Tiie Forest " Repiitu . . ).$ OF AUK...USINQI I I published every WedacsJay, by J. E. WENK. "ce la Smearbaugh & Co,'. Bulldin j ILM 8TEEKT, TIOXKSTA, TA. Terms, - 8I.OO Vear. No subscriptions received for a shorter period than three montns. Correspondent toiloitoi from all parts of tha country. No notloe will be taken of . anonymous oouiuiauiaitions. F OREST KKP'0JBJL1CAN. go Square, on inch, ooa ioMTtioa.. 100 a Square, one inch, on month. ., W On Square, on inch, tbree month. . 6 09 One Square, one inch, one year...... 16 0 Two Squares, one year,.., .......... 15 IT Quarter Column, one year............ Si 00 Half Column, one year. 60 69 Una Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisement ten oente per line each insertion. Marriage and death notices gratis. All bills (or yearly advertisements collected quarterly Temporary advertisements must be paid in advance. Job work cash on deliver. VOL. XXXI. NO. 51. TI ON EST A, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1899. $1.00 PER ANNUM. i i 7-. -r j The Empress of China has dispensed with any peace-note preliminaries anil proceeded to raise an army of 250,000 men. United States Consul Hanna, writ ing from San Juan for-HLe benefit of tonring Americans, dwells invitingly upon a conviction that Torto Rico is destined to beoome a valued winter resort for bur people as soon as the removal of the heavy duties on Ameri can building material opens the way to the erection of hotels such as our people are accustomed to use when traveling for health or pleasure. Perhaps the congressional snubs administered to New Mexico's ambi tion to be a Stato are responsible for the remarkable decrease in the per oentage of illiterates. It hns been known there for some time that the territory was not dibble for statehood on the basis of population alone, but that educational qualification would have to make a respeotabla showing also. Accordingly, the sohool system has been developod very efficiently, with the result that illiteracy to-day is little over fifteen per cent., as com pared with nearly sixty-two per cent at the last census. It looks dark for Dreyfus again, But the belief in his innocence is un Bbaken, and those who hold it still Insist that he shall be returned to Franoe and restored to his rights as a citizen and to his place in the army, lays the Washington Star. Less than . this will satisfy none of them. He has suffered, he is innocent, and France at all hazards should.nndo the wrong. There are so many difficulties mrronndiug the case that predictions is to the result are of small value. It Is said that if the sentence is reversed t by the court ol cassation a revolution will follow iu the interests of the U-my. Should the army in such a , jontest sncoced that success would jperato-as a reversal of the court's re rersfcl, and a reaffirmation of Drey fus's sontenee, his re-arrest probably If in reach, and redeportation back to ".hat lonely island. But even should Ihe army lose, it would still be unsafe to Dreyfus to appear in France, and impossible for him to live there. He tronnl be too marked a man, too inti mately associated with bloody con tentiou, although the innooent cans Dfit. . ' . Withiu the past few days some im portant data bearing upon the col onies, protectorates and dependencies if tho globe has been seut ont from the Treasury Departmental Washing ton. In view of the character of re cent events this data is of timely in terest. . Some figures taken there from. are given in the table below . Colo- Aroa - Countries. uIhs. 8q. Miles. Population. Great Britain.... 4? 11,250,412 34 1:059,123 France 32 3,(517,827 52,612,930 Germany . 8 1,020,070 10,600,000 Netherlands 3 802,833 33,911,744 Portugal 9 801,060 9,110,701 .Spain 3 215,877 256.00C Italy .8 104,000- 650,003 Austria-Hungary 2 23.263 1,569,092 Denmark 3 86,614 114,222 Russia 3 255,539 5.614,000 Turkey 4 504,500 17499,000 ChlAfl 5 2,831,503 ,16,6H0,00C United States..-. 4 16287 1O.177.00C Total 121 21.821,332 '603,048,824 According to the information set forth in the table above Great Britain has nearly twice as many colonies as the other. Powers, while her colonial population aggregates in extent near ly three-fifths that of the othei Powers. France cornea next upon the list, but her colonies are more exten sive in territory than population. A new system has just been started among trained nurses in Nw York City and other oities, which will cer tainly prove a boon to the majority ol patients and must eventually prove . very luorative to the nurses them selves. There are thousands of peo ple who aro ill, and yet cannot af ford the luxury of a trained nurse. Again there are others who do not need the services of a nurse all day and all night. The first class cannot have them on account of the expense, and consequently suffer and are ill longer than if they could have only a portion of a nurse's care. The seoond class are not ill enough to need tlao constant presence of a trained nurse. The nurse can now be hired to-oome in and assist at an operation, to visit the pa tient at certain hours, dress wounds, - bathe or change or otherwise make them comfortable in a manner such at a woman train e'd to such work alono can do. - Many sick persons are made very, nervous by the presence of an ab solute stranger constantly in the room with them, trWl often prefer to dis pense with the services. of a trained nurse for that very reason. Under the new arrangement such porsont can obtain all the benefit necessary by these visits. ' . EBB-TIDE. A sodden reach of wide and wind-swept lea. i A sky of shattered steel that palls the sight, And one long shaft of sun that seems to write ' Yast letters slowly on a slate of sea; The dreary wail of gulls that skim the crest Of sullen breakers sliding In to land, f A wofrld crown empty, full of vague unrest. And shadow-shapes that stride across the sand. The gray beach widens. Foot by foot appear Ktrange forms of wreckage creeping from the waves. Like ghosts that steal In silence from their graves To watch besldo the death-bed of the year; Poor shattered shapes of ships that once stood out Full-freighted to the far horizon's sweep To muslo of the cheery sailor-shout Of men who sought the wonders ot the deep! Poor shattered ships 1 Tbetr gallant cruUing o'er, Their cargoes ooral-crusted leagues below. They rise, unnamed, unsambered, from the flow Recession of the ebb along the shore. The flokla tide that bore them bravely then Betrays their shame and uakednoss to ba Mute witness to the littleness ot men Who battle with the sovereignty ot sea. For me, as well; alone upon the dune, . Tber sinks a tide that strips tie beaches bare. And leaves but grim unsightly wreckage where The brooding skies make mockery ot noon. Ab, dear, that hopes, like tides, should ebb away, Unmasking on the naked shore of lore Flotsam and Jetsam ot a happier day, Dreams wrecked, and all the emptiness thereof! Guy Wetmore Carryl, In Harper's Magazine. WALTER'S FIGHT WITrMNDIANS. 1- By SIDFORD F. HAM P. T the time I was foreman for Mason & Jevona, wool growers so said the old managing director of a famous ranch com pany young Wal ter Mason came West for his first visit, lie was a pale boy of fifteen, nephew to the senior partner, and sent from his home in the East, under (ho doctor's orders, to live in the open air for a couple of years. There were no comforts or con veniences about sheep-camps in those days. A bunk-house and kitchen, with all the furniture home-made ex :opt the cooking apparatus; some rough shelter for the Bheep and a stable for the horses were generally the only buildings, and these were apt to b i sot down in sorao hollow of the bare, brown plain, to liake like ovens under the summer sun and to shnka in the cold blasts of January, Mason & Jevons had a lot ot such samps, but the home ranch, on the Deep Arroyo, was a more pretentious place. There my men ana I bad Aye-roomed house, about pasture ouough for two oows, and a small garden, "uuder ditoh," for tne grow ing of potatoes and such luxuries. We thought the plaoe a wonder of jorafort.but the sudden ohange from a good city home to a sheep-camp, with its extremely early hours, its very plain fare and still plainer cooking, was rather trying to Walter; bnt he never mado the least bit of complaint, not he. He fell into the ranks at onoo, ana altnongu ae was not re quired to work, he sot about learning the details of sheep-raising by doing everything with his own hands. Before a year was over the outdoor life had turned his musoles into steel and burned his face to a brick red; still, he was only a boy, and could not be expected to compete with the seasoned men in an ordinary day's work. And yet, for all that, be would come in brisk and smiling at the end of a long day s lamb-herding, wheu some of the older hands were used up, This puzzled the men, for they bad been generally inclined to laugh at the boy as a "tenderfoot." The explana tion really was that Walter never lost his temper in dealing with the pro voking, scampering, silly lambs. Now few things are more exhausting than a tota' loss oi temper especially when it is lost for fifteen hours a day and that is the usual misfortune of lamb-herdors. Walter spent most of his leisure time npon a superannuated cow-pony. shooting at coyotes with a rifle, but it was months before be hit one. The coyote, although he always turns "broadside on and gives the marks man the best chance he can, is a bad target; his thick fur makes him look much larger thnu he really is. Walter fired away cartridges by tho box in vain. But his failnres only inspired him to try again, until at length he became an uncommonly good shot. The men, to whom coyotes were familiar, uninteresting things, used to laugh at Walter's persistent hunting. They dubbed him "Woolly Walter: The Dread Death-Dealer of the Deep Arroyo," and were always anxious to know when he intended to go off and kill a few Indians. "Don't be afraid of Indians," the boy would say, bantering the men in his turn. "If any of them ever come prowling round while I'm here I'll stand them off." The promise was made in fun, but he kept it in earn est. During the boy's second summer. after shearing time, my daughter, Sally, came out from town, where she was at school, to pay me a month's visit. When the day came for her re turn, nobody could be spared to drive her to the railroad but Walter. . I had intended to go, but John Hansford, a wool-dealer, had sent word that he was coming that day. Walter was much pleased to take myIace, for he and Sally were great friends, and with only one road to follow, there was no fear of missing the way. So, very soon after sunrise, the girl and boy set out on their forty mile drive to catch a train which was to. leave Plattville at five that even ing. About two hours after they bad left, and a good deal .earlier than I expected him, John nansford rodo up, and without waiting to shako bauds or to get off his horse, said: "Martin, you bad better call your herders into cmp mighty quick. They say, down at Truebury's, that a small band of bad Indians is knocking about the country somewhere north of here. They've killed a Mexican herder and burnt his cabin, and now they've crossed the railroad coming this way." I lost no time. "Dick Taylorl" I shouted, and out ran the ccok, the oniy otner man on the place at that time of dav. "Saddle up hurry," I said, "there are inaians oetwixt Here and the rail road. We must gallop to overtake oany ana waiter." With his poper cop on his heod and his hands covered with dongh, Dick r ashed with me to the stable; out came the horses; on went the saddles, and in less than five minutes we three, all well armed, were galloping north ward. Meanwhile Walter and Sally had traveled some fifteen miles. They were jogging along, laughing and cuatiering ami watching the shifting mirages which are always to be seen at that time of year, when my girl cnea out: "Oh. lookl There's a fnnnv nnnl Then Walter saw what annnarnd tn ha tue legs oi nve horses trotting along a --L L iooi irom tne ground. Presently the scene changed, the horses' legs vanished, and thn vnnno-- sters saw the heads and shoulders of five men. large and- undefined, sailincr uirougn tue air. sally told me after ward that this frisrhtened her. Suddenlv the mirsora cleared, anil the girl aud boy saw, about two miles to me northwest, nve horsemen, one behind the other. Thev war A viilinff as if to intercept the wagon, and there was somctniug very unusual in their appearance. Walter pulled up and took ont his field-glass. I don't like the looks of them." said he. "They aren't cowboys; i iiey ve no nats. and l think nn dd I'm afraid they're Indians." "lurn back." saidSallv. "and than we shall know if they're trying to cnt us off." "That's sensible." said Walter, and turned at once. The riders immediatelv hrnlrA intn a nara gaiiop, and Headed straight for the wagon. Walter nrn-ad hi hnmn to a trot, and then the desperate race uegau. Fifteen miles of level rjlain lav h. tween the team and the home ranch. Could the horses hold ont? At first Walter tried trotting, but tha callon. incr Indians drained so mnch in tha first mile that he lashed his team into a run. But what chance, in thatm far Hfa had two steady old ranch-horses hitched io aneavy road wagon 7 Though they began with two miles' nlArk. tha linht. footed Indian ponies camo up so fast mat my gin, as she turned lier head to watch them, could soon distinguish the forms. They grew from dark patches to definite figures of men on running beasts. Sally could make out the heads, arms, and flvinor hair nf tha Indians, the heads of the ponies and tneir moving legs. "Ihey re gaining fast. Walter." sha cried. Walter didn't look at her than. TTo voice had been jolted ont of her hvth bumping wagon, and bethought it was an oi a tremble, lie jnst stood up in the bouncing, rattling waeon and slurp,! round the sky-line. He had some hope that he might see other riders, and if he did ha wnnM head for them; though that wasn't the fwuwfak miufj iu UIB 1UII1U, JUQI there was not a living figure clear against the blue or dim acainat tlia plain nothing but the bare, burnt prairie and tne gray streak of road. ' "It's all rieht. Sally " cried tha hn-r not looking down at her, for he feared .i ia - i . i . sue wonia go into nystencs, as He Had once seen an Eastern cirl dn. "Tt'a all right, Sally; we'll beat them yet." At mat my gin laugned. "I guess." she said, "von'ra nnt such a tender foot as they call you." She told me that he stared down at her in surprise for a moment, and then changed his tune and took her richt into his confidence. 'I'm looking for a sood nlaca to fight." he said. "We can't tret awav from them by rnnning. But we must keep on until we see some cover witmn reach." ' - "Coverl" said Sallv. "We'll be better off in the oven if it comes to shooting. They'll crawl up to you through the oover that is, if it's more than just a bush or two, for you see Sally hadn't been born on the plains without learning a good deal abont Indian-fighting. "Well, that's a fact," Walter cried out "But Hello! what's that?" and Sally stood up and clutched bold of him, and they both stared while the old horses raced onward. "It's water it's no mirage," said Waller. "Yes, it's real water," said Sally, "There's a hollow there and the thunder-storm's filled it. "Must be pretty shallow," said Walter, an idea jumping into his head. Ho didn't ask Sally's opinion this time, but, man fashion, he took his chances. "Sit down and hold on tight, Sally," watiHU he said. WiTfNiiat he turned out of the road whipped tho horses into their best gallop and drove straight for the water which was a shallow pond about three hundred yards wide and four or five times as long. Maybe it was the sight of the water that encouraged the ranch-horses anyway, they kept the pace so well that the Indians were still more than half a mile behind when the horses splashed into the pond aud were brought to a walk. Walter drove them straight forward until wator be gaa coming into the wagon-box Then he tnrned the wagon broadside to the Indians. Sally and the boy were now about a third of the way across the pond and they had entered it abont midway between its ends. This snitod Wal ter's plau exactly; he set the brake hard so that his horses couldn't move the wagon against bis will, hung his cartridge-belt about his neck, jumped into the water, helped Sally down be side hira, pulled her littlo trunk over so that it concealed and protected her, and theu took his rifle and stood ready. If you will think, you will soe that be bad a pretty good fortification, Tho wagon-box was between him and the Indiane; the enemy couldneither ride fast nor run on foot fast out to where the boy and girl stood more than waist-deep; they were half nnder water, and their heads and chests were well defeuded by the wagon-box and the trunk; there were only five In dians aud these could not get near enough to shoot without offering a far bettor mark themselves. The plain afforded no cover for the redskins nothing but some scattered bunohes of grass and a soapweed here and there, bally understood the sit uation at a glance. . "Well, you've got an Indian-fight er'g head on you, Walter," she said, approvingly. "I guess we've got them where we want them," said Walter, for a boy that could knock over a coyote five times in seven oouun t expect to miss Indians. "I think so," says Sally. "They can t get within shooting distance at either end of this pond; they can't come in where we did withont your hitting them, aud if they wade across out of range and try to take us at the back, all we've got to do is to cross to the other side of the wagon, and then they're in more danger than they W6r L)6ioro "I think it's all right," said Walter, On came the Indians, almost up to the edge of the pool. Walter was in tending to disable the foremost one tb.3 moment his pony's hoofs splashed. when the whole nve suddenly swerved to the right. Then, as if with one motion, every Indian vanished behind the body of his pony, apparently leaving nothing for Walter to shoot at except the soles of five left feet. But the boy was not unnerved by this manoeuvre. He fired, aud down went the foremost pony. The instant the rider was on his feet Walter covered him with his Winchester; but Walter was not anxious to shoot any Indians, for he knew that he could defend Sally with out doing so, as he now saw something moving ou the plain something of which the Indians were4 not one bit aware. "Look toward the west," said Wal ter to Sally. I see," said Sally, and her eyes brightened. "Guess what I was afraid of, Walter. I was afraid the Indians would just wait and watch us till we would have to leave this cold water. Now they'll have no time to wait until we're frozen out." Meantime the second Indian bad come np, taken the unhorsed man be hind him, and galloped out of range with'the others. Walter let them go un harmed. For the aspect of affairs had changed a good deal more, too, than tho Indians knew. The redskins held a brief consulta tion at a safe distance; then one rode off toward one end of the pool, and an other toward the other end, while the remaining three began crawling from bunch to bunch of grass toward the wagon. This did not look so danger ous to the besieged as the Indians probably supposed. That's all very fine." said Walter, when he noted this manoeuvre, "but they haven't got half enough time to get us surrounded. However, (I'll have to attend to the crawling ones. Sally, will you just keep your eye on the two on horseback, and tell me to look when they stop." So Sally walked out a few yards. stooping as she waded, so that the water was over her shoulders, until the wagon and horses no longer inter cepted her view. There she crouched, with just her head ont, and watched the proceedings, and grew exultant and confident as she saw what the In dians didn't even suspect. While sue was keeping her lookout. Walter was making the crawling In dians very nncomfortable by drop pine bullets close to them. He wasn't trying to hit them; Lis hope was to keep them crawling or lying, so that they wonld not rise and see what was coming. There they lay very flat, and moving with extreme caution nntil Sally cried out: "Walter, they've turned back! No, they're galloping away! They know, now!" "Oh, see them run!" cried Walter, as at that moment the three crawling Indians sprang to their feet, made a dash for their ponies, and rode off helter-skelter. They had reason. Three angry, well-armed white men were within half a mile of them, and riding on like mad. We had arrived in time. "Oh, father," said Sally to me, as I lifted her up out of the water and kissed her, "Oh, father, I'm so glad you came in time! Walter wonld have had to shoot those Indians, and I don't believe I should have felt happy again if ho had." Youth' Companion. HARDWOOD SAWDUSTS. The Flue Dusts l ied For Various Special Purposes Fine Sawdusts Exported. The fine sawdust of hard woods, that whioh is produced in sawing veneers, is used for a variety ol special purposes; fine mahogany saw dust, for instance, being extensively used in cleaning furs. There are sold fifteen or twenty different varie ties of fine Bawdust from as many dif ferent kinds of hard woods, those be ing gathered from the various mills. While fine mahogany is the sawdast most largely used in cleaning furs, various other kinds are also employed for that purpose. The use of box wood sawdust for cleaning jewelry is traditional. Boxwood sawdust is also used in polishing silver. Some saw dusts are used in marquetry work. Some are used in making pressed mouldings and Ornaments. Sandal wood sawdust is nsed in scent bags. 5 The production of coarse sawdust of various hard woods, such as oak and maple, is greater thau the de mand for them; such sawdusts may be burned in the mills where they are produced. Coarse mahogany sawdust may be sold for commonplace uses, or employed as fuel where'it is made; but for the fine sawdusts of all the hard woods there is more or less de mand; for many of them there is a ready market. The most costly of fine hardwood sawdust is boxwood, of which the supply is less than the demand. Fine hardwood sawdusts are shipped from this city to various parts of the Unitod States; they are exported in considerable quantities to Canada and some ace sent to England. Sun. Sleep-Walkers' Freaks. A well-known physician gives an ac count of an Irish gentleman whoswam more than two miles down a river, got athoro and was subsequently discov ered sleeping by the roadside, alto gether nnconscions of the extraordin ary feat he had accomplished. Professor Fishnoll, of Bale, writes of a young student of Wurtemburg who used to play hide-and-seek whilo fast asleep. His fellow students knew of his propensity and when he began walking threw bolsters after him, whioh healwuys eluded, jumpiug over bedsteads and other obstacles in his way. A man was once discovered at 1 o'clock in the morning in a neighbor's garden engaged in prayer, evidently nnder the impression that he was in ohurch, but otherwise iu a doep sleep. A young girl given to sleep-walking was in the habit of imitating the vio lin with her lips, giving the prelim inary tuning and scraping aud flourish ing with the utmost fldolity. It puzzled her physician a great deal until he learned that when an infant the girl lived in a room adjoining a fiddler, who often performed npon his instru ment within her hearing. Londor Tit-Bits. Guest Itoom Toothpowdor. Passenger Traffic Manager MoCor- mick, of the Big Four, tells of a friend of his who was visiting some relatives. He was given the spare room and slept well. In the morning, desiring to clean his teeth, he looked through his valise for his tooth brush and box of tooth powder. Ho found tho brush, bnt had come away from home with out the powder. Looking about he discovered a small jar on tho mantel. He opened it aud saw it contained a grayish powder. "Here is some tooth powder," said he, and wettiug his tooth brush he dipped it into the powder and gave his teeth a good scrubbing. When ho went down stairs to breakfast he said to his hostess: "Yoa must excuse me for takinc the liberty, but as I came away from home without my tooth powder I used some of that you have in the little jar on the mantel iu my room." "Why, Charley," said the hostess. "that isn't tooth powder in that jar; it's Aunt Ann's ashes." Cincinnati Inquirer. Torpedo Moats. The average distance of disnnvarv nl a torpedo boat by the searchlight from a battleship has been calculated to be 781 yards, and the greatest distance 2000 vards. Thus, taken thn ilistnnna - at which the torpedo can be fired with effect at 500 yards, it will bo gen erally found that a torpedo boat will have to cross about 300 vards uikW fire from the ship she is attacking, and it win take the littlo craft about half a minute to do this. A Foreign Writer's llnrilnn. "I find your political terms very puzzling," remarked the foreignet who was trying to gather material fot book on American institutions. 'For example, to rotate means to move in a circle. A ring also means a circle. Now I am told that when a ring controls yonr offices they don't rotate any more!" Chicago Tribune. PUZZLE DEPARTMENT. The solutions to these puzzles will ap pear in a succeeding Issue. 19 73 Twelve Anagrammatlo Cities and Tonus of the Cnlted States. I. Lion stew. 2. Tin ch ewers. 3. Oil jet. 4. Tar pole. 5. Lion car. G. Large bugs. 7. Evil Land. 8. Ten blue veils. 9. Brown tails. 10. Labor time. 11. Farrville. 12. Lively Sam. 74. A Drop-Vowel Quotation. B-tt-r -tt-ck t-n sh-d-ws th-n b-r-bb-d b--n-th--f. " 73. Five Iteheadinent. - 1. Behead to form, and have aged. 2. Contracted, and have a dart. 3. Cost, and have a kind of food. 4. Hasty, and have a kind of tree. 5. Closed, and have an humble dwelling. 5. To reproach, and have a relation. 76. An Arithmetical Problem. A engaged B to labor 20 days, with the understanding that he was to re ceive $5 a day for every day he worked, and to forfeit 82 a day for every day he was idle. At the end of the time he received $86; how many days was he idle? ANSWERS TO F11EVIOU3 PUZZLES. 69. Six Beheadments H-air; s-hare; 1-aid: y-our: s-hut; s-pin. 70. Four Famous Women Eosa Bonheur; Grace Darling; Jenny Lind; Joan of Arc 71. A Charado Carnation, 72. A Square SHIP HIDE IDEA PEAR NO MORE SIXTEEN-INCH CUNS. First and Probably the Last For I'nrle Sam Will Bo Tested This Vear. The first and probably the last monster gun to be built in this coun try is nearingcompletion at Watervliet arsenal, and, if nothing goes amiss, may be submitted to its firing tests in the fall. The finished guu will be five feet three' inches at the muzzle. Its total length will be a few Inches nnder fifty feet. The powder chamber will be eighteen inches in diameter by nine feet in length and will hold for a full charge over half a ton of brown powder. The projectile will weigh 2370 pounds. It will leave the muzzle with a velocity of 2000 feet per second, and at this velocity the flying mass will have .a striking energy of 64,034 foot-tons, or sufficient to lift sixty-four of the biggest freight loco motives ten feet in the air. At the muzzle the shell would puuch a six-teen-inch hole through an iron plate over a yard in thickness, aud at. two miles distance it would pass through a twenty-seven and a hawf inch plate. Notwithstanding its great power Undo Sam will probably never bnild another, for while the superiority of this kind of gun was incontestable eight or ton years ago, it does not compare in efficiency with ordnance of the modern type. For a given ap propriation Undo bam can, by build ing twelve-inch guns, secure over twice as many guns of much greater penetration and efficiency. A French Pickpocket. There is a dilettantism even in thieving. A Parisian pickpocket who is now enjoying a well-earned rest from the excitements of his profession, has revealed some of his very curious methods. At ono time he donned the Uniform of an officer of marines, dec orated with the Legion of Honor, and found his way into the society of naval officers; much to their detriment and to his own enrichment. At an other time, in the guise of a priest, he visited ecclesiastical establishments, and nnder tho pretext of charity re lieved the holy fathers of their little superfluous cash. Then again he would array himself in ordinary civ ilian dress, representing himself as a silk merchant, and would have bales of that commodity sent to bis address. Then the dealer in bicycles became the victim of this versatile swindler. At last, as his repertoire necessarily became limited, and as his fame had preceded him to one of his intended victims, he had the misfortune to be rocognized aud handed over to the police. Westminster Gazette. The rteggnrs' Queen. Mendicants are to have their nominal queen at one of the forthcoming carnival masqueiades. The person selected to sot as Peine des Gueux is not, however, of the begging fraternity, and her title only syitbolizes an old fashioned custom, which is to be re vived. She is a young woman of eighteen, or thereabouts, who, every day, helps her parents to sell cow heel and calves' heads in the central markets. Her reign is to begin and end on the Mi-Careme festival, when she will shnt np shop, and, arrayed in gala robes, will be carried in triumph around Paris, with an accompanying king and maids of honor. Such fetes, with their symbolic attractions, form the chief amusements of the Paris market people, who rise early and work hard throughout the year. Paris Correspondence of London Tele graph. The Flare For Advertlnements. The newspaper is the legitimate place of the advertisement. Custom has established it, and the successful advertisers, without exception, aro those who use its columns. People are educated to searoh tho news paper, and because this is so it is the one proper place for the advertise ment. Circulars, handbills, dodgers, etc., are but makeshifts and unclever imitations f the original article. Newspaper Maker. BARN-YARD'S SOUTHERLY CORNER. Whon the frost is white on the fodder stack, The haws In the tbornbush withered and black, When the near Holds flash In a diamond mail And the far bills glimmer, opaline palo, Ob, merrily shines the morning sun In the barn-yard's southerly corner. When tho ruts In the cart-road ring like steel. And the birds to the kitchen door come for their men), And the snow at the gate is lightly drifted And over the woodpile thluly sifted, Oh, merrily shines the morring sun In the bura-yard's southerly corner. When the brimming bucket steams at the well, And the axe on the beech-knot sings like a bell. When the pond Is loud with the skaters' calls, And the horses stamp in the littered stalls, Oh, morrily shines the morning sun In the barn-yard's southerly corner. When the hay lies loose on the wide barn floor, And a sharp smell puffs from the stable door, When the pitchfork handle stings In tho hand, And the stanchioned cows tor the milking stand, Ob, merrily shines the morning sun In the barn-yard's southerly oornor. The steers, let out for a drink and a run, HeoK the warm corner one by one, And the huddling sheep, In their dusty white. Nose at the straw In the pleasant light, When merrily shines the morning sun In the barn-yard's southerly corner. Charles G. D. lloberts, in Youth's Coa panlon. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "I feel all run down," said tho jocular citizen as the cyclist rode over him. Jenkins "How do you like Miss Doneup?" Hawkins "Oh, she's not as bad as she is painted." Judge. Penelope "Has your fianoe a san guine temperament?" Perdita "Yes he even thinks I am going to marry him." "It's a good town, and it'3 like your bald head, Weary, "sud Dusty Rhodes to his partner; "thero's no lock-up there.,' Llstl" sho said, "ob, Hat to mo!" He listed to her. And when be bad listed low enough-- lie kissed her. -Life. "Every genius gets in debt," "Of course, it takes a plain, ordinary, humdrum, commonplace man to keep oat." Detroit Free Tress. Pigg "Say! Why do you call that fellow 'Asphyxiate?' That is a peculiar nickname. " Penn "Because his last name is Gaskill." Priuoeton Tiger. "As soon as Jibson was appointed to office he had his picture taken.' "Cabinet?" "No; ordinary clerk ship." Philadelphia North Ainericant If you oall a man a lion lie will nlwnys be your friend, But just hint that he's a bear, and lie will hate you to the end. Cleveland Leader. An orator said to his audience: "1 am speaking for the benefit of pos terity," when some one shouted: "Yes, and if you don't get done soon, they'll be here I" Mrs. Tracey "Do yoa realize, my dear, that you have never done any thing to save your fellow men any suffering?" Tracy "Didn't I marry you." Spare Moments. Doctor "Well, Mrs. Smith, if con venient to yoa and to your husbaud, we'll soy Thursday." Mrs. Smith "It'll suit me, and so it'll suit hi ni ne's wery tame!" Judge. Orator's Frieud "Dense throng, . wasn't it?" Orator "Dense? I should say so! I tried every story I had on 'era, and didn't get a 6inglo laugh." Chicago Tribune. Did yoa hear why- the Smiths quarrelod?" "I understand Smith insisted that tho cost of their sitting in church should como out of Mrs. Smith's allowance for clothes." Puck. Dorothy (noticing with great dis tress a rip in her doll, whence tho Bawdust was spilling out) "Oh, mamma, please do something quick! Dolly 's just sawdiisting herself to death." Judge. Blobbs "What nonsense it is for newspapers in their accounts of wed dings to describe the brides being led to the altar." Slobbs "How so?" Blobbs "Why, most of the girla could find their way in the dark." Tit Bits. Court Proceeding; by Telephone. A litigation was' up in a magis trate's court at Castulian Springs, eight miles from Gallatin. It wan during the cold weather, and J. Tom Durham, of Gallatin, was counsel for one of the litigants. The trial was held iu a country store in which thero was a telephone. Eight miles' ride through the cold was too much for the constitution of the lawyer. A happy thought suggested itself to the attorney he would use the telephone, conduct tho suit and remain in hid office by the fireside. The case was called, all the wit nesses were present and the suit be gan. . Attorney Durham arranged for an assistant, who was to stand at the telephone and net as interlocutor, while he did the rest. The attorney carried ou a careful and rigid ex amination of the witnesses, even cross examining the opposing sides. At the conclusion of the evideuce Lawyer Durham made a strong aud effective argument, which was repeated to tha oourt by the man at the telephone at that end of the line. Nashville Buu ner. A Cause For Commotion. A pow-opener in England greatly astonished a group of women who were constructing evergreen mottoes aud wreaths for Christmas by an nouncing that she had found "a stray hen a-laying iu the pulpit." Their excitement was c.iltnod whon she pro duced large green "N" which had "strayed" from some text or leseud.