1 THE INDEPENDENT. IS ISSUED SATURDAY MORNINGS, BY THE Douglas County Publishing Company. THE niDEPElIDElTT HAS THE FINEST JOB OFFICE IN DOUGLAS COUNTY. CARDS, BILL HEADS, LEGAL BLANKS, And other Printing. Including Largs ani Hsayj Posters ail Slowy Easl-Bills, Neatly and expeditiously executed AT PORTLAND PRICES. One Year - - - - - $2 50 Six Months - - - - . - 160 Three Months - - - - - 1 00 These are the terms of those paling in vnc9. The Indepxxdkht offers fine Inducements to -d-ertben. Tercua reasonable. VOL. IX. ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1884. NO. 16. .ijJJj '7'y iiu jujihii joi jyjoiivi i a J. JASKULEI., PRACTICAL Watchmater, Jeweler Ail OiticiaSj ALL WORK WAEEANTED. Dealer In Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Spectacles and Eyeglasses. and a rvLt uni or Cigassj Tobacco & Fancy Goods. j.. Ttu only reliable Optonier in to we for the proper adjust ment of Spectacles ; always on hand. Itepst tf tilt Genuine Brazilian Febblo Spec tacles and Eyeglaasea. ffice First Door South of Postoffice, ROSEBUBG. OltEOX. LANGMBERG'S Boot and Shoe Store ItOSEBURtt, OBECO.V, Jackion Street, Oppositt tks Post Offlcs, Keeps en hand the largest and best assortment of Eastern and Han Francisco Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, And everything In the Boot and Shoe line, and SELLS CHEAP FOR CASH. Boots and Shoes 9Iado to Order, and Perfect Fit Guaranteed. I use the Best of Leather and Warran all my work. Sspairing Neatly Done, on Short Notice " I keep always on hand TOYS AND NOTIONS. Musical Instruments and Violin Strings a specialty. LOUIS LAGEOERU. DR. Sl. W. DAVIS, m DENTIST, BOBEBVBG, OBEOOX, Office On Jackson Street, Up Stairs, Over S. Marks & Co.'s New Store. MAHONEY S SALOON, Nearest the Bail road Depot, Oakland. JAS. 3IAIIOXEY, ... Proprietor The Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars in Douglas County, and THE BEST BILLIARD -TABLE IN THE STATE, KEPT IX PROPER REPAIR. Parties traveling on the railroad will find this place very handy to visit during the stopping of the train at the Oakland Depot. Give me a call. JAS. MAIIONEY. JOHN FRASER, Home Made Furniture, WILBUR, OREGON. UPHOLSTERY, SPRING' MATTRESSES, ETC, Constantly on hand. FURNITURE. I have the Best STOCK OF FURNITURE South ef Portland. 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. ALL WORK WARRANTED. DEPOT HOTEL, Oakland, Oregon. RICHARD THOMAS, Propriator. This Hotel has been established for a num ber of years, and has become very pop ular with tho traveling public. FIRST-CLASS SLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS AND THE Table auppliod with the Best the Market affierdi Hotel at ths Depot of the Railroad. H. C. STANTON, DEALER IN Staple Dry Goods, Keeps constantly on hand a general assortment ef Extra Fine Groceries, WOOD, WILLOW AND GLASSWARE, ALSO CROCKERY AND CORDAGE, A full stock of SCHOOL BOOKS, Such as required by the Publie County Schools. AJ1 kind i of Stationery, Toy and Fancy Artleloa, TO SUIT BOTH TOUNO AND OLD. Buys and Sells Legal Tenders, furnishes Cheoks on Portland, and procures Drafts on San Francisco. SEEDS ! ITT TTTITTMI rtTI IHTTTI TlPfllTl flTT I T TU1V hhh Mam Ul lnD DLol yUiUjn I . ALL ORDERS Promptly attended to and goods shipped with care. Li- Address, 1IACIIEXY A BEXO, Portland, Oregox. The Granger's Conclusion. h.SCl.'fUIT !. A miMster v ho spoke at a grange meeting the other day in Worcester county, -old his audience that it takes more brains to.preach to an audience of farmers than to a city church, and the horny-handed agriculturists voted unanimously that the reverend gentle man was admirably fitted for city preaching.... Oliver Goldsmith's tomb in London is in the most dilapidated condition and utterly neglected. TEE GOOD TIME COMING. William Morris. when men and maids are merry, ere the Bunlierht leaves the earth. Oft, And they bless the day beloved, all too short for all their mirth, Some shall aue awhile and pon ier on the : bitter days of old, Ere the toil of strife and battle overthrew the curse of gold; Then 'twixt lips of loved and lover solemn thoughts of us shall rise; We, who ouce were fools and dreamer, then shall be the brave and wise. CONCERNING THE NEW CABLES. How They Are Constructed Dura bility and Conductive Power. Iatcr-Ocean. The broad principles of construction are the same in the new cables as in the old, though to the control of these principles new rules are observed. The copper c nter of the deep-sea oable is formed of thirteen wires, twelve small ones coiled about one that is one-tenth of an inch thick", making the con ductor just the sii e of an ordinary telegraph wire. All the interstices are rilled with a solution of gutta percha This covering process, which is one of the most important incidents of cable construction, is kept a pro found secret by the manufacturers. This core is, .after being electrically tested, covered with jute to form a cushion for the protection of the gutta percha from the outer -wires of the cable. Next the cable is sheathed in the finest qr.ality of sttel wire, the wires being literally woven about it. The cable is then covered with coating 3 of a black asphal tic composition, broad tape be ng worked in to give it solidity, first a coating and then a layer of tape, until three coatings of the composition have been, applied. This completes the construction of -the deep-sea cable. The shore ends are larger cables, containing the ends of the one de scribed made of jute and the black composition, with an intermediate size as the connecting link. Though a small section of this cable may appear hard and inle.ible, when lifted in a long piece it seems like a thread of silk in graceful pliableness. Though this cable will be considerably the most expensive ever laid, there is reasonable assurance that it will be for the best, not onlv in the matter of durability, but as the electrio medium, the conductor; being both larger and mora perfectly protected than any oth ers, at may be said that the breaking strain of the wire shield has been tested at a pressure of ninety tons to the square inch, nd the average weight of the cable is five tons per nautical mile. There will be t,000 miles in this cable. Already 2,00:J miles have bean com pleted ready for laying, and the rest is now being turned out at the rate of. thirty mils a day. ' Life Has Its Compensations. Detroit Free Pres-i. "Are you going to help me put down the carpets, o ohn i S pose so; where s the tack-ham mer?" "It's in the barrel of dishes no, it isn t yes, it is oh, 1 Know now: I put it in the band-box with your new bun- day hat." Just liko a woman; never knows where anything is; hat ruined, like enough ; where's the handle of the ham mer t "Oh, I packed that up with, the china set: you'll find it, dear, at the bottom of the box." "Now, who's going to stretch the car pet, hey?" ".Me, de.r." " W ell, stand there. G racious, I can't pull a hundred pounds of dry-goods along with the carpet. Oh, dear, 1 m going to have a fit, 1 believe. "1 11 make you a cup of tea, dear. You can drink it out of jour shaving- mug, it Ml oe lust iiKe a p:cmc. But when she got back with the tea John was missing. "Poor fello?! It wai too much for him! He s gone to get the air. He looked pa' e.w John tat a counter covered with eat ables, salads, and tilings) Two fingers of old crow and a dash of bitters to be gin with. I'm nearly starved ! A hot beefsteak will help me out. I tell you, boys, moving is tough work. Life has ire compensations. Johns wife sits on a roll of carpet and dr nks her tea. "Poor boy! 1 wish he could have waited for it: it's so refreshing. He'll be half starved by supper time! I know he will." Not much, little woman. , The BUlion's Question. Exchange. A good story is told of the Pom an Catholic bishop of Atlanta, Ga. He recently addressed a large assembly of bunday school children and wound up by asking m a very paternal ami con descending way, "And now, is there a-a-n-y little boy or a-a-n-y little girl who would like to ask me a question? Alter a pause he repeated the question, Is tl:ere a-a-n y little boy or a-a-n-y little girl who would like to ask me a question ?" A little hri!l voice called out, "Please, sir, vr1 y did the nngels walk up and down . acob's ladder, when they had wings?" "Oh, ah, yes 1 see," said the bishop: "and now, is there a-a-n-v little wi ur--u7""iJ"i u wuuii xiatj i i : i i : l i. ii l.-i.. to answer little Mary's question?' Charles' Itcade on Condensation. Regarding the stipulation of the pub lishers of The Youth's Companion that his story must le short, the late tharlts "Peade said: "After all, con densation is a fine thing, and a story long enough to excite an interest and paint characters vividly, a story in which there is no conversation, out only dialogue, which rapidly advances the progress of the action, is more likely to be immortal than those more expanded themes which are apt to betray us into difiuseness." Louisville Courier-Journal: Culture in the highest and best sense is an in dividual matter; it is an inward grace rather than an outward expression. Robert Griffin, of London, says the world will not be large enough to hold the population a thousand years from now. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL. Kassie I'ersenal Recollection Traits of Character Amusement. "GathV Letter. 1 The lasis of Marshall ability at the bar was his understanding. Not highly read, he had one of those clear under standings which was equal to a mill pond of book-learning. His first prac tice was among his old companions in arms, who felt that he was a soldier by nature, and one ot those who loved the fellowship of the camp better than military or political ambition. Bagged and di sipated, they used to come to him for protection, and at a time when imprisonment- for debt and cruel exe cutions were in vogue. He not onlr defended them, but loaned them money, He lost some good clients by not paying more attention to his clothing, but these outward circumstances could not long keep back recognition of the fact that he was the finest arguer of a case at the Kichmond bar, which then con tained such men as Edmund Bandolph, Patrick Henry and later William Yirt. lie was not an orator, did not culti-1 vate his voice, did not labor hard, but he had the power to penetrate to the very center of the subject, discover the chief point, and rally all h's forces there. If he was defending a casa he would turn his attention to some other than the main point in order to let the prosecution assemble its powers at the wrong place. With a military eve he saw tue strong and the Aveak positions, and, like Kembrandt painting, he threw all his light on the right spot. The character of his argument was a per spicuous, easy, onward, accumulative reasoning statement. He had but one gesture, to lift up his hand and bring it down on the place before him con stantly. He discarded fancy or pojtry in his argument?. Among the cases he argued was the British debt case, tried in 171):?. The United States now had its circuit court, and Chief Justice Jay presided at Kich mond. The treaty of pea e of England provided that the creditors on either side should meet with no lawful impedi ment to the recovery of the full value of all bona fide debts theretofore con tracted. The question was whether debts sequestrated by the Virginia legislature during the war came under this treaty. It is said that the countess of Huntington heard the speeches on this case, and said that every one of the lawyers, if in England, would have been given a peerage. Patrick Henry broke his voice down in this case and never again could speak with his old force. iUavshall surpassed them all in the cogency of his reasoning. At that time he was thought to be rather lazy. He went into the state legislature in 1782, just before he was married. His personal influence was such in Kich mond that, although he was constantly in the minority, he was always elected. His principal amusement was pitching the quoit, which he did to the end of his days, and could ring the meg, it is said, at a distance of sixty feet ire iuently. He arose early in the morning and went to market, without a servant, and brought back his chickens in one hand and his market basket on the other arm. He never took offense, and once when a dude stopped him on the street and asked him where there was a fel low to take home his marketing, Mar shall inquired where he lived, and said, I will take it for you. After he got home with the other man's marketing, the dude was much distressed to find that Mr. Marshall had been his sup posed servant. Overdoing It. Talmage in Home Science. Some of our young people have read till they are crazed of learned blacksmiths, who at the forge conquered thirty languages ; and of shoemakers, who, pounding sole-leather, got to be philosophers; and of milliners, who, while their customers were at the glass trying on their spring hats, wrote a volume of first-rate poems. The fact is, no blacksmith ought to be troubled with more than five languages ; and in stead of shoemakers becoming philoso phers, we would bike to turn our sur plus of philosophers into shoemakers ; and the supply of poetry is so much greater than the demand, that we wish milliners would stick to their business. Extraordinary e amples of work and endurance may do as much good. Be cause Napoleon slept only four hours a night, hundreds oi students have tried the experiment; but, instead of Aus terlitz and Saragossa, there came of it only a sick heada:he and a botch of a recitation. The Indians Condone a Fault. Cor. Globe-Democrat. An Otoe scandal of the fir.it water has just occurred. A s hool-girl was recently married to a man much older than herself, much against her wishes. She soon after ran away with her former youthful lover. The deserted husband was irate and about to follow on the warpath. A council was called, and .many of the friends of the run away couple sat up with him all night attempting to allay his anger. One of them gave him his finest moccasins and leggin3, another a brooch, and others still other presents, til he said "his heart felt bett ?r; his heart was not so bad as it had been," and he finally said "his heart was all right now," and they might come back, "ohe was dead." This Otoe custom might be a sensible one in some white communities. The Vanderbllt ISoys. IUinud Monthly. The late Mr. Augustus Schell was a very int'mate friend of old Commodore Vanderbilt and used frequently to call for him to go fishing. On one of these occas'ons he heard two of the Vander bilt bos in hot dispute, and saw the old coinmodore trying to break it off short, while Mrs.N anderbilt though very am: able herself, was trying with all her might to convince the commodore that it was better to let them come to an understanding by adjusting their own difficulties. "Come away, Cornele, don't disturb them," she sa'd. "Let them fuss in peace."' The quaintaess of the phrase amused Mr. Schell a good deal. - Philadelphia Call : All good citizens do not push baby carriagea, but all men who push baby carriages are god citizens. How a Cat Bode' 117 Miles. The Montreal Star thus tells how a cat rode 117 miles on the fly-wheel of an engine: The engineer of The cjtar .printing establishment, soon after start ing the steam-engine on Tuesday morn ing, noticed a white patch on the inner surface of the drive-wheel, which' he thought was a piece of paper caugh by one of the spokes in its flight and whirled round and round by the wheel. The white patch was noticed by several of the hands during the morning, who accounted for it in the same way, jbut no attention had been specially given the matter until the engine was stopped shortly after noon. As the wheel stopped the engineer was surprised to see the white spot fall to the ground and then get up and crawl away. He then, for the first time, became aware that the white spot which had been whirling on the fly-wheel was a cat which had been clinging' to one of the spokes of the wfcel and had only relaxed iti hold wi.e the wheel had come to a standstill. The; cat seemed dazed ior a while, and was taken into the street for freer j air. WW at -1 -- at Here it remained pertectiy sun lor a considerable time, but on an attempt being made to cover it with a paper it ran off in a zigzag course, but appar ently as fully alive as ever. The lower portion oi tue ny-wneei revolves in a trough, the sides of which fit close to the broad tire of the wheel, and.it is presumed that the cat, which was a strange one, being frightened at; the entry of the engineer, jumped int the trough to get out of the wav, and when the w heel was started found itself whirl ing around on the inside of the tire. The wheel is ten feet in diameter; and as it revolved from 7 a. ni. to 12 :10 p. m., and at a rate of sixty revolutions per minute, by a tdmple calculation it will be tound that the cat traveled a distance of more than 117 miles, or about '20,000 revolutions of the wheel. A Bottle 248 Years Old. Washington (Mo.) Observer. Mr. L. Green, of Newport, called at this office last Saturday morning and exhibited to us a four-ounce bottle, the existence of which is clearly traced back 248 years. It cannot properly be called a square or round bottle, as the corners and edges hardly approach either. Evidently the process of blow ing glass at the time it was made was in its mcipien -y. ine bottom was doubtless intended to be flat, but the orners and edges are not squarely and smoothly turned, and in the t cen ter of the botto n a daub of molten glass seems to have .been put on to stop up the hole that was left by reason of the edges failing to Come together and close in the center of the bottom. The shoulders at the top of the bottle, too, look as if they were in tended to be blown s juare, but instead ei tms tney awKwaidiy double in toward the center. The neck of the bottle is short and straight, without the usual rim at the top. and at the bottom of the neck it spreads out, and is ap parently molded into the hole left at the top of the bottle where the glass laps over from the shoulders. Pp and down the body of the bottle, ma sort of twist ing shape are large but pretty uniform rittges which appear to be on the out side, but upon feeling the bottle they are discovered to be but slightly in dented on the outside, and must be either inside or running through the in terior of the body of the glass. Electricity, or Imagination? Danbury (Conn.) News. James carley, oi tins town, a jour hatter, recently suffered for a : week with severe headache. Every possible remedy was resorted to without relief. Finally one of his shopmates informed him that D. B. Wilkes, living in the upper end of King street district,' could cure it without fail. Accordingly Carley set out to find the man who possessed such a panacea that could re lieve him from his untold suffering. nr. iTT'ii i jiir. vviijses, w nose , occupation is a farmer, received him cordially, and at once assured him that he could cure his hea.la.he. He requested Carley to ac company him to the old cider-mill, which they entered, and Mr. Wilkes pulled out from beneath the press a box covered With a coal sieve, i Prom the box he took a live black snake and wound it around Carley'sneck. Strange as it may seem, almost instantaneously the pain lelt his head and has not re turned since. Mr. Carley and his friends vouch for his cure. Mr. Wilkes also cures sprains and swellings in the same way. He explains the matter on the principles of animal lectricity, which he supposes that the snake pos sesses. If a cure is effected in this way the writer thinks that the pain is fright ened out of the patient by the horrid application. Germany's Great Loss. jSt. Paul Pioneer Press. Germany is still face to face with the question asked by the chamber of com- . merce at Minden a fewyearsago: "Has the German empire been founded for the purpose of uriving its citizens forth into exile " Last year 200.000 persons left the 1 ather.and; and this year it is estimated that the number will be in creased by at least 20,000. How long a ermany can stand this constant dram of her best and most productive blood is one of the puzzling questions of the century. So long, however, as she maintains her present oppressive taxa tion and military system, just so long is the exodus bound to continue. How lie Escaped. lExchangf. j The bore of singing when invited out was nicely bridged over by a tenor at Boston one evening not long ago. Un der the pretense of examining some rare paintings, the celebrated guest wandered toward the piano, carelessly locked the instrument and abstracted the key unobserved. Of course,' he was asked to sing. "Alost willingly, he re sponded, but lo! and behold, the p'ano was locked, and a searcn tailed, to re cover the key. The next morning it was found in the ante-room, and the lady of the house is"wondering yet how it ever got there. i Brooklyn .agie: irrofessional pe- destriamsm hai done no more to popu larize healthy exercise than professional pugilism to substitute nature's weapons for the knife and revolver. MRS. TOM THUMB. II er Appearance In Society Possibly Not Done Growing:. New York Cor. Inter Oc an. Speaking of widows, I came across Mrs. Tom Thumb the other day in the elevated railroad car. She had to make considerable of a jump to scat herself, and I observed her companion made no offer of assistance. This wa in accord with the lady's well-understood desire. You may have happened to find out that old men don't like to be helped on with their overcoats, because it im plies a decrepitude, which they dislike to acknowledge, even to themselves. Well, Mrs. Thumb has that sort of feel ing with reference to any real or implied notice of her size. She sat there in great dignity, but with her feet dangling far above the floor. "She ought to carry an adjustable foot-stool," I remarked, "or else some thing in theway of an automatic length ening apparatus, like thos' fishing rods that slide out of themselve attached to her heels." My companion was short and femi nine. Said she: Bless your heart, that little creature isn't practically any worse off than a good many of the rest of us. Woman's rights are cruelly dis regarded by railroad managers, if you'll take the trouble to notice. They give us shorties a choice between practically standing up and not mu.-h more than leaning against a seat ; or squarely seat ing ourselves and letting our feet danglt unsupported. Look at that row o) women across the car. lhe only one who at once rests her back fullv against the support intended for it, and her feet flat on the floor, is nigh as tall as you are. All the rest are a dozen sizes toe small for the seats. If sitting away back properly, they only touch their toes to the floor like a line of ballet girls tiptoeing on the stage. Why shouldn t a happy medium in the height of public seats be struck i hy shouldn't a man be made to sit on a level a little below their knees instead of putting the whole inconvenience of adjustment on our less lengthened sex ? Heally, 1 think of writing to Susan B Anthonv about it." The little Widow Thumb is casually a resident of New York, and a welcome visitor in a considerable number of rather wealthy and fashion able families, She is now a lady so, mature and d'gni- fled, notwithstanding her diminutive form, that nobody in the way of social intercourse dares, or is much inclined. to treat her r s a human trifle. To see her in the midst of a round of calls is to get the impression, at first sight, that your eyes have f omehow sudden y be come telescopic inversely, so exactly is she a minature of the conventional dames of ceremonious societv. She dresses for an afternoon of formal visit ing in a toilet of semi-mourning, suit able in style for a quiet woman of 45 which age she acknowledges and or ders from a livery stable one of those , coupes that, as to liveried dri er and general appearance, are scatcely dis tmguishable from private equipages. Provided with a visiting list, and easily commanding an air of well-bred bal ance, she lacks only in stature to be the ideal of a millionaire's wife. Of course she attracts staring attention "wherever she alights, but her manner of Bilent reproof is usually effective as a cure for impudence, and she is able to go about with far less annoyance than might be supposed. She is now about three feet an i a half in height, or a foot more than when sue w as hrst put on exhibition by lia'num, and it was only within a few years that she stopped growing. It would not surprise me, she lately said, "if I should take to growing again at any time. My case is cne of retarded development, you know, an 1 I mav yet catch up with the rest of you. The ma jority of the dwarfs exhibited are really children, phenomenally small, but by no means the adult midgets that thev are represented to be; and conse quently, they grow out of the profes sion. That has been the case with many a 'freak,' as the showmen call them." Founding of the Smithsonian Insti tute. Detroit Free Press. The Smithsonian institute received its name from James Smithson, an Eng lish phvsicist. James bmithson be queathed his estate of 120,000 to his nephew, on the condition that if there were no children to inherit it the amount was to go the United States, to found at Washington, an institution for the diffusion of knowledge. The nephew died in 1835, and the claim of the United States was prosecuted at London by Hon. Pichard Rush, who went from America for that purpose. Through his efforts there was deposited in the United States mint $515,169. By an act of congress the interest on this amount up to Julv, 184b, was appropriated for the erection of buildings and other inci dental expenses. This interest reached the sum of $242,129. The same act provided that all future appropr ations and expenditures should be made from the interest and not from the principal of the fund, lhe principal was de clared to be lent in perpetuity to thf United States treasury at 6 per cent, semi-annual payments. A New Trouble to the Eyes. ' Philadelphia Times. , A genuine trouble of the eye, and one of very recent origin, is that caused by the glare of the electric lights, lo very sensitive retina this is intolerable, and soma protei tion is absolutely nec essary. xor this purpose we use smoked glasses and the demand for them is really surprising. In New York thousands of grots of these are sol every year. The linemen, who ad ust the arcs of the; electric lights, and, o; course, need very strong glasses, wear oblong pieces of blue glass fastened to gether, two for each eye, and capable of shielding them from the terrible brilliancy. Even with these their eyes are very often injured. Madison ( Yi is.) Democrat : This steal ing the honorable names of trade and commerce to cover gambling operations this prostitution of holy things to false gods; this stealing the liverv of hea ven to serve the devil, should be stopped. American Speculators) Mistake. "Rigolo" in New York Sun. The supposition still prevailing among a certain class of American financiers, that the Britishers have more money than brains, ought to be given up by this time. Any one who reads Eu ropean newspapers can plainly see that, not only in ureat Britain but at all the great centers of Europe, our financial situation is thoroughly studied, ana lyzed and understood, bummed up, their views upon our stock and bond market come to this : " The cause of the ruinous tumble of American securities was the over-construction, over-capitalization and over-swindling of the rail roads of the country for the last six or seven years. The large dividends paid on certain stocks (often out of borrowed, not earned, money) constantly suggested the building of new parallel roads. The conse juence is that at the present mo ment the carrying capacity of all the railroads of the tnited States is about five t.mes larger than the amount of work available for them. Por a serieB of years, ending with 1880, there had been a succession of un precedentedly good harvests in the t nited States, and at the same time there were exceedingly bad harvests in Europe. In consequence there was a great demand for the agricultural prod uce of the United States, and the rail way traffics therefore were enormous. But in 1881 there was a partial failure of all the crops throughout the United States, and since then the harvests have not been good. Simultaneously tho harvests in Europe have improved, while India and Australia have begun to compete with the United States in the wheat markets of western Europe to an extent that a little while ago was quite impossible. The Americans had persuaded themselves that they could fix the price of wheat in Europe as they chose, and speculators therefore kept wheat and India corn back from the market in the hope that prices in Eu rope would thus be compelled to rise. Prices, however, have not risen. The principal result has been to hand over the markets of western Europe to the competitors of America. The Chicago corner-makers in bread stuffs will be pleased to learn that Vic toria, the largest grain-growing colony in Australia, is now in bitter competi tion with India in the English wheat market. What is going to be our posi tion in this contest 'i Fascinated by a Snake. Buffalo Express A Port Jervis letter says a party of gentlemen on bunday visited a famous snake-hole on the farm of the late W. T. Galloway, near Montgomery, armed with horsewhips, for the purpose of kill ng blacksnakes, which abound in that neighborhood. After killing as many as they could find, they separated tor the purpose of botanizing. Later on one of tneir number could not be found. Heturning to the snake-hole, the missing one was observed standiug m front of the hole, apparently spell bound, nor could any amount of calling attract his attention. On going closer, his friends were horrified to see an im mense blacksnake, just ready to coil itself around him. 'lhe man was rigid, while his eyes started from their sockets. The snake was moving itself in a wavy manner and slowly getting closer to its almost entrapped victim. The situation was at once understood and his snakeship was dispatched, while the man was placed in a wagon. He says he was completely charmed, saw beautiful colors, and experienced a per fectly peaceful sensation which would not permit him to go away or resist. If his f lends had not arrived as they did is probable he would have been strangled to death, as these blacksnakes will coil about a person and choke him to death. The snake was a large one, and measured nine feet in length. London's Cycling Path. i Chicago Times. English bicyclists and tricyclists propo e to have a cycling path of their own all the way xrom .London to Brighton, under a special act of parlia ment! The track will be about forty- five miles long, starting a few miles out of 1 ondon, and running to Brighton, and will be eighteen feet wide, paved with asphalt, and of easy gradients. It is estimated to cost an average of 7.000 per mile, or 315,000 in all. The Brighton to London road is the favorite one for south country cyclists, hundreds of wheelmen going ana re- turnir g within the day during the sea son, it is estimated that a 5-shilling fee would be very readily paid by 300 cyclists a day during eight months of the year for excursion tickets from London to Brighton and back, besides hundreds of smaller fees for interme diate distances. The Cholera Germ Man. I Chloaffo Herald. DrJ Koch, who has just returned to Berlin from India, where he has dis covered the cholera germ, is deso ibed as of medium height, very thin, with a serious, spirituelle student's face. His beard is brown, but his hair is becom ing gray, and this, together with his glasses, makes him seem to be older than 40 years. There are those who declare, that the discovery may make Koch as famous as Jenner or Harvey. i ! About Texas, ExcbaDgft.) Texas is a very large state, and everything is done in a large way there, from fencing to financiering. Last year the assessed property valuation was about f 500,000,000: the state debt was a little bver f 4,000,000; the school fund is $95,000,000. t j 1 The Talmud. Claude MonteSore, one of the ablest and most liberal of English Hebrews. says that the Talmud is "witty, learned. far-fetched, practical, poetical, harsh, kindly, long-winded. Mrs. Brown, in Merchant Traveler : What is my op nion of intemperance? It is a fire we kindle in ourselves, with out a dollar's worth of insurance on the premises. " - Fichte: A man can do what he ought to do; when he says he cannot he will not. Meanness is the one unforgivable sin. BOUCICAULT ON ACTING. The Letter R How to Walk on tho Staffe A Few Aphorisms. Cor. Chicago Herald. M. Boucicault, in h's lecture on "The Art of Acting," said there are three essential things to be studied by an ac torthe management of the voice, gestures above the waist, and position of the body from the waist downward. Actors are apt to turn the letter F into W. The prince of Wales, and the duke of Edinburgh, have an unfortunate diffi culty in pronouncing the letter; so everybody affects the same difficulty. There are three kinds of affectation in speakingthe clergyman's, who in tones, the stump orator's, who vocifer ates, and the tragedian's, . who either whines or growls. As for elocution on the stage, Mr. Boucicault had, he said,, a contempt for it. As for gesture, it should slightly precede the words. There is too much gesture on the stage, especially in mo ments when the actor meditates. Walk ing, he e aid, was a lost art, "I'd show you how to walk," he added, "but I can t, I ve got the gout. However, study the old Greek friezes, where pro cessions are pictured. To get a perfect walk practice carrying heavy weights on your head. Walk as the Spaniards and Arabs walk. Mr. Boucicault walked like an an'cient Greek, and then imi tated a Broadway pedestrian. He gave a few aphorisms as follows : Bemember that the stage is a picture, and the proscenium arch is the frame. Don t try the stage trick of keeping the center of the stage in order to take the house, as we say. In the old prints of Shakespeare's plays the principal character was on one side of the stage. The cure for stage fright is to mind your own business. Dont play to the audience. Only American and English actors are cap able of observing this rule. In going about the stage don t turn your back to the audience if you can help it. Don t mind your clothing, but study the aesthetic side of the character you are to assume. Avoid burlesque as you would the plague. Buffoonery has . displaced comedy. It is blasphemy of art. Irv ing and Booth can't do what Saivini does, because they are afraid of the dude, who would think they were go ing too far. Once, when I saw Saivini as Othello p'ck up Iago, shake the life out of him, and trample on him, a dude said to me: w Don't you think that is going too far ?" Yes, I thought ; too far for one whose horizon is a break down. Egotism and vanity are natural to an actor, and I wouldn't give a snap of my finger for one who was not egotistical and vain. Collecting; Autographs. The Hour. We may easily ridicule, if we please to do so, the passion for collecting auto graphs. It is often developed to a de gree that is abnormal ; and, like the children s craze to amass the greatest possible variety of buttons or of post age stamps, it admits, it must be con- . fessed, of vagaries and excess. The desire often leads those who have the autograph mania to confound just dis tinctions, and to seek the assemblage of a vast number of miscellaneous and second-rate names. But the feeling on which autograph-collection is based is, in itself, valid, and by no means un worthy. There is really good reason why a letter or signature of William Shaks peare or John Milton, of Napoleon Bonaparte or George Washington, should give its possessor a well-defined pleasure, a hint which we could not so well imagine in the absence of such a token of the great man so repre sented. We seem to see in this little remnant of him his personal quality, and that it is made some how a little nearer to us. It recalls for us his char acter and attributes, and, after a man ner, puts us in a closer communication with him. The signature may not be important in itself: it may be connected with no great event; a trivial occasion may have called it out ; but it helps to realize for us some part of a visible presence; and, by a subtle law of association brings us nearer to the great actor in the world's history, or in the world of thought. Articles, and even volumes, have been written to show the relation of hand writing to character; and whatever error there may be in their philosophy, we at least seem to extract through a famous autograph some of the aroma that belongs to a great fame. The Vital Center. Medical Journal Hitherto it has puzzled eminent sur geons to account for sudden death caused by apparently inadequate wounds in the heart, such as these made by the prick, without penetration even, of a needle. Herr Schmey, a student of the Physiological institute, Berlin, has, however, just discovered that when a needle pricks a certain small spot on the lower border of the upper third of the septum cordis, quite instantan eously the movements of the heart are arrested and forever set motionless in death. "It is now the task of an anatomical investigation," says Prof. Kronecker, who verified the discovery of his pupil, Herr Schmey, and com municated it to the Physiological society of , Berlin, "to demonstrate with accu racy this vital center, the existence of which has been proved experiment ally." v Proof Positive. Texas Sittings. A small boy testified, in an Austin justice's oourt, that the affray took place on a Sunday. "How ao you know it was on Sun day?" - "Because that day I had to go to the side door of the saloon to get beer for dinner." E. W. Conant: What can be more pathetic than the money of the poor ? More pathetic than even their wants, for the little they have tells still more eloquently of the much they lack. ' The Current: Incompetent but rich and titled, amateurs have made the novel-writing business precarious in England.