Tab Forest Republican U published inrr Wedaoalay, by J. E. WENK. Office In Smearbaugh ft Ca'i Building ELM 8TBIKT, TI0XE3TA, PA. 'Terms, - 0 1.00 Por Year. Ho subscriptions received for shorter period Chun tbree months. Corresponden.-e solloite I from all parts of tbe country. No notloa will be taken of anonymous co.utuualo.ttlon. RATES OF ADVERTISING! Fore One Squire, on inch, on. insertion . . $ t 00 One squire, on. inch, on. month. Sift Una Square, oil. inch, lro. ra inths. . S 00 One .-qua re, one inch, one year...., 10 ul I wo Square, one year 15 ie (garter Column, one rear... .. Sniu iUlf Colunu, one year .. 50 ou One Column, one year 1U0 OU Leeal advertiieuiaata ten cenU per line each insert ion. Marriages and deth notice gratia. A II Iti lit for y van y ait vert isem in U collected quarterly Temporary aJrertueintiiu muat be paid in advance. Job work cash oo deliver. EPUBLICAN, R st VOL. XXXI. NO.. 10. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNKSDAY, JUNE 22, 181)8. 1.00 PER ANNUM. rrobablj the Spaniards are think iug just now that those "Amorioan pigs" mast be of the wild boar vari ety. Massachusetts claims to have more different kinds of native trocs than has any kiugiotu of Europe. The number exceeds fifty, among thorn be ing nine largo oaks. It is reported from Spain that onr navy officers don't wear Books. This may account to the Spanish mind for the barbarous ferooity with which they keep at the work of knocking the socks of) tho Spanish navy. A largo part of tho literature of the world is becoming unintelligible to this generation through lack of ability to undorstaud quotations from the Bible, asserts the Christian Herald. Allusions to sayings and events which our fathers would have understood at a glance now signify nothing to many readers. Tho Illinois Central Railroad has beateu its record, having delivered I, 000,000 bales of cotton at New Orleans during the current season of eight mouths beginning September 1, 1897. The one million and first bale was presented by Stuyvcsant Fish, Presidont of the railroad, to Colonel . II. O. Hester, Secretary of the New Orleans Cotton Exobauge, and it is to be disposed of for the benefit of the poor of the Crescent City. "The talk about European inter vention in the Cuban affair and a Con tinental leaopio against the United States has a hollow sound," declares the New York Tribnno, "whon Amer ican control of food supplies is dem onstrated so completely. Aiuorica stands in no dread of a European con cert in dofenBe of the worm-eaten Spanish throne, when by withholding food supplies sho could menace every Continental State excopt Russia with bread riots and starvation; nor is it necessary for Americans to be impor tunate in their wooing for au Anglo Saxon alliance. England not only speaks the same langnago and reads Shakespeare, but it also livos on Americau wheat. Self-interest rather than sentiment is the true basis of an Anglo-American alliance; in future bread is more importaut than blood relationship.". It has been repeatedly stated in the past few months that the ships of nations at war oould not pass through tho Suez Canal. That was the com mon belief, and many poople who prided themselves on the accuracy of their general information have been not less coas fused than surprised to find, on looking the matter np, that they were entirely mistaken. Tbe canal is as free except for the little detail of tolls to the navies of every nation and at all times as aro the waters of the open sea itself, and this has been the case ever sinco 1888. Early in that year England, Franco and Turkey agreed on a convention making the canal a neutral highway, and a few months later all the powers gave their acquiescence. The instru ment explicitly permits the transpor tation of war material aud ships of war through the canal, whether peace pre vails or not, and only prohibits overt acts, of hostility between or within three milos of the termiui. The battleships of modern times aro a necessity to any great nation which intends to maintain its rights and pro tect its interests, believes the Atlanta Journal, but their cost is heavy. An outlay of something like $5,000,000 is required to construct and eqnip a ship which would take high rank in any modern navy. After such a ship is complete the expense of maintaining it is very heavy. This item for each of onr big battleships is now abont $1500 a day even whon they do no fir. ing. The daily expenses of our navy are now over $50,000 a day. The total annual expenses of a first-class battle ship are estimated at $547,000,divided as follows: Pay of officers, crew and marines. .1326,000 Batlons 48,000 Equipment a. 12,000 Navigation charges.... 6,000 Ordnance 18,000 Construction and repairs 13,000 Bteam engineering 32,000 General supplies 14,000 Medicine, surgery, secretary's of fice and Incidental expenses 78,000 The cost of ammunition used dur ing an engagement is immense, but it is of course impossible to estimate this in calculating the expense of a navy. Repair to warships, cruisers and other craft eveu in time of peace is largo, but after every engagement it is necessarily immense, even for the victor. War ou a modern basis is a terrifio absorber of money, aud thers never was a time when the importance of money as a factor in war was any thing like as great as it is now. THE DANCER I never read tbe papers without feeling so content That both my eyes are twisted and my nose Is slightly bent; I'm glad my mouth Is out of line and that my teeth are few. And it I had a "wealth of hair" I don't know what I'd do. A "tiny foot" or "Illy band" would All me . with dismay. And if I had a Slender waist I'd sicken in a day; For I have noticed from tho first, as strange as It may seem, The girl who gets the worst .of It Is "lovely as a dream." iTHE HEART OP SAVAGERY. ts. L LlLll J.J.U11U J- Ul' k-i V -.A.lJ -LJJ-Li I s w - & A TRAGEDY OF BEACHCOMBERS IN THE FAR $ AWAY SOUTH SEA. EARL fishers are a mysterious lot and the South Sea is full - ot obscure tragedies. Recont events in the Phil ippines have drawn attention to them anew. Tragedy was often the end of adventure, and then, too, none but tho most venturesome or the most abandoned of white men sought to live among the wild islanders iu the days, not so far remote, when the missionary had not yet introduced his stncoo churches and taught the na tives tho price of an axe or a haudful of ship biscuit. This tale of ono of the forgotten tragedies is drawn from au official document on which forty years of slumbering in a forgotten pigeonhole has served to dim the writing and to dull the im print of the lion aud the unicorn with which a British Consul made the pa per official. To write an account of a murder on sixteen sheets of Govern ment blue stationery, to attach a Beat with the royal arms that may pass sometimes as just the same as aveng ing it. Suvarrow is as lonely a group of desolation as it is possible to find in that scantily traveled region of. the South Seas which lies to the eastward of Samoa and before reaching such populous centres as Tahiti and Raro tonga. Other islauds have the pio turesque features of towering moun tains, verdure clad to their summit crags, tho grace of waviug cocoannt palms fringiug every beach with giant leaves. Suvarrow is but a ring of sand bauk skirting a lagoon filled with coral groves; the only trees, tho stunted pandanus, set on a gronp of prop-like roots. Other islauds have their peopling of brown-skinned folk, possibly treacherous, and always to be treated as inferiors by that lovely creature, the beachcomber of these seas, yot human in their desire for gaudy toys and the tinned goods on which the white man feeds. Suvarrow is marked ou the charts as uninhab ited and, therefore, is not a port of call for the vagrant whaler in his search for sperm, the trader or the blackbirder. Yet now and again little island colonies may bo found on the bare sands of tbe atoll, for in the la goon grow the pearl oyster and the beche-de-mer, which Chinamen eat, and on the sands great turtles come to lay their eggs by night. Hence beachcombers mysteriously wander ing beyond the confines of civilization at odd times camp on the bare islets in search of the wealth of tortoise shell, pearl shell and trepang the sea affords. This is the Btory of one such colony on the desolate atoll of Su varrow, a tale whose events were com plete in 1853, but have never yet been made kuowu beyond the oombers of South Sea beaches. In the early months of 1857 Thomas Charlton, of Martha's Vineyard, a "run away band from a Nantucket whaler, was living on the island of Manahiki. When he was fishing one day in a cauoe outside the coral reef a sudden squall carried him and his party of islanders out of sight of land and left them adrift and undirected npon the ocean. South Sea tradition is a mass of tales of such involuntary voyaging. With such help as a sailor could get from dead reckoning and a knowledge of the set ot the trado winds, Charlton managed to bring his cauoe to Suvar row and there established his colony of gentle Manahikians. In addition tohiswifeSutnaria, Charlton, of Tamu, as he was called in tbe liquid speech of the islands, numberel iu the census of his settlement on tbe sands eight souls. Here and his wife Kokorariki (a Paumotu womau from the far east ern island away to windward of Tahiti, and, as the event proved, a shrewd and conscienceless woman), Kaitai and his wife, ' and the siugle men Ngere, Taaran, Voitia, Otea, and Vaimau. With true Polynesian apatby, these people made the best they could of a bad affair, built them honses near a source of water, and took up the thread of life where it had been broken by the squall at Manahiki, scores of leagues away. There was food on the inland and water that is enough for a colony of folk whole need? are simple. They were destined to live not long alone. Captain Sam Sustenance was Bailing those seas in his topsail schooner Dart. Captain Sustenance might not be classed among the elect. He was not a good man, even accord ing to the standard of these waters, where the only good thing afloat was the "society's brig," said society be ing the London Missionary Society, which has pioneered tbe South Pacific since Cook's voyages of discovery. But Sustenance was such a man as best suited the early times of sea trading, enough of a mere merchant man to satisfy tbe enriosity of the in frequent naval vessels cruising among OF BEAUTY. Tbe papers never tell about a Woman being shot. Or mangled by a trolley car, or married to a sot, Or forced, at point of pistol, her last fifty cents to lose, But that her eyes are "limpid" and her boots are number twos. 8o I can live In sweet contont, without tbe slightest fear That trouble or calamity will ever hover near And when I soe my misfit face It's some relief to know That I'll outlive the beauties by a hundred years or sol Brooklyn Life. w the islands for (he sake of the moral effect, enough of a buccaneer to have dollars to jinglo on the Circular Quay iu Sydney before a grand carouse in the Currency Lass public house. From end to end of the Paoifio Sam Suste nance was known by the name of Uru Uru, which the islanders had given him. At Penrhyn Island on Angnst 1, 1857, he engaged an English beach comber, Joe Bird, to superintend the party of native pearl divers whom be shipped at the same time. There were eighteen men and several women in the party. The Penrhyn folk are widely different from the gentle aud timorous Manahikians. Sour and gloomy at all times, they aro capable of nourishing agrievance and of bid ing their time iu a plot to wipe it out. Two days later Uru-Ura stopped at Manahiki long enough to take on board 7000 coooanuts for the food of his divers, and on August 13 he anchored at Suvarrow. Acoording to beachcomber's law of might is right, Sustenance and Joe Bird with a fighting orew at their back, with a score of fierce Penrhyn Island ers, were able to decree that Tamu and his handful of mild Manahikians should confine themselves to one islet and leave the rest of the atoll to the pearl divers. Still more company was com ing. Within a month or six weeks tbe schooner Tickler, Thomas F. Martin, master, visited Suvarrow and landed Jules Tirel, a Frenchman, who was known to tbe islanders as Jules Farani, or French Jules. In October of the same year Sustonance revisited his pearling station and found little shell as yet collected. It is likely that ho gave forcible expression to his disap pointment, but be that as it may, the main feature is that the three beach combers were then there with the two native settlements of Manahikians and Penrhyn peoplo aud that all was well. In April, 1859, the brig Charlotte touched at Suvarrow and two of the Manahiki boys, Otea and Vaimau, went ou her to Samoa. Neither on the voyage nor at Apia did they men tion any white men as having been with them on Suvarrow, and the mas ter of the Charlotte knew nothing of the former actions of Sustenance. That trader again visited Suvarrow on June 15, ten months after estab lishing his diviug station and eight months after his last visit. As he stood np for the passage through the coral reef first one and then a second canoe filled with Penryhn Islanders boarded the Dart with mauy expres sions of pleasure that they once more saw their friend Uru-Uru, for the three beachoombers had long ago takou their boat and sailed away westward to Sam oa. Knowing the wild roving fever which drives the beachcomber hither and yon, back and forth through the South Seas, and their recklessness of the chances of voyaging, Sustenance saw nothing unusual in the thought of three men' setting out in a small boat for au ocean voyage of hundreds of miles. His two mates suggested the possibility of foul play, but he pooh hoohed their suspicions. At any rate the Penrhyn Islanders told a consis tent Btory. On landing, Sustenance metjthe Pau motu womau, Kokorariki, wife of the Manahikian Here. Her story was to the effect that in February the three beachcombers had pain ted the boat and made a new sail. They had taken the small cask filled with drinking water and a large supply of dried eggs of the sea fowl which swarm on the islauds, together with a variety of food in the shape of fresh and baked cocoauuts. The boat had been leaky, but was tight after the new painting. They had sailed away to the west and before sundown were out of sight. As they had left their wives behind, she was sure that they intended to take ship in Samoa and go to their own lands beyond the horizon. They had taken all their trade goods except one bolt of printed goods which they had divided among the Penrhyn divers. For a savage this woman seems to have had a genius for lying. The other people agreed with her account, and the island, when carefully searched, yielded no indication in the way of goods or stores that tho woman had told other than the truth. For the following fortnight the Manahi kiaus and the Penrhyns were on the Dart on the homeward voyage back to Penrhyn, and not a word or a sign gave reason to suspect that the story was false. Some weeks later Sustenance touched iu the courso of trade at Rak abauga, and there again encountered the womau Kokorariki. She asked at once if he had heard of Joe and Tamu. Apparently much concerned when she heard that they had not reached Samoa, she asked in what direction Pukapuka bore, and when the ship master pointed down to the west, she seemed much relieved, and suggested that the beachcombers had probably reached that island. Yet in her original story and in this renewed interest iu the voyage of the beachcombers Kokorariki was but playing a leading part in a tissue of fabrication which was sufficiently good to deceive Sustenanco, and it may be said that it is by no means easy to pull the wool over the eyes of a South Sea trader. The three beachcombers had been murdered on Suvarrow in the presence of this womau and every other person on the island, and Kokorariki herself had planned the consistent story which had cleared them all from sus picion. The story came out by the confession of tbe wife of Tamu, that is, Tom Charlton, the American, which she made to Tairi, the native mission ary teacher on Rakahanga. For some time after the last visit which Susteuance made at Suvarrow the people busied themselves about their several occupations. Tamu and bis Manahikians fished and cured the beche-de-mer, Joo aud the Penrhyn Islanders worked at the beds of pearl shell, and Jules seems to have diver sified his chief occupation of doing nothing by spells of watching the others at work. He was well liked by the inlanders. So was Charlton. But Joe Bird acted as the superior be ing is bo apt to do when living among the islanders. A common threat when any of his divers proved refractory was that he would cut them in two aud would eat their livers, and when one is a cannibal such a threat does not seem as improbable as it might ap pear in other conditions of life. Often he deprived his divers of their rations aud water when their take of shell was not np to the amount he fixed for a day's task. The divers plotted to tako their revenge upon him, and saw clearly that they must make away with the other white men at the same time. The opportunity came early one morning. Joe Bird missed some co coanuts from his pit. He went first to Tom Carlton's and questioned the Manahikians as to the theft. This was no more than a matter of form, for no one would ever suspect a Manahikian of theft. Receiving their denial in good part Joe took his guu and sword and strolled over to the quarters of his divers. Tho various people on the island were engaged in various concerns. Kokorariki was cooking a bird for breakfast. Here's wife was attending her sick husband at lomilomi, the effective South Sea massage; the other Manahikians had just started out after becho-de-mer. Tom, with pistol and sword, hurried after Joe Bird and after him came Jules Farani with a sword. Arrived at the honses of the divers Joe cbargd their head man, Taugiora, with steal ing the cocoanuts and fired the gun over his head. Theu he grappled with Taugiora and . called to Tom for help. Tom ran up aud got hold of Taugiora's baud aud snapped his pis tol at him. It missed fire and he re capped it, taking tho fresh cap from a little chamber iu the butt of the weapon. As he aimed a second time a savage named Maori caught him by the band, whereupou Tom knocked him down by a blow in the eye. But as he fell Maori caught Tom by the feet and threw him with the assist ance of Tangiora, and these two then disarmed him and tied his hands and feet. Meanwhile a savage named Itapahua seized Joe Bird and throw him down, and with the help of Tang ioro Innhed his hands. Farani bad no firearms,' but he came on a run with his sword at Matahu. The lat ter with the aid of Popokia and Na toto, tied the Freuchman up like his mates. The three beachcombers wore then thrown into their boat and word was sent to four other Penrhyns wbo were fishing on the other sido to come and row tho boat. Tom's wifo Sumaria, came running to Here's house shouting, "O nga ropa, O nga ropa, good peoplo, they are killing the white men for they are taking them away in tbe boat." Tom's wife, Kokorariki, and Kaitai's wife, a'l hastened to tbe boat. Here Su maria and Kaitai's wife had already cast off the lashings from Tom's wrists and ankles, when Rapa hua aimed a gun at the women aud forced them to desist. Tom, appar ently thinking that they were so be set on one ot the islets across the lagoon, then bade Kaitai's wife to call the Manahikians to launch his boat. This the Penrhyns prevented with guns and swords, aud, the four row ers by this time having come across, they pulled the boat out into the la goon. Tom was seated on the gun wale and the other two were- lying under the thwarts. Joe Bird begged his captors for mercy and offered all he had if only his' life might be spared. But Tom bade him not to be a child, for it was now too late, aud ho himself had brought this fate upon himself and his companions. At the deepest part of the lagoon the Penrhyns hove Joo Bird overboard first, and he sank right to the bottom. Tom was the next to go, and he, too, went down like a stone. But tbe Frenchman rose alongside the boat, aud Powhatu cut bis bead open with a sword. Then the French mau sank to join his mates in the quiet depths of the lagoon. Now that the deed was dono the shrewdness and facile invention of the Paumotu woman, Kokorariki, stood the party in good stead. Left to their own simple devices they would have shared out the goods of the murdered white men, and their detection would have been certain. She it was who sot the scene and concocted the story so well as to deceive Captain Sus tenance. She had the boat burned aud the metal work sunk in the la goon, and the property of the white men was in like manner destroyed, all but the single bolt of cheap cloth dis tiibuted to the divers. That was a stroke of genuine art. It would be such a natural thing for Joe Bird to do if he were sailing away that it car-! ried proof in itself. The money was almost all in her possession, but she had a long series of unwritteu ac counts by which it was made to seem the wages of the Penrhyn Islanders acquired by her in the way of trade. With these confessions set out iu full the original document ends. A careful 'search of the records shows no indication that any attempt was made to punish the murderers. Three men had died in the early morning in the lagoon of a little visited atoll in t ie wild South Seas, but they were only beachcombers, and their loss was not grievously felt by the world of civili zation they had voluntarily cast off in order to plunge into the heart of sav agery, a wild, a sudden, a cruel heart. How such a murder was regarded by a man who was living the same life aud was exposed to the same chances is naively shown in the concluding words of the deposition of Captain Sustenance: "There did not appear to have been any serious quarrel, neither should I judge the natives to have been much excited. I should in fer that it must have been talked of long before and probably accelerated by the gun unhappily discharged over instead of into the head of Taugiroa." New York Sun. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL The steam engine is covered by 8237 patents. One-quarter of all the people born die before six years, and one-half be fore they are sixteen. Microbes are so minute that 250, 000,000 can bo comfortably accommo dated on a penny postage stamp. There are three times as many muscles in the tail of the cat as there are in the human hands and wrists. The expenses for the electrio un derground road now being built in London have so far amounted to $8, 000,000. There are now forty-five match fac tories in Japan, employing an average of nearly 9000 operatives a day. Their exports last year reached a value of $1, 706,012. No parental caro ever falls to tho lot of a single member of the insect tribe. In general, the eggs of an in sect are destined to be hatched long after the parents are dead, so that most insects are born orphans. Iu Russia eleven laboratories aro engaged in tho manufacture of diph theria serum, in whioh the entire peo ple place great confidence, and not without reason, as in 44,631 regis tered cases in which the serum was used the death rate was but fonrteeu per cent, against thirty-four per cent, of the 6507 cases in which it was not employed. It has been suggested that as ice at only twelve degrees below freezing has a specific insulation of over one thousand megohms, it might be possi ble to have hollow conductors which could be placed in a trench filled with water and used to oarry brine for pur poses of ice making and refrigeration. Tbe frozen water would act as the in sulator, and calculations have been made showing that the arrangement is feasible on a commercial scale. The consensus of opinion regarding tho origin of the migration of birds is that it began during the glacial period. Tbe earth being then covered at either end with a cap of ice, all life was confined to a belt in tbe centre; but thj ice receded a little at certain seasons, leaving an uninhabited space that afforded the quiet and seclusion that all the higher animals seek dur ingjtbe breeding period. The birds went there accordingly to rear their young, and, as the ice recedod fur ther and further, they migrated fur ther and further. llusalan Bluejacket. Eat Tallow Candle. "To most people," says the Hong Kong (China) Telegraph, "a tallow caudle appears more iu tbe way of a necessity than a luxury, but tho Rus sian bluejackets who are enjoying shore leave just now from the Rossia and the Admiral Nakimoff appear to find in assimilating caudles of Chinese make as much gusto as an English child would have in eating a sugar stick. The other day a party of stal wart Muscovite bluejackets were to be seen going along Queen's Road, and tbe avidity with which they polished off joss candles was a sight for the gods. Some of the men, who were evidently petty officers, elected to dine off candles as thick au one's arm regular No. 1 joss pidgin arrange ments and streams of grease trickled from the corners of each man's mouth. " A large Family. In the Basler Jura, on tho slope of Mount Terrible, is a small village called Montavon. The government of the place is conducted by a President, Vice-President, threo Councilors or Aldermen, Communal Steward, Com munal Clerk and Communal Sergeant. The President's name is Joseph Mon tavon; the Vice-President, Victor Mon tavon; the Steward, George Monta von ; the Clerk, Joseph Montavon ; the Sergeant, Karl Montavon, and the three Councilors, Putor, Julius and Ernst Montavon. This curious cir cumstance arises from tbe fact that everybody in tbe place bears tbe name of Montavon. It is the name of a fam ily so large that it has been vested with town rights by the Swiss govern ment. New Treatment For lTi-iln. A new treatment for dyspepsia is a Japanese fish diet, in which tbe chief articles of food are fish, rice, eggs and oysters. The dishes are said to be numberless. One is a baked pud ding, made of flakes of fish, boiled rice, eggs and seasoning. Another is a raw fish salad; a third, raw fish pickled; a fourth, is the meat of fish pounded into a paste with butter, vinegar, sai, white and cayenne pep pers. All are said to be appetizing and nutritious to a high degree. THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS. The TrjM itntlier flplteral Ills Artfut nrsa Awfnlly Mean How a Hashful Man fiot a Wife Practical Wisdom Complete In Every Ilctall. Etc., Etc She stood nt the gate in the twilight Tho lover's favorite hour. And calmly waited Ills coming, His coming to her bower. Crown were her eyes and most patient, Patient and gentle were they, And her dark red hair seemed darker still In the fast receding day. About her nil nature lay iiiiet. No sound broke the solemn hour, And flowing oVr all were the crimson rays Of the sunthe King ot foww. Klss'd by the rays of the dying sun As the zephyrs kiss tho bud. She sees approach a man with a pail While sho calmly chews her end. The Cornell Widow. Rattier Spiteful. May "This hat makes mo look older." Kate "It's wonderful what tho milliners cau do these days." Ills Artfulness. "Your husband is so amiable." "Yes, ho acts that way iu public, so peoplo will think tbe baby takes after mo." Chicago Record. How She 1H1 It, "My wife got me into on awful scrape this morning." "How?" "She'd been using my razor to sharpen a lead pencil." Complete In Every Detail. Nodd "You don't mean to say you have already finished your country house I" Todd "Finished it! Why, I have boen trying to sell it for the past threo weeks." Practical Wisdom. Mr. Billns "Confound the collar button!" Mrs. Billus "Never mind looking for it, John. Turn out the gas, walk around a littlo in your baro feet and you'll find it. Spain's Submarine IJoats at Manila. "I noticed some time ago that Spain had a torpedo boat that would stay under water for hours?" "Spain has boats that will stay un der the water forever." Cleveland riain Dealer. A Doubtful Meaning. "Sir," said the stranger, "I am au artist." "So?" queried the other. "What sort? Razor, fiddle, brush, snow shovel, bar, pugilistio or stage?" New York World. How a Hash fill Man Got n Wife. "Blusher is the most bashful man I ever knew." "How on earth, then, did he come to get married?" "He was too bashful to refuse." Boston Traveler. Tenement House Humor. Jimmy "Soy, pn, they won't bo no more plaster falling from the hallway veiling." Pa "Why, Jimmy?" Jimmy "'Cause they ain't no more (eft." New York World. The Advice of Experience. Edith "O Ethel, what shall I do? Jack says he supposes it's all over be tween ns and that ho'll send my pres ents back." Ethel (experienced) "Tell him to bring them. " Brooklyn Lifo. Awfully Mean. The Thin Clirl-"Oh, Ethel! Jack soys that you look just like a full blown " The Fat Ono (interrupting) "Rose." The Thin Ouo- "No tire." A flood Job Coining. Jeweller "How was your boy pleased with tho watch I sold you?" Fond Father "Very well, sir. Ho isn't ready to have it put together yet; but bo patient, I'll send him around with it in a dny or two." Jeweller's Weekly. Futile. "Spain has no chance to win in this fight," said Mr. Manchester to Mr. Northsido. "Of course not," replied Mr. North side. "A notion of mandolin players has no business to contend with a na tion of machinists." rittsburg Chron icle Telegraph. An Indiana Pnrist. One of the New Proprietors "Shall we put out a sign, 'This placo hns changed bauds?' " The Other New Proprietor "No. It hasn't changed hands. We have all the old help, hnven't we? Hang out a sign that it has changed heads." Indianapolis Journal. Not I'sed to FriiKlte M are. Mrs. Housewife "Bridget, that is the seventh piece of china that you havo brokeu within the last two days." Bridget "I know it, mum. At tbe last place whero I wor-rked tho folks nover ate off of nnnytbing but goold and silver." Somcrville Journal. A Hreaiu or Happiness. Her eyes glistened. "And vou have bronchi SIO.OOO.. 00(1 in nuggets back with youi" sho exclaimed, scarce ahlo to belicvo her own senses, unsupported, as they were, except by her husband's words. "See!" he answered, and ho pro duced tbe freight receipts aud the newspaper interviews. "And we cau livo in New York?" she faltered, clasping her bunds. "Ay, love, and be descended from kings!" he cried exultiugly. Detroit Journal. THE SHIR.- A ship galled from tbe port, Another port to find, To be the ocean's sport, A plnythiug to the wind. In merry mood the crew Unfurled the driving sail, And gayly on they Hew Uefore the freshening gale. The fading land behind. The shoreless sea beforo; No track clearly defined Toward the wi'h-for shore. All lighted by the day. Kushroudod In the night. The ship snils far away, Yet lingers In the sight. And whether soon or late 'f is anchored by the shore, Still, In the hearts that wait, The ship sails evermore Alfred Lavington. HUMOROF THE DAY. Some persons are proud of their blood, but it's all in vein. On opening the front door you find tho hall stairs in your face. A girl whoso dress is a "perfect dream" is always awake to the fact. A carpeuter may believe in maxims, but he doesn't always trust an old saw. They don't furnish cats aud dogs with caudal appendages at a retail store. He "I'm not myself to-night." She "Thou how dare you speak to me, sir, without au introduction?" Chicago News. She "Don't you think it is danger ous to cat mushrooms?" He "Not a bit of dauger iu it. The danger ia in eating toadstools." "What made you so anxious to in troduce Higby and Digby?" "Higby tells war stories and Digby tells fish stories." New York Journal. "Does young Mr. Slimmius shinein society?" asked a youug womau. "Some," replied Miss Cayenne; "es pecially about the coat sleeves." "Seems to me you didn't thump quite so hard as usual at the concert lastnight. Weren't you well?" "Oh, yes; but it was my own piauo, you Bee." Hicks "Nobbins seems to be hold ing up his head of late." Wicks "Yos; it probably comes of reading newspaper bulletins." Boston Tran script. Dawdlor "Snithers writes poetry for magazines." Dofton "Is tha' so? How many magazines do they give him for each poem?" Roxbury Gazette. Fiddler "Ifes, Boston has turned out a great mauy musiciuus yours truly among tho number." Quiz "Well, how cau you blamo her?" Brooklyn Lifo. Half tho world doesn't know how the other half liveB; but if it could be convinced that such knowledge was none of its business, it would try mighty hard to liud out. Puck. Lecture (iu museum) "Yes, la dies and gents, thero are freaks and freaks, but this man stands alone." Spectator "If he'll stand a loan of fivo dollars, I'll divide with you." "The young woman yon are en gaged to is very fascinating, I under stand?" "Fascinating? I had to stassl in line seven hours to get to propose to her." Chicago Record. An old lady refused tho gift of a load of wood from a tree struck by lightning, through fear that some of the "fluid" might remain in the wood, and cause disaster to her kitchen stove. Mendicant Michael "Shnre, ma'am I've got siviu small cbildreu at home, all nnderfive." Mrs. Skinner "Sev en children! Any twins?" Mendi cant Michael "All twins." Tit-Bits. First Tramp "I hear they are building a new jail, with all modern improvements." Second Tramp "That won't do no good. You'll need a pull to get in there." Fliegende Blaetter. She "I am not up in tho language of flowers. What did that bunch of jacqueminots meau that you sent me?" He "I don't got tho translation from the florist nutil the end of the month." Tho Manhattan. Bacon "Is that man Criiusonbeak in favor of war?" Egbert "No, in deod! Every night he's out late he takes home oysters or something ti bis wife. I think he's for peace at any price." Youkers Statesman. "My son," said tbe aged politician, "it is better, especially wheu you are talkiug about the enemies in your own party, to uso only soft and honeyed words. They aro much easier to eat, should occasion arise." Cincinnati Enquirer. Sagasta "Well, Your Majesty, we have ono hope left. The rainy season is about to begin iu Cuba." Tho Queen Regent "A.', senor, it looks to me very much as if the reigny sea son was about to cud there." Cleve land Leader. The Sarcastic Parent "And yon want my daughter for herself alone?" said the sarcastic old millionaire. "Y-yes, sir." "Well, my boy, I'll do bettor by you thau that. I'll throw in tho clothes she wears, too." Cleve land Plain Dealer. "Why is it, I wonder," mused Sa gasta, "thut those Americans are such dead shots?" "It must be their prac tice nt the national game," suggested Gullou. "I've heard considerable about their putting the bull right over the plate." Philadelphia North American. "Tu," began little Clarenco, after short season of silence, "a Chinaman " "Yes, my sou," broke iu Mr. Cullipers hastily; "a Chinaman does many things which seem to us very peculiar." "Yes, I know, pa; but what 1 was going to ask you was, isn't it easier for a camel to get through tbe eye of a needle than for a Chinaman to get through his ueeJ for au idol '"Judge.