Tiie Forest Republican la published every Wodnniday, by J. E. WENK. Office in Smearbaugh & Co.'s Building ELM 8T11EET, TIONESTA, TA. Tcrmf, - 8 i.tio Per Yortr. No subscription roeolvod for a ihortor period than threo months. Correspondence sollelio I from nil part of the country. No nolle will be taken of naonymous ooinuiunicitions. RATES OF ADVERTISING! One Square, one Inch, one insertion. .1 1 00 One Hijtinre, one inch, one month. . , 8 00 One Square, one inch, three months. . ft 00 One Hcpiare, one inch, one year..,,, 10 CI Two Squares, one year 15 00 Quarter Column, one year, ,,,, 30 00 Half Column, one year,., .VI 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents per line each insertion. Marriages and deith notices gratis. All billsfor yearly advertisements collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advanoe. Job work cash on delivery. HOR EPUBLICAN. VOL. XXIX. NO. 17. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12, 189G. S1.00 PER ANNUM. IR JEST Of every 1000 Europeans. 202 art Russian?, 130 Germans, 116 Austrians, 107 French, 100 English, 84 Italians, 49 Spanish, 17 Belgians, oto. The investment in good roads made by Stnton Island will pay for itsoll many times over in a vary few years, predicts the Now York Bun. Tha population is already increasing rapidly, Li Hang Chang is said to have been greatly impressed by bis interview with Bismarck, particularly with the ox Chancellor's suggestion that the best way to reform and np-bnild China would be upon tho basis of an army, even if it comprised no more than CO, 000 men. This shows up well for American liberality, Dr. Wolf, of tho Univer sity of Heidelberg, triod in vain to raiso sufficient funds to buy a new photographio telescope for the insti tution. MissLorillard Bruce got over the difficulty by presenting a new in strument, which is siid 4o be even larger thnn that which she prcsoutod to Harvard. If Schopeuhnuer were living ho would bo delighted to find that whilo Hegel, tho supremo object of his con tempt, is falling into oblivion in Gor man y, his idol, Kant, is coming more and ruoro to tho front. Not only has tho Berlin Academy of Sciences de oided to issue a new, complete edition of his works, but a now periodical de voted to Kautistn is to bo brought out, Professor Vaihinger being tho editor. Speaking at a meeting in London in support of the unity of the English speaking world, Sir Waltor Besant, tho woll-known novelist, dcolarod that ho did not believe that Canada, Australia, and tho other great colonies would continue tho fiction of depeudenco upon Great Britain for any groat length of time. They will go their way with the best wishes of Englishmen and be come republics with the friendliest feelings toward England. Tbe publio school children have adopted tho following "State flowers" for thoir respective commonwealths: Alabama, Nebraska and Orogon, the golden rod ; Colorado, the columbine ; Delaware, the peach blossom ; Idaho, tho syriugai, Jcwa and Now York, tho roso; Maine, the piue cone and tassol; Minnosota, the cypripodium or moo Basin flower; Moutana, tho bitter root; North Dakota, the wild rose; Utah, the logo lily, and Vermont, the red clover. In addition, Rhode Island aud Wisconsin havo adopted a State tree, the maple having been selected by both. The gross blundors about the United States and its peopio, onoe so common in even tho best informed English newspapers, are rarely mot with now adays. Once in awhile we hear some thing about the "State of Albany," and occasionally that, tho Indian savages threaten Chicago, but as a rule English editors avoid sori ous errors, though they sometimes make laughable ones. Of this latter charaoter is the follow ing, which the Chicago Times-Herald clips from the Westminster Gazette. It certainly ought to have a startling effect wherever it is read: "One of tho most curious colonies that have ever been established on the American Continent is, we learn from the Lon don American, about to settle in North Dakota. It is a colony of drunkards. Twenty-one drunkards and their families are about to move from Indiana to take up their abode upon the virgin soil of North Dakota. They say they will establish a 'modal drunkard colony.' Already they have purchased 2000 acres of land, and each family will rcoeive an allotment of about fifty acres. The colony will be watched with much interest. It be gins operations this month. Very likely all tho colonists will want to start saloons, and tho question arises, who will be ready to till the soil?" Wo fancy, comments the Times-Herald, we can see John Bull elevating his eyebrows at this paragraph and exclaiming: "What a very remarkable people 1" The joke, if there is one in this amusing mistake, is on our es teemed fellow citizens, the Dunkards, who are neither tipplers nor drinkers, and look not upon tho wino when it is red. A colony of Dunkards from Indiana hove recently established themselves in North Dakota, a fuot that was stated in the Times-Herald a mouth or two ugo. It was the mis reading of this piece of news by our English contemporary that made them out a "colony of tipplers." They are, iu fact, a religious sect of German ori gin and are nicknamed Duukera oi Tunkers "dippers" because of theii mycio of baptism. They call then ' clves "The .ISrethMU-'t A BONO OF LOVE. Tbe earth below, and the heaven abovoi Let us live, my dears let us live and lovoj We know not all that the blue skins moan, Hut the beautiful lilies loll and lon.ni And hero Is the sunshine, and moadows of frreon, And rivers with sllvory ripples betweou: The oarth below, and tho heaven above: Let us live, my doari lot us live and lovol The earth below, find the heaven nbovoi Lot us live, my dear, for a breath of lovoj Wo know not tho moaning of stars and skies We only see hoaven In Love's glad oyesi We give him our sorrow our songs and our signs, And a red rose is born for each red ro90 that dios! Oh, tho earth bolow, and tho heaven nbove! Let ns llvo, my doar; lot us live and lovol Lot us live, my dear, In the lonoly lands, " For a kiss, a tear and a clasp of hands; For whatever blessings a soul may. miss, There is nothing in heaven as sweet as this Love's kiss, Lovo's lingering, first sweet kiss With tho earth below and the heaven abore! And a Ufa, my doar, that Is lived for lovol F. L. Stuuton. THE TRAMP, LL health, com bined with fated oircurast a n o e s, placed Wil 1 i n ni and Mary Churl. ton upon the hands of charity. Now charity in some places is not by a good deal what it is in other?. Ho William, who nad seen "better days," who had culti vated a'manly do' gree of iodepen donee, for the love of it, would have died a n d he did see his lovoly Mary die, and he fol lowed hor the same day rather than petition his proud and wealthy neighbors, when he Know that they were aware of his helplessness, yet kept baok thoir alms, waiting, not an opportunity, but a solicitation, to do good. Henry, their only son, oged twolvo, brought np as he had been, acous- tomed to little and ezpeotant of less, how did he know "pap" and "mam" were dying? He had always been accustomed to that pinched, cadaverous look ; he had often held his mothor s thin hand bo tween his eyes and the fire, and seen her thin, bony ringers turned to threads of jelly, end her hands were always cold. But he had nover scon such wild ox pressions upon bis pnronts' faces as that evening when he came home from fishing, with his bass "for mam," which bis mother would never need One was before the iiroplaoe on the floor, the other on what passed for a bed ; their eyos were staring blankly, cold and clammy ; their lips were apart, and when Henry spoke they did not answer. He knew nothing of death, save that he had seen poor Leo, '.the dog, hanged to save even what the poor dog ate ; and now they locked like Leo did. Foor boy I his heart knew no grief ; he knew nothing but poverty, misery, hunger and toil, liorn to his con dition, irresponsible for his existence, never yet awakened to the rcsponsi bilities of entity oh, what experi ences, bitter to the dregs of bitter ness, awaited this child of misfortune 1 'Twas better that ho did not realize it all. "I'll toll Squire Johnson ; I b'lieve they are 'swung' like Leo was," he said to himself, as he started toward their two-milesoff, though nearest neighbor. He, as children ofttimes do, had substituted the cause for the efleot, Knowing that poor Leo had been hanged, and now seeing them still. cold and silent, he reasoned as he did. "Squire, they are swung pap is, and "Now, boy, none of your simpering impudenoe I II you want anything, tell that; if not, go on home I . "I say, squire, they are 'swung,' like Leo was, and I can't make 'em talk, or wake 'em up ; they are cold, and their eyes are opon, and "They are dead, then," said little Thomas Johnson. Squire Johnson, moved more by curiosity than by pity, mounted his horse and rode down to William Charl ton's, rinding the lad's story only too true. This, then, was tho mute appeal of the dead to charity, .these people must be buried. The squire notified some of his poor noighbors to attend to the alluir, and he d foot the bill. and said : "This boy, Henry, may stay with my gardener for a few days, and then he must hunt work. And this is the cry of the tramp, "I am hunting work," and proud, rioh Squire Johnson put this cry iuto the mouth of Henry Charlton and started him out a tramp. It was autumn, and the approach of winter had already been heralded by his white errand boys tho hoar-frosts of the middle latitudes. Night had passed ; another clear, crisp, frosty morning had dawnod up on the sons of men, ushering in an other glorious day, fraught to some with dazzling delight and unfeigned happiness ; to others, with only black despair, disappointment and death, From beside a hay stuck, whose friendly shelter he had sought the evening before, to break the chilly air and to preveut the frost from gather isg upuu hi body, crept the wasted mm. form of a young man just in the first blush of blooming manhood, so far as age was concerned; but the wan cheek, pallid brow and cadaverous look, be spoke that all the eloments of man hood were wanting in that hollow frame. Had his past life, from early boy hood, been such as to have given na ture but half a ohanoe, the vigor of both body and mind would have chal lenged tho admiration and won the re spect of his fellow-beings. But Henry Charlton had enjoyed none of those favorable circumstances oonduoive to a vigorous growth either of body or mind. He had "hunted work, and faith fully, too, ever since Squire Johnson bad startod him out a tramp. After his few days stay at the gar dener's, that worthy informed him that ho muBt "hunt some employ ment," Whither was he toco? His weak looks and attenuated form wore a bar rier to his being employed. "lou can t stand it to work, they said. So it was, day after day, the poor boy had trudged along, traveling miles and miles, kicked and cuffed, receiv ing harsh words and soornful looks everywhere. He stepped out from the haystack, looked toward tbe town in an unde cided way, for he had begged at every houso on tbe previous evening, re ceiving only a few cold buckwheat cakes, from an old colored woman. As if involuntarirly, he started toward the houso of the farmer, by whose staok he had passed the night. "I can chop wood, or husk enough oorn," he thought, "to pay for broak- fast. "What is it?" said Farmer Mild- man, "Want to chop wood, oh? Well, yes, some of your stripe asked to do that same thing, one morning last week, and whon 1 went into my breakfast, ho ran oil with my axe." "Oj, let a starving man do some thing for his food I" said Henry. Farmer Suleiman was moved by the sad, pathetic pleading, and being thus moved, turned the stream of Henry's life into smoother channels forever. "John, bring thia man a basin of water, soap and towel. Oome into the poroh, I will try you. I will give you something to eat, and plenty to do." There was a vein of kindness in tho farmer's tone, which almost made Henry think he was dreaming one of those haunting dreams whioh only those subjected to great hunger dream. "When did you havo as muoh as you could eat, young man? You must be careful for a few days." The smoking "fatty ponos' and seething sanges, with other substan tial, so bountiful on the farmer's board, did seem, indeed, to justify his caution to the half famished wretch. Henry soon inoreased in health and spirits, as muoh from the farmer's kindness as from being bountifully fed. His father had successfully im planted in his youthful mind the prin ciple of doing thoroughly whatsoever he undertook. So Honry pleased the farmer by his willingness and thor oughness in his work. It is needless to trace his progress in the farmer's favor ; sullioe it to say that he was soon the trusted foreman on the large stook and grain farm of Jacob Mildman. "She is very seriously hurt, sir indeed you may prepare for tho worst. These were the words of the doctor, pronounoed over the still, deathlike body of Belle Mildman, who had boen galloping over the fields, when her red nubia, flopping in the breeze, had attraoted the attention of one of her father's fine Durhams, whioh pitched suddenly at hor horse from out a dense thioket. 0?he horse, coming to such a sudden halt, threw Miss Belle over his head int the very horns of the enraged bull. C'.'nis served as a taunt to the enraged bcist, which now rushed madly upon her, pawing and stamping her lithe form into the yielding soil. Young Charlton, who was passing near by, flew to Belle's rescue, wheu the animal pitched at him so unex pectedly that ho was terribly gored before his trusty revolver had done its work. Poor Charlton was now unable to walk, muoh less take care of uncon scious Belle ; but the field hands in an adjoining inolosure, being attracted by the firing, came and bore the in jured persons to the house. Miss Belle was so horribly tramped that she died, and Henry came near following her; but nature, aided by the best nursing, combined with the best medical skill in the State (for Mr. Mildman spared no expense for him who had risked his lifo for that of Belle, triumphed, and after six weary weeks thoy announced that he would live. But Jacob Mildman did not long survive his daughter--the shock was too much for his naturally weak con stitutionand he, the last of the name, soon went to meet his daughter and her angel mother. But before he died he did not forgot nenry. In his will, after a fow niiuor bequests to servants, Henry was made the prinoipal heir. When fully convalescent, after spending a fow years iu Europe, Henry came back to Mildman homestead : and thinking how best to invest his accumulative surplus, he resolved to found an asylum for those who were truly "hunting work. This he did, and one day, while rid ing in his 'carriage, just approaching the asylum grounds, be met a poor, blind bnsket-makor, led by a niece, a lass small, though about nineteen years of age. , SoiutHkiiiK in tho girl's laoe eeouied familiar, and sho looked so prottyjwith al, that he instantly warmed toward them, resolving not to take them to the asylum, but to his own house at least for a time. "Do you wish to sell your baskets?" ho said, by way of opening the con versation. "Oh, sir, if wo only could soil one! Poor Uncle Jonas has had nothing to eat since yesterday evening, and 1 am so tired of being ordered away from people's doors!" "Uncle Jonas 1" thought Henry. "It must be Delia. " Follow experionoes, as well as fellow fcoliugs, make us wondrous kind, though Henry was kind by nature. "I'll buy all of your willow," he said. "Come, got in hero, you and your uncle. I'll feed you, and you ' need never wander any more." Half dizzy with joy, the dull, heavy oyes of the maiden sparkled with de light as sho whispered a few hasty words to tho old man, who nodded assent. Two years later, Henry Charlton mode his way, ono bright, frosty morning, down to the milkyard, when Delia Lester, now a symmetrical beauty, was superintending the milk ing. "Delia, I am tho little Henry who used to play with you and your brother Tom in Squire Johnson's hill orchard, away down in Virginia. You have never suspected that I was that Henry, but Unole Jonas and I have talked the matter over. I oven knew yon were my own Delia two years ago, when I brought yon here." She blushed when ho said "my Delia," but was too confused to speak. He went on : "Yoa know Tom used to play preacher, and marry us beggar chil dren. Delia, will you act your part over again in real earnest?" That was a year ago. Now little Jacob Mildman Charlton sits in a nice basket crib, and is watched and rocked by good old Unole Jonas, and never is a tramp turned away from that house nnited. Mrs. Delia Charlton pays frequent visits to the Mildman Asylum, and all the inmates seem to know her cheerful step, while they are always bettor for her coming. Saturday Night. "Bnrlsal Ouug." Travelers in passing through thft delta of the Ganges, India, have occa sionally heard dull, subdued sounds, not nnlike the reverberation of dis tant artillery. As these sounds havo been heard when it was positively known that no artillery praotioe was being carried out, this mysterious phenomenon, which is known as the "Barisal guns, has given rise to much curiosity and speculation. A similar phenomenon occurs in two different countries in Europe, regarding which, in a letter upon the subject to Profes sor G. H. Darwin, M. Van der Broeck, conservator of tbe Museum of Natural History, of Belgium, writes : "I have constantly noticod these sounds in the plain of Limburg since 1880, and my colloague of the geologi cal survey, M. Rutot, has heard them very frequently along tho Belgian ooast, where our sailors call them 'mist pouffers, or fog dissipators. "The keeper of the lighthouse at Ostend has heard these noises for sev eral years past ; they are known near Boulogne, and the late M. Houzeau speko of them to my friend M. Lan caster. More than ten of my personal acquaintances havo observed the fact. "The detonations are dull and dis tant, and are repeatod a dozen times or more at irregular intervals. They are usually heard in the daytime when the sky is clear, and especially toward evening after a very hot day. The noise does not at all resemble artillory, blasting in mines, or the growling of distant thunder." M, Van der Broeck attributes these noises to "some peculiar discharge of atmospherio eleotrioity." M. Butot thinks they are "internal to the earth," and might be caused by "the shock which the internal fluid mass might givo to tho earth's crust." Similar unexplained noises havo been heard among the Dartmoor Hills, England, and in Scotland. A Bog lights a Bee. A swarm of bees caused considorablb exoitement among pedestrians over in Jaraacia last Friday. It was a big swarm and alighted in a big tree near the Long Island Railroad depot. After buzzing about for awhile they settled, but a big bulldog, ownod by one of the residents in tho neighborhood, happened along, and one of the inno cent honeymakurs, who was evidently in a bad temper, flew into the canine's direction and alighted on the brute's back. A lively but short scene thou followed. The way that dog jumped and tumbled about the gronud as the bee continued to sting made peopio suppose that ho had gone mad. Tho dog finally succeeded in locating the troublesome insect, but the tussol had made tho latter so furious that ho con tinued to bite long after there was not enough left for even a coroner to rco ognizo. New York Recorder. Credit to the Wrong Shooter, Ex-Governor Flower wont down to Creedmoor ono day to seo the boys shoot. He was persuadod to try bis own skill as a inurksiuun, and aimed at the distant target. There was a commotion m tho gravel fifty yards away, but "bull's-eye I" was called. The Governor tried again, and again the flyiug gravel iu thu foreground and the cry of "bull's-eye" iu the dis tance. After a few such successes the Governor handed tho rifle to a young lu.ly and she fired, with the same re sult, wheroupoa bomo one was heard calling to tha man who examines the targets: "What's tho mutter with you? The Governor ain't tiring new I" J udije. a fifty mile slide A CALIFORNIA WATER T0B03OAN ' THAT BEATS THE WORLD. I Passengers In a V-Shnpcl Boat Make tho Trip on a Trestle In About l'"our Hours. 7T FRESNO (Col.) letter to the Chioago Tribune says : What vy would the peopio in the T Northern States, who find'de light in Coasting hills a quarter mile long, or who go into ecstacy at shoot ing down a toboggan slide, say to a ride a la toboggan down a slide fifty miles long? There are soveral places in California where aiich an experi ence may be had. The ride is not only an uninterrupted constant slide for fotty or fifty miles from start to fin ish, but it is as thrilling, risky and rapid as any one might wish. Think of riding in small craft in a great trough from thirty to 100 feet in tho air from a lofty mountain crest down through forest, across oanons, around precipices and crags, over cattle ranches, orohards and vineyards, aud amid very pioturesque scenery 1 Con sider the fascination of traveling in four hours down a watery toboggan slide from the snow-olad and icy peaks of the tallest Sierras to a valley as balmy as a May morning, and amid vegetation as fresh and luxuriant as in midsummer. Nowhere in the broad world may such an experience be du plicated. Flumes by which cut lumber or logs may be floated from the forests primeval and the sawmills on the spurs of the Sierra Nevada range down to the valley below are common on this ooast from San Diego Ito 'Van couver. They are built upon huge trestles and vary in height from ten to 100 feet, depending upon the level of the country traversed. All the flumes ore V-shaped, and the water flowing through is a yard deep at the deepest part. When in operation the flume is gorged for a week at a time with lumber, whioh is fished out at the valley term inus of the' flume and sorted and piled ready for use. The longest flume is in Northern California. It is sixty-fonr miles long, and cost 8-130,-000 where lumber is cheap. A new lumber flume was recently finished in Fresno County. It leads from the im mense pine forests on the mountains, 7000 feet above sea level, down to tha San Joaquin Valley, at the little town of Collis, near Fresno. In other words, the flume starts amid the perpetual snows and ice of the Sierra and term inates amid raisin vineyards and ap ricot orchards of the semitropio San Joaquin. Stephenson Creek, in tho mountains, supplies tho flume with water. The flume boats in which the rapid journeys are made down the flumes are simple. They are made the shape of the V-boxes of the flumes. Tho upper ends of the boats are closed by a board nailed across, but left open to lot out the water when it splashes over the sides of the boats. Short boards are laid across for seats, depending npon how many porsons are to make the journey. A carpenter can make one of these boats in half an hour. The boat is meant for only one jour ney. None is ever hauled back for an other voyage. Half a dollar will buy enough lum ber for tbe boat, and a man is a poor carpenter indeed who cannot make his own vessel The trip is mode with little danger at Ioast in this Fresno County flume. The prinoipal trouble is that when once started there are comparatively few places where one can stop. The current is generally so rapid that it makes landing impossi ble, and the voyager can only sit still and let tho boat run. Fastidious Pike. An Englishman is in straits beoanse the young ducks are all being caught and eaten in a loch at Pitgevcny, Elgin. Ho writes to the London Field : "I am just broken-hearted beoauso the pike aro eating all" my young ducks. " We shoot them, catch them, and kill them all tho year around by fair means and foul, three or four every day, and some have young ducks in them. Iu one was a young black headed gull, a young duck, and the toes aud skull of another; in an other were two small ducks and two small coots. Thero are thousands of young coots cn the locb, but the brutes of pike prefer tho ducks." Fish are notorious eaters of ducks, and what is tho Englishman's misfor tune has been tho luck of many a fisherman for bass, pickerel and trout. A live young bird tied to a hook, not impalod, cast gently on a still water of an Adirondack stream, has raised mauy a trout "us big as hand saws," aud resulted in the death of a tew, but the boys who used birds as bait aro not usually skillful enough to land the big ones. A small bird is as good as a young field mouse for trout bait, and that is saying a good deal, as any woodsman will admit. Ill-Used Horso Kills Himself. Hundreds of employes in the yards of the AuiericauStoel Barge Company, at Superior, Wis., witnessed a singu lar occurrence. A bony, played-out old bay horse walked iuto the shallow water iu the slip kuowu as Howard's Pocket, aud tlowly moved father out iuto the deep water, uumiudful of tho shouts aud missiles of the spectators ou tho shore. When iu ubout throe feet of water tho poor animal cast ono wistful look aiouud, then deliberately put his head under water aud held it there until liie was extinct. Ju a short time after this the owner, a ped dler, appeared upou the seeuo aud al most committed ,suirilu himself w hen he learned of the astonishing deed of his four-footed servant. Tho lior.-, it is sai J, bad beu poorly le I en I overworked, Chita u Tims-.Uu'aid. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE STORIES THAT ARB TOLD BY THE FUNNT MEN OF THE PRESS, Lost In the Shuffle In a Bicycle Shop Ills Kxact State or Health Ihe Instalment Plan, Etc., Etc. Up from tho cradle came a wail, At first n pensive coo, Into a wolrii, vociferous wall Of mournfulness it grew. His sorrow, in a vein prolix, Ho struggled to reveal, "My fathor's talking polities; And mothor rides n wheel. They sny I'm cross, I'm simply sad At belli? sllglitod o. I wish tho baby-carriage fad Could somehow get a show, Bow can yon blame one in my fix For setting up a squeal? My father's talking polities. And mother rides a wheel." Washington Star. rs a nicicLB shop. "Where's your repair department?" "What's the matter with your wheel ?" "Wheel's all right. Matter's with me," HIS EXACT STATE OP HEALTH. Mamma "Don't you feel well enough to go to school?" Bobbio "No, mamma; I just feel well enough to ride my bicycle." Harper's Bazar. TAB INSTALMENT PLAN. "Now, I'm engaged at last ; it took Mr. Carrington threo nights to pro pose." "Is he so bashful?" "Not at all; ho stutters." Chicago Record. OVERSTOCKED. "Is there much poetry sent in to the editor?" the caller asked of the office boy. "Poetry?" replied that intelligent young man. "The editor has poetry to burn." Omaha Boe. rrrr HIM. Great drops of perspiration stood on tho young man's brow. "J havo it!" he exolairaed sudden ly, as a way out of his perplexity seemed to open before him. "But not" he added despairingly a moment later. "That will not do, either I" He rose and walked io tho window. The gay, thoughtless multitudo passing and repassing outside, intent upon its own pleasures and oblivious of the suffering, the headache and tho desolation that blight so many human lives, seemed morely to mock his mis ery and deepen the gloom that per vaded the apartment. He turned away from the window with a groan, threw himself into a chair, learned wearily on the little table in front of him, and buried his face in his hands. "I cannot ! Oh, I cannot I" ho mar mured in a broken voice. "I givo it up I" lie was a campaign poot, trying to find a rhyme for "McKinloy and Uobart." Chicago Tribune. now iia KNEW TIIE TIMS. Patrick was lying in bed in a hos pital. He had been brought in a fow days before after a severe fall from tho top story of a building on which he had been working. With all his suf fering ho never lost his cheorful spirits, and livened up many of the other patients with his bright remarks and short stories. Tho doctor hap pened along, and asked him how ho felt, "Fairly well, doctor; this right le,-; of moine is a very ungrateful spalpeen consitherin' that it wuz only broke in wan place whin it moight have boen smashed in a dozen." "How did you fall, Patrick?" I asked. "Did you lose your head?" "Faith, no; sure it was me footin' oi lost." "What time did it hippen 1" "Well, oi wuzn't so sure before I fell, but I wuz thinkiu' comiu' down thit it wuz near dinner hour, an' oi wua convinoed of that same as oi passed the second story, for oi saw the people in there atiu' dinner." Har per's Round Table. MODEST REOTTEST. "I don't ask you to remove your hat, miss," plaintively spoke the little man iu the seat behind her, "but if you will kindly refrain from wabbling your head I will take it as a favor. I am used to tho high hat, but I am not accustomed to the wabble, and it con fuses me and obstructs my view of the gentleman in the orohestra who per forms on tbe kettle drum." "Sir!" "Thank you, miss, I don't mind Uie high hat, but I oonfess the wabble did bother me a little. Ever so much obliged. I can see him quite distinctly now." . "Sir, I -" "I beg you won't apologize, miss. It was entirely iuadvertout ou your part, I am sure, and " "If you say another word I'll call the usher." "Bless you, miss, that will not bo noccssary I I am acquainted with all the ushers. Any of them would be glad to oblige me by askiug the gentleman who operates thu kettle drum to move a little to tho right, so as to give mo a better view of him, but I can see him with perfect ease, now, thanks tc your having quit " "Usher I" "I'll cull him for you, miss. Here, Jerry I" "X am entirely capable of calling him, sir I lam going to atk him tJ bring the mauager of the hall !" "I assure you, miss, that will not be necessary, either. The manager is my sou-iu-law. He will merely instruct tho usher to ah, thanks!" For the young woman, trembling with iudiguutiuu, had removed the hut. Chicago Tribune. CAIfOH SOHO. Past laughing btook and pebbled stream. That lenp from mead and maplo crest Upon the wave's matcrnnl brenst Where shadow-children lie and dream, My paddle wakes, upon the lake's Calm face, the phantom of a smilo Thnt ripples back upon the track My bark hath fallowed for a mile. The paddlo keeps a rhythmic sweep Where wntcr-ltllos lie asloep, And reeds are bent with morrlmont Upon the zephyr's tale intent. By maple hollow, lane and wood. And June's flofd-ilowor sisterhood. Tho sun has set, and moon hath met" The twilight's kisses manlfoldj And in tho West the day doth rest Ou purple pillows fringed with gold. Past taporiug flrs, where stars seem swung Like ghosts of fairy lanterns hung. Charles Gordon Rogers, in Outing. nUlIOR OF THE DAY. ne "Miss Edgerton reminds mo of a delicate piece of china." She ' 'Hand-painted ?" Detroit Free PresB. Ella "Did Fred propose last night?" Stella "I really don't know; I fell asleep about 1 o'clock." Town Topics. "Did he look like a bicyclist?" "Oh, dear, know; not in the least. Why, he could stand up straight with iio perceptible effort." Chicago Post. "What a heap of style Jimmie Wat son's wife throws on." "Ob, yes: Jimmie started a bicycle repair shop last week." Cleveland Plain Dealer. When tho government runs the railroad lines And woman tno nffairs of state, The trains that went nt 5 o'clock She'll mark down to 4.68. "Half a loaf is better than none," remarked the clerk, when he learned he was to get only ono weok's vacation instead of tha two he had counted up- 30. Bacon "What's that tcrriblo noise overhead?" Egbert "That's the man iu tho flat upstairs trying to keep the baby quiet so his wifo can got a littlo ileep." She "Is it not a love match. Both are wealthy and their families have arranged the marriage." He "I see ; t golden wedding fifty years ahead of time." She "Do yon know anything worse ban a man taking a kiss without ask ing for it?" He"I do." "What, for instance?" "Asking for it without taking it." Luoy "Mamma, may I go over thore to the bridgo?" Mamma "Why io you want to go ovor there, dear?" Luoy "Oh, just to gargle my feet in the brook." Sho "Did you hear if it was any improvement to Jennio See's health linco sho began to tide a wheel ?" He "I learn that sho is falling off rapid ly." Buffalo Times. It is not the propor thing to say that a man will make a good husband. It is the wife who makes the good hus band. The bad ones ouly are the self made article. Boston Transcript. "Wo canuot find a place to go this summer." "What's the trouble?" "We want a summer resort from which wo won't have to writo home that we jlccp under blankots." Chicago Rec ord. Hoax "I stood on ono foot all the way home in a crowded car last night." Joax "What was the matter with your other foot?" Hoax "Another man was Btaudiug on that." Philadel phia Record. Patrice "Tho other night, when we were out with our bicycles, Houry said he would kiss mo wheu we reached a lonely spot." Patience "What did you do soream?" "No, I FOorcUed,"., Whim-AVhams. Country Resident (to poddler) "Got away out of hero now, or if yoa dou't I'll whistle for the dog." Ped dler "All right, Bir ; but first, won't you allow me to sell you a good whistle?" Tid-Bits. Professor in English (to young man) "flow would you punctuate the fol lowing : 'The beautiful girl, for such she was, was passing down the street.' " Student "1 think, professor, I would make a dush after that beautiful girl." Woousocket Reporter. Mamma "I dou't like tho idea of that young Harris hanging aiouud Jenny so muoh. Ho hasn't a cent ex cept his little salary." Pupa "You needn't worry. They, aro both too busy talking about bicycles to have any timo for lovo making." Indian apolis Journal. A gbntloman was assisting at a bazar by reciting now and again dur ing tho evening. Ho had recited onco or twico, and tho peoplu were sitting about dialling, wheu he heard one of tho committee go up to the chairman and whisper: "Hadn't Mr better givo us another recitation now?" Wberoupou the chairmuu replied: "No, not yet; let them enjoy them solves a bit longer." Tit-Bits. An Iuiliau Present to Royalty. Tho Indian prosent to the Duke and Duchess of York, iu commemoration of their marriage, has at last arrived iu Loudon. It cousists of a uiaguiti cent cuukct mouuted upon aud uphold by four miniature ulephuuts. The casket, which is of solid silver, is thirty-one iuehes lon aud about twenty-two iuehes wide and three feet iu height. It is exquisitely embossed and bears arms, views aud figures em blematical of India. I'pou the lid is uugruved tho following iuriptiou : "l'reseuted to thoir royal and imperial highnesses the Duku and Duchess of York by the European and uativo communities iu Calcutta and the proviueu of Beugal, iu uoiuuicuoratiou of their uuspicious marriage ou tho Gtb of July, lb'j;t." The casket is ol great weight, aud is regarded as a su uoib spci-meu ol iaiiw Uvct aLv!