Aiie Forest Republican la publlshsd every Wmln lay, by J. E. WENK. Offloe In SmearbaugU & Co.'a Building . ELM 8TfiE RT, TIONESTA, Vk. Terra, - l,(( l'or Yenr. Ho subscription reen.ved for shorter period than turoo mom tin. Correspondence solldto I froti nil purti of tb oountry. No nolle will be taken ol unonymoui oo.umuulo nioiu. RATES Or ADVERTISING! One Hqnnre, one Inch, one insertion.. t 00 One Square, one Inch, one month. .. 8 00 One Square, one Inch, three months. . ft 00 One Pqiinre, one inch, one yenr..... 10 (M Two Hqunres, one yeir 15 no Quarter Column, on. year, , ,., S MM Half (Column, one yonr .V) U0 One Column, one year 100 U0 luteal advertisements ten cent, per line Mich insertion.. Marriages ami rleith notlcoe gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement, onllected quarterly Temporary advertisement, mine be paid in advanoa. Job work cash on delivery. KOR XJBLICAN. VOL. XXX. NO. 7. TIONESTA, TA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1897. &1.00 PER ANNUM. Bofore tho end of this yenr every one of the 1G8 towns in Connecticut will bo counoctod by telephone. The Peruvlnn oil region in "aid to cover 72,00 squnro miles. That of Pennsylvania is altont 850 square miles. A correspondent asks the Chicago Times-Herald to "describe tho Greek cross." It would be much easier to describe what has made the Qreck cross, , According to the London Labor Gazette, there were 10117 strikes last year, asjigaiiiht only 870 in 1805; bnt the number of laborers involved was 2(13,758 in tho latter yenr, nnd only 199,000 in 18MJ. A curious illustration of tho diverse conditions that may exist in this ooun try is the fact that while so many people in the Mississippi Valley are suffering from floods tho New Orleans papers are raining money for sufferers' from the drouth in Louisiana. A woman's bicycle club was organ ized in Detroit the other day, but the Free Press says that it collapsed within a week becnuso no two members HHiuiu ngree as 10 mo uiuiorm to ne worn. When Colorado musters in its company of women militia there will be trouble. While a marriage ceremony was being performed near Danville, Va., a kerosene lamp flamed up and was about to explode when the bride seizod it and hurled it through a window. The groom then came out from under the table, where he had hidden, and tho ceremony proceeded. Promotions are coming rnpidly these days in the upper ofllciul circles of the regular army. What few veterans of the Civil War aro left find tho age of retirement close at baud in the young est cases. "The army will soon be in the hands of ofllcors trained only in the walks of peace," observes the New For tho first time in twenty-eight years the State of Ohio is without Democratic representation in the United States Senate. The long period of divided representation begun in 1809, with tho election of Allen G. Thurman as tho colleague of John Sherman. Once only has the rule of divided representation been broken, and that was iu the Forty-sixth Con gross, when George II. Pendleton was the colleague of Senator Thurmau. One of the new dictionaries has in it a pretty big and yet perhaps a useable word, "politicalization," of which it seems to be itself somewhat in doubt, although it half-supports it with a quotation from the Brooklyn Eagle, which coined the phrase. The Eagle it seems, once referred to "tho steady politicalization of the public schools," by which it meant the subjection of these schools to political control. Whatever wo may think of the word, .comments the New York Observer, tho danger indicated is certainly a real one. Illinois women are makiug a strong effort to lift the compulsory education law of their State into activity. At present the law only , remains that every child shall attend school for six teen weeks each year. Children easily evade it by an irregular attendance during the last term of school. When the school has closed it becomes diffi cult to determine whether or not they have had the prescribed amount of tuition. Actually, although there is a penalty for infraction of the law, and although iufractiou is frequeut, the penalty has' never been imposed. It is believed that a simple amendment requiring the sixteen weeks of tuition to be consecutive aud at the begin ning of the term, aud providiug for the enforcement of the law, will be suffi cient. A newspaper artist has been tolling some of tho woes of the men who make pictures for the daily papers. He Bays: "It makes me tired sometimes when I hear some smart Aleck who couldn't tell the difference between art aud a side of sole leather criticise newspaper illustrations. . The public, doesn't uu derstand what handicaps are contiuu ally thrown about our work. A few days before election I was given in structions to make a portrait of oue of the candidates. He gave me an old daguerreotype, made just after the war, aud Baid he had had no photo graph taken since then. Well, I made his picture all right, but iu order to do it I first had to out off a full beard aud curl his moustache. Then I gave him a hair cut, parted his hair on the other side, gave hiui a staud-up collar aud a modern cravat, aud added thirty years worth of wrinkles to his face, Aud yet they say such work iuu't art," THE SAME Mothers, out of the mother-heart, Fashion a song both soft and low. Alwnys the same, dear mother art, Hocking the baby to and fro. Alwnys a laity, loving crone, Hummed in sleepy undertono. Down the baby snuggles to sleep Winking as long an wink he may. Now with a kick Iih tries to keep The trlcksny god from his eyes away We-wa, wo-wa, long, long ago, The Indian mother chanted low. Weeing, she said, on tho baby's brow Hoftly struck with his wee war club. Astride of his nose he plnyuth slow, With his little fist a rub-a-dub. We-wa, we-wa, tender and low, Hocking the baby to and fro, Le-ro-ln, le-ro-la, ever a mum. Like murmuring bee In the golden light Under tho palm trees mothers come JJthlope mothers, dark as night ' Chanting the same old silvery flow, Bwnlglng the baby to and fro. TALE OF TWO RINGS. ' -J r -r- ATtanv " t ix. a. j v. M, k?ie i va invol untarily, stooping to knock the ash from my cigar, "perhaps I ought not to ask, although I have known you for nearly three years, nut is it usual lor a wife to wear two wedding rings? Dead silence. Ho had lust lowered his violin, after a very soft solo for it was considerably past midnight when ventured that curious question. There had been au evening party, and, as I was to stay at the house till morn ing, Carson's wife had said "Good night" and left us to finish our inevita ble smoke and talk. His mouth twitched a little, but it was some time before ha retorted in a low tono: Is it usual for a man well under forty to have hair as white as mine?" Well, perhaps not but I thought you attributed that to some shock or other. Whut has that to do with with tho two rings?" "Everything." Ho listened at the door for a moment, turned down tho lights and then came and sat down, spreading his hands over the fire. Two rings? Exactly, ono is the ring I put on her finger when I married her; tho second was put there by an other man, and will stay there as long as the first. ' "Never mind now," I said. His voice had trailed off huskily. "I had no idea there was any tragic element behind the fact. "Tragic? Heavens! It was more than that, Arthur," he whispered, turning up a drawn face. "I never ineaut to touch upon it, but when you spoke it came back with a rush as vivid as if I had been standing at the mouth of the old north shaft again. And that was sis years ago. "You've heard mo speak at least, of tho mine itself tho Langley Mine, in Derbyshire. I had ouly been assistant surveyor at the pits there for about nine months when it happened. At 9 o'clock that morning, Arthur, three of us stepped into the cage old Jim Halliday, the foreman, his son Jim, and myself; the men had gone down an hour before. I shall never forget that young Jim's sweetheart had walked over to the pit with him, as she occasionally did. They were to bo married in a week or two, and she and she had on her finger the ring that he had bought in Derby the day be fore just for safety's sake, or perhaps out of womanly pride. I recollect that just as the chain clanked and the win ter suushine was disappearing over head, he shouted out a third 'Good-byl' to her little dreaming that it was to be good-by. Little enough old Hal liday and I thought that days would elapse before we emerged into God's sunlight again! "A new vein had been bored the year before, aud then abaudoned be cause it' ran in the direction of the river. Wo three had had instructions to widen it for a space of 800 yards a piece of work that had occupied us nearly a a month. Old Jim picked and young Jim wheeled the coal awav to the nearest gallery, from where it was carried over rails to the bottom of the main shaft. "Well, by 4 o'clock that afternoon we calculated roughly that we had reached the limit laid down. " 'I think it's as near as possible, Mr. Carson,' old Halliday said. 'Jim, give another count, we don't want the water ooming in "Jim went back; We could hear him singing out the paces in his light hearted fashion as he returned, his voice echoing through the long galler ies. 'Two-sixty-uiue pooh! you're miles off it, dad!' He was ouly a score of yards off, though. 'Two-six-ty-niue two-sevenjy-four. It'll allow a full twenty yet, I recon.' He had just finished his count when but there, no mau could properly describe it. It was something one had to realize for himself before he could understand a bare half of the sudden terror that whitened our lips aud seemed to bring our hearts to a standstill. There was a rumbling in one of the distant galleries, ami a sick ening tremble of the ground under neath us; then then the most paralyz ing sound, I do believe, that is to be heard iu this world. How or why it happened is something to be placed among the host of unsolved mysteries; but there was oue grinding, splinter ing roar, as though the earth had split into pieces. "Before we could stir baud or foot to save ourselves, before we could even take in that an explosion had occurred while we were guarding against an other sort of danger, down thundered OLD SONG. Mothers, too, with the snowy skin, I)v-lo, by-lo, tenderly sing, Ann tell the dustman coming In, Into the baby's eyes to fling Atoms of ilust to make him wink, And Into dreamland gently sink. We-wa, we-wa, by-lo, by-lo, Le-ro-la, le-ro-ln. ever the same Ever the tune of the long ago) Out of tho motherly henrt it came, Horn of a sense Mint mothers know, Hocking tho baby to and fro. White or black or bronze the hue, Alwuvs tho same sweet tuna Is heard. The sweetest song earth ever knew, Uappy as trill of the nestling bird. Mothers content In the twilight glow Are rocking their babies to aud fro. Mothers, out of the mother-heart, Fashion a song both sweet nnd Ion Always the same, dear mother art, Hoc king the baby to and fro. Always a lazy, loving erone, Hummed In a drenmy undertone. The Home Queen. I2 7f a mass of coal, tons noon tons of it. that blocked up the only passage lead ing to tho shaft. It just reached young Jim; standing where he did, he was struck down we heard his screech stilled beneath the debris. For about five more seconds tho earth seemed to be heoviug aud threatening universal cnoos; men all became still as a tomb "A tomb! We had our lamps; old Jim and I looked, and saw that we were cut off from the rest of the world W hat happened next I hardly &uuw, j. was siupinea witu tlio shock, sick with a mortal fear of death. He and I stood staring mutely nt each other. The only thing I recollect is that his face was grny as marble, and uiai a line oi irotu stood on his lips. Ho was tho first to come back to sense. He gave one choking cry of 'Jim!' and staggered forward to that black pile. The boy's hand was stick ing out from the bottom of it, clutch ing convulsively at nothing. I sank down and watched, in a sort of dreary fascination, as old Jim, uttering mmiKu cries, tore at tuo mass in mad frenzy. God help him! Jim was the only thing he had in the world to love. In less thau five minutes he had dragged him out, aud sat down to hug uiiu iu, uis arms. jjead? Ko; he could just open his poor dust-filled eves in auBwer to nis rather s whispers; but we knew at once that he would never again make the galleries echo his pierc- lug wuisue. , 1 1 . i or wuoie Honrs, i snnnose. neither of us attempted to realize our situation. We sat on iu the dead si lence, waiting for something to hap. pen. unco or twice we saw young Jim's blackened lips move feely, and eacu time lus father would mutter brokeuly. 'Ay, my precious boy, we'll look after her!" Once the old man broke out, quaveriugly, into the hymn, "Abide With Me!' but ho got no fur ther than the third line. That, per uupn, was BOOUt O O Clock, UUt WO could keep no count of the time, as my watch had stopped. Hour after hour must have gone by, aud still old Jim sat, with rigid face and staring eves, clasping his burden. In all probability it was morning above ground before at last ne spoke. " 'How long can wo hold out, Mr, Carson? I'm afraid to go on. I'vo been a godless man all my time.' mi i v xuat rouseu me. I examined our position carefully. The passage was about eight yards wide at this point, and measured about twenty paces from the end to where that Bolid wall of coal blocked our path to the outer world. As the bore ran level with tho foot of the north shaft, we were about forty feet below the clear surface. Wo had no food, and our lamps would burn, say, another five or six hours while the breathing air, hot aud cas eous already, would probably become unendurable before the evening came, m..i -x . . . iui was our summon, and let any man conceive a worse, if he can. One slender chance of escape at the best left; perhaps the entire passage was not blocked, aud we might force our way to the main gallery. I was not afraid of death in the way that it comes to most people, but I was afraid to meet and struggle with it there. We sprang to the task, wild at the thought that those few hours of stupor might have made all the difference. "You can guess what happened, and why, after along spoil of fight iug to oreak tnrougu tuat nomtde wall, ol T .1 1 ' , ... jim iurew uimseu uown witu a groan ana reiuseu to go on. As fast as loosened ono mass, another crashed down in its place; at the end of our des perate attempt we were half choked and blinded with dust, our hands were raw aud we had made scarce any head way. uareiy, too, nan we given up the work as hopeless when my lamp flickered' out; half au hour later, old Jim's followed suit. "Total oblivion! As I sat and con templated our fate, a fuintuess of mingled hunger and despair crept over me. Young Jim, quite still, was propped up against the wall close by, Within a few feet of me sat his futher ut times he would start up aud shri out iu nameless terror at others he would catch up his pick aud hack at the walls with the fury of a maniac. Aud worse was to come. "I think I must have faiutod. I do not seem to recollect auy more until the moment when I became conscious of my mate's hard breathing over me aud of the fact that his hand was feel iug or, so it seemed fuiLuy throat, I dashed away, pautiuguuder the shock of this new horror. " 'Jim,' I gasped, 'for Heoven'i sake keep sane! If we're to go, let us die like men! "No auswer; I heard him crawling away, and that was all. IJlie dead silence was only broken by a faint trickling sound. Trickling! Yes; I put my hand to tho level, and found half an inch of water and hotter and stifling grew the atmosphere. Tray ing hard to myself, I realized now that, should no help come, ouly a few hours could live betwixt us and the end. And then old Jim might go first, and should be left. Nay, I was already practically alone; the fear that was slowly whitening my hair had turned old Jim's brain. He suddenly sent up a peal of delirious laughter. 'Water! Who says water? Why, mates, I'm swim ming in it! Here a go!' "Presently ho began creeping round to find me. I could hear him coming, by his labored respiration, and the swishing of the ooze as he moved. Round and round the space we went stealthily, until at lat he made a cun ning rush and caught me by the ankle. Uot nun! He yelled it with a glee thnt was unmistakable. More words could never convey tho sensation of that moment. Half suffocated, past all ordinary fear, I closed with my poor old mate, and wo went staggered to and fro across our prison, until at last I managed to throw him so that his head struck heavily against the wall. After that he lay quite still. I believed at the time that I had killed him, but we knew after ward that it was that blow which pre served his reason. "The rest can be told in a few wof ds. After that I lay there like one in a dream, while the pestilential air slowly did its work. Sometimes I fancied I could feel cool breezes blowing down on me, and at others heard some one telung me to wake up, for that tho whistle had sounded at the pits. How long I lay so, I can only conjecture. I really knew nothing more until I was roused by the sound of that cool bar. rier crashing down before the picks and spades of a dozen rescuers, and the hubbub from a dozen throats as they broke into our tomb. "Only just in time. Old Jim's face was only lust out of the water, and they said that no human being could have lived in that atmosphere for an. other two hours. And young Jim? well, there was just enough life left in him to lat three days. "Till tho end of that third day, I kept to my bed; and then they sent to say tuat lie was going, but that he wished to see me first. I reached the house just iu tiuio to catch his last whisper. " 'lou you 11 take her, mate! Marry her uo one else! Only only, you'll let my ring stay there. Promise mo that.' "What could I do but promise? I had no thought then of marrying his sweetheart but it was his dying wish, and for years Jim and I had beeu like brothers. 'Just a year later I asked her if there was room in her heart for me, and and well, that's enough. Now you know why my wia wears two wed ding rings. "Tit-Bits. KlMMle. of the Flood. When John Andrews, a farmer liv ing on Island No. 8, iu tho lower Ten nessee, woke up one morning during the recent high-water experience he found a good-sized house strauded in one of his fields. Like other struct ures carried away by the flood, it had floated down stream from some point above to find lodgment in the shallows. Tho wanderer was a large two-story log house, sealed and plastered and filled with furniture. One of the results of the flood in the west end of East St. Louis brought about a novel funeral procession. Will iam Lorman, a plasterer, died. The street was flooded and neither car riages nor hearse could get near the house. The Btreet-car compauy was appealed to and responded with two trolley -cars. Ono was ' used for a hearse aud the other was utilized by the mourners. The journey to tho gates of the cemetery was made iu this manner. Canada Covet, a Mooae Head. Harry M. Church, of New Bedford, Mass., who last October shot tho larg est bull moose ever seeu in New Brunswick, has just received word that the Provincial Government at Fred erickton has confiscated the moose's head and placed it iu one of the publio buildings at Fredericktou, says the Boston Herald. Mr. Church left the head to bo dressed when he returned home, but found afterward that the mau he left it with had endeavored to steal it from him. He secured legal tdvice and made a strong light to secure the head. Finally the attention of the Govern ment was called to the matter, and, it being the finest specimen ever shot in New Brunswick, the antlers spreading out over five feet and having twenty prongs, the head was confiscated ou the ground that tho animal was illegal ly shot, aud it was thus prevented from leading the Provinces. The moose weighed 1000 pounds. Thl. Hog Carrie, an I'mbrella. A New Orleans correspondent of the Philadelphia Times writes: On a quiet little thoroughfare letting off of St. Charles avenue, there might have been Been during the heavy rain yes terday afternoon a big Bhaggy Now fouudlaud dog carrying a spread um brella iu his mouth, his dripping fail sticking out from under and wagging complacently. Investigation revealed the fact that mere was a nine giri under tlie um brella with the dog, her tiuy arm arm thrown around his neck, and the two tripping along most amicably. "My name is Marie," said the little maid upon beiug questioned, "aud this is Beauregard, my very own dog. Yes, Beaury goes to school with me. I go to the kindergarten, you know, aud he r.lways carries the umbrella if it's raining, because 1 can't, you see, and he can." Aud the big umbrella sheltering the two friends passed on. jNDUSTRIAL. reports bottled Munich, Bavaria, liquefied nir. Some comets have more than one tail. The great comet of 1744 had six tails spread fan shape. Two French biologists find evidence that fasting lessens the effect of diph theria and other microbial poisons. The largest mammoth 'found in the UBiberian ice fields measured seventeen feet in length and was ten feet high. Electricity has been adopted as tho motive power of the machinery con nected with the drainage system in New Orleans. To guard against disease the Legis lature of New Hampshire passed a law providing for the inspection of all ice sold within the State. Tho eye of the vulture is so con structed that it is a high-power tele scope, enabling the bird to see objects at an almost incredible distance. A nugget of platinum, weighing nearly two pounds, is on exhibition in New York. This is believed to be tho largest nugget ever discovered, tho metel being usually found iu very small grains. A company has been formed which made an offer to the municipality of St. Petersburg, Russia, to light all the streets of the city with electrio lights for the same price that is now paid for tho very unsatisfactory lighting with oil lamps. Charles Burckhalter, the astronomer of theChabot Observatory, of Cali fornia, will travel half-way around the world so that for two minutes, in far off India, he may endeavor to photo graph the suu during solar eclipse of next January. ' True manna is said to be found on the blades of a blue grass growing in Queensland. Nearly three parts of it consist of mannite, which, though sweet, is not a sugar. Masses as large as marbles appear on the nodes of tho stems. The manna-bearing grass is not only indigenous to Australia, but is found in tropical Asia and Africa. Telegraph and telephone poles are the latest development in the line of manufactures from paper. They are made of pulp in which a small amount of borax, tallow, aud other ingredients are mixed. These are cast in a mold in the form of a hollow rod of the de sired length. The poles are claimed to be lighter and stronger than wood, and it is said that tho weather does not affect them. RAISINC A BIG BELL. It Weighs Ninety-Eight Ton. and 1. Over Twelve Feet High. For some time past there has been a sort of dead-heat between the two big gest bells in the world, tho oue at the Cathedral iu Moscow, and the other at the unfinished pagoda of Mengoou, India, north of Mandulay across tho rivor. If the former was the bigger of the two, it was cracked, and therefore useless as a bell, while the latter, though whole, has 'dragged its sup ports down till it rested ou the ground, aud would not emit any sound. Now, however, it has beeu reswnng, aud can claim attention as the biggest bell, in working order, iu the world, says Lon don Sketch. In 1890 the Burmese community decided to have the bell raised, and employed the Irrawaddy Flotilla Com pany, Limited, to do the work. The rim of the bell was first supported by huge baulks of timber wedged in all round, and a tripod erected over it to fasten the shackle to and keep it up right. "The'old supports having been knocked away, two large irou columns, twenty-five feet high, cast by tho Irra waddy Compauy, were erected, with concrete foundations. A large steel cross-girder, with a distributing girder ou the top of it, was then passed through the shackle, aud the bull was raised by screwjacks all round aud wedges of timber, until the cross- girder could be placed ou Uie pillars and riveted in position. The screw jacks were then eased and the bell left swingiug, with its lower rim about two feet ten inches from tho ground, The weight is about uiuety-eight tons, the circumference at the base being 51) feet, aud at the top twenty-six feet. It averages over a foot in thickness. The bell itself is over twelve feet high, and the shackle, which was intended for logs of timber, about twelve feet. The piu iu the shackle has a diameter of sixteen inches. The bell was, ojist about the beginning of the century by King Isodaw-paya as au accompani ment to the huge brick pugodu which he never finished. It is said to have been cast on au islaud aud rafted across. No proper means yet exist for striking the bull, but when hit with a heavy piece of wood it gives out a deep vibrating boom. Derivation of the Names of the Day.. Suuday is so called, because it was anciently dedicated tj the worship of the buu. Monday means literally the day of the uioou. Tuesdiiy was dedi cated to Tniseo, the Mars of our Saxon ancestors, the deity that presided over combats, strifes and litigation. Hence in Euglaud Tuesday issize day; the day for combat, or commencing litiga tiou. Iu this country it is generally the day selected for the opening of court terms or susHiotis. educsduy is so culled from Wodiu, or Odm, deity or chief umong the northern nations of Europe. TuiaTuilay wits named by the Saxons from Thor, 'the old Teutonic god of thunder. Friday is from Frea or Friga, a goddess of the old Saxon mythology. Kattirduy means simply Saturn's day.'thu name beiug derived from the deity of that name, Traveling on the Juuiffrau. Un the new Juugfrau lluilwav in Switzerland no passengers will 1 accepted until examined medically, ami if auy travelers feel ill they must get out, aud they w ill be afforded medical attendance. SCIENTIFIC AND THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. IIednp.lt Alone Now Determined Novel Writing lpnfrnlng Thrown In A New Tack III. Kxplnnntlnn -The True Test A Ciloomy Climax, 1"e Itc. Ere they were wed 'twas freely snld Hhe led him by the nose; Now his turn's eoine; she sits at home, And wonders where he goes. Cleveland Leader. Ietennlnefl. 'Don't appear to be in such a hurry to meet him, Maud." 'I'm only hastening to pass him by. Judy. Novel Writing. "Pushpen thinks he has struck n new note in fiction." "It must be a bank note." Chicago Kecord. Ieafening. "A man who will wear such a suit of clothes must be deficient in taste." "Taste! Why, ho must bo hard of hearing." Detroit Journal. A New Tack. "My wife is a most original wo man, said Drown. w uy, wnen l proposed to her, instead of saying this is so midden, slie said, "well, 1 think it's about time.' " Harper's Ba zar. Thrown In. Wife "It does seem hard that when a woman marries hub has to take uer husband's name." Husband "Well, she takes every thing else he's got, why leave that out?" Pick-Me-Up. Hi Kxplnnntlnn. Johnnie has been accused of crying. "I des I aiut," he maintained, gulp ing. "What aro yon doing tnen" ques tioned Uncle Henry. "Lettin' my eyes leak." Chicago Record. A Ciloomy Climax. "Did you finish the story you were at work on?" "Yes," replied the litterateur. "You were iu doubt ns to its conclu sion. Did it have a happy or unhappy ending?" "Unhappy. The editor refusod to print it." Tit-Bits. The True Tet. Bess "You could hardly call her a social success." Jess "Why, she seems to have plenty of admirers." Bess "Oh, yes, if you look at it that way, but I don't believe she's on friendly terms with a single mau sho over rejected." Chicago Journal. All He Could Carry. "I took the dough," soid the gentle man who hud beeu caught "going through the clothes" of a drunken mau, "because I don't believe iu no mau a-haviu' more than he needs." "Bnt how did yon know that ho did not need his money?" "Uf course he didn't need it. He was plumb paralyzed." Iudiaunpolis Journal. No (ireat Iangcr. In the Criminal Court the presiding Judge ou the bench, a German, asked to be excused from jury duty. "Why?" asked the Judge. "Well, Your Honor, I don't under stand good English." "Oh, you will do," replied tho Judge. "You won't hear much good English here, anyhow." Philadelphia Record. Wifely Arroinpllshment. Mrs. Conimonstalk (soberly) "Aro you sure your fiance will make a good home body, Ely? Do you thiuk she knows anything about mending, for instance?" Cholly Commonstalk "About mend ing, mother? Why, that is her very strongest poiut. ' 1 saw her mend a busted tire once iu just fourteen min utes by the watch." Harper's Bazar. The Why of It. "Perfidious woman!" he hissed through his clenched teeth. "Oh, why do you speak thus?" sho faltered. "Thou well knowest!" Such was probably the fact. Almost anybody could see his teeth did not tit very well, and had to be kept clenched if they were to be hissed through with any degree of comfort. Detroit Journal. An Age Limit. "Did you speak to my father? said Miss Gushlcy. "Yes," replied the young man with embarrassment. "You told him that despite your humble fortune, we wished to marry?" "Yes or something to that pur pose. " "Aud what did he reply? That I was too young?" "No, not exactly. He said that I was old enough to have more sense." Washington Star. blierltM'k Agalu 4"Ah," said Sherlock Holmes, sitting down on the comer of the editor's desk, "I see you have just received a story from a young wouiau iu a lawyer's office." "How can you tell?" asked the edi tor. "Cau you recognize the type writing?" "No. Don't you see the strifTg is tied in a regulation true love knot? That is tho young woman end ol it. And iustead of ribbon she has used red tape." Cincinnati Enquirer. Value of Clean Mrrrta. It pays to have the cbffiiest streets iu the world. The etr.lt bureau iu Paris finds itself with a surplus of LIFE'S JOURNEY. He went to seek his fortune With light and Joyous tread, And nil his bag nnd bnggnga Was just a crut of bread, Ho proud and Independent, That vonth upon that day. Ho brightly beamed the future, He threw the crust away. Years afterward a pilgrim Without sack or load,' But, with a stick to lean on, Came hobbling down the road. S It was the youth yon wot of, Now humbled, bowed and "bust,1 And bo had journeyed homeward To try i ' nnd find that crust. L. I'nrks, in Truth, HUMOR OF THE DAY. Bobby 'Ta, what is an law?" Pa "Usually the helr-at-lawyer, Uobhy." Judge. "I can't see why they speak of the wisdom of the serpent. " "Well, you never heard of a serpent getting its leg pulled, did yon?" Truth. Gosling "Miss Oldstylo seems to be very strong on literature.'- Miss Giddy "Yes, poor thing; that's all that is left to her!" Truth. "My husband is a great lover of tho beautiful." "Indeed he is. I should think that you would almost feel jea lous sometimes." Detroit Journal. Jimmy "I heard Tommy Jones was ill nearly all tho holidays." Johnny "Yes, and what's worse, he got well just in time to go to school." Boston Traveler. Mrs. Hnshcroft "Is there too much seasoning in the turkey, Mr. Billings?" Billings "No; I should say there is too little turkey iu the seasoning." Indianapolis Journal. . Freshman "I would like to get shaved, sir close, sir." Barber "Exactly, sir; there is nothing better for the scalp than that, if you don't mind the looks." Judge. Frances "Yes, he is pursuing literature." Gertrude "Indeed. And is he very successful?" Frances "No. It is still a long way ahead of him." Cleveland Lender. Teacher "Tommy, if you gave your little brother niuo sticks of candy and then took away seven, what would that make?" Tommy "It would make him yell." Harper's Bazar. "How could you have the nerve after hearing her to tell her that sho sang divinely?" "Why, my dear fel low, a woman who would sing like that could be told anything?" Puck. The Boarding Mistress "And she moved away owing you for throe weeks' meat?" The Fat Boy "Yes'm! It wasn't so much, mum. She kept a boardin'-house, you know." Puck. "Willie Wishington," said the friend, "is one of those people who tell everything they know." "Yes," replied Miss Cayenne wearily, "aud he doesn't talk very much, either." aslungtou Star. First Cabmau "I axed him t'reo dollars, but he said he had only two; an', anyhow, he said de legal fare was only one." Second ahman "Well, I s'pose you took do two dollars au' ac cepted de apology." Puck. Tramp (desperately, to reporter) "If yer don't give ine some money, guv'nor, I'll commit suicide before yer werry eyes." Reporter (eagerly) "I wish you would my good fellow; "copy" is awfully scarce!" Staudard. Waggish Friend "Where did you get that " Sjiriggins (gasping). "Eh! Who" "That hat?" "Oh! lT.it9 fit itmirual ltotwlit It. umund the corner. I was afraid you were go ing to ask me where I got this um brella." New York Weekly. Novel ltiiblilt Traps. Many of the Russiai! fanners west of town are complaining about jack rab bits falling down their chimucys and frequently lodging thcrciu, stopping the passage of the smoke. Their pea santlike houses which are all pro vided with large fireplaces and pro portionately large chimneys are most ly low aud covered w ith "the "beauti ful." Tho chimneys, of course, have to bo kept clear of snow. After it has been shoveled away several times, a large funnel-shaped cone remains, the walls of which aro rendered icy by the alternate influence of tho tire below aud the cold above. Any wild an imal prowling' around ou a bitter cold night, upon Hearing one of these smoke cones and feeling the waruitu would naturally seek closer proximity thereto, whereupon, Uh ventures would invariably result in a slide, Mr. An imal landing iu the lire box below, Kulm (N. D.) Wind. Kuap From Kuutlower Seeds. Those interested iu new industries may be glad to hear that it is possible to manufacture good soups from sun flower seeds. Sunflowers grow easily, aud need little attention. A company has been organized in the United States to manufacture this sort of soap. It is claimed that the average yield of plants to the acre is ''Mm pounds gross; percentage of oil is one-third tho weight of the seeds, so that 000 pounds of seed will make 200 pounds of oil. The latter, wheu refilled and ready to use iu making soap, is worth about $1 a pound, and is said to make the finest of toilet soups. The net profit of the sunflower to the grower is put ut ftl 1 un iicre. lint Killing Their Fad. Tl,d newest fin 1 in Scott County. Indiana, is "rat killings." The i.-itnty has lately beeu invaded by hordes of rats, which are doing much damage. When a "killing" i arranged all the men and robust boys in the neighbor hood are invited, and, armed with clubs and accompanied by dogs, they begin a systematic clcuuing out of barus, haystacks aud corn cribs. The rats are very tierce, aud several men have beeu severely bitteu by them, but the work goes on nevertheless, and the average mortality of rodents at a kill ju is about 200. Detroit Free Press. 1 $10,000 at the eud of the year.