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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1888)
EUGENE CITY GUARD. X.U CAMPBELL. . . Proprietor. EUGENE CITY. OREGON.' MouK than two hundred thousand bird fckins are now shown at the Natural History Museum in London. TELEGRAPHIC. Am Epitoni of thb Principal Evknts Ktw Attractiwq Public Iwterkst. An immense swarm of bees took possession of Samuel 8. Brown's house in Northfleld, L. I. The family ytu driven out, and the bees bad to be smoked,out. Till other night a policeman in Chicago was startled by Die appear unco of what he thought was a ghost, but which proved to be a young lady who hud got up in her sleep, and was walking the streets. ' At Little Rock, 8. C, Mrs. Verein, aged 25, gave whisky and chloroform no her husband, a man of sixty, and when this failed to kill bim she doed him with pounded glass. That killed him, and the young woman is now in jail ' i A Jamaica, N. Y., young lady for some time past has placed her en gagement ring in the toe of her shoe every night for safe keeping. A day or two ago she took the shoe to a cobbler for repairs, but did not miss her ring until the honest shoemaker restored it to her. A woman in Argentine, Mich., bos terrorized the whole neighborhood. She keeps fire-arms in her house to shoot any one who tries to arrest her ; her landlord cannot collect his rent, and no one dares to refuse her any thing she asks for fear lest she will kill him or set his house on fire. A well-known Belfast, Me., firm, roevntly roceived a cur-load of white wood from Tennessee. When the car was opened a hen was fonnd inside, nearly dead. After some cure Biddy came to and is now all right. The car was between two and three weeks in transit. Frank Dehhon, , while at Lake Minnetonka lutely, in looking for frogs for bait, caught one which a scientist, who happened to see it, paid $1 for. The ecnliurity of the frog was that it had no loft eye nor a place for one, and the man who bought it will have it stuffed and exhibit it as a curiosity. A Biddgford, Mb., family bad beefsteak for supper the other night, and while sawing away on a piece that seemed tougher than usual one of the family fouud an army and navy cent firmly imbedded in the moat. It is supposed the cent was hot into the ox, and that the wound iuul afterward healed. Tub big Nova Scotia (timber raft, whose owners are not alarmed at the fate of the Loary raft, will soon be launched and started on its way to New York City. It is made of 30, 000 sticks bound togethor, making a raft 700 feet long, with spars from 25 to 175 feet in length. It will be towed but will also bo manned and rigged to sail Two perfectly pure white birds, which were caught in Galena, 111., have boon examined by local ornithol ogists, who pronounce them gen nine robins. These exceedingly rare speci mens of the feathered tribo are about two-thirds grown, and were taken from a nest known to have been built by robins of the ordinary red-breasted variety. ' Ethel Jonks, of China, Maine, had just been set out doors by tier mother, when Bhe was beard to scream. Run ning quickly, her mother saw a rooster pecking at hor head, and the blood running down over her face. She found throe large holes deuted into Iter head, made by bis spurs, and thinks he would have killed the child if she bad not rescued htir. Accokpinq to a writer in Black wood's Magaxine the gypsies of Tran sylvania teach young bears to dance by placing them on heated iron plates while the trainer plays on the fiddle. The bear lifting up its legs alternately to escape the heat, involuntarily ob serves the time markod by the violin, nd eventually learns to lift his legs whenever be hears the music. Charles Finkkkton, of the town of Corina, Minn., in digging for a cel lar came across the remains of seven persons in a good state of prescrva' tion. They were fouud in a kind ' of mound, were buiied with their beads down, and were from seven to eight feet in height, and must have been placed there at least two hundred tars ago, as on top of the mound was lue stump of au eld dm Iroo two feet iu diameter. The Governor of Tennessee bs par doued Dan Hennessy, of "guld-brick" fame, who was sentenced to five years' term in the penitentiary for swindling O. F. Noel out of f 0,000. Another battle has occurred be tween the Jones and Green factions in Hancock county, Tenn., and the re sult is that there are two les$ of the Green family. The boiler of the steamer Fulton exploded Thursday, in the Gulf, off the mouth of the Mississippi. The captain, the pilot and two deck hands were killed. , Two earthquake shocks were felt at Yuma, Ariz. One was quite severe, lasting several seconds, and accom panied with low rumbling sounds. No damage was done. Michael Murry, short stop of a baseball club, was bit by pitched bull and killed at Rochester, N. Y. His neck was broken from the force of tho ball. Capt. Nat KinDey, the famous ehief and founder of the "Bald Knobbers" organization, waa shot and instantly killed at Ozark, Mo., by Bill Miles, an anti-Bald-Kuobber. Miles escaped. 1 Mrs. Ofarrie Harrington, wife of a Chicago druggist, committed suicide by pouring oil over her clothing and then Betting fire to it. She had been in ill health for some time, and fre quently hud attacks of dementia. Sherman Reeves arrested his nephew Sherman Grim, for disorderly conduct, at Oakland, Ind. A fight ensued, and both drew revolvers. Grim was shot three times and will die. Reeves waB slightly wounded. I Billy Cole, who" shot Wm. Mont gomery and Charles Grant, was taken from jta.il by masked men at Guide Rock, Neb., and hanged on the rail road bridge. Both of Cole's victims are still alive. In a quarrel at Tuceon, Ariz., one Mexican was stubbed to death and another mortally wounded by a Mexi can named Jesus Figueroa. Tho murdered man was trying to make peace when stubbed. A most severe earthquake was felt at Winthrop, Maine, continuing thirty seconds. The earth shook vio lently, swaying buildings and rattling dishes and furniture. A second shock was felt later on,BOtnewhat lighter and of about the same duration. Major Howes and family of Boston, with Indian guides, forming a party of Ion, in three canoes, while passim? up-Tobique river, thirty-six miles from Andover, Maine, were fired on by unknown persons and Mrs. Howes was instantly killed. There is no clue to tho muderur. Howard O. Spencer was held in $6,000 and George Stringbam in $5,000 bonds, for the murder of Beret. Tike in August, 1859, at Salt Lake City, Utah. Stringham made a confession. He furnished Spencer his weapon to do the shooting, and helped Spencer escape. George Reid, of Orange, N. J., a newly elected fireman, did not res pond when an alarm rang. "Get up, Georgie; it won't do to miss your first fire," said his father, trying to wake him. But the young fellow did not stir, and upon touching his face, the father fouud him cold and dead. Julie Clermont, has been arrested on a charge of having stolen $25,000 by selling goods to diilerent parties at Guaymas, Mex., and appropriating the funds to himself. He confessed to stealing $8,000, but it has been as certained that he has deposited in several of the largest houses $19,000. A serious accident ; occurred on a railway near Springfield, Ohio. A train, consisting of eight freight, two passenger cars and two sleepers, struck a broken rail. The engine and every car were derailed. The Bleepers, both carrying pussengcra, were thrown down tho embankment. Four pas sengers were injured. Worth Jackson, a lunatic, who had been placed in a bare and close apart ment, ended his career at Cheyenne, Wyo., by gathing his throat with bits of glass obtained by breaking a lump chimney. Jackson, armed with a Winchester rille, six-shooter aud bowi knife, was captured by a ranchman near here, after firing several Bhots at passersby. Fostoflice authorities at Chicago, having in charge the box robbery af fair have completed a partial list of notes, drafts, money orders, aud other negotiable papers found iu Ober kampf's rooms. So far it foots up over $250,000. The inspector is satis fied that the aggregate value of the stolen documents recovered will be fully a million dollars. The sheriff of Crook county, Wyo., arrived at Joilet, 111., with Jim O'Con nor, a horse Ihief, sentenced to three years' imprisonment. While coming through Iowa on the fast train with bis hands and legs iroued O'Conuor jumped through a car window and tried to make his escape. The train was stopped and be was quickly cap tured. Escaping gas had filled 'the picture gallery in the west wing of the resi dence of F. C. Denney, atElmira, N. Y and when Mrs. Denney, before en tering the gallery, stepped iuto a niche and touched an electrie ap pliance for lighting the gas, a terrific explosion followed, blowing the roof off the gallery and strewing the grounds about the house with glass, iron aud limbers. Furniture was blown through Hie hallway like leaves. Plato glass windows aud walls were biokeu iu neatly every part of the house. AGRICULTURAL. Devoted to thb Interests or Farmers and Stockmen. MARKET-REPORT. Reliable Quotations Carefvllt Re vised Evert Week. Ewes that have weaned their lambs may be fattened very easily if given two meals a day of grain with plenty of (trans in the pasture. Radishes may be had at all periods. Use plenty of manure and grow them quickly, so as to have them crisp and tender. All the leguminous plants that have been tried make good ensilage, but they are so highly nitrogenous as to make too rich a food to use alone iu any quantity. Keep squashes and pumpkins away from cantaleups and water melons. In fact, it is best to grow no pumpkins on a farm where melons are raised, as the bees carry pollen from one plant to another. The hoe may now be used with ad vantage both on beets and carrots. The spaces between the rows can be cleaned with a cultivator, but the boe should be used to clean out grass and weeds between the plants. Young corn makes an excellent green munurial crop for plowing uu der, but the seed is expensive. Sor ghum may be used also, and the seed for a few acres will cost but little. Sow it thickly and plow it under when the plants are about two feet high. It is not desirable to pasture cows in woodlands. The grass grown un der the shade is less nutritious, and the animals are apt to find many wild plants, the flavor of which spoils the milk for any uso. Tiiis is especially true of woods where wild garlic abounds. Many cases of milk fever may be traced to the manner in which the cows are fed before calving. If the cow is waiting to come in, and has been dried off, she will require but very little grain. The best food is grass, with a light mess of moistened bran at night. If too fat the chances are that sue will have milk fever. In a majority of cases the loss of young chicks and turkeys may be traced to lice. At this season, when the weather is becoming very warm, lice multiply rapidly, and a few days only are necessary to have the entire flock infested. Constant vigilance should be exercised in order to pre vout lice from destroying the young poultry. This is the time when a close search must be made for borers in trees. They can be more easily destroyed uow than later on. Remove the earth from the trees to the depth of six inches around the trunk, search for the borer and fill up with coal ashes, as the borer does not work on trees where wood ashes havo been freely used. All grass crops make the best hay if cut before the seed-heads form. When a plant produces seed it has performed its mission and stored much of its nutritious matter in the seed. To secure the largest amount of nut it on in hay the grass should be cut while the stalks and blades contain the elements that would be directed to the formation of seed. Old strawberry fields soon become overrun with weeds. This can only be prevented by pulling the weeds out between the plants as soon as the crop of berries is picked, at the same time working between the rows well with a cultivator. If all the weeds are pulled out as fast as they appear, se as to prevent them from seeding, there will be but few of them next season. Look carefully after the grafts set the past spring, and give them timely attention. Remove any shoots that start on the stock, so that they may not rot the graft. A hot ticulturul au thority tells us that a graft should b i treated as if it were a young tree in stead of in the ground. When there are several buds upon the graft one will often get the start of the others and outgrow them. Check this by pinching the ends of the shoots of the exuberant grower. Prof. Roberts, of Cornell Univer sity, speaking on milk production, said the dairy farm must be fertile if we are to produce milk of tho best quality. People have an idea that rough, poor pasture lands are fitted to produce good milk, but this is a mis take, lie believes there is more value obtained from the bran than there would be if the whole wheat should be fed to cows. Good land will produce good plant, and it is econ omy to feed them to poor animals. What we want is a business cow, not one that will go off on a strike every four or fivo or six months in the year. A farmer who uses fsrtilizers is pre sumed to know what he is about. If he applies thetu to an entire field it is because previous experience has satis tied him that they pay. This being so, it is important that the fertilizer be evenly distributed so that the great est proportionate good may result. Much deiends on the condition of the fertilizer aa to dryness and fineness, and something also on the kind of drill used and its condition. Even if force feed will not distribute evenly a the fertilizer has been left in it to rust and ruin it At the best there will be some imperfection in distribution. In a long bout the larger amount of fertilizer put on at each end has a tendency to pack, and will not run through so easily as if less were put in at a time and more frequently. On account should intentional breaks in distribution be made for experiment. There will ptvbably be too many places where the fertilizer was missed accidentally. The uneven distribu tion of fertilizer causes uneven growth of grain aud uneven ripeuinc, still further detracting from iu puality. WHEAT Valley, $1 30$1 31 Walla Walla, $1 201 22J. BARLEY Whole, $1 101 12J; ground, per ton, 325 0027 60. OATS Milling, 3031 Jo. ; feed, 44 45o. HAY Baled, $10$12. SEED Blue Grass, 1416c.; Tim othy, 9J10o.; Red Clover, 14 15c. FLOUR Patent Roller, $4 00; Country Brand, $3 75. EGGS Per doz, 18o. BUTTER Fancy roll, per pound, 25c; pickled, 2025c; inferior grade, 1525i CHEESE Eastern, 1620o. Ore gon, 14 16c; California, 14 Jc. VEGETABLES Beets, pw sack, $1 50 ; cabbage, per lb., 2Jc. ; carrots, persk., $1 25; lettuce, per doz. 20c; onions, $1 00 ; potatoes, per 100 lbs., 90c.$l; radishes, per doz., 1520c; rhubarb, per lb., 6c. HONEY In comb, per lb., 18c; strained, 5 gal. tins, per lb. 8Jc. POULTRY Chickens, per doz., $4 004 50 ; ducks, per doz., $5 00 7 00; goese, $6 008 00; turkeys, per lb., 12Jc. PROVISIONS Oregon hams, 12Jc per lb.; Eastern, 1313c; Eastern breakfast bacon, 12e. per lb.; Oregon 1012c. ; Eastern lard, 1011 Jc. per lb.; Oregon, lO.Jc. GREEN FRUITS Apples, $ GO 85c; Sicily lemons. $6 006 50 California, $3 505 00; Naval orauges $6 00; Riverside, $4 00; Mediterra nean, $4 25. DRIED FRUITS Sun dried ap ples, 7Jc per lb. ; machine dried, 10 11c; pitless plums, 13c,; Italian prunes, 1014c. ; peaches, 12J14c.; raisins, $2 402 50. WOOL Valley, 1718c; Eastern Oregon. 915c HIDES Dry beef hides, 810c; culls, 67c; kip and calf, 810c; Murrain, 10 12c; tallow, 334c. LUMBER Rough, per M, $10 00: edged, per M, $12 00; T. and G. sheathing, per M, $13 00 ; No. 2 floor ing, per M, $18 00; No. 2 ceiling, per M,$i8 00; No. 2 rustic, per M, $18 00; clear rough, per M, $20 00 ; clear P. 4 S, per M, $22 50 ; No. 1 flooring, per M, $22 50; No. 1 ceiling, per M, $22 50; No. 1 rustic, per M, $22 50; stepping, per M, $2o 00; over 12 inches wide, extra, $1 00; lengths 40 to 50, extra, $2 00; lengths 50 to 60, extra, $4 00; 14; lath, per M, $2 25; 1 J lath, per M, $2 50. SALT Liverpool grades of fine quoted $18, $19 and $20 for the three sizes; stock salt, $10. BEANS Quote small whites, $4 50; pinks, $3; bayos, $3; butter, $4 50; Limas, $4 50 per cental. COFFEE Quote Salvador, 17c; Costa Rica, 1820c.; Rio, 1820c; Java, 27Jc. ; Arbuckle's's masted, 22c, MEAT Beef, wholesale, 2J3c; dressed, 6c; sheep, 3c; dressed, 6c; hogs, dressed, 89c; veal, 67c. PICKLES Kegs quoted steady at $1 35. SUGAR Prices for barrels; Golden C,6ac. ; extra C, 6c. ; dry granulated, 7gc ; crushed, fine crushed, cube and powdered, 7 Jc. ; extra C, 6Jo. ; halves and boxes, o. higher. SOME OTHER OCCASION. A Darky Who, In Hla Opinion, Waa Entire. ly Free from FUea. 'I should like to hev a pusson 'rest ed fur false pretenses," he said, as he entered the Ninth Avenue station yes terduy, hat in hand. "What did he pretend?" asked the Borgeant. "It's a gttocer down de street, sar! Three days ago, as I was a-pussin1 his place, he halted me an1 said: Moses, if you will tote off dem ashes I will glve'you a watormellyon.' "I sprung at de chance, sah. I tot ed them ashes, an1 he gin me de in ell yon." "Then whore's the false pretenses?" "In do fuckt, sah, 'dat when I pur ceeded to 'zummine dat mellyon, sah, I found it hud been plugged." "Yes." "An' dar' was no mo' ripeness about it don about dis yero old hat." "Did he warrant it ripe?" "No. sah." "Then there Is no false pretense and you have no case." " 'Zactly. sah. I 'spected It, sah. an' do you know what I did 'fore I come down yere?" "No." "Ate de hull bizinegs up, slick an' clean, sah! An' Ize gwino down to tell the grocer of it. 'An' Ize gwine to let him undorstan' dut he didn't gum game dis chile, sah no, sah not on dat occasion!" tn troit Free iVw. The man with" twins Is deucedly happy. A'.'O. lScayutu. Society is necessary to man, even If it be only that of a dog. A boasting tongue is the manifest sign of a cowardly heart You needn't puck Hp any worries. You can got them anywhere as you go along. As we may safely depend upon the word of a trrthful man, so we mny safely depend upon tho doings of a faithful man. Beauty and sadness always go to gether. Nature thought beauty too rich to go forth upon the eiu-th without a meet alloy. OWc XucJonalJ. COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Pbincipallt to Washington Territory and California. An Italian miner, Giovanni Govesg lia, while rolling logs as the Zeile mine at Jackson, Cal., was sunstruck, and died three hours afterward. . .luhn Boone, a suilor. who came to Tacouia, W. T., from Sun Pedro, Cal., became intoxicated anu was run over and killed in Northern Pacific yards. A Chinaman, an employe on the Southern Pacific at Merced, Cal, while attempting to jump on a freight tiain, slipped and fell, the cars pussing over bth his legs near the thigh. A young man named E.n.'st Staysa wu flflnidpntallv shot at Pasadena. Cal., by a rifle in bis own bands while taking it out oi a wagon, lie dieu almost instantly. M. Trayner was arrested at Los Angeles, Cal , on suspicion of shoot ini? V. Eiman. The victim will mob- ablv die. The cause of the shooting is sun unitnown. Frank Beaumont assaulted Frank Cox, at Pcautano, Cal., who shot him, the bullet entering lieaumont s tnroat and coming out at the back of the neck, severing the spine. Sam Probst, the 9-year-old son of B. Probst, of Colusa, Cal., fell off the river bank adjoining the town and was drowned. The body has been re covered. FHm! Biiile. 37 veiira old. was drowned at Stockton, Cal., while bath ing in otocktou chunnel. from his actions, aa seen bv ueonle on a vacht. 1 4 i - - it is supposed he was seizsd with cramps. At Fairbank station, near Nogales, Ariz., Sum and George McLaren, saloon-keepers, got into a quarrel with a Mexican over the price of a drink. The two saloon-keepers fired seven shots into the Mexican, killing him. both men were arrested. During a buggy ride at Sacramento, Cal.. with Jack McGrath, Miss Hattie Trunnely, feeling a pistol in McGrath's coat, attempted to pull it out from his jioeket. The pistol wus discharged, and the ball lacerated the boues of one of Miss Trunnely 's hands and passed through the other. Dr. Richard L. Pinching, a promi nent physician and surgeon of Sun FrancUco. was burned to death at Cherry Creek, Nev., where be had been spending a two mouths' vacation with the family of a friend. The fa tal accident oecurred in tho early morning. Henry Clay Brown, a ranchman, while sitting asleep on the truck near San Fernando station, Cal., was struck by the overland express. On account of a eurve he was not seen till the train was upon him. He was taken to Lob Angeles hospital, where the in juries were pronounced fatal. The loss by the fire at Stockton, Cal., was about $100,000; insurance about $b0,000. The Shippee Agricul tural Works, which used the burned building for a warehouse, had about fifty combined harvesters stored there, and a number of grain cleaners, all of which were burned. An old gentleman named P. J. Palmer, who died at National City, Cal., has in accordance with implicit instruction left by him, had his body put iu a heavy-weighted coffin, carried out to sea, and after appropriate funeral ceremonies, consigued to the bottom of the Pacific In some localities in Mexico the people are suffering a plague iu the way of an invasion of rats, which go iuto towns and villages iu large num bers, destroying nearly everything in the way. In some instances destruc tive conflagrations have been started by rats getting into places where matches are kept, and setting fire to houses. An autopsy was held in the case of John Moata, the lodging-house keeper who was beaten by Curl Foustson, a sailor, and died, at Sun Fruncisco. The autopsy showed that death wus cuused by erysipelus, but the disease wus not due to the blows given by Foustson. A warrant will not be is sued for ihe arrest of the latter, who is now on his way to Tacoma. Two youthful horse-thieves were captured a-. Seattle, W. T. Three of them had stolen three valuable horses and taken to the woods, where the boys and horses were found by Wm. Buuch, ownet of the horses. One of the boys ran, but the others were turned over to the police aud were later severely lectured by the judge and allowed to go, as neither was over 10 years of age. The boys' names are Jo Jandos, Charlie Dietzd and Eddie George. Arthur W. Dickens, who is believed to be a nephew of Charles Dickens, the English novelist, was found dead in his room at Los Angeles, Cal., with a bullet hole in his right temple. He came here from Denver, Col., about a year ago. He left a letter saying he was perfectly sane when about to take his life, and that (.having lived over fifty years as a Bohemian, being weary Of life, and finding his financial rela tions straitened, he takes this way of solving the problem. Arthur Peequeira, aged about 19 years, committed suicide at Nogales, Ariz., by shooting himself through the head with a revolver. He expired in stantly. He was a son of Ex-Gov. Petqueira of Sonora, Mexico, and heir to a large fortune, which he would have received on the attain ment of his 21nt birthday. He left no explanation for committing the deed, but it is understood that Petqueira held a quarrel with a woman to whom he became attached, lut who threat ened to di.-card him unless he gave tier more money. WASTED SUNBEAM A SogrctlT. Artlcl. 1 on Ho The relation of sunshine ..... oruria OI IL to health rmuury ana a half ago - thut it was theoiv.VJ' purified the venous blood ofh' matter, and that the same eW absorbed by the corpuscle,, veyed through every part 0( tern for use in Its compl4 processes. No one knew t feeling power of oxygen J, body, nor, until quite the sunshine itself was one ol t valuable disinfectants In nil,. Within lute years we hav i more curable and less liable t ...1, A I . . nueu iruuieu in Shelter-tt'DU 1 our Ernies or hospitals; ani more and more curing for tt . tion f ourdwclllntfs and school and churches, preferring the' side of our houses for elcepin. ''' We are building our cities streets and providing acccat sunshine and pure air in w parks. We nre, moreover, (W more scientific and faithful pV and looking out better for ft. dition of our cellars. But we ha reached the limit of whut is pos, desirable in this mutter. Can not architectural Inpinit, trive some method of using thr sands of acres of house-topg, a roofs, now so nsofnl in ... ouuni, door protection, can be made tdi ally useful, at certuin affording out-door recreation and , tection from invalidism? Can i same skill contrive new designs upper' and most salutary stories o' dwellings, playing-rooms and sc rooms, aaaptod for the winter itj but so fashioned that too intense can be excluded in summer? In the more spacious dwelling, j upper floors could be revolufo ventilating shafts introduced; V windows made to run the width t house both front and rear; resit cessibillty to the roof afforded; i: least a part of these floors mi tractive to children and invalid, pleasure resort might ornament residence; neighborly consent c wldon the range, and turf and t brighten the plain. For the t grade of tenement houses, such ! air facilities would probably be k with delight by the inmates, Sjk moonlight evenings could have is aspect; and round a family -k groups might gather, to read, t engage in games, and thus a honk pleasure could quiet restlesj sp! craving questionable or illicit ts. ments. Youth's Companion. HINDOO SAVAGERY. Barbarlo Ignorant- and Bratallt; Jwl the Nutlvei of India. Ihe leading Bombay ne'v draws attention to two recent w ing incidents as conclusively pro; the imperious necessity for social form and enlightenment in India be.' it would be possible to wac. electoral privileges. In one case tenant farmer, in the presence olw assembled villagers, amid the m of songs ond beating ol arc: deliberately gouged outtheejeso! young wife, who was pinioned tor purpose by the neighbors, beau. hud been told by a demon that . would be replaced by gold eyes. ' superstition was shared by the village and neighborhood, inch tho police, who alleged that the' fortunate woman had perished!' cholera. In the second case the was a temple midway between C dergaut and Secunderabad. T buffulos were hacked and t into pieces, which were st all over the road, and the i pie in the immediate vicinit; the lacerated animals were dak and dancing about in their b while others, holding the yetblft lesrs and ioints. were whirling: round about their heads, and ge latincr furiously. A fourth an; which was being cut up or worn was still alive, and added his F bellowings to the horrible din. A tie further on some two or three: with hndioa niikud and painted, k goat by the legs, while from -the living ana quivering tearing away with their teeth, ntf ful by mouthful, the bleeding t squirting and sprinkling it over adjacent crowd. Other goate ana f aloes were close at hand, waiting turn to supply the horrid sacrifice, complete these Bucebunalian .r" i'pnw.1 nf womnn. aDnarently IB' cated with drugs, with hairdishe wild in mien, and besmeared hlnofl iwrfrtrmftd a kind Of S dance, accompanying each mo" with violent shrieks. The object o these loathsome orgies, whicB wltnosmwl iinil nnrtichjated in Of dreds of persons, was. we are l appease the Hindoo goddess w&o in her hand the scourge of smau-i Calcutta Letter. Chicago Society Notes. nr ,.,nu Mr. Sort to Mrs. Southside. , c -v-.!.. ..T nave DM jur. nuruniuir- - -v the pleasure of meeting Mrs- before, I believe." Mrs. S. -Pardon me, member." tr a. moment Mrss. (after profund nUf 'j "Oh, I beg a thousona recall the occasion now. lu vlrv first hubaud. I'm SUCJ ' , little thing. So glad to see .v. is the present Mr. tt'on'iingloa Critic I dont 'orthsid h 1 -n Bl it bus .at T ve ;ty to I .rh wil i m 'n lVC: maj '.me ;lVt ,ltl to ilpl at 4 In 1 mi an ..ft y m muli lit f br tit ' nd l lh :iou ;dt in u nln; ,'MU pil ash Tlx ..tit irrr Yo up lilt I .of V tOi .111 de hhr cd. W :e I c ngo fret I W ,ip- "01 fcrae: It le .n a I'r nil (t1 m Hi