Image provided by: Crook County Historical Society/Bowman Museum; Prineville, OR
About Ochoco review. (Prineville, Crook County, Or.) 1885-1??? | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1892)
,, , ......- few -As- VOL. 7, IMUNEVILLE, CJ100K CO UNIT, OItE()0& SATURDAY, APRIL i. 181)2. NO. 44. V:a 1 ;.. Hfliii - , i 0GI10C0 REVIEW I'ummiiKi) Kvt Hathko.v nr DOUTHlt & ELLiOTT. Trrmi of Hubrlttltt, (its rf. (Ml HimilM, lino 1 (lMt4 In 1vri ) lima Oflielal lllr.elorr. , rWrrvM- jr uf Ml , Muu liMeVirvr, F l I f, , UHMIMK W M Hi l I MM I'M II. M Kit tf tt. ImiK MlUM 1 J N Ihn.ru ItlNUKM HHM .1 II turn W II WiiM tjtwtl J () Ml MMK OVMMtlwl"ttM ( Tik, Ik'h'Bil rttHitfft4Mtlh hui I FriiMflll triiw. I HrftlMUft IH It Nr lit Amihiim Miu f.u N HiitTa V M II kmiKktm W A lnt . II K Mi tium . MM Hum. ft Mi Arrlvnl Mil linpurtur of Mwlla. Itll4tt PlitiM l. ln I'rltHtidht ry M mmI-i ulr n tKikil I Mi Hl'ltNM IMtiM Mivl (v M U)r t.4 rHtvljr ill 4, M ftUM WMlnMlf ttwt Hal da ulr a. I'HI llt ft III) It .Kt lAaHI rir'll M 'i'Ul Wl thUMtat l t4 1 A t 'kviatU Mid ! I j ! I r. M faiKfli II . AMtt MlTt'HStl. - tvw rriuatlll ' T'fwU? u4 Hiurla A I N j atl HiiiiJf mud faiMftvtt I Hn frtttUI Hatur)! 4 M ; atrtM rn-Uy l I r H t'Mtaarii i a tu Mi-Tlia tatra ISIimvIIU al I A H ; tertta TwMiar ! r AO rAI.MKK, V M pltxrviir lifMiK, Nil t. A m 'U Uw Hi I HtuitUf,.n lwf.p -J nfMiJi T M HA1I II MwUfT r a m. Ilia H tl ( tU i a, w m At, 1 O O. MfclCTB tiMf rUtunUf iUI O ill' mil lilMlR. Nu lol. A O l W , UK KT u aaamt awJ hMl aliUr i( Mr4t UMtttlti i v It ?! riMrifv. flu I, MKKT l'UOKKSSlON XL CA Ul H. C. A. CLINE, Dentist, Dentist, l'rln.lll. r. All .ttl . ttm In t wl p"-l !. Ml ..1ImI .11. (. MlHlM UU" U All Wulk JtrtM M rOfWhll HKW. H. P. BELKNAP, M. D.. Physician and Surgeon, rlnalll. r. (Im la Rlkn dnia GEORGE W. BARNES, ATTORNEY AT LAW, I'rlna.llle, Or. J. F. MOORE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, I'rlitf lll, Or. 4II.U HEW MILLINERY STORE Two liuiiri North l I.nninla', Prinevllle, Or. Mrs. LCline. A naw and ootniilnit Una of fflillinery and Fancy Goods. Fasblonabli Fall and Winter Hats and Bonnets Mudo to Order. KI.KUANT STOCK OK Ribbons, Trimmings, ArtlDclal Featliors, Etc. Flowers, First v National v Hank -OF- PRINEVILLE, OREGON. Transacts I General Banking Business, P. f. Al.l.'H , M. WriiaL ,',.'..,.T. M. Baldwin PrMlilMit Vliw rnxlilnit.' Caablur a.lli inhum oa InMrvn ,i' PACIFIC COAST. Nevada's Wool Clip Clean : I ; and Heavy; '' " ' CLEVER BURGLARS IN IDAHO. Urge AoroRgaof Wheat and Barley in . Southern Callfornla--Ctnur d'Alene Mines. A m-w onnra hnum for Ixjk AiiudIm U n n t'lH i-uriy pKnilnl;ti!. A iriii'H ill cli'Vnf ImriclHrs and tneak i'i'M'1 U I(;!ik liluhu Wiwiiii. Tli wii'ji- l o Inw in pulton IiUa nt iIia unit compHny liua Ix'kuii Uking mai. T: ii Hnilliirii ThcIAc 1i rpplacinK It 'liinnw. ((! ii, n mim with wlille nittn in lid Hontli. an l-uo will (lve It rrirular boanl r in ill iviiiiiljr jail employment in ckiiiii Mikiim. Tim At t him Hnynr Companv ha Ixwn iu'irM.rii'l m I'Iiiini a, witli a cnpilul t ( fc of )HI,IHHI. T r.Ki'l.'iice of Kriiflism Yonnir, In .til l.ikn Cny, ia now uimhI a Ket'ley ilri- -'Blilinl.IMIt. I'i e w ml clip in NnvAila in reportuU iimi.IIv iii-avy kihI clean, 'the ilieop viiiii'M'il fpli'inll lly, Tue tj'tpi'rior O.mrt at ! Aniri!iiliM i-'ii I Mm valiillty of tli prohibition ir liniiiii'H ill 1'oiiioiia. li.Ht'nv (Vwk onya min, In Marl up.i .tin I v , A. T.,liava lieon pureliaeJ y Ni'M- York ymliriit. Th W unaii'a ChritUn TmiMranre ' ' it ion mill t " ml" 'ii-kiTpiTK nl Nuw .xtiiiiii-t-r, If. C , liav ilwlareil war. Tl t'otim) iilteil L'niiiiI Company liaa in ii ip imU'il at rliiiMilx A. 1. Or UK" itioVfa will l planted along the noil. I'ikSiIi f.ik fhnmlier of ('omiiii'roe tinjiiHt iliiTiniiiiHliiMi in L'IhIi v Li. l y oil Ilia roa.la entvring the rnl.iry. l'!ii t ifiir l'AIna mine aiti to lie p nl nHin. Tli rn nipt Ion of work o ilut H'ctiiiti will give z OUi) men etn Ui in. nt Tii imtnrnl ( wll on I. W. 1111' iiHii ! riiiii'ii on inn e lire 01 iia Anireiei ; :.n I i it. ve vi ry in lii'iituin of l)e- 4 t er. i i if.i'in of I'ort'atnl. r.. are (InmAinl- ii tloit tlmi M(y u-iire (our public ,ii'k"' i ;"i jrri' .'Hen in anuuion uiiue jii airi-aov ovnil. K at ol H iiv Civ. Ma'io. are aoveral iot tinm.'J, biiu a rheme la lin-utiatliiii to l ave III lmt watr conveyetl U tli (mli'iuT.. in tlio Uiwn Itiilro vla al l Anila are cutting ii.l liij!ilfif rnM to Kmlern point. n. ki-t to Knnntii Citv ;orJ!5avii to ' York for.lrom ! t-) V Th miner In Neva.la romitr. Cat , .r r.iii'imr nver the oroniiefta of Cam- i etn a iliibna lull Iwi-oiuiiik a law, the !li.if oiiiiiiitUe having favorably re- ivir'cil It The Hra'ltret Mnrcinlile Aitnoy re- Htrla fniirlt)in fninir.', in the rucilii! .Viaet Matfa ami Territor'ei for the past ii.fk, atffinul fotittn for th previous wtvk ami U-n tli aanm wk in In.U. U. Iin, IVaiiliuit of i ha defunct 'Atlver City ami D.'iutni I N. M.) national anka; K. II. SlnlmM. cnbier of the l intii luk, an I t'inn', c.iHhior of the Silver C.tv bank, luiva liean arrvated on aehariteof eiiilnMleiiint. A. K. W.tat itT. anth ir of a bi mraphv of th late J iv I David Terry, aiya in huntiim fur nviterlala fur thu life ol I'errv lie eontiniMily emu ai'roaa evl- luneo ah'iwinir that filfiri ha I been iiimlo to put Terry out of the way. Thr ia much contention In Hritfham City, Utah, over entabli-h n a water worka aynti'in. IViniU have It-en voted, hut the nppoVition t i their iue la ao atronit that it will alfifit the aalo, a re traimnii order havitiK already been ianueil. J. I) Snvth liaa lieon cmvicteJ of murder in thn MrUdeiree al Sacramento. I'lo waa c innncled with lha ronapirai-v ti Mb and niurder K. Allen for hii ino-iev. Snilib'a two pomp inioita are under aentence lor murder in the aecond deree. Kvery report anvs that audi an acreage of wheat and hurlev aa ia now in the ifroiind haa never I lore la-en planted in S milierti California. Thousands of acres in San II -rii'trdino count v that have never pnulu ed anythinit but aanebruah htw lii-en pi intud' to barley because of the I Jit nurket there haa been for that itiain tbla ao.nxm. fireim l'oll.ikv' aurveyira have larted by the l nl Itiver mine to ex amine trv'cvmtrv h'twn-n Eureka and ed Hint!', 00, for the propoa-d rail road ennitrnetion. There ia a tlivialon of . niiiion at Knreka a to the earneet neaa of l'oMakv and Ida luckera in thie m we, and thn lienor 0 disposition ia to aid the ninleria'-Jiiit and give it a trial. J. K. (in Idin, a hnikntnan, found le'oiinena ol q t iru-benrng free gold tve tiiilte up t h i IViiekee river recently. There Is con-fMera le excitement a( "ruokee over the Hud, or li la In the di rection of the old mm n town of Knox Vill, which foriner'v iiiiiiilared hun dred of iiihiibiian'l! In early days it waa known that a l.id.-o exialed, lmt It o iuld not tin fii in l. tiil ldon and hil (rlenda have located claims. The North AniT'cnn Commercial 0 iinp'tny la eataiilihing a eoanng ami ,-iliiply aiation at D itch Harbor, Alaaka. I'ae 1ai kenttno 0.0. l-'rink has failed ( ir lhn. place, ladim wmi inmner hiui miacell inenin ergo and elitht workmen, vim wl I co i.tnict. a whai-f for the no .mi nidiit.nu of the whaling Hoot and cuvemi'i ciiit'-r. inn i-mp i'i"" ft S:n I'olro, will proceea to inanaimo i id loid a c.irgn of 1,20 tbni of coal for emporiirv na i at. Duich Harbor. There tre s im excnllont coul mines near that il ion. which tin company proposes to levelop Hunt anninior. It n the Inten tion to make IMteh Ilarnor uie rcn- Lnvotta for whul. nil vesaete, wnera gen ral supp'lea eun ho furnished. The eveiiue cutler end war vessels will iiobably lake their fuel at that point. r't HwOioML IVI t.N f IUN. t nfr Humbrt of Italy to V'it Eng 1 1 d-f . derewikl the Recipient of a Jiilvur Wreath. Tu'rntlna Donnelly lias ciphered out ew llteorv a'ltiit' th grip, lie think' I is canned by star iiu -t tlirotigli which he earth paaars. I'lcaideiit llmrison gete up life 8tate itMia in a lexal ami red liipn atvle, just s if he ana preparinu brieis. They axo leal., romp ct and onnciae. Oeneral (Joitrka, (lovernor-Heneral of HHnimj l-oland, n a hale and viirorono ofdiorofill years, and be ia not going o reai ir ii hia plHi-e as haa iieen reported, fho Car knows his value too wed. ft1 v. J. 0. Scbwerin, a Congrcg-tional-mt iiiiuia er, wholllid luat week at Kan llalre Wt waa a noted liiinU r, and vaa lor imny years (lennrnlly considered ne best rille idiot in the Nortliweat. The birth lay anniversary of the Km-H-ror of Un ia. who is 47 vears of aire. also the wed l n aimlverrary of the 'fine r,l VValwi, aim has now len h iiK'wml W tt.e charming I'rlr cess Alei vidna for twenty nine years. King llumliert'f apnro-fhing visit lo 'Iiigliiiid is said to be due to the grati mle Iih fee's when he recalls that Queen Victoria waa the f!rnt of tho European vcrelirnn to recognize the young king loin of Italy thirty or more years ago. rhe only-survivor of the brave band f Texan patriot win tiirned the iMrl.i- t on of i'exaa Independence at WhsIi iw'lmi on th i lir.ix i river March 2. lHIWI, i W. U. (Jraa f ml, who now at the aif ii Hi! la bving in dctilinl n at Alvnredo. I'i lerewnki hn be 'n pre'ented by hie Ho-lon admirer, with a lautifiil wreath if Iniirt ! in silver. They war consider ate enough not to insist that he Hbould wear it na IheKiuian conn uerore wore eiri. They did not want to disarrange hia h dr. l'r iice liiimarck may flatter himself that he baa tli'iii-iui'la of admirers in this country, hut the fact that America is th- 'nl v nation on eirth that haa not Conirdined to ins monument fund would indicate that Herman-Americans are not very orient in showing their respect for hi in. The Kmpreaa of (jprmany Is in the hub t of writing for , lew minutes daily in tier iii;ir. .ooo.ty ever aces the con tenia of her diary not even the Kni' peror. At tne ciosi ot tne vear a new d'ary h oi I, and the old one, which h is a lock d el a , is conaiirncd to the iron sa'e containing her Majesty' do- oii sdc jewel')-.- M. C Ore, !e. the owner of the Last l,hanc and .ii hi irrh in nei at the new 'in;, in C il ir i lo Hit,', h-an hia nam, I, a native lll'ti i, who sett'ed in i!i nriiln in 1H.M. II i is u man slightly t'Hive mediii a hid .-tit. lean an I of a and, cmiili x -ii, and is 50 vearsof age, illhoilh h lo ' much younger. A'ter prorpec: inn for t 'ity years all over the State lie no linda himself a m'l.ion lite Home uf thawt!t si hohiis ileliaht in the Mllection i f ptmphlei. ndl there ere pimphl -l. which nttr.irted lit tle notiiw at th Vine of their pubiie tlon a (entn.-r nu o that are no worth a hundred times toe nricrt then asked for IS fr K'ward Kvere.t II tie is one of the pamphlet cllf-tor. H ke-rr. his in a -eries of bki-ls snspended hr row a-d nt lev from the beams in tb eiiing ot Ira Minly. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. Philadelphia Will Contribute a Choice Collect on of Historical Relics at thd Exposition. New'onndland hf" decided to partici pate In tb exposition. Wisc inaiu will expend 'l.00f)npon its horticultuiai exhibit. Cranberry culture will lie ma te umi ecially prouunent. M. J. I tinner ot ."sevaila, Mo., Has a collection of over Il.tKX) varieties of woods, p'-tnfa'liona, etc., which be pro pni, txhibi'lng at the fair. Th marble slab presented b? the Km iireh-s .luae .lime to I ananin will be in c u h d io the rxhihil Iroin Hint country. 'Jlllciiil c ineiit for its removal has been granted. The limit of the time in which 8tat p and Territories and foreign countrie. must accept ihe Biles allotted them on the extos (ion grounils has been fixed at June i, 18!)-'. Oregon will please take notice. The Cunard Steamship Companv has applied for space in the murine pec t ion if the transportation huiidiiig to show a series of models illustrating the a peed f "ocean Erevhoundu " and the devel opment of transatlantic travel. It ia now cnnfli.lered certa n that the prominent etc iera in this country will co-oierate heartily with Cuief Ivee in forming for di-play in tno art depart uient a collection of retrospective ex hibit of etching mada since the time of the Centennial col lection in 1870. Michtunn is going to come out I'rmio in the Wo-Id's Fair. More than I,IMHV 000 worth of Michigan lumber will In used in the buildings, and $4."i0,000 will no to Michigan contractora. "As to her exhibit." nana a Micl.iuau mn"i."ahe will have the neat mineral, tores' rv, bful and llshery exhibits on the grounds. The Arkansas World's Fair Hoard hat selected ten acres near Little Rock, which it will have cultivated with the Vit wot raising various agricultural prod ucts for exhibit at the exposition. The board haa made arrangements to send tc Chicago for the forestry building spec1 mens of pine, whiteonk,red oak, sweet gum, cyprns and walnut. The city of Hiiladelpliia will contrili nte to the Pennsylvania exhibit a ehoie collection of historical relies now in pos session of Meade Poet, (. A. It., George W. Chitds and the Drexel Inslilnt-j representations of Henjainin rraiiR in. Stephen Uirard and other old-tim c le hrnteil cttixenai the iiinions " lihertt bell," and other exceedingly interesting ohfecls. Applications f.ir apace for ex- libits are very nunioioni Ironi Penney! vnniii. It ts announced that the Charleaton (Mais.) navy yards will furnish thf equ Illi uipments ot th tnntntiqn haute slur nois, which will contain the exhibit of the government navv department. These equipments include twelve ship's boats. Including two steam rnttera, tout ordinary cutters, one sailing launch, twi unties, one wnaiebnat, one itl whale- Imat and one balaa, and a complete b1 of ship's furniture from navv camp stoob to elaborate smehoaMs eighty placet EASTERN ITEMS." John Brown's FortTatfen to Chicago.";; v fill A SUBTERRANEAN RIVER. The New York Legislature D.ifoats the B.U to Annex B"ookrft. to New York City." A scheme ha bn formnliled for min ing tieneath the city of Axp-.i, Ool, A suble ranean river -' t- tnt haa been tapped in Plai - i. " ?-ird rouWf , fk-in.. H fuml lieB of Danes Id btitie tiiiilk foBrTi A hew cable to connect Ilia Central American Suites with C'ii&.'foon to be laid. James Calhoun, postman ter at Biff Pine, Wyo., is a dolaulter to the govern ment. Franklin, Pa., is In the throes of re ligious revival, buainee even being neg lected. A Kanaa man applied "for a divorce because his wife would no longer Bap port him. The Minnesota lie se law ha been le. tared void, and saloons may nin all the tfine. Chicago has given up Us war against the Kntdish sparrows. The sparrow! hold the field. Anotbervesset loaded with food for the starving Kiisians will leave Philadel phia on April l:i. Minnie Johnson confesses to having fired the t'eninle reformatory at Indian apolis on March t. Railroad official es'imate that only one-third of the Western crops of 18D1 have thus lar been moved. SecrefarvTracvexore see fear that the House wilt le pareiuion'ous in the mat ter of naval appropiiat ions. The M isftchntti Ilooee ha decided to make the salary ol the tiovernor S,-0-10, the present figure ling 5,IKM. The bottom and 8,f'0.'.b gallon of water one day last week dropped ont of the new reservoir at Leavenworth, Kan. The Commissioners report in favor of tho entrance of th Baltimore and Ohio nilroad into Washington City by an ele vaied road. Reports to the Philadelphia Board of Health of contagious diteaes and death therefrom indicate a death rate far above th no-mal. The Conirressional Committee on Pub lic I.fiid-i ha reported favorably on the project I Mariposa wagon road into the osemite ahey. Ex-Audior Levella. Indicted for st- enipt if- ,Jp?ea county; connV owid id Cm; -.'ifetia-r , v i ii -, rare rc- ; i e t not lepr,- nk-1, tl railw ' The Senate oliV'.' ' riM Ahe name of the ciitom colif ctio'u ttih. -Vt and port of Wilmington, Cal., to that of Los An geles lias p.ved the henate. Two rain companies in Kansas are milking contracts with the counties of that State at tiSOo a county to produce Ironi one lo two inches of rain. According to the newoutitof the pop nlation of Knlfalo, by the State ennmer ators the total will be 2S1 01 0. Tne cen sus lijurcs in 18!) were 265,tKi4 A bill has len introduced in the Ohio Legislature to enlarge and extend the Ohio canal an that boats can be towed Irotn Lake Erie to the Ohio river. The Stale Department oflicials say that there is no tru h in the report that the Ptiited States haa established an alliance with the Argentine confederation Th LegiBlatureat Albany haadefeated tho bill to annex; Brooklyn to New York city, r.tmmany rule in the latter place la the duel iiupediuieut to the consoli dation. At presents GDI students are attending the University of Michiiran at Ann Ar bor, which is the largest number ever attend ins an American institution ol learning. David Wonger, who struck a rich vein of fulver-hearinir ore while digging well at Lincoln. Mo., several days ago. has purchased machinery, and will df velop tne lead. Toitiuiony is being taken at Chicago in the dbputed heifth-p to the estate ol Samuel sankey ot tan t rancisco regard ing the title to flM),00U worth of propertj situated in Chicago. The old Harper's Ferry engine-hone fort, which John Brown stormed and captured, and behind whose brick wal s lie bid defiance to a powerful force, haa been removed to Chicago: Th recent heavy disBtireements have reduced the treasury halance to',ol, 8:'fi. of which I12.till.20l ia on deposit -wiUiJIational tanks and ir,225,003 is in 8ubsidiifiy-tidrtwHttr.'Oiu, The Nicaragua!! government mak ing the most liberal offers to intending coll'" grrowers. It gives to a married niun i'4U acres and to a eirg'e man iaf acres of good coffee ground. Governor Flower declined to sign a bill fixing the salaries of the l!r ok Ivn Alder men at 2,0'0 on the ground that thf Legislature thould only gr:int. permission to local autu irit.ea to tlx e.-flmies. General Miles b-Miev s the great need of this country is coaH-de ensive woiks He thinks toa much dependence is pi u-e on tho navv. Fortilica ions are neceesi ties, and thev may eavo the country fi-on great lo?o. it ia opettiv ciiaigeii in jew iora ion a cirrupt on'fiind i f at. least 8,n0i,tXK. was !nisel bv in'oreated c.ipitalisls atii stock jobbers for tho n Nago of the bil ill the aew Jersey u g siaioro legaoanu the coal coin bii lalion of the Keadint railroad. Attention has baen attracted to the arsembliige ol altoitt forty tramp neai llebronville, Maee., cli-o to the Khod Island line. Hiie is s.iid to 1m Hu lour leenth conei cutive vear that tiiis atrang gathering has Iieen held. There is : leader, who seoma t' he well educated and who receives c -r ain privileges aim secures respectful oliedieuce. Tnegath ering will remain for two or three weeks. WHY A CABLE BREAKS. Ill Dflltfutt lu.trnini.ttu C7m.i1 to As ' lain th lculll, of tli Brriwn. When the Ponyer-yuortier, a French iteumer builtcxpresaly for laying ocean Cables, was in Boalon liurlxir, tiiuity pletwurs sefikera, as well as news gatherers, boarded her, intent UKn iuarnjiif,' soinnthihg about cables and men who care .for them. One inquir ing person buttonholed the Unit offi cer and plied h::o with questions. "How do you know, when the cable Ces way out in mid-ocean, when you save to repair a break?" "Oh, that's ea.sily explained. Deep ly buried as IheaO cables are beneath the trackless level of the ocean's sur face, the exact path in which each one of them lies is well known by series of chart indications which were made at the time of their construction. By means of computations baaed upon these sources of inforluution a captain can guide his vessel to any spot along the line in mid-oceuti, where no guide jxwts but the lights of heaven exist, and know of a certainty that he is with in a very shoi-t di.-iunce of a point di- ifretly (tvor. the cujiibenl cable bun tireds of fathoms below." "You aaid a little while ago that if there was a break in the cable between Cape Ann and Ireland that the ap proximate position of the break could be aacertaiiied by the operator at Can so. Now, how could he tell anything about it except that communication was stopped?" "Well, it is one of the marvt? is things in modern invention that he is able lo accomplish this. The delicate instrument called the galvanometer will tell him, iu the space of a very few seconds, at what Bitot in the hun dreds of miles length of cable, down along the dark recesses of the ocean's bed, the accident to the wire has oc curred. The aciitcnfsg of the instru ment lies simply in its ability to reg ister with unfailing accuracy the amount of resistance the unbroken wire gives. With this information, and knowing already the other con ditions of the size of the wire and the amount of its resistance per mile, the operator can calculate tne distance from the station at which the break has occurred. If there should be two breaks he, of course, can give infor mation regarding the lirst one only. since the electric connection is stopped there. If the operator at the outer end should make a similar test of his un broken portion, and it should be found, upon comparing the two re sults, through some other perfect cable that they did not supplement each other's distances, then it would be evident that there were at least two breaks, at a known distance from each other. Such instances have not oc curred, however." New York btar. Fun. Kaatl, Aeqnired. Talking of how much fame he has or hasn't, Willie Winter baa sense of humor enough to take a sacrilegious tone on the subject.. After he came back from his lirst trip to England, i i Justin Dulv said to him: "They iiaiie an awful lot of fuss about you over there, didn't they, Winter? I don't see how it came about. Do they fually road yu-tir poetry and, if so, how -xme they to?" ' - "Oh, no, no; nothing of that sort," said the gentle Willie, hastily. "Of course they never read a line of it, but, then, they never read any Ameri can poet, you know, but Longfellow; and when George Fawcett Rowe in troduced me around as the great suc cessor of Longfellow, and thai poet of the time iu the States, why, naturally, they just took his word for it and treated me accordingly." Did you ever hear anything so charmingly naif ? New York Sun. IncremM of Storms and Floods. The Northwestern Railroader puts forth a Dovel theory to account for an alleged increase of storms and floods in these hitter years. It says that there are more than 30,000 locomotives use in North America, and that vapor from these sent out int" the a mospbere each week will measure more than 50,000,000,000 cubic yards, which must be returned aa rain ; or 7,000,000,000 cubic yards a day quite enough to produce rainfall every twenty-four hours. Other non-condensing steam engines add eight times as much more, so Unit the total mass of vapor discharged into the atmos phere must be each week more than 470,000,000,000 cubic yards. CoDipi-esaed A in The largest compressed air estab lishment iu tho world is at Paris. It has a plant with 5,000 horse power. Begun in 18S1 to distribute the power for the driving of pneumatic clocks, it was not Ions before it was discover ed that the air could be profitably used for two other purposes to distribute motive power to manufacturers by day and to produce electricity kw lifirhtinff bv nitrht. The works, which are on the heights of Belleville, on theedcre of the citv. now occupy an area of 107,500 square feet, or two and a half acres, two-fifths of which is covered with buildings. New York Telegram. In thn Interest of Sclono. DvsDentic Patient Good heaveus. doctor, what are you uiking ail those murderous things out tort Zealous Physician (who worships his profession) For the autopsy : I am going to find out just what is the mat ter with you. Alarmed Patient (who is unduly sensitive) But 1 am uotdead yet. Calm Physician No. but vou might die sometime when I woulu be other wise enarasred. and it is not well to de lay the autopsy until decay seizes upon the more delicate tissues. Hold your breath while I take out your lungs. please. Burdette in Brooklyn Eagle. . .Works, Not Faith. Two well known clergymen missed their train, upon which one of them took out his watch, and finding it to blame for the mishap, said he would no longer have any faith in it. "But." said the other, "isnt it a fueetkm, not of faith, but of worksl" Living ijnuroa. T1IK i!KI) iWi-AlL Once upon a time there was a pretty little cottage by the side of the road to the town. It waa bumble, but all about It, everything, win always neat and trig, so it was evident that It was not the dwelling of either sloth or want. A honeysuckle elhiil-l up over the door, anil gay flower, bloomed in beda before it; while on the south was the stand for the bees, where in nl raw thatched hives they stored honey ail nay long in sunny weather. In the cottage lived an old man named Paul and bia wife Borbarer. They were very fond of each other, and had it not been that they hnd no children they would have been aa happy as tho day was long. As it waa, tlit-y tried not to miss too much the pratt le of little ones which the storks would not bring to them, hut went on their way in life, thrifty and kind to the poor, and doing good when it offered. In the morning Paul would go afield to his work, while Dame liarbarer would remain at home to do whatever house hold taa! needed attention and after ward to spin smooth threadaof flax with her distaff, to be sold in the market of the town or to be woven into cloth from which she made clothing for herself and ber husband, or, what quite as often hapieneil, for some poor and unfortunate neighbor. DemeBarbarerwaa always kind to the beggars wdio came her way. They seem ed to her so unfortunate in not having a home that she could not help giving them at least food and now and then an article of clothing, and she waa. almost always patienteven when their requests, aa sometime, happened, took aluioat the form of commands. "The poor creature) know no better," she would say. "They have nothing; not even sense enough lo know bow te be grateful; but that does not matter, I do not help them brc:iu- they beg prettily, but heeaUHe tin y need." But or.ee upon a tiiuu there came a beggar who tried the patience of Dam Barbarer quite beyond even her endur ance. It was one afternoon when it was almost time for her husband to return from the Ii. Id, and liarbarer was hasten ing to.get bis evening meal ready for him. She had been to the town to sell some thread, and had been detained, so (hat she had not time on her return to iake a wheaten cake for his supper, as she had intended. She had on ly a very little bread in the honae, and when a beggar came alongand rather impudently demanded a bit of bread and cheese she waa loth to give it to liim. The beggar waa by no means a prepos sessing looking individual. His dress waa all of red, although it was so failed and weather beaten, ao tattered and torn that it was hard to tell what it looked like in its best davft. The remains of a red cock's feather was stuck jauntily in his cap and jagged ends of faded red ribbon fastened his doublet. Long black hair dangled in tangled locks over his fore- bead, and, w ith his shaggy black eve- brows, half hid his piercing eyes. Ilia nose was sharp and thin, and there was to his iior-trila a strange curve which imrnW4i &etsia -t all prepossess ing. Add to all tins that he waa i.u. of on foot and that lie had something of a hump between hir. shoulders, and he was not at all the sort of man one would wish to meet on a lonely road. Dame Barbarer heaved a sigh as shs looked at him, and hesitated, while th. strange red figure leered at her in a man ner that sent a cold chill down her spine. She did not wish to share the little bread there was for Paul's supper with this fantastic looking creature, but she was too charitable to turn bim away without morsel. So she made the beggar sit down upon the doorstep, and then she brought him a email piece of bread and big piece of cheese, hoping that the size of the one would make up for the smallnecis of the other. be red beggar fell to eating w ith the ,.tetite of a he ird of locusts and as if tie bad eateu nothing for a month, and it was hardly the twinkling of an eye be fore he bad finished the bitof bread com pletely. "Please, mistress," he said beseeching ly, "please, mistresa, could you not give me just a littl wee bit of bread to eat with the rest of tny cheese?" The dame, although this was exactly what she did not wish to do, cut him a slice of bread and gave it to him with the best grace she could manage. The ragged rascal fell to eating even faster than before, and almost before she had laid down the bread knife he bad made an end to his cheese. "Please, kind mistresa," he said more humbly than before, "please, kind mis tress, couldn't you give tne a morsel of cheese to go with my bread?" This also was Dame Barbarer fain to do; and hungrily as the fire devouring a field of ripe grain did the varlet make way with his bread. "Please, good, kind mistress," he said, "please, good, kind mistress, could you not give me a very little, wee morsel of bread to eat with my cheese?" And to cut short a story which though it would be long in the telling was cot king in the doing, the red beggar would contrive first to make an end to his bread and then to make an end to his cheese, begging with ever increasing insistance for more of one and then of the other, until he had managed to beg from Dame Barbarer every morsel of bread there was in the house, and the hour of the good man's return already striking. And when all was gone the impudent and un grateful red varlet threw back his hair from his deep set and piercing eyes and laughed in her face. "Many thanks, sweet mistresa," he said saucily. "If the good man scold for lack of his supper, teach him the way I get mine, and it may serve him in good stead if he will but take to the highway and seek out some soul aa char itable as his wife." Then it was that for almost the only time in her life Diuue Barbarer lost ber temper. "Get you gone!" she cried angrily. "Is it not enough that you have eaten all the good man's supper when he toiled all day and you have been asleep, it is like ly. In the sun beside some haystack, but in return you must stay, and flout ma for my silly good nature. A pretty re turn, good sooth, for the food I have given you! (Jet you gono while I can still keep my honest hands of! your luzy carcasa." The vagalHind scrambled up from hia seat upon the doorstep, and stood look ing into her angry face with so unpleas ant laugh. "May I not come in and warm myself by the lire first?" he asked saucily. "Come in und warm yourself I" echoed the dame angrily. "Let your supper warm you, beggar!" And w ith that she pushed him off of the step into the sandy walk. "May you lie colder the more you put on," said the red beggar aa Dame Bnr barer closed her cottage door upon him with a push not very gentle. The dume did not heed him or hie words, but set to work with all speed to get something ready for her husband's supper. "Shivery shakery!" said Dame Bur barer to Goodman Paul w hen he came, "I am very cold." - "Put more clothes on," lie answered. So he gave her hi cat. and she pu that on and her thickest cloak, und her hood and a pair of mittens, and twa pairs of stockings. "Sliivety shakery! Shakery shivery cried the old woman; "I am colder than ever." "Put more clothes on," said Paul. 8.) she put on a veil and her husband' boots and his .Sunday cravat and a pair of earrings and a walking stick. "Shivery shakery! Shakery shivery! I shiver and shake!" she cried. "I am colder than before." "Put more clothes on," said her hus band. So she put on a blanket and a bosom pin, and a necklace that she had not worn since she was a young girl, and collar and her husband's watch chain. "Shivery shakery! Shakery sliiveryl I shiver and shake! I shake and shiver!" she cried. "I am colder than ever." "Put more clothes on," once more said her husband. "Here, take my thick w-aistcoat." She took the waistcoat, but in order to get it on it was necessary to take oil sotna of the manv thintrs she was already wearing; and, as fast as she took off the things in which she was wrapped, she began at once to get warmer, and she re memliered the words of the red beggar, and how he had wished that she might grow colder the uiore she put on; and Dame Barbarer knew that a spell had been laid upon her because she had sjxtken harshly to the vagabond when he wished tocoine in and warm himself by her tire. -She therefore made herself warm by taking off her wrappings until she had as little on as it was at all re spectable to wear, and thereafter she went in cold weather so thinly clad that ber ueighbors declared that she had lot. I her wits. It was well nigh a year that this state of things continued, and one day just aa the sun was near setting, and the dam a was every moment expecting her hus band home from the field where lie had been at work all day, when a strange old " woman came puttering along the road. T- ior old creature was bent well nigl double, aud one couiu b r was not straight, a hump standing L. where her shoulders were stooped over. The old woman, indeed, was so beut over that it was not possible to see her face, and it was only by her dress that one could have known her again. But it was thisdress which made Dame Barbarer stare; for it was all of failed red, tattered and stained and weather " beaten, and patched here and there, but despite the fact that it was the dress of a woman and not of a man, there was) something alnmt it that brought the red beggar of the year before up so vividly to the dame tlut she began, all of a tremble, to put a supper ou a plate for the newcomer without even waiting to be asked. The old red woman sat down, on the doorstep, panting and chuckling. "You are dressed strangely. Dame," she said, "for the time of year." .. "The time of year has nothing to do with what 1 wear," answered poor Dame Barbarer; "the colder it gets the less I wear, and in summer I have to put on the thickest things I have to keep cool." The old red woman chuckled. "Perhaps my brother haa been here," she observed, eating away with a hearty appetite, "Is he your brother?" asked Barbarer piteously; "oh, if you would onlyaalc him to undo the charm and make me like other people, there Isn't anything I wouldn't do for you." "Humph! Perhaps you weren't polite to him. He is very particular about that," "I am sure," the Dame answered, "I tried to be kind to him until he waa saucy to me." The red woman chuckled more than ever. "Well," she said, finishing her supper, and rising with more agility than oue would have expected of her; "you are on the whole a good sort, and I dare say on the whole you have been punished enough," "Oh, indeed I have," poor ,forhpi-er answered, with tear, hi her eyes. "More than enough." "Well,' then," the old woman said, "it shall not be said that I have not made amends for what my brother did more than you deserved, and you shall have your heart's desire." She looked into Barbarer's face, and the dame would have sworn for her life that it was the red beggar who cursed her into whose face she was gazing. Then sho bent over again with one of her sin ister chuckles, and went hobbling down the road. And before the summer came around again the storks had brought a little son to the cottage. Quincy Townsendin Bos ton Courier. A 8on.lt ! Stomach. "I have an attack of dyspepsia thie Worning." "What brought itonr "I dreamed of overeating last night. Chicago Times. " - i ; . '. : i. i - "" ' -mmmmm'i "'." """71 '