RATES OF AD VERTI3INC. One Square, one !nch, one insertion t 10" One tenure, one Inch, one month 8 04 One Square, one Inch, three month.. 00 One Squire, one Inch, one year 10 09 Two Sqnsres, ore year 15 00 (,'narter Column, one year SO 00 Hair Column, one year 80 00 One Column, one year ... too 00 I,rpl advertisements ten cent! per line each In sertion. Marriages and death notices gratia. All bills for yearly advertisements collected qnsr terly. Tenipofary advertisements must b paid in advance. Job work cash on delivery. ORE EPUBLICAN- H Term, - l. BO per Year. No subscriptions received for a ehortar period . Ihnn thre. months. OorrtO!)denca solicited from all part of the ennntry. No nolle will bo taken of anonymous aaniunlcaUona. VOL. XXI. NO. 40. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1889. S1.50 PER ANNUM. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN I pat-fished every Wednesday, by J. E. WENK. Offlot In Bmearbaugh & Co.'a Building kLM STREET, TIONE8TA, T. ST The electric light system Is corcrlng the whole country with a new vaiioly of bugs never seen before An Indiana doctor hits succesfully removed a patient's rib. Though tho oldest one on record, tho operation is extremely rare. In 100 years England his nided her merchant ships to the amount of $27, i oo.ooi', itud her privnto shipyards to tho nmount of $100, 000,000. Tho hind buttons used on tho coats with iu America cost, according to the ! t oit Frte Viet; f ?,2:)0,000 a jcar.and art of no earthly account. The oitirons of Harbor County, Kan., have petitioned Congress tc send a copy , -of thu Conjm-.i-m' 11 eo.d to each i.hool district in the Stato. : It appears that thero aro only three State in the Union producing sugar frflmtho canoin Louisiana, from sorghum in Kansas; and from the beet in Culi . fornia. t . . The Chicago Anarchists nre growing in numbers and organization, and, I he New M'ork Onii hi- intimates, they may hold tho balance of power at tho city election . in tho spring. Tho 'development of the Krupp guo lias been one of astonishing rapidity. In thirty yoars that firni has delivered 2H,000 guns divided up among thirty four different Governments. Ti;o Secretary of War has ditcctcd thai nluu desurteii a.c restored to the Brmy, expenses for apprehension and re turn shall bo Untiled to $10 per mouth until it has nil been canceled. Whoever thinks of Louisiana as t lumber State? asks tho Now York -Vai'i eui.i Krjire . And yet last year she pro- I need 450,000,000 feet of lumber, an in rrease of :i00 per cent, suico 180. ' A law has recently been enacted in the . German Empire prohibiting tho use oi tin alloy in tho manufacture of cooking, eating" and drinking utensils that con taiumore thau ten per cent, of le id. At Pittsburg, I'onn.,. a woman his asked tho .agent of the Anti-Cruelty Society to help her pel,, redress in the -courts from a man fFhns exercised inOjucric influence oveirier for tho pas' trine years, and . which, she alleges, it gradually killiug her. V-'The t:ix-pnycr.i of Europe may wel . .' wonder, observes tho Detroit Fret Pr. tr, " whether Kings and Emperors aro worth ' ' Having at the price. Americans with o leflearniy. of ilO.OOD men c m hardly real L'Uedthat thero aro I ."i, 000, 00!) trained irVsoldors under arms or on the reserve .: corps iu Euroj e. "?umo of thfe IcadiiiL' citiyena of Wash Vlou .have determined ti . found t 4 National park in the Kock Creek Valley, '.one of the most picturesque localities in the environs of the Capit.il. The site has been selected, and legislation will be asked by Congress while the land cau be had at a reasonable price. Says the Boston G7oV: "We loam ?.sfroui the St. Albans (Yt.) M.ne.iae.- that V', . that the town fathers arc thinking ol ' changing tho name of the poor house tc . ' Invalid' retreat,' because tho name 'poor house' is o. tensive to its inmates. ... Thiais what tho 'Coorgcitel might cali jirogToss and poverty." - : ' r Iudiaus in the United States las't yeat cnltivated 227,'JU.i acres of laud and ,iseir'l "5S bushels of. wheat, M,W2 1 Bushels of coraU.-HT bushels of oats land barley; 0'2 1,010 bushels of vegeta- bles,'and 101;J3S tons of .hay. They " " . also owned horses and mules. 1 11,407 head .of cattle, 10,471 twine and 4,117,973 sheep. . The American Colonization Society was organized seventy-three years ago. During its cxisteuco it has sent over IP, 000 coloredV'peoplo to Africa. At the celebration of its anniversary the . othet night, in Washington, Dr. Lulher iu. dorsed Victor Hugo's predit'tiou that - "Africa is to be the contiueut of the twentieth century. " The njan who claims to be the most celebrated horse thief in- the world is tpw under arrest at I.oiensberg. Kan. If is name is Washington Waterman, and he is seventy eit'ht years of age. He ac knowledges the theft of lOvi hor,es in Kansas alone, and the authorities of the State me willing to admit that he has made off with live tiuies that manv. ffe production" of oatsln the Cuite! Stutes shows a great iueretise. In thi last eight years the averago cip has been 54t)00i,0'i0 bushels, against au average of 314,000,000 for the ten years prcciing This increase, asserts tho New York OU t o r, is owing to the re ouiremeuts'of tho increased number of horses, to the substitution of oats for corn. in the South for feeling horses, and for man. The area of the oat tip, Is ,so increased proportionately more ;liat of wheat aud torn, and the a less proportionate decline, 9BS, ctrpin trii ... sirr. "Take heed! Take heed I I come with sped, For I've just new-strung my bow; My quiver is full; If the abaft I pull, Koine arrow may hit, yrm know. "Oh, pull away !" did the maiden say "For who'd be the coward to mind A bow that la strung by a coward ao young, Who In both of his eyes Is blind!" The bow be drew, and the shaft It flew, And the maiden was heard to cry, "Oh! take this dart from my wounded heart, Dear Cupid, or else I die!" He said, as he smiled, "I am but a child And could have no power to find With both of my eyes where the dart now Una, And you know, dearest maid, I am blind," Afrs. J. Shepherd. A nranjiifn to his wire 'Twas not the moonlight and the rem, The days of June In old lang syne. That brought me suppliant to your feet. Praying to be your Valentine. These so borer days the blossoms blow As fragrant as In old lang syne, And still In spirit and Iu truth I pray to be your Valentine. Mrs. T. W. Dewing. l.ov'g RESUME. The Sun, the Kom, the Lily, the Dove I loved them all in my early love, I love tbem no longer, but her alone The Pure, the Tender, the Only, the One; For alio hervelf, my Queen of Lore, Is Rose, and Lily, and Sun, and Dove! Ileint. KllOS. The sense of the world Is short Long and various the report To love and be beloved; Men and gods have not outlearned it; And, how oft soe'er they've turned it, Tin not to be Improved. Emerson. OnANDMAMUA'S VALENTINE. Two little birdies after one fly I Wonder If maybe they mean you and I , Will-Boy and Jlraf Two little b'udders, that you can see; And if one of 'em's you anil the other is me, Wonder who's him! Butteriliea la such ex-euliar things! Nothing at all but just two little whips. Guess they must be Quick winkle tnlnltles! Wonder if this Isn't a think, or a dear flying kiss, F'om g'annie to we! K'pose we can catch it? And then If we do Is one half for I and the other for you I Or s'pose we just look A fly doesn't want to be tored Into two. And a kiss is us good, when you know it has flew, . As if it was took. Mr. A. D. T. Whitney. THE WHOLE WIDE WOULD. Not from the whole wide world I choose thae, Sweetheart, light of the land and the s.-a! The wldo, wide world could not inclose the?, For thou art the whole wide world to me. Itichard Oittler. TRIl'MPU OP CHARIS. See the chariot at hand ben of Love, Wherein my lady ridel h! Each that draws Is a swau, or a dove, And well the car l ove guldetu. As she goe, all hearts do duty unto hey beauty, Aud, enamored, do wish, so they mlg.:t but enjoy such a sight, That they still were to run by her side Through swords, through seas, whither she would ride. Den Johnson. HER CERTIFICATE, 11 V EMMA A. OPPEH. The monthly teachers' examination of Black County was about to bo, 'in. Milly sat in a corner of the big room, biting her pencil and gazing at the mot ley assemblage of teachers and trembling aspirants for first certificates in antique shawls and hats in vogue five years ago, aud dresses Milly bad not known that anybody ever wore. Milly was an aspirant for a first certi ficate, but she was not trembling. She sat erect and bright-eyed and charmingly stylish in an obviously city-made suit and a wicked little cap to match. It wae clear to the most casual observer that .Milly was not indigenous to Black County. She was a bright oasis in the desert of Black County styles. The young man in the next seat ap peared to think, so. He looked at her with quite frauk approval. Millv could not help knowing it. r-he looked down at her snug gloves and pulled a petal from the yellow asters she wore, and .finally dropped her pencil. He picked it uu with anxious baste. "Thank you!' she said. He looked at her still, but rather bashfully. "What a lot of them!" she said, taking pity upon bi:n. " .'es. What do you think of them ?" he responded. She uotieed that his light hair curled thickly, and that he had a fine chin. "I I don't you think they're rather frumpy?" she said, seriously. He laughed explosively, bringing his hand down on his knee. "The word was made for them I" he declared. "You see I'm not of Block County, though 1 intend teaching here, and I don't feel traitorous. They are funny." He looked at her with puzzled iucredulity. "Are you going to teach?" he murmured. "I bea vour pardon. but " "Oh, no, don't," cried Milly Was he too tall f No, indeed! And his nose was like Napoleon's. "I'll tell you about it. 1 I ke to tell people; it's so funny. Ye, I'm going to teach if I can pass the examinations. You see, I've been staying this summer at my I nele Hidgley's, out on a farm. Well, the teacher in that district was taken sick the other day, and what did my Uncle liidgley do but hire me for the fall term me : He's one of the school directors, you see. lie said it would do me good to 'spunk up' and do it. He's always deplored my not being able to make pie crust and weed onions, and he worte iuune himself and got permission lor u, e. I know I'll en oy it it'll be such a cow experienre-but i'm fuu 0f awfl VALENTINE qualmi. I've never taught, and I don't know how. And my certificate I'm in fenr and trembling. I've been at boarding-school and all that, but I'm dread fully rusty in the common branches." Sho finished breathlessly and laugh ing, and he laughed too. "Arfor me," he said, In pleased ro- turn of her confidence, "it's merely n means to an end, my teaching. I want ' to study law, and I wnnt to do it by my own exertions. Thnt sounds rather goody goody, doesn't itl Hut I do. I've taught a few terms in my own county, and now I'vo a school engaged In yours. I ve But a formidnblv fat examiner rapped on the platform desK, and sent a thinner, ! but equally awe-inspiring, colleague in and out among tho seats with the arith- metic questions in purple type-writing; and tho Hlack County applicants sharp- ened their pencils and wrinkled their ' brows studiouly and went to work. 1 Mllly opened her lunch-basket, three hours later, in the small roo:n provided I for tho purpose. There was enough for three men, she mused, as she attacked a sandwich. A bony young woman in red and lavender hat just shaking oil tho crumbs of her ascetic repast of soda crackers and pickled pears, regarded her with stern amazement as the with drew. Through the door she passed through came the young man who sat next to i Millv. "Oh, are you here?" he said, with a ! f nclo Itidgely was disappointed. But shallow pretense to surprise. , there were gratifying recompenses. The He sat down near her, with an expres , first was that Milly was persuaded to sion of very frank pleasure. tny nearly all winter, though she didn't What was it that made him look so . take the school, and learned to make pie handsome when he smiled.she wondered , trust after all; and the second, that that his merry eyes or his white teeth? I young school-teacher she married, that "How hv vnu ant. .m J" h noon. , she'd never have known if she hadn't tioned lunch. . .. e.. 1 - . ' sympathetically, opening jjg I "Horridly," she admitted. "I'm worse that I thought. I've forgotten every thing." She looked at his scanty bread and butter. "Please have one of my sand wiches," she said, shyly forcing it upon him. "Everything, positively. I'm shocked at myself. I'm afraid I shan't pass at all; and then, what will I'nclo hidgloy say? I made terrible work of those cube-root and brokerage problems, l Know l did. lluw I envied you, you looked so perfectly unnustereu over them! And now the geography 1 Good ness me I think I did pretty well wi h the Hebrides and Yucatan and the Oiu Kiver; but, ob. dear! what aro the isothermal zones?" She made her lips and her smooth brow into a ludicrous pucker as sho looked meekly up at him. He laughed, with that enjoying, boy ish slap of his hand on his knee. "Don't you know, honor bright?" he ejaculated. She shook her head solemnly. "I haven't the faintest idea. I never did cs re for physical geography,and it's gone right out of my head." Sho bit a tart ruefully. "Wou't you take one of theso? You see how much of this I could never cat! No. I don't believe I'll get a certificate at all!" He ga.ed at ber with poignant regret In his eyes. "Oh, 1 hope so!" he said, sincerely. "You've handed in vour papers, haven't you?" ho added, vaguely. She shook her head "No; I was floundering through the end of it when I got hungry." They looked at each other with wide eyes, startled by a common idea. "Oh, no, no! you mustn t! itwoulun t be right or honest!" sho gasped, half laughing, half awed. "Abstractly, it wouldn't," the young man responded, reflectively. "Ordiuar ily, I shouldn't dream of doing it, in deed; but, you see. you aren't adopt ing teaching as a profession you're not going to teach but one term, aud that for the sake of its being a 'new experi ence,' and to please your uncle and it would bo a pity for a paltry certificate to prevent you, and I don't feel that I should violate my conscience by helping you to It a little, and and theisotuer mal zones are spaces on opposite sides of the enuator having the same mean tem perature and bounded by corresponding ing isothermal lines " Milly sprang from Uncle Hidgley's buggy, two weeks later, and rushed up the walk like a small cyclone. She had been to the Eostorfice, and she held a blue envelope in her hand, or clutched it. "I've got itl" she cried Aunt Kidgley was sweeping off the front porch. "I've got it! My per cents, were'nt very good, you know, but I passed. Won't I'nclo John be glad Where is lie?" "Land alive!" said Aunt Kidgley, weakly. "What yoi? got? He's in the barn, likely." L'ncle liidgely was glad. He studied the small document, with interspersed remarks. "I knew you hadn't no call to worry." "Pretty good:" "Hain't never be'u a better teacher in this dcestrict than you'll make warrant ye!" He took oil his spectacles as he handed it back. "There was a young man hero jest now," he observed, "about the school. Seems he had one engaged over to Bev- ; erly, ana scarlet lever rjroKe out over , theie. and they ain't coin' to have no ; school yet awhile, aud he coinoovi-r to see about gettin' this one. Dave Han : ley told him about it; seems he's a ; cousin of Dave's. Took examination ' j two weeks ago, same as you did. Wal. j I told him my niece bad got the school i promised to her, ' said I nele itidgely, I serenely. j "What did he look like?" said Milly, with sudden interest. Mh, you needn't spunk up! He's goin' home on noon train," said Uncle I Itidgely, winking. "W'y, good lookiu' feller he was ; taller'n most, and hair . color o that cream colored uug and curly, and a good, strong lookin' " Milly crushed her certificate in her ex cited hand. "Where is he?" she demanded. ' "W'y, over to Dave Hanley's, I a'poe Dave's his cousin. What are you goin' to-" But whatever Mil? was going to do she was alieady doing bhe was gone, and she had dropped her certificate on the barn floor. Dave Hanley's front door ws opeu, and reasonably full of small Hanley-,but Milly stepped over them. She could look through to the hack porch, where Dave sat with h t visitor, sod she ran through the house. The visitor rose. "Why why " lie stammered. lie was bewildered, but his delight was more than his bewilderment. Ho took her hand, in his agitation, and then rembered that he had small right to, and blushed. Dave Ilanley, whether from confusion or supcrfino delicacy, wandered. Into the yard. .Miiiy shook nanus, li sne nan tooKea , pretty in a cloth gown and cap, she was irresistible in a blue blouse and striped skirt, and no hat at all, and the young man devoured her with bright eyes. "i ve come to tell you," she pantea she was out of breath "that it's me the school is promised to; it'shcremy Undo Itidgely lives don't you see? And I'm going to give it up for you, in your favor. I have no right to it, don't you understand? I don't believe I'd ever got my certificate if it hadn't been for you. If I had been a bii lower in geography, I shouldn't have passed. It was really you that got it for me, you unscrupulous person. And I don't need theschool it was only for Uncle Ridgely and you do, You want to study law.and well, you've got to take it." She was not to be moved the fraction of an inch. She stood there, flushing and prettily smiling, and twisting an end of her blue sash, but she was firm. "1 haven't anv right to it, end I don't need it, and yon want to study law," was all she would say, though he argued and earnestly pleaded for an hour. -. .1 i it v. 1 . u& i . v. . Blityetl, aim li us umiu fa luuiib iu iuq "dcestrict" that fall, turned out within four years to be tho smartest lawyer in ! Black County and a notablo honor to j the family. Saturday Ki'jht. A Congressman's Ocean Terror. The Board of Bureau Chiefs, to which Secretary Whitney referred Representa tive Thomas's plans for a coast defense vessel, has agreed to report the plans bnck to the Secretary with a rccommen- dation that they bo adopted by the De partment. The Board believes tho de sign has great merit. Mr. Thomas has had no more experi ctkit in naval n If airs than he could get .'is Chairman of the House Committee. ! ' . . business is that of a stock raiser, and his home is in the part of Illinois called Egypt, where the only water is in wells and sloughs and not much of that. Nevertheless, he bus designed what ex perts say will bo the finest, fleetest and most powerful war vessel alloat. She will be a single-turreted monitor, a heavy armored cruiser, and the only war ship in tho world of variable dis placement. In peace she will stand seven aud a half feet out of water, with upper works of wood which can bo removed on going into action. When trouble comes she takes in water and increases her draft three feet, leav ing but four feet and the great gun tur ret above water. This four feet is the segment of a circlo rising from tha water's edge and presenting a target at ' which the enemy is welcome to lire as much as he pleases. He can't hit it once in fifty shots, and if he does hit it no body cares. Jier steel armor will bo five inches thick. Her guns will be able to pierce the aimor of tho best man-of-war now on the water. Her two ten-inch breech-loading guns, turret-protected, and having an nil-round range, will throw a .iUU-pouuU projectile ten miles. Tho dynamite gun in the bow will throw nitro gelatine equal to 1000 pounds of dynamite two miles. She will have a speed of seventeen knots an hour, and her name will be the Illinois. Experts say she will probably be able to destroy England's biggest iron-clad in fiftceu minutes. Atlanta Cuuttltutiun. H iiiuli and Habits oftlie (nail. Iho email (Bob White), so cenerallv distributed throughout the States, is a resident over all of the Mississippi Val ley, except in the extreme West and Northwest. In .Minnesota it has fol lowed up the settlements, and in th eastern part of the State has reached the line of the Northern Pacific liailroad about latitude forty-six degrees. Iu Southeastern Dakota it is abundant, and has advanced to about latitude forty four degrees thirty minutes. North western Minnesota and most of Dakota are yet to bo occupied by this species. To tho question that is often asked, whether the habit quail have of "lying to a dog" is natural or acquired, Pro fessor W. W. Cooke, in his report on Bird Migration, says: "To get a satis factory answer, one has only to hunt in different parts of the Indian Territory. In the region west of Port Sill the quail never think of stopping when they see a dog, but run as fast as they cau, and upon his near approach they flush im mediately, just us it may bo supposed they do on the approach of a cayote. Iu the eastern part of the Tenitory, near the railroad, the quail lie quite well to a dog, nod as they are exceedingly abuu dant, afford excellent sport from No vember to March. The range of the Texas quail extends uorthward to We-t-eru Kansas. In the neighborhood of Sau 1 Antonio these quail often come close to the rauch and lay eggs in hens' nests, and at San Angelo they are reported as raising two broods a year. -Vtia JVrit WorU. j lliirhesl Signal Mutton in the World. Tho United States signal service station at Pike's Peak is the highest ' signal station in the world, aud is also I the highest inhauiteu portion of the i globe, it was opened in the mouth of ' September, 17;;. That it was a wise Iirovisiou of the Government in estnb !hi!!g a signal station at this point is 1 uo longer questioned, the facts having , already demonstrated its practicability, and the present success promises that Pike's Peak signal station is yet to staud at the head of all astronomical aud . meteorological stations in the world. '1 his point is wonderfully favored by i nature for the study of astronomy and I meteorology. The rarity of the atmos -I phere brings out a remarkable brilliancy 1 and e'earness to the stars aud ad the heavenly bodies. The nights are almost always cloudless, and cloudy days are the exception. Nine tenths of the storms are below the Peak. I The IJojrd of Eduiatiou of Alaska has abolished Hogging in the public uchoo.s, HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Anjrel Cnkf). Tilts popular cak4 was invented by a St. I ouis baker, who kept the formula A lecrot a long time. A discharged em ploye finally made it known. To four Dun cos of sifted flour add 'one loaspoon (ul of cream of tartar; rub these through the sieve four or five times. Beat the whites of a dozen eggs until very stiff; add to them gradually three-quarters ot a pound of granulated sugar, and beat thoroughly while so doing; flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla extract; add the flour to the egg foam quickly and lightly. Line the funnel cake pan with ungreascd paper, pour in the mixture and bake fifty minutes. When done loosen the edges and remove from the pan at once. New Yo. t Sun. Boiled nice and Bnlalns. , Wash and boil in the usual way ono scant cup of rice, adding when half done a quarter of a pound of Ondara raisins. These raisins are the best and most most economical for cooking. They are largo, almost entirely without stems, and cost only twelve cents a pound. A word about boiling rice. Some cooks, who differ as widely as doctors, say: "Boil one cupful of rice twenty minatcs in three quaits of water and drain through a colander when done." Others ngain maintain that two cups of water or twice its bulk is the rule for a cup of rice. I have found the nicest way to boil rice is in a double boiler. At first 1 use twice the quantity of water to rice, adding salt and a small piece of butter. When the water is all absorbed, if the rice is not soft enough, I add a little milk if I have it, water if I have not. Make a hard sauce with a tablespoonful of butter and a scant cup of sugar, add ing a little grated nutmeg. Or if pre ferred the rice and raisins may be eaten with sugar and cream. Uout'vife. Smoked neef Omelet. For fifteen cents the housewife can buy a small can of smoked or, as some call it, chipped becf. It is cut very thin and ready for use, thus doing away with the necessity of buying the meat whole and then trying to cut it with the usually dull carving knife. Take three of the slices out of the box and roll them to gether; then cut the meat lengthwise once, after which cut across it so as to convert the meat into stripes. Put it into a bowl and add three eggs and a dash of pepper. Beat it up with a fork and pour "it into a hot, slightly greased omelet pan. Mip a Knile uuuer it occa sionally while it is cooking to prevent burning. If tho top refuses to cook solid tilt the pan so that it will run oil and cook on the side of the pan. When done fold without breaking and turn on a hot dish. Strew over it a little chopped celery tops or parsley. I et each guest salt his own portion, as the meat is al ready salt enough for ordinary palates. If not objected to a little onion may be added to the omelet. New York Herald. Bread Making. , Once, in going down the river to Xew 'Orleans at a dull season when there was hot much traveling, I found myself en tirely without pleasant lady companions. So, after getting tired of reading, 1 asked and obtained permission to see the taker make his rolls for tea. He wn very obliging.and I spent an hour or two out of each day in the bake room, watch ing, taking dots, and asking bread ques tious. Since then I have usually gone exactly by his directions in malting bread and roils, except the addition ol n little sugar and the use of home-made yeast instead of Jjakers' yeast, which 1 iannot always get In the country. I have tried other bread recipes, but find none to equal the following in simplicity and certainty : One large homemade 'yeast cake or a small cup of bakers' yeast, two cups ol milk-warm water; add to this five love) cups ot flour, measured before sifting, and one level tablespoon of salt and sugar; mix this into a dough and work well; put in a greased bucket, covei closely and set it to rise in a warm place in winter, a cool plac; in summer. When light, which will bo in four oi five hours, make into two loaves with out any more working or adding any Hour, putting a little melted butter on top and betweeu the loaves. Put these in a deep baking pan, covered, and let them rise an hour, or a little longer if not light in that time. Then bake in a moderate oven. ..'ust before browning, a little butter on top improves the crust. A little more or less Hour than is given may be used, us some flour thickens more than others, but five cups to two of water is as good a general rule as can bo laid down. Bread may be started iu the morning and baked iu six or seven hours, or started at night and baked iu the morning. It rises faster iu warm weather. Everybody says my bread is superfine, light, tender and wholosome. I'd say so, too, if excessive modesty didn't prevent. Jjitroit Free 1'riif. Household Hints. Boiled starch makes an excellent pasto. The yolk of an egg is good to keep flutirons smooth and clean. Tho oftencr flour is sifted for sponge cake the lighter the cake will be. Iu watering plants, put a teaspoonful of ammonia into the water once a week. Salt fish of any kind is quickest and best freshened by shaking in sour milk. pish may be scalded much easier by dipping into bo ling water about a minute. liipo tomatoes will remove the iuk stains from white cloth and ulso from the hands. Windows should be opened at both top anil bottom in order to secure proper veutilation. When flatirons become rusty blacken them with stove polish and rub well with a dry brush. Ceilings that have been smoked with a kerosene lamp should be washed off with soda water. A teaspoonful of turpentine boiled with white clothes will aid the whiten ing process. Boiled starch is much improved by the addition of a little salt or dissolved gum-arabic. Use charcoal to broil with. The flum-s close tho pores quickly and make the meat very tender. Because the air is invisible it is no reason w by pure air la not as essential to good health as are wholeoome food and drink, THE POTLATCH JX ALASKA. CURIOUS FESTIVAL AWONO THE NATIVE TRLINKETS. Tho Blanket as a Social Factor and Index of Wealth Crema tion Among Mio Indians. A "potlatch" is a social institution peculiar to the natives along the North Pacific coast. The word means a "big feast," but that does not signify all that the same words do to the white races. Blankets are the signs of wealth among these people. To have so many blankets is among them to be just so rich. Theso blankets are stored up and hoarded just as the miser hoards his gold, but for a totally different purpose. Tho idea is to have a big "potlatch" some time. Often this takes place when the owner of the blankets gets past middle life and feels that the time has come when he can nford to make this social display. Auain they are laid up and treasured, so that a big "potlatch" may be held after the owner is dead. Tho Thlinket village just north of and adjoining Sitka now hog about l.iOO winter inhabitants, those who are out fishing and working at the canneries all summer having come in to stay until work begins again in summer. Though they havo been brought under some civilizing influences they are very re luctantly surrendering their nativu cus toms. Among those to which they still cling is the custom of the "potlatch." Yesterday at 1 o'clock, says a Sitka letter to the New York 2Vm., a cannon shot was heard over in the village, to tho astonishment of many of the Americans here. Inquiry disclosed the fact that one of tho headmen of the village had just died, and that the cannon shot from an old itussian t arronada was to an nounce the death. Now comes the "potlatch." Ho had been laying up blankets against tho day of a royal, roistering "pctlatch" in his lifetime. Yesterday afternoon a score of natives visited the trader's store and bought nearly a ton of stuff for the feast. Canned goods, boxes of crackers by tho docn, and everything thatcculd be ob tained to eat were hauled over by them to the village on trucks to be consumed in tho "potlat h," which will last for several days and nights. A "potlatch" without something strong to drink is a comparatively tamo affair. The sale of whisky to these people is carefully guarded against, aud when detected, which is quite often, severely punished. They buy large quantities of molasses, however, and from this surreptitiously distil an intoxicating drink called "hoo chenoo," with which they enliven their "potlat-hes." Tho first night of this ono has just passed, and the howling and dancing which went on in tho large house of tho dead headman showed that considerable "hoochenoo" had in some way been pro vided for the occasion. The house has uo chimney, and tha smoke from the lire, built in the centre of the floor, escapes through a hole in the roof. The walls glisten with black soot. The danco has no figures, but is simply a ca.lcnccd step in a circle around the tire, the time being given on a sort of a tom ,toin or tambourine. When each dancer gets tired, ho squats down anywhere to eat and rest. So it goes on all night long, and day in aud day out, until the supplies are all gone, and tho blankets all parted with to buy the means ol keeping up the "potlatch." The duration of the "wake" depends upon the supply of blaukets. The "potlatches" invariably cud in the im poverishment of those who give them. A native who gives a "potlatch" and re tains any of his property afterward is disgraced. Tho widow, in this particular case, has entered eagerly into the festi vities, nnd yet realizes that it willtake tho last blanket before it is all over' Cremation was a favorite form of dis posing of dead bodies among theThlink lets. It has been abandoned here, at Sitka, for many years, but in the re moter villages it is still practiced. Sev eral weeks ago I went in a canoe seventy, five miles from Kiliisnoo to a floonah village of about Hoo people. They had ne:.t, comfortablo log houses, and had abundance of food. Their doctor or medicine man had died only a fe'.v days before. The last night beforo disposing of the body was spent in a tobacco smoke iu the council house. Nona but the men attended. Each one brought his own tobacco and pipe. Thopipeaid not gD around as among the Plains and Mountain Indians, but each one smoked, while some one in a conversational tone spoke of the merits and life of the de ceased. All were sitting around the sides of the building in a sort of a bunk or bench. The next day a huge pilo of dry wood and faggots was kindled in the streets of thu village and ihe body was brought out aud placed thereon nnd cremated, with no attendant cere monies. A Ssulptor Fo )U Hi Captious Critics. A St. Paul gentleman, who, many years ago was a -esident of Cincinnati, tells a story concerning Powers, the sculptor, which bus probably never been in print. There were at that time in Cincinnati two or three connoisseurs in art, who assumed a sort of general con -sorship in such matters, and everything that they said concerning works ot art wassupposed to "go." 1 hey had unfa vorably criticised some of Powers'! work, nnd, as bo did not take much stock in their dictations anywav, he decided to show theiu up to the art people of tho ity. He was working iu aom-5 wav, aud announced a reception at which ho would show somo ol ihe latest products of his yenius. Among the figures was ono representing the Mayor of the city It stood iu a niche by itieif, with the light arrang d, for the host effect. The high muck-a mucks of the art world of Cincinnati attended the recep tion. They evamiced the figure of the Mayor ami made comment on it "Tho hands," remarked oue, "do not reveal any anatomy." "The leKs a:e a tn e short." said another, "but otherwise 1 consider it a very tine figure." And so they Went on. i H e ot them finally dis covered that so uething was wrong about the Lridge uf the uo-e, and raised his hand to point ;u: the defect "Don't you pinch my uosu,'' cried tha alleged wax "Jigger" to their ustouiohment, cIls may and complete overth. ow as art crit ica. The sculptor had induced the re live Mayor to help him in his littlu -heme. J'auU'r.tt. A SJON. v., True lovo knows no barriers, ) Laughs at lock and key, tveeds no tongue interpreter To ask, "Lov'at thou me!" Eyes look into eyes and speal Eloquently, dumb; Tell-tale blushes on the cheek IVbisper whence they come Hand greets band with mute caress, Lingering tenderly, Baying thus "I'd fain express All I feel for fnee" But when Love, grown brave, would dare Make some bolder sign, Then from out a heart's despair There comes a Valentine. Demorest'e Magazine. JlU.MOK OF THE DAY. The place to call the roll Breakfast. An under cui rent The Atlantic cable. A "howling swell" The sea in a itorm. A political nobleman The official ;ount. "Catch words" ".Vab," "grab," "clutch," etc. Happy is the dudo who has the mus tache down fine. A bank note "Dear sir, you're ac sount is overdrawn." There is bat little poetry in a gas bill when the metre is out of order. Object to the impediment to their speech. The Chicago Anarchists. A woman glass-eater named Eliza, in Denver dime museum, is known locally as Crystal lAe.PUUlmrg Chronicle, Whon a public office-holder comes to feel that he is a big gun, it is time for him to be fired. S-Dneroille Journal. A kiss is often explosive. But we have yet to sco the lovers who shrink from this particular kind of dynamite. I'aciric Stale'. A man's disposition can often bo judged by the color of his eyes, but still more correctly by the color of h i nose. hitr'ington Free l'rtf. When the bashful young man finally come to the point, it cools his ardor considerably to find, pnrchance, that it is the freezing point. Time. The reason why hte dove of neace still hovers over Europe, Ethelred, is because she can't find any place sufficiently clear of bayonets to give her a footing. How like the ague 1b this boon Of matrimonial strife! The fever ends in one short moon, The chill runs on through life. Bflford'n Majazine. "That Campbell family are the very scum of the earth?" "But, Harry, they move in the very highest circles." "Well, isn't scum always found at the topi" Tim'. "Well, Tatrick, what struck you most, during your Southern trip?" "The mule, sorl" replied Patrick, with a grin that disclosed the absence of nino molars. Burlington Free l'rei. "I aw wahut a tie, doncherknow, to match my eyes." "Let me see. Blue eyes and er sorry fir, but our blue ties with red edges are all sold. Havo somo in next week." Harper' Bazar. Monsieur X "I ha, a an invitation to Mine. Y.'s ball next week." Monsieur Z. "So have I." Monsieur X. (aston ished) "Is it possible ! She must in tend to give a very largo party." America. America's madhouses are pretty well loaded with insane people, but they can't hold a candle or kororene lamp to the number of fish that go in. iae-t certain seasons of the year. Oil City Jliiaai d. A Bondout barber, who, it seems, can never get au "edge" on his razors, was dumbfounded several days ago when n customer dropped into the chair and said "Give me laughing gas before you begin operations." "Why not call North Dakota Unca papa?" asks the St. Paul Pioneer I'ree. That's it; why rot' Why not call it Chaubiinagungamaugf Why not call it Chimquassabaintook, or Molechunka -uiunk? Xvrieich B'dletin. A petition is being circulated among the business men of New York, who patronize the elevated road, requesting the guards not to kill more thau oue member in a family, except iu cases of absolute necessity. Lite. The merchant had beeu sick unto death. "Tell me tho truth, doctor," he said, "is the danger over :" "Sure,"said the doctor; "there is uo more danger: the crisis is passed. And the merchant re vokes his bequest of .?;ooo tuUia, ha pital. Bad Actor du restaurant!--"Waiter, what do you mean by bringing me such eggs? They are absolutely rotten." Waiter iwho bad seeu the actor perform the night befoiei- "I thought that was the kind you always got, sir. " Drake' t M fjatim. Miss Spinster (to shoe dealer) "I see that you have marked down some of your shoes." Mioe Dealer- "Yes; that line ol ladies' -hues is marked down. We h ive marKed 'em all down two sizes. Now Mice's a tidy little nailer, I 1 think will just tit you.' .Miss Spinster blushes aud buys the shoes. llarp.-r Btiar. A patent-medicine vender in a country village was dilating to a crowd upon the wonderful e!l'u-ieni y of his irun bitters ' Why, ' said he, "Steve Jenkins had only taken the bitters one week when he was shoved into prisou for murder, and what does Stive do but open a veiu in his arm and take iron enouirh out of hi blood to iimKr i crowbar, with which he pried tho doois open aud let him elf out:" Propagation ol Oysters. inq rtencn metnoj or propagation consists in susi emtiug tiles in the watei during the spawning season The ycung oysters cling very closely to ttieae tiles The tiles are coated with platter, aud alter the youu; uysiteia have so; upon the planter the tiles aretakeu up, the pis ter ia separated from tun t ies wi'b knives, aud the tiiea aie used lor the next spawn iug seasuu. I lie plas'er hldiug the set is then piaute 1, aud the young oysters cultivated. 'Ihe French method is much more trouble- n.o aud expensive and ex pulsive thau th it in ue iu Luiu Mii i-ouud. Our refuse deis, etc. , serve a Colic,. - -I lue, and the results are s;'enuK. .V. ' Yrk 'iim..