THE COLUMBIAN. Published Evert Frjoat, ' AT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO.. OR.. , BT E. G. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor 1 1 Published Evert Fhidat, at ST. HELENS. COLUMBIA CO., OR., BT E. G. AD AIIS, Editor and Proprietor. Subscription Rates: One year, in ad vane $2 00 Six months, " .. 1 00 Three months. " 50 A Advebtistno Rates : One square (10 lines) first insertion. . $2 CO Each subsequent insertion 100 ST. '-.HELENS,: COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, MAY 1, 1885. VOL. V. NO. 39. THE COLUMBIAN. A MAN'S SPHERES. When man's a babe and baa to crawl, What is it that makes crazy all? Ilia bawL When he's a boy and fall of fun, What does be bit you with and ran? Snow.-ball. When he's a yonth what does he play To malm himself and comrades gay.' li&se-bali. When a young man and fond of arlrl 9. What keeps him up all night In whirls? A ball. What sends a flutter to bis heart - And fixes In It Cupid's dart? Eye-balls. When. fond of poker, dress and smoke. What helps him out when he Is "broke?" Three balls. At college, at his pa's expense. What does be learn to show his sene? Foot-ball. What takes his money every nl?bt. And makes him swear and drink and flffht? Billiard -bllia. W hut does his landlady, sedate, l'ass bim each morning on a plate? Fish-balls. When lie Is old and wisdom knows. What is the proof of It be shows? lie ad-ball -d. And then, just when be wants to stay, What Is it be must leave alway? Terrestrial ball. . C. Dodge, in Chicago Sua. A COLORADO PIONEER. His Experience As a Professional Prospector. It Makes Him Tired" to Hear Tender. feet-Talk About the Business A Letter Tbat a Young: Man in the East Wrote nun. It sounded like brass knuckles, that rap on the door last evening; when, in resporse to a correspondingly vigorous come in," a stalwart, pleasant-faced man, clad in aslickens'de canvas suit, entered with resounding step, sugges tive of robust health and hob-nailed Doots, ana in ringing tones mqu.reu: "Are jou the mining sharp of this here paper?" -Yes; take a seat and tell me all about it." 'Tell you all about what?" "Why. a our big strike, of course; how many thousands of dollars it runs and you only want a capitalist with a few hundred dollars and lots of grub to make it the biggest bonanza in Colo rado." , . "Now, hold on. pard. you're dead off the trail tbs shift; I dnly want to show vou a letter." "Oh, that's it; your pard has struck it, and you want to sell an interest to go and join him and stake off the whole country." "No, vou're on the wrong lead again I've got" a letter from a tenderfoot who wants to come out here and prospect for mines." "Well, why don't you let him come es one of the" grand army of prospec tors who swarm through the gulches and climb the rugged peaks of our mountain ranges?" "You've caught on. that's the float, follow it up and you'll hit the vein cropping right through the surface." "Tenderfeet make the beat kind of prospectors, don't they?" "Pard. now you're on the pay streak to a dead, moral certainty, and I'll do the assessment work for you free gratis for nothin' if you'll put it in the paper in good shape, so that I can send it to ruy darn fool fr;end back in the States." "All right, fire away, and make it short." "Well, this chap writes that times is dull back thar and they are cuttin' wage3 down he's a clerk in a dry goods store and so he says he'll qu t. come out here, fir.d a rich mine and go back thar and sell it." "What's wrong about that? Ain't he as liable to find a good mine as any body?" "Now you're gittin' right down to bed-rock business. It's all wrong, both in theory and in practice. Nobody finds a mine. It takes money, anil lots of it, to change the best kind of a good prospect into a paying nv.ne." "Oh. your friend don't mean a mine he means a prospect." "P'raps he does, but it takes money to prospect, and he's in luck if he has money enough to pay his fare to Den ver." "He's got more money than that or he would not think of coming so far to astrange country and an equally strange business." "Now, there's whar you're fooled. Lots of fellers come out here every blessed season, knowin' nothin' about niinin or prospcct'n', and land with out scads enough to buy grub for a burro." -I thought burros foraged and didn't tequire feeding." "That's so. but they don't grow with pack-saddles on and clinch ropes and sacks hang n' to 'em. A feller can't mine with his fingers and liveon moun tin' scenery and trout in streams ten miles or more, from whar he's got to look for prospects if he wants to find any." - All good m ning ground is not nec cssar ly high up on the mountains, ami therj ceita'nly are good placer dig gings yet to be found along the streams and tn the gulches of the State." "Go eay, pard; thar's some truth, but lots of foolishness, in what you say. The bisrtrest part of the gold, s'lver. copper and lead m.ncd in this country come off the mountains, not out of nice, smooth, level places. What soft snaps weuo lying around loose l.ke have al ready been corraled by fellers who, through 3 oars of actual experience, learned their value; and now, as a rule, new ground means new ground, and that's on the mountains, and in out-of-. tl.e-way places." . "But that don't prevent tenderfeet from discovering them?" "Guess vou never saw tenderfeet prospeetiaV Tell me how they do it?" Can't only mention them in a gen eral way, it would take so long; but commonly, the fellers who are staked by their friends have a nvghty good t'mefoolin' around, and if they find any thing it's by downright, nigger luck. I've heard "'em say. lots of times, that they wouldn't climb that mountain for all the wealth in it. But, if one is spunky, or tough enough to do it, he couldn't tell pay from county rock, 'cos he ain't had the experience. I showed a feller some of the richest 'horn' I ever saw, and he looked disgusted like." "Yes. but these men do sometimes get hold of good claims." "They occasionally do, but their's the exceptions, and they catch on by trailing the old prospectors, getting Boat like theirs, and takin' their advice about locating." Were vou ever 'staked' by tender feet?" "Yes. in '80 two 'cute' chaps 'put up' for me to go to the R'co excitement, and it would have been a good thing all around if they hadn't had so much money and went along." "Had too much moneyr v nat oo j ou mean?" "Well, ou see. one was a carpenter and the other a grocery clerk, and they wanted to do things in what they called systematic busiuess style.' The car penter said a town would be built if mines were gooJ. and so he took a full kit of tools and kegs of na'ls, bolt, b.iri of steel, vise, and a full black smith outfit, and loading 'em in a wagon, while the grocery fellow took six months' grub for all the workmen h3 thought we'd need for build'ng a g-od part of the town, and for the miners on our mines. They said it was better to buy these necessary things where th-y were cheap, and so they bought about SI. 500 worth of this kind of truck bes'des min ng tools and a hundred feet of rope. I most died laughing in my sleeve, and I thought I had joined a freightirT outfit." "Well, how did It pan but?" "We hauled that cargo over to Gun nison, 'cos they said we must go that way, and it tickled me most to death to "see 'em pay toll on that wagon and hire teamsters to double'em up the hills. It cost them more money for toll on that baggage-wagon than I would have wanted for my season's outfit." "What did you do when you got to Rico?" "We never got to Rico." "Why not?" "The main reason was that there wasn't no wagon road at that time, and I told 'em so before we left Denver, but they said one would be built by the time we got to Gunnison, or if not. we could cut our wav through or else go to Goth'c. I kinder got stuck af:er those fellers, Ihev was so liberal; spent their money freely and let me cook the grub, and so I just picknicked with them all summer, and lost the whole season." "But what did they do when they found they could not get through to Rico by that route?" "They acted like sensible fellers then, as the romance was pretty well knocked out of 'em by the trip over Marshall pass, and the Gunn'son freighters and merchants bo lght their stuff at less than Denver prices, freight o3T, and they concluded their experience was worth what it cost, and didn't kick about it They didn't prospect aiy further." "You would discourage tenderfeet from entering upon- mining prospect work, I infer?" "Now there you're off again, for I would eneourage them, because I be 1 eve minin' and prospectin' properly attended to is the best business a man can follow, but he has got to have right notions about it." "Will you please give me some of these n"tions?" " "That's just what I come here for, and if you'll just tell this kid and other greenies likv h'm what I say, it'll do em good, or leastwise ought to. To prospect right a man has got to regard it as a business he's got to learn, and if he a'n't got the scads to spend learn ing: as a boss, he wants to hire out as a hand and learn it that way." "But can a tenderfoot get a job as a miner?" "Well, minin1 men ain't sighin' to h're such a chap, but if he's got the stuff in him to make a good prospector he will not be discouraged, but will rustle till some feller hires him. If he can't git a job in a m ning camp, he'd better give up all thoughts of being a prospector, for that takes grit, and means bard work and lots of it. The prospector, more than any other man. rubs up against the biggest kind of disappointments and sees money and labor wasted without any whining, be cause he regards his experience worth t. and so he go?s from one failure to another till he does strike it rich. It is a study to understand ores and the formations cf different parts of the country so as to know where to look for mineral and tell its indications, and then trace 'em to where nature de pos ted 'em in bulk. The prospector ought also to be able, to test in a gen eral way the rock he finds, to guess pretty close whether it will pay or not, and this he can't learn in a day or in one season. This the Eastern fellers can't or won't understand, and some of those smart city clerks are as much out of place on a rich mineral mountain as I would be behind a dry-goods coun ter." "You regard prospecting, then, as ak'n to a profess' on?'' "That's the t cket, pard. and if the boys w 11 be content first to learn some thing of the business they are to fol low, there won't be such a grand army of prospectors, as you call it, runnin' around doiu' no "good and spendin' money; but the fewer fellers will make more and better discoveries." Does prospecting actually pay the men who follow it up persistently?" You bet it does, in the long run; for most of our best mining camps and mines have b -en found and locat by them." Why don't they get rich and be come d st'nguijdied.. then?" "Now, that's drawin' it down mighty line, pard, but I'll tell you the truth, tho' you might leave that out of the paper. The fact isf we old prospectors, after roughin' it from snow to snow, feel pretty frisky when we " get out of the mountains, and if we've made a few hundred by sellin a good prospect or two, that money fairly burns our jeans when we hit a lively camp, and we generally paint 'em red, . 'cos we know right whar to pull out tv next spring. If we ain't got no dust it's about the same, for our credit is par, you bet, whar our cronies is. Some times we brace up and go slow to s juar up, but money's no use 'cept in towns and camps, and the winter gets mighty long in such places." "But do all old prospectors spend their money as fast as they get itP' "No; sum has families, and that keeps 'em down to hard pan, and when they git a good stake they fixes the folks and generally quit the mountains. These fellers make better bargains for prospects, and hold on and develop Vm into pay mines, and you would be astonished to know how many fellers have got good ranches or are in good paying business all . over the country that get their start from the mines." "Shall I tell your friend to come out to learn prospecting?" "Not much; if ns has got folks de fendin' on him he'd better stay thar. d no more think of advisin that than I'd take his advice to come back East to make a livin' in a store or workin' on a farm. Won't go out to take su th in? Well, good-by, pard. I'd rather proapect than be newspaperin.' ver Tribune-Republican. A WISE FATHER, Humor a Bad Thing. But Candldaer For Coagres Quite Another. So you are going to start a humor- ons paper, his son. 'lYes, sir. said an old gentloman to Have you any advice to offer?" "Don't start it." "Why?" 'Oh, there are many reasons, some of which, in a most seriou manner, I shall give yon. The quality of humor is inborn, but the employment of its finer forces requires the most careful cultivation. The rough semi-vulgar sketch :s not humor, it may create a laugh, but it is not humor. Do you re member what Addison says of h-amor?" "No, sir." 'Have you ever read Addison?" . "Very little." 'What have vou read?" "Oh, I don't know what all. It would take me some time to enumer ate." "I don't think it would. How isyonr imagination very good?" "No, sir, I can t say that it is." "All, hah. I suppose that you will attempt to make people laugh? "Oh. yes. sir." A fatal error, young man. People can be slyly drawn into mirth, but you can not shove them into it. We can persuade men to weep, but we can not force them. You no doubt have a good supply of original jokes." "Yes, sir, I think so." "Tell me a few?" "I can't tell them." "Well, sit down there and write me one." The young man wrote the following: "Sebleson went to see h"g girl the oth er night. The old man was at the lodge. Sebleson enjoyed himself pret ty well. The girl brought in some pie. The young fellow said it was first rate, and asked her if she made it. She sad yes. Ah, replied the young man, anybody who cart make such p:e ought to make a good wife.' Then they both laughed. 'Did you ever make any pie?' she asked. 'No,' sa:d he, 'but I have killed a sight of it.'" "Is that all?" a ked the old gentle man when the humorist had, with elo cutionary effect, read the production "Yes, but I could make it longer." Don't do it." "Father, I am afra'd you don't like humor.1' "I am afraid so." "You didn't sm le, but will you lend me S2.0J0?" "What, do you want to pay people to laugh?" "Oh, no, I want to buy material." "Why, you intend to print the paper, ehP" "Of course." " Oh. no, I can not let you have the money." "I tell what I thought, father. You have been suggest 'd as a suitable can didate for Congress. Well, nothing more than a good joke helps a man po" Lt'c.illy. I thought that you might get off several gcod jokes about yourself and that I could print them. Of course everything from you would be interest ing. You hare a great imagination, and have read Addison you " "Two thousand dollars, you sayP Hand me that cheek-booK, please. Of course T do not expect to be a candidate but say, if I were elected, I could make the country laugh, couldn't I?' Arkansa.o Traveler. The Aesthetic Element in Education. Dr. J. D. Anderson, in a.receut num ber of Edma'ion, cons ders the testhet ic element in education. He holds it to be an essent al duty for the teacher to inculcate an appreciation of the beautiful by both precept and example. He enlarges upon the good influence of attractive surroundings and insists that the a.sthefie spirit should pervade everything in and about the school room. Among some of the pract cal sugga tiono he makes is the following: "A teacher is not going out of the way of his duty if he cor rects a boy for coming to school with unwashed hands or unkempt hair; or if ha should draw attention to some de fect in his dressing or cloth'ng; if he should refer to an unbrushed jacket o a slovenly-put-on tie. All this comes within his jurisdetion, and he must ad judicate upon the delinquencies with all the soberness and gravity that such offenses deserve." But this adjudica tion, it may be added, should be under taken only by a teacher who is en downed with very sound judgment, ex quisite discretion and a very warm heart. Children may be made alto gether top prim, and neatnesi too se verely enforced does not always con duce' to cheerfulness in the school room. Current. IN PERIL. ailraculous Escape of an Infant from Ap parently Certain Death. . One of those strange cases of almost miraculous protection for infants,, who feel no fear because they are ignorant of danger, was given not long since in a New York paper. The mother's part in the incident illustrates the firm strength of love and terror in a weak hand, and the sudden revul sion when its work is done. A man in Stroudsburg, Penn., when passing the house of Mrs. Franklin Smith, saw her lying in the yard with two children cry in by her side. He hastened to her, ami -paw a few feet away a large ratt e snake dead. ' Airs. Smith was unconscious, but was soon l-ewved, and said that her little child, aged two years, and the child of a neighbor, aged three, were playiug in the yard. She had been watching them from the door, and noticed that while they were sitting side by side in the orass. her little one was "occasionally Fghtly striking in front of her with a short stick she had in her hand, and after each stroke both children would laugh. The other child at intervals would bend forward, with her face close to the ground, and apparentlv stroke tome t ling with her hand. There had been a small land-turtle in the yard for some days, and Mrs. Smith supposed the children were amusing themselves with it. She watched them for some time, and then walked towards them to see what they were doing to the turtle. Before she reached them she was struck motionless with horror at seeing as their plaything a large rattlesnake, which lay at full length, making no hostile demonstration?, simply raising its head when it was . touched, opening its mouth, and darting its tongue out and in. It was this performance of the snake that p'easeji the children. Mrs. Smith as soon as she recovered herself took a step or two forward, and the snake discovered her. Instantly its whole appearance changed. As qu'ck as lightning it threw itself into the coil to ma! e its deadly spring, and sounded its rattle. This alarmed the children, and they ran away. Mrs. Smith found a club, and with a few blows killed the snake, after which she remembered nothiDg until revived by her neighbor. The snake was be tween four and five feet long, and had seven rattles. Youth's Companion. DIDN'T SHUT THE DOOR. Xlffffer Jlm'a Little Deaf and Dumb Daughter How He Punished Her and Why He Couldn't Forgive Himself A Pathetic Story. 'What makes me feel so bad dis time, uz "bekae I hear sumpn over yonder on dc bank like a whack er a slam, while ago, en it mine me of do time I treat my little 'Lizabeth so orner-. She warn't only 'bout fo' year ole, en she tuck de sk'yarlet fever, en had a powful rough spell; but she got well, en one day she was a-standin' aroun', en I says to her, I says: "Shet de do'.' 'She never done it; jis' stood dah, kiner smilin' up at me. It make me mad; en I says agin, mighty loud, I says: " 'Doan' you hear me? shet de do'!' 'She jis'"stood do same way, kiner smilin' up. I was a-biliu'! I says: ' I lay I make you mine! - - "En wid dat I fet?h her a slap side dc head dat sont her a sprawlin'. Den 1 went into de yuther room, en 'uz gom 'bout ten minutes; en when I comi back der was dot do' a-standin' open yit, en dat chile Mannin' moV right in it, a-looking down and mournin', en d tears runnin' down. My, but I wu7 mad. I was ftgwyne for de chile, but jis den it was a do' day open innerds jis' den 'long come de wind en slam it to, behine de chile, kerblam! en my lan', de chile never move'! My brefl mos' hop outer me; en I feel so so 1 doan' know bowl feel. I crope out, all a-tremblin', eu crope aroun' en open de do' easy an' slow, en poke my- head in behine de chile, sof en still, en all uv a sudden I says pow! jis' as loud as I could yell. She never budge! Oh. Huck, I bust out a-cryin' en grab her up in my arms, en say: Oh. de po' little thing! de Lord God Almighty forgive po' old Jim, kaze he never gwyue to forgive hisself a long's lie live! Oh, sl.e was plumb deef en dumb. Huck, plumb deef en dumb en I'd ben a treat'n her so!" Mark Twain. THE WASHINGTON OBELISK. Diagram Showinj the Relative Heights of Some Famous Structures. 5 3 o tc' Bo a, I c S1 c C f- The above diagram shows the he'ght of the Washington Monument and that of some of the test-known edifices in both henrspheres. The reader will see at a glance that it is hig'ier than the Cologne Cathedral, the wondmis Pyra mid of Cheops and noted historical build ings. It is, in faet, the tallest tower of ancient or modern times. Chicago Tribune. Do not betray the confidence of any one. THE BATTLE OF SHILOH. An Apparently Impartial and Unpreju diced View of the Much Mooted Ques tions Connected with this Important Affair The Discrepancies of History Il lustrated The Jssues of the Battle Prob ably Determined by an Accident. ; The difficulty which the conscientious historian has to overcome in getting at the truth is curiously illustrated by a careful reading of the two articles on the "Battle of Shiloh" in the Febniary Century, the one by General Grant, the other by Colonel William Preston John ston, a son of General Johnston, and on the staff of Jefferson Davis. One gives, of course, the Federal, the ; other the Confederate, side. Not only is their interpretation of the aims and purposes of the combatants, and in their estimate of the significance and result of the first day's battle, do they differ, but in their accounts of events, even in minor details. Thus Colonel Johnston credits Grant with an army of 58,000, nearly 50,000 of whom were effectives, while he allows the Confederate com mander 50,000, of whom but 40,000 were available for combat. General Grant, on the contrary, gives the entire strength of the Federal army at 38,00( if whom not more than 25,000 were in line on the first day. Of course Gen eral Grant's statement of his own forces is official and conclusive; but the fact illustrates the discrepancies of history. The battle of Shiloh was one of the great battles of the war. It was great whether estimated by the number of men engaged in it, by the character of the Generals commanding, by the des perate nature of the conflict, by the un certainty of the result during the whole of the first day. or by the consequences which ensued from the Confederate de feat and which might have ensued from a Jrederal defeat. "The Confederate au thorities have always insisted that Gen eral U rant was virtually beaten at the end of the first day's fight, and that nothing saved his army but the death of General Johnston, and the conse quent change of commanders. Gener al Grant was freely charged at the time with being intoxicated, and severely criticised for putting undisciplined men at the front without earthworks. Ihe newspaper correspondents h"ad General Prentiss' division surprised" and capt ured at the very beginning of the fight. Some of these then current errors are corrected, so far as we know for the firs' t'me officially, by General Grant's pa per. General Grant's horse fell on him, and nearly disabled him, two days be fore the battle. The raw levies were put at the front purposely, Gemral Grant trusting to their commander. General Sherman, to compensate for their inexperience a trust reposed not in yain. And General Prentiss' divis ion fought bravely and effectively throughout the day, and were not capt ured till after four o'clock in the af.er noon. The man of Northern prejudice t will read General Grant's paper, and will but glance at Colonel Johnston's. The man of Southern prejudices will console himself with Colonel Johnston's convic tion that the battle of Shiloh was, won on the first day, and was lost on the second only because the "Confederate commander was killed. The impartial historian, accepting the veracity, but not necessarily the judgment', of both authors will compare the two papers to reach a true understanding of this mo mentous battle, and will find in General Grant's frank confession of his misap prehension ot the strength of the Con federacy, and in Colonel Johnston's disclosure of the divided counsels in the Confe ierate army the two clues to the true interpretations of the events of the day. "Up to the battle of Shiloh," says General Grant, "I, as well as thousands of other citizens, believed that the re bellion against the Government would collapse suddenly and soon if a decisive victory could le gained over any of its armies." This was substantially the universal opinion in the North. It was even shared by many in tho South. The fall of Forts Donelson and Henry apparently opened the whole Southwest to the Federal army. The North be lieved that further resistance would be in vain. Thousands in the South shared that belief. General Grant, as soon as the dilatory ilalleck gave him opportunity to move, acted in accord ance with his subsequent instructions to General Sherid-an before Richmond and pushed things. He hurried his army forward after the retreating Confederate forces, meaning to give t lem no time to recover from their demoralization. He expected no other than a Fabian policy of slow retreat and sullen, but not aggressive, resistance. Assuming that tho Confederates would retreat, if flushed, he threw up no earthworks, le put raw levies at the front. He tele graphed to Ilalleck on Saturday night, "I have scarcely the faintest idea of an attack (general ouej being made upon us." The arm", catching the contagion of his confidence, perhaps neglected to keep out scouts in the front. This was charged at the time by newspaper cor respondents, and is not specifically de nied by General Grant, who does speci fically denv some other analogous charges. While General Grant was thus taking for granted that the Con federate forces would not venture on an aggressive campaign, the Coniederate Generals themselves were in deba'o upon that very point General John ston, lirt in" command, purposed an attack. General Beauregard, the popu lar Southern hero of Bull Run, was op posed to it. He wished to pursue ti e policy in the West which General Lee pursued so effectively in the ;F -st to prolong the war, weary out the North, and keep his own army intact, by a de fensive campaign. General : Johnston overruled all opposition. He ended t he counc'l of war on Saturday afternoon with the decisive declaration: "We shall attack at d:u light to-mtrrow. I would light them if they were a mill ion." Thus both sides entered I the first day's battle under some disadvantage The Federal forces were not ex pectin;: an attack, and were not prepared for it. Even when it came, they regarded it at first as only a reconnaissance in force. (Jeneral Sherman, who was at the front, so interpreted it. j "Beaure gard." he said, "is not such a fool as t leave his base of operations and attack os in ours." On the other hand, the Confederates entered on an aggressive campaign with divided counsels. The Fecond in command was half sick, had no faith in an assault, and no expecta tion of success. General Grant apparently, ins'sts that the Federal forces were not defeated on the first day. But we think the facts do not bear out this claim. His front, had been forced back nearly or quite two miles. General Prentiss' division had been captured en masse 2,200 offi cers and men. The Federal camps were in the possession of the enemy. What the Confederates could or would have done on the morrow if their leadership . had remained un changed must always remain . a mat ter of opinion. That the wearied assailants could have driven the Federal forces into the river, or cut of their re treat, and enforced their surrender, is to us incredible, even if the Federal army had not - been reinforced bn the morrow by part of General Bueli's forces, and by the gunboats. But the attempt was not even made. The death of General Johnson devolved the com mand on General Beauregard; and the change of commanders brought a change of policy. At the council of war on Saturday afternoon General Beauregard had urged that the army withdraw, to Corinth. On Monday morning he ordered that withdrawal to take place. The first day's battle of Shiloh was a Confederate attack under one commander. The second day's battle was a Confederate retreat under another commander. Both were meas urably successful. It is. indeed, rarely the case that a change of command and a change of policy takes place on the field of battle with so little resultant disaster to the army as resulted to the Confederates from their change of com manders and policy at the battle of Shiloh. This battle singularly illustrates how far the fortunes of war depend upon what we call accident. If General Johnston had lived he would have pur sued on Monday the aggressive policy of Sunday, and his army would have either won a victory or suffered a rout And that he did not live was due to ac cident. A stray shot cut an artery in his leg. An extemporized tourniquet would have stopped the bleed'ng. But half an hour earlier he had dismissed the surgeon, who up to that time had ac companied him, to attend wounded Federal prisoners. There was no one present at the moment who knew enough to tie up the ar.ery, and General Johnston bled to death. His humanity to Federal prisoners cost him his life. On the other hand. General Grant, Col onel McPherson and Major Hawkins, reconnoitering the iie!d together, sud denly found themselves subjected to a sfiarp musket fire from a concealed bat tery. Major Hawkins lost his hat; Col onel McPherson's horse was shot through the body and lived just long enougLi to take him out of danger; and the scabbard of General Grant s sword was talccn off by a ball. If the one ball had missed General Johnston, and the other ball had struck (Jeneral Grant, the commander of the Federal forces, not of the Confederate force?, would have been changed, and the issue of the tattle of Shiloh might have been differ ent. Christian I'niin. TOBOGGANING. Some Speculations a to How the Nest Craze Will Catch You. Tobogganing, the contagion of which seems to have come from Montreal's two winter carnivals,' threatens to be the next popular craze. Already arti ficial hills are being built, where natural ones do not exist, and some provision for a glacial surface when ice is not to be had will doubtless . be forthcoming. It is a wild, whirling sensation that takes hold firmer and holds on longer, perhaps, than the roller skate. It is thus described: "Imagine yourself at the summit of a slope six hundred fejt in height, and .'et at an angle of sixty degrees. For a long distance it falls sheer as a night mare, dazzling white, each little grain of the snow scintillating like a dia mond. You straighten your toboggan's head, and your lady companion bestows herself in "the bow, tucking her skirts tightly around her dainty feet, and drawing her nubia down 4o" shield her eyes and face. You ensconce yourself behind her; on one hip if you will, with the other foot trailing as a rudder; though my experience teaches me to prefer a square seat, with the toes in the near neighborhood of the rearward buttons of Angelina's sacque, one hand trailing on eac.i s'de. by whose pressure (a small section of a broomstick is to bo commended 'in this connection') the frail vessel is gui Jed. "All being in readiness you gently push your toboggan to the edge of the precipice. The slender wood creaks, rustles and bends; from a level the sled assumes an almost perpendicular po sition, and the nether world seems to rise up and smite you in the-face. Nothing in the universe resembles this first dizzy swoop. So low is the sled and so light its fabric, and so tremend ous the impetus instantly attained,. thai the impression is one of sitting still while the universe flies up at you. The sharp edges of the straining-board cut rainbows of snow that hiss at vou, and cover your beard with chilly diamonds and Angelina's hair l with, priceless jewels, from either side the grinding crystals fly behind you like sparks from a grindstone. You have hardly swal lowed your heart again when you aro at the foot of the slope, and with the bound of a shark touched with th steel, the sled, striking the level, springs a dozen feet into the air and landing on th-3 level snow-crust speeds onward with scarcely lessening speed till at last it stops morj than a mile away from the hill whence you started, and where now the great p'nes look like scrubby bushes. In a minute you have gone a mile and a quarter, and realized the dizzy plunge of a nightmare and the long, unsup ported, breathless swoop of the eagle. -Detroit Free Press. An English gardener states that fruit does not color so. well in a sunny season as in one when there is but little suns'iine. There was more sunshine in England last year than during any sea sou for half a century, b;it stiil the ap- )les, pears and peacliei were very poor y colored. A Mississippi lady grows three hun- ilrail an1 ftffir vaplafim f TrtCPq in h garucu every summer . RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL. Australia has four universities which, in curriculum, rank with Har vard, Oxford and Cambridge. At Yale seventy-three per cent, of the students came from other States than Connecticut; at Harvard forty-five per cent, came from other than Massa chusetts. An English lady, Mrs. Havward, has been engaged as professor of elocu tion in the Cincinnati law" school, and the innovation has been received with favor. It has been proposed at Harvard University to. advise with the students as to rules of order. Possibly it w ould be better to advise with their parents. Current. The Journal of ITcalth says the ill health of school children is more large ly due to lack of propir, care home than inadequate hygienic provisions in the school-rooms. A Poughkeeps'e church membsr knows a woman who puts a five-dollar bill on the plate every Sunday, and if she happens to be absent three Sun days in succession she puts on twenty dollars next time. Troy Times. Poking fun at Vassar seems to have had a bad effect, and the managers of the institution are really alarmed by the steady falling off in pupils for five years past There has been so much said in ridicule of the students of Vassar that the girls will not go there. Ex-Governor Sanford, of San Fran cisco, states that his proposed univer sity, projected as a memorial to his son, will have colleges for young men and women, and high schools for boys and girls. He also proposes to found an institution after the model of the Cooper Institute of New York; for the advancement of science and art, with evening classes for mechanics and youth. The one-man-power may becoino too conspicuous in a church. Once wo were driving by a rural meeting-housu, and we asked a man standing near who were the chief supporters of thatcauxe. He answered: "Well, I reckon that Squire Blank is the man that does it all. He is deacon and sexton and Superin tendent of the Sunday-cchool. lie doe everything there but the preaching, and that he hires done." Watchman. This year will bring with It the golden jubilee of Pope Leo's priesthood, which he received in 1835. It has been already decided in Italy to celebrate it by a league of prayers for the triumph of the church, and the prolongation of His Holiness life; by an exhibition at the Vatican of all the offerings which will be made, specially of objects relat ing to public worship; by an alms for the mass, made up of o Serin gs from ihj entire Catholic world; and fourthly, by a pilgrimage to the tombs of the Apoi ties. WIT AND WISDOM. You can not jump over a mountain, but step by step takes you to the other side. The lad was blowing bubbles wheu he accidentally swallowed some soap suds, and that made bub ill. Whitehall Times. A St. Louis editor who started with out a cent forty years ago, is now worth $100,000. His fortune is all owing to his own energy, industry and frugality, and the fact that an uncle recently left him S99.999.99. Philadelphia Call. "If man wants to own the earth, what does woman want?" inquired Mr. Grap of his better half, after a little family matinee, a few days ago, "Well, my dear," responded that lady in a gentle tone, "to own the man, I suppose." Boston Post "I wish you would come to see mo oftener, Charlie," murmured Claribell, as they sat iu the front parlor trying to find out which knew the least "Ah, but you know, darling, I am here every night" "Yes, I know that, but I wish you'd come oftener." Well, but don't you see if I did I would have to leave oftener, ha, ha?" "Yes, that was what I said." And then he asked her if she knew where ho had put his hat. Chica go Journal. "Am I on the right road to the vil lage?" demanded a traveler of an oi l darkey who was working in a field. "Yaas, sah," said tho darkey. Tho traveler pursued his way, but presently returned very mad. "I say," he shouted to the old fellow, "what did you mean by telling me that I was on the right road to the village?' "I tol' yo' de truf, 'deed I did, boss,"' replied the darkey, "but yo' tuk de wrong direk shun, sah." Drflke1 Magazine. - Confessions of a Lowell (Mass.) journalist: What was almost a plot for a good ghost story was enacted in the editorial room oi this paper late one night recently. One of the ttaff camo in in the dark and to his horror found himself confronted by a strange white shape. Motionless, but full of terror in its ghostly phosphorescence. St a t ing back, he hastily struck a ma'ch, and then at once the mystery was solved. It was the clean towel we had given us for Christmas. "You have a very rich soil here," re marked a tender-foot to a Dakot i farm er. "Rich! Well, I should fay so. Two years ago a young man from the East came out here. He carried a snakewood cane. He stuck it iu the ground and left it here." "I suppose," remarked the tenderfoot with a smile, "you mean to tell mo it sprouted." "Sprouted! Well. 1 should say it did, and blossomed, too. Why, last year I killed ten bushels of black-snakes on that patch of ground, and each one was varnished and had a hammered silver head." N. Y. Graphic A Mean Man. Otis S. Richard, of Austin, is a very stingy man, and particularly to his wife. They were inMose Schaumburg's store a few days ago, and Mrs. Richard hinted that she wanted a blue silk dress. "Nonsense, blue doesn't suit your complexion, at alL" m "Then 111 take a green dres." 44 Do you want to poison yourself? Don't you know that all these green dresses are poisonous?" 44 Then you pick me out a dress." "That's the trouble. You see I don't like any other colors except blue and and green." Texas Silings.