period. The total difference of level is about five feet ThiB unexplained movement is demonstrated by the pilots and fishermen, who spend their lives on the river. A Curious Migration, A writer in the New England Maga zine presents the results of his per sonal investigation of a curious migra tion that has been going on for a few years past from tho Northwestern portion of the United States to Mani toba, Assinibnia, Alberta aod other portions of British Columbia lying north of the Dakotas and Montana. Acoording to S. A. Thompson, the writer of the article, a steady stream of emigration Irom the Northwestern portions of the United States to the wheat-growing regions of British Co lumbia mentioned has been notioeable for some time. In one place in Al berta he found a settlement containing a population of about ono thousand, ot whom seven hundred were from the United States. He discovered that the Canadian Paoifio Railroad Com pany was selling lnd in small tracts to hundreds of American families, and be found a record of no less than 513 homestead entries mado by settlers from the United States, representing 1552 persons. Mr. Thompson was curious to dis cover the motives which led these American farmers to loave their own country. Many individual reasons were given, but the maiu cause, as Mr. Thompson says, is to be found in the faot that the desirable publio lands have been exhausted by entries or gobbled up by the "great railroad mo nopolists in the United States. In British Columbia thero is almost an inexhaustible supply of farming land suitable for stock raising and grain oulture, to be had on terms quite as favorable as those extended to Ameri can settlers in their own oountry. Mr. Thompson suggests as a remedy for this emigration the reclamation of the vast arid region of the United States by irrigation. This would open up an immense region for settlement and in a climate more moderate than that of the Far North. San Francisco Chroniole. A Remark able Hallway. One of tho moat poculiar railways in Ameiica is the elevated railway across the Iathmus of Panama. The only steam used on tl Is remarkable railway is supplied by the brawny arms of half-nuked Indiaus, who, turning a handle, work tho machine like a rude velocipede. The car is something after the shape of the small baud-driven niacbiues used by navvies on our railways, and holds about three passengers, not including the native propellers, who have to walk while working. The position iu which the passengers are placed, it scaroely so comfortable as a seat in a Pullman car, affords at least a capital opportunity of studying the peculiari ties of the beautiful tropical scenery below, of hearing the morning call of the whistling gracbhopper, the screech ing of green paroquets, aud all the minstrelsy of the woods, with, it may be, the howl of an ocoaaioual baboon. A. collision on this line, however, and an abrupt descent into the mass of foliage beneath, might lead to a closer acquaintance thau desirable with spiders, centipedes and snakes, which abound in the vicinity of the railway. Remedy lor "Uaue iu the Throat." A raw egg, swallowed immediately, will generally carry a fish bone down th.at cannot be removed by the utmost exertion, and has got out of reach of reach of the saving finger. Courier-Journal. THE MERUY SIDE OF LIFE. 6T0RIK3 THAT ARE TOLT BT THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRE33. The Author and the Heiress A Seri ous Ailment Too Industrious in That lilne, K(c, Kto. Ho could nnt gnt the rich m.in' pot, He could not oven hope; But then he struck a job wiiitt luc:; Of writing adfl for soap. Lone now she weeps bncnuw. for keep" Ho's risen by fortune' fluke. Bo rich nnd high bo' wedded by The daughter of a Duk?. TOO INDD8TBI0U3 IX THAT trsri. Friend "Your son, 1 understand, has literary aspirations. Does ho write for money?" Father ( feelingly ) "U nceasingly . " THE CASE 13 ALTERED. "3ee the girl with the pug nose 1' "Hush ! She is worth fifteon mill ion dollars in her own right." "What a charming retrousee I" - Life. A 8EIUOT78 AILMENT. , Cawker "I sat np with a sick friend last night." Cumso "What ailed him?" Cawker "Ho lost ninety-three dol lars." Life. A PERFECT BIOHT TO. Sandford "Soy, Wheeler's pretty badly gone on MiBS Bloomer. . I just saw him putting a ring on her finger." Merton "What of it? A man has a right to ring his bicycle belle, hasn't he?"--Judge. NOT NATURAL. "I see that old Snaggs has had his portrait painted." "Yes, but it doesn't resemble him." "Why not?" "He tried to look pleasant," In dianapolis Sentinel. A MATTER OF ACCENT. Sapsmith "The first thing tho phrenologist said when he bogan to examine my owaninm was: 'What a head !' " Grimshaw "Are yon sure ho did not say : 'What, a head?' "Truth. HIS STATUS. Teller "In his speech last night, Colonel Windbagger, the prominent politician likened himself to one of the armor-plates on the Ship ot State." Grimnhaw "H'm I Ho would have been nearer correct if he had called himself a blow-hole in one of the armor-plates. " Puok. A PRACTICAL DOCTOR. Wife "Well, dootor, how is it with my husband ?" Doctor- "Fair to middling, so to speak ; he wants rest above all thingc 1 have written out a prescription for an opiate." Wife "And when must I give bim the medioine?" Doolor--"Him? The opiate is'for yon, madam." Hamburger Nacht richtcn. HER VOLUNTARY ACT. "You sign this deod of your own free will, do you, madam?" asked the notary publio. "What do you mean by that?" de manded the large, florid-fanud wo man. "I mean there has been no compul sion on the part of your husband, has there?" "Him I" she ejaculated, turning to look at the meek little man sitting be hind her. "I'd like to see him try to compulse me I" Chioago Tribune. JOHNNY WAN PROMPT. "Johnny," sharply called out Dea oon Ironside, "get np t It's 6 o'olock." Johnny came tumbling down the stairway in exactly three minutos, fully dressed. "You're improving," said tho Dea oon grimly- "This is the first Sunday morning I ever knew you to come down in less than an hour. I won't have to stand over yot with a club this time to got you ready for church." . "For churoh?" cchood Johnny. "I guess not. What are yon talkin' about, father? Hunkins Brothers' circus is goiu' to pass our house in about half an hour on their way out toJimtown. I was awfully afruid I'd miss seeiu' it. This ain't Sunday. It's Saturday." "Er I guess you're right, Johnny," feebly responded the good deacon, rubbing his chiu. Chicago Tribune. A BABY'S rECl'LIAR NAME. Tho happy parents of a new baby who livel iu Southern Indiana took their infant to church to be baptised. The baby wo Deiug raised "by hand," and where it went its bottle went also. After the arrival of the christening party at church au acci dent happened. The nozzle- of tho milk bottle came oil and the baby's nice new dress was soakod all down its long front. This uuuoyed tho parents, but nothing oould be done, as the time for the ordiuauoe had arrived. When the parents stood before the clergyman, the baby in its mother's arms, he looked at the damp dreas with a good deal of misppreheusiou, and to satiafy his cariosity tho mother whispered : "Nozzle came of!." The minister did not seem to under stand and turned ioquiriuijly to tho father, who said, a little more loudly : "Nozzle came off." The good man understood this time, or at least he thought be did. He took the baby in his arms, sprinkled its forehead with the baptismal water and solemnly said, before anybody could correct him: 'Nezzlecatneoff Snyder, 1 baptiao thee," etc, etc. -Judge, UNDOWERED. Thou hast not gold? Why this is col t All olusterlng rouu I thy forehead whltCj An 1 were It weights, nnd were it sold, I could not ny Its worth lo-al ,'h!! Thou hast not wit? Why, wlit Is this Wherewith thou captures mfiny a wlghtj Who doth forget a toniiu" Is hi. As I well-nigh forgot to-night? Norstation? Well, ah, well! I own Thou hnst no place nssurod thee iiitot So now I raise thoe to a throne;' Begiuthy reign my queen to-night. Boston Transcript. lll'MOtt OF THE DAT. Vliat is done cannot be undone es . peciallv if it is a hard-boiled egg.-j . Toxas Sittings. . u Maude "Did you ever notice bow f Algernon's face lights up whon ho talks?" George "Well I you know . he's lantern-jawed." Puck. The Old Man "Where are all my white shirts and collars nnd ties?" The New Woman "Why, John, this is the girls' afternoon to mako calls 1" Hostess- "It's but a poor lunch I can give von I But mv cook has got influenza 1" Enfant Terrible "Ob, mummy, yon always say that!" Punch. Landlord "I'll have to raiso your ront." Tenant "For what?" Land' lord "They've chauged the naruo of this street, and it is now au avonuc." Tit-Bits. Old Bullion "What! You wiah to marry my danghtor? Sho is a mero sohoolgirl yet." Suitor "Yes. sir. In . came early to avoid tho rush." NjS York Weekly. , ' fy. ' I knew a very wiso .tam, who be- . lievod that if a man wero permitted to do all tho buying, ho need not cora ' who should do tho shopping for bis family. Boston Transcript. Caller "And tliia is the new baby?" Fond Motbor-t-"ln't he splondid?" Caller "Yes, indood." Fond Mother "And so bright. See how intelli gently he breathes I" Tit-Bita, How often Dame Fortune looks on us aslant, , We think of this life but to rue it, With Its women who want to be votors and can't, ' " And the swells who cm vote aud won't do It. V ilODU --wiffgios says ue pays u thev were first married. a out "He has to. Her wonoy was left bo she oan only draw tho iuterost." Town Topics. Freshman (severely) "Waiter, how did that hair got into the soup?" Waiter "That must be from your mustache" Freshman (fluttered) "Ah yes, Charley, you ore right, i-x- cuse me."---Fliegendo Blaetter. . Judge "And now, my good man, what made you kias this lady?" Cun ning Culprit "Your Honor, my in herited love of beauty.". Miss: Fasseo "Judge er I do not think I'll proseouto any further." Syracuse Post. . Miss Kostique "Do you know whon I see you looking so happy it reminds me of what a great poot ouco said." Cholly Saphcad "Indeed I Pway, what was it?' Miss K "Where ignoranao is bliss." Phila delphia Record. The Son-in-lnw (gratofully) "I don't know what I should have dono if you hadn't given us all this furni ture." The Fiithor-in-luw "That's so, my boy ; without it my daughter couldn't have given yon muoh of a 1 Van, Vk 1Tr..l,l Mrs. Hammond "now do you liko your new oook?" Mrs. Haahcroft--"She ain't near as good as the other- one. Sbe has too good a temper. I nsed to make the other one mad every morning, and sho would pound tho steak to boat the baud." -Indianapolis Journal. Conl agio n Currlc l by Letter. A physician in a country village hai lately given to his medical brethren soma additional instances of the ways iu which contagions are spread, which should make us all thoughtful. The only casu of scarlet fever ever lost by this doctor was one iu which the dis ease was communicated by a letter written by a mother (in whose family there were two casts of the fever) to a friend 100 miles away. The cnvelopo ot the letter was given to a child as a plaything. Another severe case of the fover was contracted by a little girl from two pluytuates who had what tho. dootor callod "scarlet rush," and still another was carried to a family by a carpenter who lived eight miles away, aud whoso little children wore ailing with scarletina, a disease that the at tending physiciau informed the futher ' was not nearly ns catching ns scarlet ' fever." Kansas City (XIo. ) Journal. . Paper Uuderweur. Tho rapierzeituug reports that paper underwear, Buch as was worn by the Japanese troops during thuit wiuter campaign, gives ample protec tion against cold, but ia ubsulutely worthless duriug hot weuthor. Tho samo toohnicul journal inserts, that i r.,- i... t;-.,. ,...! cites a case in which au attack of aeuto. rheumatism waa cured by tiriuly glue ing a piece of paper ou the utl'ectod part and leaving it attached thero for several da vs. The Luster Slieep.' An Australian breeder ot initiated tho Luster sheep. One of his boat Merino ewes dropped iu biiecesaiou several lambs having wool extremely line iu fiber, uncommonly lustrous, but de void of crimp, from these ho es tablished a flock an I line I the type of sheep, so there now occurs im rever sion. The wool is exceedingly valu able, being purchased by l'roueh manufacturers and worked up into tho Pneat cloth. Farm, Field uud Fireside.