' f. JOB PRINTING. BANON UTrrK IRK PAT KlokTT' . Publishers XEUMil "oF suitscRipiiiiN. On. Year ? 00 8n Muithn . Hire Monah. 65 ( I'ayaMe lu advanc) TERMS OF ADVERTX8INO. C"W ixt""". B" lnwrtlon ?S E .ch nidi i.mal msortion 80 tLOTAt-l Local NotloM, line . " w,,u Regular aiWcrtiwmtmU IninrltnJ upon litwiral tfrro. Joft Printing Ions ca Start Miss. Legal Blanks, BuImm Cards, letter Ettdi, BiU Bead Circulars, Poetors, 7to. VOL. II. LEBANON, OttEGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1G, 1883. NO. 36. Eznnted to food atyls and at loosat lMa I EXPRESS SOCIETY NOTICES. LEBANON LOTK'.K, NO. 44. A F A M : MfU t their new hall in Mwmlc Block, on Satxudaj " tafu '"j WASSON. W. M. 1KB AXON IOOOK, NO. 47. I O O F .: rw 9a rdiy evening of .a-h w.. at od.l ll."w HH. Min atravl; visiting krothroo covrfUlly Invilwl to atu-ud. J. J. CHARLTO. N. a. HONOR LortOK Nrt. A O. IT. W, LcTonnn. OmKm: M-t .voir ' thlnl Ttmrdaj .vett ing, in th nmnto F. H. ROSCOE. M. W. A R. CYRUS A. CO., Real Estate, Insurance & Loan Agent. : Cieneral Collection and Kotary Pnblle Ba.lnru Promptly Attended to. M. N. KECK. DESICNER AND SCULPTOR, Manufacturer of Mtaoacat and Hfadttonca, AND AL.li KIIS Ol'CKJIETERl WORK FINK MONTJMKNTS A SPECIALTY. Opp R .rm H,n ALBANY. OREGON. SAW llllil. FOR SALE. A Double Circular Water Power Saw Mill. IVear Lebnnon, Or. Capacity ab"ut 5001 feet p r day. Also, 4J acres of laud on which the sawmill is located. PRICE, J$2,000 Also 1 are a targe stock of FIRST QUALITY LUMBER At lowest market rates for cash. . W. WHRF.LF.R, Lebanon. Or. WINTER Artistic Photographer, BROWNSVILLE, OR. Enlarging from Small Pictures. In-Bi-autaneous Process. WORK WARRANTED. G. T.COTTON, DEALER IN Groceries and Provisions, TOBACCO & CICARS, SMOKERS' ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONERY, (taetaaware and dassware. Urnpi and Una Flxtoreo. Main t lkan.n. Orr(s. ST. JOHN S HOTEL Sweethome, Oregon, ' JOHN T. DAVIS, Proprietor The table U supplied with the very best the market affords. Nio eloan beds, and satisfaction g-uaranteed te all g-oesta. In connection with the above house JOILN DONACA Keeps a Feed and Sale Stable, and will accommodate tourists and travelers with teams, guides and outfits. BURKHART &.BILYEU, Proprietors ot the Livary, Sale Mfl Feefl Staples LEBASO, OR, Southeast Corner of Main and Sherman. Fine Buggies, Hacks.Har ness and COOD RELIABLE HORSES For parties going to Brownsville, Wa terloo, Sweet Home, fecio, and all parts of Linn County. All kinds of Teaming DONE AT REASONABLE RATES. BURKHART & BILYEU PACIFIC COAST NEWS. A CABLE. CAR ACCIDENT A' Hrakentan 'Terribly Mangled. Fatal HhootliiK Affray. A Mailer Terribly Beaten. A MURDERER PLEADS CUILTY. l ire In a Collier. Considerable excitement was caused by a cry of fiie from the Enoch Tal bot, which is discharging coal for the Northwestern Transportation Com pany at the Pacific street wharf, 8.m Francisco. The Talbot is an oltitimer and when it was learned that fire had broken out on Ler everybdy got ashore as quickly as p'esible. She was loaded with Cheiry valley coal from Washington territory, which had become ignited by epontaneous combustion. The tirehoat was not sent for, as it was feared that the salt water she used would damage thecoul, and a stream w.-w introduced into the hold from shore, which, after some loss, extinguished the fl.tmep. Wrecks la Arctic Waters. Capt. C. T. Thomas, superintendent of the Aleutian Fihhing &. Mining Company on Kodiak ielaud, Ala k t, who arrivtd at San Fraacico by the bark Hope, gives an account of the sinking of the schooner Isabella and seventeen of her crew. There were several other wrecks in the vicinity of Kodiak inland, but no tlue to the identity of any could be found hi the wreckage that evtry day, dunug bad weather, drifted on the islands. All hat is known is they were principally tithing crafts. Cable Car Accident. As a train on the California street cable line in San Francisco w is com ing down the bill be( ween Stockton ftreet and Durxnt,the grip broke and the car immediately shot rapidly downward. Hie cor.dwcU-r and grip man, and a few passengers, applied themselves to putting on the brakes, but a rawj' rity of those on board jumped eff and several were more or lees bruised. Oie man lit squarely on the top of his head on the cubbies xnd lay for a few moments as if dead, but afterwards recovered. A mnrderer Pleads (nllty. R. L. Sykes, charged with the mur der of G-.orge Henderson at Redding, Cal., has pleaded guilty. It will be re membered that Henderson was killed while riding on the stage from Rd- dicg to Alturas, at a point about f rty- eeven miles east of Redding, in Octo ber 'S7. The arrest and conviction of Sykes was due to tho fTrts of a de tective of Vt lis, Fargo A Co., who has -P'red no efforts to bring to justice he perpetrator cf the crime. A Brakeman Terribly Jlanglfd. E A. Dowh ir, a brakeman en the Northern PciSc, met with a terrible accident at Baekl,y, V. T. While crossing from one cr to another he fell between them while they were in motion. The cars passed over Lis right leg below the kuee, and the left ankle, cutting both off. When the train backed up to the scene of the accident it was found that he had bound both stumps with his handker chief nd crawled to a ditch and im mersed them in water. Both legs were amputated. He is in a critical condition. Fatal atiootlne- Affray. As court adjourned at Fresno, Cal., in the case of Ida Hitchcock, who is suing W. A. Caruihers for f 25,000 for defamation of character, Henry Hard- wick and Robt. beconce, witnesses for the defendant and plaintiff respec tively, became engaged in an alterca tion which resulted in Haniwick fa tally Bhooting Seeonc-e. A brother of thelatter, who was present, drew a re volver andhred several shots at Hard wick, who fell also fatally wounded. One f the Chester's Victims. A boatman found the body of a wo man floating in the b y, on the north side of Alcatraz island, near San Francisco. The remains were towed to a wharf and taken to the morgue. The condition of the body indicates that it had been in the water a long time, as the flesh is totally removed from the head and upper and lower limbs. The coroner is of the opinion that the remains are those of one of the victims of the steamship City of Chester, which was sunk in G-lden Gate in August last. Two miners Radly Hart. The cave in the tunnel of the N; rth Banner mine at Grass Valley, Cal., re sulted in injuring William Jones most s-vverelv. His right arm was crushed and had to be amputated below the elbow and his left foot was crushed eff and was amputated higher up. His recovery is doubtful. George Ellis was badly injured ir the back and it is probable that his spinal cord is injured. Both men reside here and are married. A Sailor Madly Beaten. The British bark Minmyhive came into port at San Francisco from New castle, and James Baine-, one of the seamen, smuggled a. note ashore ttthe Coast Seamen's Union, seking for as sistance. The patrolmen of the uaTon at once investigated the case. He found that Baines was a union man, and on the 15th of last month, while he was unable to work, he was set up on by Capt. Webster and the first mate, aud was so badly used up that he was confined to his bunk for three weeks, and is Btill in a very weak con dition. Capt. Webster is not amen able to American law, and the only hope the sailor has of redress is through tie British vice-consul. Killed by a f alling Tree. William Ames, a young man from Michigan, was found dead in the woods near Edmonds, W. T. He had been working in the woods, and was caught by a falli"g tree, his neck being broken. Young Ames leaves a mother and sister in Michigan, who have been depending on him for sup port. Train Accident. The late train from Alameda for San Francisco, ran iuto the previouc train, which ha-J distbled its engine and was lying ever being repaired The conductor of the die "bled train, Robert Gaunce, had his spine injured, probably fatally. The engine and four cars w.-re badly smeshed up. A Woman l-rlghtfully Hnrned. Ellen Kobler, a middle-aged woman, of Los Angeles,' Cal., becoming im patient at the tardy lighting of the wood in her cooking stove, poured coal oil on the smouldering wood from a can. A flash am an explosion fol lowed, covering the woman with the ignited oil. She was frightfully burned about the head aud arms. The injuries my prove fatal. Itlattrass factory Hnrned. A fire started in the mattrass fac tory on the corner of Eighteenth street and San Pablo aveaue, Oak land, Cal., and befoie the bl.ne could he extinguished it had burned the building to the ground and partinlly destroyed the adj icent structure. The mattrat-s factory was also occupied as a earpentering and machine shop. Upstairs a family resided. The build ing was owned by Mrs. William Greg ory, and was valued at f 12,000; intur auce was f8,000. A ioition of the building owned by J. C Wilson, and oecup'td as a carriage factory, was h1 so destroyed. Several hundred iol lars will cover thia damage. light Collision In the Harbor. Theie was a collision in the bay near Sin Francisco. The schevner Orient from Coos By, while beating in against an ebb tide, fouled the Danish bark Hydra from Hong Kong, which was anchored off the Lombard street wharf. The damage done was trilling, and the Orient anchored in the stream while the crew set up her damaged rigging. I' I re at I.os .tngrlrt. Fire broke out in a two-itory frime building in Loi Angeles, Cal. The upper story was occupied as a lodging house and thrj lower story used as a height store, pawn shop and dry goods store. The upper story was gutted. L wei are estimated between 15,000 and $6000. Snlcldeof an Old Keldler. H. W. Copeland has ben found dead with his ihro.it cut in an old building near Santa Maria, Cal. The deceased was au old soldier, a native of Massachusetts, and suffrred from wonnds and otlxr troubles. He com mitted suicide. A Captain llr.pt Wead. DjnalJ Campbell, captain of the British bark Tronga'e, now in port at San Diego, Cal , droped dead aboard his ship. She has been here two weeks and s chartered to carry a cargo of lumber from Paget Sound to Astralia. TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. A Mysterious Crime. A very mysterious shooting affair, tiich will, in all likelihood, cause the death of Mrs. Rottie Stocke, residing O l Greenwich street, in Philadelphia, occurred. Three shots were heard in the house, and an itnocr, upon in vestigalion, found that a Cuban named Fred Rimos had shot Mrs. Stockes three times, two of the bul lets taking effect in her face and the third one in oue of her lungs. The officer arrested Rimos, but only suc ceeded in doing so after the prisoner had fired a shot and been clubbed in to insensibility. Both Mrs. Stockes and Raimos were taken to a hospital, where the former is dying, aud the latter is either feigning or is actually uneonsciou. Not the slightest clue as the motive for the crime can be learned, the woman being unable, by reason of the wounds in her face, to talk, and the prisoner is likewise si lent. Mrs. StockeB has a seven-year-old child, and lived wiih her husband in the house where she received her wounds. Her'husband, who returned to the house shortly after the affair, can throw no light upon it. Fatal Boiler Explosion. An accident, resulting in the killing of five persons and injuring many others, took place on the farm of Jonas Spayd, near Redding, Pa, where the boiler of a steam threshing machine in operation exploded, and killed Ii vin Puntelberger, William Rever, Joseph H Machmer and Isaac Marbtrger, boys, and Joseph Spayd. The bodies of all five were hui led from thirty to fifty feet, and were terribly mutilated. The body of Machmer was hurled clear thiongh the weather boarding of a barn. The buil ling was a complete wreck, and the force of the exploMoti wis felt many miles awav. . Gcorg . H nnershitz, Sr., was badly injurede ana cannoi rt cover. x-ngineer Hoover sustained severe bruises. John Riegel was injured internally, and two or three others are seriously hurt. Minnie Baer, aged 10 years-, suffered a concussion of the brain, and will die. Killed by the Indians. A party of prospectors, headed by McDom.ld, the half-breed, who has in duced the Flathead Indians to divulge a long-kept secret a? to the location of some remarkably rich mines in the B':ackfoot couh'ry, Montana, while clambering over the steep mountain sides were horrified to find the skele tons of two white men. One had a bullet-hole through his forehead, and both had evidently been killed by hoB; tile Indians. Beside the skeletons lay a small pile of quartz. Evidently they were the first prospectors and pioneers of the Blackfoot Hills, and for years had lain on the bare, bleak hillside. The discoveries made have caused a stampede to that section. A Duel Met ween Brothers. A. terrible, and fatal shooting affray occurred ,at Blackfoot, L T. James and John Hutchinson had been at outs for some months past, aud James often threatened to shoot his brother on sight. John evaded him in everv possible way, and was on the point of leaving the country to avoid him when fli affair occuried. The brothers were in a saloon, and both reached for their revolvers, five shots were tired, and James was shot through the head, dying two hours after. John received t bullet through his ear. He surrend ered at once to the sheriff. Parricide. H. C. Biyans, who resided a few miles south of Bonhaai, Tex., was stabbed by his 17 year-old son, Nely Bryaus. The knifu severed an artery, caut-itig the old man's almost instant death. The difficulty waa occasioned by the father asking his son, who h id been away two years, either to nome home and go to work or get his clothes and leave lor good. Immediately af ter the murder the boy fl-jd, aud has not yet been apprehended. Mcralnary Hnrned. . The Mouticello ladies' seminary at Godfrey, 111., caught fire at 1 o'clock in the morning, and by daylight whs destroyed. Mii-s. Haskell, the princi pal, aroused all the pupils, order d them to secure what c -fleets tliev could aud escaje. All got out without in jury, though many failed to properly clothe themselves in haste to encape. Of all the property of the school only two pianos and three organs were saved. The loss agregate 1150,000; insurance, f 75 000. The loss to pupils and teacher in clothing, j iwtlry, etc., is not included in th;s estimate. The pupils are being cared for by the citi zens for awhi'e, when they will be sent to their homes. A Horrible w lie Murder. Thomss Kane fatal!y stabbed his wife at Pittsl urg; P. The wum.u was sitting up with her dead child and Kane, who had lieen drinking, came into the room and accused her of laughing. 8he denied the accnsntion, but without further argument he drew a knife and thrust it into her abdo men. Horse "lent In tlnnle. A eculiar feast has 1 served at a Philadelphia club'. Pandora, a fam ous steeplechaser, was shot a few days ag , on account of incurable )ampe"-s. and some if the choicest stakes cut from his carcass were served up at this club as Filet a la Pandora" to sev eral guerts. Dr. Rush 8. Huidekoper, her owner, and the cooks being sworn to secrecy. The gu-st pronounced the meat very toothsome, but were much surprised on learning that they hsu l-en eating hor-e meat. They thought the dish was named iu honor of this hors. Hnrned to Uealb. The livery stable i f D. D. Withers, on East Thirty-fourth street, in New York, was burnel. In it were burned V) deat-i Thomas Cary, a newsbov, and twenty-seven horses. John , Riach. a newsbov. was tleeninr in the! stable witn uary ana was so severely tmrnea tuat ne is not expected to re cover. The loss is 4U,X. Three lassf Iten Drowned. While fi-ur young nun, James Hayes, Henry Gorruley, Wm. Sellan nnd Charles Ceg n were sailing in Dirtlweter bay, near Boston, Maw., the boat cap-iixed, and the three first mentioned weie drowned. FREDERICK'S DIARY. The Thirty Volumes Written by the I.ste Emperor of Germany. There has been a groat deal of gossip of the wildest and most scandalous kind about Prussian State papers which are alleged to have been found missing at Potsdam after the death of the Em peror Frederick, and it is stated that they were handed by the Empress Victoria to the Queen when her Majesty was at Charlottenburg, and that they are in England. These stories culmin ated in the malevolent Inventions of an evening paper about the "virtual Im prisonment" of the Empress Victoria, which, however, were such palpable fictions that they excited no attention at home or abroad. The real truth, however, which reaches me from a trustworthy correspondent in Germany, Is that the diary of the Emperor Fred erick can not be found. The Emperor had kept a journal during more than thirty years (ever since his marriage), which was not a mere record of his movements and occupations, but an elaborate running commentary upon public affairs both political and social very much in the Btyle of Mr. Grevilla's Memoirs. This diary waa contained in thirty Immense volumes, each being secured by a lock, and directly after the Emperors's death his successor, at the request of Prince Bismarck, demanded that the whole of them should at once be given up, in order that his majesty's reminiscences might be placed among the Prussian State archives at Berlin. Tho Empross refused to surrender the volumes, and when a second and a more peremptory application was made after the Em peror's funeral, her Majesty announced that the diary had been taken to En gland by the Queen, and that she would probably publish It, as it had been her husband's particular wish that it should be published after a suitable revision, and that h had re quested her to act as his literary exe cutrix. The Empress, I hear, added that justice to the late Emperor's memory requires this publication, as he would derive aa much benefit from It as her father, the Prince-Consort, did from the publication of Sir Theo dore Martin's work. The idea of such a proceeding is, however, very obnox ious to Prince Bismarck, who appre hends that the Empress might take vbat he would regard as an extremely .nad equate view of her duties as editor, and, of course, the Emperor William objects very strongly to any publica tion which might reflect upon German policy in the past, or whioh might be in any way injurious to what he con ceives the present or future interests A the empire. Here the dispute rests, jut one may predict with confidence hat there will be no publication for tome years to come, and that when the liary does appear it will contain noth ug to which either the Emperor or his d vise rs can reasonably take exception. AGRICULTURAL. Devoiei to tub Intkkxhts ok Farmf.ro su Stockmen. Regularity in feeding, watering and milking are important matters in the dairy. Practice it. The latest returns show that pleuro pneumonia is more prevalent In Scot land than in England ; thus thirty one of the outbreaks are reported from Englih counties; aud thirty nine from Hootch conntie; while of the cattle attacked 140 were in England nd 170 in Scotland. The districts in England where the disease has re cently been most prevalent have b en Ken', Lancaster and the Metropolis, in which about two-thirds of the out breaks have been reported The practice of putting foddr rdowu in silos has led to many exerimenU in preserving fodder, and the last ef fort is given in the Country (irntUman as follows- "I cut an J shocked when corn ws in the dough and let it stand until dry enough to husk ami thresh. Th-n cut it up in half-inch lengths and filled the silo heaping full of it, and put on neither weight nor cover I have tried every way to handle the corn crop and like this I lie best. My thresher leaves chaff, blades and hutks about two-thirds the bulk. In feed ing this cut feed a few hogs are ne-eded, as sctvingers, aa cattle do not digest." Where the quantity of manure is limited and the soil poo.', larger croos of corn can urdoudtedly be grown by applying the manure in the hill than by spreading broadcast, provided it is thoroughly decomposed. Green ma nure fresh from the fable or cellar, should never be applied iu the hill, but should lie spread broadcast upon the furrows and harrowed in. It in much better for succeeding crops to spread well decomttosed manure and hasten the growth the fiist of the sei son by applying a spoonful of firt class commercial fertiliser in the bill, covering it with earth before dropping the com. "Last week," suys the Rural New Yorker, "we ate a piece of beef that bad bteu packed in snow for more than a month. Tue flavor was delic ious. The beef was packed during a comparatively warm spell. The ouly srow to te obtaine-d whs the remaiiif cf a drift under a shady bank. A quanity of this snow wai placed at the bottom of a barrel aud well pounded down. A piece of the meat was placed ujon the snow and then mere snow lirmly packed uiourtd it. The barrel stood in the barn and the meat has kept iu ierfe t condition. If the snow had melud the meat would have been placed at once in brine." A Massachusetts journal says : The quality of Northern farm help is de teriorating. In nothing is this seen more clearly than in the management of teams. Every hired man wants to work with the team, most of them lf- cause they think this part of the woik the easiest. The team has to suffer, poorly cared for at all times, and liable to severe beatings when th- diiver is provoked. A high-spirited horse is soon ruined by eu.h trea'men'. and this fact is causing a great in crease in the number of mules now kept by Northern farmers. The mule hits long been contidered necessary at the South, where the farm labor has been much less intelligent than it U here. Appearance has much to do with the sale of manure. It is a popular fallacy that muck, being black, mut therefore be very rich. It is o'ten used by ladles in making flower beds, where it it handled with great sutia- Uciion, being light, porous and not adhesive when dry. But unless it has been out of the swamp a year or two, exposed to air and light, it is poor stuff for roots to feed in, not nearly so goou as the rich soil from a well-manured garden. The porousness of muck fits it admirably for a mulch fur newly planted roots or plants, but this makes the soil drv out much too qui- kly when once the muck is mixed with it. A mixture of resin and lard is re commended for applying on the trunks of trees to repel the borei. Linseed ml mixed with toot, and applied the first week in Juno, has kept ttie borer from attacking trees thus protected lor two or three years after its appli cation. Carbolic soap is also a good lepellant. If the borer has already effected a lodgment, he must be dug cut or followed up into his hole with a flexible wire and killed. Apple and peach trees should be examined tho latter p.trt of the summer, even if some offensive subsUuce has been used to drive away the enemy. It may have failed to reach every part of the trunk liable to attack. E.rly potatoes are ready to be dug at any lime afler , their leivcsdjc down, as it is to be presumed that this was the sign of thfcir maturity. But late-planted potatoes after a moit fall, are often green until frost cuts tlK-nt down. It is not safe to dig such po tatoes at once. A little time must be given to allow them to ripen, which will be known by the skin not slipping when bruised, as an unripe potato skin will peel. The ripening after the stems and leaves . are killed proceeds very slowly, possibly only some of the unfrozen sap in the stem is left to suc cor the potato. So long as the skin slips ' easily, the potato must be handled with great care. If bruised in warm weather the potatoes will rot down like so many apples, or eveu woibe at liiiios. Admiral Porter, the head of the navy, receives a higher salary than the commander of the army. He is paid 113,000 a year, while Lieut.-Gen. Sher idan receives only 811.000, although the latter is allowed a commutation of $100 a month for quarters' forage for four horses. The finest rosea are selling in New York at one cent each. They are cheaper than vegetables, but not quite so nourishing. It is said, however, that Turkish women who want to be plump eat them with butter. - MARKET REPORT. RKMAnt.K QUoTATtOXS Carkfullt Re visko iCvEiir Week. WHEAT Vslley, fl 403?1 421 WallaWalla.il 321 35. BARLEY Whole, 0 851 00; ground, per ton, '520 002l DO. OATS Milling, 3234e.j feed, 28 r30c. HAY Baled. flOf 13. SEED Blue Grass, 12015c.; Tim othy, 78c; 11-,-d Clover, Hl2Jc. FLOUR Tatent Roller, $5 00; Countrj Brand, f i 50. EGGS Per doz, 30c. BUTTER Fancy roll, per pound. 25c.; pickled, 22J25c; inferior grade, 22$25;j. CHEESE Eastern, al3c.; Ore gon, 13 14c; California, 14c. VEGETABLES Beets, per nckL II (X); cabbage, per lb., 1c. ; carrots, persk., $ 75; lettnce, jier doz. 10c; onions, 85; potatoes, per 100 lbs., 40e.; radLdiee, jn-r doz., 1520c; rhubarb, per lb., 6c. HONEY In comb per Ik, 18c; strained, 5 gaL tins, ier lb. 8Jc TOULTRY Chickens, per doz.. 14 004 50; ducks, per doz., 5 00(3 0 00; gese, $6 007 00; turkeys, per lb., IOc. PROVISIONS Orgn hams, 12c lcr 1. ; Eastern, 15lGc. ; Easteri. breakfast bacon. 12c. pt-rlb. ; Oregon K'(&lle.; Eastern lard, 10ll Jc. per lb. ; Oregon, 10c. GREEN FRUITS Apple, f 0 (a, 75c: Sicily lemons. $6 00(5,6- 50 California, $G 0ta6 50 ; Nva I oranges f6 00; Riverside, 5 00; Mediterra nean, 4 25. DRIED FRUITS Sun dried ap ples, 4c. per lb. ; machine dried, 10( 11c; pitiess plums, 7c,; Italian prunes, 1M(S 12c. ; peaclies, 10gllc; raisins, f 2 40g2 60. HIDES Dry beef hides, 1213c; culls, 6a7c; kip and calf, 10(12c. M.irraiu, 10 12c. ; tallow, 4344c. WOOL Valley, 15alSc; Eastern Oregon. lU3l5c LUMBER Rough. r M, f 10 00; edged, per M, I2 00; T. and G. shes thine, per M, f 13 00; No. 2 floor ing, per M, $18 W; No. 2 eviling, pel M,$18 00; No.2mstic,rM,18 00; clear rough, per M, $ 20 00 ; clear P. 4 S, perM, 22 50; No. 1 flooring, per M. 22 50; No. 1 ceiling, per M, f22 50; No. 1 rustic, ier M, f22 50; stepping, per M, $25 00; over 12 inches wide, extra, fl 00; lengths 40 to SO, extra, $2 00; lengths 50 to 60. extra, 4 00; 1J lath, per M, 2 25; 4 lath, per M, $2 50. COFFEE Quote Salvador, 17c; Costa Rica, 18(3 20c; Rio, lS20c; Java, 27$c ; Ai buckle's's roasted, 22c. MEAT Beef, wholesale, 2j3c; dressed, 6c; sheep, 3c; dre-sed, 6c; hogs, dressed, b7c; veal, 57c BEANS Quote small whites, 4 50; pinks, $3; bayos, 3; butter, ?4 60; Limas, f 4 50 per cental. PICKLES Kegs auoted steady at II 35. SALT Liverpool grades ot fine quoted 113, 19 and f 20 for the three sizes; stock salt, f 10. SUGAR Frices for barrels; Golden C.0c; extra C, 6c; dry granulated, 7jc. ; crushed, fine crushed, cube and iiowdered, 7 jc. ; extra G, bac: halves and boxes, c higher. The new wire gun at Shoeburyness, England, throws a five hundred-pound shell a distance of twelve mile, the greatest distance ever covered by a canon-ball. Mayor Filier, ot Philadelphia, is a rope-msker, and he sometimes exhibits to his friends a curious rope cable that he keeps in his i fh e. It is made oi hangman's rope, each strand having been taken from a rope by which some poor criminal's neck was broken. A melon patch near Orlando, Fla., is said to bo haunted by the ghost of a boy who died after eeling some of its fruit which he had stolen. Persons who pass the place at night claim to have seu a white fi.uie and to have heard unearthly shrieks ard groans. Lvidently a case of cholera, in phan tom. In one apaituient ol Wiuddor Castle called the Gold Room, there is stored away gclJ plate to the value of $12,- 000,000. O le piece alone, a salver of gold, is worth o0,000, and there is a gold candleabrum in the room valued at fully as much. It U heavy as to ri quire the combined strength of two meu to lift it. Lightning playtd a queer caper on it ranch near Buffalo, Wyoming Ter ritory, recently. It struck a barb-wire 'enee, and for a distance of four huu dred yards melted the barbk without injuring the strands and pulled one end of the staples holding the wires to the poits. The extracted euds were neatly turned into corkscrews and nickel plated. Macon, Qi., enjoyed the luxury of a wrestling match between a bear and a colored man. The bear seemed to be the best wrestler of the two, and would go at it just like an old veteran. He gave the colored man several hard falls, oue of which waa made with very heavy force. After hurling the man to tho ground the bear would stand on him. Last year, out in Iowa, a mad dog bit a steer, which in turn bit a pony, which tried its teeth upon a bull, which, upon going mad, -chewed -up fence rails as though they were "hay, and wound up by biting and goring his owner. . So far the man has es caped rabies, but his neighbors have raised a purse to sendjtim to Pasteur for treatment, and he is now on his way, in charge of a local physician. AN EDITOR'S WOOING. The Condition on Which CalUta Be'laRi Aeeepted Mr. Clop. ton. 'Callsta Bellamy, my happlnes . In your hands!" Mortimer Clugston, who utter i these words, was the editor and pro prietor of the Doodlevllle 1'eljer. 11. had pleaded his suit with an earnest nes that had broken a collar-lmtto. and nearly loosened a front tooth, ani as he stood awaiting the younjr lady' answer he could distinctly feel the in terest growing on the note of fll.3 due in one month, which he owed to the accommodating gentlemen In Chi cago who kindly furnished his paper foi- him. Gathering courage from her silencw ho broke out ngaln: "Calista. your manner leads me to hope. May I promise myself that you will fill the chasm in my life that er yawns for yon? A bright future may be yours, Calista. With you by my side as an assistant in an editorial career, as a proof-reider, as a helper in folding papers Thursday afternoon, making up mails, doing up single wrappers and looking after the ac counts of delinquent subscribers,, I could make the Ytlper even a greater power In the land than it Is now." "Mr. Clugston." said Miss Bellamy, "may I ak vou what the circulation of the 1 t lper ii?" "About a thousand. Miss Calista." I am not the press agent of a circus and menageie, Mr. Clugston," replied the young lady. "I am not getting up a newspaper directory, nor trying to make a contract with yoa for advertis ing a patent clothes-wringer. Yon can afford to tell me the truth." Of coure I only mean 1,000 in round numbers. My actual circulation is 886, but it is growing every day. Miss Calista. I work off three quires more than the Jasper ll?rnld of Ameri can Liberty does, and he claims 1,600. In less than a year you and I could make even - the circulation cf Doe Reeves Pinhook Jigtjcr look mighty sick." "Excuse the question, Mr. Oxiston, but have you a paying advertising patronaare?" "Advertising? There hasn't been an issue of the JVfwT for Hire years that has had less than 1.50 worth of pay locals for emulsions of cod liver oil inserted next to pure rendiDg matter on the editorial pajre. I have a trunk full of due-bills from sewing-machine companies, organ manufacturers and proprietors of patent wind-mills to ap ply on tho purchase of those artictes when I want to buy them; and out in my coalshcd I have patent medicine enough, paid for in advertising, to kill a regiment of Benjral tigers. I alwayf travel on a railroad pass, good any where between Saluda and Harker's Corners. I never get less than seven complimentary tickets whenever a c' r cus and menagerie comes to Doodle ville, and every wedding' in the neigh borhood brings me in a box of assorted scraps of cake. I teii you. Mis? Calista. the Ytlper is humping itself along in more ways than advertising. Some of my editorials have been copied into the Brimfield Tomnhavk and Eureka Thuncrbull, and pronouncec the ablest articles on chinchbus ir corn and the moral influence; of womai in politics that have been printed ir any of the papers for miles around and I have been prominently men tioned as a candidate for the positio. of delegate to the district lode o' Good Templars." ' " " 1 am not insensible to the distinc tion you offer to confer on me. M Clugston," said the young lady, softly. "I will be your wife on condition tha it shall not be a part of my duty t' wash the office towel." - Wash the office towel. Calisfcr exclaimed Mortimer Clugstone. as h" hair rose straight np on end in :t paroxysm of amazement, "we nevei wash it. so help me Benjamin Frank lin! When it isn't in use for breaking kindlings or propping up a window ii always stands behind the door. O Calista! Are you mine at hast?" The neighborhood cats wailed doliri ou:iy their touching notes of despair ing' love and defiant hate, the pensivt frofrs in the adjacent pond discoursof monotonously in Volapuk. the belatet Bellamy cow bawled loudly her pur pose to stand at the gate ot the ba -a-yard and blaspheme until somebodr came to let her in, and npon the ea' of the mild-looking old lady who was listening at the keyhole of the Bollaui; parlor there smote a sound like nntfl that which is made by a retired squash colliding forcibly"with the sidt of a brick house. Chicago Tribune. The Beaver's Building Instinct. A gentleman living in Montana caught a pair of kitten beavers, and kept them in a box in his barn. They were gentle, affectioaata little creatures and showed no disposition to be dis contented with their lot, until one day an accident happened which roused their sleeping instinct for dam-bailj-ing, and converted them into shy, wild "beavers almost ia a day. The outlet of tee watering trough becama stopped up. and the water in conse quence ran over the side and made a little stream through the barnyai-d. It was the sight of running water that revealed to the beavers the strongest impulse of their -natures. At once they dragg?d brooms, pitchforks and everv other available thing to the stream, and did the best they could to make a dam. The next day they dis appeared, and it was not until a dam arose in a creek n?ar by that the gen tleman knew what had become of his pets. But they were his pets no longer; they bad at onee become as L ild as if they had never seen a man. When a f reightX agent telis you that your trunk ia waxing shaky, and needs a strap,, ask him if he has any straps for sale. If he says he has, you may rest assured your trunk ia all right and doesn't require one any more than a country dentist needs a diploma. ruck. , "When are you going to make me that promised visit, Marion? Soon, I hone?" "I am afraid not. dear. I in vited a hired girl to come and stay with me last week, and I shall have to stav . at home and see that she has everything to make her comfortable. Judge. . SPAIN'S FAIR DAMES. The Ways of Maids aad Matrons In the Land of tho Troabadomra. When a Spanish woman Is beautiful she is beyond compare; but this transoendent beauty, contrary to what travelers would have us believe. Is tha ; exception rather than the role In Spain, and the common type of woman kind ia not prepossessing, whilst, aad to say, a Spanish woman's good looks last but a brief span, and as she puts on years she invariably puts oa flesh, whilst long before she arrives at the age when we in America consider a woman has a right to be both "fair and fat. the symmetry of her form ia -certainly not of the character that an -testhetic poet would rave a bant. In fact, one of the chief reasons why so few foreigners marry Spanish women is, I believe, on this account. A man must be very much gone on the senorita of his choice and be possessed of a Bayardian loyalty ii he does not desire to escape from the engagement on seeing his mother-in-law elect. It is really a tax upon any man's chivalry and devotion to be suddenly confronted with mamma and the senoras of the family,- and to know that the sylph like Venta by his side will inevitably become every whit as bulky and un wieldy as they. Chaperoning is rigorously exercised In all parts of Spain, a country where it is not respectable for a female to go out alone. Every young woman, even unto them who are perfectly capable of taking ca -e of themselves, has her chaperone when she takes her walks abroad. i Argus may have been 'cute, but In trial of vigilance I would, I think, be inclined to put my money on the Span ish materfamilias, who not only keeps her ctticks under her wing with a care equal to that of the most devoted -mother hen, but she can sight a possi ble poacher long before he is visible to the ordinary eye. But then. In justice. it should be added that it would not be safe for any yonng girl to walk in the streets unattended, ' for Spaniards, although exceedingly punctilious and formal, are not in reality courteous. and their views in regard to women in . general are embraced in cynical Tal leyrand's three golden rules: L' opp or tunile, ISopportunite, IS opportunity. Then a Spaniard's every-day language, even in the presence of his women folk, is of the most free-and-easy de scription. Spanish women have fewer vices than those of many other nations. They are naturally voluptuous, but they are scrupulously loyal to those whom they love, making devoted. obedient wives, without bothering their heads about woman s rights, or any of those questions which vex the souls of their more masculine-minded sisters in this country. They have all the curiosity and but little of the in tuition common to their sex in European countries. They have all the Moslem woman's hatred of physical exercise. Whilst the majority Of the lower classes can hardly read or write, the educa tion of the middle classes is practical ly limited to a grounding in matters appertaining to the rights and usages sd the mother church. Their liter ature is almost entirely of a religious haracter, interleaved with vulgar ac xnmts of the doing of the bull-ring'. -Of the works of foreign authors she 'mows but little, even by name, whilst -ter acquaintance with those of her own countrymen is, as a rule, 'confined !o trashy productions of a questionable character. Madrid Letter. SPHACTALIS MINOR. t Jan alt-a Insert Whleh Kills Oft tho Cotton Planter's Plaffae. The greatest bane to the cotton ' planter is the coco grass. Where it nce gets a foothold, from the time the cotton is planted until it is harveet d. it is one steady fight against this active enemy; and if a rainy spell hould happen to come up, and the plantation work be seriously inter- ferred with, the coco will gain such headway that it can not be stopped and will smother and " kill the young: cotton. F. L. Maxwell, of Killarney plantation, Merdron Point, in this State, thinks he has solved the coco problem. A West Indian planter told him of a bug in Jamaica which showed a great predilection for the coco. Mr. Maxwell obtained from Jamaica sev eral hundred eggs of the bug which is known scientifically aa the sphaetali vulgaris minor. Only twenty of the eggs hatched. He began operations with these. He plant ed the eggs in a box, raised several -crops of them, and, when he thought he had enough, began planting them. in the worst coco patch on his planta tion, scattering them three feet apart just as though he was planting seed. After some weeks some of the coco be gan to wilt. An examination showed that the worm had burrowed down two or three feet in the ground to the nut from which the coco springs, eaten it, and thus killed the plant. Since the first crop was hatched out about tha beginning of May. five crops of worms have been hatched, have laid their eggs and died, and each crop has been many fold larger than its predecessor, until the twenty sphactales have grown to many billions. In one place they have destroyed ten acres of the coco, cutting it level with the ground, burrowing to the roots and annihilating it, but not injuring the cotton in the least. It is not yet known whether it will attack other plants than coco. In Jamaica it is said not to injure other grasses of any kind. Mr. Maxwell is already shipping the worms to planters in other portions oi the South X- O. Cor. 2T. Y. Sun. Game is getting scarce even ia India, and an order of the Government of Bengal, published recently, forbida persons, except In self-defence, to shoot or catch an elephant or to act any snares or traps for one, and be tween April 1 and September SO in each year, both days inclusive, pro hibits the killing of deer and antelope, hare, . pheasant, partridge, hill : " sand grouse, peafowl. floricanS frvarl ctuorfna-l " 'It-'-Ivd In the country, . pink-headed dv whiitlinar teal, cc