The Forest Repawu U published .very Wedaosday, by J. E WENK. 023 la Smearbaugh & Coi Bulldln j XLM STREET, TIONESTA,' rJL Terms, - 9 l.oo Per Vear. Ko subscriptions received for a shorter period than three mocth. Correspondent. oIljr jrom all parts of th country. No noftvwlll be taken ol anonymous oommunio.iiioas. Tli a regularity -w ibh which tha lata Mr. Keely kept Lis victims signing checks was perhaps the nearest ap proach to perpetual motion on reo r ' ' - And now Germany has decided to increase her artillery. That disarm anient proposal is looking bluer and bluer. In fact, all the Towers are go ing abend as if it had never been put forward. American exports of every kind are increasing steadily, agricultural as well ns manufactured. And there is no immediate likelihood of radical change in this respect. American natural resources are 'so vast and var- iai art A Amoriitan infliintrv nnv in HA efficient and well orgauized that Amer ican producers are prepared to adjust themselves to any change that may oc cur in economic- conditions. It has long been romarked by cer tain physicians that the origiu of can cer should be sought for in some widely spread condition effecting various an imal and vegotable organisms. This . , . .1. ; ... - Idea is uaseu upon tue seeming ire quency, in especial, of the disease in isolated housos on the banks of rivers, particularly if close to woods, it hav ing been observed, too, that trees un der these same conditions are affected with veritable tumors which bear a striking rosemblanoe to cancer. Late investigations by. M. Noel, of Paris, are said to show a certain relation be tween arboreal "cancer" and that of man; thnt is, not only the frequency of malignant tumors in habitations surroundod by or near woods, but also ' a considerable mortality from cancer among certain persons whose occupa tion nfiliiTPs tliAm tn livn in thnsa turn- ditions, as, for example, exoise offi cers," who in certain seotions pass through long distances in isolated woods, Women show genius of a high ordei ' whenever thoy attempt to explaiu the causes of the ills which afflict most of mankind. A woman, one of those in . tellectual up-to-dnte womep, who - would rather discuss the- nebularhy pothesis and account for psychological phenomena than'cook or attend tc wifely duties, has stated that the colors of the drossos which women wear are responsible for their uervouf complaints. Green, for instance, pro duces indigestion, while ball gowns of the same color causo headaohes; a royal pnrplo dress is a sovereign rom edy for a sere threat; black, that dig nified color which adorns most women so gracefully and bewitohingly, is re sponsible for the over-excited person; certain other colors close to - the throat, she avers, produce blindness, deaf ucss and other horrible afflictions. The benefactors of humanity art those who reduce any philo3ophy to s practical sciouce, and this woman heaven bless her! is entitled to a niche in Hie world's pantheon for supersed ing the science of medicine by point iug out the relation of colors to health. All of us may rest assured that food has nothing to do with indigestion; it is the color green. And whenever we are physically, meutolly and morally Buffering the colors we wear are not in the proper juxtaposition to the human frame. The evideuce presented may uot be indisputable, but with this feminine logio has no concern. The oyster has just been the sub ject of an elaborate communication to the British Eoyal Society by Profes sor Herdraan and Mr. R. Boyce. They 8iiy that they did not find the typhoid bacillus in any oysters obtained from the 'sea or market that would only (which was not their purpose) from a tainted spot. But for experiment they infected clean oysters with germs, and the two principal results were emin ently satisfactory. One was that, while the typhoid bacilli could be de tected in the body of the infected oys ter for ten days, or even more, after introduction, they showed no signs of increase, and iu the intestine actually perished. The other showed that by washing infected oysters ina stream of clean sea water the typKid bacilli, in from one to seven days, uniformly and invariably either greatly dimin ished or totally disappeared. It is clear, therefore, that sea water is hos tile to the development of these nox ious germs. Of the green'oysters, the investigators say that some are per fectly wholesome, while others are not, The reasfcu is a srlIe one. The greenness in the former case is due to the presence of a harmless vegetable pigment. There may be also a small -quantity of an iron salt associated With it; but this has no connection with the coloring matter. In the other kinds of greeu oysters the color is due to a deleterious salt of copper- The epi cure, therefore, will do well not to eat green oysters unless he knows where thej coint from. VOL. XXXI. NO. AM going to give yon the money, Nell, and let you buy it yourself," said Mrs. Thome rather wearily. "What with com pany yesterday, aud getting your dress ready to day, r.nd-Flaxie cross and half sick with a sold, I Bimply haven't the courage to go to the milhuer s witu you. The Jittle cirl looked, up brightly Sha was barely thirteen, nud the thought of going all alone to Miss Prim's for her new Easter liuery was rather pleasant to her. "Oh. mamma, you don't need to go! I'm sure you don't! I can pick out inat whnt I want, and if you don't like it when it comes home wo can change it, you know. I might go down right aivnv and ' see what Miss Trim lias Mav I. mamma?" and the little girl rose eagerly. "Why ves. Nell. I snpposo so. Tou can tell Miss Prim that you want to sue, what she has and tho prices, ana thai tou will be iu to morrow to take one. Don't go over two dollars and a half. Ne e. That s all 1 can atioru this time. That ought to buy really a a vorv nina hat for a little girl. Not tnn mneh trimming, remember. I don't believe in so much show for Easter as some folks moke. Goodby, dear: be homo early." Nellie had been hastily putting on her things as her mother talked, and was out the door almost bofore she had finished. She tried to walk at first, but her feet kept going faster and faster, until she was fairly in a run, bofore she was half way to Miss Prim's little shop, that was quite in the cen tre of tho village. ' At Miss Prim's she wss all upset. There were so many hats, and most of them so pretty und becoming, that she could not choose. Sue had almost ue cided upon a dainty little Leghorn, trimmed with violets and daisies, when her eve caught a hat in another case that made her forget all the others. It was richer and more profusely trimmed. When Miss Prim placed it besides the others they looked cheap and scautr. "Oh, Mis Prim, how much is it?" she asked breathlessly. "I have been asking four dollars for it, but it is so near Easter now you may have it cheaper. You may have it for three anc a half. The girl's face fell. It was a dollar more than she could pay. "I am afraid it is more than mamma can afford this year," she said regret fully. All the way home she thought of that beautiful hat. She walked rather slowly now, thiukiug and thinking very hard. She knew it would be use less to ask her mother to buy the more expensive hat. Mrs. Thome was kind, almost indulgent with hor children, but she was firm in what she told them. Nellie did uot entef the house as gayly as she had left it, and her mother thought her tired. "Tou have been finding it hard to choose. Nell." she said, smiling. "Tell me about it." "Yes.' mamma, there wero so many, I picked a Leghorn staw, triinmod with violets and daisies. It is two and a "oh, miss prim! how much is it?" half. Miss Prim had another a good deal like it, only lots finer ond more trimming, for three and ahalf that had Viann fnnr Irtllfirfl " ;n ,i well this vniir. T'm sore." said her mother gently. "We havj had a good deal of expense, you know." The little girl was very quiet that evening and went to bed early. Far in the night the woke with a start. She had been dreaming of tho two hats and Miss Prim. In her dream she had said to Miss Prim, "I cannot buy it, because I have only two dollars and a half," and Miss Prim had said, "Why yes, yon-have, Nellie; you have a gold dollar put away in a drawer at home." It was this that hod made her jump aud wake up, for sho did have a gold dollar that her uncle, Henry Thome, had given her once when she was a baby, and it was pt away in a drawer( 50. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1890. $1.00 PER ANNUM. BY ALBERT BIQELOW PAINE. " just as Miss Prim had said. She had not thought of this before, and it was of no use to think of it now, for though she had never been told not to spend tho dollar, it was only because her mother believed she would never even dream of doing so. But Nellie did dream of it, over and a ... , 1 - over, ana eacu time sue wone wiia a start and lay awake a long time, one was pale and silent next morning, and when she set out for Miss Prim's the money that her mother had given her she carried in ner little purse, wnue deep down in her pocket was Uncle Henry Thome's gold dollar. She had not fully decided yet that she was go- " ...... m u ; l iug to spend it, out sue naa ieu ior u where she kept it in a little ring box under her clothes the first thing when she got up that morning and the little ring box hod been pushed back under her clothes empty when she came down to breakfast. Miss Prim was unusually pleasant that morning. She brought both hats out to the light for Nellie to see and said there was more thou a dollar s difference iu the two, and Nellie could see that herself. But Miss Prim looked a little surprised when sho saw the gold dollar. "Why." sue said. "1 naven t seen one for a long time. I'll keep it, I cuess. for a little niece of Tv.ine."Then she wrapped up the hat for Nellie, talking pleasantly. When Nellie started witu ner pur chase there- was a feeling of triumph in nossessinff it that wore oft as she walked along. She did not feel at all happy in the way she had expected. She remembered now (or tne nrst time that her mother would no doubt won CUrist is risen! Hear t bo song, Filling nil tho Isles ot sir. Whore the stars of glory throng, Whore the angels answer prayer Christ Is risen over all Every claim ot mortal seDse, Bin no longer need enthrall, Death no more life's ardor quoad). der at the' cheapness of the hat aud sneak of it in a way that would make hor silence equal to a falsehood. She had never told her mother an .untruth. Then she remembered how happily she had tripped away to Miss Prim's yester day. It did not seem to ner tnat sue could be the same little girl. But Mrs. Thome said less than Nellie had expected. She was tired and only kissed her pretty daughter. "Why, Nell, she smiled, "1 don't .. , see what you would want oi more trimming than that. I think a good 'eal less would havo answered. it s rather old for you now, but will be nice with a littlo alteration for next year." With a sign oirenei JNeiue toot uer purchase to her room. That night she dreamed again. Over and over sue thought Miss Prim's niece had come to see her and brought tho gold dollar. Her mother had seen it and said, 'Why, that is Nellie's gold dollar that her Uncle Henry Thome gave her." And then the little girl had said, "No. it isn't; it's mine, that my Aunt Hester Prim sent me on Easter." WTien she was dressed in her pretty new gown and ready to go to church next morning she certainly looked very sweet, though she was so pale that her mother said, "I'm afraid you are not well, Nellie. The excite inent has been too muoh for you, Easter isn't only for pretty things, my dear." Flaxio's cold was no better, and Mrs. Thorno did not go to church. By and by she prepared dinner.think- ing Nellie would be home presently and be hungry. Somewhat before she expected her the door suddenly flew open and the littlo girl burst into the room. The new hot she flung op. the table, and rushing to her mother she burst into a torreut oi tears anu sobs. "Oh, mamma! mammal" she wailed. "I deceived you. It is the one that cost a dollar more, and I spent the crnld dnllar that Unole Harry Thorne gave me when I was little!" Mrs. Thorne looked grove, "Tell me all about it, dear," she said gently. Aud Nellie told her everything, dreams and all. "Aud then the sermon was about the Insurrection," she concluded, tearfully, "and the preacher said that even our new dresses and our new hats were were symbols of of a new life, and cried as if her own childish heart were breaking. Mrs. Thorne went herself to Miss Prim's the next day. The little mil liner had not jaited with the gold dollar, and when she heard the story pf if she -exchanged it willingly and I) said she would exchange the bat too. At first Mrs. Thome thought it best not to do this, but after reflecting a few moments, decided that it wonld be too severe on Nellie to make her wear so 16jr. the Lat she now "hated, and when she left took the pretty little Leghorn that Nellie had first chosen. Nellie herself returned a little later with the other, and Miss Prim kissed her and gave her some lemcn drops, and told her that she had proven herself a sweet and worthy child. And Nellie may have cried the least bit, but she was very happy. New York Herald. FLOWERS IN OUR CHURCHES. In No Other Country Are They Vied to Such an Extent at Easter. As long as the high festival of Easter has been celebrated the custom has prevailed of removing all signs of mourning from the church, relighting the caudles and unveiling the statues and crosses. The use of flowers as decorations is a much more receut cus tom. Iu England it is first mentioned by a writer in the Gentleman's Maga zine in JUiy, 1106, .wno conjectures that "the flowers with which many churches are ornamented on Easter day are most probably intended as em blems of the resurrection, having just risen from the earth in which during the severity of the winter they seem to have been buried.' In the early days of this country flowers were seldom seen as decora tions, and it is only within tne last ouarter of a century tnat they nave been used with reckless extravagance In fact, the first attempt to decorate old Trinity Church in Ne r York City for Easter is still within tne memory of those living. A sweet smelling, in offensive little bunch of blossoms, that had been carefully chosen, was placed in the font on Easter morning. But such a furor was raised by the mem bers of the church against the innova tion that it was thought best to re move the intruder before the afternoon service. To-day the churoli is always decorated on Easter Sunday. Tn no country in the v orld are flowers used in such abundance at Easter as in America. Christ Is rlsenl Evil powers Flee like mists tho morning sun, Truth descends In healing showers, Ood and Goodness shine as one! In these resurrection hours Let us from our Idols turn, Wreath the cross with Easter flow ers, And the risen Christ discern. Easter Day. If you wnlte up Sunday morning when it's qulot in tuo street, And you hear the church bell? chiming iar awav:' It their melody Is rich and more than usu ally sweet. It's because they're ringing in the Easter Day. When you seo the streets alive with women radiant ana rnir, And bats ot every fashion, hue and ray, Till vou think a million butterflies are winging in the air, Then you'll know for certain that it's Easter Day. If vou notice during service, when the Lenten oravers are read. And every pretty woman kneels to pray, That she's taking in the bonnet of her neighbor lust ahead. You'll excuse her, 'cause you know It's Eastor Day. When you tuck, the blessed little 'uns in bed so snug and tight. And "Now I lay me down to sleep," they say, Just tell 'em 'bout their Bavior 'fore you klia 'am all sood nlsht. And thank tho Lord we've got an Easter Day. Th. Mohammedan Easter. IWrain is the name of the Moham medan Easter. It "follows Kamadan, which corresponds to Lent, and lasts three days. During this time visits are exchanged and presents made in mn nh the same spirit as that which characterizes our Christmas. At Con stantinoplo the streets are thronged and bands of music parade day and night. The decorations of the boats in the JBosphorus are striking and beantiful. The Sultan celebrates the dav by worshipping in the mosque, af ter which he gives an informal recep tion la his friends in the palace of Dolma-baktohe. During this recep tion the Sultan occupies a throne of great splendor plaoed in tho midst oi the vast and beautifully decorated au dience hall. Easter In Olden Time. Easter was at one time celebrated by feasts and games held iu the churches. These at hrst were decor ons and useful in bringing the con crreErations together in rejoicing after the seven duties imposed upon them dnrinsf Lent. The custom was aDan doned because of the excesses, which became a scandal to the Churcn. An Easter Superstition. It is curious, in view of the modern view of Easter and the "Eastor par ade." to find the superstition still ex taut in East Yorkshire, England, that it is vorv unlucky not to wear new carments on that day. In that dis trict rooks will ruin your other cloth ing if you fail to wear some new thing, ae! MICKEY FINN'S EASTER EGp. 8 - ' Q Th. Surprise Which th. Lad's Mother ! W UuwIttlDRly Provided. . A a T E 11 was speeding away, and Mrs. O'Brien had run in to borrow a draw ing of tea and to ask for the. loan of a sand-iron. She found Mrs. w- Finn sitting in a chair bursting with laughter. Tears of delight were streaming down her face in a torrent. "Sit you down, Mrs. O'Brien," said she, "and wait till I can get mo breath." And what's the matter with yon, at all, at all?" exclaimed Mrs. O'Brien, envying the cause of such joyful cyclone. "'lis all about ue littlo boy, Mickey, and his Easter egg," replied Mrs. Finn, wiping her eyes. "A weeny joke I played on him, d'ye see? If you saw the face of the little lad whin ah dear, I'm laughiu' all day about it, Mrs. O'Brien to see the egg, and me husband laugbin' till I thought he'd have a fit, aoushla, and" "Will you stop goin nialvatherin' and tell me what it's all about?" said Mrs. O'Brien impatiently. "Well, you muBt know this," re sumed Mrs. Finn, "that Mickey wanted wan o' thim eggs wid paint on it like they have in the candy store windys, and I had no money to buy wan. But I told him Saturday night to niver fear but he'd have a nice big egg on Easter mornin', all blue like a robin's egg. You'll mind I'm after sittin' the blue hin on thirteen eggs, and the time was near up for the chickens to come. Well, after the little lad went to bid on Saturday night I took wan of the eggs from un der the bin and put it in the oven to keep it warm till the mornin'. There was no fire in the stove and only a little hate in the oven, d'ye see. On Easter mornin' I put the egg in some warm bluein' water before the boy got up and whin he came down to his breakquist there it was on the plate before him, blue as the heavens in July. 'Twas actin" mighty quore, though, Mrs. O'Brien, rollin' aronnd on the plate as if tho divvil was in it, and me husband and little Mike look- at it as if 'twas a ghost they saw. But. Mrs. OBnen, if yell believe me. I had to keep me back to the table. I was that full of laughter, Ye'd think the egg was tryin' to stand on its little end. twas that full of tricks. " 'Tis only a cruked egg, and your plate is standin' down till, said me husband. "Whack it wid your spoon, me lad!" So Mickey took the egg in his baud and gave it a slap with tho spoon, and out camo tho head of a chickeu that let a yolp out of him that 'ud wake the dead. Sum, ue kicked the blue shell off him hiO you'd shed a petticoat, and waded up to his knees in the gravy oi tuo pom chops, and him howhn like a cr.t- bird, and egg-shells in the coffee and the mashed potatoes aud me husband on the flure velhn' wid delight! un, glory be, Mrs. O Bnen; me sides is achiu'. 1m afeard 1 11 oust some thin' inside o' me!" Mickey Finn. What Happened to Their Decorated Eggs, They put them under the stove to dry. -M! !!!- IM Harper's Bazar. The White House Lawn. Easter morning in Washington sees all the children marching to the White House. It looks as if a Kate Green way and Little Lord Fauntleroy army was invading the home of the President. Each child has a basket of eggs. The south lawn is their des tination. Here is a slight hill. The little onos, and incidentally their "grown up" friends, who take a gTeat interest iu the game, roll the eggs down the hill. Mrs. Cleveland Uways took an interest in tho egg-rolling, and usually spent Sunday in the Bed Boom, where she could watch. tUl pretty scene. PUZZLE DEPARTMENT. 5 The solutions to these puzzles will ap- pesr in a succeeding issue. 18 CO. Six Meheadiueuts. 1. Behead a single thread, and have a tune. 2. A portion, and have a small animal. 3. Put down and have to help. 4. A possessive pronoun, and have another possessive pronoun. 5. To close, and have a cottage. G. To whirl aronnd, and have a fastener. TO. Four Famous Women. 1. A painter Aosrhbnorue. 2. A life-saver Eagerdnglari. 3. A singer Njyenldni. 4. A leader in battle Onjaforca. 71. A Charade. My Hrst is something that travelors need) My second Is something tor which raei bleed; My wholo yon will find In less than an hour To be a very much loved flower. 71 A Square. 1. To send away. 2. To conceal 3. A thonght. 4. A fruit. 1NSWEK3 TO PltKVIOUS PUZZLES 63. An .Acrostio Lad, and, fad, are, you, Eve, top, top, ear Lafay ette. 66. A Transposition - Lament, mantle, mantel, mental. 07. A Corrugated Column ADDER AID MACAW IKE IRENE ONE TASTE C3. A Square-- F. O M E OPAL MAUL ELLA SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Professor Zickler recently found that a ray of ultra violet light trans mitted as many as 200 metres (over 200 yards) will work a telegraph instru ment at that distance. Bays of this kind have the property of causing an electric spark to pass between two highly charged conductors, whioh but for the light would not spark. This effect is made to work the telegraph instruments. An inventor iu Newark, N. J., has found a practical way to embody alco hol iu solid form. He boils the alco hol and adds to it a portion of a waxy substance that he keeps secret, and the result is a paste in which the alcohol is suspended. This paste is much handier to transport and use than the liquid alcohol, and it is claimed that in this form wood alcohol can be made much more widely useful as a fuel especially for chafing dishes and the like. Another advautage claimed is that the solidified alcohol does not burn as rapidly and wastefully as thr liquid. Air whose oxygen is ozonized by the brush discharge of an electrio cur rent of 60,000 tolOO.OOO volts is used at St. Manr, near Paris, for purifying water. The ozonized r is pumped into lofty cylindrical sterilizers of cast iron. These are divided internally by numerous celluloid plates with very large holes, and the water, be ing made to descend slowly and in a state of fine division, undergoes long and perfect contact with tho ozone, insuring complete desti'action of dead organic matter as well as of living germs. The establishment supplies Paris with about 22,000,000 gallonr of pure water daily at a cost of $30. The Journal of Geology is authority for the statement that a new mineral has recently been discovered which as a fuel is far superior to coal. The Bnbstauce, which is of a lustrous black color, is found on the island of Bar badoes, and is called by the natives "manjak." It is thought that manjak is petrified petroleum, great quantities of petroleum being found on the same island. It contains only two per cent, of water and fully twenty-soven per cent, of solid organic matter, thus snrpaising in utility the best asphalt in Triuidad, in which thirty per cent, of water is contained, and which has been classed so far as the very finest of fuel. The borings which have been car ried on for some time at the coral reef, or atoll, of Funafuti, have now been discontinued, a depth of 1114 feet hav ing been reached. The cores ob tained by the drill have been pre served, and the material penetrated is said to be, for the most part, a "coral reef" rock. The upper part of the boring consists of a mixture of sand composed of calcareous organisms with reef coral, but at a depth of 600 feet there was a sudden change to hard limestone. Tha observations ot the party engaged in the work are awaited with considerable interest, ss it believed they will throw consid erable light on the much discussed subject of the formation of coral isl ands. Kogus Copper Coins. The ingenuity of the counterfeiters now appears to be chiefly devoted to tho turning out of bogus copper aud nickol coins, rather than those of large denominations. According to tho report of the United States Treas urer for ihe last fiscal year, no less than 69,262 pieces of this charactet were detected last year, and they circulated chiefly in Boston, New York and Philadelphia. The "Queen's Bounty." "Queen's bounty" costs Victoria on an average $1500 a yeor. Tho Queen, wliun nlin nnnt tlirpn sovereigns to a mother who had given birth to three children forty years ago. probably did uot foresee to what vital dimensions the "bounty" would gnw. 100 (M 109 10 09 15 UP WW SOW tUli Uo.umn, on. year...... 100 UO Un. column, on. year Leeal adTertiiemsaU ten cenU par una each insertion. Marriages an i death notioes gratis. All bills for yearly advertisemanU collected quarterly Temporary advertisement must be paid in advsnoa. Job work cash on delivery. NOT FOR COOKING'S SAKE. Our Mattlo is a lady, Sut she never learned to bake; Bhe never oared tor cocking Just alone for cooking's sake. 80 she never oooked at all, Lest a bit ot butter (all On her dainty garments white, Or her shoes so high and tight; For she never cared to bake, Just alone (or cooking's sake. . Oar Hattie has a lover. And she (oil in love, you see; 8be thought his (ace as handsome As a (ace could ever be. But be chanced, one sunny day, Just in idle mood to say (When her finger she bad burned. And the fact be some way learned. Though she bad not tried to bnke, ; For her ownorother's sake,) Thnt she In baking burned It; And be kissed the finger twice. And Muttie thought she never Knew a remedy so nice. But the cunning follow said: "You've been baklog cake or bread, And there's naught I love to ent Like a home-made cake, my sweet." But Bhe had not cared to bake, Just alone (or cooking's sake. "Of course I am not hinting. Just to try your tempting cake; But I like the home-made cooking Cooked especially (or my sake. I have heard my mother say That there was no other way For a home to be complete, And I know you think so, sweet." But alas! she would not bake. Even (or a lover's s ke. Our Mattle Is a lady. But she weeps sometimes alone, And grieves that little wrinkles From her eyes have outward grown; For she did know, you seo. That a wKe a cook must be, And the man has wed a girl, Though witu less ot frill and curl, That can (ry nud boll and bake Loves to 000k (or cooking's sake. ' Fannie Fullerton, in What to Eat. HUMOR OF THE DAY. We pity the mRn with a mother-in-law. That he needs It may be true; Dut it might be well to think ot his wife, For she may have one, too. "I didn't see the widow at the fun 3ral." "No; her gown fitted so badly that she couldn't restrain her grief enough to be present." Miss Fondart "Jack, what do they mean when they speak of a first-water diamond?" Jack "One that's never been soaked." Jewelers' Weekly. This year should bo a bargain For reasons you'll divine; It looks like 1900 Marked down to '99. Chicago Record. Daughter "Here is Bigg, Stocks & Co.'s great store. Let's go in." Mother "No, no! No matter what we ask for, they will be sure to have it." New York Weekly. "Certainly you won't pretend that going to the church sewing-circle every meeting makes a woman good!" "iSo, but it Keeps ner irom peing talked about." Detroit Journal. "Then you regard marriage as a civil contract?" asked the Sweet Youug Thing. "No, answered the Savage Bachelor, "it's rothor a contraction of civility." Indianapolis Journal. "3olomon, I fear you are forgotting me," said a urignt eyoa gin to uer lover the other day. "Yes, Sue," said slow Sol, excusing himself. "I have been for getting you these two years." Dressmaker "So yon are not satis fied with tho dress, madam. I fear, then, I shall havo no more of your work?" Customer "No, but lit recommend you to my friends." -Melbourne (Australia) Weekly Times. Friend "Tho gossips have formu lated a regular indictment againstyour character. They say you were a ter rible flirt while abroad. Do you plead guilty?" American Girl "Y-e-s; tc three counts, is ew lort wecmy. Jones "Dear me! You say yon often lay down the law to your wife. How do you go about it?" Boues "Why, all you need is firmuess! I usually go into my study, lock the door, aud do it over the transom." Puck. "I want you to give me your candid opinion of my now book. My own opinion is that it is a good one," wrote a now author to an editor. To whom the editor replied: "Yes, it has a beau tiful cover and lovely gilt edge." Atlanta Constitution. nis Attorney "You'd better plead guilty. Your punishment would be merely a nominal fiuo." Prisoner "That's all right; I'd rather run tha risk of going to jail than to stand up before everybody and acknowledge I stole a bicycle the make of 1891." He took it very philosophically. In the course of time meu became phil osophical even in love affairs. "So you have decided that you caupot marry mo," he said. "Sirl" sho re plied, "I have decided nothing of the kind. I can marry you to-morrow il I wish. I could have married you ajy 3ay in the last six months, as you well know. What I have decided is that you cannot m.irry mo. "Chicago Even ing Post. Cllnnls In Those Days. During the investigation the othet nay of the mounds in Pokago Town ship, Cass Couuty, Mich., the bones of perhaps 100 persons were found in the ceuter of ono mound and undei these, separated from his companions, were the bones of a man who iu life must have been fully niue feet tall, occupying a sitting position, with his feet under him. A number of copper bodkius or pins, from two to three inches in length, wero fouud, and also pius made from the bones of a wolf. There were numerous copper hatchets, two-edged and sharp, one of which was wrapped iu a liueu oloth resem bling in texture those of to-day, Grand Bapids Democrat. An Invention For Kallroails. Bailroad car journals aro cooled while the train is in motion by the use of an Illinois mau's invention, ar rangement being made to suspcud a water vessel over the beoring, with a tube leading into tho latter, to dis charge the liauid and reduce the heat. a, inoh, on. iiwerlian...' cu. Square, on. inch, on month. . On. Squara, oo. inch, three months, . On. Squara, on. inch, on. year...... Two Square, on. ;esr Quarter Column, on. year.....