THE INDEPENDENT HAS THE 1 OTBTT ra -7n iul WO T17 FIHEGT JOB OFFICE IS DOUGLAS COUNTY. CARDS, BILL MEADS, LEGAL BLANKS v And other printirg, Including Large and Heavy Posters and Showy ' . Hand-Eills, ' Neatly and expeditiously executed JOI Ob Tear. M no Wtx Months .., Tfcre Month.., Tbeee are the term for thorn paying In advance. The Independent o fieri floe inducements to ad vertisers. Terms reasonable. vol. vni. ROSEBUBGi OREGON; SATORDAY. APKIL 28. 1883. NO. 3. A.T PORTLAND rtlc:EO. THE INDEPENDENT IS ISSUED Saturday 9Xornlnga, -BY THE DOUGLAS COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. TiTirnji 3 1 " ' ' PBACTICAL WATCHMAKER. JEWELER," AND OPTICIAN. ALL WORK WARRANTED. In WMe&ea, ClncUa. Jewelry, Spetele-a d Ejr'giaM, And a Full Line of v . Tobacccs and Fancy GooiJs. Dealer Cigars, The only reliable Optometer in town for the proper adjustment cf Spectacle ; always on hand. Depot of the Genuine Brazilian Pebble Spec' . taclea and Eyeglasses. ; r OFFICE First door south of post office, Rose banz. Oregon v - DS. M. W. DAVIS, DENTIST, FOSEBURG, OREGON. OFFICE Oil JACKSON STREET, Tp Stairs, over 8. Msrks & Co 's New Store. PAHOfJEY'S SALOON Nearest to the Railroad Depot, Oakland Jas. Blahoney, Prop'r. faa finest pt wines, liquors and cigars in Deerf 'las count, and tha beat XXIL3L,IA.RI TA.XJr-.I3 la the Stat kept In proper repair y Parties traveling on the railroad win find tfcb place Tery handy to risit during the atop - ping of the train at the Oak- , land Depot. Giva rna a call. - Jab, hahqnzy. JOHN FRASER, Home Made Furniture, WILBUR, OREGON. Upholstery, Spring Mattrasses, Etc., Constantly on hand. rilDMITIIDr I have the beat stock of rUmll I Unr.. lumitore south or PortUud J And" all of my own manufacture. No two Prices to Customers Residents of Douglas county are requested to give me a call before purchasing elsewhere. g3r ALL "WORK WARKANTED.-S DEPOT HOTEL dAKLASD, - - 0REU09. Richard Th.om.as, Prop'r rpniS HOTEL flAS BEEN ESTABLISHED for a number ol years, and has become very popularwith the traveling public. First-class , OLEtPSKO ACCOMMODATIONS. . And th table supplied with the best the market afford. Hotel at the depot of the Railroad. . JJAVINQ ON HAND A LARGE LOT OF FINE Spanish Merino I oder the oroe for sale. Cbea for Cash, at my Farm in Douglas county, six miles from Roseburg HENRY CONN, Sr. H. C. STANTON. Dealer in Staple Dry Coodsl Keeps constantly on hand ' uicut of a general assort- EXTRA FINE GROCERIES, WOOD, WILLOW ASD tiLASSWARF, ALSO Crockery and Cordage A full stock of SCHOOL BOO ICS Such as required by the Public County Schools, All kinds of STATION KR.Y, TOYS and FANCY ARTICLES, To suit both Young and Old. B UYS AND SELLS LEGAL TENDERS, furnishes Checks on Portland, and procures Drafts on San Francisco. OEEDS "SEEDS ! jh2 ALL K1MK OF BUST QUALITY jV 3L, JL- OK DERS rromptly attended to and Goods shipoed , with care. Address, Ilacheney & Bene. Portland. Oregon. v Itotlce, Notice Is hereby given, to whom It .nay concern, that th unJewijcoed his been awarded the contract for keapttiff the Douvlas county Pauper tor the period ol two year. All persons in need of assist nee irom t aid county must first procure a certificate to tliat effect from am memir of the County Board, and present tt to on of the following named persons, who are author ized to. and will care for those presentiug such certificate mi Riittnn- RfMehurs". L. L. Kellortr. Oakland; Mrs IJrown. Uokiiiir Glass. Dr. Scroinrs w authorized to furnlah medical aid to alt persons in need of the tame who have been declared paupers of Douglas county. WM. R CLARKlE, Supt. of Poor. Homo. Or. Feb. 16. 1880, - A Milwaukee dispatch of April 17th says: George Scheller, accused of set ting fire to the Newhall house ou the morning ol tne lotn 01 January jost, wato-day acquitted by the jury. Ffve ballots were taken and only one of the jurors was for conviction all that time, and he finally gave in because Judge Mallory instructed, that if there was any doubt in his mind he must give the prisoner the benefit of that doubt. The court room re-echoed with oheers when the verdict was announced. LATEST NEwjs : SUM1SURY. BT TCIiFiGBAPU TO DATE. Fifty Colorado miners are on their -way to Alaska to work inj the mines. - The parliament hcjrase at Quebec was consumed by fire on April 20th. y One hundred and . ten excursionists left Philadelphia Apnl 20lh for Oregon. The steamer Two Brothers capsized off Bodega beads, near Bodega bay, and her crew were all lost. " About 3000 immigrants left Liverpool for Canada,' April 20th, most of whom are bound for Manitoba. About 500 immigrants arrived in San rFrancisco on the 21st, most of whom are for Oregon ajj& WafchnigtoB. -.. Pittsburg cigar makers met recently and decided to demand an advance of fifty cents per thousand on May 1st. At Sacramento, j April 20thj "the Ar mory wall fell to the ground, killing five persons and wounding twenty more. President Arthur jwas seriously ill for a few hours at Savannah on the morning of April 21st. He returned home on the 22d. j Kansas had arother one of its refresh- ing cyclones on April 21st, destroying much property and injuring a namber of people. " Two Presbyterian' missionaries Chap man and Penny located on Prince of Wales island, Alaska, are reported drowned. j The schooner Eveline Fales, lumber laden, was wrecked -.1. . - i in a storm on Lake Michigan April 22dJ Five of her crew were drowned. . j A Madrid dispatch of April 22d says: An explosion occurred at the dynamite factory at Leon to day. The bodies of seven victims were recovered.. At Delhi, India, an extensive confla gration occurred April 19th, by which 2000 houses were jdestroyed. A great number of families are destitute and homeless. j One of the severest snow storms of the season passed over parts of Wyoming and Nebraska on April 22d. Trains are blockaded on the Union Pacific road in oonsequence. j O'Bree's circus, exhibiting at Dover, Del., recently, was attacked by a mob. The mob opened fire on the showmen while leaving town, wounding several of them, some seriously. t Business failures for the last Bix days, ending April 20th. are 233 against 185 for the last week. New England states had 29; middle states, 31; western, 57; southern, 4t; Pacific states and territo ries. 20: Canada. 40; New York citv, 10. Katie Kane, the only female lawyer of Milwaukee, Wis., recently threw water in the iac&f jrudaJIallory - while in court, asserting that the judge insulted her. She was fined $50, but refuses to pay, preferring to go to jail. Hon. H. M. Woods, editor of the Tombstone Daily Epitaph, was stricken suddenly by blindness recently, caused, the physicians say, by too close applica tion to the duties of his profession. It is thought the attack is temporary. The signal service station on the West Indies will be discontinued on account of Congress failing! to make the neces sary appropriation! Gen. Hazen states that a number of other stations will be suspended for the same reason. Oskaloosa, Iowa, 'appears to be an un healthy place for judges. Congressman Cutts, Judge Sheeyers, ninth state su preme court, Judge Johnson, of the dis trict court, and Judge Lewis, of the cir cuit court, are all seriously ill there. A Fort Worth, Texas, dispatch of April 19th says: Between 200 and 300 cow boys on ranches in ' Panhandle are on a strike for an increase of from $30 to $50 per month, with board. They are well armed, and threaten to kill men, fire ranches and work general trouble. The managers of the Garfield memori al hospital have purchased a piece of property, situated j in the suburbs of Washington, at a! cost of $37,000, the money to be realized from the sale of the Soldiers' and Sailors orphan asylum property, which was donated for the erection of a hospital upon the land just purchased. j Booth Edwards, colored, of Mumford, Ky., sentenced to be hanged May 18, for the murder of Archibald Long, last De cember, attempted to break jail recently. Calling the jailer) to bring him a-tub of water for a bath, he rushed out on that gentleman with a pistol and would have escaped had not the jailers wife locked the outer doors. Finding escape impossible, Edwards returned and shot himself through the heart, killing him self instantly. j San Francisco stands second only to New York in quantity or value of ex ports of domestic breadstuff for the hSKiv& ftJfftnSSf I mmmv vhv vm -vumsv -. - ja.WW From the port of j San Francisco there were exported, the; last month of the yeas 40,863 bushels of barley, valued at $30,- aa, and i.4y,3oy pushels of wheat, val ued at $2,177,455. j The value of exports of wheat from New York for March was $2,332,276. For nine months ending March 3ist, the breadstuff from value of exports of San Francisco was $2,763,120 more than the value of simi lar exports from any other port in the United States, except New York, which leads with a value of $68,193,991. The Tucson Star Hermosillo special of April 20th says: The government troops which followed the Apaches from south east of TJres, had running1 fights with the Indians from TJres to Gambies. They claim they have killed nearly the whole band. After losing the trail of the re mainder some of the soldiers visited Gambies, where a soldier, who was in the campaign last year, recognized a white man who was with the Indians at that time, acting as chief. This soldier was wounded and left on tbe field for dead, but was conscious. From the description of ah Apache chief it was thongh to baL.jN. Streeter, formerly United States Indian agent, a most desperate character, who for 12 years has been a leader of the Apaches. His capture proves that he was not mistaken in the man. Lord O'Neill is dead. Booth, the actor, is playing to large bouses in Yienna. Charles A. Dana, of the New York Sun, is visiting in California. Berlin working men are organizing for a general strike for an increase af wages. The village of Oakville,in the province of Ontario, was destroyed by fire April 18th. ., v; '-r The city council of Minneapolis raised the license in that place from $100 to $1500. The safe of H. H. MaColley.of Willow Creek, Nev., was robbed of $5000 on the 16th inst; Allen Potter, a reporter of the Chicago Times, committed suicide at Cheyenne April"l7th. .-"- . - Prince Thomas, duke of Genoa, and Princess Isabella of Bavaria were mar ried April 17th. The colored citizens of Washington city celebrated the 21st anniversary of the emancipation proclamation April 17th. Arbor Day was a great s access this year in Nebraska. It is safe to say that over 5,000,000 trees were planted in the State on that day. , The Pennsylvania senate has passed a bill making general election days a legal holiday ; also a bill preventing consoli dation of competing pipe lines. The Connecticut senate, by a vote of 15 to 6, decided the bill forbidding rail roads to charge a higher rate for freight for shorter distances than for long. A St. Petersburg dispatch of April 19th says: Five hundred dwellings, tel egraph station, postoffice, a number of stores, a large quantity of coal and wood, and much mining property wore burned at the village of Katow Iwanoski. ' A San Francisco dispatch of April 19th sayB: A heavy rain storm set in this morning and continued throughout the day. Indications this evening are that there will be more during the night. The rainfall is confined to the northern part of the state, with snow falling in the Sierras. . The commissioner of internal revenue has decided to redeem stamps and to return to the owners with the word "re deemed" imprinted upon each check, all checks and drafts bearing two cent inter nal revenue stamps which remain unused ou July 1. ( The checks and drafts can then be used in the regular course of business., C. A. King & Co., Toledo, have re ceived over 1300 reports covering every important wheat growing county in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Missou ri. On the quarterly report the present condition is very favorable. One-quar ter is fair, one-third poor, one-sixth very poor and one-quarter good. The present condition is much better than that of two weeks ago. Pension Commissioner Dudley has is sued a circular directing special pension examiners to give public notice that they are not authorized to collect money for fees or expenses from pensioners or ap plicants for pensions. Also, all special examiners are provided with certificates, signed by the commissioner of pensions and the secretary of the interior, and bearing the seal of the interior depart ment. Without such certificates all per sons claiming to be pension examiners are frauds. A San Francisco dispatch of April 19 says: Young McGreevy, shot by F. Valencia at a picnic last Sanday at San Bafael, was buried to-day at that town. The remains of the unfortunate boy were interred by the side of his late grand father, who for many years was a highly respected citizen of the county wherein tbe boy met his sad fate. A large as semblage of relatives and friends were present and floral offerings were numer ous. Great sympathy is felt for the family. The 306 medals have reached Phila delphia at last, and have been distrib uted to those entitled to receive them. Thev have been at Senator Don Cam eron's house, at flarrisburg, for nearly a year. One or two of the stalrart phal anx, who were at Cameron's house when the bronze trophies arrived, were given their medals with an injunction of se crecy. The others were put away until the campaign should bo over. Cameron in overhauling his rubbish before going abroad found these medals and con eluded that this was a good time to dis tribute them. Boys here are exhibiting them as curiosities. A Leavenworth dispatch of April 18th savs: John M. Abernethy's furniture factorv burned yesterday afternoon; loss, $40,000. Forty-five men were at work in the mill at the time, and being in the midst of continuous noise it was neces sarv to run from one department to an other and warn the men individually. While doing so, George Snyder was forced, in the laBt room, to jump, with several others, from a second story win dow. In falling. Snyder struck the side walk with such force as to cause his ... ..... body to sink between his hip bones. Mia recovery is doubtful. His companions are all dangerously, and it is thought, fatally hurt. The names are John Basil. W. Osborn. V. J. Westerman, B. Ander son and George Baughman. During the fire a hose cart ran down Mamie Frees, a little girl, and it is believed she will die. A Bichmond, Va., dispatch of April 19th says: Dispatches to-day state that the announcement that a number of skeletons of dead confederates, who fell at Seven Pines, have recently been plowed xlv by farmers living near the his toric battle-field, has caused quite a fetir in this eity. In many cases where the skeletons have been exposed the waists of most of them were encircled by leather belts, cartridge boxes and buckles, bear ing tha legend "C. S. A.". The First Virginia, of this city, and the Seven teenth- Virginia, of Alexandria lost scores in the battle of Seven Pines. The federal dead were removed long ago and buried in the national cemetery, near the battle field. All believed that hundreds of confederates were buried with them, and now rest beside those with whom they were opposed in deadly strife. While most of the bones plowed up are undoubtedly those of confederates, yet it is oeiievea mat some oi tnem are those of union soldiers who fell in the same battle. SEW T0RK FASHIONS. ECCENTBICmES. Great circular spots, three inches in diameter; great square or oblong, or many sided blocks, or triangles oast about, as if awaiting the mason's ham mer; birds and butterflies, and heads of four-legged beasts on. dresses, or on broad sash ribbons; great palm leaves a foot in length, and - proportionately broad; immense sprays and wide, feath ery, or leafy columns sweeping length wise; baskets or sprays of flowers be stowed on checks. Call you net these eccentricities? Then, too, one can ren der an ordinary piece of goods, such as plain wool, silk or satin as eccentric as the most fashionabl y heart could desire, by cuttingeut - large yiet -epota pr , blocks, and putting them on in applique with a narrow braiding or rows of stitch ing as a finish; while sprays for such purposes can be bought ready made. Goods with checked ground are seen united with velvet blocks, : and stylish costumes show the- basque and sleeves so devised, while the skirt is of plain check plentifully bestrewn with velvet bows. All that I have told you seems nothing, however, - compared with a young lady's costume at tha Vanderbilt fancy ball. he went as a wnite cat; lier dress thickly decorated with oats' heads and tails a cats head worn just above her own, and her coiffure showing a fin ish of cat tails. In considerably better taste, Mme. Christine Nilsson, after sing ing at a Brooklyn concert, appeared in a dress of black velvet and jet, as Marie Stuart. To journey back from a Brook lyn performance, and then attend a ball is not such a feat after all, when you consider that the entertainment only be gan at 11 o'clock. QUEEN YELLOW. Yellow is queen, and queen regnant. For dress goods, there are of mongrel yellows, many: yellowish, reddish, brownish yellows; leading up to yellow proper, which, in millinery, attains su premacy. Not so much pale, delicate yellows, but flaring, flaunting yellow; dashing boldly into orange. Scarce as yet the entire bonnet thus pronounced; very pronounced dashes of orange rib bon (narrow, of course, this season), very bright yellow flowers or pompons of equal tone. Just now, too, scarce anything renders a lady more happy tnan a band of narrow ribbon (chiefly yellow) which passas somewhat in hang man s style about her neck, and is fin ished by a dangling mass of loops and ends either in front or oh the left side. When the new bonnets begin to be worn, moreover, what a dangling there will be; since a bonnet is scarce a bonnet unless provided with at least one and often two pairs of ribbon strings, which are rigor ously narrow. BOWS AinBOW8. The fashionableness of velvet ribbon ' must not be forgotten. Many of these new boifnet strings are velvet; while on a survey of spring costumes, one is struck by the f requenoy of velvet ribbon as trimmed, laid in rows or fancifully disposed in bows. Bows upon bows, until veritably this may be called the season of bows. Not always indeed of velvet; gros graiu or satin ribbon do duty, and often take the place of brocade ou dresses of plain material. For, be yond a doubt, fashion is bidding good bye to combination costumes. A slow good bye, it is true, and a good-bye said, and said again. Yet they are vanish ing slowly, and even now the disfavor shown is toward the more ordinary classes of goods, since never were unitings of expensive stuffs more in vogue. Then, too, if there were no longer "combinations," what would be done with these eccentricities of which I have written? Ecoentrio as fashion may be, she would hardly permit one to drag around such floral or geometrical monstrosities, without an emehoration. In the cotton sattines . likewise, it must be confeKsed that impostors show plain material, besides fancifully printed. Yet ruf&ings of lace are much liked, and there are Cash's Coventry f rillings, both plain and with lace edge, which are more in favor this season than for some years. The narrow are used for trimming underwear or morning dresses, either white or colored; for grown people or children, while house keepers rejoice over pillow cases, shams, curtains, etc., showing ornamentation of the wider. Tne wear of these goods is almost everlasting, and accounts, doubt less, for some of this popularity. . The makers guaranteed every dozen to run full measure. GRADUATING DRESSES. A grand decision has been made in favor of simplicity; and mull, covered with stars, sprigs, dots, etc., is to be more used than anything telse. The dresses are called, by courtesy, white; but for the most part the white is dingy enough, though "cream white" is the accepted term. The cream, however, in which some have apparently been dipped. mu3t have been very, very stale, for tbe fabric is presented us of a hue that in olden times, would have caused an outburst from the , good lady mother who prided herself on snowy laundry ing. These soiled looking costumes, nevertheless, must be set down as among the eccentricities, and so pass muster. Gloves, still wrinkled, long, and some times as muddy looking as the dress, only a deeper shade of mud. Then, there are uncertain yellows, terra cottas or black; and if the young lady decides on black silk stockings, for which there is naw a furol, there will be commenda ble harmony. Other solid colors are worn; chiefly those prevailing in dress goods, but black silk is, par excellence, the thing. Even babies are wearing black silk stockings. Think of it, and tell me fashion be not a little unsound of mind? At watering places, many a dainty stroll . 1 1 .11! will be tasen oy young laayaora irea in white and black; black shoes and stockings, gloves, accessones and hat, and especially stylish results will accrue from the carrying of a Boulavard para sol. A flat parasol with canopy top, and in silk or satin to match or contrast handsomely with costumes. Introduced last season, it promises to be very popu lar. CARDS AS ORNAMENTS. - - Tis a phase of New York life, this giving and carrying of pioture cards. Exaotly what merchant inaugurated such donations, I know not; but once inaugurated, it has grown into a curious subject of Speculation. One lady after another, goes hugging these devices, and various are the ideas adopted, as each dealer strives after novely. So we see vases, birds, dogs, cats, babies in baskets, and I know not what. The com pany presents packages of these leaves deftly bound together with fine wire, and the garlands, bouquets, or any other wall ornament. Is this not worthy of the nineteenth century? Then, as to Christmas, Easter and , birthday tsards which are sent and received by the thousand, what may not be done? What is not being done with them? They are ranged on mantle pieces, cover one's tables and brackets, till Ingenunity is busy contriving unlooked for uses. Some cover fancy . boxes ththem, others make variously shapeof "stands for them; and thus disposed of, they make pretty enough wall ornaments. Correspondence Denver Republican. What Tripe Is. Occasionally you see a man order tripe at a hotel, but he always looks htrd, as though he hated himself and everybody else. He tries to look as though he en joyed it, but he does not. Tripe is indi gestible, and looks like an india-rubber apron for a child to sit on. When it is pickled it looks like dirty clothes put to. soak, and wen it is cooking a dish cloth On the table it looks like glue, and tastes like a piece of oil silk umbrelia cover. A stomach that is not lined with corrugated iron would be turned wrong side out by the smell of tripe. A man eating tripe at a hotel table looks like an Arctio ex plorer dining on boots or chewing pieces of frozen raw dog. You cannot look at a man eating tripe but he will blush and look as though he wanted to apologize and convinoe you he is taking it to tone up his system. A woman never eats tripe. Thero is not money enough in the the world to hire a woman to take a cor ner of a sheet of tripe in her teeth and try to pull off a piece. Those who eat tripe are men who have had their stomachs play mean tricks on them, and they eat tripe to get even with their stomachs, and then they go and take a Turkish bath to sweat it out of the sys tem. Tripe is a superstition handed down from a former generation of butchers, who sold all the meat and kept the tripe for themselves and the dogs; but dogs of the present day will not eat tripe. You throw a pieces of tripe down in front of a dog, and see if he does not put hts tail between his legs and go off and hate you. Tripe may Lave a value, but it is not as food. It may be good 'to fill into a burglar-proof safe, with the cement and chilled steel, or it might answer to use as a breast plate in time of war, or it would be good to use for bumpers between cars, or it would make a good face lor tne weight of a pile driver, but when you come to smuggle it into the stomach you do wrong. Tripe! Bahi A piece of Turkish towel cooked in axle grease would be pie compared ?ith tripe. Burlington Hawkeye. The Want of Food. 7 Next to the want of sleep and rest as a cause of tne frail bodies to be seen throughout the country comes a want of food. W nen company comes up to a farm-house the table presents a glorious appearance. Chickens and preserves and pickles and nice bread and innumer able good things crown the board, but let the guests go away, and it is amaz ing how quickly those good things dis appear! They are all transient. The lambs and pigs and chicken need have no fear of harm from the regular family. It is only when company comes that any chicken need have any fear for its life, or any child need hope for oake or pudding. Tne ninety-nine meals- are poorly devised and executed, gulped down, and put upon a basis of salt meat and fried potatoes the human machine goes forth to work. What is wanting at the daily table is sometimes made up out of the stimulus of tobacco and whisky. What is needed on the farm next to plenty of sleep is plenty of food on the table at all three of its spreads. Fruit, bread and milk should be fed out ex travagantly, and fresh meat, too, as of ten as possible. The table and the pil low will make happy young farmers. Men cannot work with profit more than ten hours a day. All effort to do more will result in loss. And without plenty of sleep and food man cannot well per form his ten hours of service. Under the influence of food and sleep and the ten-hour law our skeleton-like boys and girls whose lives are on the farm, would put on flesh and the bloom of health, and would have some light in their eyes and some happiness in their hearts. Egyptian Ills. Egypt is scarcely a desirable country to live in, if we take into account its fever-breeding and eye destroying cli mate, and then consider the various in ternai worms which swarm in its historic swamps. The worst of these is Bilhar zia, a fluke that lives in the blood ves sels, and causes a violent and often fatal disease. The females are less than an inch long, and very slender; the males stouter. The disorder does not spare tates that Europeans, for Dr. Cubbold states he saw six' officers of the Eastern Tele graph company afflicted with it, all of whom had contracted it by carelessly drinking unfiltered water during shoot ing expeditions. It is this drinking of unfiltered canal water that causes the disease in all cases. The free cerca Iarone are swallowed, or tne organism containing the "redia" stage is swallow ed, and the result in both cases is the I development of this blood-letting am- ii mal in the interior of the drinker. The other worms. Anohylostoma duodenale and Filaria sanguinis, enter in the same manner, and the three are frequently found on the same person. A large mor tality among the natives is caused by them, how large is not fully known; but now great the misohief caused by the Anchylostoma may be shown by the fact that it was the agent of the endemic outbreak that carried off so many of the laborers employed upon the St. Goth ard tunnel., , A policeman wears a uniform so that a person engaged in devilment may see him oomisg and gat away. "Jack." A year or more ago, as the foreman of one of the iron works of this oity was crossing the yard one day, he espied a little skip of a boy, not over eleven years old, seated on a big fly-wheel and chewing the cud of a bitter reflection. "Who are you?" "I m Jack." "What are you doing here?" "Besting." r "What do you want?" ; "A job." 1 Those were the inquiries and answers. The boy was pale-faced - and ragged; but in his steel-blue eyes the foreman ; saw game; and, too, the idea of a waif like him setting but to battle with the world touched a tender chord in the heart of the man who had boys of his own.and he set Jack to work in the yard. - No one thought the boy would stay a week, and so no one cared to ask where he came from or who he was. But he stuck. He was hard-working and faith ful, an des the weeks went by he gained friends. One day he walked up to the foreman and said: "I want to learn the trade." "You? Ha! ha! ha! Why, Jack, you are not big' enough to handle a cold chisel!" "I can whip any 'prentice hoy in this shop," was the earnest declaration. "Just hear him! Why, any of the lot could turn you wrong side out! When you get big enough to whip the smallest one you come to me for a job." At noon that day Jack walked up to the biggest apprentice boy in the shop and said: "Come out doors." "What do you want?" "I'm going to lick you!" "What for?" "Because I want a chance to learn the trade." The two went out, and in sight of twenty witnesses little Jack won a vic tory. At 1 o'clock he touched his cap to the foreman and said: "I've licked your bitterest 'prentice. and want to go to work" !" Ten minutes later he had become a ma chinist's apprentice, and if you co in there to-day you will find him with greasy hands, oily face and a head full of business ideas. Jaok carries the keys to the drawers where the steam-gauge, safety valves and other trimmings are kept.and he knows the use of every tool, tne working of every piece of machinery. and there is a constant call for Jack here and Jack there. Before he is twenty he will be a finished machinist, and before he is twenty-five he will be foreman of some great shop. He is quiet, earnest, respectful and observing. What he does he does well. What he is told he never forgets. And here in Detroit are hundreds of boys who complain that there is no chance for them, even when backed by money and influence. They wait and wait and whine and complain, and leave it to waifs like little Jaok to call up the game to their souls and walk boldly into a great manufacturing works and say: 'To here I want a lob! Detroit Free Press. Natore In Siberia. "The history of animal and vegetable life on the tundra," says the author, "is a very curious one. or eight months out of the twelve every trace of vegeta ble life is completely hidden under a blanket six feet thick of snow, which effectually covers every plant and bush trees there are none to hide. During six months of this time, at least, animal life is only traceable by the footprints of by the occasional appearance of a raven or snow owl, wandering above the limits of forest growth, where it has retired for the winter. For two months in mid winter the sun never rises above the horizon, and the white snow reflf cts only the fitful light of the moon, the stars or the aurora borealis. Early in February the sun only just peeps upon the scene for a few minutes at noon, and then retires. Day by day he prolongs his visit more and more, Until February, March, April and May have passed, and continuous night has become continuous day. Early in June the sun only just touches the horizon at midnight, but does not set any more for some time. At midday the sun's rays are hot enough to blister the skin; but they glance harm lessly from the snow, and for a few days you have the anomaly of unbroken day in midwinter. "Then comes the-south wind, and often rain.and the great event of the year takes place the ice on the great rivers , breaks up, and the blanket of snow melts away The black earth ab sorbs the heat Of the never-setting sun; quietly but swiftly vegetable life awak ens from its long sleep, and for three months a hot snmmer prodaces a brilliant Alpine flora, like an English flower gar den run wild, and a profusion of Alpine fruit, diversified only by storms from tne north, which sometimes for a day or two bring cold and rain down from the Arctic ice." Chambers Journal. Wants Her Slaves.. Judge Cobb found it necesssary re- I cently to prove the identity of pne of the illegal voters by an old lady named Mrs. Oglesby, who was once tne owner ox a number of slaves, but is now in very re duced circumstances, i She was accord ingly summoned to appear before this august tribunal. The witness walked into court with a short clay pipe in her mouth, and stepping up in front of his honor, she remarked: ; "Now, ain't you ashamed of yourself, Judge, to make a poor old bed-ridden body like me come here, while you're a great, big strapping man that could have walked up to my home- just aa easy as not. Now, if you've got anything for ma to do, just spit it out; for my old man's ailing powerful bad to-day." Judge Cobb explained that he would not detain the lady long, and asked if she knew the prisoner, pointing to a ne gro man. . - . " . .. ' . "Well, I should think I did," was her reply, "for didn't I raise him? and he b'longs to me right this minit. I've got his name and age sot down in my Bible, and I do hope that you will fix it np so that I can put him to work again. I've never Bold that nigger, and he b'longs to me just as much as this froek that Tve got on. And there sets another one of my niggers (pointing to another ille gal voter) r and ought to be At work right now in my garden. I tell you, Judge, inis tnmg oi steaur g a body's property is a shame, and I do hope that you will give them back to me. There ain't no law nor justice in it." The judge explained that he only want ed Mrs. Oglesby to identify the parties, and that hlsjurisdiction extended no further, as they were tow free. "Free ! you say shrieked the old lady. "Why, they are as much my nig gers to-day as they were when they were first hatched. Why you talk', Judge, like an old Abolitionist! If my old man wasn't on his back we'd soon show you how folks around town are hiring our niggers and not paying a cent for Jem. That black rascal over there knows he b'longs to me, and I've got about fifteen other niggers in this here Athens that I'm going to see if I can't get back, if there's any law in this country. w Now just you keep them boys locked up, and don't turn them loose until I tell you." The judge told the irate old lady that she could now return home. "Howell, ain't you got a cigar you can give me?" she asked. The judge said he was out, but told the witness that doubtless Senator Bar row conld accommodate her.' " The captain gallantly passed her a cigar, and she left with the avowed in tention of consulting a lawyer about entering suit to recover her slaves. Athens, Ga., Banner-Watchman, s Four Sets of Triplet; Within the month of February just passed there were born in Philadelphia four sets of triplets, which is certainly a record which any city may be proud of. The list is as follows: . Thursday, Feb ruary 8, Mrs. Charles Quinn, the wife of a laborer at the Mid vale Steel Works, gave birth to two daughters and a - son ; on Monday, February 12, Mrs. William Pedrick, the wife of a laborer employed at the machinery works, Bace street. above Fifth, gave birth to three boys; ; on Sunday, February 25, Mrs. Jefferson Bryan, wife of a shovel polisher at Bow land's shovel works, Frankford, gave birth to three boys. The fourth and last case of this boom in the triplet business occurred on Monday last, the mother be ing Mrs. Kate Welsh, a boarder at tha Lehman house, Thirty-ninth and Market streets. The lady is about forty years of age, and is remarkably well built. One Mon day afternoon Mrs. Welsh left her home to go to an hospital, to be treated for a sore limb. On ber way there she called upon a friend, Mrs. Margaret Dman, who resides ou the south eide of Market street, below Forty-ninth. While there, Mrs. Welsh grew suddenly ill. After awhile she rallied somewhat, and attempted to go home. She became so weak upon reaching the door that she reluctantly yielded to tbe invitation of Mrs. Dinan to remain with that lady all night. Mrs. Welsh failed to acquaint: her hostess with the cause of her . sickness, and the latter thought it was due to the fact that her guest was suffering from a sore leg. About three o'clock in the morning a fine, healthy looking little boy was born. Fifteen minutes later another boy was born, and half an hour Bubse quent Mrs. Welsh gave birth to a still born female infant. Not until fifteen hours after the event were the services of a physician secured, and then Dr. James Henry Lloyd, of Fortieth and Walnut streets, called. The coroner was yesterday notified of the still-born girl, and an inquest will be held to-day. - The mother is still at the house of Mrs. Dinan and is improving rapidly. The two boys are doing well. Philadel phia Becord. - . i He was Deaf. She was a stylish young lady about eighteen years old, and to acoommodate a friend she took tbe baby out for an air ing. She was wheeling it up and down the walk, when an oldish man. very deaf, came along, and inquired for a certain person supposed to live on that street. She nearly yelled her head off trying to answer him, and he looked around, caught sight of the baby, and said: "Nice child that. I suppose you feel proud of him?" "It isn't mine!" she yelled at him. "Boy, eh? Well, he looks like you."- She yelled again, but he nodded his head, and continued: "Twins, eh? Where's the other one?" Despairing of making him understand by word of mouth, she pointed : to the baby, at herself, and then shook her head. - v -. "Yes--yes,I see; t'other twin in the house. Their father is fond of them, of course?" "She turned the cab, and hurried the the other way, but he followed, and asked: ' ;;vV-- 7 . - - "Do they kick round much at nights?" "I tell you 'tain't mine!" she shouted, looking very red in the face. "I think you're wrong there," he an swered. "Children brought up on the bottle are apt to pine and die." - She started ou a run for the gate, but before she had opened it he came up and asked: "Have to spank 'em once in a while, I suppose?"' She made about twenty gestures in half , a minute, and he helped the cab through the gate, and said: "Qnr children were all twins, and I'll send my wife down to give you some ad vice. You see " But she picked up a flower-pot and flung it at him. He jumped back, and as she entered the house he called out: ; "Hope insanity won't break out on tb twins." r Women do something in the newspa per field. Miss Mary L. Booth is. editor of Harper's Bazar. Miss Nellie Hutchin son, author of many sketches and pretty poem, writes the notes of the New York Tribune. Miss Florence Finch writes for the Boston Globe, and overJ women' are emnlovod on the fctaff of Western papers, and about thirty 'as editors-in-chief. Everybody's duty is dun on the first day of January. :