Tm Forest Republican . Is published every WednosJay, by V J. E. WENK. . Office In Smearbangh & Coi Building ELM 8TBEET, TIONESTA, IX Termd - Itl.ou Ie Voar. Ko iubsorlpttonj received for a ihorter period than three months. Correspondence solicited from til parts of tha country. No notloe will be taken of anonymous oominunioallons. RATES OF ADVERTISING! Fore EPUBLICAN, Oae Squire, one inch, one insertion.. f 100 One Square, one inch, one month. ., SOU O.ie Square, one inch, three month. . 5 00 One Square, one inch, one Tear...,, 10 00 1 wo Squire, one year.... .......... 15 UO Quarter Column, one year.. . ,. JWOU Half Column, one year...,.,.. SOOO One Column, one year 100 00 Leeal advertisements ten oenU per line each insertion, llirritjn and death notice gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement! collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. VOL. XXXI. NO. 35. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, DEC. U, 1898. Sl.OO PER ANNUM. R ST ' A For to RIcan bis figured out thn 17. S. A. following Porto Rico ineani 5 Uncle Satn'a Addition.' The marriage of a former Vice Con' sul to a servant who Las graced a New York kitchen will be a happy union o the consular -nd domestio services. With British Blue Books and Frenc Yellow Books it may be said that thi talk of war'botweeu England an( Prance is not entirelj colorless. . "What on earth is all this for?' General Kitchener was beard to mut ter when he saw the throng assembled at Dover to welcome him. There's the true type of soldier for you the world over modost as ho is brave, brave ai he is modest. Experiments conducted under tin auspices of the Department of Agri culture at Washington for a couple of y6$s are said to indicate that hog cholera, or s win o plague, can be treated wilh suooess aud with comparatively little expense. According to Dr. Sal mon, of the Bureau of Animal Indus, try, eighty percent, of the h3S treated in droves have boon saved, while in the droves affected with cholera, but not given the serum treatment em ployed by the department, eighty per cent, were lost. Last year the experi ments resulted iu a loss of twenty-two per cent, and ttia year the . loss amounted to only nineteen per cent. In the view,of Dr.. Salmon there is no question of the effectiveness of the serum treatment, whioh now takes rank as a proved suooess. This is a matter of a very great interest to the farmers of the couutry who raise live stock, for, according to one estimate, 'the hog raisers of the United States lost $15,000,000 in the year 189G through the ravages of bog cholera, in amount the bulk of which might seemingly have been saved tbrough the application of the serum treat ment. It does not neod reference to the arell-known maxim, "Just as the twig is bent the tree inclines," to show the importance of inculcating frugal, sav inghabits among children. Practically, however, in most schools this is a matter of precept only, and even that Is not in most cases made prominent by proper insistence. The difference mcli habits wisely directed may bring ibont in the lives of children is cer tainly vast enough to make the sub ject of inonlcating habits of thrift and coonomy a feature of the publio schools. This has been done in mauy of the school of Chicago, by the establishment of the penny savings bank system, through the aid and co operation of the teachers and certain banks. Tho system is so arranged as to require but little time ou the part of teachers and principals. Tho Til ton school, up to last June, had sav ings amounting to $100, the system Laving being iu operation since the 22d of March last. One of the im mediate and gratifying results in that ichool of the saving habit, aooording to the Principal, says the Chicago News, has been the practical abolition of gum chewing and cigarette smok ing results in themselves worth all the extra time and attention given by the teachers, to say nothing of tho benefit financially and physically to tho children themselves. There can be no gainsaying that we went wild over our victories against Spain; that we fell pell-mell over each other in efforts to reward our gallant sailors and soldiers, and that we made perfact maniacs of ourselves in the receptions we gave to our returning heroes. Then, after the hurrah was over, after we were hoarse with cheer ing, after officers had been jumped np in numbers with dazzling rapidity and we had clasped the last home-comer to our gratoful breast then perhaps we were iuclined to feel somewhat foolish and began . to think we had made too much fuss over a little thing like that. Perish the thought! Our ebullitions of feeling did credit to the nation and when tho tree of honor was shaken the plnms fell generally into the right places. If we have any doubt upon this question of enthusiasm look at what big geese our English cousins are making over their return ing victors, muses tho New York Tele ram. Sir Herbert Kitchener is made a Lord in a jiffy. The' War Offloe is distributing V. C.'s and lesser medals faster than they can be struck off. Common Councils are offering thanks in silver boxes faster than they can be recorded. The London populace nearly pulled their dear Guards to pieces. Who can say after all this that exuberance of thought and ex pression aud emotion are confined to the Latin races? Give the sturdy old Anglo-Saxons tho chances they have lately had to show feeling and they will break loose every tiros. 7 THE BABY ON V.rorvhnd rentlesg. Grumbling at tbe dust, Growling at the cinders, Flctures of disgust. Axle hot and smoking. Train delayed an hour, " IIiw the faces lengthen, , sullen, wrinkled, sour. . Sudden transformation I Passengers in smllos 1 Scowls nnd frowns have vanlshed- L What Is It beguiles? A -BOUGH OD help us, Miss Elsie, the bank has been robbed I A hundred thou sand dollars gone, inissiet aud poor master awayl Oh, dearl oh, dear!" Fully au hour ago had the above words been thrust on pretty lit tle Elsie Mait land's bewildered bearing. She still sat in the exaot spot where the bearer of the awful news had left and shocked even her, too stunned yet to properly realize all that the terrible tidings might mean. One hundred thousand dollars gone! And the bank in a somewhat embar rassed condition before! Worst of all, the banker himself Elsie's uncle was away! Elsie Maitland was a brave little woman, but somehow this last dreadful thing had well-nigh robbed her of her bravery. A step behind her, and a low voice spoke her name. She knew it at once; it was her good-for-nothing brother's." AVby had he come here now, bringing fresh trouble? For the first time in her life Elsie felt angry with him. "Why are you here again, Harold?" she cried wheu he was standing there in frout of her. "When I gave you that last mouey you promised to stay away altogether, and try to get some thing to do. Yet here you are once more, and this time I cannot help you. Why, do you come? Uncle John would be furious at finding you here." "But he is away, Elsie," the young man answered breathlessly. "Girlie, you must help me, just this once. I promise solemnly never to worry you again!" "You have promised solemnly be fore, Harold," his sister said bitterly. "I cannot help you, I say. We are ruined. The bank has been robbed." Tho startled look on his white face causod her to cease speaking. "Is it true, Elsie?" he asked hoarsely. "Has the bank really been robbed?" Sho told bim what she knew, he listening impatiently. "I must have money, girlie!" he burst out. "I must bavo it! I must get away from here to-night, and I don't possess a single penny. Quick, dear. Uncle loft yon 6ome for house keeping. That will have to do." "I don't possess a penny, either," she persisted. "What is the matter, Harold? AVhy is it so terribly neces sary for you to leave Blackmore to night?" Their eyes met hers clear, straight-forward, honest; his weak and nervous. "Uncle will be coming back to see about the bauk, Elsie," be muttered queerly. "He must not find me here." No, it would only add to the bitter ness of his return. But what could she do? "I have it!" the desperate brother suddenly exclaimed. "Elsie, this news about the bank robbery is still exclusive. The editor of tho Black more Times would give yon any sum for it. He is enterprising, and al ways ready for something startling at firsthand. -This is our only chauce, dear." But Elsio wonld not see it in that light for a long, long time. It was not nntil her brother had fully en larged on the grim necessity of the case, not until he had forced her to plainly understand the consequences if he did not bavo money at once, that she finally consented to go to the editor of the Blackmore Times. Harold Maitland had a smart, cun ning tongue; on this ocoasion he had indeed used it well. As he prophesied, the editor literally- grabbed at tbe "copy," especially after he had fairly convinced himself that his would be tho first paper to publish the startling news on the morrow. Elsie went wearily home with the much-needed money in her pocket. Harold was waiting in hiding for her, and pounced down eagerly on the gold. ir Au bonr after bis departure their ancle's manager camo to the bouse, end asked to see Elsie. When he was admitted into her presence he noticed with a sharp pang how wan and -desolate her little face had grown. Poor child! Such things as these were hard for her to have to bear. How he wished that he could save her all care and annoyance in the future! For with the whole of his stout, loyal heart he loved her. He showed her a telegram which he had received from her uncle. "Returning at once," it said. "Keep news of robbery out of the papers at any price till I see you." Elsie read the words, or, rather, they chased each other before her dizzy, aching eyes. She suddenly tottered forward aud fell in a dead faint. Next morning huge posters ap peared from the offices of the Black more Times, making public the rob THE TRAIN. Grlmmy face and Angers, Mouth all over crumbs, Smeary wrist contrasting Fink and clean-sucked thumbs. Hound bead nodding, bobbing, Blue eyes full of fun. Wind-blown tresses shining Golden in the sun. Everybody obeerfnl, No remarks profane, Slaglc change effected liaby on the train. Indianapolis Journal. DIAMOND. bery. Newsboys shouted it frantically from one street to another, boon a big crowd had gathered outside the bank, clamoring loudly for the doors to be opened. They wanted their money back, their hard-won earnings, and they meant to get it. That exclusive news sold by Elsie Maitland on the previ ous evening to the editor of the Blackmore Times had caused an ap palling run on her uncle's bank. The doors were opened at last; the crowd surged in. presenting checks to the full amount they had deposited in the bank. They looked astonished when the gold came over the counter in their direction. Clearly they had expected to be turned away penniless. They thanked their stars for being tho first. The bank could not go on paying out for long, of that they felt sure. At noon Elsie and ber unele drove up to tne front entrance in an open carriage. He bad insisted on Iier ac companying him, despite the fact that she looked wretchedly pale aud ill. All the way along they had seen those hideous posters announcing the robbery. "How did they get the news?" John Bivers kept repeating. "Elsie, child, how did they get the news? It is a mystery to ine, If only it could have been kept from them another twenty-four hours I could have weath ered the storm." Poor Elsie's heart ached. "I have done it!" she cried. "The fault is mine mine! Oh, Harold, if only I could have foreseen all this! Tf nnlr T rnnld hfirA fnrASAAn it. nil'1 III. As yet Elsie had not told her nncle who supplied the news to tho paper She prayed fervently that she might be able to keep the knowledge to her self forever, safely bidden from the fond old man who believed iu her Fate would decide, For hours sho sat in a little room over the bauk, listening to the per sistent clamorings below for gold. How much longer could it go on? "Not lnuoli longer!" John Bivers said dejectedly to his snffering nieoe. "Not much longer, Elsie, my girl. They must have paid it nearly all out by now. Soon they will have to close the door. Don t cry, child. It is the will of Providence, I suppose; but it's hard to get such a blow as that at my time of life!" Presently there were sounds of cheering in the street. A well-known millionaire had driven up to the bank. "My God!" muttered the old banker. "This is the last straw! Eeginald Fairfax has turned against me with the rest; when he has withdrawn hia money there won't be a penny ieft!" "Go and see bim, nnole," Elsie pleaded. "He is so rich he might be persuaded to leave it." "No, child. I could not speak to him or anyone else to-day." "Then I will, uncle. Oh, do go and send him here to me! I most see him! Eeginald will save us!" John Bivers went blindly out, aud Elsie waited for Reginald Fairfax to come to her. Twice this self-made man bad asked hef to marry bim; twice she had refused. He was rich, but he was also coarse. Life with him would be a nightmare, she had always told herself. Sho did not love him. But now He was standing there in front of her, loudly dressed, and looking more commonplaco and vulgar thau ever. How could sho appeal to this boorish parvenu? She must, though; she bad worked the mischief, and she must right it if possible. At tho end of another five minutes she was telling him everything all about ber brother and ber selling the news of the robbery to the editor. He listened in silence. She humbled her self to the dust before him, andbegged him not to withdraw his money from the bank. He smiled queerly. "You twice asked me to be your wife," she wound up feverishly, "and I refused you. Would you still marry me, Mr. Fairfax? Oh, do answer! If I said 'yes,' would you still marry me?" Tho smile broadened. "Am I to understand that you are proposing to me, Miss Maitland?" be asked. "Don't seek to humble mo any more; don't, don't!" she cried. "I have fallen far enough!" "Yes," he said; "it must indeed be a terrible fall for the proud Miss Mait land to offer herself to me! You offer to become my wife if I will only leave my money in your uncle's bank. Con sidering that I love you aud that you love someone else it is rather bard on me, isn't it?" "Oh, don't, don't! If yon only knew how I loathe myself for having said all this to you? You are quite right to refuse me. How dare I ask yon or any man to take me under such conditions? You are quite right to refnse me." "I don't know," be answered slow ly. "If you did not love another man already it might have been different. But as it is yes, I certainly won't marry you, Miss Maitland; you have humbled yourself tome unnecessarily. You cannot know me very well when you imagine that I had come to with draw my support from your uncle at such a time as this. Instead, I had merely come to place the furtber sum of $250,000 to my account. The pub lio knows it already, and the paying into the bank of such a large sum has restored confidence. Ere she had time to speak he was gone. But the bank was saved! The bank was saved! A man she had always despised in her heart had come for ward and saved it. Why why had she never been able before to see the fine nature which lurked beneath a somewhat boorish exterior? The exoitement of that day was fol lowed by a long illness for her. When she returned to life ouce more it was to find her uncle in better spirits than she could ever remember him. "All the doing of Reginald Fairfax, Elsie, my girl!" the old banker said gleefully. "He Btnck to me right through, Jchild, when everyone else failed me, and his example saved the bank." He had further persuaded old John Rivers to make a partner of his long trusted manager. He was therefore in a position at last to ask Elsie's hand in marriage. When he asked her she answered, 4'Yes." Some months after their marriage Elsie received another visit from het brother Harold. He was altogether a different person. He was going tc America, aud bad come to make a con fession to her. He had sold his knowledge of their uncle aud the ban'.: to a certain gang of thieros for a large sum of mouey. But he bad never known a happy minute sinoe, and he had never touched a farthiug of the ill-gotten cash. He was going to America now, to start life in earnest, and wheu bis sister asked him. where he had found the necessary funds he told her that thejdonor was"ReginaldFairfax. THi CHINESE CHOPSTICK. Most Efficient Device For the Purpose jii-i Ever Invented. With the evidences of Asiatic- con tact supposed to be so strong in Cen tral America, one might have im agined that so useful a device as the simple chopsticks would have seoured a footing. These two sticks, held in one baud and known" iu China as "hasteners or nimbleyads," are cer tainly the most useful, the most eco nomical, and the most efficient device for their purposes ever invented by man. Throughout the vast Asian re gion, ombraciug a population of fire hundred million, the chopstick is used as a substitute for fork, tongs, and certain forms of tweezers. Even fish, omelet, and cake are separated with the chopsticks, and the cook, the street scavengor, and the watch re pairei use this device in the form of iron, long bamboo, and delicate ivory. Tho bamboo chopstick was known in ChiualOOOB. C, and shortly after this date the ivory form was devised. Their use is one of great antiquity in Japan, as attested by references to it in the ancient records of that couutry. One may search iu vaiu for tho trace of any object in the nature of a chop stick in Central oi South America. Knitting needles of wood are found in the work baskets associated with an cient Peruvian mummies, but the chopstick has not been found. Curi ous pottery rests for the chopsticks are exhumed iu Japan, but even this enduring testimony of its early use is yet to be revealed in this country. From Was Middle America Peopled From Asia? by Professor E. E. Morse, in Appleton's Popular Science Month- 'y. The Mare That Got Left. A Scottish paper tells a story of Sandy Mc , a Forfarshire farmer, who had been spending an bonr or two in the evening with a friend a couple of miles away. It was a moon light night, and Sandy, after partak ing freely of bis friend's hospitality, was riding quietly homo across the sheep pastures on bis "guid auld mare," when they came to an open ditcb, whioh bis mare refused to cross. A "Hoot awa, Maggie," said the rider, 'this winna dae. Ye maun jist ower." He turned back about a hundred yards, wheeled round, and gave the mare a touch of bis whip. On she went at a brisk canter; but as they reached the edge of the ditch she stopped dead aud shot Sandy clean over to the other side. Gathering himself uy, Sandy looked his mare straight in the face and said: "Vera weol pitched, indeed, ma lass. Bit boo are ye goin' to get ower yersel', eh?" A Speaking Acquaintance. "Yes," said Mr. Jones, when a cer tain girl's name had been mentioned, "I know her to speak to, but not by sight." "You mean," cut in the prompt cor rector "you mean that you know hei by sight, but not to speak to." "Do I?" asked Mr. Jones, anxious iy- "Of course, you do. You have seen her so often that you know who she is, but have never been introduced to her. Isn't that it?" "No, that isn't it. I never saw her at all to know her, but I speak to her nearly every day." "How can that be?" "She is the telephone girl at Cen tral." Harper's Bazar. A New Home For Emperor's Sons. A small but pretty chateau is being erected in the forest of Grunewald, near Berlin, Germany, for use as a residence for the Emperor's youngest sons. The marble palace at Potsdam, on the shores of the River Havel, has been found to be damp and un healthy, which caused an outbreak of typhoid fever there recently. The solutions to these pu tales will ap pear iu a succeeding Issue. - - P. A Ladder. The rounds 1. A carpenter's tool. 2. A division of time. 3. A battle ship. '4. An organ of the body. Primals Tbe vessel that made the first capture in the war with Spain. Finals A battleship now building. 10. A Square. 1. A piece of timber. 2. Formerly. 3. To examine closely. 4. A pavilion. 11. A Diamond. 1. A consonant iu Think. 2. A piece of turf. 3. Eaten at dinner. 4. Enjoyed by school children. 5. A jolloquial name for father. C. A di vision of time. 7. A vowel in Easy. 13. A Letter Funis. 19 9 22 3 11 5 18 1 20 10 12 4 8 14 17 15 21 23 16 C 2 7 13 Reading across 1. A sportsman. 2. Challenges. 3. An article of furni ture. 4. To pollute. When these words are correctly juessed the letters represented by the figures from 1 to 23 will spell the title of a book and its author. SOLUTIONS TO PREVIOUS PUZZLES. 5. A Double Acrostio TOMB HERO E N O S HURT UNTO B E AN 6 An Hour Glass G R U M C H R B L I ONI N G O VENUS NAP P CAB ARROW PLATTE P R O M E N A 7. Three Buried Cities and One Buried State. Quebec, Geneva, Bam-' bay, Texas. 8. Five Pied Lakes of the United States. Traverse, Mullets, Oneida, Drummond, Sedgwick. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL Nervous people should be relieved co know that a search of medical litera ture reveals no substantial caso ol burial alive. It has been found that the soot pro luced when acetylene gas is burued with a smoking flame gives carbon of high grade. It is estimated that the whole coal inpply of our planet would barely suffice to produce heat equal to that which the sun dissipates in one-tenth of a second. Hydrophobia has animal instead ol bacterial origin in the view of Dr. A. Grigorjew, a German biologist, who has isolated what appears to be a pro tozoan from patients suffering from rabies. The icebergs of the two hemispheres are entirely different in shape. The arctio bergs are irregular in form, with lofty pinnacles and glittering domes, while the an tar tic bergs are flat-topped and solid-looking. It has been found that the moss of tho tamarack swamps in Minnesota is as good as that of the South for np boisterers' use, aud there is promise of an extensive industrial development in the preparation of the new com modity. Experiments have resulted in the discovery that, by pressure, marble ia capable of being moulded into any desired form, while still retaining its strength, columns of marble two centi metres, two and one-half in diameter, aud four centimetres in length being thus accurately turned and polished. Recent Wireless Telegraphy. A good illustration of one of the possible usea of wireless telegraphy was afforded on the other nide of the Atlantic, shortly after the Prince of Wales injured his knee. He was on board bis yacht, and it was cruising off the Isle of Wight. By means of the Marconi apparatus be was able to send bulletins regarding his condition to the Queen, who was at Osborne House. Other members of the royal family, also, made use of the installa tion, among them the Duke of York and the Duke and Duchess of Con naught. Two interesting discoveries were made at this time. The system ap peared to work better In heavy weathti than when the air was clear. And on one occasion a straight line between the sending and receiving instruments passed through a hill, and yet no in terference was experienced. At pres ent it is not known whether the oleo-tro-magnetio waves went through the earth at this point or curved up over the hill and then came down again. New York Tribune. TVant No Amateur Cook-Ml.trs.ars. London cooks are beginning to re bel against takiug service with a mis tress who knows, or who thinks she knowr, something about cooking. The other day a cook made reservation in her application at an agency that her mistress must be "old and sensible." She said she wouldu't go to a house where the employer went into the kitchen to show her how to stew, roast and boil. TALE OF A DESERTED CITY. Meadow Lake, la California, Is Called the American Fouapell. In Nevada County, California, re :pose the remains of one of the Strang j est towns on this continent. Meadow I Lake is the American Pompeii, whose I entombing lava is the summit snow ' storms, which sometimes bury it twenty-five feet deep ou a level, and those annual exhuming is brought about by the summer suu. It was in the summer of 1865 that the name Meadow Lake was formally given to the town, previously called Excelsior and Summit City. Until 1858 nothing had been done in the way of prospecting that particular lo cality. Henry Hartly, an Englishman, who visited the vicinity in June, 1863, in search of game aud chanced to dis cover fragments of gold, imparted his discovery to his friends. A company was formed, and soon after other com panies, and the building of a city was started. With the close of the fall of 1865 the new city contained about one hundred and fifty houses completed and a num ber of others iu course of construc tion. Then all hopes were blasted. The adventurers awoke to the sad reality that, though there was plenty of gold in Meadow Lake, it was so combined with some snbstance un known to the metallurgists that it was effectually locked from the hands of man. All dreams, the black art, science and metallurgy were set at naught. One after another, as they abandoned hope, the disappointed gold seekers turned their backs on Meadow Lake and went down the mountain. More than two million dollars hud been poured into that bottomless abyss of California known as "dead work," to pay for mills, roads, buildings and mining. For years the solitary inhabitant of Meadow Lake was Hartly, the Eng lishman, who was mainly responsible for the existence of the town. How Dishes Got Their Nantes. The sandwich is called for the Earl of Sandwich. Mulligatawny is from an East India word meaning pepper water. Waffle is from wafel, a word of Teutonic origin, meaning honey comb. Hominy is from Anruminea, the North American Indian word for parched corn.- Gooseberry fool is a corruption of gooseberry fonle, milled or pressed gooseberries. Forcemeat is a corruption of farcemeat from the French farce, stuffing, i. e. meat for stuffing. Succotash is a dish bor rowed from the Narragansett Indians and called by them m'sickquatash. Blancmange means literally white food; hence chocolate blanc-mange is something of a misnomer. Charlotte is a corruption of the old English word charlyt, which means a dish of custard, and charlotte russe is Rus sian charlotte. Gumbo is simply okra soup, gumbo being the name by which okra is often known in- the South. Chicken gumbo is soup of okra and chicken. Macaroni is taken from a Greek derivation which means "the blessed dead," in allusion to the an cient custom of eating it at feasts for the dead. Grocers' Review. Tailoring Under Difficulties. Mr. Knight, the adventurous cor respondent of the London Times, who got into Cuba after twenty-four boms' immersion in the water about three 'months ago has just returned from Havana. Once in the city he was un able to get out. One of bis most amusing adventures occurred wheu he was imprisoned in Fort Morro, be fore his identity was fully established. He landed on the coast in rags, and when he got to the prison asked that a tailor should be sent to bim. Tbe tailor came, but was not admitted to the cell in which Mr. Knight was con fined. However he measured the war correspondent through the bars of the window, and next day returned with the garments cut and pinned together for the trying on. This was accom plished with some difficulty, Mr. Knight standing up close to the bars while the tailor did the fitting. The suit proved to be a remarkably good fit, and Mr. Knight wears it with pride in London. Boston Journal. A Story ot Ben Itntler. An old friend of General Butler tells a new story of the soldier-lawyer. According to it, toward the close of his career, when he ranked well toward the top of the bar for criminal cases, Butler was sent for by a pris oner cherged with murder. Upon his arrival in the cell of the accused man a distressing scene was enacted. The prisoner at once became hysteri cal and implored the lawyer's assis tance. "General," be cried, "I want you to defend me. You must defend me. I'm in danger of being banged, and I know you can get me off if any body can." "Are you guilty or are you innocent?" calmly inquired the General. "Oh, I am innocent, en tirely innocent," protested the pris oner with tears. "Then you don't need me," quietly responded General Butler, rising and reaching for his hat. "Innocent men are not banged in Massachusetts. Good day, sir." Juvenile Nostalgia. The sensation of homesickness has been variously described, but never more graphically than by a little girl who, miles away from; home and mamma, sat heavy-eyed and silent at a hotel table. "Aren't you hungry, dear?" asked her aunt, with whom sho was traveling- "No." "Doesn't your head ache?" "No." "What's the matter?" Thechild's lip quivered, and she said in a tone to grieve the heart: "I'm seasick for home." National Parmer. '. . '. ON CRUTCHES. When I 'listed folks all said. An' I guess thoy hit it right, "Jim's so good at raisin' Ned Mi;bbv he's cut out to flght." So 1 started, sore but proud All alone I took th' train; Sav, that dilTerd from th" crowd Whoa they bruog me borne again On crutches. Lawyor Dobson grabbed my hand Never knew me 'fore I went; Said I'd led th' Spnrtaa baud Wonder wlmt in sin he meant; Then th' folks, when they had yelled, Het me iu Jofh Hooper's hack; Tell you what ray hoad was swelled Wheu I came n-limpln' back On crutches. Canker Green got oft a speech; Told 'em how I bore th' flag. Fust man thro' th' shuttered breach Set me bliishln' with his brag.; Then be said, "I have n plnce Knved forSergeant Jim to fill, When he gets his health and graco Say, I nearly had a spill On crutches. Tarson, too, on Sunday night, Aim os' shamed me to th' ground; Called me hero ot th' light. Asked 'om all to wait around. Chrls'mns, how they stayed an' shook! But, ye sue. I didn't enro When I caught Myrtilly'g look As I stood a-swayin' there On crutches. Somohow we were 'nenth th' stars, 'Cross the Meld n-walkln' slow, When Myrtllly dropped th' bnrs- "Lean on mc," she whispered low. Lordy, but Tiy bfurt went fast Hide by side with 'Tilly there Life seemed too blame good to last 'Cross that Held I stumped on ulr, Not crutches. William ltussell Hose, In tbe Criterion, HUMOR OF THE DAY. ne "There is always something lonsensical about a pretty woman." She "Yes; it's a man. We suppose whiskers originated ifhen Daniel bearded the lions in their len. Philadelphia Bulletin. The modern Cindorelias, Left at home beside the embers, Are tho husbands of the women Who of many clubs are mombri. Llfo. After a mau reaches the age of forty le quits tryiug to secure the moon itnd gives bis entire attention to get ting tho earth. She "Did yon let him Kiss you be fore you were engaged?' She "Yes. That's how we happen to bo engaged. Papa came aloug." Patient "Doctor, I would like to lave your bill." Doctor "Yon had bettor wait until you are a little stronger."- -Up-to-Date. 'What do you consider tho hardest problem of a man's existence?" "Getting his own conseut to craw) jut of bed iu the morning." He (exhibiting sketch) "It's the oest thing I over did." She (sympa thetically) "Ob, well, yon mustn't let that discourage you!" Tit-Bits, He paid her lovely compliments I'nat tilled ber heart with thrills. IIu's sorry lor his r.ishness now, For now lie pays her bills. i'hllndulpbla Record. "So the war is really over?" "Yes; jur laudlady has takeu down 'Re member the Maine,' aud put up our favorite old motto, 'Pay as you go." Truth. He "Here it tells of a doctor who lays impolitoness is a disease." Sho "So it is. And iu tho street car it is generally found to be well seated.'' Philadelphia Bulletin. The Sweet Young Thing "I won 3er if you ever felt tbe pangs of love?" The Savage Bachelor "I had a deep aud abiding love for green apples ivhen I was a small boy." Indian' apolis Journal. By the time a mau has learned to jpeuk with discretion aud weigh his words carefully, a younger generation spriugs up, thrusts him iu a corner, aud will not let him speak at all. Atchison Globe. Mrs. Filauthrop "If you are a infferer from nervous prostration, as you say you are, why don't you do something for it?" Tuffold Kuutt "I do, ma'am; I'm tukiu' wot they cal' the rescure." Chicago Tribune. "This scientist says that a futuri war may bo decided by submarini fighting." "That's goodl" exclaimed Sagasta, with a gleam of hope in hit eye. "We have a lot of ships alreadj on the ground." Washington Star. "My father-in-law is simpleton! The other day I wrote him that my pecuniary embarrassments were turn ing my hair gray, and what do you Bupposo his answer was? He sent me a bottle of hair dyol" Fliegendf Blaetter. Jeweler "Tho inscription you wish engravod on tho inside of th riug I nnderstaud is "George tc Irene." Young Man (with embar rassment) "Yes, that's right. Bui er dou't cut the "Irene" deep." Standard. A lady who adored a certain preach r took tho late Archbishop Migee tc hear him. "Oh, what a saint iu th pulpit!" said the lady, as they wer going home. "And, oh, what a oiartyr iu the pew!" added the Arch bishop. Tit-Bits.. To Make the Kyea Ilrleht. The Hiiuplo pluu of bathing tho eyes ith cold water every night at bed- iiuie and the first thing on getting up in tho moruiugwill make the eyes both :lear and bright. TUo application of iold water causes tho blood iu the nu nerous little blood vessels which sur round tho eyes to circulate freely, and in consequence tlio eyes will beconu itronger anil brighter. Worthy or III Digiilt.r. "The style of your new office build jig puzzles me a little. I can make nt the rooms for the oIIuvh. There leenis .to be the entrance. Hero in the inner court. That room over there 00 Us large enough to be au auditorium. 3ut what is this elaborately planned ipartaieut on the second lloorV" , "This will ba tho jauitornim." -hicago Tribuua.