"A. IT 1 ; f 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. LEBANON, OREGON, FKIDAY, , FEBRUARY 13. 1891. NO. 49. ANON 1 1 - -t 1 'itlSBl" "'IH ' ''ilijlil W. B. DON AC A, -DEALER Groceries and Proyisions, Cigars,. Tobacco, Furnishing Goods, ; - Etc, Etc. First-Glass Goods al GIVE HE A TRIAL nmirTTtT Pmrlnfi Taken in Exclianire lor Goods. KEEP ON HAND SMngles. Posts, Boards and Pickets, W C. Peteksox, " Notary Public. PETERSON Real Estate Brokers . HAVE ON HAKP choice BjRaiisrs In Lanre and Small Farms. Best Fruit the world, lmproveo. ana irampnnw unuu, " " "' Satisfaetien Guaranteed. Have on hand some CHOK E LIT PROPERTY, Residence and Business. Bargains in all Additions to the Town. x- Houses Rented and Farms Leased. iisrsxjiRAJsraE , AOKVTS FOB London Liverpool Globe Insurance Co. Guardian Assurance Co., of London. Oakland"Horae Insurance Co., of Oakland, Cal. Srarf Insurants Co of Salem. Oregon. Collections Receive Prompt Attention. pleasure in giving our patrons au mrormaiion aesireu in uur imw w irau. J. A. BEARD, Druggist and DEALER IN Pure Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oil, Glass, STATIONERY, FIHE PERFUMERY, BRUSHES AND COMBS, CIGARS AND FANCY MAIN ST.. PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED. DR. C. H. DUCKETT, D ENTI S T LEBANON, OREGON. J. K. WEATHERFORD, ATTORNEY- AT -LAW. Office over First National Bank. ALBANY. - ... - OREGON. W. R. PILYEU, ATTORNEY- AT- LAW. ALBANY REGON. - G. T. COTTON, Dealer In Groceries and Provisions. Tobacco and Cigars, Smokers' Articles. Foreign and Domestic Fruits, Confectionery, Queensware and Glassware, Lamps and Lamp Fixtures. PAY CASH FOR EGGS. Main Street. Lebanon, Oregon R. L. McCLURE (Successor to C. BL Harmon.) : and : Hai Lebanon, Oregon. c Shaving, Haircutting and Shampoo-"no- An the latest and best style. Spec r ' '' :tjr.tion -nai' t-ressinf Ladies' IN- Reasonable Prices. AND BE CONVINCED. A STOCK OF Sam'l M. Gaulaxd, Attorney-at-Law. &, GARLAND, Land in Valley. Finest Grain Ranches in Farmers' and Merciants' Ins. Co., of Salem. Notary Business a Specialty. We take Apothecary. TOILET ARTICLES. LEBANON, OR. 3. L. COWAN. 3. M. RALSTON. Bank of Lebanon, LEBANON, OREGON. 1 Transacts a General . Banking Business. ACCOUNTS KEPT SUBJECT TO CHECK. Exchange sold on New York, San rancisco, Portland and Albany, Org, Collections made on favorable terms. I. II. liORUM. Tonsorial Artist A Good Shave, Shampoo, Hair Jut, gleaned or Dressed. Hot and Cold Baths at all Hours. Children Kindly treated. Call and see me. LEBANON Ut r . i4 Li! MeatMarket Prop. Feesh & Salted Beef, Pokk, Mut ton, Sausage, Bologna & Ham. BACOi AND LAED ed;ellenberger EAST JLJSTD SOUTH -VIA- Soutliern Pacific Route. TUE BlOC NT SHASTA ROUTE. K PEEKS TRAILS I.IaVI. roiTUSD DAILY I Tam) P. M.l Lt Portland Ar A. M. Albany Ar 19:13 A.M. San Francisco Lt) AK) p. M. 10:23 P.M. Lt 10:14 A.M. I Ax A bo to trains stop only at the following stations north of Roeeburg: - East Portland, Oregon CI ty, Woodburn. Balrm, Albany, Tangent, Shedds, Balmy, Harrlsburg-, Junction Ctiy, Irrliig and Eugene. Roscburc Mall Daily. 8 a A. M. Portland Albany Koseburg at 4 iM P. U. Al 13 X. Lr I 8:20 A. M. 13 -.20 P. M :40 P. M I AT Albany Local Dally (Except Sunday.) txO P. M. Lt Portland Ar lKM A. M. t aw P. M. Ar Albany Lt S.-00 A. M lxx-al Paaaengcer Train. Daily Except Sunday. :38 t. M. Lt Albany ArlSS A. M. i: P. M. At Lebanon Lt8:40 a. M. 1 Sk A. M. Lt Albany ArilHr. M. 8aa A. M. Ar Lebanon Lt Sau p. m. PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS. Tourist Sleeping Cars Fur accommodation of Second-Class Passengers. attached to Express trains. WKST SIDE DIVISION. BETWEEN PORTLAND AND C0RTALU8. Mail Train Dally (Kxrept Snnday.) TflO A. M. ' Lt Ar Portland Corral Us Ar Lt 1.5 J0P.lt. ASP. M. 13:10 P. M. At Albany and Oorrallls connect with trains (4 I Oregon Pacific Ballroad. (Express Train Dally Except Sunday.) I 4 AO P. M. Lt Ar Portland McMinnvIlle Ar Lt 80 A. M. I 8:4$ A. M. T tSS P. M. S7-Throngh tickets to all points East and South. or tleketa and full information regarding rates, mars, etc., call on Co agrnt atijebanon. K. KOtULCK, K. e. ROGER. Manager. asst. t. F. it P. Afft THE TRICK HONS. Aa Iaterrlsw wits Mr. Darling, the Una Tamer. The lion tamer is a highly intelli gent young man, who. born in the United States, went to Germany in his youth. - In Hamburg he associated with a leading firm, the Jamrach. of Germany, and so, hating animals in nis charge, became familiar with hand ling them. Travelling for the busi ness, he made frequent visits to Africa and Asia, collecting animals. In a commercial sense, considering lions and tigers as cattle to be bought and sold, he became thoroughly acquainted with theif -.ways a5id instincts. "Cer tainly it was the only school where such quiet mastery over savage ani mals conia De acquired. "It Is a very Ions" business." said Mr." Xarling all my animals have been two years in training. Why, it takes all of two months to make a lion sit in 'a chair, and stay there. I can not vannt general intelligence in lions; it is rather individual. I- have had some fine young lions, superb in body, that had no brains. Not wicked or cross, but simply stupid. It was a tendency to forget to-morrow all that oaa oeen acquired lor months before. But I can't always tell. Leo is my best pupil. He never was ugly, but once I gave hint up. and sent him off. he was so dull; then took him to school again; and I know no lion sec ond to him now in intelligence and docility. This is the point. A lion doesn't want to do things. He Inst aoesn t want to. Now you must make mm. x'unisn mm, and you make him yonr enemy; afraid of yon, and he gets worse, not better. I coax him and talk to him in English, for Eng lish is the best language for command. The seesaw and the velocipede are difficult tricks. Not one lion in a thousand can. be taught to keep bis balance. They mostly tumbled off. Perhaps in that performance their highest intelligence is called into nlav. The velocipede requires a careful lion, and l have just the right one. -. It is nice work to get the exact pose and to keep it; but what gave me the most trouble is the chariot performance. A lion must have had an original con temot for that kind of business. You see I am busy harnessing up one lion while the others are perfectly free. The art has been to make the rest of them come up of their own accord. lor months I had one lion tearing round alone, and the rest scatterec about. Now they all come up to time. They don't want to, but they must. It is patience, kindness, making them not airaid oi me tor i am not afraid of them that has done the business. I have rehearsals all the time, for the animals must be constantly at work so - as not to forget. The whelps are com' mg on last; one. 1 think, shows great intelligence. I feed them eiarht pounds of beef a day for the big ones and six for the smaller" ones, and they take their supper after the performance." "You cannot reward your lions for good behavior, like you would t horse, with a lump of sugar or a car rot?" "No; they despise sugar, but love beef tea. But if they behave very well, 1 give them during the perform' ance a little tidbit of meat, and Nero would think I was not doing the right thing with him if he didn't get his mor sel. My whips indicate the positions for the animals. You could not hurt a lion, who has a tough hide, with i lash, but a whip acts as a protection You might belabor a lion, with a big stick, and he would not feel it. But he does not fancy a stick, the point of which, like a spear, is held in his direc tion; so it one threatened me, 1 could keep him off. An act I had to give up was where a lion rose and put his fore- paws on my shoulders. The claws are very sharp, and any display of endear ment would cut through my coat, and wound my shoulders, and a new coat every night was too expensive. All the licvis are fond of me, and we re spect one another. Harper's Weekly. Profitable Industry. Pecan nut growing is one of the ris ing industries of the Gulf States. After the trees begin to bear thev invoke no labor or expense and yield, it is said, an income of $500 to $ 1,000 per I acre, according to the quality of the nut. Steam Heat And Pianos. ' Steam heat is the worst for a piano. and in time shrinks botn case and ac tion, so that the former cracks, and the latter rattles. When one lives where that bandy mode of heating the room 'obtains, a dish of water should be kept constantly upon the radiator; it in ceases humidity, and In a measure - "rjnking. Qofai Housekcep- JTarin Botes. Koap Its Cans and Cnir, - Roup la a disease of the lining meni rane of the beak, extending however, o the whole head and throat, through e tear-duet to the eye, and finally affecting the whole constitution. If the throat be examined, there will be indicated the formation of a mem brane covered with a whitish tissue. In fatal cases death ensues in from three to ten days after the specific roup aj-mptoms show themselves; and cases not treated are generally ratal whenever the malady appears aa an epidemic in its severe form. An au topsy will reveal the gall-bladder and liver full of pus. The flesh has a bad color and is soft, slimy and spongy, especially about the lungs. This is the worst disease to which fowls are liable in California simply because people will not provide proper pro tection for their birds. This malady is known under different names, such as swelled eyes, diphtheria, sore head, hoarseness, canker, bronchitis, ' sore throat, asthma, snuffles, influenza. quinsy, etc., all of which are merely different phases of. the same disease. The causes of roup are many, but do not all need enumeration here. Any thing that iowers the tone of the fowl bad food, bad housing, impure water, bad ventilation, lice, filthiness, etc., etc., will of course bring on this disease. The most common cause on the Pacific coast Is being compelled to sit all night in drafts. So prom inent is this, and so marked is the commencement of this disease, that it might almost be called malignant catarrh. "When the people of southern California learn that fowls must have tight houses, free from all drafts, to roost in, roup will not be the terror it is now, and " sick chickens " will be the exception rather than the rule, for no portion of the United States Is naturally aa healthful for fowls as this. Roup is to fowls what heavy colds are to human individuals; and as we may have cold In the head, cold on the lungs, sore throat and other disturb ances from cold, the term "roup" covers them all. Roup in some forms is contagious, while in other cases it may excite that effect in those of weak constitution. We have had, individu ally, a great deal of experience with this disease, but have never felt any fear of it. If it is taken in time and handled judiciously no person need ever be' afraid of what is known as roup " taking hold of his fowls. It is in its last stage very destructive, but in the flrststagenopoultry-breeder need ever tremble with dread of thjs malady. Proper treatment at tie commencement of the disease will pre vent any serious consequences. It can be brought into contact with the human eye, or wiih'a wound or an abraded- surface on the hand, and cause serious inflammation, so thai caution is needed in handling thoso, affected. It has never been found, sti far as we know, in any kind of wiltj fowls. On this coast it is very preva lent, many turkeys, ducks and geese beine affected: in fact ninety-nine one-hundreths of the turkevs, both old and young, that die on this coast are killed bv roup, lhis Is not as it should be, for roup can undoubtedly be prevented if the proper means are employed. A turkey is much more difficult to cure when the disease is fairly started than a chicken. As stated acove it is nigniy con tagious in some cases. Hence, the first thing to do is to thoroughly clean out the quarters and disinfect them. The best disinfectant is carbolic acid. An ounce of acid ( the crude, worth 40 cents a pound, is the best) in a eallon of water may bo sprinkled over every post and everything m the poultry house. This should be repeated twice a week until the disease disappears. The walls Bhould be whitewashed. Add an ounce of acid to each gallon of whitewash. Filth, dampness, and roosting in drafts are the true causes of roup. A hen well fed and kept in warm, clean quarters win never taite up your time treating her roup. Cor, Petaluma Courier. a Pertinent Paragraphs. A fruitgrowers' union has been formed at Los Angeles to throw off the yoke of the shippers' union and buy, sell and ship oranges and other fruits wthout regard to the rules adopted by the old shippers' organi zation. There is an enormous differ ence between the price the grower receives and that which the consumers pay, and the new organization pro poses, if possible, to reduce it. If it can find a way to reach the consumer without the mediation of the commis sion man it can accomplish its object. At the initial meeting f4000 of stock was subscribed for. "We give a good deal of space in this department to the subject of poultry. It may seem to the casual observer a subject of email importance, but it is not. The , poultry products of the United States stand In aggregate value away up near the top of the list. In California, where eggs and chickens are so high that they are pouring in in a steady stream from places thous ands of miles distant,' at a heavy ex pense for freight, the poultry business is one of the most profitable. Novices will not succeed at first. The trade must be learned, as must that of black smithing, but it pays better, and with less labor, when mastered. The State. Horticultural society could not take opa-eulljtect of more importance than that . which was brought up at its meeting in San Francisco Jan. 30, the sale of inferior eastern fruit by eastern retailers as the California product. Boxes which have contained fine California dried fruit are emptied and refilled with trash which disgusts consumers with what they suppose to be California fruit and destroys our best market. Some means should be devised to counteract the work of these swindlers. and money would be well spent that would T1're the publication of their trie : " the towns where (Eurrtmt Btmm. 8Uk C altar. The California exhibit at the Chicago world's fair will Include silk worms, silk cocoons and samples of silk from the state, and the silk culturlsta are already taking -steps to make the ex hibit a satisfactory one. It in not generally known that in San Fran cisco there is an organization known as the Ladies' Silk Culture society, one of the officers of which is Mrs. L. E. Pratt of 1103 Eddy street. The society is busily engaged in sending rhullierry slips and young two-year-old trees to various sections of the state. Recently the ladies interested themselves m a party of Japanese who arrived 4ere from Tokio for the - pur pose of engaging extensively in the silk culture industry in California. The Japanese purchased a large tract of land in San Diego county and will endeavor to cultivate silk on a scale never before attempted in California. Imported So a; Itlrds Tnrive. Large flocks of goldfinches, bull finches, European robins and other birds, descendants of those Imported by the Portland Society for the Im portation of Song Birds, have returned from their winter migration and are making the orchards in the vicinity of the city vocal with their songs. Lin nets and some other birds have re mained there all winter and are ir fectly at home In the gardens about the town. The society is so well pleased with the success of its experiment that it has ordered another $1000 worth of nightingales, black thrushes, song thrushes, black starlings, linnets, sky larks, European red-breasted robins, American mocking-birds, etc., which will arrive there about the middle of March, and after being exhibited a few days will be turned loose. All these birds are insectivorous, and will be useful in destroying orchards ests as well as in furnishing melody. The egislature has passed an act provid ing? for the protection of both im ported and native song birds and their nests and eggs. . The Farmers Alliance. The annual national convention of the Farmers' Alliance at Omaha Jan. 28 voted down a constitutional amend- . , - '! 1 . .TT I l mem uenying women ine rigut w sit as delegates. r An amendment to make all laboring men eligible to membership was voted down. It was "resolved that one delegate from each state meet Feb. 22, 1892, to Call a convention to nominate can didates for president and vice-presi dent of the United States; that the national banks ought to be abolished and money loaned direct to individ uals by the government ; that the Aus tralian ballet law should be adopted ; that the government mortgages on railroads ought to le foreclosed ; that the president, vice-president and United States senators ought to be elected by popular vote ; that the Al liance shall never affiliate with the Republicans or Democrats; that the coinage of silver should be free and unlimited, and that women be allowed the right of suffrage. At a conference with the Farmers' Mutual Benevolent association the representatives decided that the two organizations could affiliate, but not consolidate. A Tenine Storm. The severest storm of snow and wind in eighteen years visited New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and a portion of New England Jan., 25. It lasted nine hours and laid , low nearly every telegraph, or telephone pole, blockaded trains and played havoc generally. The fire alarm sig nal systems of New York wnd Boston were completely tied up, and in New York the Western Union had not a single line working out of 1500running Intd the city. The Metropolitan tele phone company had absolutely lost 3231 of its 10,000 wires, and 1300 more were crippled. This company paid linemen flO a day to work restoring order out of chapB, and the Western Union had to import linemen from the west. Along the New Jersey coast" the storm, as usual, made great inroads, cutting into the bluff and decreasing the size of the state. Houses were unroofed, wires blown down and trains felt their way without telegraphic orders. The damage was enormous, the telegraph and telephone service in Brooklyn alone suffering to the extent of $150,000. Current Comment. The great success which has attended the organization known as the " King's Daughters " is one of the most con vincing proofs that could be given that woman has a sphere and that she can fill it. '. In California the circles have bound themselves together to found a home for incurables and an entertainment which they gave in San FrancisCo the last week in January was one of the grand successes of the season. They represented scenes from the "Arabian Nights" in the large Odd Fellows' Hall and gave a better entertainment than many a troupe of professionals could have done, and Lmade.jnuck . money. The; home for incurables is sadly needed, lire city and county hospitals are only for cases that may be cured, and when a needy patient is pronounced incurable m most of the county hosnitals of Cal ifornia he is straightway bundled off to the aimsnouse to me. The ladies of the Trinity church , San Francisco, have opened their home for friendless girls and women who may be left without protection in the city. It is at 300 Van Ness avenue and ha3 been fitted up with bright carpets and handsome new furniture Board and lodging are given for $3 a ! week and, as this.-'' . vt sufficing ' meet the costti. . r . bv subsc-"-' ... Women's I$)rjrin Care of Goldfish. Authorities differ greatly in regard to the goldfish aci-ording to Harper's Young People. There are those who maintain that it can stand any change of temperature ; and Instances have been recorded in which a goldfish found frozen in a solid piece of lee has so far recovered, on leing gradually thawed, as to swim about a pond again as though nothing had happened. But hardy as, in its natural state, one of these little ceatures may be, experi ence has proved that once transplanted to aquarium or globe much of this vigor is lost. It then becomes sensitive to almost any change." Too much sun or heat of any kind will kill it, and during a thunder storm a globe' mu?t be removed from the window, and the water changed almost immediately. Not only after a storm, but every day as well, the water in the globe should be changed. While doing this the flVh should be carefully removed with the hand and placed in a basin of water, a net being apt to injure the scales and so destroy their brilliancy of color. While in the basin and the fish should remain there for half an hour in order that the globe may lie thoroughly cleansed they may be fed with bread crumbs or biscuit. In this way the danger of having the water in the globe made impure by the bread becoming sour is avoided. It is altogether wrong to suppose that the water of the globe supplies all the nourishment necessary to gold fish. It must have something to eat once every day. It Is quite satisfied with bits of bread and biscuit though it is wise occasionally to vary this with duck-weed, lemma, aquatic plants and small fry. A branch of box ought to be placed in every irlobe apainst which a fish may rub, and so rid itself of the slime that collects and clogs its gills.- The globe should be large enough to allow free movement to the fish. In a globe of twelve inches in diameter onlv two fish ea-h 1t four or five inches in length can live comfortably. For three fish of that size the glole snould je at leat sixteen inches in diameter. A wide-mouthed globe is by all means best and a square or oblong tank Is lest of all. Efforts should be made to introdui-e a small jet of water into the glole or tank, thereby iutrod'jcingVi constant supply of fresh air, without whic,h m fi$? h can lyep well ; for water has the power to absorb a given amount of atmospheric air, and a cur rent of fresh water is In reality then a current of fresh air. Without this air no fish can live. One that is healthy has power in its gills to extract this air while under the surface of the water. A sure indication of disease in a fish is its constantly rising to the surface to breathe. Another symptom of disease is the languid undulating movement of the fish, the loss of brilliancy of color, and the lying motionless at the bottom of the glole. Such fish should be Im mediately removed f roin their fellows and placed in a basin of fresh running water. Generally a few days will effect a cure.' ; ". , .. Keep the globe; not more than four- fifths full of water. Let it stand in the coolest part of the room, near an open window. Protect It from the sun. Of all things have plenty of pure water and room. In purchasing fish the greatest care should be taken, not only in regard to their being absolutely healthy, .but also that no. fish from different local ities should be compelled to live to gether; for fish, like almost all an imals, dislike outsiders. The oldest inhabitant will always hunt a stranger, sometimes even to death, just as one that is strong will destroy another that is sick. - - Woman and Social Krolntioit. We can notice everywhere that man has taken the lead, on -the whole, in the process of social evolution, but that sooner or later woman has fol lowed in each step. Thus "a woman can now go about the street with n freedom which au unarmed rriari did not always enjoy. It is not three hundred years since the toilets of men implied as much elaboration, as much expense and as much time as did thoso of women at the same period, and far more than the toilets even of refined women now consume. Men have reduced all that magnificence to a simple working costume, varied by an evening dress of plain black, and the great mass of women now tend in the same direction. Even the daugh ter of luxury lays aside splendor for her tennis dress. Women are no longer expected to be wholly absorbed in their home duties any more than they are ex pected to go veiled in the street. In deed, a larger part of those home duties have been taken from them; they are not expected to do any more spinning or weaving, Tor instance, and the time which that once cost, if it is not to be wholly wasted, may well go the cultivation of their own mind3 and the healing of the world's sorrows.- They have ceased to be mere depend ents " or appendages, and there is nothing left' for them but to go on and be, individuals. T. W. Higginson, in Harper's Bazar. A Chance For National Guardsmen. Company G of the first regiment of the National Guard of Oregon has is sued a challenge to any company on the coast for a competitive drill- for 1000 a side and crate receiDts.'i each company to drill thirty-two mejtwo guides and three officers In the school of tr , Boldier and company, Upton "I and official decisions to govern. uv officers are to judge, a.nd . - .Tdrill General Bsros. UNITED STATES. The Farmers' Alliance defeated In gal Is for federal senator from Kan sas and elected William A. Pfeffer, Several buildincrs at Bluefleld. W. Ya., have recently been destroyed with dynamite and a reign of terror exists. S. A. Bradford of Wilkinson county. Miss.i having been acauitted on trial for train robbery the people of the county held a - mass meeting and adopted resolutions that he shall be put to death if he shows his face In the county again except in obedience to an order of court. The Democratic legislature of Mil waukee has repealed the law requiring children to be instructed in the En glish language in school. , Tom Hetlund and Charles" Thomiy son, ranchers, have been arrested for extensive cattle stealing practiced on Bad river, 8. D., and heretofore at tributed to, Indians. O. H. Hollintrs worth, late .receiver In the land ofllee at Austin. Tex., is 12,000 short in his cash. The supreme court has i-everswl the decision of the court of claims which gave the Central Pacific judgment for 198,021 against the government, and has decided that in estimating net earnings under the Thunnan act money spent Tor Improvements must not be. deducted from the gross earn ings. Kentucky's anti-lottery law has been declared void because it specified cer tain lotteries and prohibited them without prohibiting others of the same class. Texas has prohibited prize fights. An attempted strike forhicher waues of Armour s and Morris' butchers and sheep-shearers at Chicago Jan. 26 was a nzzle, only about sixty men going out. " Their places were quickly filled. At Milwaukee Jan. 26 Freddy Haek- brath and August Preise. aged 12. hile skating were seized by three older boys who said they wanted to make niggers out of them." and held their faces over a log fire until they were horribly burned. The boys will be disfigured for life. Harris A. Smiler, a wife murderer. was electrocuted in New York Jan. 26. Whether he liked it or not. he was a Smiler to the last. The -Nebraska house has passed a resolution asking for the foreclosure of the government's mortgage on the union I'acinc. Frank Patterson stopped Miss M. E. Wilmount on the street in Chicago Jan. 24 and tried to snatch her purse. containing $60, but she grabbed the purse with one hand and his hair with the other and called for the police. He tore away from her, but she held his hair so firmly that she tore off a large peice of his scalp and he was traced half, a mile by the blood that' dripped from his wound and arrested. The United States takes 28,000 bales of wool from Australia this year. C Perry Bryan, widely known- as "the youngest soldier of the rebel lion," and Henry Hart have been ar rested at Chicago for selling a large number of parcels of land which they did not own. Bryan was exposed by a widow of St Paul whom he promised to marry but who found when she followed" him to Chicago that he already had a wife and chddren. " Miss Sarah Little of Saginaw, Mich., set her clothes on Are and was fright fully burned. Her sister, Xouise al lowed eleven strips of skin each one inch wide and seven inches long to be taken- from her body and - grafted upon Sarah's, and both are doing well. , The town of Mitchell, Ind., a lawless place, has been changed to a peaceful immunity, by. a crusade of women. Many saloons, .which were formerly very prosperous, . are now doing no business.' ,. .' ...... ... T. A. Mann of Omaha became en raged at a cow and tied her and sawed her legs off.- Tbea fce had to-fly- to escape being lynched. Secretary, id the Treasury William Wlndom dropped dead from heart dis ease in New York Jan. 29 just after delivering a speech at a banquet of tne board oi trade and transportation. Dave Cronin, with several aliases. who was with Jimmy Hope and Bige- low when they were caught in the act of breaking into the safe in Sather & Co.'s bank in San Francisco, but who escaped then, is in limbo m New York. lhe national farmers Alliance re ports the nrosDective wheat croo to be 10,000,000 bushels less than shown by tne government report. FOREIGN. Members of the Salvation Army are jailed as vagrants in Finland. The czar is afraid they are teaching sedition. It is rumored that Gladstone is about to retire from politics. Manning of England and Gibbons of America are among the prominent candidates to succeed Pope Leo; Burglars murdered John H. Estop,- treasurer of Lancaster township, Ont, Jan. 27. . " . Sardou's new play. "Thermidor, which belittles the leaders of the French revolution, caused such riot ing when produced In Paris that the government was forced to suppress it The Chilean rebels seem to be gain ing ground. .Wolves have become so bold and fierce on lake Winnipeg that the In dians -dare not venture abroad from their villages except in large numbers. One camp of hunters was recently at tacked and every soul eaten except one who managed to climb a tree. . Masked strikers are assaulting non union railway workmen at Glasgow, England wants to control Hawaii, Finland is rebellious under the czar's oppression arfd is In a state of siege. An avalance at Athamana, Greece, destroyed eight houses and killed twenty persons and injured many. It is reported that 'Abdurrahman Kahn, ameer of Afghanistan, is dead Charles Bradlaugh is dead. An avalanche at Floresta, Italy, Jan. 26, destroyed eleven houses and killed nineteen, persons. The North British railway company has attached the funds of the Scotch Railway Servants' society in a suit for $100,000 damages lor causing the late strike. In a scrimYnage between German and French soldiers with knives at Bor deaux, Jan. 26, several were wounded. Much standing sugar cane in Cuba has been distroyed by fires believed to be incendiary. SmokefVi should be smart Shough to know that the genuine "Seal of North Carol' -- "' ng Cut'' costs them no .more " - A v-- -hlch some dealt "Strv ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS TO THOSE STARTING IN BUSINESS LIFE. Don't Aim too High, Study Tear But .if. bohj iM Mjmj js up lor ?-- Rainy Dtf. - The N. Y. Herald thus replies to the following letter: .. . T am a f.nttnt.rv hnv T rm fnm m (tn In Near Hampshire to New York wlto the bopeof maaiDa; a name ana a iorxane. r-iuxrr a9 fame or the fortune would satisfy me, but I prefer both it ther are wltalo reach. Will you ktDiHr tell me how 1 can ear out for myself m successful career? The results of our experience and obf-erratiou are en tirely at your service. youngman. suppose we begin - our conversation by denning terras. - What do yea memo by "a successful career?" '- If, aa yon say. von are ambitions to become a niUionnaire two or three times over your chance Is one ia i thousand. Possibly yon mar be that one. It depends on yonr natural gifts and your opportunities, v But , bow about tho other nine hundred- and ninety-nioeP Are their lives to be a failure, becauso they can't acquire an immense bulk of capital? In other words, is a surplus of cash the prime factor ia the problem of happiness, and is a citizen's usefulness to be measured by his bank account solely? " x ou may also tret the fame voa wish. It depends on your education, oa tho quantity and quality of yoor brains and on your native genius. With these everything is possible; without them. yon will everlastingly hunger for the unattainable, and in the end draw tee coverl id of a wasted life over yoor head ana ate a disappointed man. . ane number of thoso woo achievs such greatness that tho public build. ' monuments to their memory -is v55 few, but if your name happens to be that list the Herald will gladly snbscrk for the purpose. . Ns pon t make any mistakes In this mat . - ter. If you wish to get oet of- life all v there is in it for you there is a war to do it Real happiness consists of health. self-respect, tho good will of the im munity and a sufficient income to " gratify roar reasonable wants. Every- thing else is trivial and not worth both- i enng about The man who has steady work, fair wages, a cosey home, enough to eat a thick overcoat and the eon- ; scioaness of personal integrity, is a mightily favored fellow, la possession l of more than three-quarters of tho best things which this world affords. I Now, von can have all this, if voa make certain rules the basis of voar conduct - : First Don't aim too high, but aira straight Emerson's advieo to "hitch " your wagon to a star" is the merest buncombe of rhetoric Ton will pro dace larger practical resnltstLoa mien your wagon to a weir le3 mole. Longfellow's peom. "Excelsior." Is another bit of exquisite trash. Of course it is beautiful, "and all like that; yon know." but it is net adapted to a rough and tumble fight wih circum stances. -The young man in that poem shoulders a flag and starts for- well, for nowhere, so far as we cab discover. He is one of the climbers aa explorer of the celestial Alps. When he gets to the top of a hill he turns back and screams oat Excelsior!' What for we can't say. This is a free country. however, and he can do as he cleases. Up he trudges until - he gets to the snow-capped summit of the next ascent Unreasonable boy! he seems to be just as dissatisfied as ever. Eridently he wants the earth. Id spite of a chronic bronchitis and io constant dangrer of pneumonia, he waves his bunting. yells' -.xceisiori -.once more anosiru.es out for an altitude where the mercury freezes in the bulb. He may be gelnz yet for aazht we know. He has undertaken a tough job. though, and his flag by this time most ue iu taiiers. You want to set rid of . a good deal of this "excelsior" folderoL It is a mighty roor investment of talent c . r - . , . . i - stay uowa ueiow, iiu icw tne glaciers and the mountain peaks -take care of themselves. - ,.-.. : Second Do your work well, no mat ter what it is. , Study your basin ess. Make yourself master of it by patting your head and heart into it If it is uouKteepiog, iucu acp wou in such fashion that the Angel Gabriel will want to lend you his crown as a token of approval. If you are a mechanic, or artisan, or farmer, - be. proud of yourself, and the rest of the world will soon come to be proud oi you. - Nothing is needed so nines ia this generation as a man. with skilled angers, ion may have a long puu. but the clock will strike an unexpected hourand the opportunity which comes to everybody in turn, but which most people miss will present itself. Study the bulldog: and when: you get your teeth into a big thing, let them stay there. . .. ..- TTwrd Savo -money. " . The coward runs in debt! the brave man has a fly dollar surplus in hi pocket. The world may laugh at yon because you can't have a four-in-hand necktie. All right let It laugh. You are your own world, and the people who sneer are simply outside barbarians. When they see that five dollar bill growing bigger they all want to shake" hhds with you and send you to Congress. Keep well within your income and you trill save yourself from skulking round the corner like a Kicked aog.when the dunv - -is on your track. The handiest thingN . . on the planet is the penny laid tip for i a rainy day. . -- Now, young sir, get rid ot the upo : -sense ttk you . are a genius, settle down to the conclusion &hat you are ' -ast ao-average -North American boy ,r " and start in- . Keeg yourself sJertiwwwr, after ydujr. djgestive appajratriv'uon't , smoke cigarettes, get to bed early, be ; . square toed ta'allyour dealings, and we will wager acdakie-trjot at sixty you will hava tij tool' ksckward for I - those who began the rajctgsjwo. you did. Are-you reeMy- . Then, Go! A African TUtfread. StanleV says the railroacf from Mom basa to victoria Nyahza;. the building of which has- begun;' will be about ' 600 miles long, and that its total cost t will probably not exceeed $5.000,000,,. . It is to be a. light narrow-gauge rail -road. AH the money required to build it has not yet - been raised. The ro : " can easily 'be completed iu four yep but it is not known yet how so will be run through to'the lake. -T : ley thinks it would begin to pay I-' . ; "7v on the investment as soon ; ; ' . pleted. He believes the J : - ' ; ernment should help buil as it lies wholIyi-Brit' .. and ' - " , far & -i x. " .A