SULLIVAN REPUBLICAN. W M, CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. IX. The price of platinum has advanced fully 100 per cent., owing to its in creased use for electrical purposes. The cheapest railway faro in the world will be that on tho Central Lon don Railroad, on which there will be three workmen's trains daily, the fare for sis miles being but two cents. It appears that tho Wyoming Legisla ture, which recently imposed » tax of $2 on bachelors, was electe I by woman's suffrage. "This is significant," observes the New York Commercial Advertiser. A cycling carps has been added to the equipment of the Salvation Army, an nounces the New York Commercial Ad vertiser. Fifty young men have been re quested to volunteer to travel for three years on •wheels. Tho tunnel that will connect Butler Valley, Penn., with the bottom of the mammoth Ebervale vein will be, thinks the New York Tines, on3 of the great est engineering feats of the century. It will open an almost inexhaustible sup ply of coal, and will servo as a drain for all the colleries in that vi cinity. A good illustration of the expansion of the world's trade during the last thirty years is afforded by the produc tion of petroleum in the United States. In 1859, 84,000 gallon* were produced in the Pennsylvania and New York oil fields, and in 18' JO, 63'.),029,966 gallons were exported from the various State3 which now produce the oil. A new kind of stamps will soon be introduced in the postal telegraph ser vice of Russia with a view to securing the inviolability of the privacy of letters. The new stamp is printed on very thin paper, and cannot be used again if it is once put upon a letter. When used wet and taken oil the envelope it leaves an indelible impression upon the spot where it was attached, so that if a new stamp is put upon the same spot the im pression of the first stamp can be seen through it. So great is the demand for silver dimes, that they are turned out now at the rate of 100,000 a day. No less thau §3,176,477 in silver dimes have beeu struck oil in the past three years. For this purpose, states the Detroit Free Press, all the uncurrent silver coin is being reworked, notably the silver half dollar, which is a clumsy pocket-piece and very unpopular. The novelty bauks which the dime savings institutions are sending out is supposed to be answerable for the sudden demand. The three mints of Philadelphia, New Orleans and San Francisco are kept busy supplying the wants of the people in this line. There is no doubt, states the Detroit Free Pre™, that the world's fair will bo somewhat influenced by European poli tics. With Germany and England in close friendship aud Russia allied with France to offset the power of the drei bund, there is very sensitive and jealous feeling in all quarters, au i our commis sioners will need to use intioite tact in order to brius all these countries to the point of making generous exhibitions at Chicago. Of England wo are certain, and probably of Germany; but France seems coy, and it is not unlikely that Russia will need a degree of persuasion to induce her to do justice either to her self or to the fair. John Lickenheim, of Riley County, Kansas, who was a scout aud fought iu Kansas as early as 1855, and built the first log cabin in Riley County, wheu in Kansas City, Mo., a few days ago, gave in his reminiscences, some idea of the rapidity with which that city has replaced nature. "I never thought," he said, "such things could bo possible on the ground I used to camp on. When I was here last, some twenty-five years ago, this was all unbroken sod abaut here. Why, I usel £o camp a few years before tint down in the hollow ic the center of tho city, and I have watered my horse lots of times at a spring on Troost avenue. Dozens oi time 3 I have fought the Indians or the forces of Gen eral Price along Kansas City's river front. On one occasion Price with his 40.000 men threatened to drive us blue coats into the Missouri and the Kaw at this point, but we wero reinforced and ho had to beat a retreat. In 1860 the old Missouri had its arms spread all over the ground where the Union Depot now stands, and I used to tish down there." DO BIGHT. Do rlghtt And let the fools laugh on. To-day they're here—to-morrow gone; While they with folded arms survey. Tread duty's path and clear the way. Be brave; though long and dark the night, Morn always brings the glorious light; Look up, and fair ambitions flame Shall light you onto wealth and fame. Fight on; the world shall know your name. Do right Do right! 1 . i And bear proud folly's scorn, Their night shall be your waking morn When laurels crown you; such as they Will feel the touch of cold decay. When grateful thousands bless They'll feel cold want nud sore distress So battle bravely; fight to win! Fear not the strife; hood not the din; ; Bear well the cross the crown to win; Do right 1 —B. J. M'Dermott, in New York News. a ch7r Jo Taliaferro's father was poor, his father had been poor before him, and bis grandfather back of him again. It was m his great-grandfather's days, and through his great-graudfather's ha ads, that the money had slipped away from the family. Since then no ono had had the energy to replace it. "It was too much trouble," said the Taliaferros, who pronounced their name "Tolly ver." Jo's father did make a half-hearted effort. He wandered from his home in Alabama up North somehow, and ran away with old Snyder B. Simes's daugh ter and only child. Snyder B. Simes, lumber merchant, was a Maine man who bad made his pile himself and meaut to keep it. lie burned his daughter's let ters unopened and made a new will. "If my money's to be spent in riotous living, 1 mean to spend it myself," he said, buttoning up his pockets. Mrs. Taliaferro l>urst into tears when she first saw her new Southern home; then <;ot up and put on an apron and began to clean the house. This she con tinued to do until the daj of her death. She never learned to ad list herself to her surroundings, nor tb /t it is some times a good woman's futy to ignore dirt. She , washed ua-f scrubbed and cleaned, and was finall ;/ swept out of this world on a sea of soap-suds—another ruartyr to the great god of cleanliner*. She left one little boy behin . her, named Jo, to the care—or, mor- prop erly speaking, to the neglect—of his father. "Do you sco that man?" said tho su perintendent of the yreat Brookville glass works, which Northern capital had lately planted in Brookville County, Al abama, "do you see that man?"—he was pointing out Jo's father. "Well you will never see him doing any move than he is now. Nobody ever saw him work, lie eats, drinks, c'othes himself, has a roof over his head, . not a cent in his pocket. Now, low uoes lie do it? And there arc a dozei. like him about here. I tell you, the mysteries of Pans are nothing to 'he mysteries of Brookvillo." And as we never permit our 's to dwell on a subject without hearing from it agaiu within twenty-four hours, that same day the superintendent re ceived a* letter from Jo. The spelling was dubious and the handwriting shaky, but there was noth in' ,dubious or shaky in the spirit of the cc /iposition. ''Mister Superintendant: i wud like a Plae in > or employ. Jo TOLLY. "P. S.—Taliaferro is to long and quar." The superintendent laughed as he tossed this evident result of anxious labor in the scrap basket. The next week he rccived a fac-simiie of that, letter minus the postscript, to which he accorded a similar tieatment, but when he oaw those same straggling characters on an envel ope in his mail the third week he opened it with an amused curiosity. "Mister Snperintendant: I wrot you 2 Letters and hav no ansar. I wod like to bo iu yor employ but I knnt wait I mus git a job. Pleuse'sir ansar and oblig. Jo TOI.LY." The superintendent's hand with the paper in it hovered over the scrap basket. Then he drew it back. At his call a weak kneed young man came in from the outer office. "Have you room for another boy out there?" the superintendent asked. "You have. Well, then, write to this appli cant and tell him he may come on trial." For the first few weeks Jo Tolly was like a new born puppy out in the world with his eyes shut. "You must look about you, Tolly," said the head clerk. "Now, I started out with no money, no education, no bucking, and here 1 am, all by keeping my eyes peeled." The clerk with the weak knees struck in: "Look at me," fcc said. "I've been a sober, honest, industrious, God-fearing man fot fifteen years, and not a cent to show for it." Jo turned his long, ruddy face and big, innocent blue eyes from one to the other and said nothing. lie rarely talked, and when he did, it was with a deliberate slowness which barely escaped a drawl. But he pondered all that he heard in his heart, apparently; for gradually his puppydom fell from him and he became a satisfactory fixture in the office. The Brookville Glass Works were a close corporation. They had bought up two thousand acres about the site se lected for their works. Their laborers dwelt in their cottages built on their LAPORTE, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1891. land; they bou„\jt from the company store, and lived under laws of their di rectors' making. But there was a Naboth's vineyard in tho centre of tho settUment. The trouble was that old Colonel Jay respected his ancestors, and refused to listen to ony proposition regarding their sale; for the "vineyard" was a family burying-ground this time. The superintendent vainly represented to him that the bones should be carefully removed. "They are earth to earth by this time, sir," said Colonel Jay, with statelincss, "When I sell that ground, sir, I sell them. So you will not mention it again, if you please, sir." After that, the superintei, who expected a pistol in every Alabama pocket, did not care to open the subject again. "Ain't you ever goiu' to sell, Colonel Jay?" asked Jo. 110 had paddled across the creek which separated the glass works from the old man's house, and was sitting on his porch with him in the twilight. "No, sir. Nor I ain't over going to accommodate again, neither. I told those Dixes they might bury their little babby there, and what did they do? Laid it right on great-graudaunt 'Liza. I went aud told them they'd got to take that babby off. But it warn't pleasant. I wou't accommodate again." "And you ain't ever goin's to sell, Colonel Jay?" "Look here, Jo," said the colonel, testily, "how old are you? Eighteen years. Well, I guess you remember me as soon as you remember anything. Did you ever know me to change my mind? That ground ain't-ever-to-be disturbed!" Joe turned his full blue eyes on the colonel. "Jlow about when you die, Colonel Jay?" he asked in his most deliberate speech. The colonel was staggered and showed it. "If I were you," Jo went on, now lookiug over the water, "I'd fix that while I was able. There's a whole arre there, and there ain't but one end of it in graves. I'd sell it all under a deed that would make the man who bought it keep the grave end nice and clean, and the grass cut—and perhaps llowers." Colonel Jay rose from his chair. "Boy," he cried, "you're right! Why didn't I think of that?" Then his face fell suddenly. "But who'd be fool enough to buy?" "I would," answered Jo, stolidly; and if I don't pay you a hundred dollars for it in a year's time, you can tako the ground back and all the improvements on it." What the improvement meant, the whole works soon knew. "Jo Tolly's store" was the talk of the place. It was little more than a shanty, but the laborers soon learned that the shanty had goods of better quality and lower prices on its shelves than the com pany's handsome storehouse had on theirs. •'lt ain't very pretty outside, but I tried to have it good in," said Jo, mod estly, looking at the well-stocked walls. "I spent all my money there." The money referred to was a small sum which he had gotten by auctioning oil the worn-otl roof which covered him, and the bit of land on which he stood. The rest of the tract had been sold al most to the very djor step long before. There had been no one to interfere in his reinvestment, his father having per formed the first graceful act in his worthless life by step'*' 0 out of it at this opportune time. "Don't spend it all in shoestrings and rock candy, Tolly," the superintendent had said. "Put it in bank and try to keep adding to your bauk-book. That's tho way." "Yes, sir," said Jo, submissively; but at the same time it was not his way, nor did he follow it. At tirst tho Tolly store was only open" at night,and Jo waited oil the customers after hours, but as the business grew a small boy kept store by day and was as sistant to the proprietor at night. "I shouldn't think you'd dare, Jo; I shouldn't, indeed," said the weak-kueed clerk, who came to inspect his enterprise by stealth and after nightfall. "Why, I wouldn't oven like the chief to see mo come in here. And how can you sleep right next to those graves?" "I like them," said Jo, showing the first sign of interest. "I'm getting real fond of them. I like Aunt 'Liza, and I feel like I knew Aunt Jane. " 'Dear friends, rapont; ur> more delay, For deatli will eotne to tako no nay; Be always ready, night and (lay, 1 suddenly was suatcUe I away.' I feci just like she was saying it to me every time I read it." The head clerk—he of the "peeled eyes"—also paid Jo a visit; but lie came in by broad daylight and examined everything. lie laughed a good deal, and looked at Jo's placid face curiously. "You're bucking against a big con cern, boy," he said. "I tell you you'll have to work like au ox and kick like a steer." Jo, smiling his usual rather stupid, slow smile, listened to each one and said nothing. As yet the superintsodent had said nothing either, but that came. | One day, as Jo was passing through j his office, he stopped him. "Tolly," he said, carelessly, "how much do you hold your land at?" "What do you think it's worth sir," inquired Jo, respectfully. "Not much." "I've got my store built and paid for out of it," Jo went on, as though calcu lating aloud. "I've paid for my land, the business is growing, and " "You take a week to think it over in," said the superintendent, hastily. On that day week Jo entered the superintendent's office and stood before his desk. "Well, Tolly," said the superintennd ent, "what is it?" "It's ten thousand dollars," said Jo. When the superintendent had a little recovered he knew that he was a very angry man, and at the saino time that it behooved him to walk carefully. "The directors couldn't consider such a price," he said. "It wouldn't be worth it to them." "No, sir," said Jo, meekly. "I know it ain't worth much to anybody but me." Then it was that the superintendent gave Jo very clearly to understand that he considered him infringing ou the rights of the company in whose service he was. The boy looked so puzzled that he melted somewhat. "You don't understand me." "No, sir," said Jo. "I thought I owned the land." "So you do," said the superintendent, reasßuriugly, feeling now on sure ground; "but not for all purposes." "I thought I could put a saloon on it if I wanted to," said Jo, in a depressed voice. The superintendent's hair almost stood on end. A grog-shop in the mid-it of his works? lie could hardly conceal his dismay. "Tolly," he said sternly, "you must choose between tho office and your shop. No man can serve two mas ters." "Yes, sir. You are very kind, sir," said Jo, looking gratefully at hiui. "I was thinking my clerk wasn't doing as well as he might if I hud my eye more on him." "And I assure you, gontleinen," said the superintendent, reporting to.the board of directors, "when that boy left my office I did not whether it was as a fool or as haviug made a fool of me." "Call the lad in," suggested one of the directors. "Let us see if we can make anything of him." Jo came in at -once on being sum moned. lie did not even tarry to take oil the apron which he wore in his shop, or to brush the Hour from his coat. These adjuncts helped to heighten the ruddy iunocence of his appearance as he entered. lie faced the curious eyes of the waiting board with a disarming guilelessness. "Did you want me, sii," he asked of the superintendent, and the slow motion of his lips was almost foolish. But had those lips only been formed to say "ten thousand" they could not have repeated it more persistently wlieu the question of barter was opened. His slow-moving blue eyes looked with open, childish appeal into the assembled laces. "I do think it's worth that to me, sir, don't you?" he asked of the most urgent speaker; and that gentleman suddenly collapsed. There was one director who took no part in the controversy. 110 sat iu his chair rubbing his hands together and watching the scene from his keen, deep set eyes. Every now and then his sparo frame was shaken with silent laughter. As the door closed on Jo's retreating figure he gave way to spasms of alternate laughter aud coughing. "Oh, dear, dear!" he chuckled, wip ing his eyes, "to have that fool look on the outside of his head and all that horse sense ou the inside!'' "Then, sir, you think him playing a game, do you?" asked the superintend ent. "Playing? He's played it! Hasn't he caught us in just the trap he started out to?" The old man went oil iu another par oxysm of laughter. "What did you say the lad's name was,"he gasped as he recovered. "Jo Tolly," answered the disgusted superintendent, "or, rather, that's what he calls himself. His real name is T-a-1- i-a-f-e-r-r-o." "Taliaferro—Joseph Taliaferro What was his father's name?" "Joseph, also, I believe." "It's him. As sure ns my name is Snyder B. Simes it's him!" cried the old man, rising to his feet excitedly. "Where's he gone? Where's he gone?" He rushed from tho room, his thin legs wavering under him, followed by the bewildered superintendent. When they returned, Jo Tolly, divested of the flour and apron now, was with them. "Gentlemen," said Mr. Snyder B. Simes, "allow me to preseut my grand son to you, formerly of the firm of 'Jo Tolly,' now full-fledged partner of the lumber firm of 'Snyder B. Simes & Grandson.' Tho Tolly store is closed, gentlemen. We—that is, my partner— has decided that it is more advantageous for our present business to be on agreea ble terms with this Brookville Glass Works Company." Here Mr. Simes, shaking with laugh ter, broke down again. "Oh, boys, ain't he a chip of the old block?" he cried.— Frank /^tlic's. Dublin lias the largest brewery. Terms —$1.25 in Advance; 51.50 after Three Months SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. A Troy (N. Y.) electric car cost SIO,OOO. Water power runs the Dover (N. H.) electric plant. Harvard College is having constructed tho largest and finest photographic tele scope in the world. The electric light plant at tho palace of Vieuna is to be extended so as to make a total of 4000 incandescent lamps. A resident of Evart, Mich., has in vented a device whereby brakes applied to a locomotive will operate eveiy brake an the train. A new Swedish glass is claimed to have important advantages for microcopo and other fine lenses, giving greatly in creased power. A chair propelled by electricity from a storago battery placed beneath the seat is the latest luxury for the invalid. One charging will last forfifty milesof travel. The telephone between Paris aud Lon don having been so successful it is pro posed to connect Brussels and London. For that purpose a cable will be laid between Ostend and Dover. A Frenchman has invented an im proved method of telegraphing so that it is practicable to transmit 150 words per minute on a single wire. The meseage when delivered from the machine is type written. Artificial grindstones, which outwear by years any natural stone known, arc oiade of a mixture of pulverized quartz, powdered flint, powdered emery or co rundum and rubber dissolved by a suit jble solvent. Owing to the rapid destruction of tho pinions, the running of armatures at 100 C or more revolutions per minute is being done away with. Slow speed motor*, with a normal speed of 400, are now :ousiderod the best practice. The longest shaft in the world in one piece, or in any number of pieces, is in the Washington Navy Yard, Washing ton, District of Columbia. It is J?J inches square, 460 feet long, and trans mits power to traveling cranes. It runs &t 160 revolutions per minute. It has been estimated that one ton of ;oal gives enough amuionia to furnish ibout thirty pounds of crude sulphate, the present value of which is about £l2 per ton, and there being 10,000,000 tons A coal annually distilled for -jus, no less than 133,929 tons of sulphate, ot the money value of $1,607,148, are pro duced. The question why a piece of solid iron floats ou molten iron has been satisfacto rily answered by Dr. Anderson and Mr. Wrightson. The cold metal is reallj heavier than the molten, and when first placed in the latter it sinks by virtue of its weight; but growing warmer it ex pands, and thereby becoming specifically lighter it rises to the surface. After a time, however, it again shrinks and melts into the fluid mass around it. Some of the most prominent irot founders are introducing a new and sim ple practice in order to secure strongei castings, the method in question consist ing in placing thin sheets of wrought iron in the ceuter of the mold previous tc the operation of casting. This method was first resorted to, it appears, in the casting of thin plates for the ovens ol cooking stoves, it being found that u sheet of thin iron in the center of u quarter-inch oven plate rendered it prac tically unbreakable by fire. History of Lighthouses. The history of the lighthouse goo 1 , back to the time when your neighbor didn't fling things into your back yard. It is claimed that Virgil had kuowledge of a lighthouse, and that ho stated that one was placed ou a tower of the temple of Apollo, ou Mount Leucas, the light ol which, visible far out at sea, warned anc guided mariners. It is even said that the colossus of lihodes, erected 300 years before the birth of Christ, showed from his uplifted hand a signal light. But th< famous Pharos of Alexandria, built 282 B. C., is the first light of undoubted rec cord. Other lights were shown fronr. towers at Ostiu, Ravenua, Apainea, but the lighthouse at Coruuna, Spain, is be lieved to be the oldest sea town. This was built in the reign of Trojan, and iu 1634 was reconstructed. England aud Frauce have towers built by their Koman conquerors, which were used as light houses, and they are to-day marvels it the art of masonry.— Chicago Herald. Preserving Iron From Itnst. The beautiful ironwork so much in vogue nowadays, is generally finished ou account of its susceptibility to rust', with a coating of black lacquer, or so.in other preparation, which is not only in appropriate but gives to the metal ati unnatural appearance. A clever French man, who was an expert in metal work, showed us such a simple and effective way of preserving it from rust, that it is worth remembering. The only material required is a cow's horn (the toy truin pets sold in the shops will a;iswer tlu purpose), lleat the iron aud rub th( edge of the horn over it—that is all. II the horn smokes a little as you rub it oc ycu will know that the iron is hot enough. This will cause the horn to melt, and an imperceptible coating will be left upon the iron that will atlord complete protection from the damp for n year or more on out-door work. On in door ironwork it will last indefinitely. New York Tribune. NO. 52. THE OOLDBM-BOD. x There's gold in the miser's cheat Fast locked with a golden key; And a gold most rare in a woman's hair And gold iu the sands at sea: There's a tawny gold on the wheat's lith« length / Where it's breeze-tossed billows nod, J But never a gold so full and free, . Ah, me— None, none like the golden-rc J. There's gold on the maple's branch That gleams on an autumn lea. And a golden crown when the sun dies down While the shadows turn and flee; There's a wealth of gold in the pointed leaves Where the willow strews the sod. But no such feathery filagree, . Ah, me— None, none like the golden-rod. There's gold in the dawn's faint streaks That glint on the poplar tree, There's gold in the mine, and in lees of wine, And gold on the bumble-bee. » But by the plumes of its knightly crest. Where the wild wind rides rough-shod, There is never a gold so fair to see. Ah, me— • None, none like the golden-rod. —Ernest MoOaffey, in Arkansaw Traveler. HUMOR OF THE DAY. ~ A work of art —Belling a picture.— Puck. If life really were a poem, it is doubt ful if any one would be averso to it.— Detroit Free Preis. Belle—"This mirror is simply per fect." Bess—"Ah, I see. It flatters you."— Yankee Blade. The spoon craze pervades the water ing places. It takes only two to make a full set.— Boston Herald. When a firm winds up its business it ia only reasonable to suppose that it has been running down.— Detroit Tribune, Quoricus —"What is Mrs. Moneybag, ges's position in society?" Cynicus— "Why, it's capital."— Washington JStar. Ever since Rebecca went to to the well watering-places have been great resorts for ladies with matrimonial aspirations. Chicago News. There is no affliction without its com pensating benefit. The deaf mute is a stranger to the trials of , the telephone.— Boston Transcript. A distinctive feature of this season's hats for the ladies is an exceptionally low crown. Not so the price. It is as high as ever.— Detroit Free Press. Theatre Manager (to departing specta tor) —"Bepardon, sir, but there are two more acts," "Yes, I know it. That's why I'm g >ing."— Flieqewle Blaet -1 ter. "The Eastern sages believe that there is n sign on each man's forehead that the i angels may read," he whispered softly. ''What is yours?" she answered. "To let?"— New York Herald. Philanthropist " You say youi brother treated you with marked disre spect? Iu what way?" Tramp (wiping his eyes)—" Went to work in my pres ence."—New York Herald. At supper the other evening Feble witterather brusquely bade the table gill give him some sauce. He got what ho asked for, but, somehow, did not seetn to relish it .—Detroit Free Press. "I say, waiter," exclaimed an impa tient customer, "I've been here a full hour!" "I've been here since seven this morning," answered the waiter. "Tire some, ain't it?"— Philadelphia Record. The Maiden—"l hope you noticed, Mr. Rimer, that it was your book that 1 brought out here to read." Mr. Rimei —"Yes. I also noticed that you fell fast asleep over it."— Munsey's Weekly. "We have no use for bear stories," said the editor. "Our readers demand something spicy." "Well," said the man wit'i the manuscript, "this story is about a cinu.imon bear."— -Indianapolis Journal. "You couldn't get steaks as rare as you liked them at your late boarding house, eh?" said the old boarder to the new. "Well, it'll be rare enough you'll get them here, let me tell you!"— Detroit Free Press. "Great Scott!" exclaimed the world the other day as she wiped the perspira tion off the North American Continent with a point lace cloud. "Did any one ever have so much trouble with a suu before?"— Lift. One occasionally reads of the discov ery of the petrified remains of human br ings. Is this to be taken as indicating that there may have been those in days of yoro who succeeded in rvakmg them selves solid?— Detroit Free Press. A Jefferson avenue young man who has moucy enough to do t1... summer resorts and conscience enough to flirt with every girl he meets, went iuto a Woodward ave nue jewolry store last week where bo knew one ot the clerks. ' I want three rings, lady's size," he said. "Ah," smiled the clerk, cunuingly, "going to have a cii*u >s, are you?"— Detroit Free Press. "How are you getting on with the piano?" asked Alphonso of his best be loved Matilda. "Oh, very well; I can see the great progress in my work." "How is that?" "Well, the family that lived next door moved away within a week after I began to practice. The next people stayed a month, the next ten weeks and the family there now have remained nearly six months."— Yankee Blade.