EUGENE C1TT GUARD. LUCAXrBUL. freprletwr. EUGENE CITY. OREGON. BEATING A BUNCO. A Orn Coautrrman XtrlSM Itlf Snsp I t'hleaa' . It'i curloui feature In human nature that while a man will peril his life to assist a stranger who Is being forcibly robbed, be will turn ahout and dolllit in seeing that ssme mun taken In and done for by a "akin" gumo or a bunco man. On the next bench to u in Lin coln Park, Chicago, one day last fall, aat a long, Inan, lank stranger who had hayseed and onion top scattered all over him to prove hli hailing place, and he gave hlmscvf away In every move ha made. Pretty aoon a slick young mus approached blra and extended bis hand and exclaimed: "Well, well, but bow are you Slo ven?" "How ar1 ye?" replied the man, as be looked up In a puzzled way. "What! Don't you know mo?" "Why, your face looksklndor famllur, but I can't place ye." "Can't place mo! I am William Scott, nephew of the Judgo of prohato In llrassvllle! I saw you hundreds of times in the two yearn I lived with my uncle." "Oh, yen. I thought I bad aeen you before. And you know mo right olTV "The mlnuto I act cyos on you." "Ilow'a every body down there?" "All tolcrsblo. You live berer' "Yea. I look after about fifty house and atorea here for a capltullst" 'Hlunlil You niunt got big wages." "Oh, a hundred a week." "You do! llygum! but you are smart er than fox trapsl Meblie you can help tig) to a Job?" "I think ao. Indeed, I wa going to make you an offer." We were on to him from the Htart as a bunco man, but had no thought of In terfering. "Hayseed" should take the papers and keep posted. I "How would you like to eonie hero and assist me at a salary of tlOO pur month?" queried bunco after a bIL "Je whltuknrl but you don't mean it!" "I do." ! 'tllve us yer band on It! Hay I'll work all day and sit up all night for tfiom wages!. Kay, . will yo bind the bargain right now?" j "I will. That Is, I H I "No flunking out now! I've got a hun dred dollar Mil hero, and I'll give ye fifty to hind the bargain. Yes, by gosh I I'll give ye sixty!" "I was going to say that I ought to see my employer II rut, but I know it will be all right. I will take your flu, but only for a day or two, as I happen be a Utile short Just now. You know where the I'ulmor Hoiiho Is, of course?" "That all-flrod big stono tavern?" "Yes. Meet mo there in one hour from now to sign a contract and begin work." i "I'll be right thar, and I'll work ,llke a boss, (lln me 111) out of this hill." He handed out a bill, and the young man scarcely glanced at it, so great was his hurry to return the forty and get away. I think bo mistrusted ui al though we pretonded not to sea or hear any When be was out of sight "Huyteod" caiuo over to us with a grin on his face, and queried: j "How did I act It, boys?" "What!" , . "My young-man -from-llin-turnip-flelds." "Hut you -you H "1'ui from Cincinnati. I do a Utile business with tho threo cards and the shells when home. Thought I'd seo what they were mado of In Chicago." "Hut you gave biin a hundred dollar bill." "Exactly one of the counterfoils of 1874. I bad fifteen of them once. I'm Just $40 ahead, I'm going now. If ho should return before you leavo tell him that 'Moven's has gono to meet him at Mr. "V.nnr's big alone tavern. ' Two b and red a month! Wake, snukes, but hain't I jlst struck a goluonda w ith a blgU!"-N. Y. Hun. DEGRADED SAVAGES. Thing Toltl lr I'r. Carl l.iimliults About Uurrnilsiul Cimiillmls. i Iteauty exists rarely 'iinngcunnihnls; in fact, their features are distorted and coutrac ted as It tho ligature of their faces had been out when they were chil dren like Umoc of the horrible Nero In Hugo's "L'Homuie qui Kit" It is on account of their unhealthy ' food that children are weaned late, and j It even happen that a child Is nursed at lis mother's breast with the next older brother or sinter. The advent of a baby Is not regarded with favor and infanticide is therefore 1 very common. Horrible as it may sound to civilised ears, mothers during a scarcity of food will often eat their own children. They tattoo their children In tht crudest way, cutting parallel lines across the breast and stomach with sharp stones and clam-shells, and keep ing the wounds from healing by filling them up with ashes or rhsrcoal. The shoulders are cut In tho same manner until they look like epaulets. Cultivation of the soil Is unknown among the aborigines; they subsist 00 wild honey, snakes, roots, lititrds and edible beetles, with an occasional wild animal. These beetles are broiled in bot ashes until they are brown and Mr. l.umholu says they taste better than a European omelette when cracked open. The position of women among these aavages Is a very subordinate one. They are expected to provide the dally food and sally forth on long expeditions for this purpose. If the husband gath ers game or litards or such delicacies he keeps the 111 fur himlf, while bi wife and child must aubmit on vegetables and berries. They frequently flog their wives bru tally, and If she runs away to some one more kind, the husband Is privileged to malm bor when he sees her. This la wnat they call "marking" a woman. Two wivea ia the usual matrimonial equipment of a warrior, and some hsve five or six. A girl Is delivered over to her husband when she 1 nine or ten years old, and aa long as they remain young they are sura of good treatment N. Y. Journal. "Money talks." of course; hut a couple of ulckcl In tbe contribution box from philanthropist In the front pew make mora noise than five-dollar roles. N. 0. Ilcayjne. It I not thoiwlit to make much differ- j ence h t'ier a hoy' sk n is clean or not, i jiiilin from the genernl cnr m in bet ing l'.ut this ia rontrs-y in (u't.for it hsa u aii!v Je'iionriMtrJ that sn au ! imal wnh a clean ikin dt Lot ronvitue aa nm h one n kept clean and give j better riura for the lood eaten. I DCNRATBN RANCH A Story of American Frontier Life. By OapU CHARLES CTN8, U. a A, Author uThCotonr$ Oaughttr Trent (As Runkt." "Tht Drltr,m SU. And now those hounds who were out on the right flunk are up In line with tbe very leaders, and bounding along the level at the side of the ravine, yet keep lug wary eye upon the chase Ho. too. the horsemen. Making a deep curve in the ravine five hundred yards ahead, and confident that Hunny will blindly rush along his winding track, they strike out across the prairie, gaining twenty horee lengths hy the move, and now, with two or three of the oldest hounds, I'arke, Dnna and Mrs. Belknap are darting on breast of the chase. "Keep out there to Uie left, some of your ahouu Dana. "He'll spring up the other side quick as he sees us. Drive him back." And, obedient to the signal of his waving hand, two of the leading troopere breast the slopes to the east, cnlling hulf dozen hounds with them. Darting around a bend, Bunny's agonized eyes catch sight of the hound and horse on the right hank, and like a flush he whirls, scamp er up the opNMite slope, and shoots out on the prairie aguin just In time to meet the hounds and troomr who havi an ticipated the move. Now he I wild and demoralized. Once more he dive Into tbe ravine and end the dust flying Into the very faces of his pursuers, for now the leading hound are so close that the foremimt jaw are anapping the air at his every bound. A quick turn to the right and up the eloe throws these leader far too fur beyond; they sweep around In long curve; but, though he ha thrown them off. the hunted, senseless, helplcn wretch has forgotten the trailers In the rear; they spring across the angle he ha made, and are close aa the original pur- uers, and much the fresher. Wildly, madly now he twist and turns, first up one bank, then the other. Far to the rear the coming riders see the signs of hi breuking down, mark the scurrying to and fro of horse and hound. "Come on! tliey shout. "Lies gone now, anu w can be In at tho dentlil" Mr. Law rence on one side of the ravine ia as far to the front as Mrs. Hoik nap on the other. One of them must lose the brush; he cannot die on both aides, at once. The dark beauty ha had more thnn one rasping disuptioiiitmeiit In the lust two days; it would be intolerable now that, after all, Mrs. Lawreuce, and not she. should prove the victor. Hunny makes one frantlo rush up the slope to the right, and, with half a dozen hounds at his very heels, spins In front of her eyes, catches sight of two fresh antagonist fronting him, whirl sud denly ahout to the right, and almost dive under her horse' heaving barrel as he once more plunges into the ravine, down the rugged alnpo, up the gentle ascent to the other sldo. There half a dozen long, lean muzzle gleam close be hind hi in; he fuller, wavers; a sharp nose 1 thrust underneath him aa he runs, a quick tons sends him kicking, strug gllng Into the air, and In another lnrtu.nl, wllh piteous but liiulfectual xiueuk and pleading, he la the center of a tumb ling, anapping, fung gnashing group of hounds, and his Utile life is torn out al most liefore Grulium can leap from hli saddle, heut thorn buck with the visor ol his cup, then, seizing the still quivering body by the legs that would have saved could that empty head only have direct ed, holds poor Hunny aloft in front of Mrs. Lawrence a snorting steed aud pro claims her "(Jueen of the Chase. And this, too, has Mrs. Holknup to see nd strive to smile, while down In her heart she knows that it could not so Imvs nappeuud hud I'erry come. CnAITEIt XL re noon, somew hat comforted in oon acience because of his elf denial of the morn ing, Ned I'erry scanned the distant prairie in search of the hunk It was nesrly lun cheon time, and he expected to llnd th party making Ita way to the little stream whither the Uutketa, boxes and hampers, had been dixilched by wagon aom hours liefore; but w hen he sighted th quartermaster driving homeward In hli buggy he learned from that bulky vet eran that rabbit after rabbit had been run, and that the whole party had dually decided to give dog and horses a coo) drink down In the Monee valley before, aturting northward across Hie prairie. "They must be getting down Into th valley two or three miles east of the ranch just about now, and will go due north from there, unless they stir up more guuie along the Monee. If I were you," said the quartermaster, "I'd rids over to the lunch stand. You won't gel there much before the crowd," I'erry thanked him forth Information, but, m far from accepting hi advice, th young ofllcer turned his horse's hrsd in the direction of iHinraven, and wa speedily riding thither with an alacrity that he himself could hardly explain. in his brief talk with Hie colonel after parade on the previous evening I'erry had told Mm what he could of the char acteristics of Messrs. Mallland and Ewen. Hie odd letter which had been sent by them had given the commanding officer cause for much thought, and he was de sirous, evidently, of gathering from lerry'a observation a complete an Idea as was possible of their fife and surround inn. And still Perry bad found it Im possible to volunteer any dwwription of Vise Maitland; he could Dot bear to speak if her until until he knew more of the I oc tor's purpose in hia visits to the ranch. He had been detained by hia commander just long enough to mats it nscesMtry Vr him so go direct to the SpntgutV without leaving hia helmet and lr at out. They were wailing dinner tor lim aa it was, but air. Iklknap took do AViittV?f'J& UMNO eastward Just I.iai" bof. Vte o7 that eircurnrfance; whul she aaw s-as that he had avoided even pawling within hull of her puuza both UrforeaoJ ifier parade Now. though conscious of no Intention ( avoidance, I'erry rxle lorlli W the neeling of this day with some little mis Wing. In llu (li st place, h- knew tliut ie must sir! ve to make his rear with Jils slialuud lady: and yet. in view of til he hud seen and henrii l:i the pal forty fight hours, how utterly dwarfes lad that affair hi laughing flirtation with Mrs. Ii4-lkriu Iss.-omel Had any ne told him his utlciilions to her and jer marked preference for his sis-lety were mailers that cople were beginning 10 talk of some with sly enjoyment, tliers with genuine regret he would Save been grateful for the Information, instead of resentful, us, with most men, would be the case ninety-nine limes out 11 a humlred. Hut lie knew nothing of ;his, und had too Utile experience losus pect the c.-immeiits in circulation, bhe was uiost iiiien-sting up to the day be fore yesterday; he loved to ride or dance with her; he enjoyed a chut with her more thnn he could tell. A most sym pathetic and attentive listener wo Mrs. Belknap, and her voice wus low and in eel and full of vublly caressing tones. Hm bail mado him talk to her by the hour of his home, his hopes and ambi tious, his pmfi-Hsion and his prosccta, tnd had held him in 0 silken boudagt that he had no desire to escape. And yet, as ho rode, out on the breezy plain this brilliant day, he found ull thought of her distasteful, and his ryes, fur from searching for the flutter of her trim habit in the distant riding party, would go roaming; over the intervening ilmdcs and shallow down in tho Monee valley and seek the bare, brown walls of Dunraven far across the stream. It was Mid indeed that he should have sought this, the longest way round, on hi ride in quest of hi companion from tho fort Unco agnln he looked at the isolated clump of buildings from his post of ob servation on the bluff; once again he iw across the stream and through the triK S the liarU-d liurri'jr that hud caused both him and his mm .ch laceration of flesh and temper; once uuin ho saw the ibullow vulley winding uwuy to the touthtast, decked with its scrubby fringe work of Cottonwood and willow; hut this time, three miles away, It ao OUHtomed solitude was broken by groups of riders and darting black spocks of dogs, ull moving northward onco more snd already brcju-ting the slopes. He ihoiihl have tin tied away eastward and ridden across country lo join iheiu, but down here in the valley, only a short distance away, ulmorlicd in watching the hunting party, sat Mr. Ewen on a pawlej; und excited bay. Whatever oooluexs liis riilcr'iuight fuel at this dis covery, it was not sluircd by Nolan; he pricked up his ears and hailed his fel low quadruped with cordial and unaf fected pleasure, a neigh that the English bred horse was so utterly uninsiilar us to wiiirl nlsiul and nnswer with corro iKiiuling warmth. Kwen caught nt his heavy Derby and jerked It off his bullet bend with an air of mingled embarrass ment nnd civility, replacing it with similarly spasmodic haste. Perry coolly, hut with a certain easy grace, raised his forage cup in resKiiise In the salutation, and then, seeing the manager xlis I. Hik ing nl him ns though tie wanted to say something und did not know bow to I lo gin, gnve Nolan his head mid rode, dow n to short hailing distance. "W'o meet 011 neutral ground out hero. Mr. 10 wen 1 siipHwu your exclusive employer over yonder can hardly pro hibit your answering civil inquiries after his health?" And, though he meant to be distant, Perry found Idinself smiling at the oddity of the situation, "Do you know, I was just thinking alxuit you," answered Kwen, "nnd won dering whether you w ere with that party dowu yonder? Tim old gentleman is better, thanks. He had two pretty bud nights, but is coining around slowly." "And Miss Mitillumi-how is she'f" "Hither seedy. She bus hud good deal of cure and vexation of late, I fancy, id this ia no place for young girl, afivhow." "Well, you have some appreciation of the true character of Dunraven us a resi dunce, after ulir'answerry Perry. "Now, if you can give 1110 uuy gixfcl reason why she should live in this uttorly out-of-the-way place, you will lift weight from my mind." "Oh, they don't live hero, you know," poke Eweu, hurriedly. "She come hero only when her father docs. It I her own doin. She goes with him everywhere, anl will not leave hint. She's ull ho has, don't you know?" "1 don't know anything about It You Dunraven people soeui averse to any expression of Interest or courtesy from your fellowmen, but I'm freo to say I should like to know what on earth there Is in American cavalrymen to make them such ohjis-ts of aversion to your muster; and I would be glad to know how it is such a girl as thut i drugged into such a hole as yonder." Ewen s;it in silence a moment, study ing the young fellow's fuce. "You deserve a belter welcome there," he presently answered, "and I don't know thut 1 can do better than lo tell you ih milh what 1 know of it. And let uie tell you that if the old mau knew nf my sS'uking of it to any one, I'd lose the most lucrulive but least attractive place I ever had. Do you sec?" "Then perhaps you had better not tell me. I do not care to pry into secrets." "Oh, this is n secret. Il wus thut Hint drove him here; everybody knew it in England. You were mighty shabbily treated at the ranch, and you requited it by preventing what would have been bloody row, and by lending us a helping bund. Even the old mun recognize that; and I thiuk he'd be glad lo say so to you, and see you, if you were not Just what you are a cavalry officer." "Why. what on earth can we have done? If any of our cloth have wronged Mr. Maiil.md In any way, it is our right to know il and take it up." "it wasn't your chilli, old fellow." said Ewen. th.-twiug visibly, "but it wus the cavalry all tbe Mine that broke hi heart and his pride, and made his life the wrwk it K and drove him from his borne, shunning the si.-lit of his fellow men, all these vears xiling her. t. In the prime of her young life Mr IViry, there ar only three or four of us at Dunraven who know the st iry. but have only sympathy and pity nold.une for him. though he is the hardest vaster I ever served." "How did it happen?" "led Perry. "All through his son. There had been nor of them, but there was only th one Archie when the Lancers were ordered to South Africa, il waa a rounder, only 17, they tell me, and be naJ fust Wen gazetted to lib) Cornetcy. The old man wus all wrapped up in bim, for of the three boy the eldest had died only the month liefore the regiment wai ordered oh foreign service and the ec und had been killed In India. Both ilieae two who were gone had mad tJiemselve fomou mong their com ude by their fearlessness and high character, and the old man, of course, could not ask Archie to quit the aervlw just when order for dungerou duty came. The boy went to the Cape with hicorprf nnd got into the thick of tht Zulu war just at the time of the massa cre of tbe Twenty-fourth nt Isandlwhani and the fight at Itorke Drift I wai at home then, and all England wai quivering with grief over uch needles! sacrifice a wa made of that regiment, and ull ready to full down and worshlr such fellow a Chard and Ilromhead who made th nipcrb light almost at till same time. "Theysuy old Malifnd wanted to gc himself, as volunteer or something, with Lord Chelmsford, but It couldn't hi lone. His father had fought at Ainu nd Inkerman. and his grandfather hud d the (iuards at Wutcrloo. The whoh rilie were soldiers, you know; and now A rchie waa with the Lancers in Zululund, and the Lancers were going to wipe out the disaster of the first fight of th campaign, and Archie wo to uphold tin grand old lighting name and come hoim covered with glory. He was the heil now, and Mis (Jladyt was but a littli girl, i have Inurd it all from Mrs Cowan; she was their housekeeper it those duvs. and a sort of companion, too to Mrs. Maitland, who was very delicate. The old man was very fiery and proud and full of licrce denunciation of every thing that had gone wrong in the cam paign;and be offended some people bj the way he condemned some officer whe was a friend of theirs, and there wen others who thought be talked too much; but he fairly boiled over when the newi cume of how the prince imperial hud been abandoned by his escort, and that British ofllcer and a dozen uien had rut two miles ut top eod from a lieggarlj little squad of niggers before they dared look round to see what had become ol their prince, whom they hud left to flghl the gang alone. Thut was old Maitland'i text for u month. If any son of his bud ever lieen of that party he would disown disgrace, deny him. forbid him his sight cut him off forever. And right in tin midst of it ull a judgment, some peoph laid there came the awful news tlia' Jornet Maitland of the Lancers was to Is urt niartialed for misbehavior in fac jf the enemy. "Of course the old man only raged nl first, said it couldn't be true; 'twas al mcfotil invention or ridiculous blun Jur, but he ran up to London and saw somclxHly nt llie Horse Guurds thal'i vnir war olilce. you know and cuun o.ick iHking a century older and simpli vriished to earth. Mrs. Cowan says they jhowed him the ofliciul rejiort of a gen Will ollh'cr who wus called upon tocx plain why he had not sent certain troop 1 the ri'lief of un advanced and threat ned kisI, and ho replied that he hat tent the order by Cornet Maitland. of tin pincers, bad given him an escort of 1 dozen men und strict injunctions to pusl through by night, at ull hazards, thougl the way was beset with Zulus, and Ilia be neither went through nor returned hut was found hiding nl a kraal twodayi ifter, only twenty miles uwuy. Tin j-mirt returned, and after much cross sxaminutioii had told the story, separate rand collectively, thut the young office' dad IsH-ome utterly unnerved toward, liiilnight by the reK)rts from scoutiiu parties and others; hud declared to then tint it was simply madness to alteins j push through; they would be massu .ird to a man; and, though they an tumiiced that they were stanch and ready lie refused, nnd ordered them to bivouni where they were for the night, uud ii the morning he bad disapeured. The declared they supKised he had gone bucl to camp, and after waiting a day the returned, rcorting him lost. "Wheu found ut the kranl he was do llrious with fever, or pretended to be said the general, and he was brought it under arrest and the trial was to pro cccd. I don't know how it turned out He was not court niartialed, hut jierniit led to return to England. It was said lit 'Id a very different dory; that he hat lagged the brigade major who detuilec the escort to let him have hulf a dtizel of his own Lancers instead of the pad of irregulars they gave him: he did no: trust them, uud feared they would ubun don him ns they had the prince; but tin stuff olliccr said the order couldn't Is changed these men knew the country and nil that sort of thing, you know; and there was one fellow in the Lancers win. stuck to it thut he believed Maitland nun tried bis I nut to get through alone. Ilui 'twas all useless; somebody had to U held resionsililu, and the failure was ul hcaHsl on him. "Meantime, there had been fury at home; old Maitland had written casting him off. repudiating cursing him foi all I know and the next thing then came a messenger from the captain ol his ship ul Southampton. They brougln his watch, his ring, bis sword and port uianU.tiis. and a letter which U writ en on receipt of that his father sent am a long letter, that the old man it-ver read to any living soul, but broods iver to this day The young fellow lade hem all good-br; he would not live to lisgrace them further, if that was what vas thought of him at home, and leaped iverboard from the sterner the night ifter she w eighed anchor no oneabourd xhiM tell just when, but be was writing 11 his state room as she cleared the bar xir, and the steward saw him undress ng at 0 o'clock In the morning every hing about bis belongings wus found in perfect order his letter lo the captain )f the ship, the portmanteaus, watch, ring, clothing, etc., just as he dcM-rilied in that letter and he was no more seen. Il was the conviction of all thut he must have hupcd ov, rlswrj in the darkness when far out at st-a. "Then Mrs. Maitland bowed her head tnd never lifted it again. Then, all loin, nnd fiercely rejecting anything tike sympathy, old Maitland took to travel came here lo America, wandered tround the world, shunning men as he would th. prairie wolves, and wheu lie Ii d in pi in England he would see no ste luit tin-attorneys and solicitor w iih w in -in Ih- bad business. Here al Dun rairn Ih is more content than anywhere. htsMtiso he is farther Iroui the wwld Here Cl.tdy hi queen 'twas she who named it. two year ago. for her mother wus a connevtion "f the earl' Hut 11 tit'..nd even here hale to have his name mentioned, and that is why I uy he li fers all buMnrsa lo me and keep hi:iiM lf out of everything. Do you sm lut a.weighl be carries?" T cotrroti-ioj. THE ARIZONA. KICKER. obis of lbs nrro nd Joys of Wester) Killtorisl Ufa. We extract the following from tht last issue of the Arizona Kicker, which was only a half sheet, and which seemed to have been printed on a cheese-presa. Exi'LAXATobv. We owe our reader an apology for tho hape and appear ance of the Kicker this week, and shall proceed to give it. Last Sunday we went t.n Kilter Ilend to ee tbe boys and i rake in a few subscriptions. Our office I was left in charge of a chap just from ' the East who claimed to be tieorge Al j fred Townsend. As we bad never met George we did not fool like calling the stranger a liar. We intended to return Tuesday morn ' lng, but in this country man propose ' and mules and other things buck against hlra. Tho Infernal, lop-eared, stiff ! legged, pig-headed, limb-spavined beast I which we rodo-a fit counterpart of our 1 contemporary down tho street threw I us nine times in going thirteen miles, and we arrived at the liend badly used I up. We hadn't yet raked In a dollar j when Lew Smith, pug-ugly whom we , assisted to run out of our town four weeks ago, sounded his war-cry ana be gan to encourage the liendors to hang us. Most of 'em were on a drunk that day, and tbe proposition at once found favor. Under the protonse that we, as editor, publisher, proprietor and city editor of the greatest weekly In tbe West and which runs as an annex, but undor tbe same roof, a grocery, butcher shop, feed store, shoe store, hardware and cutlery, had been seeking to break down th social barrlors of tbe mighty West, thoy hunted up a rope and selected a troe. We appealed, but It only added to their desire. We tried to arguo, but they wouldn't have it Our editorial person was laid hold of and hustled alung to a rope dangling from a limb, and as we looked over the crowd and failed to catch a sympathetic eye we felt that our time, bad como. The boys were white about one thing. Drunk as they were, thoy had sense enough to realize that a groat editor could not wind up hi earthly affairs in a satisfactory mannor under fifteen min utes, and on motion of a half-breod, who once succeeded In borrowing half a dol lar of us, the time was increased to twenty. We wanted to argue the caso, but it was no go. We started In on a speech, but they whooped us down. By the time that we got down to buslnes five of our twenty minutes had Bed. During our editorial caroer we have assisted at several amateur executions. We had always supposed that if the crowd was sutisllod tho victim was bound to bo. It nover seomed much of an ef fort for him to lot goof earthly matters, and we have sometimes wondered wby more of them didn't come forward and ask to be pulled up to a limb. Our Ideas underwent a great change as we sat on a meat-box under a dangling rope, while the minutes hurried away like a jackass rabbit taking tho lead of a prairie fire on a windy day. Any man who bollovos he can do business undor such circum stances U mistaken. Ho fnols restless and unsettled, and his mind seems to be distributed ovor acres of space. It was only after wo had lost twelve minutes of our time fooling around that we started '.n on our last will and testa ment, and we hadn't wrliton threo lines of that before we suddonly rocolloctod that WM wcro without a blood relative on earth. As to leaving the Klckor and its annex to any galoot in town was not to bo thought of, and wo finally mado out a bill of sale to that Individual known as William of the Hill, who has several times appeared in our town and attempted to run the city government with a broncho and two revolvers. We didn't expect him to maintain its high literory stundard and great moral excel lencn, but wo know ho d kill tho post master and make a sieve of our contem porary tho first week of his editorial career. When time was up the noose was placed over our heal and tightened un der our chin, and It admonished us to observe the apparent enjoyment of the crowd. They scorned to feel in as good spirits as an army horso turned out to buffalo gaass, and their Impatience to make, a pendulum of our body was an other queer feature of tho convention. We had just been drawn off our feet, and our editorial Ideas were becoming rapidly mixed, when a lot of passing cow-drivers happened along and broke up the candy pull on the ground that they were waiting to hang us the first time wo came up there. We were saved to bo hung at I'hujnlx if we ever show up thero. We are just able to crawl around. We have chills, sore throat, pains in the back, headacho and a general foellng that wo don't care a copper which party elects the next President We apologize for the appcaranuo of things this week, and promise not to be lynched sg iin it In our power to avoid it Detroit Free Pros. PRESENCE OF MIND. It tVas Shown bj a flnld-lltvr Vnittt Trjtliif Ctrrumatsncmi. I have heard of many striking exhibi tions of presence of mind in the face of udden danger, but here is an instance of it which beats every thing of the kind that has ever come under my notice. I can vouch for tho truth of the story. An Australian "forty-niner," who had truck It fairly rich at tho gold diggings, was taking his nuggets and dust to Mel bourne. He was walking alosg by the side, of his team with bis rifle under his arm, indulging in pleasant speculations concerning the good time he would have after he bad sold his gold, when stranger appeared on the road, and ac costing him, said: "liive us a piece of 'baccy, mato." Those were daysnheo people, espe cially those who had been to the dig gings, didn't stand on ceremony. Sus pecting no Ueachery. the miner thrusta hand into his pocket to get chunk of tbe much-prized weed. Ia a moment the muzzle of a pistol was thrust against his forehead, and the stranger shouted: "lUil up'." The stranger was a bush ranger, and that was the way bush rangers ordered their victim's to throw up their hands before going through them. Without pausing an instant although he knew that the bush ranger had only to exorcise a little gentle pressure with his forflngvr to blow him into eternity, the miner bawled out at the top of his voice: . "llobr T;ere was no "Bob" around there. It conceived by the miner ia the fraction of second and immediate ly put into execution to distract the at-U-oUon of the bush ranker. It worked. The bush ranger thought th miner was calling a companion to hi assistance, lie looked around to catchy film pea of the fictitious "Hob." Thai wa the njiner'sopportunlty. Quick a flash he swung his lefturm and knocked tbe pistol out of tbe bush ranger' grasp. Then be brought bi rifle to bis aboulder aud leveled it at the bush ranger' bead. In much less time than it tukes to tell It tho situation had been com pletely reversed. The bush ranger was at the mercy of the miner. "Now," suld ho, "you scoundrel, just fold your hands behind your back and march ahead of me; if you move or try to runaway I'll save tho hangman a job by letting daylight through you." In that way tho miner escorted tho hush ranger Into town and banded blm ever to tbe police. Toledo Illado. THE LOVE OF HUMBUG. How th llumsn Ksmilr I llrgulled by Nlistns mikI rrecenilers. If one may bo Indulged in the use of a little slun', It makes a wise man tired to see bow persistently his compeers run after and are beguiled by the latest shams, and seom nover so hnppy as when they are being deceived. Especlully Is this trait noticeable In tbe matter ol physical ailments. Tho family physi cian may measure out his prescrllcd doses of qulnino or senna, give tbe patient a pluin, practical talk, and de part with theconseiousncsiof duty done and the certainty thut tho subject will leave the powders untouched on the mantel, unless be l.:omes frightened, and that his reputation as a physican will suffer in consequence. Hut let some traveling fakir como along, pitch his tent swing out his flag, with ringing of bells and blowing of horns, and lo! the public is at his feet ready to lie healed, willing to swallow tho most nauseous mixtures, If only they be christened with unpronounceable and untranslatable names, anxious to pay doiiblo the fees of a respectable, respon sible physician, and bold to assert after a wuek's diet of bread pills and rain wa ter sweelened with molasses, that they are perfectly cured of imagined ail ments, and are urgent that their friends shall share in their good fortune. (science doesn't always receive the support of tho universal puollc; hum buggery does. Tho street wizard, with tangled hair and picturesque garb, can extract teeth painlessly by tho same process which nearly murders tho patient if performed by an educated dentist, dressed in nineteenth century clothes and located in a well-appointed olllco. Tho nohlo aborigine, in war paint und feathers, dealing out mystic oils, will carry off all tho spare change of a community, whilo the vlllago phy sician grows poverty-stricken. The dealers in patent medicines roll In wealth; tho vailed sibyl who prescrllie to her mystified devotees from a dark ened 1 losct gathers In the shekels; and If tho commonplace physician means to hold his own ho will soon bo competed to label Lis vials with cabalistic char acters, consecrate, them with mystic pa-soi and mutter "abracadabra" over tliem as ho gives them into the patient's band. The common sen.-e which a man uses in tho selection of a suitable coat or but seems to des -rt hiin utterly when uny trifling ailment attacks him. His Intellect wavers, and superstition, that cunning fiend always lying In wait for humanity, betrays bim unresisting into the toils of tho mountebank. Wo can not chango human nature with our ex ordiums, but wo can ut least make it alive to its own weaknesses and incon sistencies. Milwaukee Sentinel. CHROMO MANUFACTURE. Uow lleitlly ArtUlln Copies of rulntliiKf Am rrotlui'iMl. All chromos are not works of art by any means, some being most ntr.wious daubs, but a really g.iod chromo Is hut little inferior in artistic valuo to the painting of which It is a copy. To p-oporly produco a chromo, a litho grapher matt be himself an artist; he must analyze tho picture and fully real ize tho combinations of colors and tho Bp.rltof the work. Tho lithographer begins by preparing a stone for each ' separate, color, and thoro may be as many as twenty. Then he makes a delicate and elaborate ink tracing of tho picture; not only its gen eral outlines, but tho minute and intri cate touches and shadesof color of which it Is composed, Tbe tracing paper is chemically pre pared, so that the lines upon It can be reudily transferred to stono. A press is employed to transfer the impressions on tho paper to thn stone, considerable pressure being used. Thousands of im pressions can then ho taken from the stone by simply running an ink-roller over It The tracing thus transferred forms what is known as tho "key stono." Sup pose there are twenty colo.si in the chromo. This number of Impressions is taken from tho key stone and each care fully dusted with red chalk. A dim copy of theentiretracingisthen pressed on each one of these atones. Tho drawing then begins, and often occupies many months. Each stone is to be printed )n a separato color, and therefore must contain not only all that Is necessary of that color of the picture, to tho minutest dcUil. but all of the compound colors, mado by printing one or more over others. A variety of gradations of color from its full strergth to tho faintest tinting can bo produced on each stone, just as In using an ordinary pencil or crayon on drawing-paper. Tho various colors are, of course, worked up in bla-k hy the artist, and it Is the printer who applies tho colors. Tho lines on each separate stone are etched with the wash of nitric add an 1 gum arabic, and are ready for the presses. Tho printer must be as skillful as the artist in applying his colors, au I must fully realize the blending and effect of each color. As fast as each color Is printed it is suhmitfd to the artist who has thus a progressive proof of the work. It has been probably noticed that lines cross each other on the margin of a chromo. These ar, tne registering marks, an! enable tho printer to place the sheet In the sm relative position every time a new stone Is used and a new color applied. These lines are drawn in the original tracing and app ar on each stone. When the first color is printed very small holes are punctured in each sheet at the intersection of these line, very fine holes are also drilled in corresponding positions on eich of the ub-quont tones, anl tbe holes in the paper ara to correspond precisely with the holes ia the stone, and thus as each additions! color is put on. a perfect register is cured and each color falls just where It belongs. i The next process Is to make the chromo have a rough surface like an oil painting. A atone is now prepared which has rough surface, similar to cafivass. The chromo is raon W.Z upon It snd passod through s press with besvy pressure. Whon it comes forth, it is an exact imitation of the painting. It is then varnished, and thus you DT0 tbe chromo ready for the market. An expensive part of ohromo-maklng Is the lithographic stone, A bid of lithographic stone has been found In j Tennessee, and there are small quarrloi In France, England and Canala, but It I Is all of a coarse quality. There is only ono reauy nne quarry, and that Is In liavarla, and tho stone ui worth thirteen cents a pound.-Ooldea Day. MISCELLANEOUS. Twenty-one tramps met In. Decatar Neb., and ordered meals at a restaurant After they had eaten they compelled the proprietor to accept ten cents as pay. ment in full. A Frankfort Ky.,man Is training hi hens to lay their eggs in the kitchen, where ho has placed a cradlo for their accommodation. This saves the labor ol hunting the eggs. A burglar at Cincinnati, who re mained curled up undor s bed for hours waiting an opportunity to rob th house, was obliged to sneeze, when ho was dis covered, pulled out and banded over to the police. It has beon assorted that chewing wooden toothpicks sometimes produces small ulcers In tho mouth, and that even the stomach has been similarly affected by the action of the small particles of wood detached by chewing. A New Yorker was about to drown In tho surf at lleach Haven last sum mer, when bo cried out that he would give S-'i.OOU to tho man that saved him. Ho was saved, but bo wouldn't pay, and the other day settled the matter for $15, alleging he mount to cry out that figure and no higher ono. A French paper proposes, in time of war, to make carrier pigoons photograph tracts of country by attaching to them miniature cameras, In which tho thin spool of sensitized papor shall unwind and bo exposed as they fly over the country. The pictures can afterwards be enlarged. A few days ago as a class at the Cincinnati Collegoof Mo licino was about to dissect the body of a man who had died of drink, a young man rushed into tho room and threw himself on the sub ject crying: "My father! O, my poor father!" This recalls tho fact that some years a?o President Harrison found In the Ohio Modlcal College tho body of his father, John Scott Harrison, of North Itend, Ind. These horrible incidents emphasize tho fact that there is a vast deal of unpleasant rouunce in actual life. A searcher among old deeds and rec ords In London lately came across a statement that Mr. Samuol Wilson be queathed a sum of 'J0, 001) which was considerably increased "to bo lent to men who have been Set up ono year, and not more than two years, in somi trade or manufacture In tho city of London, or within three miles thereof, and who can give satisfactory security for tho re payment of same." It has not boon claimed for many years. In Switzerland and other mountain ous countries tbe goat leads long strings of animals daily to and from the moun tains, hut it is in South Africa that it U regularly kept and binployed as a leader of flocks of sheep. Should a blinding storm of rain or hail drive tho silly slit-op bofore it, or causo them to huddle together in a corner so as to suffocate each other, the trainod goat will wake thorn up, an. I. by methods best known to himself, will Indues them to follow him to u place of safety. Some idea of tho care necessary to preserve the great oil pipo linos intact is furnishod by ono of our contomparar ies. It appears that track-wulkors pass over every mile of the line each day, about fiftoen miles lining assigned to eoch man. Every walker is a telegraph operator and Is supplied with a pocket instrument. Should he discover a leak in the lino he Immodiaioly telegraphs the division superintendent At stated Intervals along tho telegraph lines wires run down tho poles into locked boxe9, the key of which is carried by the walkor. Oponing the box, he attaches his instrument and wires report to headquarters. AN HISTORIC INCIDENT. William IV. Vets Stuck While Heading a Rperrh from the Throne. King William IV. had a rather em barrassing time in reading his speech st the opening of Parlir.mont February 4, 18M. The day was a dark one, and his eyesight was so poor that he had diffi culty In reading his own production. He made a desperate effort to get through with his task, frequently cor recting himself, hesitating, stammering and blundering. Whon he finally got stuck completely, and appealed to Lord Melliourne to deoipher the word he could not mako out the situation was almost painful. Ho was persistent however, and continued to toil on until he got ahout to tbe middle of the ad dress when the librarian brought is two wax candles. He then paused, and looking at theLordsand Commons male this littlo apology: "I have not been able, from want of light to read this speech In the way its importance de servos, but as lights are now brought me, I will read it again from the com mencement, and in a way which I trust will command your attention." These words, tho historian takes pains to sdd, werespoken distinctly and without em barrassment. The King, though fatigued by the struggle in the darkness with bis manuscript then began again at the beginningand read the speech through to the end in a stylo worthy of a teacher of elocution. This trifling incident h been thought worthy of record by British historians because it came near disturb ing the gravity and dignity of what I4 usually a very solemn and impressive occasion. Chicago News. Mlntrln of Artistie Beautr The new brocades continue to he miracles of artistic beauty anl endl?1 variety. A length of pearl-colored bro cade in a shower of lilies of the valley, a delicate cream ground hidden in tangle of tiny roses, a mass of soft yellow silk scattered over with wheat ears all await the moment of inpir tion in some master mind to be com bined in wonderful creatiens for lb enl.ancin? of same rareb".ty'i;'!i',T"" Even staid woolen materials havecaa?', the craze, and blossom with anemone and Japanese chrysanthemums of black on terra cotta or gray surfaces. Suit ble complements of these gorgeous ft' rlcs sre the girdles of pearl sometim thrown among their folds in the shop. pe'vrl Medici collars, garnitures of P-" pink poppi. s and roes, with velvet petals and ceiatures of black pissame" terie with long fringed ends of let" '