THE COLUMBIAN . PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., np n it y 71 1 O Pj COLUMBIAN. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY , AT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., BY BY E. G. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor, E. G. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription Rates: - Advertising Rates: One year. In advance... Hlx muutbr. Three months, " .82 00 . 1 00 VOL. III. ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON: APRIL 27, 18S8. NO. 38. One quare (10 lice) firat Insertion...... Each aubaequeot invert Ion. .12 00 . 1 00 50 m THE BABY'S SIMPLE. Over the cradle tbe mother hung, froftiy coouisr a slumber tonit. And these were tbe s:mp!y words she sua All the evening long: Cheek or chin, or knuckle or kno. Where shall tbe babv'n dimple be ? Where ball the an?ei's fljger rest When he come down to the baby's nest? Where shall the angel's touch remain When he awakens my baby aa'u ? fc'tlil aa she bent and n? so low. A murmur into her music broke, And she paust-d to her fr uiz cuttld not know Tbe tab) ' n gel sj,olte : "Cheek or chin or kr.uckliior knee, Where shall tbe baby's dimple be ? Whre shall my rtr-r fit'l anl re t When I come down to the bby re t? where shall my najier'n touch remain When 1 awake your baoy atftU: ?" S'lent the mother eat and dwelt Lnnjr on ibe sweet de:y of cho!ee. And tuen by the bAy 's siue shs ku.lt. And sang wi:h pleasant voice: "Not on the limb O argil dear ! Kor the c.tarm witti its youtu will d'sappear; Not ou the cheek t-hill the dimple be, Kor ihe harboring smile will fade and fl?e; Bnt toucii ih.u the chin with lmpre-.' deep. And my tl,y the a-'gel's seal ha!l ketp." TOE WICKED WORLD. Born at Arras, which also gave birth to Daoiieus, ami to Maximilian Robes pierre and liis brother, on July 23, 1775, Francois Jules Vidocq was the son of a baker, who had a lucrative contract of supplying the local government with bread" flour, etc. At thirteen Vidocq robbed hi3 father's till, stole his silver ware, and brought np in the house of correction. After his discharge he stole a large sura of money from hi3 father and fled to Ost-nd, where a sharper robbed him of his ill-gotten gains. To keep himself from starving he became a sweeper out of the animals' cages in a menagerie. He was advanced to the po- j sition ' of acrobat and tumbler and starred on the bills. His master desired to promote him into a South Sea savage, to eat raw flesh and drink blood in the presence of the audienee. Bat Vidocq had a weakness for his food cooked, and in the year 1701 he returned home, and old Vidocq killed the fatted calf. He next entered tbe Freuch army, and fought so creditably at Jernappes that i.e was made corporal of grenadiers. He entered Paris in 1770 at the age of 21, and led a fast life until his money gave out, when he rejoined tbe army in tbe north. Mixed up in a forgery, he was sentenced to the galleys for eight years and remained seven years in servitud, when he escaped. He joined a band 'of highwaymen, and in forty-eight hours afterward gave them up to the authori- ties. He was himself remitted to the galleys, though, and when lie got out got J into trouble also, and was sent back j again. Finally he settled down to an ! appreciation of the fact that there was no future for him in crime, and decided to try and find a market for what he knew i of lutid its votaries, lie Stated his case to M. Henri, commissioner of tha secret police of Pans, and he was placed upon the force in a subordinate capacity, on general rule of "set a thief to catch a thief." After three years service he was employed as a detective, and exhibited remarkable aptitude. Here is one of the exploits, as told by himself, with which he won his early favor with the authorities: In 1810 robberies of a now kind incon ceivable boldness awakened the police to the knowledge of a troop of malefactors of a novel description. Nearly all the robberies had been committed by ladders and forcible entries. So skillfullv were they arranged and executed that Vidocq himself followed numerous clews with out success. A burglary was committed "in Rue St. Claude, in an apartment on the second floor above the room in which the com missary of police for the district resided. The cord of the lantern which hung at Lis house door had been utilized a3 a ladder by the thieves. The burglars had left behind them a nose-bag, and Vidocq surmised that the perpetrators might be hackney coachmeu, or at least that coaches had been employed in the enter prise.: He started on this trail, and, 8lights it was, it proved a correct one. He found that the nose bag left by the burglars belonged to a man named Hus son, who was apprehended, and from him information was obtained implicating two brothers named Delzeve, the elder one of whom was soon arrested. In a short time Vidocq had the entire band at bay, and most of them were convicted and sent to the galleys. The -ounger Delzeve, however, had baffled all efforts at capture, and bade defiance to Vidocq himself. The wily Frenchman fqfr two years followed the young man by night and by day, in by-places and opn thor oughfares, and finally trapped him. Another important case in which he had an opportunity to develop his rare detective skill was when a galley slave made his escape. He learned that Mme. Noel kept an establishment where men of this kind were harbored. Vidocq was too well known to undertake so import ant a mission as the capture of this gal ley slave, except in disguise, so for the nounce he became a galley slave and bor rowed the name of a thief, one Germain, aliens the captain, w ho hail beep an inti mate acquaintance of Noel, and though the similarity between Vidocq and Ger main was sligLt, he determined to per sonate him. They hail been companions in the galleys, and had escaped from these prisons together. Vidocq cut his hair short, dyed both his beard and hair, washed his counte nance with whito walnut liquor, and gar nished his upper lip thickly with a kind of coffee grounds which he plastered on by means of gum arabic. lie even doc tored his f-t-t to complete tbe resem blance, and made the marks of letters on his wrists, and even prepared shoes sim ilar to those worn in the galles, and stamped with the horrid letters, G. A.L , the abbreviation of gallerien, or "galley slave." He adds in his autobiogrpphy that the costume was perfect; the thing wanting only one hundred of those com -. panionable insects which :peoplo the sol itude of poverty, and which were, to gether with fregs and toads, one of the seven plagues of old Egypt. He was Sromtply admitted to the residence of adame Noel, with this expression of pity: "Ab, my poor lad, there is no , occa sion to tll mo .where you hare come from. I am sure you must be dying of hunger." "Oh, ves," he answered, "I am indeed hungry. 1 have tasted nothing for 21 hours. She went off and immediately re turned with some food aud wine, which he ate with great eagerness, and said: "Mother, you restored me to life." He then impressed npon her who he was, and began asking in regard to the man he was seeking. Mother Noel, not suspecting for a moment that she was entertaining the great French detective, gave him away, and asked : "Are you known to Vidocq and his two bull dogs?" : "Alas! he replied, yes: they have caught me twice." Patting him upon the head, and with a peculiar expression upon her face, she said: "In that case be on your guard. Vi- !ocq is often disguised. He assumes characters, costumes and shupes to get hold of all unfortunates like yourself. Poor Mother Noel had occasion to back her own opinion bv morning when tbe two "bull-dogs, "as she called her guest's subordinates, dropped in and aided him in clapping the bilboes on the gentle man he sought. Tbe year 1814 was tbe most remarkable of his life, on account of the important captures which followed one another. Burglars, thieves, crimi nals of all classes became an easy prey to his rare detective genius. ; About this time a great many murders were com mitted all along the roads leading to the capital, without it being possible to dis cover the perpetrators of the crimes. In vain the police had a strict wutch on the actions of all suspected parties, but their utmost diligence was fruitless, when a fresh crime, accompanied with circum stances of the most horrid nature, sup plied them with hints from wnicu they could at length anticipate bringing the culprits to justice. A man named Fon taine, a butcher living at Labourtille, was ou his way to a fair in this district of Corbeil, carrying with him his leather bag in which hf had safely deposited, as he supposed, 1500 fraucs. At a trilling distance from Essonne he i stopped to take some refreshment, and falling in with two very well-dressed men, they entered into conversation with him, found out where he was going, how much he had with him, warned him of the danger of the road, and one of them, showing a huge stick that would make good resistance, volunteered to accom pany him. The night was very dark, scarcely al lowing the travelers to distinguish one step before them, and while Fontaine was unsuspectedly following the path recommended by his companions, when the one who remained behind struck him over the head a violent blow with his cudgel, which made him reel. Sur prised, but not intimidated, he was aKnfc to turn to defend himself, when a second blow, more violent than the first, brought him to the ground. Immediate ly the other robber, armed with a short dagger, threw himself upon him, and dealt murderous blow after blow till he believed his victim was dead.' He quick ly stripped him of the contents of his money bag, after which they made off, leaving him weltering in his gore. Hap pily, passengers, directed by his groans, came to his succor, and discovered the wretched man, whom the freshness of the air had recalled to his senses. In formation was immediately dispatched of the crime. Fontaino was removed to the hospital, and in a short time was out of danger. Accurate impressions were taken of the footmarks, buttons, frag ments of paper dyed in blood, and every insignificant thing at the scene of the crime, with hopes of fastening the offence upon the assassin. On one of the p-ece3 ' ! tne paper, which appeared to have been hastily torn off to wipe the blade of the knife, were observed some written characters, but they were without any connecting sense. The attorney -general, however, attached great importance to the explanation of this fragment; and upon more closely ex ploring the spot where Fontaine had been lying, a second morsel had been picked up, and by attaching the pieces together they ciphered out the address, the business and town of a certain man, but so indistinctly that it was hard to say who he was. Vidocq was called in and opened the campaign against the as sassin. The torn address ha regarded as an enigma which should first be solved, and after racking his brain day and night he finally concluded how the perfect address sbonld run. This gave him the impres sion that the assassins were in league with a wine merchant. He directe i his suspicions against a man named Raoul. This mau he had regarded with suspicion for some time; and the carbaret kept by him had long been marked as the ren dezvous of suspicious persons. Rjtoul, moreover, had married the sister of a liberated slave, and he felt satisfied in his own mind that if the crime was not committed by him at least it was the work of his brother or some of his rel atives, i - Every scheme laid by Vidocq to fasten the crime upon Raoul for a long time was circumvented, and he put his place under espionage. The detectives noticed that two persons of infamous character seem ed to be on close terms of intimacy with the wine met chant, and were frequently seen stealing from the gloom of the evening and returning next morning greatly fatigued, with tbeir clothes all shotted with mud and dust. : The detec tives also noticed a man visit this place who for many reasons they had surmised to be one of the assassins sought for. He bad a halt in his gait, proceeding not So much from habitual lame ness as from recent injuryi and io per son and dress he was found to closely agree with the description given by Fontaine of one of the robbers. Vibocq started one evening, in disguise, to the wine merchant's cabaret, remained there all night, and at 4 o'clock the ntxt after noon, when he began to grow impatient of the success of his plan, lie recognized a visitor by the name of Court, whom he had previously suspected of the crime. He secured the necessary papers for the arrest and the next morning ascended to the room which Court occupied. He knocked on the door aud the words, sharpely ottered, oamo from with;. "Who is there?" "Why, who should it be but Raouir responded Vibocq, closely imitating the man's voice. Cheerily the response came. "What news? Nothing fresh turned up?" "Yes," replied Vibocq. "I have a thousand things to tell you." Thus securing an entrance io the room, Vibocq put Court and his wife under ar rest and proceeded to turn over every thing in the apartment in which he found a pair of pistols ready loaded and primed, some knives and a large amount of clothes which appeared to have been recently washed. He afterward arrested Raoul, and, after putting the men in separate places of confinement,- Court finally admitted that it was he who mur dered the poulterer, and was somewhat surprised that the man .should have re " covered after the terrible beating and cutting that he gave him. Vibocq then plied him with questions as to other as sassinations, and he admitted that he had murdered several other people. At first he denied that he had any accomplices, and at length he admitted that Clara R toul had participated in the crime of which he was accused. Vibocq next sought to wring a confes sion from Raoul. He stole in upon him suddenly one evening, when he was sleeping, placed himself beside him, and whispered gently in his ear, in the hope of leading him, as under tbe influence of a dream, to answer the questions he put to him. Some unintelligible words es caped him, but it was impossible to make any sense out of them. This scene lasted a quarter of an hour, when Vibocq asked him what became of the knife with which he murdered his victim. He gave a sudden start, uttered some inarticulate word3, and plunged from the bed, his wild eyes glaring as though he dreaded the apparition of a horrible vision. He finally confessed, and both men received the just reward for their terrible crimes. Ic 1825, a suspicion which had for some time been growing against Vibocq be came so generally believed that a strong popular demand rose for his removal. It was said, with what truth no one can say now, that ho was himself the originator of many of the burglaries he was so suc cessful in ferreting out. He declared the accusations vile slanders, but popular opinion was too strong aud he had to be dismissed. . He became a paper manufacturer, and in 1831 established a trade protection so ciety, which was nothing less than a com mercial agency for furnishing informa tion in regard to business men's habits and solvency for the protection of their creditors. He succeeded m this as in other lines. He made quite a hit in lit erature, publishing in 1841 a ievision cf his autobiography, which he had first put out in 132!). It had been a failure then, but on the second edition, Eugene Sue's famous novel, "The Mysteries of Paris," having taken the town by storm, Vidocq's book, under the title of " The True Mysteries of Paris," caught on also and made money, if not a reputation, for him. Vidocq died in Belgium in 1850, leav ing a handsome fortune to his beirs. Our Postage Stamps. The new two-cent rate of letter postage goes into effect on the-1st day of October next, and by the change the familiar green three-cent stamp, bearing the pro tile of Washington, will go out of use af ter thirteen years of service. The first issue of adhesive postage stamps used by the Government appeared in 1851, and consisted of two denomina tions a five cent stamp bearing the face of Franklin, whose zeal and ability laid the foundation of our postal system, and a ten-cent stamp with the head of Wash ington upon it. Not very long after a second series of five denominations was issued. The one-cent stamp bore Franklin's image, the three Washington's, the five Jefferson's and the ten aud twelve a var ied picture of Washington. In 1857 the series was increased by the issue of a twenty-four, a thirty and a ninety-cent stamp, and of these two dif ferent portraits of Washington monpoliz ed the twenty-four and ninety, while a second viow of Franklin tilled the frame of the thirty. The third issue appeared in 18G1, Washington still apjearing on five of the denominations, Franklin on two and Jef ferson on one. In 1SG3 the first two-cent stamp was printed. It was black, and boi the face of Jackson very conspicuously placed. In I860 the fifteen-cent stamp was in troduced for foreign postage, and had placed upon it the portrait of Lincoln. These remained in use without change 1 till 1870, when a series of ten square stamps of various designs appeared, three of them portraits. The one cent was still reserved for Franklin; Wash ington was placed on the six-cent and Liucoln on the ninety-cent. The other designs were fanciful and unpopular, and a new issue, the one now iu use, was brought out a month later. In this Franklin i? on the one-cent, Jackson on the two, Washington on the three, Lin coln on the six, Jefferson on the ten, Clay on the twelve, Webster on the fif teen, Scott on the twenty-four, Hamilton on the thirty and Commodore O. H. Perry on the ninety. The seven w as later given to Stanton and the five to Garfield. Thus it will be seen that, from the first, the denomination in commonest nse has borne the head of Washington. As tbe three cent stamp will now go almost entirely out of nse, and the two-cent be come universal, it is very proper that the postmaster-geueral should place the im age of Washington on a newly-designed two-cent stamp, as he intends to. Bos ton Advertiser. A certain gentleman in Philadelphia who owes his prominence entirely to his wealth, sent all the way to London for a batler with silk stockings and silver buckles. He arrived a severe and cir cumspect person, accustomed to serve the" blue-blooded aristocrat. His new master soon became the subject of his snuffy criticism. It was not long ere so ciety was shaking its sides over the fol lowing comprehensive verdict: "E is an 'og, an' 'is wife's hanother!" Raw starch, applied with a little water as paste, will generally remove all stains from bed tioking, About Divorces. The divorce question is an old one, of conrse, but it has periodical periods of revival, and becomes as lively a topic as preaoher or legislator can discuss. The remarkable sermons now.being preached by Rev. Dr. Dix are attracting national attention, and none of them more so than the one on "divorces." The current number of the North American Review disousses the question from the theolog ical and legal stand point; in short, pick up tbe every-day newspaper and there is some allusiou to this divorce problem. t Judge Elcock, of Philadelphia, said that divorces in 1'ennsylvania can be had more easily than in any other Common wealth in the Union. This calls the at tention of our citizens to the honor of our own homes and makes us ask," What are you going to do about it J" For some time there seems to havo been but two views held concerning this social prob lem. The laxity of certain State laws concerning divorce were the direct result of reaction against the harsh rules of the church. Theology either made marriage a sacrament, or permitted only one rea son for a divorce, viz: adultery. This was a little too rigid and overdid itself, for it is a matter of record that the crime of adultery was committed by collusion in order to obtain a divorce. Then came the law-maker, who erred on the other side and made divorce getting so easy that it has become altogether too com mon. It is true that marriage, so far as the law is concerned, is simply a contract, but one so far-reaching in its social consequences that it should not be idly or negligently broken. One of the chief causes for divorce in this State that is the most common cause is desertion for two years. All parties have to do is to live apart, and on ex-parte testimony the judge is bound to give a divorce.' Con corning this Judge Elcock, in a Times interview, says: "The first thing to be done should be to ohange the term of desertion, making it five or six years, and then the respond ent should be required to appear in court so that the averment of the libellant might be put to te-t before a decree is made. As it is now, malice must be as sumed from the fact of the alleged deser sion. The examiner has much the same power as a master, and if the returns are in legal form, the respondent having had notice by publication, the judges having limited discretion must take the report as final, and though they may feel that the case ia not right, in the absence of proof, and the impossibility of obtaining it the decree must be made." That divorces are necessary every one must admit, but should not be granted for every whim and humor. Prof. Wool sey is oi the opinion that the facilities of getting divorces and the increasing causes for divorces, increase the number of divorces themselves hence he advo cates se2aration instead of absolute di vorce, which carries the permission to remarry. Of course no perfect law can be made, one that cannot be evaded or one which will not occasionally work an injury. Judge Jameson, of Chicago, brings to the aid of society the red tape of law. He would make divorces more difficult to get by throwing around them much legal obstruction and would have uniformity of law on the subject by pass ing a Federal statute.. Then again be is opposed to absolute divorces in many cases granting only simple separation with the right of parties to remarry. The only thing after all is to change our law radically, but make it more decided, a little less lenient and take away the laxity of its execution. In the long run, pub lic opinion, aot law, establshes our social relations. The marital relation cannot be preserved by law, and so Judge Jame son concludes, as all sensible men must: "Finally, the most effective remedy will be the elevation of public sentiment in regard to the sanctity of marriage; not sanctity in the ecclesiastical sense, which makes of it a sacrament, but in that of the highest social obligation that can bind the conscience of a man of honor and honesty the obligation to keep the faith be pledged in marriage to his wife and to the State, and which he reuews upon the birth of each of his children, to abide with her until death, unless separated by law for strictly necassasy causes." The First Paper Maker. Who was the first paper maker? If the reply to this query should be, as is quite likely, that some old-time inven tive genius was the man, it will be incor rect. The date of the invention and the founding of paper making is not definite ly known, 'ihe common wasp was, how ever, the inventor. The big wasp's nest, which was always kept at a safe distance, and often knocked down with a stone during the rambles of boyhood, was com posed of actual paper of the most deli cate and elegant kind. As spiders were spinners of gossamer webs of intricate and exquisite pattern when primitive man went about dressed in the shaggy skins of beasts, and could neither spin nor weave the beautiful fine cloth fabrics of to-day. so little wasps, when people of a later and somewhat more advanced age had recourse to such rude and unsat isfactory substances as wood, stone and brass, the bark of trees, and the hides of animals, on which to preserve memoran da, were making a material of far greater excellence. They made their paper, too, by very nearly the same process employed 'by man at the present time. Indeed, sever al of our best, discoveries in regard to building, architecture, and manufactures of various kinds, if they have not been derived from acute observation of the' work of certain animals, including in sects, have, when compared with their constructions and their manner of mak ing them, been found to show a wonder fully close resemblance. The beaver gave men their earliest and most service able knowledge concerning dam build ing, and to-day no workman can surpass this animal's skill and precision in the erection of such structures. Nature is a great teacher, and especial ly does the paper making of the wasp illustrate how valuably suggestive she may sometimes be; for assuredly, the wasp was the first to show that it did not always require rags to manufacture paper, the vegetable fibres answered for this purpose, and could be reduced to a pulp, and that to make the paper strong aid tenaoious.the fibres must be long. The first thing the wesps do, when about to build a nest, is t y collect, with preference for old and dry wood, fibres aDout , one-tenth of an lich long, and nner tban a hair, and put them into bun dies which they increase as they continue on their way. These fibres they bruise into a sort of lint, and cement with a sizing of glue, after whiih they knead the material into a paste, like papier maobe, and roll up a ball; this they trample with their feet into a leaf as thin as tissue paper. I The ceiling of the wasp's chamber, to the thickness of nearly two inches, is often constructed by puttiig, one above another, fifteen or sixteen layers or sheets of this prepared piper, and be tween these layers spaces are left, so that it seems as if a number of little f hells had' been laid near one another'. Next they build up a terrace composod of an immense number of paper shells, until a light and elegant structure, like a honey comb, has been constructed, and in the cells thus formed they rear their young. lbat tbe wasp was tbe first paper maker will, we think, hardly be dis puted. As patent laws did! not probably exist in the days when wasps first began to multiply on the earth and to build their houses of paper, the field has been an open one up to comparatively later days, and has been well improved and. enlarged upon. The quality has been much improved, the quantity greatly in creased, and the uses to which paperhas been successfully adapted are many and i - m i .: -ii- marvelous. xue wasp was ; onuuiag much higher than he knew when he went into the paper-making business. He 4 was a genuine Christopher Columbus. Paper World. Domestic Difficulties. For the fuller understand ing'of the fol lowing anecdote," it is necessary to intro duce a third parson, John W., a wealthy and extensive cotton spinnt r of Oldham, England, who attended at the weekly market day at Huddersfield, seventeen miles distant to supply tho manufactur ers with cotton warps. At the baptismal font, amid the clus tered and massive arches of Oldham church, he was christened John Wrig ley; but as the babe grew into a strip ling, a well-befitting name, indicative of some peculiar characteris ic, as is the prevalent custom in the hil ly regions of northern England, was grac?fully thrown upon hia shoulders by the presiding priestess of the neighborhood, and to have searched for him bv his proper name would only have been labor in vain. 1 Fcrtanate indeed would have been the inquiring stranger, if, in coming across a group of mirth-loving wives of Old ham, he heard so ae such remark as "Oh, I'll tell yo' whoa he means John o' mi' Gronnv's." To meet him on the street, his fea tures bore evidence of the engrossing care of business, but when seated at the head of the dinner table, at "The King's Head," in King street (kept at the time fifty years ago, by tha rosy-fa-jed host, Joe Smithies, whose ample rotundity of person reminded the obser rer of a plen tiful larder) that look of anxiety had been left somewhere belosv stairs, and his face glowed with the genial sun shine which spring only from a cheerful hiart. ! Dressed in blue coat, drab knee breeches and gaiters, he wis, both men tally and physically, a flc e representa tion of the English nation md character, aptly described by the poe:: "Stern o'er ea.h bosim Reason hMd her state With dating Him irregularly :reat; Prtde in their port. tletUnce in their eye, I aee the lord of buiuna kind pass by; Intent on h'ea denimts. a thou rhtful band. By form uatauened, fresh from nature' hand, fierce to tbeir native hardneH of sou True to imaged rights above control." The following is a specimen of. the ex pected tale whereby he would set the whole company in a roar of hilarity, dur- ing the carving and disc ussing of the roast beef, the material, as the first Na poleon used to express it when speaking , . i-t ; ; ii of his armies, or while enjoying tue cherry wine:- A contest had long been pending be- tween Johu No. 1 and his spouse Betty, as to which, in plain ternsl should wear that badge ot governing power the breeches. The matter had been t he subject of many a curtain lecture, a la Caudle. It was after one of extraordinary length and severity, that an adopted plan, the result of John s serious cogitations, had now reached maturity, and ho resolved to hazard all on a single c. list of the die. Though ever willing "to render unto Ctear'tf " he Creasar the things that are owned and acknowledged that he owed a greater part of his virtue and forbear- ance to tbe exercise ot wvicui bis noisy wife constantly gave it. Accordingly, at peep o' dar,' he arose and transformed, not withd ut regret, the coveted unmentionables to her side of the room, and proceeded tu arry herself in ner attire tbe pe tticoat being motives, that actuated bv scrupulous there should always be a complete har- mony between outward appearance and the internal government of the house- hold.. i movements Observing these novel which disclosed the fact that the advan tage of muscle would be I greatly in his favor, and that even a dernier rosort to the cudgel would be utterly hopeless.she exciaimea: "Yo are not going to John, are yo ?" put them on, I but I will, of doors with "Yaw (he meant yes), Betty.' "But yo' winna go out them on, John, win yo ? "Yaw. but I will. Betty This movement in the rear took Betty completely aback. Overcome by the sudden manner by which her own weapons had been turned and the dreadful aspect w upon herself, hich affairs had assumed, she at once capitulated, con senting that she would n more dispute with him the reigning pov er.if he would only, once again, put on his breeches. Affairs with John No, 2 j had not so fortunate a turn. He and "his better hidf" had met at the sacred altar of Hymen, eagerly rush ing into the, golden bondage j of matri mony, and coming together in middle life; each as the inheritor of household furniture. The honevmoon had sq arcely passed, however, ere she claimed that her fur- niture must be called ."mine," while that portion bought by him, she authoritively insisted must be called "ours." This disturbing element was the cause of many a war of. words, which one day terminated in a ucufHe, and tbe ejected husband suddenly found himself outside the door and twang went the lock in his face. What was he to do now? The wide world and he still wider ocean lay before him, the prospects of a homeless wanderer arose vividly to his mental view. While thus ruminating, the erring footsteps of a life time were condensed into the review of one short hour, while his dreams of connubial felicity vanished into the air. - Taking a farewell look at the house and it surrounding plants another Paradise lost sad thoughts came thick and fast. "Who now shall tear you to the ain, or rank Your tribeo, and water from tbe ambrorlal fount? The heart-appalling reality forced the conviction upon his mind, that "to the victor belongs the spoils," ahd the cur tiin falls on the mournful scene, when the bare-beaded victim is humbly plead ing at the window of the conquering heroine, and sole possessor of the domicile, "would not she hand him out our hat?" Poison iu the Sultan's Palace. Ia November last General Fuad Pasha was arrested and tried by a tribunal in the palace of Yilditz. The chirges against him were of a vague character. bnt they were founded upon some rash after-dinner talk attributed to Fuad, who 7a communicative over his champagne. ,Th tribunal found nothing against him and he wrs released and resumed his du ties as aid-de-camp to the Sultan. About three weeks afterward he was again ar rested and confined in one of the kiosks in the palace ground?. No charges were brought against him, but he remained under arrest until the 28th of January, when he was released. A private letter from Constantinople tells us how the hero of Katchielewo and Elena regained his liberty: "After re maining in confinement for more than three weeks, Fuad declared to hia at tendants that he could endure it no' longer, and that he would rather die than continue to live under such persecutions as that to which he was subjected; he was resolved to take no more food. His attendants thought it merely a "facon de parler." But Fuad stuck to his word and for three days he ate no solid food; but he smoked all day long, consuming from eighty to one hundred cigarettes per day. On the evening of the third day he had a sort of cataleptic fit, and re mained in a comatose condition for some hours. This caused much alarm, and the first chamberlain tcld the story to the Sultan, who exclaimed: " 'If he dies what will they Fay out side?' j The chamberlain replied: " 'If he dies it will be said that Fuad Pasha was poisoned in the palace.' Whereupon the Sultan ordered that Fuad Pasha should be sent home wit'i a present of 500 to console him for what he had undergone. " St. James Gazette. The Traveling Cure. Three years ago when traveling in America, one morning, at a little station we were approaching the Rocky Moun tains I was astonished to see a very old and venerable French cure in his usual garb enter tho car, and as he was evi dently in some distress of mind, and as evidently had little command of English. I asked him in his native language if I could be of any service to him. There was a difficulty about a box which I soon settled, and then we sat down and en tered into conversation. He soon found out that I was very much astonished to see him there; and told me so. I ac knowledged it. "It is very simple," he said. "I am very old, and six months ago I was like to die, and I was doing my best to prepare myself for the long jour ney. In my fancies I imagined myself already in the presence of 'le bon Dieu,' and I fancied this question addressed to me: 'M. Ie cure, how did you like the beautiful world you have left?' I rose iu my bed as this thought came into my head, for I I who .figure to yourself had dared to preach of a better world for fifty years, was, oh! so ignorant of this. And I registered a vow that if le bon Dieu' allowed me to rise from that bed of sickness I would spend the rest of my days in admiring His works 'et me voicif I am only on my journey round the world; I am going now to Btop at tho Tosemite Valley a few days en route for Sau Francisco and Japan, and the box, Monsieur, which your kiDdness has res cued for me, contains a little scientific library, now my constant oompanion in my delioious wanderings." Norman Lockyer, in Nature. The Cup that Cheers. Now that adulterated tea in to be ex cluded from American ports it may be well to tell consumers what they are about to escape. According to actual analysis and common report there have been found in the alleged tea of com merce, nutgalls, currant leaves, iron fil ings, filbert husks, sulphate of copper, -oak bark, hornets' nests and wasps' nests shredded and colored, acetic acid, aloes, common green paint, lead in various forms, desiccated door mats, peach leaves, tarred rope that had been ground to powder and soaked in sea water,-' ma nilla paper, bamboo leaves, vernal grass, ammonia, arsenic, stable sweepings, and many other things too numerous and dis gusting to mention. "Whether any of these substances have ever paid duty ac cording to their kfad, instead of tea, is not known; but there can be no doubt that such of them as have been imported in tea boxes have been sold and swal lowed as tea by people who have the hap py habit of supposing J that whatever comes out of a teapot is good to drink. If the tea of the past has in the main been cheering, how wildly exciting the effect of the unadulterated article will be! N. Y. Herald. ; , V .i - It takes twenty blows of a hammer in the hands of a wpman to drive a ten penny nail three inches. She misses the nail twice where she hits it once. How many blows does she strike in all, and how far can her voice be heard when she strikes her thnmb? SHORT BITS. The first theft: The baby's crib. The loveliest spot on earth: The ace. The dairyman's fortune is his milk maid. ' A heavy mash: "Trnth crushed to earth." Hatters are the people oftenest oauijht napping. . Everybody's duty is dun on the first day of January. What next? A cornet recital U the latest novelty in concerts. It is rumored that ex-Senator Tabor puts on a great many frills. In some respects Anglomania is only another word for' assininity. " From the lowest depth there is a path to the Joftiest height. Carlyle. Some men are club-footed, but it is the policeman who is club-waisted. It is the very rich men in this country who can afford to put on million airs. A quack doctor makes ducks and drakes of the money of gullible people, Ctesar had his Brutus, Charles I his Cromwell, and Senator Kellogg his Price. New Jersey legislators, it is said, crack jokes while the chaplain is praying for them. "Why does a kiss raise the spirits?" "Because it's the cream of ta-ta." Har vard Lampoon. The painter's belated jest: "I'm always glad to hear of big crops they bring me plenty of graining." Persons who do not understand the nature of an oath should not undertake to use the telephone. A policeman wears a uniform so that a person engaged in devilment may see him ooming and get a vay. No matter now conscientious a cigar dealer may be he will never display a cabbage leaf as an emblem of his busi ness. Diamonds should be washed regularly, but it is not necessary to hang them out on a line in the back yard. New Orleans Picayune. Dorsey, it is said, does not believe in God. It may also be said that God does not believe in Dorsey. Louisville Courier-Journal. Many teachers of our public schools are now absent because of ill health. Sixty substitutes are now employed. Boston Traveler. New York has plenty of milk now. The warm weather has released the ice imprisoned brooklets of Orange county. Boston Traveler. There was no ice on the ground when Adam fell, but the jar reverberated down through the corridors of the centuries.- , N. Y. Commercial. It is said that the name of a well inown Massachusetts ale brewer ia Drinkwater. That's all there is in some names. Exchange. The ground-hog and goose-bone, not haying published an almanac, still main tain their reputation as weather prophets. Norristown Herald. German geographers propose to chris ten a portion of the Northern Ocean the Nordekskjold sea. Don't, it's kjedd enough now. Lowell Courier. Notwithstanding tbe "backwardness of the season," Easter bonnets this year are ripe two weeks earlier than they wore last year." Norristown Herald. Talk about your hop producing re gions! Your old-fashioned arm chair with tbe bent pin attachment holds over everything of that quality. Exchange. What man is there whom contact with ' a great soul will not exalt? A drop of ' water npon the petals of a lotus glistens with the splendors of the pearl. Hindu. ( The man who will invent a sealakin sacque which can be worn in the summer time will gain the everlasting regard of thousands of American women. The Diummer. Senator Tabor, of Colorado, rising to make his maiden speech, tbe other day, said: "Mr. President, I am paired with the gentleman from Hampton, Mr. South -Carolina.". , A calculation shows that a Dundee spinner must spin Bixty miles of yarn to earn $2. Almost any country store can produce men that will spin a longer yarn fo'r nothing. To thoroughly enjoy the old song, "A Life on tbe Ocean Wave," remarks a friend who hat experienced the horrors of seasickness, you must a life on the ocean waive. A new diploma factory has been dis covered by the Detroit Post. - It obseives that the late Vice President pro torn, has conferred the degree of M. D. on Miss Ad die Burr. ! A New York druggist is going to open a soda fountain in London this summer. It will be fun to see the Englishmen sit down to wait for the foam to settle. Detroit Free Press. That was a bold man, a defendant in a recent divorce suit, who said that he would rather marry all the women in the world than pay $5,000, the amount sug gested as a compromise. A lady leaving home was thus ad dressed by her little boy: "Martina, will yon remember and buy me a penny whistle? And let it be a religious one so that I can use it on Sunday." Tho old Vermont man who heard that there were wildcat mines in Utah said that if the pesky wildcats were down in the bowel b of the earth, people must be dreadful fools to digs 'em up.- Boston . Post. A fashion item states that "the Boston young man ia beginning to wear eye glasses and knee-breeches." Well, the one necessitates the other. The average Boston young man needs the eye-glasses in order to see his legs. -Puck. French Beans a la Pumlette. Choose some young and tender French beann.re move all fibers by breaking off the ends; wash, and boil in boiling water; when done, toss them in melted butter sea soned with chopped chives and parsley; stir in a litte flour, a pinch of salt, and some stock, rednoe the sauce, thkkeu with yolks of egg.flavor with a f aw drops of lemon, aui serve.