THE FOREST REPUBLICAN RATES OF ADVtWTUIHft Ono Sqaaro, ono bicb. one uieertloa, IIS On. Sqnare, ono Inch, on. month On Square, ono Incb, Ihreo month 0t Ono Sqnare, one Incb, ono yrar 10 Two Bqnares, ono year. ' m Qnarter Col.mn. one year. m M Hlf Column, ono year - 00 Ono Column, ono yaw ,u0 90 Leval advertlaemeou ton eenti pot lino oaeh ta onion. Marriage aad dratb notloea gratia. All blUe for yearly adrertlMin'Ma oollortod ana, tarly. Tamiorary adTortlMmcnta must bo paid H dvauee. Job work caab on dallrory. ts poWliticd overy Wodnndaj, by J. S. WCNK. OiUoaln Smsarbnugb Co.'a Building KLM BTRBBT, TIONK8TA, Pa, Terms, ... II.SO prYr, Vo tnbdertpttonn kcIt4 for I shorter perioel thsn Hiiro moinha. Onrrwnr aolliMtoil from all nana of the eoniitry. No notice will bo takea eraaonjnioiii orjniFioin. VOL. XX. NO. 40. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1888. S1.50 PER ANNUM. n H M vw 7 ii l ii v ii v j ii y ii V li i Y 1 . . Tho St. John, N. Ii., Olnbt now open ly advocates immediate annexation ol Canada to tho United States. The .largest amount of land held In the Vnitcd States by an alien corporation is t lint owned by tho Holland Company, In New Mexico. It embraces 4,500,000 acres. 1 Unptain All crt 8. Fillsbury, of Ilock land, Mo., who was recently grantel a cortiflcato by the United State? Hoard of Inspectors to command a steamboat, is the youngest Captain In the service, be ing otdy twenty-three years of ago. There are wholo towns in Germany that do little else but make dolls for American children. They are mostly simple country folk. England's children spend ulmo-t 1,000,000 for French and German dolls, and America's children al most double that. The:etsa touch of pathos in the case of Margaret Cainc, who has been con victed o drunkenness 231 times in vari ous London polico courts. The woman's latest exploit was to turn up very drunk tit a police station, and to begin singing "Home, Sweet Home.'' There are fourteen thousand acres of vineyards along the Hudson river valley, and tho average yield is four tons to the acre. At !) cents per pound th!s means f 240 per a- re to the grower. Some grow larger crops than this average, and real ize $.100 per acre in sales. The United States Postal Improvement 'Association, which has just been formed, desiies the reissue of fractional currency for use in the mails, the abolition of pos tal notes, the issue of postal orders for small sums at reduced rates, and the pas age of laws of special interest to farmers and fruit-growers. An accommodation train in service on the Omaha road between St. Paul and Stillwater is known among railroad men as tho hospital train, from the fact that every engineer who has run on tho train forso.eral years post has either had a stroke of paralysis whi'e at Hie trottle or been injured in some way. The extension of the oyster trade in juance during the last ten years is re gurded as ono of the most extraordinary gastronomic features of the times. Dur ing the last yearho bed have produced imo,000,000 oysters, ten times mora than in 1376. Tho working classes have their oysters daily, and every wine shop, even in the poorest quarters, has its oys ter stand outside. Tho youngest racing syndicate in the .world is that known as D. J. McCarthy A- Brother. The senior member of the firm is 18 years old, the junior member but a little over 10. They belong in San Francisco and own C. H. Todd, t lie horse whVh won the American Derby at Chi cago last spring and brought nearly $14,000 into the pockets of the tenior member by so doing. Tho United States has been, without doubt, the mo t prolific of all countries in the world in tho issue of postage stamps, having put forth over 500 differ ent varieties altogether. The number of distinct varieties issued by the various (ioveruments throughout the world is vnrously estimated, but 5,000 would probably cover the wholo. Quite a nura- bcr of new issues have appeared the past year. Advices from the gold mining regions of 'Georgia, indicate a marked revival in gold mining entcrpiises. A syndicate of Knglish capitalists has just bought 2,000 acres of gold mining property near Gainesville, and w ill construct a 10 mile canal aud erect stamp mills. New Or leans capitalists havo ulso purchased an extensive tract near Canton, aud will engage in gold mining on an extensive scale. There are more than $1,000,000 in the savings banks of Massachusetts for which there are no known owners. A law passe i by tho last Legislature requires . every bank to print annually a list of de- Us fticu have remained untouched iwcnty years. One Boston bank, tho rovim ial Institution for Savings, has $148,000 of such deposits, divided among 280 depositors. The Five Cent Saving Hank has $41), 000 credited to 807 de positors, from whom nothing has been , heard for over two decades. In lough, mountainous districts of New York, Pennsylvania and some of the Eastern States, bears have never been entirely exterminated. Lately they have greatly increased in numbers. Kither the presence of winter, or, more likely, scarcity of water in their mountain homes, has emboldened them to come down and invade the settle ments. Several such cases have lately been reported in central Pennsylvania. A wounded bear is a dangerous customer for one man to deal with. Though they seem to move clumsily, they get around in altogether too lively a fashion for safety, if one meets them a'one. But wherever bears show themselves old guns will be burnished up and a general hunt , : made, until they are destroyed or veil bark. THE WINOINO noun. "71 i better fo do the mol trtfinn thing in the world than to consider a half hour a trifle.nUoethe'i Spruteht in JVosa. Stay notl Pans notl The moon Is near; The sun has climbed the height I Ht ay not nor fear I I Follow till thv work bo donst On, ever on ! Mo suinmor beam shall scorch thee, Nor sudden wave o'erwbelm thee, Till thy task be endod. On, ever on ! Through tho mist and through tho night, Through the blinding morning light, By elements befriended, Till thy work be done. Thou wouldat sail the sea, Tho mountain wouldst thou scale, Upon the starry worlds Exhaust thy vision frail, Stay not for the storm And stay not for tho hour, A greater master yet Holds thoe in his power. The moon is here, Thy work undone. The end draws near Kre thou hast won. Conquer Death, for he Is weak And the gathering days are strong! Time to struggle, time to seek While the untired moments throng Close about thee: sefzethe flrstl Then to thee the second turns, And the third is all thine own; Thine the light and thine the strength, Thine the throne! Mr. Fields, in Century. BIG JiEX AXIM'HARLEY. Were we afraid of Big lien? Well, yes, to a certain limit. There were live of us in a bit of cabin out in the silver country, and Iiig Hen was boss of the ranch for several reasons. First and foremost, ho was too much for any one of us single handed, und. secondly, he had many good points about him. While he was overbearing and brutal at times, he was tho bes't miner in the party, and no bad luck could d scourage him. With any one else as boss we should have scnttered at once, for tho winter was coming on and wo had been down on our luck all the .all. "Break up? Hunt for luck?" sneered Big Ben whenever anything was said about abandoning our claim. "Well, you are a lot of coyotes a cussed bad lot. You haven't got the pluck of a sick wolf. I'd like to sec some of you walk off and leave me in the lurch, yes, I would. Ml turn to and lick the hull crowd out of your boots if I hear another growl, ' Dig Ben insulted us a dozen times n day, and on three or four occasions he laid hands on us in a voilcnt way, but somehow we stuck there. As 1 told you, he was a practical miner, the hardest worker in t he lot, and we leaned on him in spile of the fact that we hated him. Wo could have shot him down in some of the quarrels, and the verdict would have been: "Served him r glit!" but we knew that ho had a good heait down in his bosom, and the hand which clutched knife or pistol was alwavs restraimed. One afternoon, while I was minding the cabin and the other men were at work in the tunnel or shaft, a stranger entered. He had come up from the Forks, three miles away. Ue was a boy of sixteen or thereabouts, with a girl's voice and shyness, nud he was hungry and in rags. It was bitter cold, and yet his clothing was of tho thinnest kind, and he hud hungered so long that he was hardly more than aslindow. I welcomed and fed and warmed him, and then ho told me that his name was Charley Bland, and that he had wandered out there to look fur his brother .1 nines, from whom he had received no word for two or three years. They were orphans, and both had been bound to farmers in Illi nois. Botli had been ill used, and Charley had finally followed James's ex ample in running away. This boy had been knocking around' the silver camps for six months, sometimes meeting friends and sometimes treated like a dog, and he had found no trace of his bi other. Koine one down at the gulch it was a cruel thing to do had told him that James was at our run p, and he had periled his life to come up there and see. On that day, as I shall never forget, there was a loot of snow on the ground, a blizzard racing, and the thermometer marked ten degrees below zero. The boy was asleep when the men re turned from the shaft. Big Ben was out of sorts at the way things had been going, and no sooner did he see aud hear tho lad than he rail' d out : "lie can't stay here uuoiher hour. We don't run a poor-house, und we let no baby-faced swindler cat our hard-earned provisions." "I ll work. I'll work as hard as ever I can," protested the boy wiih a sob in his throat. "There's no work for you. You've got to move on to the camp above." ! I he lour of us protested in chorus, and we took such a firm stand that deadly weapons were drawn, and would have been used but for the action of the boy. He was terribly frightened over the row he had I 'en the innocent cause of, and as the lour of us had our pistols leveled at Big lieu, and meant to shoot if he moved a foot, the boy opened the cabin door aud glided out into the dark and bitter night with the silenco and swiftness of a shadow. "You uro his murderer," wo paid to Big Ben, as we lowered our weapons. and he growled : "If we took in every straccler wo sho.ild be crowded out of house and home before New Year's. What is it to us whether he lives or dies." I think he felt conscience stricken within the hour, however, as he went to the door and acted as if lie hoped to see the hid standing outside. The boy bad been gone half an hour before we fully realized what his going meant, and then two of ns went out with the lantern and 1 searched and called for him. The snow was being whirled about in a furious manner, and the wind was rising to a gale, and the bitter cold drove us back after a quarter of an hour. It was true that we had 1 ttle enough to eat, and that we were cramped in our cabin, but the idea of driving that pale-faced , orphan boy out to freeze was something 1 we could not get over. It was just the thing needed to set us up in rebellion against our boss, and that night we threw off the yoke and gave it to Big Ben right and left. We had two or three, rows- before -.becUirne.., and all turned in sulky and indignant. Whew I But what a night that was I Tho cold increased until the rocks were split, and the wind roared until ourcabin threatened to topple over at every blast. At midnight Big lien crept carefully out of his bed and opened the door, ai d then I almost forgave him for his brutality. Conscience had been at work, and his heart was touched. Ho hoped to lind tho boy crouched on the threshold, and I heard him sigh and mutter to himself ns he shut the door and returned to his blankets. The strongest man in our party, clad as we were for the winter, could not have stood against the blizzard half an hour, and I fell asleep to die un of finding poor Charley's frozen corps on the trail leading down to the Forks, and of his big blue eyes being wide open and staring at me in a reproachful way. For breakfast next morning we had some canned meat opened u new can from our slim store. We thawed it out, and all ate our full shares, and were on the point of starting out to search for the boy when one of the men was taken ill. Inside of half an hour all of us wero down with fains and cramps, and it was evident that we had been poisoned by the meat. AVe had no antidote of any sort, and one after another went to bed to suffer the most ngoniziag pains and to lose consciousness. Big lien was the hardest hit of nil, while I, perhaps, suf fered the least. That is, while all the others raved and shouted and lost their senses, I was all tho timo dimly con scious of everything going on." The blizzard was still raging, and tho ther mometer was marking a still lower de gree when the door opened and Charley walked in. I saw him, but 1 was flighty, aim it seemerl to me that lie was dead. I remember his looking down upon eachof us in a strange, scared way, and starting to retreat when one of the men shouted a louder curse. I was the first to come back to life, as it were, and that was twenty-four hours after being first taken. Tho pains were gone as I opened my eyes, but I was weak and wretched, like one just over a terrible fever. The boy Charley was standing before me as I opened my eyes, and he bent down and whispered : "Y'ou have all been terribly sick, and I think one man is dead. Can you eat something?" I did feel a bit hungry, and I bad no sooner signified it than lie came to me with a bowl of btoth. As I afterward learned, the stoim had driven a couple ot nures to seeK sneitcr at the aoor, una he had secured both of thorn. He did not know the cause of our sickness, but suspe. ted some calamity, and was pre pared to feed us as soon ns wo could eat. It seemed that when Big Hen drove him out he tumbled into the ravine a quarter of a mile away, and he found shelter under a ledge. How he kept from freez ing to death that night heaven only knows. Indeed, heaven, preserved him. It froze our water pail solid when stand ing within six feet of the fire, and there he was, out in the cold in a threadbare suit. When morning came he returned to the cabin to make one more appeal. He found us suffering and out of our minds, and the tire about gone out. Had it not been for him we should have frozen as stiff as pokers, for on that day it was thirty-one degrees below zero all day long, and it went down to almost forty decrees. The boy kept up arousing fire, dressed his rabbits for the soup, and all day and all night long he kept forcing strong coffee down our throats. That doi.btless helped us to pull through, or at least four of us. The other man, whose nanio was Hale, had his teeth firmly clenched, and from the way his features were dis torted and his limbs drawn up it was evident that he died in great agony. In a couple of h iurs I was able to be up and assist Charley in caring for the others, but it was far into the nwht before the last man could use his tongue in a sensible manner. It was Big Hon, and when consciousness returned and ho saw the white faced boy bending over him the great t rant whispered: "Ayo! 'I he corpse of the lad has risen up to confiont and accuse mcl It was a cruel thing I did to drive him out, and the Lord will never forgive me for it!" While out of danger we were yet weak and almost helpless, and none of us could attend the fire or do a bit of cooking for nearly a week. The wholo thing de volved upon the boy, and no one could have done better, lie was cook, nurse, doctor and protector all in one. He got three more hares aud a couple of birds, and 1 don't believe u spoonful of tho broth went down his own throat. Well, I for one had been watching Big Ben to see what he would do. The first moment ho was able to sit up h called Charley aud pulled the frail little fellow down on his breast, saying: "If you'll only forgive me I'll pray to the Lord to do the same. I'm rough and witked, but to turn a lad like you out o' doors on siuh a uight as that wasn't me at nil. Old iNi I a n must have had posses-ion of me." That gre:it big fellow cried like a child, and Charley cried with him, and I might as well own up th it we all cried. Whut made it the more solemu was the fact t hut we had a corpse at tho door. When it was known that Hule was dead, none of the other four of us could lil t a hand. How the boy got the bodv out of doors 1 never could understand, but get it out he did, and it was three long months before we could give it Christ inn burial. On the morning when we all got out of bed feeling pietty strong again, Charley went to bed with a fever.aud before noon was raving craiy. I tell you it was awful ! to hear him cry out every few minutes in I his delirium: ' "Oh, Hen, don't drive me out. I'll! work as hard as I can !" Every cry went through the big fellow like a bullet. He nursed and soothed the poor boy with all the tenderness he could command, and two or three times carried him about in his arms as a father would his ailing babe. There was a doc tor at the Forks, and after dinner U'e Ben braved the blizz.aad and made the trip down and back. The doctor could not be iudu edto return with him. owing to the cold, but he sent some medicine. Poor Charley was beyond human aid, however. He raved through the afternoon aud night, and next morning was siruck with death. His mind came bark to him at the last, and as we stood over him he calmly said : "I know I'm going to die, but I'm not afraid. I'll sec father and mother in heaven, and perhaps Brother .lames is there, to." """ W'niJc we all felt bad enough, Big Pen was completely broken down. ""lib"' got down on his knees and begged Charley to forgivo him, and I never saw a man feel the bitterness of an act as he did. "Yes, I'll forgive you, replied the boy, "and if you pray to God, He'll forgive, too. Has it come night so soon again?" "No, my child," answered one of the men. "Hut I can't see any of you any more. Good-by. Let me take your hand, for " And with that ho breathed his last, and there were two to rest in the snow until spring came. Did you ever hear of "Charley's Gulch;" Yes, of course you have, and if you have passed that woy you have seen the boy s grave. The head board contains only the name cut deep by Big Hen's knife but tho story of the boy's heroism has been told in every mining camp in Nevada, and it has never been told without bringing moist ure to the cyea of all listeners. A'cit York Hun. HEALTH HINTS. In some forms of headache a towel or a napkin, wrung out in hot water, as hot as can bo borne, and wound around the head, affords relief. Ex-Secretary Holcomb, of the Ameri can Legation at Pckin, Bays that out of the 4()O,00D,O00 inhabitants of the Chinese Empire fully :)(, 000,000 spend less than $1.50 a month for food. "Granny," tho famous sea anemone of tho Edinburg Botanical Gardens, is dead. It was fed with half a mussel, dropped onco a fortnight into the mem braucous csophagal tube which did duty for a month. The common practice of raising faint ing persons to a sitting or upright posi tion is often sufficient to destroy the spark of life which remains. The death of un eminent English Statesman a short time ago gave opportunity to the Coroner for emphasizing this fact, and of point ing out how much more reasonable and sound it is to keep such persons in the prone position while restoratives and local means are adopted to enable them, if possible, to regain consciousness. Endurance of the Japanese. When ono rejects that there is never a firo which would fill a half-bushel measure; that tho Japancso wear no woolen garments, and only sandals or clogs on their feet; that the Winters are cold enough to make ice two or three inches thick, and the ground is often white with snow, one wonders how they live, writes a correspondent from Japan to tlio Chicago Miil. There seems to be something peculiar in the physical make up of tho Japanese, us well as in their plants, which enables them to endure safely great cold. I am told that plants which in America are killed by Autumn frosts here live and bloom in the midst of snow, and when tho thermometer has gone much below the freezing poi.it. Certainly tho people hnve wonderful powers of endurance if their sensations are as ours are. Every Japanese, high or low, takes his hot bath every night. He jumps into a vat of water heated from 100 to 115 de grees and enjoys the boil, and stands f"r hours up to his waist in cold, mountain torreuts, and it. is said will break the Ice in Winter and work up to his neck in immersion, and seems to feel no ill effects from it. He is certainly a wonderful animal, and ethnological data must yet be furnished to convince me that he il not indigenous to the soil he lives on. Chinese Punishment. The Chinese penal Code provides that when an unskillful physician, in adminis tering medicines or using the acupunc ture needle, proceeds contrary to tho established forms and thereby causes the death of a patient, the magistrate shall cull in other physiciuus to examine the medicine or- the wound. If it appear that the injury done was unintentional, tho practitioner shall then bo treated ac cording to the statute for accidental homicides, and shall not bo allowed any longer to practice medicine. But if he have designedly departed from tho estab lished forms, and has practiced deceit in his attempts to cure the malady in or der to guiu property, then according to its amount, he shall bo treated as a thief; and if death en'iues from his malpractice, then for having thus used medicine with intent to kill, ho s!iall be beheaded. There appears to bo nothing in the "ce lestial" code nnsworing to the laws of "barbarian'' nations concerning civil damages recoverable by parties made to suffer by "unintentional" malpractice. Tlio Origin of Beer. Ale was the sole title of malt liquor until the reign of Henry YJIL, up to which time the employment of iioj.s as an ingredient In the beverage was un known in England. In the" year 1524, or thereabouts, the use of hops was intro duced from Germany, and lo distinguish thu new kind of malt liquor from the old, the German name bier was adopted, and, with au iutinitesimal change of spelling, became part of our iaiiguaie. Germany, in truth, is tho native laud of beer, and nowhere iu tho world is it treated with such special honor. Iii Germany the ! drinking of beer is not, as with us, a j mere means of carnal refreshment, but, : particularly among the students of the universities, is elovated to the dignity of a cult, amilianty w ith whose ritual is ' deemed an essential branch of a liberal education. lb tltVK Two Great Foreign Armies, A gentleman publishes the following comparative statement in a Siuthumpton journal, Rays London "Truth. It is clearly put and worthy of recollection: BRITISH AKMV. Nuintier of troops, Ids, (KM, cost, ils, a.rj.uuu. held marshal. OEECMAn ARMY. dumber ot troops, 4'J8,1"4; cost, bou.iOJ. 'i tlel I marshals (Count Molrko and the frown I'rinee.) rl general. "tti lauU'uant-gua- 1 17 iiih or-euulUi. 21U coluuels. 21U lieuleuant-colo neln. si majors. 41 generals. 1 r7 luutfiiant gen f-rals. is-i major-generals. JO colouola. l.'iO jiouluuant-colo-nela. 1.1. 'i0 uiuj'irs. 400 broker, w'l.ueu, tin pot, Holen-le-gel or otli. i wise usi J hal -'; v Ki-iirru!11. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Recipes. Graham Griddle Cakes. One pint of graham flour into which has been well mixed two teaspoonfuls of baking pow jJCi' ,;n'Ia halfteaspoonful of salt; make a thin batter with sweet mTlk'ari"iI cook in thin cakes on a aoapstonc griddle. Coiin Bread Without Ehud. Take two cups of corn meal, one tup of wheat flour, one half cup molasses, one tea spoonful soda and a little knit, and sour milk enough to make a batter that will run easily, pour in a pan about three or four inches in depth and bake one half hour. Potato Chowdkr. Large potatoes, six; onion, one; milk, one quart; butter, one tablespoon ; salt pork, two ounces; egg, one. Cut the pork in small pieces and fry, add potatoes and onion sliced; ! cover w.th boiling water and cook till I potatoes are tender; add the milk scalded, and the seasoning. The last thing add I the egg beaten light, j Corn Sorp. One can sweet corn, one I pint and a half of milk: flour, one table spoon ; butter, one tablespoon ; egg, one; salt, one teaspoon; celery, one sprig: pepper. Heat the sweet corn and celery1 slowly in the milk till it reaches the boiling point. Hub butter and Hour to gether ahd add to the milk, then the salt and pepper. Beat the egg and pour it into tho tureen, strain the soup aud pour upon it. Graham Muffins. Ono and a half cups of graham flour; wheat flour, one half cup: milk, one cup; baking pow der, one and a half teaspoons; salt, one half teaspoon; sugar, one-fourth teacup. Put the graham flour into the mixing bowl. Mix the remainder of the' dry in gredients in the sieve and sift. Pour the milk on to the dry ingredients, nnd stir well. Beat the egg and cut it in. Grease hot gem pans and fill. Bako iu quick oven. Custard Pie. Line a deep plato with pie-crust made as preferred with butter or lard, or both. Huild up the edge a little, lo three well-beaten eggs, rc- serving the white of one, odd four table 1 spoons sugar, one of flour, and a pinch of salt, and milk to fill the crust, on which nutmeg should be grated. Hake in a moderately hot oven, tryinsr it with a fork from time to time. When no i longer "milky," teinove from oven, nnd after it has cooled a little, cover with a i meringue made by whipping the white of egg that was reserved with one tea ; spoon sugar and a bit of essence lemon. Brown lightly. : Broiled Chicken. Cover it with I boiling water; lot it boil once, then 1 draw to one side of the range and leave : it to simmer an hour. Kemove the scum, ! which will discolor the fowl if allowed to remain. The slow boiling makes it ten ' der. When done servo with egg sauce ' in n sauce boat, and use the broth to I make soup for dinner. The egg sauce is I made as follows: Cream an ounce of ' butter; add to it ono tablespnonful of I dry flour, a saltspoonful of salt aud half i a saltspoonful of white pepper (black I pepper spoils its color). Mir it briskly and add half a pint of the chicken brot h. i Divide an ounce of butter into little i balls, roll them in flour and add them i one at a time; stir constantly, and enre should be exercised not to allow the same to brown or discolor. Chop three cold, hard-boiled eggs and add them to : the sauce before serving. j Useful Hints. I Never leave the cover off the tea canis ter. Use newspapers to polish window ! glass and mirrors. . Flour should nlways be sifted just be ; fore you wish to use it. j Salts of lemon will take spots out of linen and also remove stains from wood. ' A spoonful of fine salt or horse-radish will keep a pan of milk sweet for several days. Carpets will look much brighter nfter sweeping if wiped off with a dump cloth. White and pale shades of paint may bo beautifully cleaned by using whiting iu the water. Do not leave any tomatoes in tho bot tom of a tin can, but pour them into an earthen bowl till you want them. This applies to nearly all tanned vegetables. Kerosene will brighten silver, but an easy way to keep bright the spoons and forks iu daily use is to leave them in strong borax water for several hours. The water should bo boiling hot when the silver is put in. A pie that is properly baked will slip I from the tin with careful handling, and j if placed on a wire frame where the air 1 has access to the bottom it will cool I without becoming moist, and when ready to be served it can bo transferred to a plate. I One of Gw? C7 r readers has excel- j lent success in cutting glass by holding it under water and cutting it with a pair of large scissors. One of the family pa pers says glass may be cut with any hard tool, like a chisel, for instance, if kept 1 constantly wet with camphor dissolved 1 in spirits of turpentine. (7.i t'nv. j Cleverly Caught. Hero is a good story of tho redoubta ble Master of Bulliol. Not long ago an under-gruduato of that college iost a roll of bank notes. He had the numbers and wisely told Mr. Jowett of his losH. "(Jive ine the numbers and say nothing about it to uuy one," said the Master, who then sent tho numbers lo the bank teller with a hint not to disclose them. Next day the Oxford boardings were cov ered with posters proclaiming the loss, but giving the wrong number. The thief fell into the trap and presented one of the notes at the bank, with the prompt result that ho was arrested That undergraduate has recoveied all his notes and thinks that Mr. Jowett ought to have been a detective. l.m,ilon l.iit. An Unexplored Country. There are few regions more didicult to travel over than unsettled portions of the Puget Sound basin, the timber is sohc iv y and the undergrowth so dt-u-o. I lai cs less than ten miles uiurt uro of en -ciai -ated as completely us if seveiul hundred miles of opeu country Vy bei ween them. In fact little is geneial y know.i con cerning the country outside of Hie (.u ernment . turvevs.-- i SOME OLD-TIME SONGS. TUNES THAIWIHE POPULAR DUR ING THE WAR AND BINCB. Hontlmental Sonus of the Minstrels Favorite War Tnnce on Both Hides Later Compositions. How many of the popular songs of twenty years ago can the old boys of to-day recall? How many of the old melodies that thrilled them in the days of their hot youth have found an abiding place in their memory? The evolution of the popular song presents a striking illustrat'on of the survival of the un fittest. The great sentimental success of the unti war period was undoubtedly "Hen Holt." The untimely death of something lovable and beautiful was the unusual theme of the sentimental song of that period, though it varied occasion ally in order to picture the heart havoc caused by the separation of slave-lovers. "Hen Holt" was n splendid illustration of the prevailing theme. Hwashummed, whistled, sung and played on musical in struments for more than a decade. It was immensely popular with the young ladies, many -of whom are now grand mothers. "Sweet Alice" was shrined in every sentimental female's heart, and the question of the day was: Don't you rememlier sweet Alice, Ben Bolt, Kweet Alice with hair so brown? She wept with delight when you gave her a smile And trembled with fear at your frown. Sharing "Ben Holt's" popularity dur ing tho same period were two songs widely sung by Dan Emmett, Dan Byrant and other minstrels. These were "Nellie Gray'' und ", !-usannuhl" both depicting the sufferings of slave-lovers. "Nellie Gray" swept the country like a cyclone: My charming Nellie Gray, They have taken you away, Ami I'll never see my darling any more. w as heard on every side and voiced by every tongue. "O, dear Susaunnh!" was built more in the comic way, and the request, "Don't you cry for me," was 1 used on tho consoling fact that "I'm going to Alabama with the banjo on my knee." The pessimistic strain in which tho fate of a certain "old nigger," popu larly known as "Uncle Ned," was be moaned was well known before "Nellie Gray" or "Susannah" nppeared. Dan Emmett's "Dixie" und Foster's "Swuneo Kiver" hnve proven the most prominent of the ante-w ar melodies. , A sentimental ballad railed "Loiena" was a great favor ite in the '00s, and lor 80 years previous the appearance and philosophy of "Old Hosiu tho Bow"was known to every one. A state of warf ire has always proved conductive to song. The flourishing condition of minstrelsy in ages past was duo largely to the warlike and adventur ous spirit of the times. During the civil war both sides were proliffc in song-making. The South made the first great hit with Randall s "Maryland, .My Maryland." The "Bonnie Blue Flag'' was tho Southern national air and was to the boys in gray what "Y'ankee Doodle" was to tho boys in blue. The Southern women ardently took it up, and through every city rang tho chorus: Hurrah I Hurrah! for Southern rights of war. Hurrah! for the Bonnie blue Flag that bears the single star. Of the sentimental songs of the war period the most popular were "Fairy Bell," "Annie of tho Dell," "Just Before the Hattlo, Mother," "Toll the Bell for I ovely Noll," and "When This Cruel War is Over." In the North. "Wait for the Wagon" and "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Hoys are Marching" hail a great success during the same period, and otheis that ran riot through camp and fireside weic "Mary Blane," "eld Cabin Home,'-"Fair, Fair with Go'den Hair," and "Daisy Dean." Who has forgotten "Daisy Dean" and its wistful ( bonis? None knew thee but to love thee, Thou dear one of my heart, Thy memory is ever fresh and green; The wild flowers may wither And fond ht-artsbe broken, Still 1 love tine, my'dui li ig. Daisy Dean. A beautiful song, truly pathetic, ob tained great popularity iu both North and South during the war. Th's was Florence Percy's "Hock Me to Sleep, Mother." The South produce I two war songs that evince genuine poetic talent, and have been accorded unstinted prai-e by the critics. They are the ''Conquered Banner" and "All tju'et Along the Po tomac To-night,'' tl.e first named by Father liyanuud the last by I ainar Foun taino. Ono of the most pathetic poems that appeared during the war was "Somebody's Darling. The circus clow ii was the great promulgator of popular music during and ju-t after the war. lie was then in the full blu.e of his g'oi v. Sim e then the blaze hits degenerated to a spark, und that is threatening to go n::i. Hut twenty years ago he was the b gu" -t attrac tion in the ring, and li s loulss !d like shares in a wild cat mining scheme. The war songs were succeeded by whit might be termed the Billyenieiso i.ici epoch. These were the days when the "Iiig Sunflower'' and " ove Among the Hoses'' were epidemic. The agile Bil'y was the pioneer of the genteel song imd dance business, ami whci he sang 1 feel ju .t as happy as a bi' suullowei That no Isaucl Ih'uIs tothc. breeze. Aud my heart is as light as the wiull!i it blown The leaves from otr the trces-es. he was pronounced unapproachable, of the same date is that ridic ulous composi tion: "Captain Jinks of the Hor-ii Murines. " YV. II. I ingard brought it over from I ondon nnd first sunk it iu li s act of lightning i Images, und while Ii" maintained intimate le'ations with "( a tain Jinks'' he prospered. I en he attempted something higher he n t into trouble. "Put Malloy," "The ( harming Young Man on the Flying Trapeze," "The Dark Girl Dressed in Hli.e." "Tho Fellow That Looks l.ie Me," "In the Howery," were widely su g at the time. In the early ',0s the Ii; successes w ere "Little Fraud," "I I 'eel So Awful .loll v When the Hand Ben ins ! to I I, iv, '' "Champagne I barley," "'I he I Muil gan Guards," "The Cottage by the Sea,' "! illarncv." "Good live, Charley," Ten 'Ihousiind Miles Away," and .'ennie the I'ride cf Kibhtre." Tie n came ",lv i,H, "Miolling on lie i-aiid ," and since then the ouautity h:cs increased aud the quality decreased iu t he same i;il ;o. - I 7 e io Jribiini: Thcie is a big difference between get I ill:: on well in lite aud ti lting well on iu lite. "1 LOVE THEE, L.IFB." I love thee, love thee, life! I fain would dwell with thee thy mnch-love.1 guest. ih fold me nearer to thy pulsing breast ; That I may feel thy heart-beata throb in mine, - - . - - Soliold'ing it in unison with thine, I love thee, love thee, life! Oh. hold me closer in thy strong embrace, t'plift me, lie ir me onward In thy race, Impart to me thy soul's exulting power To tie mine heritage, mine earthly dower. I love thee, love thee, life) I fain would wear thy brightness in my fac e. Oh, give to me thine animating grace, Inspire me, thrill me, love me in return, It is thy noblest gifts for which I yearn. I love thee, love thee, life! Bear not so swiftly toward my journey 'sen. 1 : For oh, I dread to part with thee, my friend ! Surround me with thy warm, entrancing breath, And leave me not too soon alone with death Inter-Ocean. HUMOR OF THE DAY. Don't count your chickens before the hatchet falls. A man may be opposed to capital punishment and yet in favor of hanging up his grocer. Bntnn Courier. An oculist doesn't want an eye for an eye, and a dentist doesn't want a tooth for a tooth. They want . Life. Did you ever see a doctor kick a banana peel off the sidewalk or tell au acquaintance that he was sitting in a draught? About the most miserable man in the world is the one who is expected to laugh at the joke of a story he has heard before. Nebraska S ate Journal. "We've won your suit," the lawyer said. And gleefully rubbed his pate, "And what are your charges, sirf" they said; "Oh, merely the saved e.-tute!" Oil City Derrick.. They tell of a young Lincoln man that he is so able a contortionist that he can Bee without dilliculty the bald spot on the back of his head. Lincoln (AiiJ.) Journal. Some musicians are fond of speaking of tho "colors" of tho tones of various musical instruments. We wonder if they have noticed that the cornet is always "blewi" Burlin'jton Free I'res. A violinist says that it is not the bow arm that gets tired, but the tips of tho fingers. We always supposed that it was the man who was compelled to listen to the violiu playing. Y rrUtvwn Herald. "What is the cause of that red spot on the end of your nose, Blobsoni" asked Popin.ay, slyly. "That, sir," replied Blobson, "is a solar spot. I was out in the hot sun all the summer." Burlington Free Prett. A New York firm left a 1,000-pound boiler out of doors overnight and in the morning it was gone. The only thing that can safely be left out over uight in New York is a six-story building. Omaha World. Wife "What under the sun are you doing?" Husband "Trying to tie this string around my linger." W ife "Why, I did not ask you to do any errand." Husband "No; this string is to remind me that I have nothing to remember to-day." Omaha )Vorld. The Canse of the Glacial Period. Tho ocean equalizes the earth's tem perature. How delicately balanced the forces of nature are as to glaciers may be seen in tho fact that there havo been five periods of . advance aud retreat in Switzerland since lsot). Wero. tbj Sahara desert to bo inundated, it might disastrously cluiugc the climate of cen tral Europe. The orbit of tho earth is an ellipse; its longer diameter being ii, 000, 000 miles moie than its shorter. The sun is in one fo.i of this ellipse; the earth's summer solstice is fully seveu days longer than the winter. Tho present is favorable to glaciutton in the southern hemisphere. There should be an increase of glaciers each 21,000 years, due to the earth's changing relations to the sun. Special epochs have been 200,000, 750,000 and 850,000 years ago, aud similar epochs are sxpected 500,000, 800,000 and 1100,000 years to come, .'roll's theory rests ou hypotheses and assumptions. Ho takes the winds and ocean currents for stable quantities. But the Gulf Stream fifty miles wide, 1,000 feet deep, and which moves four miles an hour and the trade winds need be to accounted for. The southeast trade winds predominate. Why! Because the southern hemisphere is cooler, But why is it cooler? The ex tent and depth of southern oceans add power to the winds in that hemisphere. While tho trade winds are steady but not strong, they are sometimes interrup ted by terrible monsoons. Not all cold seas are favorable to glaciation; those in the far North lack moisture. The weak point in Mr. ("roll's theory is his failure to satisfactorily account for the absorption, retention and distribu tion of beat received from the sun. Why do clouds prevcut frost I Why does heat fiass into glass easily (as into a greea louse) umi not so easily escape f The equator is not so hot, nor the arctic region so cold as they ought to be according to the heat received from the sun. The dif ference between the equator aud tho coldest point on parallel 07 (where the mean temperature in January is Mi de gress below zerol, which ought to be 172 degree , is but about 75 degrees. We do not know what caused the glaciers, but gla iu'ists are moie concerned w ith the facts of glaciation. 1'rof. 'riiht of Uirrarl. ' The Value of a Whale. The ow ners of the b erk Staiuboul have brought suit in the I'nited States Dis trict Court against t lie I'aeilie Steam Whaling Compnuy, owner of the bark Wuuderei, to iccovcr $7,000 for the loss of a whale. Plaintiffs claim tint they hud harpooned the whale, which there upon kwu u under a held of ice and came to the sort ice a mile away, und that the crew of l he Wanderer then captured the same animal, and, iu ur.lcr to give a shadow o! claim, substituted their own harpoon for tliat of delcndant. It is ilaimed that for forty yems it had been the recogni ed custom that when a crew had once harpooned a whale it wus entitled to the full ownership of the inttnal. S' .t'v i'.'iK.-i .