Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (April 3, 1891)
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. V. LEBANON, OREGON, FKIDAY, APRIL 8. 189L NO. 4. W. B. DONACA, -DEALEli in- General News. UNITED STATES. Groceries and Provisions, Cigars, Tobacco, Furnishing Goods, Etc., Etc First-Class Goods at Reasonable Prices GIVE ME A TRIAL AND BE CONVINCED. Ocmntrv Produce Taken, in Goods. Exchanj for KEEP ON HAND A STOCK OF binglesj Posts, Boards and Pickets. W. IC. Peterson, Notary Public. Sah'l M. Gaklakd, Attorney-at-Law. PETERSON & GARLAND, Real Estate Brokers HAVE ON HAND . CHOICE ZBHGrIHSrS In Xj&Tfte and Small Farms. Best Fruit Land in Valley. Finest Grain Ranches in tee world, improved and unimproved Land, rrom S per Acre and up. fSatisfactien Guaranteed. Have on hand some CHOICE CITY PROPERTY, Residence and Business. Bargains in all Additions to the Town. Houses Rented and Farms Leased. nsrsTXiRisrciE FOR 1ondon Jb Liverpool A Globe Insurance Co. Guardian Assurance Co., of London. 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 giving- our patrons ail information desired in our line of business. J. A. BEARD, Druggist and Apothecary. DEALER IN Pure Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oil, Glass, STATIONERY, FINE PERFUMERY, BRUSHES AND COMBS, CIGARS AND FANCY TOILET ARTICLES. The next congress will have a majority for free coinage large enough to override a veto If one is interposed. It is feared that the Sioux, angered nt the snubbing of their delegates in Washington and the failure to carry out the promises made when they sur rendered last winter, will go on the war path as soon as the grass Is green, and that they will be joined by all the other tribes in the northwest. A tenement house occupied by ten xuiumcs iu flew a i k was ourneu March 18 and four occupants perished with it. It was five stories high and when the fire was discovered the Are escapes were so hot they could not be ueu. Frank Waters, a New Orleans re porter, gotarunic marcn 18 and began abusing the lynchers and the pros ecutors of the Mafia members and rjicked a anarrpl on the ntmnt. with Arthur Dunn, one of the counsel for tne state, in wnicn waters was shot dead and Dunn probably fatally ituuuuw, In the case of Mrs. Inea MoCahe. who killed Judge MatStein atPiedras negras. Mexico, lor insulting her an escaped irom lau alter peinir sen tenced to the penitentiary, fjniterf States Judge Maxey of Corpus Christ! has decided that under the treaty with Mexico neither country is bound to extradite its own citizens on the demand or the other. The viUaire Of Highland. N T ' h .-. ....... . i i .s ' lhree men were killed hv a snow. slide at the Eureka mine, on Treasury mountain, Colorado, March 17. The Union Pacific has compromised with the telegraphers. The government refuses to run anv more goiu into pars ior exporters. xne juenign vaiie railroad com pany refuses to obey the order of the interstate commerce commission to reduce freight on coal 30 cents a ton and says Its charter from Pennsyl vania fixes the limit. The case will go into court. Bev. Howard McOuearv of the Episcopal church at Canton, O., has been found guilty of heresy. Dennis Cramer of Chicago lost a uic in court marcn its and tnen hunted up three of the witnesses he nad depended upon and who had failed to appear and shot them, wound ing two dangerously. Louis A Vf TV of Snn Francisco nd vertised in a Philadelphia paper for a wife and has married Miss Lottie Haskell, a belle of Uammontonl N. J. as a result. Lawrence Barrett is dead. Three children have died of diph theria under faith-cure treatment at Uubuque, la., medical aid being re fused by the parents, and there is intense excitement. The faith-curers. iwwu women, nave neo. II le cny. Anderson. Churchill & Co 's lace works, worth $100,000, are to be re moved rrom Nottingham to the United estates. Secretary of War Proctor is expected to resign by J uly 1. Josepn Perrien. a wealthy hfuhelor or Detroit, was kidnaped by masked men, blindfolded and carried off in a coupe to a house where he was held a prisoner a day and a night. He was compelled to sign a check for $15,000, but the kidnapers failed to realize on it and he was released. The Mafia is still busv sending skull-and-crossbone notices in New Orleans but ita letters cause little terror. r The salt trust has fizzled. Missouri has made it a crime, pun ishable by a fine of 100 adav. for anv corporation to belong to a trust which nas in view tne regulation or prices. The president has sent a communi cation to Germany which is believed to oe a notice tnat n American pork be not at once admitted to Oermanv our ports will be practically closed to uennaa imports. Current News. MAIN ST., LEBANON, OR PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED. DR. C. H. DUCKETT, D K NT IS T . LKBASOV OREGOH. I. K. WEATHERFORD, ATTORNEY- AT - LAW. Office over First National Bank. ALBANY, - - - - - OREGON. W. R. PILYEU, ATTORNEY- AT- LAW. G. T. COTTON, Sealer in Groceries and Proisions. Tobacco and Cigars, Smokers' Articles. Foreign and Domestic Fruits, Confectionery, Queensware and Glassware, Lamps and Lamp f ixtures. PAY CASH FOR EGGS. IaImmb, Oregon 11. L. HeCLURE fBueeewor C. H. Hansen.) Barber : and : Hairdresser. Lebanon, Oregon. - Shaving, Haircutting and Shampoo ing in the latest and best style. Spec ial attention paid to dressing Ladies1 hair. Your patronage respectfully so-iolted. 1. 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 laccitco, Portland and Albany, Org Collections made on favorable terms I. R. BORVM. Tonsorial Artist A Good Shave, Shampoo, Hair uut, uieanea or Dressed. Hot and Cold Baths at all Hours. Children Kindly treated. Calland see me. LEBANON I'll WiWi E lik f IB I -71 'W Meat Market ED. IEHES8ERGER, IV;. Fresh & Salted Beef, Pork, Mut ton, SAUSAGE, DOLOGNA 6. MAM. BACOS AJTD LARD ALWAYS ON HAND Hala Street, t rlfwiwi. Orv. Eierht hundred cloth capmakers are on strike in New York. A laifre oleomarcrarine factorv at Providence, R. I., has been seized for shipping unstamped packages in violation of the federal revenue law. Over FIT Hundred Drowned. The British steamship Utopia from Naples bound to New York with 880 people, mostly Italian emigrants aboard, eame In collision March 17 with the British ironclad Anson, an. chored in Gibraltar bay, and sunk soon after. A southeast gale was blow ing at the time and many women and children were drowned. A large num ber after clinging to the rigging for some time were rescued ny Doats rrom tne channel squadron. On entering the bay the Utopia ran into the Anson. The Utopia sank within a few minutes. Boats were immediately lowered from the British ironclads Bodney and Anson and also from the Swedish man-of-war Freva. The boats rescued 180 persons. Many others who were rescued were lodged in government buildings on shore. The crew of the Utopia were saved, but 569 passengers perished. labor Union Men Arrwted. At the Investigation ot the clothing cutters' lockout at Rochester, N. Y.: ny tne state board or arbltation. a scheme by which money is extorted from the firms by the clothing cut ters of the national union was shown by the voluminous correspondence between the manufacturers in Roch ester and Walter S. Westerbrook, sec retary of the Cutters' union, and Tames Hughes, chairman of the ex ecutive board of the union. Westerbook has been arrested In New York, Hughes In Philadelphia, and James McGulre in Chicago, on the charge of extortion. James A. Wright, district organizer of the Knights of Labor, who arrived at Rochester, March 18, from Philadel phia, together with John G. Theim and Frederick A. Archer of Rochester, were arrested immediately after that morning's session of the board of arbitrators on a charge of conspiracy. Sttmaaer School off Methods. The California Summer School of Methods will hold a three weeks ses sion In July. This summer institute of professional instruction was lneor- poraVd last December by the follow ing p.-jminent educators: Professors C. W. Childs, J. B. McChesney. C. H. McUrew, J. G. Kennedy, Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper, Mrs. Mary W. Kincaid, Professor John Swett and State Superintendent J. W. Anderson. The executive committee ot the board ot directors has adopted a programme and course of InatrueUoB for the com ing sessioD, which will be held in the State Normal School building at San Jose. A neat little manual settim? forth the officers' names, the aims of the institution end all other particur- lars will be sent out to teachers and persons interested. Special features of the coming session will be n-.orning talks, class instructions on more than twenty-five different subjects, model classes of children to illustrate tne work, a course of evening lectures and a weekly council of instructors and teachers for the interchange of their best thoughts. The course of study Is arranged in four departments kindergarten and primary, elemen tary and grammar, high school, educa tional psychology, and pedagogy. Farm Notes. FOREIGN. An explosion in the arserikl at Om- auiman Killed iuu dervishes. The prince of Wales has secured the nusmng up oi the baccarat scandal. The supreme court of Hawaii has affirmed the new queen's right to dis miss the old cabinet and appoint a new one ana sne nas aone so. The Union .Pacific has granted its men a new scale of wanes to avoid a striKe. The St. Petersburar correspondent of the Berliner Tagblatt, the chief mouthpiece of the Jews in Germany, has been expelled from Russia unh?r tne ann-dewisn decree. TinDOO Tib is stricken with par alysis, his right arm and side being aiiecxea. The reported massacre at Massowah is denied. Newfoundland is seeking admission to the United States in preference to xne aroixraxion 01 ner dispute with r. ranee. One hundred and fiftv-two English peers own 1539 saloons. Rev. Richard Lewis, bishop of LandalT, owns two. A telephone connects Loudon and fans. Jerome Napoleon is dead. British Guiana refuses recinrocitv with Canada, preferring the prospect ui iwipiwiy wnn me united states. The world's rice crop is short. Emperor William has returned to jMsmarcK s policy of warfare on socialism. The Entrlish .government acknowl edges the right of colonial govern ments to pronioit uninese immigration. The Paris nolice have nnpArthAd a widespread Boulangist plot for an uprising. The British parliament is consider ing a bill eranowenncr the naw tn sustain the French in their claims on the Newfoundland coast and the New foundlanders say they will fight if such action is taken. Walter E. Ouaife. an emnlove of Phil A. Wood, a Tacoma liquor man, is missing, and so is $2000 of Wood's money. Mrs. Edward Hanson of Tacoma was washing March 18 when a stranger claiming to be the agent of a wine house called on her and showed two bottles of sample wine which he took from a valise. He induced her to drink a glass. The stuff was dru treed and she became unconscious, where upon he assaulted her. stole $75 and disappeared. A dispatch from Valparaiso states that Mayor Valduvieso of that city has gone over to the insurgents after winning over to their cause the gar rison, which deserted the fort after spiking the guns. The ex-government troops then seized President Balma eeda's transport, the Mmdia, which was anchored in the harbor, and which was loaded with Gat ling guns, rifles and ammunition. After this the mayor and garrison embarked on board the transport and departed northward to join the insurgents. This is a tre mendous blow to President Baluta ceda's prestige, and his cause may now fairly be said to be on the wane. IntlJrnstnt Italians. The Italian colony of San Francisco had a meeting March 17 at which resolutions denouncing the New Or leans lynching were passed and the following telegrams were sent : Mabquib di Rcdini, Prime Minister of Italy, Rome : The Italian colony of San Francisco, assembled in a large and solemn mass meeting, vehem ently protests against the barbarous act of the New Orleans mob. ' It tniBts in the wisdom of the home government, and hopes for a prompt, energetic and adequate reparation for the grave outrage done to civilization and to the Italian name.' 'Hon. James G. B la ink, Secretary of State, Washington: The Italian- American citizens of San Francisco, in a grand solemn mass meeting, strongly indignant over the infamous act perpetrated by the New Orleans mob, which paralyzed and filled with amazement the whole civilized world, protest with all their strength against such action, unworthy of a civilized country. They trust in your experience, energy, ability and love of justice, and hope to obtain a prompt, ener getic and adequate reparation accord ing to the treaty in existence between Italy and the United States." Mrs. Johanna Stoft was fatal v burned while lighting a fire with coal oil at Seattle March 22. Geortre SulTern and Jim Finnicran have been arrested at Seattle for rob bing the Port Town had H -nnntimnf and $1000 of the plunder recovered. The Dostoffice at Tracv has baan discontinued. The labor organizations and Far mers Alliance have organized the Industrial Federation of Washington, to Kxpctimcnto With Sand. I have just read an article written by J. B. Carron "Starting Tree Seed lings " in prepared sand. He closes said article as follows " Now, as eucalyptus seed most cer tainly germinates better in sand and manure than in soil, why will not all tree and vegetable seed that require transplanting start best that way?" X was very much Interested in what be wrote, as I have been experiment tag for some years past with pure sand, as well as sand prepared in various ways, in order to satifsy my Yankee curiosity as to its value for potted plants, cuttings, etc., and in tended in the near future, if success crowned my efforts, to give the readers of the Rural the benefit of my experi ence. I know that there are a great many people, especially ladies, who find it very difficult to prepare suit able soil for potted flowers, and after taking a great deal of pains to make a compost that they suppose is suit able for their lovely flowers, soon find to their great surprise and sorrow that the soil bakes after being watered and that their cherished plants do not flourish as they should, but make a puny and sickly growth. I am not Ht present fully prepared to write en thi subject as I would like to, but owing to the article above referred to just appealing, I thought perhaps it might be the most favorable opportunity for me to state a few of the experiments I have already tried, and the success that followed, as well as to speak of some experiments now under way which I may in some future article write about. It is a well-known fact that the most successful florists use a great deal of sand, and if one will examine carefully the roots of plants sent to them by such persons, he will almost invari ably find that the little compost that is still clinging to the fibrous roots is very fine, sandy, light and porous. Noticing this some years ago, it set me to thinking, and being a great lover of flowers and not having suit able soil for them, I determined experiment and persevere until I cured it in some way. My first at tempt was with English walnuts. the summer of 1888, having a few barrels of sand left after plastering my house, I planted them in a long box about ten inches deep filled with this sand, which came from Vallejo, and I suppose from the ocean beach, I took great care to always have moist, and sprinkled- it a number of times with weak liquid hen manure. Early in the spring they commenced to come up nicely and made a rapid growth. I found on transplanting them to my nursery rows that but very few nuts had failed to germinate, while some of the same kind of nuts, planted at the same date as the others in good garden soil, mostly rotted, Jbast spring I obtained a lot of fine sand from the creek and mixed it with one part of very fine and thoroughly rotten cow manure to three parts of sand. I then took coal-oil cans, cut out the top, and planed some pine or redwood slats as wide as a lath and three-fourths of an inch thick. These I cut exactly the width of the can and nailed two of them on the outside, opposite each each other, with inch wire nails driven from the Inside of the can. By this method they pro jected nearly one-fourth of an inch through the wood, just enough to clinch nicely. I then nailed on the other two sides planed laths of suit able length to come flush with the ends of the other peices and secured them there with two-inch wire nails, and half-inch wire nails in the middle. clinching them In the same manner as the others. This made a stiff, strong can. I painted them both in side and out and made holes one- fourth of an Inch in diameter at each corner and in the middle, on all sides and just at the bottom of the can in side. In this way I find the drainage is much better than where they set on the ground. I then put in an inch or two of rather coarse burnt bones, with the addition of charcoal I sift out of my ashes. I then filled up the cans with my prepared sand, well set- tied down, to within two inches of the top, and planted several kinds of lilies. I never had lilies do as well before, and they were admired by all who Baw them. In July last I took a cutting of ger anium and put it into the Vallejo sand without manure. I kept this can in the shade for two or three weeks, tak tng great care to keep the sand a little moist. I also watered it four or five times with liquid manure, same as I applied to the English walnuts. It made a better growth than any other geranium cutting I planted, and I had prepared soil of several different kinds for them. This season I expect to have at least 20 different kinds of choice chrysan themums which I shall plant in coal- oil cans in sand prepared as for the lilies before referred to. I have al ready succeeded In raising a fine lot chrysanthemum rootlets in this prepared sand, as well as having started a fine lot of cuttings of differ ent kinds daisies, pansies, etc. I have also at the present writing growing in this sand a nice lot of cabbage and lettuce plants, also onions raised this year from seed, which I shall trans plant as soon as the weather permits. am not yet done experimenting. I like it, and I am continually at it and have been amply repaid for all my palns.-r-Ira W. Adams of Oalistoga in Rural Press. Woman's World. Current Comment. lhe English government has di cided that no woman representative or a labor organization can be placed upon tne labor commission. Women may work on farms, in blacksmith shops and foundries, may do the neaviest work there Is, but laws, and investigations on which laws are to be based, must be made by men alone. MISSING LINKS. EfigTIsbTntrTnchamTinberof TfmSh I words were mixed. The latter had been The shipment nf t.i-. hi. in... picked np from the post traders, and as lope Valley, Los Angeles County, for I their expressions were frequently more iosv were 34,84 sacks, equal to 4 607 - I puuiw, n wuuwiwt 280 poands. A dealer in artificial limha un that fully 300.000 Americans have lost one or oom legs, and at least 100.000 are imuua an arm. 'A little armadillo, the mulita-of Uru. i. m.ttr"j . .u is r ceen getting later and later, and it is SHuv-rf th'rd. ja? "jzfzv 5.?--y.?.'.?.' .-'eta. apt to be surprised, by the vigorous meaning oi nis pnrases. The Prince of Wales, it is reported, ' intends next season to introduce a re form m the dinner hour. The fashion able boar of dining has in recent years There are more evictions for non- Eayment of rent in New York and rooklvn in one vear. iavi a. Indtrn nf .us iBuer cur, cnan in ireianu in years. two sentative of those antediluvian giants. djviuuud, mastouon, mezatberium. The first semi-annual convention nf the Pacific Coast Women's Press as sociation met in San Francisco March 16. The morning and afternoon were occupied in private sessions. In the evening the hall was thrown open to ul unc juciuij. lonnon.-.i ... ' J'7T: i u - ' i v; 77 T - The salutatory was delivered hv . ""K" 10 J. "0t "h"'?'0 " jonnowett. Mr. Swett said he was . ... I muted th n.nr ,nr.inin. is a rich repository of snimaV and "tograpli inscription. vegecaoie rorms. its nora differs bv one-half of its species from that of the rest ox ine giooe. Kossuth.the great Hungarian patriot is passiner bis old a?e in the bitterne of poverty. He is 84 years old, feeble, sad-hearted, and will not long rema'Q uDcininieu di aeaio. The snn eires 600.000 timed mn.h light as the full moon. 7.000.000,000 EuireDeBoardman. h Prfniir il' Alan. bookkeeper sufferin&r from nnrvnna troubles caused by overwork, com mitted suicide at Spokane Falls March 17. glad of the growing taste for litera ture. To meet the demands of the times a great host of young women writers had come Into existence, whose nnuence could not be underestimated. Mrs. Nellie B. Eyster followed with a graceful address of welcome. She thanked God for such grand women as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Lucy Stone Blackwell. who had made this convention pos sible. Mrs. Eyster ended with a pane gyric on the good newspaper, hoping that the day would come when we might regard our newspapers as we ao our bibles and prayer books. Mrs. Emily T. Y. Parkhurst traced the development of the Women's Press association from the American Economic association. She also paid a high tribute to the newspaper, de scribing the truly successful editor as one actuated chiefly by his duty to tne people. Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper then read a fine essay on "The Press as a Philan thropic Agent." "There can be no greater treasure to any community. said Mrs. Cooper, " than a good news paper. It is greater than the giant Hercules. The newspaper rules the world.' Mrs. cooper went on to sav that the newspaper elevated the masses, controlled public influence, kept-clean the moral atmosphere and acted as the greatest agent of philan trophy. " The daily press," she eon- The Prince will, it is said, tix the hoar for dinner at 8, and, of couare.what the Prince does "society." in the exclusive sense, will follow. Emerson's old home at Conenrd I. becominir more and more a shrine for the literary pilgrim. It is now the hospitable home of Mr. Rmnnvm ni4 . In one sinele dav last snminer 105 I Miss Ellen Emerson. One nt the mnet Americans visited Burns' birthplace. I interesting relics in the bouse is a fine The pilgrims during the year numbered I old classic engraving that was present- Wbjr Tbe Canary Sines. Yon are asrlv." said the bine-lav ta the canary, poising on a limb outside and plaining her beautiful feathers; . -you are only a common yeliow color,"' and yoar body is ill-shaped." 'And yon are cased .' said the f v robin, tarning her saner head to one side with a superior air;" who would oe snut op xorever behind gilded wires P times as much as the brightest star in not I " and she fl&nnted away. fha mhv u ,..1 vz nnn nno .: u I . .v . , .. - , . . - the sky, and 86,000,000 times as much as all the stars in the heavens com bined. A golden eajrle weiirhinsr thirtv-five puuuus wiu miieu a snore time ago on tun DiKwioD reservation. . Ainnrnna- 1 he bird stood three and a half feet high and measured nine feet from tip Uruguay has a healthy climate and. according to its tables of mortality for iwa, obi oi a cjtal oi y,t4U deaths. luni-oTD were oi persons over one Hundred years of age. Its death rat is only is .10 per 1,000. The Mediterranean Is comnaralivelv snaiiow. a crying up of ooo leet would leave three different seas, and Africa would be loined to Italy. The British channel is more like a pond, which ac counts lor its cnoppy waves. Some ladies of hie-h social r tr i . . . . cw iuu rc saiu to nave sutrtea society "for tlie advancement of pro- You are passionless." said th Inm bird, ernel in her own happiness- even as women sometimes are "yod nave no mate; von do not know how tn love!" Yoa are ungrateful," said ber mis tress; I feed yon and you do not siner' Then tbe poor eanarv fell to trrww ing silently, day by day. Ugly and passionless and ungrateful and not even free! Was not that sad? Then one day they brought ber a mate, and be abode with ber. Yearn in for leva. she fancied for awhile, that this was its but one aweet morn a lark called to her from across tbe green meadows to come out, come out for tbe skies were blue, and tbe waters were cool, and the very winds were perfumed of flow ers, and here was love, love! And sbe longed to go; Her little heart panted tor freedom, after all these years, and sbe beat her poor bosom against tbe cruel wires nntil it tm pnety and fiCf ality in dress. Among I bsed and bleeding. O. to be free. the things to be avoided are decollete I Iree: t in vain thinzs to be avoided are Attttritovi ureases ana sleeveless bodices. About a century a?o it was estimate! that Paris had only about fifty pick pockets; now tbe police reports sbow tinued, "is the omniscient, omnipres-l that their number has reached 4.000 in ent schoolmaster. An editor has more the metropolis alone, and about ten power than preacher, judge or legis- thousand in tbe rest of France. There are 16.000 nubile schools In Missouri Tbe new state superintendent proposes to introduce a uniform system of instruction and a speeibed course of the desire, mo slut sunk down, prone, snfferimr. crashed. Then all in a moment, something leaped op within her little beating breast something strong and sweet and passionate; and out of that swell ing: uncertain throat flowed such a lyrical gush of melody that tbe whole world stood still to listen. So, song was born in the eanarrs sonL and ao i. louoii its way to expression ana cheered many a lonely heart, and com- ioneu many a sorrowinl one. lator." Mrs. Cooper thanked God that in these days he was calling women to places or responsibility as journalists. She closed by reviewing the noble I form and sent to each teacher of tbe work done by newspapers in develop- I 8taLe- ing the kindergarten idea. 8. F. Hersbey says in a recent article: Mrs. Charlotte Perkins . Stetson I niom?n ,ITes longer t&an man. goes traced the upward development of l?5,1 woman from barbarism toher present fr.nth ih HmanH hA ki:. I world still litfnin- ivu. nn nUnp whom oUo. la : I ... K . " . I tu. i;tiA . ' .l y juok ucgmuiuy w I lur oupuun id jaiij prisons anu alms- I in" ".warn ner iuu status as a nouses. Wbit n Indlaa Caa Staal human being. I Mrs. Belle Wooster Hitrrins. of Rni- I Tbe officers ot the association arell,vaD- Me- has had nineteen years of I Jo show wbat an Indian eaa stand Mrs. Nellie B. Eyster, Mrs. Jeanne C l'!e: """has sailed to every part of e hasto 1 may tell of an inci 1 f ha (T I ft ta Rha ia n av . .n I nstIE W n ffn n. nitfinMl nnrin Ct t nam- na in. instructions to be published in pamphlet I tbe mad world praised ber. and those wno naa sneered at ber were silent of envy. But sbe only said: ''Iamngly, ana J. am passionless and lam ungrate ful and I am not even free! Is It not sad?" And with the song still flowing from her lips, and with tbe bushed Carr, Mrs. Kate D. Sarah B. Cooper, Mrs. E. T. Y. Park hurst, Mrs. Sam Davis. Mrs. Emilv Brown Powell, Mrs. S. E. Reamer, Mrs. Mary O. Stanton and Mrs. Isa bella Raymond. On Tuesday, the 17th, Miss Sarah tion. and could take a ship to anv port. foreign or domestic, should it ever be come necessary. Onlv one member of the nnmpmtia family of the Bonanartes livea in Cor sica, the home of tbe great founder of iiiw laiuuj . j nis is tne x rineess marx- anpa. wife of Lucien Bonaparte, who. se para tea irotn ner husband, lives ter 1 was with them, says a writer ia the Detroit free Press. Toward even- . ing on a very eold winter day. when H , was snowing just a little and drifting a great deal, an Indian came to tbe log house with a jng half full of whisky and with bis rifle. I imagine that tbe jng bad been entirely full of whisky wften ne started, and by tne time he the M. Severance. Btate superintendent of the franchise department of the life of seclusion in the village" of Ajac- I to th.. nODSr;h wa ,r"tbT - Wnman'a rhr.v;Br. oi J jolly condition. Tbe jug and the rifle w WUiujUUU -a. u I fmr lau tjt? I Union, read an able paper, "Metis Probably the oldest house ana .trams Atnene." Miss Severance United si.tc i. . rfnir. .f reviewed the myth of Zeus swallowing I ling that stands in Guilford" Conn. It metis, ana Atneue springing full-1 was D""f in ltnu ana is still occupied, crmwn fmm w rari, t i . I la colonial times it did duty occasional. r. - ........ , .T ... , wu- , , . treated Metis, the victim, with A thn '7 ."? " ,or' anlwas IP ?.ce of refuSe w the heroine H WwI Z. TI "g P was on the , ui unci war-pacn. ,Jtr nao Mrs. trar&eld is said to be over better. Athene is the true, noble whelmed by ber correspondence. Let woman her sisterhood is increasing ters come to her from every part of tbe to-day. Vulcan assists her, Zeus re- country and on every conceivable topic. spects her. while both desnise Met.i I TeiT communication she receives is Mrs. Kate Douglas Wiggin then gave a fine essay, "The Kindergarten Preventive of Crime." Mrs. Wiggin believed that if the little ones were taken in time and their whole iea seres of land in Michigan, and his given careful attention, and frequently a pleasant letter of some length is sent i ii answer. The Detroit Free Press savs: "If boy lifteen years of age should be left natures developed according to the laws of order, beauty and harmony, there would be no need for jails. Mrs. Francis E tiger ton ridiculed i popular caricatures of "woman's guardian should cover it with hickory trees, the income of tbe boy when he came to be thirtv vears old would be from $9,000 to $11,000 clean cash off his mile xarm. Occasionallv the return of the swal- rights, but made an eloquent plea f low or the nightingale may be some- ror the ballot in woman s hands for purifying politics and aiding higher nuiiiimiy ucriuuiuoill. Mrs. Mary O. Stanton read an in teresting paper on "Physiognomy." Two crentlemen were tn.llrir.cr nhnuf uuoiuraseuMji ijnHe in wnicn, tnougb were slrontrlv inclined to AmhnrL- says the Florida Dispatch. Finally one of them remarked : " I must con sult my wiie oeiore decidn. " "Whv?" exclaimed the other, " Is she boss? " io. was tne reply, "neither am I. we are a well matched team - nnri A don't drive tandem. My wife is as much interested in the welfare of our family as I, and she has a right to have a voice in the investment of our little property." There was nothing hvio ma" juswh ill kiiiH virw fir miit- rimonial obligation, especially in the case of poor or only moderately well- iuiiiit- huu tnese comprise an zines, papers and periodicals issued in tbis country or a number more than sufficient to afford every man, woman and child in tbe United States one paper per week for a year. The Ural Mountains were ancientlv overwhelmingly large propoition ofjtne subject of various myths. The wbat delayed, but most sea fowls may be trusted, it is said, as tbe almanac it self. Were they satellites revolving around tbis earth their arrival could hardly be more surely calculated by an astronomer. Webb C. Haves, the ex-President's son, lives in Cleveland, where he is rated a keen and successful business man. He is Treasurer of one corpora- no u ana a scocsnoiaer in several otn- ers. lie is a bachelor and occupies nanasome apartments in tne east end oi me city. According to the latest issue of tbe "Newspaper Directory" there were no I the- northwestern part of CheAhin. less tban 3,481.610.000 copies of maga- 1 yonn., standing in Mr. Delos idoteh were ta&en awav from him, and be was ordered to get to bis wigwam as quick as be could before darkness came on. He left and was supposed to bave gone to the camp, but early next morning his squaw appeared at the honse and said he had not come borne that niarht. and as the night was cold she bad been anxious about bim. Then tbe search for tbe lost Indian began. ue was xonna in one oi tne sheds near tbe barn nnder a heap of drifted snow, and the chances are that the snow that was above bim bad helped to save his life. Tbe searchers for the Indian bad gone in different direc tions, and it was his own squaw who. with true Indian instinct, had tracked him out, and sbe was alone when sbe found bim. Apparently the Indian was a frozen corpse. Sbe tumbled bim out of tbe snow bank and palled off his blankets, and dragged bim down to the creek, where a deep bole . was cut in the ice for the purpose of watering tbe eattle. Laying the Ind ian out on tne snow, sue tooK the nan tbat was beside tbe hole, and, filling it repeatedly, dashed pailful after pailful of ice water over the body of tbe Ind ian. By tbe time the other unsuccess ful searchers had returned she had ber old man thawed out and seated by tbe fire wrapped up in blankets. There is no question that if be bad been found by the others, and bad been taken in the house frozen as he was, be would bave died. Ijarftea Apple-Tree In New England. The lararest aoole-tree in New V.nrr. lnrl .hrfr.r.K.hl, i .K " U 5L r.vWij au mo wwim, 13 IH me- northwestern part of the families in this countrv wh- siignt increase or diminution in the annual earnings would be felt alike oy every memoer. The wife has labored at home to earn or to save, while her husband has lahorod in the. ueiu, xne snop or tne counting-room, is justly a partner in his earnings and savings, and should share in all plans for disposing of their small accumula tions so as to make them more pro ductive if all goes well. California Fruit Grower. Slavonians who. In the eleventh cen tury frequently visited tbe region of Urals for trade, described them as mountains reaching the sky, inter sected by terrible precipices, and as beinflr inhabited bv a nnnnltinn nf pova dwellers. It has been estimated that the volume of water poured into the Rio de la Plata exceeds the aggregate discbarge of all the rivers of Europe put together. Its ordinary flow at some points ia 100.000 cubic feet per second. The ordinary volume of water in tbe Uru guay River averages 11.000.000 of cubic feet per minute. Brichim Yon ner did cot possess the fabulous wealth that was credited to him. He left just $1,200,000 when he Gin crerb read. In mAlHnr o;nr,v bread it is essential to h molasses; syrup will not give good satisfaction, and coarse black mo lasses is also objectionable. New Orleans is probablv the hMt. To! one cupful of sugar, one cupful of I died, and this sum was divided accord "foiii, duo cupiui ot molasses, ing to the strictest laws of equity four cupfuls of sifted flour, one table- among eighteen wives and their chil- nfrt til. we5lp dren. Amelia Folsoni. Brigham's three e, Sin k.. aX.'t'lir.""' spouse, is Buu auve ana tr anrf,,; .r-.i,." "K "2 .T most unarming woman. euros, milk and flour I outing Bull's language was a com- oouad of pun. Sioux AQdinon,rj9l kiss' dooryard. Its age can be traced by a family tradition to 140 years at icasi, iuu it may ue twenty or twenty, five years older. It is at "the present time of symmetrical shape; the trunk is nearly round, without a scar or blemish on it; there are eight large branches: five of them have been in th. habit of bearing one year and the re maining three the next. Mr. Hotch kiss has irathered in one vear from thn five branches eighty-live bushels of fruit, and his predecessor has harvested -110 bushels from tbe same Siva branches. By carefnl measurement. circumference of the trunk one foot above tbe ground, above all enlarge, menu of the roots, is 13 feet 8 inches. The girth of the largest, siogle limb ia 6 feet 8 inches. The height of the tree has been carefully measured and found to be 60 feet, and the spread of tint branches as the apples fall is 100 feet. or 6 rods. The fruit is rather small, sweet, and of moderate excellence.. Boston Journal. VJalversalily or Time and HeuBrfl. Standard tiuie has been tally accept- ed in Asia by not less than 40,000,000 people; in Europe by almost an equal nnmber. and in America bv more ttaaa 60,000.000. W hat is now thought an essential ia a standard omt of meaimrn. -went. if -