JOB PRINTING. tsi r mrttr rurm I K.I1M1H VTI.KK c Hl'UI.Kit . I'ltblishera I ANON I J 1 a-f deacrfptiott .f Orr Vr ....$3 00 I H!; f hUs.v KIPl'IoX n o PrintiM Dsns en SLcrt K:;:o, t. x V 1 1 1 , I i l iu .1 - s S I .4 I'.ywnlr tn AavaniA, (1.1.0 XL.) Legal Blanks, Business C&tCs. Or. cire, Aim4 l'-rO--n .Si 00 I fctt-fe ftviai.tlliU Ui44Ul'll 1 Mi J Letter Beads, BUI Heads, Circulars, Posters, Etc Zuented la good trlaod at love living price. I LOCAL A VOL. II; Lc- N .t! v. jwrHn... IS eoatt I LEBANON, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1888. NO. 8. li,u!t (tveriM"iBnt iiwrteti upon mwru rm. EXPRESS SOCIETY NOTICES. LKBAKO?? t-'l-.K, HO. H. A. F A. M : Mwti at tutr tew hAc m iHmm. mock, ou atuiu tvtalti, on o betar U luu moon, J WASaoN, W. M. LEBANON IODOK. SO. 47, I O. O. F.: Mwtt St ur.tiy ever.ing of 'b wk, at 0ld Kcll.w a Hull, Min .wwA; vttiUug kiethrva eotiltnlly Invited to H0XOR U!K!K NO. A, O. IT. W. Ixhannn. . orrstm: tu evry nri an intra ritnntiu wen- tut in u. mouta. it. nuawt. m. n . DR. A. H. PETERSON, SURGICAL DENTIST, Filling and Extracting; Teeth Specialty. LEBAKUX. OREQOM. Offica in W. O. Peterson' jewelry atora. IVAII work warranted. Charges roatonabl e j C, H. HARMON, BARBER &.HAIRDRESSER, LEBANON. OREGON. Btwlac Hjt, Cutting, and 8hamoolog la tha Uurt and BEST STYLES. rrurant ragwotfaUy aolloitcd. St. Charles Hotel, LEBANON. Oregon. N. W. Oorar Main and Sherman Buwata, Iwo Blooka H. E. PARRISH, Proprietor. Table Supplied with the Best tha Market Affords. Bampta Boona and th. Beet AecouiaodaUoaa for i . Vonuaanaal ataa. . GENERAL STAGE OFFICE.- I. K. CONN, Contractor, Carpenter and Builder. srlaaa and Mpeeiaeattoaa I'araUhtd Hhart Satire. all USDS of carpenter wori done And Satisfaction Guaranteed. CTPRICES VERY REASONABLE." Albaajr mad Lcbaaaa, Or. G.T.COTTON, Groceries and Provisions, TOBACCO tt CICARS, SMOKERS ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONERY, 0,aeeawr a4 CIawarr, Iita,f aad Lamp Ftxtarea. Xala Mt Lekaaaa, Orfi. jL.i3i3rvorv Meat Market BCBLAKELLEXBER6ER, Proprietors. , Fresh and Sajted Beef and Pork, MUTTON, PORK, SAUSAGE, '" BOLOCNA and HAM. tan ni Lai. always on Hani. Main Street, Lebanon, Or. BLACKSMITHS, Lebanon, Oregon. Horse Shoeing and Gen eral Repairing, All Work Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction at .. Prices to Suit tho MAYERS BR A I-atr Jitpaneee invention id aid to be a process of in king from eea wed a fort of pajer almost ad tran- parent 88 glass and as tough aa parch luent. Tub best conduciors of electricity are silver, copier, gold, inc, platinum, iron, tia. The poorest conductors are dry air, ebonite, para (line, resiu, sul phur, sealing k ax, ghu", Bilk, wool, dry paper, porcelain. If you are ever chased by b'ood hounda it may be well to kuow that sheets of tiesue paper placed on the ground under the f et and then re aioved carry with thera every trace of the scent. AnomlPb now fish by electricity. A small battery is attached to the rod, and near the hook id a small electric light. The fisherman lights up his lamp and the unusual phenomen at tracts the fish. The baited hook does the rest. Mr. Graiq, of New York, under took to drive a cat out of a cafe. The contract was a bigger one than he could fulfill without aesistance. The cat jumped at him, bit him in the face, eaught the lappel of hia coat, scratched his chin, cheek and neck, and hit hi? left wrist though to the boue. The waiter had to pull the infuriated ani mal off. Herb's another good aigument for taking the tax tff I tobacco. A Mis souri wretch fired a pistol at a passen ger train near Rich Hill, and the ball hit a passenger. It would have made a serious if not fatal wound but for (he fact that he had a plug of chewing to bacco in his vest pocket. The bullet struck the plug, and was thus stopped in its course. A citizew of Orlando. Fl., has dog that acccmpauiea him everywhere even to church. One 8unday the owner concluded to break the canine of his churcL-going habits and or dered him home. The dog rere.ted until his roaster was out of eight, then promptly turned back, entered an- j other church and remained until the I tervice was over. Johs II. Cormer, living on theOck- lawaha River, Fla shot an alligatot over eight fiet lorg. Opening it out j of curiosity, he waB surpiiaed to find. snugly ensconced therein, a water snake alout a foot long, and eleven young snakes. The reptiles had evi dently been in their novel home sonu time, as the liver of the alligator war six inche3 out of its noimal position, and was flattened cut in places by the continued pressure of the snakes. Db. Jclicb roHLMAK thinks the reaeon why our teeth decay so fast i because we do not use them enough, and. like other organs that are not ex ercised, they tend to atrophy. Oui teeth become week because unused to hard work. The author warns mothers and nurses not to give the children soft food, if they would have them have good teeth in other words, make them eat their crusts. Telephosic communication can be carried on between ehipa at sea by means of a sound-producing appara tus attached to each vessel, to b woiked under the surface of the water. Each vessel also has a sound-receivintt apparatus to take signals. IntelligibU fcignals could be produced by this ap paratus which would be transmitted through the water in all direction with considerable velocity. Thb family of a Georgian were awakened the other night by a great noise under the house which shook violently. At first they were ture that an eaithquake was in progress, but in vestigation with a lantern showed that a cow was under the house. How she got there was a mystery, as Bhe could not stand upright. It was her horn and back that made the noise and thook the house. The householder had to get a pick and spade and dig a ditch, in which the cow walked out. Metals may be platinized by a new and cheap process in which the met j allic object is covered with a mixture of borate of lead, oxide of copper and spirits of turpentine, and submitted to a temperature of from 250 deg. to 330 deg. This deposit, upon melting, spreads in a uniform lavcr over th object. Then a second coat is laid on, consisting of borate of lead, oxide of copper and oil of lavender. Next, by means of a brush, the object is covered wi h a solution of chloride of plati num, which is finally evaporated of a temperature of not more than 200 deg. I The platinum adheres firmly to the surface and exhibits a brilliant asptct. If the deposit be made upon fhe first coat the platinum will have a dead ap pea ranee. Platinizing in this way costs, it is said, about one-tenth the price of nickel-i-lating. -It is not generally known that a little gold mining is done in Scotland. Gold is found in small quantities on the property of the Lead Mills Silverlead Mining and Smelting Company (limit ed) in Lanarkshire, and Lord Hope- toun, whose marriage was celebrated I recently, received as a weddr-'preo- ent from the miners a nngget of three hundred and fifty-five grains. Ladv ' Hopetdun now wears a wedding arui enHppg rtde out of this nugget, e share-holders hope to have their " increased some day hy the ' running into Scotch sold. k OREGON NEWS. Ewything of General Interest la a Condensed Form. A posloffice has been established at Sidney, Coos county, and Samuel scliuck wa) appointed postmaster. George L. Mason has been appointed postmaster at Lake Creek, Jackson county, vice Joseph T. Deck, resigned The mail service between Vale and Burns, Malheur county, has been in creased. Adam A. Baser, the postmaster at Sipicer, Linn cou.ity, has resigned, and John V. Ball has been appointed postmaster in ins place. Senator Dolph's bill, giving to Dalles Uity a portion of the military reserva tion adjacent to th.U town for a park, passeo the senate. T. B. Merry, of PorU.ind, has been appointed assistant commissioner to Australia. Ln ut. Marx has been ap pointed secretary of the commission John Milligan's team ran away at Liiayette, throwing Inm from a wagon against a tree and breaking hia collar none. J. A. Allison, while work ins; on the e ira at lilalocka, near The Dalles, as brakenian, slipped and fell between the cats, breaking several bones in his left foot. An east-bound freight t-.aiu was thrown from the track near Fleasant Valley, and the fireman killed. The engineer and others were severely in jured, and the train badly smashed. There was a shooting acrare at Ne- tarts, in which a man named MjCor mick was shot by another named Des mond, the bullet taking fleet in the groin and making a dangerous wound. At Astoria, Miss Rhea Durant was awakeued by the noise of a man en tering her bedroom, who had effected an entrance through the window. The young lady making loud outcry, the burglar decamped in haste. While the foundrvmen at the peni tentiary were running off a heat, a quantity of molten metal was spilled I mm a laule upon the limb of a con vict named Eatea. The metal slipied down the unfortunate man's leg and into his shoe. In great agony he ran and jumptd into a tub of water, where he stood until the metal was cooled. His leg and foot was pitifully burned. Charles Robertson, a young man en- gged in rolling logs near Erw"n' mid, two mile above Silverton, Marion county, nearly loet his life by having one of the logs roll over him. The log, which was a heavy one, and was rvlluie down a side hill, crashed over hia It gs and things, and then, striking a maul, leaped over his body. In ad dition to other serious injuries, It b ertdon had several ribs broken. His hurts were considered vc-ry serious, but at last accounts he was celling along all right. At The Dalles, the little dtuhter of W. II. M ody, aged about 'hree years, got a bottle of carbolic acid, and be fore the mother could take it from her had innocently swallowed nearly the whole contents. Fortunately, Dr. Gil mer, in his daily visits to one of his patients, passed by the residence and immediately applied the usual anti dotes for the poison and an emetis. I his circumstance, and the little girl having eaten a hearty breakfast a ,-hort time previously, undoubtedly wived her life. At lat accounts the child was doing welL Fishermen all the way from St. Helens to the Cascades are idle, on ac count of the enforcement of the law prohibiting them from using nets with meshes less than iuches that is, a tneeh that stretch s to that length. They say there is nothing running hut blue-back salmon, and they have to use a 5 to 51 mch mesh to take these, and they claim that tho enforce ment of the law is all in favor of the wheelmen at the Cascades. They say that when this large mesh law wa rn a Je there were no wheels and no at tention was paid to bluebark salmon, ahich have now become of consider able importance, as they are used by the cannery men. W il'iam Garvin, a locomotive fire man, 31 years old, was killed in the Albina railroad vards, oproite the coal bunkers. While the locomotive on which he was employed, No. 37, was on its way to the bunkers to take on coal, he and Engineer Johnson put in their time oiling the valves, which they did by standing in the cab. When the bunkers were reached, Garvin un dertook to step to the platform by passing between the tender and the locomotive. About this time locomo tive No. 7, whi' h had been down to the flouring mills, rounded the curve jut below the bunkers pushing eight or nine cars. These cars struck loco motive 27 while Garvin was in the position previously staUd and the ten der being forced forward by the pres sure, he was crushed to death. He died in a few minutes. There waa a large gash on the right breast and the right leg was fearfully mangled. Sev eral ribs were broken. Soma Othar Uissasa. "They say she died of a broken heart," said tbs first woman, aa they canio up the car stap. I don t believe it, sharply replied No. 3. -But whyf" WhyF Because she had as many as six new bonnets a year, and not on of them cost less than fifteen dol- lars." Detroit Frr Prea$. The largest hanging ball in tha world is in a Buddlst monastary. New C.nton. China. It is eighteen feet high and forty-five feet in circumfer ence, and is of solid bronze. It is one of the great bells which were cast by command ni the JS.nperor lur.gto about A D. 1400. Tha whole bell both inside and out, is covered with an inscription ln embossed Coinesa oUar aotsrs about half an inch long, oover- ng even the handle, the total number of charaotaii being 84 000. Tha char acters tell a single story on of the Chinwa classics. Bjtring field Tim. Mr. E. Gatehell, who owns a traot of mountain land in Cambria County Pa., waa looking over it tha othr day and cam upon a cavern in wh'A he found a bed of snow aad ioe H feat tfcfek. COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Principally to WathingtoL Territory and California. A six-pound shad was caught at II waoo, at the mouth of the Columbia Gavin Duncan, a young sailor on the Uritisu f hip Uhotan, hll from the rig ging to the deck, a distance of thirt 1 feet, at San Francisco, and was kille P. B. B irrett, of Falls City, Cal.. be came insane and got away from friend and drowned himse.f in his own well lie leaves a wife and four childreu. Charle? E. Bevan, a young mer chant of Wheatland, Cal., Bitot and killed himself. Business troubles were the cause of the suicide. Henry II. Liudenbureer, 24 year or age, and a salesman in San Fran Cisco, CI., took poison and died. He had been sick and despoudent. The gteat Monteiuma, Col., irriea ting tunnel, which will reclaim 200,000 acres of laud, is completed. It is over a mile long, running under one of the ranges or the Rocky mountains. The tunnel and fifty miles of canal will Up the waters of the Dolores river. Peter Burke was seriously wounded at Sentinel, A. T.,by a Mexican named Uaatillo Ortega. Duriner a quarrel both drew revolvers, each sbootiuK the other. Urtega, it is supposed, is but slightly hurt, and it is thought thtt uurxe wm recover. Domingo 8olar was shot and killdd by James MacCarthy at a wood ranch iu the southeastern pirt of Virginia. Soljtri refused to sell or lend a pony which MacCarthy wanted. -The latter is but 17, but has served two years iu state prison for arson. A horrible accident occurred near Bodega, CaL John H. Miller waa en gaged in mowing hay, and had cau tioned his children against running through the clover in front of the mower. Liter in the day his three-year-old child playfully attempted to run in front of the machine, when it waa caught by the knife, and both lejts were instantly severed from the body. A wagon and team con tuning M. Fay, his wife, d tughter and baby. Mrs. J. Sissell and Mr. E. Roche, broke through a bridge over the flume of the Montezuma Mining Company, near Callahans, Cat. The flume was run ning full of water, and the current was very swift. Mr. Fay and Mrs. Roche fell outside the flume and were unin- ured. Mrs. Fay, Mr. Sissell and the ba'jy, together with the horses aud wagon, went through the flume about third of a mile. The baby wa drowned. Mrs. Fay and Mrs. Sisaell were both rescued, though they are badly bruised. The Yaqui Indians are now at war ith the Mill urn federal forces iu Sonora. Tluy are fortifying different places and making a determined stand against the troops. A few davs ago Mj. Eocisoand Lieut. VillareJ with two columns of federals, attacked the Indians in a strongly fortiGed posi tion in the Amalaguaca mountains, near the town of Agtiaverde. A des perate fight ensued, but the federals, after a number of charges, routed the Indians from their fortification, killing seventeen and wounding a large num ber. The federxl forces had one man killed and several wounded. Wm. Holmes, son of A T. Holmes, of Eberton, met with an unfortunate and painful accident, which, while not necessarily fatal, will cripple him for life. He was out hunting in the mountains near Palouse, W. T., with a rille, when by some means not learned here, his gun was discharged, the bullet passing through both leg at the knees, and blowing one of th knee-caps off. He was brought to his home and everything possible done for him, but the nature of the wound renders it certain that it will be im possible to do more than preserve the use of one leg. Thomas Treste, of Chico, Cal., aged 72 years, some five weeki ago having buried his wife, married Mollte ttwof fe.d, who has just served five years in San Quentin. Treste is possessed of some property, which the woman wanted, bhe got a revolver and at tempted to take the old mau's life. She told him she intended to kill him and burn his body with the house. Treste made his escape and had the woman arrested, charged with an at tempt to commit murder. Ihe practice of thawing the outside coverings of dynamite cartridges over tires is largely prevalent among the miners employed in the cement quar ries at Rondout, Cal. John Lyuch was engaged in the thawing process. Four cartridges which he held in a tin pan over the fire exploded. Strange as it may seem, when the smoke cleared away. Lynch waa not only alive, but perfectly conscious, but he presented a terrible appearance. His bands had been blown away as clean as though they had been cut off with a knife. The larynx, vocal and som. of the othor organs in the throat were exposed to view. His limbs were broken in many places. His whole body presented an appearance ns though he had been cut and slashed by a bowie knife, yet, in that horrible condition, he lived five hours. Out of 40,000 Sioux Indians there are 35,000 still in heathenism. There are sixty-six tribes on the Western prairies for whom nothing is yet done. There are 40.000 Indians of school age, but wheu every school is packed to ita utmost only 12,000 can be ac comodated. This includes Government schools, Roman Catholio schools and ill, so that those under mission teach ers would be far less a number than 12.000. Soma ingenious individual ha9 or ganized a .'-Book Exchange1' in ParU which might possibly he imitated with profit in this country. Membership costs 3 francs and 50 centimes (70 Cents); that is, the reader buys a book not In paper coders, but a well-bound volume and pays this amount in cash. On a fly-leaf he will find a list of "aub agencies.1' principally "In Wge hotel, restaurants, etc., where he' may npo;' payment of an additions 'jfcO centimes (10 cents) surrender Hat aok and ge: another, and so on, ad i ' It Isop; tional at any time fo- V " -r to ""lrrender a book" v ye '"aaca In ' CURIOUS SPECULATION. A Fraa Macro Bold Into Slar.rjr Tlraa anal Again at Ilia O wo Requaat. Sitting at the Grand Hotel one even ing, I heard one of the strangest ro mances of modern times strange, be cause It was true. How do I know it was true Well, the man who told it Is one of Ohio's wealthiest citizens and a man who does not tell what he is una ble to substantiate. But to the story. As near as I now remember it ran as follows: In 18 17 1 was a steward on the Golden Age, one of the finest passenger boats that plied between Chieinnati and New Orleans. It was In the days before rail loads and telegrams and when slavery was at its prime. Well, one day a strapping negro entered my office, just as we were about to sail, and asked me how I would like to go Into a speeula tion with him that wonld make sis a good deal of money. I was young then and willing to do most any thing to make money that was honest, and I told him to proceed with his proposition. -Well," he said, "it is as follows: I am as likely a negro as can be found In these parts. I am a free man. What I want to do Is for you to take me to New Orleans and sell me into slavery. I ari worth 1,500. You sell me and I'll do what is right with you." His proposi tion took my breath away at first, it was so startling. "Do you want to go back Into slav ery?" I asked, astonished. "No, indeed, I does not," ho an swered. "And yet you want to be sold?" 'Sum, sir, but I'se a likely nigger, and I'll soon be back on your hands again." I reasoned with the follow in vain. He knew of no way of making money so easily as being sold. I hesitated to appear in the role of a slave dealer. I was opposed to slavery, but a I thought e.ver the subject I concluded then- would be nothing wrong in selling the man, and at the last moment yielded to Ins wishes and took him w ith me. Upon arriving at New Orleans I at once pro-' ceeded to the slave market, which, in 1847. was one of the principal business places in the city. I made my objaet knSwn, and the next afternoon I was informed the sale would take place. I gave Charley (that was his first name) into the custody of the brokers, and left the market You can rest assured that I was on hand early the next day. and when Charley appeared I hardly knew him. He bad been dressed up in a new plantation suit ami had a smart cap on his head. His sleeves and trousers were turned up. The bidding was lively, and you can imagine my feelings. perhaps, as I saw a human creature sold like a horse, and kuowing I was responsible for it. The auctioneer would run Charley up and down the street like a horse, and the planter's would feel of his arms and legs and ankles to see if there were any blemisfies. When $1,400 was bid the !TCtarprrr1d Br-pmrrrlrtrnr planter, who gave me $1,000 In cash and a mortgage for the rest I can tell you it was not with thepleasantest feei ng that I started out on the return trip, after having sold a fellow creature nto slavery. Well, to make a long tory short, on the third or fourth trip after that I was awakened one night by a tap on ray state-room door, and was astonished to find Charley waiting on the outside. I took him down the river with me and again sold him at Vicks burg. A month later he turned up again, and I sold him at a private sain on the boat. Mouths rolled on. and I had sold Charles at nearly every port on the river, and then I commenced to trade him off and get boot money. I would then tell the slaves I traded for. or give them their liberty, whichever they preferred, but as my slaves were nearly all old men. they chose to be resold. I was doing a thriv ing businees in the slave Hue and had quite a name on the river. At the end of the year the mortgages began to fall due and I collected them with great regularity. I think I sold Charley fifteen times in all, and we divided $25,090 or $30,000 between us as the result of our business. As selling an escaped slave was against the law, and I had sold Charley fifteen times, we had to end our profitable investment." " hat became of Charley r asked his friend. He went to Canada for awhile, avs married and had quite a family. His name is Charley Iields, and he is now living in Indiana, and is a barber by occupation. What he did with his money 1 do not know, but there are no times now like the old ones," and the speaker softly chuckled to himself as the story was ended. Cincinnati Commercial Ua- tette. A Sletping Harness. Americans invented the sleeping-car. but a German has invented the sleeping- harness, if we may so call it, that makes the car less needful. Broad straps sup port tho arms; they pass through a noose over the head so that either arm can be lowered, which gives one a chance to change one's position. The head is supported by a pad, which is ittnchcd to the upper part of the arm- straps. Tho back, of course, rests against the back of the seat. Thus the world changes. In old times beds and pionos were horizontal. Now, both are often upright. The new harness is the natural sequel of this change; it will enable a man to sleep in his parlor bed stead without taking it down. San Francisco Argonaut. An exchange says that the finest church edifice in Albany, Ga., is the one . now being built by the negro Methodist Episcopal Church there. Tho congregation comprises the negro aristocracy of the place, an aris tocracy said to be based "more upon education, refinement and morality than upon pecuniary success." A recent funeral ia Louisiana was Announced by handbills reading as fol lows: "There will be a large funeral at Frogmore, the grandmother of 'b wife. All are invited to attend. Ice water in abundance, free to all. Come one, come all." The paper contained the date of the funeral services, the names of six "managers, "three of whom were clergymen, "and the time of arrival and departure ol nns from, neighboring stations""' " AN AFRICAN ROMANCE. A ramnas Ml.ilnnarr ffh. Marrlad of Afrlea'a flatter OaaehUtrs. Oaa Probably no missionary la the world has been so prominently before the public In the past two years as the Rev. George Grenfoll, of the B iptist Congo Missions. His nunie will always be as sociated with the exploration of most of tho (Joiigo tributaries that are now known. lie has not only seen more of me Congo basin than any other man but ho is also a careful observer, a good route surveyor and fairly well skilled in the use of geographical Instruments. The geographical societies of England. France aud Germany have sought for ami piihlisnotl contributions from him. and there Is no doubt that, next to Liv rngstoiin and Krapf, he deservedly ranks among the foremost of Africa's missionary travelers. Perhaps few of the thousands who have read tha reports of his Interesting journeys are aware that Mr. Grenfell. who Is a thorough Englishman, is the husband of a native of Africa. His wife is a c:lornd woman, originally heathen, whose tribe has for many yearj Inhabited the Atlantic coast, a little north of the Cong.. He Is, perhaps. the only white missionary in Africa who nas Riurrteu a native. This strange marriage is said to have eome aliout in this way: Few mission aries in Africa have had GrenfellV large and varied experience, though he Is still in the prime of life. Before we heard of him on the Congo at all, lie told us much about the Cuneroons eoiintrr, which the Germans have since annexed. Grenfell is one of the few men who seem to bo perfectly adapted forsuch a life as he Is leading. lie loves his wild surroundings, he loves the ex plorers' toilsome life, he seems to endure the climate as well as a native, and his heart is thoroughly enlisted in the work of Christian missions. While geog raphers hare been reading and writing abosit the new regions and tribes he has revealed to the world, he has looked upon these new countries chiefly as new fields for missionary enterprises. Grenfell made op his mind long ago that he waa destined to live and die in Africa. He decided. It is s:ud, after long reflection, that it would greatlr impair his usefulness if he took a wife from among the fair daughters of hi native laud. He had good reason to doubt that he would be lucky enough to find a white woman who could en dure as well as he the climate of thf torrid zone. He hail not the slightest desire to marry anybody whose life oi health would be sacrificed if he took her to Africa, or for whom he migh? have to sacrifice his life work by going back to England with her. He there fore, decided when he married to wed a native of the country. In the course of time Grenfell met hi fate at the mission station and trading post of Kabinda. on the coast not fat north of the mouth of the Congo. He -saw-among' the-mrssion - converts a bright young woman who had receive 1 a fair education in the mission school ot Kabinda. She was a comely girl. She had been instructed for years in the art of housewifery by the mission ladies, dressed in the garb of her civilized sis ters, was neat and industrious and a devout Christian. She was, in fact, in her changed condition one of the best products of mission arv labor. Grenfell believed she would make him a good helpmate iu his future arduous work a a pioneer missionary. In due time they were married, and from that day to this. Gren fell's friends say, he has had no reason to regret the very unusual choice he made. It can be said, on the authority of Henry M. Stanley, that the two babies who have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Greiif .'11 ars "beautiful little children." The home of the Grenfells is on Stan ley Pool, but until the past year they have have not been there much of the time. Mrs. Grenfell and one of the children accompanied the missionary, on some of the adventurous journeys in which he has explored over 3,000 miles of the navigable waters of the Congo basin. She sat unperturbed and very comfortable behind the wire screen that warded off the shower of arrow. which were launched at the litth steamer Peace by the hostile natives ol Mobang River. A writer, who evidently had not ' heard of Mr. Grenfoll's little romance. ' recently mentioned as proof of the fact that white ladies can reta!u their health" and vigor on the Congo' that the . mis sion ary, Grenfell, was accompanied on his long jonrueys by his excellent wife. K. T. Sun. m m m - Our Mineral Resources. The report of the U. S. Geological Survey on the mineral resources of the United States for 1835 contains somci interesting statistics. The total mineral product is valued at $423,521,356, an increase of $15,303,603 over 1834. Among seventy mineral substances cited, coal is the most important, show ing a total value of $159,019,596. An increase is shown in the production of coke, natural gas, gold, silver, copper, zinc, quicksilver, nickl, aluminum, lime, salt, cement, phosphate rock, man ganese and cobalt oxide, while the pro duction of coal, petroleum, pig iron, lead, precious stones and mineral waters decreased. Science. In avoiding idle words. our Savionr .Iocs not m '.in tliMt wo shall always talk about religion, but that our mo 'ivo in all we say shall be to use the wondrous faculty of . vocal expression which he has given us for his glory. Ho did not mean that we should be gloomy, reserved, uncommunicative, tfraid to open our lips, lest we should ay something wron j, but that the in ention of our lives should be by- our vords to please Him and advance His kingdom. Christian at Work. . A Cape Colonist who ; had been guilty of indiscreet remarks publishes this card in a local South African news paper : "I, the nndetsigned, A C da Plessis, C son, retract hereby every thing I have said against the innocent Mr. G. P. Bezuidenhout. calling myself an infamous liar, and striking my mouth with the exclamation - v'You mendacious mouth, why A-' - so?' I declare furthevv-V ' FOLLOW THE FASHION A ftmuu Chicago Habbl Talks oa tha Wad. of Drm, Fashion, said Dr. Ilirsch, Is indeed the great ruler of this world. It Is an unconscionable elespot to which nieo are willing slaves. The heavy artillery ot tlie pulpit made no breach in its ramparts. Eve forfeited paradise, and the result Is the thralldom of mankind to fashion. Let the 'world denounce fashion as It will, men are infected by it. The question whether nascent modesty forced man to cover himself is not yet decided. The origin of dress, though generally thought to be arbi trary, would. If all the facts were con sidered, show rationality. In northern climes It first originated, for there pro tection against the cold weather was most needed. The loins were first covered. When weaving was discov ered the style of dress became more varied. The garment worn then by the Greeks was thrown around the body much after the fashion that plaid are now worn. The garment later on assumed the appearance of a sleeveless shirt tied in the middle. This was the first type of dress and from it sprung tho swailow-taiL The pantaloons wtrw also the invention of northern climes. In Egypt cloth was worn around the legs. To tha Germans the credit of first introducing pantaloons Into Europe is dne. It was compose! of two parts, tied at the waist Hence the name of the garment in every language 's iu the pluraL The name was given to it by the people of Veniee, who were the first to join the two parts together. Dress also had a symbolical value. By it the different classes of society were distinguished and it also marked the differences of nationality, as each na tion had a costume of its own. The dress of the peasant was different to that of the miner, and the drawing room called for a garment different from that worn while traveling. The play of fancy, therefore, had not as much to do with the introduction of dress as generally supposed. Political ideas, too, influenced the change cf dress. A hat for years had been the exponent of certain political proclivi ties. The Spaniards, prior to the Thirty Years War, wore a stiff silk hat After the war the soft hat was assumed. In England, political parties were symbol ized by their headgear. The Puritans wore a stiff hat That style of hat was imported to America and it be came the symbol of independence. It was taken back to Europe, aud it was so obnoxious to rulers there that the Czar of Russia banished a man who wore it from his realms, and another ruler put a man to work on the streets for the same offense. The Kossuth hat put an . end to the autoc racy of the silk tile in America. Before Kossuth came here to walk the streets with a soft hat was to invite a crowd to follow yon, Modeta democratic ideas are leveling all dis tinctions in dress. The colored waiter and the guest appear in the banquet hall wearing tho same style of dress. The dudes, noticing this, sought to effect a difference in attire by requiring the members of their set to wear swallow-tails of a different color. The head-dress also serves the sense of beauty, but this applies more particu larly to the dress of women than men In nature, Darwin says, the male bird puts on his finest plumage to be in favor with the female. Women put ov their fine hats for men, or, perhaps, to arouse the jealousy of their own sex. The "loud" colors were at first in vogue because the people were unedu cated. Their place is now taken by a profusion of shades of colors toned down. As one man is no man all have to admit, no matter how they object, the dictates of fashion. The genius had the prerogative of standing aloof 'rom all fashions. The crank and 'ude also had their own styles. - As .he people were not all geniuses, cranks" or dudes, they will obey fash n. Sensible men will submit to it s long as it does not injure health iYhen it does common sense will pro test against it Fashion is an evidence f civilization, and as such the scepter will never depart from it Chicago Herald. - aaa HE EXCUSED HIMSELF. Hw Cwiaaaaa Out Rlt of a TerrI toriml VVIr Pallar. "My dear sir," said a self-appointed representative from one of the Terri tories to Chairman Springer, of the Committee on Territories; -my dear sir, I must have a word with yon concerning the claims ol my Territory, which I am here to urge." : "I am very busy just now," replied Chairman Springer, anxiously;' "couldn't you wait till to-morrow?" "No, sir; no, sir; not unless you absolutely insist I feel that I most speak and that you must hear me. Our Territory now has " "Er well, couldn't you come in this afternoon, say P" "No, no; I could not in Justice to the great and growing Territory which I represent I feel it my duty to tell you that my Territory " "I must go to the committee meeting in fifteen minntes." Give me that fifteen minutes, then! As you roust know my Territory is the largest the richest the grandest oi them alii Large enough to make two great imperial States the peer of any in the Union! I am speaking for 600.000 people whose rights are being trampled under foot, whoso " "Just before you came in. Colonel Gopher, there wa3 a Kentucky gentle man in here looking for some one to tike a hand in a poker game just being started in the next room." : Say, Springer," just exense mi Til tell you the rest next week!" and the Colonel's coat-tails cracked against the casiug as ha shot through the door. 'Tell the truth, love, and snanie the devil,". -said an attorney's wife to him the other day when she had him in a tight placet, "My dear," said he, re proachfully, ' i "would you have your only husband do an nnrrofessicnal act?" Washington Cri ic Large numbers of ve school chii Iren of San Fr&Scisco hare been wiih "rawn from school ce. account of the low tempera 'e of tL school-rooms. In many ot ' tehooj the te pe-' 'Tire is not. TTTegrees. " Th' n of .U" the city ARSENIC-EATING. A Habit WkoH netting Ilrlnntr Ai-nott KxelaalvaJ to tins Kemiln av The Board cf Health has received several letters from people who com plain about the sale of arsenic waft-is to unwary young women who want to beautify their complexions. O.ia moth er In Harlem wrote that her daughter had bee;i using the wafers without ber knowledge, and she feared that if th wafers contained as much arsenic a their makers claimed they must be strongly impregnated with poison. SIih also raised the point that if the waf rs contained no poison tha -'.manufacturer was an impostor. Dr. Cvrus Ed-ou analyzed the articles and f-jiiud but slight traces of the poison ia ibeiru The principal danger from the wafer, it is said, is that those who ne t!im think that it Is not dangerous to fn.t arsenic, and are thus tempted to try a cheap solution of the poison. Dath is ukuij vj result irona vus siigiiic.c overdose. . Dr. William A. Ha nmond talked freely the other day about arsaaic Ha regarded arsenic-eaters in the 'ame light as cocaine-eaters that is. He had yet to see one. It is not a nabit in this eou itry," said Dr. II I m mond. '-though arsenic ia o'tn pre- icribed. We often hare to use iare quantities of bromides for curing epilepsy or other troubles of the nerv ous system, and one effbet is to pro dace pimples, especially on the facs. Arsenic is used conjointly with the bromides to prevent thse pi ro pies and also to r ore them. But I would no more think of allowing women to use arsenic at their own sweet will than cocaine or any other 7 active agent Arsenic is useful in depraved states of the system, such as pro duced from malaria, and -physicians constantly prescribe it in these ca-e. I have never known or heard of a c ise in which it was taken to produce exhilarating effects such as opium causes, any more than have heard of coc;;ine used for such purpose. Arsenic is poison ous in small doses, and consequently differs from cocaine. Iu medicine it is generally used as arsenious acid. Two and a half grains killed a healthy, ro bust girl of nineteen years in thirt r- six hours. Under circumstances favor able to the poison from tWo- to three grains will kill an adult The doses used in medicine vary from one-fifiieth to one-twentieth of a grain. ThesMi arsenic wafers contain much less that that and consequently have no effect They, therefore, are a fraud, and the man who makes them ought to be ar rested. The Syrian peasants use ar senic the men to improve their win I so they C3n climb mountains m ire easi ly and the women to improve 1 h- complexions. They have been known to take six grains in one day. They begin by taking ex remely small dor. Arsenic has no effect on a horse. Iu one instance a horse took 55'3 grains without any result" Another doctor said it was impos sible to estimate the number Or arsenie eaters in this city, bt canse they are a class that do not often come under a physician's observation- 'Yet" said he, "the number is large, though yon can not say that it is growing. The population of this cl y is increasing. whereas they are simply maintaining their proportion. That is about the case with the arsenic-eaters; they ara keeping up their proportion of the other id'ots. Some actors, a low class of women, and even some rasmbers of the best society eat arsenic or use it ia some form to improve their complex ions. It gives them a certain pallor that they consider desirable. They begin by taking small doses,-and grad ually work np to large amount,' and then when they think it is time to leave off they gradually lessen the dose or, rather, they try to. for tha habit once formed, is extremely diffi cult to abandon. Those who take ar senic say that it has a pleasant effect hongh not like opium, morphine or hashish, and the svstem's demands for t are not so imperative as in the ease of either of these drugs. I have seen arsenic-eaters shut up in prison who id not complain as bitterly as tha norphine or opium users would have lone under the circumstances." The - reporter yisited a number of East Side drug stores and talked with the proprietors about their experience with arsenic-eaters. One dreggist ia a ten by fifteen shop said that his ar senic customers were not confined to one class of society; . they embraced people in all walks of life, though al most all were women. "We don't, waai to sell it" said he, "and won't sell it without a prescription; but they will have it Just now there is a demand for these wafers, and we have to pat them on the counter. There is not enough arsenic in them to hurf any body, bnt people ask for them, and if you don't have them they say: Oh, well, we can get them at ; another store.' . We have perhaps twenty cus tomers here every week who are habitual arsenic-eaters. They begin using it to improve their complexions, but once acquired the habit is hard to break off. We don't sell it without a sabscrip--tion, and the dodges that some of these people play make me weary. There is one fashionable - woman who efrives down here once ia awhile for the stuff, and always has some new' excuse lo offer for asking for it I have to ask her name and the use she intends to put the stuff to, and then reeord all in my poison book." -V. F. 2V6. , ' Beginning in 1879 with a collec tion of $25,455, the Hospital Saturday and Sunday Association of . New Yai'ta has collected and distributed in sevea . years ending last February more than $250,000 distributing the amount so far as undesignated, among the twenty-eight hospitals which have associ ated themselves with its work. An Arab when one day the qnes-. tion was put "How do you know tt Is a God ?"!. turned with apparep dig5stio"n'Rf jt the questioner, a.' plied: ""Ho- - I know wile" or a -ised my to - -' I from t