SULLIVAN JSllfe REPUBLICAN. W. M. CHENEY, Publisher. VOL. XTI. South Africa will again canny cotton manufacture. The fitness of things is liappily il lustrated, the Chicago Herald thinks, iu the name of Mr. Chinook Whiskers, of Oregon. M. Berry asks the French Chamber to give Parisians the right to vote by mail, when they are out of town, or too ill to come to the polls. A Kentucky woman recently brought suit against a railroad for killing her horse and her husband. She got $l5O for the horse and one cent for the lius baud. The ex-President ol the Royal Col lege of Veterinary Surgeons of Eng land condemns public drinking troughs for horses on the ground that they propagate certain diseases peculiar to horses. Justice Wheeler, of Chicago, holds that a bicycle rider has as much right of way on public streets as the driver of any vehicle. F. G. Nelson sued the owners of a truck which ran into him while he was riding his bicycle, and has gained a judgment for SSO and costs. It has been estimated that 25,000 horses are employed in the London carrying trade, that their value is a million and a quarter, and that the cost is for food alone $4,000,000. A rule prevails of foraging the horses on threepence an inch per week—that is, a horse costs as many shillings a week as it stands hands high. Letters just published, written dur ing the siege of Paris, show what high prices were paid for curious meals. A certain M. Deboos bought up the Zoological Garden and sold tho ani mals at a profit. The cassowary was sold for $lO ami the kangaroo for only 820. Two camels brought SIOOO and a wild boar $4lO. Elephants' flesh was a luxury, and the two were sold as steaks for $5400. Tn Ireland vaccination was made compulsory in 1803. Since that time the Irish Poor Law Commissioners have carried out the law and the whole population has been vaccinated. From 1830 to 1840 the yearly average of deaths from smallpox was 5800, in the next decade it was 3287 and in the next 1272. In the year 1807 they were twenty, in 18G8 they were nineteen and in the next year six. The largest balloon in the world has just been constructed at Ilolloway, iirnr London, England. It is a sphere of 57.24 teet diameter, has a capacity of over 100.000 cubic feet, weighs one and a quarter tons, and will lift an ad ditional weight of a ton. It is to be used for the purpose of obtaining con tinuous meteorological observations for a period of six days without de scending. It has been successfully tested. The annual report of the State Geological Survey of lowa shows that the belt of coal extending ncross Missouri from Keokuk to Kansas City is more productive than any other portion of"the great interior coal field of the American continent." This field includes a large portion of lowa, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Kansas, Indian Territory, Arkansas and Texas. Coal beds are found in most other States also, but they be long to other fields ond strata. The St. Louis Republic says : Secre tary Herbert is the only member of the Cabinet who can be called a specialist in his own deportment. Mr. Herbert is fitted to be Secretary of the av y, and for no other place around Cleveland's council board. He lis a sailor, every iuch of him; he 'knows a ship from masthead to keel; be can box the compass like an old salt, and could walk the deck as an Admiral or climb the rigging as a sailor. He has sailed before the mast, and has been taught the art of sea manship in the school of experience. Though the Chinese have been in this country so long a time and have become so numerous, it is said of them that they do not and csunot compre hend the status of the police, re marks the New York Sun. Their first idea is that a policeman is a sort of feudal ruler, with the right to chop off their heads or levy on their property or do as he pleases with them. They have no fault to find with such rulers. They are used to them in China. In fact, as soon as they rind out that the police are mere watchmen on salary **t to guard the pnldio peace they be come disturbed ami confused and end the strain <>u their minds l>y deciding that the policemen must !>#• soldiers, and that IN what nenilv EVERY ( hum tUM lUmka ttb tu-dfty, The Dakota River, with an estimated length of 600 miles, is believed by many to l»e the longest unnavigable stream in the world. If all the people of tho United States were placed in Kansas, California and Nebraska, those States would not be so thickly settled as England is now. Every member of tho British cabi net acts in three capacities—as admin istrator of a department of state, as member of a legislative chamber and a confidential adviser to the crown. An agricultural writer figures that the loss to the farmers of the coun try by the use of narrow wagon tires, through the wear and tear of horseflesh and the loss of time, amounts to the enormous sum of 8300,000,000 a year. Jonathan Hutchinson, to the aston ishment of the New York Mail and Express, is devoting the best years of his life to studying the question, "Do the sick ever sneeze?" He believes it to be fully as important as the deter mination of the problem, "Why are black cats black?" It appears as if the people of the United States were steadily reducing their consumption of quinine and other cinchona alkaloids. Year after year since 1887 the importations of cinchona bark have been diminished. In 1893 the amount imported was less than half that of 1887. Fine carriages with rubber tires are said to be coming into use in the city of New York. These tires cost about SI 00 for a set of fonr, and rarely last more than one season, but they are a great comfort to those who can afford them, making the motion of the car riage easy and noiseless. This is an age of specialties, ex claims the Boston Cultivator. The successful men of the world to-day are those who devote themselves to special work. Every mnn has some liking or possibility which is greater than any other, and which is in some way dif ferent from those of other men. This is his vocation, and he should devote to it his best thought and endeavor. In this way he will concentrate his energies nnd secure larger results. A Philadelphia physician think* that a great deal of nonsense has been writ ten about hypnotism. "Any one," he says, "may hynotize himself in a few minutes by closing his eyes, directing them inward and downward, and then, imagining his breath to be vapor, watching its inhalation nnd expulsion from the nostrils. Babies invariably look cross-eyed before going to sleep, in this way producing what hypnotists call 'transfixion.' Fishermen often hynotize themselves watching a cork on a surface of shining water. An hour passes by as if it were a few minutes." The Swiss Government has, for the last twenty years, caused observations to he made through its forestry sta tions on the temperature of the air, of the trees and the soil in the forests. These observations show that the tem perature in the forests is always below the temperature outside. The tem perature also varies according to the trees composing the forests. A beech forest is always cooler than a forest of larch. As to the trunks of the trees, they are always colder than the surrounding air. Regarding the tem perature of the soil, it is found that iu the forest the temperature is in variably below that of the air. Out side the forest the soil is always warmer than the air in summer and colder in winter. The popular idoa of Siberia, accord ing to the Chicago Record, is that it is a barreu desert extending from the frozen ocean of the north to the burn ing sands of the tropics, but this is a great mistake. The population of Rus sia in Asia is nearly 18,000,000. There are several cities with a population ex ceeding 50,000. The agricultural pro ducts reported, which constitute only a very small portion of the whole, are valued at an average of #30,000,000 a year, the output of thtj mines exported is valued at upward of $20,000,000 annually, and the furs, tish, skins and other products that come into Kuropean Russia from Siberia are worth $5,000,(100 or $0,000,000 more. Rut this population is scattered over an enormous area; it is only partially civilized; the greater portion of the country does not expect or aspire to the production of anything more than is necessary for local consumption; the means of communication and trans portation are lacking, and, as pro ductive industry is measured in the European countries and America, it niav be «aid Hat two-third* of the ui Übiutlijr iOir LAPORTE, PA,, FRIDAY, MAY 11, IS»4. tHE SOLDIERS OF THE SUN, Along the margin of tho world They march with thoir bright banners furled, TTatil, in lino of battle drawn, Tley roach the boundaries of dawn. Tbey orosa the seas and rivers deep. They climb the mountains high and steep, Aad hurrv on until in sight Of their black enemy—the Night, Then madly rush into tho fray These armies of the Night and Day. Swiftly the 9hinlng arrows go, While bugHng Winds thoir wamlnes Mow. Strive as He will, the Night Is pressed Farther and farther down tho west. With goldon spear nnd gleaming lance The cohorts of the Day advance. Thus, dally, is the battle won By the brave soldiers of the Sun! —Frank IV Sherman, in Harper's Weekly. MISS TIM BROOK'S OPENING. T wasn't the first m 9/J time by any means Miss Tim brook had i* l li. read her niece's let '/[ tor i nof was it the fi 7 fi'st time that Miss Cynthia Stone had, fry figuratively speak- Wffak ' iug, stabbed her \ttlta stout, geutlo old Jf' friend by remnrk ing, oracularly, "Ingratitude is the crying sin of the age !" The crying sin of the age Was a mov able quantity with Miss Cynthid. Last week, when-the butcher's boy had un intentionally given her the wrong change, it had been dishonesty ; and the week before, when a child had timidly walked into the little mil linery shop nnd begged a few snip pings of velvet for her dolly, It had been boldness. On all other occasions it was whatever happened to cross Misß Cynthia's fixed ideas of the fit ness of things. Miss Timbrook gave a little sigh, nnd returned to the bonnet she was trimming. As she tried to fasten a pink rose iu what, she hoped Was a pertly Correct fashion against some Very green bows, she said, with a great effort at cheerfulness: "Pink an' green is tit for the queen." "Humph!" said Mitw Cynthia, scorn fully. Miss Cynthia was Miss Timbrook's old-time friend, companion and assist ant, and was the spice of her placid life. "Sybilla Tim, you amaze me!" de clared MiBK Cynthia, sternly. ''Why don't you show some spirit? Tell that girl to pause before it's too iate. Rc miud her how you've brought her up, and even high-schooled her there iu New York for three mortrtl years, boarding her out afterward to a high priced woman on account of her bein one of them highty-tity milliners, so as to have her pick up idees, and you all the time hoping that when 'twas all over she'd come back here and be the prop of your old age and build up the business." Miss Cynthia stopped only long enough to draw a full breath and then went on again: "And it's time 'twas built up. Look at them bonnets, Sybilla Tim.'* Miss Timbtook looked as she Was told, and beheld four bonnets perched upon frames ift the little shop window. They drooped dejectedly, and seemed to shrink from the gaze of the passers by. And well they might. Miss Timbrook quailed visibly at the sight of her own handiwork. "I know it, Cynthy," she said, apologetically. "They aren't just what they ought to be. They're old style, like ourselves. And I know the trado's failing. But dearly as T love to fuss with the ribbons and the arti fieials, I'll shut up the shop before I'll say u word to hinder Ruthy from fol lowing her own bent." "Fudge 1" said Miss Cynthia, sharp ly. "She feels a drawing—ain't that what the letter says?—to be an artist. And now that some of her pa's kin has left her a legacy, she thinks that in stead of coming home for good, she'll just make us a little visit, and then go back to New York and study what she calls art. She thinks it's more uplift ing than making bonnets. Land! I don't like making bonnets myself, but I don't intend being drawn away from my 'lotted duty by something that looks more alluring. She says it's an 'opening' io a higher life ! Fudge 1 I say." "Speaking of openings," ventured Miss Timbrook, timidly, "there's that Boston woman that's just set up a tine shop on Plum street. They tell me she's sent out cards to announce her spring millinery opening, and is going to serve tea to folks; she really is. Suppose we have an opening. Cynthy?" At this rash suggestion, Miss Cynthia burst out, "Are you crazy, Sybilla Tim? And what, for the land's sake, would you open?' " Giving a scathing glance at the four limp bonnets in the window and be stowing a final glare on her friend, i Miss Synthia flounced out of tho room, i Miss Cynthia might storm and scold, J but she only used her temper to cloak the sympathy and love which she was ashamed to show. Ruthy's unexpected desertion was a bitter disappointment to her, first on account of the sorrow of her friend, Sybilla, and secondly on her own i ccount. Bonnets to her did not represent any form of the ideal, BK they did to good Mi«H Timtirook, but as she hud said to herself over and over Again through the long winter, "Siuce it must be bonnet*, I'd like 'em to be t isty, such an Kuth'U know how to 11*. ' Aiul now Kuth v WHHii't eonunt 1 When MIRH Timbrook'x niece really did come for her lit'le vm.t, it *eem«eople writs poetry about it. —Atchison Globe. The popular idea of a good business man is one who can meet and beat a scoundrel at his own game.—Puck. Some men have such confidence in their ability that they would start a sun-umbrella business in London.— Puck. There would be no great objection to the anarchist if his exploded bombs were only as harmless as his oxplodod theories. WtmMugton Star. There's nothin' like the weddtn* For to make a feller learn ; 1 For he thinks that she is his'n. But finds out that he is her'n. , —lndianapolis Journal. Passenger "I say, conductor, 1 there's an old gentleman falling off the 'bus." Conductor —'That's all right; he's paid his fare." —Pearson's Week ly- "Are you sure Miss Oldtime keeps up the study of ancient history?" Madge—"Oh. dear me, yes. I saw her reading in her diary to-day."—lnter- Ocean. "Are there any more jurymen who haven prejudice against you?" in quired the lawyer. "No, sah, da juty am all right, but I want to challenge the judge."—The Green Bag. La Fiancee —"I am awfully sorry, Jack, but those roses you sent ine don't match my gown." Le Fiance (who paid $9 a dozen) —"Can't you change your gown, dear?"—Yogue. "I think 1 understand now," said Higge, "why they speak of Miss Wei laby's new Paris-made gown as a 'cre ation.' It looks almost as if it were made of nothing."—Chicago Tribune. Men cannot consistently deride wo men for wasting so much cloth in making their sleeves, so long as they themselves are wearing the long-tailed coats that are in fashion.—Somerville Journal. Author —"I am troubled with in somnia. I lie awake at night, hour after hour, thinking about my literary work." Friend- "Why don't you get up and read portions of it?"— Broo klyn Life. "If, as the Bible saye, 'all flesh is grass,'" said the star boarder at the breakfast table yesterday,"this steak must be the kind of stutt those tough Mexican hammocks are laado of."— Philadelphia Record. Jess—"Miss Fitz gives her age as twenty-nine, but she means thirty." Bess—"Then why don't she say thir ty?" Jess—"Oh, that's the way mer chants mark their goods, nowadays." —Kate Field's Washington. Duel Up to Date : "I challenge you to a duel." "Accepted." "Your choice of weapons-—dagger or pistols?" "Neither. Winter ascent of Mont Blanc —rotten rope—three feet dis tance. " —Fliegende Blaetter. "I don't know whether I like thoso pictures! or not," said the young woman. "They seem rather indis tinct." "Hut you must remember, ruadame," said the wily photographer, "that your face is not at HII plaiu."— Indianapolis Journal. "I need a new umbrella, and I'm going to buy one," declared Mrs. Mc- Bri'le. "Let me give you a piece of advice about buying umbrellas," adiled her husband. ' Sever buy on a rainy day." "I'd like to know why not?" "'Because they are always up them."—Detroit Freo Press. "Dear,' asked Mrs. Wickwire, look ing nplromher paper, "what does thi* paper mean by referring to 'tho superfluous woman?' What is tho superfluous woman?" "In our eu- KHgemoDt davs," unsw. red Mr. Wiok wire, "ihn superfluous woman waa vuav youoguc luiUaaupoli* Journal.