The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898, February 27, 1891, Image 1

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He who thinks to piease the World Is dullest of his kind; for let him face which way he will, one-half is yet behind.
LEBANON, OREGON, FKIDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1891.
NO, 51.
'W. B. DONACA,
-DEALEB
feies and Provisions,
j, Tobacco,
Etc.,
at
iSS
EIE A TRIAL
Goods
.xtrv Produce Taken in Exchange for
f
Goods.
KEEP ON HAND
lingles, . Posts. Boards and Pickets.
W. C. Peterson,
Notary Public.
PETERSON &
Ueal Estate Brokers
HAVE ON HAND
CHOICE B.AJRGr.AJQSrS
.i
In Large and Small Farms. Best Fruit Land in Valley. Finest Grain Ranches in
the World. Improved and Unimproved Land, from $4 per Acre and up. .
Satisfactien Guaranteed. Have on hand some CHOICE CITY
PROPERTY, Residence and Business. Bargains
in au auuiuoiis u uie own.
Houses Rented and Farms Leased.
AGEXTS
London & Liverpool & Globe Insurance Co.
vruaraian Assurance (Jo, or Lonaon.
Oakland Home Insurance Co., of Oakland, Cal.
State Insurance Co., of Salem, Oregon.
Farmers' and Merchants' Ins. Co., of Salem.
Collections Receive Prompt Attention. Notary Business a Specialty. We take
pleasure in giving1 our patrons all information desired in our line of business.
J. A. BEARD,
Druggist and Apothecary,
DEALER
. I Pure Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oil, Glass,
STATIONERY, FINE PERFUMERY, BRUSHES AND COMBS,
cigars AND FANCY TOILET ARTICLES.
MAINST.,
PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED.
DR. C. H. DUCKETT,
D N T I S T .
3
BASON, OREGON.
VVEATHERFORD,
ATTORNEY- AT LAW.
- Office over First National Bank.
ALBA3V, - - OREOOJf.
W. R. PILYEU,
ATTORNEY- AT- LAW.
ALBANYfiEGON
G. T. COTTON,
Dealer In
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. H. Harmon.)
er : and : Hai
Lebanon, Oregon.
Shaving, Haircutting and Shampooing-
in the latest and beet style; Spec
ial attention paid to dressinw-T fj
hair. Your patronage rear -licited.
. i
rfeser
IN-
Furnishing Goods,
Etc.
Reasonable Prices.
AND BE CONVINCED.
A STOCK OF
Sam'l M. Garlakd,
Attorney-at-Law.
GARLAND,
FOB
IN
LEBANON, OR.
J. L. COWAN.
J. M. RALSTON.
Bank of Lebanon,
LEBANON; OREGON.
Transacts a General Banking Business.
ACCOUNTS KEPT SUBJECT TO
CHECK.
Exchange sold on New York, San
rancise o, Portland and Albany, Org.
Collections made c a favorable terms.
I. II. BO 11U3L
Tonsorial Artist
A Good Shave, Shampoo, Hair
Cut, Cleaned or Dressed.
Hot and Told Baths at all Hours.
Children Kindly treated. Call and see me.
LEBANON
Hi
Meat Market
ED. KELLENBERGER, Prop.
.Fresh & Salted Beef, Pork, Mut
ton, SAUSAGE, BOLOGNA & HAM.
"Slim A.KD LAED ALWATTS OX HAND
Main Street, Lebanon, Org;.
EAST AND SOUTH
Southern Pacific Route.
THE MOUNT SHASTA ROUTE.
EXPRESS TRAINS LXJVX POBTLAKD DAILT :
T .-00 F. M. I 1,1
Portland Ar;3 A. M.
Albany ArS:lSA. M.
San Franctaco L 0 p. M.
10 :23 P.M. I l.T
10 -J5 A.M. I Ar
Above trains stop only at the following stations
north of Boaehurg : East Portland, Oregon City,
Wotxlburn. Salem, Albany, Tangent, Khedds,
Hftlsey, Uarnsburg, Junction Cliy, Irving and
Eugene.
Bowbaif Mall Dalljr.
8 KM a. x. I Lv Portland Ar J r. .
12 ao mi. 1 I.t Albany Ar 1 11 KM X.
6 :U P. a. Ar Hoecburg Lt 6 30 A. U.
Albany Local Daily (Except Banrtay.) '
50 p. jr. Lt Portland Ar I SOO A. M.
Sam) p. m. At Albany Lt HOP A. M
Local Passenger Trains Daily Except
Sunday.
J :36 r. 1C. Lv ! Albany Ar 1 33 A. K.
1:3 p. M. Ar Lebanon Lt 8 :40 A. X.
T -JO A. X. Lt Albany Ar I 4 $6 P. St.
Sat. K. Ar Lebanon Lt a :t0 p. M.
PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS.
Tourist Sleeping; Cars
For accommodation of Second-Claas Passengers,
attacbed to Express trains.
WEST SIDE DIVISION.
BETWEEN PORTLAND AND CORTALLIS.
Mall Train Daily (Except Sunday.)
TdO A.X. I
13 :10 p. M.
Lt
Ar
- Portland
CorraUis
Arl 5 SO p. If.
LtM9p. M.
At Albany and CorvalUs connect with trains tf
Oregon Paolllo Railroad.
(Express Train Dally Except Sunday.)
t .-40 P. X. I
I.T
Ar
Portland
McMinnvlUe
Ar
Lt
I S 30 A. If.
:45A.M.
38 P. X.
ay-Through tickets to all potnta East and South.
For tickets and lull Information regarding
rates, maps, etc, call on Go's agvnt atLebanon.
K. KOKtlLKK, K. 1". K(1(,EK
Manager. Aast O. F. A P. A gt
Current Brius.
Limited Reciprocity With Brazil.
President Harrison has issued a
proclamation Betting forth that the
Brazilian minister has communicated
to the secretary of state the fact that
in due reciprocity and for the consid
eration of admission into the United
States free of all duty of sugars,
molasses, coffee and hides, the gov
ernment of Brazil has by legal enact
ment authorized the admission from
and after April 1, 1891, Into all estab
lished ports of entry of Brazil, free of
duty, all wheat, wheat flour, corn or
maize, and manufactures thereof pro
duced in the United States.
The act also admits into Brazil free
of duty cornmeal and starch, rye, rye
flour, buckwheat, buckwheat flour,
barley, potatoes, beans, peas, hay,
oats, pork, salted, Including pickled
pork and bacon, (except ham), fish,
salted, dried 'or pickled, cotton-seed
oil, coal, anthracite and bituminous,
resin, tar, pitch and turpentine, agri
cultural tools, implements and
machinery, mining and mechanical
tools, implements and machinery, In
cluding stationary and portable en
gines; and all machinery for manu
facturing and industrial purposes,
except sewing machines, Instruments
and books for the arts, sciences, rail
way construction materials and equip
ments. The government of Brazil has also
further authorized the admission with
a reduction of 25 per cent of the ex
isting tariff duty in Brazil of lard and
substitutes therefor, bacon, hams,
butter and cheese, canned and pre
served meats, fish, fruits and vege
tables, manufactures of cotton, in
cluding: cotton clothing, manufactures
of iron and steel, single or mixed, not
included in the free schedule ; leather
and manufactures thereof, except
boot3 and shoes, lumber, timber and
manufactures of woods, including
cooperage, furniture of all kinds,
wagons, carts and carriages and man
ufactures of rubber produced in the
United States.
What rite Farmers Want.
The council of the Farmers' Alliance
and' Industrial Union in Washington
resolved to ask congress that all ves
sel built, owned and - manned by cit
izens of the United States that carry
full outgoing cargoes, to be reckoned
by the tonnage of the vessel, two
thirds of which at least shall consist
of home agricultural products, shall
be allowed to enter and "discharge
their returning cargoes, provided said
cargoes shall consist of manufactured
products, at any port of the United
States free of all customs duties.
The Ocala platform was indorsed,
especially the clause demanding the
suppression of the Louisiana lottery.
One Soldier Murders Another.
At the T'residio at San Francisco,
Feb. 11, Albert Blackman quarreled
with Gottlieb Nouneman, the cook,
because, at the command of the chief
cook, Nounnann had put a comrade
out of the kitchen, where he had in
sisted on going in violation of orders.
Blackman went down town and
bought a revolver and the next morn
ing before daylight he shot Noune
mann through the window while he
was in the kitchen, and killed him
Instantly.
Edward Crossthwaite was fired at
by a Mexican near the boundary line
atTiaJuana. He beat the shooter
over the head with his gun and then
escaped to the American side. Mexi
cans came over, armed, and seized
him and he now lies in a filthy dun
geon at Todos Santos.
The assembly has adopted a con
stitutional amendment forbidding the
legislature to pay any deficiency in
curred by any officer except upon the
written authority of the governor,
secretary of state and attorney-general,
in cases of urgent necessity.
Pertinent Farag-rapha.
The Selma enterprise publishes a
paragraph to the effect that the Cal
ifornia orchardist has a great advan
tage over him of Florida in the fact
that in this state fertilizers are
" scarcely considered, much less made
an item of annual expense." The
myth of an inexhaustible soil is about
exploded. Probably the land In Cal
ifornia was as rich as anywhere in the
world when settlers began cropping
it, and a great area of it is yet virgin
soil, but the most successful fruit
growers in California, who are making
prof.ts frova each acre such as aie
nevtsr dreamed of In Florida, are
spending more money than they do In
Florida for fertilizers, and the time is
coming when California will pay more
money for fertilizers than any other
area twice as great and make a better
profit on each dollar so paid, for her
climate is such as to draw out the
elements needed from the soil and
make better use of them in the build
ing up of grains of wheat, luscious
fruit and succulent vegetables than
any other.
Fruitgrowers cannot be too much on
the alert to guard against a condition
of affairs next summer in which a
combination of buyers can dictate the
price of fruit. It Is not enough to or
ganize for the shipment of fruit east,
for the eastern crop may be abundant
and glut the market this year. It
every fruitgrower were prepared to
dry his own product unless buyers
paid him a fair price there would be
more independence and more money
on the orchard farms.
The Peach Borer.
In southern Oregon, Mr. Carson re
ports no iarvsa of the Sanina Paclflca
are found, but he says that the larvas
of the flat-headed borer Is an enemy
to the peach. Here in the valley I
find both at work on the peach trees,
but the moth larva? is more abundant
than the larva? of the beetle. On the
college grounds about 20 three-year-old
trees were treated with carbolated
whale-oil soap, thinned with solution
of washing soda ( carbonate of soda,
cost about 2), cents per tree, two,
three or four years old, for each ap
plication). Five trees treated with
resin wash (full strength, as given in
report in California). Seven trees
wrapped with newspaper, several
thicknesses wrapped around trunk
from crotch to two or three inches be
low collar, and earth heaped about
bottom of paper. This was all done
between July 24 and 29. The trees
treated with the two first mixtures
had their trunks from crotch to collar,
and a little below, liberally slushed.
Every tree was carefully examined
before being treated and found ex
empt from borer.
Dec. 10 and 11 the trees were ex
amined. Those wrapped with news
paper were entirely exempt from at
tack, and those treated with carbol
ated whale-oil soap nearly exempt.
Those treated with resin wash Bhowed
a better record than those treated
with carbolated soap. The trunks of
all were in a fine condition.
Summarizing : Newspaper wrapping
seems to be the most sure though pos
sibly the most difficult to apply.
Either of the mixtures referred to
does good work" in keeping away
moths. One point here Is extremely
important, viz. : the earth should be
removed from around the tree for
three or more inches below the collar,
and a liberal supply of the mixture
(supposing a mixture to be used)
poured or "tlushed around the base
of the tree. The necessity" for this Is
shown by the condition of a large
number of seedling peaches which
were dug up at the college a few days
since.
Many large borers were found way
down in the roots, on trees where one
would not expect their presence.
They had In many instances entered
at a peach plum bud on Bide of soi
ling (destroying bud) and then worked
down to roots. Our dry season seems
to call for but one treatment if trees
are examined faithfully at proper in
tervals. The summer season is so
long, however, and in consequence
the moth is on the wing bo much later
than its eastern cousins, it would seem
advisable to make two applications,
one after the latter part of May and
one about the middle of August. The
newspapers, once on, are good for the
entire season. F. -Ii. Washburn of
CorvalUs in Bural Press.
A Yellow Scale Parasite.
Alexander Craw, quarantine officer
of the state board of horticulture, Is
engaged upon a series of interesting
experiments which will prove of value
to fruitgrowers throughout the state,
and particularly in the southern coun
ties. The yellow scale has been the
most destructive pest known to citrus
trees. Immense sums of money have
been spent in vain endeavors to erad
icate it Every known device was
employed, but without succesB, when
soon after the heavy rains of the sea
son of 1889-90 it was seen to disappear
from many trees. This led many to
assignthe cause of Its disappearance
to the rain, but subsequent investiga
tions demonstrated that this was not
the cause.
A small undescribed parasite was
discovered to be living on the Infected
leaves. It is a small fly which would
be overlooked by the naked eye. It
is perfectly developed and deposits an
egg upon the scale. The egg hatches
as a grub, which destroys the scale.
Mr. Craw is preparing a bulletin de
scribing the history of the insect, its
development and habits and great
benefit to the'healthy'growth of citrus
I trees.
Current Comment.
There was a dissension among the
King's Daughters in San Francisco.
The money raised for the proposed
home for incurables was taken
charge of by a board of directors who
elected themselves to that position
without help from the other members,
and the other members asked by
what authority this was done. The
self-chosen directors had incorpor
ated. Explanations were made. All
the King's Daughters may step into
the corporation. Peace reigns again.
Mrs. Langdon has been in Washing
ton working for the extension of star
mall routes in Butte and Plumas
counties. She had the backing of
Senator Stanford and showed that a
woman can do as effective work In
the political field as man. Then why
should she not be allowed to vote?
Is there any field left where woman
has not shown that she can equal or
excel man? The leadership in the
professional mind-reading business
has now fallen into the hands of a
specimen of femininity, and she is a
girl of only twelve years at that. Miss
Eva McCoy of Detroit eclipses the
best performances of Washington Ir
ving Bishop. She holds a man's hands
and spells whatever word he thinks of
and does other astonishing feats. The
young man who, a few years hence,
esteems it a privilege to hold her hand
and whisper sweet nothings to her will
need to be very careful. He cannot
fool her with tales of love and think
of another girl at the same time.
Mrs. Mary Shone of Forthington,
la., believes she has rights as well as
men have. She recently thrashed a
bully In the school she teaches who
would not obey her, and the blowing
to pieces of the stove with gunpowder
by his friends has not seemed to dis
turb her In the least She still holds
the fort. More power to her elbow !
Following the collapse of the Evans-
ton (Ind.) co-operative kitchen comes
the failure of a similar institution
where eleven families dined in one
room at different tables and divided
th cost at South Evanston. It was
found to be too expensive and attain
the servant girl triumphs over" those
who attempt to dispense with her.
Kitchen Recipes.
Silver Cake. One pound of sugar,
three-quarters of a pound of flour
dried and sifted, half a pound of but
ter, one pound of citron, the whites of
fourteen eggs. Beat the sugar and
butter to a eream, add the egg whites
beaten to a stiff frost, and lastly, add
the flour with half a teaspoonful of
pounded mace and the grated rind of
one lemon. J ust before baking, stir
in the citron, which must have been
well floured. Bake carefully and ice.
Cocoanut Cake. Beat yolks of five
eggs, one-quarter pound, butter and
one pound of sugar together until
very light Then add one-half pint
milk, one-half pound flour, beat well.
Add Juice and rind of one lemon and
two cups grated cocoanut Beat the
whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and
stir them, with two teaspoonfuls of
baking powder, into the cake. Pour
Into two square pans, dust thickly
with powdered sugar and bake in
moderate oven three-quarters of an
hour.
Molded Bice. Boil half a pound of
rice in water till soft ; dissolve half a
pound of loaf sugar in the juice of two
good lemons and a wineglass of rum ;
strain the rice from the water and
mix with it the lemon juice, sugar and
rum, adding the rind of the lemon
grated very finely ; stir it all well to
gether and pour it into a previously
wetted mold, and set it aside In a cool
place till wanted, when serve with a
rich custard, flavored with vanilla,
over it
Graham Biscuits. Put one quart of
graham flour into a bowl. Bub into
it thoroughly two ounces of butter or
lard. . Add a teaspoonful of salt and
two teaspoonfuls of baking powder.
Mix and rub again, until thoroughly
blended, then add sufficient milk,
about a half-pint, to make a soft
dough. Turn out on the board, knead
lightly, roll into a sheet about three
quarters of an inch thick. Cut into
biscuits. Place in greased pans and
bake in a quick oven 20 minutes.
Excellent Mincemeat Three pint
bowls of meat, five of apples, one of
molasses, one of boiled cider, one-half
of butter, two of raisins, five of sugar,
two level teaspoons each of cinnamon,
nutmeg and cloves ; one tablespoon
each of salt and black pepper, juice
and grated rind of three lemons.
Chop the meat and apples fine, and
boil all together about two hours. If
too thick, thin It with a little of the
liquor In which the meat was boiled.
This makes about two gallons, but it
will keep a long time if you don't have
anyone in the house very fond of
mincemeat
Dried Plum Pies. Soak dried plums
overnight, stew them gently and
sweeten tc taste. Cover a Jdeep pie
dish or shallow pudding dish with
paste, over which spread a thin layer
of the plums. then a thin layer of
paste. Add another layer of plums,
cover with paste a second time and
bake.
Potato Balls. Take cold mashed
potatoes and make into fiat balls ;"roll
them in bread crumbs, dip them in
beaten egg and roll them in cracker
crumbs, season with salt and fry in
hot grease. Cover them first with
bread crumbs, which prevent them
from soaking up the lard.
The Walla Walla penitentiary will
have a fifty-loom jute bag factory.
Judge Hanford of the United States
district court at Tacoma has decided
that Indians who have taken lands in
severalty are citizens and have a right
vi wuy wuiBtty,
(Bmnal Betas.
UNITED STATES.
In the Cannelsvllle (Pa.) coke re
gion about 15,000 men are on a strike
against a reduction and there has
been rioting and murder.
Several persons and much stock
perished during a blizzard in Nebraska
and South Dakota Feb. 7 and 8.
The railroad employes in the upper
Mississippi basin are being organized
to tight the granger element in politics.
The Christian church in Heyworth,
111., recently bought an organ, despite
the strong opposition of a large
minority. The latter took the In
strument into the street at night and
burned it
The glassware 'lompanles of the
United States lire forming a trust to
control the entire product
The tapping of an old shaft full of
water by coal miners at Jonesville,
Pa., caught only three men, instead
of eighteen, as reported, and these
were saved after clinging to a shelv
ing rock five days.
It is now conceded that Robert Ray
Hamilton Is still alive.
Dr. Biegler of Bochester, N. Y.,
published in 1879 a remedy he was
using for tuberculosis and which is
based on the same principle as Koch's
the use of the attenuated bacilli of
the disease.
Alexander Johnson, 70 years old, of
Pittsburg, deserted Rose Ann Hen
derson, aged 60, to whom he was en
gaged, for a pay lassie of 50 and Rose
Ann has sued him for breach of prom
ise. "Adonis" Dixey is bankrupt and
has been arrested for debt.
James Red path is dead.
Henry Kraemer of Los Angeles was
buncoed out of $20 at Jersey City
Feb. 10, as he was about to sail for
Europe.
Jay Gould and C. P. Huntington
have practically got control of all the
railroads south of a line drawn from
San Francisco to New York, including
TTi., r : a
George J. Gibson, secretary of the
whisky trust, has been arrested on a
charge of trying to bribe Government
Gauger De War to blow up the Shu
feldt distillery at Chicago, which is
fighting the trust. A dynamite
machine that would have destroyed a
dozen such buildings was seized.
There was a strike at Clark's thread
mills at Newark, N. J., Feb. 13, and
the strikers stoned the works and
broke every window in them.
Admiral Porter is dead.
H. M. Bodgers, an insurance agent,
wrote a confession at Omaha that Le
had murdered a girl at Mercer, Pa.,
and then took poison. His life was
saved and he is in jail, where he is
trying to starve himself, but he is be
ing fed with a force pump.
Laborers on the world's fair site at
Chicago struck Feb. 13 for a raise to
f 1 75 a day from fl 50.
. Jay Gould is reported to be very
eebfe.
The North Dakota legislature has
voted to submit a constitutional
amendment repealing prohibition. If
the next legislature votes the same
way the people will vote on the pro
posed amendment in 1894.
General Sherman is dead.
FOREIGN.
Portuguese troops have been sent to
subdue a revolt of plantation negroes
on the island of St. Thomas.
King Leopold of Belgium announces
himself in favor of universal suffrage.
The king of Uganda, under French
influence, refuses to recognize the
British protectorate.
Many people have been devoured
by wolves in Hungary. this winter.
Reports from Bussia conflict One
day we are told that in return for
financial aid the czar has relaxed the
persecution of the Jews. The next
day it is reported that the atrocities
of the persecution are increasing.
The latter now appears to be true.
France will probably put a prohib
itive duty on American pork.
The ameer of Afghanistan is recov
ering. The British colonial exhibition at
Kingston, Jamaica, was formally
opened Feb. 9.
The new Italian ministry is cutting
down expenses.
The trouble in the ear and throat of
Emperor William is believed to be
cancerous. -
There is no revolution in Guatemala.
The coffee crop of Central America
will be the largest ever produced.
Dillon and O'Brien have surrendered
and will serve out their sentences.
Two Lutheran preachers have been
arrested in the Russian province of
Courland for preaching after their
churches were closed. One was
knouted.
Another woman has been murdered
in Whitechapel and the crime is pop
ularly laid to Jack the Ripper.
The boiler of the Quebec Worsted
company's factory at Quebec burst
Feb. 12, killing thirty people and
wrecking the building.
All efforts to heal the Irish breach
have failed and the campaign will be
the Parnellites against the McCar
thyites and the priests. Parnell would
not step aside because he could not
have assurance that the home rule
plan of the coalition that would follow
would not Include an imperal veto
power in local matters.
A Russian newspaper correspondent
writes from Brazil that Russian emi
grants are starving by hundreds, yet
a heavy stream of emigrants is still
pouring in.
The West Cumberland (Ens.) steel
rail works have shut down, throwing
1100 men out of work. . -. .
The London police think they have
Jack the Ripper.
The Newfoundland legislature has
passed resolutions reciting that with
the consent of the British government
Newfoundland proposed a reciprocity
treaty with the United States, which
Blaine accepted, but that the British
government, through the interference
of Canada, has refrained from ratify
ing it, and that this course jeopardizes
the loyalty of the people of Newfound
land to the British crown.
The Chilean rebels have defeated
the government troops in an impor
tant battle at Tarapaca.
An unexplained explosion destroyed
Wilson, Colson & Co.'s drug store at
Seattle Feb. 12.
' Smokers should be smart enough to
know that the genuine "Seal of North
Carolina Plug Cut" costs them no more
than poor Tobacco, which some dealers try
AV
-"tie on iaem.
ONLY A WOUNDED DOC
The Influence of a Human Woman an a
Rough sad Crnel Crowd.
It was nothing but m yelping street
cur, whose leg had been'ran over by a
passing wagon, but it had a voice
pathetic and shrill enough to wake the
dead, gays tbe Congregalionalist.
"Get out!" yelled a man close to
whom it passed, and he raised his caue
to chastise it for offending his ears with
anch unearthly bowls; but the poor
brnte only ki-yi-d" the loader.
Scat!'r cried a bootblack, swinging
his kit around tbe lamp-post after the
cur. "Tie a can to its taiir he yelled
to some more boys, on second thought
and off they scurried after the caudal
ornament, only pausing long enough to
shy a stone, which produced a new and
more discordant series of yelps.
"Why doesn't some one call the
police to shoot him?" indignantly de
manded a well-dressed lady, stopping
her ears to shut out the sound. ' It's a
shame to allow such things!" And still
the dog's cries of pain rang shrilly
down the street
'If some one only had sense enough
to give him a dog-button, that would
soon quiet him." suggested a knowing
looking man with a leather case in his
band.
The drivers cracked their whips at
him from their seats; clerks ran ont
and wildly gesticulated at him to make
him stop; but still the car limped and
yelped along the gutter none of these
things seemed worth a cent so far as
topping bis noise was concerned.
Then every body stood still and
stared at a very unusual scene. A lady,
well dressed and refined in manner and
look, motioned the street boys nearest
her to stop yelling, and stepped quick
ly np toward the dog with a soft white
band outstretched, and some soothing,
soft-spoken words. The poor, fright
ened thing stopped, curled its tail be
tween its legs. and cringed down nearer
the curbstone as if expecting another
blow. She spoke to it again, calling it
poor doggie" and various pet names,
until it turned its wistful eyes in mute
pleading and allowed her to pat her
hand on it Then she stroked it softly
aod reassured it further, while a boy
ran to a near drug store for something.
She saturated her handkerchief with it
and bound up the dog's leg. In a
moment the brnte was perfectly pas
sive and had ceased even to whine.
She turned it over to the kind-hearted
Irish janitor of the big Equitable build
ing.wbo had taken in the situation and
brought ont a box partly tilled with
excelsior.
But before he could take it into the
basement the knowing man with a
leather case had changed his mind
about "dog-buttons," and saying that
he was a doctor, offered his services to
set tbe broken boner the ladr who had
talked of shooting the cur politely
tendered her own handkerchief - to
brush the dust from the bands of the
dog's friend, the boys came back with
out the tin can, and, gathering around,
proposed to "chip in" and buy some
bologna for the patient; and every one
went away saying: Well, I declare,sbe
must be very fond of dogs, and quite
used to their ways, to be able to do just
the right thing so cleverly."
She had never kept a dog in her life,
and was just the least bit afraid of
them; but she was tbe possessor of a
heart sensitive to the sufferings of the
meanest of God's creatures as to her
own, and her little act of thoughtful
humanity had stirred the better uatures
of those whose thoughtlessness only
would bare made them inhuman.
A GREAT FRENCH SHIP.
The Amlral Dsperre of the First
Armored from Stem to Stern.
A notable French armored ship of the
first class is tbe Amiral Duperre. It was
designed by M. Sabattler. and differs
materially from that country's other
ships of the same class. It has a com
plete belt of very thick armor from stem
THE AMIRAL DUPERHS.
to stern greatest thickness 22 inches,
tapering to 10 inches at the extremities,
with a thick deck (3 inches) at the top
of the belt in tbe usual manner. But
above this belt there is no armored main
neck battery, as in the other ships, the
chief armament, of four 48-ton guns, be
ing carried in four elevated barbette
towers, two ot which are well forward,
and project considerably to enable their
guns to act efficiently as bow-chasers and
at the same time to command all round
the broadside and right astern. To
facilitate this the rides of tbe ship have
great tumble home. Tbe other two
towers arc situated at tbe middle lino of
the ship, one near the stern, and the
other further forward, between the
main and niizzcn masts. The main deck,
although without armor defense, is not
without armament, as it carries fourteen
64-iuch 60-pounder rifled breech-loaders.
Ulnttona.
' Among the accounts of enormous
eaters there are, perhaps, none more
extraordinary than that related in
"Fuller's Worthies," concerning Nich
olas Wood of Harrison, Kent England.
The account says: He ate at one meal
a whole sheep, at another time thirty
dozen pigeons. At the residence of
Sir William Sidley he ate as much as
would have sufficed for thirty men.
At Lord Watten's in Kent, he devoured
eighty four rabbit's at one sitting,
which et the rate of a half a rabbit for
each man, would serve 163 men. At
breakfast he ate eighteen yards of
black pudding, and during the day ate
a whole hog. When accomodated with
fruit he ate three pecks of damsons.
Disgrace In Ireland.
She is an Irishwoman, bright witty,
entertaining, as an educated Irish
woman cannot help being. She was
telling me of a gathering in a certain
hotel parlor in the Green Isle soon
after one of the periodical uprisings
among the Irish people against land
lordism. In mentioning certain facts
regarding the persons present at this
meeting she spoke of the imprisonment
of this one or that as a matter of course.
I remarked that it was a strange con
dition of affairs that in which the
prisou had lost its taint. "Taint!" she
cried. "Not to have been in jail is a
disgrace!" Twentieth Century.
vDundee boat-builders 'ggJ ,penc
per hour. . .
A STORY OF BOSTON C0RBETT.
Bow and Why He Tried to Kill D.
Brown, of Cload Connty, Kaa.
D. L. Brown, of Concordia, Kas., was
at the Union Depot, says the Kansas
City Star, on bis way to the southeast
ern part of Kansas.
It was in the latter part of Decem
ber, 1886, on a Union Pacific passenger
train, that an attempt was made by
Boston Corbett the slayer of John
Wilkes Booth, to take Mr. Brown's
life. Corbett was a superstitious sort
of a fellow, and believing God hal
commissioned hira to care for tha
spiritual welfare of the people of Clond
County, they were harrassed with his
sermons depicting the horrors of tha
sulphuric regions and commanding
everyone to flee from tbe wrath to
come. Forbearance with these good
people had ceased to be a virtue, and
the feasibility of incarnating Corbett
in the State Insane Asvlam was talked
of.
At that time Mr. Brown was the
Probate Jndtre of Cloud Connty and
Corbett would necessarily have to be
brought before him and his sanity de
termined by jury before he could be
removed to the asylnm. Corbett
imagined that his oft-consulted friend
was at the head of tbe movement and
he resolved to kill him on sight Ac
cordingly he made sure that his old
army Colt's pistol, the one he used ia
shooting Booth, was in good trim and
awaited his opportunity. About that
time Corbett received notice from
some of the Republican leaders of the
state that If he would present himself
at the opening of the legislature he
would be given an appointment as
doorkeeper. He boarded the train at
Concordia one Monday morning for
Topeka, on the same day Hi. Brown
had decided to pay a visit to the capital.
Corbett walked into the coach with his
mammoth horse pistol strapped around
his waist Suddenly he saw Brown
hurriedly coming down the sidewalk,
grip in hand, toward the train. Cor
bett was wild in an instant and vocifer
ously announced his intention of shoot
ing as many leaden bullets into Mr.
Brown's corpulent frame as it would
bold. Tbe latter stepped onto tha
platform of the train just as it was
pulling out with not the least intima
tion of his danger. Corbett with his
revolver in his hand stood in the cen
ter of the coach, his face livid with
rage, waiting for his victim to turn th
knob of the door and enter. The pas
sengers in the car, notmore than half
a dozen including the news agent were
greatly frightened at the impending
danger. The latter, a boy of 18 years,
summoned up enough "courage to
pass Corbett and ro ont of the front
door and warn "Brown. The latter
entered the coach ahead and with a
handsome but deadly looking doable
action revolver in band awaited ao at
tack - from Corbett The latter en
deavored to force his way through the
door, but the conductor appearing on
the scene finally persuaded him to re- i
turn to his seat. Corbett kept his
hand on his revolver all the way on
the journey. The excitement of the
sessions of the legislatures and his re
hearsings of the killing of Booth al
most completely unbalanced his mind
How he adjourned the senate at tha
point of his revolver is well known.
FOOtINC THE CAMERA.
Skllllnlly Painted FaeeapKay Deceive tha
Lenses of the Photographers.
Some of our girls are learning haw
to be- photographed beautifully and
trickily "Have you observed and
wondered," said one of the most cele
brated of the camera men, "how well
the actresses manage to look when the
eve of the camera is focused on them?
Well.' I can tell yon how to do as well
as they do. - First, choose an artistio
photographer. No matter how much
you know about what you want and
what to wear, there are matters of
view, and light and shade, for which
you must depend absolutely upon him.
But be will not be able to advise yon
how to make np your face and will
probably object sweepingly to any such
device. That is where he is mistaken.
If he were wise he would know how to
pose a girl, and then with a bit cf
white and a bit of black chalk make
her lovely for that view- Several of
the New York photographers do this
now. ' Tbe stock pose, into which
photographers, on general principles,
put victims over whom they don't in
tend to bother, is three-quarters, which
is an abomination to most faces. Ther
is small chance for expression; the eye
gets no show at all. and the contour "of
the cheefc. whicb. is seldom beautiful
except in children, is betrayed. You
will find they have a rooted objection
to full-face positions. I have never
been able to discover why. There is a
tendency to raise one eyebrow higher
than the other, or look cross-eyed; bat
it is his business to look out for that,
and stop you if your features begin ta
wander around your face.
"Now. in painting a face for pho
tography the eyes can safely be made
np a great deaf. Pat black under the
eye, only don't let it be just one heavy
black line. Shadow it ont softly.
Blacken the lashes as much as they
will stand, only don't let them be
lumpy. Increase the apparent length
and sweep of the upper lid, by which
the size of the eye is judged, with a
line continuing the line of "the lashes,
and a parallel one continuing the Una
of the crease that shows just above
when the eye is open. Draw these
only as lon- as can be done without
their showing as lines. An actress ob
tained a clever picture, in which the .
effect of very long lashes is given by
lines, presumably shadows thrown by
said lashes, painted above the eye, just
under the eyebrows. Use red very
carefully. Your lips probably need
painting into an improvement upon
their own shape. Do it softly, and
with very faint red. Red takes black.
Look carefully and yon will trace a
hard line about the lips of many
actresses' photographs. Sometimes
yon don't need to look carefully. If
yon want a dimple to show - specially,
yon can heighten its light and shade a
little; but unless your photographer
poses you so that the device does not
betray itself the effect will be a fail
ure. Having thus accentuated your
face, don't distnrb its arrangement by
a smile, or smirk, or any other grimace
of expression when the lens is opened
on you. Otherwise, art and nature
will make a hopeless mess of your
features But if yon have planned an
expression in harmony with tbe make
up, save it till the last moment The -operator
is bound to grip the back of
your neck with his monkey wrench,
and if you hang on to your joyful
smile all through that ordeal you will
get something demoniac and wile
send to your friends." 21". YSun
Pennsylvania produces half thflT-
nined. jn the United St&taa, .
W5WS
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