The Forest Republican I published every Wednu Iny, by J. E. WENK. Office In Smcarbaugh & Co.'i BuIliMnr ELM STREET, TIONESTA, TA. Toriua, - t)l.i)(l Per Year, No subscription reeelvod lor a shorter period thnn three months. Oorreponuom-e soil, 'He I froti (ill parts of th eonutry. No nottoi will be taltea of nuonymous ooiimniaio ulom. RATES OF ADVERTISINGS Forest Republican Ono Square, one Inch, on insertion..! One Fipisre, one int-h, on? month. One Square, one inch, throe months, . One l-'quare, on in-h, one year.... Two i-'qinre, one year (Juarter Cohunn. one ve:ir I 00 800 ft (10 10 no l-. mi m (HI Half Column, one yeir. ,V) 00 Une I'olur'iin, one year ou tK) IjAenl advertisements ten centa per line each insertion. MarnngcB an 1 deith notices gratis. All hills for yearly aiivertimMii MiU collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advanai. Job work casli on delivery. VOL. XXIX. NO. 21. TIONESTA, PA AVEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9, 189G. &1.00 PEll ANNUM, Canada, having secured the little in ternational mug for yachts, may try for the big one the Defender's cup. This conntry exported $24,000,000 more of breadi-tuffs during the year ending June 30 than during the same period of last year. . i If the votaries of the wheel continuo to increase in number, Tacit thinks it will simplify matters if the stray pe destrian trill ring n boll as he ap proaches the crossing. Though Italy loads the rest of Eu rope in suicide, as well as in homi cide, Russia is ahead of her in the proportion of professional u.en, espe cially doctors, who commit suioiJo. The story of tho fortunes of T. II. Rogers, one of the new Sheriffs of London, reads as if tho scene were laid in America. IIo began to make shirts years ago in a small room in London, where he cut the garments ont himsolf, and now he employs 1800 persons in that business. An oil lady, such as would have do lightod tho heart of the Emperor Napoleon, has just been discovered at Bodmin, Cornwall, England. She is the mother of seven boys, all of whom re serving in the British army. She has recently been in receipt of a portrait from tho Queen and a cheek for 850 as an nppreoiution of her sor vioe to tho country. MoxO'Roll has no use for tbo Anglo Saxon new woman. Ho declares her to be, "the most ridiculous produc tion of modorn times, and destined to be tho most ghastly iailure of the cen tury." Ue says tho wants to retain all tho privileges of her sex and seoure all thoso of men besides. "She will fail to become a man," Max kindly assures ns, "but she may cease to be a woman." A circular of the Section of Foreign Markets, Department of Agriculture, compares our imports and exports for the past threo years. The figures show that wo exported of agricultural products $73, 000,000 loss in 1895 than in 1894 and $24(1.000.000 less than in 1892. Tbat shows why we are short of money. Tho deficit in receipts is mainly dno to tho shrinkage of prioes, the quantities exported remaining about the en mo. As against this we imported goods in 1895 to tho value ol $87,000,000 more than in 1894. The heavy and somewhat anoient ordnance in nse in Norway and Sweden are to bo replaced very shortly by armaments of more modern manufac ture. For this purpose a sum of $1, 000,000 will probably be expended on field and machino guns, and the order will, it is expeoted, be placed with an English firm. In any case, this order may be regarded as a merely pre liminary installment of extensive pur chases, as a decided tendenoy has manifested iUclf throughout the Scan dinavian peninsula in favor of modern methods throughout. There is to be a thorough overhauling in both Nor way and Swcdon, and a long list of contracts may be looked for by British manufacturers. It is worth mention ing that all the old rifles whioh were reoently collected for disposal have just been sold at an average price, of less than seventy-five conts. Harper's Weekly says : It is some months since newspaper readers all over the country began to read of the remarkablo effectuality of the elevated railroad pillar opposite No. 5 Fulton ttreet, in Brooklyn, in killing and maimiog inoffensive citizens. This pillar, it seems, forms one of the sup ports of the Fulton itrcet terminal of . the Kings County Elevated road. It stands between the tracks of the Fifth avenue trolley line, at a point where the crowds front the forry board tho eurfaoe cars. The pillar is so near the track as to brush off with cer tainty and despatch any person stand ing ou the foot-board of a passing car. Since tho 1st of January twenty two peop'e have been crushed between this pillar and moving curs. Two of them have been killed, and a large proportion of those hurt havo been badly injured. The pillur has been so muob talked about, and its destructive cess is so notorious, thut it had come to be known as Death's l'illur. Strange to say, nothing had been douo about it uutil tho 11th of July. It smashed man's head thut duy, und the Fifth avenue trolley lino concluded it would be uecebsury to tuke extra precaution. So now every car stops when it gets to that pillur. Thut trolley cars should bj allowed to run uuiuck rgaiust uu irou pillur in a civilized . meriuuu city for six months, with sjeh a rt mil tin g tule of death aud in jury, is au amazing uud iucouopra hefcaiblo thing. TME DOORWAY OF THE HOSfc. Over tho doorway of the rose Wandered s Jcllow bunded hee. If the llpj f noon Wero to hum a lino. They would bum thnt drowsy melody. That same low, resonant chant that ho flung there til the sweetest flower that blow". Fast asleep lay the blushing rose. Lulled by th f notes of that monotone, Even the duncing foot Of the aophyrs fleet Blood still at souud of that murmurous drone, That note noxt higher that Bllouee, blown Along tho tube where the honey Bows. Forth from tho doorway of tho rose Flashed tho rings of tho !adon beo, Yet. it yon will You may liear film still, Novor from luturo'a harmony la lost one coord that may well agree, Sho does not forget tho song she known. Curtis Hay, In Bachelor of Arts. STOPPING AN EXECUTION. BY VICTOR Xi. WHITSOHUB.cn. T the time of which I am writing ). was living in seclusion in a small town about thirty-five miles north of Lon don. I was en gaged in rather a lurira 1 itnni nn. dertnking; in fact, i was writing a novel. I had en 9 cased myself to get tho work h question completed by a certain ilal. and in order to do so I found mynii toniTielled to throw over nil other lyr-.patian for the time be ing. 'I kr vorv fow people in the town when I yos Vving, and for five or six veo md mrcoly seen anyone to speak t So engrtTBl was I with my task mat i Had -vo time to read the news paper, aud yri it qiUe ignorant of what was eoing o m te world. The only relaxation 1 aDowul mysolf was a good brisk walfc Hit the oouutry every afternoon. With this exception I had hardly stiAed from my house, except to ruu up V London oneo or twice for ihe purpoM ol vmting the docks, and .making drtmn techuioal invostiga' lions concerning them. This I did.as a good portion, of the novel I was working at wa about the life of dook- surrouudisgs tn the vicinity of Both erhithe. It was a little after eight o'clock one evening m April, that I finished the eeoond volume of my work. It was with great satisfaction that I wrote. and with a considerable flourish, too, the words: "hud of Volume the Sec oud." I generally worked up till ten or eleven, but it was useless doing any more that night; so I put on my bat ana ooat ana started oil tor an even ing stroll. I had no sooner stepped into the street than a boy accosted me with a bundle of papers under his arm, and the request : "Buy an evening paper, sir?" I bought one, put it in my pocket, and resumed my walk. It was a fine night, and I went some little distance, reaching home a little after half-past nine. My landlady had brought in my supper, and as my walk had given me an appetite, it was with no small pleasure that I viewed a goodly joint of cold beef waiting my attaok. I took off my boots and put, on my slippers. Then 1 sat down and did ample justice to my oold repast. I had laid down the nowspapcr on tne table when entering tho room, in tending to read it during supper, but my appetite bad got tne better of ary craving for intelligence, so it was not till I bad lit a pipe and subsided into a cosy arm-cbair by the Ore that I uu folded the sheet of printed matter, j looked at the "leader." Something about a new "Greek Loaa." That didn't interest me. I skipped through the little items of news and hurried jottings, and summaries peculiar to onr evening papers, l'resontly my eye nas caught with the following pura fraph heading: "IMPENDING EXECUTION OF THE CLINFOLD MURDERER." There is a morbid fascination for tost people in an execution, and so, yielding to this feeling, I prooeeded to read tne paragraph. "The murderer of the unfortunate James Renfrew will be hauged to morrow morning at 8 o'clock. The wretched man, whose name Charles Fenthurst is now in everybody's month, still per.iiats in his plea of in- nooenoe. Here I became deeply interested, The name of Fenthurst was most fa miliar to me. I had formed a deep friendship with a man of that name. Ue was a good fifteen years my senior ana had died about two years previ ously. I knew he had a son named Charles, a young follow, who had em igrated to South Africa eurly in life, and who was generally supposed to be working at the diamond mines. Could this be the same man ? I reud on. "It will be remembered that at the trial the strongest ciroumstautiul evi dence was brought to bear upon Feu burnt. The murder took place in a house on the outskirts of the small town of Clinfold. It was proved thut Fen thurst was in the habit of frequenting Renfrew's premises, aud that appar ently ho wus expectod theru ou the evening in qucttiou. He was seen near the place soon after the crime was committed, and several other proofs of a strongly condemnatory character were also luid aguiust him. He has permuted from the first, how ever, in muiutuiuiug that he was ab sent from' Cliufold at the very time the murder took place. This wus about 7 o'clock in the eveniug. At that hour, he says, he was returning from Loudon, where he had been spending part of the day; only ono witness. Le says, could prove this, aud that is au individual who trnvolot with him as far as P and entoro into conversation with him. Adver tisements have been insertod in at the pnpors by Font burst's legal advis ers, for the purpoco of discovering the individual in question, bnt as n answer has been forthcoming, it it generally believed that the whole story is, a myth. At any rate, there seeme out small obanoe of an alibi being proved at the last moment. The mnr dor was committed on February 6. Since his condemnation the murderci has been confined in Silkminster jail, where his execution will take place." Astonishment and dismay confront' ed me as I laid tho paper down. J was the missing witness they had sc vainly sought. I distinctly remem bered, early in February, running up to town rather lute in the afternoon. spending just half an hour thero, and returning by the first train I couli! oateh. My landlady didn't even knofl but that I had been for rathor a longei walk than usual. I had entered intt conversation on tho return journey with the only other occupant of my compartment, a young man with s Bmall blaok bnz, on whioh were paint ed the lotters "O. F." I remembered all this distinctly. In order to make sure I snatohed up my diary, and quickly turned to the date of the mur der, 1 obruary C. There was the en try: "Ran op to town in afternoon. Inquired concerning material fol Chap. vii. Saw B for half an hour. Retained by 0.24 train." Tho horror of the situation now flashed upon me. A man's life the life of my old friend's son depended upon me. I looked at my watch. II was just eleven o'clock. Hurriedly J draggod on my boots, thinking tho while what I should do. My first im pulse was to rush to the telegraph offioo. Then, with dismay, I remem bered that it was shut for tho nighl after 8 o'clock, aud that the postmas ter took tho o.J'J train to the largo town of F , about fivo miles off, where ho lived, leaving the office fol the night in charge of a caretaker, and returning by on early train the next morning. It was impossible to telegraph. Then I thought of going to the police (thero wore just two constables and a ser geant in our little town), but what oould they do more than I? Country polioo are proverbial for the leisurely "routine" manner in which they set about an inquiry, and it would not do to trust them. I was in desp?;r. Madly I throw on my hat and rushed out. I ran ia a meohanioal way to the postoflloe. Ofoonrse, it was shut aud if I had aroused tho caretaker he oouldn't have wired ; bosides, all oui wires went first to F , and, as I have said, all commutiicution was shut off after 8 o'clock. Thou I started for tho railway station. This wat about half a mile from tho postoffiee and well outside tho town. As I hur ried along, I thought, with fresh dis may, that this would also prove a fruitloss errand, for the last train to Silkminster was the 8.30 p. m., by which I have mentioned the postmas ter always traveled. Silkminster, I must mention, was nearly 150 inilot down the line. Should I wait till tho morning anri telegraph? I remembered that tht office did not open till eight o'clock; I had, by thin time, reached the sta tion. Of course, it was all shut up and all the lights were out, excopt thoso in the signal lamps for tho night express. It was now haf past eleven. Wai there no hopo? Yes. At this moment my eye caught ( light in the signal box, about a quar ter of a mile up the line. I could see tho signalman in his box, the outline of his figure standing out against the light within. I looked at my watch: the down express from London wai almost due. I would make a rush fo) that signal box, and compel the oecu pant to put the signal against it ant stop it. It was a desperate game, bu1 only get that train to stop for au in slant, and all would be right. By get ting into it I oould reach Silkminste) in the early morning, and what caret I for any action the company migl tako if I eaved my friend's sou? f the sigualmaa refused to put back th, lever?, the strength born of desperi tion would enable me to master him, and relax them myself. All thi. flashed across me in au instant, and I clambered over the railings on thi side of tho station, and fouud mysel on tho line. Even as I reached the rails a soma phore signal that was near me let ful its arm, und the rod light changed in to a brilliant green. The express wai signaled I Would thero bo time? ? dashod along over the rough sleeper toward the signal box. It was verj dark and I stumbled over and ove.' again. I had oleared about half thi distance when I heard tho ominow roar ahead, and in a few seconds couli distinguish the distant glitter of tht engine's head lamp bearing towart me. Tho train wus just over a mill from me, rushing ou at cxprcss'spced With a groun I ejaeulutcd, 'Tot lute!" At thut instant my eye fell upon I ghastly looking structure by tho sidi of tho track, looking grimly throug) tho durkues. It resembled a out armed gallows with a man hau-jiu; from it I For a moment I thought il must huve beou a fearful fancy con jurod up by tho thought of Feu thurst's drea Iful fate, but iuiuiodiute ly I remembered thut this struugi looking appuritiou wus nono othei than a mail I ag suspended from apoa iu fact, purt of the uppurutus b) which a train going ut full speed piokj np the muilf. The cxpres train tha was coming hud a postal oar uttuchuc to it. From tne side of the cur a strouf rope net would be laid out, catching the bug I saw suspended before me. As a ba would be deposited fron the train iu a somewhat nuiilur mau uer, there out;ht to have bteu a mai ou guurd. 1 ulterwurd fouud he hat luft his pout tin J kouj to have a chai with his friend in tho cheery sign box, A mod and dospcrate idea took pos session of mo. Tbo train that was hearing down, and which would reach mo iu one minute, should pick me up with tho mails I I grasped the idea of the thiug in a second, if I could haug on to that baq; so that it came between me an I the net, it would break the force of the shock, and the not would receive mo as well ni the bag. Fol tuuuto!" I am a small man. Tho bag hnug just over my head. I jumped at it, seized it, drew myself np parallel with it, hold it firmly at the top, where it swung by a hook, and drew my legs up so as to present as small a compnss as possible. It did not tako me half a minute to do oil this. Then 1 waited. It was but a few seconds, but it seemed hours. I hoard the roar of the approaching train. Then tho engine dashed past me. I shall never forget tho row of lightol carriages passing about a foot away from me oloser evou thuu that, I suppose and I hanging and waiting for the crash to come. And it came. There was a dull thud a whir and a rush, and all was dark. When I came to my senses 1 wai ly ing on the floor of the postal van. Two meu in their shirt-sleeves wero busily engaged in sorting letters at a rack. I felt bruised and Btiff all over, and I found that my loft arm was bound in a sung made oat ol a hand korchief. "Whcro aro wo?'1 I asked. Tlioy turued round. "Oh, you've come to, have von?" said one them. "Now, perhaps, you'll give an account of yourself. It's precious lucky you're hero at all, let me toll you that, for if you had been a taller man we should only havo got part of you in tho net. As it is, yon ve got your oollar-bone broken. We've lied it np a bit. Now, perhaps, you 11 speak out; aud look heie, if wo find rou ve been dodging tho police, don t you go thinking you'll give 'em the Blip any further. The mail van ain't rofune of thut sort." I told them the iuolivo that had prompted mo to take the desperate Jtop I hnd dono. They wonldn t be Uevo it at first. Luokily, though, I had put the evening paper and my jiary in my pocket, so I showed them paragraph and tho entry. They O civil enough then. "Well, sir, wo thall bo in Silkmin ster uboa.' threo, or a little after. hopo you'll .o able to save tho poor beggar. You Bur.st excuse our turning to work again, au'.'io bo3t thing for you will be to rest you;-eIf. They piled a quantity of empty weal-bags on the floor and m.do me a rough shakedown. Before he wor.t to his work aain, tho other one said; "What o pity you uevor thought a better way out of the difficulty than aoming iu here so sudden-like. "There was no other way." "Yos, there was, sir." "What was that?" "Why, you should have got the sic- nalmuu to telegraph to Silkminster uc eou'a nave none it an right. What au idiot 1 had been after alii However, I should be in time to stop tho execution. A little after threo wo drew up at Silkminster station. Thero was a po licemen on the platform, and I at once iold my story to him, the result being that wo drove round to the jail and insisted upon seeing the Oovernor. Of course, he was deeply interested in what I had to tell him, and at once made arrangements to stop the exeou tion. The Home Secretary was com aiunicated with by means of speoial wire. Fortunately, ho happened to be in town, and after a couple of hours of anxious suspense, a reprieve was reoeived for him. "Well," said the Oovernor, "I don't know which I ought to congratulate most, Mr. Fenthurst or yourself, for you have both bad a narrow escape." iiittle remains to bo told. I coon identified the condemned man as the Serson whom I bad met in a train, "e also turned out to be t he sou of my old friend, us I had fully expected. After the duo formalities ho was dis charged. Suspicion having strongly attached itself to his name, however, he was vary miserable autil about a foitnight afterward the real murderer was discovered and captured. CC' Fenthurst and myself beeamt fb friends, aud although I was fearfull, shaken and upset for somo weeks aftti this adventure, I never regretted the night on whioh I was picked up with the mails. Strand Muijaziue. American Paper Abroad. Several journals of London, Eng land, are now printed ou white panui made in the United States; a Now Hampshire paper mill is supplying white paper to a Scottish publishing house, while the Freeman's Journal, Dubliu, Ireland, has eontructod with an Ottawa (Cunada) paper munufao turer tor its regulur supply of news paper. Australia also uses Americas paper. The American continent must over be tho leading factor in the world's supply of whito paper. The paper mills of tbo future must be located withiu easy reach of the greut spruce forests. A single paper pulp mill in the Statu ol New York usei seventy curlouds of lo ;s uu 1 short wood daily. Its uiiuuul consumption is 311,000,000 feet of wusto lumber. Had tit Keep Coo.. A Massachusetts Congressman who wus ou board tho truiu which tm wrecked ut Hyde i'urk, Mass., lui full, lays thut wheu the shock cutne, one of tuu pusseugers wus pitched over teverul louts just in time to receive the eon louts of the wutor-coole, which tipped jvor and soaked hi. elotbiu;; with ico water. A highly excited pasaeuger rushed up to him aud told him to keep sool. "Clo awuy," caul the wet man, "1 am tho coolest uluu iu tho cur. 1 have jut hud two buckets of U'o water (uiptied down my buck." THE MUY SIDE OF. LIFE. STORIKS THAT ARB TOLD BT THE FUNNYMEN OF THE PRESS, A Lover's Tale A Spell-Hinder His Views A Sad Case I'rotectlou From Harm, Kte., Ktc. She heard my suit. And then in ooynnps blushed, And In a whisper bushed. Acknowledged that my paslon grand Had caused her dear heart to expand, And bid me ask her father fur her hand. Away I went. He heard my suit, And thon in fury tore About the room, and sworn That my presumption was Immense, inouiru Dackeil oy littlu common sense, Aa bid me, ero he throw mo out, go hence. I went. l'hlladephla North Amerlcuu, HIS viKwa. Sho "Young Spilkins appears to bo a man of extensive views." He "Yes, to bo suro. He's a kodak fiend." A STELL HINDER. "People seem to pay a great deal of attention to Filkcr's opinions on poli tics." "Yes; bo bac such a deep, bass voice." Chicago Record. PB.OOP AGAINST TEMPTATION. Mrs. Brown "Mrs. Smith is a wo man of romarkable strength of mind." Mrs. Jones "Is she? ' "Yes. Sho never buys anything ho doesn't want." Life. NOT IMPOSSIBLE. Jones "Think an absolutely truth ful man can be a successful diploma lkt" Smith "Oh, yes in tho absence of international complications I" THE REWARD OP EXPERIENCE. Young Lawyer "Why do you take '.hat case when there's nothing in it?" Old Lawyer "Nothing in it? Blunt paid me a big retainer and I'm charg ing him $50 a day during the trial." PROTECTION FROM HARM. "Weren't yoa awfully frightened, 31adys. when the oyolono struck so icar?" "Oh, no, dear; George had his orra iround me tho whole time." Detroit Tree Frees. A 6AD OAST, Little Mendicant "Please, sir, givo ue a nickel." Benevolent Clergyman "Have you o paronts?" Little Mendicant 'No, air; I am tn orphan by birth." Texas Sifter. ONE LONG HONEYMOON. She "It seems rather hard, dear, that yoa can't afford to tako me on a wedding trip." "But, darling, you will never know the difference. In the little flat I have engaged it will be just like living in a I'ullmnu car." Life. ONE ON THE OLD MAN. Mr. Chaflie "Johnnie, your mother complains that you are disobedient. That's got to stop. You must obey your mother." Johnnie "Not much. It's you who havo to obey her. It isu't me that's married to her." Texas Sifter. DECLINED. "For your birthdoy, Johnnie, I'll make you a present of the licking you have earned by your bad oonduot dur ing the past week." "Well, pa, if I havo eurnod that licking it belongs to mo, anyhow. There is not much of n present about that." Texas Sifter. PROBABLY. J .Toues (uBt introduced) "I suppose you don't remember me, but 1 was once a witness against your side in a certain trial, and I remumbor that you cross-examined a e with the greutest oourtesy." Tho Lawyer "Is that so? Porhaps your testimony was not material," Puck. NOI A CASE OP "ROOM POR ONE MORE." Aunt True "If you tell lies, Dicky, you will go to tho bad place. ' Dicky "Does everybody who tells lies?" Aunt True "Yes, Dicky, they all go there." Dicky "Then I guossl ain't afraid much. It must be overcrowded now." Truth. WHOM TO CONSULT. Doctor (to patient) "What oils you?" Patient "Indeed, I don't know. I only know thut I suiter." "Whttt kind of life do you lead?" "I work like au ox, I eat like a wolf, I am as tired as a dog, und I sleep like ahorse." "iu that case 1 should edvUo you to oousult a veterinary surgeon." Texas Si Iter. ENCOfllAOlNU LITTLE BODUY. Little Bobby's Mother "Bobby broke one of thoso pretty vases of mine to duy, Philauder." Little Bobbj 's Father "The rascal 1 And of cour.-io you " "No. Ho came ri,'ht to mo and told mo tho truth about it." 'To encourage him in doiii right I told him ho luif;ht huvo two pieces of pie ut diuuer." "You took tho proper course, Mi rundi." "I uin gla I yoa approve of it. Pail under." "Yes. Bobby will come and toll you tho truth ayuiu to morrow." ' 1 am sure he will !" "Yes. To-morrow he will come uu I tell you he has brokcuthw other vuo." St'IESl'IHC ASD IXDU.MTKIAL. Experiments made at Taris by Dr. Bertillon have proved that kleptomania is easily cured by hvpnotio suggestion. A prize of $20 is hereafter to be of ferred eomi-annnally to the surgical in.orno of the Boston City Hospital who rdmimsters ether in tho most skillful and humane manner." Various nostrums are proposed for the exlurmination of the army worm, but tho majority of them seora to have the knack of destroying the plants themselves, root and branch. Superintendent D. W. Croft?, of tho gas company of Northampton, Mass., has found by experiment that a refuse from the gas works known as "spent time" is very effective in exterminat ing tho army worm and similar pesK According to a Singapore paper six ty per cent, of the cholera patients taken to tbo pauper hospital have been cared by hypodermio injootions of Btryohnino, while fifty per cont. were savod in the general hospital by other treatment. The newest thing in tho way of aoronants is the proposal of Professor W. W. MoEwan, of Jaokson, Md., to ascent to a height of two miles by means of a rooket. This is not a sui cide sohemo, as the professor will pro vide a parachute to assist bis descent. Egyptologists are engaged in con sidering a scheme, presumably emana ting from the Egyptian Government, for tho preparation of a comprehen sive aud descriptive catalogue of an tiquities of Egypt in tho possession of all tho publio museums and private collections throughout the world. A case of complete and immodiate relief from tho effects of ivy poisoning ib reported in the Medical World by Dr. W. L. Shanks. His patient was swollen from head to foot, but ia an hour after bathing in a solution of sodium hyposulphite was attending to business as if nothing had happened. It is said that an Ohio driver has an ingonious eleotrio contrivance for shooting speed into a tired horse. It is claimed that this battery was used for tbo first time ia tarf history at tho rocent Akron (Ohio) meeting. There has been somo talk about it and some protests against its nse on tho ground of cruelty. Tho Evolution of a Tornado. Usually it is in the afternoon, be tween the hours of two and five, after a warm and moist day, that the omin ous tornado clouds begin to form. For two hours before the breaking of tho storm the sky may have the peculiar scalloped appearance given it by tho ball like masses of vapor, or thoro may be a warning of only half an hour be foro the clouds become suddenly stirred to violont agitation. A vast oommotion is taking place on high ; there seems to be a panic among tho clouds. Like great monsters black masses advance heavily but rapidly, sending out diro threats and warnings in jagged lightning flashes. Fleecy olouds beneath them race madly along and twist and whirl and scurry this way and that, as it terrorized and un certain where to flee. The light grows less and less until houses are dark and men running for shelter seem like blaok phantoms. Everything is very quiet ; the loaves on the trees are stir ring slightly and tremulously, in strange contrast to tho vast movement and exoitement ovorhoad. Thero have been a thousand rapid changes among the harrying olouds ; now a supreme one comes. Off in tho southwest, near the horizon, the clouds seem to rush together aud drop from tho sky in a black mass that sends out a great streamor to the ground. Hailstones and great drops of rain begin to fall, and with flushes of lightning aud a grinding roar tho thing somes rushing on. Tall trees in its path shoot sud denly upward ; houses collapse, and their roofs and furuituro soar aloft un til this demon cloud becomes laden with impediments. But it quickly tires of these toys of its fury ; it hurls them violently asido and comes tearing on as if wild with insatiable rage and a desire for greater victims. Huge buildings of stone burst as if under mined with dynamite when it reaches them, The water in rivers mounts in a monster wave, and stanch vessels are left capsized and foundering. The tornado's duration at a given point rarely lusts ovor ten minutes, and fre quently not over two or threo ; at the end of this brief period it has gone raging aud loaring on. But they have been long and cvoutful moments. Demoiest's Magazine. An Educated llore. Thorois a horse in Philaaelphie whose business is to draw a collection wagon over a postoffiee route iu the middle of tho city which knows the locution of letter boxes as well as ltt driver, the postman, Thero are t cumber of these boxes near together ou Broad street, just below Chestnut too near together for tho postmun ta bother about driving from ouo to the othei. He is saved ull trouble ol loading his horse, however, by tho iu tolligeuce of that auimul, which as soou us tho postman ulights at tho first box walks off to the bccoud und patiently waits thero for his master. (iullerit's. Galleries are becoming fushiouublo iu England, lurgo tracts of laud in mutable spots beiug ubuudoued to the birds, ou which they muy build their nest", lf.it is true thut gulls' eggs can by coloring uu I cliemiculs bo palmed off ou the publio for plovers' eggs, it is possible that tho birds muy bo pro tected for commercial reasons us well. One Melodious lioose, Henry Giles, furuior of Lythum, Euuluud. is the owner of a black 1' vn- . . - - . . . tiuu gooso which has a voico liko a j rauary bird. Every evening ut dusk rlio t;"osu twitters aud trilln most beau- iiluliy. THE LINNETS SONO. Ono day a sorrow opened wide my door," And wlillo its shallow lengthened on the floo Its fad habiliments of sombre gray " Drovo ail the rosy flame of hope away. -t'S Just then a linnet from tho choir of Jane Touro l throngh the window his ecstatic tune, As If to mako tho welcjmo gospel plain That joy shell triumph over grief and pain. I turned to find my spectral guest had gono; A fresher glory flushed the Holds and lawnj December's gloom hid tn tho almanac, And novernjore came thnt sad taller back. Jool Bouton, in Harper's Bazar. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Tho wasp has one strong point, but it is not in his favor. A man without enemies may not bo mach of a man, but ho has a soft time of it. Man wants but little here below, As someouo said before. Hut when begets it, don't you krow, Ue wants u little more, no is the brightest lawyer who, when confronted by a cloud of wit nesses, can further beclond thorn. Truth. Muggins "Is your son in busi ness?" Buggins "He's a contractor." Muggins "What lino?" Buggins "Debts." Philadelphia Record. Uomekecp "Ever drink any of theso substitutes for coffee?" Day board "I haven't drunk anything else for seven yoars." Cincinnati En qairer. "Summer is a rough season on ns parents." "Why so?" "Our daugh ters, who have boen graduated, try to make us talk grammatically." Chi cago RecorJ. "I went to take a quinine capsule this morning, aud the blame thing, just as I got it in my mouth, oamo opart "Au, that was a bitter port ing, indeed." Indianapolis Journal. He "I am going to pay you the highest compliment a mau cau pay woman." She "This is so sudden." Ho "I knew it can you lond mo ft dollar until to morrow?" Now York World. Wiggles "There's one good thing bboat Hicks. He is always willing to admit it whon ho is in tho wrong." Wagglos "I don't think it is a good thing. It doesn't Becm to trouble him a bit." Somorvillo Journal. "It seems to me, Mr. Stillson, that your now houso is lacking in a jn dioious uso of irotwork." "Well, my wifo will fill that dotloionoy just as aoon aa eho gets her cyo on those measly closots." Cleveland Plaio Dealer. "And how is your papa, Eddie?" "Papa is feeling ever so much bettor to-day." "I snpposo it's tho change in the weathor?" "No, ma'am, 'taint the weather. Mamma has decided to start for the seasido to morrow." Cleveland Plain Dealer. First Wheelman "I always get rat tled whon I sco a woman crossing tho street ahead of mo." Second Wheel man "So do I. They have so many pins iu their clothes that if a fellow collides with thorn ho is always euro to puncture a tire." Now York Mer cury. "No," said Dismal Dawson, in an swer to tho benefuotor's question, "hard time3 is not the best foi our business. Nor yet good times. The times that auils mo best is about me dium when tho work ain't too plenty, nor niouoy too scarce." Indiauapolis Journal. Fuddy "Snapshot was showing mo a lot of photographs ho has taken. They uro only passable, but to hear Snapshot talk you would think thein marvols of tho photographic art." Duddy "Yes, Snapshot isu't much of au artist, but then his viows ore better than his opinions." Boston Trans cript. 31nlag;isy Cookery. Cooking beiug on art, every raoa bos a stylo ot its own. Tho Malagasy, like the gentle Hindoo, knows how to prepare his mess of rieo. It ia not boiled to a musb, as in England, or aa our potatoes aro sometimes pulped, but covered with a proper sullioieuoy of water, it is carefully treated uutil the grains arc swollen lit to burst, and yet remain full, intuct, soft and rather mealy. Tbo mtuioo root is aa easier dish to prepare. It is sometimes sorvod boiled, as ynms and sweet pota toes, aud again as a sort of cold por ridge. Nutivo coffee they understand how to make, uud tho uroma is x cellout; but tea, ulusl you have to look to tho browiusr of thut Irom start to finish if you deoiro a drinkable cup. Poultry aud giimo uro eaten fresh, and tho cooks have a clever uud withal cleanly trick of dipping tho dead aui muls iu boiling water, which enable them to pluck easily und quickly. Tho preparation for trussing comes later. There is no luck of variety at a Mala gasy table, but, ull tbo sumo, you miss tho wheuteu llour bread, sugar and condiments, wheu oloyid with rice, fowls, manioc uud cn. Tho staple luel is buueh crass, which, whoa dried, bums fiercely uud settles into a (;lo iug tmber that gives off a deal of heat. All tho cooking is douo on eurtheu hearths, uud tho roasting, boiliug aud baking in big irou pots. The grass being slightly uromutio, the odor is us ii;;reeablo hh thut of a hard wood lire. Loudon Telegraph. AlmMMU'a I liiuatt', Abyssinia, uccordiug to M. Marcel, a French traveler, bus throi oliiuates, according to the nltitudo ubovo tbo sea. In tbo low country or valkns ba nanas, date, in l:go, eollou uud other tropical plants l!o;ui.-b, elephant?, lions. jjiiuiKs, zebras uud i;u.el!ea abound. Tho intermediate oue re calls tbo climate of S.cily.or of Anda lusia in Spain. Thero is (;ood pa-tin j for llocUs und herds in t ho hihcat U' tion.