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About Ochoco review. (Prineville, Crook County, Or.) 1885-1??? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1891)
IMHNKVILLK, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28. ISM. NO. '25. VOL. 7. hCHOCO REVIEW IM IIl.tKHHtl KVBV BTIKIV V DOUTHIT & ELLIOTT. atniilit.. Tartna of iilrlitMin. (I'a.allla Ill alLaHO) I MM orriK - m maio hi'ii.iiinu. ... ; - - late Oltlflcl llralr,. W filliM. fun luewuetlne. Lt(M Stuiiema !uurt. LlU.1 HUM lb4Wl"l. a,..i.4.llilt. Li. a ,...m tMalrirt, llsuaua W mini . 11411. Mir-n. FM4S H.aaa a H Mi Kl.a.if (Wld. i. m I' ittmu I IMjft tta.a I mi HAH i J H Mni aai.L (J N Imi.ra Miauaa tlahsue J II lltait W WlIK I) A UoaeasM. IE Count r IUK'UI IMiartarr. k.MMlUt I.. MUM, S,,,aat.ttaft4el, ttt.r, ' flne'llle Pllrt, at.alel.le, T J BrsrMiaai. J I' Mi Hraiauaa I U Sll.lue AatMcs ll.tfM.ee w A r Km N Wan 0. M lUixrit W A !" II K lli'.ru L W I4 M U Hell. B It 1.4' I Arrl.al and Dxiiartnr nf Mail. Ii.l.iae."" i - - - ...-el . itiua. a. a . m , .,-.. , - u.l.r e, I r .......... I .on il I a a an Hi aa laa.e. rrtna.uk Brewe. i.l 11...,.!., al 4 M. ; him ieieie mmm nee I, at 4 r a . . , I aiee.lll 4t llllll LaaB-laaeM rniie.llle I ..,.lai u..l 1hufJ. at I 4 m ; anil- ll,.inl4 and I eVe'ei'llia aau UlTiaill -teste. rrtna.llla .nwlar anil Mlunui H a. m , .... r.'i'T. "!i ii 4 Baal. 1-e.ae IMeetUla Belaroef I'aia.. 1 1 1 a n m.t.e. mmw , - -'"T - a urAIMH.I- at MKKTINt.H OK WH'IKTIKS. it4h Alt wmk IMINKVIl.tK li'tMlK. Nk T. A r a A M . Umb it-.. HaUuidAf in m Iwdt ' lull . 1A4 . J .aauiia aai.Hlh PACIFIC COAST. The Chino Sugar-Beot Factory. MORE TIN MINES DISCOVERED K Roteburg Man Objeolt to aMarrlajft '!Crmony Pruoeeding1, and it Buunoed. PERSONAL MENTION. EASTERN ITEMS. Mr. Cartt, Chicago Woman, Hat Qaniua for Collecting rund Urand Duchett' Fad. Ixiuia Koamilh ii now in hii INHU yr. nialmr. Vlilllti.a Rrooka aiNki 812 worU a minute. Uir.rr McOtirdv. who won the oaae for the Tlliin heim, rwoivna fMV (or hia fue. Tiilntoi'1 limn and caiUveroui lxk at tracted iniir.h atu-ntinn while he waa in l'aria fe(ntl) . aK. ITU A l.ii. U,.IUuiil.l a HAlinaw of the hiwilot thu ralt HnanoiaUvHine, in wrviiiK hia twelvu itr)nt' in the Krench army aa a private aoldlHr. CiIoiihI I.. L. Iniilnic of New York enjoya the honor of IwinK the i-hil'i of lannta wndilel bv the ot, William Oullen Hryant. when the iHtter waa a Justice of the I'eaoii In a Loiu Inland vlllaK'- Cardinal Uvlirerie waa onie a lan Hilirtttr, Ordinal Howard formerly held a doiiiiniHaiiin in tlm l.ifa (iiwrda, and th Cardinal Arfhl)i"liop of 1'erth waa in hia youth the amaileat of Auitrian HiiHKiira. II V. Chenthain ol North Carolina, th only eolorf"! niemlior of the next Conrea, ia a oollen raIiiale, and il Kind to In the l"t elni-alel nitn, with nt ion. that haa vet aat in the limine. Mr. Glii.Utonw ia almmt the only meni her of the llntieat of Ciiiiiinoin who aita unvoveml in I'arliainent. Thin hie face ia more readilv wanne.1 hy viaitora. who look at itritain'a lKinlatora at a diatam-e throiiKh a icrHlia. HenaUr llale'a family ia iiiovIiik Into hia new nianion In WanhiniUin at Kii tenth an I K trt. It ia hardly hab itable, ami the apitroni'liea are iiiiHiin plcte, hut work ia lielnn viiioroualy iiiahel to roinpletion. Alohonne l'Hinlwt ia ifrowinn very fee hie, and ia now alumni Wind. Ilia intel ligent wife ia hi" wnatant conmauion, and to her he ia .lU-tatimr a novel by the title of " l. liuloii," whirli in all prob ahihtv will he hia laat. Ml the Coal Miners Indiana Strike. in THE KENTUCKY ALLIANCE. K New Haven Tob -VJi";' Sale or Cigarettes to Yale Boys ia Falling OtT. v'Hihui uhhik. Nu lui. A o I' w.air 1 mwl l lad M.aU M aaaa awalk. HINKVIII K fin IHMrAWV. I. MKT iba ttM M..la ..ai.l .4 an mnm. I'ltOrKSSItlNAI. CAKPS. C. A. CLINE, Dentist, Dentist. tHvlll, Or. Alt 4-tiUl (ktk Umm In Uw mm i I ithvtlr a.ailMl v mnum ia-.w- 1 lativM H. P. BELKNAP. M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Prlnatllle, llr. OMca H HalBiial a dnia r4.ia GEORGE W. BARNES. ATTORNEY AT LAW, PrlnaolUa. Or. () an TliM auaat. J. F. MOORE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1-rhia.llla. Or. naioa na atraal laallna hi Ounttnoaat. naar ft. llxb aalaV VaWr totm iocure Dillonaneaa, Hlok llelaih, I'onaU. attn, Malarln, Uvr Coniplalnu, laaa Ui aale anil mi tain raiuady, nmiTH'H BILE BEANS I a he nn 4 II. Nlae (40 llttla Heana to the uuiiiri ihri una Ilia a."". if,r.,i..p.... aanlinlalaa ara aail Aaa. I'rli a or tlliar alae, Win. per Hnl. UiriAuin-'in ift'-fHOTeinnvuM Kiadinua!::;,: DAHUl. IM Tutt's Pills aalaaa.a. A. t (aal a a BS 4 taV w a aj we aateaaa. mmm imil avrt K . - as lvMtl r(Mit. r( ! kwl. mm r tal4l m mm ANTI-EILIQUS MEDICINE. In malarial aiatrlala laalr alrlaae are wUaly rMaaalnai, aa lka hhih a an.. i i.Im.14 akaavalaaa 'rawt thai aalaaa, jjaal aaaja t. Immm aaaall. rTee. tleia. Said Ewarvvhar. tlurltua liava luiim vIolHtillir the Ne- vada linli lawa by ruU:liinu trout in the luinlhlt. TIim iiionrat nn the !xlv of Conatable lr.l.ii r.ai.1. killnt bv J ainea Heed at Tnii-kaa.. Uinta tbe killinif waa done in alf-duf.iiae. A hitter tiltht lietween Ixia Anitelea l.M ,Uv aul.r ffimtiMtlv haa latn Inaiiaiirated over the poeeeaanry righta Ui water aminea. An liri-uiiii woman haa Inventml .liali.araaltin mill' lilne. and ahe will ex- lillilL tt at the W or Ill's Kair. It ia Kirtel ti work ali'ndidly. Annin tamplwll haa lan indirtl at ItolaeUily for liaeelnn eouliterleit money. Site ia lia-lleveil to I' one of a K "P" eratiiiK in the Nortliweatern StUw. HoUthern California pniniea to have during the net few inontha HieKn-aUiat ulantiiiK of ormitfe and lemon i.rchardi ever know u in the aoiithern part of the Htate. Tin or that rivnla the Temearal prod uct haa lawn found in abundance aity llve inilea eaal of San Oleuo in the I ituiia Moiintaina. Nine location have Fwen niale. A Tuewon jury haa found eora ReeJ, alio killed Jamee Kairell at .Noalej. one vearaico. aniltvnf nianalauuhter. KeM l.U) year old, and. I.ia ae caniHi lor i,,,,.,,,;! i-I b. name of a nhvai aympathy from the Jury. ..i... Ki lnia hn ileclare that he I're.lileiit Jolin A. ivemp in ""-il,,,, f....i W'iml Cnaat Inaurance C-oniiany at , raifima haa nkipxd Irom town, and ei-tM-rt are at work on the lka to tea if there were any irn-Kularitiea. The Chino anifar-lieet factory i abut down now until It ran Iw ascertained from Waatiinnlon whether it will Iw er uiitteil ti hold lt avrupHiivcr until neat aeanm n-lorelhey are rf.T through ma iliini rv ami reduced Th" liKlucat on the bodiea of the men il . d In the Anaconda uiine in Montana wrnllcd In andin t-at the cak. waa .verloade.1 and the ahaft waa in l Tha (nr rendered a verUtrt ja.iniii"..- "w t . t.MiPirtiniK ihecotnpany irom u omuin. M. A. Mllorv. I. V . Diamond, K. II. .Vvkn ami II. A. I.naty have been in- liclial I'V tbe United Sinte urnnd jury I I'.iitluivl fur eonapiracy bi defruud tlie invnrniiieitt hv fraudulently locatma; iarlicaoi iMvernnn'iit land. They have MTutel i-atrnaivi'ly in Seattle Hint oilier tiea of aa!iiniiUn. The raw milla of r'reauo roitnty, CbI., t.alM.1 in llm Sii.rra Nmn.ltt Moillltttiua fr.jiu the Iwail watera of Klnu'a river to the head water of the San Joaipiln and lie trilintArica have an cnei uown iu. the aeaatui, winter weather hnvin act in ii.ui niiiiii.l.i Tin. auilniit for the antuam la almut tK'.lKHl.tHM feet, valued at I,(HHI,IKXI. A I t 1 a fa aim baa returned from BO eedition into Alaeka, rHirta that he liM-ated the source of the Alak river alanit eleven uiilca northenat of Mount St. Kiiaa, and found that tbe wlioie ol I... ...... ..r.. ..f Hcuntka'a Held of .1.' J --- exploration ia available lor pack lioraea. Me biuiM'lf took ana naiUKiu "iu' ur borwa In perfect condition. Hewillask the BDVermnent tor Bil appropriation w ohii up traila. The Hvnod of the PreahytertHn Churcti at Mmle.to. Cat.. I trying Kev. II. (iilliiiKhain. who ia accuaed of vulvar lanK'lDK", iinclirtlian anil nnunuiiiipriai inducl, viaitlima place of aniUHeiiient in pan r ranciaeo wnere nipiorn a .ua- penaed, willful laiwliooit in ciaiuimu lie a graduate of I'rininton Collene and tbe freel wealth of hia father, fraudu lently obtaining a license to preaen. falae awearinir. alun.leriiiir brethren and claiming that hiadivoreed wife waa dead. ti.- ii.l ..I ii, a Direa Yninn Indiana alio murdered their medicine man north of the remrvation hiet year, wh'ch baik nliuv In tbe Un ted State PiBtrtctlonri at lx Alible", wiib rliapa one of the ntiickiwt trial endiiiK In a conviction on re.ohl. Kroiu the time of coinnienciiiK . l..,.u,.ul tliM illrv till ill tbe rendition of the verdict and diachurite hut three and one-half lioura were conmuneti. l'heee Indian will receive a ueain aen- tence, hut It la poastihla the Treaidont will t petitioned to change the sentence to Imprisonment. I Miring U nmrriaue ceremony Bt Roae- bnrK, Dr., which WM ."'" HBriea M inkier ant litlle uniaen, worn u If ... nnn bad BI1V rea- ton why tha ceremony should not pro ceed, a young dry-noon clera naineo Mnnlatepwl lorwaru, eavuiK " " oriou objections. Mo aid he wanted to ace and apeak with the girl privately. He waa put out of the house, and a im Ud waa found in hia pocket. Me aaul he iat.1 always wanted to marry the r, but had never gathered courage to tell her of hia feelinga. It ia a inirtilar fact that, while from Iwentv to thirty license for the aale of .leoin'argarine have been issml by In lernal Hevenue Collector Weldler to vVnahiiiKton parties during the past few month, ot a li.vnse haa In-en ine.l rtheBHle of it in Oregon during the ai, e period of time. Tl.i. la Bvounted (or I.V the stringency of the Oregon laws I ,d .Vmumrative laxity of the Waslimg- , , iHwarctfiihitinKthe manufac ore and .lie of ad.i!leral.d nrticlea of ftKHla. rhe Oregon In rrquiroa '". i, Tl,p uniform eximrt hill of lading itO go inUielfect Decemlier 1. Over 52,7lH imiiugranU arriveu in this country during Hepteniber. Ti.a Uar,n llirsi'li tniBt'es have pur chased 5,IH) acre t. Woodbine, N. J. Day and night aluft of men are now worked on all the exposition building, -ci.. ,.,.iiii r .iHllWaon Davis are to be placed in Hollywood cemetery, Kieli- nionn, va. Tl.. n.lllmnra A mrrirnn aVI ! lHlti- more haa not hail a bank failure for tifty- seven yeara, ' .!!, i place Dllieu Wliu luaiura u" ii..v. nau.! in beinif austained by r ., r. . ... , . u . . . ........ ,i. a -u. wnat oetter iiumumui ivuiu atock.nen in Texas, ow.ng to the the se- smaa ploU vere drought. ; nir thia at intervals thronehont the citv. About liltv of the release.1 Tennessee , .,.,,; K tu. mvict. have Wncaptured in Kentucky ; ,hib a forwg and returned. , .(V,. UHn Arrangements .re being made l.T . : " . . n. cable from Nassau ml""" 1 i" -7.,. .v.- H.a,' fntnr. the coast of Klon-ia. , -- fk..inf resnect to State laws the red- worarn, ... u,,..Uu.., w eral government will not sell custom foundation for stronger ana neafwrr ria, a. ! BnJ l,HyhtAr arils tha fit WODld ouor nv Blicrion in .name. , " - . . . 11 . ... ' .v,...Jun, nfmul nn h. .an I. In. lViinavlvani.i's 'osa by the .imiimiei.iv ri' 7 of Bards'ley A Co. waa !C.""2 in-teiKl . veeteu.-rraua . vnapraan m ou nwa ol H,;M:liNlirli'f''"1' jol- of th- Di-nvt-r and Kio discoveretl iwculiar niicrnacopical I.,-... in .iiran.lti.a. Now ami then lV the naked vision a eiiilisr form can lie observed pulling on one. a .1 VV ViM nt Washington UOiiriM - - - denies that he recently made a peecli in Kichinond in iavr oi iiniurnnK iiwi "n 1.1...1. Ha j at the Cliicairo Fair. The Ocneral was not at. the meeting, ami d.n-s not sympathise with the aeiitimenta of tbe M-ecli. Jennv Lind tioldsclimidt's memory ...:i. i... l. .liuu a..K,iii nttier aysva bv .4ial apll.ila rMliin.tnetablih which a large nuinlsr of eminent artists have are-d Ui WKe part in a raniwi, nnw. will te given in ixinuon canj ...ffiiiiff aorinii Colonel C.eomeW. Hooker of Vermont ,iu..i.f Hint licnera i-roeior. iwumii M .....lain i i t..im n ii . who was in I'rcei ...... ii....r.'. ( 'a In m t ivasewa more .1 .1.- ..,.aiil.,a and charact erist ice of Vbra'iMin Lincoln tlian any other public m.n ui Ibis iri'iieratioii. .. i t .....I. UMr,ititt who is re- I lie , iritii'i l.ii. i (Hirted bi ! one of the. lest dressed women in K'issie. ifela hut few of her .. .. . . (r..,., i,iria She Ixarned cieiltitic ,iru..,l,iiM. in !iulnn. ami with the l nl clever women ,.i i...r i-l ..I r iiinkia nearlvall the .i..H.. i..t I.ul t.ir Inline use. OnlV her gala coetiiinea come from the artistes of I'uris Chicago haa a woman, Mr. Cars, who haa a geniua for rollerting funds. To Ibis taek she devote-, when having an object on hnn.l, aluut three hour a day. I'urt of her success seema to conit in o timing her calls as to catch the per- she solicits from jnat after thev i....u -w ...f...i.,l.;,. .liiinl or lunched. M im iVr. it ia aimed, raised the greater lart of tl.nOOimo for the TemierBnce V ... : 1 .1 : :.. ll. I. ...... leiupie now imimi.ii.v .it vi. NATlONAlTCAPlTAL tirande for()rtrTirVS47.0K, a de crease of 24,1H'. irom laet year. rr y v. ...v , . ,u kmiMtv nf I in nw York anon bv the Secretary ot me I rea-nry. - . - - . - " 1,1 .... l-l (Intl. ,Uvuft.Thisarriviilln town A tolaveo dealer mew 11 -v-... n e-- - - - .. . trade til the innin i wnn , " , aavs that the aale of cigarette ia falling teenth street and made some tnflins; pur- chitae. The next day he missed s pocket- Step have been taken bv the Chain- , hovk containing nny uoiiar in cuxreut;. tr of Commerae in St. Paul to start sn He thooRht that he had mislaid it in his inmigration movement in mat cut bhu :r(x, at we notei, anu a uuigut ""area State.. i was made for it. He gave it up as lost, Heirs of (ieorgo V. Morseof Iyimaiana !ami would have distnissed the matter ill sue the government for 4.oi,).00) roIn hi mind had not the clerk of the r infringing his breech-load in rlrte ! hotel snggeated that he might possibly patent. . have left the pocaetooox in some store. "? '"' ) 7, i. ..I d that the "nmitnor shall know what ho s buying. ml requirement applie to retail qiian. ities a well as wholesale package. In Vaahiiigton no auc.h labeling is required. At a meeting of th Fruit arower,' Union ol Southern California at lx.i i An- r "rceT. Tbox U t. otherwise .Tfppsn. It waa also agreeil to appoint ..entTat Chicago and other large taat- Full Teitt of the Preiident'a Thanke giving Proclamation Puyallop Indian Reservation. A Plea for City f'lajrfrouiid. City children are undoubtedly happy In their play, hut I cannot watch them without sailnaa and a regret that the fuller pleasures of a country life will never lie theirs at tiie time they are best Jttod to enjoy them. The earnest plead ing for a leaf or blossom from tbe flower laden tourist as, retnrning from his out ing, he passes up the afreet; the eager band of merry children in pursuit of a wandering butterfly fairylike visitor from a strange land tell of a formless longing for the unknown freedom of the woods and fields. What can we do to add to the joy of a youth .which ia all tsm hriaf? A a von enter voue hlirn aehool. these boy and girls enteiNm the jariou duties of life. Then follow the itrng gle for existence, and a severe one it usually is. We cannot give all these children homes in tbe country, we cannot give them all even an outing there; bat we can give them playground in the city; a very little plot here and there will do. We have reserved great parks and squares which we permit them to look at and sometimes to venture on. But as playgrounds these are practically nse lfs; they are accessible to comparative ly few. A vacant building lot in the proper district i far more to the pur pose. Happy is the boy who lives near onel Notice tbe evidence of constant i nse it shows, the small baseball "dia mond" clearly outlined, every smooth The earnings Hoaaat Maw Tork Khou Girls. A gentleman who lives in Cincinnati 1 returned home a day or two ago arter It was exnected that the vexed ques 4. .1 11 .11.-., Hons regarding tne ruyaiiuu uu.a reservation at Taconia would lie nettled I... . I... .,... Uai.,n tahiillwn.8 VCIlt OUt there by an act of the laat Congresa, but t aeems that tins coiniiiiaeion iim done what they were expected to do, ...i i. . ,,,,...iw,ii at iaxiie ia aa tar irom settlement aa before. ajThs Indiana have bargnined away some of their moat vai- liable liliuls. inetr ibiiub ore urn. .... .1.1 . lutfut,, ,t, twin t. nfTaiiima as a cttY. ,U. Hir ... .. . ---- ' . and they are iisoicse m tut- uiuian., cept for what thev can get ior mrai, in r ii,.. i.wliviiliial siul tribal tlin .lint.". -"V rights of the Indiana waa .uppoeed to be 1 a I 1 U.. tl.aa .WMIimlMinrt Hi AH tll riahUof the men who have brtrjrai net! unfit tKa 1 ii rl lit n M for their lands, out the commission' report, nov with the t-ocrctarv, i far from tatia'actory, and will lie little or no holp hi siding him to make a reeommenilation to Congress. ThePuyallup matter will lave to lie fought all over agaiu this winter. Tim full textof the President' thanks giving proclamation ia aa follows: It is a verv glad incident to the marvelous prosperity which has crowned the year now drawing to a close that its he pfnl and reassuring touch haa been felt by all the people. It has been as wide as our country, and so special that every home ha felt its influence. It i too great to be the work of n a 's power, and too particular to h the device of hi mind. To Clod, t he beneficent and allwise, who make the labors of men to be fruitful, redeem their losses by his grace, and the measure of his giving is is as much beyond the thoughts of man as it is hevond his desert, the praise and gratitude if the People of this favored nation are due. Now, therefore, I, Ilenjumln llrrinon, Presi dent of tiio Cnilud Statea of America, do hereby appoint Thursday, tbe 2nth day of November, to lie a day of thanks giving to Uod for the bounties of his provident, for the eai in which we are permitted to en toy them, and for the preservation of the. institutions of civil and religion liberty which ha gave our father the wisdom to devise and es tablish, and u the couraps to preserve. Among the appropriate observance of the day are rest front toil, the renewal of family ties aliont our American fire sides, and thotightfnlnea toward those who suffer lack of tha body or of iplrlt. A eobtmn ol maaswey In KaW ')' ";t. ...... i MiirrnDhical centre, .Jt the United State, evidently witiiour raum ing Alaaka. Tbe success of the Brooklyn linage ha Slighted to capitalist to form a company with a capital of ;,kh,,000 for the purpose of build, ng two more bridgf a across the K st river. Tha nwa- Hebrew Orphan Asylum tn r. l.,t 41 t. n tl. It is to nrooaivn "" t; be flve'atorica liiuli and to have a front age of l.fO leet. It win accomin.Hmw several hundred orphan. The retired commander of the Seven teenth Infsntry, General Mixner, las tieen placeil in a private asylum nn.ier treatment for softening of the brain. The annual renort of the Itoard of Oeneral Appraisers of New York recom- mend that the right of anneal le vsieo ir. the Secretary of the Treasury only. Two men have been arrestfvt hy l. niteu ci.ina n..ti.B in tit., liiiliuii 'IVr ri 1 1 ir V . HO ensed of selling thousands of lots in the Uegeti lutiirn capital 01 ine t. iieroRcr Strip. The Chicago City Council has eranteu ritfbt of wav to the Chicagt K'evsted Terminal Kail way Coinpit iy. This is the iiiiich diacusHCAl line project ea nj tieneral Torrence. Tliia ansann no lesa 414 horses have made records of a mile in the teeni, to sav nothing of the records that nave lieeii made in the ten by Sunol, an. y Hanks, Palo Alto, Allerton, .eieon aici Arion. The Fsrniers' Alliance in Kentucky has oi?ned a store in Louisville and taken options on thirty-live others throughout the State, wit h the avoweu intention of revolutionising the farm aiimilv business. The new Hoard of Directors of the Denver and Rio Urande road has elected (leorge Coppel) Chairman of the boanl ; Kdward T. Jetfrev, President and Oen eral Manager; J. O. tiillnly, Treasurer, and W. Wagner, Secretary. The allotment of land in severalty among Arapahoe and Chevenne Indians on the Milk River reservation ia going steadily forward, and bv next spring it 1 expected the remainder of their reser vation will las opened to settlement. One of the big Florida hotel has the great orchestrion which was exniuitou at tlio rans exnnnuon. mmj."...... -.v placed in each room, and are connected with thorclestrion so that each guost may hear the music when he wishes. A Sew York jury has awarded Thoma Fortune, the colored -xlitor of the New Ynrk 4,i,. t-:R damages in an act'on l:rou ht agniimt the proprietor of a Hlth.venne hotel for being assaulted and refused a drink because of his color. W. W. I.ong, a member of the North Carolina House of Representatives, ami b number of other large planters in the Roanoke bottoms are completing ar rangements to bring to their plantation some 500 of the expatriated Rnf.s;n Jewisli farmer. Not hir year has the supply of drink ing water been so low at New York, nor has the danger of genuine witter famine been greater than at the present. Com uiissioner tiilrov aavs unless there is rain the water will last only H.teon or twenty days more. The Cherokee since. Judge Green's decision that they do not own the Strip are now ready to renew the negotiations, which were broken on" lust vear, for the aale of the land to the poverument. Chief Maves, it ia said, favors the disqio sition of the outlet. The miner of bitiiminoii cuil in In diana have riecid d to U ke fr advance of B cent per ton. The blo-k-col min er have already struck f r 10 cents ad vance. The operators refine to pny the Increase. All the nil iters in t He state of Ir liana are now out, and n long am. deaperat. buttle l looked for. a-w . . The iritiiLleuuin attacked littla- iuipor- tna ti lha anirirestion. but about a Week ! afterward he stepped into the Fourteenth itreet shop and laughingly asked one of jthe floor walkers if a pocketbook con I tainin? fiftv dollars had been found Much to his surprise, an affirma tive answer was given, and in a few seo- nxts hia property waa restored to htm He learned that the saleswoman from whom be bad made his purchase found the pocketbook on the counter after he had departed and promptly turned it in at the office. "Are all your clerks as honest aa that?" Naked the Cincinnati man. "Certainly." replied the operintend aat r.r tlia store. "We have never yet failed to return property lost in this store to claimants who could prove their right toit." "Well, that beats some towns," said the westerner. "Here's a 'V for tbe sales woman. "New York Times. BARNUM'S BILL STICKEJI6. Titer aorarlaa Tha fa Itahataa jr la aVaa- Idity of Tnalr War a. Opposite to this bouse is a boarding thirteen feet high by over one hundred feet long, and in a few minutes I was to see a feat in bill Hing such a aeems hardly credible, now that I sit calmly down to write of it A wagon having driven up, five men got out of ii; one I recognized as Mart Ready. Barnnm's boss poster, two were Americans in their neat duck overalls, and two were t.ng- lih bill sticker whose appearance I would rather not describe. In two min ute after their arrival the duck over ailed men had out their tin cans full of paste and their eight foot long pole with brushes at the end, and were hard at it covering the boarding with pasts from top to bottom, from end to end. The Englishmen stood by with something like sneers on their faces, as who should say: "Well, thers ain't much in that; we can cover a boarding with paste, too." Another minute passed and Ready began handing out some carefully folded posters. The Englishmen face relaxed a little, a who should say: "What are they goin' to do now!" and they began in vrhisner together. The two Americans leized one of the rolded posters, gave it a shake, ran the brash end of the long polee under It, raised it, gave a sweep and another sweep, and there on the brding was a sixteen sheet poster, containing a fac simile of an open letter from P. T. Bar nuin, headed "My Greatest Ventura." Then followed a twelve heet poster portrait of Barnum, a forty-eight sheet depicting the how tent as they travel in America, a twenty-four sheet picture nf Jumbo, a fortv-eiirht sheet representa tion of the gallery of human freaks of nature, a thirty-aix sheet portrait of th fair Indian soaks charmer from the Bowery, New York, a forty-eight sheet picture of the menagerie, a thirty -six sheet twrtrait of tbe .Mexican rider, a forty-eight sheet representation of the elephants performing, a twenty-four sheet picture of tbe clown and a twenty four sheet portrait of Misa Clara O'Brien, the Roman knife thrower. All along the tops and the bottom of the picture "streamer" were pasted. The most remarkable fact, however, was that every one of these huge poster was slung up into position whole they had been pasted together before tarting. The 100 by 13 feet waa covered in exactly fourteen minute and thirty second! There! That is something like bill stick ing. You ought to have seen the face of those Englishmen. They were a tudy for Dickens. Of course a crowd garn ered, and, as the omnibuses stop at tiia Cedars, you may guess there were sows quaint remarka from the driver and conductor. Pall Mall Gazette. Tuoaa Wire a aa tha Brtdf. Thousands of rjeopie cross the bridge every day, but comparatively few of them know nincn about toe wire mat are trained across the big atructur. They are there in great number and of ; almost endleess variety Their resting place is on the girders. Through them countless messages telephonio and tele graphicare transmitted at all hour of the day and night. Some of them resemble ropes, but they are not, for each contains 500 telephone wires. Of these there are five. Besides them are many other black, snakelike .ir.ml. arlii.'h are other mean of oom- ninnication with Brooklyn and pointa beyond. Or course, nearly every oouy is .hut the land ends of the Atlantio cables of the Commercial company also cross the bridge, but tueir location is generally misunderstood. They are se curely fastened to the undar side of the promenade Hooting, in plain view oi passengers on the trains. New York Herald. Mafnlflcent Tobacco Crop. (food news for smoker come from Havana. It is expected by the best au thorities on the subject there that the present tobacco crop will even surpass that of ten veurs ago in quality and titi7 It nromises. moreover, te " .. - . ... LI. 2. . U. "cure early enongn to enauio it h ua sampled by July The interior hanresta of the last nine years with the excep r ikw which was a comparatively good one-had all been late in arriving, nv. i.ni.n... that of 1890. in soite of tbe 'v in.'. . - most careful treatment, could not be got to "cure" fit for smoking until last Jan uary. The crop is roughly estimated at a Quarter of a million bales, each of 100 ... r 1 1. pounds weight. Lonaon ""ii'i"' m.nn.l Shirt. Ho Waistcoat, rv. i.ouimhln waistcoats that come ia 4 U. - many well chosen designs win oe wora .k th. m.ta mid trousers. They may be worn with the cheviot, but not the flannel ahirts. If it is so warm tnai we fl....ui ahlrt must be donned for comrort tt is too warm to add the weight of the j waistcoat. LHotnier ana r ar- lusher. v. ft 1.1. for th Rous. nn.. ....... f hniioA at Jadburar. In which 4UO aiWV". . Mary Queen of Scots resided for Beverai weeks during her visit to the border iM in tha autnmn of 1566. was OX WUMat. - a jt ... ..1. t F.itinbnreh last weea. IBIDU MM anw o bat there were no bids for the quaint and Almost aa Goad a Maa aa Bar Brorhon There is livinar at a point on East bay near Pensacola. a remarkable family of four bov and one young woman. Th hnva mnaidpr their sister to be one of thamnplvH. she beine in nearly every re spect aa handy as a boy should be, and sharing the labor of her brother. They can draw the lines of a hip, hew the timbers, build and launch her, and then sail her around the world. The schoon er Axel, a fine little vessel which they have built, is at present semewher on tha o-ulf under command of Capt. O., one of the brother, who ia a meet expert navigator. Tha nthar brother and sister are now engaged In building another and a larger vessel, which is well under way, ana which, when completed and launched, will be one of the stanches! crafts sailing the Mexic sea The draughtsman who . :k A .1,. linAa urwin kuvh aks is being constructed is one of the brother, the carpenter who are building her are the draughtsman and hi brother and sister, and th master who will sail her will he one of the bovs. who will tak the remainder of the family for the crew. For mile and miles in all directions froo tha home ths bovs have scoured the for ests looking for natural crooks to be used aa timbers, a great many or wnicn they have found and used as such. The work ha ao far progressed that tbe item will be put in in a fsw day, wnen plann ing will be in order. The vessel win oe fashioned after th most approve! pat tern, and she will measure, when nnisn ed, 80 feet over all, have a beam of 24 feet, and has now a keel of 71 feet in length. She will be rigged as a schoon er. Savannah New. Baaaarar Ego Emperor Ego is th nickname Will iam II has won for himself here, writes a Pari correspondent, "I, me, my, mine," being pronoun that crop up con stantly in his peech and letter. Hi taUurram to Prhice Bismarck, nublfehed as soon as they arrive, are model of the egotistical tyl. There nothing nlAiuuia him more than to find himself repeated in print. The first Emperor William had served up to him in hi old age, along with hi breakfast every nmrninir. two naoers. of which spocial editions were cooked up exclusively for him. He was not aware ot mis. no journal was ever a cause of sharper cah inent bickerings than this one. Each minister wanted th lion' har of space, thus to influence the august read er. Bismarck eventually managed this apecial issue himself. Th copy which met with his approval was Known as "pap for the emperor," who, long before his deth, had fallen farther into second childhood than any on suspected. Mot to NaT tha BuBaioaa. The next legislature of Wyoming wfll pass a law making ths killing of a buf falo a misdemeanor. An act to this ef fect is not required to protect th buf faloes as game, for the hunter would hunt the mountains and plains for wild buffaloes in vain. It is intended to im ply to ths men who lie in wait and shoot down the buffaloes that happen to atray off th reservation in the Yellowstoos park, where a few relics of th bygone ' , ... . i i a. I. are nreservea. ine aesa ouua.v NOVEL AND NEWSPAPtR, Tha Latter ftalil to lla Intrenching Opoa lha Former. Very often we hear litut this is the aj;e of the novel, but quite as often do we hear that it is alo the age of the news paper. Slight otwervation would be needed to establish the truth of either statement. One him only to see the woe ful exhibit of pirated piiper lxoka on the stalls of hotels and railway stations for at least a partial understanding of how fiction almost usurps, at present, tne en tire domain of lielles-leltrea; and with resie-t to the much belauded "enter prise" of journalism, what weightier evi dence could l presented than that of the bulky quintuple and sextuple sheets which now and then rear their presumpt uous little hillock from our breakfast tables? In the lat ter it would appear a if all pliaws of life eventually find por trayal. Though it may be iron in the soul of the novelist to say so, the newspaper has actually achieved a style. Grammar, forsooth! We must look to our own verbs and nominatives nowadays, lea Printing; Hoiine square prod our choicest prose with its pen and hold up before merciless through a hideous, wriggliusj blunder of w hose exintence we had mat dreamed. Day aftr day we stare, wide eyed, upon certain "effects" lavishly tiirown away, as wo can't help calling it, en the merest ephemeral descriptions. And then we have a pang of envy when we tell ourselves that nervous and forci ble writing can actually be accom plished, like this, by a man who knows he is of necessity only manufacturing "alms for oblivion." We, the professional novelists, hava grown so careful how we fling any pre cious bits of art into that huge and fathomless ocean of tho "unsigned." We rn-'iri to look on the ethical side of the question, and to asniire ourselves that this writing as well as a fellow can write, without tarinjj a fig for any fame that may come of it. is a rather excel lent straight iacket for the eirotist. Then the modern journalist, by his calm capac ity, wrought ol drill anu discipline, can waken in the sensitive man of letters a pang of shame. Mere is our famous Robinson, pet or tlie pubiisners, wno can't write, let us eay, except with a certain kind of pen. at a certain kind of desk, seated on a certain kind of chair bottom and amid sepulchral silence, cut with Jones, firm of nerve and unspoiled by daintiness, it is quite a different mat ter. He can reel you oa ins astontsu- ingly good "copy" in a tiny little room that smells of tour paste and trembles with tlie cacophonies of the elevated. " J.ow that, realism has gamed such hoadwaT with the hiif miblic of novel readers, the new spaper is becoming all the more a rival ot me ncuonioc do close is the analogy between their pro ductions that the reporter constantly speaks of his own and his comrades' work as a good or bad "story," and un questionably so regards it. The instant that such effort as this deserves to be called literature, its challenge grows a more than formidable one. Not long ago I read in a New Y'ork newspaper a description of an execution on which, as it seemed to uie, had been be stowed eloquence, and care of a very striking kind. In their thirst for actuality,- one is prone to ask why readers should not prefer literary power when thus expended upon narra- , tives that are fragments of living fact Beyond doubt a preference of the sort is augmenting, and one with its increase directly proportionate to tne still ana strength of our developing journalists. Any one who glances through a newspaper of the best character might be apt to pronounce it in some respects a unique and spirited Btory book. Its tales are treated with a reserve and dig nity of expression that are no doubt the heritage bequeathed us by great dead stylists. At tlie same time they have nothing of the old fashioned "beginning, middle and end" about thern. They sometimes "turn out" with all the dis mal abruptness beloved by the Russian story tellers. There is too frequetly neither a conventional hero nor heroine. and only a few grizzly glimpses of hu manity Berve to replace their aDsence. The stream of narration runs between ragged banks and with haphazard cur rent, but we feel that it mirrors no im agined sky, and that the weeds trailing in its tides are a giowtn or no niymio meadows. When invested with authen tic art these little histories make very nuwirent and memorable reading. Be C O sides, if there be a cult, a wave or ten dency, in their direction, all the more must they demand respectful heed. It is not so very long ngo that "plot" was an imperative essential in the Eng lish novel, and to this popular require ment Dickens again and again unhesi tatingly, though often bunglingly, bowed." Thackeray, however, had from the first sneered at the ancient methods, and we all remember that passage in the early part of "Vanity Fair," where the humor now seems so cumbrous, and where he tells us that he might have made it a dark and tempestuous night instead of the sunshiny day in Mayfair that it had the commonplace misfortune really to be. For Thackeray, both to his frantio devotees, and his more rational observers, must be admitted as the first real English naturalist in fiction after Fielding. The world moves along, in spite of certain well meant, if misdirected, efforts, to the cotitrary. And no stronger proof of this could be brought forward than the way in which naturalistic novel writing is today being justified and confirmed as a desired and prised form of art by tho tendency of the modern newspaper. Will it also, in tlie course of time, be eclipsed by the newspaper as well? I confess that 1 sometimes tremble for the craft of which I am an earnest, if hum ble, representative, when 1 see with what force and finish a thousand topics are treated. Innumerable actors in the immense human comedy are sketched with vivid fidelity and sometimes appeal ing nower. One can imagine Balzao race are preserreu. . tjT. .. , a r------ - - r. ..... j . I u:....Alf M.ina afilh im.uniiint and ad hot there were no bids for the qnaint ana , brings its slayer fiw ami uie smpii. .u- ---------- out were were . . . . I ., . . .. . , . ,u. aairatinn a lile of our modern newspaper, 4...M.l-in0nlorAllmfir WUOll WAS IH1 I lu lion lo BUI mem m a .muu, vmw - , ,. ,. 5??el!wSi?S. I hunt.-Kxchantva. ! -Kdr F.wc.tt in Belford a Uagaxma, jOaloa, 44 Alurrajr Mb. Vw Yrk. sru ceiivar.