-vr -t3 -13 nSi q (i .Wci JrH' Or .if. , I ft He Who thinks to please the world is dullest of his kind; for let him face which way he will, one-half is yet behind. VOL. IV no. L1MAN0X, OUKCJON. Fit! DAY, JUNK, 0, 181)0. 82.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE: i V T , - . i J 5 I GENERAL '."NEWS. Decay of the Ksyptian Obelisk In tVniral Park, N.-Y. PATH'S TiH R XKTS HER t.iOO.OOll. A Kiir Marries Twenty New WJvm. A f 25.M Portrait. The kins of Si;tm has just married twenty new wives. Dom Pedro. ex-enieror of Brazil, ia an honorary member of the New York Historical Society. John GiWhittier. the aged poet, re cently refused $2,000 from a magazine for a'short Christmas oeiu. Theodore l. Weld, the well-known anti-slaverr agitator, celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday recently. The eldest daughter of General Ma hone has tue of the finest ami sweetest voices Mrs. John V. Maekay has ever lie ant. The Russian government gets aliout thirty-six hundred pounds of pure gold every year from the mines of eastern Siberia. Miilaia has received the sum of $25, 1)00 for his latest portrait of Gladstone. It was paid for by subscriptions of the women of England. Swinburne, Alfred Austin, and Lew is Morris are prominently mentioned iu connection with the English laureate ship as a successor to Tennyson. Governor-elect CampleU. of Ohio, Is a Knight Templar, a memlter of the Knights of Pythias, the Grand Army of the Kepnblic'and ihe Onler of Elks. Kev. T. P. Sandford, who has be come the pastor of & baptist church in Birmingham. Eng., is a full-blooded negro w ho was bora a slave iu Vir ginia. An eccentric old lady living near ; Dresden, Tenn.. has purchased her burial role. Site is seventy years old and insists that she can't last much longer. Her American tour will net Fatti $500,000. This will go a long way to ward her household expenses iu the Welsh castle with the unpronounce able name. The Egyptian obelisk in Central L Park. New" York, is rapidly going to decay, notwithstanding the efforts made to preserve it. The climate is too severe. Chartotte M. Yonge, the historical writer, has written and published exactly 100 books. She is now en gaged upon her 101st work, to be pub lished shortly. Sir Julian Pannccfote is devoting good deal of time to the study of Amer ican literature. He says that he had no realization of the richness and va riety of the work of our men of letters. Editor V. II. Mable of the Christian at Work thinks too much professional ism has crept into the churches, and says: "We need dirtier churches, more shabby churchesimade so by the masses attending." The contract for the organ for Tal nwge's new tabeSnacle in Brooklyn has beeu awarded to the firm that built the old one. It will have 5,078 pipes and 1 19 stops, and it is said it will be the largest ever built. A bright J'oung fellow in London earns his living by writing speeches for wedding breakfasts. In England - speeches are still expected from the bridegroom, and they are generally very bungling affairs; The library of the late Dr. Bauer, the celebratedGerman scholar of Ieipsic, has just been purchased by the Haver ford. Pa., college for a large price. It , ausists of 3, WO volumes on ecclesias tical literature and history. Senator Edmunds of Vermont has served longer in the Uni ed Slates Sen ate than auj- of his colleagues. April 6, ISiH), he will have been iu the Sen ate without a single break t went v-f our vears. Air. February. Edmunds will be ti'2 in Mrs. Emma E. Forsyth, the daughter of a former American consul at Samoa, is claimed to be the largest land-owner in the world. She has a plantation of about 150,000 acres on au island near New Guinea and employs over 500 people on it. A Lower Soncon, Northumberland county, Pennsylvania, farmer, while butchering the other day, struck a bul lock with a sledge hammer, and left the animal for dead. When he re turned from his breakfast the animal was finishing a chest of meal. Frank R. Stockton, who stands at the head of American short - story writers, is a thin, intellectual-looking man, with a fascinating smile and a pleasing mode of conversation. He is a tvpical American in apiearance, of the highly strung, nervous kind. Charley Crew, a Marion (O.) jewel er, has completed a medal which is to !e given to lra Williams. Mr. Wil liams is the farmer who had the fol lowing sign posted on his farm regard ing hunting: "Hunt all you please, and when the bell rings come in to din ner. " Miss Maud Banks, who fijnired on the stage awhile, is now in Washing ton acting as private secretary for her father, Gen. N. P. Banks. The Gen eral looks as large and strong as he did twenty years ago, although 74 win ters hare made his thick thatch of hair and his heavy mustache snowy white. A countryman went to a store in Morgantown. W. Va., the other day and purchased a Kerosene "That's the first one o them notions that ever come 'to my house," be re marked. "Candles was alius good enough for marm and me, but darter's got a beau and thinks we ort to put on a leetle style. A New Yorker says: "Men marry their secretaries and typewriters so oiien in tne ousmess wona oi jew York that there is now no novelty at all about the performance. 1 have known dozens of such cases. In our house alone four men have married typewriters or women clerks within the past twelve months." The schedule for service by the great guns is thought to be as follows: The 160-ton gun, with good luck, can be fired ninety-five times before becoming unfit for service; the 67-ton gun 127 L'tttnes and the 45-ton gun 150 times. The cost of each round for the big one is 327; 184 for the 67-tonner and 98 for the 45-tonner. In the past twelve years something like 400 out of those who have been candidates for the post of officer in the English mercantile service have been unable to distinguish colors. No few er than mistook drab for green; over one hundred confounded pink with green. Two persons could not recognize white to them it was green or pink. An officer high in army circles sug gests that as a "solution of the Indian question the red man be enlisted in the regular army. He says that they make good soldiers but very poor farm ers. The Americau army has found the former to be a serious fact, while theluterlor Department has made al most an utter failure of converting them into farmers. When Mr. Browning's friends first made known the poet's intention of be ing buried by his wife's side the Flor ence authorities stated that It would require an act of parliament to re-open the old cemetery where Mrs. Browu ing was buried; but they have since announced that, out of respect to the poet's wishes, thev are willing to re move Mrs. Browning's remains and the monument over her grave to the new cemetery. An American lady who recently risked Count Tolstoi, the great Rus sian novelist, complains that he is not quite consistent in practicing what he preaches. He holds thai, there is some thing degrading in the mere handling of money and property, and according ly delegates to the countess the control of the household and the entire man agement of his pecuniary affairs. She observed, however, that he has a lux uriously furnished study, and horses, carriages, and servants at his com mandalthough they are his wife's. On the whole, the great man would ap pear to have beeu lather a disappoiub-lueuU Rumbletborpe and the flail. Gen. Bumhlethorpe is certainly a very big man big iu statue and big ger still in his own couceit, brimming over, as he constantly ks, with his own Importance, says the Boston lYanaeript. Gen. Bumhlethorpe was never in the army; he never was even in the militia. But he was surveyor-general once, a good while ago, ami has of course worn the title of general ever since, aud has always insisted upon it. He has been a shade more over!earing since he be came a general in this way, though he was sufficiently overbearing before that. One fine afternoon last summer Gen. Bumblethorpe was taking a walk through the outskirts of the country town which he had honored by choos ing it as his place of summer sojourn. In the course of his wanderings lie came upon a pair of bars leading into a C-assy and inviting meadow. The irs "he let down and walked into the meadow. He had but half crossed the meadow when he saw, to his horror, a great black and white Holstein bull emerge from the dark shade of an apple tree and advance toward him. Gen. Bumblethorpe is not an active man, but the steady advance of the enormous auimal stim ulated him for the moment to great activity. And his own rapid llight also served to stimulate the bull, who lowered his head and charged fero ciously, bellow-ing the while. It was a mad chase, but Gen. Bum blethorpe had some good rods of ad vantage in the start, and the opposite fence of the field w as not far away. The geucral ran rapidly and succeeded in turning a somersault over the fence just in time to eseaite the infuriated animal. And then it was Gen. Bumblethrope was infuriated, r roni the sate side of the fence he stormed and raged at the bull, and. seeing a farm-house not far awav. he stalked over to it. The farmer was cboring around the barn when the general rushed up to him. "Is that rour bnll over there, sir?" exclaimed Gen. Bumblethoriie. "Wal. I guess 'tis," said the farmer. "Well, sir, do you kuow what it's been doing?" "Chasm' ye. mebbe." les, sir, chasing me: and it is an outrage I will not tolerate an out rage, 1 tell yon, that 1 should be pur sued and humiliated in this way?' "Wal," savs the farmer, "it's a thing that bulls will do; ye can't help it, ye know.'1 "Help it!" said the general, black with indignation; "do vou kuow who I am?" "No, I don't." Well, sir, I am Gen. Bumble- thorie." "Is that so? ' said the farmer.with a great deliberation; "is that so? Why in thuuder did' nt j-e the the bull, geuralf" The Jews Still Wander. It is remarkable that Emin Pasha should be a Jew by birth, and one of his rescuers Vita Hassen a Jew by profession. But the presence of these Jews in Equatorial Africa does not stand alone. From the time of Abra ham downward the migratory instinct has been dominant in the race. Me sopotamia, Canaan, Egypt, Canaan once more, Assyria, Babylonia, Persia. Canaan a third time, and then the world at large such are the successive stages of Israel's national migrations. The Jews, indeed, have ever leen the 'tribe of the wandering foot." Ia an age when movement from one country to anot her was a rare and hazardous proceeding in the twelfth century, to wit Benjamin of Tudela and Pe techia of Ratisbon traveled through a great part of Europe, Asia and Africa, and were thereby able to make con siderable additions to the world's knowledge. The second Benjamin and Halevy, who explored the Felashas, may also be mentioned. The existence of Jews in out-of-the-way corners of the globe, the Felashas and Beni-Israel and the Cochin Jews, has only been made possible by the migratory ten dency of the race. The four young men who kept last Yom Kippur in so queer, yet touching, a fashion in the wilds of South Africa, are among the latest illustrations of the tendency. No doubt the waudering instinct has been strengthened by persecutions, but now that peace and quietness are his in freater measure, the Jew still retains is predilection for travel. Jewish Chronicle. On the Verse of a Panic. Jackson (whose financial credit is gone): "I tell you, Withcrbee, we are on the verge 6f a financial panic" Witherbee: "Pshaw! What makes vou think that?" (Confidentially): "Well, ir, Bagley aud Roberts used to leud me small sums a year ago, but when I go to them nowadays for a live or a ten they tell me frankly that they haven't got it. Bagley and Roberts e two of our best business men, too. I tell you, sir, we're going to have a 3a,nic" Six of the 111 members of the Tale law school are Japanese. Charles V. Pier. of Seattle, has covered a new kecres of pine. dls- EASTElliY iNES. The Kansas fliv Treasurer $-20,- 000 Short. MISSISSIPPI WIIITK PAPS Klt.LKD. N n ii s KtlrtiMl. Steamer r'tiinnliTeil. A Xatetl t'liiiintiscr Dd. The Minnesota Iri vinii Club, of St. Paul, has received a character. Teiinv is now tlrst choice for the Sub- urban, with Kuceinnd ami Prince lioval clone up. St one unison, owned bv the Canadian turfman,.! I-".. Soaurain, is a race horse and no mistake. Pettit, the American champion tennis ulaver. defeated Latham, a orolessioniil. at London, Falkland, by :J sets to I. The Intel col leijii te Football Associa tion met in New Yoi k City on Mav 10, and changed the collep dx it bull rules. At Bethlehem, Ph.. May 10, the Le- high Fniversity football team defeated tin John Hopkins team by:! itonls to 2. At Brooklyn, N. Y.. on May 10. the Brooklyn Lacrosse team I vat the l'l- leije of the fit v of New York bv 5 uoj.ls to 1. Harry Hill's latest venture, his ealoon at One Hundred and Thirtieth Mrect and fhird avenue, New York, with bin old picture gallery nf wirs was nobl at mctioii. In the jwH'l-chilinpioiiHliip ttetween Messrs. IeOro and INmers Mav II, Powers won, the score U-inji ti H to IV- Dro's 5.VI. IK-Oro made 12 MMiitcbes, Powers 5. Tommy Nverson, of Syracuse, X. Y , and Tom Gilford, of New York, fonht at 14 jHMiuds for bx, near Jcisey fit v. (iitl'oKl knocked his opoiieiit out "in the third round. At IVnver, Co!., Billy Vvls and Jim Rates fought for a pure of f,"t0, "Police 1 tJaiette" rules. In the twelfth round: Woods knocked Bates out. The tiltt ' lasted 4tl minutes. j L. Iavenpirt, of the Fountain Gun' Club, Island, and Thelore 1'eck, I f Haverstraw, N. Y., tlt at 100 birds! tor fl.OOi), at Woodlawn, L. 1. Peek j won. h-eore, Peck, 77; Ihivenort, 71. ' Charley Mitchell and Kratik S'a in j are wraiiglind over conditions for a match for JEl.iHM). Slavin want to make a match to a finish. Mitchell de- j sires 10 or 12 lounds, for IT0 1 or 1,0 hi. ; Princeton Col lew and Stevens Insti-! tute teams played a gaine 0f Lacrosse j tor the championship at Princeton, N ! I., on Mav 1 '. Piinceton's team tdayed j in great form and won by 12 goals to 0. ; i J. E. Sullivan, Secretary of the Ama-i teur Athletic I'nion, is business mana- j er and athletic editor of the Sporting i rimes. He owns sixtv-eicht medals, as crophies of bis athletic piowess in days j gone by. 1 I. J. 0' 'onnell, the deaf mule who' shoots with a ri lie in over 5 1 positions,' writes that he is willing to arraiiire a match at trick rifh shooting with any man in the world. O'lVcmell lives i.i i White Clou I, Mich. The Golden Gate Athletic Club put up: a thousand dollar purse for IVnnv Kt 1-i leher, of tjuincv, Mass., and Joe l-'llings- ' woith, of New York, ijneenslieriy rules , will govern the match. The l-jser's end . of the purse is f 1 oil. i Fd Barton, the colored pnjrili.Ht, and Harry Cumminir fought ut the lclipe j Club, IjOiidou, Kng. Barton knocked ; out t'umniiiiffs in the second round. Barton is HI years of age, ntands ." leot (1 ! inches in height, and weighs I2S ounds. j i Jimmy Nelson, of New London, whipped Christopher Cornell, of I'as coag, in a lK-round fight near I taught. : Mass., on May 11. Tne stake was $: 0, ; of which $:!."0 went to the winner. Nel- 1 son knocked his man out in the bitli! round. i Ciarlev West field, the champion bul lock-dresser and butcher of South San Francisco, and M. F. Mullins, champion butcher of the Chicago stock yards, have leen matched for a bullock dressing con test for 1 1 ,00 ) a side, to take place in San Francisco. In the Yale College spring regatta at New Haven, Conn., on May 10, the 2 mile eight-oared race lietween the Soph- mores, Ficshman and junior crews, the Sophmores won by a half a length from the juniors in II minutes 4H seconds. Butler won the single-scull race 1 x$ miles, for tho Cleveland Cup in 1:1 min utes 30 seconds. Edward Haulan and Fred A. Plaisted rowed a single-scull raco at Bi'idgeMrt, Ala., for a purse of $2,000, offered by the Bridgeport Land Co. Hanlan displayed great sjeed and won easily. 'Ihe dis tance was one mile, and lianlau's time was 4 minutes and .'!0 seconds. It was the first professional race ever rowed on the Tennessee river. Fred Miller, well known to followers of the races and sporting men generally throughout the country, has lieen ar tested at Alexandria, Va., charged with using the mails for fraudulent pin oses. It is alleged tbat lie sent, out circulars Seeking purchasers for counterfeit money. Nancy Demerire, in attempting to es cape from a west-bound train on the Kiie road at lavitsburg, Ohio, tepied in front of a train going east and was de capitated. A brakenian who tried to save her lot-t an arm The woman's husband was killed at the same place and under similar circumstances a few weeks ago. Jack Falvey of Providence, and George Mickle of Taunton, Mass. , fought in ihe Gladstone Athletic Club, for a purse. The battle developed into a rough-and-tumble, and Mickle lay down after fight ing 23 minutes. Six rounds were fought. Both men are light-weights, and Falvey has figured in over 20 glove fights. Ibi ly Maboney of Boston was referee. Fal vey was seconded by Jimmy .Murray of New York, and Hippy Homer, while Mickle was attended bv Jimmy Nelson of Fall Kiver ami Jimmy Pol an. j The King of Bavaria, at Munich, has presented Win. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill), the American ?ortman, with a decora tion and a diamond ring. Miss Annie Oakley, the "Police Gazette" female champion rifle shot, was also presented by bis majesty with a diamond bracelet and a decoration of honor. The king's monogram is on the ring and bracelet. The shooting of Buffalo Bill and Miss Oaklay created quite a sensation. MUSIC. Balaaraan Who tlaa Man? l'elly and IMvrrtbig Incident. Trial. "The petty trials and tribulations of the salesman who retails sheet tutislu behind a counter are a vexation to the spirit and a weariness to the tlesh." '1 he speaker, says the Boston Herald, was a well-known publisher of music ami the senior partner in a West street firm. "1 served a tedious apprentice ship to that sort of thing myudf," he continued, "ami so I kuow whereof I speak. It Is notorious that the musi cal world la peopled perhaps more largely than any other profession with cranks. I suppose that when a mail Is thoroughly absorbed In the theory and 1 ract ie of harmony he Is prone to be arred by the discords of everyday life and Is disagreeably conscious 6f Itelng out of tune with the universe. But, however we account for it, the fact re mains that music-buyers are, as a class, tho most exciting and techy of custom ers. Half the time they haven't the faintest idea as to what "they want, and they will frequently own to this frank ly, "reiving on the clerk to make selec tions for them. "But the life of a music clerk has Its compensations. The grotesque and picturesque incidents that come under bis eyes are numberless. You see that pale" young man with the saffron w hiskers o er there. Well, only yes terday t beautiful, lauguoroiis-eved young 1 idy tripled in here, and glid ing to the' counter iu front of that guileless youth lisocd dreadfully; 'Will you give ine your hand in mine?' The clerk happened to le as bashful as he looks, and he was taken completely aback. He flushed a vivid scarlet, stammered 'Why certainly,' made as if to extend his hand, aud then, he thinking himself in time, climbed to yonder shelf and brought down the song -Your Hand in Mine, for which the artless damsel had inquired in such a bewildering fashion. Aud the young lady, w ho was evidently not w ithout a sense of the humor of the situation, drooped her languorous eyes and smiled serenely. "The man who gives the most trou ble is, perhaps, the funniest of all the bores that drift into the music store. He is the individual who wants the music to an air which he does not know by name. With the assurance of a Mozart he says to the tired clerk who waits mi him: 'What I want goes something like this; "1 ra-la-la, tra-la-lee. tra-ladoo." Don't you rewenilwr it? Uh! yon must kuow it. Tra-la-!a, tra-la-lee. If you'll run over the names ot songs that sound like that t may re call the title. Tra-la-Ia, trada-la, tra-la-loo.'" There's only one thing to do with this particular crank, and that is ' to tell him bluutly that you have no j car for music and that consequently j 1. . , 1.. ! iuu imc no loea oi me tune ne is try ing to hit. After that he is reasonably sure to ceae his discordaut trilling aud take his leave. "One day last week a stalwart son of Erin came iu, accompanied by a buxom young nunian, whose brilliant costume aud affectionate manner stamped her as a newly wedded bride. Iu a timid tone, enriched bv a delight ful brogue, the toung woman asked one of the clerks if he hud the song Let Me Fold Thee Close, Acushla.' "We have ' Let Me Fold Thee Close, Mavoureen,"' replied the clerk. "Sure, it's all one, me loy,' broke iu the happy groom. 'Acti-dila or Ma voureen, it comes to the same thing.1 "The smiling clerk bu-ded himself with wrapping up the music, while the blue-eied bride shlv whwitR-red to her spousc: 'Airah, leddv. be aisv now How cud yer expect the man to have any Gaelic' young gintle- "All in all. tin-re are some very d Verting incidents to Ins met with iu iin j establislin t of this sort, ami might pick up a much worse place for ! the sillily of Ihe funny tido of huiuau ' nature.''" i Trnckhig Snnke lj Scent When the Australian black fellow is pushed and can liud no other game he catches snakes, lizards, iguanas aud kangaroo rats, the wiliest and most agile of all wild animals on their own ground ami amid surroundings the most fa vol able to their concealment, by simply exercising their faculties of ! a superior wild animal, j With those woudcrful. great brown j eyes of his he can see the faintest trail where a snake lias zigzagged through the dry moss and leaves, or the slight est footmark where au iguana had lied from his approach to its refuge in a hollow tree, says the Fore.it ami (Stream. When daylight fails him and the dews of evening begin to fall, his broad nos trils take up the chase, and. stooping down among the hushes, with a tough forked stick in his hand to support him in his tiring attitude, he follows the track as unerringly as any bloodhound. When he runs a snake to earth, if he cannot surprise it in the open and kill it by a sudden blow of his stick, he squats over its hole, holding the fork ed end of his stick downward, and makes a low, hissing or whistling sound with his lips. Soon the snake puts his head out of the hole and peers around. In an in stant the forked stick descends and fixes it to the ground by the neck, and the black fclloNV, seizing it lirmlv by his muscular hands just behind the head, so that it cannot bite him, drags it out of the hole and twists its head off; or, if it is to strong for that, iiouiids it on the ground till its back is broken. So with the igautias and all the other animals. The black fellow never loses their trail when once he gets upon it. aud having followed them to their lair, he patiently awaits until they come out or until he is nblo to get a hand in and put them out. The black fellows declare, and prob ably with truth, that not a single ani mal can escape them if they have time to hunt a niece of desert country thor oughly. When they want to return to camp they can follow their own trail by sight with the greatest ease, but they say they cannot follow their own trail by scent at all. It has no scent for them, though another man's has a strong scent. This is one of the most curious facts conuectcd with these strange people; but it is only in accord with the well-known natural phenom ena. A Sagacious Dog. ltoscoe Whitcomb of Waldo, Me., has a shepherd dog which he prizes highly. One day a colt that was fasten ed by a halter got his feet through the stall and fell iu such a manner that he was choking to death. The doj was in the barn, saw the trouble, aud. run ning to the house, caught Mrs. Whit comb by the dress and attempted to pull her out of doors. The dog would run toward the barn and then catch Mrs. Whitcomb by her clothes. She tiually went to the barn arriving just iu time le save the QkV SELLERS OF SHEET 'SPORTING NOTES. Numerous Pugilistic Events for Ihe Near Future. IIVXMlX KP0 It KM AXOTIIKIt Vlt'ToltY. Trail Xetvs. ' lluffals Uili" llonernl. A Live llird Mahh. Nasselock, Ihe dead. German coinner, is The authorities have cloned all gam bling houses at lleiieva. At the next consistory at Home, three bishops w ill receive cardinal's hals. The Mingle wood mine ut North Law rence, Ohio, is on tire, and :HM men are' thrown out of employment. The steamer Harold, bound from Bil bao to Glasgow, foundered oir the Irish coast. l-ix per nous were drowned. At ihe papal consistory to Ik held in June the bishop of Geneva ami the papal nuncio at Lisbon will bo created cardi nals. The nuns in a Catholic convent at Porno, Austria, have Is-en evicted, ami the nunnery has been converted into a magaxine. The Brazilian government has decreed that ufter July I customs duties to the minimum amount of 20 peri-ent. shall be payable in gold. The grand lodge No. 2, B'Nai B'Kith, composed of delegates from the lodges in the Missomi valley, held its first busi ness Hession in Kansas City. the Be publican convention in the Third I ennslvania congressional dis trict decided it iiiexedient to nominate a candidate and adjourned. Near Hover? Ind. T., Her. F. F. Grif fin, organiser of a large colony of colored people ho had settled near tbeie, was .l lot and killed by Samuel Moore. It is reported that Patrick Hyne, who syrved two terms as national "treasurer of the Ancient Order of Hilternians, has confessed to a defalcation of t2,HOO. The Vienna corresondent of the lAm don Times learns that all the owers ex cept France have concluded commercial treaties with Turkey umii the- basis of a lixetl tariff". 1 he trial of Secretary of State Hice ami Public Printer Collier and Cleve land of Colorado upon the charge of con spiracy to defraud the state resulted in their discharge. I jiw ver ( linto G. Ucynolds died in New York from a pistol hliot wound which he received in bis office on Wall j stieet a few davs ago at the hands of Al- phoiise J. Stephani. A shortage of lietween $17,0 0 ami 120,0. 0 in the accounts of City Treasurer I'eake of Kansas t ilr was discovered, and he wan stisnded from office land ing an official investigation. The murderer of Jarob S. Heisingcr, suHiiiiteiideut of the Hr farm at Free port 111., has tieen captured, and is now in jail. The murderer expresses hiitisell as glad that he committed the act. Near Meridian, Miss., White Caa set lire to the cabin of a negro named An ilervon. Anderson ran out, fired into the crowd, killing I ami is Ijtnd and wounding two others and escaped. Thomas B. Musgrave, of the Union league club, New York, who was ar rested on a charge of sending obscene mail matter to Augustus 1. lasigi of KltincU'ck, N. Y., has been discharged. Advices have lieen received from j Fast Afiica that .Maj. Wissmann cap ! tured Makind.tni on I lie 14tli inst., plac- I ing the whole coast from that place to ! Zanzibar in the hands of the Germans. In New Yolk Judge Ingraham decided I that Uei-eiver Hentv Wintkrop Gray, ol 'the North Kiver Sugar Refining coin i puny, has no right to the profits of the illegal combination known as the sugar trust. Henry innwoody s lurniture estao- lisbment, a tine three-story brick, was completely destroyed bv fire at Salt Lake, I'lali. The loss on stock and buildings aggregates f 125,0 0; insurance, 71,IK0. Joseph Butcher and Frank Perkins, brothers-in law, quarreled over a mort gage on some proiierty near Mount Vei non, Ohio. Pcrkiim struck Butcher with a club, crushing his skull and caus ing instant death. At Bangor, Maine, James McGuire, lespondeiit in the "Oiiginal Package" case, was fined 10J and costs or ninetv days in Jail, it lieing Held tbat he was amendable to state laws. He has ap- is'uled the case. The Ohio He publican central commit tee decided upon Cleveland and July 10, as the place and time of holding the next Republican convention, hx-ltov. ror aker was selected as teniorary chair man of the convention. Ludwig Marqiiardt, an artist, attempt ed to murder ins wile, rrederika in Philadelphia, by shooting several times, and died shortly atterwards from the effects of poison he had evidently taken lieforc attempting lus wife s life. Leslie MacI,eod, the associate editor of Wallace's Monthly of Ne York, lias lieen discharged. MacLeod was charged with lieing implicated with Robert L Wallace in stealing tiouds from John II Wallace, proprietor of the monthly. j Arthur Newton, the I-ondon solicitor j who pleaded guilty to the charge of con i iiivuig to defeat justice by assisting ecr- tain Hrsoiis charged with complicity in ; the Cleveland street scandal to escape I was sent to imprisonment for six weeks i I At Ihe New Jersey Jockey Club, only ; live noises laced tne starter in tne rsew Jersey Jockey Club Handicap, at $25 each, with $1,500 added; mile and a quarter. Castaway JI, with Hamilton went to the iiost the favorite at (I to 5 ; with Badge, with W. Hay ward, second choice at 2 to 1. The race proved to be ! a surprise as Dwyer Bros.' F.on won eas ily, w ith Badge second, w hile the favor ite was absolutely last. Bergen rode the 'winner. It was the general impression Castaway II was stiff. Mike Daly, of Bangor, Me., and Jamei Dwyer, of Ijewiston, Me., have signed articles to contend according to "Police Gazette" rules, six rounds, at Lewiston Me. The conditions stipulate that the winner will take HO jer cent, of the net receipts aud the loser 20 per cent. Daly agrees to torteit foil to Dwyer it lie fail to knock him out in six rounds or 24 minutes, the time limited for the rounds including the one minute rest lietween each round. AN UNKNOWN LAND. a Sort Ion nf tha Unt1 Rtataa Kaar lrnllin by Whlla Mm. Washington has her grsat unknown and like the Interior of Africa, says the Seattle "reus. The country hut in by the Olympic mountains. which includes an area of about 2.600 miles square, has never, to the positive knowledge of old residents of the ter ritory, been trodden by the foot of man, white or Indian. These moun tains rise from the level country within ten to fifteen miles of the straits of Kan Juan ile Fuca In the north, the Pacilie ocean in the west, Hood's canal in the east, and the basin of Quinault lake in the south, aud rising to the height of 6.00U to 8.1)1)0 feet, shut iu a vast unex plored area. Ihe Indians have never penetrated It. for their traditions say that it is inhabited by a very tierce trllie, which none of the coast tribes dared molest. Though it is improbable that such a tribe could have existed in the moun tain country without their presence In coming known to the white men. no man has ever ascertained that It did not exist. White men, too, have only vague accounts of any white man hay ing ever passed through this country, for investigation of all the claims of travelers has invariably proved that they have only traversed its outer dge. I he most rer.erallT a?cepted theory In rcgarl to this country is that it con sisted of great valleys stretching from the inward slopes of the mountains to a great central basin. This theory is supported by the fact that, although the country around has abundant rain, and clouds constantly hang over the mountain tops, all the streams flowiug towsrd the four points of the compass are insignificant, and rise only on the outward slrqte ot the range, none ap- leartng to drain the great area siiut in iy the mountains. This fact appears to support the theory that the streams flowing from the inner sloies ot tne mountains feed a great interior lake. But what drains this lake It must have an outlet somewhere, and as all streams pouring from the mouutains rise on their outward slope, it must have a subterranean outlet into the ocean, the straits, or the sound. There are great discoveries in store for some of Washington's explorers. A irentleman named Drew, now re siding at Olympia, states that he has limited to the summit of the eastern range from Hood's ranal. and looking down could see great Talles stretch ing toward the west. A party of rail road prospectors claim to have pene trated the interior, but could give no account of it, and appear only to have skirted the outer slopes ten or fifteen miles from Hood's ranal. A party of United States soldiers are said to have traversed the country from Port Townsend. but mo data is obtain able as to what they saw. Numerous attempts have been made to organize exploring parties, but ther have invariably fallen through, the courage of the projectors oozing out at the ttst moment. There is a line oi- iHUluniiv for some of the hardy citi zens of the sound to acquire fame by -tiuveiliug the mystery which wraps the laud encircled uy the suow-capiieu Uljmpie range. tie naa 1 ne iracaraeats. We were waiting at Trenton for tha cross train to Long Branch, when a lame and sorrowful-looking man began to circulate among the jieople and solicit alms on the ground that be had just buried his wife after a long illness. which had. coupled witu ui-ueaitn, re duced him to poverty. Look here, sir!" said the third mau he came to, "you are a liar and an imisistor!" But I am not, quietly replied tne man. But you are! You told me this very same stor i-v in Buffalo a year ago!" "And he told it to me in Pittsburgh aliout two years ago!" added a second. And he related it to me and got money in i'atteron inree months ago! exclaimed a third. "Gentlemen, I am a truthful man!" protested the beggar. "But you are telling a mighty old storv." "No, I ain't. My last wife died four months ago." "Y'ourlastP How many have you had?" "Three. I told this story In Buffalo because I lost my second one there. Please read this document." It was a doctor's certificate of the cause of death, with a newspaper notice pasted thereon. "But you told It to me a year previ ous in Pittsburgh," said the Tennsyl vanian. "No doubt of it, sir. Please read tb:s. It relates to the death of my tlrst wife." It was some such document as the other, and its genuineness could not be doubted. "And the story you told me atFater son relates to the death of the third, I suppose?" queried the third accuser. "It does. Here is the document." That jiajier was also straight, and the first accuser scratched his head, looked puzzled, and finally said: "Well, I take it all back. You are not an impostor, but excuse me and ac cept this half-dollar, when I rise to re mark that you are stopping in a house next door to a fool." And the thrice bereaved was sent limrdug away with a purse of about & A. 1. ISun. The Deadly Cold Bed. If trustworthy statistics could be had of the number of persons who die every year or become permanently diseased from sleeping in damp or cold beds they would probably be astonishing and appalling, says Good Housekeeping. It is a perifthat constantly besets travel ling men, and if they are wise they will invariably insist on having their beds aired and dried, even at the risk of causing much trouble to their land lords. But the peril resides in the house and the cold "spare room" has slain its thousands of hapless guests, and will go on with its slaughter till people learn wisdom. Not only the guest but the family suffer the penalty of sleeping in cold rooms and chilling their bodies at a time when they need all of their bodily heat by gettiag be tween cold sheets. Even in warm sum mer weather a cold, damp bed will get in its deadly work. It is a needless peril, and the neglect to provide dry rooms and beds has in it the element of murder and suicide. Periodicals tn Russia. There are 686 periodical publications In Russia. Seventy-eight of them are political aud news dailies, 109 are icientitlc. 86 religious. 15 artistic, S3 agricultural, 82 statistical and biograph ical, 15 pedagogic. IS for children, aud the rest miscellaneous. COAST jXEWS. (Vur d'Alene Mining Properly Pur iliasetl liy a Portland Sjntlicate. C'AXXHtlKS AT KALKM AXI) ALU AX Y. Marble IMsrsvfry at Little Dalles. JrflVr sa Mills Is be (trapeses. A new w harf cost built at Fairhaveu. ing 175,000 is leing The electric street curs have com menced running at Salem. The road from Tillamook to North Yamhill is now clear of snow and can be crossed with teams. The New Whatcom cily council do nated (iiO to the lire department for suits for the men. Frank Carroll, a native of New York, has Is-en adjudged insane at Albany aud J committed to the asylum. Itanglas county i to have three new i-ells in its jail. They are to lie ready by August 1 and will cost $5,001. The Nook sack Indians are said to own in severalty some of the very finest lands in the valley of the Nooksack. The starch factory proioition made by Tai-oma men to the Albany Board of 'lrade has teen rejected by that body. The Albany city council has forwarded tocongiess memorial for the right to bridge the Willamette river at that city. The bunch grass everywhere on. the range reminds the old settler of many long jrars ago, it is so abundant this siting. The work of building the new steam boat for the upiier Snake liver lias been delayed by difficulty in securing neces sary material. Woik on the motor line lietween Inde pendence and Monmouth is progressing favorably. The line will lie in opera t inn by the first of July. The Old Itaminion mine has an K00 foot tunnel on the 50tMoot level. The rciort received by the owners is that the reault is mot satisfactory to all. A Seattle cable car ran into a delivery wagon, completely wrecking it. The dummy was somew hat damaged ami the paseengers in the car slightly injured. A fine quality of marble lias jnst lieen discovered within one and a half miles of the Spokane Falls A Northern, and only a short distance from lit'ie Dalles. J. B. Irvine, of Spragne, Wash., has written to J. II. Townsend. of Albany, offering to start a cannery at the latter point if sufficient inducement is offered. An assay was recently made of ore from the dandy mine, near ColviPe. It ran five ounces in silver, 58 per cent, lead and 12 per cent. copjcr, or $78.50 to the ton. It. P. Hume has purchased the tug Katie Cook, of the Coquiile Mill and Tug Company, and will take her to Smith river to tow vessels out and into the river. John Carrey, of Fox valley. Grant county, an insolvent rancher and stock man, lias made an assignment. C. D. Dustin, of Ixmg creek, was apiomted bis assignee. The machinery for Salem's big can nery plant is already on the way and will lie ready fw business i.i a few weeks. Two hundred eople will lie employed this summer. The boarding bouse of the Enreka & Excelsior Mining Company at Cracker creek was totally destroyed by fire last week. Tlie Iokm is estimated at $1( OJ. The origin of tlte fire is a mystery. Hoquiam cast 205 votes, all for incor jioration. J. T. Bums was elected may or. It. K. Hawdy, treasurer, ami A. M. Murphv. C. F. Iincastet, P. An'zen, John Hichardson and G. W. France conncilmen. The little steamer I'uritan, C. F Mon tell master, has left Astoria for Chilcat, Alaska, where she will engage in the fishing biirtiness. When she left here, says the Pioneer, she looked like a float ing wood yard, her deck tieing filled with fuel. The school house is the pioneer of civ ilization. All over the state new settle ments arc springing up and as an evi dence of their substantiality stand the pel tool houses. Citizens of Long Creek, (irant county, will build a fine new one this year. Fifteen thousand dollars have been raised by the people in ami around Jef ferson to reoen the mills at that place. The farmers of Jefierson and vicinity are feeling more hopeful and confident, as they are discove.ing tbat the affairs of the mill are not as bad as at first re orted. Snow in the mountains adjacent to Cornucopia, Union county, is rapidly disappearing and mining operations will soon be n mimed. The Oiegon Gold Mining Company's tramway, which was injured by a snow slide last winter, is to be repaired at once and will he in oper ation in less than a month. Yakima has secured another educa tional institution in the college of the Congregational Association, which will be located in the neighliorhood of the Ahtanum church, three thousand dol lars and forty acres of land have !een tledired the association, and it is be lieved tbat this lonation will be still further increased. The Dunlap Mining Company, of Fox valley. Grant county, were compelled to shut down worn on tlieir upper placer mine, due to the failure of water. The company anticipates the construction of a leservoir during Ihe present season, as that will be the onlv means to secure sufficient water to run any length of time. A contest is now iending at Oregon City which involves ownership of a val uable piece oi land back ot Astoria on the John Day's river. The claimants U the' proiierty are Neil Gilmore and Miss Nora Simpson. The first named filed on it as a homestead, while Miss Simpson entcied it as a timber claim. The result of the contest will not be known for sev eral months. The settlers living on the upper Nes tucca river, after putting in 108 day's work, have opened up the Jones trail and placed it in good condition. By this trail horsemen can save from fifteen to eighteen miles travel between Sheri dan and Tillamook City. This route is already becoming popular, and it is thought that but a short time will elapse until a good wagon road will be put through from Sheridan to intersect the county road already laid out in Tilla mook county up the Nestucca valley SKETCHING fffOM THE NUDE. A Paap Into tb Stadia nt a f'hleato Art On a platform rais-d tlxnit thrr.n feet above the level of the floor stood what appeared at the first glance to tsj a magnificent model of a woman in wax. One hand rested lightly on a table, the other on her hip. The figure was of robust build and beautifully proportioned, while the pose w:ts graceful, easy and as Immovablr main tained as that of a statue. A faf.'-t wave of color mantling the check was the only thing which warned the re porter that this was no triumph of the wax-worker's art, but in reality a living woman clad in nothing beyond blush: and her native modesty. As the Journal man made a tonr of the easels and diffidently compared the different studies with the original, not a word was spoken, and the work went on as unconcernedly as if the living model had been nothing more than one of the plaster casts from which the young women in the antique class were working. As for the model herself, after one furtive glance at the stranger, she asraia fixed her eyes on a poiut high above the heads of the stndents and devoted all her energies to the ex tremely difficult task of standing per fectly still. This relieved the news paper man from his natural embar rassment, t.nd he was aide to critkally examine the various sketches. The human figure is one of the most difficult things to draw, and perhaps for this reason the sketches were not -arly so uniformly good as the work had been in the other rooms. At the same time some of them were rigorons, accurate and effective, and one study in oil was a particularly strong piece of work. A strange fact noticed was that no matter how slight an amount of work had been put on the face. - and notwithstanding that the whole figure had been sketched in every case; thus" reducing the head to a small size.every student had caught a likeness of one of the most entirely unattractive faces it was ever the reporter's lot to look at Apart from a head of magnilicen blonde hair there was nothing even in teresting in the dull, cold" features. The model was evidently quite osh1 to posing, the students treated the matter as one entirely of business, and after the first uncomfortable embarrassment had passed away even the reKrter forgot the entirely unconventional presence and made his notes with even more sang froid than had been the case in some of the other class-rooms. Chicago Journal. Made to Look New. Old elothin may lie made to look nearly as good as new by pursuing the following plan, says the Philadelphia JRerord: Take for instance a shiny old coat, Test, or pair of trousers ofjlroadcloth, Cass i me re, or diagatr Thesoourer makes a strong, warm sospsud and plunges the garment into it, rubs the dirty places; if necessary puts it through a second suds, then rinses it through several waters and hangs it to dry on the line. When nearly dry he takes it In. rolls It np for an hour or two, and then presses it. Aa old cotton cloth is laid on the outside of the coat and the iron passed over that until the wrinkles are out; but the iron is removed tKTtnsvXLa, steam ceases to rise from the eooda. else they would be shiny. Wrinkles that are obstinate are removed by lay ing a wet cloth over theru and passing the iron over that. If any shiny places are seen they are treated as the wrinkles are; the iron is lifted, while the full cloud of steam rises and brings the nan no with it. God cloth will bear many washings and look better every time because of them. The Man fbr the Emergency. We were humping along down to ward the Gulf on a trunk line road less than a year ago. when we stopped at a small station thirteen minutes late. We had been reported as late from the last, aud exiected orders here to change the run. A brief investigation disclosed the fact that the station master, who was a!-o the operator, was drunk. He had felt a chill coroiug on. and had downed about a pint of redeye to keep it off. . He sat in a heap in his chair, his strength all gone, and his eves blinking, aud all the reply he could make to the conductor was: "Shay, ole feller, whazzer mazzer wiz vouT The conductor pondered a minute. The side track there was full of freight cars. It was six miles ahead' to the next station, but did the north bound express have orders to let ns make it? lie suddenly grabbed the Ojierator, hauled bitn ont of the office upon the platform, down njton the earth, and then carried him to the water ditch and damped him in. There were three feet of water, and it was cold as ice. He hauled the operator up and down for two minutes, dragged him out and stood him on bis pins, and then said to him in a voice as menacing as the point of a dagger: "liO in and teleirrapa lor my or ders!" The man walked in all drippinz. sat down to his table and sounded his call, and in fifty second our train had orders to make Six-mile Siding," and make it like !" The engineer got the word. and away we went, and five minutes later were at the switch. " Just then old north-bound tooted, and our last car was in and the switch thrown over not a second too soon. She came past us at the rate of fifty miles an boor, fling ing dust and gravel clear over every car. but we had saved our bacon. Two months later I met the operator in New Orleans and asked him if his cold water bath left any ill effects. - "Not the slightest," was his reply. "The only trouble was that the com pany objected to my way of taking a bath, and fired me out." N. T. Suti. Travel la Asiatic Turkey. Official notice has been sent to all -the foreign legations in Constantinople warning tourists in Turkey in Asia not to take any rides, revolvers, wearing apparel, silver coin, pictures, books, or manuscripts in their possession, as all such things will be confiscated by the custom-house. All printed matter will be taken away on the plea that it may refer to the political or religious system of Turkey. The Art of Sharpening a Kail". Do you know how to sharpen a carving-knife?" The question was ai. ed bv a bi? butcher ia u.ton street. "Very few people do," said he. The carver ought to be held at an angle of twenty to twenty-five degrees on the steel. "When the" other side of the blade is turned you must be careful to pre serve the same angle. Then draw steel from heel to point a."' . . edge, using only a slight Jf. r. lltruld, ' '