4 V HUU jgr -V.J - VOBIilUlBD VBBT -BtIa BV COLL. VAN J L. K V K ALBANY, , OREGON. The Precious Cloud of April. by b'heli.t. . ; From my wings' are shaken the dews that waken -.-. ! i 1 he sweet bads-every one. , , TOxen rocked to rest on thoir mother s breast As nhe dancea about the eon. j I wield the flail of the lashing hail j . . , And whiten the green plains under. ; And then again I dissolve it in rain , " And laugh as I pass in thunder.. ? I bind the sun's Uirpne with a burning zone And the moons witn a guvuo i --... The Toloanoee are dim; and Blare reel and swim '. - ' When the whirlwinds my banner unfurl, From cape to cape, with a bndga-like shape Over a torrent of sea. " . I ' Sunbeam proof, 1 hang like roof. The mountains its columns be. The triumplalr& through which I march With hurricane, fire and snow, u , When the powers of the air are chained to my chair , . , , In the million-colored bow, - j. 1 . '.-j The sphere-fire above, its soft oolora wove '$ While the moist earth was, laughing below. i From the Table.' - STEASUE DUEL. The following lines appeared in the Paris Figaro of Dec 12, 186 , exciting the legitimate curiosity of all the idle, gossipy, dolce-far-niente inhabitants bj their brevity ana mystery? t . t evening, at a private receptron Riven by thee narming ana tatentea actress, Mile. M. D , of the 'lionffea,' the young Count Gas ton d' Array, well kuown-ia our highest circles as a most amiable and aecomphahed geutle- man, threw a glass cf Moet in the face of Duke AJbort de la Rive. . No reason was jrivon - for this unexpected occurrence. . Cards were exchanged between the two parties, and it is rumored that the honor of the fair hostess her self is compromised in this lunentabl affair. A meutci les details. ' - j Editor a of tkr. Table Gentlemen Having been present myself at the alter cation that arose - on, that memorable evening, I feel , particularly pleased to be able to elucidate a matter which has hitherto remained enigmatical, to the Parisian scandalbrewers, "and which ven the ubiquitous, pryingFigaro has vpr been meacable of divxmncr. The morning after the supper, Dake Albert de la Hive's -seconds presented themselves at Count Gaston s hotel, and, having been ushered into his pri vate Bittiusr-room, tendered Mm an un sealed missive, stamped with the Ducal VIODI) til T VJ wruwwuwa " . . " 1 1 u v lOWS: ,' , " . . .. i - "Mossnnra Lk Coktk : - As lover of Mar guerite, you have acted in'the most despicable manner, eucn ininga snouia nave nq con cealed. You also insulted me grossly and tatidlT. The satisf action I desire from you. and which the gentlemen who bring yon this are authorized to olaim, is that you should r. M., precisely, to meet me at the Oaf a An- flais, where we will sop together in Hoom No. ; and as I know. Monsieur le Compte, that yon are a fine eater j I demand of yon to acoept my challenge, to wit : that we shall eat and vniUB litJkn euouvo W UUW V wv. Good Btomachs will tell qu en pensez'veus . Foil-thrusts, pistol-balls, and all fanch barba rous instruments; lacerate the. flesh, destroy one's equanimity of mind, and upset one's sys tem, besides hurting atrociously: an excellent j-epaxt will be more palatable." "Gentlemen, you can inform ;your friend, the Duke, that I will hold my- and that Mile. M. T herself will honor our meeting with .her presence." At eight o'clock three persons sat down to table in an elegant and sumpt-motisJy-furnished, 'cabinet particulier" of the best boolevard restaurant, five minutes later, three dozen Ostendes, -accompanied by two bottles-of amber tinted Chablis - vietix, were placed be fore the guests, und jtbe discreet garcon disappeared,leavmg two deadly, enemies in the face of each other, and a smiling but bewildered woman between them. "lam so very glad, that everything has ended in sueh a satisfactory way," observed the young actress. " My Boederer is too strong for you,' I think, """Gaston," she added, -playfully; " here After I will tell Jaoques only to pour out two glasses, xoa bad no idea w ateadv it was. And then Monsieur le jJue acted so very composedly. You are too' rash entirely, mon cheK.' ' Well, I avow," replied jQaston, as he finished his oysters, VI was rather flushed.' But the Duke and I are above such trifling peccadilloes. By the way, De la Bive, - how do you find these bivalves t . Bather cop perish, heh t WelL really, f. prefer them to the Ameriran and Eegiish natives, for I confess I find a certain' savor to them nneonalled bv anv foreign -oyster. Washed down by this royal Chablis, I frankly think I could swallow another dozen. Waiter! j By the way, how eharming Sbl.nei der is in Bu-be Bletae. What a hit that cher Offenbach has made. . Why, Schneider's impersonation of Boulotte is simply admirable; so artless,yet bold; so broad, without vulgarity. I'osmveiy delicious, that woman. 1 enjoyed my 'Vrs-aTlilovf Till V- i " Yes. indeed, Duke. I met Meilhao f he other nisht in the coulisse of- the Varieties. Sanguine fellow, he hopes for a two hundred nights' run. Thanks to Dauuis ond Schneider, the piece will last. V ." V They say that the Pinee of Wales is very- An u nere is wo fish." - ' j . . At this moment the garcon entered, bearing a saperb tote fit grotlnt - while the butler, anroned and ready with the corkscrew, - placed a bottle of : 1837 Chateau Yquem besida the appetizing cub a, , c "What . were you alluding to, -Craston?" said the actress. , . " Oh, nothing; a mere stage potin; 'some behind-scene scandaL Doke, al low me to pour you out some of : this golden nectar. Fine aroma. You, as an sonologist, wOl find it exquisite, and appreciate it, too. - -I was recommended to me by my friend Ernest Hendave. Ton remember him t Poor fellow, he -was killed at Bolferiao. Splendid ar - tost. landscape painter of great merit. Curse the Austrian bullets. Here's to So saying, ho quaffed off his glass and fmed, scrupulously, the generous portion of sole placed before, kita by his .astronomical adversary. , . " This fish," said Marguerite, in not op to the Cafe Anglais standard; le lacks , eometlung, I cannot tell what " -- , " ejnon, Perhaps," . sad Gaston. But I assure you it is delicious, and,I wiH refer to the Date, whose fondness tor fish w proverbial at tie lnb. I be lieve he descended iato sh , Maelstrom with his yacht after a Norwegian salmon -.ad Lis fc eatise on pLacs.lkrial matters in general could no Lav been better eva in the EncyolvfwJ.;ft.- - - "Xq, -no, madias... Oaioa ex?. er. , ' naffldeji, J. wo- 'Irt t.Vs k n " r- t":her!f ! !k1 JJfoarjt- &s4 Well xv ored in the extreme; whoever, you know rney say ut mo. ' Come. come, no Latin. Duke. The greatest wrong a man can have towards women, sometimes, is to be in the right. But I will capitulate. But what is this?" : "His de veau a la Jardiniers," said a spruce, liveried garcon. What wine, gentleman r Aiargeaux. " WelL what is the news of the week. Dnke ? continued the fair comedienne. ' Any new conquests? Is it really true that Cora intends to make her debut in " Orphee aux ; Enters?" . Come drop this taciturnity and tell me all vou know. Why, I declare, how vou do eat to-night! Are you" famished? You don t eat, you devour. A roue in tne ISaia this morninir to try my new mare, , Fanny; the ride sharpened niy appetite. As to your other questions. Mademoiselle." 'an swered the Duke,., tossing olT a small glass of claret, instantly replenished, ' must una my breatli to reply. Cton quests I "have. few. My Don Juanic days are over. I am a bitter old skep tic nOW. ' J: . . ; . "Po-h!" retorted Marguerite. "A nianof 35, an artist, a millionaire, turn ing synicaL Ha! ha! you are conceal ing some 'bonne fot tune.' Mon cher, ten me, is she pretty?" "J(o, I am serious, Miss. I abjure the fair sex pro tern. I find women to be as perfidious as the waves. An Eng lish poet said something to that effect, oeueve. "Perfidious as the waves! - Well, I agree," laughed Marguerite; "but men are such good swimmers, you know." "You are " facetious. ' Madamoie!le. But, nevertheless, I no longer' believe in women; and in their virtue, less." "Oh, horrible!" exclaimed the ac tress. "Why?" "Well, to preserve a precious object, it must lie used as little as possible. Is not that so?"- . "Certainly." . , "Well, apply that aphorism to vir tue." "But, Count, you are not eatinsr. Al low me. Here comes a 'Chateaubriand aux petits pots,' tbat looks superbly. Suppose Madamoiselle, that we post pone our pyschologioal and abstrct dis cussion upon virtue till that of the old Beaune, I have ordered, has been thor oughly investigated." "As you wilL Duke, only I shall make a desperate strucrsrle, I warn Vou, to sustain the honor of my culminated t "A discomfiture from such a fair ad versary would delight me, Madcmo- selle." - -: - - - "Louis XV.! JjouisXTi ! Duke old schoot," laughed Gaston, helping him self to a salmis which had just been brought in. "By the way, what has be come or unaries JJcnnay t . "I can't say, my friend; . the last I heard of him was that he worked . with Rochefort. . Did you see his last Lan terne f Admirably sarcastic it was, too keen and cutting as an Aleppo's blade. ,xue fellow will get in trouble befcre long. Mark my words. But he yearns for reputation. His talent justi fies his ambition. But as a comarade I prefer him . to a politician. What a charming, sociable, witty conversation alist ! Badinguet will seize on him yet. Troublesome days in store for France." " Oh, bah ! uke; how do you know? Mere rumors. - I defy the most clever statesman to predict tie future of France six months ahead. Of Franoe, I agree;' but not of Paris. Paris and France differ radically. The waiter here appeared bringing a perdriz aux trunes, a gem of culinary art. Politics, like religio i, are nebu lous.' Such a discussion would lead us to the morning, besides annoying Mad amoiselle: and, as I have a great treat in store for you, we will leave politics A treat, you say ? ; "Yea, e accaroni a la Solf erino, which will appear in good time. Why, is that anything particularly regal? " Quite a novelty in Paris, I believe; a delicious dish, and legendary one, too." - - ' .- . - " How is it served ? : "Oh, simply enough. Maccaroni cooked with tomatoes scroped Gruyere, onions, and finely-chopped ham." : What a mixtnre !" said Afarrnnrit. "No; it appears that, -after the battle ox aoliermo, . tne h.mperor and . his aides-de-camp, with Gen- Fleury, were detained in some old, deserted, bullet shattered cot near the field of battle, and that they were obliged to find their own dinner. o Jfieury poked about, and after a diligent search, found some maccaroni, a piece of stale cheese, , and Borne onions and tomatoes in the garden; so he made anamalgum of the materials, chopped ug everything to gether, and put it in a pot in the fire. stirring it around with his sword. The plat was pronounced excellent. And now it is the rage here, with the very sage addition of tnunes. - The dinner now progressed rapidly entrees after entrees, partridges, chick ens, quail, venison, vegetables, roast after roast, laved in the choicest brands of Burgundy, and Boardeaux. Salads, entremets, and lesser delicacies, aided the rivals empty bottle upon bottle of JMederer changing from time to time to redolent - Geisenheimer - or sweet Tokai. Kesselrode paddings, gelees au Mbdere, creams, meringues, fruits, and sherbats followed each other in vertig inous succession. . Grave infractions to the established law of a sociable sup per were made; but both ate voracious ly, and paid no attention to the remarks of the actress, wmie jfaxarete. i'eraita. and Asti were drunk, ad infinitum, over twenty varied deserts. Marguerite, sole witness to this strange display of gor mandizing, began to suspect that some thing was wrong, although the general conversation was of the slightest and most brilliant style, until the adver saries began to show signs of repletion and fatisrue. Flushed by wines and rich food, Gaston breathed heavily, but, notwithstanding, finished a large om elette au rhum, which was : pronounced so palatable that another larger one was ordered. - "Here's to your good w&hes, Duke, said Marguerite, attempting a smile. and, sipping lingeringly at a glass of Liunel. . . . "You compromise yourself, Ma demoiselle. - 1 Gaeton grinned. "You are witty, Duke." "Not at alL Everything wjtty in the world has been said or written a thousand times, bu always appears new. the maioritv of people - only re membering what is stupid. My feeble attempts have. but the charm of being apropos. . ., "I think before our Mocha, Gaston, we could do justice to a pate de gibier or de foie gras. w nas ao you say i " Volontiers," muttered the young Const, who, oririson and purple in the face, tottered to the window and remain ed a second bre thing the oool morning The viand wa brought and the Coaot, 8,r-Tareiit!y relieved, began to partake cf ki. . oureely a xoinute had elapsed, aits term 3 put the first mor sel to his mouth, when - he gave a faint, half-stilled cry and fell backwards upon the carpet, dragging with him a half finished glass cf bpani h vdne. ... What passed subsequently was not narrated by the actress, but two hours later, when the door of the private apartment was broken in by the alarmed restaurateur, the bodies of Duke Albert de la Rive and Count Gaston d'Avray, were found, choked to death, and Mile. M. JD- stretched upon the sofa, mca- Eable of uttering a syllable, her jeweled and driven int j the wall by a dirk- two inches below the bell-tassel. . , . The Centennial Buildings Blander. The projectors of the Centennial buildings at Philadelphia have, appar ently, committed a serious blunder in their plans by putting the . different structures at such long - distances from each other that nobody but professional pedestrians could maze the tour with out exhaustion. As most of the visitors will be there but for one day, it is de sirable that doing up the exhibition in that time should be made feasible; moreover that the cost of a visit should not be indefinitely increased by car riage hire and car fare. These are vital considerations, and as no possible purposes is subserved by the macnincent distance placed ' betwpen the buildings by the Commission, this mistake should, by all means, be reme died before it is too late. According to the present arrangement the ma chinery . hall is half a mile from the agricultural building and the latter is nearly a mile from the maia exhibition building. The item3 of shoe leather aloxie, which the millions ; of yi sitors would expend in needless t.-avei would feed the poor of a city for a generation. The transfer of 1 visitors by steam or horse cars from building to building would be cn improvement on walking, but it would be a work attended with prodigious inconvenience and numerous accidents, arid would represent an ex pense of at least half a million dollars, that might be avoided by putting the brildings nearer together. . , Caricatures in Luther's Day. When Luther began the immortal part of his public career in 1517 bynaii ing to the church door his ninety-five theses against the sale of indulgences, wood-engraving was an art which had been practiced nearly a century. . He found also, as we have seen, a public accustomed to satirical writings illus trated by wood-cuts. The great Hol bien illustrated 'Erasmus's Piaise of Folly. ; Brandit's Ship of Fools, as well as the . litter of works which it called forth, was even profusely illustrated. Caricatures as distinct works, though usually accompanied with ' abundant verbal commentary, were - : familiar objects. Among the curiosities , which Luther himself brought from Borne in 1516, some years before he began his special work, was a caricature suggest ed by the Ship of Fools, showing how the Pope had "fooled the whole world with his superstitions and idlatories," He showed it to the ' Prince Elector of Saxony at the time. The "picture ex hibited a little .ship filled with monks, friars, and priests casting lines to peo ple swimming in the sea, while in the stern sat comfortably the Pope with his cardinals and bishops, overshadow ed and covered by the Holy Ghost, who was looking up to heaven, and through whose help alone the drowning wretches were saved. 1 In talking about the picture many years aiicr. Luther said: "These and like fooleries . we then believed as articles of faith." He had not reached the point when he could talk at his own table of the cardinals as "peevish milk-sops, effeminate, unlearned .block heads, whom the Pope places in all kingdoms, where' they lie lolling ' in kings' courts among the ladies and women." Finding : this weapon af caricature ready made to his hands, he used it freely as did also Lis friends and his foes. He was .himself a caricaturist. When Pope Clement VII. seemed dis posed to meet the reformers half-way, and proposed a council to that end, Luther wrote a pamphlet ridiculing the scheme, and to give more force to his satire he "crushed a picture to be drawn" and placed in the title page. It was not a work describable to the fast idious ears of our century, unless we leave part of the. descriytion in Latin. The Pope was seated on a lofty throne surrounded by cardinals having foxes' tails, and seeming "sursum et deorum repurgare."i In the Table-Talk we read also of a picture being brought to Luther iu whieh the Pope ; and Judas were represented hanging to the purse and keys. ' "T'will vex the Pope hor ribly," said Luther, "that , he whom emperors and kings have worshiped should now be figured hanging up his own picklocks. Jamea Parton', in Harper's Magazine for April. The Wooing of Harold and the Fair- i -;"- Hatred. ' -The beginning of his great adventure was of a romantic character youthful love .for the beautiful Gyda, a -then glo rious and famous young lady of. those regions, whom the young Harold as pired to marry. - Gyda answered his embassy xmd- prayer in a distant, lofty mancer: "Her it would not beseem to wed any jarl or any poor creature of that kind; let him dp as Gorm of Den mark, Eric of Sweden, Egbert of Eng land, and others had done subdue into peace and regulation the confused con tentious bits of jarls around him, and beoome a king; then, perhaps, she might think of his proposal, till then not" Harold was stru k w.th this proud an swer, which rendered Gyda tenfold mora desirable to him. He vowed to let his hair grow, never to cut or even to comb it till this feat were done, and the peer less Gyda his own. . He proceeded ac cordingly to, conquer, in fierce battle, a jarl or two every year, and, at tue end of twelve years, had his unkempt (and almost unimaginable) head of hair elipt off Jarl Sognwald (Reginald) of More, the most valued and valuable of all his subject-jar Is, being - promoted to this sublime barber function after which King Harold, . with : head thoroughly cleansed, and hair grown or - growing again to the luxuriant beauty that, had no equal in bis day, brought Lome his Gyda, and made her the brightest queen in all the north. - He Lad ' after hit, in succession, or perhaps even simultan eously in some cases, at least six other wives; and by Gyda herself one daugh ter and four sons Thomas Carlyle. "A Nevatm. women recently knocked down seven burglars,' one after another. Her husband watched from the top of the stairs, and felt so brimful of battle that he couldn't oool off until he had jerked his eight-year-old boy out of bed and whaled him soundly for not getting up and helping his mother. . . : Axil the ' tools of workmen ' or other implements of labor deposited with the pawnbrokers of Paris have been re deemed and handed over .to their owners by the Duchess of Magenta with the proceeds of a charity festival placed at. her disposal.- - , . ... ; Whbm n eat sines, does ah not do it on pnrpusl Bha simply does it to amews herself. OLD-TIME DUELS. He Wilt Clinton and John Kvrartwont An Kditer ivills a Captain. Mr. John Bieelow concludes his article on DeWitt Clinton in Harper's, for March, and gives this account of the duel between Ulintou and bwartwout: The following letter has reference to a duel in which DeWitt Clinton had been concerned with John Swartwout as long ago as 1802. Swartwout was a devoted: friend and admirer of Aaron Burr, then vice president. The friends of Clinton, among whom Cheetham was most conspicuous and most scurrilous, accused Burr of coquetting with' the federal party the gravest offense which in those days could be laid at the door of a Republican. It reached Clinton's ears that Swartwout had accused him of opposing Burr upon personal and selfish grounds. Clinton responded, in his gentle and unimpassioned way, by proclaiming Swartwout 'a liar, a ssoun drel and a villain. This was reported to Swartwout. and. of course, a chal lenge , immediately followed. Colonel Smith, Swartwout s second, has left us the following account of what occurred on the ground -at Weehawken, where the combatants respectively sought sat isfaction. Clinton was accompanied by Richard Biker, the hero afterwards of Halieck's Recorder? " The' gentlemen took their stations, were each presented with a pistol, and, by order, faced to the right, and fired, ineffectually. At the request of Mr. Riker I asked Mr. Swartwout, "Are vou satisfied sir?" He answered, "I .tm not." The pistols then being ex chrnered, and their positions resumed. khey by order faced to the right, and ! lired a shot without effect. At the re quest of Mr. Riker I again asked Mr. Swartwout, "Are you stisfied,-sir?' He answered strongly in the hegative. We proceeded, and a third shot was ex changed without injury. At the re quest of Mr. Ricker I again asked Mr. b war tout, " Are you satisfied sir !" He answered, " I am not, neither shall I be until that apology is made which I have demanded. Until -hen we must pro ceed. I then presented a paper to Mr. Riker.containine' the apology demanded, for Clinton's signature, observing tbat we could not spend our time in conver sation ; that this paper must De signed, or proceed. Mr. Clinton declared that he would not sign any paper on the sub ject; that he had no animosity against Mr. Swartout; would willingly shako hands and agree to meet on the score of lormer friendship. 'Mr. Swartwout insisting oh his sig nature to the apology, and Mr. Clinton declining they stood at their posts and fired a fourth shot, Mr. Clinton's ball struck Mr. Swart wont's" left leg, about five inches below the knee. He stood ready and collected. At the request of Mr. luker 1 again addressed Mr. Swart wout, 'Are you satished sir? lie an swered that it was useless to repeat the question! 'My determination is fixed, and I beg to proceed.' Mr. Clinton re peated that he had no animosity against Mir. Swartwout, was sorry for what had passed, proposed to advance, shake hands and burythe circumstance in obliv ion. During this'conversation Mr. Swart-, wout's surgeon, kneeling by, his side, extracted the ball from tne opposite side of his leg. Mr. Swartwout stand ing erect on his post, ' and 'positively declining anything short of an ample anology, they fired the fifth shot, and Mr. Swartwout received the shot in the left ' leg, ' about ' five inches above the ankle, still, however, standing steadily at his post, perfectly composed. At the request of Mr. Riker I again addresed Mr. Swartwout, 'Are you satisfied, sir?' I an. not, sir; proceed. Mr. Clinton then quit his station, declined the com bat, and declared he would fire no more. Mr. , Swartwout declared himself sur prised that Mr. Clinton would neither apologize nor give him the satisfaction required, and, addressing me, said, 'What shall I do, my friend?" I answered, 'Mr. Clinton declines making the apol ogy required,refuses taking his position, and positively declares he will fight no more; and his second appearing to ac quiesce in the disposition of his princi pal, there is nothing further left for you now but to have your wounds dressed.' the surgeons attended, dressed Mr. Swartwout 'a wounds, and the gentle-, men in their respective barges returned to the city." ' 5 Mr. Bigelow also describes the duel between Coleman, editor of the Even ing Post, and Captain - Thompson in which Thompson was killed. " The year after, Clinton was chal lenged by Senator Dayton, of New Jer sey, a warm partisan of Burr. This af -fair, however, was arranged without a meeting, but the year following. Robert Startwout fought with Richard Riker, who had been Clinton's second, and se verely wounded him. The same year Coleman, editor of the Evening Post, was provoked by Cheetham, the Ther sites of the press in those days, to chal lenge him. Friends, however, inter fered, and the affair was settled upon the understanding that Cheetham would behave more discreetly in the future. Out of -this challenge, however, grew another quarrel which was attended with altogether deplorable results. A harbor master of New York, by the name of Thompson he was ca'led Cap tain Thompson gave it out that it was Coleman, not Cheetham, who had shown the white feather on the occasion just referred to. Coleman heard of it and challenged him. They met in what is now Twenty -third street, . then called ' Love Lane, at the edge of a winter's evening. The ground was covered with snow, and it was cold and nearly dark. A shot or two was exchanged without effect The principals were then brought closer to each other, that they might see one another more distinctly. At the next shot Thompson cried out that he was hit, and fell headlong into the snow, mortally 'wounded, Coleman and his second hurried away, while tV.e surgeon raised the bleeding man and examined his wound,' at the same time suggesting to him the propriety of never mention ing the names of any of the parties to the meeting. ; Thompson promised he would not, and kept his word." 'He was brought,' says Mr. Bryant, 'mor tally wounded, to his sister's house in town;' he was laid at the door; the bell was wrung; the family came out and found him bleeding and near his death. He refused to name his antagonist, or give any account of the affair, declar ing that everything which .had been done was honorably done, and desired tbat no attempt should be made to seek out or molest his adversary. " YnsTEBDAr was indeed an eventful day in the life of a lady on west Jsckson street. During a trip on the street cars to State street and back, she saw the loveliest polonaise pattern she ever saw in her life, the handsomest fellow she ever saw in her life, the handsomest woman she ever saw in her life, got 'the worst fright she ever had in her life from the drunkest man she ever saw in Lex life, never was more insulted in her life as she was by a young man who spoke to her on the car, and finally got home feeling more tired than sb ever felt in her Ufa. Chieapo Tribune, Wsxa is an egg sot oval? Whan you torn it round. BRITISH MISCEGENATION" Marrlase of a Beautiful KnIih Lady to a uinooo riuce. . M. D. Conwav writes as follows from London to the Cincinnati Commercial: M The Lahgalibalele affair has once more shown that it is almost impossible for the Anglo-Saxon to live on terms of equality with negroes, or indeed, for that matter, with any race of dark com plexion. .News arrived here from India this week that a young Oxonian scholar, wno, irom a highly creditable examina tion for the civil service, had ; passed to the prospect of 'a brilliant career jn , In dia, has been shot by his servant and killed.. It is Malcom Beade, brother to the distinguished traveler and Author, Win wood Beade. The friends of this young man are inconsolable, and they have universal sympathy, and yet the incident which led to this tragedy is significant of the deplorable condition of Anglo-Indian Society. . The vouncr man had administered corporeal chas -tisement to his servant, and while he was asleep the servant killed him. I suppose that Malcom Reade, . known ' to have been amiable and good-tempered, might have resided in England to the age of Methusaleh without the possibil ity of , striking any. one of : his servants. Not the lowest and coarsest Irishman - would ever have received a blow from him. The more amiable we know him to be the more apparent is it that the - Englishman instinctively treats the colored man as his slave. This social, condition of India has caused a good deal of excitement in re lation to a marriage which is to occur here in London witmn the next few days. An eminent Hindoo is to marry a Xjondon beauty. .The gentleman in this, case is Mutu Coomara, , Swamy. Swamy is a title, and literally. means "God.r' As it is not usual to designate mortals with such a high title as that (though his bride would pass pretty fairly as a "goddess") this gentleman i designated by that which Queen Vie toria ha given him, Sir Mutu Coomara, for he is an eminent member of his majesty's council in Ceylon, and be sides this he has written, , some Oriental books of high value. The lady is a Miss Lily Beeby, a lady distinguished in her circle as an artist, but also ; being more beautiful than any picture she ever painted. One wonder is that a beautiful young lady should be found ready to wed a pagan. The Hindoo first met the young lady in a company 01 English people wno have long repu diated Christianity, and , he being no adherent of any special eastern sect. they found a basis of religious har mony in simple Theism. But the most serious matter of speculation is the re ception which the two will meet with in the east, for which tbey will soon depart. No ' cose of . inter-mar- riage between a Hindoo ami a person of the English race seems to have ever been known before. Old residents of India have informed me that it is abso lutely unprecedented, and that if Sir Mulu were to take his bride to any part of India, both of them would bo treated by the whites as pariahs. They all agree that in Ceylon the prejudice against "miscegenation will probably be less. and that the Hindoo's very high rank (he would be king of Ceylon if Queen Victoria should resign the island) and official position would enable them to tide over the first indignation. But the agitation the coming marriage has caus ed in ''Oriental circles" in London, proves that anything like an amalgama tion of races in India is not to be con templated. At the same time Indians are ' received in the highest society in London' on terms of perfect equality; young ladies dance and flirt with them as industriously as with others; and it requires the atmosphere of India to bring about the singular exasperation of cute feeling to which 1 have referred. The sooner the English people can stop subjugating to the Queen races they aie unable to treat as fellow subjects, the more speedily will certain ugly clouds vanish from their horizon. Restoring Charred Currency. The process of the restoration of charred currency and other valuables constitutes one of the most interesting features of the service in the Treasury Department at Washington. A corre spondent describes the work as it is carried on in one of the sunny rooms of the treasury building, where four ladies are kept constantly employed. - It will be remembered that an express car was recently burned near Washington, The government had $5,750,000 in it, andthe private property, consisting of dia monds, watches, etc. amounted to half as much more. The jewels and watches only were returned to the express com pany. The money in the government safes was so oi sirred that at .a breath it crumpled, and yet four-fifths of it will be i deciphered. Each little shriveled piece is detached with a thin knife and laid on blotting paper. There the ladies examine it with magnifying glasses, and alter deciphering as much as possible they paste it on a strip of thin paper; and so,, bit by bit, a whole note is pieced out. After her great fire. Chicago sent 200 cases of money, all in cinders, aggregating at owners valua tion, $it4,yy .y; ana out 01 that sum $126,541.33 was redeemed and returned to the owners. Boston profited in Chica go's experience and packed her burnt money so carefully that of the eighty- three cases, containing xss. 812.90. $88,290.80 were returned to her, beside other valuable papers. The most skill ful of these ladies once deciphered 185,000 out of $200,000 that had been in the hold of a burned ship for three years, and Adams Express Company, which was responsible for the amount. gave her $500, Another time she and her associates worked faithfully and long over some bonds a crazy cashier threw into the fire. The bank asked $100,000, but the ladies picked ' out ?i4o,uuu; wnereupon the directors, with reckless extravagance, presented them wiui fova aouara apiece I ; Hloetles la Navigation. During voyages, especially across the Atlantic, the wave line of the side of the ship is very often such as to leave an ordinary screw half exposed, when the engine, with only half the work to do, will spurt off at a dangerous rate. To prevent this an Irish inventor has devised a simple method of lowering the screw, enabling the engineer in heavy weather to keep the vessel going much steadier, with very little re duced speed. A large amonnt : of power is thus utilized with a gain of : uniform motion, t a"1 . w is regarded by experts as the most important improvement ever introduced into steam navigation. Observations in voyages have led Mr. Deverill, of Eng land, to devise a ship-moving register, by which he observes . that in a two hours' voyage it made over J,50Q,000 rolls and about 1,000,000 pitches, the average number of oscillations in both directions per minute being : fourteen. Mr. Deverell thinks he has demonstrat ed that within ocean limits the swell is increasing, rjeh! that the movement of an indepenIex.t body within the ship is nnoeasing?, arid proposes to utilize this aa an adiiusaf propelling; power A FRENCH STOBT. The Prlca of Two Potatoes In I8O0. The following anecdote - of the first Napoleon was related by an English man, who was a considerable time in the French military service, and who vouches for its authenticity: ;: The eveainsr before the battle of Ulm, when Napoleon the First,' in company with Marshal Berther, was walking in- coanito through the camp, and listen ing to the talk of his soldiers, he saw in a group not far off a grenadier of the guard, who was roasting some . potatoes in the ashes. , . , "I should like a roast potato above all things," said the Emperor to the Mar shal; "ask the owner of them if he will sell one." '., - " In obedience to the order, Berthier advanced to the group and asked to whom the potatoes belonged. A gren adier stepped forward and said; "They L are mine. "Will you sell me one?"inquired Ber thier. "I have only five," said the trrenn- dier, "and that's hardly enough for my supper. r. :: :.: "Jt will give you two napoleons if you will sell me one," continued Berthier. "I don t want your gold, said the grenadier; "I shall be killed, perhaps, to-mcrrow, and I don't want the enemy to find me with an empty stomach." Berthier reported the soldier s an swer to the Emperor, who was standing a littlo in the background. "Let me see if I snail be luckier1 than you," said the latter, and going up close to the grenadier, he asxed . nun it he would sell him a potato. ".Not by a long shot," answered the grenadier: "I havn't enough for my self." - ' - - - -.wr . . "But you may set your own price." said Napoleon. "Come I am hungry, and haven't eaten to-day." ' "I tell you I haven't enough for myself,"- replied, the grenadier;: "besides all that, do you think I don t know you in spite of your disguise?" "Who am I then i" inquired Napole cn. ' - - ; r - ' ' "Bah!" said the grenadier: "The Little Corporal, as they all call you. Am I right?" . u "Well," said Napoleon, "since you know me, will you sell me a potato ?" "No," said the grenadier ; "but if you would have me come and dine with you when we get back to Paris, you may sup with me to-night." ''Done !' 'said Napoleon; "on the word of a Little Corporal on the word of an emperor. " "Well and good," said the grenadier. "Our potatoes ought to be done by this time; there are the two largest ones: the rest I'll eat myself." The Emperor sat down and ate his potatoes, and then returned with Ber-V thier to his tent, merely remarking "The rogue is a good soldier, IU wager. " ,' . -- - v Two months afterward Napoleon the Great was in in the midst of a brilliant court at the Palace of the Tuileries, and was just sitting down to dine when word was brought to him that a grenadier was without trying to force the guard at the door saying that he had been invited by the Emperor. "Let him come in," said His Ma jesty. . The soldier entered, and presented arms, and said to the lilmperor : "Do you remember once having supped with me off my roast potatoes ?" "O I is that you ? xes I remember. said the Emperor: "and so you have come to dine with me have yon? Bus- tin, lay another cover on your table for this' brave fellow." . Again the trrenadier presented arms and said: . "A grenadier of the guards does not eat with lackeys. Your Majesty told me I should dine with you that was the bargain and, trusting your word, I nave come hither. True, true," said the Emperor; "lay a cover near me. liay aside your arms, mon ami, and draw up to the table." Dinner over, the grenadier went at his usual pace, took up his carbine, and turning to the Emperor presented arms. "A mere private," said he "ought not to dine at the table of the Emperor. "Ah! I understand you," said Na poleon. "I name you Chevalier of the Xjegion of iionor, and lieutenant in my company Of (retards. "Thank you, heartily," returned the soldier . Vive V Etnpereur t" he shout ed and then withdrew. - Star-Gazing. Star gazing is in order now. At 8 p. ic, in the South, a little to the West, and at an elevation of about 45 degrees, may be seen the constellation of Orion, easily recognized by the four very brill iant stars in the form of a long quad rangle intersected by three lesser stars, arranged at equal distances and in a straight line parallel with the horizon, pointing on the one - side to Sirius the brightest fixed star in the heavens, and on the other to the Pleiades, 30 degrees to the West Between the Pleiades and the "bands of Orion" is an upright letter V, known as the V of Taurus, consisting of one very bright star at the left upper end, in the eye of Taurus, and five lesser stars. In the North, a little West and just above the mist of the horizon is Cassiopea's chair in an upright position, consisting of five stars of the third magnitude and one or two smaller ones. Almost directly over head, but still slightly South, is the sickle of Leo, oomplete in outline, with the curve of the blade toward the Northeast, and Regulus, a star of the fLst magnitude, in the extremity of the handle. But the brightest object in the firmament these evenings is the planet Jupiter, which becomes clearly visible in the East shortly after eight o'clock, and those who rise as early as half -past four in the morning may see Venus in nearly the same position. JBouton Evening Transcript. Angelica Has a Ghost, There is a reported' ghost at Laird k. Co.'s sawmill at Angelica, Shawano county. This is the mill which was blown up last fall, killing six men. The story runs thus: ?-tti- " The night watch was sitting in the mill reading, when his attention was called to the dimness of the light in his lantern, and shortly after he says he heard groaning near the place where themen were killed by the explosion; then he heard something thrown against the heater in the packing room. . This has bcn kept up nightly ever since, and although the mill has been sur rounded ly men at night, and several men stationed inside, the same thing has happened as before. . Last Wednes day night, as one of the watchmen went on top of the boilers to turn a stop cock that lets the water into the boilers, he saw a man lying on top of the arch. He immediately drew a navy revolver and shot at him, and he says that he is cartaia ha hit him, but although they searched, they could find nothing ,of rum, irat eiaun tney touna niooa." How true, as Dr. Johnson says, that "every man endeavors with his mtmost care to hide his poverty from others and . Earl j Spring. . A hopofal bine was in the sky, So dull and blue before, Tho wind that whistled shrilly by ' Passed softly with a murmuring sigh, . . . Its revelry was o'er. : . , More steadfast new the sun's warm gaz. And all the myriad charms That waited tar his wooing rays, And lay through all the winter days Nestling in the earth's brown aims. . Peeped smiling forth; so sweet and shy . From out their hiding place; . -. Each had turned upward to the sky When he in kingly pride rode by, r j ' Its tiny, emerald face. " ' The brooklets locked, with ley keys. ? Now Joyous dashed along' ' ., And fleecy clouds in asore seas Went sailing by, while from the troee . We heard the robin's song. , The last pale, wasted snow-drif ts la Tearful upon the ground; ' And while they wept themselves away, With springing green the earth was gay - And glad with tuneful sound. All Sorts. " . , .. . , . ,. . ;v. t , ( Owed to spbing fresh violets..- ; Ague without fever is no great shakes.' ' A hbavt - BU8IMH88- importing ' Ele phants. '! Thk worth op a womin double you, Oman. .;. .. iit Oabuc eaters are now crowded in streetcars."' '"' What is the Spiritulists ' paper f (W)rapping paper. . ; They are harvesting barley now in Southern California. Therb are now 6,000 bushels of wheat at Daluth awaiting shipment. y A , Baitimobb beggar ... has retired from business with a fortune $26,000. Thk fourth son of Brcte Harte was born at Morristown last Monday. His oldest is about thirteen. - V ------ A soon step is often the first step of life taken by a little waif. . Questions op ran day one I or two? z, s or o ? able or ible f u in or n out ? Concerted movement The waving of a baton. ' A baby ' with twenty-eight toes has been born I in Stockton, Mo. ' What a character of corns he will be ! -.- A uttus man observed that he had two negative qualities r he never lay long ia bed and he never wanted a great coat. ., - St. Louis has ten thousand dogs. The natives wear a section of stovepipe on each leg during the mad dog season. '.-.- , We read a good deal in the papers of stylish turnouts in Washington. Butler's turnout, though, not stylish, has been much admired. ' , It's the fashion in Florida to wear gloves" worn out' at the tips of the fingers, ; in order better to corral the fieaS. ,: ..... . ... -...:-- j When a Detroiter was asked the other day by a traveller if he had ever been in Brooklyn he hastened to reply: "Do I look like one of that sort of men sir?". ,:v- -v:- A Chicago man thinks that the worst speller ought to get the Dictionary, and the winner should have a "wreath of sorrel, ""or some other garden sass, like them Greeks." ' ( - Wher a Western man gets a divorce from ; a. crusading and strong-minded, wife, the papers say, "Mr. So-and-so has Tesjgned his position as husband for Mrs. So-and-so." , "'- , Eveby man who mails a package subject to the new postage rates drops it into -the hole with the wish that Senator Hamlin had to sit for two hours on a hot shovel. Detroit Eree Eress. ' The average' gorilla of Central Afri ca, now points to Stanley and his band of explorers, and pathetically reminds his grand children that "it is what they may one' day expect to come to." - 1 Yxms have been constructed with nose pockets to allow the veils to be pinned back closely and yet set well on the face. In giving erders for the article the length of the nose is to be stated. "Don't call on me for three days," is what an Ashland girl posted on the front gate, as she further added: "I'm foing to eat some onions this week if never have another beau." . Jkxxxk kissed me -when we met. Springing from the chair she sat in ; - Tune, vou thief, who loves to get Sweet into your list, put that ia Say I'm ugly, say I'm sad : Say that health, and wealth have missed me Bay I m growing old, but add jenn Leigh BurJ. A Bbookxyk lady, whose husbandhas an unpleasant habit of railing at her. has hit upon the plan of calling in her servants when he begins to let out his temper, and then turning to him saying sweetly: "Now my dear, please go on with your remarks.' He doesn't ero on. at least not as he began. - Them is no end, the sun's last ray Fades in the golden west -Fades but to dam a brighter day -, Above some mountains crest. The light that for aa slowly dies, ; Gladdens with day seme other eyes. There is no end; the hours that cteat Hope from some loving heart, . 1 ' -New joys to other Uvea reveal, I And love's bright dreams impart. , The last day tor earth's weary child, m On dawning life hath sweetly smiled. ; There ia no end; the reatless tide ' Sweeps on forevermore " As singing on the ocean wide, . It breaks upon the shore. As rolls the tide across the deep. So love and anguish onward sweep. At a recent spiritual seanna in : Pjurf. Boston, a policeman succeeded in tvino- the medium so securely as to completely baffle the spirits, and, in response to a meeic appeal, nnaiiy unwound the rope. "Whtxk 5 a youne ladv from Nankin township was having her photograph taken, and just at the moment when it was required ot her to keep perfectly still, she suddenly threw n her arms and exclaimed: " Oh ! Lord sake, but I forgot to take this quid of gum out of my mouth!" : . . ,: "What a nuisance 1 " exclaimed a gentleman at a concert, as a young fop in front of him kept talking in a loud voice to a lady at his side,. Did yon refer to me, sir?" threateningly de manded the fop. " Oh, no I I mean the musicians there, who keep np such a noise with their instruments that I can't hear your conversation," was the stinging reply. ,:, The folly of inflicting French hrases on a country postmaster was remon strated the other day, when a letter dropped into the Lasgsport (Ind.) Aost -directed to a - young man - i ; . vUle, . -was -sent by by the intelligent officer in charpe to Evansaille, and there detained till too late to aeoomplish its intended purpose ' .' Dx7bot their forty years' wanderinc in the desert, the cUes of the larr--ltes did sot wear out; and more t,'.-.-y one tail hearabonts thicks thai 10211 similar phenomenon ean alone aeoorjai for the tiailness of tra&s ia tbtelr lias, . JSvsion Trwutoriptt