THE INDEPENDENT HAS THE THE nTDEPEITDENT - . IS ISSUED SATURDAY MORNINGS, BY THE Douglas County Publishing Company. FINEST JOB .OFFICE IN DOUGLAS COUNTY. CARDS, BILL HEADS, LESAL BLANKS. And other Printing, including One Year - - - - $2 50 Six Months 160 Three Months - - - 1 00 Large aM Esayy Posters aM SSow Hani-Bills, Neatly and expeditiously executed AT PORTLAND PRICES. These are the terms of those paying in advance. The Independent offers fine inducements to advertisers. Terms reasonable. . . . ROSEBURG, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, j 1884. VOL. IX. NO. 24. MOT 1 II Jj , Ull U yJLliiy) 11" U JOJI JJl S ; - ':--,t:.:-v v. - ; ; -,, ?;'-:v V;V , --0 J. JASKULEK, PRACTICAL " Watctaier, Jeweler 'ant Optician, 'all work warranted. Dealer In Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Spectacles and Eyeglasses. AND A FULL LINK OF Cigass, Tobacco & Fancy Goods. Tk. I! VI t i-i, .... .V. . b ,1 !nof ment of Spectacles ; always on hand. Depot of the Genuine Brazilian Pebble Spec tacles and Eyeglasses. Office First Door South of Postoffice, ItOHEIIUHG. OREGON. LANGENBERG'S Boot and Shoe Store ItOSEBUllCi, OREGON, On Jackson Street, Opposite the Post Office, .Keeps on hand the largest and best assortment of Eastern and San Francisco Boots and Shoes, Gaiters, Slippers, And everything in the Boot and Shoe line, and SELLS CHEAP FOB CASH. Boots and Shoes SXade to Order, and Perfect Fit Guaranteed. I use the Best of Leather and Warran all my work. Repairing Neatly Done, on Short Notice. I keep always on hand TOYS AND NOTIONS. Musical Instruments and Violin Strings a specialty. LOUIS IiAXGEXBERG. DR. M. W. DAVIS, 639 DENTIST, ROSE BURG, OREGON, Office On Jackson Street, Up Stairs, Over S. Marks & Co. s New Store. HAHONEY S SALOON, Nearest the Sail road Depot, Oakland. JAS. MAIIOXEY, - - - Proprietor The Finest "Wines, Liquors and Cigars in Douglas County, and THE BEST BILLIARD TABLE IN THE STATE, KEPT IN PROPER REPAIR. Parties traveling on the railroad will Grid this place cry band; to ait during tne stopping or. tne train the Oakland Depot. Give me a call. JAS. MAIIONEY. JOHN ERASER, Home Made Furniture, WILBUR, OREGON. UPHOLSTERY, SPRING MATTRESSES, ETC., Constantly on hand. FURNITURE. have the Best STOCK OF FURNITU RE South el 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 etsewnere. ALL WORK WARRANTED, DEPOT HOTEL, Oakland, Oregon. RICHARD THOMAS, Proprietor. This Hotel has been established for a num ber of years, and has become very pop ular with the traveling public. FIEST-CLA8S SLEEPING ACCOMMODATIONS AND THE Table supplied with the Best the Market affords notel at the Depot of the Railroad. H. C. STANTON, DEALER IN Staple Dry Goods, Keeps constantly on hand a general assortment of Extra Fine Groceries, WOOD, WILLOW AND GLASSWARE, ALSO . CROCKERY AND CORDAGE, A full stock of SCHOOL BOOKS, Suoh as required by the Public Count; Schools. All kinds of Stationery. Toys and Fancy Articles, TO scrr BOTH YOU NO and old. Buys and Sells Lejral Tenders, furnishes Cheeks on Portland, and procures Drafts on San Francisco. SEED t ALL KINDS OP THE BEST QUALITY, ALL ORDERS Promptly attended to and goods shipped witn care. Address, IIACIIKXV & 11KXO, Portland, Oregon. SeaGra and Oatmeal. Loaves and Fishes. Bread is made on the Devonshire coast of England from a sea-gra..s, porphyra laciniata, which is chopped and mixed with a little oatmeal. It will keep from four to eight days, and the people who use it are tond of it. How Rich New Orleans Editor Do. New Orleans Picayune. Some rise with the lark; others get up when the steam whistle blows. Real eomfortis found in lying in bed until one feeli like getting up. TWTLTGHT. " ' fJoaqaiu Miltur. The broad re J city in her blossome 1 trees Lies compassed about by the hosts of night Lies humming, low, like a hive of bees; , And the day lies dead. And its spirit's flight Is far to the.west, while the golden bars t That bound it are broken to dust fM s'.ars. Come under my oaks, O drowsy dusk! The wo'f and the nog; iear incense hour When mother earth hath a smell of musk, And things of the spirit assert their pow er When candles aro set to burn in the west Set head and foot to the day at rest NATIONAL CONVENTIONS. Former meetings a Mescrlbed by Long John Went worth. Chicago In'cr-Oeean. "The first national iolitical convention," said Long John Wentworth yesterday, "ever held in Chicago was ia ISOl). I was mayor of the city at that time. Did you know that Horace Greeley was the man who nominated Abraham Lincoln" "No," said the reporter. "Was Greeley a delegate from New York?" "No, from Oregon." " ' " "From Oregon C' "Yes, he bad the Oregon proxies. Well, you gee, there was a fight between Seward and Horace made up bitter political and Greeley, his mind to down him. Seward was the proraineut can didate before the convention, and everybody expected to see him nominated. Greeley didn't care who was nominated so it wasn't Seward. Well, Bates and Chase withdrew in favor of the dark horse. Greeley l ad no candidate of his own to start on, but he is entitled to the whole credit of nominating Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. When Lir:cjln came to be president he did what few men would dare dohe made up h's cabinet of his opponents. He put in Seward for sec retary of state, Bates for ; attorney general, Chase for secretary of the treasury. "The second national political convention held in Chicago," said the Hon. Phil Hoyne, was that Demccratic convention of 1864 that nominate 1 McClellan and Pendleton. My two boys we:e pages in that convent on; now they are young men. The convention was held on the lake shore in the old wigwam. It had a canvass roof. I went in with Governor Dick Yates and Pitt Kellogg. They had bad some trouble in getting in, and I thought it singular that the governor of Il linois couldn't get into a co:ivent:on, so I helped them get seat3. The convention was very orderly, indeed. I remember seeing Vallandinghani. Crowds followed him about, 1 believe ho made a speech from the steps of j the old Sherman house, where he was stop-; ping. 'The next was the Republican convention of 1S63, held iu. the Crosby opera house, where Grant and Colfax were nominated. Joseph B. Hawley presided. I saw Dan S el; les, rorney and R. , Thompson present.! I think Logan nominated Grant Any way J the convention was unanimous for GrantJ The effect was creat when the roll of states was called and the vote of each to au aouncod by the president in his maguifl-'ent sonorous voice, lue cnoice or uoaax ror vice-president was not .'unanimous at fiistj but was afterwards made so, "No more conventions were held here until in loM', wtjen uarneia ana Ar thur were nominated, ur course, you re member all about that, it was such a short time agOi Grant and Blaine were the prom iuent and talked-of candidates. Garfield was the dark toise, starting on one vote, cast, I tHnk, by a delegate from Pennsjd- vania. There was great excitement through out the country. It lasted from the 21 to the 8th of the month. Tiie first two days were consumed in straightening the delegations, There were fights in nearly all of them. The nomination was made on the 8th, about 3 o'clock. There wouldn't anybody believe at first that Garfield was ' nominated just as they wouldn't believe the report of his nssas sination. I heard the speech of Flannigan, of Texas, when he said:; 'If we're not here for the offices what the ! are we here forT The chairman sm led, ana every no ly eise laughed, Of all." the newspaper boys the loudest Shooting the Caaade lSapld. Po-tland (Ore.) News. The Gold Dust, a stanch and trim little steamer, successfully ran the rapids at the Cascades of the Columbia yesterday morn ing. There were five persons aboard. The Gold Dust was bnilt m Portland some five years ago. She is eighty-five feet in length, with a twelve-foot team, and has a draft of six feet, lieht. For a j-ear or two she ran as an inderendent boat between this city and Vancouver; then she I was taken to the Columbia river to rim ibetween the Cascades and the Dalles. The owners had to cut the boat in two a;.d haul the sections with teams around the Cascades rapids. Lately her owners concluded to return the boat to service on the Willamette river. "It was a mighty ticklish job to run the rapids," said Eugmeer , St. Martin to a News rep rter last evening as he was enjoying a smoke in the engine-room of the Gold Dust, snugly moored at Ham; Taylor & Co. s dock. "I've been on the water for over fifteen yeais, and it was the hottt time I've ever experienced. We started from the upper Cascades at S:30 m the morning, and at once shot into the seething waters in the channel, close to the Washington si le. We shot through the rapids, fully 300 feet in length. like an arrow. It didn't seem to me to take us half a minute. The water was very rough, the mad waves dashing us to and fro. This channel is less than 100 feet wide, with savage rocks on both sides. Owing to high water these rocks are some six feet under water, and this fact made the trip the more dangerous. Twice in the rapid vovasro I thought we were sroners. lhe waves dasnea against me ooat viciously, - ; a. v - i knocking iu the lights of the engine-room and Louring a volume of water into the boat. I was drenched to the &kin, and so were the othei-s. Once out of the mam rapids we had smooth sailing. We made the trip from the upper Cascades to the dower Cascades, some six mil.-s in about as 1 many minutes. The Oregon shore was lined with spectators, mostly government employes, and tr.ey gave us a round of hearty cheers as we safely rode through the rapids. One such a trip will do a man for a lifetime. Jim Flk. Revenue. New York Letter in Troy Times. The late Samuel Bowles, former elit.or of The Spriogfitild Republican, Fpent one night in the Ludlow Strtet jail, and found even this brief experience fully sufficient This was the work of Jim j Fisk, whom Bowles had Landled in a very severe manner. Bowles soon afterward came to this city, and Fisk arrested him for libel. He ordered the .ofacers to wait till late in the afternoon, when business men had gone home an 1 no bail euiild be obtained. Bowles was trapped iu this tricky manner,! but the next mornnig bail was procured an 1 he was release ). Fisk then dropped the tu t I Uis only object was to lock Bowles up. He was always proud of this exploit i Ai kansaw Travelert A man wbut is evil but whut ti les tar do good, soon gita tirw l o' de job. Da wolf ken 13 ez gentle ez de lamb, but it's so tiresome dat he kain' noT out long. MADAME SAUVAGE. FNew Orleans Times-Democrat from the French of Guy de Maupassant. 1 When the war broke out, the son of Sau- vage, wno was then 33 years old, enlisted. leaving his mother totally alone. Folks did not, however, pity the old woman much be cause she had money everybody knew that! So she remained alone in her isolated house, so far from the village at the edge of the forest. But she was not in the least afraid, being of the same stock as the men of the country a hardy old woman, tall and gaunt, who seldom laughed, and whom nobody pre sumed to trine wtth. Indeed, the country women there do not laugh much. Laughing is well enough . for the men! The minds of those women are melancholy and narrow, for their lives are dismal and seldom lightened by an hour of joy. The peasant husband or son learns something of noisy gaiety m the tavern; but their helpmates and mothers re main serious, with visages perpetually austere. The muscles of their faces have never acquired the movements of laughter. Uld Mother oauvage continued her ordi nary mode of life in her cabin, which was soon covered with snow. Once a week she used to eorao to the city to buy a little bread and meat, after which she would return to her dwelling. As there was a good deal of talk about wolves, she never went out with out a gun slung at her back the son's gun, a rusty weapon whose butt was quite worn awav by the mere rubbing of horny hands against it, and it was really curious to watch the tall old woman, a little stooped by age, striding leisurely through the snow, with the barrel of the gun sticking up above the black covering which surrounded her head and contned those white tresses which no body had ever seen. Une day tuo Prussians came. Ihey were quartered upon the inhabitants of the place, according to the fortunes and resources of each family. The old woman had to receive four, liecause she was-icnowu to be rich, These were four big lads with fair flesh, fair beards and blue eyesi who had remained stout in spite of all the fatigues they had en dured, and who seemed to be right good fel lows, although conquerors in a conquered country. Finding themselves alone with the old woman they took pains to show her all possible consideration, and did all in their power to save her trouble and expense. They could be seen every morning, all four together, making their toilet at the well, in their shirt sleeves; pouring the cold water over that fair, rosy, northern flesh of theirs even on the days when it was snowing most heavilyT while Mother Sauvage went to and fro, preparing the soup for them. Then they 1 1 A T 1 couiu oe seen cleaning up tne Kitonen, wasn ing the windows, chopping the wood, peeling the potatoes, washing the linen, in short, do ing all the house-work, just like four trood sons migM do for their mother. But she, the old woman, was ever thinking of her own son her tall giant boy, with his hooked nose and brown eyes, and thick mous tache that seemed to cover his lip with a veritable pad of black hair. And every day she used to ask each of the f our soldiers quar tered in her home: ' Do you know where that French regiment hi the Twenty-Third of the line? My son's m that." They would reply, as well as they could: "Nein! don1 know don' know nodings." And comprehending her pain and anxieties, these young men, who had mothers living far away in Germany, paid her a thousand delicate lit tle attentions. She liked them well enough, too those four enemies of hers; for peasants do not feel patriotic hate; such feelings oidy belong to the upper classes. The humble folk those who pay the most just because they are poor, ami wno are oeing perpetually weighed down by new burthens; those who are slaughtered wholesale, who form the ver itable food for powder, because they are the majority; those, in fine, who stiff er most atrociously from the miseries of war, because thev are the weakest and the least aggressive such folk do not at all understand what war enthusiasm fci, nor touchy points of military honor, and still less those pretended political combinations which exhaust two nations in six months, the victor as well as the van quished. People m that part of the country used always to Bay when speaking of Mother Sauvage's Germans: iueres tour reiuows wno ve found a snug berth." Well, one morning while Mother Sauvage was ail aione at uome, sue caugnt sigut oi a man, quite far off on the plain, hastening toward her dwelling, tie soon came near enough for her to recognize him; it was the country postman. He handed her a sheet of folded paper; and she took her glasses, which she always wore when sewing, out of an old spectacle-case; and read as follows Madame Sauvage : This will bring you a sad piece of news, i our bov V ictor was killed yesterday ty a round-siiot, which liter ally cut him in two. I was close to him at the time; for my pjp,ce was always next mm in the company ; and it was only that very day that he was talking to me about you, so that 1 could let you know it anything should happen hnn. I took his watch out of his pocket to bring it to you when the war is over I salute ycr' amicably, Cesaire Rivot. Private second class in the Twenty-Third regiment of the line. The letter was dated three weeks pre viously. She did not cry. She remained motion less, so overwhelmed, so stupefied by the blow, that she did not at once feel tie pain of it. She thought only: "There's Victor killed, now!" Then, little by little, the ter.rs lowly rose to her eyes, and the pang began to make itself felt at her heart. Fancies came to her, one after the other frightful, torturing. Never could she ki s her child again her only child, her great tall ton! never! The gendarmes had killed hi father, the poacher; now the Prussians had killed her son. ne had been cut in two by a camion balL And it seemed to her she could see the thing the whole horrible thing; the s head falling off, with eyes wide open, and his teeth still gnaw ing the comers of bis thick moustache, as he was wont to do in his licurs of anger. And after, what had they done with his body. - If they had even given her back her son again, as they had brought her husband back to her, with a rifle ball through the center of his forehead, But she heard a sound of loud voices. It was the Pruiians returning from the village. Quickly she hid the letter in her pocket, and received them very calmly with her cils tomary face; for she had had the time to wipe her eyes well. They were all laughing, the four of them quite delighted because they had been able to bring home a splendid rabbit with them stolen, no doubt ; and they made signs to the old woman that they were going to have something wonderfully good to eat. She set to work at once to prepare break fast for them; but when the time came.to kill the rabbit, her heart failed her. And yet it was not the first rabbit by any means that she had been given to kill! One of the sol diers killed it by striking it behind the ear vith his hand. Once it was dead she took the red body out of the skin; but the ght of the blood which she was handling, which covered her hands the wa itu blood which sho felt getting cold and coagulating made her tremble from head to foot; and she always saw before her the figure of her tall son, cut in two, and all red just like the body of the stfll palpitating animal. She sat down to table with her Prussians; but she could not eat even so much as a mouthfuL They finished the rabbit without noticing her. Meanwhile she watched them sideways, without 6peaMng maturing a singular purpose in her mind, and yet with such an impassive face that none of them observed anything unusual All of a sudden she asked: I don't so much as know your names; and yet we ve been a month together now . They were not able to understand what sne wanted without some diHcuI.y, and then they told her their names. That was not enough! She made them write the names down on a piece of paper, together with the addresses of their families; and, perch ing her spectacles upon ner great nose, she looked at the strange German writing. Then she folded up the paper carefully, and put it into her pocket, next to the letter which had told her about the death of her son. : When the meal was over she said tCthem, 'Now, I'm going to do some work for j-ou." And she proceeded to carry hay up to the loft in which they slept They thought this was very queer; but she explained to them that it would enable them to keep nice and warm, so thoy all helped her. They piled up the hay to the straw roof; and thus made themselves a sort of bed room with four sloping walls of forage, warm and fragrant, where they could sleep delightfully. At dinner-time one of them became quite anxious at seeing that old Mother Sauvage ate nothing. She told them she had cramps. Then she lit a good fire in order to warm herself : and the four Germans ascended to their loft by the ladder which led to it As soon as they had closed down the trap door, she took away the ladder; and gom, out noiselessly, she began to collect straw and fill her kitchen with it She walked barefoot throueh thev snow so softly that no one could hear her. From time to time she heard the loud and irregular snoring of the f our sleeping soldiers. WTienshe "judged her preparations com plete, she put a bunch of straw in the fire, then flung the burning heap upon the rest; and she went out and looked ! A fierce glare lighted the ulterior of the building in a few seconds; then the whole be came a frightful furnace, a gigantic oven whose violent light blazed through the single narrow window, and flung a long bright band across the snow. Then a great and terrible cry rang out from the upper part of the house; succeeded by a clamor of yells, human howlings, hideous cries of agony and fear. An then, the floor r .mmbling in, a storm of flames, roared up into the loft, burst through the roof of straw, rose to heaven like a vast torch-fire; and the whole structure flared against the night. Nothing could' now be heard but the crackling of the conflagration, the crumb ling of the walls, the falling of the great beams. The last fragments of the roof fell m, and the red hot carcass of the dwelling flung skyward a great jet of sparlcs through a cloud of heavy smoke. The snow-whitened country, illuminated by the fire, shone like a sheet of silver, tinted with crimsom. Afar off, a great bell .began to ring. Old Mother Sauvage stood erect bef oie the red ruin of her home, armed with a rifle, her dead son's rifie, fearing that one of the men might escape. 1 When she saw it was all over, she flung the weapon into the fire. A single sharp report rang out People came running to the scene peasants and Prussian soldiers. They found the old woman sitting on the trunk of a tree calm and satisfied. A German officer, who spoke French like a Frenchman, asked her: "Where are your soldiers f She stretched oiit her long, lean arm to ward the crimson mass of ruins, where the fire was dving down at last, an answered in a strong and violent voice: "INSIDE!" All gathered about her. The Prussian asked: "How did the fire startP She replied sonorously: "I started it" They could not believe her; they thought the disaster had rendered her insane. And then, while all listened, and pressed closer about her to hear, she told the whole story from the beginning to the end from the re ceipt of the letter even to the last cry of the men burned up in her house. She did not forget one single detail of what she had felt, nor of .what she had done, Then, when she had told all, she took from her pocket two pieces of pajor, and in onler to distinguish them by the light of the fii-e. she coolly put on her glasses. Then she said, showing one paper : ' 'That is the letter about Victor's death." And holding up the other 6he added, nodding her head toward the ruddy ruins: "There! that's their names, so you can write to their folks about them." She presented the paper to the officer who held her by the shoulders, and she continued : "You can write to them how this thing happened ; and you can just tell their parents that it was I who did it I, Victoire Simon, called La Sauvage I Don't you forget it!" The officer roared out some orders in Ger man. They seized her and flung her back against the still glowing walls of her dwell ing. Quickly twelve men took their places in front of her, twenty yards away. She never winked. She knew what was coming. She waited in perfect calm. An order rang out, followed by a long de tonation. One shot was heard later than the rest all by itself. The old woman did not fall ; she sank down perpendicularly, as though her legs had been cut away from under her. The Prussian officer approached to look. She had been almost severed m two by the volley, and her sti:Tened fingers still clenched the letter, all spattered with blood The Wife's Strategy. New York Morning Journal, "My dear," said a young wife to her hus band, who had already fallen into the habit of going to the lodge in the evening, and who was just preparing to go out, 'l am going up street to interview the superintendent of the post office this evening. "Ah! indeed; on what business, prayf "I want to see if he con give me any ad vice in regard to getimg a naoituauy late male in od time." The husnand Diusned, pretended he was looking for a newspaper instead of his hat, and there was a member absent from the lodge that night Efl"ect of the Earthquake. Exchange. A curious result of the recent earthquake shock in Essex, England, was that the wells in and around Colchester exhibited a rise in their water level of about five feet This gradually increased for five days after the phenomenon untO a height of eight feet was attained. Th wells at last accounts had apparently permanently rested at the height of seven feet above their old water mar it. IN THE "3IQ FLAT." Tenement House with Over Eight Hundred People In It. W. M. Donnelly in Texas S:ftmg. We will go up "Mott'&treet to that tall brick building labeled on the front, iu letters five feet high, "TIIE BIG FLAT." It is detached, is seven stones high, has seven windows on each floor in front and thirty-two on each floor at the sides, and runs right through to Elizabeth street. It is said to bo fireproof and it appears to be so. lwo broad flights of stone stairs with iron balusters, one on the Mott street and one on the Elizabeth street end, lead from floor to floor. At the top of each flight is a long, dark corridor, off which sixteen doors open on one side and thirty-two windows on the other. Each of the doors load into a suit of three rooms, with windows opening on the court -yard, and each suit, except the end ones, which cost $13, is rented for $9 to $10 a month, payable in advance. There are, at present, the janitor informs us, between 800 and 900 peo ple living in the house, Most of them are Bohemian Jews, but there are some Russians, Italians, Chinese and Irish also. "We have very few Irish," savs lhe janitor, "for wo don't want the lowest of them, and the better class woman t come here. lhe tenants are chiefly tailors who work a home, and street peddlers. "The Big Hat," continued the janitor, was originally built for colored pooph and was afterwards turned into lo h ings for working girls. Now it belongs to the New York Steam-llouting company. What are my duties? Well, to collect rents, to see that the tenants keep their rooms clean Jews aro mostly dirty to have the water-tank on the roof, which is filled by a steam pumn in the cellar, kept always full; anl to exe cute general repairs, l here is no gas in any of the rooms except mine, and the tenants burn kerosene They bring their own cooking-stoves with them. No, there is no elevator; if a man lives on tho top floor, ho must walk up and down to his room." "The Big Flat? ' savs the sergeant al the desk in the Elizabeth street .station: "Tho most troublesomo house in the precinct! Not so much the tenants, you know, who are hard working people, but thieves and pickpockets, when they com mit a robbery, make use of the passage from Mott to Elizabeth, to escape the officer chasing them. Wo get a good many complaints of all sorts from the tenants, too, but they don't amount to much. Go and see some of the Italian tenements in Mulberry street. The Italians are a saving people, ana are rapidly buying up all the Mulberry st reet houses. Up long flights of dirty stairs we toil, until at length we reach an open door A woman, apparently about oo, but in teality not more than half -that age, J Stan .Is in the entrance with a fortnight- ! old baby in her arms. She is unkempt, unwashed, and altogether unattractive. Is this a sample of the bright Italian beauties of whicli we have read and dreamed so much, with their darkly flashing eyes and raven locks, and clear, pale olive skins to which the red blood rushes on occasion? Alas! it is even so. Italia's maids are women at 15, mothers a year later, grandmothers at 30, and decrepit hags in a year or two more. Here in New York the descendants of the Masters of the World live like rabbits in a burrow. They sleep anywhere and anyhow on the floor or sitting on a box with their backs against the wall. You will find twelve or fourteen domiciled in a .ooin that would fairly accommodate two persons. Disease is common among them, and their dense ignorance of the commonest things makes tho evil worse. They eat anything they can get, whether they buy it from the butchers' offal, or pick it out of the ash twirrel or the gutter. They will not spend money on fuel and pork is cheap, so they eat it raw, and tri chinosis is rife. They can live, like the Chinese, where men of other nationali ties would starve, and so they are sav ing money and leeoming householders, and arc forming a permanent Italian colony in Mulberry street and its neigh borhood, as they have already done m the vicinity of Snow Hill and Holborn Valley, London. An Kagle ICye. IF.xehaii; e. A story is told of Van Amburgh, tho great lion-tamer, now dead. On one oc casion while in a bar-room he was asked how he got his wonderful power over animals. He said: "It is by showing them that I am not the least afraid of them, and by keep mg my eye steadily fixed on theirs I'll give you an example ot tne power of my eve. ' 1'or.mng to a ioutisn tellow who was standing near oy, he said: "lou see . 1 mm. ... that fellow? He's a regular clown. I'll ina'elim come across the room to me, and I won't say a word to him." Sitting down, he fixed his keen, steady eye on the ma l. Presently the fellow straight ened himself gradually, got up and came slowly across to tho lion-tamcr. When he got close enough he drew back his ann and struck Van Amburgh a tre- mcndo'Ai blow under the chin, knock.ng him ds.vr over tne chair, with tne re mark: again, "You'll stare at mo won't you. , ike that A IitUle Abeut-iTIliided. pi--w York TrutM.J j A Whi; ehcill woman, about to boil an egg for her fiisband's breakfast, asked the loan f his watch to time the boS ing. "Your watch has stopped," she cried; "the egg is in and I can't tell how long it ought to remain in the kettle." The husband hastened to the stove, and was horror-struck to find that the good woman had dropped his elegant gold watch into the kettle, and was hold ing the egg to her ear. Cement tor Patching Shoes. Trxis Sifting!!. The cement used in patching the up pers of fine shoes is generally made b dissolving gutta percha in chloroform until the mixture is. about as thick as syi up. f crape and pare clean around the hole to be covered, and thin care fully with U long chamfer the ed-;e oi the bit of. leather to be applied. nh a little of the cement is needed, but u surfaci must be pressed close toget ier. The parts will atlner firmly in a few minutes. FOREIGN TELEGRAPHIC I7ZWS. The Nile expedition is progressing fa vorably. Lord DufTerin has been appointed Vice. roy of India. The Czar attended the theater in War saw incognito. An unknown vessel burned in Valpa raiso harbor recently. A Nihilist manifesto has been liberally circulated in Warsaw. t creat crowd greeted General Wolseley on his arrival at Cairo. Direct communication is maintained be tween Paris and Tonquin. France has abandoned the scheme for the occupation of Formosa. The physicians of Spezia, Italy, believe mat nies spread the cholera. A grand fete was given at Paris recently in aid or tne cholera suiierers. Telegraphic communication has been opened between Tamarand and. Bahara Typhoid fever has broken out in on; of the British regiments stationed at Cairo, Several Rome physicians wiU be prose cuted ror refusing to attend cholera pa tients. King Humbert, while visiting cholera hospitals in Naples, refused to use disin fectauts. A United States gunboat has arrived at Lima, Peru, fifty-three days from San 2 rancisco. A serious fire is reported from Calais. Due Brencie8' factory burned. The loss is very heavy. ( A recent fire in Piere, Dak., destroyed tne mam nusmess block of that city. AjOSS, $auu,uuu. A number of army officers at Warsaw have been exiled for life for being mem- Ders or a secret society. Six thousand Turkish trooos have been ordered to Western Arabia to suppress the rebellion in that district. Advices from Debbeh state that rebels under El Mahdi's ameers have been de feated with great slaughter. The London Truth is authority for the statement that Rubenstein has agreed to give twenty concerts in America. M. de Giers, the Russian prime" minis ter, has started to Poland to be present at the meeting of the three Emperors. A dispatch from Warsaw states that most of the subjects arrested during the Czar, will be released upon his departure. The Paris Figaro declares that if China issues letters of marque the French will hang all who may be captured, as pirates. A London cable sayS: Stocks & Co.'s leather works at Leeds have been de stroyed by fire. The loss is placed at 80, 000. John M. Francis, the new American minister to Austria, presented his creden tials last wees: to emperor rrancia Jo seph. As lung Humbert was Dassina the prison at Naples last week, the inmates raised a loud shout praying to be set at liberty. The burial of cholera victims at Naples is found very difficult, owing to the unu sually large number so suddenly needing interment. That cholera is on the increase in Naples, is shown by the following record for twenty-four hours: Number of new cases. uocs: aeatns. azo. Ex-Empress Eugenie, of France, is raD- idly breaking down in health, and it is feared she will not much longer survive her husband and son. une oi steamers nas been placed along the coast and rivers of Corea. It is reported that England has offered to guarantee a loan to the Egyptian gov ernment, if Egypt will place the mosoue propeny under English control as security. The Highland brigade has been ordered up the Nile. General Lord Wolsely will remain at Cairo for the present. He will take command of the troops above Assi- out. A dispatch from Shanghai to the London 2 inies says: A Russian flagship has been seus to ancnor at a uorean port, wmie tne ileet remains at Nagasaki, awaiting or- aers. The colonial policy inaugurated by Bis- marcic is steadily growing in popular fa vor, and the chancellor daily receives let ters of congratulation and other proofs of its success. According to an official statement the total number of forces under the French flag m Tonquin is 19,000. Of these 14,000 are Europeans, and the remainder native auxiliary troops. Advices from Tamatave, Madagascar, to August 30th, state that the French had bombarded and temporarily occupied Ma- hanoro, a town on the coast some distance south of Tamatave. The Governor-General of Canada has signed the new quarantine regulations. affecting the transportation of Montana cattle in bond through Canadian territory, and will go into effect immediately. Operators in the London markets have lately been inclined to a hopeful viev of tne outiooK or American anairs, in conse quence of the excellent report of the cotton, corn, wheat and all other crops, i A dispatch from Peking says the Rus sian fleet has left Chefoo, with excessive supplies of provisions. I It is believed that Russia mediates a blow at the integrity of China, while the latter is seriously engaged witn r ranee. Having become alarmed at the reports about the African climate, a number of those who enlisted in Canada for service in the Nile expedition for the relief of Gordon, have deserted to the United States after having drawn a portion f their pay in advance, j Admiral Peyron, French minister of marine and the colonies, supports the de mand made by Admiral Courbet, that France shall officially declare war with China as necessary action to insure the complete success of his naval operations. Later dispatches confirm the report of a substantial victory of Mupor of Dongola at Ambukal over the rebels from ivorao- fan. Recent advices report Mahdi in South Kordofan with an army of 14.000, which have been sent to reinforce the army besieging Khartoum. There has been considerable re-action in the number of settlers going into the "Ca nadian Northwest during the past twelve months. At Emerson there was a falling off in the number entering at that point of lo per cent during tne past year, and. compared with 1882, the decline was 50 percent. Advices have been by the Canadian de partment of agriculture from St. Lucia, West Indies, stating that a coolie shin had arrived from the East Indies with thirty- two cases oi Asiatic cholera on . hoard, twenty-seven ot wnicn died on the pass age, and advising the dominion govern ment to quarantine against vessels from that sort. DOMESTIC TELEGRAPHIC KXWS. Mitchell. Dak., had a S125.000 fire re cently. Ben Johnson was hanged in Cincinnati last Week. San Francisco lumber mills are running on half time. . Disease has appeared among the cattle In Osage county, Kan. The steamer Wyoming brought 500 more Mormon recruits last trip. There is great excitement at Benton, M. T., over recent gold discoveries. The Denver and Rio Grande Railroad is to be inspected and-re-orgauized. Levi P. Morton, "minister, to France, is talked of as Judge Folger's successor. A cyclone passed over Clear Lake, Minn., last week, and several people were killed. The brig Anita Owen, Santiago de Cuba to New "iork, lost three men on the pass age. ; Actors and actresses from abroad are pouring into New York by every incom- , ins bteamer. Frank IlHtchings, the San Francisco strangler, expiated his crime on the gal lows last week. Alonzo Morreys, formerly of Portland, Or., was found dead in his bed at San Francisco last week. The grand council of the United States Improved Order of Red Men held session at Springfield, 111., last week. John McCullough, the tragedian, who was prestrated at Manhattan beach re cently, is said to be recovering. All telegraph, telephone and electric light poles in Philadelphia must be put underground by January 1, 1885. An autopsy of the body of Judge Moore, found dead at Jackson, Cal., recently, shows that he committed suicide. There was a meeting held at Sacramento last week for the purposes of developing the resources of northern California. At Nerfolk, Va., recently. Sam Blouse. aged 18, shot and killed Nellie Devlin, aged 14, and then committed suicide. Professor Newton, of Yale College, was elected president of the American Asso ciation of Scientists at Philadelphia last week. A representative of the Indianapolis Sentinel has been in Pittsburg a week or more looking up evidence in regard to the Blaine libel suit. Oliver H. Bateman. confined in the Sa vannah, Mo., jail, confesses to the murder of the McLaughlin girls at Flagg Springs, iuo., August 31SI. At Petaluma. Cal.. recently. Patrick Shea poisoned himself and four children witn strychnine. The father and two children are dead. The difference between the New York stone cutters and master masons con tinues. Apprentices are all locked out. There is no prospect of a settlement. ' About 200 members of the Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F., from all parts of the world, arrived at Minneapolis, Minn., recently, wnere a session of the lodge was held. J. H. Square, a private banker of Wash ington, D. C, who made an assignment a short time ago, committed suicide last week by cutting his throat with a pen knife. . Last week the steamer St. Paul, of the St Louis and St. Paul Packet Line, was seized at Keokuk, la., on an attachment of the Second National Bank of Keokuk for 8,255. The agricultural department reports that the product of winter wheat is above I 3 - it . m ine junior Dondnoiuers of the Keading Railroad are organizing to ask the United states Court to instruct the receivers to see that the junior interests are not en tirely ignored. ' Miss Victoria Morsini. daughter of G. P. Morosini, a millionaire and partner in jay uouid s oroKerage nrm, created a sen sation in New York last week by eloping with Ernest J. Shelling, her father's coachman. During a terrific thunder storm at Olean. N. Y., last week, a 35,000 gallon tank of oil, belonging to the National Transit Com pany, was struck -by lighting and set on fire. Loss, including car, tank and oil, is about 20,000. Several attempts have been made to wreck the East Tennessee train near Mc- Donougb, Ga. Last week a colored boy named Ed. Jenkins, aged 12 years, was discovered placing obstructions on the track and confessed his guilt. Last week a largely attended convention of residents oLSchnectady county, New x orK, passed a resolution calling on the senator and assemblymen of that district to work for the woman suffrage bill, in stead of opposing it as heretofore. The Northern Pacific Railroad Company last week, obtained an attachment against property in New York state belonging to David E. Swan, cashier of the company at St. Paul, Minn., charging that Swan wrongfully appropriated $21,000 of the company s money. The Lacowsie cassimere mill of Hamp den, HI., is under attachment for 830,000. The nominal owner is George B. Webb, but II. Smith holds a mortgage of 825,010 to the full value. The unpaid wages for the month are 5,000. Seventy-five hands are out of employment. The United States sub-committe, con sisting of Senators Dawes, Cameron, of W isconsin, and Morgan, have left Wash ington for San Francisco, en route for the Round Valley Indian reservation, to in vestigate troubles existing between In dians and white settlers. Charles Perdue, while cutting brush on the Pewens farm, a mile north of Decatur, ill., made tne gnastiy discovery of a human skeleton dangling from the limb of an old" tree. The skeleton is supposed to be that of an old German who disap peared last winter, and it is thought that he hung himself. A Jamestown, Va., dispatch eavs: The hearing of Attorney Maney before United States Commissioner Hewitt, for the al leged violation oi the postal laws by using cancelled stamps, resulted in his complete exoneration, the Court stating that there was nothing whatever in the evidence to cast any suspicion of guilt. The Amalgamated Association at Wheeling, W. Va., is out in a card in which it calls upon all rail consumers to reject the steel rail and leave it upon the hands of the manufacturer. It shows that the iron rail, which was so useful a factor hitherto in the nation's progress, Is cneaper, Deiter, ana in every way more suitable than the steel rail. In the Cincinnati jail languish the fol lowing who are to be hanged on the dates set opposite their names: Joe Palmer, the accomplice of Berner, October 10th; John H. Hoffman, October 24th; George Oliver, November 7th; Pat Hartnet, December 5th. Dates are yet to be made for George Gilbert, Pat Muldoon, Mike McDermott, Thomas Bernhardini, Maria Walsh, James Boyd, Mrs. Pratt and Charles Ball.