Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon scout. (Union, Union County, Or.) 188?-1918 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1890)
THE OREGON SCOUT. JONES CHANCEY, Publishers UNION OREGON. A TOKEN OF ESTEEM. ItTonclies tlie Colonel' ,Hert-StrlnK, Hu For n Few Moment Only. As tho train stopped at a station about thirty miles west of Indianapolis wo no tlccd an unusually largo crowd on tho depot platform and it was evident that speech-making had been indulged in and that somebody of nolo was taking his departure. Wo soon discovered that this person was a certain Colonel Blank, who camo into tho car with a packago under his arm, and whoso cheeks were wot with farewell tears. Ho called "Good-bye!" a scoro of times from tho window, and as tho train finally rolled on ho blow his nose, wiped his eyes and turned to us: "Gentlemen, it touches tho heart strings to part with old friends and neighbors." "You aro saying farowoll, then?" "Yes. I am going up to Indianapolis to reside. Tho field hero is too limited, as I havo discovered after ten years' res ldonco." "Well, it is certainly pleasant to part from friends tho way you have." "Indeed, it is! Over two hundred of tho best peoplo in town camo down to boo mo oil, and tho president of tho bank made a beautiful speech, wished mo every success, and nil that, and then handed mo this as a token of respect und esteem." "Ah I Mado you a present, oh? Evi dently something nlco." "Bound to bo," replied tho Colonel, as ho took a package from tho seat. "Perhaps you don't want to roveal tho contents hero?" "Oh, I havo no objections. We'll undo it and sco what tlioy have given mo." Ho carefully untied tho string and re moved tho several papers which wrapped tho precious memento, and lol there was exposed to our gaze a spongo! Ye8,sir; a great big bath sponge, which never cost less than a dollarl Wo pressed for ward to sco it, and tho Colonel turned red and whito by turns, bit Ills lips, and bobbed about on tho seat, and as wo held our breaths ho burst out with: "Gontlemon, heart-strings bo blowcdl Tho onory, thieving, loafing, lyingcrowd havo gono and heaped a deadly insult upon mo, and tho next two hundred and fifty years of my life shall bo dovoted to wading in human blood clear up to the top vest button!" N. Y. Sun. THE TOOTHSOME OYSTER. lie Ih (Inn f America' Oldest Settlers ami Him Always lleen Apprecluteil. Tho oyster is one of America's old set tlers. His family antedates that of our most aristocratic Puritan stock. That oysters were eaten during tho revolution is proved by tho story that is recorded of Benjamin Franklin. When he was traveling in cold weather and saw no vacant place at tho tavern Jlro where ho could warm himself, tho genius whoso stntuo adorns Printing House square cried out the order, "Half a peek of oysters in tho shell for my horse!" Upon this all tho fire-place crowd rushed out to seo a horse eat oysters. Very soon tho hostler returned and ssild: "Why, sir, your horso won't eat tho oysters." "Won't he?" said Franklin, now com fortably seated by tho fireside. "Well, then, bring them in and cook them and I'll eat them myself." Tho archives of tho States bordering on tho Atlantic on wlioso coasts oysters abound aro full of papers and document i ubout legislative and ovon military strife in regard to oysters. "Indeed," say.s Mr. Parkinson, tho then editor of the Caterer, "it is not going too fur to say that oysters havo kept the peoplo of the several colonies and States in a perpetual stow over since they were first settled." Tho ancient Romans ato oysters raw with a seasoning of vinegar, garum, oil, wine, honey mixed with eggs, and pop per and allsander. Thoy also minced them with mussels and sea hedgehogs, stowed them with plno almonds and various condiments and ato them scald ing hot A celebrated Roman epicure Lullt u fish pond, where ho kept oysters and fed them on a paste of cooked wine and honoy. Tho Greeks understood tho sorvlng of raw oysters bettor than modern Ameri cans. They were opened by a slave at tho very table in view of all tho guests. Since the fourteenth amendment this method is not practicable hero, hut it Bcrved tho purpose of allowing them to ho eaton, as noarly ns possible, alive, whlc,h in spite of Thackeray, who in jest scared an oyster oator half to death by exclaiming, "Why, man, you'vo swal lowed It alive!" Is a gastronomlcal con sideration of tho first importance. N. Y. Herald. Virtue of Heil Umlerweur. The popular belief in tho sanitary clllcacy of red underwear la a clinging superstition, nothing more. Bed was in ancient times considered a potent chnriu itgulust the evil eye. At one time in tho sixteenth century, when tho evil oyo was esteemed to bo especially tri umphant in England, there was a boom in red tupo which it has never slnco ex perienced. Many peoplo to this day believe that a rod string worn about tho nook is a sure preventive of asthma, measles and mumps. Tho relics of this old faith are to-day best preserved In tho great confidence which obtains in tho medical virtues of red fiannel, and n not so widespread belief that the milk of n red cow is better than that of any other cow. As to red fiannel it has tho single merit over other colors, that the dyeing material used destroys all vestige of uuliuul life in the wool, and that red flannel will not shrink as white tluunel does. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. While passing a farm in Virginia tho figure of an elderly man whose at tiro was noticeable for the utter absence of any decorative olTorts, was to be seen loaning against tho fence. "How aro you getting along down here?" "Jos' gettln' 'long; no ino'h." "Good farm?" "I'Vh." "Can you ralso any thing on it?" "Consld'blo. I Jos' raised seventy llvodollahscmlt; fohth mortgage, too," Wnsblmrton Post, THE PACIFIC COAST. Indian Medicine Woman Dragged to Death. E. J. Baldwin Loses Some Valuable Brood Mares on His Santa Anita Ranch. Thorwald Juisett's child was drowned in a well at Tncoina. A liiuli-liccnso nFsociation has been formed in Sun Francisco. Colorado capitalists are investing heav ily in Salt Lake property. Tho State of California was libeled at San Francisco for townge service. Miss Jennie Clymer was struck and killed by a train in Oakland, Cal. The Challenge was a total loss on Gueines island. No lives were lost. Nine corps if Union Pacific surveyors tire working in Southwestern Nevada. Lewis Conwav, a Spokane convict, es caped from tho Wnlhi Walla penitentiary. New York people have purchased a site for u sugar refine y at Vancouver, B. 0. John Meyers of Berkeley, Cal., was drowned in tho Mokelumno river near Hope. A Bock Creek Indian medicine woman was dragged to death by braves of her tribe. W. A. Burleigh has been appointed postmaster at Birdsview, Skagit county, Wash. Mail service has been established twice a week between Long Creek and Susan ville, Or. General Ticket Agent T. II. Goodman of tho Southern Pacific is ill in San Francisco. John T. Glover, a San Francisco" lei tor carrier, has been arrested for embezzling $3.50 from a letter. Louis Kuskell, a Ran Francisco hat merchant, dropped dead on tho street from sudden hemorrhage. The injunction suit at Seattle against the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern has been thrown out of the court. Considerable whisky is being taken from Sun Fruncisco to Honolulu and thence by whalers smuggled into Alaska. Joe Dully has been limited, charged with last fall's Forest Hill stage robbery. He denies that ho had anything to do wtih it. Los A nicies electors have decided by a two-thirds vote to issuo bonds for$374, ()() for the construction of an interior system of sewers. The libel suit of W. A. Kay, recently a banker at Pasadena, against tne Los Angeles Times was decided in favor of tho Times. Tho United States steamship Mouon gnhela, untler sailing orders for New York, still' lies in Sun Franc sco harbor on account of stormy weather. There is every belief that the lobsters planted in Puget sound about fourteen ironths ago are doing well. Many have been seen on their feeding grounds. The steamer Belgic. which reached San Francisco from China lust week, brought 410 eases of prepared opium, on which tho consignees paid duty of $ 15, 100. 0. C. White of Olynipia, the last Sec retary of Washington Territory, has been unpointed to the ofi'ice of Printer for tho State of Washington for the term ending July, 1803. From 1,000 to 1 ,500 coast seamen, with torchl'ghts, music and transparencies, paraded the streets of San Francisco in commemoration of tho fifth anniversary of tho Coast Seamen's Union. Tho people living along the line of the road between Seattle and Tacoiim com plain that tho coal rates nre too high, mid that they should bo reduced both in justice and in response to good business IHilicy. One hundred and threo horses, valued at $200,000, were shipped from Senator Stanford's stithies at Palo Alto. Cal , by special train to Now York. Thirty-two nre colts from the famous Btallion Elec tioneer. Tho towns on Bellinghnm bay nre pros pecting tho advisability of uniting undor one charter. The hitch will bo over tho inline. Each town wants its name used, ami tho older town wants tho others to join undtr its charter. In Walla Walla county so far no injury has been done to grain, though consider able injury has been indicted on the fruit and very great injury on range cattle and horses. There has also been more than the average lots of sheep. Bepresentntives of Fresno, Visaliu, Bukorslleld and Merced have formed tho California Baseball League. Mr. Mod get t, ii prominent banker at Bukerslield, is President of the li ague. The Fresno club will be organized immediately and grounds secured. The Douglass County Board ol Trade has taken in hand the matter of securing seed grain to replace that which bus nec essarily been fed out in consctiuence of the unusuullv hard winter. Arrange ments have been made whereby J,5tX) wortliof seed grain will be deliverol in Watervillo in time for spring seeding, and farmers will be enabled to get seed at reasonable prices on secured notes payable utter harvest. A petition is being circulated asking the 1 ostofilce Pepar tmetit to establish a mail route from Yiiiiiina City to Ahou lt.iy and to establish a iKistolllco at Heaver Creek. The route runs four or five miles east of the present route from New ort to Alsca. To have it established would bo a great convenience to Yaiuiiia City and the people on Uppvr Heaver creek. The Hoard of Tnulo has indorsed it by a memorial. During tho recent cold rains a lot of valuable brood mares belonging to E. J. Baldwin, which had U'en turned to as turn on his Santa Anita (Cal.) ranch, took cold, and eight of them have bctn iirostratod with congestion of tho lungs. Two racers, Fallen lxaf and another costly mare, died. Maggie Emerson, tho dam of Mollie McCarthy, will probably not survive. She is valued far in the thousands. The other mares aro im proving. The loss to Baldwin through (his mishap will reach, it is said, $ 150,-000. EASTERN ITEMS. The State Treasurer of Missouri a Defaulter. Miscellaneous News From Ail Parts of the East Condensed Into Paragraphs Omaha linemen have st uck. Tho Grant Monument Association now has $141,503 GO. Kansas farmers aro petitioning for a reduction in corn rutes. The public debt reduction for Feb ruary was $0,l;l),480.(10. A cable-car laborer at Denver had his leg groand on" by the cab!e. The railway earnings for January show a gross increase of $4,000,000. The Kingston (Out ) City Council has voted to tax all chun.li property. David Dudley Field has made a speech declaring for compulsory voting. In Brunswick. Ga., the law confines the sale of liquor to three streets. A new town called Stanley will be founded on the Sioux reservation. An Illinois farmers' union has declared that lump-jaw cattle aro good to cut. The Cherokee strip is being invaded by hundreds of Oklahoma boomers. Virginia tux assessments in the future aro to show tho race of the taxpayer. A mysterious and fatal cattle disease has broken out in AVayno county, Intl. The brewery owners of New Orleans talk of consolidating all tho companies. The defalcations of the Slate Treasurer of Missouri are now figured at $2i,000. A number of Sparks' rulings adverse to settlers have recently been reversed. Chicago's street railway stock is boom ing since the vote on the World's Fair. Tho land on which the Auditorium at Chicago stands has been sold for $470, 000. George H. Pendleton's funeral at Cin cinati was attended by many distinguish ed men. German colonists arriving in Nuevo Meon, Mexico, to work in tho cotton fields. The Canadian Pacific is encountering heavy snowdrifts in Maine, which delay travel. The Knighls of Labor of New York want the legal rate of interest fixed at 6 per cent. It is estimated that 1 10.000,000 Euro pean eggs were eaten in the United States last year. Phono'-'rnph closets are very common now in tho ollkes of the New York busi nets men. Howell Osborn is said to have squan dered $20,000 a year on Fay Templeton, tho aclresi). Judge Tuthill of Chicago has decided that it is not libelous to call a ierson an Anarchist. Jay Gould is reported to have ac quired nearly all tho. coal fields in tho Southwest. It is proposed to have daily mail and passenger 6tf-amers between NewYoik .Hid Liverpool. Considerable excitement prevails at Tillin, O., by an abandoned well legin ning to flow oil. In 1888 Illinois farmers made $10,000, 000 on their corn crops; last year they lost that amount. Tho Atchison railroad gross earnings approximated for February show an in crease of $420,000. Tho Legislature of Mississippi has changed the name of Bolivar county to Jell' Davis county. A bill has been introduced in Congress for the establishment of a life-saving station at llueneme, Cal. The Women's Suffrage Convention has chosen North Dakota as tho immediate battle ground for the cause. There is a rumor that the Chicago vards aro about to be sold to an English syndicate for $:!0,000,000. The law prohibiting tho use of stoves or furnaces in pas enger cars goes into elfeet May 1 in Maryland. The Kansas State Board of Agriculture reports that the jiopulation of that State has declined .tl,ti:)8 tho past year. Minister Robert Lincoln authorizes a denial of therepirt that ho intends to resign in cunseqit nee of tho death of his son. Tho Chester (Pa.) School Board has adopted and will foou introduce the school savings bank sybteni into the pub lic schools. In many parts of Maine lumbermen have had an exceptionally good winter, with just snow enough for sledding and no big drifts. A New York court has enjoined tho production bv Mark Twain of tho play " Ptiuco and l'auper " on petition of Ed ward II. llout-e. F. W. Smith, the defaulting Laud lice Receiver at Tucson, A. T., has iipped, leaving his bondsmen in tho rch. Four Indictments aro awaiting otli skippe mien. him Cavalry overtook live renegade Anacho murderers thirty miles north of GIoIk, A. T., after a" 300-mlle chase. Threo were taken alive and two killed in the capture. C. V. Henkel, cashier and tookkeepor of tho Globe Light Company of Chicago, has disappeared with Mwcen 2,000 ami $.1,000 of tho company's funds. Ho left his young w ife and two children in des titute circntubtanccs. Billy Myer, the famous light-weight pugilist, lias signed articles of agreement for a tight to a finish with Andy Hower May 7, More the Athletic Club of New Orleans, for a purse of $11,000 with four ounce gloves, Queonslmry rules. He lias arranged to tight with Jack HopjHjr of New York at Fort Worth. Tox., May 1 to n finish, two-ounce gloves, for a purse ot $1,000: eo ho will havo two lights in one week. FOREIGN NEWS. Silver Ore Discovered at Nigoll, Russia. An Electric Plant Found In India German Cavalry to be Armed With Lances. Students are rioting in Prague. Ex-Sultan MuradV.of Turkey is dead. Bismarck ia preparing an anti-strike bill. Franco will put a duty on corn and flour. The American squadron of evolution is at Naples. A free port is to be established near Copenhagen. The French Exhibition is to bo opened j in London May 3. I An ophthalmic epidemic is reported ' from Pressburg, Austria. . Out of 300 suicides in Vienna in 1889 t ninety-two were women. i The French propose to deal rigorously i with tho King of Dahomey. The French language is to bo used at j the Berlin labor conference. 1 Two thousand Liverpool grain porters have struck for higher wages. j Aukape has been issued increasing the war footing of the Kouban Cossacks. Von Moltke was thrown from a car riage in Berlin and badly shaken up. Tho Bank of England has reduced the rate of discount from 4j to 4 per cent, j Russia is trying to effect an alliance between Servia, Montenegro and Greece. Influenza is raging with great violence throughout the State of Hidalgo, Mexico Silver ore in quantities has been dis covered at Nagoll, near Ekaterinoslay, Russia. Emperor Francis Joseph has offered Doin Pedro Ilagendorf castle as a sum mer residence. The five elevators of the Eiffel tower made a profU of $1,2J0,000 during the Paris Exposition. Tho infant victims of tho Warsaw (Warsaw) baby-farming horror are now numbered by the hundreds. The popo will appoint a Metropolitan of Tokio and four Suffragan B.shops, the Japanese government consenting. French detectives are scouring Mexico for Evraud. who with Gahriello Bompard assassinated Gouire a Parisian bailifl. Tim nnli mips of London forbid an officer to arrest a drunken person unless the latter is trying to do some one an injury. An English railw ay company has set apart a special fund from which to re-1 ward acts of bravery on tho part of its employes. j Phelps, American Minister at Berlin, J gave a dinner one day last week to Eis-1 smdeoker, formerly German Minister at Washington. In an encounter in Ehisona between Turks and a band of brigands over i twenty of the former were killed and six of the latter. j Hi.wv rains have movailed in the province of Murcia, Spain. The rivers have overflowed their banks and done much damage. The colliery owners of Great Britain have determined to form a federation to protect their interests against combina tion of miners. Influenza is raging in Teheran, Persia, causing seventy deaths daily. Several members of tho Shah's household aro among tho sufferers. It has been decided by tho prosecutors that in the coining trial of Moussa Key ho will not be proceeded against on the j charge of rapo ami pillage. Tho House of Commons has author ized tho expenditure of $20,000,000 iu improving and extendini, tho military barracks throughout the country. Loudon city scavengers removed dur ing the year from the city streets 20,000 vanloads of slops and sweepings and 3S, 3S7 vanloads of diiBt and trade refuse. An tlectric plant (vegetable plant) is said to have been dis"overed in India, which has the power to affect tho nng netic needle at a distance of twenty feet. At tho Kompton Park (England) March . . .t ........In., 1, ,..ll.i 1,n,illfiii-t j UlCCIlllU lllO CllllllllliUll lllltmu I two miles over eight Hurdles, was won ' bv Theodolite, Papyrus second, Castili.n 1 , iiuru. At Prague, Bohemia, a demonstration of students was made at the grave of a Young Czech. Tho students were dis persed by tho police and a number ar- rested. j Tho lances with which tho German ' cavalry aro to bo armed urn to have shafts of hollow steel and to carry small tluga in the Prussian colors nailed near the head. Twelve thousand men and ninety-six "steam navvies," which aro supposed to do the work of several thousand work men, are now employed on the .Manches ter ship canal. Labouchero in the House of Commons said he would not believe the statements I of either Salisbury er Attorney-General Webster, and tho flouso suspended him tiy a vote oi in o no. Dotoctivo Moser. who was employed bv tho Ixmdon Times to procure evl- , . .i... ii ii:..... .l....l..u ti... lieiue llgaiusi wio i urm-nin.-o, ni-iiiro niu I statement mado by Harrington as to j Moser's operations iu America. I In Vienna tho incandescent lamp has ! been much used in medical experiments on horses for diseases of the nostril, fltere is an ex client cooling arr.umetnent which ! allow-B cold water to circulate around the lamp. Booavuvtt, Brazilian Minister of tor eign A (fairs, has returned from his mis- sion to Montevideo and Buenos Ayres. An official decree has been issued estab-1 lishing three hanks in tho northern provinces of Brazil. PORTLAND MARKET. A contiuanco of wintry weather, until three days ago, has had a quieting influ ence upon the distributive movement of trade in this city and vicinity, but reports from interior cities indicate a moderate improvement in the demand for staple merchandise, and while trade is not active for the season, it is of sufficient volume to afford encouragement that further im provement may be expected. AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. t-. tii SXMroa Urnadcast Seeders DJ(ffHU Binding Twine lOperctdls 18c i,i.ji..2 wi 12lc Grain Drills 110 00 Gang Plow lL0llo Osborne's Mowers " lteapers 20 pet dis io 1120 Combined Mowers and Reapers... 20 t? ct dis " Droppers " Steel-frame self-binding Harvesters, 2U V ct dis 1B8 130 180 Riilroad Barrows, iron wh.els, dozen 49oa Railroad Barrows, wood wheels, fc dozen Road Plow 30.Jb Solid Steel Scrapers ?!mi Steel Disk Harrows V-l Spring Wagons l1." Sulky Plows i-l Walking Plows ,S Wagons, all makes llUfelCO HAGS. Burlaps, 40 In ? Burlap, 45 in Burlaps, 00 in I'i Gunnies, 28x40 Potato Hags, net cash OkS"! Wool. Jib. " 4 Wool. :n tt. Wheat Sacks, spot, net cash Wheat Sacks, extra, second-hand. 3 COFFEES. Green , Guatemala, ? lb 2? &m Java, It go 27 Mocha, lb lb -8 n So. 1 Costa Rica.'jMb 22 &2 Bio V lb 2U Salvador, V lb 21iz22i Boasted, In baps ,, Arbuckle's Ariose, tT 2fipg2fii Closset & D.'s Columbia 1 lb prs .2:l(20 Costa Bica 23 28 Guatemala 2oJto28 Boasted Java 30 (532 Roai ted Mocha 35 37 VKQETAI1LES (FRESH). ( Cabbage, V lb 2 Carrots, 1? sk 1 2o Carrots, young, I? doz l- Celery, V doz 00?1 00 Lettuce, t? doz 12J Ontniw. W 100 lb' 3 003 23 Potatoes, C 100 lbs 1 751 DO Potatoes, sweets, lb.... 24 Radishes, p uoz Spinach Turnips, per sk. 12J i'25 POULTRY. Chickens, large young. $ dox. 5 00 5 50 Chickens, orouers Chickens, old IIurIch. V doz OQ'dt 5 30 00 8 50 Geese. vouiiK. 1? doz 10 0011 00 Turkeys, young, t? lb 15 Grouse and Pheasants 3 00 FRESH FRUITS. Apples 1 50(22 00 Bananas, i? bunch 3 504 '0 Lemons, California, P box 3 754 00 Lemons, Sicily, box, new 5 25 Limes, tf cwt 1 50 Oranges, Riversides 3 00 Oranges, Seedless 4 59(g4 75 GRAIN. Barley, whole, V ctl Corn, 100 tts Osts, good, old, V bushel. Oats, new, " Bye, jf 100 lbs, nominal... Wheat, Valley, tr H O lbs. Wheat, Eastern Oiegon. . 80 00 1 50 40'a"42j 1 220l 25 1 17(31 20 1 1211 15 DAIRY PIIOUUCE. Butter Oregon fancy creamery- , Choice dairy Common Pickled, California Eastern fancy creamery California choice.... 25 20 8O10 1820 1820 12j 10 15J0 11 10 15 Cheese Now California Oregon skims and old... Swiss Cheese, domestic. Young America, Or Eggs- Oregon, V doz Eastern, tfdoz fi.ouh. Portland patent roller, b bbl. 3 75 3 75 3 05 3 fli 3 50 3 73 2 50 3 75 3 25 4 50 haiem patent roller Dayton patent roller t'ascadia pttent roller... Country brands McMinnville SupHrfine White Lily Grah'im Uye flour SEEDS. Gra-s Seeds Timothy Orchard Grass Bed Top Blue Grass English Rye Grass Italian Kjc Grass Australian Rye Grass.... Mesquite Millet Hungarian Millet Mixed Lawn Grass 0 0i 11 12 7 ra o 12 (314 m o 0411 74 o 7 (10 5 0 5 (a) (3 1215 10illi 10 ft 18 15 17 0J10i 43) 5 4i& 5 5 I 5J 3 i Clover Seeds Red Clover White Clover Alsyko Clover Alfalfa Miscellaneous Canary Flax Hemp Rape, California FEED. Bran, V ton... Hay, f ton, baled Ground Barley, t' ton.... Mill Chop, tfton Oil Cake Meal, f ton.... Shorts, f ton 17 0018 03 15 00 10 00 22 5024 00 18 0020 (O 30 ax32 50 20 00fi21 00 LUMDER ItOUCill AND DRESSED. Rough Per M, 10 00 Edged 12 00 T. & G. sheatMng 13 00 No. 2 flooring 18 00 No. 2 celling 18 00 No. 2 rustic 18 00 Clear rough 20 00 Clear P. IS 22 60 No. 1 flooring 22 f0 No, 1 celling 22 50 No. 1 rustic 50 Stepping sa 00 SALT. Coarse -Fine 200-lb bags, Vton 17 00 100-lb barfs. ton 17 00 Ground Rock, 60-lb bags, t? ton 12 50 WOOL. Eastern Oregon According to shrinkage 1011 Valley Snnug clip lOftlS uinpqua 10 20 Uiupqua, lambs and fall ..10&14 FULFILL YOUR PROMISES. The Value of Good Reputation to Yonn IJuslnrsn Men. Thero is no losson tho young business man needs to learn more thoroughly than tho valuo of good reputation and good credit These can not bo won and kept by falso pretenses of any kind, but . must bo earned by a strict observance of contracts, agreements and promises. Tho man whoso word is "as good as his bond" is tho man who has Inspired con fidenco in himself by always doing that which ho has promised to do. I"W i nicn no n ruin, cautious about entering into obligations, chary about making promises that he may not be able to ful fill. If too prodigal in tho latter re spect one can not hope to keep faith at all times. A man who is or intends to bo honest sometimes loses credit and reputation simply becauso ho is too hopeful. Counting with too great confi-y dence on uncertainties, he makes prom ises that he can not fulfill becauso of the failure of the event on which they were predicted. Ho voluntarily fixes the date for the payment of a debt, and finds too late something hasgono wrong, so that he can not meet his obligation. Such an accident may happen to any man. Upon the way in which ho meets tho unexpected troublo depends how hl reputation shall stand afterwards. If he can fulfill his promise at any per- , sonal sacrifice ho should do so; failing-' that, he should endeavor to keep his word by borrowing elsewhere, thus gaining time for tho final discharge of his obligation. But if ho can not do ei ther ho should go as soon as possible to his creditor and secure an extension oy frankly telling him the state of affairs, thus renewing instead of nrcaK- ing his promise. Tho ono essen- tial thing to do is to keep good faith, or come as near to it as possible. Tho worst possiblo course is to lot timo run nil nn til his creditor beirins to press him on an obligation long overdue. It is too 1 ate then for expl anations or renew als. His credit is gone, his reputation is gone. His after promises are mistrusted, though they may bo grudgingly accept ed. He may for years after thus shat tering faidi in himself pay promptly and keep his word, but thero will remain the lingering feeling of distrust, born of ono failure to keep faith or to explain in . advance the reasons why it could not bo kept. An engagement of any kind should bo held sacred, and thus good reputation, which is of slow growth, may bo gradually built up, for ho who keeps his word at all times becomes re spected and is trusted. Tho young man can not learn too early in life his respon sibility to himself and to others. Hois to make his reputation by what ho says and does, and at the outset should havo a high regard for truth, .which carries with it honesty, and insures a prompt and completo fulfillment of all engage ments. Be should not allow a careless habit in money matters to grow upon him, hut should pay all his bills prompt ly. There is an implied promise to pay at the end of tho month or when tho bill may bo presented, even though thero has been no engagement mado to do so in so many words, and it is a good practice to keep these implied, as well as all other promises, with scrupulous caro. f Such a course will in timo establish a. reputation whose value can not be meas ured by money, besides developing use ful habits and keeping ono free from op pressive and grinding debts. Baltimore Sun. FOOLISH SUPERSTITIONS. A Little Iiist-ct That Huh Caused Many w Stout Heart tn Tremble. Mankind havo in all ages been prono- to tho most lamentable superstitions. -Tho enlightened nations of antiquity wero no moro exempted from them than the most ignorant. Tho .lews, as wo aro repeatedly in formed "in Scripture, could with diffi culty bo restrained from idolatrous and superstitious practices and confined to tho worship and servico of tho only truo God. This remarkable tendency of tho He brew nation was in all likolihood caused by their sojourn for the space of four , hundred years among tho Egyptians, whoso wholo system of religion was a. mass of idolatrous observance. They had a number of ideal gods to whom they erected temples of prodigious sizo and architectural splendor; thoy also' offered worship to various animals, as tho ox or bull (honco tho golden calf of the Hebrews), to which th'ey gave tho name of Apis; the dog, tho wolf, tho hawk, tho ibis or stork, tho cat and other creatures; they likewise paid adoration to tho Nile, personifying it in tho crocodile, to which temples woro erected, and set apart for Its service. The Egyptians, notwithstanding their learning, also believed in dreams, lucky and unlucky days, omens, charms and magic. In a word, they wero grossly superstitious, and seem to havo had but a feeble conception, if any, of the laws which regulate tho ordinary phenomena of nature. Thero is a fiood of sclentlflo light abroad in the world, but thero are, nev- . ertheless, many dark places whero su- perstition broods. Thousands and tens of thousands of people believo that tho noiso which a small beetle makes in boring its way into old furniture and the timbers of old houses, is premoni tory of death. The "death-watch," ono of the most Insignificant of insects, has caused many a stout heart to tremble at tho sound made by the attrition between its neck and body in tho act of tunneling, it is a sly creature, and tho fact that It does Its "tk'klng" chiolly in tho night, gives it a mysterious interest for tho ignorant. I f you capture a death-watch it invariably "plays 'possum" feigning insensibility so pertinaciously that it Is said tho ap plication of tiro will notlnduco tho llttlo hypocrite to betray tho slightest indica tion of vitality. It has a bad habit of destroying wood-work, and that wo be lieve is the only evil that can bo said of tho littlo creaturo. It Is not an uncom mon thing, in old housos, to hearthreo or four of tho genus at work at once tholr labors having about as much to do with tho fa to of tho Inmates as with iho revolution of tho globe upon its' axis. X. Y. Ledger. Socrotary Proctor was an enthusi astic coon-Uunter in his boyhood dav3.