(' 'llT ': v vol. a. HOOD KIVKIt, OREGON, SATURDAY. DECKMKKU 5, 1891. NO. 27. Th Hood River Glacier. ft i 1 ?, i . -is r ! I f V 3ood -iver Slacier. r(ii.umi) btint toinT oasi r The Glacier Publishing Compuj. i vacHirnuN rmcs. r .v i tiioiiilK ,,,, , ( i r ThtM uiunUi. , M 'Wi? , GEO. P. MORGAN, uu OhM n..k u I U-4 Oflaa, Land :: Law :: (Specialist xm X. I, Una Offloa BulMlpf, Till PAM.KS, OH O. D. TAYLOR, Real Kstate Broker, Firs, Life tad Aooldtnt Iniuraaos. Money Loaned dd Real Estate Sccoritj Omat, f r.nrh Co Hank FI'ilMla. TH PAUM, ORKOON. THE GLACIER Barber Shop brant Evans, Propr, Beoond 81., nr Oak. . . Hood River, Or. Hbavfng tnd Hir cutting aaetly don. Satisfaction (iuaraiiteed. PACIFIC COAST. Portland Catholics Wilt Build a Cathedral. WELLINGTON MINE STRIKE. The Chinese on the Empress of Japan Roughly Handle a Customs Collector Eto. Tucson is to have a f 100,000 tmnita riiini. AiiHtin, New, has just shipped 100 tons of antimony. Ih Angeles is making a move to own her own water works. llorse-csir lines at Sau Picgo are being changed into electric jwwer. The Catholics of l'ortlaml projKise to build a magnificent cathedral. Sacramento Trustees have decided to vote ay for an extra lire company, ChuiIeB Prooks, a wife murderer, is to be banned Ik-eentbcr 21 at Spokane. Excursion trains from the East are beginning to Arrive in Southern Call- foniiu. ) Portland's saloons will all have toelose nt midnight from the beginning of the new year. A ledge of iron over twenty feet wide and 3,000 feet long has been found south east of Portland. Arthur Leonard of Carson, clerk for Wells, Fargo A Co.'s exproBS, is charged with embezzling 2,000. At 4 cents a pound many of the raisin growers of California claim a profit in their crops of $150 an acre. The Wellington mine strikers after a year and a half of enforced idleness have declared the strike oil. The mine owners were victorious. Portland authorities promise a sensa tion soon in the arrest of opium smug glers. Railroad employes are said to be connected with the work. The Kradstreet Mercantile Agency re ports seventeen failures in the Pacific Coast HtateB and Territories for the paBt week, as compared with seventeen for the previous week and thirteen for the corresponding week of 1800. Judge Zane, at Salt Lake, has ren dered judgment escheating from the Mormon Church for the benefit of the school fund, under the Edmunds-Tucker act of 1887, the Tithing Ofliee. Oardo House, Historians' Ollice and Church farm. The Barber's Union of Tacoina pro poses to see that the Sunday law in that city, in so far as it relates to the closing of barber shops, bo strictly enforced hereafter. People who do liot shave themselves will have to get Bhaved Saturday night or wait mntil Monday morning. , San FranciBco Bay is filled with ves sels. While freights are exceedingly low and still falling, arrivals are very heavy. A large percentage of the arrivals are colliers from Australia, the result being that coal is plentiful and cheap. At the beginning of the season the pros pects Were for big crops and a scarcity of tonnage, and shippera negotiated charters at high figures. The prices caused ship-owners to rush their ves sels to San Francisco from all manner of unexpected quarters, and, wheat be ing held firmly, there is now an over plus of tonnage and a scarcity of avail able grain. . Ships chartered some time ago were at 40 to 45 shillings. Freights are now at SO shillings, and vessels are till crowding iu. EDUCATIONAL. Tho Pretldqnt of Brown Univenity Advocates Turning the School Houses Into Palaces. The public schools in the United States nave 12,rKM),(HX) pupils. Dublin University has bestowed the degree of I'octor of Laws upon a woman Indiana University has opened with a much larger attendance than ever be fore. Wcllesley arid Smith Colleges opened tho scholastic year with 700 students each. Now York sehwl children of foreign birth are being taught to salnte the American Hag. Seven school buildings in the most crowded district of Chicago will shortly m thrown open Saturday for instruction in sewing. Kigld examination of the applicants for certificates to teach in Willis, Tex., has resulted In the idleness of half the schools of the canity. President Andrews of Brown Univer sity advocates turning schoolhouscs into luxurious palaces and furnishing a free luncii daily to the scholars. Precocioiisness begins to make Itself leit. j he undergraduate students in the Michigan University are younger bv a uu year or more on the average than they were twenty years ago. The self-education of tbe masses goes Hteadily forward. Besides the army o( university extension the entering classes for this fall of the Chautaiupia circles numbers 15,000 students. The course of instruction lasts for three years. There is at Baltimore. Ireland, a fish ing school, where Itoys receive instruc tion in all branches of a sea fisherman! work and in audi allied industries as net-making, boat-building, cooperate and siiii-making. the school lias pro duced excellent results. Oerieral I-ew Wallace, whose new novel is expected to be finished Iwfore New Year, usuullv rises as early as II o'clock in the morning. He takes some very slight refreshment, gets into the saddle, rides a couple of hours and then takes a regular breakfast. He now devotes him self assiduously to work until noon, when lie has luncheon and another ride. His second sitting at his desk lasts until 4 o'clock. The remainder of the evening and night is spent with his family and meim. i The total number of scholars in schools and colleges of all sorts in India is only i,2W,tXK, or 1 'i. per cent, ot the entire population. These are mainly confined to the cities and towns; but out of 250, 000,000 in all India less than 11,000,000 an read and write. A census of illiter ates in the various countries of the world places the three Sclavic States of Koumania. fcervia and Kussia at the head of the list, with alxnit KO per cent. of the population unable to read and write, ui the l-atin-speaking races Spain heads the list with W per cent., followed by Italy with 48 per cent., France and Belgium havinir about 15 per cent. The illiterates in Hungary num ber 43 per cent., in AuBtria ;tt) per cent, and in Ireland 21 per cent. NATIONAL CAPITAL. Treasury Department Has Information of the Existence of a Most Dan gerous Counterfeit. The United States patent ollice has is sued a patent to Emile Borliner for a combined telegraph and telephone. Commissioners (irener, Lindsay and Directors Lawrence and Peck have been appointed a committee to call on Presi dent Harrison and the Secretary of the Navy to ascertain what, if any, expense of the rendezvous at Hampton Roads and review in New York harbor in April, 180.5, should be borne by the exposition management. Manv are of the opinion that the government ought to foot the bill. A telegram has been received at army headquarters from General Brooke, com- nanding the Department of Dakota, in response to one sent by General Scho field asking the truth about the report that Big Foot's band had left the reser vation and started for Pine Ridge. Gen eral Brooke stated he had been unable to learn anything definite about the movement, but would find out the scope and significance at once. There is no apprehension felt at Washington that the movement will be followed by any thing like last winters outbreak. Gen eral Schofield said : " The state of things m the Indian country to-day is far better than a year aifo. There is more content among the Sioux this winter than last. This is mainly due, I believe, to the fact that the attairs of the government so far as they affect the Indians are better, ad ministered. I do not think there are anv discernable signs of trouble this winter, for so far as I can see the tribes are quiet." The secret sendee division of the Treasury Department has information of the existence of a most dangerous $20 counterfeit gold certificate. It is a pho tographic counterfeit, check letter A Is. K. Bruce, Kegister: James UiiitUlan, Treasurer ; act of July 12, 1882 ; depart ment series A 372,946. Apart from the counter containing the 20 on the face and tho portrait of Garfield there is lit tie of trie gray ot the photograph anout it. The seal is small and scalloped, hav ing a reddish tinge, apparently applied with a brush. The number is very pro nounced and heavier than in the genu ine. The surface on the note is one-half of an inch shorter and one-eighth of an inch narrower than the genuine. It has the two parallel silk threads running through it. The tint on the back of the note is light brown, while in the genuine notes it is orange. This counterfeit is determined by the character of its tints rather than by the lines in the engraving, as it is a photograph of genuine work. EASTERN ITEMS. Work on the Galveston Jetties Resumed. THE CHOCTAWS AND NEGROES Secretary Noble Dismisses a Clerk Pension Office for Writing Objectionable Novel. In South Dakota the total vote this year does not exceed 35,000. Fifty cents will be the price of admis sion to the Chicago World s talr. The reciprocity agreement with MeX' ico will le proclaimed alxnit January 1 tongress will be asked for $800,000 to pay for World's rair medals and pre miums. The beginning has lteen made toward building a great temperance temple in riosuin. Two packages of cigarettes daily have just made George Geisel of New York eraxy. He is 20 years old. President Harrison has pardoned George Welles, convicted in California of violating the postal laws. The Democrats in Massachusetts gained nearly 17,000 over lat year's re turns, the Republicans about iO.IKK). Ijirge numbers of representative cat tlemen are In Chicago, and a national breeding association is being organized. A Kansas City Appeals Court decision acknowledges the right of a negresskept in Ignorance ot tier Ireedom to recover her wages. The Chwtaw Council has prohibited negroes from settling on their lands, and those who were in the mines are being sent awav. It is proposed to erect a monument at Memphis to General N. B. Forrest, whom KoU-rt K. lee once called the greatentof Confederate Generals. The Knights of Labor ( ieneral Assem bly has decided that all w ho do not ac- tef-t all the principles enumerated in the platform must leave the order. The water in the lakes and streams of Western Connecticut is so low that many mills have stopped running and others have had to return to steam power. The Mexican revolutionists on the Rio Grande border are gaining recruits. They are well armed, and are said to have many sympathisers in Mexico. The loss to shipping bvthe September and October hurricanes is estimated by the marine underwriters to have been over f2tu00,u00, and ninety souls are known to have perished. Parnell's estate will be inherited by his brother, John l'arnell, who is soon to leave Atlanta for Ireland to claim the property. Mrs. Parnell receives only a He interest in the estate. The Transcontinental Association, at meeting at St. Louis, voted against granting a $50 rate for delegates to the National Convention, for which San Francisco is making a bid. Bar Kagle's party of Indians, which refused to remain on the Cheyenne Agency, are at Pine Ridge. An inves tigation will probably be had as to the causes which produce the discontent. Of the 500.000.000 persons who were carried last year on steam vesssels but sixty-five were killed. This shows that this means of travel is the safest in the world. Work has been resumed on the Gal- eston jetties which the United States government is constructing in the har bor of that city for the purpose of pro curing deep water. The Chesapeake Islands, which are the center of the oyster wars, are set tled by a hardy race of fishermen, who have as little intercourse as possible with the mainland. The amount of money in circulation in the United States increased $33,810,- 25 during October, and is now $24.23 per capita. The volume of circulation s 05.4!)4,544 greater than at this time last year. telix btarhenberg, a Swedish in ventor, has undertaken to harness New York Bay to a motor which will move all the machinery in New York city. His motor is set in motion by the rise of the tide. Secretary Noble has dismissed from the service Lewis W. Bogy of St. Louis, a clerk in the pension office, for having written and published a novel ot objec tionable character on official life in Washington. Otto Kramer of Philadelphia has sued the Traction Car Company of that city for $2,000 to satisfy the damages of his person resulting from sitting on a tack. Mr. Kramer found the tack on the cane seat of a car. The City Council of Chicago, by a vote to receive protests against the action of the police in breaking up a .'1 1 ' 1 A " 1 1 1 socialist meeting, pracucauy censureu Mayor Washburne and Chief of Police McClaughey. Members of the Women's Christian Temperance Union at Kent, O., formed themselves into parties and called at all places where loud theatrical posters ad vertising a burlesque opera were dis played and tore the bills and lithographic prints in pieces. The Methodist General Missionary Committee has appropriated for differ ent classes of missions as follows: Chi nese, $11,400; Japanese in California and Honolulu, $7,000; Bohemian and Hungarian, $7,350; Italian, $4,750; Por tuguese, $800 ; Indians, $9,350, PERSONAL MENTION. Emperor William Says a European War Cannot Be Postponed Beyond Next Spring, Munkacsy, the Hungarian artist, is at work on a new work representing Christ among ins jjiscipies. A bust of Matthew Arnold was recent ly unveiled in the baptistery of West minster Abbey by Ird Coleridge. The Critic says there is no truth in the story that Grover Cleveland is writ ing "A Constitutional History of the United States." Dr. Keeley, the bi-chloride promoter, has 800 to 1,000 patients, and gets 25 a week from each one. It pavs to work a good, fetching fad. Prof. Axe is one of the operating sur geons in the Itoyal Veterinary College of ixmuon. ue is gentler than his name might seem to indicate, however. The royalties from Moody and San- key's famous " Gospel Hymns " have, it is said, amounted to $1,200,000, every penny of which has gone for charitable purposes. As soon as Mr. Spurgeon began to re cover his health, begging letters legan to deluge him once more. He has long suffered from the iniortunitie8 of this class of people. The Duke of Norfolk has taken his deaf, dumb and blind twelve-year-old son to the shrine at Londres.'Franee, hoping to secure a miraculous cure for the unfortunate child. W. K. Vanderbilt wanted his physi cian to accompany him on a six weeks' tour to Europe. 'The physician said his time was worth $1,000 a week. He was offered $10,000, and went. The Chilian Minister in Washington is described as a rich, dapjwr and bandbox-like gentleman. He is small and delicate, and doesn't care much about discussing international matters. i The reigning family of Germany don't seem to be sleepy-heads. At 7 in the morning William, the Kmpress and the three elder Princes, with four grooms at tending, leave the palace for their regu lar daily horseback ride. The Rev. Howard Mactjueary, who had his falling out with the bishoo of Ohio, and so fell out of the Episcopal Church altogether, is reported as giving satisfaction to the Universalists of Sagi naw, Mien, unt ine "heeev" bee is in his bonnet, and so he Sallies forth to lecture from time to tim:4. In his childhood Mr. Patrick Egan. now American minister to Chili, was an errand boy in a flour mrd in an Irish rural town, and in a few vears he be came managing director of the milling company at Dublin and a commission merchant of some importance. This was before he became conspicuous in the land league. Tb9 famous oak under which Tasso is supposed to have spent the greater part of the day during the last year of his me, when he had retired to the convent of Santa Onofrio, was blown down during a violent gale a few weeks ago. The London Sews says that the tree, which all visitors to Rome used to visit, was kept standing bv supports of mason rv on all sides; but' at last, notwithstand ing all the care taken to preserve it, it has succumbed to old age. The trunk will, however, be kept as a relic in the convent at Santa Onofrio. WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. Australia Will Make a Splendid Exhibit at Chicago Anthropologists Are Aroused. The Knights of Labor in session at Toledo, O., have declared in favor of keeping the World's Fair open Sundays. Montana's World's Fair Commission has set aside $5,000 of the State's appro priation of $50,000 for the use of the women. Leigh Lynch has been commissioned by Director-General Davis to visit the South Sea Islands in the interests of the exposition. The supporting columns for the fores try building are to be trunks of trees with the bark on three from each State of the Union. Mr. Sell, the London advertising agent, has applied for space to exhibit speci mens of all of the leading newspapers of the world which have been printed dur ing the last two centuries. A splendid exhibit from Australia seems assured. Minerals, education. forestry and especially wool are to be represented. Wool growers and wool brokers to the number of fifty met re cently in Sydney, New South Wales, and took steps to make at the exposition a very extensive collective exhibit of wools. New South Wales has selected its commission to the World's Fair. William Ordway Partridge, the great sculptor.has asked for space in the art pal ace for his statue of Shakespeare, which he is now making for Lincoln park. His statue of Alexander Hamilton, which he is making for the city of Boston, will also be shown. Mr. Partridge is Vice- President of the'Anieriean Artists' Asso ciation in Paris. He gives assurances that the association is heartily inter ested in the exposition. The Chicago Paper Trade Club, which includes the prominent manufacturers and dealers in paper in Indiana, Illinois. Michigan and Wisconsin, has decided to make the best exhibit of paper manu facturing and its machinery and appli ances ever held under one roof. The display will show the actual manufact ure of paper iu all grades, from wood pulp to the highly-hni8hed book, and the exhibit will be conducted every dav during the time of the exposition. The finished product is to be run through a perfecting press and printed and sold as a souvenir. FOREIGN LANDS. Russian Peasants Prac tice Cannibalism. THE IRISH LINEN TRADE. Japanese Fleet Will Not Co-operate With China Against the European Fleets. Italy's finances are improving. Emigration in Prussia increased 30.7 per cent, the last year. Mr. Jackson, the new Irish Secretary, is a rich Leeds tanner. 1l tl da! a im nrariDpSnnr tA mnis1 !a 4 Vt a sale of spirits and tobacco. The loss of vessels at Murtinimifi dur ing the storm was $5,000,000. I.Ueien RrinnnArtA whn Hia1 iha nthar day, spoke eighty different languages. The Japanese fleet will not co-operate with China against the European fleets. Bremen in the firnt eitv in liprmini tn 0erate all its car lines by the electric motor. The Frpnrh Ronati has a liilt regulating the hours of lalmr nf wnmen and children. A company controls the flower virls nf Berlin, who wear the national costume and make money. The imnnrtu nf nil infn India am 8f) per cent, larger in ouantitv than thev were five years ago. Kmnernr William wilt asvtn hocrin a crusade against gambling in the civic and military services. During the niut vent- at Mnnti Turin the total receipts from the gaming tables amounted to $4,200,000. A tffPrmnn avnHiftat. ia urrtinfv tliA . --J u " Detrolenm SDrimro rm-ontlv Hiannvonut at Gillano, near Bologna, Italy. A bill will he intrmiiwoit in tha Vn glish Parliament to abolish actions for oreacn oi promise ot marriage. Baron Hirsch is reported to be ar ranging an International Jewish Con gress, to be held in London next year. A vegetable cartridge shell, which is entirely consumed in bring, is now coming into general use in the French army. Gladstone has declined the tender of a banquet at Pans by Frenchmen who lavor me withdrawal ot British troops from Egypt. Dom Pedro is reported to have an nounced that he is willing to return to Brazil to assist in restoring order and re uniting the people. The difficulty in fighting the famine in Russia ia increased by the improvi dence, ignorance, selfishness and fatal ism of the peasants. Women convicts at the recent wreck of the steamer Enterprise in the Bay of Bengal formed a human life line and rescued six fellow voyagers. It is rumored at Valparaiso that the government of Chili will amnesty all but some twenty of those who promi nently supported Balmaceda. Cycling is gradually making its way throughout the armies of Europe. In Russia each infantry regiment is to have four orderlies mounted on cycles. The Dake of Portland gives all his Profits at racing to nharitipq nrwlpr a promise to his wife, and since his mar. riage has given $6,000,000 in this way. Notwithstanding the Russian fnminn large ouantities of End tan whent nnn. tinue to be imported to England, the amount rather exceeding that of last year. A Brazilian Government rWrt in at isBued orders a lease of the State rail ways for thirty-three years at a gold rental, half of which is payable in ad vance. A newspaper correspondent named Eugene Wolff has been expelled from German East Africa fo : writing biased reports discrediting the Governor of the Colony. The number of deaths at Altona from trichinosis, caused by eating diseased pork, is now reported as thirty. An in vestigation as to the origin of the meat is in progress. The famine in parts of Russia is so se vere that peasants practice cannibalism. The death role from diseases consequent upon the absence among the people of the necessities of life is terrible. The ships that were built to carry beef from the Argentine Republic to Europe are now employed in conveying fish be tween the same points, the beef business having apparently proven unremunera tive. The Russian government is said to contemplate a more rigorous supervision of the sources of news sent to foreign newspapers from Russia, which is claimed to be in many respects false and exag gerated. The London Spectator has recently shown that in England the tendency of population to the cities is irresistible; that the youug men and women are de eerting the agricultural regions and that farmers are unable to get the laborers needed for cultivating the soil. - The St. Petersburg Novosli, which has already commented unfavorably upon the speech of Emperor Francis Joseph to the Hungarian delegations, returns to the attack in a second article, wherein Austria is dubbed "a wolf in sheep's clothing, always Bpeaking peace while arming to the teeth for war." ALUM AND AMMONIA In Oar Brrl Hhttll W Drlra Slow FoUon From Our Hrrakfant Tabla? A nuisance that troubled England fifty years ago it now rapidly spreading ii this country, that is, putting alum in the oread we eat. 1 his question is causing a great deal of discussion at the present moment, as it is revealed that alum being used as a substitute for cream of tartar in baking powders. A story is told that a very large percentage of the baking powders sold on the market con- ibiu eiuier slum or ammonia, and many of them contain both these per nicious drugs. Much timely alarm in felt at the wholesale use of alum in bread, biscuit and pastry. To younv children, growing girls, persons of weakly frame, alum bread eaten morn ing, noon and evening is the most harmful. It is the small quantities taken at every meal that do the mischief. Alum is cheap, costing but 2 or 3 cents a pound, while cream of tartar costs 30 cents, and the high price of cream of tar tar has led cheap baking powder to be made of alum. If the reader wants to know something of the corrosive ouali ties of alum, let him touch a piece to his tongue; then reflect how it acts on the tender, delicate coats of the stomach. The Scientific American published in a t recent number a list of alum and am- rnon ji baking powders, which is of eret.' value at this time. Following is aoov' t ueiiseu. iisi complied nora omciai re ports, rowders marked with a star seem to have a general sale, as they are mentioned in at least two of the official reports : atlantic a pacific. roval. ; cbown. mlvkk star, davih' o. k. "snowpkikt. GK.M. STAR. kestos. staniiabp. There are. in addition to the foretroimr list from the Scientific Ama-tcas, a num ber ot such powders so d in the Western that were not found in the Eastern stores. Following is a hat of the most prom- incut; yc, AXDRKWH PEARf, Contains Ammonia (O. K. A ml rem & Co., Milwaukee.) ACME oulainn Ammonia (Thou. Wood de Co., Philadelphia.) BOX BOS Contain Alum (J. C. Grant Baking Powder Co., Chicago.) CAIXMKT- Contain Alum (Calumet Baking Powder Co., Chicago.) CI.IMVX Contains Ammonia (Climax Unking Powder, Co., Indianaiolla.) FOREST CITY Contains Aintnnnla Alum (Vouwie Bin., Cleveland.) HOTEL Contain Ammonia AIuj (J. .'. Grant Baking Powder IA iVL' i ;:, ) HEKCnJW JmOuUA AaimotiU (Hercules Baking Powder Co., Kan Kmnri. ) ONE SPOON, TAYLOR'S Ammonia Alum (Taylor Mfg. Co., M. hrnii.) RISING SL'X. Contain Ammonia (Pbo-nix Chemical Works, Chicago.) -.Coutaiiu .Btfir tuyai flaking Powder Co., New fork.) Where the I.uck Come In. Sadleigh Did you bear of Mr. Garner' sudden death? It was very sad. Just a ha had finished the accumulation of a larg for tune, and bad made up his mind to retire and njoy himself for the remainder of hi life, he was suddenly struck down from nervous exhaustion. It is terrible! McPblie Yes, but isn't it fortunate he cant take his fortuue with him I The fellow who get it without the nervous exhaustion i in luck. Boston Transcript. Speculative Heredity. Materfamilias Imogen, I don't think I could ever approve of your marrying George Kocicpate. I should bate to think thai, anr of my grandchildren would be like him. Ha was such a bard beaded boy, and it run in the family. Imogen Yea, mamma, I know all th Rockpates are awfully hard headed, but you must remember that there is softening of the brain in our family. Life. Hi Mistake. "What were you about to remark?" 'Nothing at all, I a:re you," replied Willie Washington. "But you looked as if you bad. something to say." V ' v. "Ya-as; I'm verwy deceptive that way. I've often thought, myself, that I bad some thing to say, and disco vahed aftah I said it that I hadn't." Washington Post. Heroism Rewarded. Railway Official Is this the man that has just saved the train from destruction? Several Bystanders es, this is the man. Railway Official (with emotion) My friend. you have saved a hundred human lives and many thousand dollars' worth of property. j, wm see that you are rewarded. (To subor dinate): Wilkins, take up a collection among the passengers. Chicago Tribune. He Had. "You shouldn't speak so harshlv of your fellow man," said a merchant to his clerk. You ought to remember the admouitiou to return good for evil. That's what I've just done; and I did it with a vengeance." "How!" "I gave a man change for a counterfeit 10 bill." Washington Post. They Usually Do. "Did you make much on your last stock deal?" "No; lost $700" "But I thought that MacDollars eava toh a pointer." "He did: but it proved to be a disannointnr Instead." Munsey's Weekly. After Many Day. "Why so beaming, Briefless?" "Concratulate me. I have cot a clinnt. it last." "Indeed!" "Yes. sir: nivself. Mr landlord la aiitno me for rent." New York Sun. ir You Have Hnilt You'll See the Point. "How are you getting on with your new bouse?" "I have bad to tear it all down." "What was the matter?" "It wasn't built the way my friend want d iU"-New York Sua. V f rtVi