.fine Forest ia,.... b publish! tvery wednss Jay, by J. E. WEPJK. Offloe la Smeirbaugh & Co.'i Buildin j XLM 8TBEET, TIONEST1, rju Terms, - 91.00 rr Year. Ko subscriptions received tor a shorter period than three months. Correspondent solicited from all parts of the country. Mo notice will be taken of anonymous ooaimunlo.ulona. .... oaa Squire, one inch, one insertion., f 100 One Square, one inch, one tuonth. SOU Oae Square, one inch, turee months. . 5 OJ One Cquare, one inch, one year...... 10 00 1 o Squares, one year 15" Quarter Column, one year. SW(W Half Column, one year. 50 Oj One Column, one year 100 00 Legal aJvertijeuienU ten cent per line each insertion. Marriages and death notices gratis. All bills loryear.y ad vertiaeinenta collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. Jt Ut J&S'l KKF U MJULU AI VOL. XXXI. NO. 44. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15, 1899. 81.00 PER ANNUM. n 4 . s I I -4 Dewey leads, so far, in the number of poatolBcci named after him. lie has eighteen, while Schley and Samp ion have five and three respectively. France rep -ts that her export trade declined about $30,000,000 in 1898. The trouble Vith the French is that . they have been paying too much atten tion to military scandals and too little to business. - j --. . . . j The killing and eatiug of four com. mercial agents in Upper Ubangi, West Africa, shows that dead white man -continues to be a favorite article of food in the tropic. But there is noth ' ing of this menu seen in the zones. ' The latest labor-saving device is a l"buttouholo moistener," which does these things: "It opens the button hole, perfumes tho collars and cuffs, removes the starch from tho edge of the buttonhole and permits buttoning with case; saves wear and tear of but tonholes, breakage of buttons and the deBtruetion of your finger uftils. " The advertisement adds "aud saves your reason;" but thvreiu it is wring; it is the abundance, the bewilderment of labor-saving devioes which make man the sad, nervous wreck he is at the end of this centnry. Man's memory is said to be growing weaker. That is not true; bnt what is true is that his memory is so overburdened with re membering all the labor-saving devices pf which he is the slave that he has little time or mind or thought for any thing else. 7 The crowning triumph of the ar with Spain that is, so far as t'le medical department is concerned has been the successful solution of the long-considored problem as to the best means of transporting the sick snd Wounded, The great value and . effioienoy of the ambulance ship have been amply demonstrated. Oar navy has in this respeot shown the way to the rest of the world. . Foreign na tions have already followed the lead given them by America, and it may be taken for granted that in future the hospital ship will fee regarded as an ibsulutely necessary complement to a naval squadron, in time of war at all events. History may be ransacked in vain to find a parallel in sea warfare to the Spanish-American conflict, both' as regards its successful issue and the Bmall loss of life. JVhat a mere dot iu timo seems 150 jears when plaoed in the history of the world! What a moment in the existence of the present States of Eu rope! And, yet, 1JW years ago there was not a single white man. in Ken tucky, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. t The colonists had no more knowledge of that now flourishing part of Amer. ica than of the mountains of the moon. One hundred and fifty years ago Can ada belonged to France, and the pop ulation did not exceed a million and a half of people. One hundred and fifty years ago Prussia, a little monarchy, was getting ready to sustain a single handed contest with Russia, Austria and Frauce. Washington was unheard of, and the Unitedtates were a loyal part of tho British impire, and on the pojjfical hoiizJ Ju speck indicated the struggle w within a quarter of .a century (Hereafter, 'established , the greatest republic of the world. ' One hundred and fifty years ago there were . four newspapers in ' America. What a vista of human energy is dis played when ye look back over the 18 years, as theuffiOsWfTjtury draws . near! No country can show its qual. It is almost ignored abroad. It is hardly appreciated at home. Secretary Wilson hns already begun planning for agricultural schools in iho Philippines, and advocates such institutions as Booker T. Washington has founded atTuskegee. "The Maker Df the world," says Mr. Wilson, "will hohrthis nation responsible for the welfare of 10,000,000 of colored peo ple in the several islands now under our flag. The very best service thai can be done by the United States tc those islands is to teach their people to work, just as Booker Washington is teaching the colored people of Tub kegee to work. We have not had marked success with the Indian, be . cause he would . not work. We are - working people ourselves. A man has ficaroely respectable standing in th United States who does not contribute by his head or his hands to the wel fare oT the Republic. But the colored man will work, and juste as rapidly as the people of those islands can be helped in this direction success will come to the efforts .of the United States in trying to do them good, Just in what way Congress may deem it wise to manage those islands no man can tell. Perhaps Congressmen can not themselves tell. But education toward the industries is what the peo ple of the islands are all needing." v -- ::: r Abraham Lincoln. (INOO-February 13-1HOO.) When o'er the land, from strand to strand, the drum beat near and far, Wlieu from the shop, the field, the crop, men crowded to the war. When In the South, from the oannon's mouth, shell rained on Sumter's wall, The summons then for loyal men went forth the battle call Hod war's alarms to arms, to arms, our land and flag to save By one proud stroke to break the yoke to manumit the slave. Then stalwart men from vale and glen to arms came promptly forth, And faithful rods with swords and guns thronged proudly from the North. The glowing West, her bravest, best, heard the wild war trump sound, And formed in Hue, with hope divine, to light on freedom's ground; 1'roud, pntriot men from the land of Fenn, from valley, hill and crag, For equal laws, for freedom's cause all clroled round the nag. To freedom true, the Jersey blue, the Knickerbocker brave, And many a band from Maryland, came forth our land to save. From Maine's green pines, Missouri's mines, and from the land of Clay Kentucky sent, on victory bont, her sous to join the fray The brave and free from Tennessee, and all the sunny South Vent men to fall at their country's call, at the grim cannon's mouth. For freedom's land, with heart and hand. New Eogland's faithful host Like Spartans came to breast the fame or fall at duty's post. From mine and mill, from knoll and hill, came forth the mountaineer, From the prairie sod, with shoulders broad, tho gallant volunteer. M The cumptlre's blaze shone through the haze by rivulet and rill, And freedom's lamp shone o'er the camp where squadrons thronged to drill. And who the wan, ungainly man, who marshaled all the free, Like marble stood while war and blood oppressed by land and sea; His one firm word, the people stirred; "Uulonl" for evermore; One land, one sky, to live or die, ono flag from shoro to shore. No arms, no fates can part the States, no cause the Union sever Preserve this soil tor men who toil forever and forever! This soul that God picked from the sod to stand In freedom's van, The lund to save, to free the slave and fight for trampled mac; To check the pride to stay the tide of felt despotic power, He held the rein he broke the chain In freedom's trial hour, The Hpartan horde that drew the sword to him gave up the brand, And Lincoln died In freedom's pride the savior of our landl Charles J. Beattlo. JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC EMANCIPATOR. JO 30000000000 oooooooooococ The following article, giving some aneodotes of the early life of Abraham Lincoln, is taken from Success: "I meant to take good care of your book, Mr. Crawford, I did, indeed," said the boy, in great trepidation; "but I've damaged it a good deal with out intending to, and now I want to make it right with you if I can. What shall I do 1o make good the damage?" ; "Why, what's happened to it, Abe?" asked the rich farmer, as he took the copy of Weems's "Life of Washing ton," which he had lent young Lin coln, and looked fit the stained leaves and warped binding. "It looks as if it had been out all through last night's storm. How came you to forgot, and leave it out to Boak?" "Twss this way, Mr. Crawford," replied Abe, shifting uneasily to the other foot; "I sat up lato to read it; and, when I went to bed, I pnt it away carefully in my bookoase, as 1 call it, a little opening between two logs iu the wall of our cabiu. I dreamed about General Washington all night. When I woke up I took it out to read a page or two before I did the chores, and you can't imagine how I felt when I found it in this shape. It seems that the mud-daubing had got out of the weather side of that crack, and the rain must have dripped on it three or four hours before I took it out. I'm real sorry, Mr. Crawford, and want to fix it np with yon somehow, if you can tell me any way, for I ain't got the rnoneto pay for it with." "Well," said Mr. Crawford, "being as it's you, Abe, I won't be hard on you. Come over and shuck corn three days, and the book's yours." Hod Mr. Crawford told young Abra ham Lincoln that he hed fallen heir to fortff, the boy could hardly have t'eltmore elated. Shuck corn only PRESENT CONDITION OF LINCOLN'S BIRTH PLACE, NEAB HODOENSVILLE, KEN TUCKY. three days, and earn the book that told all about his greatest hero! "I don't intend to delve, grub, shuck corn, split rails and the like al ways," he told Mrs. Crawford, after he had read the volume. "I'm going to fit myself for a profession." "Why, what do yon want to be now?"jsked Mrs. Crawford, in sur prise. "Oh, I'll be President," said Abe, with a smile. - "You'd make a pretty President, with all your tricks and jokes, now, wouldn't you?" said the farmer's wife. "Oh, I'll study and get ready," re plied the boy, "and then maybe the chance will come." "Perhaps people hundred years hence," writes Jesse W. Weik, one of Lincoln's latest biographers, "will hesitate to believe that the speech at Gettysburg battlefield and the inaug ural address delivered from the por tioo of the Capitol at Wellington, March 4, 18C5, were written by a man whose school days, all told, 'did not amount to one year,' and who was 'never in a college or aoademy as a tudent, and never insjde a college or I His nose was wU I is . n HNS i , academy building, till after he had be come a practicing lawyer, in his twen ty-eighth year." Mr. Weik says that Lincoln found "pieces to speak" in "The Kentucky Preceptor," containing a number of useful lessons in reading, compiled for the use of schools by a teacher. "We are indebted to his stepmother for the information that his mathe matical instruction came from Pike's arithmetic; but he was unable to buy the book, and was therefore obliged to borrow the oopy whioh belonged to YOUNG ABE LINCOLN IN TRAINING FOR THE PRESIDENCY. "Ob! I'll study and get ready, and then maybe the chance will come." a neighbor presumably Josiah Craw ford. "In order to possess the essential parts of the book, he resolved to copy them. Having procured certain sheets of unruled paper, nine inches wide and fourteen long, he sewed them to gether at one edge with string, so that tbey would open like a book. Then, with a quill pen, he patiently copied the essential parts of the entire arith metic. Along the edges and in the unused corners "of many pages are found snatohes of schoolboy doggerel." "Not only were books in some cases out of his reaob, but paper and like supplies were not always to be had, so that the practice of writing was not at all times an easy matter. Oftentimes when at work plowing in the fields, the boys would when the old, flea bitten gray mare stopped to rest at the end of a long furrow draw from his pocket a piece of smoothly planed wood and cover the impromptu slate with words and figures, written with the pencil he had made of soapatone or clay. His stepmother tells ns he would cover the smooth side of every log and board abont the cabin with his rude essays and arithmetical calcula tions. The door was a study in hier oglyphics." "As I was once riding to mill with my father," said Captain John Lamar, "I saw, as we drove along, a boy sit ting on the topmost rail of an old fashioned stake-and-rider worm fence, reading so intently that he did not notice our approach. My father turned to me and said: 'John, look at that boy yonder, and mark my words, he will make a smart man out of himself. I may not see it, but you'll 6ee if my words don't come true.' That boy was Abraham Lincoln." One of Lincoln's Kind Acts. One summer morning, shortly be fore the close of the Civil War, the not unnsnal sight in Washington of an old veteran hobbling along could have been seen on a shady path that led aut twenty mile's ST wiT- from the Executive Mansion to the War Office. The old man was in pain, and the pale, sunken cheeks and vagne far-away stare in his eyes betokened a short-lived existence. He halted a moment, and then slowly approached a tall gentleman who was walking thoughtfully along. "Good morning, sir. I'm an old soldier, and would like to ask your advice." The gentleman turned, and, smiling kindly, invited the poor old veteran to a seat under a shady tree. There he listened to the man's story of how he had fought for the Union, and was severely wounded, incapacitating him for other work in life, and begged di rections how to apply for back pay due him and a pension, offering his papers for examination. j The gentleman looked over the papors, and then took ont a card and wrote directions on it, also a few words to the Pension Bureau, desiring that speedy attention be given to the appli cant,' and handed it to him. ' The old soldier looked at it, and, with tears in his eyes, thanked the tall gentleman, who, with a sad look, bade him good luck and hurried up the walk. Slowly the soldier read the' card again, and then turned it over to read the name of the owner. More tears welled in his eyes when he knew whom he had addressed himself to,: and his lips muttered: "I am glad I fought for him and the country, for he never forgets. God bless Abraham Linooln!" James Parton's Prediction. In 1862, James Farton, the cele brated biographical writer, made the following prediction in regard to Abraham Lincoln: History will say of Mr. Linooln that no man of a more genial tempera ment, a more kindly nature ever tenanted the White House; that ha gave all his time, his thoughts, his energies to the discharge of duties of unprecedented magnitude and urg ency; that, hating no man, he stead fastly endeavored to win the con fidence and love of all the loyal and patriotic, and that, in spite of four chequered years of such responsibility and anxiety as has seldom fallen to the lot of man, he bore away from the Capitol the sunny temper and blithe frankness of his boyhood, returning to mingle with his old neighbors as one with them in heart and manner, in retirement as in power a haprjy specimen of the men whom Liberty and democracy train in the log cabin and by the rudest hearth to guide the counsels of the Repnblio and influence the destinies of the people. low Stanton Defied Lincoln. The application of a man who wanted to be chaplain in the army during Mr. Linooln's administration was recently found, says the Indianapolis Journal. Attached to it are a number of in dorsements which are not only inter esting in themselves, but aid in dis closing the characters of the two men whose influence largely molded the policy of government in those turbu lent times. The indorsements read as follows: Dear Stanton: Appoint this man chap lain in the army. A. Lincoln. Dear Mr. Lincoln, He is not a preacher E. M. Stanton. The following indorsements dated a few months later, but are come just below : Dear Stanton: He Is now. A. Lincoln, Dear Mr. Lincoln: cancy. J) ear Mr. Stanton: laln-at-lnrge. Dear Mr. Lincoln: of law for that. Dear Mr. Stanton: bow. But there Is no va- E. M. Stanton. Appoint him chap- A. Lincoln. There Is no warrant E. M. Stanton. Appoint blm any- A. Lincoln. I will not. Dear Mr. Lincoln: E. M. Stanton. The appointment was not made, but the papers were filed in the War De partment, where they remain as evi dence of Lincoln's friendship and Stan ton's obstinate nerve. Lincoln's Last Pardon. The last official act performed by Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States was the signing of the pardon of George 8. E. Vaughan, un der sentence of death, charged with being a Confederate spy. Mr. Vaughan, now an old and broken man, lives in Maryville, Mo. The story of his arrest, sentence to death and final pardon an hour before Lin coln was shot by J. Wilkes Booth is one of the most interesting of the un published chapters of the Ciril War. He would be In it he'd essay And try to make Li honored way - - JOlitioa. mm . The solutions to these puzzles will ap pear in a succeeding issue. 12- 43 A Qneer Problem. A carpenter made a door. He made it too big. He cut it and cut it too little; he cut it again, and made it just right. How can this be? 40 Six Beheadments. 1. Behead a kind off rnit and have a kind of fish. 2. To come into a col lision with, and have the stroke of a whip. 3. A noose, and to change, 4. Timber, and have a brown pigment. 5. A hard wood, and have pertaining to bones. 6. A plant, and have a dart. The cnt off letters will spell the name of a naval hero. 47. A Novel Acrostic. ' All the words described contain the same number of letters; when cor rectly guessed arfd written one below the other, one of the rows of letters will spell the name of a celebrated astronomer. Reading across: 1. To hinder; 2, articles found in every stable; 3, con quering; 4, a city in England; 5, fathomless; 6, meddling persons; 7, a place of worship; 8, a celebrated Greek philosopher; 9, bearing up against; 10, indirect allusions. 48. A Diamond. 1. A vowel in Profectum. 2. What every boy expects to be. 3. Part of a roof. 4. A snare. 5. A consonant in Semper. SOLUTIONS TO PKEVIOUS PUZZLES. 41. Six Pied Flowers Anemone, laburnum, aster, violet, tuberose, sun flower. 42, A Diamond V RID VIXEN 1 DEN N 43. A Dee, eye, Riddle 1. Pea, are, oh, 2. geo, why prodigy. Skate. 44. A Siuare SIRE IRON ROOD ENDS SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL Tho need of nitrogenous manure for wheat-growing land has now re sulted iu a demand for 1,250,000 tons of nitrate of soda each year. By means of electricity it is now possible to produce ozone in consider able quantities, and its utilization in the arts is constantly increasing. The Pintsch system of gas lighting is now used on 85,000 cars and loco motives in the world, its use on loco motives, however, being almost en tirely oonfined to 2955 such maohines iu Germany. The comparative infant mortality between a rich and a poor district iu the French city of Lille has been as certained to be as one to seven. Most of the poor infants die of gastro enteritis, a preventable disease due to injurious diet, especially bad milk. The annual amount of vaooination default in England is now believed to reach 300,000 in 920,000 births. In other words, of 100 children born, and surviving at the end of the year, less than seventy have been vaccinated. In Scotland the default is less thau three per cent. The curions fact that corn, pota toes and other plants thrive better when plaoed in rows running north and south has been proved by Dr. Wollny, of Munich. This reduces the shading by each other to a minimum, more uniform and regular light, heat and moisture resulting. Some manufacturers have begun to make ornamental bulbs for incan descent lamps, resorting for this pur pose to various attractive patterns brought to pass by means of the sand blast, or rendering the lower part of the bulb white by the same method, in this way reducing the glare of the light thrown downward. Phosphorus is now produced by means of the electrical furnace. The method consists in heating a mixtnre of phosphate of lime and coke, which are first reduced to a powder. When the mass becomes pasty, the open ings of the furnace are sealed, except one, through which the vapor passes. The vapor is collected and distilled. Wanted SIOOO For Savins; Life. David Highley, a wealthy man, of Marion County, Ind., is defendant in a most peculiar suit. Last spring Highley, with his wife, was driving across a bridge that spans Pipe Creek. A storm was raging at the time, and a flash of lightning frightened his horse, which jumped off the bridge into the swollen stream, dragging Highley and his wife into the tor rent. Highley swam out and ran down the bank, where he found his wife lodged in the limb of an overhanging tree. From a house near by he secured the assistance of two men, who rescued his wife. The men claim that High ley offered them $1000 if they would rescue his wife, and that he has never paid them. They now bring suit to recover that amount. New York Times. Could Have Gone Along. While some companies of the Tenth New York Regiment were returning to their armory in Albany a man on the curbstone said: "Why, they're all right! Look at them! They've been on a grand exenrsion to Honolulu." A private in the ranks heard the re mark and turned to the young man and said: "Say, young fellcw, the tickets to that excursion were free; why didn't you get in on it?" ICWiUOl else do v ' WOMEN AS CRIMINALS. They Will Tell About a, Crime Quicker Than Man Will. (Views of a Veteran San Francisco Detec tive.) Women as criminals are very smait, but they cannot keep crime hidden so well as a man. A woman is more desperate ia love affairs than in anything else. Men get desperate about money matters. If a woman of the criminal type loves a man she will, as a rule, do al most anything to win him. It is difficult to convict women of murder; the jurors are men, and they sympathize. Men don't want to have womeu hanged, but a jury of women might go to the other extreme. Women don't like women as well as men like men. A woman has no sympathy for an other woman who has done wrong, but often a man has sympathy for a wrong doing fellow aud will help him out. If a man doesn't like a man he wants to have the other know it. It is just the reverse between two women. A half-way decent womau will do anything to hide a criminal who is her sweetheart. Get a woman in a tight place a.. ' she will tell about a crime quicker than a man would. Men kill themselves when they aro broke; women don't. The women cau stand it better and are more used to it. Most of the suicides of women are on aocount of desertion . A Chinaman's Idea of Life Insurance. A New Orleans lawyer told the Times-Democrat this yarn: "I had a Chinese client who went home on a visit, leaving his laundry in charge of his brother. When he returned he was promptly ordered off the prem ises. His brother had coolly appro priated the business, and swore he would kill him unless he made himself scarce. The dispossessed gentleman called on me next day, aud, after hearing his story, I advised him to get out a warrant immediately, but he shook his head at the suggestion, and said in pigeon English that he wanted to have his life insured for $10,000. I was ustonished. 'Whnt on earth put that into your head?' I asked. 'So they makee alio time som9 watch,' he replied. After a great deal of cross-qnestioning I got at his scheme. He had in same mau ner conceived the idea that insurance companies did everything possible to prolong the lives of their policy hold ers, and it followed quite naturally that if they had $10,000 at stake they would take particular pains to see that he wasn't hurried into tho here after by his wicked brother. In other words, they would 'makee some watch,' and being a very frugal gon tlemau, it struck him as a cheap way of securing a bodyguard. He was greatly disappointed when I explained that the"companies lot their clients take their own chances, and it evi dently impressed him as most un businesslike. He weut away, aud at last accounts the wicked brother was still holding the fort." Snapihoti at Egypt. No region in the world presents a clearer and more distinct individual character than Egypt. Each village is a special world, eaoh valley a uni verse that has developed its own life; and man has felt the special local im pressions; and even in modern times, while all the Egyptian villages present a similar aspect, and, although the fellah appears to be the same sort of a man everywhere, each locality has its speoial individual characteristics. - One who knows how to observe men and things critically will find consid erable differences. These dissimilar ities are as old as Egypt itself. They have always existed, and are as much more intense as the communications between district aud district were for merly more diflicult. Thoy are due to physical conditions special to each village, to the prevailing winds, the form and character of the mouutaius, the extent of cultivable lands and the supply of water. A study of the detail of the country is a very important preliminary to the examination of Egyptian history. Every village and every home had for merly its speoial divinity and its par ticular usages. Are we sure that the gods and customs were not imposed by local conditions? At Oinbos two hostile gods were adored in the same temple. May we not see iu this fact a recollection of the hostility which has always prevailed between the in habitants of the two banks of the river, and still continues? Popular Science Monthly. Qneer Friends. Adolph Schmitt, a farmer at Beech woods, Sullivan County, N. Y., ou go ing to his hogpen one cold morning recently was surprised to find a large rat perched on the back of one of his hogs. The rat made no movement when Mr. Schmitt appeared, and the hog being apparently satisfied, Mr. Schmitt did not interfere. The rat spends most of its time on the hog's bask and a strange friend ship has grown up between the two animals. The hog is restless when the rat is not on it. Several times it has angrily defended its 'friend when other hogs have suapped at it. The rat in return for the hog's pro tection scratches its friend's brintly back aud nibbles lovingly at its ears. These attentions seem to afford the hog boundless pleasure, for the more active the rat the more hearty are its grunts of satisfaction. New York Press. Away With Chain) Sir James Crichtou Browne is of the opinion that peoplo ought to sit on the floor instead of on chairs, since sitting on the ground was ruce general with the entire human race, aud is "both healthy and natural. "London World. 1 tire fctrscture is recauuen UBon $750.000. Irfind-n Chronicte. TWO VIEWS OF ACUINALDO. (From a Manila Faper.) The following couple of verses were taken from the Clevelind IMain Dealer, and shows the mistaken idea people at home have of Aguioaldo and bis followers. We take the liberty of appending a concoction of our own. with apologies to the above es timable paper. . As It was written: " " aocinaldo. We rather like your stylo, Agulnaldo. You are at it all the while, Aguinaldo. Yon tep right out and fight, And you hit with all your might, And you make the Dons a sight, Aguinaldo. And when all's said and done, Aguinaldo, We'll remember you, my son, Aguinaldo. You're the friend of Uncle Sam, And you'll llnd hi s not a clam. When ho bands around the jam, Aguinaldo. As it should have been written: We do not like your style, Aguinaldo. The Yanks are bad to rile, Aguinaldo. They'll make you look a sight, If you provoke a light. You'll be knocked clean out o' sight Aguinaldo. And it's time for you to run, Aguinaldo. When Uncle "gets his gun," Aguinaldo. "'e will do the job first rate, i - .e'U "lay you out in state," If you lo not "pull your friegut," Aguinaldo. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "And what would you bo now if it weron't for my money?" "A bach elor." Puck. She "I understand you proposed to Emily while out for a stroll last nig'ht?" He "Yes; I won in a walk." Yonkers Statesman. "Cooks," said the suburbanite, "may be divided into two classes those who resent criticism and those who ignore it." Puck. "He has proposed to her a dozen times' "Has his peristency beeu re warded?" "Oh, yes. She refuses him regularly." Truth. Miss Quipp "The idea of anything of coral for an engagement memento!" Mr. Quirk "Why, isn't it a cause of many wrecks?" Jewelers' Weekly. Which was the handsomest on the grounds Was really hard to say, But the hog that scored 1000 pounds Had the most winning weigh. Chicago Tribune. "I never give a book to a girl with out reading it first." "Why not?" "If there was a proposal in it she might take it as personal." Chicago Rec ord. '. First Snake "Won't yon drop in at our cave this evening? There is to be a snake-charmer present." Second Snake "I shall be charmed, I assure you." Puck. The Young Partridge "Aren't you afraid of the man behind the gun?" The Elder Partridge "Not when he is rigged np in one of those fancy hunting suits." "How did you got such a pleasant expression on that ugly Miss Posse's portrait?" "I got her to telliug me about meu she might have married." Brooklyn Lifo. Papa "Such a wedding as you want, my dear, will cost $2000." "Then what is to be done, papa?" "You will have to be married without my consent." Lifo. "So you've lost all yonr marbles, eh? Well, it serves you right. Boys always lose who play on Sundays." "But how about the other feller, who won all my marbles?" Willie "Say, pa, what does the paper mean by referring to Mr Soft leigh as an ornament to society." Pa "It probably means that his useful ness on earth is not apparent." Chi cago News. "Mudge is doing well. He came in and asked me for change for a twenty dollar bill half an hour ago." "H'm. A little louger ago thau that he came into my place and got small bills changed into a twenty." Indian apolis Journal. Mrs. Youuglove "These women write about 'How Husbauds Should Be Managed' Do you suppose they man age their husbands any better than we do?" Mrs. Elders "Do I. Why, pshaw! child, don't you know they haven't any husbands?" Detroit Free Press. Preferred a Solo. A gushing, sentimental girl and her matter-of-fact aunt sat on a green hill side, the aunt endeavoring to enjoy nature, while her niece discoursed of things far and near without a notice able pause of breath. At last she spoke of the beauties of the landscape, at great length. "I love to liHten to the music of that brook as it babbles on and on," she said, unwisely, "Yes," said tho annt, seizing her first opportunity, "the babbling of a brook is a pleasant sound, my dear. I think I prefer it as a solo, however, rather than with another part. I don't care so much for a babbling duet." Then for a few delightful momen's there was silence on the green hill side. Youth's Companion. Increasing tho Site of Fruit. A French agricultural journal gives the method by which a vine grower, of Touraiue, is said to produce magnifi cent grapes. Ho dissolves two kilo grams of sulphate of iron in 100 litres of water, and sprinkles it ou the leaves and bunches of the vines. The first application is made when the grapes are about one-third of their full size; the second, about a month later, and the third, about twenty days before they are cut. It is claimed that corresponding results are ob tained with pears, apples and cherries. The method is inexpensive, and the journal quoted recommends a trial, though it does not guarantee the suc cess of the treatment in all' cases. London Times. wards.