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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1889)
THE Morning "K. TT" Ac "VT: TWELVE PAGES. PAGES 9TO-12. -;.-- & VjtVJ,1j.' am -. IT fc" -VOX. XSXS. ISO. 90GS. TOkTiAOTk OKEG02T. SATURDAY, OCTOUEH 26, 18S9. phige prra cestts THE MIMES OF ALASIA. A Evi5Tr ef lliB Work Dane la That Territory Daring tne Sea3n. Tls Gild Oapsaj1 Fkre-Sir7r 3w Basis, cne p Creek esd Riinea GnKk 31 ke 0od Showlogs A"it Ttfcr. jHncnu SJlaing Record. Tbo hortened days of our fall time, grow Irg ahorter with iwch succeeding week, de note the termination of ne ef the mot re markable wet and "disagreeable seasons for 'be miner and prospector that has ever been experienced in this district. Notwithstand ing this fact the hardy prospector has pane r trated tbo most secluded recesses along our -iiyyal-bearing Eoacoast, and niany yalua- W discoveries have been made, which, u iSS5"wcre in .W-.'ber ie''un' -A or do main. cnpitafiStfr' tcould immediately tkkc iold or them, and before anotuer season passes by more than Uventy mills would be erected and the raining industry of Alaska would receive an impetus vrbich would .slomsh the world and insure the mining Tsture of this most wonderful section. From Tieent indications next season "will bring 'nany hundreds or people to this camp, and tisto be hoped that anew era will dawn and Alaska will come to the front vith glow ing colors as a place for investment, of capi ral for the purpose" of devoloping our min eral wealth. While it cannot be denied that flio failure of the Alaska Gold Company, after expendiug several hundred thousand" uollars on the Bear Nest group, to dcvolop Jial property to a successful termination, cast u cloud throughout the East over Alaska, and the failure is a subject of gen eral comment in mining centers, yet when the true conditions are given to the public, and it becomes generally known ttiat the Alaska Gold Company displayed tbo most' gro s neglect of business principles, and also that tho company placed too much confidence In the report of an expert to whooi they paid JlO.OyO to expert it, then the cloud will gradually disappear and the allure will be looked upon its a thing of Engli'h stupidity and not on account of iho mineral resources ot the country. It is a historical fact ihat failures have occurred in nearly all rich mineral dis tricts in the world and will also occur Lguin where bad management is predomi nant, r A BI1EEP CBEKK MIXES. During the past year this district has 'r-hown up some extraordinarily rich silver ueenng ledges and considerable dcvelop rneutwork has been done and the proper ties are rapidly coming to the front. A ear ugo little or nothing was known of Jus section, buto-dayit bids fair to become one of the richest ailycr-producing sections on the coast. This season .Messrs. Reynolds & Anderson haTo shipped from their" claim about Hixty tons of ore to San Francisco for inciting, and tho returns have been most rncoaraging, running from $100 to the ton up into tho thousands. There are. a number J other locations equally as good, but havo ot received the attention (hat the Reynolds i, Anderson claim hat. Next season will witness a scene of mining activity in that section, and the owners of claims will realize uundsomely for their cilorU:. feAlAIOS CI1EEE CLUU3. Amjnj iho discoveries during Jbo -iysflrj nro deserving special mention arc tho-c n the vicinity of Salmon creek, a few xniieg "rom Juneau. A number of elaims have ievn located, and work in the way of strip ping tho surface has been done and all -la.ins shov, up remarkably wcl Assays of average ore indicate well and this section -remises to develop into a niost excellent. nuiig district, and its proximity to Juneau will hi oa tendency to make our city ono )f more than ordinary importance as a min ng oi titer. These properties have been atlr.ic'ing the attention of Eastern capital sts, and negotiations for their purchase are low pending, which, if they are "made, we iay look tor the erection of extensive vioiLs next season. THE BKNMU: 1AT niSTKICT Last season attracted considerable attention ami a front dual of development work was dno. This year little hag been done out ride ot the annual assessment work. In this j.itnct there are miiuc excellent properties owned by mon ot limited means, who are luublo to open them up in such a manner as -o attract the attention of capitalist", yet Ch so properties are good, and it is only a jzestionot tunc when this district witlbc jwo one or the foremost mineral producing a Ktidis of the coast, though it will require a -rgo amount of capital to bring it about. 1KHJOIAS IfilASD niOVrilTiES. Of tho Treadwell so much has been said ihat there is nothing new to be mentioned, except tho practical change of management. John Troadwell, the promotor of this gigan tic mining plant, di-qtosed of his entire intar t, ai,d Colouol Frye .-old a large portion of h s Interest, thereby throwlngthe general nram.'genicut and control in other hand. It !iaj been rumored that the new management jtends entering into other extensive mining enterprises along the Douglas island mineral li.lt, .did steps have been taken to secure pateuts for a number of claims adjoining the jYcauwoii on me souui. a large number oi ihrr properties on Doueins iblaiid have rt eeived some itttonliou during the past sea ton, but nothing in tho way of permanent development. A contract has recently been Icl to drive n tunnel in the I.iu-y location 'or the purpose of Investigating Uie monts of hat property by giving the ore a thorough mill test. In the immediate vicinity of Ju ueau tho eiSTKKK AX-VSKA MIMSG .VSP M1IUSG CO. lias expended a largo amount of money iu, "Jtc luiidiug of a road leadiug to the baMti, the erecting of a ten-stamp mill and a tntm v ay for the transportation of ore from tbo jiuie to the mill, and tho driving of tho unrel This comjany is operating on what is known as the Jumbo group of mines, situated iu Silver J3ow batln. a threti . j jrths intercut in which was purchasod late ast fall from Mosri. Garside, Sanderi and oUits, and operations wore commenced sariy m the spring and have been pushed atcaJily ahead under tho supervision of -upeniitendeiit Charles I. Uepuc, assisted by A. Sanders. This comimny shcu itsrtmg ojujratioti'. has labored under many disadvantages occasioned by the heavy rain- fails during the season, wliieu lias retarded progross, though everything considered, tho maiiMgetueHt is deserving of great credit Kr the rapidity and substantial manner in which tho work has been executed, bo far this company is making ft better showing than any operating in Al'i-Va since the erection of tbo Troadwell r.ant, and from present iiitiieations it Will be but a very short time uUI their output of bullion will RreaJlY' exceed "that ot the fumous Treadw-rli. Tliere are ubout 1000 wO i ti lilriHrBilo am on the riurun.anu the (Hisuiiafr eo-er abour 210 toot, and at n Jf t-UiCeul 176 feet a body of most excel 'en4 i;uari wav tapped. The ore is a white 4UJ2, heavily impregnaied with black Mil T5ht.rcts, with'a Jigut sprinkling of ga.eua. It hows a good pcroentage of grfd, ami is Tro milling. Jt is the intention of the toni j ny to add ten more si amp to the mill cirly next spring, andbtfore the close of the i;no!."l& put iu twenty more, making forty statu i-5 all ld. The ten-sUmp mift was rea Jy for ojierations overal weeks ago, but .t his boon tletayod on acconnt of the traiii way iiol being completed. It is aaticipated, boM.r, that the mill will be started m the course of a few djf. TS TiEOC CC)T.rBATKIJ. Thlt property Is about two mHcs from Tci:i-m and n owned by Tortland capitalists. A. tcn-sUjnp null waft erected on it Jastsea- salmtwii not oneratd until t&is anrint-. FruperintSndfnt Cou'tcr has keiit the mill ji operation daring a larser portion dl tho iuiu:a.aH i ivavudi inusi aausiaoioniv 19 all interested. This property lay idle for h number of ycara awaiting capital to de- relop t, ana n is grauiyuig to knotf u has ilicl out fiuccessttu. xs may ik stated. Umt there are other proper lies ef equal merit in this ncmrty awaiting CMjiital to bring them lo the frenL ABJtuuvrr igiAro. Early in the fr.rini: the bonding of the "W'jlieuguby & "Ware property lo the Sbw- cH company lor Jc'J.QOa, csuseu aitamoeroi prospectors to visit that section, and Mme very promising locations wee matie which will eventnallv bt-eome valuable, an this isl and bears strong itiHieations of being well mineralized. The Lowell company, after expeding several thousand dollars xu in Tcstigalins, abandoned the enterprise, the ledge showing up most flatteringly on the surface, but as it was bunk on, the pay ore cave practically onr, tho assays indicating too small amonnt; lo pay for working. Other property in the vicinity of thij prop er .y have been bonded to an Eastern com pany, and development work has been re cently commenced, and it is to tcboppd. th-it 'these properties will make a better showing. THE HtVHIt llVC DlSTSICT. This district is ituaie about fifteen miloa from Sitka and is caid ti contain an exten sive mineral belt. A large number ot loca tions, have been made, but little permanent development v.'orkhai been done. The Lake fountain Alining Company has been ope rating on the I.ucky t'liunco location about four years, but thuu far have failed to de velop to a successful termination. Fifty or a hundred tons ot ore were tanen out tins Ecasou ruJ run through a 5-stamp- mill, with what results wo are unable to say. The ore is of a high grade and with proper management this properly could be mado to pay good dividends. THE TUK OH. The miners in ths Yukon hare met with but little-success the past spring on account of high water. On Forly Mile creek there were two freshets during tho season which carried away all the water-wheels and othexwise retarded mining. In one night this stream raised fifteen feet- All say there is rio question about that section Jkj ing rich in gold, but that it requires capital to work successfully. It Is reported that three steam pumps arrived on Forty Mile creek a short timo before the latter parlies started out. . JtK CMS .W! aiit.Lios. Aulnjiartiriiiliril S.ocul I'cllttctan hitalio Jiibeiils an Immense .fortune In Californln. BipncronD. 31 e., (Special to the Ju-ai.ir) By the recent death of an undo in Santa Clara, Cal., Cyrus 1'. Berry, well Imowh in "Biddcford and Suco, becomes the principal licir to a forimic of about ?10,000,OX). The lucky heir is 45 years old, and has beeu Jor years past a prominent citizen, Iinying held the ofiicc of city clerk three years. During the late Trcbident Arthur's administration ho held a position iu the Portland custom house, but iu the last hair-dozen years has not been in prosperous clrcurustaucc;, and has earned his living as an ordinary ma chinist in the water-power shop. The prospective windfall doea not come .amiss, and connected with tt is an interest ing romance. Silas Emerson, an uncle lo Mr. Barry, on his mother's riue, was born In Harrison, Me., and when a young man went to Boston. There ho learned the builders' trade. At Boston he made the ac quaintance of a young lady, and later they became engaged. There was, however, another suitor for tho young Inily'a hand in the perhou of aoung lawyer belonging to a wealthy and nrislocrajio family The par- tnought ihe union oi their daughter with t.ieouiig la wj'er much more to be desired than with the young carpenter, and they fm.iliy succeeded xu winning tho daughter to tins view I-OKT VAIT1I IS WOMZN. From that time until the day of his death Emerson, if not a woman hater, had at least lost all faith in the fidelity of the gentler ?ex, and went through life uumated. On the iirat vessel which left Boston when the California gold fever of 1819 broke out Emerson took passage, with tho avowed de termination to make for himself a fortune bcido whieh that of the fcuccessful rival would sc-om insignificant, and how far he succeeded v. ill be learned when to estate is imully Eottled. Upon his nrrival in tho gold fields ho went to work in the mines, but it only took three days to convince him that there was hi ore money to be made out side than could be dug from tho earth, so he for-ook the pick and hhovel for carpenters' tools nnd built small hanlics and" cabins where now stands San Francisco and selling them lo men who were Hocking into Oal ifornia from all parts of the world. Then he began speculating in real estate, buyn.g lots in and near the rapidly growing cily, and they brought fabulou prices when the gold fever had subsided. But before fcan Francisco bad stopped it wondcrlul growth he bought a farm of 1SO0 aero3, ituated in what js now Mountain Yicw. and later bought another estate in Santa Clara county. Ilis'lirsl farm was wholly dcTotcti to wheat nnd that iu Santa Clara county lo stock rais ing. niS TSTIMATMi WILUTll. The last time lie visited the Kast was nine teen years ago, when he conceived a strong attachment for Ins nephew Cyriib, and he at the time stated that his will was mado, and that, after he was done with this i:fe, the bulk of his property would go to him, but until then lie mm.t work for his living. Fince his return to California very little had been heard from linn, although ".Mr. Berry has received occasional brief letters in all of which the intention to make him the principal heir was cither openly stated, or implied. Mr. Kmeisou was, however, ec ceutrio, and alwa s seemed determined hii favorite should .hirt for himself. Last Thursday Mr. Berrv recved a dipatch an nouncing his uncle's death at the ago of 71 years, and this morning, while on his way to work, ho received a second telegram ask ing him to come al otice to buuta Clara as he had been named in the will as administra tor. How much projierty has Ieen left is not known, as the dcccacd was always yery reserved iu regard to his business allairs. -V distautTQlatiou, who visited him eight years ago. states that at that time he was assessed for $1,000,000 worth of real estate, and San Francisco properu worth from $0,00o,t0Q to W.UM.00Q. Mr. Berry has a brother Charles, at pres ent hrtng uKn ihe sleamboil 2?ew York Stair, and poibly!ie may come in for a slice. There was also another nephew, hut nothine; has been beard from him for yeafi, and it is not known if he is living. Mr. Berry accepts his improved prospects calmly He will luavu this city for buiitr. Cl-raon Monday. "U oumn succrjij.,, u -J.nuli lknti, Minneioli 5eeinl Oct. 2SL iritsan B. Anthonj arrived in this city to day from South Dakota, where she h&a been grooming the champions of woman suttrae. 1 it au interview she Baid: "Tho KUtto pf South Dakota is the pi.ce of all others in the United Mates to which wo are going to turn our attention. The .slate is bound bv tits constitution to submit the question of universal stuirage-a year Jrom this time, and we are going to concentrate all our forces in (bat state from this time on. Ail the b?l speakers,. all the best worker; hi tha woman surTrace ranks in the United bta.i? are to bu turned into tho Held in South Dakota. We have every assurance that we aro going to carry the day. We shall do the greatest work "for Uiocaae over done. We have never bofore had such au opportunity. We never had before a whole year in wuiolt to work on a state. The fact is the people ot South Dakota are largely made up of liberal Westerners, who did. not come front the con servative Siut. We will not have to work with them as wo would with people in the KasU" A I'llUtre Citia. raDiuitlpiua Inquirer' Perhaps the best way lomakc electric wire, safe would be to connect each ono with a director of the company. Throoeti JTurlmanitestilrtileir-sIeepsra udf dining cars; also latest improved tourist stecpcrs turougli To Uie is.ist via sortaorn Pacific milroad. Odes, No. 121 First street, J ccracr Wuhinstou, TEE AGE OF ALUMINIUM. "WLat Har Oom if the Ustsl Oaa Be Cheaply Pro&acscL Ifv7dl Takj las Plas cf Ircn, aad TToald Eablo c. Theraaai Tabgs To Be Dsae Whloh Caaaot Sew Ea Aeccaplhlied. From the London Spectator. According to an American newspaper the chemists are al work by hundreds in the states "striving by night and day" to Find some means for producing cheap aluminium. If they succeed :u their task and the metal which in 1823 Wohler discovered in common clay becomes no dearer than iron, it cannot be doubted that the newer substance will be everywhere adopted for the thousand, pur poses iu which strength, ductility, tenacity, and rigidity are required. Just as the men ot the stone age slung aside their flints to use bronze, and (hos'e of the bronzB aban doned the instruments compounded of tin ard copper for the Btrongcr and more tena cious iron, so wo, io whom iron is now the staple metal, should .most unquestionably give up its use could aluminium be produced in like quantities and at the same or lesser price. Other things being equal and a free choice ofL'rcd between the two metals, alum inium must in almost every conceivable case be preferred, for there is hardly a pur pose now served by iron for which the for mer substance would not prove ten times more efficient. The difficulty of producing it cbcaplj alone prevents aluminium from becoming ibe universal mclnl. That this is notable may be easily real ized, if wo stop to consider tho intrinsic ad vantages ot aluminium. To begin with, it is present every wnere, and wore the proceas of extraction cn-y not only no country, but no district, and even no parish, would have to rely upon its neighbors for its supply of the prime necessary ot industry and commerce. Iron can only be produced where nature has deposited lodes cf a particular ore, and the nation not possessed of this natural gift, is forced to purchase it from without. Alum inium, hes cyjinjwhere cke at hand, In slaie.in feldspar, hi many .kinds of rock, and In ordinary clay it rests concealed; and h-ancc could only a simpler process of extractiouthau that now in use be devised it might conceivably be as easy to manufacture the metal as to makebricksand pottery. As in mauy xnrts of the country tho earth that Is dug out of the foundationssupplies a great portion of the bricks required, to build the houe, so aluminium might be produced at the very "pot where it was required. A rail way jcompany ues the clay from the cut tings to turn mlo bricks "for the walls and arches of viaducts ami tunnels. Under the circumstances we are imagining, it would manufacture from tho same deposit of earth the lines and girder for the bridges. Great, however, as would bo the advantages de rived from the possibility of manufacturing aluminium at the very place where it is ncodedaudoutof materials always procur able, there arc others still more important that wouldjbe obtained by Us use. It would not merely act ai a substitute lor iron. It r,cnld enable a thousand things to be done which cannot now be accomplished. What these are may be realised by consider ing tho essential qualities of the metal. In the first place, alumiuium is verympllenble .aud verv ductile, and can bo wrought into wire as Coo as a spider's web, or be beaten outinto sheets as thin as gold leaf, it has ! ItljratTrfj-anTlreiiacII crly prepared, is as hard as iron. Exposed to dry or rao'&t air, it is alike unalterable, and is little likely to become oxidized or furnished as the purest gold. Neither hot nor cold water, nor sulphurelcd hydrogen tho gas of which so qutckiy blackens sil ver not m constant use havo tho slightest effect on aluminium. Most remarkable of all, in ?pite ot its hardness, stiffness and te nacity, it is lighter than glass, and only a quarter as heavy as silver. Bearing in mind these qiialitie", and im agining aluminium to be used where ii on is now employed, it obvious that many of the great problems of mechanics when applied to industry would be solved. Take the case of speed iu cccan navigation. At present, one of tho Rreat difficulties is the weight of vessels. It is practically impossible to get engine power sullioient to oLtam more than twenty miles an hour. Suppose, however, the weight ot tho uuitcrinl out of which ships aro constructed reduced by one-half, and their sides coated vith a highly pol ished nou-corosive substance. Under such circumstances there can be little doubt that the advantage in favor or land transport as regard speed would bo done away with, and we should think nothing of vessels crossing the Atlantic in seven-two hours. A swift passenger ship, built of material of fiTing as little resistance to the waves as ulrtss and lichtcr and moro buoyant, might easily accomplish fifty miles au hour. Then, too. ships drawing only tho ame amount of water as at present might accom modate a great deal more careo, while largo aud commodious vessels would require far loss depth ot water lo float them than at present, in inland navigation this would be of the utmost importance. It is calculat ed that a ship which, it entirely constructed of iron, would draw twenty-six feet of water would, when madeot aluminium, not draw more than four or five. Practically, then, the lisht metal would treble or quadruple the number, of miles of navigable river in the world. Where now it is only possible to float a barge, moderate sized steamer would be able to ply with ease. Tho railways would gain no less thun the ship. Tne'cngines, tenders and the wheels, and the fittings of iho carriages, make up a dead weight for every trdtu which it is exceedingly cost ly to transport, and which, of course, "brings no profit. If half, or more, of this useless burden could be saved, and goods and passengers siihsiitutcd for it, the companies would gam enormously. Again, great speed could he far more cheaply and easily obtained than at present. In the s.me way, aluminium, applied to the construction ot bicycles and tricvcles would largely increase their ulilih-. M:tdj of metal incapable of rusting and half as light aRaiii, even the present hieh rate of speed could be increased. If wo consider any other of the uses ot iron we shall sec how, in each case, aluminium would do the work, better than its rival. Take au Iron bridge. To bejein with, the labor of fixing the girders would be immensely decreased, for tue same amount of energy now cm ployed to lift and place one portion of the (rams would then do the work necessary for throe or four. Xor would the advantage of the light metal be at an end when the b'idge was hu It. An iron structure has to bo coated with paint every few years to pre serve it from rusr. An aluminium oue would require no such laborious uud expen i'e attention. 1 he metal of the future would be as useful iu the arts as iu commerce. For medals and token coins the advantages it can claim aro obvious, w hik; for the manufacture of the thousand articles of luxury now made of iron, brass nnd silver, it would be of special service. An iron dome or tower, since it must be covered with dull, sticky paint, is necessarily ugly- Imagine, however, a cupola like thai of St. Paul's, of polished sil-' ver-blue metal, reflecting the rays of the sun, and even in the dingiest weather gleaming brightly through the l fos and mlsUsl A dome overlaid with gold leaf wouhL of course, be still more striciag, but next to that iu irointof beauty would be ono covered with thin plates ot aluminium. Again, there could bo no more perfect metal m which io cast statues and all sorts ot ornamental work, such as railing and balustrades. Bronze, as the prcBent public monuments of London, bear witness clearly enough, cither succumbs to the atmosphere or else has to bo coated with a thick, sticky Ineuer. which obliterates tho outline and spoils the sculptor's work. A viod tins not liable locust, capable of a high p'-h. jud easily worked would, however, suit ibe :mi -, it'- art to perfection, nnd 'under su. tt ,-.! :. r5 Uie effigies of our il Iustrlouv .Ici.u ..'it ba made tobrigSTen. instead pf rrrHo hldexmsTbur sqUaroa j aud xuWicgaideu t?l l ltf tltnCCk siulif v MpfcM nH)akA!i. to make aluminium tho metallic staple will i uutkMWi wjt Mftw .un Liiucaiuriuir 4 iu the end sacc&ed, or whether iho search. lu: the metal o! lie future will prove M fruitless rs that for the philosopher's stone, remains to be seen. Po33tbIy some student may brinji about the usurpation of alumini um sn a very few years; but-equally possi ble, further research msy show thatit mtut remain physically impossible to prodae it, except at great cost and labor. "Wo are iu Ihe habit of saying that in the end science conquers all difficulties, but this is by no means really the case. We bear most of those it overcomes, but, as a matter of fact, there are as many defeats as victories. Still, there is some chance that the secret may be discovered, and the ideal melal be yet forth coming. Wo sincerely trust it may, for it is impossiblo not to feel that the two qualities of lightness and inability to rust aro alone enough to make us long for a time when tue age of iron shall have perished, and that of aluminum established in its stead. DETKCXIOI BY aiEASUliEHKHT. Hair tho FrrccTil'olloo Mont'tr Crlmtnds liy Ilccnrded JJiroosions ot" Various I'arts if Tholr Persons. A syatom of Identifying criminals by ai ihroporactrical measurements, instead of by photographs and descriptions, has oeen em ployed by the French pojice for five yca;s. The French police claim for thi3 method that it has enabled them to rid the country of mauy ot the professional thieve3 wih which it was infested, and has led to tile identification of escaped convict's and desert era from the army. France was overrun by experienced pickpockets and other blacklegs who left Swilzcilsnd. Belgium or Piedmont wheu those countries became too small for them, or who. eraigrated..froia England to America when Ihcy found those countries getting too hot for them. The French police iound that these foreign visitors chanced their names frequently and assumed other dtsguises iu order to escape detection and the punishment of old offences-. Under the anthropometrics! system, prisoners when arrested are not classitieu unuec tno names they give, but according to the measure ments of certain bony parts of the human frame, such as the length of the head, oi the feet, or the fingers. It is claimed for this system, thnt it insures the Identification of a person who has been once arrested and measured, "no matter what name he gives or how he may change his personal ap pearance. The mechanism of ' tills gytgm, wjUl hi beat uimGrsTood t 8 Scribing what happens to a criminal when arrested in Paris. The de tectives take him at once to the identifica tion department in the Palais de Justice, aud here M. Alphonso Bertillon, the inven tor of tho anthropoinclrlcal system, and Hi3 assistants measure him. The first meas urement taken is the length of ihehead, which is considered Ihe best. The height U not considered so reliable, as a thief wili not stand up straight to bo measured, but ho has no power to alter tho size of his head, aud the human skull develops littlo after" the age of twenty. The measurement is taken with a compass, ono point of which Is placed above the bridge of the nose while tho other is moved round to find the greater length of the back- of the head. The maximum breadth of the head is taken from one parietal bone to the otner, and tho size reg istered to a millimeter the unit of the met rical system. Tho breadth of one's head vario3 independently of the length, and ex perience has shown, that English and Amer ican criminals have much larger heads Han tho French. The Iongheadedncss of tho English-speaking thief perhaps accounts lor his superiority over his French colleague. After the head la measured the length of the middle finser of the lef t hand is regis tered. The "bight is next taken, and after that theicmjmor iuoarmslcx1tpnuou. .uie Ifrffi'is measured. tnuT ihat the length of tho arms, cxtepdod. 'Jlhe alo the left foot. In order to obtain the maximum length of the foot the prisoner is made to stand on it. Tho mcasuremeut of tho left ear is taken and the colo of the eyes noted. While one man measures a prisoner another records the measurements on a card. All marks, scars and moles on tho prisoner's body arc minutely de-icnbcd. Two photographs of tho prisoner, ono full faced and the other in profile, are then stuck on the card. The detectives of Sail Francisco do not particularly favor the measurement system. They say, in the licit place, that it is not practicable. In Franco there are thousands of police and they have plenty of time to go into details. Hero the limited force makes it necessary lo use tho speediest means of identification, and the photograph answers the purpose. Hero the criminals arc meas ured as to hight and weight. Any such pe culiarities as moles, scare, etc., are recorded on the picture. And the objection to the French .system is that a mau may change. A broken bono in the ami imperfectly set might shorten the limb. A crushed" foot would destroy another iuaik of identifica tion. A man's bead does not change very much after reaching maturity, yet there arc many cases on record where men have got the swelled head quite late in life. This is noticeably the case with a number of ox-city officials and other distinguished residents of San Francisco who hac "done timo" in the Ftato prisons, county jail and house of cor rection. The French, after tnking a man's meas urements, file his registered card away with in my other'. Theo cards in turn aro divided and subdivided according to sex, leiiKth of head, etc., and are duly catalogued. When a tormcr law-breaker is brought up for trial, his card is seut to the judge, and uio prisoners' pasi career is uruuiii. uy ugauisi mm au iuu iriai. xina aoit;m. is practiced in tin departments as well as In Paris. Everyone arrested in France is measured, aud duplicate cards aro sent from the provinces to the central depot In Paris. 1Tot tUe aTonlha AWro mci1. Iii lookmg up the peculiar names given ench of the twelve months of the yeir it become necessary for us to go back to tho old Romans, who ha ye imposed upon us a set of uames equally as absurd as tboe of the Norsemen, the Scandinavians, and Sax ons applied to tho week, as given under that heading above. January is named from Janus, tho god of doors and gates, because tbe month opens the year; sonic say that he was a tuo-faccd god. and could looic back o:i tho last year," and forward to tbo com ing. February is from jr's&rao, to purify. March was originally the first month, and was named for Mars, the god of war. April is from aperire, to open, because the buds open In that month. May is from Mala, a goddess. June is from Juno, the patron of marriace, and i?, therefore, the favorite month for wedding?. July was named for Julius Cajsar, and Au gust for Augustus Oaisar. Originally August had but thirty day.s and February tweiity nine in the common year and thirty m leap years. Augustus wa3 jealous that" Julius's month should have more days lhan his own, therefore took ono from February aud added it to August. September, October, Xovember, and De cember are so called because they were orig inally the seventh, eighth, nintli and tenth months of the year. The names are inap proprlalo and rank misnomcr3 as now applied. ha t'nllril nn Her Cook. WsshiBglon Test. Society teems to bo preparing to form on. Tho other day we oyerhesrd a table conver sation substantially like Ibis; "What, dear, j ou haven'theard aboutit?" "No. dearie, not a word." "Why. you sec. Mrs. X- (a prominent ladv) tried to get Mr?. Z.'s (another promi nent lady) cook away from her and actually Went to ilrs. Z.'s hou-,e when Mrs. Z. was avrav and offered the cook, more monev." "My. my I What did Mrs. S do about, it?" "Well, the ucxt time they met at a state dinner Mrs. V. didn't notice her. Somebody who sat between them 3aid: " 'Mrs. Z, yoa know Mra. X do you not?' " 'N-n-no,7 said Mrs. 2, I believe not. She sometimes calls on my cook, I understand, but I believe we do not exchange those cour tesies, W alter, another ot the brcadsticks, please. " Crank. Tfrt you wish toJb&Jiaasidercd a craak t If very nervous you. will-be, Uaiut of course, bat a last. JIi$ciulLeyfpo Infuse Ti2ori!ulo,ynix "Jrervoos syttSf w"J aEd thus relieve Its latraaquiUrr with IloateltarV&cnuch Cheers, the pre-eminent nerve tonic oad eongneroc of dyspepsia, tho x52Bihsn constlpaUoa, livercompuunt&aiX aeursZ- gift are EUDjU&wa dj uie cwtin, THE EUD OF THE W0ELD. Second Advantist3 Getting E:a3f Thoir Translatioa Eebs3. A ?re3icUca 'Sali To Bs Foaadad ca BiblicU Propfcwias Forsiar Lajs Ears Be- ' callal-Ika HUlorilss. Forty thousand apparently rnllonal men and women throughout tho United States and Canada belicTed that on the 25th day of October, A, D. 1SS0, the world would come to an cud; thai the nations of the earth would be blended into one people, speaking one tongue, and that over all for a thousand yeare ono spiritual rnler will hold sway. They believaJhafc if it does not happen be fore that "day the sun, on the morning of October 20 wilL remain stationary on tho horizon, uud on its upper and visible arc would appear, reaching lack into au illimit able vista, an angelic host, and in the midst of this host "a woman, clothed with he sun 'and the moon under her feet, and upon her Tieada crown of twelve stnrs." Then the seven trumpots were to be sounded by the seven angels, and the "third woe," a3 pre dicted iu the book of Revelation, will have bosun its fulfillment. Coutrary to all precedents, tho Second Ad ventists, both of the United Stales ami Eng land, had not set a specific day for tho end of time, but thev were mutually agreed, witli a few isolated exceptions, lhat tho most careful calculations jirpTe beyond tho possibility of error, that the hour would not go bayond the date named. In 1S13 and 1SI1 William Miller fixed the day in each. year as October 10, and when his prediction did not come to pass he explained, that the difference' between the Jewish and the Ro man time misled him both as to the month and the year.. Before his death. Avhich toofc place in 181D. he left directions showing how accurate calculations might be made, and on these were baed the prophesies of the world's end!n 1S.77, JS87. 1373 and the pres ent year. ., They all rest on one foundation. Tiz., the fulfilment of previous bibli cal prophesies and tbo assumption that this indicated further fulfillments thereafter. It is claimed thnt inasmuch as the birth o ,Christwas foretold (Isaiah"vii:71) and that the birth should take place In Bethlehem (Micah v:2), and the several other prophe cies concerning n Messiah (Isaiah viii:5 0; Psalms xvi:I0) all came to pass precisely at the time and in the manner prescribed, that the fourth prophecy (the second appearance of tho Messiah) demanded belief. It was not until Willinrti Miller underfoot to sdt the exact period thnt there had been any previous effort in thatdirection. The begin ning of the Eleventh century had been looked forward to with awe and dread1, it is true, but none of tho religious teachers of those days yantured positive predictions. It was not until nine centuries hud elapsed thatapronhet arose who in uu incrcdiblv short space of timegathered about-hiin thou sands of followers who have maintained their faith with a steady persistency in the face of failure, opposition and ridicule. . Milierism, or, as it is called now, Second' Advcntisni, has its strongest foothold in New England, whero all hcrtcrodoxishis seem to flourish best. It has more believers in the state of Massachusetts than in any other of the Eastern states, and in the city1 'of Boston there is a weekly publication de voted io the promulgation of the doctrine. Vermont furnishes tho next largest quota and then cornea New Hampshiro and Uou uectlcut. A few are scattered through Maine and Rbcdo Island. There is no regu lar place ot worship in the city of 2?ew York, and the believers, even in a city of two millions of people are few and far be tween. In the city of Philadelphia there arc two small congregations, and in Souf h and East New Jersey half a dozen all told. Iu tho upper part of New York and on the Pennsylvania border line there are several thousand believers. The Western states, especially Minnesota, furnish tho next largest number of be-lit-Vers. They may be grouped in this wise: Xew imgland, 12,000; Middle states. C0Q0; Western stales. SGOO; Northwest. liOOO; Can ada, 5000. As a body tho Second Adyent i.sts do not differ materially with the great lending doctrine of Ihe Evangelical church. Thev are essentially Casuists, but cotifoiut readily to whatever forms of law uudcr which they live. Thefuhuieof Miller's prophecy In 1S13 first brought the aect into promineuce thioughout the civilized world. The founder wa3 a mail or much magnetism', nnd while not scholarly, possessed a rude logic that attracted attention cveu among tho learned. His hjpothesis was so niKCfuous and so cleverly do vetailed that tho announcement that the end of the world was at hand created a no ticeable excitement all over the country. While thousands scoiFed at the theory, they nevertheless felt slightly uneasy as the day approached, and there aro men living now who Ter.K'niLcr many who, though loudest in their ridiculo, were the last to go to bed that night. Among tho believers the faith v.ts firm. Scores of farmers in Massachu setts, in Ihe vicinity of Pittsiicld, abandoned their property to whoever cared to i j.o it lor a tew nours and pa- take It for a few hours and i tieiitiy awaiteu tne mowing ot fcraoners hor. Carriage engagements were broken, written business contracts between be lievers were dcstr03'cd, in the belief (hat ihcy could never be carried out. Children were permitted to go uncared for, and mothers, who had been thrifty housewives for years, dropped all their household duties. As tbe day came nearer tho fervor grow greater and converts flocked to the Millcrite standard by the thousands. Among the extremists m the sect active preparations wero made for what they believed would be an imme diate translation. Spotless robes of pure white were made, and In thc30 dozons. of families attired themselves and repaired to their housetops (o await the signal. Just cut of Boston the 9-year-old son of a devout Adventist Insisted as a proviso before taking to the roof, that his doe should be permitted to accompany him. Unaccus tomed to such a hight the wretched beast began to howl, and thasacrileKtous interrup tion caused the patiently-waiting father to attempt chastisement, which eventually re sulted in his falling through the scuttle. A stout young woman near the same village caught the hem ot her garment iu a nail as she was going upstairs with her mother, hud a thread becoming started, her "ascension i robe" was ripped open at the'princinalseain, much lo her mortification. When the night had come and cone, and the earth looked the same as it did the day before, there hegana good deal of gquabbliug over the property that had been given away. An old farmer near Piltsfield compelled the grantee of his properly to-produce his deed, and it w is found stipulated thereon that the instrument should be null and void unless "the sal.l Gabriel shaU blow a horn or make some equivalent announcement that the end ot Ihe world wa3 at hand." Several law suits resnlied. and ono of them dragged through Uie courts for several years before adjudication was made. One ot the Snost interesting incidents of the time and one not generally known to New Yorlrers is the following, which is taken from Ihe current issue of W. G. McLaugh lin's" Metropolis: This fallh broujmt o Kw York Uio founder of the great firm or IT. K. Claflln & Co. Ho lived la Connecticut, where he lept a dry good store. AYha ho became a Miilerlts- he threw epen his doors and invited the puMic to come In and help thcirt'eltcsto cverythiajr upon bis shelves and counters. They accepted the Invitation and cleaned oat the store, while CKiflln, In his night gown, climbed upon a high fence eo rs to have u clear course to the skie, and listened for the hut trump. The next day he was a. poorer and wiser man, and his uc'Rhbors xaade tuck fnn ot him. that he pubed up stakes and removed to 2fear York. Whenever this storr is told before J. Me- ATthnr, be shakes his head donbtfclly and tries to raise objections, oat i: is ono ot tie uuuis oi his tory all the same. While, Miller was disappointed, ho was" not disheartened j and he immediately set 'about discovering the cause lor his "error. He. found it,, as he claimed, iu- the auachron Ism, and in a few weoks mndo his second announcement for the year 1BI-L 'i.ao laita oi m. number ot believers nau J weakened by that lime, out they were in the i uuxivnty, ana a,iags we same svjv? n?" re-enacted that year that had caused such a 'sensatian in 1S13 Tho world in general tookless interest in tho movement, aud the chroniclers of the day devoted themselves principally to broad burlesque. Inl57 there was a stuff urther falling off", although tho financial panic of that period was looked upon as one of the principal onions. Ten vear3 later, after the war of the rebellion had closed there wo 3 another propnecy wnicn was not luiuiieu, anu men came '7J and with it the grcac financial crash. Again this was- looked upon as an omen, and many of the faithful gave up theic property "and abondoned their pur suits. The anVicrTronisra was biamed a fifth timer and tbe calculators applied themselves diligently to hunting' for the causes. A great many years were spent in this work and at the last it T?as found that lSS9was the fateful year, and ihat the "seventh day of tho tenth, month" fell between Octo ber 13 and 25, according to the present method of time computation. On this the Adveutists took their stand, and asked the unresencrate to take heed and prepare for the "dies irac." But tho 25lh of Octobor has passed and so far as the telegraph reaches over tliis world, no one has heard the sevea trumpets or seen the seven angels. A. CHANCE VOK AN EXTLOKEK. A. Section or "Washtnzton 3500 MUos Square In tha tiljmplo Mountains, Which HnySoTor i:on Trodden hj tho Foot of a "White alas. Seattle Press. Washington has her great unknown land, like tho interior of Africa. Tho country 3bul;in,by Ihe Olympic mountains, which, includes an area about- 2300 miles square, has never, to the positive knowledge of old reaidents'of ilia t6rrritory, been trodden by the foot of man, white or Indian. These mountains rise from the level country, within ten to fifteen miles of the Straits of San Juan do Fuca in tho north, the Pacific ocean iu the west, Hood's canal iu tbe east, and Die basin of the Quinault lake in tho south, and, rising to a hight ot GOOO to SOOO feet, shut in a vast unexplored area. The Indians have never penetrated itt for their traditions say that it is Inhabited by a very fierce tribe, which none of the coast tribes dared molest. Though Iti3 improbable that such a tribe could havo existed in this mountain couutry without their presenco becoming known to the white men, no man has ovor ascertained that it did not exist. White men, too, have only vague accounts oC any whito man having ever passed through this country, for investigation of all tho claims of travelers" hra invariably proved that they havo only traversed its outer edges. The most generally accepted theory in re gard to this country is that it consists of great valleys stretching from, the inward slopes of the mountains to a great central basin. This theory is supported by the fact that, although the country around has abundaut rain, and clouds constantly hang over the mountain lops, all thestreams flow ing towards tbe four-points ot the compass arc insigniucanv. anu rise uuiy u me vui ward slopes ot tbe range, none appearing to drain the great area shut in by the moun tains. This fact appears to support the theory that the streams flowing from the in nerslopes of tha mountains feed a great in terior lake. Butwhat drains this lake? It mult have an outlet somewhere, and as all of the streams pouring from the mountains rise on their outward " slopes, it must have a subterranean outlet into the oce.au, the Straits, or the Sound, There are great dis coveries In store for sonio of Washington's exploreis. A gentleman named Drew, now residing at Olytnpia, states that ho lias; climbed to thesumniit of theeasteru range from Hood" canal uud looking down could sec great valleys stretching toward the west. A party of railroad prospectors claims to have penc truted the interior, but couM give no ac couut of it, and appears only to have skirted the outer slopes ten or fifteen miles from Hood's canal. A party of United States soldiers is said to haye traversed the country from Port Townseud, but no data arc ob tainable as to what they saw. Numerous attempts have been made to organize explorius parties, but they have in variably fallen through, tho courage o the projectors oozing out at the last moment. There is a fine opportunity for some of tho hardy citizens of the Sound to acquire fame by unveiling the mystery which wraps the land encircled by the snow-capped Olympic range. ASSIGNING SKXATOKIAIi SjlSAXS. A Wmltlnjjlon Authority Thrown Some I-islit Upon tho IV ay Terms AVill lio distributed Anions; the New Senators. The Washington .Sfrirprints the following from John Miller, its standard congressional writer. The reorganization of the senate in December will be made quite interesting by the acquisition ot eight senators from the new-born states. At the special session of the senate nfter the 4th of March there wero thirty-seven democrats and thirty-nine re publicans. When congrcs? meets in Decem ber the republicans will have at least forty five senators. It is not yet certain which party will get the two senators from Mon tann. If they go to the democrats tho sen ate wilt stand forty-five republicans and thirty-nine democrats. Otherwiso the re publicans will have forty-seven and the democrats only their present number, thirty seven. An interesting thing about tho reorgani zation will be the classification of the eight new senators. Uuder tho constitution the senate must ba divided as nearly as may be into three equal classes, the terms expiring two years apart from one class to another. The terms of the senators in one of these classes will expire in 1891, of tho other iu 1S93, and of the third in 1S95. The new sena tors are each elected for six years, but they cannot all come into the class of IbOj. Two only of them can enter that class. Tho rest will havo' to suffer a shortening of their terni3 some to two years and some to four. At present there aro twenty-six senators whose terms expire in J39o. In each of the other classes there are twouty-six sanators. Three of the new senators willfhavc terms expiring in lj91, three in lRDS and two ill 1805. All three of the classes wilt then bo even. There is no law by which to determine which of the men "shall have short and which long terms, and precedence furnishes but one means of deciding the question. When tho United States senate was first organized the question was decided by lot drawing straws. When Colorado was ad mitted slips of paper were numbered and put in a hat to be drawn by two senators lo decide their fortune. Senator Teller then got a term of but four or live months be cause tuo term ol luo das3 wnu wntcu late cast ids lot had almost expired. This seemed like bard luck, but by a paradox it was qnito the reverse. By having a term that exoired so soon he was thrown back upon the same legislature that first '-.elected him for election, and so got two terms, a long one and a very short one. Some such thing may happen to some of the ncv? sena tors if m "any ca3e the legislature holds over for two years. However, they will have lo trust to luck for their assignment. With the West Virginia cases in their pres ent conditiou the house, without the mem bers from. the new states, has lWrcoublicans and 101 democrats. There have been livo deaths Cox, dem.; Gray. dein. ; Laird, rep."; Nutting, rep., and Towuscnd, dem. They do not change tho status ot the parlies atali, as each deceased member will besuc cesded by a member of his own party m each case. Five representatives from tho new states add that much to tho republican majority, giving them 1G9 members, a ma jority ot sir, but only two more thun a quoruuu A t IaB'ejl Cnper. Lipplncott's Magazine. A lad cut oa poor Towsert tail, And Liushedat all his monniags hollow; "Ah, ha" ho.said onto Ute cur, "IHc caudas et ncm ssQUttur; That l?, It can no longer follow." Elegant new dining-cars; daily from Port land o Chicago -and SLTiOUt-s. vLTOrcgon' - Railway & Nav. Co..Oregori'Sh6rtTHne, and Union Pacific. Twenty-one hours quicker to ail points east than any oilier transconti nental lino. Pullman psiace alcepers and f rea family sleenins-cara oa all through trainj. TJaloa ticket ofijlce, yisgt, nd. OjUc p&rcqU. THE TEML EEOK THE YUK03T Starvation Spreada Her Awful Wings Ovar Uaforiunate Gelu-Sssxara. Tls3 cf tha Glittering Hstal Still XTrgi TacsV " Who flava Eicapsd Beata to Ajaia Ia vaia tna Honntah Fastacsjss Special Correspondence of Tho Oresonian. CnrxcooT, Alaska. Oct. 1, 1SS9. "Say, old mau, you are just the kind of fellow Jt wauo to go into tho Yukon with." It was on one cveningin tho latter part o April last that the passengers on the Alas kan steamer Geo. W. Elder were crowded intq tho cabin for the purpose of partici pating in a concert in which those whocould be pre vailed upon to do so were to anniso the rest with an impromptu entertainment About halfway down the programme oc curred "a bear story, by A. IngrarhV whom; I afterwards learned waA from Seattle. When the master of ceremonies mads lhe announcement a tall, slim man, of perhaps. 60 years of age arose and modestly related, an encounter he had way back in the sixties tvith a grizzly bear in tho mountains ot Montana. Ho told of hia coming suddenly upon tbo brute, and after discbanrimr his rifle at close range, found himself engaged, in a hand struggle with his maddened ana bleeding adversary. He fold the s.tory as a, man used to frontier life aud the dangers, ia cident thereto can relate, and without tin least effort to cover himself with glory in that sanguinary contest, but, holding up to view his left hand, which was bent ami twisted into a shapeless and crippled mas of scrawny fingers, said: "I did not kill tha bear, but have this to remember him by." I thought he was the kind of a man a. tenderfoot liko myself should tie to in enter ing upon an expedition involving a tramp ofl 3500 milc3, and it was thi3 impression that led to tbeTcmarks I addressed to him after the concert, and which appear at tho be ginning of my letter. Among upwards of fifty men upon that steamer who had taken passage with a view of going into the Yukon country, by tlm time they had landed in Juneau, tho ardor of over three-fourths of them had cooled down, and a dozen only were left who per sisted In carrying out their original inten tions, and made hasty preparations for tho long and hazzardous tramp. It was only at the last moment and even after I had pur chased my outfit, that I concluded not to make the trip, but tho old man was one of the small band, and he cordially shook my hand as he bade me good bye. 1 could not help but think as their boat shoved off, that if any of tha party suc cumbed to the hardships that attend a trip 1 into the Yukon country, my old friend would not be the hrst to go, and l fully ex pected to see him return this fall, ihe'halo and hearty old veteran that left with so light a heart, and hear him as modestly rclatu his .summer's experience, as he told of hia encounter with the grizzly that marked him. for life. Three small detachments of men have re turned this fall from tho Yukon. The sec ond brought out word that they passed a boat lying upon the beach with no ono to be found near it, but it was thought to belong to four men who started from Forty Milo creak to come out on July G. It wa3 known that they had but a small supply of food with them, and it was supposed thev had taken to the woods in search of game. Thus :t proved Co be. and yesterday two men tottered down the mountain side to this; place, whose ematiated faces and trembling limbs showed that they had survived an ex perience that few men would have lived,: through. s-r-' One of them. J. W. Sperry, of Portland", Or.r is a man W years of age, with hair as white as the driven snow. As I pressed my fingers to the calf ot his leg, an impression was-lcft as if 1 had pressed upon a piece ot putty. A certain indication that scurvy would soon have fought a bittlo with star vation which so nearly claimed him aa a victim. Tho other man, R. C. Rose, also froSn Portland, is twenty years younger, and his youth alone saved him from filling an unmarked grave in the great valley o tho Yukon. Three weeks after starting on their home ward lonrney their supply of provisions wero entirely exhausted, and they soon be came so weak thatihey could not pull their boat, which they finally abandoned and took to the hills in search of game. Occa sionally a squirrel was shot, bnt as quickiy eaten by the men, who were now ravenous, and wild berries became their only means ot subsistence. Their trail was followod by clouds of mosquitoes and files that lit upon them in swarms, and which they had to fight continually, and their faces and hands soon became raw and bleeding sores. In their weakened conditiou, Ingram and F. C. Young, from San Diego, Cal., another of tho party, were unable to fight oft the pests, which preyed upon their eyelids until thoy became so" inflamed that they lost all power to open or close them, and they became totally blind. Tho dread of death by starvation and fear of being hopelessly lost in that strango country, soon told upon the minds of these tv;o and Ingram repeatedly begged his com panions to shoot him. Finally ho laid, down, refusing to move, and when bis com panions saw ho was about dead, left him, almost dragging Young along. The next day Young succumbed, a victim to starva tion and the torments of the pests which swarmed about them day and night. They left himlying upon the ground to die, how Jar from whero the foot of man has ever trod, they do not know. Another day brought them to some dried salmon cached by Indians for wiutcr use, and they were now able to retrace their steps to tho boat and soon a party o'f Indiana came along from whom they obtained food enough to enable them to reach tbe first white settlement this side of tho Yukon. On their way back to the boat, thoy came to the spot whero Ingram was left.butfound the niosquitos and flies singing a requiem, over their comrade who had passed to the great beyond. He was left with buta sfono to mark his resting place, and his blanket and a few branches of hemlock spread over him tor a shroud. They could not find whero Young wa3 left, but they arc -satisfied strength or reason never returned, sufficient to allow him to moye front the snot. On their way out, the party discovered a ledge having a clearly defined vein of rich ore, showing free gold, and at its; base, found liberal quantities of gold in cvury pan. Lo cation notices were hurriedly put up. and in anticipation or rich results nnothcr year when they all hoped to return, buoyed up their spirits for a time, and spurred thern on to renewed efforts to escape from their im pending doom. The pangs of hunger soon destroyed all hopes of future rich.c3f and their only thought was for something to eat. Notwithstanding their terrible oxperience, the two survivors intend to return to tha Yukon the coming spring. This 13 but an other Instance of the fascination that takes possession of goid hunters, and these two men will probably continue their quest for tho yellow dust until they possess it in uu to'd quantities, or perish in their attempt to find it. MINER W. BRUCE. (Copyrighted lise.) Sudden Chinsrn "X sontiincnU Texas Sittings. Orafor Jones You are horny-fisted work- iugmen. Audience Three cbcern for Jones t Orator Jones And bjcauao you are wori itignien n Audicr.ee Hurrah' Hurrah 1 " Orator Jones And hence, as you are acl enstomed to toil, you ought to keep ow working. Audience Lynch hlml Lynch binil Time Would laU. Judge. -" Patient Great heavens', young man that's pretty strong medicine I , , ' -v..n iinnthr Yes: it's v?rroowcrful- fSomcUmos it cures ami sometimes ttkilUi' Patlentr-Well I 3ay hero, youujrman,fi is tnerc any danger in my case c ' Young Doctor I cn't tvil for au hour' yet, Mr. .Moneybags. Now calm yourself. Itew3aJenc-T caused b- a dlso&sed liver, eaa her- &T91494&7 tiflg Siaraoui Wt cujtot j. V-d V i ) i