Tiie Forest Fepublican I pabll-dioj ovary WuJn lay, by J. E. WENK. Office In Smearbaugh & Co.'. BulUUng KLM BTIlERr, TIONE3TA, tk. Tcrnm, - Itl.oit Lr Venr. Wo subscriptions re tuJ for snorter period thtin throo months. Correspondent-, aoliot4u fr0 of lb country. No no: la will lw tacna o' "iionymout ROnimnnieulniM. RATES OF ADVERTISING! On, Squire, on, Ineh, on, In-wtlon. .1 I Of) On, quar, on, Inch, on month. . 8 on On, Pquarp, on. Inch, Hire month,. . On, Nquar on, Iwh, on, year..... 1011 Two tvpmres, one yeir I-Iiki Ouarter Column, on, year S ' II. If Column, on, ynnr. .VMM On, Column, on, year l"l CO lial advertisement, ten cents pw lln, each Insert ion. Marriages an, I ileith notlcM gratis. All billsior yearly ad vertincin-mts C"llvted quarterly Tamporary advertisements iuut be p. 1 1 in advance. Job work cash on deliver. OREST REPUBLICAN VOL. XXX. NO. 30. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1807. $1,00 PER ANNUM. Wbcru iIciuOm dogs nro unclioinoil postmen nro not obligee! to deliver mail, bo ilio authorities Lave decided. The Trenton (N. J.) Trno American thinks tlmt after nil, the Klondike fever will probably cliiim more victims than the yellow variety. In the opinion of tbo New York Mail and Express there in often more political wisdom aired in a village gro cery than in a State oonventiou. r It will lo obsorved that the minors returning with rhhes from the Klon dike are not half no gleeful that they have gold an that they are homo again. It ia CHtimatod that tho French Gov ernment will expend altogether $21, 400,000 on tho Exposition of 1000, of which Paris will contribute $1,000, 000. To a spectator who has been accus tomed to witucHS baseball oncouuterH and football scrimmages the game of golf looks like almost an ideal form of porfoct rest, facetiously observes the Chicago ltccord. Stuuitzapoltavaskayn is tho name of the place whero tho building of the great Chinese Eastern Kail way through Manchoorin, and which is to connect the Siberian Kailway with tho Chi nes6 system, wns recently begun, if Htanitzupoltuvasknya bo a sample of tho length of East Siberian and Mun choorian place miinos tho trains of the now railway will be obliged to "go slow" in order to give tho brakemen time to call them out between Htatious. A Brussels correspondent of a Paris journal says that tho feature of tho Brussels Exposition that . attracts by far tho most attention is the conver sion of a log into a clean, crisp, well- uiusirutoil little newspaper. This ex hibit is, inado by an enterprising firm of paper manufacturers and the local newspaper, "Petit ltlou." Hugo logs ire fed into a gigantic hopper, cut into small pieces, and after passing through most interesting stages of paper manu facture are fed into a small perfecting printing press. Iu full view are edi torial rooms, artists, engravers, storo typers and men setting typo by ma chines, aud almost beforo the cud of a k log has reached tho hopper tho other end is folded under a newsboy's arm aud being cried through the exhibition grounds. This is an ago which is making in creased demands for light and air, ob Bcrvos the New York Observer. Mauy of tho newest river and Houud steam ers of this section now advertise among their attractions diuiug sutoons on the main deck, instead of in a stuffy lower cabin, as of yore. The ocean steamers, which aro necessarily more compact iu construction, aro supplied with plen tiful currents of air circulating around between decks, even in heavy weather when tho hatches requiro to bo bat tened down. Kestaurauts huvo thoir revolving fans, and the best of engine rooms their aerating 'apparatus. All ' this is in tho iuterest of an improved and thoroughly sensible sanitation. "There is life in the air" is a true say ing. Public health, aud often public morality, too, is bettor when society is aerated. While tho Trans-Siberian ruilwuy is iu process of construction, it is inter esting to note that a movement is al ready assuming shape in this country to establish connection with this gig antic system by means of a trunk line built from Portland, Oregon, to Ber ing sea. Of course there are many diiliculties in the way, but if tho enter prise succeeds it will enable tourists to make a complete circuit of the globe iu less than thirty days. The Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Com pany has sent out a mup within tho last few days showing the character of this proposed route. The time re quired to make a tour of tho globe by means of this route is showu iu the following table, which also gives the important stopping places along ' tho route: Miles. Days. H'rs Ch.ie.ago to Portland. ... 2,374 3 8 Portland to Boring strait.. ii.SC 6 10 llt rintc Btruit to Irkutsk. 3,200 0 hi Irkutsk to 8t. Petersburg.. 3,1171) 7 15 .St. Petersburg to Berlin . y3 I 0 Uerliu to Turls 607 .. 17 Paris to London. 2iH 8 London to Liverpool... 202 i Liverpool to Now York. . S.Otiti 5 8 New York to C'bicugo 012 1 M,1'.W 31 20 At the present time it requires nearly three months of constant travel to uiuke a complete circuit of tho globe. Much, therefore, is to be gaiued bj tho establishment of this new route: and, iu spite of the uppurout diflieul ties which render the enterprise doubt fill, it is siuiply a question of tiui before this ovcrlund route to the ol world becomes a definite reality. THS COLDEN SIDE. There's many a rest on tho road of llfo, If wo could onlv stun to tnke It: Ami ninny a tone from tho better land. If ttie iii-rii loo heart would wakn It. To tho sunny soli Hint Is full of hope, Ami whose beautiful trust ne'er falleth, The grass Is green anil flowers are bright. Though tho wintry storm prcvutlctu. 1 letter tohnpn, though tho clouds hung low, Ami to keep tho eyes still lifted, I'or tho sweet bluu sky will soon peep through. When the ominous elouils nro riftod. Thero was never a night without a day, Nor an evening without a morning; And tho darkest hour, the proverb goes, Is the hour before tho dawning. , r- HE fact that ho was riding a bicycle should have kept him to remember ing that ho was not living iu an age of romance. But he forgot it. And to live iu the midst of a matter-of-fact world and forgot that it is such is what makes most of the tragedies of that world. Thero were excuses for him, of course. Tho first, that he was young; tho second, that ho was care-free, and tho last and as the nursery rhyme has it, tho best that he had come from the early spring of New Yjrk to that of Southern California. He had ridden through willow paths along tho gravel roads that a month before had been tho bed of the Sau Gabriel; ho had crossed tho shallow gleaming branches of tho stream time aud again; ho had looked from the green swell of tho divide over as green valley, whore wild flowers were thick on the ground and where peach and almond trees made pink and white patches. Just across the valley the mountains were half covered with snow, but the air was warm from the sea and the sky was bright blue. So there wus excuse for his forgetting the bicycle and thinking the world a place for romance. A place for romance, but there can bo none without a womau. And there was no womau. He coasted down the incline of the divide aud made for tho Monte road, by tree-bordered byways aud paths. Thero was not a flake of dust in the splendid air. All kinds of picturesque, Old World things ought to happen. Iu a garden of this sort man ought certainly not to be alone. Some nymph should come 'dripping aud glittering out of tho zanja; some slender figure should push its way through the high, green barley and the Unity branches of the peppers aud stand beside him. He forgot tho barbed wire fence be tween the barley Held und the road. The grasses und (lowering weeds and the peppers hid it. But the zanja rippled aud purled on, the barley waved iu the wind from the sea, and tho sun gleamed on au uninhabited world. Then a bell rang out, just ahead, by the road side, aud the silence of the spring high noon was filled with the voices of children and young girls. The woman entered the gurden. She was neither nymph of zanja nor sprite of the field, only a black-gowned school girl, who stood on the school house stops and waved a handkerchief at the passing tourist. - The tourist was a man aud young which was all the school girl cared about. The girl wus pretty and willowy which was all the mau cared about. He raised his cap and motioned to a clump of trees down the highway. Of course she would under stand. It was all a part of the roinauce and the country, and she understood. She left tho culling, screaming chil dreu and her older companions and strolled toward where he sut, on the grass under the trees. It was out of sight of the school house. He watched her black, lithe figure moving through the llccked sunshine that came in through tho plumy branches of the poppers. They were all alone iu the midst of spring and the garden, birds were sing ing from the earth, the sun was shin ing from the sky, aud the soft wind blew from tho sea beyond the valley. The snowy mountaius were far away, aud the world on the other side of them yet further. Her name, she said, wus Alicia. How sweet the double e's of the vowels, how dilt'erent the stem Nelson to which ho hud to confess. But oven that was pretty when she said it. How old was she'? She was fifteen. The heroines of the poets were thut uge. Wherelid she live? Some vague way over thero umoug the pink blossoms. He re membered thut when he was a child thoso questions had always tbeguu an acquaintance: "What is your name? How old aro you? Where do you live?" All the wisdom he had accumulated iu the years between then and now hud vanished. He did not want it. He forgot thut he had meant to reach tho hotel of the valley by luncheon time. He wus not hungry; but Alicia wus. She put her plump brown liund into her pocket and brought out a news puper roll. Inside of tho paper there wus a tortillu and boiled mcut. She ute these while she talked to him, and when she hud finished she started to draw tho back of her wrist ueeuss her mouth; but remembering the teachings of school und the preseuoe of the for eign young muii, she took out her handkerchief. He had meuut to ask for thut handkerchief, the white signal which hud fi ltered iu the air; but he suw thut it wV. grimy aud ink-spotted, so ho asked nyr tho wire riug she wore iusU ud. Ali iu put ted with it as though it hud been very precious. t MB1 7M There Is many n gem In tho path of life, Which wo pass In Idlo pleasure. That Is richer far than a Jewelled crowu, Or thn miser's honrded treasure. It may bo tho lovo of a little child, Or a mother's prayer to heaven, Or only a beggar's grateful thanks For a cup of water given. Better to weave In the web of llfo A bright and golden tilling, Aud do God's will with a ready lienrt, And hands that nro swift and willing, Than to snap tho delieiito silver threads Of curious liven nsundor, And then blame heaven for the tanglod onds, Aud sit, and grieve, and wonder. M. E. Crouch. T,. Then bIio brushed the crumbs from her black frock and stood up. must go now," she said, with an acceut that kept the words ffoin being com inonpluce. "First tell me where you live," he askeil. She pointed over to the patch of feathery pink. "In the white house in them trees." "What is your father's uoine?" "Mateo Manzelo," she auswored, wiudiug one of her heavy braids around her hand. "I will como to see you to-night," no told her. "Yes," she murmured, with musical indifference, as she wont leisurely up the pathway aud never once looked back. The man rode on to the hotel and returned to real lifo us ho avked if a valise aud a trunk had come aud if there were any letters for Nelson Cameron. Thero was one. After ho had had bis luncheon ha sat ou the long piazza, from which the snow- cupped mountains could bo seen through the climbing roses, and read it. But tho letter was dull, aud tho memory of tho brown hair and eyes that had always seemed the most bean tiful iu the world paled beside that of two soft black braids aud two orbs as soft aud as black. There was a vague promise thut the owners of tho brown huir and eyes might be iu California, too, ere long. Cameron was not so pleasod'as he tried to think ho was. He began to imagine tho meeting of that night. It came about. Old Mau.elo and his fat, black-wrapped wife did not object to him iu the least. Ho walked for hours up and down tho moonlit road, with Alicia's hand in his und went from her a Lord Lovel ou a steed of glittering steel at midnight, The poison was in his blood. He had eaten of tho lotus, aud he forgot home aud the past. He gave reckless rein to tho course of young blood, And so a fortnight passed away. There were no more letters. They were being sent to Santa Barbara, where he had told the brown-eyed girl thut the first weeks iu March would find him. He had not written to her. He had meuut to. But it was the laud of poco tiempo. In iHirsuunce of tho romance he was living, he one duy put on the dirty overalls aud coat of old Mauzelo and went with Alicia to the Sau Gabriel railway station to wash aud pack oranges. Alicia was dressed iu faded dark blue, with a yellow handkerchief around her neck and a piuk bow in her hair. She was very pretty, aud very open iu accepting the open devo tiou of the American. It was still just a lark for him. it wus rather more for her a little -more. A tally-ho drove up to the station aud the driver stopped it, thut his party of tourists might watch one of the really picturesque scenes left to tho United States. Some of the wash ers looked up. Cameron aud Alicia Mauzelo were tulkiug together and did not. Both were gazing light love into each other's eyes. The boss of the gang came up to the tully-ho with a haudful of oruuges. The finest one, all wet and glistening with its scrub bing, he offered to the girl ou the front scut. "Thank you. What a splendid one!" she piaised. "I am so thirsty thut it will taste good." "May I peel it for you?" he asked, with au iullectiou thut showed him English at once. He had not offered to peel them for the others, but this was a very beauti ful womuu, with brown hair aud a skin that reminded him of the wouieu ut home. While he prepared it, she looked ut the workers. And when he huuded it to her: "Thauk you," she suid uguiu, "and cuu you tell me who thut mun by the girl iu the blue gown is? lie is evi dently not a Mexican. " He wondered why she should cure to know, but he answered: "No; he is au American. All I cuu tell you ubout him is that his name seems to be Nelson. It is whut the girl culls him." "The girl?" "Yes. It's a picturesque Uirtutiou, I gutherod from her father. It hus been going on for some weeks, and the old mau says Nelson, or whutever his uume reully is, meuus to marry her. But it is unsufe." "Very, I should say," said the girl, reflectively. "They rurely do, these whites thut muke love to pretty Mcxicuus," added tho Englishman. Tho pretty Mexicuu cast up her dark eyes just then and took notice of tho tully-ho. She hud known it wus there ull along, but she hud not been interested iu it. "The lady ou the front wutch you," she murmured to her companion. Cameron glanced up. Ho cuught th unfaltering look of the brow n eyes, aud the scales the rosy sculcs of ro mance fell from his own. He flropped tho orange that he held into 1 tho water in his tub aud started to the tally-ho. But he took only a utep, then went back. Tiiegirl ou the front seat had turned to the others. "Can't wo get out for a whilot I'm sure we are all cramped and tired, and I should like to watch this pretty scene for a bit," The Englishman helped her down. but she thanked him and walked away. Her manner implied that she would make her own investigations. She wandered among the boxes and the tubs and trays, hazarding a word to the washers hero ond there. Most ol them did not understand her. She came up finally beside Cameron's tub and spoke to him. The on-looker fancied that she might be asking how many oranges ho had cleaned that duy. Alicia, a half dozen feet away at the end of the tray, was unconcerned. Sc the Anglo-Saxon conducts his tragedy. It is evidently more attractive her than in Santa Barbara," the fair Amer lean said, in cool, placid tones. Cameron stammered. "I can't blame you. It breaks mj heart, of course. But that can't bi helped. I cau stand it and bettei now than later. Only I cared for you a great deal a great, great deal." She stopped. "Don't you now?" asked Cameron baldly. "Yes. I supposo I always shall, too. But, of course, I shall never see you again." He started to protest, a littlo out roared in feelings at her severity. "Pleaso don't make a Bceue," she said, anxiously. "It won't do any good. You ought to know mo wel) enough to know that. Cameron reflected that Alicia would have screamed, aud cried, aud stabbed perhaps, but would have forgiven, That was hor Latin blood. This girl was Anglo-Saxon. She would novel forgive, but neither would she evet forget. Ho understood he was o) her race. So he kept silence. "Did you tell her you would marry her?'' "Yes." Ho did not ottonipt tc evade. "Then you will keep the promise, will you not? He did not answer. "I must leave that to yon," she finished. "If you think you should, you will do it. Good-by. Tho cool possessors of hot young blood ported after the manner of the well-bred of their kind. Tho girl drove away through the country ol romance. She was in Elysiau lielcU and her heart and soul were iu hades but no one knew that. The mau washed his fruit in silence while tho littlo daughter of the lunJ stood beside him, patiently waiting for him to speak. When ho did, lit said: "We shall bo married iu a week a' tho mission, Alicia." "Yes," she answered, pleased. Aud tho romance was closed. Argonaut. Ifoa.ed In a Steeple. The only man iu tho United States who Jives iu a church steeple is Heze kiah Bradds. the sexton of the Buptis! Church at Westport, a suburb of Kan sas City. Tho room is small, scarcely lurgoi tuuu a dry goods box. In thut tiuj room ho cooks, oaU aud sleeps. It it just under the bells. Through the small windows that fur nish light iu the daytime ho cuu see e portion of Kansas City. Above hie head the swallows twitter as they flv iu and out through tho lattico work. Iu his smull room are a bed, a dresser, a tiny stove and a table. Ho hus been sexton of the church for several years, aud has occupied thie room in tho steeple since his wife left him. Some years ago he married a kwidow with a grown sou. The sou proved a bono of contention, aud aftei numerous quarrels the wife left her husband, taking the furniture with her. Then tho church trustees suggested thut Mr. Bradds move into the littlo room beneath the bells. Church mem bers furnished the room comfortably, and since theu Mr. Bradds hus lived s lonesome life. Hen., of Touch Wanting. One has heard of heartless women and women without feeling, but that a human being cau exist without any Bense of touch seems marvelous. Yet that is claimed for Mrs. Evurtiua Turdo, a young widow iu the West In dies. Physicians who have kuowu her case pronounce it a physiological freak. She is said to be wholly with out feeling, has swallowed poison, been shot, bitten by rattlesnakes, re ceived a puncture iu her heart from a doctor's lance aud hud her neck dis located, all without experiencing unj paiu. Besides theso experiments, she cau without injury drink benzine aud light the gus ut a hollow needle which pierces her cheek. This strunge as sertion is bucked by the word ol physicians of repute. As u child she was bitten by a cobra, aud it is claimed that her sensory nerves were paralyzed aud her system inoculated with poison. 1'i ter tli. Great'. Hut. Two hundred years ago, on August 0th, Peter the Great became a ship builder's apprentice ut Suurdum, a lit tie village a few miles from Amsterdam It is trim and picturesque. Iu a nur row lano by tho waterside is tho hill iu which the Czar lived tho life of workmun. Nicholas II. recently in closed it in a new building of brick uud stone iu the Byzuutiue stylo. A Corner on the Aliliulet. Chemical uuiues are occasionally curious aud long, as everybody kuowt to his cost. Here is another to if added to the list: Dipuruossiuoctop- I henoudipheiiilpiperu.iuu. It has been given ny an itunuu chemist to a new compound which he hus discovered. TIIE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. (II, Downfall Not Qualified to Judge Modern Chivalry Wanted: A Name Trouble Averted Not a Fair Kxclinns;, Might Have llcen Worse, Ktc, Etc. llo used to bo a "ladles' man," Dabbling and gay; llo more his hair in hangs and had A winning way He used to be a "ladles' man," liut things are run on another plan To-dnyl Now tin is just a woman's man; Nllnnt nnd meek; Ills wife says man aro fools, and bo's Afraid to speak; She's big and strong nnd runs affairs, And sits upon him If he dure. To speak I Cleveland Loader, Not Qualified to Judge. Maude "What's the luckiest day to bo born on?" Claude "Don't know. Only tried one." Modern C:blvalrv. Awkward Miss (with umbrella) "Bog pardon!" Polite Gentleman "Don't mention it. I have another eye loft." New York Weekly. Might Have llcen Worse. The Wife "Did the editor say your poem had no merit?" The Poet "Oh, no. He merely said it wasn't tho kind they paid for." Town Topics. Trouble Averted. "Itis a good thing the Siamese twins are dead." "Why?" "Suppose one of them wanted to rido a wheel aud the other oue didn't." Wanted: A Name Her Doctor "Sick, eh?" Herself "Yes." Her Doctor "What's the matter?" Herself "Oh, I don't know. What is fashionable now?" Tho Yellow Book. Where Man Is Appreciated. "There's no excuse for a man whoso wife does not appreciate him," said Mr. Meoktou. "It'o his own fault." "How is ho going to help himself?" "By purchasing a tuudem bicycle." Washington Star. Love I, llllud. Willy "Sny, Auntie, what did Uncle Bob marry you for?" Aunt "Why, for lovo, of course!" Willy (meditatively) "H'ui! Love will mako a man do almost anything, won't it, Auntie?" Toronto News. Womuu', Inhumanity to Mun. New Woman "Simply because a woman marries a man is no reason why she should tako his name." Old Bachelor "That's so. Tho poor fellow ought to bo allowed to keep something he could cull his own." Judge. Agreed. "I tell you, there's nothing like a good college truining to fit a young man for life." "That's right. It hardens his mus cles, gives him great powers of endur auce uud makes a mau of him." Phil adelphia North American. Ilreuklng It Gently. "Do you know, I'm quite worried about myself. I really believe I'm losing my nerve." "How do you notice it?" "I'm getting so I hate to auk any one for a loan. As soon as I suw you I begun to tremble." Lifo. An Opening Fur lllni. Fresh Youth "You told me thore'd be au opening for mo iu the full, and now you sny you don't care to employ me." Broker "Thero is au opening for you. Eight over there tho door. Good-day." Harper's Buzar. Not a Fulr Kaehaugt. Bobbie "Ethel, mamma has just promised me something nice aud warm. Give mo half your cuudy uud you cuu have it." Ethel "Hero's tho cuudy. Now what is it?" Bobbio (munching) "A spunking." Corroborated. "I rode tweuty-fivo miles ou my bi cycle last night," observed Brooks, "and cutue home perfectly fresh." "I huve no doubt of it," said ltiv ers. "I heard your wife telling my wife this morning thut you seemed to be raw ull over." Chicago Tribune. Nut Much of a MyMtery. KildutV "You say that tho cashier is mysteriously missing?" Burlow "Yes." "Aud that 575,000 of tho bunk's funds are ulso gone?" "Yes." "Then where is tho mystery ubout it?" A Holeinu Warning. "Whut immense ears tho uow neigh bor's boy has." "Yes, mummu. Ho told me whut made 'em so big." "What wus it?" "He suid his mummu wushed 'em so much thut they bouked full o' wuter and swelled." A 1'rvtty Custom. South American lovers huve u pretty custom. It is well kuowu thut when tho petuls of tho great laurel muguoliu aro touched, however lightly, the result is a brown spot, which develops in a few hours. The fact is lukeu advant age of by the lover, who pulls u mag nolia flower, uud ou one of its pure, white petals writes u uutto or message with u hard, slurp-pointed pencil. Theu ho sends tho llower, tho young lady puta it in a vuso of wuter, and iu three or four hours the message writ ten on the leaf becomes quite visible aud remuius so. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL, Another paving material has been discovered in Florida at Tumpu. It is tho pebble phosphate, und is said to be very good and cheap. Tho production of india rubber in Mexico is attracting attention, and tho samples which have been exhibited are said to be of fine quality. Coul tar, when usod for dyes, yields sixteen shades of blue, the same num ber of yellow tints, twelve of orange, uino of violet, and numerous other colors and shades. The most wonderful astronomical photograph in the world is that which has recently boon prepared by London, Berlin ond Parisiau astronomers. It shows at least 0H,000,0()0 stars. A New Hampshire quarry is turning out a soapstone boot, drier. It is in tended .especially for rubber boots. The stono is to lie heated und then dropped into tho boot, to bo left thero till the latter is dry. Clover sickness, a common diseaso which often ruins clover crops, has caused German scientists to mako ex periments. They huvo succeeded iu getting cultures of the bacteria that produce tho disease. They expect that soon farmers will be able to inocu late their land just as a human being may be treated. Planters in tho Southwest havo fin ally found a practical means of destroy ing insects that infest cotton plants without injury to the boll. Tho ma chine, drawn by two horses, looks like a cultivator. It is provided with roll ing brushes which turn in opposite di rections so as to brush both sides ol tho cotton plaut, brushing oir all insects from tho plant without injury. The insects are caught on rolling bauds placed on each side of tho machine, which carries the insects betwecu two1 rollers, whero they ure crushed. Tho attention of a French surgeon, Professor Lnnnelougue, was Intel drawn to blisters produced on tht scalps of Bcverul children who hud been playing iu tho shudow of u well whose top was under bright sunlight. Tho idea that his might be an X-ray elTect suggested itself. Experiments were theu made on a number of persons, when several who were exposed un protected to similar radiations were burned, while others who wero pro tected by strontium glass escaped. The investigator dcclures that X-ray dis coveries will revolutionize tho trout uiont of sunstroke. He thinks the an cient Greeks may huvo been wiser than wo know in covering their heads with brass helmets and their chests und backs with light metal cuirasses, nnd concludes that future protection from sunstroke may bo sought behind stron tium glass helmets. Inventing Lucifer Matches. It was during his early days a us sistant tcichcr ut a Beading (England) school that the lute Sir Isaac, theu Mr., Holden, invented ' tho lueifel mutch, through tho necessity for au illumiuunt ou dark wintry mornings. Ho told tho story thus: "In the morn ing I used to get up ut 4. o'clock, in order to pursue my studies, aud I used ut thut time Hint aud steel, in the use of which I found very greut inconveni ence. Of course I knew, as other chemists did, tho explosive material thut wus necessary iu order to pro duce instantaneous light, but it wus very difficult to obtain a light on wood by that explosive material, uud tho ideu occurred to ino to put sulphur un der the explosive mixture. I did that, and showed it iu my next lecture ou chemistry, a courso of which I wus de livering at a largo academy. There was a young mau in the room whose father was a chemist iu London, aud he immediately wrote to his father about it, and shortly afterward lucifor matches wero issued to the world. I believe that was the first occasion that wo hud the present lucifor mutch. I was urged to go and tako out a patent immediately, but thought it wus so smull a mutter, and it cost mo so lit tlo labor, that I did not think it proper." Woiitun'. Work at ItrusHcl l-:xlillltloii. At tho exhibition ut Brussels thero is a "womun's work section," iu which a number of girls are daily to bo seen pursuing their uvocutioiis. Tho mu jority of them, nuturully, aro luco mukers, producing the specialty of the couutry. It is shocking to know that for the monotonous hand-skilled uud eye-trying labor of luce-iiiaking the wage is but half a fruuc for tho long day. Think of toiling ull day, with tho attention aud tho eye-sight ou the struiu, for ten cents! Artificial flower mukiug is uuolher Brussels specially; very few of the blossoms thut adorn our huts are made ut home. It wus interesting to seo the manufacture ol snowdrop; how the blossom had to be quite elaborately constructed, uud theu how tho stem hud to be covered with green paper by deftly twisting fingers, uud how tho blossom hail tc bo cuught iu ut tho right moment to hung gracefully uud then to reflect thut tho result will be sold retuil iu America for teu or fifteen cents dozeu! Aiuei'lt-MU Hairpins. It wus not until 1 NTH that the man ufacture of hairpins began iu the United Stutes. Previous to that time those used iu this country wire brought from England or France. Now tht trudo is such u large one that it take 50,000 packuges, each containing twenty-four pins, to supply the whole Bale deuiund daily in New York ulolie. Could I'liolouruiill u ISIock of llou-s. What is to bo tho largest photo graphic cumeru iu tho world is ut present being made to the order of u Dublin firm. Tho cuse of tho instru ment measures seven feet bix inches long by six font high and is of richly curved ouU. The lens is of special manufacture uud will coat ubout tfoOOO BY THE MARSHES. In building green the willows bend, The rushes patient stand, from east to west the cloud-fleots trend At will of breezes bland; And dark against the sunlit sky The golden plover 11 y. Ueyond, a mist spreads filmy cloak O'er amber waters lone, And pud's of distant scattered sinoko Above the reeds nro blown; And zigzag traced, from left to right lnrts by a jaek-eulpe's flight. Hero bask the shy ami weary teal Ueslde the pool's dim edge, Hero water-hens all noiseless steal Among tho waving sedge. And bitterns In tho Inmost brake, Htaud solitary, liko a stake Wide stretches steeped Iu sylv iS"ieaguerO'l ny tin) sun; Winds, southwest winds, with w balm flreen grass and rushes dun; And wheeling through tho fur-off sky The gulden plover fly. Kmest MeUufToy, In Woman's Home Companion. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Hard money The money you try to borrow. Never waste your time; waste some body else's. Handled without gloves Knives und forks, generally. She "And wero you successful with your first case, doctor?" Ho "Y-yo-cs. The cr widow paid tho bill!" "The mills of tho gods grind slow ly," remarked the philosopher. "Geared too low, eh?" queried tho cy clist. Puck. "Drink to mo only with thine eyes"? Tho poet was a snge, I wist. Tho things one drinks with but ouo's eyc.T Are least expensive on tho list! Harper's Uuzur. "Timo works wonders," said a hoI dier, uged thirty-seven, when he re turned homo from India and found his twin sister only eighteen. Cal cutta Critic. "Were your wife's pictures satisfac tory?" "Good pictures ouough, but not at all natural." "What wns the de fect?" "Why tho fool of a photog rapher took her while she was looking pleusunt." Philadelphia Bulletin. "I don't hear Jones prating any more about his great love for little children." "Jones has moved into a house that has a vacant lot next door, where the boys of tho neighborhood play bull daily." Indianapolis Jour nal. "Why this sign uot to touch this particular piece of statuary with canes or uuibrollus?" asked a visitor ut the art exhibit. "Because," snapped a competing artist, "you could only do justice to it with au ax." Detroit Free Press. Bridget has a kitchen full of her company. Mistress (from tho heud of tho stairs) "Bridget!" Bridget "Yis, mum." Mistress "It's 10 o'clock." Bridget "Thank yo, mum; au'willyezbo so koiud as t' tell mo whin it's 12?" -London Tit-Bits. Why a Swelling Follows a lllow. Tho swelling which follows from a blow is nature's effort to protect tho part from further injury und to keep it ut rest while repair is going on. Whut actually takes place at tho scut of in jury is not even uow quite understood. Tho injury to tho smaller blood ves sels interferes with tho How of blood through them aud tho white corpuscles, with part of tho serum, tho watering part of tho blood, escape into tho sur rounding tissues. At tho same timo the blood vessels iu tho neighborhood dilute und the increased How of blood with tho thoroughfuro obstructed in creases tho swelling. It is probable that the white cor puscles of tho blood puss into the tissues to assist iu tho repair, as bees or ants assemble at an injury to their storehouse, but with this dilTerouue, thut tho substance of tho corpuscles is probubly converted into tho tissue of repuir. From one point of view the human body is only ono gigantic colony of iudividuuls, uud the swelling thut follows injury but tho rush of these to repuir tho breach. Phila delphia Times. The 1'oultry Industry. Our enormous wheat crop, which is extolled iu every journal iu tho coun try, aud which excites tho uduiirutiou of the world, is equalled by the value of tho poultry und eggs produced iu tho United Stutes, tho eggs uud poul try finding homo markets. At sixty cents u bushel tho total value of our wheut crop is ubout 100,000,000 a year. Tho census iu 1HJS0 (seven teen years ugo) showed tho vuluo of poultry und eggs to be '.0(,00(,(MiO, und yet it is doubtful if tho census enumerators wero ublu to get the full number or vuluo. To-day it is known thut tho poultry industry is ut leust one-third larger than iu IStfil, uud thut tho vuluo of tho poultry uud eggs produced in thiscoiiutry is fully jfllOO, 000,000, which places it on u par with many other leuding industries. Farm aud Fireside. White Auhuuls Cannot Smell. Very few animals but pigs uud sheep uro white ull over, uud it hus beeu found that pure white crcuturcs uro entire deficient iu tho sense of smell. Iu Africa white rhinoceroses poison themselves sometimes by fitting u euphorbia, which no ot'-iv uuiiiiul will touch, uud Italian wool growers do not like pure white sheep, b cause they ure ulwuys eutii.g gruss uud herbs which don't agree with them. I ml Inn LuiiKUugt s. There are uceording to uti eminent urchu ologist, no less than from 1'JO Lj 1.10 absolutely distinct lunguuges iu North uud South America. As tho growth of luuguago is very slow, ho thinks tho fact of tho existence of so greut u u' iety of iqieech oil the west ern continents proves that the native red men huve inhabited them for iiuiiy thou.-iuuds of years. do culm riultuweh like