- l-m r J ODD SORT OF SLAVERY. SECURING GOVERNMENT LABORERS IN MADAGASCAR. L Terrible Form of Kmployment That Hangs Over the Head of Every Mada faicarone What "Fanampoana 5Ieans to a llarbaroils People. Not only is slavery universal through out Madagascar, tnt also is there a stilj more gigantic evil, and one which is , even. more. sorely crushing the manhood and stifling the life of that curious and beautiful country. - ;'- "Fanampoana,' or forced labor, has a protean shape. It may best be under- stood by describing it as partaking of the 'nature of the corvee; it is also applied .to conscription, to all kinds of government - Bervice; it is part of the. feudal system, and it even sometimes takes the shape of a "Togging bee." It w.puld be unjust to the astute old man who presides over the destinies of the people of that country if . it were not stated that he has more than once considered a plan by which it might be modified and reformed. Bat the sys tem is too deeply .woven into the inner. life of the nation to be dealt with except by a master -.hand, and then only with the assistance of outside and friendly financial support. For instance, it is one of the main characteristics of Fanam poan' that it supplies the place .of the payment of officials throughout the is land. In fact, in all Madagascar no sec retary, clerk, artisan, soldier or civilian serving the government in whatever ca pacity (with the exception of a trifling percentage received by some of the gov ernors of districts) a paid or even fed by the state. "The qneen honors them by employing them" (so the official euphem ism rims) and they must feed and cloths themselves. But wheu loyalty takes the shape, as is constantly the case, of carry ing vast weights of wood, iron or stone on raw and bleeding shoulders, alon. goat tracks (for roads there are none) through swaiups and forests, up and . down hills 5,000 feet high, then the addi tional stimulus of shackles and leg irons is needed to persuade the ioor captured peasant that on the whole he had better accept the "honor, half starved though be must be. POWEK OP THE VJXJEEX. . If ho runs away he brings punishment on his family, and becomes a fugitive and a bushranger; the numerous robber bands are mainly recruited from such runaways. . Hundreds of instances could be cited, especially . within the past twelve months, io show that this tyrant ny is becoming more and more nnsnp- portaule. - ; Iu the first place all the land in Mada gascar, with comparatively few excep tions, belongs nominally to the queen, but actually to the government. At the present moment and for many years past the government is and .has been com pletely centered in and despotically ruled - by the prime minister, Kaimlaiarivorny, who besides his original wife has mar ried two successive queens of Madagae car. Fortunately for himself and his family his rule has, on the whole, been wise as well as vigorous. In the Saka Lava expedition, out of tens of thousands of peasants who were summoned, as sembled, and . even partially . drilled throughout the country, only about 2,000 oould be actually laid hold of, and a few months of fever and numerous deser- - tions quickly reduced this number. Similarly in the alluvial gold .fields. upon the enormous nominal royalty of W per cent to the government (45 per . cent, is divided among the foreign shareholders, directors and superintend- . ents), immense exertions have to be con stantly maae. to Keep up tne supply of - forced labor. TALENT UDR A BlXSHBLu Thus it comes about that this most important branch of the national wealth is not developed. Here, as elsewhere. serfdom spells poverty. - Again, in the case - of craftsmen ' and artificers, . Madagascar possesses and - cotdd produce plenty of men whose talent would compare favorably with that of almost any people in the world. Bat the moment . they, show proficiency in their art they are "Fanampoaned, that is, they are. honored by being em ployed . by the government or by some powerful official, without wage and without food. A clever craftsman, from -whom you buy a work of art. in what ever metal, begs you . not to say from - whom you purchased it, solely for fear of the "honor ' which would be in store earpenter or jeweler you must not search for him among the tradesmen of his own craft; but the clever jeweler is found among the washermen, and so on, in an amusing "bo-peep" of industry. The qneen honors -"Baini-be" or "Bootoo"by taking him away from his rice fields just at the season when his labor and super vision are most required for his crop. So - - the unfortunate "freeman," who is not allowed to send, his slave as his substi tute mark the grandeur of the distinc- taon conferred upon him is remorseless - Yj bled, even to his penultimate dollar. ' if be desires to nrocure exemotion from the honor. Fortnightly Review. A Problem In Mathematics. A Teasel divided into "forty-two thirty-seconds" was discovered at the cus tom house when the official papers of 41 TT n r , w KuooBur xi. j. juousiey were) oeang -hanged from a registered to a coasting - raffc. - Forty-two owners wore marked x the papers, each owning a thirty-eec- tbe matter - puzzled the captain very . sBuch, but he left feeling that he bad mot only the largest- vessel under the American flag, but the biggest in the worid. Philadelphia Record. A Play That Failed. Fledgeley I see that bow : knots in jewelry are very fashionable. Owendolin Beau knots have always een fashionable.- - And she thought she heard the dull thud of the setting sun, as the young man showed no signs of intelligence ni woTorq fVrriTQr EEAR HUNTING IN ALASKA. Tltese Explorers Were Too Batrly Frlght- '-"' encd and Frozen- to Shoot. , . One dark -day' in' winter j' during. a heavy snow blizzard, with the thermom eter down to" 40 degs. and the -wind at the rate of forty miles an hour, when the mere thought of outdoors sent a ri'ld shudder through the system, a na tive came rushing into the etation ex claiming, - "Nan-nook! nan-nook! naa nook!" To "say that all were startled would be speaking mildly. We were eseited. A few queries put to the native located bruin about ten , rods from the station, quietly eating his . breakfast from a deak walrus that had drifted ashore" the fair before. - Grasping our rifles, handing one to- the native',' which we kept conveniently at hand, shoving a few cartridges into bur pocket, tlirow- infc.bn whatever garmentscameat hand. we sallied forth, for Mr," Brum s skin. -' A short distance from the station the assistant passed the writer, his long legs having a decided advantage in wallow ing through the deepjnow.: Some four' or five rods from fhe station the steward was met returning with face and ears frozen. The writer however kept on doing his best to keep the two hunters, just seen through the dimness' ahead, in sight, when he heard the report of a rifle quickly followed by the report of an other; thinking that bruin had at last succumbed, the writer hurried on until he came to the dead walrus, when he stopped to listen. Nothing of brnin or hunters could be seen and nothing but the howling of the winds could be heard. Retracing his steps he arrived at the station' with face frostbitten and both ears frozen. Some half an hour after the assistant and native returned and the assistant tells the following story: Approaching the place they suddenly came upon bruin quietly feeding, scarce ly ten paces distant. The native being in advance without intimating his inten tion raised his rifle and fired, causing bruin to raise his "head and give an om inous growl. The assistant, in order to use his rifle more dexterously, had taken the mitten iu his right hand, in his agi tation -dropped it and the wind whirled it instantl6 out of sight. In stepping aside to bring the native out of line he stepped into s hollow, came near falling, ' thereby losing his sight ou the bear when he fired. He thinks his bullet must have-struck very near the animal, as the snow flew: all over him, and he was so frightened that he marched off, they following, but soon lost" sight, of their object.-,. Perhaps they did not care to get too near and were perfectly will ing he should go. i; One of the natives in the old signal station hearing of the oc- ctrreuce. mutned himself up in skins. took his rifle and a supply of cartridges, went down to within fifteen paces of the dead walrus, sat down and waited for Mr. Bruin to come back and fininh his breakfast. -.- - . . - He had not long to wait, for bruin soon came and commenced tearing off the flesh at a great rate, as though in anger for having been .driven away and now determined " to" make "up " for IcJ: time. At the proper moment the native raised his rifle and ' fired, killing the brutes instantly.- - Help was dragged into the being, near, he 1 Old Station and skinned, the carcass, furnishing a good supply f fresh meat for the natives and his skin proving to be one of the largest and finest the writer ever saw. Alaska Cor. -New Bedford Standard. . -- The People of the Chinese Empire. In order to understand China you must remember that the country is not made up of one people. -Nearly every one of the .eighteen provinces .has a different language from the others," and the coolie H of Peking - can no more :-understand the language of the coolie of Canton than, can the peasant of Berlin understand the jargon of 'the lazzaroni "of ' Naples;J A servant of -north China is uo good in south China, and the people of the dif ferent "provinces ' have different" habits and customs and different - ideas. They look" different. -' The Chinamen who come to America are all from the south ern part of - the empire. - They are lean, scrawny and short. ' , .The Chinamen who live along the great wall are, as a rule," six footers. Many of them can carry 500 pounds on their backs, and they are either fat or muscular." In' the provinces between you find differences of physical structure and of intellectual caliber. The people of the north have better faces than those of the south. Frank G. Carpenter in National Tribune. - Wanted, a. Big Bell. . - Young Lady Good morning, Mr. Sur plice. You stated yesterday that you wished some of the members of the con gregation would solicit subscriptions for, a bell.' - Clergyman Yes, Miss De . Goode. It is' my ambition to have the largest and finest bell in the city. Young Lady I have plenty of leisure and would like to help. . --. Clergyman Very well. ' .' Here is ... a book. . Don't waste - time applying to families who live within two or three blocks of the church. - They won't give anything. New York Weekly. Popularity of Blonds. - It is interesting to know that an intel ligent hair dresser claims that blonds cannot be done away with; that blonds are essentially the beauties of civiliza tion,: and -that they cannot be driven away. - He says that the blond can dress more effectively, and that a well kept blond has ten years' advantage in the point ' of youthful looks.- You cannot expunge her in favor; of the "brunette even in literature, for in the novels turned out during :the year there have been 882 blonds to eighty-two brunettes. Ladies Home Journal. Kiuily TiMlug"isheil. ITe I was just reading about life on n cattle wanch. - So - interesting, dontcher know. : They brand the little calves so as to distinguish them. v. She (coldly) That is unnecessary in the east. Life. . Fighting Hl Flesh. - j General Furlong is a gentleman, of in- uepeuuent nivalis, wuo uvea as cne jiia Avenue hoteL He is a large, heavy set man, whose tendency is to get larger and heavier set. All he has in the world to do is to look pleasant in which he succeeds admirably and to fight this flesh. ' Most people thus unhappily situ ated have some hobby to ride and al ways go cantering off en the slightest provocation. Not so General Furlong. His hobby is walking. He never rides anything not even his hobby. 6t dnoVand th77r7a Broal Most people in easy financial circtun- way car if they didn't keep a brougham ! and pair, but he entertains a prejudice j against everything on wheels; He walks, j Technically speaking, there are eight j furlongs to the mile; in his case one Fur long will cover 'eight miles without stretching. Sixteen to-twenty miles a j day are as nothing to him. " - There is a pleasant fiction about the aristocratic Fifth avenue that when General Furlong is out he has "just stepped down to the Astor House." " If anybody calls for him, "Oh, he'll be back soon he is probably strolling around Ir- vington somewhere," or, "He went out 1 for a short walk he . is by this time either at tho Battery or in Harlem." Manhattan island is too small for General Furlong. This talk of rapid transit makes him tired. New York Herald." ' Attends Executions, but Dislikes Funerals. i The great weakness of a well known i reporter in a large city is a partiality for ' attending executions! For many years past he has been present at all the exe ! cu tions which -have taken place in his j own neighborhood as the representative j of and important daily journal. ( Mr. Titerope can tell you scores of in : teresting anecdotes about celebrated "j criminals, unknown to or forgotten by ; the present generation, whose departure ! to another sphere he assisted at, as he I himself jocularly puts it. He can make I your blood run cold with his stories about J awful scenes on the scaffold. He is still . hale and hearty, and expects to be a wit ; ness of many more scaffold scenes before j his own work is ended. A murder in his , own neighborhood is enough to raise him ' to an unwonted state of excitement,. for j in the "murderer he sees a wretch who i probably will pay the penalty of his I crime upon the scaffold, j Mr. Titerope is an excellent reporter and -is ready for any kind of work with one exception. . That exception, stran ere i to say, is a funeral. His chief and his j colleagues are aware of his dislike for i that- particular kind of duty, and to a funeral be has not been for years.-" But ! what an extraordinary thing it is that a man with a fondness for executions should j be so averse to attending a funeral. London Tit-Bits. - - Pure Coffee. - There is one consolation for the" prevalent- adulteration of coffee, which is that the peoplo who use the adulterated article are apt to be better off in health than those who partake largely of the pure article. It is known that coffee in creases the pulse, makes the mind active and produces wakefulness. Consequent ly most people take it in the morning. r lnnm nnantitiM it rn-nlnoM nslnito. rirT Ya W nnmamiiniW - 'l IJJJ with heart trouble are forbidden to drink coffee.'' Taken at night it produces wake fulness.' '. One cup of black" coffee ad night will give a night of misery to any one inclined to heart trouble and keep awake for the entire night a person riot accustomed to its use... The. optimist must ! therefore hail with delight the prevalence of adul terated coffee. . -; Theepicnre, however will continue to get his coffee -green roast it himself, grind it with religious exclusion of any adulterants and use it at once by mak ing a decoction by pouring boiling water over, it and never boiling the coffee in the water to be drunk. Thus the epicure ' may extract the utmost of onhealthf ul ness from the fragrant and . delicious berry, adding another to the long list of pleasures that are somewhat - hurtful.1 New York Sun. Fashion In Pill Boxes. -You saw the customer ahead of you. You heard him ask what sort of pill boxes we are using' this season. - There is a fashion in pill boxes the same as in hats and bonnets and parasols. - Some years the round pill box of the olden times is the rage. Then we have the oblong box and the box which has a drawer in it, There is a variety of shades in these box es. Some seasons they run to one color altogether, and there are customers who insist upon their pills being put into the box which is all the go. ' A woman sent back a box of capsules because the box was black when the fashionable shade is pink. These things do not preyail in such 8 tores as ours, but in the parlor drug stores in the swell centers they have to observe these niceties to the let ter. Pharmacist in Chicago Tribune. ." Bffeetlve Way of Cutting Iron. ' . It. is well known that a smooth disk of steel driven at a high speed will ' cut' in two a file held to the' edge . of the disk. This principle does not seem, to have been practically used save in an instance recorded in a 'government armory. The ends of tempered steel ramrods, such as were in use twenty-five years ago, were being treated and the material was found to be too hard to cut. Some small wheels of iron, about six inches in diameter and one Inch 'thick,' were brought into requi sition. They were driven at the rate of 6,000 revolutions per minute, and melted or abraded the metal away instantly, at' the ame time drawing the temper bo that a screw thread could afterward be cut on the end of the tempered rod. Pittsburg Dispatch. Your Well Insured Men. The Earl of Dudley holds the largest life insurance ever effected, the ajponntt being for $6,000,000. Second in the list comes Mr.-' Wanamaker, whose policies of $5,250,000 exceed that of the czar of all the Bussias by $350,000. Fourth comes the Prince of Wales, whose life is Insured for $2,625,000. Yankee Blade. A Woman's Terrible Experience. .- A farmer : named . Morrand found a woman lying underneath a tree near his farm in St. Jerome parish. She was alive, but almost" a' skeleton, unable to speak and insane. She 'was Matilda Grapin, a domestic. ' Over a month ago she left a house to go to church, but had never been heard of again ""Stud was be lieved to be dead. She had laid down under a tree where she and her dead hus band had. often sat together She fell asleep and slept for two days, and when she awoke tehe had lost her reason."' She wandered-fcbout the woods for thirty five days, and never tasted any food. She obtained Water from a brook. Since she has been found she has been rational at times and lias told the above remark able story.- She is in a very weak state. Montreal Cor. Sfianeapolis Tribune. Too Late with His Objections. A" marriage ' ceremony at ; Rosebrrrg was interrupted in a sensational manner a few evenings ago. Charles Minkler, a freight conductor at Woodbnrn, was the groom, and Lottie Critzen, of Rosebnrg, the bride." During the ceremony tire of ficiating minister asked if any one had any reason why the ceremony should not proceed. " '""' " """ A young dry goods clerk of Roseburg, named Mannis, stepped forward, saying he had serious objections. He said he wanted to see and speak with the girl privately.- He was put out of the house and a pistol was found in his pocket. He said he had always wanted to marry the girl, but had never gathered courage to tell her of his feelings. San Francisco (Thrnt.il - ." ' . Pope never could compose well with out first declaming for some time at the top of his vbice, and thus rousing his nervous" system to its fullest activity. - Ia just 21 hours 3. V. S. relieves constipation and sick headaches. After it gets the system under control an occasional dose prevents return. Wo refer by permission to W. II. Slarslmil, ISruns wick House, S. F.; Geo. A. Werner; 631 California Bt, B. T; Mrs. C. MclvfU, 138 Kearny St., S.F.J and many others who. have found relief from constipation and sick headaches. G. W. Vincent, of 6 Terrenco Courti S.-F. writes:' "1 nm 60yenrs of age and hare been troubled -with constipation for 25 years. I was recently induced to try Joy's . Vegetable Sarsaparillo. I recognized In It at once an herb that tho Mexicans used to give us in the early SO's for bowel troubles. (I came to California in 1839,) and I knew it would help me and It has. ' For tho first lime in years I can sleep well and my system Is regular and in splendid condition.- The old Mexican herbs in this remedy are a certain" core in constipation and bowel troubles." Ask for O Sarsaparilla Fbr- Sale : by SNIPES & KIN ERSLY i :THE DAIXE8. OBEtfON. . ' KEAL MERIT : Say the SB,. Cotfgri"lCure is the best thing" they "ever '. saw.' " We : are not flattered for we known Real MEBiT'wiLi; Win. -All we ask is-an honest trial.'1'-" For sale by all druggists.' ; '.' :...- '; ' ?.: S.5B.'MfeDicisfE Mfg. Co., : ' "'"'"'.' " Dnfur. Oregorrl A Severe Law.- The' English peo- ' pie look more closely to -the genuineness ol thess staples than we do.; In fact, thej have a law under - which " they "mak eteBre's'"'anav de- . stroy - adulterated ' products 'that '-are not what they are" represented to be. " Under this statute thoaumds of poands of tea hare been horned because of their wholesale adal teratloaC! ' s -f-; - . iri " Tea, by the" way. Is one of the most notori oasly adulterated articles of commerce. Not alone are the bright, shiny green teas artifi cially colored, but thousands of pounds of substitutes for tea leaves are" used to swell ; the balk of cheap teat; ash, sloe, and willow -leaves being those most commonly used. Again, sweepings from tea warehouses are colored and sold as tea. Even exhausted tea " ' leaves gathered from the tea-hooses are kept, dried, and made over and find their way into thecheap teas. - The English government attempts to stamp . this oat by confiscation; but no tea Is too . poor for u, and the result is, that probably tbe poorest teas used by any nation are those . . consumed In America. Beech's Tea is presented with the raar auty that it Is unoolored and unadulterated; ' ia fact, the snn-cured tea leaf pare and aim-' pie. Its purity insures saperior strength, about one third less of it being- required fox , an infusion than of the artificial teas, and -it ; fragrance and exquisite flavor is-at once ap- parent. 'It win be 4 revelation to yon. Is . order that its purity and quality may be gaar anteedyit Is sold only in pound packages ' hearing this -trade-mark: - :. BEECHsl: TEA ildhopjdj .: Price Oe per pound.- For sale a Zieslle Hixtlor's, Jou r .4aV4t1 The Dalles IS Of Leadin City of Eastern Oregon. During the little over a year of its existence it has earnestly tried to fallfil the objects for which it was founded, namely, to assist in developing our industries, to advertise the resources of the city and adjacen - and to -work for an open river to the sea. Its record is "before the people and the phenomenal support it has received is accepted as the expression of their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, it will live only to fight for what it believes to be just and ri, ht. Commencing with the first number of the second vclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages while the -price ($1.50 a vear remains the same EPS? - ISBftSS- . Thus Jbbththe weekly moi ejreading matter for ' ' published in the county. DONE AT CIDI1ICLE JOB BddK a r;d J Done on LIGHT BINDING Address all Mailorders to THE DALLES, Clpnicie and daily editions contain less money than any paper ' .'..-.. f- o b p r i 9 ti 9 Short Notice. NEATLY DONE. Co., OREGOrS