THE COLUMBIAN. Published Evert Fridat, at ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OH., DT Published Evert Fridat, AT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OR., BY E. G. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription Ratks: One year, in advance $2 00 Six months. " 1 on E. 0. AD A1IS, Editor and Proprietor Advertising Rates : ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, MARCH 28, im. " ,! ft V 41 A. i t i rm VOL. IV. M - . i ju.c square iv uiiea; iu bl iirnei uuu , . t, w JX(J. 04. Each subsequent insertion 100 Throe months, " THE COLUMBIAN. COLUMBIAN. ! L JD1L Hj CHIHUAHUA'S CAPTIVE APACHES Welcome Home of the the Captive Squaws Lack of Pity. Scouts with A Ilrntal f E.1 ward Roberts in San Francisco Chronicle. But the scalp-bearers had hardly massed before there came the squaw: who had been taken. The minute these bareheaded, dirty, homely, hard-faced women were seen the cheering and the excitement increased, while the boys in the street pressed hard against the guards and tried to strike at the wives of those who had killed and tortured their parents, brothers and sisters Some of the prisoners held their nurs ing babes in their arms and heeded only them. The big-eyed nurslings, held as lovincrlv by their wild mothers as ever the women of civilization hold their young in times of danger, cried with fear, and even the food their mothers offered them so piteoasly did not serve to comfort them. It was enough to make the heart ache to see these igno' rant mothers, hated and struck at be cause born in a wilderness and the wives of savages, press their children to their breasts and hold them away from the cruel hands outstretched to strike. And vet so hated is an Apache that every wail was hailed with joy by the friends of the victors. I saw not one face among all the mothers there that had pity written on it. Women hel their children up to see the ragged squaws and laughed at the unhappy wives and cursed them. Chihuahua for got its Sur.-day and the people forgot their religion. The spectacle was as barbarous as- that which must have been the accompaniment of Ca-sar's entry into Rome, with the bleeding captives lrom Gaul following his victorious chariot. Did any of those who looked upon these poor women, who were di-omeu to live hereafter in drearv prisons far away, and who marched now within hearing of the bells which only a few hours ago had call the people to mass, stop to think what their religion taught, or did the clamor of the Spanish brass up there in the graceful towers only serve to drown their reason and inflame their hate? The cathedral stood nearby, the air waa soft and beautiful, and still not one mother's heart apparently pitied or prayed for the unfortunates who marched to a living death with the scalps of theur husbands swinging before them The spectacle was barbarous and in human, and taught once more that vic tory know 8 no pity and uncheekedj hatred rules the day in times of war. Later on, when the procession had reached the plaza, the mayor meets the ranchmen and welcomes them to the city and congratulates them on their victory. At the end of his speech the band plays a march again ; the bells are rung louder than ever, the dust is raised in perfect clouds, and after circling once round the square the pageant passes out of sight up the street. An hour lattr the city was enjoying its Sunday evening quiet. Ways of a Kentncky Lnwyer. Louisville Courier-Journal. But to the man himself. Mr. Bob bitt is a lawyer, and any worthy citizen findinsr himself in legal trouble any where within the precincts of Lincoln Rockcastle or Pulaski counties need not telegraph far for counsel. When asked why he did not also include Garrard, and make a legal quadrilateral of it as it were, Garrard being the contigu ous county, he replied that he always, some way or other, he couldn't exactly tell just how it was, but, as a general thing, his instincts impelled lata to confine his arguments, his rhetoric, his eloquence and his law business to the courts cf certain counties where, upon the conclusion of a case, the senior counsel didn't have to be expressed ,home iu a pine coffin. - "In this out-of-the-way place how do clients reach you when your services are desired?" "Why, they come just as the ancients did when they desired to consult the Delphic oracle." "And how about fees?'! "I take all they've got and notes for the balance. If I find out that the totes are uncollectable I give them up, and then the would-be robbers think I'm an honest man." Xot a Hermit's Life. Cor. Pittsburg Dispatch. 1 Mrs. A. T. Stew art will never again be seen in New York society. She will spend the remainder of her life in mem ories of the past, in cherishing the fame of her husband, in doing deeds of un ostentatious chirity, and in enjoying the companionship of a select circle of life-lorg friends. For she doesn't live like a hermit. Oh.no! She spends her summers at Saratoga living there in imperial splendor. She drivts out, she v alks, she attends the superb garden concerts. Indeed; she seems to enjoy life there as fully as do any of the gayer and younger guests. In winter she lives in her Fifth avenue mansion. But not alone. She is never without pleasant companionship. And though the lights from the huge crystal chandeliers scarcely show a glimmer through the heavy white satin curtains, every evening her parlors are the scene of pleasant social life, all in a little world of its own. If any one thinks Mrs. Stewart lives like a hermit in a tomb he is badly mis taken. Handwlch Inland fronsit. . Enquirer Interview. There are great droughts on the Sandwich islands. There are no great water-sheds like we have here. I knew a man who had 18,000 sheep on one of the Hawaiian islands, for which he had been offered $1 a head. He refused the offer, expecting to do much better with them, but. there was a drought, . and every sheep died for want of water. There was absolutely no possible way of saving them. There are places on the islands where enor mous piles of bones mark the spots where catt' I 1 been in the habit of drinking. oun tains dried up and they perished u droves. Both motives of humanity and pecuniary interest were paralyzed. There was no help for the beasts. Arkansaw Traveler: De wise man an' de fool doan' quarrel, but two fools or two wise men kain't get along so well. Pattern Designing To- Day. Scientific American. A writer in our esteemed contem porary, Cotton, Wool, and Iron, thinks that our pattern designers for fabrics have not kept pace with loom building, rsove J ties in fabrics are very rare; we imitate foreign makers too much, and if we accidentally arop on something new in mutating, w e then imitate each other, Most of us are satisfied if we do as well as some who have gone before us. There are not enough whose ambition leads them to "look beyond," to reach into untrodden heids. x or ten years past the progress in the building of fancy cassimere looms has been wonder ful, and the loom maker of to-day can say. with a feeling that he can fill the bill, "If vou don't see what you want, ask for it." We do not believe the same feeling holds good with our designer, who has a chance to-day unknown to the designer of years ago. He has a loom on which he can do most anything; he has yarns of silk, worsted, jute, mohair, etc., which he can combine in entirely new fabrics, if he would only look beyond and step into untrodden fields. Don't imagine that vou must do only just what has been done before, but try something entirely new. If you get new fabric don't be set back by any commiss'.on man, for they are only mor tal, and as liable to err as any set of men we ever had to deal with. If you get a new thing, make enough for a gar ment, and according to what that gar ment is to be, go to the most fashionable maker and get his opinion. If he ob jects, and you are satisfied you have good thing, then go to some leaders of fashion and persuade them to wear the garment. Don t give up. Remember that a new fabric is the same as any new invention, and that a new invention often takes a lifetime to perfect it. Do not get discouraged, but persevere combine new materials and make a bold stroke for novelty. xOod-!Vatured Alary Anderson. Chicago Tribune. Mary Anderson explained to a Lon don interviewer (interviewing, bv the way, has become the thing in Lon don now) how so many of her photo graphs have gotten into circulation. simple matter when you know how it i3 managed. I am afraid I am too good- natured, out wnat am x to do .' X come down to breakfast and find a beautiful bouquet waiting for me. By its side lies a dainty little note. I open it and find a request from an enterprising photographer, which runs something like this : " 'Madam Every day we have end less inquiries for your photograph We have, of course, to send our custom ers away with out being able to satisfy their demands. CouicL you sit to onr artist ? We should be very grateful to you, etc. Ana it generally ends m my compliance. When Miss Anderson goes down to the studio of a photog rapher she finds herself the centre of a group of operators. Each has hi camera ready, and the subject poses herself, gives the word, and simultane ously a dozen caps are taken off a dozen lenses; and Miss Anderson's.face and figure will appear in twelve different positions. This must be a formidable process for the subject, at any rate, but it effects a wonderful saving of time. When more elaborate effects are re quired the photographer takes his camera up to Miss Anderson's drawing room, where of course better work can be done. A Marble Mountain in eorcia. New York Tribune. A number of capitalists have just purchased 800 acres of land in Pickens county, Ga., for the purpose of quarry ing marble. This promises to be one of the most important of the new in dustries of Georgia. A member of the company speaks in the highest terms of the quality of the marble. "There is iterallv, he savs, a mountain of marble on the property, and in every direction we find rich out-croppings. The supply is simply exhaustless, and as to the quality it is superior to any I ave ever seen for building and interior decorations. Gen. Ripley, of the Rut- and Marble company, pronounces it the best of building marble, but says that for cemetery purposes it is not quite equal to the Vermont marble ; yet we went together to a marble-cutter in this city, who was working on a piece of marble. Gen. Ripley pronounced it Italian marble, while Gov. Proctor thought it was Vermont. The truth is it was Georgia marble taken from our quarry, Jtor cemetery, building or decoration we are satisfied with the quality as well as the quantity." florae Marine. United Service Gazette. A well-known traditionary corps will be no longer fabulous, as the horse ma rine is about to appear in Tonquin. According to The Republique Fran caise, the French government, instead of sending out regular cavalry to the ed river delta, propose to purchase the horses of the country and set on their backs companies of marines, who are to be organized, "after the example of the English," by regular cavalry of ficers as mounted infantry. We have used ponies and other quadrupeds when sailors and soldiers had to make a rapid march, but we do not remember any instance where our marines were set on horseback. Another Defaulter. Boston Journal. In one of our horse-cars a small boy 1 J 11-1 1 m m was observed to ue suddenly agitated, but regained his self-control after a few minutes. Soon after the conductor ap peared and asked for fare. When he stood before the small boy there was a slight pause, and the passengers were surprised to hear the following: Pleatho charge it to my papa, l ve thwallowed the money. " A Sinking; Mountain. Deinorest'a Monthly. The mountain of Naiba, which is about twice as high as the Crow's Nest on the Hudson, is gradually descending into tne bosom ol the earth, a deep ex cavation being formed all around it as it settles. There is no volcanic action accompanying it apparently. The mountain seems to be gradually losing its subterranean props. FLORIDA ORANGES. Hard Work at the mart and Plenty of "Writ" Necessary. New York Tribune. A resident of Florida, in speaking to a Tribune reporter regarding orange culture in that state recently, said : ' "Plenty of good land for orange groves can be bought in Florida for $ an acre or even less. I know of land that can be bought for that sum that is covered with wild orange trees. These trees only need grafting to become pro ductive of erood oranges. "What other expense would there be besides that of the land and the graft ing ? "The land would have to be cleared. for in that climate all land that is not in use soon becomes covered with rank : luxuriant vegetation. . . 1 hen some buildings would have to be put up, and there would also be the trouble and ex peuse of evicting squatters, who are generally to be found in abundance on desirable land in Florida." "Then the expense for land is really a small part of the cost of starting an orange grove ? 1 es, and the reason that so many people fail in. the bus'nessof orange raisincr is that they start with too little capital. A young man with a few hun dred dollars will go down there and think that, because he can get his land cheap, he has money enough to start a grove on, but he generally finds out his mistake. Besides the - expenses of which I have spoken, there is the ex pense for labor, which, although labor is cheap there, amounts to considerable and the cost of subsistence for the orange grower and his family if he has one all of w hich count up." "How long before the orange grower can hope for some return for this out lay?" It will be two years before the or ange trees provided he is fortunate enough to get land that has wild orange trees on it, and grafts them will yield marketable fruit, and all this time he has to incur the expenses I have men tioned. When his trees get to beariag he must find a market for the oranges and, unless he can be fortunate enougl to sell them on the trees, he is at an expense for transportation. Having once got fairly started in the business. however, the expense is exceedingly small compared with the returns, and a fortune can be made unless the orange grower is unfortunate with his trees. " Are there any hardships or priva tions to be undergone by the young man who would try his luck as an orange grower in Florida?" "Yes; if he goes into the unsettled part of Florida, as he would have to do if he got his land cheap, he must con fine, himself to the society of negro squatters and possibly one other orange grower two or a dozen miles distant, He must school himself to view without emotion a snake dropping from the roof onto his dinner-table, or some wild am mal sittinsr on his front door-step. If he is fond of beef and milk he wil find that he might as well sigh for orto lans and truffles. However, if a young man has grit and energy, and combines with those requisites sufficient capital he can make a fortune as easily and surely by starting an orange grove in Florida as in any other way the world affords." Deaf Mute? Increasing. In a paper read before the National Academy of Sciences, at New Haven, Prof. A. Graham Bell contends that something striking and abnormal is going on among deaf mutes, something that is tending to create a new variety of the human race. He quoted reports of various asylums and institutions for deaf mutes, showing that eighty-tw cases out of one hundred deaf mutes were married to deaf mutes. Thes e re ports did not give the information whether the marriage in each case was between persons congenitally deaf or between those who had become deaf by disease, or between one of each kind. He believed that those who, being congenitally deaf married congenitally deaf persons, were likely to have deaf mute children. The professor presented diagrams showing tha the probabili ties were that those who were congeni tally deaf had in almost every instance relatives who were deaf mutes also, The total number of deaf mutes in the United States was 34,000, or one out of every i,ouj. Too Hneh Piano. Demorest's Monthly. This raises the question whether there is not too much piano playing in this country. Every young girl is taught to consider that accomplishment a necessary part of her education, yet many women have no natural aptitude for music, and those who do learn rarely keep up their practice after mar- riace. lo be even moderately emcient as a performer requires incessant prac tice. 4.t is easier to learn two languages thoroughly than to become an indiffer ent pianist. Training the voice would be much more useful. Singing is not easily forgotten, and then exercising the voice is wholesome for the body, which cannot be claimed for incessant piano thrumming. Then why should not girls learn to read and to recite. But no young woman should be forced to become a pianist, unless she has strong musical predilections and great perseverance. Col. Ochiltree's Crest. New York World. Before leaving Europe, Col. Thomas Ochiltree ordered a crest and coat-of- avms to be made for himself at the Herald's college, Birmingham. Col. Ochiltree appropriated the shield and quarterings of the late Baron Mun chausen", which had a Babylonish lyre gules on argent and a profile of An anias proper. His crest is the arm of a cowboy grasping a lariat, and issuing from, a bale of Texas cotton. The Force of Habit. Exchange. He was a very thoroughly reformed framhlflr. and thev were clad to a1 him a deacon of the church; but on the very first Sunday that he assisted in taking tip the collection, when he met t.ha nnninr deacon UP bv the chanceL he whispered softly : "Bet you fifty even . -. . 1 i 1 . . . M that 1 ve raited tne uiggest pot. flefore the Telegraph Came. Moses S. Beach in New York Sun. "We never used the telegraph much untu the Mexican war. There is a lit tle building on the roof of The Com mercial Advertiser building which was built originally for a pigeon-house and where at one time we had two or three hundred pigeons. This enterprise was started about 1844, first on the Pear Street house, because we did not want it to be known what we were about, and a man named D. H. Craig was em ployed to take care of and train these birds, and after the thing had become partially successful we removed them tocthe top. of our building, because there was much time lost in the trans mission of the news from the Pear Street house to the office. J. he pigeon scheme was not entirely successful, al though it enabled us . to get ont some extras ahead of our rivals. We had trained them so that ' they would fly from New Haven to the office in one and one-half or two hours. We used them successfully from the race course on Long Island, and for short distances they did well. I went down to Charles ton to report the proceedings of the presidential convention and had a basket of pigeons which I loosed at Rahway, and when I got to the city the extra Sun met me at the Courtland Street ferry. "We had also a method of telegraph mg by lights or signals, but we never made much of it ; I had planned out a system of telegraphing by the sema phore, and intended to get the steamer news from Boston in that way; but the electric system was perfected, and that revolutionized journalism altogether. "I should say, in regard to reporting, that a man named Button came over from England who had been a short hand writer on The London Times, and I think he was the first phonographer in New York. 'He established a school here, and I took lessons from him. Before that Davis and the other re porters had each his own system of abbreviated long-hand, but I think that verbatim reporting began with the advent of this man Sutton in if my memory serves the year lo3b. Literary Whimsicalities. New Orleans Times-Democrat. A whole history might bo written on literary trifling, or the various whimsi calities with w hich literary men have amused their leisure hours. Greek poets used to divert their friends by composing poems from which particu lar letters were excluded. One of these lypogrammatists wrote an imitation of Homer's "Odyssey" in as many books as there were letters in the Greek al phabet. He called the first Alpha, be cause there was not an Alpha in it; the second Beta, because -that letter was omitted, and so on through the rest. A Latin monk, for want of something better to do, wrote a little prose work, of which a part still remains. It has as many chapters as there are letters' in the Latm alphabet, the first chapter is without an "a," the second has no "b," and so on through the rest. There are said to be still extant five novels of Lope de Vega, from each one of which he excluded some particular letter. These heroic authors seemed determined to prove that tiey could get along with out the alphabet, and taking up each letter in turn, triumphantly showed it that they could transact their business without its assistance. On the other hand, there have been literary triflers who manifested unusual fondness for some particular letter. An Italian monk named Hugbald wrote a book, stupid enough no doubt, in which every word began with the letter c. There is also another bramlsss production of the same age, entitled ' Pugno i'ocorum, of which every word begins with "p." Gregorio, to' amuse his friends at Rome, wrote a dis course from? which he excluded the let ter "r," and when a friend asked for a copy he replied in a letter in which not an "r" was to be found. What the Color of Hnoys Mean. Detroit Free Press. . "I will tell you something about paint ing buoys," siid the pilot. " When you enter any harbor in the world where the channel is-marked by buoys you will find that thosa on voar right as you pass in are painted red, and those on your left black. If you should see one painted in red and black horizontal bands the ship should run as close to it as possible, because that indicates the centre of a narrow channel. Buoys with red and black vertical stripes always mark the ends of spits and the outer and inner ends of extensive reefs, where there is a channel on each side. When red and black checkers are .painted on a buoy it marks either a rock in the open sea or an obstruction in the harbor of small extent with a channel all around. If there are two such obstructions and channel between them, the buoy on the right of you will have red and white checkers, and the one on your eft will have black and white. check- era." "Supposing a wreck obstructs the channel?" "A green buoy will be placed at the sea side of the wreck, .with the word wreck plainly painted on it in white etters, provided there is a clear chan nel around it.. Otherwise an even num ber will be painted in white above the word 'wreck' when the buoy is on the right side of the channel, and an odd number if the buoy is on the left." "Mod's Country." Marshall's "Army Life." Tho name "G od's country" became one in daily use in the army. There was no thought of profanity in its familiar use. It was the one name that clearly showed how the soldiers looked upon the land of their northern homes compared with the southern country in which their active toldieriBjj was done. n their opinion a name having abso- utely the opposite meaning wou4 be the only one to describe the rebel coun try. Of course the feeling of dismce related more to the people of the south than to nature's handiwork. In the soldier's dictionary the name of "God's country" meant the land of oir north ern homes. 1 Prof. Swing : The soul is not a nar row river, but it is an ocean, ana when the tide runs low upon some shors, it is running high upon some other coast. HOW BYRON BECAME A GENIUS Rlddlnc Himself of Burdensome Vrossness. His Intellect was Set Free. I IJeaffreSon's "Real Lord Byron." lile he was still at Cambridge, already a successful author and ap proaching his twentieth year, he resolved to rid himself of his "burdensome and disfiguring grossness." He began the regimen of starvation, Epsom salts and hot baths, which he maintained fdr the rest of his life, and which, while it brought him to striking and unusual physical beauty and elegance, brought him also to such spiritual and intellectual straits as. outrages against nature always entail. He systematic ally sustained life on biscuits and soda-water, and when hunger grew too intense to be bearable, he indulged in feasts of potatoes, fish, rice and vinegar, which gave him agonies of indigestion. Ho was nearly, always suffering; from actual pangs of hunger, and drank laudanum and sometimes chewed to bacco to still these pains. j The effect on his system was as ap parent at first in his sensations as in his appearance. Relieved of the burden of his superfluous flesh, he couhl walk with apparent ease and security, j The body that had oppressed him was no longer nnwieldy and unmanageable. Obeying his will, it filled him with de light. And what is even more note worthy than all the other results of the regimen taken together, is that this discipline of j star vation and drastic depletives quickened his brain to such a degree that the man of intellect for thei first time knew himself to be something far higher than a man of mere intellect. The goads and whips of the regimen had affected the nervous system, so that he had become a man of genius!. He had gone to drugs and starvation at the instigation of personal vanity. Hence forth he persisted in using them for the I sake of the delights of that highest life to which they had raised him, and from which he soon - sunk surely and quickly without their assistance. Seville Ladies. Chas. D. Warner in The Century. We spent a good deal of the waiting time in scrutinizing the packed i seats for beautiful women, and, I am sorry to say, with hardly a reward adequate to our anxiety. I am not sure how much the beauty of the women of Se vine is traditional, luey u ave ; good points. Graceful figures are not un common, and fine teeth; and dark liquid, large eyes, which they use per petually in seillades destructive to peace and security. And the fan, the most deadly weapon of coquetry, gives the coup de grace to those whom the eye3 have wounded. But the Seville Women have.usually sallow.pajstv," dead i com plexions. Perhaps the beauty of the skin is destroyed by cosmetics, for there was not a lady at the bull-fight who was not highly rouged and powdered. mis gave an artinciaiity to their ap pearance en masse. Beauty of figure was very rare, and still rarer was that animation, that stamp of individual character, loveliness in the play of ex pression, and sprightliness, that charm in any assembly of American women jno. the handsome women in the ring were not numerous enough to make any impression on the general mass and yet the total effect, with the blonde lace, the artificial color, the rich ; toilet and the agitation of fans was charming, Mozart's Superstition. Cincinnati Enquirer. i Mozart, the wonderful, who produced so much in so short a time, was faken with a queer presentiment in the last months of his young life. A stranger called on him, requesting him to write a grand requiem, not wishing it: for montn. tie paid Mozart iw guineas and left. Mozart began his work, and shortly afterward the horror seized him that this stranger had bribed him to write hU own requiem. He did iot quite finish it be fore the stranger called, thinking in this way to set his delusion at rest, and that the stranger would countermand the order. The stranger called according to ap pointment. M ozart told him the requiem was unfinished, and that it would take more time. " Very well," said the stran ger,"if it requires more work you should have more money," and paid another 100 guineas. Mozart sent his servant to follow the stranger to find out who he was, but the servant soon lost him in the crowd. Mozart was not sure his delu sionwas correct, and went feverishly and furiously to work to finish the requiem, lie finished it in a few days before the second month was out, but when the stranger called poor Mozart was dead. Oyster Bed Protection. Chicago Times. j.ne commission wmcn nas been in vestigating the rapid depletion of the Maryland oyster beds will report to the next legislature a plan conceding all the shallow waters to the tongsmen. giving them a really greater area than they now have, but dividing the deep water into ten districts, which may be dredged alternately, with intervening districts of smaller extent, on which there shall be no dredging for an in definite time. It is thought that the prohibited strips will be permanent breeding grounds, from which the tide will carry spat to the neighboring grounds for their recuperation. A tattle irl's Idea, Milwaukee Sentinel. "No," said mamma, "We can have no idea of what God is ; He is beyond our comprehension." "Mamma," ; re plied little Edith, "I fink I know what Dod is like ; He must be like a bis'op, only p'aps not quite so gwand." Don't ct In the Habit. Arkansaw Traveler.J "Excuse me," said a polite citizen to a colored man. "I didn't kick you on pur pose." : NV6ah, kicked me on de shin, sah. 'Scuze ver dis lime, but don't git in de habit ob it, sah." Chicago Herald : It is a great mis fortune to a poor man to be bom with the tastes of "ten thousand a year." ; Compound for sins they are inclined to, By damning those they have uo mind to. Hmoklnc la Mexico. Cor. Indianapolis Journal. While waiting for coffee, and after wards during pauses in the conversa tion, the gentlemen of the family and not infrequently the ladies also settle gracefully back in their chairs and en joy a cigarette or two. I learned a les son at my very first dinner in Mexico. It was at a hotel table,' and a stranger Mexican seated beside me, who hap pened to finish his dinner first, inno cently lighted his cigar for the usual table smoke, which I, in the depth of mv ignorance, regarded as a personal insult, nd indignantly left the table. Since that day I have become "learned in the ways of the Egyptians," and can not only tolerate the national custom with equanimity, but (be not horrified. 01 fastidious friends!) occasionally take a dinner cigarette myself I When one is in Rome it is as well to do as the Ro mans do. These tiny Mexican cigarettes, rolled up in corn-husks or tissue paper, are not at all like the strong smelling things we have in the United States. These are not much larger than straws, the husk is sweet to the taste, and they have a delicate fragrance which is very pleasant. In Mexico everybody smokes at all times and in all places at the theatre, in the ball room, everywhere. JLn making formal calls or more ex tended visits politeness demands an im mediate and frequent exchange of cigarettes and " light " with many courteous words, as "after yon, senora (referring to the match; precisely as our ancestors were wont to proffer and accept the civilities of tho snuff-box, Every Mexican lady's pocket is supplied with match-box and cigarette-holder of more or less elegance, and the dainty fingers of many a fair young senonta are discolored like polished bronze at the tips from much cigarette rolling. Catehlnsr Ostriches la the Desert. Cor. San Francisco Bulletin. - A striking difference exists between the corraled and farmed ostriches and those running over the African deserts, inasmuch an the latter never fight. Dr. Sketchley hunted for nine months in the desert. The birds have to be hunted scientifically. Certain facts are known, one being that the birds will always run in a semi-circle. First they will run with the wind that they may use their wings to help them. After they get what the sailors would call "a head wind," they go around the other way. They must be Jrun down. One horse cannot "wind" them. The great trouble is to keep them in sight. They will run forty miles on a stretch. If they ever get a breathing spell they will'get away. The hunter starts out with a fresh horse. A bushman boy rides another and leads one. As soon as it is seen which way the bird will run, the boy takes his cue and drives to where ne thinks tne hunter will need the fresh horse. In the mean time the ostrich singled out for the chase and the hunter, are speeding along like the wind, the latter straining every nerve to keep in sight of the bird, and the bird making its most prodigious strides for freedom. A great deal now depends on the bushman boy's judg ment, in having the fresh horse at the right place that no time may be wasted. it is seldom that the boy makes a mis take. The hunter leaps on the fresh horse and gains on the bird, which, growing tired, goes more and more awkwardly. The hunter has only, when he catches it, to rap it on the head with his hunting whip and the chase is over. There are really only two kinds of ostriches, the North African and South African birds. The males are black and the females drab. All are of one color, drab, until after they are two years old. Arizona's Wild Camels. Tombstone Epitaph. The camels now running wild in Arizona were bought by the United States government in Asia Minor. There were seventy-six camels in the first " colony." They were first em ployed in packing between Fort Tejon and Albuquerque, in some instances carrying 100 gallons of water to the animal and going nine days without themselves. Tiring of the cam els, the government condemned them, and they were sold at Bene cia to two Frenchmen, who took them to Reese river, where they were used in packing salt to V lrgmia City. Afterward the animals were brought back to Arizona, and for some time were engaged in packing ore from Sil ver King to xuma; but through some cause or other the Frenchmen became disgusted, there being no market for camels just then, and turned the camels loose upon the desert near Maricopa wells, and to-day they and their descend ants are roaming through the Gila val ley, increasing and multiplying nd gettmg fat upon the succulent sage brush and grease wood with which the country abounds. " . Xo Work, Xo'Kat, Xo Wife. Arkansaw Traveler. A thiriman, who had married a white woman, applied to the police judge the other day for a divorce. "Don t like the white woman, he said, by means of an interpreter. the judge asked. "Keeps." "What has she done?" "Nothing, and that's why I don't want her. Want wife to work. No work, no wife. No work, no eat. You may have her." The judge refused the generous offer. and the discontented Celestial carried his complaint to a higher court. . Decapitate Insects. San Francisco Chroni cle, S. R. Canestrini has been experiment ing upon the enecrs ox decapitation upon insects. Butterflies' were able to use their wings eighteen days after they had lost their heads. Crickets leaped on the thirteenth day after they had beon beheaded and the praying-mantis showed signs of life on the fourteenth day after the head had been separated from the body. He gives still more singular observations, tending to show that the head in insects cannot be sub ject to the same perpetual strain as the head In mammals in guiding the mo tions of the body. BRIC-A-BRAC AMONG ANIMALS. The Wonderful Museum of n South Amcricau Marmot Birds That Col lect All Sort or Otld Things. New York Sun. "That looks like a pile of rubbish," said an animal collector and sportsman, "and so it is m the ordinary sense of the word." The heap of remarkable brio-a-brac that caused the remark was arranged on a wide mantel and about tho grate, and would have attracted the attention of Ned Kendall's ghost. There were bone i of all sorts and sizes; long, thin bones; heavy, short ones, some intact and oth ers broken evidently with a purpose ; here were several human teeth, the cheek bone of a skull, the dried claw of a bird, an empty, egg, some curious seeds, distorted pieces of wood, oval stones, others resembling human heads, and one that might have even passed as a primeval potatoe, while among the rest was an old-fashioned open-faced silver watch of foreign make. "The collection of some crank? sug gested the visitor, after surveying the lot. "Not exactly," was the reply. "That represents about one-sixteenth of the collection of a little animal in South America, called the Lagosromus. You see, they are all useless articles, but se lected with exactly as much taste as hundreds of people use in choosing things merely because they are curious, odd or out of the way. I was' traveling through lower South America, across the pampas, when I first noticed the animal. It-looked like a prairie dot? somewhat, and is a marmot. They bur row after the fashion of some of our marmots, and often make riding ex tremely dangerous. In going along I often observed tbe'heaps of earth piled up before their holes, the pebbles, etc., but thought it the stuff they dag oat that had been rain-washed. One day I lost my spur, a large sil ver one that had been presented to me by a friend in Rio, and not wishing to lose it, I rode back for several miles over the road I had been driving on. All by accident I looked over the road side, which was covered with the biz- cacha holes, and there saw one of the animals running along, dragging my spur. 1 knew it conldn t get in a hole, so I sat down and watched the animal half an hour. The spur was solid silver, heavy, and of the Mexican pattern, very long, and gave the little creature no end of trouble, catching among the stones and low grass, so that it had to turn round and round, now backing and lifting, to carry it along at all. Finally, however, it was dragged to one of the holes, and not taken in. but placed on the top of a heap, in the midst of such. stuff as this here. I went forward and claimed my property, and judged that there were two bushels of. bric-a-brac there, all -collevtfrvl ' uierrelr to grminlj -the taste of the. animal; in fact, it had the stamp craze as near as was possible in a barren country where stamps could not be found. "I considered the rubject so interest ing, continued the collector, "that after I returned a month or so later I loaded up a mule with these articles and brought them home as animal bric-a- brac." "Is this an umsual occurrence "No," was the reply: "in point of fact. there is the same love of finery among birds : and all animals that we find among the gentler sex of the genus homo. Unfortunately, however, among birds the female is generally the plain est, and the love or display is only shown by the male. The collecting mania is seen in a large number of birds. Thus one of the bower birds, a form allied to the birds of paradise, erects a sort of museum by inserting sticks into the ground so that the tops fall to gether and form a kind ol arbor that is used for a variety of purposes, as a state chamber, play-house, ball-room, hall of courtship, etc. This is decorated or ornamented with a land arail or Helix of a certain kind. "No, it was purely a taste for this color and siyle, for there are numbers of other land snails near by that are equally beautiful and even more at tractive, but for the same reason that some persons prefer old fnrnitnra in new, the bird chooses this variety. An other bird, called the gardener, found in the east, only collects botanical specimens; seeds, flowers, gaudy leaves and blossoms are brought and renewed as they fade, until tho site of the mu seum is often Piled with the withered specimens that have been thrown aside. "Other birds, as the bower birds, in general collect - material with a di versity of taste equaling that of the bizcacha, that are, however, a trifle more aesthetic 1 hey seem to care more for the beautiful than the odd or curious, and richly colored seeds and feathers are selected, or brightly tinted shells brought from the coast fifty miles or more, which shows the lalor under gone . by these collectors. In the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge you will find one of these bird museums, and a bushel or more of the collections. A good example of a domestic collector is the crow. I had one once whose col lecting proclivities were so acute that he nearly reduced me to penury.' I was walking in the garden one day and acci dentally spied a silver spoon sticking out of the gronnd, and an unearthing showed articles innumerable: keys, combs, pennies, dollar bills, scissors, a tooth-brush, a thimble, and among the rest some papers in an old steel purse that were of the greatest value. In all. there was abucketfal of things of more or less value. ' I gave the collector of them to a man who had defeated me in a law suit, and in about a mouth I guess we wero square; everything of his that the bird could lift was underground. An Orange Preservative. Two New Yorkers who are now in Jacksonville, Florida, claim to have discovered a chemical process that will preserve oranges and other fruits for twelve months without impairing the quality of the flavor. A Prlest' Salary. A French rural priest's salary aver ages $240, of which half comes from the state and half from the commune. He pays no rent, and gets soiue presents of food usually.'