LEXINGTON WEEKLY BUDGET. VOL. 2. LEXINGTON, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY SEPT. 25, 1890. NO. 52. FOBLISBED EVEHI THURSDAY EVESINO SNOW & WHITSON. Terms of subscription i Oat Isar, II oc 81x Months, 60 cents. Invariably In idraac. EATES OF ADVERTISING I Ono squaro (ton linos or less), first Insert Ion 11.00; saob subsequent Insertion, 60 osnts. Special rates with regular advertisers. All transient advertisements must be paid tor In advance. Job Printing ft! avs-aydescrtpilua exc.iU.ad with neatness and dlepateh.. T. SHIPLEY, M. D., PRACTITIONER OF Medicine, Surgery & Midwifory. Registered. HKPPKKR, OREGOH. Attorncy-at-Law and Notary Public, LEXINGTON, OREGON. Atti.rnej for the North American Attorneys and Tradesmen's Protective Union of Connec ticut. JVRANK KBLLOOGr, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, HEPPNER, OREGON. Money ta loan on Improved farms. Office In first National Bank. JJK3. KATB PARSELL, Notary Public and Conveyancer, ALPINE, OREGON. Deeds, Mortgages and all others Legal Instnl metits carefully drawn. Applications for Stato and school Lands made, and Pensions obtained. pRANK H. SNOW, Land Agent and Notary Public, LEXINGTON, OREGON. Filings taken on government land. Real estate advertised and sold on commission. New t'omera are invited to call and be tilled full of nolld facts about the advantages of Morrow joutitry. Office houis from 7 a. M. to midnight, Bi'i.our building. R. LIEUALLEN, General :-: Blacksmith And Horseslioer, 13 ALWAYS ON DECK AND PREPARED TO i do anything In bis line In a neat and work manlike manuer. Burses shod with care and accuracy. Shop on C St, Lexington, Or. O. W. BROCK, Wagon and Carriage Maker. REPAIRING DOME. Arcade Street, Bet. C and D, Leilngton. ... Oregon. New York Working Girls. Many columns, says a New York letter, have been written about the work girls of New York. They have been ((escribed at one time as the most op pressed people upon the face of the earth, submitting to every condition of hardship, and again they have been described as the underpaid hirelings of . cruel jaoitalists, and all that sort of thing. The average working girl in New York is very different from these descriptions. She is a cheerful sort of being, who gets up early, works late, look healthy and complains very little. Sometimes she seems a trifle gay and often she is lively. 1 recall just now one instance of absolute cruelty on the part of her employer, and that is in the case of a rich dry goods firm which compels ber ta stand during all the hours of tha day, with a short respite at noon of thirty minutes for luncheon. As an offset to this cam I may, I think, properly mention the rules of an ex tensive retail establishment up near Twenty-third street. The salaries of the saleswomen tji this place are very liberal, indeed, and while all the girls are compelled to be on time in the morning there is fp vtein of fines. A mere reprimand usually serves all the 1 ends desired. la' summer every sales woman is allowed two weeks of loca tion oti full pay., .rwid during the dull season She may ;.ke as many more without salary. But in no case is she compelled t do- a amount of work that is calculated to iujure her health or to interfere vt-itli her enjoyment in the evenings, except on Saturdays Does she flirt on tb street? Well, if she dills a little and it does not inter fere with her work in . the store the proprietor is no wiser, or, if be knows it. ha savs notbinu-. Illegitimates In Russia. Some time ago a midwife of Warsaw, Sktiblinsknya by naino, was brought to justice, with several of her coadjutors, for the crime of killing illegitimate children. The woman and her helpers called tliemselved "The Society of Angels," and engaged in the atrocious work of "despatching the little ones to heaven," of, course for a certain con sideration paid them by the unfor tunate mothers or their friends. This fact aroused a discussion in all the Knssian papers on the fate of illegiti mate children in that country. The mortality of such wii'fs was found to be over 80 per cent, even among those in the Government asylums in St. Petersburg and Moscow. Those asy lums keep the children for only a short time, and send them to villages be raised in tlm fundies of peasants. There they die in large numbers, tint the number of such" children as are "despatched" directly by professional murderers like Sknblinskaya can hard ly be estimated. Only about three weeks ago asimilar"Soeiety of Angels" was discovered in Vilna. The fate of the unfortunate infants has raised the question as to the causes for the prevalence of such a crime. The papers bint, as broadly as the strict ness of the censor of the press allows, that the cruel laws with reference to waifs are at the bottom of the whole trouble. An illegitimate child iu Rus sia, if it ever grows up, has no stand ing before the law. No matter what his abilities or virtues, if by chimed or by natural endowment, he happens to be possessed of any. there is no hope and no prospect for him to do any good in the world or for himself. The law will not recognize him as a member of so ciety, and lie is tossed about and buf fetted until he finds his way into some gang of criminals passing their lives iu a mine in the Ural mountains. In view of these facts it is no wonder that sinful mothers regard it as a benefit for their children to be "despatched to heaven" beforo they grow up to live in ignominy and suffering on earth, and that ' angels" like Skublinskaya should be found who have no scruples to help sinful mothers ridding them selves of their children. Preparation for Foreign Travel. For a traveling dress, a good Eng lish serge is best, gray, or else black and white mixture. It will not tumble, will not show dirt nor dust, and will wear two years, if necessary. Let this be made as plain as possible, short enough to clear the ground by two inches (Italian slreels are iwj dirty), and h-ive a good, hig, strona; liuen pocket. A soil felt hat is the best head-gear. A traveling rug or good shawl is a necessity, also an umbrella, both are bought to better advantage iu Loudon, (iet boots before leaving home, it is hard litting an American foot abroad; and be sine to take rub ber overshoes, they will be often needed, especially in (iermany; ami there they weigh four times as much and cost ac cordingly. It is not necessary to take a quantity of underclothing; it can be washed anywhere in 24 hours. Warm er underclothing will be needed than at home. It is well also to take an ex tra dress of some dark silk. Soft surah is preferable, made without many "furbelows," that may pack well in a valise. This is to wear at dinner. As for purchasing abroad, almost everything can bo bought somewhat cheaper in London, but not so much cheaper as people imagine. Prices are higher than in New York, with the exception of kid gloves. One can get them made to order at a little shop at 232 Rue de Rivoli in Paris for about 75 cents a pair for four buttons, and from that up. Florence is the best place to buy jewelry, especially tur quoise and mosaic. The Florentine statuary is very cheap. It is safe to offer about one-third the original price. Naples is the only place for corals and cameos. Don't buy lace in Brus sels, as it can be got in London much cheaper. London is the place to buy books also. Of course I ranee is the place for pictures, and a visitor should be there iu May or June to attend the Salon exhibition. In traveling on the continent, get Bedaeker's guide-book. Look up the hotels, and, if intending to stop any place for several days, write ahead for terms. Ask for a price including light and service, as they are always extra. When the price does not include lights, take candles along. The charge for lights is 50 cents a night for each per son, and a dozen cnndles cost but 20 cents. Soap is always extra, except in England. Those who ask for anything not on the bill of fare will pay handsomely for it. In all the Paris restaurants they charge for the table-cloth and napkins, to begin with. The Paris edition of the New York Herald will give a good deal of information. Be daeker's gives a list of all the hotels and pensions, also cab fares, etc. The second-class, except In the matter of style, are much cheaper. They are generally more comfortable, and the cooking is just as good. A little knowledge of the language of the country goes a "teat ways, and reduces expenses wond ufiilly. Keep on hand a large stock of patience and all the Christian virtues, and bo very wide awake all the time. Good Housekeep ing. The mayor of Plainlield, N. J., baa an umbrella that he has carried for thirty-five years. An effort in the United States senate to prohibit the sale or drinking of liquor in committee rooms of the senate wag voted down Aug. 28. Drinking by sena tort in committee rooms was declared to be a great and growing evil. ARE YOU A DOOR-BAN CER7 Don't Say Su" Too Quickly, Hut. Just Think Over Y.Mir Sins. "Are you a door-banger?'1 asks a writer ill the Milwaukee Wisconsin. This question, addressed to every person with whom we come in contact would probably be met by an indisr nant negative, yet if they paused to glance even half-way backward they would instaut.lv regret that involuntary lib. The art of door-banging is one that apparently conies by divine right to every human being, ' and that art is more carefully developed thau many other natural gifts that would, with proper cultivation, enable the happy possessor to make quite as much noise in the world and with less inconveni ence and annoyance to others. Most bouMis art:, peculiarly sdrU't.M..2!Hm J '.IT'1' ; .. for the display of the door-banger's ceaseless activ ity, a fact which the man who set the fashion for portieres had doubtless in consideration when he first made up his mind to introduce that innovation. To him, indeed, we should be very grateful, for the fewer doors there are the less likelihood of and opportunity for such Wagnerian discord. The man or woman who would not take your life under the greatest pro vocation, does uot hesitate to imperil your hearing, and the worst of this sort of thing is that we meet with it generally at the hands of those who are nearest and dearest. The relative who is up first iu the morning wejl, that's the one who has the best show at the door, and the arms of Morpheus must exert a double-horse-power pressure if they would guide your slumbers successfully through that reverberating bang. It is true that in sickness an effort is usually made to subdue this peculiar instinct, or to repress this native taleut; but behold, when the sufferer is con valescent, the pent-up energy once more displays itself in the direction from which it momentarily lapsed, and the music of the present once more offers pdds to any that the great German masters cau originate. People who are evolutionists cau doubtless trace the early development of this historic disposition to bang. They will point to far-off ages when man iu his natural state used to close his jaws with a far-echoing snap upon the human flesh he devoured; to a little later period, when, in a more en lightened state, lie swung heavy prison doors upon his captives; to even a later age, when, his first musical inclina tions beginning to blossom, lie herald ed to his victims their approaching neatn iiivougii tne en iivemug strain s'u. the tom-tom. Now in this age of seeming cultiva tion, the foregoing methods of pro claiming our immediate personality ale happily forbidden, but there is no law. written or unwritten, against that evil which is apparently inherent and irradical. But perhaps that Utopia, toward which present writers declare we are progressing, will be a laud iu noceut of other than tent-like accommo dations for family life, where, conse quently, the restlessness which has hitherto found vent iu door-banging may spend itself in pursuits which will be beneficial, uot annoying, to the human race. The Human Face la the Senate. The absence of strong faces is even more noticeable in the Senate than it is in the House. The three most strik ing faces nre those of Gorman, Cul len, and Carlisle, more strength of character being found iu Gorman's, than all the rest. His is really a re markable face, iu striking contrast to the rest about him. A stranger in the gallery would pick him out at once as a statesman of the highest type, but suspicion would be raised by au inde scribable trace of cunning, as in the face of Talleyrand. Edmunds has the face and head of the philosopher and sage. Sherman, Teller, Faulkner, Spooner, and half a dozen other belong to the alert type, representing in the House by Dingley, Holman. Greenhalge, and tho like. The weakest face in the Senate is prob ably that of Mr. Hoar, and the vast majority are of different grades in his class, such as Dolph, Hiscock, Hale, Mitchell, Ransom, etc. Washington Letter, The Growth of Trees. The correlation that for a long time was supposed to exist between the num ber of "annular" rings formed iu the trunk aud the age of the tree has been refuted on the best of evidence. M. Charency, the French explorer who visited tbo ruins of Plenque, Mexico, In 1859 and again in 1882, and there fore at an interval of twenty-two years, found that trees that had been cut by him in the first-named year bad, in the short space of less than a quarter of a century, grown new trunks which ex hibited no less than 230 of these so called "annular rings." an average of nearly ten a year. From observations made by M. Boussenard it would appear that equatorial plants often form no less than twelve concentric growths in the space of a year, two of which are usually much more developed than the remainder, which appear to correspond to a period of maximum circulatory activity. St. Louis Republic. A Model Young Man. There is a youth of 21 near Via, Irwin county, Georgia, who was never Intoxicated, never spent but 10 cents for drink (aud that for lemonade for bis sweetheart), never used au oath, never carried a pistol, and Defer sparked but one girl. HOW TO PACK A TRUNK, Advice on a Matter Tliut I of Munli portance Nowaday. Onir grandnothers would have open ed their eyes' at the thought of a pro fessional trunk-packer. And yet the fancied and real ':ikts of modern life are such that the acking of one's wardrobe for safi'ftansportution is no'w a days oue of l fae arts. (Every young girl .ake special paring aud learn unt s.Wt only for hui- own comfort, theWby help her , isne can often llu.ls.-W , be the la weary 'Minws to "goon! Samarn, iuvaliM, write! tlm VmMi's f! Order 'iv .,.,.!. that is siwciaU:!.!'. fingers, for met, in is needed b..,, .... ,. , H'elT article, ami squ i.f tne bundle into corners, and put tho heaviest ar ticles on top. Before starting on a task that will require a long time, and will demand much thought and planning, tho pack er should go from room to room, from closet to closet, from bureau to bureau, aud select exactly what she intends to take with her. This is the only man ner by which everything will "be se cured and nothing mislaid or left bo hind. It is a good plan to do your packing in a lower room, as it is much easier to bring things down than to carry them up, nnd then it. is not so hard to lift the truuk when filled, nor so dif ficult to get it out of the house. Nearly all staircases bear honorable scars that have been won in a battle betweeu trunk and porter. When everything has been collected and the time of the journey draws nigh, the truuk should be "brought down, its interior dusted, and all its broken straps, corners, locks, etc., carefully mended. The heavy articles, shoes, books, underwear, iu short, everything that will bear pressure, must be placed in the bottom. Over these fold a layer of newspapers or a soft old sheet. In folding dresses if the trunk is too short to admit of the skirt lying full length be sure and fold it carefully over a little at the top. All strings at tached to steels in gowns -'lould bo united. Tissue paper sho' a bo placed between the folds of good dresses aud also over passementerie or jet trim ming. T s lessens the danger ol creasing and keeps dust and lint from settling there. Dress waists should be laid smoothly in long shirt boxes. All the col lars, laces, ruchings, ribbons, and ?A k,ifcjkere!iieff -should be placed in uutiui i.,.r.T hum JJrti n;u 1111 ciothiug on each side so as to keep them steady. Hats and bonnets are the most dif ficult to manage unless there are spec ial compartments for them, and of these there are never enough. 'They should be wrapped each aloue in tissue paper and then covered with stiff brown paper, which should be pinned firmly around them. They should then be placed iu boxes just large enough to hold them and packed in the middle of the trunk, where they can be held tcady by the clothing around them. Do not place your jewelry and money in your trunk. A far better plan is to make a stout bag of chamois skin, place your valuables in it, aud fasten it securely inside your dress waist or any other portion of your attire most convenient. Above all, do not place your valuables iu a hand-bag, lo that von will lay it down on the car teat or hotel table and leave it there to be lost forever. All garments that are liable to crush ing should lie placed iu the very top of the uppermost compartments, and if they are carefully laid they will be subjected to but little pressure. If you are going to a place remote from drug stores.or where the services of a physician will be hard to secure, it is best to provide yourself with 1 few simple remedies, lot you may luffer under some eniergenev. A Lot tie of Jamaica ginger, cxliacl ul ham amelis, sonic camphor, some prepared mustard plaster, ami a few soft cloths for impromptu bandages would be useful companions when away from home. Some of our favorite toilet soap will take the place of our bad-smelling stuff so often found in hotel toilet- xuuLsTho bottles should be plainly labeled, firmly corked, wrapped first in cotton batten, and then in paper, and placed in boxes. Ink and shoe polish should never lie packed in a trunk. It is better to buy such things when you arrive at your journey's end. If you are packing for children be sure to remember their little playthings. Make a place for dollie and her ward robe, pack a small box with odds aud ends of silk and cardboard, embroidery needles, transfer pictures, scrap-book, and other Ihings, so small iu your es timation, so necessary to their hap piness. When the little creatures are lakeu aay from their family surroundings and deprived of the toys and games tney love, it is no wonder that they go into mischief and are a uuisance to all akout. In short, it is in packings trunk, as in everything else. It re quires thoughtfulties", good judgment, unselfishness, and a sincere desire to oblige others to make your work a SUCOCiS. Criiiiiiiiuii In Paris. it i now possible to U cremated in i'sris for tib cents.recent improvements having greatly reduced the cost. Near ly nil lliu cremations, however, consist of llie remain of persons disputed of al the public expense. KINCS OF THE SULKY. fntarestlug tiosNlp About Remarkable Trotters of the Fast anil Present. The question, "What show would the horses of twenty years ago have with those of the present day?" was put to Doble. "I consider Dexter and George M. Pafchen the equal of any horse now living, if we take into consideration the tracks, vehicles, aud manner ol handling then iu vogue." "Yes," said Splan, "the blanketing, drawing fine, nud work which George M. Patchen had to undergo was terri ble. At one time, matched to go under saddle, he was reduced forty pounds in one week, nnd on the day of the race did not have, as much flesh "ns a canary bird carries. You rode him in that race, Bud; he was drawn so line that his sides wore glued toother. He was on tire at trie end of the lirst heut and much distressed, but he had won derful recuperative powers." "He and Dexter were us game as any animal that ever lived, aud what horse of the present time could stand the gruelling they wore giveuP" asked Doble. The triumphs of queen Maud S. were then touched upon. "I knew of no animal possessing her stamina," raid Hickoff. "Well, I often thought Blair's handling was injudicious, but after I got to know her 1 believed that in ninety-nine out of a hundred cases killing work was just what site needed. Iu the warming up before she accom plished the feat which hung her shoe over the entrance to Cleveland's track Bair gave her a mile in 2:12 1-2 and a repeat in 2:11 3-4, and I would have given but little for her chance. In the drive when passing tho three-quarter pole she swerved, and Bail', reaching for the whalebone, gave it to her. I thought all was up, and that she would go into the fence, but her nearness to the fence is what saved her. Summon, ing up nil her powers into one mighty effort she went straight and truo. You all know the result. "She made me hold my breath with painful anxiety the time she started against the present record." continued Kickok. "I had quite a little wager up that she would not beat her record, nnd when site wont the three-quarters in 1:85, a runner's gait, I made up my mind that my money was burned up. but a break settled it in my favor." The prospects of tho 2:00 horse were discussed. Doble had not much faith in his coming, although he had driven Johnston a quarter in 27 1-2 seconds. Uickok, wlule lie liad seen Johnston go in 30 seconds nud St. Julien iu the same time, said they were the only ones iu his experience, and thought the time was yet far distant. Splan was more sanguine, anil considered that when you got a horse with the perfect gait of Axtell and the endurance of Maud S. doing quarters in 28 1-2 to 2D seconds, the 2:IK1 Hotter was a fact. "1 con sider Axtell to lie the best-gaitcd home living; his gait is the poetry of trotting action. The man who could ever watch the bend of his knee, the fold of his fetlocks, without being awakened to a sense of perfection of movement unsurpassed has no perception of the beauty in art or nature," mused Solan. "His gait is of that smooth and frictiouless sort so hard to diwerilie and judge the rale of pace," stated Doble, "and while I lirst thought ho was going away from the w ire when he made his record belter than a 2:30 rale, it is barely possible that he was going as fast as 2:25 but surely no faster." The Horseman. Dogs In Warfare. Experiments iu training dogs to act, in time of war, as scouts, messengers, and sentinels, are being carried on with success in most part of the in fautry regiments garrisoned iu Franco. The manner iu which they are edu cated is curious. Wheu a dog is to act as messenger two men are detached from a post and walk about a mile, the animal being led by the collar. One man remains stationary, while the other returns to his starting point. On being set loose the dog immedi ately sets in pursuit of tho latter and finds its way to the post with unerring regularity. To insure the delivery ol dispatches, a smalt bag of dark ma terial is strapped on the animal's back. As a sentinel, tho dog will scent a stranger at a distance of one hundred yards, and will commence growling, barking or evincing disquietude iu somo other manner. In order to accustom them to scouts' duty the dogs are encouraged to search a lield or a thicket in which soldiers, wearing foreign uniforms, lie in am bush. As soon as the animals perceive the latter they retreat, running to the soldiers who accompany them, and thus announcing the presence of an enemy. Their instinct seldom mis leads tlietii, and they have been found very useful as a means of communi cating with patrols and detachments on outpost duly. In time of war they are also intended to search for wound ed soldiers and oiterers, ns well us to carry provisions and ammunition to outposts. An interesting sight, savs a corrcs uondciit, is afforded by tfie spectacle of these four-footed soldiers at drill under the command of a sub-lieutenant and surrounded by no admiring group of vagrant curs w ho do uot enjoy the distinction of Iwitig enrolled under the French Hag. ami who contemplate their four-footed brethren with evident euvy. There is a plague of locusts iu tha roviueeof Giziiii iu Egypt. In five Jays the authorities destroyed six tons l them, in plowing, quantities ol iheir eggs are turned up. Exposure to ;ho suu destroy the eyj,. NECESSITY MADE A TONGUE. The Stor of the Invention of the Kplieiu- erai i iiiiiook Language Out of the necessity of a universal language for commercial transactions has been evolved the harsh, discordant Volapuk, yet uot generally accepted. Its only charm, if it possesses any, is in the simplicity of its grammar. It has no horrid irregular verbs, like the terrible aller which" is the bete noir of all students of French; nor has it that awful subjunctive mood of our own language which the average Kansan ana Missourian, instead of letting severely alone, has laboriously wrestled with until they have constructed ono or two veritable provincialisms and which sound, when heard by the culti vated ear, like an epitaph in a York shire country churchyard. But years ago, in the early par of the century-, the traders of the Hudsou Bay, the Northwest, and other fur com panies manufactured a jargon out of the English, Indian, and French lan guage as a means of communication between themselves aud the various Indian tribes, whose tongues and dia lects were like a sealed book. The Chinook enabled them to converse with the white men, and, converse, also among themselves. It is not a lan guage, because ll has no grammar; it is more euphonitis than Volapuk, but that is admitting little in favor of its euphony. Oue word, like the French on or faire, has a dozen different mean ings, depending upon its relation to another word, easily guessed at in Chi nook, but uot so easily in French if one adheres to tho irrevocable lint of the "Academy." Although I have had no use for Chiuook these twenty five years, I have not forgotten it, and presume I could carry on an ordinary conversation without difficulty. To give a specimen of its character I here present tho little nursery prayer of "Now I lay me down to sleep:" "Al-ta ui-ka nieosum, ni-ka tick-ey Sah-a-le syee, close nan-age ni-ka turn turn. Spose uika mnm-e-loose clip ni ka mit-whit to-molla, ni-ka ticlc-ey Sab-a-le syee qual-lsum is-cuin, ni-ka tum-tuin." Literally: "Now I sleep, I want the Great Spirit to watch my soul. If I should dio beforo I got up to-morrow I want tho great Spirit to forever keep my soul." During the early days of the Penin sular campaign a certain officer of high position nud rank sent a telegram to an other officer stationed in Washington, who, like myself, had been "hived" iu one of the posts on the Upper Pacific for years aud understood Chiuojk, iu which jargon the message was wiltutw Of course it was intercepted, as were all suspiciously worded messages, and brought to the" great War Secretary's office, where cipher experts perspired aud grew desperate over it, but could make nothing out of it. its capture created a terrible commotion; nnd awful was tho mystery surrounding it; a plot against the Government it must be, and no effort was spared to trace it to the sender. At last this was ac complished, nud its liarnilessuess clear ly established; the weary officer before Yorktown had simply nskod his old comrade to send down at first opportu nity some bottles of good whisky. Stanton overlooked it, but warned the principals not to indulge In such dan gerous pleasantries again. Kansn City Wiir. Forty-Two Unities and a Button. Robert Jones, a colored man who lives near Henderson, in Houston county, told the Herord about a big rattlesnake he killed a few days ago. He relates that he was in the field near his house at work. His dog uear by was barking at some object, and as lie turned to look he saw his dog jump at least three feet iu the air then yell as if paiufully hurl. The dog started to him, and when within a few feet be gan to reel and fall, and iu five min utes he was dead. The face of llie dog was skinned from above the eyes down to the nose by the fangs of the mad dened serpent. He told his boy to go to the house and get his shotgun aud pistol. When t lie boy returned they started to look for the snake, but could not locate him for some time, as the rattle sounds us though It was in every direction lit the same time. Tho snake was found and the con tents of the gun tired into him at short range, while still in his coil ready to strike again. The load did not stop him from rattling, and the pistol then put two balls through his body, but it did not diminish tin! singing the least bit. They limtlly got two poles aud had to strike him at least a dozen hard blows before lifu was extinct. His body was as large as the crown of a Derby hat, live and a half fuet long, aud hail forty-two rattles and a button, making it 48 years old, His den was under a large rock, and Jones thinks there are a great many more of them in the den. It is tile largest snake killed in tlds part of Georgia. Afonfe zuma Itcionl. IjNiiiiuiie of the World's I'opulul Ion, The Mongolians lead with about 630, 000.000, ami tho Aryans, which com prise practically all the people of Europe, four-fifths 0f those of the American continent, ami all of the civilized residents of Australia, come next, with 015,1X10,000. The negroes are put at 150.000,000, the Semitic peo ple at 65,000,000, the Malays and Poly nesians at 33,000,000, and the Indian of North and South America at 15.000,. LAW. Again the laineiil it heard that tb sweet, low English voice i becoming hlijh-pitclic I, l,nll. and haiwh. I