Tie Forest Republican Ii published every ttednosJay, by J. E. WLJK. Office In Smearbangb. ft Co.'i BuildiD j ILM STREET, TIONESTA, FA. . Teimi, . Sl.uo Per Vear. No tubserl Mlons reoelved (or a thorter period than three months. Oorraspondence solioltel from all parts of tba ooontry. No not to wilt be taken of anonymous oommunlontions. RATES OF ADVERTISING) One Square, one Inch, one insertion..! I 00 One Square, one inch, one rjonth. ., 8 00 One Fquare. one inch, thre m inths. . fi ) One Square, one Inch, one year 10 00 Two Squares, one yeir ,.a 15tnl Quarter Column, one year.,,., Smu Half Column, one year .VMM One Column, on year 100 IM IjfttAl advertisements ton cent per line each insertion. Marriages an 1 deith notice gratia. All bills foryrarly advertiwm mW collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advanca. Job work dash on deliver. Porest Republican. VOL. XXX. NO. 45. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 23, 1898. S1.00 PER ANNUM. Governor John R. Roberts, of Wash ingtou, in a reoent address in Taooma, Hummed up what he termed his faith thus: "Life is a struggle; a school; o test of fitness. No struggle, no school ; no school, no fitness; no fitness, no fntnre." The amount spent annually on the roads of the country equal three per cent, on twenty-six million dollars. Were twenty six millions actually in Tested in good roads, we would have the finest highways in the world for the same annual cost, and be making money out of them besides. An invention which English people will not take up is the automatio writing telegraph. You write at one end of the system and at the other end a pen writes out what you have writ ten in your handwriting. Sketches can be transmitted in this way even at a distanco of 200 miles. There is fifty times as much invention in the i apparatus as there is in the telephone, bnt apparently no one wants it. The Savannah news says: "Great advertisers live in the hiBtory of the city and prosperity of their firms long after they themselves have "shuffled off this mortal coil;" their announce ments in the newspapers continue to bear frnit after the advertisers are dead. On the other band, the non advertising business man is dead to the community long before he leaves this life; and hiB business is more than apt to die with him. The books of the United Slates Mint in Denver show that the deposits of gold for the last year were the largest ever reoeived. The total will slightly exceed $12,200,000, and a conservative estimate made by the Mint officials places the entire output of Colorado at $22,000,000. in round figures. Colorado will go far ahead of California, as it is said to be doubt ful if California's output will touch the $18,000,000 mark. Last year Colorado's output was $16,500,000 and that of California was $17,000,000 while the total production of the country was $61,717,925. The Washington Star remarks: No portion of the Western Hemisphere is open to the despoiler as China is. All portions are reasonably safe from such assaults. There are rich countries in Central and South America indif ferently officered at times, and which in certain ciroumstances would be ex ceedingly tempting to the buccaneer ing spirit of Europe. They have their rackets among themselves, and gov ernment there might be more secure to the local advantage. Frequent shifts are ma Jo, and now thi3 leader is up and then that. But rapid and violent as the., changes may be, no - fine old land 'grabber with a crown on his head ever reaches bis long arm from across the sea and tries to profit by dissention. And why? The Monroe doctrine forbids. This year will have among its note worthy anniversaries the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the death of Isaao Watts. It will be chiefly as a vriter of hymns that he will he hon ored by affectionate remembrance. Of his hymns, says the Youth's Com panion, the Christian world has chosen a few as pre-eminent. If he had written only the ' hymn beginning: "O, God, our help in ages past," his name would have a sure place in the roll of makers of verso worthy and destined to live. A great hymn levels denominational barriers. While men are talking of Christian unity, or dreaming of it, the hymn, in its sphere of influence, if only for the moment when heard or sun", makes believers one. . He whohas strengthened and inspired generations, refreshing Che saints and moviu Joue who make no pretensions to saintliness, may well be remembered. The London Graphic declares that tihe sale of oocoa has increased in the British Isles enormously in the last five years, and thinks it may possibly supplant tea. Tea certainly has a high value as a stimulant when some strenuous immediate task must be done. Lord Wolseley recommends it ' for soldiers on the march, and mountain-climbers claim that it is their mainstay; but, ullj the same, pro tracted use of it plays the mischief with the digestion of most persons and! is highly injurious to the nerves of many. Coooa is sustaining aud diges. tible, and has no objectionable effects. It would be u public boom if some houses on favorite bicycle routes would net up somothing akin to the old fashied chocolate-houses; for the autumn is bringing out the fact that bioyole-riders have too often drunk of contaminated wells and arc paying the penalty in typhoid. Coooa, having been boiled, would not contain deadly uiioicbei. Vt 11! 1 millkTn r-r A!tr v a w-a wAMiiiNuiuiN During the Civil War there was o1y one spot in all our now United States where soldiers of both armies could meet on common ground as friends, not foemen, as brothers and sons of one father, the "Father of His Country." That, spot was Mount Vernon. A "truce of God" prevailed throughout the broad acres that con tained the home and tomb of Wash ington. Whether hunted by their enemy or drawn hither by the same reverent in spiration that attracts visitors to Mount Vernon from every part of the habitable globe, wearers of the blue and the gray were equally weloorae. The only restriction placed upon their coming was the servants' request thot they leave their arms at whatever point they entered the grounds, some times at the old porter's lodge, three quarters of a mile away. - At Washington's tomb unarmed pickets of the South and North fre quently met during the years of the "great conflict." Sacred, however, as this home of peaoe is, it is to the women of the United States, and to them alone, that we owe the purchase and preservation of Washington's home, and only their loving care has made possible the past and present restoration of this fine old type of the colonial mansion of a century and a half ago. The high privilege and real happiness of visiting this house and grounds, with all their varied and tangible memorials so intimately as sociated with the life and character of the immortal Washington, the American people owe to the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. Of the early struggles and patienkilabors of successive members of this association much might be said. Organized in 1858, under the regency of Miss Ann Pamela Cunningham, it obtained by purchase some 200 of the thousands of acres owned by the late Colonel John Augustine Washington, laBt private owner of Mount Vernon, who found himself uuable to maintain the estate. To his eredit be it said, Colonel Washington did not sell the land on whioh rests the tomb of Gen eral Washington and his family. The tomb, or the two aores containing it, were deeded as a gift to the associa tion. Later donations from Jay Gould and others have increased the real estate of the association, to 237 aores. ' " The restoration, equipment aud keeping of the respective rooms of the mansion have been intrusted to the noble women of the different States represented iu the Board of Vice-Regents. These vice-regents are representative women of most of the leading States, appointed by the regent, their names being submitted by her to the Board of Vice-Regents for confirmation or rejection, after the manner of Presidential appointments. There are thirty-three vice-regents now in office. These ladies have wrested what they affectionately style "this, our beloved home," from decay aud almost from annihilation. Not only the mansion and tomb with its family vault and two sarcophagi in olosiug the remains of "the General" and his "consort" receive their anxious care, but the work of the as sociation extends to all the outbuild ings and every distinctive feature of the grounds that has any connection with the period of Washington's occu pancy. The annuaf reports presented and read at the yearly meetings of tho WASHINGTON'S TOMB Ladies' Association show admirable results' iu their care of the place aud in the accumulation of articles of use in, or identified with, the General's family life. During the gatherings of the Board last year, Mrs. Charles Curtis Harri son, of Philadelphia (Vice-Regent for Pennsylvania), invited Architect T. Mallou Rogers, of Philadelphia, archi tect of the restoration of Indepen dence Hall, to oome to Mount Vernon and confer with the Mansion Commit tee. The result of this conference is fully outlined in a written report made by Mr. Rogers, embodying details of a projected restoration to be under taken this fall. This work will in volve aud effect a more complete transformation iu the general aspect of the interior than any yet attempted. The restored second floor of Indepen dence Hall has proved a revelation of Colonial beauty and simplicity. This restoration of the paneled hulls and antique stuirway of Mount Vernon will vividly recall the faces and costumes of the Carys, Fairfaxes, Lees, Piervys, Dulanys, Johnstons, Craiks, Hunters, Dudes, ltamsays, Fitzhughs, Wests, ML I fill a numb AT MOUNT VERNON. Stuarts, Dicks, Masons, Carlyles and other friends of Washington and the Cnrtises, with their hair-powder, face patches and silk stockings, and even their outdoor life, with outriders and fine equipages. In the report mentioned, aud in conversation with the writer, Mr. Rogers explained how, in response to the request of the committee, he made a thorough examination of the cellar, first floor hall, second floor hall, the antique staircase that greets the visi tor's eye as he enters the main door, also the side walls of the halls, doors, cornice, columns (supporting the girder sustaining the upper floors of the mansion), windows, etc. After carefully removing each layer of a small section of the paint on the side wall panels, the original color was re vealed. This proved to be n delicate WASHINGTON'S HOME French gray, almost a robin-egg blue. This color had originally been applied to the side walls and ceilings and panels of the stair skirting. This delicate' tint was in entire harmony with the then prevailing hues as seen in the garments and appointments of pel-sons of colonial distinction. The present coating of paint is a deep yellow-brown, grained and hideous enough to any one possessed of ar tistic tastes. It doubtless antedates the period of control by the associa tion. While carefully preserving any portion of the woodwork and carving from dilapidation, and repainting when the same was needed, it has only been recently that from six to ten layers of paint have been removed to ascertain what was the early col onial tint. Mr. Rogers' examination also extended to the doors, trim, door heads, choir rail, washboard, windows, stair-skirting battons, cornice, etc These proved to have originally been painted ivory white, china gloss finish on the ball side. The present cornice and cross gir der, supported by two columns on either side of the hall through which the visitor approaches the staircase leading to the second floor, all are re garded by Mr. Rogers as of modern construction aud entirely incongruous with the rest of the work. Rebecca Robinson, once a slave of John Aug ustine Washington, told the writer the history of the origin and construc tion of these columns in the hall. She states that many years ago the cross beam supporting the entire upperpart of the house badly sagged. Then an arch was raised to remedy this defect. This arch was regarded as ineffectual, and in 1881 it was removed aud a new AT MOUNT VERNON. iron beam inserted, braoed from the cellar, and these columns erected ac cordingly. They were never a part of the interior construction iu Washing ton's time, and their removal will greatly add to the exact restoration of the first floor hall. Other deti& in necessary repairs to the cellar, and features of the staircase not in har mony with other portions, in varnish or color, form matter of no great pub lic interest. Au examination of the walls was made, starting from the stairway to the second floor, and after a removal of three layers of a small section of wall paper the fact was re vealed that the original mortar was a colonial buff. In soine places it would seem to have been white-ooated, and iu other places a rough fluish of buff mortar is found under the paper. Re search will be made to ascertuiu whether the walls were originally of a buff mortar finish or parered after the fashion of one of the luyers removed. It seems more than likely that, when oommenoed, this transformation of the halls and main staircase will ultimate ly lead to a new restoration of rooms given over to the cure of vice-regents Hi t e tarn rao m iMf$ jgM mm i mt opi i fr it?m I M i HffT yy n m mi from various States. To be sure, they are, for the most part, neat and fresh enough, but recent investigation has shown that they are not to-day as they wero iu Washington's time. Thus the "river room," or guest room, on the second floor, was originally gray, with white window sash; the mantel was originally painted white, then painted, at some Inter date, in imitation of gray stono. This should be restored to its original color, white. The choirboard and washboard should be gray. The woodwork in the Maryland room, the bed chamber of charming "Nelly Cnstis," afterward Mrs. Laurence Lew is, was originally the same gray as the walls of the first floor hall. The mantel was originally white, then painted black (two treatments) and again painted white over the black. This should be burned off and repainted white, the window sash white, chair rail, trim and washboard gray. In General Washington's room the mantel, now black, was white in its original ooloring. The trim of the room was gray and the washboard stained and varnished, and, at a later day, painted black, the chair rail and trim gray and window sash white. The above points were brought by Mr. Rogers to the attention of the AT MOUNT VERNON. oommittee after an examination made by him at their request. As the great purpose of the associa tion is to keep the mansion and its surroundings forever open to the public, the projected restoration will be made be degrees, so as to interfere as little as possible with the freedom of visitors. F. W. Parsons. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. The People Megan to Celebrate It aa Far Back aa 1783. We may reckon February 22 as one of our oldest holidays, for though no Legislature had at that time set it apart as a legal holiday, the regular celebration of Washington's birthday began in 1783. On February 22 of that year a party of gentlemen met in a tavern in New York. One of them had written anodo on Washington, another brought a list of tracts, still others had prepared speeches. There was great feasting, patriotio toasts were drunk, and before the company went singing home they agreed to meet to gether on every coming February '22 iu honor of their country's chief. Other little knots of friends followed their example, and before long the celebration became general. Though not publicly recognized, wherever there were a score of more of houses the people gladly devoted at least a few hours of the day to jollity and good cheeV The celebration of the day gradu ally grew in importance till in the be ginning of this century. Every theatre on that day brought out some new play and made itself gay with flags and transparencies. Taverns spread their best cheer. There were balls and bonfires, barbecues aud caunonad ing, bell ringing, feasting aud toasts. A glance over the Gazettes and Adver tisers of that period shows that it was quite the end of March before they ceased to publish accounts of the fes tivities which had taken place iu every city aud town in the land. Washington was born before the adoption iu England of the Gregorian Calendar, and was, therefore, born on February 11, old style. For a long time some of his most ardent admirers persisted in celebrating this duy rather thau the 22d. We find as lute as 1790 certain counties iu which men of the old school were unwilling to adopt the new calendar, at least so far as con cerned the birthday of the Father of their Country. Doll.' Hair. The hair on the head of most of the dolls in this country is made from the hair of the Angora goat. WASHINGTON. In the upright little tippling lives the mighty mouutain pine, Htraighter thuu an Indian chieftain with It long, unswerving line, Lifting high its sturdy brauchog, rooted Iu its rocky bed, Landmark to the valleys under, shelter for the weary bead. Iq the boy so true anil fearless lived our hero good and grand. Through the day. of stormy trouble shelter to his native land. For the unbent twig, believe me, evergrowa as it began, Aud the child of uotile nature makes the noblu-hcarted mau. Vuutu's Companion. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. I"lie Family Fronnmlst Didn't Die For Her Fascination ITnevontrnl An Un Jnt Charge A Thoughtful Parent Kconomlcal Two Varieties, Ktc, Kte. Mabel wears fine silken hose Furchasod with her papn'a rocks; Dnt the old man always goes Around In ten-cent cotton socks. Chicago News. Fascination. Norah "Come along, now, an' niver tnind the little vagabond." Bertie "Please wait a minute, Norah! I think he's going to swear igain." Pack. Didn't Die For Her. "Well, I am relieved that he pro posed to you." "Relieved?" "He told me he was going to kill himself." Life. Two Vnrletle. The Landlady "Mr. Peebles, the gentleman who arrived last night, is a chronic invalid." The Sarcastio Boarder "H'ml From laziness or disease?" Puck. An VTnJtiHt Charge. "Somebody is trying to prove that lociety is responsible for murders." "Well, that's wrong; sooiety is made p of people who want to hill one an Dther and never do." Chicago Reo rd. Uneventful. Uncle Bob "Did you like the trip to the West, Johnny?" Johnny "Not so much. I was waiting for train robbers, and we never saw one the whole time." Vuck. , Thoughtful 1'arent. "Oh, Queenie, such sweet news! vVhatdo you thiuk?" "No idea, Flo! What is it?" "Papa has been bitten by a mad Jog, and now we are all going to Paris, tsn't it a bit of luck?" Pick-Mo'Up. A Libel on the Sex. "There are fifty-four muscles used In carrying on u ordinary conversa tion, " she said, looking up from the book she was reading. "And yet.womau is supposed to be a veak creature," he said, thoughtfully. And then he dodged. Chicago Post. Embai-rmssed. "Maud," said Mr. Dobbs. sternly, "why did you refuse young Bliven? 4. fine young man, whose heart is in the right place." ' "Well, it wasn't when ho proposed to me," ffnswered Maud, flippantly, "for it was in his mouth." Harper's Bazar. Economical. -"Seems to me it costs you a good deal to study," said the father, as he handed his son money to buy books vith. "I know it," replied the youth, pocketing a $10-bill, "and I don't ntudy very hard, either." Harvard Lampoon. Profeulonnl. "Well, said the doctor to the India Rubber Man, who was anxiously wait ing iu the hall, "it's a chip of the old block." ' Heavens!" exclaimed the poor man, "by 'chip' do you nioau a girl?" "No; I mean a bouncing boy." Philadelphia Record. An Ante-Mortem Rtateinent. Officer "There seems to be noth ing on the body to identify the man. We do uotevon know where he lived." Bjstauder "Of course, it's lather indefinite; but just after the car Btrnck him he cried out that he was a citizen of Greater New York." Officer "Ah! A Brooklyn man." Puck. Clinueed Mind. Judge "Why did you commit this unprovoked assault?" Prisoner "I wanted to get my pic ture in the papers." Judge "Well, will you be good if I let you go?" Prisoner "I am afraid not. I now want to kill the artists who mado tho pictures." New York Journal. The Merit or It. , The Cook (entering parlor) -"Ah, mam'zelle, wild ye inoiud askiu' the professor to play that hornpipe over agin?" The Professor (delightedly) "Ah! Ze ladies admire vaire mooch mycom posoetion?" The Cook "It's not that, begorra, but it's such au ilegant chime to chop hash by!" New York Journal. A Hint He Took. "I Bee they have a machine now for photographing one's thoughts," he said, for want of something better to say. "I wish you would photograph mine," she returned. "Why?" he asked. "Possibly it would encourage you a little," she answered. Shortly thereafter it was decided that he should "see pupa" just as eoon as he could muster up sufficient cour age. Chicago Post. Deaf and Duuib. Deaf and Dumb Beggar (at unex pectedly receiving a quarter) "Oh, thankee, thankee." Benevolent Passer "Eh? What does this mean, sir? You can talk." Beggar (in confusion) "l'-e-s, sir. Ye see, sir, I'm only holdiu' this cor ner for the poor deaf and dumb mau wot belongs here." Benevolent Passer (quickly) "Where is he?" Beggar (in worse couf usiou) "He's he's gone to til' park t' hear do music." New York Weekly. PRECEPT AJND PRACTICE. My grandmother used to say to me, My grandmother used to say, "Now. don't run after the boys, my girl, But stick to your Bewlng, pray! For men who want wives will hunt thom, dear, Care not to be met half wny; For the longest chase Is the fnircst sport," My gpdinother used to say. My grandmother usod to sny to me. My grandmother used to say, "Now, stop your dreaming aud baste your bom. Dreams never wero meant for day. Don't hurry, my girl, to find a lad, Molds novor have will nor way Till sorrow and twenty are come and gone?' My grandmother used to say. But I'd heard some tales and said one dayi "Now, Oranny, you dear old thing, You met, I've been told, your lover at The gate at the meadow spring. And, though scarce eighteen, you rod be hind To the village six miles away, And were married and all by Tarson Thlpps; Now, what have you got to say?" And grandmother smiled demurely, then, Above the hurrying th read; " 'Twas not for the lack of precept, dear, Things happened as you have said; For, 'Htop your dreaming and baste your hem, For the men won't run away;' And "Wooing will keep for a good two year,' My grandmother used to say." Richard btillinan Powell, In Tuck. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Nobody seems to care much whether he kisses the bride at a silver wed ding or not. West Union Gazette. He "Did she say why she left her last place?" She '"Why, the woman she lived with sneered at the wheel she rides." Puok. Juenu me a dollar, old man. "Can't; only have a half." "That i all right; you can owe me the othe half." Princeton Tiger. Duzby "Do you regard thirteen as an nnlucky number?" Dooby "Cer tainly I do; aren't they always abus ing it?" Roxbury Gazette. Spendley "Well, if my money should go, dearest, you'd still have met" Mrs. Spendley "Don't you be too snre about that!" Puck. "Now, when you ask popa for me, be sure to face him like a man." "That I will. He doesn't got any chance at my back if I can help it." Standard. Mrs. Goodenough "Now, Johnnie, won't you sit down and tell me why your papa whipped you?" Johunie "No, mam; I'd rather stand md say nothin'." Judge. Guest (in cheap restaurant) "Here, waiter, this meal is simply vile. I won't pay for it. Where's the pro prietor?" Waiter "He's out at lunch, Bir." Philadelphia Reoord. "I am very sorry, Captain Brown, but circumstances over which I have no control compel me to say no." "May I ask what the circumstances ore?" "Yours." Ftck-Me-Up. "Is it true that Rakeup has been in search of buried treasure?" "I guess it is. He said something to me about diving into his wife's pocket for c.sh." --Philadelphia North American. ""I thoroughly enjoy looking at the advertising pages after the holidays are over." "Any special reason?" "Yes; here and there I see something my wife didn't buy." Chicago Rec ord. Reporter "How much do you want written about that dime museum freak with a rubber neck?" Editor "We're short of matter to-day; stretch it out to a column." Norristowu Herald. He "I'vo a ripping new naughty story to tell you. I don't think I've told it you before." She "Is it a real good one?" He "It is indeed." She "Then you haven't told it me be fore." Standurd. "Waiter, do you remember me? I came in here yesterday and ordered a steak." Waiter "Yes, sir. Will you have the same to-day?" Customer "Yes, if no one else is using it." London Auswers. Old Foggs "In this natural history, Thomas, it states that a thrush feeds its young no fewer than two hundred aud six times a day. What havh you to Bay to that?" Thomas "Wish I was a young thrush." Standard. Jack Bachelor "So your lute uncle left you all his money wheu he died, did he?" Bob Bluffer (disgustedly) "No, not all. Tho meau old duffer had to go aud leave two hundred aud fifty dollars of it for a tombstone." Judge. Mrs. Fogg "One cau never tell what to believe. Mrs. Jones says the Wimpers tight like cuts and dogs, aud Mrs. Brown snys they are the happiest couple in towu." Fogg "I don't see as there need be any inconsistency iu the two stories. Some people are never huppy unless they are quarreling." Boston Trouscript. "What pretty illuminated cards!" exclaimed ouo woman. "That one with the motto, 'Honesty is the best policy,' is especially nice." "Yes," replied the other. "I brought them from Europe, and the best of it is, I got them through with a lot of other things without paying a cent of duty." Washington Stur. ''Shall we shoot or hung him?" asked the vigilantes. The methodical muu of business paused to thiuk. "Let us not be hasty," he said, "lor hurry begets crimiuul waste uud ex travagance. The first thing to do it to leurn the price of rope, uud com pare it with the priceot uniiuunition'" Philadelphia North Americau. Dying Millionaire "I have been much in litigutiou, always successful, too, aud I feel that I owe everything to the lawyers. I want them to have all my property." Attorney "Ah! You wish me to make a will, then, be queathing " Dyiug Milliouuire "Cutting off all my relations and be queathing tho money to charitable institutions." New York Weekly. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THr CRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. Von Can Itlse What America' Oreatrat I'llnrntnr Said Dr. Horace Mann on , tho I'.nragca of Drink In Our Collra-ea TrncJWord Spoken Forty Years Ago. Ton enn rl with Ood's asolslanco, Van can leave the pa.t behind; Evai-y time you make resistance Stronger grow your heart and mind. Firmly stand against temptation, Do not leave your soul to sink; You can rise from degradation. You can free yourself from drink. Sacred Heart Review Horace Mann on Drink', ltarage.. "Intemperance carries ruin everywhere. It reduces the fertile farm to barrenness. It suspends IndiWry In the shop of the mechanic. It banishes skill from the cun ning hand of the artisan and artist. It dnslics to pieces the locomotive of tho en gineer. It sinks tho ship of the mariner. It spreads sudden night over the solar splendors of genius at Its full-orbed, meridian glory. Hut nowhere Is It so ruin ohs, so direful, so eliminating and expul sive of good, so expletive and redundant of nil evil, as in tho school and tho college; as upon tho person and character of tho dtudent hLnself. Creator of evil, destroyer ol good! among youth, it Invests its votaries with the fulness of both prerogatives, and (ends them out on the career of life to suf fer where they should have rejoiced, to curse whnro they should havo blest." "Wo are In a sick world, for whose maladies tho knowledgeof truth and obedl enoe to it are the only healing. Oh! If the literary Institutions of our land would unuctify their ninhltion, and lustoad of an earthly rivalry to send forth great men, would provoke each other to the holy work of ronriug good men, thco would they be doubly rewarded, both by great noss and goodness such as thoy have never yet Imagined. Referring to the compara tive worth of scholarship and morals,' Montaigne says, 'Wo know how to decline virtue, but we'know not how to love It.'" I "Surely, It Is tho most nppnlling fact In nil our ahnnls, and It ought to make every parental heart palpitate with nlarm, that the college, whero the youth of our ooua Iry must bo sent for the higher culture of tho mind, should ever exposo them to a depravation of the heart. And yet It Is ab opinion not uncommon, nor would to U(d I could say wholly unfounded, that as youna cri uinnls learn new lessons in crime wlieiV-en. 10 our public prisons, so young men Pise purity of character nnd contract habits of vleo when sent to college" "Some of the mojt awful and heaven-defying vices that destroy the peace of so ciety nnd turn all the sweets of lite into, bitterness are only eolloge vices full-growu the publio manhood of the academlo childhood of guilt. "On Its colleges, far moro than on Its Legislatures, does the well-being of a coun Iry depend on Its eduoatlon more than on Its legislation." Works of Horace Mann. Due of Alcohol by F.mnloyea. At the International congress of railroad and marine hygiene, held iu Brussels last September, there was a discussion on the) question whether tho use of alcoholic drinks should be permitted to railroad em ployes and sailors. Dr. Van Collie, of llrussols, mado an address in which he answered the question uegntlvoly; flrst.i because such drinks are useless; seoond,' because they are dangerous to the health nnd lifesof the men, us well as to safety Iu operation. He would have their use limited and so far as possible suppressed. To this end ho would have the mon instructed as to tho dangers, and havo severe rules against the misuse of liquor. Delegates from Itudn-lVsth, Loudon and Derlln doubted whether it would bo possible to carry out a prohibitory regulation. The congress agreed in a resolution recom mending the managements to limit the use of alcohol by employes so far as possible; to warn tho men of its dangers, punish those, who get drunk and to rid the service of them. As there nro soarooly any total abstainers among ciAtliientnl railroad men, this Is a moro decided step than it would seem here. A Vivid Teinperunco Lesnon. Ilobert Quail, of Van Homo street, Jer sey City, while intoxicated went Into the house of Mrs. Margaret Murtlin, at No. 5 of the same street, aud beat uud threw Michael Lynch, a boarder, down stairs. Lynch died of his injuries uud Quail was held for tho Grand Jury on tbecucrgeo! mauslnughtor. Quail had been out of work uud spent yestcrdny afternoon at the home of his brother. He was intoxicated wheu he reached Van Horno street on bis way home. The house iu which Quail lived Is exactly like that of Mrs. Martha, and he entered that. Quail entered the room which Is In tho same relative position as tho ouo occupied by Quail lu bis own home. Lynch was seventy-live years old, and without any warning wus attacked by Quail and thrown down the stairs. He disc) on his way to the hospital. Verily, the World Move.. In the year 1H10, n gentleman named Mr, Itobert Warner applied to a well-known In-tut-unco company lu I'.nglaiid to Insure his life. Uut when the directum lenrned thut ho was n total abstainer, they informed III in that they would ouly insure hi m on condition that he paid more money eaaU year than those who took Intoxicating liquors. They believed, becuusebo was au libt-tiiiner, he would shorten his life! Mr. Warner refused, and with some other friends Htaited au insurance company fur total abstainers. That comiiauy is now known as "Tim Tutted Kingdom Tom per uni'u and Oeueral Provident Institution. ' At tlie end of IHn years ii was found that during that period the death rate of the three most prosperous Insurance companies wus 19 per 100, while the Temperance I'rov Ident had lust only 12 out of 1000, or at the rate of 7'i per 1000. Hard Cider. There Is probably no kind of drink that Is inure dangerous to the teinperunco cause thau elder after It bus begun to ferment. Theeumblnnllou of alcohol with the malic acid of the apple Is especially bad fur tho digestive urguus. The tweet cider, fur the short lime it reiuulus sweet, Is a nice, pleasnut drink. Hut so soon as fermenta tion begins, i should bo turned into vin egar as soon na possible. Warming a little of this to near blood heat, and pouring this with some yeast Into the barrel, will make It Into vinegar very quickly. Ameri can Cultivator. A Hint lu Wive, aud Sl.tern. Homebody, who seems to know, suys: "If wives weru'us careful to make themselves and their homos as pleasant for their bus bunds as lliev did wheu thuir huabauds were ouly their sweethearts, tho saloons would not be no enticing. Aud If girls made the homes us pleasant furthoir own brothers lis tliev do for some other girl s brother.so many boys would not go ustray." A Child' Worth of Driuk. While the Cubinet suloou at l'rcscolt Arizoua, was crowded with hundreds ol customers uue night recently, a Mrs. Hell entered with u babe lu her arms, aud, plac ing It on the bur, said: "Tho father of this child deserted me and my baby, caring more for whisky thuu for us. 1 wish to lender you bis child, so that bis uppetite may be gratliled to the extent of the depoi.il. " Thorn was a rush fur the child, seventy live men coming forward to a-k for It. Tins 1'iubate Judge was culled in to settle the cont rover.-v. Ho lias liiken charge of the de.-citd infant.