- t liJTwinTnitii 'lis 'mm' iiiininisiiiii n nan m i ! mi hi ii m iii i - "' . if II Mill iiiiiM iiiii ii i iii ii m i. in iii - - . : . . 3 THE INDEPENDENT IS ISSUED Saturday 2IornIngr9v -BY THE DOUGLAS COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. THE INDEPENDENT? HAS THB 013 Ii..jAlS whip nil I t y ti ii FINEST JOB OFFI02 IK DOUGLAS COUNTY. -CARLS, BILL BEADS, LEGAL BLANKS And other printing, tnoladiog Large and Heavy Pesters and Showy Hand-Bills. . . ' : Ueatly and expeditiously executed 1 A.T PORTLAND PBICEO. ALL SORTS. llLD JUf One Yr.... .$ SO Kk Hottlh.... t SO 1 oo These tre the terms for those paying la ad ranee. Tbe Ijidefkndbnt offer, floe Inducements to ad vertisers. .Terms reasonable. vol." vm. ROSEBUHG. OREGON, SATlBl)AY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1883. NO. 24. JU1JLM JL o ; j y .... . - iJK '. - .-. 3S:J. JA8ECULEK PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER, JEWELER, OPTICIAN; -i AND ALL WORK WARRANTED. Dealer In Watcbce. Clack. Jewelry. Spectacle ad Eyriumt, And a Fall Line or Cigars, Tobaccos and Fancy Goods. Tbe only reliable Optometer in town for the proper adjustment cf rpeotaclea ; always on band. Depot of the Genuine Brazilian Pebble Speo tacles and Eyeglasses. OFFICE First door sou lb of post office. Rose burg. Oregon. XiAXIGEN BERG'S Boot and Shoe Store, KOHEHUUO. OGN On Jackson Street, opposite tbe Postoffice. Keeps on band tbe largest and best assortment of EMateru nud Han Vramelco Boots and .hoes, Galiero, MUppers) And everything In tbe Boot and Sboe Line and SELLS CHEAP for CASH. Boots and Shoes Made to Order Perfect Fit Guaranteed. I use tbe Bent of Leather and Warrant all my woik. II El'AlUINO XVently Done On Short Notice. I keep always on band AND NOTIONS, TOYS W Musical Instruments and Violin String a Spe cialty. LOUIS LAAGtSKKtCKOt DR. M. W. DAVIS, DENTIST, ROSEBURG, OREGON. OFFICE-ON JACKSOST FTREKT, Up Btairr, over 8. Marks & Co.'s New Store. r.lAHOnEY'O SALOON Nearest to tbe Railroad Depot, Oakland " Jum. Mntioney, Prop'r. The finest of wines, liquors and cigars la Dcsrj las county, and the bast BIIililABD 'TJk.TtUTa In the State kept ia proper repair kHrUei traveling en the railroad win find this place very handy to rial t daring the step . ping of the train at the Oak land Depot Give meaoall. Jas. MAHONEY. a ' i JOHN FRASER, Home Made Furniture, LATEST NEWS SUMMARY. UT TKJLEGRAVII TO IIA.TK. WILBUR, OREGON. Upholstery, Spring Mattrasses, Etc., Constantly on hand. ETI IDIJITI IDC I have the beat stoclc ol rUnili I Urf C.. turniture sooth of Portland And all of my own manufacture. No two Prices to Customers Resident of Douglas county aro requested to giro me a call before purchasing elsewhere. JCST ALL WORK WARRANTED.- DEPOT HOTEL- OAKLAND, - - OREUOI. Richard Thomas, PropV. rpms HOTEL riAS BEEN ESTABLISHED for a number ot years, and has become very popular with tbe traveling public. First-class SLEfcPINC ACCOMMODATIONS. And the table supplied with the best the market affords. 1 1 otel at tbe depot of tbe Kailroad. H. C. STAffTON, Dealer in Staple Dry Coods I Keeps constantly on band ment of a general assort- EXTRA FINE GROCERIES, WOOD, WILLOW AND GLASSWARE, ALSO Crockery and Cordage A full stock of KCIIOOL BOO K9 fiuch as required by the Public County Schools, All kinds of STATIONERY, TOYS and FANCY ARTICLES, To suit both Young and Old. BUYS AND SELLS LEQAL TENDERS, furnishes Checks on Portland, and procures Drafts on Snn Francisco. -QEEDS! I&-8EEDS! SSKSDS ! Ex-Senator J. 0. Furnham of Mil ledgeville, Ga., died Sept. 15th. There have been fresh anti-Jewish dis orders in tbe Hilada district of Hungary . At Havana eighteen death a from yellow fever occurred daring the week ending Sept. 15th. Two Mormon elders were recently tarred and feathered near the town of Laurel, lnd. The San Francisco Alta was recently sold a number of prominent Democrats being the purchasers. The postmaster-general says the reduc tion on letterpostage will cause a loss to the government of over $2,000,000. A fire at Casey, 111., recently destroyed eleven buildings (business hoases), and several offices, causing a loss of $80,000. Col. Robert M. May of Westmoreland, Ya., member of congress, shot himself Sept. 15th, on board the steamer Vir ginia, from Baltimore to Norfolk. The independent labor party has ap pointed a committee to issue a call for a national convention of the labor organ izations to be held at Philadelphia Jan, 12, 1883. A fire at Delphos, Ohio, Sept. 15th, entirely consumed the extensive works of the Pittsburg Hoop and Barrel Com pany. Tne night watenman was burned to death. Loss, $70,000; insurance, $30,000. The New York Produce Exchange Weekly estimates tbe probably require ments of wheat by all European coun tries at 313.000.000 bushels, and the probable available supplies for Europe at 232,000,000 bushels. The celebration of the 73d anniversary of Mexican independence was immensely enthusiastic. The procession of societiep, schools, government employes, militia, and allegorical cars, was four hours passing a given point. The city was overcrowded with strangers. The session of the legislature of New Hampshire, which closed Sept. 15th, was the longest ever held in the state. Mem bers of each house received 102 days' pay. It will require upwards of $100, 000 to settle the per diem. Nearly 375 bills and joint resolutions were passed. At San Francisco, Sept. 15th, Henry Marks, a laborer, stabbed to death John Connelly, who was living in tbe house with Marks and wife. The victim was caught in the act of adultery with Marks' wife and was stabbed eight times, and died in a few minutes. Marks was ar rested. ' The side-wheel steamer Queen Victo ria, which has been running the past three weeks on the route between Chat ham, Ontario and Detroit, caught fire at Clemens' wharl, six miles below Chat ham, September 14th. The flames Bpread so rapidly that the crew barely had time to ef cape with their lives. The loss is estimated at $13,500; insurance, $10,000. Prof. Swift, director of the Warner observatory at Rochester, discovered a oomet Sept. 16th, in the oonstellation of Draoo. It is a significant fact that only two comets have been discovered in the same constellation ana bo near eacn other. Prof. Swift receives the Warner prize of $2000. The wonderfully brilliant northern lights prevented an extended obeervation, but the motion of the comet is southwest. The postoffice department Septem ber 15th, 1883, began the distribu tion of the new two-cent stamps, and the requisition upon the contractors was the largest in the number of pieces and value ever issued in one day. The order was for 37,879,830 postage stamps, 7,131, 950 stamped envelopes, most of these be ing of the two-cent denomination, and 59,830,090 postal cards, the aggregate, value of the articles ordered was $950,000. Benjamin Styles, a miner, met with a horrible death in tho Eureka Con. new shaft Sept 15th. It seoms he was work ing on a timber across tho shaft, 600 feet below the surface, when by some mis take, a heavy water tank was lowered nnon him. His head was mashed to a pulp, his leg was nearly torn off, and the breastbone was mashed, forcing the entrails to protrude. Deceased was 36 years of age, and a native of Ontario, Can. The report of the commissioner of im migration for the state of New York shows that 39,374 emigrants landed at the port of New York from August 3, 1882, to June 30, 1883, inclusive. The largest number landed in one month, 6959. was in May. 1883. and the small est, 1343, in January the same year. The duty imposed by the board on returning paupers and persons nnable to take care of themselves to the ports whence they came, has been carefully exercised, and a large number of undesirable persons have been sent back. Yellow fever is raging at Guavmas and Hermosillo, Mexico. Mechanics' Institute fair opened in San Francisco September 11th. ALL KM IIS OF BEST QUALITY A X Ij, ORDERS Promptly attended to and Goods shipped with care. Add rent, Iiachenej & Reno, Portland. Oreon. The weekly statement of the bank of France shows a decrease of 2,565,000 francs in gold, and 3,475,000 francs in silver. The Chicago Daily News publishes a large number of letters from physicians of that city, in answer to a circular ask ing their opinion as to the probability of a cholera epidemic in this country next year, or within a few years. Most of them anticipate more or less cholera in this country next year, and urge the ne cessity of a thorough observance of sani tary precautious, both municipal and personal. Eight veterans of the war of 1812 met at Washington, D. 0., Sept. 13th, to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of North Point. They were Major Edward Simms, Michael Caton, S. Mase, Capt. W. W. Moore, James Lawrenzo, John D. Clark, the Rev. French Evans and John Sanderson. They are all that is left of 133 members who organized the association of surviving soldiers of the war of 1812. For several years past it has been the custom of these survivors to meet for roll call at the residence of Captain Clark, the oldest of the sur vivors, now 93 years of age. The few survivors are all well known old citizens who have, for hall a century or more, been identified with business enterprises of this district. The survivors of the war in the district first organized the association shortly after the close of the war. It was kept up for some years; and then interest died out, but in 1855 thev reorganized. They then elected Col. W. W. Seaton president, Gen. John L. Skinner second vice president, James Lawrenzo secretary, James A. Kennedy treasurer, Col. Wm. P. Young marshal, and Dr. W. P. Jones surgeon. From time to time their officers have been changed, as death created vacancies. But one of the original officers has kept his place successively until the present time James Lawrenzo who still walks erect and with a lively step. Hugh J. Hastings, proprietor of the New York Commercial Advertiser, died Sept. 12. The 25th anniversary of the discovery of gold in Colorado waa celebrated at Denver, Sept. 12th. At St. Joseph, Mo., recently, the steam printing house was damaged $50, 000 by fire; fully insured. Admiral Pierre, who returned to Paris a few days ago from, the command of the French fleet "at Madagascar, died Sept. 11th. v y-V,; :-.'V ;. : A man by the name of Scott Pickerell and two horses, were burned to death in a freight car near Jacksonville, ILL, re cently. The sugar refinery at Hutchinson, Kansas, is pronounced a success. The manufactory will turnout 100 barrels per day. On account of extreme low water, a portion of the Amoskeag mills have shut down. About 4000 operatives are tem porarily idle. The treasury department purchased 296,000 ounces of fine silver for the mints of Philadelphia, New Orleans and San Francisco. A large number of negroes were poisoned by eating boiled shrimps at a celebration in Beaufort county, S. C, recently. Three have died and seven more are expected to die. The postal money order agreement be tween the United States and the Hawaiian islands was signed by Postmaster-General Gresham and the Hawaiian minister. It is to go into effect January 1 next. At Irwin, in Southern Illinois, on Sep tember 11th, a temple belonging to a re ligions sect known as Pilgrims, was blown up with giant powder and the building entirely destroyed by fire. The Pilgrims practice polygamy, which aroused the indignation of the people in the vicinity, and to get rid of the obnox ious sect they blew up their temple. The report of the committee to inves tigate alleged frauds in the importation of Hawaiian -sugar has been submitted to Secretary Folger. The report is un derstood to state that no evidence of the importation of Chinese or East Indian sugar through Hawaii has been obtained, and the charges ot Belmont are not sus tained. The report is replete with valu able statistics of tho sugar, business of the Pacifip coast. The New York Commercial Bulletin prints a letter from H. Kains Jackson of London, an English authority on wheat, in which the available crop of British wheat is set down at 9,000,000 quarters, disclosing a deficiency compared with last year which will make it necessary to import 14,000,000 quarters for the Unit ed Kingdom. The general situation on the continent as well as in England, he says, leads many to expect a revived de mand and an increase of price in Octo ber and during the winter months. Sixteen of the mutual fire insurance companies of the United States, in ses sion at Chicago recently, adopted a res olution to decline any risks on imper feotly constructed mills and factories, and to allow those furnished with auto matic sprinklers and reliable water sup ply a reduction of 25 per cent, from premium rates. The companies also ap proved a suggestion that a chain lead from tho safety valvo of a boiler to the exterior of the building, so that, in case of fire, the engines can be flooded with steam and the danger of an explosion averted. At Smith ville. N. C, Sept. 11th, the wind reached a maximum velocity of ninety-three miles per hour, for seven hours. Many houses were unroofed, wharves washed away and fisheries seri ously damaged. All the pilot boats were blown ashore and one was sunk. Many vessels were in harbor, but only two held their anchorage. Tha oldest pilots say that in duration and violence the storm exceeded anything ever experi enced. The revenue cutter at Colfax, though in imminent danger for several hours, rode out the gale. Sixty masked men forcibly entered the Yell county jail, at Danville, Ark., re cently, seized John Coker and Dr, Flood, took them to anj iron bridge across the river, and hanged them from the center span cross beam. Coker was accused of leading into ambuscade the sheriff and party in search of the Daniels outlaws several weeks ago, in which two men, Carter and Cortes, were killed. Flood was accused of harboring the out laws. Coker begged to be shot, but was told he must hang. The bodies were discovered and cut down Sunday morn ing. . A St. Johns dispatch of Sept. 12th says: It is my painful duty to report the total failure of tbe expedition. The Pro tens was crushed in a pack in latitude 78 degrees 52 minutes, longitude 72 degrees 25 minutes, and sunk on the afternoon of the 23d of July. My party ,crew and ship were all saved. I made my way across Smith Sound, and along the " eastern shore to Cape York, thence across Mel ville bay to Upernavich, arriving there the 24th of August. Tbe Yantic reached Upernavich the 2d of September, and left the same day, bringing the entire party here to-day. All are well. Lieut. E. A. Garlington. A bloody affair occurred Sept. 12 on the prairie three miles from Cheyenne. James Knight, a freighter, and two men, H. Moore and J. H. Wenzell, slept in Knight's wagon. About daylight Moore arose and struck Knight with an axe, and knocked him senseless. He then at tacked Wenzell, who, after the first blow, awoke and fought, taking the" axe from Moore not, however, until he had re ceived another blow on the head. Moore then took a revolver and shot at Wenzell four times. Wenzell has two bullet holes in tbe chest, one in the left arm and one through the left hand. . sol dier from Fort Russell, out duck shoot ing,' went to the rescue, and Moore fled over the hills. Wenzell's skull was fractured, and a ball passed through both lungs. Knight's skull was frac tured. Neither is expected to live. Moore's object waa to get $53 in Wen zell' satchel, but he was unsuccessful. Romance In Kcil Life. A strange romance of low life one that would have delighted the heart of Dickens having woveain its plot the absorbing element of love, suicide, mur der, desertion and the final triumph of the good over the bad, has "just come to light in this city". The persons con cerned have already acquired notoriety in one shape or another through the medium of the public prints. Recently there came to Philadelphia from Denver, Colorado, Mrs. Cody, a sister of Secretary of the Interior Teller, a venera ble lady with white hair. Mrs. Cody's mission waa to find tha wife and children of a certain John Slanlon, the son of David Scanlon, whoi died last year in Denver, leaving property valued at $25, 000. The only clue jwhich the lady pos sessed as to their idefitifey wa that Scan ; Ion murdered his mother and afterward killed himself while awaiting trial. A search was made through the records of the court without revealing the name of Soanlon. Mrs. Cody went to the county jail, where she learned that a man named Davidson had murdered bis mother, and afterward, in June, 1882, killed himself while awaiting his trial. Davidson was none other than Scanlon. David Scanlon was born in this country, and thirty six years ago went to the Dounty Donegal, Ireland, where he married a pretty lass with blooming cheeks the happy couple sailed for this country during the honeymoon. Reaching New York, they stopped at a cheap boarding-house. A short time after landing Soanlon deserted his young wife and left New York. He had no settled trade or occupation, but took to ped dling suspenders and like articles, and, little by little, in his wanderings drifted west, halting in the cities by the way, and finally settling in Denver. Here he flourished by dint of strict economy and constant application of busi ness, and acquired a snug fortune. After Scanlon deserted his .wife, she came to Philadelphia, likewise turned to peddling small wares, and, after waiting for years for news from her husband, she married a man named Davidson. David son in his turn was a peddler, and after his death his wife took charge of the lit tle business which he left. John Scan lon, the son of her first husband, born after he deserted her, grew up to be a simple, half-witted lad. He drank heav ily and worked only when compelled to do so. He married some years ago, a young woman in his own station in life and lived happily with old Mrs, Scanlon or Davidson, as she was now called. Al though John's right name was Scanlon he got the name of Davidson and went by it until his death. He grew quarrel some and frequently beat his aged mother, his wife and his two ohildren, both boys. John sold peanuts and huck stered when not off on a spree. The old woman bore a reputation for industry and sobriety. On May 4, 1882, the elder folks and the children were living huddled to gether in a miserably furnished attic at No. 718 Swanson street. Young Scanlon had been drinking heavily in the morn ing, and the neighbors heard him quar reling with his mother. He went home to dinner, and then out again for more whisky. He was in an unusually ugly frame of mind when he returned to the garret shortly before dark. He pioked idea of the excitement created in certain circles by this attempt to give the women of the country an education which is abreast of modern progress, y The Catholics are even dangerously excited. An American friend who lives in the south of France tells me that he believes that the Protestants in that section are almost as angry with the republic as the Catholics are, simply because of the many new measures which the govern ment is undertaking, and which, inde pendently of religions considerations, seem to populations long accustomed to a monarchy as "subversive" and diaboli cal. Two thirds of the southern French would go over with a rush to an Orleans pretender, should one arise. But I do not believe that one will arise; certainly the indications now are just the contrary; and the friends of re publicanism . and llDerty in all tilings can comfort themselves by reflecting that if tho republic can keep at work ten years longer it will have effected the radical change for whioh it is striving. The spread of education has already marked results in the country districts, where once ignoranoe reigned supreme. If the discontent at added burdens and duties can be allayed, France will soon bo numbered among the European countries which have decently instructed common folk. Paris Corr. N. Y, Post. The anchor chain of the New Orleans! weighing 8000 pounds, was carried from Utica, ninety-six miles, to the harbor on the shoulders of 300 men, who traced their ways by means of blazed trees. After the cessation of the war the govern ment ordered the boat housed to pre serve it. A double-roofed . building was : accordingly erected over its 300 odd feet of length, which was blown down some three yeags ago. Since then the vessel 1 a i a m . ua own tue sport oi- eiorms, and pre sents a decidedly weather beaten appear ance. Many of its timbers have walked on in tne snape of canes, and to-day it stands awaiting its final destruction at the fall of the auctioneer's hammer. Such a Mee Man. Coming down the river from the Flats tha other day waS,A. bon( ixR f-ra. old, neatly dressed, white plug hat; kid gloves and appearing to be a real nice man. As he was alone, some took him for a widower, while others argued that he had been disappointed in love in his I man who slipped Vip on The Modern Virginia Negro. The second generation, grown np since the war, is not without education, but it wholly lacks discipline and sense of re sponsibility. Naturally, having escaped out of slavery, it regards liberty, which is often interpreted license, as the chief good, and it is very slow to learn habits of industry and thrift. Idle and ill-clad negroes about the streets are a common sight; perhaps the women are more in dustrious; they certainly develop a fond ness for dress and cheap jewelry, but their morals are not a recognizable quality among the assests of o: aracter. The negroes and it is the same where ever I went in the state are gregarious; they likqj to live in town, to huddle together in close neighborhoods and a good many in a tenement. Many of them own little places and cheap houses of their own.bttt their pres entambition does not go beyond a hand-to-mouth existence. A good many of the girls go to the White Sulphur and other watering places in the summer and pick up enough in one way and another to keep them during the winter. Some who are single or have become so by tno loss of their husbands, frankly say that they prefer to remain alone rather than undertake the support of an idle darkey too many "good-for-nothing niggers'' around seems to be th?ir point ot view. The long and short of it is that the col ored brother likes to enjoy himself with as little exertion as possible, and he has equal delight in religion, balls and dancing, and larking around in the night generally. His religion has no relation to morals it is something to be enjoyed for its own sake. The question of domestic service is a very serious one in Virginia just now. The negro has a monopoly of this labor market and he likes to show his independence. No ser vants, men or women, live in the houses where they are employed, not even in the hotels. They come in the morninar. when it suits their conveni np a quarrel with the female occupant of ence, get through tho work of the day as the room below that occupied bv the easily as t bey can, ana men go nomo, family on a triflins pretense, and after his evil1-passions had been thoroughly excited, turned upon his mother and struck her in the face with his fist. The old lady picked up a chair to defend herself, but before she could use it Scan lon had snatched up a hatchet, and rushing at her hit her a terrible blow with the butff end on the top of the head. She fell to the floor insensible. Fren zied, Scanlon jumped upon the prostrate form and literally beat the head to a jelly. He was arrested by two of the neighbors and taken by the police to the Second District police station. He knew nothing of the murder and lay all that night in a beastly state of intoxioation. In due time he was given a preliminary hearing and committed without bail to Moyamensing prison to await a trial for murder. He appeared to take to his confinement cheerfully, and his suicide in his cell, which occurred on the afternoon of Monday, J uly 10, 1882, created the greatest surprise among the prison officials. He chose the method of his death with singular delib eration. After having first removed all his clothing, he hung himself by his red flannel shirt from the lower bar of his cell window. From the time of the death of her hus band Mrs. John Scanlon resided with Mrs. MaoMitohell, a friend, at Third and Pine streets. One of her boys was put in an orphan asylum. When r a. Cody so luckily stumbled upon her and informed her of the wealth she had inherited she refused to believe the story and treated it as a hoax. When pressed to go to Den ver to claim the money she refused. Mrs. MacMitchell, however, finally coaxed her into the notion, and on last Monday evening Mrs. Cody and Mrs. Scanlon, and one of her little boys, left for Denver. A Wilkesbarre lawyer named Jerome will follow them and help them tosecure the property. Mrs. Scan lon carries with her the record of her mother-in-law's marriage in Ireland. The case comes np in tha supreme court in Denver in September for final settle ment. There, is said to be no possible doubt but that Mrs. Scanlon will get the entire fortune. Her other boy will Be shortly sent to join her in her new found western home. Phila Press. and then the consequence of this that there is no Ti ii control ana no discipline, xt is me geu eral complaint that only the elders who were slaves before the war are of much account as servants. They are not on hand in the evening, and they come around in the morning to get breakfast at suoh an hour as suits their conveni ence or the pleasures Of the night. It is also a common complaint that both house and field laborers slight their work, and that it is impossible to give them a realizing sense of the eighth commandment. They see no reason why they should not help themselves to what ever they want from the larder or the field, or take articles convenient to wear. A ourious annoyance I heard muoh spoken of. Articles sent to the washer woman are apt to bo worn by her and her friends for some days before they are sent home. It must be owned that the Virginians endure this anomalous condition of affairs with more good humor than northerners would, and pa tiently hope that education and time will ftlmncs them. But education thus far early days and had never married. But he was nice. He chuckled to the babies, patted boys and girls on the head and sat right down among the ladies and related all the Indian legends of Lake St. Clair. Ever so many of them said he was the nicest gentleman they ever saw, and one little woman who tnrned np her nose at the idea of nia being too sweet for any thing was promptly wilted by a score of glances. When the boat arrived at Detroit the nice man with the white plug hat had agreed to see a lady and two children over the Central depot. Oh, no; it wouldn't be the least trouble to him. On the contrary, he was delighted at the privilege. He had a satchel in either hand, and was in the crowd waiting for the gang-plank when a woman's voice was heard crying from the wharf: "Yes, that's him that's the miserable old deceiver!" The nice man suddenly dropped both satchels and tried to push back, but the crowd was so dense that he was pushed along np tne plank, lie had no sooner reached the wharf than his white hat went sailing, and a voioe hissed out : "Had to go to Pontiacon business, did you? This is the way to return from Pontiao, is it?" He dropped the satchels again and broke for the street, but she hit him whaokl whack! whack! with an umbrella, and called after him : "It's the first time you've had on gloves in a year, and you've got your whiskers dyed since morning! Oh, you base old deceiver! Here the children and I haven't had a square meal in two weeks, and you are around playing masher!" "Give it to him," cried a voice in the orowd. "Oh, yon bet I will!" she replied. "I Baw him before he did me, and he was trying to look purty and innocent, as if he hadn't been married twenty-three years and has seven of the raggedest children in Detroit! I'll sweeten him I'll play masher till he hasn't a whole bone left!" "You bet!" " Yes, and you bet ! Whioh way did be go? Who's got a club? ' Free Press. Mills' Gift. The statuary presented to the state by D. O. Mills is now in the rotunda of the state oapitol. - The marble and the heavy wooden casing weigh over six tons. ,lhe casing was partially removed to-day, but soon boarded up again. It was found that the statuary was intact and not damaged. It has been packed for more than a year and is very dusty. The exposed and fiail portions had been wrapped- ia rags to prevent injury. The group is o unre white marble upon a pedestal one foot thick, about six feet long and three feet wide. The figures are life-size. Queen Isabella sits upon a throne that rises about two feet above the common pedestal. By her side half kneels an attendant, who looks eagerly across toward Columbus, who stands near the queen, holding in his hand a globe withjHrhich he is demonstrating to her royal majesty that there must be another continent. The queen's face is turned that way and bears a look of at tention. One hand is also stretched out as if in promise and assistance to the bold Columbus, Engraved on the front of the throne are the words of the prom ise given by the queen that she will fur nish the funds on behalf of her own We hear of clever people gettiag ahead of Time, but the veteran .soy the-f linger soon catches np. "Is Jay Gould a religious man?" asks a correspondent. Not exactly, but he knows how to prey. y The evening had been convivial, "And now, gentlemen," said the cbairman,"I'll propose a toast." - ''This is the best fire-escape," said a minister recently," affeotionately laying his head on the bible. , One who knows says that in the coun try they blow a norn before dinner, but in friom fltAv IaVa Ana i . vw m vuvj itav vuw : . - There is in Georgia a negro boy with blue eyes; he probably tumbled into an old indigo tub on wash day. "ketch feesb,M but "kill fish." It's just as much of a lie, all the same. "Haste makes waste," remarked the a banana peel does not appear to teach industry, thrift kingdom of Castile, and pawn her jew or morality, and I fancy that the best els f the fund in the treasury should be- fhinff that could happen to tne negroes i uiua. would be some competition in the labor field. Eventful History of an American Frigate. Tho famous old vessel New Orleans is to be sold at auction, and a writer well posted on marine matters relates the fol lowing interesting narrative concerning her early history: Near the closo of the war of 1812 the United States govern ment began the construction of two three-decked men-of-war, one at (the other near to) Saokett's Harbor, more advanced than the other, received the name pf New Orleans a name aufficient to fire the popular heart in those days, because commemorating General Jack son's magnificent victory of cotton-bale fame. The need of a frigate as a counter-match to the Lawrence was pressing, and the government was exerting ex traordinary energy in construction' and equipment, since no vessel sailing the stars and stripes could be transferred from the Atlantic to Ontario, the rivers St. Lawrence being fully in possession of the enemy, to say nothing of Lachine Rapids, etc. In six weeks from the time the first tree was felled the New Orleans The apostles of the new educational I was sheathed, two deoks in the third part- movement in France seem in no wise ly laid. The vessel lacked lining up (inside ingUKJiieu uy me ueucii iu iue uuaget. The Upper Council, which deoides on matters of public instruction, has, just approved of the immediate creation of lyceums or colleges for young girls that is, maidens from twelve to eighteen years of age in the towns of Nantes, Amiens, Armentieres, Cambral, Bourg, Oueret, Roanne, bamt Etienoe, Nice, Charleville, Moulins, Montauban, Rheims and Paris. The state pays 1,650.- 000 francs for the building in which it pro poses to establish the "lyceum" in this The supposed lace on the rich raiment of the queen is most delicately carved, as are all the features of the figures, so far as could be judged in the hasty look given at the dusty and half-hidden marble. The bight of the central figure, the queen, makes the total hight of the statuary about eight feet. The cost was $30,000. It was bought in Italy by Mrs. Legrand Lockwood and again sold to Mr. Mills. The name of the sculptor oould not be found to-day on the marble. The donor is also having the statuary put in place at his own expense. As there is no state and sat down on a basket of eggs. "I am the power behind the thrown," soliloquized the mule, as he pitched his -rider heels over head to the ground. Mint is said to keep rata and mice out . of the house. If a fellow owned a mint he could also Vkeep the wolf from the door." Bismarck is fond of Georgia water melons. When devouring this luscious article he always keeps a watch on the rind. At this season of the year the good deacon goes quietly to the drug store soda fountain and gets his whisky eyrup titiously. v A man seldom looks more foolish in the eyes of a rival than when he kinks his arm for a girl to take and she does not take it. "What 1 Not lend a paltry ten to me, your other self ?" "My dear fellow, I should never get it back I know myself too well." The fuzzy peach ' picked before , it is half grown is now a valuable assistant to ; the young physician who 13 building up j a practice. A summer resorter has discovered that landlords at the mountains ask Bteep prices for board because the land is so very high up there. , Statistics show that when a fire occurs in a hotel not more than one-tenth of the guests are thoughtful enough to pay their bills before leaving. A person do 38 not need to be very ob serving or travel very far to learn that the great men own all the railroads and the clerks all the hotels. When Hamlet said: ''But I have that within me which passeth show," it is be lieved that he had in his pocket a com plimentary ticket to the circus.- , - There is complaint in Western Ken tucky that Eastern Kentucky has got all the desirable offices, and is getting all the next best things the circuses. "Sam, I have lost my watch overboard. It lies here in twenty feet of water. Is there any way to get it?' "Yes," says Sam. "there are divers ways." : Out west the cellar is the place to go in time of a cyclone,and when a man has ; a barrel of cider in the cellar, it's sur prising how many times a day he thinks there's a cyclone coming. A young man who went ' into the . kitchen where his girl was baking, and inadvertently sat down on a hot pie just from the oven, now boasts that he "de scended from the 'upper crust. " A writer in a current magazine says "the song birds nearly all build low." Their human imitators, however, charge high enough to counteract the humility of the woodland warblers. The speaker who alluded to his candi- date as "the war-horse who snuffed tha battle from afar," climbed np to the composition room with a club after read ing it in the paper as "the ward boss that snatched the bottle from a bar." They say in St. Louis that when a Chicago man registers at a hotel there the clerk at onoe rings the bell and tells a boy to "show this gentleman to the bar." In a social game of cards it is estimated that the woman asks "What trump is it?" seventeen times a minute; but then she , doesn't begrudge the effort it costs her.- "Don't tell me 'you won't,' " said an Eimira father to his little daughter of six summers. " well, papa, said tne artiesa little one, "what shall I say when I mean I won't?" "Do you love mo very much, Alfred?" asked a Boston wife. "Bunker Hill monument may fall, but not my love." "Then when you go by the market don't forget the beana. Johnny and the Milk., Johnny's parent's are puzzling them selves whether that youth is likely to turn out a spendthrift or a person of in tensely econonomical habits, a shrewd politician or a rogue; and all b causa of appropriation for such work, tlje donor I a little incident that happened while the wui aiao pay wr giamwj puoomi i iamny waa recently spenuing a bwuhju o French Education of Women. ceilinarl .portions of bulwarks, hatch cov ers, etc.; and when the order came to stop work because of the declaration of peace, it was thought it could have been lannchftd in thirtv davs more time. Illustrating the grim energy of our fore fathers, let me say that all this boat's rigging was conveyed at great expense and difficulty from New York City via the Hudson and Mohawk rivers to Utica, then overland to Sackett's Harbor. There were then no railroads, and the pnvarnment road connecting Utica and feet high, yet to be built. It will take a I month to prepare this, and during that time the statuary will not be open to pub lio inspection. Probably there will be some public exercises at the time of the unveiling. Sacramento Bee, Aug. 22 J. An Immense Bridge. One of the principal spans of a gigan- tio bridge which is being constructed for the Oude and Robilkund Railway Com pany of India, is now erected in Eng land. The bridge will consist of seven main spans and nine smaller girder spans each of the former 356 feet long from the centres of the pier, 25 feet wide, and 35 feet deep, and each of the latter 114 feet between the centre of piers. It is designed to carry the railway, and a roadway as well, over the Ganges, and is made entirely of steel. The weight of each of tho large spans is 752 tons, and that of each of the Bmaller ones 127 tons, and the total weight of the whole will be about 6,500 tons. The smaller spans and two of the larger ones have already been shipped to India, and the others will follow as completed. Great Britain has laid claim to an- citv. It is impossible to anv one nn-1 the then busv village of Sackett s Harbor familiar with France to have an adequate I was a very rough and rude highway . J other great slice of West Africa. 7 S - - - . Ll 1L. 1 ; fTkfc rocreauuu iu mb uuuuity. iuo uiut night, as they sat down to tea- as- usual, the horrifying intelligence was brought from the pantry that the milk and cream that had been set out for the bowls and berry dishes of the company had all dis appeared. The first suggestion was, of course, that it was the oat, but when it was suggested that the family kept no cat, suspicion pointed its withering fin ger at Johnny. . 4 "Johnny," said his sire, in the accents of a man who had been disappointed in his supper, "Did you drink that milk?" "Ye-yes, I did," replied the culprit, screwing a tear out of his eye with his "And what did you do it for?" was the next question in the catechism which leads to a licking. ; "Cause," said Johnny, blubbering, "I saw a big cloud comin up and thought it was goin to be a thunderstorm, and I knew thunder soured the milk and 'twouldn't be good for nothin', and so I pitched in and drank it up to &ve it, and he wept once more; Neither his story nor his tears, how ever, averted the interview with his sire which Rnbseauentlv took place in the 1 woodshed. Boston J ournal. ; ,