I 1 KlKKPATKtCK : BL'OUEtt Publisher IERMS OP" SUBSCRIFIION. Cm Yew..... ti 00 nix aiiM!-ns ... ............ 1 Tim Months. 65 TERMS OF ADVERTISING, f Lr.aAl ) On square, first Insertion ..$100 Ksch ajttltionsl insertion 1 60 t LOTALl Local Notices, r- r lliw.'. 15 cents tteular aavertuwnwits inserted upon liters,! terms. LEBANON 11 " ' "" I.. i - -. .- ' . 1 1 - . VUL. 11. LEBANON, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1888. NO. SOCIETT NOTICES. or LEBANrtX LODGE. KO. 44. A. T. A. M : Meets at their new hall tu Masonic Block, on Saturday cwuiujg, vb or ueiure wre lull moou. J WASSOX, W. M. LKBAJJON LODGK. NO. 47. I. O. O. F.: Meets 8- unl.-ty evening of eah wrvk, at Odd rellow's Halt Mto street; suiting brethren cordially invited to ihk pew ork Assembly has dered an investigation into the lobby and its, methods attend. oiu ior tne eleventh census calls for an appropriation of $6,000, 000. HONOR LOPOR SO. SS. A. 0.n. W. T.ehnnnn oretpai: Meets every first and third Thursday even ing in u muatn. c. n. kosui. M. w. DR. A. H. PETERSON SURC .CAL DENTIST. Filling and Extracting Teeth a Specialty. LEBANON. OREGON. Office in W. C Peterson's jewelry store. tar An work warranted. Charges reawnabl e C. H. HARMON, BARBER & HAIRDRESSER, LK BASON. OREQOX. Thk Hennepin Canal steal has been again shelved by a committee of the House. roiR thousand Irish emigrants sailed from Queenstown for the United States in one day last week. J he Postorhce Appropriation Bill propo.-es to devote $60,133,340 to the support of the Post-office Department THKftew York Senate has passed a bill to limit the number of liquor li censes to one to each 300 of popula tion. Shasing, Hair Cutting, and Shampooing In the latest and BEST STYLES. 2V Patronage respectfully solicited. A city ticket composed of women for the Council and a woman for Mayor has been elected at Oskaloosa, Kans. Thk redaction of the public debt during March amounted to f 21.5SG, 559 68. Total cash in the treasury, $586,454,002 66. Gt. Charles Hotel. Thk yel U8ed by the presding of- been in use for over fifty ye.irs. It is made out of an elephant's tooth and has no handle, nor it never had one. LEBANON. Oregon. IT. W. Corner Main and Sherman Streets, two Blocks , ust a a K. Uepot. H. E. PARRISH, Proprietor. Thb New York Democratic State Convention for the election f dele gates to the National Convention will be held in this citv on Tuesday. May 15th. TELEGRAPHIC. Ae Epitome of the Principal Efenli Attracting Pablie Interest Now Tables Supplied with the Best the Market Affords. Sample Rooms and the Best Accommodations tor Onunercul men. GENERAL STAGE OFFICE. A Bill has been introduced in the United States Senate to remove the prohibition against the appointment of ex-Confederates to positions in the regul.tr army. I. F. CONN, Thb four best advertised men America to-day, and without the penditure of a cent on their part, m ex- are Contractor, Carpenter Robert O. Ingersoll, Chauncey M. and Builder. Depew, Father McGlynn Conkling. and Roecoe Plaae and Speeineationa Famished ess Hhort A o tire. And Satisfaction Guaranteed. Somk experiments havtt " v 4., . . . ! t . T'I - - 1 On reco-,"55 tut: umuuu jii-cirs- aan), in which a number of eggs were hatched out in a magnetic held, with the result that the chkkens were all more or less deformed blind, deaf or lame. arpRlCES VERY REASONABLE." I Albany and Lebiaaa, Or. C.T. COTTON, DEALER IX Mich of the so-called ivory now in use is simply potato. A good, sound potato washed in diluted sulphuiic acid, then boiled in the same solution, aud then slowly dried, is already to be turned into buttons, poker chips and innumerable other things that ivory was used for once upon a time. The saloon haa evidently lost its rrir in Philadelphia. . Thft itlt'fi-ps C.f GrouBries and Provisions. Lnse court, acting under the TOBACCO St CIGARS, SMOKERS' ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONERY leeaware and Glassware, Lamp and Urap Flxtares. Mala Htn Lebaaoa, Orfj. Itieat Market arRL KELLEXBEBeiER, Proprietors. new law, are maniiesung tne most contemptuous indifference to the in terests of the liquor-selling tribe, and seem actually to relish the opportunity to smite the business hip and thigh. While England is contemplating a monument to Raleigh, France has de cided on one for Parmentier. It would be hard to suggest the names of two men who had less in common; but each in his own country will be recog nized as the introducer of the potato. Parmentier's is a clearer - title than Raleigh's. A Bill introduced by Senator Mor rill, mow before both Houses of Con gress, confers upon the director of the mint, with the approval of the secre tary of the treasury, the power "to cause new designs or models of au thorized emblems or devices to be pre I pared and adopted" for use in the coinage of the country. This is an admirable measure. "Freh. tnd Salted Beef and Pork, MUTTON, PORK, SAUSACE, BOLOGNA and HAM. "Bacon anil Larfl. always on Haul. At Wath, in Yorkshire, six dozen hot cross bnns are thrown from the top of the tower of the parish church at noon on Good Friday, in accordance with the will of Thomas Tuke. At one time forty dozen used to be thrown but the crowd used to create a riot in the church yard, and it ww at length decreed to distribute thirty-four dozen more sensibly at the church door. Main Street, Lebanon, Or. BROS BLACKSMITHS, Lebanon, Oregon. . Horse Shoeing and Gen eral Repairing, Ail Work Guaranteed Satisfaction . AT v There were strikes affecting 144 trades and 1,604 establishments and shops in the Stato of New York dur ing the year 1887, according to the fifth annual report -of the bureau of statistic of labor presented to the legislature by Commissioner Chirks F. Peck. Six hundred and ninety- four of these strikes were successful ; 190 compromised; 3 doubtful; 695 unsuccessful, and 22 pending at the. time of the compilation. The loss in wages to the 51,731 strikers is esti mated at $2,013,229 45, and ?217,- 069 78 was spent by labor orgamza tions in their protection and relief ; while the loss to employers U put at 11,101,576 70. Progressive observation istltename I nf a new frame which has b;coiiie lop- i0 Give ular in Boston. The players are hown a larjre nuiaber of articles of all'feinds on a tray. In about half a minutetthe tray is taken away and the personrfio IS niosi successiui lu naming un Roscoo Coskling died at his home in New ork after a short illness. An explosion occurred in the St. Helen colliery, at Workington, Eng land. Seventeen persons were killed aud several injured fatally. iucuoweii urawioru, colored, was shot and killed by an unknown person at a point two miles from Noleusville. Ten n. The body of a Chinaman was found hanging to a tree about three miles from New Wt-stminster, B. C. An in quest was held and a verdict of sui cide was returned. Thomas M. Kenned v. a wealthv cattle dealer, of BowmmvI lie. TfT. wa? killed by Sheriff Jose Marie Es parza, a wealthy Mexican near Ferrv Landing, Texas. At Jennear, La., in a diirmte at the polls Nicholas Trovoat was shot dead. and his brother L. P. Provost, was mortally wounded. The trouble is said to have arisen from a family feud. Carrie Beiswenser, while scrubbing at heeling, W. Va , ran a hi splin ter uuaer ner thumb-nail. A phvsi- cihji removed it, but the arm swelled badly, and K'ck-Hw set in. and it is said the girl cannot live. The Western nail manufacturers met at Tittsburg, Teun.. and fixed the basis of a ecale of pricea. The scale slightly advances nails between ten and twenty . penny, and will reduce those under tt n-penny. The jail at Friars Point. Tenn.. was bui-ned, and five pris.meis perished, in tne tumes. An effort was made to rescue them, but without succeas. The jail is supposed to have beeu fired by one of the inmates who waa under sentence to the penitentiary. The. assembly at Albany, N. Y., passed a bill providing for the execu tion of the death penalty, by means of electricity. This is the biU recom mended by the comnriseion. It pn hibit nt wspaiiers from publishing de tails tf executions. While two Indian policemen at tempted to arrest Sacate, an Apache Indian, and his son, at Los Ciuces, N. M., who were drunk and causing trouble in camp, a fight eiifued in which one of the policemen were killed, oucsve s uu .. , . ., ,j uw men wete severely injured by stray shot?. Chester Draper waa accid m tally shot aud killed by Percy Candaland, at Salt Lake City, while a party of which Draper was one were serenading a newly married couple, friends of Candaland. The latter fired the shots as a practical joke, to frighten the aer enadtrs. The marinf s and blue j ickets of the North Atlantic squtdnm, participated in a sham battle, at Pensacola, Fla. Five blue j.icketi and a matine were wounded. It is suj posed the material in the cone of a shell had hardened, and tore eff, the metal cone wounding the men. j Two notorious criminals were cap tured at Billingp, Mont, having in their por3es.-ion fifty-eight head of horses, bearing thirieen well-known Nevada brands. Oae of the men has been recognized as Teton, the noted horsethief and murderer, for whose capture there are rewards aggregating $8,000, in Nevada and 'Idaho. The residence of D. A. Hoffman, a fanner near 0.k Ridge, Mo., was burned and three of his children were consumed. Three other children were so badly burned that it is expected they will die, and Hoffman was so seriously injured that he died. It is thought Hoffman became suddenly insane, and fired his house himself. Frankie, the little daughter of Rob ert Pell, of Paducah, Ky., was burned to death. She was playing with her brother around a tire in the yard dur ing the absence of her parents. Her clothing ignited and was totally burned from her body. She survived but a couple of hours. Edward Cossar, a colored man of St. Louis, possessed of considerable weal tli, returned to his home unex pectedly, and found Rev. Sidney Hib- ler, pastor of the Methodist church and principal of the school, at his home. Nut being satisfied with his ex planation, he t-hot him in the head, killing him instantly. Orrin bteere, a larmer, living near the village of Lisbon, N. H., while sit ting in his dining-room reading ,a paper, in company with bis family, was killed by an unknown assassin, ho literally blew the top of his head off. A load of buckshot was fired through a window four feet away. No reason is assigned for the crime. The entire countiy is hunting the mur derer. As five section men were passing the Ceilings White Sand Company's works in a band car, on the St. Louis, Kan sas Citv fc Colorado road, near Li Bodie, Mo., a blast exploded, blowing an immense rovk upon the hand car All of the men were fatally hurt Their names are Harry McCowan Themis Benimor, Smith Dougherty Clark Patton aud Ed. Shepherd, Three of them died. A familv named Lathrope, com prising the father, mother and three chil tren, were drowned on Upper Wolf river, Wis. They lived in shapty near the bank of the stream and though they had been warned to leave their dangerous abode, they neglected to do so, and the floods swept the building and occupants down. PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL. A collection of butterflies owned by Herman Strieker, of Reading, Pa., Is valued at thirteen thousaad dollars Thomas Anderson, of West IIuvsii t-onn., and his brother, of Flushing, L. I., are the last of the Mohawk IndTana. Tl..... J.. !.-.- . ... uiasij-six yoars old and nt vigorous as a much younger man. A contemporary of Charles Lamb describes him as baring "a f.icu of quivering sweetness, nervous, tremtt I, ma biiiI a .. di:t.. ..i.i ,,Ki al, in",,,, vl name inni n looked only lit for the most placid for tune." A lady stood hanging to the strap of a St. Paul horse car when a working-man in the far comer arose and po- tiiety ouereu ins said. thank you. said she, "but I dislike to deprive the only gentleman in the car of his st aL" A song sanjr by Tattl during her last tour of the West was composed by ine iotirioen-year-olii datijrhter of the Sr.t. 1 o . t wim ijiiiLiunu UA i mj9yiYaU!:t. lilts composition was so ditlicult that the child was adrist-d to simplify it, but she refused, and it was sent to th diva, who sang it with great siicccm. Mrs. Stevenson, wife of the now famous novelUt, Is a daughter of Jacob Vaudegrift, one ef the pioneers of In. dianapolis, aud is remembered in that city as a petite, pretty brunette, very bright, a.T.I, withal, very fond of a good novel. Her first husband waa Samuel Osborne, deputy clerk of the Supreme Court. Empress Elizalwth, of Austria, al ways takes the zither with her when ever she visits her mother, tle Duchess Ludoviea, of Bavaria, who is very font! of hearing her daughter perform on that instrument. The Empress re ceived her first instrm-tions in zither playing from her father, and subse quently took Ieasotisof the first masters of Vienna. The negroes of Union Point. Ga., are nnder the control of a voudoo" doctor. A negro died a week ago and the coroner found that lelladonna had been used. From what can be learned the negro women of Union Point are completely under the coutsol of the voudoo doctor, while the ne.-rro men are so fearful of being "tricked" that they will not divulge any thing. The late Marshal Pelissier once struck his aid-de-carap in one of those uncontrollable fit of rarre for which he was notorious. The of fier took out his pistol. point fiJa 1'fl'ssler and praemed A fot-tnhrlit' irff- relissier. "That will teach you notT'f keep your arms in such bad order. "LjtiaM frctow, CONCERNING DRESS. Pom Sensible Comment by a Well-Know Woman Writer. Putting asido all the sad showinjr of low ideaU to be found in the manner of dressing to bo seen everywhen around us, we may, perhaps, Iwlp out Selves and others to find a bett-.-r plant of thought on the subject, by taking noro i wiiat some girls have saiL win hold the matter under consideration. I hnd it possible todivide these girls Int inreo classes: First. The girls who have nearly all the money I hey want, and who believe that their first duty in life Is to dies3 themselves with it. C" nil ocuiiiHi. jliib gins who iiave very little money, ami who use what time they have, as well as all their money in niient-uig as wen uressetl as possi ble. Third. The girls who have little of either time or of money at their own disposal, and wlvrse Interests are in something quite difieient from their clothes, j-et who have taste and sent! nietit, ami who sutler if they ever find themselves dressed inappropriately. We have all known girls belonging to each of these classes. . We know the girl mho is given nearly all the money she wants, anil is told to get the prettiest things sho can find to wear. What is the result? Sometimes. .i ?-i . iikw iu go-is in eonieetionery shops who get so tired of sweet thtntrs that they never want to touch them, the taste palls. It is like anv other earthly Hssession, once ours we care very little fjr iL I hpai.1 a young dressmaker with a large custom say the other day: "Why, if it were not my business, I would wear the plainest things I crtild find, ami never think of dress again as long as live. I anions actresses, too, whose profession requires constant attention to dress. re known to despise fine Iressing when they are in private. L liarlotte Uushman, who saw ntre of society, and that of the best kind. through a long series of years than al most anybody of her time, used to limit herself to three dresses a comfortable gray woolen dress for every day, n good black dress, and a light silk fm "occasions." This 1 -ft her a margin of money for doing many noble things. It is wonderful what a moth of money fine dressing is! and of all un satisfactory results, perhaps to be nicely dressed is one of the !&'"'' f am askings-f fijHi. of fine I reading. 711" lyitent New England Wf.rffe'.': 'there is a coionialiou In belli well dresstd which even religion c The Athens (Ga.) Bnnntf Tias this success to re'-ate in matrimonial ad vertising: "Our reader will remem ber that some months since Colonel Joseph S. Baugh. an Oglethroe bach elor, advertised for a wife. He was deluged with letters from all over the United States. lie distributed several of these letters among his bachelor friends. At least three weddings will be the result of the correspondence." .. "A LITTLE NONSENSE." question is: ani Lenther Religion does not work in that way. If we neglect our duths she b. not com ing to help us until we take rains to help ourselves; and one of our fet ju. ties to ourselves and to others is , ue fitly dressed. There never was a tire lessly dressed or an nn-neat persn known who was not also careless mIxki appointments, careless at figures, un neat in processes of thought, and in some way untrustworthy. Alas! V is a fact, that clothes illustrate the mui. Mr. James T. Fields, in Wide Awil. BROKEN ENGAGEMENTS. Tha Nonebalanea LHsplared Nowadays la anaira ol the Heart. it is often somewhat shocking to people of middle age, or past that period, to observe the nonehalance with which far too many of the young ladies of the present day speak of their engagements or marriage, that is, with no shrinking, or hesitation, or reserve, and, as it would appear to the ob server, with no delicacy. And not only is it the want of delicacy that strikes one, but a want of respect toward the engagement, a treatment of it as if it were the lightest of affairs. without especial significance unless one ilen-scd. an arrangement for lunch, a rendezvous t a reception. nut ncarij so serious, in.iecu, as a dinner ei g igement, which is some thing that must be kept, but a part of the frivolities of life, not to be looked at intently or spoken of gravely, but entered into half in prank and frolic, continued as long -as agreeable, and broken as lightly as a bubble a child blows from a pipe. The manner, too, in which these en gagements are formed is a source of surprise ana snocK. again, to tne re putable middle-aged woman, who is convinced that things were not done Bo in ber young days the total levity anu want oi sentiment, the young man s purse and general ability to pro vide a tine menage and equipage hay ing more to do with the solidarity of the enterprise than virtue or personal charm; genial manners, good dancing and pleasant temper being enough for the temporary arrangement, and the temporary arrangement being tolera bly well understood to be only for the scafCM, terminate, like various other copartner-ships at the will of either party. But equally is it a matter or pain and troub'e t the astonished observer to notice the manner in which the en gagement? are broken, letters re turned, all but & tell-tale few, some gifts returned and some retained; a little romance, a little sentiment, as if just for the play'a sake, a few tears, under which the laugh comes spark ling presently, and the way is clear for the next aspirant. And then the affair is spoken of as cooly and openly as any event of yesterday's dinner or of last nirht's ball such and such a thing hapiened when this young per son was engaged to So-and-so, or no, was it then, or when she and young This-and-that were so epris with each ojper? 1 be whole affair of the engage- flower that hMf'r,5J2een Topped. lo'd in i.:, i ... ,. that tiVliC-fl day. when one and The contracts fur the new refinery buildings which Claus Spreckels, the Ciiliioriiia sugar king, is to put up in Philadelphia, has leen awarded. They will cc&t about $1,500,000. without the machinery, and from 700 to 1,000 hands will be employed. Mr. Spreckels'e great enterprise ia expected to result in a direct increase in the commerce of the Dort of Philadelphia ! . . - . " . cles on the trav scores a point. of $ 40,(JOU,OOU, and an indirect in .lifi strength of shafts or barx 'jrease of about $100,000,000. Im- S ,i- konJinir and twistitKsDorter8 declare that the erection of ;Twrh r-nhes of their diameter, j the refinery means the arrival t tha a two-inch shaft is eight times 3 port of fully 500 additional 'aels. one-inch shaft, while a ! during each year, which wr inch shaft is twenty-S67 timei i about a third of tha Boiton EudueL j - onnage. A young lady's first Is he marriod?" Shoe ftexrrfer. An exchange says base ball um pires are but mortal. There are times when they wish they had wings. It is surely no wonder that a man who is on a bender seldom is able to walk straight- Detrvit Graphic "I aim to tell the truth." "Yes." interrupted an acquaintance, 'Tnt you are a very bad shot. Chicago Living Churth, Marshall P. Wilder tells of a small boy walking down a country lane with a basket of green apples on his arm, singing "Nearer, My God, to Thee." "Papa. I guess there ain't any plumbers in Heaven," said a six-year- old youngster, one rainy day. "Why not, my son?" "'Cause the sky seems to leak so easy." Don't tell a woman that she's a second hand rib worked over and turn to Genesis for your authority. It's un- gallant, and besides, its dangerous. Merchant Traveler. In hot weather the water in drink ing fountains is too warm to drink, and in cold weather it is frozen solid. There are other things in this life which pos sess equally discouraging foundations. "Didn't you say flour had gone down in price?" asked Mrs. Snaggs. "Yes." replied her husband. "I don't think it has. I still have io pay a nickel for a five cent loaf of bread." Pittsburgh Chronicle. The man who truly loves his wife will find a proper place, cither rip i the garret or down in the ellar. In which to keep his wearing apparel, and not go crowding her drcssea out of the closets. A'. V. Weekly. A Diserctious Young Miss. I asked my lorty for a kiss When we were walking out, Phe answered me, the cautious mint: "You may take one. If you are sure There are no odious nmnleur Photographers about-' A". F. Weekly. There is a clever lad in this town who will get his living in this world and no mistake For playing truant maternal authority cut off his supper. Casting one fond look at the authoress of his being, he paused at the door to s.-ry: "Mother, I am going to die, and when I am no -more I wish the doctor to cut mo open and look at mj- stom ach." The maternal heart was filled with awfql forebodings and the mater nal voice asked what he meant "1 wish it to be known," ho answered, "that I died of starvation." This was cuotigh. The small boy retired to his little bed gorg rtrplution. London Rahemian Pigs' Feet Souse: Cut off the hornj part of the feet and toes, scrape, singe and wash thoroughly, place in a kettle with plenty of water, b-jiL skim, pour off the water, add fresh and boil until the bones will pull out easily; do not bone, but pack in a stone jnr with salt and pepper sprinkled between each layer; cover wkh-goojl vinegar.' When wanted for the tablet, take out a sufB- HIGH-PRICED TOADS. Austria lata ut ir I eiejjt . urii. . . , . Tor ureasr ' t skillet, add per if need- Ther Are Import d From Ureat Hr.lalo. In most districts of Great Britain toads are moderately numerous; more numerous, iiidee-i, than might be im agined, for they are not animals that court publicity. In the faee of this il is rather surprising to hear that toads are now being imported into this couii- try from Austria. They are packed in wooden boxes filled with moss, and on their arrival fetch as much as from $15 to $20 per hundred. Toads have long been an article of commerce here; in most welt ordered gardens the visitor will occasionally le startled by a quaint apparition on the pathway, puffing like an asthmatic old .gentleman, and the suburban market gardeners and nurserymen very frequently have them in their frames and greenhouses and about their grounds. But until re cently our horticulturists have been satisfied with the exertions of the na tive toads in ridding them of slugs, grubs and noxious insects. It is possi ble that the Austrian toad may be larger and more voracious than onrs, and this may explain the fact of its imporht-tion. At present it does not seem to have put in nn apiear anee at Covent Garden, where a stock of toads and green frogs is usually kept. At nny rate the new visitant. if only as useful as the native animal, dtwerves a hearly welcome as a cheap and useful ally of the gardener, for not only does tho toad live to an ex treme old age, but it has the nn usual merit of finding its own provinder and lodging. And beyond this it has much more good nature in it that its forbid ding exterior would seem to indicate. anil has frequently become so tame asb come at a call or even at the sound of a whistle. And when dead its useful ness does not necessarily cease, for naturalists before now have found In sects of great rarity In the stomachs of loads fhey have happened to dissct Altogether it is Very evident that Su Patrick made a slight mistake whet he banished the toad from tho ureen Isle in company with the "sarpints" and other hurtful creatures. Lottdon Globe. Two brothers in Cambridge, Me.. were inveterate checker players, and one of them always wanted to bet on each game. The elder had scruples a"-ain.st gambling, but ono morning when the old folks left home to be gone all dav he told his brother he'd bet with him. The boys spent tho day at the checker board, and when tho parents e.ine home the voun ner son had lost all his pocket money, all his knick knacks, and six sheep which he had owned. The older brother refused to give back the winnings, and the younger hasn't been anxious to gamble since. Young me clad in the garments formerly worn bv students hsve been numerous in the streets of Ojak Japan, lately. Ttjiey lecture ip' the-way corners. nd even i streets wbnn'J - - ea iaur a young lady broke her ark s.eiucor, or naa it broken for her UN. want . . - . . ... ....., icuremeai ior a season ove a younr widow, and di.l it ..... . i. . . . ""' v sue naa done no . to go to a Picnic an1 t,.A i .i , . . ' - en mongiit Detter of it TI.... . .. . . ""cjrainio me omet fr r!;.i onlooker a single profanity about the ouiness, ana she feI thl. tk. . . . I V UiUH 1 If enlarging tne careless war ; engagement is formed, as iX rhed into the Holy of Holies. wtout removing the ahoes from one's leer. Hr tar u n : , m . rw.f " -'""""J U1 "mes. sue . """es. are an the broken 1 ""- srl LiiS Vnr 4i hafr.1 1 1 iutcuaim man Iur5l? an divorce after- i. ijir an hn. I alt. 1 1 . . rauem morals there maV . ,.er- lhe Ter dea of muc s a,inn a be approached with as affair , Knows the enwe moatiy conducted that an prepara"1 u neYer "Pen of till din 9 Sle ""Wag tor the wed sor s stric? his 'f oe-nd the cen- little oV " wo-tild Tpt haTe cnurcn-going feelin a little Om convenience olM ANCIENT MOSAICS. laterntlns; Hlotorleal Spelmena Rpi eotlns; Mytnoloris-al (iabjaeta. Mosaic was applied with good effect by the Romans to portraiture, which gained in durability -what it lost in nnisb. Instances are given of Cara- calla a gladiators and the friends of the tmperor Oommodus. whose ortraits were erected in a jiortico of his gar- uen. r-any in tne first century B. C, mosaic had become a necessary part of omciai iurniture, and Mr. Parry quotei Suetonius, who tell3 us how Csesar car- : I i . . . . nun mosaic anouc in jus campaigns mat nis otlicial "pavement" might be always ready. The common adoption of mosaic suggested the use of native materials. ,vnore marbles could not be obtained stones of various colors and clay, baked red or black, were em- r.l.sr-A.1 TT .a a snjjCTu rrequenuy, as nas been re marked before, the composition is So superior to the execution that it is im possible not to believe that the originals were the work of able artists. Arid thus an additional interest is imparted to mosaics as preserving some record of the composition of ancient pictures and wall paintings. Interesting as mosaics are which represent my. thological subjects, those are even more interestinc- which illustrate eon- temporary life. '"One of the best examples of the kind is tho grea mosaic of Italiea near Seville." This represents the interior of a Roman eir eus, and bears testimony to the, import ance of a city of which little remains, though It was founded by Scipio Africanus, and was the birthplace of thn Emperors Trajan, Hadrian and Theo- dosius. A still finer specimen of mosaic representing the entire scene of the cirens is at Lyons. This is fullr described, and is an excellent illustra tion of the lively interest taken by the Romans in the games of the circus. Another favorite subject was taken from tne kingdom of Neptune. There is a good instance of this on the coast of Spain. on the floor of the Church of St Michael at Barcelona, "where the whole dorr of the ocean kingdom is portrayed in mosaic, with fishes, nereids. and tri- tons sporting among the waves, and indicating the spot once occupied by a temple of Neptune." These subjects were very popular toward the close of the first century A. D., a fact attributed to the extension of Roman commerce by sea. Of all such desisrns the Balm is given by Mr. Gambler Parry to the mosaic found at Constantine, described in glowing language, which should be studied, as it contains, among other naRworable expressions, a fine enohem- i ism BjtJtei. TIZk Tf!I?T6a &f tn , .npeutn-,enrj of draper-, deities who evA-r this 1 ftei "privilege 1S9 I I are Knry description ' ' -ir. . . Jol Prising Ecus en Stcrt luk K 4 Legal Blanks, Business Cards. Letter Heads, BiU Beads. Circulars, Exseuted la food style sad at lowest Hilrf Posters, FfJ" WOMEN AT WASHING! , f i 1 h A MARVELOUS MACHINE. It Ha. Bole-. ,K rorfy THoMat Usfs to tha l.ch. k;nVT 1?owland- of Johns Hop- --, y.aun ior specrrnm r,K or decomoositinn t:i. . - and ... j at icuuiim r. m accentinir wouiu nave the af- no lover such just for the season's pleasure Vst to lift the nrnarh fmm van so had a lover. bur becnse So-and- i, e,Ted only when so worthy that tb$d where he was keen tiinL-nr',,lluB to jar. Unlucky of lio-ht Thta Cine waa m-trlo . . --icijr bi lne universi ty under his personal tnn.u.. , is the result of the most VtZ taking effort The .t i'. part of it-the screw and to meats for reamlaHn ti, . " 1- -w TTmm VI IDA aept at a constant rem so as to avoid all error arising trnm -J pansion and contraction, and isguaMed against so small an ormr A. ? j .1 --wa ea Jlte-UUZl dred-thonsandth of an inch. The en gine is run by water mw :. - closed m a elaas ca v. double-walled brick chamber in the W TtmTHif 1.1 . temperature as possible. So delicate .-vamacrunery tnat while it is run ning the case is kept closed, as the heat from a person's body would affect it The new machine at first was not satis factory, but now the worst ruled plates by it are better than tr.K. i-jf .. old onet The old one hardly rled more than X0.000 Tinea to the inch. Io n? haS rule aa high as 40.000. and can be graduated to rule an almost infinite inmW k metal nannlltr on.n.t.i . . . . . ? "uiuios, Rnu lDe lmes How Msjjt of Them Make an i Comiortabla Living. i . ,' According to the most reliable. ' - - .- available, there are about 20.000 m ' . women in Washington than men. - The fact of it being the "at of Government very naturally attract scheming wo men and adventuresses. The schem ing onea are not necessarily all women of the vicious and immoral cl.-.ss. Schemers can move in the best circlet. Many a woman comes here because she imagines it is a good place to win a husband; others think they can get employment, and still others who have a little money manage to make friends among the residents, and they p.ts winter In the hope of getting i ciety. it has always been a mystery how many of the females known to be honest and respectable manage to live here. It b an expensive place, but they manage to keep np appearances. Aney Dave nearly all been reduced from some higher sphere. Many of them are the wives or daughters of men who have been in Government positions in the army or navy, or pe.r- anps in Congress, and have died lear- ng nothing for their families. Some of those who have been o reduced have trod the highest walks of social eminence." Xnose of more, coin- w mon-place qualifications have gnrrenwc v dered their social positi.a and n mi' - . boarding-houses or gone into tl i ; -partmenta. There ia an er-rep v tarive still alive here in Wash'- who has two daughters in one t departments. Employment Kf accomplished ladies of re ireumstances u . tha of chap - to yonng people. A chaperonr , very important attachment for ' , people in Washington society, V . one it is not alwavs easy to -; It is embarrassinr. and He . generally inconvenient, for mat . ' to have to sit in the corner - or a .": he wall and nod while their- aughters whirl in the -walta f-'-," '-. tread the mystic mazes that lea 2 . .. remature old age. An amiabloehap- ... ..... . jC -VI erone, wno win go wua tagiris to the theater, to balls and parties, aad whfre not, is cheap at most any price, ad can find plenty to do profitably. Of conrse they do not advertise: "Wanttd A situation as ehaperone." Nortl -. hey ask Mrs. Pennyharvest if she doea not want to hire a ehaperone with lonw xpertence and good reference N-.t at alL It all comes about very natur ally- . The lady is so accomodating and Mrs. Pennyharvest is so grateful that it all comes to be understood. An ther occupation of fashionable ladles eeduced circumstances is that ol i'ng to invalids and entertainin tiicij'-fih all the small talk of the day. " '"AH thiese-rS2 resofted to by ladiea who have by (omfS beea thrown upon their own resources, fcoroe perform these services opeajy with no pretense at concealment' of their necessities. Others manage to keep their occupation a secret between themselves and those they serve, each ituBKingtnat she Is the only one favored. Washington is a place for the cnltiTation of clever women, and they are found living npoa the'r sharp wits in U the walks of society. . Many.do a thriving business in the "lobby." There is one your o- girl who is about the capitol every winter! who is said to make a large ineorae from her practice before the House Cer. &L Levi Jtepnb iean. f run mto each other above twenty thou- I1?,0'1 to the taW passing by never known as speculum metal, though Hass WedrJ Oaya. Accord inr to an ancie chronicle, there are thir?d reliable the year that are esoecialf ays m marriages ami journeys. lor follows: January 1, 2, 4. & r " 15; February 6, 7 and 18 jf nd and 8; April 6 and 11; Majf11 L June 7 an d 15; July 5 amf m! 7; 15 and 19; September 6 jS"8' ber 7; November 15 and h"CM- cembcr 15. 16 and 17. Ev knows that Friday is the mostly day for a wedding, while WeW and Thursday are the luckiesy grandmothers believed that it-" most unfortunate thing if the t after finishing her toilet and lea her nrra was also bad for her to see the man s. enS,n ' small counting machine was about to marry, after dressing recor"lng the number of lines and before the time had come for tht11'. In Rn joining r0Oni is a very ceremony. Lhxcajo Journal. measuring the R aaT3 Jl Iltra. M.TH1 t (ilaKfn , uv iiMti ClUUblV it A lkJ wUa a J AN IRISH DELICACY. - - How a Sew York Peddler Gets Hb r arfr - ,ron Greaa lale. - The little candy stand beside the ... entrance to tne rotter buildino- attended to by a gray-haired old Irish man, who apenda his time In readin r the prs nntil . customer appear! Thete ia nothing else very extrTordi- ' nary abont the old man, but there ii -something on his table which is a puz-V zle to a great many persons. It is , V bundle of what resembles a mass of A ?,t -t.lnd entgl Pece of brown ' silk ribbon, which, after being taken off the roadway, had then beea thrown into a mill and crimped and shredded. Most of tha m..nl 1 . - , j ' ,r" -""e gaze is at- T- - Some of -then.'fe la ainnana- v am a s "'tl,,uc useo. ior exnerimnnf.l prposes. The prepared n1ar ,.i.. on the machine, and the screw regu lated to the required itir... j when the machine starts it moves the plate the distance, s.iv. nn. Ihousandth of an ineh - ,7 j , . , . Buiau "",u,u,iu P"int runs across and draws tne Drown masa. ... iiwb bv ior eatino- be cause it is on the table, but others re gard such an idea as preposterous. An elderly looking effter making a purchase of two applet at the stand a few over the little table to get a closer look at the stuff They askl each other what it was, and fin-Jly inquired of the the line while the plate is station. old mn- It is a matter of infinite care, and I "Skor at'a dulsk." -why it-1: f ted e elderi m V hy, it a dulsk, of course." wia the reply. "Ifs a sayweed that r-,- " ab PTrtWa several days are neccessary for ruliny a nl.fa V. . . . . A r Iour mcnes in dia meter. The diamond point can be so arranged as to vary ever firtin. - t I.: l t i l . as to P '. .. )ne-hnnlruk i;n "... . I VoCKS whleh ira loff v .1. in for a last glance at herself, v UUB nt me end of I .-w , . "i "e ae at Almost, But Not Quite. 'Where have you been for the p-st two weeks?" said one traveling man to another; "out on the road?" No, I took a run to New Orleans to see a young lady down there." Did you have a pleasant time?" "No, not as pleasant as I expected. Her father doesn't hold me in the high esteem with which I could honor him." "Then you were not wined and dined and feted?" "No, I wasn't exactly feeted. but I was booted on several occasions." Merchant IraveUr. :. OF GENERAL INTEREST. Chicago is to have an elevated rail road with a capital of $20,000,000. . Agricultural. As a general thinj? it is an easy matter to exterminate weeds on a widow's bonnet, but; It gjft man to do, thf. Charley wn j ' tes half a inly a stick- "- 'tween twr--' .... tie is it that an error of one hnn. eousandth part of an inch, or ors. can be detected. The mlmo v r .. o wot;iiie ape tne finest in the pari have been sent to different of t scholarly portion of it, one preseust and best plates beinir 1 . ti r. . ..... rs ini. ieimnoitz, the perfect physicist of Berlin. If a fectly dto niea s one that per for this work it was designed one in thably the most perfect 'Baltimore Sun. An F'is s m from a Virprcserves a clippin thirty years newspaper of only is given of tlryhich an account two years' lnifce of a woman to lave to read. Vat for teaching a . A man . " attacked a few dtacon, Ga,.wa pony which he wt by a Tex have been killed iitj. and wouh' to his assistance at a(t not rlll mal by striking it w the aci. A io,uuu iigni-' a , n i Paris for the Unite;. meaJ0!Vil? Washi from the Irish "s whic -..ei, uuniig wqh time it L gathered. When plucked from the parent rock, with the moisture of the sea still fresh upon it. no ribbon of silk or other materiallpossesses such soft tex w more oeautiiut shades of brown "After it is gathered for awhile aVi" exposed to the snn it changes to a da lis. color and gets coated with a frost h r of salt When thoroughly dried it considered very healthy food. To natives gather it and store it away in a? cozy nook besides the ehimnev. Th-., sometimes eat it boiled down almost to ' pulp, and very often it is the only thing they have as an adjunct to the drv. mealy potato." e When asked how it got here, he said: I have a sister in Ireland, and every ' year she sends me ever a bag of Somebody coining over - geentllT brings it to me, and I don't hT to n, V any duty on it Now and then I sim .v.u uuuuu sow or two to the si - -and that a how I get it here." a j v :- - t Applicant "Are you m s collector? I have gocxl referi, 1 from Black & Son. my late "mp'rSf Manager "Why did" you leave tWJ Apnlicant "Well von (uw H,: so they all knew ' which neceK toeir raa.- 1.: