The Oregon Scout. r v UNION, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1880. NO, 35. vol. II. THE OREGON SCOUT. An Independent weekly journal, issued Baturuny by evo y JONES & CHANCEY, Publishers and Proprietors. A. K. JONES, I Editor, f t H. Chaxckv, i l'oremnii. IIaTESOK SUIISCHll'TIOX: One copy, ono year fltO Six months 1 00 " " Threo months " Invnrlnbly cash In ndvnnco. ITby nny chnnco subscriptions nro not pnld till end oryenr, two dollars will bo olianrcd. Kates of advertising mado known on appli cation. Correspondence from all parts of the county solicited. Address all communications to A. K. Jones, Kditor Oregon Scout, Union, Or. Ioclgc Directory. Guam) IlONiir. Vali.ky I.odok, No. no. A. V. and A. Jl. iliets on tho Becond and fourth Saturdays of each month. O. I. llKbi., W. M. C. K. Davis, Secretary. Tkion Lonni'.. No. iKi. 1. O. O. K.-ltiKiilnr meetings on Friday evenings ol each week at their hall in Union. All brethren in good standing are invited to attend. Hy order or tho lodKo. V . Uo, N. 0. 0. A, TiioMrfjoN,Secy. Clinrcli Directory. Jl. E. Ciiuiicii Dlvino servlco cvery.Sunday at 11 a. m and? p. m. Sunday school at .1 p. in. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 0:30. llr.v. Watmkv, Pastor. PitEKiiVTKiiiAN Ciiuiicii Ilegular church services every Sabbath morning and evening. Prayer meeting each week on Wednesday evening. Sabbath school every Sabbath at 1U n. in. Hov. II. Vkusox Hick. Pastor. St. .loin's Kpipcopai. Ciirncii Service every Sunday at 11 o'clock a. m. Hev. W. H. Powni.u Hector. County Officer. Judgo A. C. Craig Sheriff A. 1. Saunders Clerk r . K. Wilson Treasurer A. F. Henson School Superintendent J. L. Hlndman Surveyor E. Pimonls Coroner E. 11. Lewis COMMIKSIONK1IS. Oeo. Ackles Jno. Stanley Stato Senator I- H. itlnehurt UBPHKHENTATIVKS. F.T.Dick E. E.Taylor City Olllcerw. Mayor D. Noes COUNOII.MKV. S. A.Pursol W. 1). ltoidleman J.S. Elliott J. It. Thomiison .lno. Kennedy A. Levy Hecordcr I. V, Davis Marshal E. E. rates Treasurer I. D- Carroll Strcot Commissioner Ij. Eaton Departure of Train. Hegular cast bound trains lenvu at'JiliOa. in. Westbound trains leave at i:'M p. m. iitoificssioAi. J. K. CHUTES, ATTORNHV AT I.AM'. Collecting and probate practice spcclaltloB Olllco, two doors south of Postollice, Union, Oregon. K. EAKIN, Attorney at Law. anil Notary Public. Office, one door south of J. II. Eaton's storo Union, Oregon. I. N. CROMWELL, M. D., Physician and Surgeon Office, one door south ot J. II. Eaton's storo, Union, Oregon. A. E. SCOTT. M. 1)., physician' ai ;sa:i:.,i:o.'V, Has permanently located at Nortli Powder, where ho will answer all calls. T. II. CRAWFORD, ATTOKNUY AT VaW, Union, - Oregon. D. Y. K. DEKRING, I'hyhieiuii ami Siipkmii, Union, Oregon. Oincc, Main street, next door to Jones llros.' variety stoio. llesldonco, Malu street, second house south ot court house. Ctironlodl8euso9 a specialty. 1). H. REKS, Notary Public -AND- Conveyancer. OFFICE Stnto Land Olllco building, Union, Union County, Orpgon. II. F. BUULEIGH, Attorney tit I.UM , IN-nl 1'f.lati; uud CoIleeliiiKT AkiU. Land Office Uusiiioss a Specialty. Offlco at Alder, Union Co., Oregon. JKSSB IIAKDESTY, J. W. SHKI.TOX SHELTON & HARDEST!, ATrOBKVH AT LAW. Will prnctleo in Union, linker, (Irnnt, Umatilla and Morrow Counties, also in the Supremo Court ol Oregon, the Diidrict, Circuit and Supreme Courts ol the United Htutep. Mining and, Corporation buainwn a spe cialty. Office In Union, Oregon. BILL NYE'S LE1TER. My Dear Son: I tried to write you last week, but didn't get around to it owing to circumstances. I went away on a little business tower for a few days on the cars, and then when I got home the sociablo broke loose in our once happy home. While on my commercial tower down the Omchaw railroad, byin' a new well diggin' machine of which I had heard a good deal pro and con, I had the pleas ure of riding in one of them sleeping , cars that we read m much about. i 1 am going on lifty years old, and J that's the lirst time I ever slumbered at , the rate of forty-live miles per hour, in- i eluding stops. 1 got acquainted with the porter, and he blacked my loots in tho night unbe known to me, w Idle I was engaged in .1, ,.,,!.,.. TIi timet, lmvo llmllHlt IliMt I was your father, and that we rolled hi j luxury at Home an me time, aim mat n , was a common thinjr for us to have our boots blackened lV menials. When I I i i. ,1 , .- t I JCIt me car nils puiici umimiuh ij clothes till the hoi flashes ran up my spinal column, and J told him that he treated mo square, and 1 wrung his hand when ho held it out towards me, and J told him that any time he wanted a good, cold drink of buttermilk to just holler through tho to'ephone. We had tho sociable at our house last week, and when I. got homo your mother set me right to work borryn' chairs and dishes. Slio had solicited some cakes and other things. I don't know whether you are on tho skedjulc bv which these socials arc run or not The idea is a novel ono to me. The sisters in our set, onct in so often, turn their houses wrong side out for tho purpose of raising $4.0 J to apply on tho church debt. When I was a hoy we worshiped with'less frills than they do now. Now it seems that tho debt is a part of tho worship; Well, wo had a good time and used up 150 cookies in a short lime. Pari of these cookies was devoured, and tho balance was trod into our aU-wool car pet. Several of tho young people got to playing Copenhagen in the setting room and stepped on the old cat so as to dis liguro him for life. They also had a disturbance m the front room and knocked oft' some of the plastering. So your mother is feeling rather slim and 1 am not very chipper myself. 1 hope that you are working hard at your books so that you will be an ornament to society. Society is needing some or naments very much. 1 sincerely hope that you will not begin to monkey with rum. I should hate to havo you meet with a felon's doom or lill a drunkard's grave. If anybody has got to lill the drunkard's grave let him do it himself. What has the drunkard ever done for you that he should expect you to till his grave for him? I expect you to do right as near as possible. lvou will not do exactly right all the time, but try to strike a good average. 1 do not expect you to let your studies encroach too much on your polo, but try to unite tho two so that you will not break down under tho strain. I should feel sad and mortified to havo you come homo a physical wreck. 1 think ono physical wreck in a family is enough, and 1 am rapidly get ting whore I can do the entire physical wreck business for our neighborhood. I see by your picture that you have got one of them pleated coats with a belt around it and shof t pants. They mako you look as you did when I used to spank you in years gone by, and I feel tho same old desiro to do it now as I did then. Old and feeble as I am. it seems to mo as though I could spank a boy that wears knickerboeker pants buttoned into a Garabaldy waist and a pleated jacket. If it wasn't for them cute littlo cam el's hair whiskers of yours I would not iMsliovo that you had grown up to bo a largo exponsivo boy, with thoughts. Somo of tho thoughts you express in your letters tiro far beyond your years. Do you think thorn yourself or is there sonic boy in school who thinks all the thoughts for the rest? Some of your thoughts aro so deep that your "mother and I can hardly grapple with them. Ono of them es pecially was so full of foreign stull' that you had got out of a bill of faro that we will havo to wait till you coma home tooforo wo can take it in. 1 can talk a littlo Chippewa, but that is all tho for eign language I am familiar with. W hen I was young wo had to get our foreign languages tho best wo could, fo I studied Cliippcwa, without a master. A Chippowa chief took mo into his camp and kept mo thoro for somo time, while I acquired his language. Ho be came so much attached to mo that I had great difficulty in coming away. I vish you would write th"o United States dialect as much as possible, and not try to pnralizu your parents with imported expressions that come too high for poor people. Remember that you aro tho only boy wo havo got, and wo aro only going through tho motions of living hero for your t-ake. Fonts tho day Ts wearing but and it is now along into tho shank of the. evening. All wo ask, of you is improvo on the old people. You can see where I fooled myself, and you can do better. Read and writo and sifcr and polo and get nollogo, and try not to bo ashamed of your uncultivated par ents. When you get that checkered littlo Bawed-off coat on, that pair of kneo panties and that pockcr dot necktie, and tho sassy littlo Iniyti holler rats" when you jiass by and your heart is bowed down, remember that no matter how foojlhh you may look, vour parents will never sour on you. Youu Fathek. WICKED STUDENTS. Moldy Hccords TUnt Dlsoloso tlio In iquities of Harvard Hoys. Forty years ago, says The lioslon Journal, there disappeared from tho se cret archives of Harvard college ono of those ponderous volumes whioh con tained tho private record of tho doings of tho parietal committee, that largo governing board which in those days had so much to do in shaping the courso of the college, and which even to-day has no slight weight in restraining tho unlawful actions of tho students. It may be surmincd that some mischiev ous, reckless collegian purloined tho volume, but however that may be the college faculty knew not where it went, nor do they know to-day whore it is. By tho permission of tho possessor ex cerpts have been made, giving an idea of the unique and strict system of tho ear ly college days of this century. Wo find old customs prevailing at the university in tho years 18:27-80, as given m this Iwok. For instance, wo find tho parietal committee voting "that Bab cock, senior, be sent to tho president for wearing an illegal brown surtout; also that nolice be given to freshmen that cloaks do not officially cover ille gal garments." But "Babcock, .rmlor" did not commit half so heinous an of fense as "Page, sophomore," for, as wo find recorded : "Sept. 2, 1829, met in 20 Hy., Dr. Popkin in tho chair voted, that Page, sophomore, be directed to discontinuo his .nankin pantaloons." Those classmates of Pago who are alive, lo-dav may, perhaps, remember wheth er the prescribed nether garments wore, "discontinued" or not. Charles Sum ner, afterward the great statesman, while at Harvard, fell under tho ban for a serious misdemeanor. On tho .r)th of September, 182S1, the record shows tho parietal committee to havo voted that Sumner "bo directed to leave off wear ing a dark red cravat." To what, depths of wickedness tho student of those days descended! Tho freaks of to-day are the mildest virtues compared with them. What college man of to-day would expect this ad monition: "Voted, That Rutter and Draper, frcsluiten, bo spoken to by Mr. Curtis for splitting wood" (!) or "Vo ted, That tho secretaries bo ordered to report to the faculty names of six men,' seniors, for walking on tho Sab bath." Another student is admonished for smoking, another for liring a pistol, and still a third "for embellishing his daily conversation with profano lan guage." Again, wo find it recorded in this sa cred book: "Dee. 17, 1828, Voted, That Mr. Brown speak to two dogs to wit, one blaec tlog and one pie-bald dog. for intruding into tho college yard." Record fails to show whether or not t ho plebeian dogs who thus trespassed tho sanctity of tho college precincts re strained from their wicked courso after Mr. Browi did "speak" to them. In the year 1828 there seems to have been a wholesale spirit 6f unrighteousness in tho college in ono respect, for the pari etal committee found it necessary to vote that all the classes "ha officially informed that all persons who toast bread in Collego hall will bo liable to publick admonition." To what base ness had Harvard men fallen that they should tanst bread to such an extent as to require this notice from tho gray haired professors. But' these worthy veterans had studied carefully the needs and tho practices of their pupils. As an example of this wo notice that at a cer tain meeting where tho question of "noting" or of "speaking" to studen'i was discussed ono member, "after sneaking at length on tho various rea sons why they sliotild rather note than speak to him a student, ended with tho following peroration: 'So long as you continue to speak to them, so long will they continuo to transgress and to apply the principles of permutations and combinations, to see how long they may offend without being punished.' " This was philosophy and mathematics wor thy of Pythagoras'. The parietal committ"o did not Jind it always plain sailing, for wo lind their secretary dolefully recording, under dato of Oct. C, 1830, "Would have met at II. 21, but the door was locked against us." Evidently some mischiov ious student had been there ahead of them. But tho dignilied sages made up for their discomlituro at a subsequent meeting, when thoy "mot at Mi'. Me Keati's room, Hy. Is'o. 3. Mr. Brighani in tho chair," by voting "that i barrel of apples be provided for tho parietal committee." How little they then thought that thoir secret misappropria tion of tho college funds to satisfy tho cravings of thoir inordinato appetite for that seductive fruit which tempted our earliest ancestors would in after years bo disclosed as it now is. Their secre tary was faithful in his duty of record ing, and thus wo lind: "&ov. 19, met at Mr, Allen Putnam's room. Meeting called to order, Mr. Putnam in tho chair. Voted to adjourn. Sir George Putnam was, disappointed, having de termined to mako a point on any sub ject, having propared himsolf for tho strong and pathetic by u proper ail mixturo of tho tough and tender loin at dinner." Poor Sir George's disappoint ment thus stands on record, uud tho secretary's touch of humor is not lost in tho dust of years ujon tho shelves of tho college's secret archives. The MiwUisippI houte of reprcjentatlro vpted not to cctJpt any railroad paues, d then, horrified at Ita own virtue, carried a mo tion to reconsider the rote. - The Closing Speech. In tho year 1S72, at a. little village in southeastern Kansas, a saloon keeper by the name of "Joe" Smith was arrest ed for selling liquor without a county license. The arrest. was caused by tho temperance alliance, an organization effected for the purpose of stopping tho sale of intoxicating liquors. Joe was brought to the county seat and tried for the olfense before a justice of the peace: and one of his attorneys, a long, lean, lank, hungry ex-Missourian, clad in jeans, and from a gash in whoso attractive visage (called by courtesy a mouth) there trickled or rather over llowed a vast amount of tobacco juice, and wlue knowledge of law and tho English language wore alike deficient, h:ul the closing speech to the jury. The writer was unfortunately a member of the jurv. While the trial was in pro gress the attorney above referred to was constantly objecting to tho ques tions asked the witnesses, and express ed his objections in the following lan guage: "May it please t lie court, I object to this 'question as regular, irrel evant, importunate, and without probable bearing upon this cause." His objections in every instance were overruled by the court, and when he came to deliver the closing speech to the jury he spoke as follows: "tieiitlepien of the jury: What's tho cause ot ail tins iioorar Mown at i; :' It is caused by this hero d d temper ance reliance'; it's nothing more or less than a condemned abortion of my friend, Joe Smith. (icntlcmcn of the jury, you know that throughout this entire 'trial not ono of my injections have been sustained. 'It has always been an incoherent principle of mine, from my youth up, to take the weaker side of a question, ami to aid and lift up those who were weak and suppressed; and now, gentlemen of the jury, you behold in me the coadju tu tor anil paramour of tho prisoner who stands before you, charged with a crime of which, it is needless for me to say, ho is not guilty. Centlemen of tho jury, if you have a single bowel of compassion in your soul you will clear this man of the foul, en venomed aspirations and clouded para doxes east upon his mental and moral horizon. The evidence brought before you by this hero temperance reliance is of no force, no effect, and proves naught, but shows the malice ami calumny, tho vi tuperotis conglomerations, that man kind may work up and nurse in their breasts against those who are supplant ing them. Gentlemen of tho jury, I pauso for words to express my contemptuous ha tred of tiuwe who havo vented tho gall of their spleens, to try and compass the overthrow of my friend, Joe Smith. Has it been proven ho sold whiskey? Has it been proven he sold beer? No! ! A thousand times No! ! ! ! Give 1113' distressed friend a favorable verdict, and it will go thundering down the dark ages, as an adamantine nioinu ment to justice. Should your judgment he so warped by the false, inalienable and fiduciary testimony that has been forced in your unwilling cars, that you should find him guilty, then may God have mercy upon your sinful souls, and may you never know peace or quietude while my client rests under your most unretributive sentence." He closed his speech as follows: "Gentlemen of the jury; Gaze on my honest friend. Will you doom him to' lio feloniously incarcerated in a prison cell? Gentlemen of the jury, by your looks, I guess not!" Lauton, in reck" 8 Hun. How Ho Worked. Several years ago a little boy lived in Brooklyn who was very fond of music; his mother, a wise woman, decided that ho should have every advantago for tho study of music that was in her power to give him. She worked and saved to pay tho best teacher. Years passed away and tho little boy became a big boy who loved his piano next to his self sacrificing mother. Means were found to send the boy to Europe to study, where ho worked to improve every op portunity. Tho boy returned a young man, and recently ho played for the first time in publio in the city where ho grow up. In tho audience were many peoplo who knew of thy struggles of both tho mother and son, and it was a delight to listen to tho music that was tho result of those years of toil and study. In the audience was tho mother, happy in seeing her dreams and hopes realized. At tho closo of tho concert tho leader presented tho mother with tho baton ho used in leading tho orches tra. It is quite certain that tho niothor of this young man did not have to urge him to practice. This conversation, it is probable, was never heard in that homo: "Paul, come, it is time for you to practice." "No, it wants Hvo minutes of the time." Then, liftccn minutes later: "Paul, go at once to the piano. 1 shall listen to seo that you keep time, and practice all tho time," "1 think it's awfully moan to mako a follow practice all tho whole time boo -hoo 000!" If ho practiced in thiH spirit he would never have stood before the music lov ers of two big cities, conscious of a power and a gift that would enable him to repay to the fullest tho love and sac rifice of his mother, and givo hours of happiness to thousands. It Uket a rapid reader to keep up with the mat of magazine literature every mouth. A Long Time Between Drinks. A great many years ago tho governor of North Carolina received a friendly visit from the governor of South Caro lina. After a real North Carolina din ner of bacon and yams, tho two govern ors lit pipes and sat in the shade of the back veranda with a demijohn of real North Carolina corn whisky, copper dis tilled, within easy reach. "There was nothing stuck up about those govern ors," says a North Carolina state his torian, in tho homely but vigorous lan guage of his section. "There (hey sot and smoked, and sol and smoked, every once and awhile taking a mutual pull at the demijohn with (lie aid of tho gourd, which I hev ucd as a democratic goblet. The conversation h.t ween tho two governors was on the subject of tur pentine and rice, the .daplcs of their re spective states, and the further they got into the subject the lower down they got into the jug, and the lower down they got into the jug the dryer the gov ernor of South Carolina got, who was a square drinker and a warm man, with about a million pores to every square inch of his hide, which enabled him to histo in a likely share of corn juice or other beverage, and keep his carcass at the same time well ventilated, and gen erally always ready for more, while the governor of North' Carolina was a more cautious drinker, but was mighty sure to strike bottom at about the twelfth drink, like as if - nature had measured him by the gourdful. Well, they sot and smoked and anjued, and tho gov ernor of North Carolina was as hospit able as any real southern gentleman could bo, for ho ladled out the whisky in the most liberal manner, being par ticular to givo his distinguished guest threo drinks to his one and gauging his own drinks witli great care, for fear that if ho didn't ho might los tho thread of his argument and t lie demijohn might run dry before the governor of Sleuth Carolina should bo ready to dust out for home, in which easo it 'would look like ho had not properly observed the laws of hospitality, which would havo been a self-inllieted thorn in his side for years to come, and no amount of apology could easo his mind or enable him to feel warranted in showing his counte nance to his fellow men, especially in his homo district, where for generations it had been a main point with every gentleman to keep his visitor well sup plied with creature comforts and to hand him a good gourdful as a stirrup cup when about to make his departure for tho bosom of his family. Singular to relate, the cautiousness manifested by the governor of North Carolina was of no avail, for at one and tho same time the jug went dry, and the governor of North Carolina, much to his subse quent mortification, when ho learned tho fact afterward, dropped off into a quiet sleep, while the governimof South Carolina continued to keep on with his argument, keeping the empty gourd in his hand in closo contigiiousness to tho demijohn, and wondering at the appar ent absent-mindedness of his hitherto attentive host to whom, after a minute and a half of painful silence, ho made uso of but one remark; "Governor, don't you think It's a long time between drinks'!" The remark was overheard by George, body servant of the governor of North Carolina, who, knowing that there was something wrong, took to the woods, where ho remained in seclu sion for throe days; hut tho governor of South Carolina, receiving no reply from the governor of North Carolina, mount ed his horse and rode sadly homeward with an irrepressible feeling at his heart that there was coming to bo a hollow ness in friendship, ami that human na ture was in danger of drifting Into a condition of chaotic mockery." Rich' mond Jlefonncr. BRIGHT EYES OF WOMEN. The bright eyes of women KntrunclnKly xlilne. Like MipplilreH from heitvcu AVItli lustra divine. So full of deep ycurnlnjr And heavenly thought; liiii;lit stars ever linriilntr, lirlglit stars ever nought. Tho comfort ot sailncM,- Our liopo from above, All beaming with gladness And fniliiili) love. The Bourco of coinpas.Hlon, Of fclghg und ot tears; Tlio cup of concession la louir ufter years. Oh. then let us cherish Tho eyes wu adore, Too soon may tliey crlsn On I.cthe'B dark bliorn. 'XI s then nil tlio iilcusuro Of life, will depart, When men loo tlio treaturo They lovo from their heart. J'Mlailt'jihta Xeu A Guy Deceiver. In love feho full, Jlyehy bluebell, With a Btrollliitf bumblo-bee; lie whispered low, "I lovo you so! Sweet, give your heart to me! "I lovo but you, And I'll bo true; O, givo mo your heart, I prayl" She bent her head; 'I will," Bho ald, When lot ho flew away I -Mixnjartt Dcland, Hammering tlio Desk to Pieces. At tho beginning of evory session of Congress a new piuo top has to bo placed on the Spoakor's do3k. Pino la used because tho ivory gavel produces a louder sound upon it than upon somo tougher wood. Oak was once tried but tho occupant of tiie chair compjabiitd that a sharp blow produced a stinging sensation in tho hand, consequently pine has been used ever alum. NEEDLES. The Manufacture of a Very Necessary Article. A contributor to The Auranin Xcws writes: Tho world produced in I880 an average of 60,000,000 needles per week. Bedditch, a town of twenty thousand people, seventeen miles from Birming ham, England, has fourteen needle fac tories, and produces .rjO,000,000 weekly, while Germany has two producing 10, 000,000 per week. The two principal houses in Bedditch are Henry Mal ward it Sons, who produce 10,000,000, and Alfred Shriinpton ovSons, who pro duce 8,000,000, and the other twelve factories produce iW.OOO.OOO weekly. The wire, which is of tlio finest spring steel, is received in packets from the wire-drawers at Shellield, is first tested to lind if the quality is perfect. It is then cut by means of a huge automatic shears and guaged to tho length of two needles; those pieces aro then straight ened by a rolling process; thoy are then heated on large iron plates, and when tho proper heat has been attained they are thrown into a largo basin of oil, which produces tho elastic temper necessary to all first-class niledles. The' are then washed with soap and water and dried in sawdust, and thence go to the pointing-machine, which consists of a large grindstone, with a concave sur face, revolving at a high rate of speed, and a wheel revolving at a low rate of speed at right angles to the stone, and shaped to fit the stone on this wheel is a belt called the saddlo, which holds tlio needles us they rovolvo in passing over tlio stone, thereby getting a uniform taper to the point, they aro then re versed, and the other end pointed in like manner. Thoy then go to tho stamping machine, where tho two eyes aro stamped, grooves put in, and tho wiro is almost cut in two between tho eyes, thoy aro then threaded on two wire's and tho buTi-caused by-tlru stamp filed oil the sides, then broken between tho eyes, which is easily done, as thoy aro already almost cut in two; then whilo thevaro still on tho wires tho hear h aro 'filed and dressed, thoy aro thou held fast whilo tho wires are mado to rovolvo and pass to an fro through them, oarrvimr on it a solution for pol ishing tho inside of tlio eye and remov ing all burr from it. Thoy aro then placed in packages of several thickness of canvas, and ndxed with oil and pow dered stone, all lying loncthwiso; thoy aro rolled up and corded like a roll of pudding, then placed on a stool plat form, whilo another form above is lot down on them, the upper ono moves to and fro rocking tlio packages, and in this way they are scoured bright and all crooked ones broken. Thoy aro thou washed with soap and water, then toss ed in sawdust fill dry, then passed by hand over a bull' wheel by which that exquisite polish is nttaiilud whioh is found on all perfect needles. Tho needles aro put into largo pans, and by a certain way of tossing thorn thoy aro tirown into neat, rows in the side of tho pan, then placed on a table in rows and all turned points one way; this is done by having a cloth 011 the lirst finger mid striking the side of tho pile; tho points stick in tho cloth and aro deftly whip ped over. Thoy are then placed on a strap, and the ends of tho strap turned together makes it a band whereby tho points can all bo turned up, and as tho points are too lino to secunly from a black surface, from whioh a broken point or an imperfect ono can bo soon at a irlaneo and picked out. Then thoy go to tho sticking tahlo, where thoy aro arranged in rows of separata sizes and a woman gathers thorn in two'nty-fivo times faster than could bo imagined and .sticks them through tho cloth, whioh has been stretched on a machine made for tho purpose. An export girl can stick forty thousand needles per day. Tho needles aro papered and wrapped in packages of ono thousand 'and live thousand, and in that way go to all parts of tho world. Manners. Manners aro of more importauco than laws. Upon theso, in a groat measure, tho laws dopciul. Tho law teaches us but hero and there, now and then. Manners are what vex or sootho, or cor rupt or purify, oxalt or debaso, barbar ize or rolino us, by constant, steady, uniforms insensible operation like that of tho air wo breathe in. Thoy givo their whole form and color to our lives. According to thoir quality thoy aid mor als, they supply laws, or thoy totally de stroy them. fcdmuml liurkc. Grown Wise. It was on tho ovo of tho ?5th anni versary of thoir marriage. Said sho: "I do hope if anybody is going to givo ua anything it will bo in raonoy. When wo wero married wo wero ignorant, and wo didn't find out immediately that seven sugar spoons and thirteen ico pitchors wero not essential to marital bliss; but I think wo havo been married long enough by this time to know how to pick out our own presents." Foughkeepste Eagle. Professional Courtesy. Two Toxus doctors met ontho street. "I feel sorry for yo4. Yo.'ef ht sot to bo out in tlds kind ol weattier.' Yw.; aro a siek man," said )r. Blister. "I am not feeling1 vary woll," replied Dr. Soonovor, "What doctor t tranUitflW?' "Youlim Hf li able to Iki arrested for' attempted sul-