JOB PRINTING, a lixtio stusv rnitMT.I rm BANON Y13B 3. Y. KlttKI'ATItK'K -Publishers trmrf dssorrptlon oi TfcRMH 'r Ml-HACRirrioN. . V..H. 1 Months 1 .ar. Mxnth ; 63 t rVrnlil. in alnM TKHMS or AtWKRTlSINU. (I.mm. I Oo.r. lnwrtt.m J tad k.I.U t.n maurthw ) tOCM Unl HMc. ! H . - tii.uhu df rtlmnt tiwrt."! nwm IHr.l Iwml JLJ Job Printing Done ca Stert Notice; Legal Blank, Business Cards, Loiter Heads, Bill Heed, Circular. Peatere, Hte. VOL. II. I,KBANON, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1888. NO. 18. F.urttUd is grind style so4 at lowest Hriaf I SOCIETY NOTICES. ... A r- A. M : Mwu t their nrw hil hi Monlo Rluck. r.n Salimlsj crauliv. on or twtor. tt r ""J,,,, w M LKRtXoft 1,011. WO, 4T. t O MM jUj. Mm Mmt; lau., kiflhnn tIUIl lmir.l w u,i,d J. a. I H AUl.TON, H U, ROR lolWlK N . A V V. W , t.-rnon. Mwt ! wt sit thlrJ Tl.ir.trw ' month, r. M rtOHfofc M. w. ln In th A R. CYRUS A CO., ' Real Estate, Insurance & Loan Agent. Weaeralt'ollrctlow and Xetarj- Ibllc Baalaena Promptly Attended to. M. N. KECK. DESICNER AND SCULPTOR. Msaufsctum of MtiiBtiU and Headatonea, AND AUKIXDSOr (KJIKTRHV WOKK FIJtK MOSCMESM A BFEOIALTY". Opp. Kivr Rouss, ALBANY. OREtlOX. St. Charles Hotel, LEBANON. Oregon. S. W. Oonu SCia snd fthrmn Streets, two Blocks Kbt o R H LK-pot. T. C. PEEBLER & CO. Prop. Tables Supplied with the Rett the Market . Allot d. ntuDpIo Room. sa4 lb Vmt AccomrocxUthni. fw lX.mnwrsi.1 Bta. GENERAL STAGE OFFICE. WINTER Artistic Photographer, BROWNSVILLE, OR. E.ilargin? from Small Pictures. In elautaneous Process. WORK WARRANTED. C. T. COTTON, DEALER IN Groceries and Provisions, TOBACCO t CICARS, SMOKERS' ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONERY, qaeeaaware aat til ana ware, Lamps kit Uap Fiatarea. Mailt Ht Ltbaara, Ort. ST. JOHN'S HOTEL Sweethome, Oregon, JOHN T. DAVIS, Proprietor The table ia suDDHea with the very best the market affords. Nice clean beds, and satisfaction guaranteed to all guests. In connection with the above house .IOI irs DONACA Keeps a Feed and Sale Stable, and will accommodate tourists and travelers with t ams, guides and outfits. BURKHART & BILYEU, Proprietors of the Overy, Sale anfl Feea Staples E.KBAXOX. OR, Southeast Corner of Main and Sherman. Fine Buggies, Hacks, Har ness and GOOD RELIABLE HORSES For parties going to Brownsville, Wa terloo, Sweet Home, Scio, and all parts of Linn County. All kinds of Teaming DONE AT REASONABLE RATES. BURKHART & BILYEU. A MUSUUW PRISON Dr. I-ar14.lr.ll I'mix a Kathtr Pteaalag I'tctaro or Knsslaa Affairs. When ill Moscow in 1883 I drove out with my traveling companion and an American, a former Governor of Virginia, to see the new Central prison, recently built in the suburbs. We arrived, however, "after tho fair," for it was at the eml of August, ami most of the com panic f exiles hail Marled, live lunidioil only remaining:, of vtuiom cntcgories, includinj;, I think, wives and children. We went over the building, which was a great improvement on the old one. The wenU were very largo and lofty, re minding one of extensive city ware houses, and detached from the main building were towers with small rooms for iolitle:il prisoners. The rooms certainly were not large, luit they npre:ircil reasonably com fortable, or at all events had nothing about them to recall the sensational dump," fugus-eolered ce'.ls luto which certain writers on Russian ptisons ai-e fond of thrusting their political prisoners, especially in the Alcxeicfsky ravelin of the fortress tf Peter and Paul in St. Petersburg. 1 did not secure a photograph of the Central prison at Moscow, but had unexpectedly become possessed of a sketch of n cell in the Alcy.rlefsky ravel in made by ft political prisoner who (Ceiipied it. This prisoner, on my second visit to Siberia, heard me nar rating to a friend that I had been per mitted to vMt the Peter and Pawl fortress, whereupon he drew me aside and told me that he had been a prisoner therein, and would tell me his experience if 1 would call upon him privately. 1 did m but was rather be hind the time appoint d. and whilst he avns waiting he made tor me a pen and ink sketch of his tell or ttiom, which measured eighteen feet eight Inches long by sixteen feet four inchea broad and nine feet four Inches high. It was furnished with table, chair, commode and a bel with two feather pillows, a pair of sheets, blanket and woolen coverlet. MexcntscfT, chief of the se cret police, who was assassinntcd by the Nihilists in 1879. asked him on one occasion whether he wou!d like to smoke, in which cae he should be snp- pitctl with a quarter of a pouud of to bacco for cigarettes every other J a v. He was also us lie I if he w ould like t o paint or write, and drawing materials were brought to mm, as also book from the library. It was in this fort-re-a prison, he said, that he read (lib hon's "lecline and Fall of the Roman Empire." How f;r this state of things prevail in the new prison at Moscow I am tin able to say. but I should imagine not to a great extent, because the Mos cow cells are intended for political" on their journeys. At the time of my visit there were but two political pris oners nn dig the five hundred others? They were in separate cells, one hav ing. I noticed quite a little library of books, nml among other things a scent Imttle, but whether contain ing eau-de- Cologne or vodk't I w4 not sure. The small proportion of political prisoner to crimiittls just ment.oned will not coincide with the popuUr i.lea as to their number. but in f.tct much nonsense has been " writ ten and more believed respeet- ng the number of Russian po- t.tical offenders sent into exile. One writer talks about a calculation that in t-istern Siberia alone there were from SO.) to 4 ). OX) Polish political exiles, whereas, in 1879, for instance, 818 was the total number of Polish iriminals exiled, and criminals out number the politicals by qiore than ten to one. Others, When they heard prison statistics quoted that from 17.000 to 20.000 Russians were exiled yearly, jumped to the conclusion that these, or a large portion of them, were (l'.ticai offenders, whereas the dejwr- laliwn of political onemters, until re cent years, did not come under the or dinary iiion administration at all. ut was separately managed. The political" traveled alone, and was nsutlly kept in prison alone, specialty guarded; and under these circum stances from time to time I saw them in the prisons of Russia and Sibert i. but it- was always in ones and twos and as rare birds among a whole flock of others. I do not think I met with tirty in going through near'y all the principal prisons of Siberia; and this impression receives support from such information as I could obtain from an official 1 know, high in the prison ad ministration, who told me in Novem ber. 1881, that the total number of po litical offenders of all kints sent to Si beria that year was seventy-two, of which number, however, about half had been condemned to the mines in four previous years, but detained in Russia. Dr. Lansdell, in Harper1 Magazine. m m IMPORTANCE. OF TRIFLES. Little Tliti)? That H t Chanced History and Perso sal Career. A Cunarder pnt out from England for New "York. I' was well eqtuncd. but. in putting np a st VJ in the pilot box, a nail was driven too near the comnas-v. You know how that nail would affect :he compas . The ship's officers, deceived by that distracted comna. put the ship two hundred miles ff her course, and suddenly the man on the lookout cried: Land, ho!" and the 5-hip was halted within few yards of her demolitiot on N a tucket shoals. A sixpenny nail came near wrecking a great CunarJer. Small rones hold mighty destinies. A minister, seated in B iston at his table lacking a word, puts his band before his head and tilts back his chair to think, a; d the ceiling falls an crushes the table, and would hare crushed him. A minister in Jamaica, at niah', by the sight ot an insect called the candle-fly. is kept from sweeping over a precipice of a hun dred feet. F. W. R -bertson, the cele brated Englishman, said that he entered the ministry from a tra'n of circ mistances started by the bai k ing of a dog. Had the wind blown one way on a certain day the Spanish in quisition would have been established in England; but it blew the other way. and that dropped the institution, witb 75,000 tons of shipping, to the bottom of the aea, or flung th broken and splintered logs on tb rocks. DEEP. am Mighty llantr rl.tio at the Iilanrt ol Msnrltln.. I never saw a aja-serpont," si'd Cilouel Nichola Pike, formerly Con. Mil at Mauritius, .'but a fish was seen while 1 was stationed at Port Louis which answered v.'ry nearly to what is generally known as a sa-serpent. 1 lie keeper of the lighthouse several miles below the port nml on a led-je some distance out at sett snnt me word that a huge fish, some ninety feet long, luid nppe ired there, and wait tod me to count down Immediately. 1 took the tlrst b a', but. unfortunately, when we reached tit desired spot we were unable to laud on account of the r Highness of the sen, and were obi I god to stand on and off until ll calmed. When we finally landed Iho huge lish hxd dtsnpiiearcd. 1 talked with at least fif y persons who were entirely trust woithy whi had seen it. They nil agreed as to Its enormous size and un usual npxnrancv Mv opinion Is that it w i s a sort-s"reut, and that it came In shore to spawn. 'Thit Island of Mauritius is thii-13 miles long ami twenty wide and con sists of one huge volcanic dexslt. Pi contains ninny caverns which oen Into the sea. In these I hare found lish and animals which were marvel for form ami color, rome being liean lifttl and others hideous, A si range serpent was said to inhabit one of the caverns, for which I made a dlli 2enl search. Ot I fishermen would not go near Its supposed hannts. A gee tlentait owning a sugar estate near by dcclar d that he had seen It and nn oth r that he hat ftl It with cuttle lish an. I that It. was the most hideou brute he had aver seen. 1 senrrhej for hi in inn ihaleboat with a boni'i lance and other lae'ele, but never came across him. At or 1 left the Island my friend. Hon. William Ward, who was a great shark hunter, took my rig and went in search of the monster. II 1 states that be saw his bead and It was as big it" a wine pipe and was coveted with barnacl -s; that he put a harpoon into It, which wa twisted off as if it hadbcen a pes em. He in tend, d to blow it lip. but c mid not get the charge in the right sHt and fin ally abandoned the search. 'J It. re were so many beautiful and imeres'.ing things in nature at my si at i n, ho never." said the Coonel. that it was not worih wh'le to waste any time searching after monstrosities. There was a lish seventy feet long, which seemed to ba c m.po;ed entirely ot cartilage. When it was lamlod It eoul.l all go to pieces, having no lones at all Then there was what was called t he angel-flh, which, when liung ti seemed to hare broad, white wings like an aiivrcl. Then there was he wonderful e.ds which measured Ine feet. One I caught a specimen f this fish, and getting hint on the b-.ink. he fought so de-perately that I lid it t know what to do with hi r. I h.i native who was in attendance culled out, "Mas.. 1 fix biiii.' mil leaning down graspi-d the squint. Lig ti.-h with both hands, bit through his verb b e, and the lish succumbed im mediately. 1 his specimen is also in the museum at Cambridge. The de Il ls'), also found in the Indian icean, s not very pleasant to m -et some limes. I saw a man nln had his arm o badly lacct at'd by 0114 that it ha I t bo amputated- It has a body as arge as an ordinary dining-r.oiu a!l with tentacles ex ending over a space eqnal to an nrdiuary room and .nt so str. n; that thycat seise a tn n and uiax htm out of a boat. Victor II i,ro speaks of this fish in his Toiler of the S sa." Bariittnt also had ne on exltibt ion her; at ont time. Then, again, there Is the tnzxard. whih has b.-cn ca'.led the tiger of the ocean. It j is not longer than a wa k- ing-stick. but terribly fierce. In walking over Ihe reef I have fre quently encotiniereu mm. 11 ne sees you appronch he will wait and then dart at you like a flash. If there is any jx riion of your body exposed lie will tear a piece out of it as it it had liecn cut with a raa r. Falling one d.iv ff the mouth of the harbor. I uooketl iwool these nti at the same time with two tliuorenl lines, and in Tying to get them into my boat they foug'.t mo with such desperation that 1 w.obligid to call two fishermen to help m and they declared that they were two ot ine worst nstt they ev.-r killed, being worse than bull dogs. A lisli called the laff exudes a do dly poiso t. A row of spine are conceab d in Ins b.ick wlr.ch, ivli -n exc.toj. ne erect. 1 ncso spines are tilled with a milky-looking substance which, when in :cte I into the human nh, can -s the mr-st intense agony. ..1 if remedies are not applied mo : pily, results fatally. Thi fish ;ei crally co iceals itself in the sea' weed wher it is apt to be stepped on by the bather. I saw a soldier once who had bce:i unfi rtunale enough to step on one of theso fi-tli. and his cries could be heard for half a mile, his foot swelled greatly, but .he surgeon was successful in counteracting the effects of the poison and th. man re covere L O ; shore at Mauritius there were no da g -rs but tha moment you til your f-.ot into the water vo 1 wire oirr unled by dangerous fishes and epliles. " Brook y 1 Art ;e. A Pretty Work-Basket A very convenient and pretty work basket may be made of two peach baskets. The baskets arc firmly glued tosretber, bottom to bottom, somewhat in the shape of an hour-glass. Then the entire structure is covered with sateen of any desired color, laid in full plaits. tack:d at top and bottom, and nt the p int of union of the baskets. The top basket is lined with sateen. A piece of heavy pasteboard cut round and smoothly covered with sateen fits in snug ly, covering the bottom and making a neat finish. Full pockets are sewed in below the top of the basket. The outer rim has a deep, lace flonnce, beaded by box-plaited ribbon arranged to conceal the rim of the basket, A broad piece of ribbon, tied around where the bottoms of the baskets meet, is finished by a large bow. Farm and Fireside. The wonderful growth of music In the churches can not but be remarked. MONSTERS OF THE INSIGNIA OF MERIT. Knnip.su rtr air Hnllitlind of Store Than Ortlnry Inter.. Inquiry has been made as to the sig nificance of the Iron Crows the late Emperor William was so desirous to have buried with him. Tim Iron Cross s the chief badge of military service. and was conferred upon William when u was a Prince by his brother, then King, for great bravery and sol- llerly conduct. This was In 1849, when he Wits given supreme command of the ioj al forces when linden and the Pala tinate rushed into arms against consti tuted authority. The cross wns more prized by hint because he liad been re called from banishment ho was exiled by imperial order In 1M48 nml the order pHur h meritr, better than hi re call, attested Ills restoration to favor. The order of the Iron Cross was founded by Frederick William lit 1813. The Insignia is a cast-iron cross with silver mountings nml hearing no in scription on the reverse 5 the upper part, of the obverse contains the initials t. . surmounted 011 a crown: the center Is adorned with three oak leaves. below which is the number 1813. When the cross is conferred for military merit, the ribbon supporting It is of black watered silk with white stripes; for civil merit, the ribbon is white watered silk with black striix's. Other F.tiropenn orders may Iw re ferred to whit liiliMesL The Uoial Prussian order of the Ulack Kngle, founded In 1701 by Fiderli k. is a blue enameled cross, each arm of which is forked with a center sold monogram F. R." (Fredrlciis Rex) and a crowned black eagle with spread wing. The motto is Sunm Ciqiie" (every one his dm-). The order is never conferred Uxr. jH-rsons lielow thirty years of age, (term.tny ha also the order of the Red Eagle, the second order of the kingdom, founded 1706; the royal or der of the House of Hohenzollern. n gold cross with white and black en nntel, foil ruled 1841; Ihe order of Louise, a small blaek enameled gold cross, founded in 1814. exclusively re served for ladies; the Ibtvnrian order f St. Hubert, founded 1411, to be ad mitted to which requires that one should have bwn six years a member of the civil order of merit of the H 1- varian crown. Austria share with Spain, since the time of Charles V., the right of the or der of the (Tolden Fleece, founded in 1429 by Philip III., the (io.al. Duke of Burgundy and Count of r'laiulers. The French legion of Honor was founded in 1H02 a a reward of civil tnerit or military valor. The ,b.igfiei order o' Russia i that of St. Andrew, founded IfiOH, nml is conferred exclusively on persons of the most exalted rank. It I represented by a blue enameled figure of St. Andrew on the cross. Russia has a military order of St. George, founded in 1709, which is never con ferret I but for a gallantry al sea or in the field. The Insignia is white enameled rnss with gold rim. on the obverse side of which is an Imnge of St. George and the drn?on. Spain has numerous orders, the old est lieing that of Culatrava, founded in 1158, and is now a court distinction rarely conferred. The order of Alcan tara was founded in 1177, and is lim ited to those whit can prove noble descent through at least four genera tions. The orders of Great Britain tire more or less famous. The first in dig nity is that of the Garter, founded in 1349. The next that of the Thistle. founded in 1540, the motto of which Is "Nemo me inipune laeessit;" that of St. Patrick. 1783. "tjuis HeparabitP" that of the Iiath. 1389. "Trln jnncta in uito;" the Star of India. 18tl, motto. Heaven's Light Our Guide;" St. Michael and St. George. 1818. The chief order of Brazil is that of Pedro, founded in 1822. Denmark has one of the most illus trious orders of chivalry, the order of the Elephant, which ranks even with that of the Garter, founded at an tin certain date, but probably in the twelfth century.- It is limited to thirty knights. Italy's chief order is t h it of the Annunciada. reorganized in 1518. Sweden has the nobler order of the Seraph, founded 1280, and limited to twenty-three natives ami eight foreign ers. Chicago lntr-()cean. RAILROAD ENGINEERS. Am Old Knight of the Throttle Talk. About His Clleacaes- There is a a general belief among the uninitiated that all good engiuees ar practical machinists. This belief is entirt ly erroneous, for the rule has al ways been that the best engineers com up from the ranks of the firemen and not from the machine shops. Whilt an engineer of experience can repair s break in the machinery of liis chargt he could not build a locomotive or any part of it at all intricate in construc tion. Instances can he cited where machinists have totally lacked the nerve, gained by long experience, to run an express train at the high rate of speed necessary to niake scheduli time, nnd in the majority of cases where a man is taken from the shops and placed on n locomotive he makes a belter freight engine driver than when put in charge of a passenger. 1 once knew a popular engineer who had worked in the machine shops until into middle-life, and had then been given a desirab e run on the limited express. His train was always behind time, and in a few months he looked terribly aged. One day he threw up his job, and none too soon, for he would inevitably have lost the place anyway, and he afterward told mr that he lacked the nerve to pull the throttle out and give her the full head way needed to make the time on his run. lie said that when running at a rapid rate he felt like a man gazing down ward from a dizzy height, and nothing oould induce him to step within the cab again. He went back to the shops. There are exceptions, of course, but they are few and far be tween. St. Louts Globe-Democrat. The latest Maine romance comes from Biddeford, where an honest, awk ward farmer, who had been pestered for years with a suit for sending indecent letters to the girl he loved, has Just been able to prove that their author was none other than her rascally brother, who hoped, by preventing her marriage, to keep undivided their tout estate. INDIVIDUAL DUTIES. Plow to lasnr Self. Approbation and ! ttMpoet. Every person of common reflection must be aware that he owe to other. and to society, certain social and civil duties, in requital for the kind offices ml protection which he receives and enjoys from the community of which he Is a member: and he should know. for such we consider to ba tha indis putable fact, that upon the manner In which these duties are performed wilt materially depend hi. reputation with good men, and the measure of his pure enjoyments in life. Hence it is of the liint importance that he should ilx upon a scale of morals in early life, which shall govern iu his business transac tion, and In hi intercourse with society. Every class In society seems to have a scale of moral peculiar to liself. lit its business affairs, notie of. which jtre exactly fitted for general adoption. The Importing merchant, for Instance, thinks it justifiable to ue deceptive in voices, by which lie defraud Ihe reve- utitt of a part of the duties due upon merchandise; whilsj the salesman li valued an I rewarded according to hi tact in extolling his ware to the buyer in giving them a fictitious value. The who subsist on the spoils of office consider that "all Is fair In politics" that "the end Justifies, the means." The lawyer encourage litigation liecnttse it I his vocation hi dependence for the w nuts and Ihe superfluities of life. The phvsician knows when he gets hold of a rich patient, and deems it no breach of morals to make hint pay well to pay something for hi ioor neighbor. The parson, even, feel no compunc tion in abandoning bis flock to the wolves, and accepting a higher salary, when he is persuaded h can be more eminently useful to the cntie of vital piety. And 1I19 farmer practice n thousand little devices to multiply hi pence which he would hardly applaud in his neighbor. We do not menu to charge these practices ujhii the w hole of the differ ent professions for there are many ttonorahiu exceptions in all we would inert ly intimate tint they are besetting sins, human propensjiies which it re quires fixed principles and inflexible fortiuide to re-1st and overcome. If ttce successfully indulged In, they an pt to obtain an ascendancy, and to lie come more and more ditlicult of re--ti a!nt. But there Is a precept, of the highest authority, applicable to all classes and conditions of life which all commend, though few practice it. It I to "do .into other what you would that they -hotild do unt t you." This constitute the highest rule of moral conduct, and it observance confer the highest honor the purest happiness. Adopt it as n rule of life. It a ill insure you the resjM'ct and love of all who cherish virtu; It will do more it will insure self-approbation and self-respect. X. T. I.t'tger. DELICATE FEELINGS. Why Ynana; Men IT ho Jara nensltlTO-tess Are Ksrely Mneeeasfnt. Many talented ers.ns miss the road to fortune by want of humility and patience. They think every thing must depend on "a good start," and unless they can make gitoJ engageni"nt" they will remain out of employment for weeks a id mouths. They miss three things support for that time, th practice that keps talents improving, and the furnishing of the best evidence that they are willing to work. A man is far more likely to be called from an "humble to a more advantage ous position thau from idleness to the place he desires. The trouble with many young men Is a foolish pride which seems to say that idleness is more honorable than work. They have very delicate feelings it goes "against their feelings" to do this and that, when there is nothing what ever of immorality or debasement con nected with the employment. To give an Instance, we will repeat, a dialogue which took place recently. A young man, nicely brushed up and very genteel, entered an office, and. ith a polite air, addresseit the gentle man with ".Mr, you want a young man here, I believe?" Yes," was the reply. "Here are my recommendations," said tho voting matt, as he handed a paper certifying that he was worthy of onhdence, etc. The gentleman read Ihe paper, and looked up, remarking: "We should lie lad to do your friend the compliment f engaging you. and therefore von will please let me say something iu re gard to fitness." "What shall 1 be expected to dor" asked the young man. "To aid in the office as opportunity may present, and to piy notes and col lect drafis, etc.." was the answer. I don't think collecting draf.s would igrce with my feelings," replied the voting man. "Well," quietly responded the gentle man. "1 would not advise you to any thing against your feelings. Good morning." Worth and Wealth. No Wonder They Were Fresh. These fish, my dear Mrs. Hen Iricks," remarked the minister, who was discussing a Sunday dinner Willi the family, "are deliciously fresh. 1 am enjoying them very much." .They ought to be fresh," volun teered Bobby, who was also enjoyirig them. "Pa caught 'em only this morn ing." A'. Y. Sun. It is related of the ex-presidt nt o. the Press . Club, John C Hennessey, who is a devout Catholic, that on a fast day recently he jnt into the club restaurant and called for boiled sal mon. "We have no salmon to-day only steak, roast beef and some game," said the waiter. "Well," said John, meekly, "you may bring me a steak, but God knows I asked for fish." N. Y. Sun. t) Sunday " School Teacher "What does it mean, Johnny, in the prayer where it says Lead us not into temp tation.". Johnny "W'y I guess it means, they needn't trouble theirsolves because we can go into it ourselves without leadty" Crtfto. BASE-BALL LITERATURE. Bill Nja Urapptos with tho Nw atylo ot Reporting (lamos. I am extremely sorry that Matthew Arnold did not live to read more of our American base-ball literature. 1 think he would have liked it better if he had done eo. In saying that we were a vulgar people and that the American humorist was a National mis fortune, I think he criticised 11 hastily, for he wa only In this country a little while and judged our humor largely by tho supply he read while here and which he brought with him In his trunk, but if he could have seen the base-lialt word-painting of our glo rious country he would have loved us. If he could have read that Richard son went out, Irwin to Farrar, that Foster hit safely and stole second, that Welch filed out to Wttod. and all about Tiernau's scratch hit. and Ew Ing's failure to sacrifice, and Ward's miss of a grounder that went through him. Mr. Arnold would have said that ke had done us An Injustice. We do not claim much for our long Hue of ancestry, and those of us who came over In the MayfloWertry to con ceal it as quietly a possible, but here in this wild and savage land we are trying to build up classic style of writing up our .National game that will make the mother country tired. 1 admit that I can not utiderstan I It at all yet, but I am striving to do so and I am willing to work hard. I sometimes wih that Lord Tenny son could come here for one summer and sit with me on a bleaching-board. with hi numerous hair hanging oy jr his top-coat, while I explained to hi lit lliat it looked rather squally for the Gii.nts, for Instance, till Flattery jolted merry thunder out of the horsehlde. tore tho tar out of the willow, smashed the leather, and then, while the 1'hillie tumblers were pullingdandelion greens n. onu the llarlem. the Metropolitan in-tie!der lit out like future punishment beating tan-bark, accumulated a one b tgger. a two-bagger and a three-bag-tec. straightened himself out like a tong-waisted jttk-raobit across the plate and made hi roral red home run just a the No w York Central got in with the bad and the band olaved Tommy Make Room for Your Auntie. " I think that Alfred would like that If me Lord like a vivid and searching tvle he would find it here. I am only beginning to write in this way, and it i new to me, but I think I can ulti mately give a description of a ball game that will appeal to every heart. When I began I would have said, for Instance, that O'Rourke swatted at the ball and missed it, till the pitcher hit O R xirke's person with it and then be went to the first and gradually got to the third base, but now I would say that O'Rourke, the Gothic extended catcher for the Giants, strove to belt the blooming ball to windward, mauled ;he atmosphere two times nnd con- t-ussed the life preserver on the right leg of L nipt re Daniels, wa presented with one base as a mark of esteem, and with a blister as big ns a hornet's nest where he had tried tn bisect the orbit if a hot ball with the bosom of his knickerbockers, he bungled a second, tnd while Hallman was muffing the trb, catching invisible crabs, fluking very thing in sight and corking hi.uself generally, O'Rourke lit ont like a icared-to-death bobtail cornet, fell ff ty feet horizontally, and with his ear full ot hot ball, a blister acrois bis, meridian a fractured thigh and his mouth full of sand, hoarsely ejaculated "Judgment" There Is a description that appeals to every heart. There Is a literary moss agate that ought to tickle a man like T.-nnys'in, unless he has a foolish prejudice agaiust American writers. My ambition Is some day to write the lurid description of a base-ball j;aine which will go snorting down the corridors of time, along with Balak lava. Marco llosxaris and the stubborn youth who stoo I on the burnin deck. I want to write it so that it will be bright nnd jaunt in style, and yet 1 would like to sock a little sadness in it, a description that should be rich in coloring, and yet free from informa tion, a carefullj' and professionally prepared gem of literature that would contain abput a column and nothing else whatever. The London Saturday Review says that "what AmerJca wants is a liter ature that shall smack of the soil.' llsre Is the opportunity. Let the um pire take down the remarks of a Giant who has tried t reach nine feet and catch hold of the third base with his front teeth, and then demand j idgmcnt before spitting out the north end of the Polo ground. BUI Nye, in S. Y. World. Not One of T hat Sort. "1 suppose you are a fatherless boy?" he observed, as they mado change fot a paper. -Oh. no." Hut your father gets drunk and yor. have to support the family P" "No." "But you give all your money to your in ther?" Not a red of it." Well; you are poor?' "Not much! I'm just doing this for recreation, while my brothers are cut ting the coupons oil father's bonds. Say. f you go tip ns far a the coupe office tell 'cm to send me down a turnout to roll me up home. It must be gcttin near our dinner hour, and we havi fourteen invitations out to-day." De troit Free 1'ress. Spencer, Muss., has public-spirited citizen. The other da" one of them gave fourteen acres of land for a pub lic park, another gave $30,000 for a high school 11 tid another gave 25,00C for a public library. Not the Key-Hole. A citizen stood in an unsteady way gazing at a front door on First street the other night, and another belated who passed that way halted and asked: 'Looking for the key-hole, old fel low?" "Chee-hole!" "Yes." . "No, itur. I've goz way beyond rhat, stir. I'm looking for 'er door itself 4 Sheemi to be too many of 'em hcve. 1 HE SIBERIAN ROAl. Dsrlptln of tho llistorte tllchtray tram tho I ral Mountains to Tinmen. These transport wagons, or "obozes," form a characteristic feature of almost every l:tndscaie on the great Siberian road from the Ural Mountains to Tinmen. They aresmnli four-wheeled, one-horse vehicles, rude and heavy In construction, ,jgh with Siberian products, and covered with coarse matting securely held In place by large wooden pin. Every horse is fastened by a long halter to the preceding wagon, so that a train of fifty or a hundred obozes forms' one unbroken CHravan from a quarter of a mile to half a mile in length. We passed 538 of these loaded wagons in less than two In uis. and I counted 1,445 in the course of our first day's journey. No further evidence wa needed of the fact that Siberia is not a land of desolation. Commercial products at the rate of 1.500 tons a . day do not come from a ban en arctic waste. A it gradually drew dark towards midnight, these caravans- Id'gan to (top for rest and refreshment by the roadside, and every mile or two we came upon a picturesque bivouac on the edge of the forest, where a dozer, or more oboxe drivers were gathered mound a cheerful camp-fire in the midst of the'r wagons, while their lib erated but hoppled horses grazed and jumped awkwardly here and there nl-ng tho road or among the treea The gloomy evergreen forest, lighted up front beneath by the flickering blar.o and faintly tinged above by the ;low of the northern twilight, the red nnd black Rembrandt outlines of the wagons, and the group of men in long kaftans and scarlet or blue shirts gath ered nlmut the camp-fire drinking tea, formed a str&ngc, striking and pecu liarly Russian picture. We traveled without stop through out the night, changing horse a every post station, and making about eight miles an hour over a fairly good road. The sun did not set until half-past bine, and rose again about half-past two, so that it was not nt any time Very dark. The villages through which we passed were sometimes of great extent, but consisted almost in varibly of two lines of log houses standing with their gable to the road, and s p.trnted one from another by in closed yards without a sign anywhere of vegetation or tree. One of these villages formed a double row five miles in length of separate houses, all fronting on the Tsar's highway. Around every village there was an in closed area of pasture land, varying in extent from 2W to 500 acres, within which were kept the inhabitants' cat tle; and at the point where the inclos ing fence crosed the road, on each side of the village, there was a gate and a gate-keeper hut- These vil lage gate-keejcrs are almost always old and broken-down men. and in S.leri they are generally criminal exiles. It is their duty to see that none of the village cattle stray out of the inclosure, And to open the gates tiir nnsalntr trediiclpa nt m11 hriiirtt of t ha t day and n.ght. I rom the viMage com- mune mey receive ior meir services a mere pittance of three or fourrubles a month, ami live iu a wretched hovel made of boughs and earth, which throughout the year Is warmed, light ed and filled with smoke by an open lire on the ground. George Kennan, in Ctniurtf. THE HAMMOCK'S MISSION. How Two L m Were Mveri and Two Hearts Forovrr Itlasto.l. It was but a shy, retiring hammock covered with dust; it bad lain for months in a secluded garret where the silence was broken only by the scam ering of the mice or the noisy odor of the cockroach. Yet this hammock had a mission in life, nnd when the hired man came up and yanked it forth from its lair of old linament bottles and seatless chairs it knew that its time for action In d come. Soon was it oscillating gently be neath the shadows of the great oak trees, awaiting the coming of Algernon aid M.tbeL who were soon seen stroll lug down from the front porch. Soon the folds of the hammock no longer swung listless. Three hundred pounds of avoirdupois is likely to take any trace of listlessness oat of the most in dolent hammock. The turf.e doves ceased their gentle musiclistened and hung their heads in shame to find that' after years of prac tice they bad not mastered the Lrst principles, of the art of cooing. A single star came out twinkled for a lew moments, then hid itself behind a moonbeam, discouraged at finding itself out-dazzled by the love-lit luster of two pairs of eyes. Suddenly the hammock's over strained nerves gave way. A single report like the snapping of a toy pis tol, and mother earth received tow of her children on her bosom. "Confound that ! !!!!! ham mock." said Algernon simply, yet poured his whole soul iuto those few words. " Algernon.I can never be any thing to you more than a sister," she said, gently, as she pulled her back hair out of Algernon's coat collar. That was alL Two hearts were severed and hearts forever blasted. The mission of the hammock fulfilled. Merchant Traveler. two A Booming Psalm of Life. . Tell me not in monraful numbers that the town is full of gloom that the man's a crank who slumbers in these bursting days of boom. Life is real. life is earnest, and the grave is not its goal, every dollar that thou turnest helps to make the old town roll. But enjoyment, and not sorrow, is our des tined end or way; 11 tou have no money, borrow buy a corner lot each day! Lives of great men all remind us we can win immortal fame; let us leave the. chumps behind us, and we'll get there just the same. In this world's broad field of battle, in the .bivouac of life, let u make the dry bones rattle buy a corner lot for wife! Let us, then, oe up and doing, with a heart for any F.. .... afill ajthiarinff ctill nmvninrr lltlV O.II4 OV k .U,, 0V... ft. OUtll. I rooming early, booming late. Atchi- on (an.) Giofa. SCOTCH OIL .MINES, rha Curious Potroloum Fl-lt at TTost CiUUor, BlMltlMttd. William F.tidiey. of West Calder. Scotland, which is the ancient oil shale region of that country, has been making a lour of the Pennsylvania petroleum field dnring the Inst few weeks, and was in New York this week. "I am more Ihsn ama"d," said he, "at w hat I hnve seen.. The petroleum of Scotland is milled like coal, and al though I had rend f the oil-wells of America. 1 was not prepared for such a vast difference In the method of oil production. The Scotch petroleum Is not In the fluid stnte. b t lit a shale formation. The extracting of the product of this shale was for many year a most Important Industry, an I is q lie nn cx'enslve one yet; but the Amcrica-i oil. both illuminating and lubricating, is now set down in tir markets cheaper than the Scotch oil can be produced, and how long our oil pr. duct ion wilt last 1 only a ques tion of how long nndotial pride will resist consideration of economy. The Scotch oil shale I black, a d ' lies nt a dep h of aliout four hand red feet benentu the surfnc The shnle frodiicing regions ar a 1 ba. wee 1 E 1 in burgh an 1 G.asgow, and are known ns the oil fields of West Calder. 'I hey ' are very extensive and literally ln x hatistible. That is one hope we have The fluid oil of this country will un doubtedly becom j exhausted or grea. ly eursniled in production some lime i t ihe future. It would not be kind In rue 10 sny that I hope s , but. well, I am interested In West Calder. When your fields cease to poor not m quantity of o'l that enables yon to refine It, export it, and sell it 1 1 Scol land at a lest figure than it cost ns to exir.-'ct the oil from the shales at the n-ry threshold of Scotch markets we will come to the front with onr oil mines again, a id know whatever hap pens they can't be exhausted. When thrfoil fields of West Calder were being operated to a full capacity (he shsle refinery there known as the Addiswell oil works, and which cover icVenty-five acres of ground, gave em ployment to over two thousand men. lit various parts of the field there were shale crushing works, not unlike your coal breakers where the shale is run n being taken from the mines. It is broken np into small pieces, and the rude oil extracted at the crusher. What we call crude oil. yon would call ar over here. The refiners take it in that condition, and from it extract Humiliating and lubricating oil, am monia and wax. The latter is called parafine in the oil traxle of tbi conn- ry. The tar from a ton of shale will yield fourteen gallons of illuminating oiL This is snl jected 1o four di -i'erent acid distillations, each one II nth heavier than any the Amer ican fluid petroleum requires. The result is a clear, white high-flash illuminant as good as American kero sene, bat four limes as expensive. If the American prod net simply came in competition with ur illuminating oiL Ihe rflect on our trad would not be much consequence, as in that brnnch of tbe oJ1 nsi ness is not where the profit lies. The lubri cant, the ammonia, and the wax ar the products which make the shale koines valuable. The American lubri cating oil is cheaper, and those wh use it ssy better than any. The lat er altogether I can't nrree with. Of course the American oil does not in- terfere with 'our ammonia produe s. or with our wax trade, bnt, we can't jtiTordtijprodr.ee kerosene and lubri cating oil to throw away in order that we 1. ay get al the ammonia and wax ' that the shale contains. I am forced to say. 1b-re fore, to use nn American ism, that the Scotch oil business is nt boo 11. ing at the 1 resent time. Z Sun. THE POPE'S PRESENTS. . Will Carletoo n Ttm aosl Gisraa Btal as to Thotr Splendor. As a mark of special favor I was taken by one of the attendants at the Vatican to see the Pope's presents. What warehouses full of wealth have ieen sent for this aged man to look at just before he steps into the grave! They are all his own; have been gives him absolutely; he has had them in sured for over a million dollars. But those who look upon bis frail form and white face know that the possession of them must consist merely of a glance. Here are some of the queerest as well ' as the grandest things that could evei be sent to a ruler, temporal or spirituaL Gold nnd silver have been hewn by the smith's cunning knife into every sort of jewel that the enthusiastic mind could invent Diamonds flashed their way here from every direction. . Kings and Queens could not have sent more magnificence if they bad drawn upon their stock of crown jewels. In the midst of these gleaming signals to the senses is a plain though richly bound copy of the Constitution of the United States refreshing in its grand sim plicity, and full of instruction for any potentate who will read it. Here are slippers, enough to have clad the feet of every Pope that has lived, and more pontifical robes than Leo can ever wear. Here are top boots, embroidered sofa pillows, mus kets, medicine cases, sets of carpen ters' tools and enough clocks to make green with envy the Philadelphia col lection of a certain unwilling candi date for the Presidency.- Among the things which people wonder what the Pope will do with are a lot of baby clothes and rattle boxes. Here are tokens from Catholic mis sionaries all over the world. War cos tumes, stufld monkeys and birds, carved ivory, pictorial histories oi Buddha and Confucius, the teeth oi the beasts and the stings of the rep tiles which the Pope's messengers have to encounter in the torrid zone and on the islands of the sea. Many of these seem to say to Leo: "See what your missionaries suffer for the cause!" There are also hundreds of knapsack ready packed for missionaries who are yet to go. Each of these contains an altar service and a relic of some saint, w ithout which mass could not be said. Hundreds of new church bells are la the adjacent garden waiting to be senl as silver-tonged messengers to some I new temple of worship, ' f f ,