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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1890)
He Who thinks to please the world is dullest of his kind; for let him face which way he will, one-half la yet behind. VOL. IV. NO. II. LKH ANON. OREGON, FRIDAY, ) UNE, 13, 1890. 82.00 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE. liEXKUAL XKS Thomas the Kkt'lrie (iKoKfcK HUMIS TRAIN IN HOSTON Faster it brcgan Sheep raisrrs Their Flecks. Land boomers in Oregon are oauea "raxoopers." Statistics show that Ohio has 31,600 more boys than girls. Wolves anl other kinds of game are plenty in northwestern Florida. A Mexican giant 7 feet 6 inches In height is emploj ed as a special, ouieer at Scrantou. Pal - The baby kin? of Spain is the thir teenth of liis njme, which fact makes his mother feel nen ous about hint. John W, Dwight of Pennsylvania owns in North Dakota a farm nearly as largo as the state of Rhode Islami. j James Whiteomb Riley, the bachelor! poet, 5a in receipt constantly of letters from women w ho want to marry him. . Secretary Hn.sk and Representative Reed are great friends. '1 hey are called "Tom and J err'" in Washing ton. Jobn Horn, of Orviile, Ohio, is six feet four inches high, weighs 3.15 po , mid is twenty-two J ears of ag?. A West Virginian has been arrested for personating his deceased twin brother and drawing the. pension of the latter. A proud mother in Merced. Cal., ow ns a four - mouths-old baby that weighs tweiuy-six pounds and has cut four teeth. An exchange chronicles the fact that Mrs. Sophia- Bennington, of Xeni-.t, O.. agid forty, has given birth to her twenty-fifth child. The pope has expressed to the cardi nals at the Vatican his desire for burial under the Church of St. John Lateran, in the part restored by himself. The lances reintroduced lately into the.F"eneh cavalry are considerable ' shorter and lighter" than those used iu this branch of the service under IS" a po'.eoa L. It is reported that the sheep raisers of eastern Oregon are selling off their t'.ocks as fast a they can. Alumt one hundred thonsaud have already been disposed of. A colored woman w ho said her aire was one hundred and one years was arrested and put in the Birmingham. Ala., lockup the other day. She had We a quarreling. There is a Mission grapevine at Car penteria, Cal., which has a girth of six feet at the base, branches out in every direction for a hundred feet, and this year produced four tons of fruit. la London they are utilizing elec tricity in a novel w ay. During heavy fogs horses carry an electric light on their heads which can be illuminated as occasion requires, the storage bat tery being la the wagon. , If you would gaze on an example of j superb disgust, rind the Maine hunter vh thought he tired at the shining! ori s of a ferocious wildcat at ,d after-j WRi"d discovered that he had tilled a to- j mato can with shot -holes. j Eight cotton factories, sixteen bank's j and various other .enterprises have! let-n started in Sooth Carolina withiu a i Near. Corporations chartered between j October, -1S8S. aud PS!'. nu sober eighty- ' two, w ith an aggregate Capital of over j $41,U(XM)iXV " j A wnteh for blind people has been invented in Switzerland.. In the mid- die of every figure is a small peg, j which drops wheu the hour hand reaches the figure Tl ,.er feels that the og is down uml couuts back lo twelve to determine the hour. When lbim Pedro, of Brazil, lay sick unto d 'ath in llaly. not very long ago, he tohl his nurse one morning thai he h id bail a dream. "An old man came to me." said Dous IVdro, "ami in a moit earnest way informed me that 1 s; ion Id lose mv crow n before Host mv life." A queer circumstance has just been brought to light in the Mart mviile, Ohio, iKstofiice. A large rat wa3 dis covert 1 Toy the postmaster which was in tho habit of making one meal a day out of postal cards. After Indng de prived of this diet the animal soon died. Unequivocal contradiction - is given by Colonel George W. Williams, the negro orator and historian, to the re- t ceotly current tales of his engagement i and marriage to a young English lady j whom he met on board ship while go- ; ing to Europe last month. "The ro- j mantic rumor," he says, "is without foundation. " Citizen George Francis Train when ; in Boston recently was surrounded by i a crowd in a hotel corridor, when he offered to bet that he was the biggest fool in America. Nobody accepted the wager at lirst, bnt finally a man came forward and said: "I'll take your bet, stranger, provided yon are not George Erifncis Train." A well-known London journalist, a man of culture and ambition, is having bis eldest son educated to be a cook. The boy has heen trained by a famous chef at Brussels. He afterwards studied 'finder the chef of the Grand Hotel, Paris, and has iust been apprenticed for three years to M. Charpenuer, chef j oi the Savoy Hotel, Loudon. j A large tract of swamp land on the j line of the Jacksonville Southeastern j Railroad, near Manito, III., has been recently drained. The result of the til- : ing has been peculiar. In some places the roadbed of the Southeastern snnk four feet, a4 the road was compelled to spend a large amount of money in making the necessary repairs. John B. Alien, the Senator-elect from the Stste of Washington, is the Tonngest-locking man in the upper iouse' ofc Congress. He has blonde hair and c.ieeks and the extremely a-oiitliful; lpea.ance that accompanies com, exion into middle life. He --t as' ,-otiiiir as be looks, but the doeynot give him any uneasiness. -. Dvifft-Ebing. an eminent profes " ;n tic; University of Vienua, says 0 pr cent of all cases of insanity . . ft. a predisposition from their . "Vis- In 20 per cent of all cases - - 'wranceig found to be the sole ' ' ' i cause, and in SO per cent more - the causes of mental disease. . " ies legal measures to combat ",, At of intemperance, or the for- of societies to counteract it. her dav at Jackson, Mich., a ed a mouse, aud the frightened j little animal run tip a telegraph polo j aud then started out on a wire for the , next pole, ISO feet distant. The wire j swung gayly In the breere, but the trembling'traveler hungon and reached the next station In about an hour. He descended the pole, and when he reached the base he was so tired that he allowed himself to bo picked up by a spectator, A good story is told of Alphonso ... j Karr. A youthful man of letters ar Sellutg rjve4 at, r.uvtat- with a letter of iutro j duction to Alphonse Karr. He had I been pariieularlv told of Karr' 3 pjissiou- ato love of the sea; and, iindiug the author of "Genevieve seated on the leach. mending a net, ho immediately began an enthusiastic, outburst of com monplaces about the grandeur of the ocean. "Monsieur,'' interrupted Karr. "1 love the sea; we have lived together a long time. Hut if yon have come alt the way from Paris to disgust mo with it, I can only say it is a w icked thing to do." Thomas A. Edison's latest achieve ment is the invention of a light by which pictures may bo seen at night with all the advantages of daylight. Electric lights have heretofore thrown either loo brilliant or too yellow a light. Edison secures a perfect light for pie lures by placing at the back of the bulbs in his system of lighting a lead piece covering half the bulb and fitting it closely. Inside of the bulb is a coat ing of silver. The natural yellow of the light and the stiver reflection com bine to make a light that brings out all the colors in a picture harmoniously. It was lirst used in the Hiuiniualtuu of the "Angelus" in New York. A NATURAL IRON-CLAD. We had proceeded perhaps a quarter of a mile without incident, w hen, on entering a little oasis of grass among the sand hillock. Hans stopped short, thiuking he heard a slight noise near at hand. Wheu it was jepealed an in stant later, he stepped softly toward the. spot from which it seemed to come, and saw a dark object, about as large as a woodehuek ami almost as flat as its own shadow, shnilling from one tuft of grass to another, stopping but a mo ment to snitf about the roots of each, and then trotting away to the next. Reasoning as I had dotie the previous niirht. he leveled his gun and pulled the trigger just as the jieludo emerged! from the shadow into the nm light ot the moon. Hushing forward through the smoke to pick tip the game he was amazed to see the petudo scudding awar unhurt, as f i-t as its short leu would earrv iu He gave chase at once and soon overtook it. but it dodged suddenly and made oil in another di rection, "while he ran some distance past. Recovering himself, he dashed after it again and bringing his foot down fairly on its back succeeded only in upsetting himself without Moppin the armadillo. Again ami again he overtook and stooped to grasp it, but each time irot onlv a handful of sand and glass. Ho was rapidly being A ptohibition advocate named O-diorno winded, while jeindo stiii seemed per- Congelton, was eat uHn, badly lienten, fectly fresh, and in all probability we f hoi and thrown into the bay ut Ouk Khouid have lost our game after all. had 1 land, Cal., the evening of May .10, by uu not Miguel At this juncture brought his i known pitic. He bad ls-en .warned to club down on the animal's head, ajt- talking against the use of ardent parently killing it outright. U was i l"r"s. only shamming, however, and by dig ging its long Ciaws into the ground was itblo for several minutes to defy Miguel's knife. But eventually a itai sjot was found, and as soon as it was dead we began to examine it curiously. Including the tail, it was not far from two feet in length, and weighed per-1 haps seven or eight pounds. It was little onder that Hans's shot had no) ctlect. for the rounded back waseovercd completely with a csl of mail formed; of cross rows or bauds of thick, bonv plates, so hard and smotttli that nine! times out of ten they would have turned j otT a ride-bullet. The seams or lines j of skin between the bands were almost hidden bv the o eiiappiugof the plate-s. and were thinly sprinkled with coarse hair. This Iweame more abundant on the bellv and legs. The teeth, which U'vew only on the sides of the jaws. were of small size, bnt the feet were armed with large claws, those, on the fore feet were especially long and; strong. Altogether, it was rather a repulsive-looking beast, and it was hard I to credit these'rtions of Miguel and i the tloctor ih the ttcdi resembled in 1 flavor that of young roat pig. and was I j even more delicious. This sptH-ies, thei I hairy armadillo of the pampas, has no , power to roil itself up in a ball which j i many of its relatives js-ess. but il j i attacked often escapes its enemies by j Battening itself e'.oe against thei j ground and feigning death. During j j hot weather it seldom ventures abroad i i bv day. but searches at night for it? 1 j food of roots and insects. In winter, j however, or in dull, dark weather, il ) sometimes roams about by day, taking j I refuge, in case of necessity, iu any j burrow at hand, or, if surprised where ! the soil is moderately so!t. it can bur row out of sight and out of danger in a few seconds. UWfVr IS. Juirrnws, .St. Sicholax. Miss AV a a maker's Millions. Who can compute Miss Minnie Wan amaker's fortune? "Two million dol- lars." one says. "Double that." says another. "A full $C,000,000 bv tho time she will inherit it," says a third. There are four children iu the Wan amaker's family, two sons and two daughters, and they can swim in mon ey in any direction, says a Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Pits. Miss Wanamaker is so pretty that she would be a 'catch' if she hadn't a cent, hut the possession of so much gold makes Jier the most interesting girt of the season, for she is newer than Miss loiter and almost as lovely. She knows a thing or two about money, and is sincere enough to recog nize sincerity iu others. The fortune hunter who follows her will be unwise. For over a year she has beeu learning how to take care of money. Her fa ther gives her an allowance, and she buys all that she wears. No one questions Miss Wanamaker about her spendings, and even if she overdraws considerably on her bank account it only brings a laughing criti cism from her father. But what girl does not overdraw? Thev tell me that manv of them get an allowance of from 3,000 to 10,000 per year, and the only girl in Washing ton "who has not overdrawn hers is "Miss Florence Windom. Of course she docs not get that much, as the secre tary of the treasury is not a very wealthy man, but whatever Miss Flor ence gels she came home after a shop ping Four in New York a short time ago with 23 cents in her purse. fern.Jieals In Kussia. ; There are 686 periodical publications I in Russia. , Seventy-eight of them are political and news . dailies, 109 are j scientific, 86 religious, 15 artistic, S3 I agricultural, 82 statistical and biograph I rest laLjceiJaueoui. ical, la pedagogic, ia tor children, ana COAST NEWS. Linn t'oiinly, Near 'Albany, lo llavei a litM'imm Colony, i THK FATK UK A ritumUlTIOXIST. ! - . j Ktiglislt Hup uoalers litij ittg and Sliiijiiitg j Direct t Kurhuitl. California is tmw tmpplvinix the I'oit-j land markets with bcei. ' Crop prospects in Walla YVulla valley I are said to be better than ever tVtore. five memWrs of a family in. Canada I have died from eating w ild parsnip roots. ' About 1'resno. 'ai , a small lnn-tle bus appealed in the vineyards, HceeswtalittK ' the bug picking proeess. The six-vear-obl son of IJ. A. I i.-lt it- ' wi, was throve n Imni a horse and killed near Salem, Citizens of Lew is county ar' petition-1 ing the county court to build a biide across the Cow lits; river at Toledo. Anew warehouse will be erected at; Wheatland, to cost fSiMSt, rephn-ing the one earned away I y the tloo.1 last spting. The Httmliotdt river and its tribntaties ; are said to le almost jjorued with the carcasses of stock which perished last! winter. Eutilitdi bop-dealers are now uii a vis- : iting torn- of all the coat bop-lields, ar ranging when I bey can to tdupthe etnu ing piuthlet direct to I'.tilihb maikets. It is claimed that in Saeiamento val-j ley, whe'o urcbanls and meadow lands ' have been submerged, tlt-h have devoured not only the grass but many of the young : trees. Mvrtle iViint is steering for a lnxnn. J Alioiit two huudretl itcivs are lieiitg -; i olatted as additions to the town, and ev-: j erylly is coulldent ot a big t the place. boom for. j Over 100 bead of animals have Is-en : ) killed iroin W. S, Lada'sherd ot Jerseys, j owing to the development of disease! anions tliens, mtixxniceii ttiruut) cos liroufcbt jtiim t'alii'oriii.i. Manv others I are in quarantine, i '. - During the imntb of May over K0O ; f hovin have lieen sbipeil to Tueotna, from : .btl't-rent points in the Willamette valley ; ami i-outlirrii Oregon, by a f-alem firm -1 which wili isoon Ifgin Mipplying mutton ; : sheep lo that jmrtion of Washington. t .'treat excitement prevails in MIC 1 1 u ur d Aietie munng district over a re ! cent gold discovoiv. A tramp walked ' into the gulch, made the thscoveiy and i Nld out on the following Friday for i f'0,( O.i. humpies of ore s-ay -".",' Ot to ! the ton. s Genesee eitisteiis ate circulating e tit ion lor the calling of a fqs'eial election for the put Kse of voting to bond the1 town lor flO.tsO, said amount to ls used tor the airse of dicing one or niore j ditesi.tu welis to ol.lam water for lire t protection and tor other public improve- ! tllelits. ' l tie tsiiicr and plant lr the new saw-: mill at fvm'nuw , on the Nehalcui, has, lieen pun based and w ill lie taken to 'I'd- ! amiH'k by the steamer Iaxus (linen on i her next trip. The mill-ite has leen se- j lected and ibe woik will commence on the erection " a stone budding and hotel iinmcdialetv . j tieneral liidweil, of Cbico. Cal., has! ! uncle a sale of the entite season's cmp ol "' i It nit trout bis Kan. he Cbuto orchards of i I I,1I,"0 acies, and vineyard of 'Hi acres,: j which will amount to alsuit tS.000,000 , i cun l4 greater i"rt;tn, and the what re poll I!1 Marvsviiic and Yuna Citv will mams will iiediied at Cbico. Rev. John Hogan, a German preacher, lias been traveling lor some time ovei ditl'eteiit portions ol the Pacific coast, st? lH.ting a location lor a colony of tier mans, who will arrive at v astle Ganlen, N-' i aUj,,t.tlH irs, ' 'l0 onth, has picked out a largo tract of land iu I. inn county, near Albany, for bis colony. Robeit Kbman, late assistant door keeper of the state boost" of representa tives, has been conH'lled to band in bis resignation to the tseattle authorities s city detective for complicity in aiding ttie gamblers of that city to evade the ! Isce. l.lmian is the man that assaulted Representative Brown, of Sjsjkane conn ty, in the closing days oi the session. The sand along the banks of the ma jesuc Columbia river is an obstacle to railway traliio, almost as ditiicult to ovt r j come as the snow blockades durii.g the winter. Mearly eveiy train is delayed ; on account ol ttie ever-shifting sand bills i covering the track. j James M. Coon died at his residence, i between Hied and Peoria, May 30, at the age oi neaily NO years. Mr. Coon was j one of ihe earliest settlers in Linn coun- j ty, having come there in 140. . He has Iwn mi invalid with ibeumatism for some tune ami bis death was looked for. Edward Sal bach, a well known farmer living near Stockton, Cal., waa fatally injured lecently, by an inlmiated bull. The people of Port Angeles subscribed $1500 for a "write up" of one page in the New Yoik Sun. The article lias ap pearcd in cold typo, and the suhscriheis are dissatisfied with it. The Times of that city says the article fails to speak definitely of the coal mines near there, throws doubt over the local railroad pro ject, "and wanders astray into eivety rield and nook of the new state of Wash ington without expressing any decided confidence in the city of Port Angeles." Ir. A.S. Haley, while on his return from Waterville lo Lake Cbeian, lost bis way near the breaks .of the Columbia, ami in the darkness bis horse stumbled throw ing him to the ground, the horse falling upon and bruising him badly. He managed to woi k bis way dow n to the ferry and was taken home by bis friends. He is slow ly recovering. j James Ronudtrce, the Snohomish blacksmith, w ho disappeared quite mys j teriously a lew days ago, has not yet ! turned up, and it is thought that in a : state of intoxication the old man lias I fallen into the Pillchuck or committed suicide, as he was very despondent, hav ing tried many times to quit the use of intoxicating liquors without success The work on the new wing at the in- j sane asylum is about completed. It can- i not be occupied at once as it baa not yet j j been furnished. The asylum now fur-' j nisbes treatment for &J0 patient, which j I is the largest number ever confined ! i there. The wards are now all crowded : 1 and the immediate furnishing of the new i wing is a necessity that will no doubt be j met by ttie board ot asylum commission ers at an early day. BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE- it i tm trt tin Hern, and than Mnnnter Arlunlljr lCxUtetl. 3n a bright morning In May, 1897, I left Anglers for Nantes, the met run-j oils of Hrlttanv. writes Louis Frechette In the Anna. As 1 was about to take the train, a friend, a lio had come to see me olf, said with a parting hand- -Bv-thediv, before von get to 1 Ancenis there Is a station called Chani- toee, js ttie cars pun up toon, io tne right and you w ill see the ruins of an old chateau. Take litem iu well they are the remains of Jitucheurd'a castle. ' llluebeard'a castle? What Blue beard do yon meanP'' 'Surelv there is only one Perro aults Bluebeard, Ollenbaeli'a Blue bearil." "Did he ever live?"' 'tJerlalnlv, In th-sh ami bone, as you and 1. with this tlilletenee that he wiis a hard case to begin with, and a marshal of France into I he bargain." 'Really what was his name?" tlilles do He!, n descendant of of the oldest families iu Europe. one His career was most extraordinary. The name w hs not unknown to inc. t had read of it in the chronicles in which is handed down to us the marvel Olts Rtory of the maid of Orleans. But what could lie th connection between It and the blomlthtrsiy hero ot l'er- reault's celebrated tale? Ihlsquestum suggested itself to mr mind as the train bore me at full speed over the waving hills that border the Loire, ami from one thought to an other 1 found myself unconsciously re hearsing the different scenes, phases and catastrophe of the chihlisli Oram which grandmother take snclt delight in presenting to their little gaping aud shuddering audiences. 1 could see the youthful bride, led on by curiosity, creep tremblingly, clutch ing the little gold key, to "the fatal door, open it noiselessly, utter a crv of horror, and drop fainting at the sight of the ldies hung iu a row. Then the sudden return of the angry husband to his castle, his turv on see- ng the little gold key soiled with blood. his brandishing ot the deadly sword, w ith the infuriated cries of '-Prepare to die, madam!'' 1 could hear the pitiful tones of the poor victim, during the short respite granted her, as she called to her sister perched up on the tower: "Ann, sister Ann. seest thou u one come? And ! the lamentable replv; '-No, I see nothing but the shining sun dusty road!' on the ! And at last came the sigh of relief of yore, as I fancied I could hear from afar olf the sounding approach, of the - galloping rescuers. 'I I,., . h ilinln.t rn till u-n p..l,,l p 4 x x i itti;o aut(x. s a i mi vx nv u t - Chammptoce, where, sure enough. 1 saw on the right, as my friend directed, about a quarter of a mile otf, tho jag- ged fitrm of a lofty mediieval lower j which rose alsmt a heap of rums ami a ,' clump of stunted oaks, casting against the heavens its vast and somlar outline. : This was (lilies de Retx's castle. Blue ; Beartl's home. Or rather it w-a one of his castles, for he had ninnv, the whole surrounding country which Iwar his name (.Pays tie lieta) having once beeu his. A BOY MILLIONAIRE. llttta Marshall Rnharta. to - Ot.f , lit l'nl.,ir or n Fnrl mo f S.OiHt.OOO. Little Marshall Rolrts. son of the late Marshall O. Rolwrts. is I In young est millionaire in New York City. TluM-e are hundreds of children in Mew 1 York who will p.obablv some dav in- j herit one or more millions, but little Marshall Rola-rts already inherits his ; vast fortune, aud in eleven jears it will Ih entirely in his control. His father w a one of the great mer chants of his day. and wheu he died some four year ago he left an estate valued at JlO.OOO.'nOO. The Utile boy did not have this entire fortune be queathed him. because there were other claimants xvilh equal rights to it. When Mr. Roberts died he wa an old man. His widow, one of the lieantifnl y'ouug society women of our metrop olis, and the mother of little Marshall, was his second wife. His first wife was thirty years her senior, ami had a daughter who is now Mrs. Ames Van Wart. Mrs. Van Wart has a daughter. Miss Evelyn Van Wart, w ho is 20 years j ol(, Thu lnake, young Mrs. Roberts, who is now but 30. stepmother to a lady of 40, and stepgrandniother to a yoiing lady of 20. and the little million aire of 10 uncle to a maiden twice his age. When Mr. Roberts died he left a will dividing his money between his wife, his grauddaughter ami his little sotv The son has half of the fortune for his own use, but until he comes of age his mother is to have tho income from the $5,000,000. Little Marshall Rolwrls will some day be one of the greatest catches iu the matrimonial market, and he bids fair to be a handsome and clever young man. He is a nice.hcalihv-lookiug lad, tall for his age, well formed, and with a round face full of intelligence. He has great.soft. brown eyes like his mother's, ami a dimple iu a rather decided-look-' ing chin. lie has been across the ocean almost every year of his life, has lived for months in London and Paris, speaks German and Freuch as w ell a English, and is being educated for a man of the world. His greatest ambition at present is to be an athlete. He has a bicvele on which he rides up ami down Fifth avenue; he plays tenuis, bowls ami rides. Two horses are at his command, and almost every tine morning he may bo seen mounted on one of them, and attended by his own special groom, "a young Irishman who once rode in a cir cus," as the young millionaire is fond of explaining to his friends. He has a tutor who lives in the house and looks after his mental traiuing. j He is being educated after the English i fashion and learns his Latin and Greek i with his English primer. Sirs. Roberts is proud of her bright, i handsome boy.aud takes every pains to make him a healthy, educated gentle man. He eats plain food, sleeps on a hard mattress, is taught to know the value of money anil iu every way is trained with the same rigor as a royal prince. His fortune is, most of it, invested in real estate aud Government bonds, and four or five well-known men are his guardians. His income, when he comes into his fortune.will be f'JOO.OOO a year. which is almost $550 a day, or $22 for i every hour he lives. A Small Deer. A remarkable little animal has been added to the London zoo. It is a deer, though in size but a trifle larger than a full-grown cat. The cloven hoofs proclaim its position in the mammalian world beyond doubt, but it hits no horns, iu the male two long canine teeth project from the upper lip. aud these uurhaua serve iu their stead. . KAiSTKKN NEWS. iHfim Villain's IlllPSllWIllM ill ilil- ! waiikfp. , lt ISPEltH HIS TWO MTTI.K CIUUHIKN. KitRti - li Sj inlirab'S Hit) ittg tip Our flour- ln Mills. Sisty-eitfld .election ufllcers have lsen ilidicteit fur ion-iHHi at Jersey City. Henry Vl'lurd buys the. Milwaukee (reel rut lines mid lei 1 1 ic light pliint. The Nottli Dakota Democratic state convention will held at tirand Forks July lo. The I'Mcific Mail the Sreat .Northern : t:ilic, Imikes a deal w itb and Canadian Pa- Over TO I 'cut of the cilinenn nf t'bl- iugo are Kneicn tKit n or of fieluu pnreu- ttiye. Senor Hilva I'oito, an Afile.tn explorer ! of futv years' ex eriein e, bits committed suicide. tjitelss-'s premier says a royal com scandals aiint bit. ! inissioe sliall silt the I ifovermeiit. A lire at Chris Mueller's saw mill at Davenport, Iowa, destroyed fTtUMll wotth of lumber ; insured. An 1 'ttgliuli syndicate oltVrw to buv the twenty-one flouring noils controlled by the Noith Dakota Milling association. The Punk of Midd' ..... i , , i ..... ., imi e lennessee inn . ..,, b i tiiHii-m. i.iMiiini lew, f.!l t. eut : O Ml assets U taeen fiitM 01 and 70,0 K The timber laborers on the Liverpool j do ks hat e struck for an advance oil r day hi their wages. Ihe slrikt spread. may Richard Croker, the ex leader of Tam many Hall, has started from Germany for New Yoik to f,,- be senate com mittee. At the f.otn'uc Pointe. Quo , inquest the nuns produced a lint nf tifty-sis in maica who js ri-lied in the in-aue asy lum tire. The Vatican has in.tm -ted the Catho bishops uf (.'anada to endeavor to h-s- li. fi, n ",M autagtnnsm betai:eu the English i : an-f tivncb. j Tl ie celeHralti Hillings murler east was ui coed in the !h suiteiiHt court. It is not rxpt-cted that a dccicioii w ill be rendered this leim. Miners In the Cluion ami K. vnoldt ( Pa.) district bate decided lo stride for i the Columbus scale of li-'i cents. . lony! stlllulw is exHH ted. Abram Pofsaiihi", iiM-rinteieb'rd of i mails til Rochester, N Y., has leen sen ; tence l to three years in the s-riitentiary ' for embe.r-ltng letteis. A bill es-t.-ib1ishing Indian school in y iinieMola, Aiicbitfan. W 1-COtlMlI. ."south Dakota an I .Montana will be ri pnted fa voiaidy to the bon-e. i Schedules of b a-ijumeiit of Sistan ,t Sons, of York show liabilities of II ,t;::i,7;U ; iiomina! Mssets, (1 ,7lwi,n 0 ; i actual anets, lO.t'.'t. t 1 be rvpoits from Nan Antonio of a rev ! obttioiiary itnivviiM-nt in Coahuila, Mex., . "1 J ., , i ,'1 K '." H,,",H, 1 'h'"1 ""founded. The National Aix'iation of Chri-tian .-a-iciitUt. ha bemin its annual conven tion in New Yoi k Over I,2o0 delegates truni all parts of the country are present. The jndire iu the MarionVouiit v (Kbj.) election fraud ca-es bus terierved a d- isioii until lVeeniber. This is regarded as a practical victory for the defendants. The president semis a message to con kdess submitting b.r consideration the recommendation of the Pun-A met h an conference-of an inter-national American bank The wife of the rdiah of Persia, who has been under medical treatment at Vi enna loi some lime, has bad her mulil '-to tuny rt.-iiifd, and lias one back home. lo her The American Medical association at Nashville. Tenn., elected Dr. W. T. Brings of that city president, ami se let led Wa-liington as the next place of meeting. A limited passenger Irain on Ihe Al ton was inn into bv a freight near Kan sas City. Mrs. Mary Morris, of Mil waukee was one ol "the three jiersolis painfully injured. The KmihkoIh n.itier-' .v,n,u Km utiauimoiisl v adopted a resolution in fa- vor of a working day of eight hours, in cluding time occupied in ascending and descending the pits. In the investigation of the Jessup trag edy at Savannah, Ga., the coroner's juiy declared the kiding of Mrs. Littlcfield to be murder, and the killing of alt-Call justifiable homicide. At Huge::, Westphalia, a widower named Scbultz deliberately drowned his two lutle children in the river Volme and committed suicide by jumping into i the stieain when they had disappeared. Bv a lnrkv discovery at th" OKio state prison ihe escape of live desperate eo.iviets from that institution was pre vented jird as it was about to lie acenm ("lisbed. "Thev bad dug a tunnel under i be walls. Chicago police are on the bunt again for ".I. B. Simonds,' the man who bought the furniture for the Carlson cot tage, which Dr. Cronin wua murdered in. "Sinionds" has la-eu seen on the street tw ice latclv. It is stated that Chancellor Von Capri vi intends to submit a measure to the reichstng imposing a tax upon all Ger mans who are ineligible for service in the army and upon all German citizens who are abroad. - The expedition of the cutter McLane np the Suawanee river, in search of the missing Mayor Cottiell of Cedar Keys, Flu., has been abandoned. The ac counts of the affairs at Cedar Keys were ot exaggerated. At Povlestown, Pa., J. Monroe Sellen berger, the lawyer whose forgeries and other criminal escapades recently caused such widespread sensation, has been sentenced to twenty-two years imprison ment at hard labor. Jobn P. Kunse, who was tried with Coughlin, Burke, O'Sullivan and Begga for alleged complicity in the Cronin mur der, was married in Chicago to Miss Ju lia Gbover, the young lady who visited him so often during his imprisonment and cheered him during the trial. JACK AND BILL CATCH IT. hf Try la II ran li Hp a Circa aa4 cm ma Wlaar and Ilattar Mas. Lafayette H a straggling little town of about 2100 iuhabitauls. situated twenty miles from the nearest railroad. It Is important to the country arouu, because a circus stops here every year. These circuses are uot of the Barn um kind, but small affairs, travelling through the back districts ott wagons, and keeping away from the railroads. Nevertheless the arrival of one of them is a great event at Lafayette, aud several thousand people always collect to see the sights, some of them walking thirty miles. liifl and Jack Johnson hare long been the terrors of this region. Every backwoods district in the Southwest has ita bully, aud the Johnson bovs for years possessed that Undisputed dis tinction within a region embraced by a radius of ten mi'es. Bill, the elder of the brothers, was tall aud heavy. Jack was small ami light, but fully as dangerous as his brother. Neither had ever killed a man, but they had wound ed innumerable persons, and aver aged four or five tights apiece each week. They frequently stampeded the small towns, riding through the streets at full speed, tiring right and left. A fjw weeks ago a circus tempted by the warm weather, came up from the South, aud made a trip through the southern part of this blf.te, ami Ln fut cite was one of the towns visited, liie novelty of a circus la wiuter was all the more acceptable to the people, sud the crowd in attendance at the per formance was unusually large. During the afternoon the show was Iu full blast, wheu Bill aud Jack John son arrived. They galloped into town, and there was a scattering of women ... i ..i.ti.i i .. .... t,.i. au'i cniiuivii. biiu ui meu, iuu. iium were well loaded with whisky, and after rubbing their pistols across the noses of half a doseu men they went to the circus. After looking at the ani mals and the gymnastic performances they wandered into the side show. Pot a while they contented themselves w ith gazing at the Circassian girl, the fat woman, the sword swallower, and the armless man who fired a repeat. ng j ritle with his toes, but they soon grew j tired of such tame sHrt. Bill and Jack wanted a light. None of the spectators j would tight them. An idea then oc curred to Jack. They would clean out i the sitle show. ! "Let's break up the darned thine," he said to Bill, 'and have some fun. You take the fellow who swallows tIB knife, aud Pit salt into the one who shoots the gun with his toes.' Bill at once agreed to the proposition. i sud leaping over the ropes which j separated the spectator from the jer- formeis. they i ushed upon their victims. The crowd raised the cry of fight and ; made for the door, but the circus per- formets were perfectly composed. The j sword swallower tos-Ted his sword to ) one side, picked up one of the heavy pins lo which the tent ropes are ; fastened, and saluted Bill with a blow j which nearly broke his skull. The man ! with the repeating ride, who was sup-;- posed to have no limbs but the lower I ones, pulled two arms from beneath : his vest, reversed his gun and clubbed i Jack over the head, j Then the side show people sailed In. ) The fat woman kicked Bill in the side, i w Idle the sword swallower pummelled j him about the head. The Circassian girl tore out w h6le handfuls of Jack's j Lair, w Idle the armless man rapidly I I beat his countenance out ot shape. In I live minutes all was quiet iu th tent. The people timidly ventured back. The circus ei -formers were smoothing meir disordered attire. Bill and Jack were lying senseless on the ground. They were takeu out, aud it was found thai Bill's leg was broken. So was hi nose. Both eye were closed, and m head aud liody were covered with gashes. Jack bail both anus broken, and his bruises were uot less numerous ttian Bill's. That night the attendance at botb circucs w us Ihe largest ever known. The applause was tremendous. Nc attempt w as made to arrest anybody j Recently Jack, whose broken arms I nenled rapid!)-. Joined the Baptist Church. Ulli will do likewise a soon as his fractured leg is mended Both are scarred for life and announce their i a.. ........ t.. ..: ... . i ;,:.. "J"' iinuaiiwii iu A3 viii''vua ; and Christians. LafaytUe Ky. letter. Lincoln's Gettysburg Speech. It has sometimes Iteen said that ft he Gettysburg speech was not i . j ln,9J preciated at the time of its delivery: w i therefore add the testimony of another i high authority to that of Emerson.. On the day after" the dedication Edward j Everett w rote to the President: Per I mit me . . . to express my great i admiration of the thoughts expressed by i you with such eloquent simplicity and t appropriateness at the consecration of thecemeterv. I should be glad if I could flatter myself that I came as nearto the central idea of the occas on. in two hours, as you did in two minutes." Mr. Lincoln "replied; "Your kind note of to-day is received. In our re Stective parts yesterday, you could not have been excused to make a short address, nor I a long one. I am pleased to know that In your judgment the little I did say was not entirely a failure. Of course I knew that Ir. Everett would not fail; and yet while the whole discourse was eminently sat isfactory, and will be of great value, there were passages in it which trans- ' eeuded my expectations. The point made against the tueory ot tneueuerai Government being only an agency, whose principals are the States, was new to me, and. as I think, is one of the lcst arguments for the national supremacy. The tribute to onr noble women for their angel ministering to tho suffering soldiers surpasses in its way, as do the subjects of it, whatever has gone before." Century. Bernhardt a Clairvoyant. Mme. Sarah Bernhardt is a firm be liever in the supernatural. She has related that when at New York, on her first American trip, she woke up one night after a terrible dream, in which she had seeu her son Maurice bitten by two mad dogs. The vision made such an impression on her mind that early next morning she telegraphed to Maurice., ami received the reply that he had lieeu bitten by two dogs, that the wounds iu his arm were not serious. Moreover, the dogs were not rabid, bnt had liecu immediately killed. Mme. Bernhardt could, she 'affirms, mention numerous other circumstances in her life which it would be impossible to put dowu lo mere chance or coinci dence. A Modern King Lear. An old man named Daniel Murray has been committed to the almshouse of Northampton couuty, Pennsylvania, at his own request, because he can not get the use of t, 000, his own personal prop irty, w hich he assigned to his relating. SPOUTING NOTES. Itiiey, I lie Winner of the Kenfuckjr Derby. UOCA C. ROSS VS. FOOTPADS. The Sulfa A hb sal Pigeon Northwest. Sbout sf tlis The Avomlale Nashville. stable won :t,(7 at Terra Cot I a, (he broken down. great race horse, is M. M. Morse has lieen elected secre tary of the National .T rotting Association. Ten-mile trotting raeen distance running races on are like long tbe turf s-l- iium occurrence. The Montana Circuit entries are aixty at Anaconda, sixty-four at Deer lodgn and sixty-six at Butt. The New York Jockey Club ojsmed their spring meeting May SO, on tin? fin est race course in America. .The Emperor of Norfolk will never run again. When I e did iqiort the silk he was a sprinter and no mistake. There are eighteen entries for the three-vear-old stake race, of the Oregon State Pair. A consignment of 100 Shetland pontes i arrived in New Y ork recently. One was 3I inches high and weighed ISO junds. The bill to legalise betting on New Jer sey race tracks was just what was w anted to settle many arguments ami discus sion. Blue Belle, the American trotter, won the Grand Prize of 6.0 i0 florins at Vi enna, on May 10. Blue Bdle trotted the mile in 2:2t. Captain Brewer, the champion trap shot of the woild is in Han Francisco, He will probably sltoot several matches in that city. The Portland. Me., Yacht Club lias indorsed the bill now Itefore Congress "to provide arms and equipments for a naval militia." Jobn Teeiner, who at one time held the "Police tJacetie" champion chal lenge row in eup, baa oismed a liot-l at Mt-Keesport, Pa. Jack Pempsey is living at Portland, Oregon. He will remain in that city un til the La Blanche and Mitt bell match is decided on June 17. The Chicago stable of racers a on the money of the Nashville spring meeting. The horses that ran under their colors cooiHi in fl.-toO. 1 The Selby Live Bird championship medal waa won in Oakland, Cal,, May 17, by C. B. Smith,- who succeeded in killing 37 birds out of a jossible 40. Black Knight, by Hindoo Brooklet, recently ran 5 furlong in a trial at Nash ville in an even minute. Black Knight is owned by McUuigan, and is a sprinter. The IftO-yaM foot-rar-e for 500, be tween Harry Camptell, of PitUton, Pa., and George Siekler, of Towanda, was run at WilkesbaTe, Pa , on Mav lo. Campbell won easily in 104' neconds. Secretary King, of the Charter Oak Paik, Hartford, Conn., notifies Fox's Weekly that 'here are 111 entries for the 110,03 colt race for foals of Dow, to be trotted for at Hartford, Conn., in m. Advices from Shiner state that Dun es nc Kosa, the champion athlete, waa lacked by footoada or bushmen. in attacked ny lootnadu or bushmen. in Australia. They knocked him .town, tint be got up and whipped ail three, knocking one of the biishmen's eye out with a horn-handled stick. The great pigeon shooting natch le-j tmeen George C Beck, of Indianapolis, j who holds the national championship, ! ami Fred Erh, of Lafayette, Ind., the ex-1 champion, was decided at Indianapolis ! Ind., on Mav 12. Beck won. killing 44 out ot 6' Krb no,''',d down 43. It mi tiuw niiavr lor me nanipion. Hnith Leonard defeated Peter Schu macher, of San Francisco in a wrestling match for a puree of 500, at Buff alo. N. Y.,on May 12- The conditions were Gnooo-Roman, best two in three falla. Iiponard won the first fall in 20 minutes P j 9 seconda ; Schumacher took the second in W minutes 13 seconds. Leonard won the third fall ami the match in :tO min utes 20 seconds. Prof. Geo. Whistler, the champion trick swimmer of Australia, came near losing his life at the Golden Gate, San i Krancisco. He was giving an exhihi- tion in bis Boynton suit, and while jumping from a steamboat into the wa ter tore a bole in bis suit, and in spite of bia efforts he waa carried out to sea. Several steamers passed him, bnt not withstanding his signals of distress, paid no attention to him. Just about the time he supposed be was going to fur nish a meal for the sharks a coaster dis covered him, bove to and rescued biru. At Philadelphia, recently, the Milk Dealers' Protective Association held a series of races on the Driving Park. One of the interestingifeaturea. wathe two races by milk dealers in milk wagons. One of them, especially, caused unusual excitement owingto an accident. The race was won bv Nellie, a mare owned by Samuel Middleman. After winning she ran plump against the fence, npaet the milk cans and fell, injuring herself. The distance was one mile, and, consid ering the fact that each of the milkmen bad to place in bis wagon three large cans filled with water, and that the wagons were large and the harness heavy, the time, 4 :30, waa not bad. j The first of the great turf events of 18!l, the Kentucky Derby, waa inn at j Louisville, Ky., on May 14. About 12,0(10 spectators were present to witness j the rat. Robespierre, who waa the fa- j vorite just before ihe race, had his jockey i changed. Francis being substituted for Kiley. The little jockey was unable to control his horse, and it was a fight throughout, in which Robespierre would be sawed down and held back for a few leaps, only to take the bit and run to the front at a pace that was killing to him. Riley won it because be waa a long way the best horse started. None of the other five could touch him on that mud dy track, and it is doubtful if Bill Letcher, who alone proved to tie in the same class, could have pushed the great eon of Longfellow even over a dry track. All talk of Riley being out of condition was nonsense. He was never more fit. Clean of limb, sound and atromr. there was no sign of cough or other indispoei- j tion. His eye was clear and bright and) he looked the w inner. Then there was Isaac Murphy's riding. The occasion required a jockey who could keep hia boree in hand. Murphy did this admir ably. Tim of rata, 2 ; distance, mile aiia kali. Wbar'a My Mggert la the month of January, In going down the big river "from Vicks barg to New Orleans. J hapjxmed to strike a boat on w hich were half a dozen professional gamblers. There were a large number of other passen gers, and a game was going oa in the cabin nfght and day. I hapjwned to fall in with two young men at the start, and incidentally learned that they had been off on a speculation which turned out disastrously and were returning home close to dead broke that they could only raise $20 betwewu them. On the second night one of them cam into the game with this money, and in the course of an hour won f-SOU. Then luck shifted and he was eieaned ouf. As his last dollar went the banker iu quifwli "Hare you anything to raise a stake on." "Yes. W bar's my nigger?" was the replv. . . "Vere, Mars John! answered a role, and a "young and likely, " as it usd to be termed, negro I toy about ?0 years old entered the cabin and bowed very humbly. Thar's a nigger who Is worth f 1. 600 in gold," said the young man. "How much will you put op agaiuat him?" "TwelTe hundred. Doner In just forty minutes the last dollar was gone, luck and trickery being too many for the young fellow, ami as he rose up the "banker" culled ont; "Luck seems to bate some folks. Whir l my nigger? No one could auswer, bnt a search for him was at once instituted. Three or four men looked high aud low, but be could not be found, aud it was finally concluded that he had gone overboard. There was a great deal of "cussing around," but it didn't help matters any, and all finally turued in for the night. When I weut to niy stateroom I found the washbowl full of black water, and a strange coat and hat on the floor. I was wondering over these things when otie of the young men came in the one who bad. not played. "I came to remove these thing," he explained. "I got into your room by mistake, you see." But what does it mean? "It means that I am the 'nigger" who was put up against twelve hundred dollars anil lost." "What an ideaf "Yes, we ought to hare made a thou sand dollars apiece, but it was no go. Hope you'll excuse my intrusion and keep mum." And all the rest of the way to New Orleans the passengers mourned the , death of that "likely nigger" and won dered whether be went Iright down or died by inches. A'. J", San. Krlcaoij Patriotism. Though be waa a citizen of the world, and a naturalized American, his inter est in his native land never reaped; in deed his affection for it increased as he m CSS oa I U jvai a x w X 1 ited Sweden after his departure from home in 1826. says Heribner'a JJaymine-. He did propose in the latter part of ttu life to return thither, and de clared that he would rather lie under a mound of gravel in Sweden when he was dead than beneath the tallest mon ument that could be erected on Ameri can soiL He became in terested. how ever, in his study of solar heat and the development of bis sun motor, and was not willing to transfer himself to a region so little adapted to such studies as the high latitudes of Sweden. He l'anwu1 in faun rtt Ka Vxxawjas " ' needed, ns be explained, to be near the ! vertical ravs of the sun. - "New York ; York is certainly not vertical under ' h tnn. bnt ravs in midsummer in cline only seventeeu degrees, and pro duce a beat scarcely two degree lea than in the tropics, thus sufficient for mr purpose. . . . " hen Ericsson obtained a position securing to him an income much in ex cess of his modest needs, which was not until after he had reached bis sixtieth year, ho was constantly rn.it- j ing gifts to Sweden aud to Swedes. These appear to have attracted little or no attention in this country, but they have added a feeling of affection to the pride with which his country men remember him. An ancient miner sent word, through one of Ericsson's correspondents, that he had known John in bis youth; immediately a draft was sent to purchase a handsome watch for the old gossip, and as one of his neighbors, "the man with the leathern apron, was subsequently found to bare some vague reeoiiec-ilou in the same line, he received 150 crowns to "buy him a coat," When famine pinched the Norrland- j era in 1S67. and collectections for their relief were taken np in various coun tries, the total contributions from the United States amounted to 20.3 1 6 Swedish crowns. Of this sum Ericsson gave 20,216 crowns, and a suliscription of 100 crowns from the Swedish minis ter completed the total. Tho Jews Still Waader. It Is remarkable that Emin Pasha shonld be a Jew by birth, and one of bis rescuers Vita Hansen 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 been the "tribe of the wandering foot." In an age when movement from one country to another was a rare and hazardous proceeding in the twelfth centnry, to wit Benjamin of Tudela and Pe tachia of Hatisbon 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 Haleyy, 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 Yora Kippor" in so queer, yet touching, a fashion in the -wilds of Sooth Africa, are among the latest illustrations of the tendency. No doubt the wandering instinct has been strengthened by persecutions, bat now that peace and quietness are his ia greater measure, the Jew still retains cAjJk. his predilection for traveL JcwiA ere are only nve workmgmea justices of the peace in Great Britain. Three of them are in England and two in Scotland. Charles V. Piper, of Seattle, baa oovered a new ar-ecies of pine. 1