THE INDEPENDENT IS ISSUED Saturday Mornlnss, BY THE DOUGLAS, COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. THE INDEPENDENT HAS THE ' - FIHEGT JOB OFFI02 IM DOUGLAS COUNTY. sj CARDS, BILL HEADS, LEGAL BLANKS And other prJniicg, Including Large and Heavy Posters and Showv -"- Hand-Bills. .Neatly and expeditiously execufed " Ar rortTi.. ruicES. 'jdf One Ter.... 9a ro . I 50 fttx Months., Tare Horn lt.... . 1 OO These are the term for those paying: In advance. The Ikdiu'Esdrnt offer fine inducements to ad Tertlser. Terms reasonable. vol. r. ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1883. NO. 51. in H 1 I UWffW ff ITU "r z&?F&&tJ2! II I U E "I mm m I U il f f ll II h fl fl I l f Azr hi 8 SbJ. J ASKULEK PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER, JEWELER, OPTICIAN. AND ALL WORK WARRANTED. Dealer In W-tchea. Clocki, Jewelry, Spectaelra and tcyrgiassea. And a Fall Line of Cigars, Tobaccos and Fancy Goods. The only reliable Optometer in town for the proper aoj'tmeai cf Spectacles ; always on band. Depot of the Genuine Brazilian Pebble Spec tacle and Eyeglasses. OFFICE First door south of post office, Rose bun?. Oregon - DR. M. W. DAVIS, DENTIST, HOSEBURG, OREGON. OFFICE-ON JACKSOS STBEET, CFPOHITB THE POSTOFFICE. MAHONEY'G SALOON Nearest to the Railroad Depot, Oakland. Jus. Mahoney, Prop'r. . ' The finest of wines, liquors and cigars in Dorj las county, and the best . hixXiXahxv T.nri in the Elate kept in proper repair: Parties traveling on the railroad win find this place very handy to visit daring the stop ping of the train at the Oak land Depot. Give me a cell. " 1 1 " a i mm a i ii JOHN FRASER, Home Made Furniture, WILBUR, OKGGON. Upholstery, Spring Mattrasses, Etc., Constantly on hand. FURNITURE. I have the best stock of lurnltare south of Portl-nd And all of my own manufacture. No two Prices to Customers Reside t3 of Douglas county are requested to give me a call before purchasing elsewhere. J6 ALL WORK WARRANTED.-t DEPOT HOTEL OAKLAND, - - OREGON. " ' ' ' ' v ' " ' ' Richard Thomas, PropV. THIS HOTEL HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED for number ot years, and has become very poptxlarwith the traveling public. First-class SLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS. And the table supplied with ; the best the market affords. Hotel at the depot of the Railroad. - srr.s:lSSfc, AYINQ ON HAND A LARGE LOT OP FINK Sjipanish Merino I offer the ame for sale, Cheap for Cash, at my Farm in Douglas county, six miles from Roeeburjr HENRY CONN, Sr. H. C. STAHTONi Dealer in Staple Dry Coodsl Keeps constantly on hand ment of a general assort- ! EXTRA FINE GROCERIES, WOOD, WILLOW AND GLASSWARE, ALSO Crockery and Cordage A full stock of SCHOOL B O O IS Such as required by the Public County Schools, All kinds of STATIONERY, TOYS and e FANCY ARTICLES, To suit both Young and Old. BUYS AND SELLS LEGAL TENDERS, furnishes Checks on Portland, and procures Drafts on San Francisco. 1U" k.LM BS! ALLEHDS OF BM QUALIIY ALL ORDERS Promptly attended to and Goods shipped with care. Address. Ilacheney & Bene, Portland. Oregon, Hotice, Notice Is herey given, to whom it .ay concern, that the undersigned has been awarded Uie contract for keening- the Douglas county Pauper for the period ot two years. All persons in need of assistance Irom aid county must firtti procure a certifies te to that effect from ant inem!er of the County Board, and present H to one of the following named persons, who are author ized to, and will cure !or those presenting such certificate W. L. Button, Roseburjr ; L. L. Kelloiri, Oakland ; Mrs Drown, Lookup Glass. Dr. Scroggs is authorized to hirnlsh medical aid to all persons in need of the tame who have been declared paupers of Doulas county. WM. B. CLARKK Supt. of Poor. Rflssstran, Or. Feb. IS. 1880 ' The inost forcible , expression of intol erarjce was tittered a short time ago by a Scotch clergyman of the Free Kirk, who, referring to the introduction of an organ into a neighboring Established Church, declared that "soon they would pet a concert every Sabbath in the old Kirk. The devil wouhr have hia bandmaster there to discourse Bweet music to them, and the captain, like a cursed pirate, would hoist his false colors to lure souls to destruction." LATEST NEWS SUMMAEI. II Y TELEGRAPH TO DATE. Prince Henry, of Pcssia, arrived at St. Thomas, Cuba, on the 22d. c Four flouring mills were destroyed by fire at Hamilton, Ohio, on the 22d. - It is stated that Henry Villard left New York for Portland on the 22d. John McCullough, the tragedian, who has been ailing for some time, has fully recovered. - ; The remains Jof Charles Soehner, a German, were cremated' at Washington, Pa., recently. 1 Cardinal Manning has issued an ap peal, asking for a collection for the dis tressed people of Ireland"' ' , - - One hundred and thirty-five head of cattle perished in the flames of a large fire recently at Shipm&n, 111. The President has appointed Thos. J. Sherwood, of Marysville, Cal., receiver of public moneys at that place. Six persons were severely, if not fatal ly injured, in a gas explosion recently in a colliery near Shenandoah, Pa. : Queen Victoria met with an accident on the 17th, in which she injured one of her limbs, and lis now confined to her rooms. i Four prisoners confined in the peni tentiary at Boise City, Idaho, overpow ered the guards and made their escape on the 22d. r The New York" Public of the 23d says the business transactions for the past week show a decided increase over the same week one year ago. - An eruption of Mount Etna has begun on the 21st, accompanied by an earth-v quake, causing a panic in the vicinity Several houses have fallen. .The Eureka cotton mills at Mount Aiery, N. C, were destroyed by fire on the morning of the 22d. Loss, estimated at $20,000; insurance, $15,000. .The Chicago cigar makers at a recent meeting resolved to go on a strike aboui May 1st, if manufacturers did not give them a raise of one dollar per thousand. Eev. Lawrence Walsh, treasurer of the Irish national land league, of New York, cabled $30,000 for the relief of victims of famine in the west of Ireland on the 22d. : , ' ""Eev." J. Gilfiillan, Protestant Episco pal missionary of the White Earth reser vation, pays the Indians suffered severe ly from the ravages of smallpox during the winter. A Halifax dispatch of the 22d says that there is the greatest freshet on Corn wallis river known for years. Trains ceated running on account of washouts on the roads. t - The steamar Burgundia arrived at its pier at Brooklyn on the 22d, bringing the body of John Tloward Payne, the author of "Home, Sweet Home," back to its native land. It is rumored that Salmi Morse will produce his "Passion Play" at Louisville during the latter part of the summer, providing he can obtain a license from the city authorities, t A Tucson dispatch of March 25th says: The Apaches ore still east of the Magda lena. Some say there are 15 Apaches, and others say 200. Three men are re ported killed this evening. General Diaz and party from Mexico have been banqueted at New Orleans, St. Louis, Chicago,' aev York and Wash ington, visiting Niagara Falls and a nam ber of other places of interest en route. The estimated expenditures of the dominion of Canada for the financial year ending the outn oi June, is $45,006,145. The amount voted for the present year, fending the 30th of June next, is $54,837,264.. The New .England milK producers, re cently assembled at Boston, discussed their grievances against the Boston con tractors and inspectors, and charged adulteration by the middlemen. The price fixed was 35 cents per can for eight and a half quarts, on the cars. The St. Paul Pioneer Press of the 21st publishes a lengthy article from Mon tana as to the flock of that territory, stating that leading stockmen have been interviewed and say that the winter has been most favorable for stock, not count ing a loss of more than five per cent. A Vienna dispatch of March 22d sayd: The recent demonstrations of a reading cub of students in memory of Wagner, have led to twenty duels among the stu dents, the combatants being German on one 6kle ami Anstrian on the other. One of the participants was severely wounded. A Tombstone dispatch, of March 22nd, says: This afternoon a report -reached this city of a terrible conflict between cattlemen and Mexicans, in which about six men were killed and two wounded. It occurred at Morrison's ranch, on the Barbacomari. thirteen miles from Fort Haxecha. It is rumored that Captain Kortz, late master of the Tacomff, will appeal from the decision and sentence of Inspectors Freeman and Biliman to Supervising In spector C. C. Bemis. It is said the Cap tain considers his suspension for two years unjust, and! his proposed appeal will be for the purpose of lessening that term. -- : - In the senate of the New Yorklegisla ture recently a bill prohibiting contract labor, and the bill regulating the use of convict labor, and the bill giving the convict a share of the product of his la bor. were all killed. In the house the bill prohibiting the manufacture in pris on of shoes, stove and iron hollow ware, was lost, while the bill prohibiting the manufacture of stoves by convicts got only as far as the committee of the whole, which, it is thought, will be the limit of its progress. A number of improvements are con templated by the: life saving service of the Pacific, including improvements at Cape Gregory station, near Coos bay Among other things, a boat-house wjfll be constructed at a more accessible point. It is also proposed to connect that station by telephone with Empire City. A new j building will be constructed at the station at the mouth of the Columbia, to which a life boat, wagon and a number I of Castor patrol lights and other supplies j were recently shipped. Lord Haldon died on March 25th. Jerome Holt, a negro, was hanged at Graham, N. C, on the 23d. Gen. Charles Craft died of heart dis ease at Terre Haute, Ind., on the 23d. A fire in the Catholic cathedral, Brook lyn, N. Y., destroyed the drapery and grand altar. v Sigismond elected as March 25th. Lacroix, a radical, was Gambetta's successor, on The image across tne St. John river. St. John, N. B., was carried away by the ice gorge on the zdd. Oakland, like San Francisco, has an empty treasury, and no funds to pay its salaries for the present month. At Jjuiutu Minnesota, Marcii zotn, a fire destroyed 13 buildings and contents. Total loss, $47,500; insurance, $35,000. Capt. Carey ,who commanded the party of English soldiers with Prinos Napoleon when he was killed in Zuland, died re cently. ..: ": :.- '.. Alaska is to have a mail route from Haines to Juneau, a distance of 150 miles. The mail will be carried by canoe monthly. Williams' sewing machine manufactory was burned at Montreal on March 2oth. Loss estimated at from $200,000 to $300,000. A statement prepared by the treasury department estimates the reoeipts for the nscal year ending June 30. load, to be $4P5,C00,000. ; Patton, the brakeman of the Southern Pacific train accident at Tehachapi, and tried on a charge of criminal negligence, was acquitted. The East Hampton, Mass., Catholic church, a brick building just finished, was burned March 25th. . Loss, $30,000; partly insured. irranKU. Hamilton, wnue ioc&ed up in a Duiiding at Eldorado. Kan., for being drunk, set fire to the same and was burned to death. Wm. Banks and Green Cunningham, colored, were banged at Lafayette, Ga., on the 23d, for the murder of H. H. Eudd last January. A frightful accident occurred at the San Francisco gas works on the morning of the 23d, in which Horence O Halloraa was burned to death. Sam Bran nan and others.reprc sensing a New York company, propose erecting smelting and milling works in the Yaqui river, near Konora, Mexico. Commissioners from several little states in. Central America have under consideration the terms of a projected federation of their governments. The issues of standard silver dollars from the mints for the week ending March 24th, was $218,495: for the cor responding period last year, $188,500. Mrs. Helen Hunt Jackson, of Boston, has been appointed special agent of the Indian Bureau, to investigate the condi tion of the Mission Indians in California. A Vienna dispatch of March 25th says: Several localities at the foot of Mt. Avart were destroyed by snow avalanches. It is stated that 150 persons were killed and 100 injured. A Braidwood, Illinois, dispatch of March 25th says: Explorers entered the Diamond mine to-night for the purpose of making a search, so far as possible. ior tne uouies oi toe arownea miners. it - 1 3! 1 1 i A late dispatch says the eruption of Mount Etna is increasing in violence. A new crater has opened, and the lava threatens to overwhelm Nicholas and other yillages. People are fleeing from their homes, and troops are assisting to save property. A strong effort is making in the south toward conversion to Mormonism. A presiding elder of the Mormon church has recently arrived in Nashville. Tenn.. and is arranging for the emigration of j a - tt i . converts to utan. jib aays there are now 90 Mormon missionaries at work in the south. Iron ore has been offered in the Pitts burg market during the past few days by the iiepublic Ure company for $8 50 per ton, delivered at Cleveland, SI 50 per ton less than last year. This, it is be lieved, will break the ranks of the ore producers, who were then united in hold ing up the price and fighting the blast furnace men. The London Mark Lane Express of March 25th says: In wheat and flour there was only a holiday trade, and prices were only nominally unchanged. The same may be said of foreign maize, which was lower. Barley was in little demand and quiet; foreign, unchanged. Oats. lower; foreign, dull. . The statement of the TJ. S, treasurer of March 24th shows gold, silver and U. 8. notes in the treasury to-day, as fol lows: Uold coin and bullion, $182,610,- 755; silver dollars and bullion, $106, 487,192; fractional silver coin. $277,795, 519; total, $361,625,388 Certificates outstanding: Gold, $40,075,940; silver, $60,705,370; currenoy, $9,875,000. Business failures for the last seven days, ending March 23d, as reported by N. G. Dun & Co., of the mercantile agency, number 195, egainst 265 last week, a reduction of 70. New England state, 175; middle, 39; western. 57; south ern, 38; Pacific states and territories, 12; New York city, 8; Canada, 24. Total. 195. A Winnepeg dispatch of March 24th says: word has reached here of the wrecking in the latter end of August, while going across the Great Slave lake from Fort Eesolution to FortEae, of the British Circa m Polar expedition, de tailed to take polar observations last year. ' No lives were lost, but considera ble hardship was endured. The expedi tion arrived at Fort Eae, its destination, September 2d. They placed their instru ments and have taken two observations. A St. Louis di?pa ch of March 23d says: Eeports of the winter wheat crop from more than 200 counties in those parts of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, i Kansas, Missouri and Texas, where win- J ter wheat is grown, show that m Kansas ! and Missouri the condition is good and tne acreage tuny equal to last year, Tennessee', and Illinois give fair reports; .Kentucky and Indiana, especially the latter, show considerable damage; from Texas the reports are meagre, but good as far as they go. How the Fates Wort Against Poor Jones. It has sometimes been doubted t has there is a divinity which shapei our endt rough hew them how . weinay, but there is one man in this cityi who be lieves he is foreordained, predestined, predetermined to suffer. . Poor Jones! he seems to spend his whole life in offer ing to Mrs. Jones -an excellent woman, by the way a series of apologies for doing things he never did, arid he no sooner gets out of one scrape than he plunges into another. If Mrs. Jones has a fault it is that of loving Mr. Jones too much for his own good ; and being so particularly fond of him hetself, she imagines every omer woman mjust De, so at time i Jones finds his life hardly worth living. , : : It always happens, too, at some time when he is in a peaceful, pious frame of mind, walking firmly in the paths of rec titude and flourishing like a bay rum tree. For instance, just a few nichts ago he said,af ter supper, that he believed he d go down town a few minutes and look at the new electric light, !and Mrs. Jones asked him to mail some letters for her, and he started out, whistling "l want to De an angel." On the way down it occurred to him that he might as well stop at the barber's and get shaved, and he did so. I Then he went to look at the light, and as he walked Jong the .sidewalk, where it was as bright as day, he saw a lady jn front of him drop a folded paper ott of her purse. He started ior ward, pi( ked it up and presented it gallantly to the lady, saying: "Madam, you dropped this jftst now." Now. the most that he expected was a grateful "thank you;" but instead of that the womangave a terrible screani, grabbed hold of a policeman who was sauntering by, and, pointing out Jones, shrieked: Jones attempted to explain, but the policeman told him to hush up or he would club him, and then asked the wo man if he should arrest him. She said n-n-o, she would hate to have to appear in court against such a creature as that, and so after taking Jones' name and number he let him go. Jones went home; he had tasted enough adventure for one evening, and was glad to get back into the no-place-like-home atmosphere again, but when his wife saw him she held up both hands. "Why, Jeptha! she exclaimed; "how you look! where s your collar and tie gone to?" "I I I don t know!'' stammered Jones, who had forgotten all about the barber shop where he doubtless had left them; "h-h-ham't I got them on?" "Why. no ! andyon look so aueer. Did you mail my letters?" "Xy-yes, gasped the wretched liar; "of course I did." "I don't believe it !" said Mrs. Jones, in a voice that nearly took Jones out of his boots. "I know those letters are in your pocket at this very moment! Let me feel." Jones had a wild thought of rushing out into the night and cold and leaving Mrs. J. to find out all she could, but he hesitated, and the man who hesitates is lost. "There they are," she said, in a tone indicating that she had found a roll of million dollar bills, "and but what s this?" There was an awful silence, and you could have heard a meeting house drop as Mrs. Jones, with a calmness born of desperation, unfolded a piece of white paper and read : "To Madam Blank, fine French milli nery. Dr. One pink satin evening bon net $30. Eeceived payment. Saeah Blank fc Co. It was the wretched piece of paper he had picked up and which fate had helped him to thrust into his pocket to form one i i . , i , i i in. mi iron uuaiu ui uuvertsw uiruum stances. We will draw a veil over, the subsequent hilarities of that evening and merely refer to the atmosphere of Betsy and-I-are-out gloom which has enveloped "no-place-like-home" ever since like the dense smoke from a glass factory. Jones .i'ii i . it i j i3f8ii a strong Deiieyer in mauuoai uea- tiny. Detroit Post and Tribune. What the frlnee of Wales Blight Do. The outlook before the Prince of Wales is not very brilliant. At forty-two a man gets weary of the eternal round of soci ety, and it may be believed and hoped that the Prince is! sick of the empty- headed "set" of the past, and tnat bear- hghta between his butts and buffoons, Aylesfords, Cronmels, etc. have , ceased to have charms for him. But the career open to the eldest soil of a puke Is closed to him. Nothing, as matters stand, can change his position save the abdication or death of the Vueen. indeed, he is even worse off than his brother-in-law in Germany, since he has at least actively and honorably participated in real life in the army, from which the Prince of Wales is kept back by etiquette and con demned to pass his days in christening steamboats.inangurahng docks and open ing new wings to hospitals delightful tasks, doubtless, yet which, nevertheless, must after a while be apt to pall, and we can wen imagine tnat a vista or some twenty years more passed in that fashion may not be altogether cheering. And yet the Queen is quite likely to live as long as that, and those who know her well assert that she will never resign; to be Queen is, in fact, a confirmed habit with her, acquired very early, and likely to be held on up to the last. for we don't Jay aside habits as we grow old. If the Prince gets dis contented with having in fact no career worth the name until he reaches sixty two he may, perhaps, yet astonish' the world by a startling, new departure, and no one could help him toward one bet ter than a statesman who has given so many in hia time as Mr. Gladstone suppose, for example, as these two pace the sands at Cannes some afternoon this week, the Prince, were to say: "I'm sick to death of this playing at work. I want to have some share in political life. Can not something be found for me?" and the Prime Minister replied: "Well, sir, un less we could make some arrangement by which you could be permanent Vice roy of Ireland, I see nothing, and I sup pose you would not do that," and then the Prince were to rejoin: "Wouldn't T? I'd be delighted to' do it, and take my chance of dynamite and daggers with the rest. If Spencer can stand it, why can't I?- Even if I am killed, there are the boys, Alfred and Arthur." Why, in this case, we can imagine that Gladstone might produce another of those startling transformation scenes which the public has learned to expect from him. Wind sor castle would frown, but the country and her colonies would cry, "Hooray for a plucky Prince. Only give him a chance and you see he is as brave as his brother-in-law Fritz. N. Y. Times. - The Betrothed, There was once in this conntry a youth and a handsome girl who had been court ing for many years, and were betrothed to each other, and had pledged them selves to remain faithful to each other even after death. . ; Now it came ,to pass that the young man went at last on a long, long voyage, and died in foreign lands. So that his sweetheart knew nothing of what had happened to him. Yet in tho night he returned to his na tive village, and entered the stables of the young girl's parents, and took there from a white mare, and rode her to where his sweetheart slumbered with friends at a great distance off. And the dead man rode to the door of the'house, and knocked upon it, so that the folk within were aroused and cried out: "Who is there?" "It is a young man sent by the parents of the girl who is living here to fetoh her home." "Ah !" said the dead man's sweetheart, "mamma must have sent him." For she knew the voice. "Aye," answered the horseman, "fof to-morrow is our wedding day." She mounted upon the white mare be hind him, and they started.! But on the road the youg man said to lier: "The moon lights thee; death is with thee art not afraid ?" "Nay." Bhe answered; "with thee I cannot fear." And he complained of a strange pain in his head. "Bind thy handkerchief," she said, "around thv forehead." ' He answered that he had none, and the young girl gave him hers, which he tied around his head. So they rode to the house of the maid en s parents, and she dismounted and knocked upon the door, that they might open unto her. Who is there ? 'It is I, your daughter, whom you did send for' "By whom?" I "By my own betrothed. I rode hither behind him. On the way be told me that he had no handkerchief, and I lent him mine. He has gone to the stable to unsaddle our gray mare." They went to the stable; and the be trothed was not there. But the white mare's flanks streamed with sweat. When the young girl learned that her lover was nowhere to be found, she knew that he was dead; and she died also. But long afterward, when the body of the dead sailor was disinterred in order that the lovers might be buried together, they found the maiden's white handker chief bound about tho skull. The White House Lady. Not being a senator or member or in any way related to these eminent men. I was not present at the President s recep tion and I don t know wnether I ought to print what a young lady who was there writes to me about it. But as it is a good-tempered criticism perhaps it may as well go in. Here is what the fair one "takes her pen in hand" to say; "I desire to make no invidious comparisons when I say the present regime at the White House is several degrees more formal than during the period when Mrs. Hayes enacted the role of 'first lady.' Her Saturday afternoon receptions were delightful features in the social whirl and every caller felt personally welcome when held in her warm grasp or gazing into her bright, sparkling face. The presentations to Mrs. McElroy are not followed, as heretofore, by introductions to the several members of the receiving party, and one wanders rather helplessly along the long line of beautifully dressed women, unless perchance some familiar face causes a momentary stop and snatch of conversation. The woman of social standing has hitherto stepped in the rear of the receiving party, if she so desired, in order to witness the incoming human stream or to meet the friends sure to be gathered there; but the man who is stationed at the end of the receiving line guards the entrance of this desired haven as effectually as the angel with the flaming sword protected paradise, un less, perforce, the person desirous of entrance is on intimate terms with some member or the party assisting in the en tertainment of callers. It may be per- ""J "n0t io w the stiffness and coldness of the social atmosphere and the small numbers in attendance." Washington Capital. How (Jould Does Ills Work Easily Oliver Ames asked Jay Gould a few days ago how, with such apparent frail health, he could manage such a world of business as his vast possessions repre sent. Mr. Gould faintly smiled and replied: -v. "Is it difficult for you to manufacture shovels? Do you worry about each Bhovel and each man's work? "Oh. no," said Mr. Ames: "I have got that bo organized that the business runs itself. It doesn't give me any trouble." "Exactly," said Mr. Gould. "It gives me no more trouble to handle my busi ness than it does you to handle yours. I have organized the whole machinery so that I get results before me every day of what is being done, and the whole thing is very simple when it comes into my hands. Atlanta Constitution. "I'm a reporter," said an un salted youth to the baggage master, as he planked himself down cn a hand-truck near the car. "tfot anything new ior me?" "Oh, I upset a can of varnish on that truck just before you sat down, but as the item is already covered, it will be stale . before yon can get at it." The news gatherer was pried off with a coupling-pin, and sent home by slow freight. Drake's Traveler's Magazine. A Bad li'fe-nislory. By the death of an old man named Jacob Augustine, several days ago, near the village of North Lima, Mahoning County, this State, the particulars of a sad life-history were brought to light. Augustine had lived a remarkable life. Born within the boundaries of the town ship in which he died, he attained the age of seventy-nine years without spend ing a single night a doz an miles from 113 home, and only once had he visited Youngstown, the county-seat of Mahom- ing County. He was looked upon by his neighbors as an eccentric man, and the fact that he never married was usually alluded to in a joking manner. A few days before bis death Augustine sent for the village 'Squire, who drew up the celebrated will and was appointdd executor of the instrument. The docu ment was signed and sealed, but after the testator's death it could nowhere be found. The house in which Augustine had lived and died was searched from cellar to garret. Every nook and corner was carefully inspected, and a queer collection of relics was the result. - Old Spanish, Mexican and American coins 1 bearing dates earlier than 1800, were found hidden away in all sorts of odd ; places, together with some of the earliest ! issues of greenbacks and notes on State j banks. The searchers were about to j give up in despair of finding the lost will, when they concluded to again over- j haul the contents of a chest which had i been looked through several times. It was packed to the top with a curious collection of clothing in various stages of usefulness. At the very bottom of the chest was a package wrapped in a sheet. This,' on being opened, disclosed to view a suit of clothes carefully folded. It was shaken out and examined. Such a suit! It was made of brown home-made cloth, such as was worn in the days of the forefathers. The coat was of the swallow-tail cut, and the pantaloons had the peculiar flap so stylish in early times. Each garment was supplied with brass buttons, fas tened on with home-made linen- thread. eacli button being stamped, "Warranted orange." In one of the sleeves of the coat were found $6 25 in money, and the will. The strange suit of clothing was taken to the village store and displayed in a window, where it attracted consider able attention, many unfeeling people gazing at it and indulging in coarse jests and laughter. One old man gazed long and attentively at the relic of bygon6 days and turned away with a tear in his eye. It aroused within his heart sad memories, to which he gave vent as fol lows: "That suit has a history. 'It was in tended for poor old Jacob's wedding out fit. When he was twenty -one years of age he engaged himself in marriage to Gotliebe Wealandt, the daughter of a neighboring farmer. Mrs. 1 Augustine, Jacob's mother, favored her son's choice, and with trne womanly prido wove the cloth and made a wedding suit for her boy. Gotliebe's father, however, was opposed to the union. He said his daughter should not marry Jacob Au gustine. He broke up the match, and at the same time broke the young peo ple's hearts. . Jacob did not murmur. He . laid his wedding suit away in the chest, where it has retrained from that day to this. Jacob never married. His father, mother, brothers and sisters died, and he was left alone, but he has gone to join them now." "In the little cottage on the outskirts of the village," continued the old man, "may be seen a picture of wretchedness which plainly tells the remainder of this sad story. In that cottage lived Got liebe Wealandt, now an old woman. For fifty-eight years she has grouped in men tal darkness, her reason having been de throned by the cruel interference of her father in her girlhood's love-affair. She is not long for this earth, and when the last sod of earth resounds on her coffin lid, the two spnls so long kept asunder will probably join each other in Para dise." Cleveland, Ohio, Cor. Chicago Tribune. Artists and Their IH-Foriune In Mar riage. Our sprightly and nervous friend Sarah, the actress, is henceforth, if we may believe the gossips, to call herself Sarah Bernhardt without an Damala at tachment M. Damala himself persists in his recently determination to "go for a soldier," being convinced that a actor's career is not the proper thing for him. He has been living for some time in an atmosphere overcharged with electricity, and he covets the calm of some cool gar rison retreat, where he will have nothing to go through but one dress parade daily. Considerations "of honor and dignity," h6 says, prevent him from remaining in ! Paris any longer. What does the divine Sarah say to all this? Merely that M. Damala has judged it prudent to retire from the stage. It is whispered that.the marriage m London not being recognized as valid in France. M. Damala recedes his marital rights, and the lady proceeds on her erratic route alone. Otherwise, they say, how could M. Damala have en listed in the foreign legion, in which only single men are received. These "artistic marriages" all end badly. Be- hold now the gushing, although some what mature diva, Hortense Schneider, the inimitable creator of the "Grand Duchesse" first and most successful of the types of opera bouffe; see her in the act of breaking up a marriage to which she had fled as to a home of refuge. Some time ago she married an Italian country gentleman, Light Bionne, and went : away to ; compara tive seclusion in Upper Italy, For a few months she amused herself in superintending the castle and in learn ing the tricks of housewifery; but pres ently she became homesick for the cool northern air of Paris and the bright mornings in the oderous alleys of the Bois. So she suggested a return to the modern Babylon. But the husband said: "Nay. We will go up to Paris for three months yearly, and while there you may do what tou please I will n3ver com plain. But the remaining nine months of the year must be passed on my estate. The result was a quarrel, and now the Italian courts are called on to separate the discontented pair.Schneider will doubless have to leave with her separated husband a large slice out of her L very comfortable fortune. Mme. Bernhardt has had her temper a trifle soured by her many money losses of late, and more especially by the pain ful necessity of having to sell her jewels in the auction rooms of the Hotel . Drou ot. As she has always been excessively charitable, she 13 haunted by beggars wherever she goes. Day before yester day, when getting out of her coupe at the door of the Vaudeville theater, she was accosted by a sniveling old woman who had made frequent drafts upon her purse. "Oh, my sweet lady," said the crcne, "do help me once more!" Sarah's hand sought her portemonaie, but she had left that useful article at home. VJtlave you a five frano piees?" she said to her coachman. "No, madame, not a arm ' "Then what shall I do!" blubbered the old woman. "Sell your diamonds," answered Sarah. as she gathered up her skirts and hustled into tne theater. .Paris uorr. Bosten Journal, vj Astrological Frealctloas for 18S3, In 1883 Mars will be the ruling planet. The influence of this heafenlv bodv upon the irascible humor in man and and animal is well known. Particular care should be taken by persons of anat urally impatient disposition to avoid outbreaks of temper, especially" during the opposition so f Mars to the moon which occur on or about February 21. March 22, April 19, May 17. June 15. July 14, August 12, September 10, Octo ber o, November 6, December 3 and 31. At such times, also, bulls should be ; re strained from running at large, and wa ter should j be frequently thrown upon dogs to see if they manifest any symp toms of hydrophobia. Jupiter is sta tionary on St. Valentine's Day, and en gagements made then may be fatal. The conjunction of Mars and Mercury on St. Patrick's Day indicates that large amounts of money will be collected for the liberation of Ireland. The first days of May will be lovely, with a little rain at night. . Poetry of some merit may. now be written, and a thorough revolu tion in dress and cooking expected. On the 9th events fatal' to domestic happi ness will be extremely liable to Joccur. Startling developments in aristocratic families will now be made. No destruc tive frosts will happen in this month, and corn-planting will be earl v. From the 2d of June to the 13th 6f July, a severe drought will take place. On "the 19th, a European sovereign will die. On the 27th an ocean steamer will take fire, with great destruction of life. The 4th of July will be again signalized this year by an event of great National importance. On the 17th, however, an instance of serious official misconduct will come to light. Much-needed rainy weather will begin on the 13th, and henceforth the summer will ba intensely hot. 1 The as pect of the asteroid Melpomene now in- Ldicates special disaster to members of college faculties, a railroad accident be ing the probable danger threatened. The 19th will be a day of peculiar horror. August will be fine till the 24th. Es caped lunatics should be very cdreful of their behavior during the whole month. Fits and the falling sickness will be quite general after the 14th. On the 3d of October avoid trifling, as it is one of the frosty, A new washing machine will be patented on the 11th. Scholastic Annual. The Strongest Man. ProfessorE. A. Proctor found at Eeno. Nev., a man who claims to be the strong-. est man, in me woria. his name is An gela Cardella. He is an Italian, aged 38, and stands five feet ten inches in height, weighing 138 pounds. His strength was born with him, for he had no athletic training. He differs from other men chiefly in his osseous struct ure. Although not of unusual size, his spinal column is double the ordinary width, and his bonea and joints are made on a similarly large and generous scale. He can lift a man of 200 pounds with the middle finger of his right hand. The man stood with one foot on the floor, his arms outstretched, and his hands grasped by two persons to balance his body. Car della then stooped down and placed the third finger of hia right hand under the man's foot, and, with scarcely any per ceptible effort, raised him to the height of four feet and deposited him upon a table near at hand. One or two power ful Irishmen waylaid Cardella with in tent to thrash him, but he seized one in each hand and bent them together till life was nearly hammered out of them. He was of a quiet and peaceable disposi tion and his strength inherited, :for he states his father was more powerful than himself. Call the Kext Case, Sir." Forty years ago Eatonton was a fast town. Gambling of all kinds, cock-fighting and horse-racing was the rule, as it is the exception now. Why, sir, at one term of the cdurt 1845 or 1840 the Grand Jury returned one true bill against forty persons John W. Ashurst, Solicitor-General, and a number of Erominent lawyers included in one atch for gaming. It was in this case that it is said Judge Cone made himself famous. When the case was reached all of the defendants rote and pleaded guil ty. Juge Cone fined each of them $10 and costs and lectured them severely upon the uselessness ; end immorality of such habits and the viciousness of the example which they were, setting for the youth of the country; then, commanding the defendants to take their seats, with a solemn face but a merry twinkle in hia eye, he 'turned to tfce clerk and said: "Now, Mr. Clerk, enter after these cases, 'State of Georgia vs. Judge Cone, gam ing special information by His Honor; plea of guilty,? and fine him $100 and coats. Call the next case, sir."- Eaton ton (Ga.) Messenger. ; Some men are ever ready to ofTer a remedy for everything. The other day we remarked to one of these animated apothecary shops: "An idea struck us yesterday"," and bef are we could finish be advised us: "Bub Che affected parU with arnica 1" Ex. - -'y;?'. The Woman's Bo ird of Missions re ceived during the year 1S82, $131,843.