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About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1896)
Highest of all ia Leavening Power Latest U. S. Gov't Report FOR A GREAT PARADE s . VETERANSOFTHE NORTH AND SOUTH WILL UNITE. Schema Has Been Reoelred With Great Faror In the South Wht General Moor man Says of It Twenty-Hre Thousand Confederate Expected to Be In Line. The movement for a reunion and pa rade of the civil war veterans has now assumed the form that insnres success. It will be seen in New York nest year on the Fourth of July. Often of late years the veterans of the Confederate service have been called in to the gatherings of Union veterans. Often, too, at the sooth, those who once wore the bine, accepting hearty invita tions, have mingled with those that wore the gray and perhaps have marched with them. . The encampment of the Grand Army, the celebrations of Deco ration day and the dedication of battle parks, like those at Gettysburg and Cbickamanga, or other ceremonies con nected with the war have witnessed such reunions. But now, for the first time, the Union and Confederate survivors of the war are to oome together for the sole purpose of celebrating themselves their frater nal nnion and the return of brotherhood to every part of our land. It is because this is the special pur pose of the projected gathering in the one hundred and twentieth year of the independence of these states that it has a significance which will grow from the present time until the celebration is held and which will give it a national importance as one of the great events of 1896 and indeed of our day. The idea of a united veterans' parade has been received with great favor throughout the south. For the purpose of finding out how it would be accepted among the ex-Confederates, Colonel Gar nett wrote some time ago to General George Moorman, adjutant general and chief of staff of the United Confederate Veterans, of which organization Gen eral John B. Gordon is commander in chief. General Moorman's reply, dated Nov. 23, was in part as follows: "At the outset I will say that nothing I can say now can be regarded as offi cial, as I would not undertake to ex press an opinion on a matter, so impor tant until I conferred with General Gor don, the commanding general, and Lieu tenant Generals Cabell and Lee and other leaders. My personal opinion is that, while the old veterans do not care to be paraded for show or to show them selves, if it is the sentiment of the conn try that good can be accomplished by joining in this parade,, I am satisfied that they would be willing to do any thing that would assist in a more per fect reconciliation or would assist in adding prosperity to any section of the country. "As is well known, they are thor oughly and intensely patriotic and doubt if any citizens of the republio would rally more quickly and zealously to the defense of the national honor than those old southern soldiers. "Some time since it was announced that the United Confederate veterans were to be invited to hold their next reunion in New York city. This, I be lieve, was well received by the veterans and press of the south. The parade is a new feature, and in order to give you a definite answer I will confer at once with the commanding general and other leaders and veterans and will also place the matter before the press of the south, bo as to ascertain the trend of opinion on this subject." Colonel Garnett has not heard again from General Moorman; but, as has been said, he has seen that nearly all of the southern papers are heartily in favor of the movement The next Confederate reunion will take place in Richmond, It was at first suggested to have the re union on May 24, 25 and 26, but the prevailing sentiment in the south is to have it a month later. General Moor man is of the opinion that the best dates for the reunion are June 80 and July and 2. If this is done, the veterans can come to New York from Richmond, in which case the number of them that will come will be largely increased. Colonel Garnett is most enthusiastio over the movement and said that he would not be at all surprised to see 25, 000 Confederate veterans in the parade. New York Sun, Zelln Has Written Her Book. Information is received that Zella Nicolaus, whose suit against George t, Gould has brought her into notoriety, baa blossomed forth as an authoress. She has nearly completed the manuscript of the work, which bears the lurid title. "A Glad and Sad Young Girl; or, The Child Adventuress. " This purports to be a sketch of Zella's life. The young woman is expected to arrive at Wabash Ind., in a few days, on a protracted visit to her father, Wesley Lytle, pro prietor of a small grocery. Cincinnati Commercial Gazetta Dumas' Queer Will. The will of the late Alexandre Dumas prohibits the publication or the perform ince of any posthumous works or plays which mav be found in his manuscripts. tnm U.8.Jowmat ffattefat mi. W. H. reeke, who manes a specialty Epilepsy, has as with doubt treated and cur ed more cases than any living Physician; his success is astonishing. We have heard of casea of, so years' standing Ith a larore hot. tie of his absolute care, free to any sufferers who may send their P. O.-and Express address. We advise any one wishing a cure to address tot W H. reEU, 1- P-i 4 Cedar St., lew Ter SURE CURE row PILES IIM1HIUWIH, THRILLING SEA STORY. On of aa American Vassal Itesened as It Was Sinking. The British steamer Rosemorran, Captain Norman, from Norfolk and Newport News for Leith, landed at Plymouth the other evening the captain the American ship Belle U Jttrien, from San Francisco, before reported foundered, together with his wife and 13 of the ship 8 crew. These were picked op from a small boat on Nov. 27 as they were abandoning the sinking wreck. Captain Colley makes the following statement : "Our voyage was a stormy one from the first, and the ship was soon driven from her course and began to leak. We were not auxions for our safety until we got within 75 miles of Queenstown, on Nov. 17, when the ship eucounteiea a terrific gale, with tremendous seas, which swept her decks and stove and carried off her bulwarks and deckhouse. The ship was then leaking badly and taking water very fast The crew manned the pumps con- i etantly in the effort to save our lives. ! The water continued to gain, however, and on Nov. 19 the water in the hold was ten feet deep. In the meantime one man had fallen overboard and was drowned. On Nov. 19 we got out the longboat and towed her astern. Three seamen and the second officer were in the boat The high seas caused the boat to plunge so violently that it became necessary to cut the painter to prevent her from swamping. The boat was with out oars and was provided with neither food nor water. When the painter was cut, the boat drifted away into the dark ness, and I immediately had another boat lowered, manned by the first and third officers and five men, provided with flashlights to search for her. . "The Belle OBnen watched for hours for the return of the boats, but we saw neither of them again. Soon another gale sprang up, and the pumps became very difficult to work on account of the grain in the hold choking them. As the water gained, the grain continued to swell until it bulged the planks on the ship's sides and heaved her decks. We did not relax our desperate efforts to keep the ship afloat until we were sight ed and picked up by the Rosemorran. " TOOK PART OF HIS SKULL. Kl am peter WIU Have a Piece of Sllrer In Its Place. What promises to be a very successful trtphining operation was performed on Policeman Peter Elumpeter of Brook lyn the other morning by Dr. Sappirl. Klumpeter, who is the only Danish policeman in Brooklyn, has been suffer ing for the last eight months from an abscess, growing gradually into the form of a bunch of carbuncles back of his right ear. The surgeons discovered that the abscess was caused by a portion of the skull being diseased. After he was placed under the influ ence of ether Dr. Sappirl cut through the abscess, and with a fine saw re moved the diseased part of the skull, leaving a hole about the size of a silver quarter. The patient was watched care fully, and is doing so well that the sur geon feels confident that the operation will prove a success. As soon as the blood that flows from the wound has been sufficiently staunch ed a silver plate will be placed over the opening in the skull. If all goes well, Policeman Klumpeter will be back at his post within two or three weeks. STRANGE TELEPATHY. Hiss Morris' Awful Premonition of Her Mother's Death. While a fair was being held in the basement of St. Mary's Church of the Immaculate Condition, Williamsburg, N. Y-, the other night, Mrs. Sarah Jane Morris, a widow, was suddenly taken ill and died a few moments later. Her daughter Maggie was to have sung at the fair that evening, and Mrs. Morris bad gone there to hear her. At the moment when ber mother was taken ill Miss Morris was practicing in the academy adjoining the church. Without knowing of the illness, Miss Morris suddenly stopped singing, and when ber teacher asked her what the cause was she began to cry and said she was all choked up. Presently a messen ger arrived and told Miss Morris that her mother bad been taken ill. While Miss Morris and the sister were hurry ing to the church they met another mes senger, who told Miss Morris that her mother was dead. . Mo Canals on Mars. At the regular monthly meeting of the section of astronomy and physics of the New York Academy of Sciences, Professors Bees and Jacoby and Charles Post read papers attacking the alleged discoveries of lines and canals on the planet Mars. The attacks were princi pally directed against Percival Lowell of Boston, who while at Flagstaff, A. T., claimed to have seen the same lines and canals discovered on the planet by Signer Schiaparelli in Italy. After the reading there was a general discussion, and the conclusion arrived at waa that these people were romancers and not as tronomers. The academy therefore dis carded the theory of canals and lines on the planet Mars until such time as they could be seen more plainly, or at least by a greater number of persons. Schlatter and His Copper Bod. Francis Schlatter, "the healer," ar rived at Trinidad, Colo., the other day. The alleged miracle worker carries a copper rod of curious shape that he olaims was presented to him by the Fa ther. Schlatter says the rod possesses magical powers, and he guards it with great care. ' ; Torn Him Out. The founder of Christianity and the founder of Mohammedanism were both born in places that are now under the rule of the Turkish sultan, who, until a few years ago, ruled also over the birth place of Moses, the founder of Judaism. New York; Inn. QUEEN AS ARBITRATOR. Christina of Spain Chosen to Judga Be tween Nations. The queen regent of Spain has been agreed upon by the government of Co lombia, Ecuador and Peru to act as ar bitrator in the delimitation of the bound aries of those countries. The remarkable feature of the news in the above cablegram is that a queen is selected to be arbitrator. It is the first time, it is asserted, that woman has been chosen to settle an international dispute of this character and importance. Maria Christina, queen regent of Spain, once dodged when asked to be an arbitrator. But then the dispute was between two women, the wife of the speaker of the oortes and the wife of the minister of justice, who both claimed the same seat in the oortes gal lery. The prime minister declined to settle so important a matter of etiquette, whereupon the husbands went with the case to the queen. She is short sighted, and raising her tortoise shell lorgnette to her eyes she surveyed the contestants for a time. Then she feigned illness and withdrew. A few days later she went into the country "for her health." Since she has been regent Spain has had more real peace than in many years before. Her position has been most try ing, but she has maintained it heroical ly and successfully. By winning sym pathy she has accomplished what shrewd, powerful statesmen failed to do maintained an appearance of order in one of the most restive countries of Europe. Simple in her manners, domestic in her tastes, generous in her disposition, she has firmly installed herself in the affections of her people. She is said to be the only sovereign who ever intrusted the royal person in a balloon, insisting upon making the first ascent while a detachment of royal en gineers were experimenting with mili tary balloons at Madrid. But she does everything differently from any other monarch. Slowly she has been relaxing the proverbially rigid etiquette of the Spanish court. Former ly it was impossible to smoke before the queen. At a court dinner some years ago she ordered cigars brought on. averyboay was astonished ana no body seemed inclined to take the first step. Finally the queen picked one out, lighted it, and said: "Pass around the cigars, gentlemen. " New York World. 1 CENT PIECES. The Great Demand For Them and the Reason of It. Ever since August last there has been an exceedingly heavy demand on the United States treasury for 1 cent pieces. This demand is not confined to any one commercial center, but comes alike from all sections of the country. Treasury of ficials attribute it to the growing cus tom in dry goods establishments and other business houses of marking down prices from round figures, which prac tice naturally requires a good supply of pennies for making change. Prior to its adoption the 1 cent piece cut a very small figure in ordinary shopping trans actions. Although the demand has been gener al for the last two months, it has been conspicuously heavy of late in the case of Chicago and St. Louis, and the the ory is advanced that this special demand is due to the availability of the 1 cent piece for the purchase of local newspa pers. The stock of pennies in the sub treasuries at Chicago and St. Louis was nearly exhausted a week ago, and it was found necessary to call upon an other subtreasury for assistance in that respect. The treasury department is doing its best to meet the demand, and for the last two months the mint at Philadel phia has kept three presses constantly in operation for the exclusive coinage of 1 cent pieces. The daily output has been 150,000 pieces, of the value of (1,500. The government apparently de rives a profit of (1,200 a day on this coinage, the seigniorage being at the rate of nearly 80 per cent of the face value of the coins. This profit disap pears, of course, when the coins are re deemed. It is estimated that there are 780,000,000 1 cent pieces outstanding. Washington Star. A Story of Dnmas. The death of Alexandre Dnmas recalls a story relating to his birth which in Paris has become historical : When the elder Dumas was still a very young man, he was wretchedly poor. He hired a garret in a cheap Paris lodging house. The first night he was in the house he was groping his way up stairs when suddenly his match went out. Ee stumbled along in the darkness flight by flight until, just as he reached the eighth floor, a little sewing woman who had been burning the midnight tal low opened her door and, holding her candle above her head, said : "You are the new lodger, aren't yon? I will show you the way to your room. " Dumas moved from the lodging house very soon after that, and the little sew ing woman went with bim. Subsequent ly she became the mother of Alexandre Dumas ills. New York Sun. Opposed to Dangerous Innovations. The other day a proposal was made at a parish meeting for the lighting of the village of Godshill, isle of Wight, with light lamps, which, it seemed, could be maintained at the modest cost of a half penny rate once every three years. Up rose a farmer named Hollis to oppose the revolutionary soheme. To the mind of this worthy man its authors were "wanting to turn night into day. " "It would set a bad example to the young," he continued, "keeping them out all hours of the night. What they ought to do was to set a good example by going to bed early and getting up early, and he would like to bear the curfew rnng again. "London Truth. . Marshall pass, on the Denver and Bio Grande railroad, is the highest point vet attained by a railroad in the United States. Elevation, 10,865 feet. In 1880 there were 174,659 hands em ployed in the cotton mills in the United States. In 1890 the number had risen to 221,585. Another Victim. The Tobacco trust ia the very latest victim of the deadly cigarette tabic. Boston Herald SECRET OUT AT LAST. GENERAL JOHN A. LOGAN WAS "TOM ANDERSON." Known That He Wrote "Uncle Daniel's Story of Tom Anderson and Twenty Great Battles' Secret Well Kept -Pub lic Men Attacked In the Book. John A. Logan's secret is out at last The disclosures to be made in the fol lowing article will create surprise, if not a sensation. In 1886 a book appear ed from the press entitled "Unole Dan iel's Story of Tom Anderson and Twen ty Great Battles." It was published anonymously "by an officer of the Union army." The little work attracted a good many. Prominent public men were cov ertly attacked in its pages, their names being paraphrased. Some of them, con spicuously Senator Voorhees of Indiana, published interviews m self defense. All efforts to identify the author proved fruitless. The secret is now out. John A. Logan was the author, and Tom An derson was himself. General Logan wrote the book in 1884 and the following year. He began it while he was on the Republican ticket with Blaine as a candidate for vice pres ident. When he appeared at the capital of Illinois, December, 1884, to take per sonal charge of hiR campaign for re-eleo-tion to the senate, he was engaged put ting the finishing touches to his ntanu soript After midnight, when his rooms at the Leland hotel were cleared ot vis itors, General Logan sat down at his desk and wrote upon this story of the war. Finally he called in a number of friends whose advice as to the literary merits of his effort he craved. With characteristic bluntness General Logan asked them to tell him frankly whether or not he was making a fool of himself by writing such a Btory. He especially wanted to know if he was too severe in his criticisms upon publio men. Gen eral Logan pledged these friends to se crecy. He afterward required the same pledge from his publishers, and the se cret has been well guarded from that day to this. General Logan told those who were honored with his confidence that all the incidents used in his book were actual occurrences. He regarded the story more as an autobiography than anything else. The framework of the story was imag inary, but its substance was drawn from General Logan's own experience and observations. The inscription on the fly leaf was as follows: "Uncle Daniel" ia presented to the publio, A truthful picture, based upon the events of the late war. This volume is dedicated to the Union sol diers and their children. The author, New York, Jan. 1, 1808. In order to conceal his identity and to avoid pointed references to prominent men in military and civil life General Logan changed geographical and proper names to suit his purpose, although nearly always leaving a clew to bis meaning. The story is told by Uncle Daniel after the close of the war, and this Uncle Daniel in real life was Dan iel McCook, father cf the famous fami ly of McCook boys, who entered the army from Ohio. Boston Journal. Wedded While Hypnotized. If the story told by Mrs. George Paltridg6 of Ann Arbor is true, George is a bold, bad Svengali. Mrs. Paltridge was formerly Miss Mary Lurfield, a popular young lady of that city. She was engaged to marry a student named Weir in the Inw department. In the bill for divorce she claims that on Sept. 9, 1895, Paltridge took her to Ypsilauti, hypnotized her and compelled her to marry him under the name of Mary French. Then, Ehe alleges, he took her to Kalamazoo and maltreated her. Ten days later she returned to her father's home in Ann Arbor, and now seeks a divorce. Chicago Times-Herald. WE ABE POISONED BY WATER AIR AMD When they contain the )?erms of malaria. To annihilate these and avoid or conquer chills and fever, bilious remittent or dumb ague, ue persistently and regularly Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which slso remedies dyspepsia, liver trouble, constipation, loss of Btreugth, nervous ness, rheumatism snd kidney complaint. Ap petite and sleep are Improved by this thorough medicinal agent, and the infirmities of age mitigated by it. A wiueglasslull three times a day. In leap year every youth anew And jovial ditty sings. Perhaps he'll now get back a few Of tboBe engagement rings. THE WORST OF IT. If the best of life, as it is said to be, is but anticipation, the worst of it is surely worry and vexation. They are the plows and harrows that furrow tne brow and out deeply into the nerves. It is constant plowing of this kind that tears up the nerve tissues. The greater nerves, like the bigger roots, may resist for a time, but the ploughshare gets down to them. Worry brings all sorts of other ailments of a torn-up system and at last the sciatic nerve is reaobed, a disturbance to which in the form of sciatica is attended by ex cruciating pains. Bt. Jacobs Oil has cured the wort caBes of men crippled by it. Use it and make sure of a prompt and perma nent cure. "Won't the young lsdyskite?" "Me! s-goin' to knock m j sell about like them blokes and spo'lmy'at? Not likely I" Piso's Cure is the medicine to break up children's Coughs ands Colds. Mrs. M. G. Blunt, Bprague, Wash., Maroh 8, 1894. Tby Gkemka tor breakfast. m Ming SENT POSTPAID IN EXCHANGE FOR 100 COUPONS, OR, IT YOU PREFER, FOR 2 COUPONS AND $1.00 IN CASH. Ths watch Is nickel, good timekeeper, quick stem wind and set. 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They care , Kvm. and clear tha Gomnleiifl naralar. They eon HaadaolM. snd clear the Completion better thi Thar neither gTipe nor sicken. To txnmnoe roo. frill mail aainple fror rail boi for too, Mdvreifn wbtre. a. fiOBANfcO MUD. CO.. Pblladelphla, t OPIUM MornhlnA Habit Gored In 10 to SO dura. No par till cured. DH, JiSi srriKNn, Leoanon.Odio, X. F. N. U. No. 634-8. F. N. U. He. TV n. n A -a ii I'M IB' 111 re 1 1 BastougnrrapMUa Good! Oss j II In time. Bold bdrnmlsu I They Collected. Fares. The Indie, of Roma have Just gone, through with an experience that has been W unprecedented beauty. Some time ago Superintendent Marvin of the Rome Electric Railway company offered them the electric care for one day, the net pro1 to go to the St Peter's church building fund. They accepted, and they have com pleted the task. The leading eooioty women of the city got together and di vided np the time into turns of two hours each, and one married and two .ino-l ladiea took the different turns. The girl put on weir uiimi im;uie B . . , . summer garments, sewed bands or rib bon on them with -uourtuotor in large letters on the front, and thoy just took the town by storm. The city was full of visiting Maaoni, and whon they caught on to the scheme they filled the ears and the luuy rare cottuuiore s wu.uk around on the footboards and roped in the riches in a hurry. The aay was big success, and while the weather waa warm they didn't seem to miud it and worked faithfully tin wo oiock at night, when the can were taken off. There were someoi me niuat umumug Sion easy. Sing episodes oonnected with the day imagiu "a.fetrssues able. Many of the passengers, when the There is a latge per ,0UUB lading would approach them and timidly hold out their hands, would fb thn nrofforea nana ana snime i .an a .. i a. BillBerly With Winning gllUM'e up into the briaht face above, which was quick ly changed to consternation wnen tuey beheld the insignia of office on the sum nier bat and hoard the cast iron, "Fare, please," from the curling lips. Rome . v T J.. a1...a lturUllttnil (Ut. ) UOIWI ill eHSUH VUMD.i.Wvt( TRAMPS' CONVENTION. Annual Masting of Knlfhta nl the Hand Maar Wichita, Kan. A two days' convention of tramps of iHtl,.aul linn Innfc ariinnrfifvl It was held on the Arkansas river between Wellington and Wiutleld, and about 1,600 were preeent. Kansas uity Jim presided. A Christmas holiday oouveuiion win be held at Hot Springs, Ark., and the regular summer convention has been designated for Cripple Creek, Cola The time will be designated in tne regular tramp alphabet on all the rail road depots and tanks when Kansas City Jim Axes It. His headquarters in Wichi ta are in a vacant room counootod with the police station. The police cater to him, as his residence there is a sure protection against tramp depredations in the city. Boekasplnt "or Convicts. The Arizona territorial prison man agement has embarked in a beekeeping experiment, in which the prisoners will be employed. An apiary, with zo stands of bees, baa been installed, and it is ex pected the business will prove very profitable. A single hive at the prison is said to have last year produced 200 pounds of honey. It probably induces curious sensations and many vain long ings In the prisoners to see the bees fly se renely and at will over the prison wans, and yet return of their own volition to their home within. A Short Presidential Campaign. The Buffalo Merchants' exchange has . joined with other commercial bodies i throughout the country in requesting the national committees of the several political parties to fix the time of hold ing the national conventions so as to shorten the next presidential campaign. If this request should be heeded, there would be general satisfaction, Buffalo Courier. Arangod His Father's Itoath. Eleven years ago Amos Wright, spected and prosperous farmer near Cooper, Tex., had trouble with a man named Kennedy and killed him. Walter Kennedy, who was then only 6 years old, saw his father killed and swore vengeance. Early on Saturday he went to Wright's lot and waited for him. When Wright came out, Kennedy shot bim dead. He then gave himself np to tbeanthoritlja msm PRIZE WIKXERS. CONOVER PIANOS CHICAGO COTTAGE ORGANS WIN (alVKN Highest Awards At the World's Exposition for excellent manufacture, quality.' uniformity and volume of tone, elasticity of touch, artistic cases? materials and workman ship of highest grade. ATAltttjUIS) ON APPLICATION PHIS) CHICA80 C0TTA6E 0R6AN GO. OHIOAQO. ILL. ' lAHtEST WAWUFACTUBEBS OP taw am mm n the would. ravnti, and TrUo-MarIm obtained and all Pas- nisisassesnauctsa Mr Moiimti Fiss. MTOrrios than those dtserlp- aaarg. Our 1m not due till patent Is sscured. ' A Pa SMUT, " Haw to Obtain Patents," with east sasselo th U. I. and Igraiga csaatries; iiw, , jiaarsse, O.A.CNOW&CO. I PATtNT friOI, WA(MIMTf)SJ, . . f aad ws caa sstur. patent la IM Urn. ream iram wasnmgton. isd madsl, drawing or photo., with nsa. wa adrisa. If utMi.hl. . ... fM. PrsejwiisraeU.