C 77 ALL; 1 l . Tlie Coolei ' 62id of Pennsylvania Out laws Must Captnred. ; ' ' WORSE, THAN MOLLlE MAG 11 RES. MUfr!i -:J t diiik Hf - jH'Milf f.-. . O -i i?.--.-? H 5.' 1 ' t The Leader, of the Band is Trapped and ' Killed by Irate Farmers. RECDS AVENC HATH. Torture of a Fawner and Outrage or hl s loung Daughter for Defenae-of; Uxiontown, Pa., July 2S,-Jack Copley's infamous band of cut throat robbers and vagabonds, considered one of the most daring and dangerous bands of outlaws, next to the Molhe Maguires; that ever persecuted the citizens of this fltate, was left without a leader last Fri day, when Jack was trapped and shot. Coolev's band robbed travelers and the farmers of the surrounding country -fleeing to the coke regions when a sher :ifTs posse would start in pursuit. tOnce in the coke region it was impossible to make an arrest.' When Cooley was shot his last words were: "See that my death is avenged." . Yesterday the facts of a horrible crime came to light from the sheriff, who arrested a man named Rankin, one of Cooley's band, for. steal ing a flock- of sheep. Since Cooley death Rankin iB-said to have been chief of the outlaws. The sheriff secured from an eye-witness the story of the methods pursued by the band in avenging the death of their leader. After the theft of the flock of sheep, the outlaws drove .them to this place and sold them -, to butcher. With the proceeds liquor was bought and the men reveled in the for est during; Monday. Last evening the band, numbering a dozen men, pro ceeded to the house of Wesley Sisler, near Haydentown. . He was , seized by the " outlaws and pinioned. His only child, a young girl,' was then assaulted by members of the band. The helpless lather's cries for help were stifled by blows and a gag. His struggle for lib erty was only stopped by a blow from a . musket butt. After accomplishing their revenge the band departed. It is thonrfit that the eirl will not recover, A sheriffs posse started in pursuit of the band, and "lynch them all" is the cry heard today. Picked up a Team. Walla Walla Statesman. Considera '' ble excitement was created at Lewiston Wednesdav over the announcement that the steamer Annie Faxon, on the way up from Eiparia, had picked up a 'float' ing team,' harness and parts of a wagon which were taken abroad, btories are current that a team was heard running widly along the street leading to the Snake river about two' o'clock Monday morning, and this is supposed to be the flame team. It ran into the river above the ferry and was drowned. As no in quiry has been made concerning the matter, it is supposed the driver per ished with them. No clue is had to his identitv. The brand on' the horses was a figure 5 on the left hip. The wagon -. was new. , ' ' Elopement in High Life. Ameeicus, July 27. An elopement which has stirred up Georgia society is that of Miss Dousch Holcomb, one of the belles of Georgia, and J. Ponce de Leon Gill, a wealthy New Yorker, who has a home at Dewitt, Ga. Miss Hol comb is a member of one of the most , prominent' Georgia - families, and is grand-daughter of Mrs. Gov.'Perkins, of South Carolina,- whose beauty and brilliancy made her famous at all courts - of Europe when her husband was min ister to Russia. Miss Holcomb and Mr, ' Gill came to Americas this morning and were quietly married. None of her rel atives were apprised of their intentions, Peaceful Surroundings. Condon Globe. Condon is the most delightful little city in the Inland Em pire, .and . there, is an air of cordiality and refinement about the people that is re freshing and enlightening in its effects. Oondon people live a ''happy, cheerful, -easy life. The eurroundings are beauti ful, and this has a great influence upon the lives, characters and dispositions of her people. A man who resides upon a barren desert must be barren of virtues, (while one who lives surrounded by the magnificent generosities of nature, ' like -those surrounding Condon, must be en nobled by the contact and influenced to ward the great and the good. i i ,? ....... - Greeting. Ochoco -Review. .' D. C... Ireland has ibecome editor of The Dalles Chronicle. Mr. Ireland is one of the oldest news papermen in the state, is an able writer, :is wide awake to all ideas of progress, iand is the right man in the right place. May he and The Chbonicle live for ever. Dismlaal Swamp Sold. -Norfolk, a., July 27. The famous Dismal Swamp of Virginia, which con tains 50 square miles, was sold here tn--day to Thomas R. Ballantyne, the mil lionaire farmer of Virginia, for $10,000. ne McCoy UitrH. CVt pno.eil .mnriv Fossil Journal r . As the work of sur veying "the fcC6y ditch is in progrew, it seenjs appropriate to give some facta .in connectionwith the project as found in the location - notice ;filed with foe clerk of Crook county on 'the' 27 th of! of April last. The enterprise is the con- : ception of the Oregon Land, Irrigation, Lumber and Fuel Co., with principal office in Portland", and incorporated un der the act filed with i the, secretary of station. February 18,'l891,'providiiig for the? iropriatltJ,fj from the lakes and running streams of Oregon for irrigation.--Thenct.will tnafee the pro posed ditch" when" completed real prop erty in Crook county. The point of di version will be at or near the upper rapids on DesChutes river and its general course will be northerly and as. far as possible iff a; northwesterly 'direc tion, traversing' the' arid' lands" on .the east side. 1 ' -' "-. ' ' FromVthe headgate? will extend system of flitch or flume, or sections of each, .-of the following . . dimensions Flume, fifty feet wide, and ten ' feet deep dhches at bottom 150 feet, at the top 100 feet. The capacity will be sal ficient for 200,000 inches of water, miner's measurement, under a six inch pressure. Six reservoirs are to be con strncted in connection with the-ditch, and provision is made for enlargement of resources as business will justify. ' It is to be known as the McCoy irrigation ditch, of which H. McCoy' is president and G. W; McCoy -secretary.- Although the survev is now in progress, it is im possible to learn when or on what .scale the work of construction will be com menced. It has been said that the ditch will, when completed, render service to the Haystack and Agency plains country, northwest from Prineville. Poor Fire Apparatus. How often it occurs, when things are going along smoothly, that some particu lar necessity for the common good is neglected, and a fire, or a flood it may be, comes along and destroys ' hundreds and sometimes thousands of dollars worth of property, besides oftentimes sacrificing lives. In Portland recently an entire block of buildings was destroy ed, in the very heart of the city, which it is said might have been avoided with a little better management. In Walla Walla, last Saturday, the Stine house, the French restaurant, and Meyers cigar factory,' were destroyed because of a de fective steam fire engine.' The engineer was suspended, but if the statement of Chief Engineer Blalock is true the enr gineer of the engine should be reinstated and the councilmen hauled over the coals neglect of duty. Chief Blalock eays : for "I was within a half block of the engine house when the first cry oi fire was given and I ran to the engine, when I found the guage on. the boiler marked twenty pounds of steam. When the engine arrived - at Fourth street and was set the guage showed ten pounds of steam. . Engineer Thornton opened the throttle to give the fire a draught when the steam dropped down to nothing. The flume3 of the engine were leaking very badly and it was almost impossible for the stoker to keep the fire going. This goes to show, that it was not the fault of the department's paid officers, but of the engine and proves what I have been contending with the council for, that the city needs more and better apparatus. I make this statement in justice to the paid members of the firj department who naturailv will be the recipients of considerable censure from the public." Dalles Business. merchants, and Dusmess men gener erslly, m The Dalles,' inform us that during July and August they expect dull times i that while business seems inac tive because the:fimeri ar too buer to visit the city,-trade keeps up about the same, and mail orders increase. The wool business isabout closed for the sea- eon, and wheat will soon be on. Vegeta bles of all kinds are plentiful and values are a shade etronger. Cantoloupes and watermelons are arriving from Cantor ma, per steamers .principally. In dairy produce there is a firmer tone to the market for choice fresh butter, and deal ers are asking steady prices for a strictly first-class article. The demandfor sum mer fruits is steadily maintained, and the moderate .receipts- tend to sustain. values. 'There is considerable specula.' tion among dealers as to actual condi tion of the apricot and peach crop, owing to the fact that the driers and packers are offering unusually high rates for the green products. Berries are in moderate demand and prices are fairly steady. Historical Structure. . Oregon City Enterprise. . The build ing that served as the first capftol of Oregon territory, in this pitv. is being repaired this week by the owner. ' It was built in 1850 by, John L. Morrison who now resides on Puget sound, after J whom Morrison street, Portland, was named. The territorial legislature, held its sessions there before the Capital was changed to Salem. Subsequently it was used for a Good Templars hall, and Y. M. C, A. rooms. It wa once used for a private school. The Enterprise first saw the light in the building. ' For the paet fifteen years or so it has been used as the Oriental hotel. Tllli'ADViSORY BOARD: Criiiiialiy Boia THreats is : to ywnat : v - They Iiitend 10 bo; - . ..-I .t. : THE EMPLOYES TO BE ASSASSIN'S. Will Ntrt Permit the Mills , to Run if Aay Agency Caa Prevent It. SEIfcCTXfr IWEJT TO SECrill WORK. DterUoqd J fcontrel gr, Wreck Mills. Swern to y the Bidding of the ' Committee. t' HosiissTBAD, July 28. It is evident the Carnegie Company are ablc . to operate their mills under the protection of, the militia. "but there is other means of fighting, according to a member of the advisory committee, who said: "We will not, under any circumstances, per mit those mills to run, if there isany agency which may be employed to pre vent it. We have already selected men who will go into those mills as fast as they can secure employment, who are instructed and swprn to carry out' onr orders in consummating a policy which we have agreed upon. When we arc sure there is no longer any hope for us. our - representatives in the mills will place explosives where they will do -the most harm to the machinery. ; We have definitely determined that .these mills shall not be opprated by non-union men, and one of the principal waysro prevent it 'is either to control or wreck the property. I might say a great deal more, but under the circumstances I have gone as far as I dare." j J ,': A Remarkable Curiosity. W . Walla AValla Statesman. .' The propri etor of the Statesman has in his posses sion a remarkable curiositj. It . is a rounded crystal of chalcedony .three in ches long of an oval form, white and translucent. It is but a thin shell, and when held to the light it seems to be nearly filled with water, which flows about as the object is turned this way and that. What makes it . interesting is that the water has undoubtedly been inclosed and hermetically sealed in this natural receptacle for .thousands and thousands', of years.--Probably it was there long before Moses was bora, and yet not a drop of it has evaporateu. Originally there was. a cavity in the rock, formed by a volcanic bubble. Water percolated into it, bringing in solution eilex, which was deposited on the walls of a little hollow in a .coating of chalcedony. At length it would have been filled up solid with beautiful crys tals, forming these "geodes," as they are called, which are nature's treasure caskets, found concealed in rocky for mations there least expected , and re vealing wonders of brilliant color. Agates are made in the same, fashion. However, in this instance tho small channel by which the water flowed in and out became closed up in some way and so the process stopped. After the lapse of no one can tell how many cen turies the stony mass containing the chalcedony chamber with its liquid con--tents was broken open and it fell out, being loose. i Lively Debate in Honolulu. Honolulu, July 20. A mass meeting of Hawanans, held at the Queen's ar mory, July 13,' was addressed bv RVW Wilcox, on the subject of fie cession of Pearl harbor to the V n'ited States, Wilson look- the gronna that to cedfr Pearl city to America would establish Hawaiian independence',- and he labored to remove the apprehension of evil which he said the native ' Hawaiian feared might follow this essaion of territory. Thefliscussion became general andJHon. Joseph Nawthi said ne was not in favor of Wilcox's remarks. The principal in the liberal party, he said, was autonomy and the independence of: the Hawaiian kingdom. He disapproved of the reso lution, and said he advised all" constitu encies to demand of their represen tatives the calling of mass meetings where this inattercouftl-be fully discussed. Strong resolutions ox warn oi connaence ' in Marshal Wilson, the Queen's adviser. were entertained in the assembly. ' .- The Xpidemlc in Xnrope. St. Petxbsbubg, July 28. The cholera is soon expected here if warm weather continues; ; The death , rate along the Volga' is really greater than was sup posed, and trade is. at a standstill. A Vienna dispatch says the preventive measures ordered enforced in Western Russia have-not been executed owing to the prevailing panic, although the cholera has appeared at Ekaterine, Stay, Odessa and Other places, i Arrangements for the great military maneuvers near Charokoff have " been canceled. Large qnantities of disenfectants have arrived at Constantinople for the Caucasus, but cannot proceed, owing to the fact that no ship can be" chartered for .Russian ports. All the ports on the Sea of Azov are affected from cholera. It is expect ed the disease will soon appear in west ern Crimea. . ;-Y J ft. irt-mtx it TheQr Worthern Kaetera XfctfiM ..V San From tiie Klnm&tti taOs xprsf. Last. week he Express pubhshed statement made by the chief engineer of the Great Northern road to the effect that Jim Hill's line , would be buit to San Francisco at an early date via southeastern Oregon. The statement is corroborated by the following which ap pears in the San Francisco Chronicle : "President Hill of the Great Northern will extend his line from Butte, Mont., via Boise City, to San Francisco. He has entered into a construction contract with D. C. Sbeppard of St Paul, for the building of the line, and much of the heavy work -will be done daring the coming winter.'' The Chronicle also 'prints another piece of news that has an important bearing on the future of south eastern Oregon.' It relates to the unsuccessful euit. of the government against the mili tary road company, which owns 185,000 acres of land "in Klamath. The origi nal company will aow have a perfected title and the vast domain will pass into the hands of the -eastern syndicate, of which ' Messrs.' Weyerhauser and Musser, St. Paul capitalists, are at the bead. Those -.two gentlemen, as an nounced in a previous issue , of this paper, informed Capt. CO. Applegate, when the, latter was in St.' Paul,-that they, will.' . co-operate with Klamath county people in a railroad movement as soon as the suit was decided in their favor. The Chronicle announces ' as follows : " "The old-time litigation of the United States vs. the military road com pany et al., was decided yesterday in favor of the defendants by the United States circuit -coart of appeals. It was held that the certificates of the construc tion of the military , roads signed by the governor oi Oregon were conformable to the statute which granted certain lands to the company for -such road construc tion, and the subsequent purchasers, who bought in good faith, were to be protect in t'ueir claims. The snit was brought to annul the land grant. The lower court had decided ia favor of the defendants and its judgment was affirmed. The real defendants were ex-Mayor Pond, and a number of associates." Power of the Press. Klamath Star: "The power of the country press" was not even perceptible in the defeat of Lionel R. Webster. In spite of the fact that the people's party vote went solidly against him and as solidly in favor of Chamberlain, he got more'vqtes than any other state candi date on either ticket. There is not a more poplar . man in the state than Webster and the power of . the country press arrayed against him is not worth shucks. Even the press must have solid facts against the candidate it would down. . Cun Cleveland Get There? Telegram. Here is the majority vote in 1884 and in 1S38 in four democratic states : 1884. 1888. Virginia.. 6,003 1,539 West Virginia. '. 4,221 506 North Carolina 17,884 13,118 Maryland ...11,118 6,18? It is really doubtful if Cleveland can' get next November the vote he received four years ago in these states. Oregon Butterflies. Klamath Express. Edward T. Owen, French professor of the Wisconsin state university, in company with Burt Cun ningham, has been chasing- butterflies In the Wood river country for four weeks past. The- professor has enjoyed his outing thoroughly' When, not a.ddjrg to bis fctomoJpgll collection be bss been casting the fly in the northern crystal streams with splendid success in one instance taking six speckled beauties from one pool, the half dozen aggregating thirty pounds in weight. On his arrival- here he jealously watched a box on which -was marked, "value, $250." It contained about 2o00 butter flies and moths which he will add to his collection at Madison, Wis. The professor has secured winged beauties from India, Australia, Borneo, South America and European countries, num bering in all fully 30,000. It is one of the most complete collections extant. It Is Weakening. Tekoa Globe: The third party's strength in this county, as well as others in eastern Washington, is, without doubt, on the wane. .From all parts i of thercpunty come ;reports of .weakening, and the indications are that" both the republican and democratic tickets will have their usual strength in November. Administrators Sale of Horses. In pursuance of an order of the county court, of Wasco county, dated July loth, 1892, 1 will sell as a whole or in lots, all the band of mares, geldings and colts, also one "Black Stranger" stallion, a fine horse and good breeder, belonging to thefatate of the late W. J. Meins. -These - are good well , bred horses, many of them broke to work. They will beiold for cash or approved security. .. . ', . - ,..' K- " J. C. Meins,' Administrator, r ' . of the Estate of W. J. Meins. 7.23d velni. Beginning with Aug. 1st I will give a valuable premium to every person who orders one dozen cabinet pictures. Photos to lie as erood a9 the verv best. rPrcmium on exhibition after Friday next. Call and see them. Only good for a few days. Hunt, the photographer. atoek only th The habit of in&lcing imitiiortua of ar- !,. oRr-.w.ni!,- of the def nnct Pharaohs. .Novr, ordina rily when one buys a thing he wants it fresh: but this rule does not hoM goo.l in- the mummy trade. .Tow nlerthey re the better, from .n coumierrsal poii.t Of view. " ' . , The high price of authentic lnmnniies in a good state of preservation has led it the practice of 'inanafacturin thean to order, and the man who contemplates the purchase of a dozen or so of these cheerful objects should see that he gets what is left of something which once walked and talked in Egypt 3.000 or 4,000. years ago. The mummy trade 1mm been very ac tive of late. Ordinary Egyptian citizens who have had no further use for them selves for thirty or forty centuries can be bought for about fifty dollars at Cai ro, but a bette quality or lncuvidual-a prince; or. i a -. high prieat, .for instance cornea as high as $500 or even more. If you should find in mommy for which yon paid, $100,. say, a lot of gold and jewelry worth about $1,000, you can be confident that, the thing is genuine. An Egyptologist named Mosconas once made a small fortune in the purchase of one mummy which had once contained a rich man's vital spark. The chest. which bad been separated from the vital organs before embalming, had been filled again with, gold and precious stones. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph, Explaining; Shower of Blood. No phenomena of nature have excited more widespread consternation in an cient and even in comparatively modern times than the so called rains of blood, stones, fishes and reptiles. The peoples of antiquity regarded such occurrences as dire warnings and por tends, and at the present day their occa sional happenings gives rise to much wonder and actual fear. Nevertheless, science has been able to" ascertain the causes which produce these remarkable precipitations, which are accounted for by reasons entirely commonplace. In 1670 a "rain of blood" fell at The Hague. The citizens got up in the morn ing and found that a shower of crimson fluid had fallen during the night. There was great excitement and the occurrence was looked upon as foretelling approach ing war. One level headed physician got a little of the strange water, from one of the canals and examined it under a microscope. He found that the fluid had not really a red color, but was sim ply filled with swarms of small crimson animalcules. Further investigation showed these animalcules to be a species of water flea with branching horns. Presumably they were brought. from a-great distance by wind and deposited with the rain. How ever,' notwithstanding this explanation, the -Hollanders -.persisted in regarding this affair from u superstitious point of view, and many declared afterward that it was an omen giving warning of the desolation which ' vas subsequently brought into the country with fire and sword by Louis XTV. Washington Star. - The New Clab Member. I read conscientiously Sunday after noon at the club the weekly rules and regulations laid down in the newspapers concerning the details of life, that I might regulate my behavior thereby; and I notice that "initials are not con-, sidered good form on note paper, not even monograms." This did not particu larly interest me, as I have for years used a firm, plain and unruled paper though! do not delight in two, sided let ter' 'writing, and the only .notes" I Am punctilious in answering are dinner In-. vitatiohsand the good wishes of Miss Porphyry sent to roe a.$ the bosiqning oi each vjarid'a Jfoar a&3 mine own. . : But J9oWi np gai. across. tfiS hall I 6a W' young bpriggles busily engaged in the consumption of club paper and en velopes. Letters stood in high stacks nnftti ttle table. And I fc?nnstd thi maxims Th.0 newness Of club uTSBiber sulf) t9 in direct proportion to the amount of daily correspondence. The clublinor parades the" fclnb stamp as the -newly married .man his wife. And t should regret this thrusting of such dan gerous weapons as pen, ink and paper iatO'the hands of . the-wiae- -and "the-foolish,' were it not that club paper had oc casionally its nses; as when Thackeray wrote that delightful Roundabout in de fense of Lord Clyde. Boston Post. The Kia la History. What a fleeting, intangible, evanes cent and altogether delicious thing a kiss Is! No savant can 'analyze it. The genius that fathoms star spaces cannot measure it; the science that weighs the fraction of an atom cannot determine its specific gravity. And yet what an im portant part it has played in history as well as in romance. .. It has been the re ward of genius for 'was. not Voltaire " In laying in yrmi-- uriutr mummies , b crtfal : " boy publicly kissed in the stage box by the ff - JTjT 7t beautiful tehees de yaSra id.'impli-tVed ' W,?' . -1U j. . -.I". -1. 1 Shea. soon revived.: His thro ance with the demands of an enthusias tic fit to thus reward the author of "Merope?" It has been the bribe of politics, for when Fox was contesting the hard won seat at Westminster the beautiful Duch ess of Devonshire offered to loss all who would vote for the great statesman. And the inspiration of patriotism, for did not the fair - Lady Gordon turn recruiting sergeant when the ranks of .the Scottish regiments bad been depleted by Sala manca, and tempted the gallant lads by placing the recruiting .shilling between her lips for all who would to take it with their own? New York Sun. Equine Arlntoeraey. 'That fellow is awfully stuck up," remarked the cob to the polo company, as he wagged his ears in the direction of the new tandem horse. "He -refused to recognize me today in the park. He may be a society 'leader now, but I re member when his mother used to be driven by the grocer's son." -Harper's Bazar, i - Me C'arrlett a MtlX. ' . ' of, ) ,The othpr lv a xttil dressed ma sat j in a Boulevard cr going up town." Th day won -rH, tiio car was roll and tbe nsnal discomforts of surface transH wero.tumed en. The man mentioned s the observe! of all observers. Ha carried a common black muff on bis knee. Iii.i hands throat in either end, and -had a far away look in' his eyes. The ladies exchanged amused glances. The gentlemen regarded the innff with vari ous degrees of wonder and contempt. 1 "Newest style." suggested one gentle man to another. "Yes; it's going to'beseold day to morrow. When you see the pigs carry ing straws" ,. "That beats aseV came ia a Stage whisper from across the way. "Wonder- if he wears corsets," said austber. What is it, anyhow?" "Sorry I forgot my muff." .,,.. "IH steal my wife's sealskin soene to night." ' - V "Poor fellow! Somebody ought to aear "hun home safely." ' ' - . r - Amid these remarks the man. with the niuff sot quietly. looking oat of the-window. He must have overhear some of them; he must have known that he was the -object of universal curiosity and ridicule, bat he gave no sign. It ap peared, however; that he -was only col lecting himself for some final effort, for when he arose to leave the cas at Seventy-second street he suddenly confront ed his fellow passengers. . , , . "This is my wife's muff," he said bluntly. "She left it on the bargain, counter. I had to go back and got it. rm taking it home. If you see anything funny in that I'm blamed .if I da." New York Herald. ' . An Interesting; Law Salt. A law suit over a meteorite has stirred the usually tranquil life of Kirchberg, - in Wurtemberg. Some time ago every body there was startled one night by a loud report, and a ball of fire was seen. to fall near the Bennecker sawmill. On the.next day a stone weighing a too. was found among the logs . by a laborer, in the mill. News of the occurrence- was published far and wide. ' Among the scores of pilgrims to tne stone axnorur the logs were wise men from Stuttgart and Tubingen, Who believed that they had a rare specimen of celestial geologi cal formations. Their competitive off era for the stone bred a quarrel between the laborer and the owner of the mill as to whether the finder of the stone or the owner of the land on which it fell could claim it rightfully. Tubingen professors had it shipped to the university, after having agreed to pay $300 for it if it proved, to be a duly tested and accredited meteorite. The laborer thereupon enjoined the mill owner from receiving the money for the stone, and the mill owner got a lawyer, who is trying to raise the injunction. Meantime, the Tubingen prof essors have said that the-stone has few attributes of a meteorite, and have refused to reship it: so laborer and mill owner are about to begin proceedings to compel them to return it, both maintaining that-the uni versity is trying to get the meteorite for nothing. There are four lawyers in the case al ready and nothing has been decided, so the costs bid fair to exceed the value of a dozen meteorites. New York Son. Something New in Canoe Racing. In the last couple of seasons we have noted the growth of the war canoe, pro pelled by paddle entirely, and the sport had by a few races witn them has created something of an interest in paddling races generally, which were giving away very extensively to. the sailing events. There is n.aw. some tall; of building en larged wur canoes, to cold from a deseu to thirty or so, and raoingbin. There we a few fairly lorgG Wddling canoea now In existence, but they have served heretofore on moouliirht and other nigliU as int-uiuins for the introduction of the gentler Sex to the fascinations of the sport. These ny be manned for racing, and, per contra, the ous coa terpplVt'd for racing may, on 6CC&8on, be" SicTifimf fonove'aiur DeJfiCr,.. Ii either event, ft looks OS though the re gattas of the summer would; be made doubly interesting by these largo canoe races, each boat with a crew of probably twelve to fifteen paddlera, - Harper's .We(' .-- - Swallowed an Ortter HhelL The Rev. W. D. Shea made a narrow escape in Macon Wednesday night. , He went to a restaurant for some oysters and swallowed a piece 6t "shell, which very near cost him his life. The shell lodged - in his throat, lacerating the membrane and causing hemorrhage and strangulation. . Theeeveral present were attracted to the minister, who had gone into convulsions. : A physician .was immediately dis patched for, but in the meantime the shell became dislodged and was thrown . up during the convulsions. The shell was about the size of a quarter of a dol lar, with sharp edges. After being re- " Rev. Mr. Shea soon revived.; His throat was con siderably lacerated, and altogether the minister had a narrow escape. Colum bus (Ga.) Enquirer-Sun. Felled by Dead Oeeee. ' While a Hutchinson (San.) policeman was standing under an electric light the other night, he was startled by some ob ject striking him a heavy blow on the head and then fall at his feet. As be stooped to examine the object he re ceived a second blow, this time on the back. When he recovered sufficiently from , his fright to gather himself to gether he found he had been struck by two wild geese that had been killed by striking the electric light wires. Phila delphia Ledger. Di Vp m Fortune. While digging a foundation for a, house in Wichita, Kan., recently, it ia reported that $35,000 in gold were ex humed. The money is said to have been the fortune of the grandfather of. the present owner of the ground, who is supposed to have hidden it . .