Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1899)
Eugene City Guard. I. i. i run i Prrltr. KUESE CITY OB.KOON Possibly political combines are called ring because they are aot square. Unfortunately tbe position Canada wtnta to take In thla lioundary dispute la od our side of thu line. Ordinarily a bulne enterprise get! what It can Individually, hut when a truat la formed they get together. An Improved style of I'J hill I te bo Issued, l"'t It "HI prolmtdy ""P through tin- UdSTH oa easily us the Old kind. Rom will aay since the snoemaksi-e and glovers arc going In form trust, the nation imiy ! further bound hand and foot In Iheae tliliiK". The woman who married the lawyer who ted W(M her Mil ft her pr-.lml.ly thought ahe BdflM Jut aa well turu everything over to MM lumu- n i believed there in no inw to nt the offeiiHe ..f that mother who llsgg-d a fun! train In order to reach the Led Ma of the chll.l ahe thought wua dy ing. IVrhapa If William Waldorf AHtor had known elevation to the peerage MUX lll,H.ll.le he might not have be come a naturalised llrltUhcr; h la In the attitude of the man who haa pur chased a large l.cd gold hrlck. Kor nalloiiH. aa for Individual, eiii.ugh la at good aa a feaat. Appar . ..il v I r.mrlM.i"' n think so, for the llouae of Coinmona applauded the ..serth.u. repeatedly made l.y mem pari cf both partlc. that no one dcidrca I.. dd another Biiare mile to lliitlah territory. dtles are filled with Bohemians. Hun g;u lull-, Italians and other Immigrant who do not value education, and can not read aijrf write. Home pinpll will I 3'i"t mpnn enough to rejoice over tin- atateiiietit of the eomte d'Astnrga, from whose fam ily ft, W. AHtor chilnm deaceiit, that ti i. hiii lean Jneqoaa iTAatofgn, h... a BUgOeOOt, waa lK.ru In Franco in inn tad Bad loQennuny hUnr, '- ruining the founder of tin- A inerlcnii AjBtatl 'I 'he """it profeaaee to he very aorry. ii" i" arlatecraUo, but poor, ami a eOOaUUllIp with William Wnhh.rf might dOOl M It would prove to hla advantage. To no nation In Hie opening of twen ty two of II port and harbor by Japan more Imporlant Hum to the Dol led Suite. Until OOBMMdora Terry an chored l ulled Stale warahlpa In a laptntM MrbOC In IBM and practical ly compelled a treaty recognising other nation, Japan Md been closed to the rest of the WOf hi Hurlng the lat twenty year no nation baa Bade areata! ptogtaaa than Japan, Now it la amhlUnua to I unled a one of the commercial nallotia. The story that c h from tin- KI..11 Mba la 11. -I an roae colored a wore Hie atorlea taM ebool thM BJ Dorado when ii,,. 1 n aa on. Tin' pold product of the laat year I reported to have la only 110,000,000, or on-' half the nin.iunt estimated, and sickness anil dcstltu Hon are thinning out Hie ndvenlurera. The gambler! an- apparently tl Bly luuiieeful gold aaakara in the region, The itatamenl that reporti tron aJaa ka Indlcnta thai re gold win be found there than will eer coino out of the Klondike may, however, only mean that the transportation com panlaa reaching Alaaka are endeavor ing to work up a DOOm for thcniHclvea at the Klondike! axpaoaa, The la teat article of French political faith I, that 'the army la the life of the State." Nothing could bettor iiiua tratc the bewlldenneol of the Qoilic in tellect. Aiming really weir governing pjopll the life of the Stale la anppoaad to reahle In the brain and brnwu of the tlilaana. without wboai labor the army would M aa deatltute of llf-- a a forgottea theological herooy- Thla In faralon of the truth la. however, con genial to Hi-- iTeuchiimn booanaa bg army I" spcetiir-ular, and nothing la dearer to tin- average I'ntlslun than a h..w. Whether there I- any reality or lobe! truth behind the BOOH la a ques- t loii which doea not Ihtereet him. The M-rtam girl ha a new champion In no le a erou that rrofeor Cum mlng of Harvard I'ulvendty. wboae paM-r on the subject I the out' -.me of much research and thought. The Mf glint girl -ineatlou la all old one; wom en have tried to aolve It, but In an uu aytematlc way, which ha reanlled only lu NpaMiuoillc reform. Irofeaor dimming' suggestion I to place 60 metlc service lu the line of a trade, governed by a union, which ahall reg ulate hour ami wale of wage, ami by which the right of employer ami em ploye hall la- defined ami pr-.te-'ted. It la more and more becoming a re- og- nlzed fact that n Ivance en n ! made In domestic service until the aaiimed degradation which at preent attend It I remove-l. Should aervatit not n slde lu the houio. hut com-- dully to the dutle which begin and llhUh at r- gil Inr hour, It WOnld give the serine of freedom an-l ludcM-iidciire now luck ing and convert Die alleged tyrannized ervant Into sclfrcMpcetlng employe, with a better -I- lined ata-lal atatua. I'erhap the time ha come for men to take up the noIiiiIoii of a prohlein which women have failed to llnd, and If more college men will give their time to It, a ha Profcaaor Cummlng. we may look for n happy ending to it perplexing controrera. VAR WITH YAQUIS. SERIOUS REVOLT OF INDIANS IN MEXICO. raqnl IUt Hen Vlahtlns for Tnde pnUace Hlare 173S-Mxlca I to ItUn for Inaurrcctlon-Soaicllilns ot tb Ftctartaqu Yauul Conatrr. The Insurrection of the Vaqul Ind uim proiulve to give the Meilcali g-jveni BMBl another prolonged war. II ha K'cu hut two year alnce the laat up rling of the Ya-iula waa put down, after nearly fourteen year of tlghliug, and the rebellion now on hn all null tation of preparadneaa, Contrary to natamanta made thai the Ytquh would m-t giolaal the American realdeut In Houora the Yntjui country there have already lan-n laln a iiuuiIht of Am-'rl- can gold proapectora. In-h-e-l, It ha ii-', - Inia-d that one of the cauae of the uprlalng waa the fact that the gor- ernmeiit taTtnltled Americana to come Into Honora and dig gold. 1 he laijula claim to hold the Honora country by right of occupation for centurle lock Already ceumi lntlHtl'liiu are upec- uhillng mi Hi-' Dm MtO! of Hipiihitlui -f the Doited ItnhM to be revealed ty the coming ceiiHU. The Nleady west- ward aonrai of thl lnvllhle point for the hiNt half century liinke II pnicllc- gblg t.i determine lthln renoiiubla eiactnea II location next year. In 1H.M) It wai lu Went Virginia, aouth of Pnrkaraburg, Thence it croeeed into (ihlo at the iii'Xt ..ii.n- and traverHcd that Htate by alow atage until In IMNi It had reached Cincinnati, lu IKiai It croNncd lulu ludlnmi, -i ll cIoho ly following the thirty ninth parallel, ami raachad a H-int 11 few mil-' aonth of CreeiiHhurg. It rate of progre W eat W aid ha ban lit .il-nt the aver age rail- of live mile mt year, having Ojoveled BOB mile ilnce the inking -if the llrt cenatW At thl rate of ping reaa during the coming century It will crow Into llllnol. Home claim, how ever, that thi rVeetern mnrch --f popo- lalloll Will Ih- cheeked hiii mid that Nilbly the next ceiiHU will mark nearly, if dot quite, Hi extreme Weel eru ndvanee. Connhlerliig the growth of Wentern Hliil.'i gad Tel rlbu lea, however, thl doc nut enem probable. It I more likely that the limit will ba reached eomewbere in iiiinoi the eon lug century. Within 11 few deende Chicago iii ba tin' aanraal tin gtat of population of the Dnlted state of any city of conai-iience, ami Ihu the Ntar of empire will hlue In the zenith of the Inland metropolll of the cuuu-try. Onnnlnghnma Qrnham, hlmaalf a amy Scot, thu give the genoejl of the BMdara Bngllahtnao "Bnxoo to- ll-llty. Celtic guile. TeUtOOlC dullnes and KormnB prlda, all levi pored with aaal wind, bnptlaad with oUat, nnrrow i'il U loaularliy, awollen with go-d fortune, and rendered overhearing by Wealth, have worked together to DN din e Hie t'." Nut by any iiiean a good 1111 In led sketch, or a Htrlctly truthful one. bnl If moral and mental heradltj 1 Inalatad upon, the multiplex origin of KnglUh character BOBt B0 count for what I -I long ami 0Od In It a well a for What I weak and bad. A for Rngtlah AiiiciIiii. the daughter nation, It haa become the great nmal gantatoi of tag world, aboorbtng ntanoat every atraln of QeOtlle bl,Hd. Vaiikee character I lliitlh iilu two hundred ami eighty ream The pat QUI tag! of Illiteracy I higher III the Southern State and New Mex bo an-l Artaooa than lu any other hcc UM of th country. Thai I due III the former to the large number of iiucdu rated Colored people! In the hitter 10 the Mexican population. Nebtnana 1 the banner Mute for education. Only B.U per aaal --f the population of oral id yeara of ag-' are unable to rand ami write. Wyoming I hoi on, I. with a percentage of S.41; Iowa third, Mill, nml Kanane fourth. 'A.m. Compared with tliU the percentage of illiterate in Maaaaatnaetta la taa exactly doable that of Nebrankn In New York Slate It la ft .VI and In Connecticut lllth It1, n.2H. In Ohio It I .'. '.' an-l In llllnola BJB Thl I due chleJly to the foreign pupal a Haa In the large fill, ami In manufacturing cntere. The farmer of Kauaoa, Nehraak and Iowa never fall to elid their - hlhlreu to aeh-iol. while the linn- of ltou. (law Vork, Chicago and ether large "fat the Brat time in hlatorr," write Boa, a. w. Tourgi "the world' la bor h able In prodttca " than the World i nn i on nine," Thl r. -nil ha been reached by the application ot Kkiiied Induatry to the develop meal of the ample reaolirce of nature the glfl of the All rather to III It 11 11 111 11 chil dren. Inventive genius planting, bar venting ami manufacturing by me chaulcal uiethod ha made It hinIIi, for one man' lalair to upply tin neana of life ami comfort hi bundrodi nii-l the a me Inventive geiilua, calling to it help van! combination! of capital, haa created aondulti for the dutiiim Hon and exchange of COmmodltloa over large Hpaccs of Hie globe, by laud and ea. N ii t in ally, the nation Hint are moat Intelligent and eiiterprUltig ran iter the huge! aervlce 11 ml reap the huge! beneflta, Naturally, also, a amall minority of any population b come capliiln of ln-lutry, ami direct or of the great financial operation which tin the alnlcaa of bualneea, ami make Ih,' mighty wheel go round Thi Kituiitiou make two thlngi poaal hie. The strong ami prosperous na ttnna have It In their power to crowd ami oppress the lower or llowef ra- e that Htlll make up the bug-' majority of mankind, and the few mm whose geiiiii for management, or ad ran tag! of position, place them III the lead, can compel their fellows in pay ihem undue tribute! ami to depend on them for permission to lira on the planet In short, we hae rein hi d a condition where the human Bttltltudea, by gen emus, eiiilliil-le dealing, might live with less exhausting labor and more rational happiness than ever before and yet It Is a Condition w here the self lh use of power may easily create new and cruel form of tyranny and serf dom, which must be the seed of eon- tllrl gad revolution It Is a good time for men and nation to Himler the principle of noblesse oblige. Iti'll- -nirrrlng Minuter. Coi. Bingham auperlntendent of puiv lie building and ground, who ha charge of the vVaahfngton Rkoonment, say one of the gienlaal trouble the watchmaa at the awnnmanl have to contend with I the chipping of these aiaaaorial stum- by ratio bantam "tine of the trangel thing In reganl In tbma rvdlc hunlers," said Col. Hlng haul, "I the fact (hat more than 0Bg half of the men airct,s for chipping -iff relic are clergymen. When th police arraal Iheae dee pollen and itart with them to the station house the man will Is g 1. to ask what Is the pea ally and try to beg off. ,. i,,, that the tine I a heavy one, but that $15 security can be put up for appear auce lu the police court. Then the prtMoncr explains that he I a minister of the goapal ami m-'.int no harm, and Hint In- could not I land the disgrace of appearing In a police court, lie andg up by giving up the eollateral, after generally trying to cut It down to SIO, ylug he ha only that amount with hlui."- New York Mall and Kxprea. To N' papntar, a man must M k-pt o buay applaudlua the feat of other tht he ha no time to aecomplUh any thing himself. T.,.,,1. n In no Way tie with the Indian of the w.-i- i n part of Dnlted Htate. except, perhape, twi Ch.-rok.-e ami a few "H.-r trll-s known for their laac-fulne and for their love of anolicatlon to igrteultore, si,,,-,. ti,i vrv iirt lettlemenl nora by the 8pai.lar.ls the Va-pil have inhabited a email triangular territory ittnatad in the delta ol Ibe faqnl Hirer aud extending from HieCulf to a place Inland called Hu-'un Vlatn, A fOW Yaul are aettled B! tar up a Com rifu, but the principal Vaqul eonotrj 1 na juit etatnl further down Hie Boaat lu this territory the Y.i-i'il were found by the panlarlir and Ihelr tradition I that here they hn- r.-hl-l from lin- memorial tJmea. Kor eentnriea tba Mexicun govern menl acknowiodfcd tbe right of the Yinpu 'I v '" "' cnHrrnta thla territory a"d for een turlea the Yaipil remained p-a-'efully at their work of cultivating the noil and ua general laborer elsewhere. Within their territory the TatJUll have even now retaln-l uideM-ndeiit gov ernment. with chief! dedda accord ing to their law ami to mete out pun ishment to the guilty, ami ao perfect haa been their method of aelf-govern- ment that the Meilcan government ha had 110 OOCUloO t" Interfere. The .. ...A compared !.ure. The Indian. r 1 mountains, u" I ..ursue-l. and at every favorable opK.r I .W..M , down upon the troo, ; .. . 1 ... .,., viii,,,.... mur- ,.r ass.iii.-ti ueigii-.".." n.. I r-.inl Attemi.t Kearh the North Pole. Another North l'olar expedition ha eotaa to grief, it i that of IfaHar W- llmau, the well knowu Waahlugton newapapat man. who et out lat year t 111,. I the pole, and who bai Juet re-turio-d. barely with life, to tbe verge of civilization. WdlmaU and hi party wintered at Qoaatp I a cartridge fired from tbe guu of Idle curiosity. 1 ove laugh at locksmith, but the majority of them geXITJ Jut the eame. Tbe man who falls to find his level probably nalkd h do bla level btxat. 1 I N E W r !L (ix ! f e, eXjR cS HfrWX VI S 3" , rksXr''"' uT "& BUKNH ul' Till: PUK8BNT YAyli INDIAN LI'KISI.m;. and by confirmation of title by the King of Spain long before the Mexican g-.i ernment was thought of. When Mexico revolted and est.'ihllah- e-i her Independence, the Taqnli refused to recogulae the new government ami proclaimed their own Independence ami autonomy, Blnca then the effort to ol- talB from them r- gnltlon of the gOthorlty and law of Mexico ha led to frequent collisions la-tween them ami the government troops; pitched bnttlaa have been fought and though generally beaten by superior fores TAQ0I INDIAN milt.. ami forced to retreat for the time, they have never yei bean lubdned. Already in the InaunaotloB now ou the Yaquui bnva rOUtad fOrOM of Mexican aoldlera aanl Bgalnsi them, and the government Is mobilizing 11 large army to pit against the wily warrlora. The Ya qnla' method of lighting Is one taught then by nature ami experience. When beaten they retreat Into the almost In accessible fastnesses of (he Siena Ma dre. whither the government troops dure not follow them, and there await the departure of the troopa, when they again deecend and dear out the people who have eatubllahed themselves on their land. Though the population of tin- faqnl country doe not exceed 15,000, Hie male portion combine to make a form Ida big foe. ami the Mcxi can government anihipalc a war of six month or more. t-ry of the sVojora, The Indiana Inliahlt (he valley of Souora. They are good agriculturist when nllnwvd 10 till their farms lu peace, and their valley llng rich and fertile has tempted covetous men with little regard for right to take ad win tiue of the peculiar fixtuiv of the Mexican law In regard to taking up land and tlbug claim ou the Ympil holding. Thee. of course, under standing little of law and moved by a sense of Injustice, have resisted the aahtnrc, and troops have la-en called out to enforce the law- that I, put the new claimant lu poelon of the faqUl land taken under the law. The Vaqula katra itood together ami Diads good lights after their fashion, ami when c,iniilcd to do o retlrel. only to return when the troop were with draw 11 to take forcible possession of their own again. In former lnurrec tlon they had hut few firearm, hilt when the Souora railroad to tiuayma wa bunt taey rnrnnaao a targe pro portlon of the lalam-r. and with the BaoOey earned Wlu-hesier rifles were pur-hased. with which they have been much more formidable antagonists than ts-fore and are more conscious of their ow 11 strength. If the war is continued until the 'aiiil an pacified or exterminated dire disaster I sure to la-fall that beau tit nl Slate. The extermination of the Yaqiil Indian simply mean the de struction of the inauual labor In So Dora. The Yaqul- are not only the beat and most trutcd worker In Souora, but they constitute the largvat numlssr of able workingmen In that State. The faqnl is by nature moral and Indus trioua and no complaint can he made against hint 011 that nccount. All over Souora there are found Tnqola lu time of peace working In the fleldl and lu the mine and even as luhorers on the rallroadH. In the latter Capacity they are more valued ami more trusted than nny Mexican, and we know of In stance where railroad agents have preferred faqnl aectlou bossi s to those of other natloniilltle. Ton't Waal Land Divided, A u laborer the Yaqul Is hard-work-lug aud faithful ami can always be re lied on. lie does not shirk hi work Whan Ida foreman turu hi back aud he does nut Morten his day's work by continued Cigarette smoking. No won der, therefore, that he Is highly valued for the work he can and does perform. As do many other laborers, ba gata drunk w lieu pay come uu Saturday evening but he confines hi carousing to the raiicheria lu w hich he lives and keep his family ami when Monday morning comes around every man 1 at hla work. The Yaqol country from Buena Vlata to the gulf has always bean held a common property by the Xaqula n a bribe and baa never been portlonod nut to Individuals a in other coiumunltlea. The reason for thla la found lu the nature of the territory it self. The fertility of the faqul delta depends entirely upon the overflow of tin- Tnqul River, in time of heavy rain the delta and adjacent river bot tom hinds are covered by water or made moist by sub Irrigation, w hile In dry seasons the contrary Is the cause. A the territory Is large, each Individ ual Ya-iul can always Bud a Dlace suit able for cultivation for that particular season. Next season he may have to And moisture ami other condition! nee cHsary. Now It Is evident that If the laud were not beld lit common and If every Ynqul had his own allotted place XAol l I KON AXP KUI'LOVKB. liiMuh'riait. If the Indian do not surrender 11 war of extermina tion will ensue. It I n pity. hi". fr rjoneml DiaX had hope the Indians would remain friendly, and become civ Uhwd. Not long ago he sent thirty tcbool teacher Into their country to Instruct them and to establish school and college. These may have DOM murdered for all that la known, for some of them went Into tbe outlying dlatricta. So far ua I can learn, the In dians are well armed. They have, In fact, been buying weapons ever since their leader signed the treaty of pence, and I do not believe they ever had any Idea of keeping the truce. The murder of their ow n chief who had accepted afBcc onder tin- Mexican government Indicate! that they have grown deeper ate ami that the contest will be fierce." The InCtlca "f the a-plls are to aiuci suddenly nnd to ambush and Imme diately after the assault to run ba. k Into the mountain, where no one can follow them. After 11 Yiu-iii ha fought for some time he suddenly be- cornea a peaceful Indian ami leave the territory In which the war rage. Thl happen when hi ninmunltlou Is all spent; he must then provide himself with more. This he doe by working lu Arizona nnd New Mexico, n In these places he cnu procure arms with his savings nnd return when he has enough, When be has accumulated enough he return by passing from Arizona through the sierra aladra wil derness, where he I free from sol (Here1 bullet and from observing eyes, nnd when least expected be turn ur fully equipped with munitions to carry ou the war. The faqnl Is not the blood thirsty beast that some re port have made him out to be. He l brave, industrious and peaceful! be does not torture his prlsouers. but neither does he allow them to escape, lu iv.17 peace wa made with the Y'a qui. The government promised them a certain sum of money and they in turn ngreed to have their land survey ed aud partitioned. Imrlug the last two years the Yaquls have quietly been working in the mines of 8or;-.x and Arizona and have saved tielr .-iigs In order to procure arms to rvcw rJse war. Whatever will be the oatcoosref the war. It will be a most ruinous one for Sonora. If the Yaquia are extef minuted, as the rejKirts tell us is the In tention of (ieneral Torre, then the ef fect will soon Ik? felt, It will mean the extermination of the manual Inlior in Sonora; It will mean the crippling of her wheat and mining Industries. The Mexican government could well have afforded to allow the Y'aquls to remain in possession of tlnir land, ns their value ns laborers Is ninny, inanv time greater than the price that can be real ized I iy selling their land. Souora Is n country with Immense resources, with enormous tracts of fertile soil where almost I'veryuiing might lie grown pn.lltiil.ly. Such crops as wheat, sugar enne, beans, corn, oranges, dates, peaches, apricots nnd many other frulti are hardly surpassed anywhere. WAITKIl WK I.I.MAN. Cape Tegelhoff. ou the southern pent of Hull's Island In latitude HO. In the middle of February Welmuu tiegun nis dash for the He. and n mouth Inter bad high ex'clnllous of reaching 11, The employ lh correspondent In ,lt. ,.. Crabb lloblnson. auci , " wf H "!C()oplug".hegov,.rUmen,T2 news of the battle of wal cago vurouieie. VjjJ Mm Proved . lirs.t ' It.en TrtVSi Electricity Is making -,, w. I kitchen through the nur.ur .7,eJ room, says the Cuui,H,iita.T?kJ time it has been um-d fur .""l of the 5 o'clock t... ir.,.1. " '"Kl the duugers which are alwa.ii1! wheu an alcohol lamp , UJ""1 kettle, coffee pot or cbuiiB(n7r 'hi adjusted to the near. , ami) "jbl Wile, I hi.lulri. ., "f'Olhkl -..vs , IV IIUIIUI, '1-.,,. .. . . I m i-A -ri ieni'e.1 ,,.!, there are dishes which .re Z? 'i lu their perfection t, f..... v"l Are that cooked them. I ,,,!, I?.! passed Ihelr youth In tl... W l-ccv.Mi over the way terlorated the flavor of euny uivoriie or the IggU appliance have ilum efl.ln-. -"UleTfcfc osu I 1 A bring back the old coudliiom, cakes liakeil on n . cnlly heated lo the exact tmiJ lightly brushed with oil, tfi delight as they are Hipped fr. die to plate. Hut while thlnf can be used with the lllurnlu? Till: BHIP gBlTBJOr, WUICU TUUK WKI.LMA.N TO kilAM Jut USD. until a succession of disasters began. The daring explorer fell into an Ice crevasse, seriously Injuring one of bis lege, ami two days later nn leequake killed many of the sledge dogs and de stroyed the bulk of the sledges. There was m. alternative but to retreat, and for'JiHi miles Wellmnn was dragged on a sledge by tin- faithful Norwegian! of the party. Wellmnn Is still unuble to walk and with the prospects of be ing a cripple for life. The expedition, while falling In reaching the pole, explored regions hitherto unknown and collected much valuable scientific Information. No trace of the Andree expedition was found in Franz Josef Laud. SIGSBEE'S DAUGHTER WEDS. -cremony Performed Over n Year Agn with Much Mystery. M'.ss Mary Kllen Sigsbee, only daugh ter of Capt Charles I). Slgsliec, the gallant commander of the United States battleship Maine when she was blow u up In the harbor of Havana, stole a nmrcfa on her friends and was secretly Our Production uffopp-r, The copper production of tin- Dnlted States In the year 1808 was the largest ever recorded in a single year, or 11 to tal of 180,000,233 pound! of tine cop per, which was an Increase over 1SH7 of 34,C20,087 pounds, or 0.8 per cent. The exMirts for the year amounted to 200,705, Uo4 pounds, or about ho per cent, iif Hie total production. During the current rear the production has In creased but very slightly, while tbe xtlss MAIIY BLL8M SIOsnKB rent. It requires an extra ittafiaMat as that current Is too weak. This h generally put In at tbe leg of tbe dining I tabic, tp to this time electricity bul been used almost exclusively bj tfc I woman who makes a fad of eipert.1 mental rutiklng, and the hai ber elte-1 trie kitchen lilted up like a small labe ntory, far from the domain of the (ia lly cuisine. The whole paraphernalia mlgbt I Into n tiled closet almost anysbcrt.s hooded nnd ventilated tbat no ok escapes Into the surrounding rootmn one of the apartment bouses lo Nrv York dainty little electric kltcbrubo been fitted up where the tenantian asked for them, although tbtian ments were not deslgued for M keeping originally. 1'rlntlng Without Ink. An English company bo be formed to print, without the ost d Ink In nny form, by simply the plate luto contact with cl duiiiDcncil paper, linen, silk. t other fubrlc, and obtaining t clear linnrosslon of any desired tv. The operation Is a quiet ( more simple thuu letter-presl prt nn.l Mia work resembles In OBI and delicacy a copper plate engraving. Ordinary printer'! m blocks, form, Bterinitypes and types may Ih' used as n prluiH face, nnd drawings, etc., iefl several bltn-ks of electros, lllb.x work, or copperplate eiigravlnt : done nt n great saving. OBJ sketches, scrolls, or fancy K'tterlng be made upou the transiareifl' traced through from drawn or ?" sketches, the words beHf W their respective places, and, If P" on opaque paper, photograrjai e .1.. .. l. made, while fW" ,m Ml lugs can bo reprodiiceu tbe nrtlsfs work. Any daworpw itlzlng soUt"' may la- um, .'' - . j niuih fhaanor than rlntiiig IM. the speed of the process Is grelH Its favor.-riilladelphla Kecori CAMP BCKNE IN THE YAQUI COUNTRY. some would possess suitable land for Cultivation, while others would have dry lands, which would le worthless unless properly Irrigated. Much of the present trouble with the Yaquls arises from tills fact. Tbe Mexican govern mont warns the Yaqnta to divide their laud SO that every Individual may is scNs his own plot. h - Take to in- Mnnntalns. Colonel Martlues of the Mexican army, lu nn Interview on the Ynqul In surrection, say: "The Indians have Ihi'H restless for some months past. They object to American ptoapocton Invading the mount. mis of their coun try lu quest Of gold. We were cxpivt lug au outbreak aud were not uuptv parcd. If we can cut off the Indians la-fore they reach their strongholds, our work will he easy enough, but once lu the mountains, conquest of the In surgent will bo a difficult Urobilin. That wa the trouble during the ten years' war which ended two yea- ago consumption has grown on a large scab', and an extraordinary Increase In price has resulted. Aleoh.,1 for Automobile. The majority of motor cars are now driven by petroleum, but a French en gineer recem mends the use of alcohol instead of it. aud motors are belrg al tered so as to consume It. There Is no fear of explosion with alcohol, and It is said to Ik- less costly than petroleum. We might therefore paraphrase the na tional svet, and say. "Tut It In your cars to save your legs." No Occasion ft.r It. we ain't got no company for "Ma. dinner "No. little Tommy." "Well, what makes little finger out when Cigarette. you stick your jou drink T"- Never resurrect an evil that k. , and cost Mexico much blood and trva- fairly burled married In New York City Nov. 20, ISPS, to Halfour Kerr, a young artist. Many precaution! were taken to pre vent the Identity of Miss Sigsbee nnd Mr. Kerr from becoming known. Dis tortion of mimes was even resorted to. The circumstances attending the mur rlage were most mysterious. Miss Sigsbee went to New York from Washington to attend the classes of the Art Students' League lu com petition for the life class scholarship. She carried olT the prize. At the .-ml of the term of 18D7-'B8 she returned to her home In Washington. Not even her Intimate friends suspected that lu ad dition to the prize of the life class schol arship she had also promised to be come the wife of Mr. Kerr. In October, 1S1IS, she returned to New Y"ork to re sume her studies. The following month the marriage ceremony was performed. First Unity Was Written. It has been discovered that what may be called the tlrst dully newspaper was a manuscript letter written by salaried correspondents and forwarded by them every twenty four hours from Loudon to the provmcee, That was lu the days or the early Stuarts. During the Commonwealth these Lon don letters were printed lu type and cir culated in large uumbers. Even so long ago as 1660 the law of libel was such as to be character! Oaed by Judge Bcrogga as making any hewupaper publication Illegal and tending to pro voke a breach of the peace. Defoe, the author of "lloblnson Cru soe," was one of tbe early Journalists, his paper being called the Ilevlew. Then there was Tutchln. whose week ly publication, the Observer, cost, ac cording to evidence he gave In a court of Juallce. half a guinea to print, though the typesetter eventually raised his price to 20 shillings. The Observer had a certified circulation of 20tt copies. Afterward there came tbe Grants. Steele, Addison and Johnson, who might have lived in the vldnlty of "PREMIER CONSCRIPT.' 1 At orlean. aad I"1 f Aiistn The Duke of ArclKlllcn"- -- w r ....... iM.MiniM- K-ibi'n-lw 1 mice 1.001s --- t.CAt ilrilll'i'c-2 lB " eldest ... - I.-..II IL WHS isiru ' . gx of Orleans, do l'niis, attiiiuiug bis majority. he entered runs. B,i I hi- 111 s.-eo . .j, . -.II lift I 1 1 .. At I Keb. pnKveJW" the Mnlre ex pre s Frenchman, to perform ..irto xx-ii.-p,-. 11,011 he N'1 1 conformity with the - ggt ...11 nt rr'HiceW.-i lot uius i:ie 0011 o rtftP heirs of the families ,nai",-jlr therO, lie was llli. ni:-'uw Carnot after 11 mouth 9 vr j,m couducteil w . ,w lane - nnment nnd frontier This es. .1 Lome Mturra aM' i"j ...l.-r Uw title of the "ir""",.,rttH;I sn the death of h: , -M has reside! mostly In mM occasionally met m l,r"" ' -jrU-ers in franco of the OrieaJMf' A e.- r.. MM n altoruey it",, ..an a7the aherir. f - gone and chawed up the ...j i-..ii make tne - ,ya juuge n, the bull DUD. then. i anawl court for a week Just to au-UijUer-ruck.