.7 iver Glacier vol. :j. HOOD RIVKK, OREGON, SATURDAY. N(VKMIiPIt-21, 1801. NO. 25. The Hood E 3(ood Iiver Glacier. roiutmu iviht iTDanif isi-t v The Glacier Publishing Company. at uat iiir noM puict P jwr , t m Hi iM'inlh. ,,, ur ThiM iiiuiiUi. , , tc l'Wl.n.7 C-4 GEO. P. MORGAN, UU ChUI CUrk 0. a. Und ww Land :: liuw :: HiK'CMiiliMt. Hoow ho. t, Und Offln. Uulldlng, Tim nu,r. on. O. D. TAYLOR, Real Hstatc Broker, Fir, Life tnd Aooldent Iniunnoe. Money Loaned on Real Estate Sccnrily. 0o., Fr.nrk C. ' fl.uk Rulldlnf , Till DALLM, OHKOOW, THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. 8oond Hi., D4r Oak. . Hood Rl.r, Or. Htisvlng and ILir cuttiug atly (loo. .S.tuf.ctluO UllrllWl. PACIFIC COAST.. Fine Lithograpic Stono Found in Utah. FRESNO RAISIN SHIPMENTS. CI&ub Spreokels' Son Purohasos the Entire Street Railway Sys tem at San Diego. Pcjtrlct fever is at Klko, Nev. Pendleton Iscleaniiigouttbegaiublers. Portland is determined to enforce the Fnnday law. In Millard county, Utah, fine litho graphic atone baa been found. Los Angeles is being flooded by "green good " circulars from New York. The wreck of the bark Charles Devens at Coos Hay is to be removed at once. Ranchers around Idaho Falls, Idaho, are offering potatoes in the field at 10 cents per 101) pounds. Raisin sbipmenU from Fresno are now ateraging twenty carloads a day. The total shipments will reach 1,000 carloads. The prospects for the completion of a railroad from Salt Lake to Ixs Angeles are fair according to a report that reaches liOB Angeles. A. B. Spreckols, son of Cluus Sprock ets, has purchased the entire system of street-car lines at Ban Diego, and will apply electricity in ojierating them. (leorge E. llolden, a Chicago sporting man, was robbed of nearly $8,000 be tween Albuquerque and Pomona. He carried the money in a small handbag. fleorge'Clark, who is charged with the killing of Superintendent Oalavotti while the latter was taking a bar of gold to Nevada City, has surrendered' to the authorities. Prof. Martin W. Sampson, professor of English in the State University of Iowa, haa been appointed assistant professor of English in the Leland Stanford (Jr.) University. Two well-known guuablers at Portland charge that there is a gambling trust in that city, and that from M.OOO to 4,000 is collected monthly and given to officials to insure the gamblers from being inter fered with. His just announced that three East ern parties, whose names are withheld, have donated 1M.000 to the endowment fund of the Pomona College and $25,000 for a building to tie erected during the coming spring. The United States government has sent a gold watch and chain to be presented to Captain D. D. Rood of the British bark Norcrdss at Victoria, B. C, for the rescue ot the crew of the American ship William McUilvray in AuguBt, 1889. While the penitentiary commission ers were in session at the Santa Fe prison, three prisoners, "with "wooden revolvers," wrapped with tin foil, held up the guard, and two escaped in a car riage which was in front of the building. From reports gathered from fruitgrow ers in alt parts of California south of Fresno it is found that the total prune rop in that region this season has been one-eighth of a full crop. In Pomona Valley it has been even smaller than that. John'Moran, a section bes on the Atlantic and Pacific atNeedleB, has ben arrested at Albuquerque, and property which was stolen from a Pullman sleeper on the 20th ult. and belonging to Mrs. McClernand of Fort Wingate Was found n his person. EDUCATIONAL. Weslorn Unlvenity Student! In Alle ghany Abandon the Cnno Rush, and Substitute Boxing. . New York ha ni k 1m ii night schools. MlHHourl linn 1U,HK country school teachers, Only I ' per cent, of thn jMtilutin of India Van road and write. The Imperial University of Toklo, Ja pun, liim 2,000 scholars enrolled. An eleven year-old Kansas Uiy was granted a teacher's certificate Iiim t week. Mcmtier of the same family seem to have a tendency for Hit' same kind of work, of Urn (I.IHM) lady teacher II,- 000 are MtHti-rtt. Western rnivcraity students in Alio ghany abandoned their c;ui rush and Niilwtituti'il a turning iniiU'h for joints between leading freshmen and sopho more. It Ih now announced that the unknown giver of $50,00.) to found a McliolarHhip itl Clark University, Worcester, in -.ember, IHHii, wan tin late Hon. George 8. Barton,, Tim director of the Lutheran Theo logical Soniinarv, now locutcd at Get tysburg, have Ih-hii considering for some time tin- plan of removing that institu- Uion to Washington. At llio North estcrn University (co educational) at Evanston, III., thitt year, iln young women arc not permit ted to receive callers except during the hour front 7 to H p. in. On Friday the young men Stay until l:!(0 p. in. tMolier 8 Colonel Amos A. Parker ol riuwiiiiain, .v II., ceienraieo nisonc hundredth birthday. So far as in known he Ih the oldest collide graduate in America. having finished the course at tlit University of Vermont in lHi;. The Kaytirweather lieiiuest will go far toward meeting the expense of many necessary improvement! in Dartmouth College. More apparatus, bathe and locker will soon be udded to the gym nasium, and improvements in Reed Hall will also Iw puide. The Methoiliat I'liivemity of Waah invton Ih rapidly taking ahaiie, and in a short time the tine aife, which Iiuh U-en tmrchaHed by means of the contribu tions of the residents of the Capital City, will preaeut an active scene as the various uuiiuuiKS are erecieu. In lt42 Harvard graduated a class of nine members. A hundred years later the graduating class numbered twenty four. A century later yet the number had doubled again, and in IHiA) Har vard gradimteu her first clans of 100 iiiemlH-rs. Twenty years later the Hansen had more than doubled again, and now the entering clans of this year more than quadruples that number. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. The Lady Managers Decide to Establish a Model Sanitary Kitchen in the Woman's Building. Florida's World's Fair building will reproduce old Fort Marion. Niearaupa 'wants half an Bcre for the site of itsbuildiiig at the exposition. The government building lor toe World's Fair is making satisfactory progress. A bill to appropriate MM.COO for the World's Fair exhibit has been intro duced in tho Brazilian Congress. The old curiosity shop which Dick ens immortalized will lie one of the in teresting exhibits at tho World's i air. Tho World's Fair at Chicago will con tain a pumping plant of 40,000,000 gal lons per day, and its cost will be $15 .),- 000. The Hamburg-American Packet Com pany, ot wnien uari M'-mirx is ine new S'ork director, lias subscribed $5,000 to the exposition stock. Ouartish. the noted London book dealer, intends to send to the exposi tion an autograph letter of Christopher Columbus, for which he paid $5,000. Virginia's building at the exposition will be of the old colonial type, meas uring S3x7ti feet, two stories high and surrounded by a plaia fifteen feet wide. Its cost will be $20,000. The great imitation coast-line battle ship, which is to constitute and contain the government's naval exhibit, is in an advanced state of construction. It will all be inclosed before winter weather sets in, and all the interior work, will be completed by spring. The little old building on Arch street, Philadelphia, where Betsy Uohs made the first ilag for the United States army, is likely to be removed bodily and taken to Chicago for exhibition at the World's Fair. The nine lady managers resident in Chicago, called together by Mrs. Pot ter Palmer, have decided to establish a tnruhd RRnitarv kitchen in the woman's building at the exposition. An effort will be made by a Bpecial entertainment or otherwise to raise the $4,ouu neces sary for the purpose. The women of Illinois, who have the spending of $80,000 of the $800,000 which the State appropriated for its represen tation at the exposition, have been granted, for their exclusive use, one- tenth ot the spaco in the Illinois Duna ing, which, altogether, is something more than an acre ana a halt. One of the unique features of the Mexican exhibit at the fair will be the celebrated Panduxa famly, consisting of five persons, who are probably the most expert workers in clay and modelers of figures in the world. The family will be sent to Chicago by the State of Guadala jara. It is the intention to provide a Mexican house for them to live in dur ing the fair and a work shop, where their work may he inspected. EASTERN ITEMS. t River Making Inroads on New Orleans. ELECTRICAL PROCESS IN IRON Black Diphtheria Spreads at Alarm ing Rate in an Iowa Nor wegian. Settlement. Iron is to be made at Chattanooga by an electrical process. The Supreme Court of North Dakota sustains the prohibition law in every particular. The people of Brooklyn have sounded an emphatic call for another bridge across the East river. Nicaragua needs water badly, and American well drillers with pumping out tits are Mi demand. (ieorgia. statesmen have resolved to return to the old custom of aniiual.ineet- ing of the (.legislature. A rich amler deposit, it is reported. has Ix-en discovered in Ontario, the esti mated value of which is $7,000,000. Iuiisiana sugar men are objecting strongly to the atqiointment of . negroes as inspectors under the Ixmnty law. The inroads of the river on New Orleans continue, and may prove a rather serious matter for a part of the city. A canal to connect Jamaica Bay with the (ireat South Bay. on ttie south shore of Jong Island, is sjioken of as pronatiie. Before the close of the year four new cruisers two at Baltimore, one at Nor folk and one in l hiladelphia will have been launched. The numlier of postofiices in the United States is otlicially stated to be 04 ;!H1, showing an increase of 2,000 over imhi year ai tins time. By an order the Secretary of War has reduced from thirty-five to thirty years the maximum age at which army re cruits w ill lie accepted. Ignatius Donnelly has " begun two more liliel suits against the St. Paul I'iuiiffr-I'rmt. He is not satisfied with the verdict just given to him. The IVIaware Indians have just re ceived $454,000, being one-hs'i of the sum given them by the government for lands in the Indian Territory. An ingenious jierson in Chicago has invented an automatic Adelina Patti. It is a Ufe-Bixed wax figure, which imi tates her smiles, gestures and poses. During the last eight months the numlier of locomotive engines exported from the United States was 250, against ninety-three in the corresponding period of 1800. The New York naval reserve artillery is rapidly filling up its ranks to the maximum, and is inaugurating a fixed programme for the winter's drill. All the tiauor dealers in Bar Harbor. Me., including proprietors of summer restaurants, have been indicted for al leged violation of the liquor laws. The government proposes to build another timber dock in the navy yard at Brooklyn, the accommodations of the other two docks being insufficient. It is. to be about 000 feet in length. The Commercial Club of Kansas City haa called a convention to meet Decem ber 15 and 16, to urge upon Congress systematic improvements of the Mis souri and lower Mississippi rivers. The Governor of Tenneesoe has offered a reward of $5,000 for the arrest and conviction of 'the leader of the Brice- ville riot, and a reward of $25 each for the capture of the escaped convicts. An agreement'' has been concluded with the Tonkawa tribe of Indians of the Indian Territoay, by which the Indians cede to the United States 80,000 acres of land, the consideration being f30,00. Kansas City officials have been wrought up to a high state of excite ment by the discovery of gold in samples of Btrata pierced by a drill while drilling for the water-works tunnel nnder the Missouri river. President Noel of the Olympic Club at New Orleans has telegraphed Sullivan's agents in New York offering $15,000 for the Slavin-Sullivan contest for March ; also a solid gold pitcher emblematic of the world's supremacy. Black diphtheria is spreading at an alarming rate in a Norwegian settle ment in Soldier Valley, Harrison county, Iowa. Fourteen persons recently died of the disease. One family of ten lost six members. The place has just been quarantined. Collis P. Huntington, the railroad king, is defendant in a suit brought by Perkins, Goodwin & Co., paper dealers, to recover from him $15,027.40 for paper furnished in 1888 to the Star Printing Company. Mr. Huntington held $00, 000 of the $300,000 of the capital stock of the company. It is now sought to hold him as a stockholder. The recent wreck of the EI Dorado on the Bahama banks has led to the dis covery of an ingenious method of cheat ing the government. Nine cases were marked linen goods, while only three contained toweling, the rest having costly kid gloves. The goods were dam aged, but being in bond were shipped to New York, and the government ap praisers in seeking to ascertain the loss discovered the cheat. There is a hint that the San Francisco Custom house would be involved. PERSONAL MENTION. Bardsley's Occupation in the Pennsyl vania Penitentiary it Making ' Pepper Boxes. It is no longer good form to call thA Emperor of Japan the Mikado. He is now called Kotel, and the Chinese Em peror answers to the title Bakudahan. Charles Stewart Parnell according to Thomas Blggar Harrison was the person who dubbed Prince Alliert Victor, Queen Victoria's eldest grandson, "Collars and Culls." " Holiest" John Bardsley's present occupation in the Pennsylvania peniten tiary is making pepcr boxes. He has gained twenty pounds in weight since his term liegan. . Kmile Grainer, a wealthy Frenchmen, has taken the liveliest interest in the building-tip of Uncommercial prosperity of the State of Wyoming, and has al ready sppnt $400,000 in tne work, upon which he has been engaged for the past eight years. 4 Von Milium, the German Secretary of legation and Charge o" Affaires, will con tinue to represent his government at Washington until a successor to the late Count von Arco-Valley is appointed. Mumm is a very proper name for a dis creet diplomate. Of the land pertaining to the late Chief Justice Chase's home near Wash ington, D. C, called "Edgewood," about seventeen acres have been laid out for a villa site, but the remaining thirty-six acres Kate Chase still retains with the old mansion, which continues to be her home. Achille Perelli, who died a few days ago in New Orleans, was one of the most distinguished sculptors in the United States. He was horn in Milan, Italy, ami was a pupil of Galli, a celebrated Italian sculptor. After fighting many battles while in Garibaldi's armv he came to this country, and resumed hjs artistic work in Louisiana. Victorien Sardou's wife met the fa mous dramatic author for the first time at breakfast one morning at her own home, where tie had come to consult her father. M. Soulie. Director of the Palace of Versailles. It was a case of love at first sight, and before Sardou had left the house she had given him her heart. Even the famous people have tl eir vanities. Meissonier was proud of his shapely and delicate hands. He said that Ins fingers were so sensitive that he could w ith his eyes shut lay on the ex act amount of color that he wanted on a given spot if somebody placed the point of the brush upon it. , Mrs. Charlotte Emerson Brown of Or ange, President of the Federation of Women's Clubs, is a daughter of Prof. Ralph Emerson, for many years con nected with the Andover Theological So ciety. She is a handsome woman of fine physique anu an accomplished linguist, speaking half a dozen languages fluently. NATIONAL CAPITAL. The Assistant Secretary of the Inte'rior Depatment Files His Report for the Fiscal Year. Assistant Secretary Bussy, of the In terior Department, has filed his report for the fiscal year. The report reviews the work of the board of pension ap peals. It shows that January 1, 1891, there were 5,028 appeals pending before the board, as against 5,030 July 1, 1891. Mr. Bussey points out several defects in pension legislation, and makes a num ber of recommendations looking to their correction. He asks that Congress be requested to enact a law ttiat shall ex pressly authorize the department to treat all improper, illegal and excessive payments of pensions, whether caused by" fraud or mistake, as payments to be charged against ttie current pension, with a view to readjust or equal the cur rent pension payments within the dis cretion of the Secretary. He suggests that in case of insane, idiotic or other wise helpless children of deceased pen sioners, of pensionable age, the limit be abolished, so as to admit such children at any date to the pension roll. He also recommends that persons who served in the Confederate army and afterwards enlisted in the avy of the United States be given the same pen sion accorded those who served the Con federate cause and then enlisted in the army of the United States. Under the authority of the act of Congress, approved September 28, 1890, the Director of the Mint has prepared a new design for silver coin, which has been approved by the Secretary of the Treasury. The design is intended for half dollars, quarters and dimes. On the obverse face of the coin is a female head representative of liberty looking to the right with an olive leaf and Phue necian cap on the back of the head. On the band, or fillet, over the front of the head is the word "Liberty," and over the head at the top of the coin, "In God We Trust." Around the medallion are thirteen stars, and at the bottom the date of coinage. On the reverse side appears the seat of the United States, as adopted in 1782, an eagle with open wings. On the breast a shield argent, six pellets gules, a chief atmre. In his dexter claw the eagle holds an olive branch, representing peace, and in the sinister claw a sheaf of thirteen arrows, representing war. In his beak the eagle Holds a scroll containing "E Pluribus Unum," entwined above and about the head with thirteen stars, environed by clouds. This will be the design of halves and quarters. The dime on the obverse side, in place of the stars, will have "United States of America." "In God We Trust" will be omitted from the dime. The reverse of the dime will be the same as the present dime in use. The reverse of the half and quarter is a return to the design of almost the first coinage of the country. FOREIGN LANDS. Jerusalem Becomes a Jewish City. BRAZIL TO FOSTER THE VINE. The French' Senate Passed the Bill to Admit American Pork by 179 to 64. The French Senate has passed a bill to admit American pork by 179 to 64. The epidemic of smallpox, which re cently prevailed in Honduras, is over. A split has len discovered in another big British gun a sixty-seven-ton gun. The Canadian Cabinet crisis is over. Chapleau will retain the SecretarvshiD of State. Russia is establishing new ports of commerce and naval stations on the Black Sea. An epidemic resembling la grippe has attacked many persons at San Jose, ; There are fears of a famine in North ern Hungary, owing to failures of the potato crop. Prince C.artoryski, Vice-President of the Upper House of the Austrian Parlia ment, is dead. Advices from Africa report that Car dinal Lavigerie is seriously ill at Algiers. The Pope has sent his blessings to the Cardinal. Natives of South Africa are building a telegraph line across Mashonaland at the rate of three miles a day. The Russian government has placed an order for 500,000 small-bore repeat ing rines with a trench nrm. Orders have been issued by the Porte for the construction of eighteen new cruisers for the Turkish navy. The extraordinary rainfull of the past month all over England has produced the heaviest floods since 1875. Negotiations have reached an advanced stage with the Rothschilds in Paris for a Spanish gold loan of $15,000,000. 5Iel bourne, Australia, has just com pleted a splendid system of cable roads about eighty-five miles jn extent. Great Britain still pushes her claims to the ownership of the valuable mines in the eastern portion of Venezuela. The Italian railroads have prepared a zone tariff project for the carriage of parcels not exceeding twenty-two pounds in weight. Rumors from Nicaragua are to the ef fect that a number of persons will be exiled in addition to those already driven from the country before long. The Dreyfus motion relative to the prosecution of the Archbishop of Aix was withdrawn after an exciting debate in the French Chamber of Deputies. Grand Duke Alexander of Oldenburg, chief military expert of Russia, is tak ing part in a strategic conference now proceeding between French and Russian officers. As there is a popular superstition in China that telegraph poles cast baleful shadows on the graves of deceased an cestors, the wires are being buried to save trouble. Fifty huge chests were required to transport from Greece to Berlin the su perb collection of the relics of Troy left by the late Dr. Schliemann to the Berlin Museum of Art. A new naphtha spring of immense ca pacity was recently opened in Bakoo on the Taggieff grant If it continues with the same power as at present, it will be the richest naphtha fountain in the world. A Portuguese mail boat from East Africa has arrived from Marseilles, and reports a recent encounter between British and Portuguese soldiers at Lo renzo Marquez, in which two were killed and fifteen injured. France is supposed to be preparing to sweep all Russian refugees over the border, their absence from French soil being one of the conditions the Czar ex acts before he will visit the Republic. The Inman line steamer City of Rich mond, which cost 125,000 sterling to build, was offered at auction at Liver pool, and the highest bid was $6,000. The vessel was withdrawn. When,Kicking Bear of Buffalo Bill's Indians went through St. Paul's Ca thedral the other day he examined the muskets on Wellington's funeral car and grunted, "Gun no good!" The total tonnage of the port of Liver pool during the last fiscal year was 9, 772,605 tons. The Mesey Dock Board received from duties on vessels and mer chandise the sum of $5,670,000. In the last annual report of the British postoffice it appears that of the $7,960, 000 received in the money-order depart ment from foreign countries there came from the United States $5,580,000. The Theosophical Society people in London are chagrined at Sir Edward Arnold's departure for America. They had been making preparations to ex ploit him aa one of their own sort in order to gain luster from his reflected light. It had .been announced that he was to preside at the next meeting of the society. A conflict between Turkish troops and an armed band under the command of Chiefs Zanlus and Mauris, champions of the Cretan Christians, has occurred near Melopotamos. Thirty of those en gaged in the fight, including Chiefs Zanlus and Mauris, were killed. AMMONIA AND SUICIDES. On. ot Ih. Mnil C.rtalH Af.nU lor C.ualDff V.ath lr Slow V oLanlng. Of the number ot those seeking sui cide by swallowing some form of poison, probably there are few who have sought to kill themselves by means of ammonia. Nevertheless ammonia, althoughit is the active agent in most of the salts sold to women for their gilt decorated and per fumed scent bottles, is poisonous when taken internally in a concentrated form. To attest this there have been recently in New York several cases, the most re cent being that of Herman Ilarowitz.)f w hich Deputy Coroner Jenkins said that death took place in a comparatively short time after the ammonia was taken. In another case, that'of a child, Dr. Jen kins said death resulted in five minutes after swallowing the ammonia solution. There are on record also cases of slow poisoning from ammonia administered with intent to commit murder. Further more, the appearance of workmen in guano factories, where ammonia is set free by grinding guano, has been noted, and in every case there is an unmistak able system of poisoning. Thi is dis coloration of the skin of the face, which assumes a blotched, dirty appearance. First to take on this appearance is the skin of the nose and forehead. Autop sies of those who die from ammnioa poi soning reveal a dark hue on the mucous membrane lining the stomach and intes tines. As an agent for causing death by slow poisoning, ammonia is one; of the most certain and most difficult of detection, owing to its volatile nature. This qual ity lias led physicians to believe that some of the mysterious deaths that have taken place in the history of modern and mediaeval crime are due to ammonia. It is known now that months have elapsed between the first symptoms of sickness and the death of a person from ammonia poisoning. On the other hand, death Las resulted in four minutes from the time a large draught of ammonia has been swallowed. It has been found in cases of gradual absorption of ammonia in the human system that there is a gen eral elimination of healthy oxidation of the blood and a consequent lowering of the bodily strength. In the cases of Im mediate poisoning, death comes with frightful agony, as in the case of Haro witz. Blood gushed from his nose and mouth. Statistics in England put ammonia thirteenth in frequency in the list of poisons. Alexander Winter Blyth, med ical omcer ol Jiealth in the ot. Maryie bone district, London, cites thirty cases of poisoning by ammonia swallowed for the purpose of committing suicide, or administered with the purpose of com mitting murder, or abtorbed uncontciovt ly in food. Of the suicidal cases six were fatai. Of twenty accidental cases twelve were fatal. Of cases of murder with ammonia, Dr. Blyth notes two, both of them children. New York bun. Fl.ating Prsiric. .f Uililui. A curious phenomenon is to be wit nessed at the Ames' crevasse, and, in deed, is one of the causes of the great damage it has done. Under any circum stances the water from this crevasse would overflow the rich country lying be tween it and the gulf of Mexico, causing damage to the umount of several million dollars, but to the surprise of many, not content with running down stream and overflowing the country below, it haa taken to running apparently, np stream. Some curiosity was felt over this phe nomenon, and the case on examination hows it to be due to the prairies trem blantes the floating or trembling prai ries of southern Louisiana. All along the gulf coast the large border of land floats on the surface of the water. The land is made by fallen timber and grasses. It gradually accumulates dirt and becomes in the course of time sufficiently firm to support brashes and even trees, but the soil is only three inches or little less thick, and below it is the water, upon which it floats on account of its lightness. Occa sionally pieces of trembling prairie, are detached and become floating islands. There are quite a number of these in Salvador, these lands, floating from side to 6ide, being frequently carried at a rapid rate by the breeze, trees acting as sails to catch the wind. The current from the Ames crevasse has carried these floating islands down stream and torn a number of others from the trembling prairies. Cor.St. Louis Globe-Democrat Mr. Tihlen'i Disputed Will. Two judges have decided in favor of the Tilden will and two judges have de clared against it. The case will soon be argued before the New 'York court of appeals, which will finally decide wheth er New Y'ork is to have the $5,000,000 library or whether Tilden 's great bequest is to be absorbed by his nephews. No man doubts that it was Mr. Til den's purpose and intention to found a great public library with his money. He carefully executed a trust for that purpose, and died in the belief that the beqnest wis so well .guarded that bis heirs could not have it set aside by any quibble of the law And yet h purpose so plain and unmistakable has been de clared invalid by two judges, who inter pret a law" which is described as "the perfection of common sense." It is this extremely technical interpre tation of the laws' provisions on the part of law judges that justifies the presence of lay judges on the bench of New Jer sey. Among the lay judges of the New Jersey court of appeals there would not be two opinions regarding the intentions of Mr. Tildeu in the testament he exe cuted prior to his death They would unanimously decide in favor of the will. And so, in fact, would our law judges, who have on some notable occasions demonstrated that with them law is, in deed, the perfection of common sense. Newark Journal. owl T fty hi ntfi in ne n itf ig n if. r- De to le IT re al I- l. i- n B I- r t ) i T IV ( i I r V i