RATES OF ADVEWTI81IIO. On Sahara, tack, lm-rtlta..'7.?... 1 On. Square, ooo Inch, ooo montk One Square, one Incn, thre montk... - Ono Square, one Inch, ono year U Two Sqnarri, one year Quarter Column, one year . M Half Column, on year On Column, on year ....10 Isai adTrtlBCsu tan enrta per Ua ack lax erUon. MarrUf tad deetk notice. paUa. AS Wile for yearly edTertl..t eolletd mta. tarty. Temporary adTertleememie bum k. paid 1 ednne. Jsk work-caeh ra delivery. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN It published every YVednctdar, by J. E. WENK. Old 3a In Bmearbaugh & Co.'a Building ELM STREET, TIONMTA, r. Terms. tl. BO per Year. No mtiKrlptlom received for a Ihorttr period than thrre month. Oirrt-onan-. ollelted from til part of the country. No nolle will b laltou of anonymou. na-tiuunlcatlons. Forest PUBLICAN VOL. XXI. NO. 20. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 12, 1888. S1.50 TER ANNUM. There aro 4l,000 donf mutes in this country who arc votcri. Morton is older than Harrison by nlno years; and Thiirmun U twenty-three years older thnu Cleveland. It Is predicted Hint tlr? iron product of Washington Territory will soon ex ceed t hut of Pennsylvania. Admiral Luce, iua public speech, has railed atlcution to the pleasing, net that lempernnce princinles rulu in the Ameri can Navy now as novor before After a wnrm contest, Miss Klin I.eben has been elected Superintendent of City Schools In Portland, Oregon, and will roeoivo $3000 just like a man. Sunday-schools aro increasing rapidly in this country. I nst year the American unday-school I'nion organized 1.102, with GI)2;i teachers and 51, 12:) scholar. Jtoccnt statistics show a total of nbotit five hundred church members within the walls of Peking, China, connected with the Avo Protestant missions in that city. Tho Gniftlnr for lSS, just Is- -mcd gives California a population at tho present time of over 1,10,000, nearly vico tho population of 1-80, according the official census. Congressman Cox figures up our popu ion In 131)0 at til,? I'i.Ol) ), while .Mr. kiuson sots it at C4,"iO.,ooo. Tho st ambitious American ought to ba ! ircly willing to split tho dilTerenco. Three public spirited citizens of rcago have aireed to purchase old t Dearborn, tho ancient relic of the , ami proo;it it to tho city if tho Mpal authorities will vcmovo it to rk and have it properly cared for. I.o papor money of Peru, fays tho i ionati Emnirer, is valueless, and at time $2000 a yard was charged for CO in theso depreciated bills. You 100 a day for board at tho hotel. 1 tho Govorument tries to keep tho y in circulation. ,0 ancestial homo of tho Washing family in Northamptonshire, Eng I, is to be so'.d. The estate contain i acres, and was granted to Lawrence a hington in till. His son, Law uc.e, emigrated to Virginia, and was cueral George Washington's ancestor. '! isallogcd that recently in Nagpiro, 'ia, a boy of sixteen was offered a i liico to tho gols, in accordance with superstition that human sacrifice) sed a bountiful harvest. The head is severe! from tho b d , and offered goddess, wh'lo tho body was ton ' I to a god. Aflor natural gas natural glass rannol much of a surprise, and a vein of it if i orted from Butler, Ca., at a depth 817 feet. The pieces aro round, How, very rough in the mid l'e, liavoa -ileii appearance, and aro supposed to :n from the fusing of tho saudy soil . some intense heat. Tho New York Miil on I I'r r:m says .nit "tho prison statistics recently given how that the proportion of tho foreign ... bora who become prisoners is nearly ' double that of thu native born; but that the disregard of thn foreign born for law is far more in tho direction of im morality ami disorder thau in dishonesty or violence." Pasteur, tho hydrophobia specialist, lis known as "Cauicido the Fiist" in Paris just now, bee msu his roc miuiondv tions inspired tho Prefect i f the Police to mnke strict regulations about dogs. All the animals must be held by n string while on tho street, and wandering canines are promptly impounded and suffocated with coal gas. The cherry crop has beou a failure his year in England, except in Kent, where they have been abundant and delirious ever since tho time whoa Itichard liar reys, fruiterer to to Henry VIII., sent to Flauders for fresh graft of a specia kind, the old stock of English cherries seeming to be dying out, and planted 101 acres of tho uew fruit around Tayn bain. Hail road men say that lightning occa sionally strikes locomotives when they run through thunder storms, but it has never been known to harm them or thu men in thoir cabs. The electrl ity thins out and spreads all over tho engine, run ping off tho wheels and along the tracks .when its leaves tho machinery. The impression is that tho locomotives are lightning catchers and attra t the bolts that otherwise might hit the cars. ' The Queen of Sweden, who is allicted with nerves, has been ordo ed by her physicians to ri-o early, make liar own bed and sweep and dust her room. The Swedish medical profession may be luck ing in science, observes the Chicago Herald, but it is certainly nut deficient In good sense. ' The w oman who gets up nud makui the fire, hustles ground and gets breakfast is seldom ucivous, while his sweet and uninterrupted clumber duriug her matutinal activity tondi to preserve the nerves of her hu-sbaul. A BRIDAL. SONQ. i) Son, From out whoso gracious rays Cams forth the day of (lays, IVhen my dear love was born, Shine out! And with your brightest ray Bring gift divine to mark her wedding day. A Rift, a golden gleam, A prophecy of good in every b"am. Rojohw with so much of yourself that in her lives, Which shu with loving joy to others freely gives. 0 Moon, From out whose peaceful life, A portion ramo to guard her own from ttrlfe, Shine out I And with your softest light, Mnko hnppy I'enco to rule her wedding night; Let nil your rays In silvery sheen, Whisper of coming nights serene, Rejoice with to much of yourself that in her lives. Which ho with loving joy to others freely gives. O Stars, From out whoso twinkling beams Caino radiant gleams To dwell, ami And within her soul an Billed glow, A sunnier warmth thnn ever stars do know, Catch from unsetting suns to-night A rmld'er tint a hint of Heavenly light, lirflset her eyos At d make new beauty In the skies. Bcjolce wiih so much of yourselves that in her I v , Which she w til loving joy to others freely gives. O Flowers, AVhose censers swinging slow, Exhaled rare erfume drenched in morn ing dew To touch the breath that first she drew, Lift loyally votir heads and gayly smile With Jov the while Her bridal blossoms bloom. Cull swoet perfection from her face, And then give hack your borrowed grace, Rejoice w ith so much of yourselves that in in her lives, Which sho with loving joy to others freely gives. O Music, Born upon celestial lyres. And thrilling 'mid angelic choirs, Come nearer earth to-day, Whisper in my lay; Repeat tho melody you sent, Whon to the world her voice you lent. Swell in the air that tells The echoes of the bells; He like her Lover's heart, (if her own part Rejoice with so much of yourself that in her liv.s. Which she with loving joy toothers freely gives. O Love, From out whose very heart she came, Horn from thy glowing flame, Look down And in thy glorious way Crown thou her wedding day. Oh, nearer come make thou her bridal bed. Close by her side all future pathways tread, Help her to see thy face In every clime and place; Rejoice w ith so much rf thyself that in her lives, Which she with loving joy toothers freely gives. And ye, O favored ones and blest, Whose hearts have been her rest Since life bogan, Ve listen now and hear, with all Love's pain, Her marriage vow; Giving, where most ye long to keep, Smiling, where most ye long to weep; Repress your tean, Banish your fears, Rejoice with so much of yourselves that in her lives, Which she with loving joy to others freely gives. Mrs. Mary M. Burnt, in Independent. A MISSIXd COIN. "I beg your pardon, but could you give mo a glass of milki" Ellio Tier jumped up with a little in voluntary scream. She had been so in tent on the letter sho was writing, with the back of the tea tray for a desk, aud the queer cone nhaped ink bottle bal anced on the window sill ut her side, that, she had ijuitu forgotten the existence of anything else in tho woild. "A glass of milk f" she repeated, tim idly glancing at the tall, brown com ple.ioued stranger, who stood between the rows of yellow African marigold aud purple phlox in the narrow garden path, and deciding in her inmost mind that ho was neither tho bank burglar of whom she had read in the local newspaper, nor the evil minded tramp who had set fire to Mr. 1 ogau's haystack last week. "Yes, certainly, if you will wuit a min ute." She put down the ten tray and tho pen, bestowing the cone shaped ink staud in a place of safety, and ran into the cool, sweet smelling milk room, for a tumbler of cream ladeu milk. "Aunt liessy said I was to let uo one in tho bouse while she was gone," rea soned this young chatelaine, w ithin her self; "but 1 ha-ven'l let him in, and one would bo a barbarian indeed to refuse a drink of milk to anybody this warm morning.'' When she came ba k thu brown faced stranger was gathering mulberries from the drooping boughs of the trees that overhung the garden wall. "Am 1 a thief ;" said he, noting the look of amazement on El lie's innocent, dimpled fuce. I hope not, but to tell you the truth, 1 have traveled a long way since breakfast time, and am very hungry." Ellie's heart melted at onco. Hie for got Aunt liessy's charges and exhorta tions. "Hutigry, are you." said she. "Wait a minute aud 1 will get you a piece of blackbeiry pie and some cheese." She tied back into the house, aud pres ently returned with a triangular wedge of crimson-bleeding p;e, enough to nipt any ones appetite, and comply- ccntly watched her guest while lie ate it. "Is it nicot" snid she, rndiantly. "The nicest thing 1 hnve eaten in a month," enthusiastically answered the young man. "And this cheese Is like solidified cream." Little I Hie stood watching him. "Aro you the tin peddleri" she asked, suddenly. ' Did you leave your pack out in tho road f liecauso our old tin dipper is rusted nearly through, and there is ipiitc a bag of rags and clippings on the pegs back of tho door, if " "Uli, l am not the tin pcuuier." saiu he. Ellio turned very red, feeling con scious of having made A faux pas in her impulsiveness. "I beg your pardon," said Bho. "I didn't know " "I am very much obliged for your kindness," said he, rising from the door sill, which had done temporary duty for a scat; and then he went on his way. Kllio looked after him with solemn, long-lashed eyes. "Ho is very handsome," said sho to herself. "I think he must be liko Don Alono Mcndozo, in the 'I'nll of Castig 1 in, ' or liko Guy Livingstone. I hope he wasn't offended at my asking him if he was the tin peddler; but in a placo liko this one never knows who is who." Ellio Tier was a teacher of the primary department of a city school, and she had como to spend two weeks of her vaca tion with her Aunt licssie Parsons, who was married to a farmer. And this was the lirst day that tho had been left to "keep house" all alone by herself. Of course, it was nn honor, but. all the same, there was a certain responsibility attached to it, and Ellio secretly felt that she would be very glad when Aunt Bessy camo buck from town. "JuMThenn footstep sounded on tho threshold of the bafik kitchendoor,whi h opened into tho shndy luxuriance of tho orchard. It was licr I nele Benjamin. "Ellio," stvd he, I wish you would stir up a pitcher of cold ginger and water, with a little molasses in it, for the haymakers. I just remembered that I had left my coat hanging up hero by the window, with Eh hallo! where is itl" "Whero is what, uncle?'' said Ellie, Iiatising with tho can of ginger in her land. "There was a ten-dollar gold-picco in a leather purse in tho pocket of this ala packy coat!" said Uncle lienjamin, look ing aghast. "I forgot to take it out when I came from town yesterday, aud now it is gone !" Ho turned every pocket of the thin summer coat inside out; he shook it as if expecting that the missing coin won d drop out, like a ripe nut. Hut all to no avail; nothing was there. "It's the strangest thing in the world !" said L'nclo Hcnjamiu. 1 kcow I left it hero. Has any one been in the house since morning, Ellief" ".'-no." faltered Ellie, salving her consienco with the rejection that the brown-romplexioned stranger certainly had come no nearer than the door-sill. "Then what has become of my gold piece?" said l'nclo Henjamin. "I am sure I cannot tell," fluttered Ellie, her heart giving a sudden throb as she recollected the two intervals of her absence, onco for tho glass of milk, and once for the piece of blackberry pie. During those intervals what m'ght not have happenc 1 ! "I'll go upstairs and look in the bureau drawers," said l'nclo Henjamin. "1 am perfectly certain that tho moucy was hero in my coat-pocket ; but still "' Ho hastened up the nnrrow, wooden stairway, und Edie, spurred on by a new inspirat on. caught her muslin-wreathed hat from the tablo, and darted down a lano that led across tho brook, and through a patch of woods to tho high road beyond. "if I take the short cut over Denni son's Hill," she thought, "I can catch him c cn yet. The thief! the ungrate ful poltroon 1 To drink the milk and cat the blackberry-pio, and then to serve me so." Sho coursed through the fragrant masses of awectfern, ncross thickets of low-growing huckleberry bushes, all purpled over with fruit, under the shade of solemn, old pine trees, and past herds of gracing cattle, who lifted their heads to look at her as she passed. But when at last, breathless and pant ing, t-he reached the low stone wall that separated I'ncle Benjamin's farm from the mam road, she reaped tier reward. There, only a few paces away, tho tall, brown-skinned stranger sat on a stone, funning himself with the wide brim of his straw hot, and reading from tho pages of a tiny duodecimo volume. Liko a young deer, Ellie Tier shipped over the wall and sciz.cd his arm. "Oh, you wicked, wicked man !" she cried, gaspiug f r breath,. "Aren't you ashamed of yourself .' Give mo back the money that you sto e this instant! Oil, don't hta'e at me as if you didn't under stand what I say! Y'ou do understand! You are a thief! Y'ou have returned my kindness with the basest ingratitude!" The man looked at Ellie as if he believed her to havo gone sucdenly mad. "ltoally," said he, "all this is per fectly incomprehensible to me." Ellio uttered a scornful laugh. "You will please be so good as to come back to the house with me '."said she," v gorotisly, retaining her hold of his t-heve, "and l'nclo lienjamin will search you ." "Search me! For what I'' "As if you didn't know!" retorted Ellio, curling her pretty upper lip. The brown-complexioned stranger was tall and broad-shouldered, with thews and siuews like those of a gladiator. .Miss Tier was something under five feet in height, and a resolute turkey gobbler could have put her to flight at ten seconds' warning. liut, neverthe less he followed her as meekly as if he had been a feeble prisoner in the grasp of a giant constable. "1 don't know what it li 11 about," said he, "but if you say go with you, go it is." Ellio deigned him no answer. Argu ment, she felt, could only injure the diguity which formed her chief strength. Aud so they proceeded in silence across the green piisturo-lot, aud through the sylvan woods opto I'ncle Benjamin's back door. That worthy soul was d awing a bucket of clear, cold water from the well to moisten his parched throat. H i hair wo rumpled; great beads of perspiration stood on. his forehead. Evidently up to tAi time his search had been fruitless. And at the sami moment thero was a rattling of wheels, and Mrs. parsons, El lie's aunt, drove her littlo red pony around to the rear, and jumped out of the low wagon. ".Mother," bawled tho farmer, who had not yet taught sight of tho ill assorted pair toiling up the ascent bo hind the gnarly apple trees, "havo you seen that ten-dol ar gold picco that Ehcnezcr Parley paid me yesterday I I left it in the pocket of my nlnpacky coat when I took it oil and " "Yes, I know you did;" said Mrs. Parsons, briskly. "And an awful place it wns to leave it in. 1 saw it there my self when I brushed tho dust off your nlnpacky coat, and I took it out and put it in the top, left-hand drawer of the piuo desk in the spare chamber. I meant to havo told you of it before 1 went, but somehow it slipped my mind." "Je rusalem 1' grunted Mr. Parsons. "I never was so glad of anything in ail mv life!" I Ellio, from behind the orchard wall, i had overheard every word of this col i loquy. Hie let go the sleeve of her cap tive. "Oh, I am so sorry I" faltered she. "Pleaso forgive mcl I I thought " "You thought I had stolen this miss ing treasuio," sail her companion, his lips relaxing into an involuntary suiilo. "Well, under tho citcumstnnces it was not such a very unnatural conclusion, i Only, young lady, let this be a lesson to i yon not to judge too hastily hereafter." Ho" bowed, raised his hat from his head nnd vanished under the leafy canopy of the old apple trees. And the next Tuesday evening, when Ellie went to tho second of the Course of Lyceum lectures in the village with her uncle and aunt, she recognized in tho speaker of the evening her anony mous friend who hnd appreciated tho blackberry p'e so thoroughly. Sho could feel herself color to the roots of her hair as she sat there. " First I took him for a tin-peddler," she said tohrso'f, "and then for a thief. What muil he think of me? " But when sho was formally introduced to Edgur Williams at the close of the lecture, and tried to stammer out her upologies, he only laughed. "Pray do not vex yourself nbont it!" said ho. "As for me, I havo forgotten all the disagreeables of the day, and ro member only the delicious taste of that piece of blackberry pie that you gave me, and I have thought more than onco sines that I should like to become better aciiuaiutcd with the lovely giver." Ellio blushed prettily, and the ac quaintance thus oddly begun ended some months Inter in a quiet wedding in thu city, inwhich the little school teacher and the brown-faced lecturer took rather prominent parts Saturday A'yi'. WISE W0KDS. Praise undeserved is satire in disguise, Wit is follv, unless a wise man has the keeping of it. , Tho reward of ono duty is the power to lullill another. Do not talk of your private, personal or family matters. Fidelity in tril'cs is the ladder which leads to greatness. Cultivate forbearance till your heart yields a tine crop of it. Men love to hear of their power, but have an extreme disrelish to be told of their duty. Knowledge without discretion is like force without direction never useful but by accident. Pncrifice being tho essential basis of virtue, the most meritorio is virtues are those which aro ac paired with the great est effort. It is tho cultivation of the moral side of our natures that has given to our people as a nation their great strength aud grand strides. Do not fret. It only adds to your burden. To work hard is very well; but to work hard and worry, too, is more than human nature can bear. Life is history, not poetry. It consists mainly of littlo things, rarely illuminated by flashes of groat heroism, rarely broken by great dauger or demanding great ex ertion:. A nobleness and elevation of mind, together with hrmness of constitution, gives lustro and dignity to the aspect, and mokes the soul, as it were, shine through the body. If, in spito of wars and fevers aud accidents, and the strokes of chance, this world be as rich and fair and grceu as we have found it, what must the com ing world be like? The true way to be htunblo is cot to stoop till you Are smaller than yourself, but to stand at your real height against some higher nature that shall show you what the real suiallncss of your greatest greatness is. Alaskan Mesuierizois. John I'o'd, of Victoria, British Colum' bia, said to a Chicago Sera interviewer: "1 took a trip last cummer up to Sitka, in Alaska, and near that pi. ice saw the Iudians give a very close imitation of the same sort of work that our mesmeriz.ers do. A lot of sealskins had been stolen from the village, and the Indians were tryini; to find the thief. A young Indian girl was scatuil in the middle of a crowd of old men, and a bright bit of quarts was held jut in front of her eyes, at which she looked steadily for some time say fifteen minutes; then her eyes began to close, and an old Indian camo forward aud covered her forehead with his hands. Hie seemed soon to be in a genuine mesmeric trance. The old muu spoke to her, and siie answered him. Then they brought in another piece of sealskin from the rifled store, aud some eaitn from one of the footprints sus pect 1, aud questioned the girl again. As I was informed, the girl located the tto'.'.n property in another village sonic ten miles away. I ufortuuately for tin romance of tho story, the stolen skins were not found whero she said they were, although the Indians believed they had been very recently removed. The whole experiment, however, is so much like the mechanism of modern uicsiikt isin which 1 have seeu here aud in the old country that I was im-utly impressed wilb it. The Indians declared tint this ' method of Ending lust articles was in J use among the far northern tribes since long before the white men. appeared i among them." HOME OF THE DIAMONDS. THE QUE AT MINES RTJNNIKO IN SOUTH AFRICA. A Description of the Ho Iloera Mine, llio Kooiio of a Itccont Terrible lllsnsler. Tho Do Peers Mine difaslcr in the South African diamond fields, by which twenty-four whites and two hundred natives perished, has awakened frosh in terest nmong those who ileal in the most valuable of precious stones. By far tho greatest portion of the diamouds now obtained come from the mines of South Africa, which were discovered near Hopetown in lstt? by somo Hutch chil dren. The nvnes are situated in Griqua- land West, no,v a pnrt of Cape Colony, about six hundred nnd forty miles north east of Capo Town and tio hundred miles from the sea coast. Although they nre nt nn elevation of nearly 4000 feet above tho sea level, the heat is excessive during the smr ner months when the work is principally arricd on. According to the tint report of the terrible calamity it was that "tho De Beers Coal Mine nt Kimberley" had caught fire. The manifest error in re gard to the character of the mine was not corrected in subsequent dispatihcs, but the cause of the latal lire was ex plained in this way: "While the shafts were being changed tho hauling wire broke and tho skip rushed down the shaft with frightful rapidity. Tho oil lamps were broken, and tho blasting fluid quickly ignited the wooden casing of the shaft. Flames in great volumes shot up the shaft, completely preventing egress. The mine was soon tilled with smoke, nnd the lights carried by the miners wore rendered useless. The panic stricken natives and whites, in their efforts to escape, became massed together in tho galleries and were suffocated to death, Tho Superintendent of the Do Beers Mine is Gardener F. Williams, of Oak land, Cnl. Ho went to South Africa on his second tup in the latter part of 180. He is a regular correspondent of George F. Kunz, Tiffany & Co.'s gem expert and mineralogist. A Tim reporter talked with Mr. Kunz and obtained from him somo interesting facts about tho De Beers Mines. Tho mine covers 13J acres or CIO claims, each SI fest squaro w ith a road way of 1.1 feet between each claim. The mines were originally worked in indi vidually claims, yi43 in number, each 31 feot square with a roadway 71 feet wide between each pi ir of claims. These small claims aro now consolidated into about HO large companies and privato firms, having a gross cnpital of nearly $10,000, 000. There are four largo mines, nil within a radius of a milcand a half. The celebrated KinibeiL'y covers 7J ncres. Thirty-three million carats (over 0J tons) of 'dinmnnds have nlrca ly been task en out, vn'ucd in tho rough at 1.1,000,00'), and, alter cutting, at tlio.000,000. Tho absorptiou of the t-maller by the larger companies is constantly goir.g on, and it is proposed to consolidate all the com panics into ono. Ten thousand natives, each receiving i'l a week, are oniploycd in the mines under the supervision of 1200 European overseers. The enormous sum of over I'l, 000,000 is annually ex pemled for labor. This mammoth investment of European capital would have been more iirntitable to the shaicholders were it not for the thievishness of the nntlvo diggers, who, instigated by tho vicious whites that congregate on the field, at one time stole and disposed of lrom onc-nitu to one fourth uf thu entire Held. .More un proved methods of surveillance, recently introduced, have diminished this loss. None but authorized a 'ents are permitted to purchase or possess rough diamonds, and a large detective force is on the alert to prevent any infringement of the rules. A record is now kept of every diamond found. The thieves have been caught making chickens swallow diamonds in the mine, and a post-mor tem held on one of the natives who died suddenly revealed the fact that his death was caused by a iiO-carat diamond which be had swallowed. According to tin latest official reports there were employed in the De Beers Mine !HI4 whites nnd 2MS natives. Of the latter UnO were hired from the Govern ment at a cost of i.18 per annum. For merly the natives were allowed to leave the mines, but owing to I he fraudulent traffic carried on 2: 00 of them were last year compounded. They practically lived in tho mines, an t were better olt than those who had their freedom. The old system ef open workings has been to a great extent almndonca lor the shalt and undcrrronnU plan. I niter mo origin a method the excavations wero t arried on to a depth of ,1(10 feet. There were many accidents owing to the fulling shale or reef. A rock shaft is cjmpleled to depth of IS II feet and taps low levels. Luring last year over 'JL'i'.M feet of main tunnel were driven. 1 hero is ouo shaft of Tul feet, another of 477 feet, and third of 121 feel. As many as 18 tribes of natives have been represented m tho mines. Some of the natives have been known to tramp a thousand miles to "Ct work. Last year 8!0,000 loads of "blue stuff" wore hauled out ol the mines, and K ill,: O loads yielded 07'.', i;l21 units of ilia mouth, for which the compauy received i'lih-1,081 Us. l.tl. 1 he u tual e peuditure was i'l 11, 18, leaving a profit of tliix.MiT. The l'e Beers .Mine is capi talized at 12, -100,020 in leu pou ml shares. lrom September 1, I to Dccemhe III, 181;, the De Beers Mine yieldei 1144,01.1 t arats, valued at 1,1. 4 ill. ', au average of I'l 'd. per carat. This in duties everything taken Lorn the mine. lu the beginning of the enterprise the mine produced 4-10 carat per load, but hist year the yield was 8 10 carat per load, a signilicant increase. Water l ows from the mine at the rate of .IMii) gallons per hour and at the rate ot l'-OU callous lrom the rocK shalt, There are nine big w ashing machines in use, wh ch are more reliable than the hand or eye. It is so act-male that diamond the size of a pin head cannot ascapc. .Yen l urk Timet. The wool product of California has averaged ntaily 40, 0 10,001) pounds pel year since I'smi, bringing to the State T. ono iiui! a year, l itis is ubout ono seventh of the entire wool piuduct o the co .nlry. Witty Shcridiu's toast at Stafford (town of Bhoemukers : "M iy the wh yiorld trample on the trade of stufford," HOUSEHOLD AFFAIKS. j Rea-Wcetl Decorations. Various decorative uses for the sea weeds which the coming months afford an opportunity to visitors to the seaside to collect aro suggested by VtmrnUir a ml FurnLihrr. They may bo used on the lids and sides of glass caskets, borders ami even foregrounds to water and color painting, nnd on picture and even mir ror frames, meanwhile, until visitors re turn home, being kept in a scrap-book. When collected they are dried between blotting paper and then washed with mastic gum dissol. ed in turpentine, which gives them a fresh appearance. Thnv aro a'lixed to tho leaves of a scrap book, which should have a flexible back, by means of gum, and may ens ly oe de tached by dampening the reverse side of tho leaves. Very charming monograms nd various fano ful designs may be brnicd with sca-wecds. They make ex- client borders for the outside surface of the glass aquariums. To Clean White or Very Light Silk. Take a quart of lukewarm wnter and mix with it four oun cs of soft soap. four ounces of honey, and a good-sized wineglass of gin. I npicK the siltc ana lay in widths on the kilchen table. Then take a perfectly new common scrubbing brush, dip it in the mixture, and rub the nlk hrmly up nnd down on uotn sitics, io as to firmly saturate it. Rinse it in ;old water twice, until free from soap, ind hang it on a clothes-horse to drain until half dry; then iron it with a piece of thin mu isnu uetwceti it, twin mo uu, i , .. . i . i. .. : "jr It. Will UB IllUIftCU Oil UlU liuin-n oi-tu. in ,. i 1 .!. a:.i.. i- ., -,u nt. .l.rt KI!l, Lilt, H 1 IV lllllLU fl I1UU1I1 nUUl V. VI. u ' table, so that every part so that every part may como . under the brush. White) silk requires a little blue in tho water. "Silk stockings iho.ild be carefully washed in water that is neither hot nor cold. Any pure white wan will do, and tho stockings should I e-dricd on wooden frames made for tho purpose. White silk handkerchiefs i must l,e quickly washed in a lather of I pure white soap, to which a squeeze of blue, with a spoonful of salt, has been , Killed, to provent the color lrom run ning. Family HeraUl. C.annlns I-V tilts The process of canning tho different kinds of fruit covers but little, except in tho time required for cooking them end I the quantity of sugar used. I Tsone but perlectiy sound, weuripencu fresh fruits should be put up. They may be canned with or without sugar, but wo think the uso of a little sugar adds greatly to tho Uavor. For tanning fresh fruits, they should never be cooked sufficiently long to de- ' stroy the natural flavor, thoroughly heat ing being an mat is necessary. Air-tigni. glass jars should be tilled with the fruit ! while they are hot, und then quickly sealed. Tho jars should be well heated before filling. Alter filling tho jnrs and screwing on the tops, they should be set in a warm place, where the air will not strike them, until morning, when tho tops maybe screwed tighter. Tho jars may th-u be wiped and put in a cool, dark closet. They should be examined from time to time, and if any signs of fermentatiou nre visible, the fruit should be opened and recorked. Large fruits, its soon ns pared, should bo tin own in cold wnter to provent dis coloring, and then boiled in clear water, to which may be added a littlo alum. When teudortako up and boil five min utes in syrup. It is best to cook only enough to till two or threo jars at a time. The jars should bo heated and every thing in readiness ns soon as the fruit has boiled. The work should bo done as quickly ns possible. Small fruits aro improved by being sugared an hour or two before cooking. If a little alum is added to the syrup, they will be clear and keep their shape. H too much juice is in tho kettle for the quantity of fruit to bo canned, it maybe used for jolly. If these directions are followed, success in canning will be sure. Couritr-Jvurna'. Hecipes. Potato Scallops. Boil and mash the potatoes soft with a little milk or cream. Bent up light w ith melted butter a des sertspoonful for every pint of thu potato fait and pepper to taste. Fill some patty-pans or buttered scallop shells with the mixture and brow,, In the oven when you have stamped a pattern upon the top of each. Glaze while hot with buttei und servo in the shells. Nkwmaiikkt PrnbiNc. Ono pint ol grated bread, one quart of milk, one cup of sugar, ono tabl -spoonful of butter, ami the yolks of four eggs. Soak the bread crumbs one hot r in the m Ik, I lieu atld the other ingretlicuts and bake. When it is done spread a layer of jelly over the top, then cover with a meringue made with thu whites of tho egns ami half a cup of sugar. Browu slightly. Li:mon I'rn'.-. Powder una sift n pound and a quarter of loaf sugar und mix with it the grated rind of two fresh lemons. Whi-k the whites of three CL'gs to a stiff froth, anil udd to it grad ually the sugar ami gratetl lemon. Make a thick paste, whisking thoroughly. Cut into pieces of the desired shape, hand ling the paste as little as possible. Place on oiled white paper, aiitl bake on tint in a moderate oven for tight or ten min utes. CiiKiiitv Cakk. Beat up one quartet of a pound of castor sugar with the yolks of ten eggs for quite twenty minutes, ail 1 one quarter pound of blanched aud cut-up it I molt tie, then one and a halt ounces bread crumbs and well whisked whites of live egys; when well beaten to gether put in a shallow cako tin; take about half a piut of cherries, fresh oi bottled (if the latter lay them first ou a s:cT! till quite dry) drop them iulo tho cuke and put the tin ut once iuto the oven and bake for three quarters of an hour. The Briefest of Wills. Ono of the shortest wills on record is that of John F. Do Hart, which is anion the testaments on file iu the iiegister'i office, and reads as follows: Inn. auki. phi, February Everything 1 own Igivo to my wife, Liza : John K. Ik Haul The instrument was executed on Feb. ruury 22, 18.1, by Mr. De Hart, who died three days later. It is written on a scrap of paper, evidently torn from well-used mc iiiuruudmu booh, tliesigna ture of the decedent being written twice, the first oue being rather iudis tinct. The value of the estate left by Mr. De Hart was $750.-Tdladclj.hit li iW, THE HAPPY FARMER. At last, at last, tho evening shadow's fall. And wearily but happily I hlo me home, While in my henrt I hear the welcome call That bids me from the hillside to the hearthside come. O parting day, that brings the parted near! O tlusky sha le, when higher lights appear! I welcome thee, with heart and carol free, t welcome thee, blest hour, when fond heart welcome mo! How loitsrHngly the burrin? day goes by. How heavily the hours impose thtr meeA 'it pain! But comes at length the lonient evening skv, To bend with vast and coolness o'er ttn throbbing brain. O tender eve, that bring'st from toil re lease! O holy night, with broo ling wings of peace! I hail thy sha le, that homeward beckons me, welcomo thee, blest hour, when fond hearts welcome me! E. C. L. Ilrowne, in Botton Trantaript. Hl'MOR OF THE DAT. A boy's sphere A baseball. A summer resort The drug store. Candid people seldom giveaway taffy. Tho pilot of a ship ought to wear a helm ct. All the wards of a latch-key should be home-wards. A police miss apprehension Arresting the wrong girl. rtfr,rl;n nn nnt-nnd out rcmedv - - f t , , for the toothache. . , . , . , . . . Jiiespiucr ia ita ipicat. wuuu mo happii life is . ... hanging by n thread. Tho Czar received King William in his every day boiler-iron shirt. Boston inebriates never seo snakes. They havo ophidian hallucinations. The man who gets left docsu't bolievs that "Whatever is, is right." Life. There ought to be a law passed that railway restaurant keepers shall date their apple pies. We consider this business of making fun of women who catch sight of a mouse a holler mockery. It is perfectly proper to carve out your own fortune, but you should not chisel other people in doing it. "Is you pa building a cottage on the shore?" "No; I heard him tell ma he would have to build it on tick." It is a curious thing that on the rail roads it is the fricght rather than the steam that makes tha cargo. Bnar. Women aro pleased when likened to birds, but not to all kinds of birds. It is dangerous to call a woman an old hen. There is said to be an affinity between tho beasts of tho field and the birds of the nir. It is well known that the play ful calf is fond of a meadow lark. Ye gods! would it not be funny If we should ever see The bark become visible on a dog, Autl audible on a tree. Pucfe. Barber (purely from force of habit) "Havo a hair cut. sir?" Bald-headed customer "Ves; threo or four of them I guess I've got that many left." Jiiil'j : "Things That Never Dio" is the title of a new poem. And it does not men tion tho chap who wants to know if it is hot enough for you, cither. I'Udlurg Ciro lii lr. The Cause. C azzam "Hello, Cumso, you look entirely fagged out. What's the matter" Cumso "Oh, nothing! A week's rest will set mo up. Just back from my vacation." Time. Whether tall men or short men aro best. Or bald or moilost and shy men, ' 1 can't say; bat this I protest: All tho fuir sex are in favor ol Hymen. , Otnalia B.'e. Wc notice from a perusal of the papers that "tho flat In s gouo forth" this year. We are gla 1 of this. It would be an awfully lono-omc year in which the fiat did not go forthiug. Bton Traiucrijit. The busy housewife now gets up And jams her black raspberries, I And jellies all her currants red, I And cuus red sour cherries. Itanieillt Brtett. I City Y'oung Lady (to farmer) "What kind of a tree is that?" Farmer "That is a beech tree." "How singular! 1 didn't suppose beech trees grew any- ' whore except at tho seaside." 1'exM Sitiny. I Feline Sagacity "Bridget, has John nie como home from school yet?" "Yis, sorr." "Have you seen him." "No, sorr." "Then how do you kmw he's home?'' " 'Cause the cut's hidin' under the stove, sorr."--jf'.w. i She (at a garden party "Isn't that young Professor Braiufog coming this way, Mr. He Sappy.'" Ho "Ya'us, Miss , Maude. Shall 1 present him?" Sho--"Oh, dear, no. 1 think young men with brains, Mr. l'e Sappy, uro such a bore." -in A young Englishman is said to have written to his fond undo the following encouraging letter: "Dear I'ncle You have often said that you could dio happy if I could pass the final examination lot tho liar successfully. You can die happy. Your dutiful nephew." i I a Unit, ileur ( hai k-s, 1 told Miss Jones 1 ivully tl.d not likj you ' Perhaps tin iiii-auing ot my words I Hot It not y.-t fully strike' you. j So lu-ui mo -.wo ir by all the stars A twtnkliiu iio,v ubave you, The reason why 1 like you not i Is tiiis: boouise 1 love you. i Hurler's Bainr. i An English journalist, ou reading in ' tLe paper of the defeat of the Clevelund ; nine by the Cincinnati bays, stopped I short at the headline: 'l1levclaud Beaten by tho Beds,'' and ttiblud home an a .-count of an "Atrocious assault ou tho President of tho l uiied States by a band of hostile Iutlians that nfest the District of Columbia. .Y.i 'u i. Tramp "I know it. ma'am; I'm .always out id won,, uui n s my hick. I . - ...... . . Tramp "It's this way. iiia'uin. In the winter I feel like mowing lawns, and in the summer I just actually t ravo to shovel snow, and nature continually balks mo. Have you Mich a thing as a pio iu the house." '. 'a lla: ir. Y'outh "I've ot some poetry here I'd like to have vo i look over." Editor ai "YtB, sir. Have you got your liceiiM with you: iiiuiii- -iy incuse: Editor Ye: your poetic license.'1 Youth "No u-no. I didn't know 1 hJ to hve one." Editor "We never look ovt r ny poetry without t'sst seeing th poet's, license. Good-day." iW,