RATES OF ADVERTISING. One B()niire, one Inch, one tweitlon.. I 1 M On Square, one Inch, one month.......... M Ono Square, one Inch, three meatus. Ono fqnare, one Inch, one year 18 SO Two Squares, ono year 15 BO (juarlcr Column, one eT..... St 0 Unit Column, one yrr M M Ono C'olnmn, one yeir .........1 an Legal adTertiseaienU tea nti (, Ue . la crtlot. Marriage and death notices gratia. All bills for yearly adrertiienrante eerie' qaar. terly. Temporary adrerkiietnenta Btaei fee paw hi advance. Job work cash on delivery. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN Ii pnullihcd avery Wedneeday, bf J. E. WENK. OMee la Baiearbaugh & Co.'n Building EIM BTBKET, TIONESTA, Fa, Term, . tl.DO per Year. No lMrtHniw received for a holier period 0rruondnce solicited from aJl perU of the eniulry. No notice wul be token of aaoarmoua ooauriunlcattone. ' YOL.IVIII. KO. 40. TIOHESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, $1,50 PER ANNUM. Tho Chase eslato in England Is reputed to bo worth f 300,000,000, and there arc bout 800 persons in tbis country who claim to bo heirs to It. England will have to mortgago Home of her furniture If eho pays nil tlicso demands in cash. Will somo ono write a history ol China? President Angoll considers this n fair field for tho future historian. He will havo to t,trugglo with the lists of the Han, tho llow-Chow, and tho Tae-Tsing dynasty, but that is nothing to an enthu siastic spirit such us is needed to con struct any living picturo of tho past. A prize of if.1), 000 was offered somo time ago by Mr. Lotlllard, of New York, for tho discovery of tho key of the an cient Maya alphabet. Tho offer is still standing. Mr. I.e Plongeon, who has recently returned from a twelve years, study of tho ruins and monuments in Yucatan, is thus far tho strongest com petitor for tho award. According to the New York Commer cial Knqiiirer, a company of fruit grow ers has been formed in California, with a capital of f 239,000, to carry on tho business of shipping lruit to tho eastern markets. They expect to run fruit trains daily from Sacramonto, mado up of cars for tho principal points of distribution In tho Eastorn and .Middle States, and by putting them through on passenger train timo to supply at tho motropolis in good condition and at reasonable prices tho vast quantity of fruit that now goes to waste in California for lack of some such system for utilization. A traveler cnterod a town in south western Kontucky ou "court day," whon tho streets were full of people from tho country ' and the stores wero crowded with customers. There wus quito a bri gado of horso traders on hand, and from the well-to do farmer, with his prancing roan, down to tho dilapidated darkey, with his rickety old mule, that looked like a relic from Noah's ark, all had their say and their trado, and imagined that they had tho best of it. That is ono of the mysteries of tho business. One hun . drcd men cau make fifty trades, and every man of them mako inonoy by it. It reminds mo of a group of boys I onco knew who boasted that they could moot together every Sunday and mako two or three dollars apiece trading jackets." Crater lako is thus describod in a po titiou I lint is being numerously signed in Oregon to make a national reservation of the wonder. Tho surface of the lako is 0,300 feet above sea level, and it is about eight miles long and six miles wide. It contains a circular island COO feet high, on which is found an extinct crater which is ninety feet deep and 475 feet in diameter. Iu another portion of tho lako is fouud a conical shaped rock which is perpendicular, and rises to an altitude of 2,2'JO feet above the water's surface. Other rocks of remarkable form and elevation tower high above tho lake. The lako walls are nearly perpen dicular, and vary in altitude from 1,000 to 2,000 feet. The microphone an electric stretho scopo whose sensitiveness to the faintest sounds as making "tho walk of a ily seem liko the tramp of an elephant" is likely to become of great use in medical diagnosis. In the Atlanta Medical and Surgical Journal, Dr. Eve describes an interesting series of experiments mado by him with the instrument. Ho was ab'o to detect tho nature of obscuro fractures by the character of tho sounds conducted through tho instrument, and could dillerentiato aneurisms from tu mors by the sound of pulsation. Intra cranial and muscular sounds were made out with great clearness, and in diagno tis for stone the instrument worked with mathematical accuracy. The doctor suggests that an audiphono constructed on the principle of tho microphone would prove inestimable to pcoplo of impaired hearing. Many cases of heroism occurred in tho city of- Saragossa, Spain, during the re cent cholera epidemic. Every citizen gave money, food or labor to tho suffer ing. A poor washerwoman, bringing homo clothes to a ludy whom she found in a state of collapse, in which it was impossiblo to warn her, threw oft her dress, jumped, into bed, took the dying woman iuto her arms, and chafed the clammy limbs until circulation was re stored. When tho disease had spent it self tho Spanish government offered re wards to tho principal officials, who promptly refused them. It then be stowed the grand cross of the Order of Beneficence on the entire city. This cross is given ouly to a few individuals, who have risked their lives for the help of others; there is no order more highly vuVfieti in Spain. Never before has it Len conferred on an entire town. A noble instanco of courage and pres ence of mind is recorded in a New Zeal and paper. A child, which was on the track of a down-grado train, was rescued when tho engine was within two yards of it, by the engineer leaping down and seizing it. He was himself thrown off without severo injury by tho cowcatcher. An English paper frankly says: "Hail tho BfTair taken placo in England, where engines are not provided with cowcatch ers, tho driver would have paid the pen alty for his bravery with his lifo." Tho Boston Record gives tho following good illustration of tho confusion which the blending of old and new fashions iu some of our inodorn hrusos produces in the minds of plain people. "A visitor at a fashionable "West End mansion, tho other day, was from the country, and had not bcon in lioslon for several years. During this period his host had built a spick an spnn now house on tho site of his bid one. After going over the gayly decorated establishment, surveying tho sumptuous drawing rooms and the es thetic attics, the guest came down to the lower floor, whero the rooms, instead of having large plato glass windows like those above, had exceedingly small panes, in imitation of tho fashions of a century or more ago. The innocent rural visitor naturally supposed that here was a veritable vestige of tho past. "Well, John,' said ho, 'I'm real glad you've kept part of the old house, though it's an awful small part.'" The wild beast pest but slowly disap pears in British India. There is, how ever, a slight decrease in tho loss of life from the bites of wild aiimata and ven omous snakei. The numbers are 23,003 for 1883 and 52,423 for 1881. Tho num bers representing those due titmko bites are 20,007 and 19,020 in tho two years respectively. The reported loss of cattle amounted to 41), 072, against 47,778 in the previous year. Of these, 47,044 are said to have been caused by wild animals and 1,728 by snakes. Tigers and leopards are shown to havo been about equally destructive, having killed 19,680 and 10,609 head of cattle respec tively. . In the number of wild animals destroyed there was a satisfactory in crease from 19,800 in tho previous year to 22,775. Tho destruction of poisonous snakes is enormous, but the numbers have declined from 412,782 to 380,081. Wherever tho system of rewards havo been pursued the figures havo shown n satisfactory increase, although it natur ally happens that here and thero a too adventurous snake killer pays for his daring with his life. Noses anil Ears. With the astrologers a large noso was always a sign of much character of some kind, but tbat was determined by other characteristic marks. A Human nose was a sign of a courageous temper and a disposition to faco and overcome diffi culties, while a more strongly aquiline noso was an indication of rapacity; the idea being evidently borrowed from the similarity of this description of beak to that of the eagle, tho most rapacious of birds. The snub nose showed little character but much temper, while the Greek nose, even, straight and regular, was a sign of the temperament of tho owner. Largo nostrils indicated good lung's, health and long life, while swell ing nostrils showed a warlike spirit and fire. A very sharp nose was considered an indication of a busybody, while a bluntnessat the end of this member was an outward sign of the possessor's men tal lack of acutcness. Large ears wero always bad, tho similarity between their owner and the donkey being supposed to extend further than the cars, while small cars were always good. Tho lobo of tho car passing insensibly into tho cheek was a sure sign of a th ef and liar, while an exceedingly sharp division be tween the two indicated honesty and candor. Thick ears meant thick brains, while thin, delicate curs declared their possessor to be a man of rotined intelli gence. Two Storle or Grant. After General Grant had appointed Judge Taft secretary of war, he invited a number of leading Republican Senators to dine with him at the White House, that they might becomo personally ac quainted, lie forgot, however, to invite Judge Taft, who consequently was not present so those invited to meet him did not have the pleasure of seeing him. On another occasion, when Congress was investigating tho Washington real estate pool, Geueral Grant sent one of his sous to the Capitol to invite infor mally a dozen Republican Senators to dino at the White House for a conference. The young Grant mistook that stanch Democrat, Senator Eli Stulsbury, for Senator Morrill, of Vermont, and so in vited the Dclawarian. His presence acted like an extinguisher ou all politi cal talk, and he, after having wondered all through the dinner why he was in vited, hurriedly took hia leave wheu the cigars were introduced. Ben : l'trley Poore. Liquid fuel is exciting much attention in England. With a view to its use the Russian Black JSea Navigation company is building a large fleet of tank steamers to import petroleum in bulk. OS E AT A TIME. One step at a time and that well placed, We roach the grandest height; One stroke at a time, earth's hidden stores Will slowly come to light; One aoed at a time, and the forest grows; One drop nt a time, and the river flows Into thowboundless sea. One word at a timo, and tho greatest book Is written and is read; One stona at a timo and a palace rears Aloft its stately head; One blow at a timo, and the tree's cleft through And a city will stand where the forest grew A few thort years before. Ono foo at a time, and he subdued, And the conflict will be won; One grain at a time, and the sand of life Will slowly all bo run; Ono minute, another, tho hours fly; Ono day at a time, and our lives speed by Into eternity I ain of stored, Another and more on them, And as time rolls on your mind will shine With many a garnered gem .Of thought and wisdom. And time will toll, "One thing at a time, and that done well," Is wisdom's proven rule. Golden Days. AN OLD CLOCK. It was a bright, breezy June day, and in the big kitchen of a comfortable-looking house on tho outskirts of the little town of Springvale a young girl in a purple calico dress, with her round arms bared to her shoulders, was churning. She was tall, and rather slender, with a quiet, thoughtful face and earnest dark eyes; but there wns nothing melancholy in cither her appearance or manner; and, as sho raised and let fall the dasher, she hummed the air of a hymn she and John Henderson had sung together in church tho ovening before. She was engaged to John, and he took her to prayer meeting every Thursday evening, as a matter of course. It was only what was expectad of every young man in Spring vale under tho some circumstances. John and Pruden:e had been "keeping company," as tho Springvale people termed it, for five years, and still thern seemed no prospect of their marriage; for John's farm was old and overworked ; he had no money to spend in enriching tho soil, and he had his sister Thirza to support. But Prudence Dcnnison, being of a gentle, pationt disposition, did not grumble or tret over tho delay. She loved John with all her heart, and thought him well worth any number of years ol waiting. Her mother did not agree with her iu this. Sho was anything but patient ana amiauio about the matter. She thought Prudence could do better than marry John Henderson, and feltt sure that there were many other young men in Springvale who would come forward as suitors if John would only take hun self out of the way. She treatad her daughter's lover very coldly in conse quence, and mado no secret of her dis like to him. . She was sitting by the kitchen table, paring apples for pies whilo Prudence churned. She was an old woman with rusty gray hair, sharp blue eyes, and a thin,' stooping figure. Prudence did not bear the slightest resemblance to her. She was "her father over again," the country people said. Neither Prudeuce nor her mother ever talked much, and this morning the si lence of the kitchen was unbroken for a long time, save by the loud ticking of the old clock in the hall, and tho occa sional snatches of a hymu which Pru dence hummed softly to herself. - Mrs. Dennison was the first to speak. "I expect John Henderson's told you bout that girl Miss Peck's took to board?" sho said, as she" rose and went into the pantry for some pie-pans. "No," answered Prudence, pausing in her churning; "he didn't nieution her. Who is she?" "Dear knows!" said Mrs. Dennison. "Miss Peck's so close-mouth, nobody kin pet a word out'n her. 'Pears to nie Pi ask John 'bout her if I was you. Miss Barker was tcilin' mo yestidday (hat he'd been up to see her 'most every day since she come. They say, she's awful pretty, an' puts ou lots of stylo. Seems strange John didn't say nothin' bout her. Miss Barker was sayin' as how it didn't look nono too well for him to be ruuniu' up there so much. It'd bo jes' like him to give you tho go by, now he's took a new faucy. Men aro mighty onstable. You can't place no dependence on 'em and there's no de nyin' you're gettiu' on. You can't blame men for likin' what's young and pretty;" and Mrs. Dennison drew a long sigh as she walked slowly across the room to the stove, and deposited a pie in the capacious oven. Prudeuce made no reply, ond her face was hidden from her mother's gaze. She was bending over the churn, adjust ing the lid, which she had lifted a moment before in older to see the con dition of the butter. Mis. Dennison did not speak again. When the pies wero all in tho oven, sho left Prudeuce to attend to them and went up stairs. Prudence presently heard her moving about in the room overhead. The girl continued to churn steadily, but tho did not sing any more; and there was a troubled look in her durk eyes now. A shadow fell across the kitchen floor, and, raising her head, Prudence saw a jauntily dressed inau standing in the doorway, lie wore a gray tweed suit and an enormous wutchchaiu, and the haud with which he wus twistiug the ends of a long, red mutt ache was adorned with au enormou amethyst riug. Good morning," he aaid, with a low bow, and a smile which showed nil his teeth. "I'm round Rafter old clocks, and a woman living a'littlo way back of cere told me you had one. Want to sell it?" "No," answered Prudence. "I would not think for a moment of selling my clock. It belonged to mv grand father." Let mo see it." said tho stranircr. "I'm interested in these old clocks. Tho folks in tho large cities have taken a notion to 'cm lately, an' I'm buying 'cm up for a firm in Ilarrisburg." 'no entered tho kitchen as he snoke. and Prudence, after a moment's heita- tion, led tho way into the hall. Ihe clock stood at one side of the hall door. It was eight feet tall, with enormous wooden ornaments on the top resembling antlers, and a door half way down tho case, that, when opened, dis closed two great iron weights on chain pulleys, and a big brass pendulum that swung slowly back and forth with a solemn "tick! tick I" that somo people, alone in' the house, would have found unbearable. But Prudence liked it. She was at fond of the old clock as if it had been a living thing, and had never thought of herself as an inmate of John's house without a meutal vision of the old clock there, too. "This would just suit a lady that's been after me for one," said tho man, looking admiringly at tho old-faBhioned faco of tho clock, with its wreath of flow ers encircling tho lower part, and big, jolly-faced moon at the top. "Come, now, you'd better sell it. I'm willing to give you fifteen dollars for it." Prudence shook her head. "My grandfather left it to mo when ho died," she said, "and I can't sell it." The man argued the matter with her for a little while, but finding her firm, finally went away. That afternoon, when dinner was over and tho house put in order, Prudence dressed herself in her best muslin gown and went out to take a walk. Her mother looked after her with some curi osity as she closed tho gate behind her. It was Prudence's enstom to sit down at her sewing when tho work was done. Sho seldom went out except to attend to some necessary purchases, which wero alwavs discussod openlv before she left. Sho had never before gone out without assigning some good reason for it. "What I said 'bout that girl kinder stirred her up, 1 expect," commented Mrs. Dennison, who would have been greatly amazed had she known that it was for the purpose of seeing the girl in question, and judging for herself of her superior charms, that Prudence had gone out. Her walk was not in vain. As sho ap proached Mrs. Peck's house, sho saw a lovely vision on the front porch a tiny creature with a quantity of golden hair piled on top of her small head ; a deli cate, pale face, and a graceful figure ar rayed in somo soft, white material gath ered in at the waist with a very broad cardinal sash. Prudence did not doubt for a moment that this was Mrs. Peck's boarder, and her heart sank like lead in her breast. Was it any wonder that John admired this dainty creature? He would have been less than a man if he had not. And, oh. how different sho looked from any girl Prudence had ever seen before ! Poor Prudence! Her life had been a very quiet, monotonous one, and she had never known the necessity for pretty dresses and gay ribbons. She had al ways bougnt only what was absolutely necessary in tho way of personal raiment, ! and her selections had invariably been i made with a view to durability and econ-! omy. She had never owned a sash in ; her life, nor a pair of slippers, and she . had worn her chestnut hair in the same j quiet fashion for the past ten years. She walked past the house very slow ly, and kept straight down the street until she reached the open country. Then , she sat down under a great tree in a se- j eluded lane, and tried to think calmly over this now phase in her quiet life a phase sho had never dreamed would en ter it. It was almost dusk when she reached home, and she passed through tho kitchon without speaking to her mother, who was setting the table for supper. As with a settled purpose, she entered the gloomy parlor on the right of tho hall, and threw open the shutters. Thero was an old-fashioned mirror between the windows, and after a moment's j hesitation she stepped before it and looked in. She stood motionless a long j time, her dark eyes strangely troubled, I her slim, brown hands clasped before j her. With a heavy sigh she turned away at j last, and looked about her. Everything ' was the worse for wear, in spite of caro- i ful usage; for the parlor hud been fur nished when Mrs. Dennison had come to tho house a bride, forty years before. On the mantel wero tho little china or- i naments Prudence had received as birth- : day and Christinas gifts when a child. i "I'm getting on, as mother said. I can see that now. I never thought of it before. But a couple of new dresses, bright ribbons thaso things count for a good deal with a man, 1 suppose. He don't know it, perhaps, but he is in fluenced by them." Thus murmuring to herself. Prudence advanced to the windows to closo the shutters, but paused ns she b.iw tho stranger with the red mustache standing outside. "Came back to bee if you had changed your mind about that clock," he suid, with a familiar smile. 1'rudence went into the hall and un bolted tho frout door. "Wait here a moment," she said to the man. "I went to speak to my mother." She went into the kitchen, her eyes shining with a new light, her breath com'iig fast. "Would you care if I sold the ol.l clock, mother?" she asked. "There's a man here who will give me fifteen dol lar for it." "It's yours. Do as you please with it," answered Mrs. Dennison, who had never possessed a particle of sentiment. "But look out that he don't grve you counterfeit money." Prudence gave a long sigh when she saw the old clock carried out of the hall and put into the stranger's wagon; and that night, she woke up half a dozen times with a senso of seme great loss having fallen upon her. And. oh, how she missed tho "tick-tick" of the solemn old pendulum! But the next morning, as soon a3 her household duties wero done, she went to the best store in the town and bought the material for a white dress, and four yards of broad sah ribbon of a rich car dinal hue. When John called Monday evening he did not recognize tho figure that came forward to meet him, and stared at it a moment in mute astonishment. "Is this really you, Prue?" he asked. "Why, child, what have you been doing to yourself? I don't know you in this new gown." "But don't you liko mo iu it, John?" asked Prudence, with trembling lips. John (hook his head. "It may do for somo girls that little one up at Mrs. Peck's, for instance," he said; "but I think little brown wrens better than butterflies, Pruo." Prudence had been in a morbid, mis erable frame of mind for four long days, and was completely unstrung. As John ceased speaking sho burst iuto tears, and then threw herself down on the old lounge, where sho had sobbed herself to sleep many a timo during her childhood. John's nrm9 were around her at once. Do was startled and surprised by the sud den outburst, so unlike his quiet, gentle Pruo. and it was a long time before ho could win her to tell him her whole story . But he knew it all at last. Prue con fessed even her jealousy of Mrs. Peck's boarder. "You're n little goose," said John, when at length her tears were driod, and she was smiling again. "Mrs. Peck's boarder is my Cousin Sam's wife. They had a quarrel, and she ran away from him and camo here to Mrs. Peck, who is her aunt. Sam wrote me all about it, and I've been trying to patch tho matter up. It's been hard work, she's such a silly little thing so unlike you, Pruo but I got her to promise tbat she will go back home to-morrow. And so you sold the old clock in order to buy a new dress and a red sash? Oh, Pruel Prue!" "I see now how foolish I was," said Prudence, with a sigh. "But thought "I'll hear what you thought when I tell you the news," interrupted John. "It's the strangest thing! It seems that Thirza has been corresponding for sev eral months with a gentleman sho met at the camp-meeting last summer, and has decided to marry him." "Really!" gasped Prudence. "Yes; the wedding is to be in August, and I want you to come when sho goes. Will you?" When Prudence, after her quiet wed ding, walked into tho house which sho and John were to share together hence forth, the first thing she saw was her grandfather's old clock standing in the hall, ticking as solemnly and regularly as if it had never been moved. She turned to her husband, glad tears in her eyes, and a questioning look on her face. He put his arms around her, and drew her to his side. "This is my wedding gilt to you, Prue," he said. "I hunted up that man with the red mustache the very day after I learned you hud sold the clock, and bought it back." "You couldn't have given me any thing I would have prized more, dear John," said Pruo. But she never knew that the wedding gift had been the one extravagance of j his prudent lifo. He had paid seventy live dollars for it, but no one ever knew it except himself nud the man with the red mustache. Florence B. Uallowell, A Decorated Goblet. An interesting home-made method of natural decoration consists simply in taking a glass or goblet and placing iu the interior a little common salt water. Iu a day or so, a slight mist will bo seen upon tho glass hourly this will grow until in a very short time tho glass will present a beautiful appear ance, it being enlarged to twice its thicknesniid bo covered with beautiful salt. crystals, packed upon one another exactor like some peculiar fungus or ani mal growth. It is uecessury to place a dish beneath the glass, as the crystals will run over, if the term can bo used. The glass can bo made additionally beautiful by placing in the salt and water somo common red ink. This will be absorbed, as it wero, and tho white surface covered with a rich red coat, which, in turn, cau be covered by blue or any color by the introduction of inks or tints. No inure simple method of producing inexpensive and beautiful or naments can bo imagined, and by using dilfercnt shapes of vases and shades, an endless variety of beautiful forms can be produced, pleasing alike to young and old. Orient ijie, A metu an. Crimson Tipped. Sho lias Bunny, golden hair, She is t)x:iiibitily fair, And her eyes of bluo are gorgeous in their lu.tre; While her lips are ruby bright, And her tooth ure pearly w hite; And, in fact, she, as a uenuly, is u bustur. lint, di spite Iu r rk.u inn bo rul e, ( And her f.isemtitinx uir, And In' knowledK that ut il.eiu all meu are j talking. I Hliu in lifo no pleasure liudij, I 'or the rooty autumn winds Tint her lovely noso with ml whou bhe goes valkiu;. Uooilall't Sun. SLUMBER-LAND. Oh, baby mine, the night is here, The niht that drifts us slowly near The realms of Slumber-land. Gently the waters ebb and flow, Creeping through nodding lids of snow, That border Slumber-land. Mother's arms are the sails and boat, And mother's voice the winds that float Your bark to Slumber -land. Beautiful dreams, instead of sands, Fleeting visions people the strands Of far-off Slumber-land. Sloopy sands that creep into eyes Ever so open, ever bo wise, Wafted from Slumber-land. Hushl I'm sure yon are almost there, Brenthing the drowsy, mystic air That floats through Slumber-land. Now a kiss on the rosy face, Just to show we have won the race The race to Slumber-land. Adelaide Samson. IUM0R OF THE DAY. Billiards must be an easy game, for it's mostly done on cushions. Stockton Mae erick. The average postage stamp generally gets in place after it has been well licked. Electric Light. A canal horso should never be hard up. He can always draw on the bank. St. Paul Herald. There is no hen so self-contained but that sho is liable to lose her head. Binghamlon liepublican. "What is your idea of love, Mr- Sin nick?" "Three meals a day, and well cooked. Chicago ledger." When she was younger and wore the queens' wreath, Sho was the finest soprano you met, oh I But now she's grown older, with a sot of false teeth, I find that her voice is falsetto. Gorkam Mountaineer. Three editors are members of the Delta fCal.) brass band. They were driven to it in solf-defenso. Burlington Fret Press. Strange, that with the 21,000,000 but tons manufactured in this country last year, we still have to fasten our suspend ers on with a shingle naiL Palmr Journal. A nicely sharpened lead pencil is the only thing in creation that defies the law of gravitation. The lighter end always strikes the floor first. Burlington (Ff.) Free Prttn. A LOVEtt'S COMPLIMENT. "A pretty thing in gloves," said she, "1 wish to get a perfect glove," "The prettiest thiug iu gloves," said ho, "Are those white hands of yous.my love." Hoston Courier. The king of Dahomey has 3,500 wives. When his royal husbandness rolls home ward about a a. it. the chances are a, 500 to ono that he will be overheard when he tries to "sneak upstairs in his stocking feet. Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown. A'w York Graphic. TWO WAYS OF LOOKING AT IT. The snow is beautiful to see And to the Hiet givea delight, When over lawn aud over lea It lies, a maiitle pure and white. But when six inches deep, or so, It lies at morn, beside his door And must be shovelled oil, the snow, The poet doomed a blasted bore. Motion Courier. White Gold-Seekers in China. Siberia has always been regarded as rich in auriferous deposits, and travelers' tales have been heard describing the rich results of washing tho mud of the rivers, while the soil was mingled with golden scales. Strange, these stories did not seem to attract tho hordes of needy ad venturers who flock wherever gold is, or is supposed to be, in existence; but recently, for somo months past, a busy community of diggers bus been at work in a place so inaccessible that, until last winter, the Chinese wero unaware that a tribe of foreign devils were gathering up wealth ou tho borders of their own empire. The mining camp is composed of detachments from Australia and Cali fornia, and a sprinkling of diamond seekers from South Africa; and these men havo formed a government of their own over a republic they huvo coolly appro priated from the Chinese empire, having the Hussiau administration on the other side of the river. The results of the work are irood, upward of 2,000 pounds weight of gold having been purchasod last year by Russian agents, who have paid excellent prices, ranging up to sixty-five shillings for tho troy ounco. This now "nation" foundod on the banks of tho Amour rivor, is likely, if the stories told about it are true, to becomo tt power in tho world; for as its only trouble is likoly to ba with China the bold diggers have taken tho initiative and defied tho "ten thousand" which tho ira:e and disappointed man darins threatened them with. This in cident is another painful leaf in tho his tory of China. The brother of the sun ami moon-, the sou of heaven, to be de fied by ft gang of outer barbarians clad in 11 nun ei shirts, corduroys, and kuee boots, uud speaking an unknown but emphatic language, and toseo tho golden treasures of his land taken away from under his very nose, is humiliation too great to be submitted to ; yet what can be done? Tho "ten thousand" had bet ter keep at home, and let well enough alone. Japan Gaztte. Comments on the Baby. MOTHER. "Ain't it a pretty little thing, Its eyes so lirii;lit anil clearf Whut dimpled cheeks! whut tiny toes! iluw do you like it, dourf I A Tit Kit. ' My love, I think this little babe All other bulies eveels: It has my nose, it lias your mouth, And niorcy, how it yells!" -Hoton CourUr.