The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, March 26, 1892, Image 1

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VOL. X
HOOD IUVKU. OREGON, SATURDAY. MARCH 20, 1892.
NO. 4'X
Hood
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Ttie Glacier Publishing Company.
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Tim tuu.M, on.
O. D. TAYLOR,
Real Instate Broker,
Firt, Life tnd Aooldrnl IniurM.ie.
laaoy Loaned on Real Estate Security
Offla. Fr.nrh Co ' Pul flulMlB,
TIIR fUl.LU. (HtttllOlt.
THE GLACIER
Barber Shop
Grant Evans, Propr.
8ooin1 Hi., tifr Oak, . . Houd Rir.r, Or.
Iliaing anil Hair cutting (Mil; duni.
.Satisfaction (iuatallUad.
PACIFIC COAST.
Mining Excitement in
California.
FORGED ORDERS DISCOVERED.
An Escaped Convict From San Ouentin
Caught After Being Free for
' Several Years.
A cavalry troop is to be organized at
Portland.
Governor Coleord has Appointed April
1 as the arbor day for Nevada.
The Dayton mine at Silver City, Nev.,
is being worked under a lease.
At Noise, Idaho, one Rumpel is Biiinj?
the Union Pacific for $20,000 for the loss
of a leg at Nam pa.
San Diego, it is said, is to le made the
distributing point of the St. Paul and
.Tacoina Lumber Company,
The British government refuses to rec
ognize the claim of Captain McLean,
seized by the Russians in the Itehring
Sea, to ttie protection of the British Hag.
Tohlaa II. Seeling, a prominent resi
dent of Thd'nix. A. T., killed himself,
owing to financial losses and involve
ments in the expenditure of the funds
of the Knights of I'ythias lodge.
At Victoria, B. C, the eagles have
been set free from the park, the wolves
shot, and the deer will be liberated, ow
ing to the refusal of the Council to ap
propriate funds for their support.
Bradstreet's mercantile agency reports
fourteen lailures in the Pacific Coast
States and Territories for the past week,
against twenty-three the previous week
and twenty the same week of 1891.
The report that the First National
Bank of Great Falls, Mont., is in the
hands of a bank receiver is false, and a
reward has been ottered for the name of
the person who originated the report.
A number of forged orders on various
departments at Sacramento for salaries
are in existence, amounting altogether
to over $1,700. The forgeries wore dis
covered on presentation of several to the
City Auditor.
The suit of Mrs. A. J. Fiske against
the Travelers' Insurance Company for
If 10,000 on the life of her husband, J. D.
Fiske, is on trial at Fresno. Fiske, it
will be remembered, was shot and killed
by John Stillman.
The grip haB again reached the In
dians in Alaska, and the fatalities are
very severe according to a recent arrival
at Victoria, B. C, from Alaska. The
Indians around Juneau, Wrangel and
Chilcat, says this authority, are in a
state of terror, and at all the camps and
villages holes have been dug, into which
the dead Indians are unceremoniously
thrown.
At Oreana, Owyhee county, Idaho,
Deputy Constable Fleming shot and in.
stantly killed Samuel J. Pritchard, a
Deputy United States Marshal. Fleming
had a warrant for Pritehard's arrest on a
simple assault charge, and because the
latter would not " hold up his hands" at
the command of Fleming he was shot.
There is much excitement over the af
fair. Pritchard was unarmed.
John McAdoo has been arrested at
Stockton and identified as an escape
from San Quentin in 1885. He had lived
in Stockton several years, but one day
was caught stealing, and an investiga
tion of his home snowed he had long
carried on a system of thefts, lie orig
inally was sent from San Francisco to
prison for ten years on a charge of as
sault with intent to murder.
PERSONAL MENTION.
Sir Edwin Arnold Has Not a Very High
Opinion of the Inhuhitunlt of
South America.
Bob Ingi-rHoll muvh that the sublimes!
line in the Knglish language Is : " live
Is not love that alters when it alteration
rinds."
Mrs. Iiise, the Farmers' Alliance Lec
turer in Kansas, is dmu-riU-d hn "a sal
aried nightmare, inawtuliue and bewhis-
kortMl."
l.oulet, th head of the new French
Cabinet, is dcscriU-d at a man who has
been Hixleen years in public life without
making a record.
Kx-Governor Gaston of Massachusetts
has recently fallen down a lligbl of aUirs
and so injured himself as to x) unable
to leave his room.
C. C. McCoy, President of the North
western TraiiMiKirtntioii Company of
Portland, is in Vv'aNhiiigton. lie Is look
ing after bis numerous mail contracts.
Victor Ilutto wrote standing at a high
desk ; the older Dumas worked with bin
shirt sleeves rolled up; the present Da
man writes with a quill on blue paper.
Paniull's mother recently pi need a
Celtic cross of (lowers ukii his grave,
which Ixtre this inscription : "May the
spirit for which Charles Stewart Parnell
died freshly revive with tho new year
anil live forever."
Sir John Kverett Millais, the great
painter, is never so happy as when
sketching from nature in Scotland.
Seated Is-hind some wimpliug burn,
with an old clay iiipe In his mouth, he
will work all day without troubling
about food.
Albert Bierstadt has gone to the Ba
hamas to visit Walling Island, where
Columbus is supposed to have first land
ed in this country. He wants to secure
a correct liackgrouud for tho historical
imiuling which he is to exhibit at the
World's Fair.
The King of Wurtemberg is reported
to be greatly annoyed because the late
King bequeathed the beautiful villa of
Taulienheim to an American, the engi
neer of the Royal theater. Kvery effort
made by the King to repurchase the
villa has failed.
WORLD'S FAIR NOTES.
A Russian Will Exhibit Rare Carpets,
Shawls, Hangings, Etc., From
the Far Orient.
An Ohio World's Fair Commissioner
has estimated that the exhibitors from
his State w ill spend upwards of $5,000.-
000 in the preparation of their exhibits
for the exposition.
The California building at the fair will
be an imposing structure of the "old
mission" type, 110x500 feet, with a
dome, and costing about $75,000. It will
Is surrounded by a hedge of Monterey
cypress.
v ermont will nave a blinding at the
exposition without drawing on the Stute
appropriation (or the cost of its erection.
One hundred substantial citizens have
guaranteed $10,000 for that purpose, each
pledging himself to pay $100.
Denmark will spend alout $5,500 in
showing as a loading feature of its
World's Fair exhibit a Dani-h dairy com
plete and in operation. The dairy in
terest is one of the most important in
Denmark, and the raoBt approved meth
ods and mechanical appliances are util
ized in the dairies of that country.
W. L. Libby A Sons of Toledo intend
to erect on Midway plaisanee a factory,
in which the manufaetureof cutglasscan
be seen from the furnace on through the
cutting, finishing and decorating depart
ments until ttie finished product is
turned out. The factory plans call for a
structure, 125x200 feet, of stone, iron
and glass and with an imposing dome.
The firm intends to spend $40,000 on the
building alone.
Italy will make no government display
at the exposition. The King, however,
has recognized the fair by appointing a
commission, and M nister of State Ru-
dini has informed Vice-PreBident Bryan
and Director lliginbotbam that the gov
ernment will encourage individual ex
hibitors m every way possible, lie inti
mated that it wq 1 even pay for the
transportation of a.i exhibits. Mr. Hig
inbotliam reports there ia throughout
Italy much enthusiasm over the exposi
tion. The Bristol (England) Chamber of
Commerce has undertaken to furnish an
exhibit for the exposition that will
doubtless attract a great deal of atten
tion. In addition to a representation of
the manufactures of the place the ex
hibit will show much in illustration of
the lives and discoveries of John and
Sebastian Cabot, upon wh.se early Amer
ican explorations is based England's
claim to its past and present possessions
in this country. The Merchant Ventur
ers' Guild has agreed to contribute Cabot
relics, of which it has a large collection.
Mr. BariluBOW of St. Petersburg, Rus
sia, a dealer in fine Oriental goods, in
tends to exhibit in the exposition rare
carpets, shawls, hangings rind textile
fabrics from the far Orient He will fur
nish a number of loomB in rich Oriental
styles, representing the residences of the
wealthy Mohammedans of Asia and by
way of contrast the tents of the nomad
tribes of the Kirgniz Tartars. Some of
the apartments will be in the style of
the Caucftsua ; others in the Bokhara and
Chiva Btyles. The furniture and decora
tions for these apartments have been for
the most part collected at great expense
in the remote Orient. Suirnow & Co. of
the same capital will exhibit a complete
suit of apartments of a "Boyar" or
wealthy Russian noble of the twelfth
century and also the cabin of the rich
Russian peasant ot modern times. Each
of these exhibits will be in a separate
pavilion of distinctively Russian archi
tecture. '
EASTERN ITEMS.
The Total Population of
Brooklyn.
JUDGE VAN BRUNT'S ACTION
Mayor and City Council of a Kansas
Town Arrestod The Harlem
Land Claim.
Cincinnati will vote $0,000,000 bonds
for new water works.
Governor Bovd will not call an extra
session of the Nebraska Legislature.
A third electric railroad between Min
neHpolis and St. Paul will I) built this
year.
The Central ltailroad and Banking
Company of Georgia is in the hands of
a receiver.
The naval bill, as completed, appro
priates $78,800 for improvements at Mare
(aland navy yard.
Over 150,O0i) bushels of American corn
have Ijei-n oent into the famine district
of Durango, Mexico.
A tiumlxT of Chinamen are becoming
citizens of Mexico to evade the United
States restriction laws.
Jay Gould is said to be after the Aran
sas Pans railroad. He is seeking deep
water ports on the Gulf.
The public binds outside the perma
nent reservation at Hot Springs, Ark.,
will Is sold at auction April 10.
The estimated cost of the Chicago El
evated Terminal Company's structure is
$.',500,000. The plans are nearly com
pleted. The Massachusetts House has passed
a bill absolutely prohibiting the sale of
cigarettes either to minors or to grown
persons.
The jury of inquiry into the condition
of young Field at New York failed to
agree as to his sanity, and was dis
charged.
The great Harlem land claim, which
involves property valued at more than
$100,000,000 in .New York city, is to be
pushed to an end.
Heirs of ex Senator Joseph E. Mc
Donald of Indiana are contesting his will
on the ground that it was made under
undue influence of his wife.
The Chicago University, which will
not open until October next, has already
received over $4,000,000 in gifts, and has
a promise of another million.
Nebraska prohibitionists in their plat
form favor woman's sutl'rage and the
ownership of railroads, telegraphs and
telephones by the government.
A company lately formed in New York
is making money by fur. ishing sentries,
whose province it is to keep unwelcome
visitors from the portals of millionaires'
dwellers.
Memphis is going to have a big cele
bration on the occasion of the opening
of the new bridge across the Mississippi,
which gives that city a closer connection
with the West.
Representatives Cutting and Loud are
urging the establishment of an addi
tional life station on the beach at San
Francisco. The proposed location is
three miles south of the present station
The census returns for the citv of New
York are all in, with the exception of
two election districts. The total popula
tion of twentv-four Assembly districts
according to the enumeration is 1,795,2!.
Roughs at Corning, la., are determined
to break up a revival of Free Methodists
which is in progress in that town. The
minister has asked for the militia, but
the local authorities claim to be able to
keep order.
The fortv-fifth annual report of the
Penns lvania Railroad Company shows
the total gross earnings on the lines east
and westof Pittsburg for 1801 were $134,
254,612, a slight increase over the earn
ings of 1890. (
The St. Louis Merchants' Exchange
has had a call for 18,000 bushels of corn
for shipment to Mexico. This is the first
transaction of the kind known to have
been made, Mexico in former years rais
ing ample crops.
The lynching of Ed Coy, a negro, in
the southern part of Arkansas, has in
creased the desire of many negroes in
that section to emigrate, and large bod
ies are reported to be organimng to go to
the Cherokee Strip.
In theCook County (111.) CircuitCourt
is filed a writ against George Jacob
Schweinfurth, the self-styled Christ.
The suit is for $50,000 damages for alien
ating from the complainant, George
Coudrey, the affections of his wife.
The next cruiser to be launched will
be the Raleigh. She is being built by
the government at the Norfolk yard. It
will be a fine addition to the navy, hav
ing a speed of nineteen or twenty knots
and a fine battery of rapid-fire guns.
The people of Brooklyn have built
twenty-five miles of elevated railways
managed by two separate corporations.
The city government has lately author
ized the introduction ot the trolley sys
tem on the surface street-car railways".
The Inter-Ocean of Chicacro reiterates
the charge that the National Union Com
pany of iNew York: is a tool of the IN a
tional Cordage Company, notwithstand
ing the newspaper has been sued for
$200,000 damages for the original charge.
It is estimated that the fifty long-distance
lines which the American Bell Tel
ephone Company is putting up between
New York and Chicago will consume
8,526 tons of copper, while the total:
length of the wire will be 98,000 miles. '
NATIONAL CAPITAL
A Great Deal of Controversy Said to
Exist Over the Dispositon of
Puyallup Reservation.
The River and Harbor Commi'tee will
give no more hearings. It is believed
the Saciamento river will only be given
an appropriation of altout $50,000 and
the San Joaquin about $10,000.
The House Public Building Committee
has ordered a favorable report on bills
making the following appropriations for
public buildings: Boise, Idaho, $100,
000; Helena, Mont., $150,000.
The bill appropriating $10,000 for a
public building at Boise, Idaho, has been
ordered favorably reported oy the House
Committee on Public Buildings and
Grounds..
- i
Senator Mitchell has presented a peti
tion from Coos Bay (Or.) citizen praying
lor an appropriation for the removal oi
obstructions in the channel of the Upper
Coos Bay, (Jr.
Mr. Morvan bas introduced a bill in
the Senate declaring all laws and parts
of laws inoperative which exempt from
the payment of duties articles of com
merce not on the free list entered in the
custom-houses of the United states for
transportation through the United States
to or from any British possession.
Senator Allen has secured the passage
of the bill granting a portion of the pro
ceeds of the sale of the Port Angeles
townsite to Cla!lam county for the pur
pose of erecting public buildings. The
Public Land Committee of the House is
dead againt-t such a bill as this, and will
probably prevent it from becoming a
law. Senator Allen also reported a bill
granting Hollingsworth eight acres of
land near Colfax, Wash., which bas teen
in dispute for several months, but which
rightly belongs to Hollingsworth.
Representative Wilson has been urged
by Spokane people to hurry up the case
Injfore the Interstate Commerce Com
mission known as the "Spokane ter
minal case, which was argued before the
commission last summer at Spokane.
The commission will not make a decision
at present, liecause' there is now pending
a 6imilar case in the CircuitCourt which
was appealed from the commission.
Then, if the Spokane case should
be decided by the commission, the
railroad could appeal to the court, and
it would remain uneettled. When the
decision is made the commission will be
governed by it and make its decisions in
accordance with it. One appeal has
been argued, and a decision is exoected
at an early date.
Senator Mitchell has introduced sev
eral amendments which he proposes to
oiler to the Indian appropriation bill
when it comes up for consideration in
the Senate. The first of these amend
ments provides for the leasing of lands
in the Klamath Indian reservation not
deeded by the Indians for terms of five
years for grazing purposes, the regula
tions to be approved by the Indian agent
and the Secretary of the Interior. The
second amendment provides for the leas
ing of lands on any Indian reservation
for grazing purposes for five years and
for mineral purposes for ten years. This
will prove a very good thine, as it will
allow a large amount of mineral lands
now tied up on Indian reservations
to
De prospected and mined, and will also
Among the petitions introduced the
other day in the Senate were several re
flecting on !enator Itolph and protesting
against his bill, which, it was stated, le
galized the liquor traffic in Alaska. Sen
ator Dolph made a brief explanation of
the petitions and his bill on the subject
in the Senate. He slated he would be
favor of prohibition in Alaska if it
was pracncauie, out tnat liquor is now
sent to that Territory by shiploads and
sold to everybody. He proposed to pass
a bill licensing reliable persons to sell
liquor, who would then become assist
ants of the government in preventine
the sale to Indians and others bv irre
sponsible and smuggling parties. He
said that it would be impossible to stop
. i. i i : i i -1 ' ,
me onio ui it uy nuy prouiouory enact
ments the government might make.
(senator fsquire recently moved to re
consider the vote by which the bill at
taching the north shore of the Columbia
river to the Oregon collection district
was passed. He merely entered his mo
tion, and intends to call it up at some
future time. The proposition was ear
nestly combatted by Senator Dolph, who
holds tkat in the interest of vessels en
tering the Columbia river, no matter
whether .they land goods either on the
north or south shore of that water.
should be able to enter and clear at As
toria instead of being compelled to go
around to Gray's Harbor on the Pacific
Ocean for entering and clearing goods to
or from the Washington side of the Co
lumbia river, benator Dolph said he
considered it an unheard-of proposition
to have both sides of a river like that in
different collection districts. He wanted
to vote immediately upon Squire's mo
tion, but it was decided to be out of
order.
There is a great deal of controversy
over the disposition of the Puyallup In
dian reservation. Senator Allen has
been severely criticised on account of the
bill he has introduced, and copies of a
long editorial abusing him very roundly
have been sent to every member of the
House, lhe ettect will be that nothing
will be done in this Congress to settle
the Puyallup Indian affair, and it will
still go on as it is now. a detriment to
Tacoma and of very little use to the In
dians. Senator Allen says he believes
the men who have made contracts with
the Indians and paid them for the lands
should have a right to these lands. The
Secretary of the Interior and the Puyal
lup Commission hold otherwise, and
seem to think the Indians are losing a
great deal in the proposed settlement.
As none of the members of the House
will take the trouble to inform them
selves about the situation at Puyallup,
and when the matter comes np for con
sideration in that body will be -opposed
to anything being done, as they do not
understand the matter, the bill will very
liKeiy ue Kineu.
FOREIGN LANDS.
Mr. Crispi Retires From
Public Life.
THE CENSUS OF INDIA TAKEN.
Vienna Municipal Authorities Have
Imposed a Tax Upon Women
Who Wear, Trails.
Paris may build an underground elec
tric road.
Cotton at Liverpool has reached the
lowest price on record.
The French Chamber has refused
abolish theatrical censorship.
to
A large force of Salvadorians are
re-
ported on the Guatemalan frontier.
Saonz Pena is the candidate of the na
tional and civic parties of Argentine for
President.
The Prince of Naples is visiting Aus
tralia to inspect it as a field for Italian
immigration.
Premier Ca novas del Castillo says the
Spanish government has decided upon a
policy of retrenchment.
Queen Natalia of Servia continues to
be the cause of fierce debate and bitter
feeling in that little kingdom.
At Athens M. de Imezes has been ap
pointed Minister of Finance and M.
Mielstopouloe Foreign Minister.
A correspondent writes that the Rus
sian famine sufferers who eat at Tolstoi's
free tables look like living skeletons.
Prof. Huxley hopes that England and
America will give Bupport to the pro
posed marine biological station at Ja
maica. European governments are becoming
alarmed at the movements of the unem
p'oyed, and labor day is looked forward
to with some apprehension.
English live-stock dealers are opposed
to the United States Treasury in refusing
entry to imported animals unless a cer
tain pedigree can be show n.
Crispi's retirement from public life is
announced in the hope ot improving the
strength of the opposition, and Signor
Zanardelli will be the leader.
A sugar and coffee firm of Antwerp has
failed, with liabilities amounting to
2,000,000 francs. A French house in
Hamburg is the largest creditor.
Miss Mary Reed, an Ohio lady who
went to India as a missionary, is a vic
tim of leprosy, and is hopelessiy wasting
away in a leper village in the Himalayas.
The immense Southeastern railway of
England placed so enormous a valuation
on a small strip of its land near Ber
mondeey as to charge at the rate of $05
000,000 an acre.
The Midland railway in England has
now running between St. Pancras and
Bradford trial trains fitted with a hot-
water apparatus supplied from the
en-
. eine for heating the carriages.
The Manchester (England) ship-canal
report states that the receipts from near
ly all sources and 200,000 in addition
have been exhausted and 2,500,000 will
be required to complete tho canal.
In the German Reichstag the bill era
powering the government to proclaim a
state of siege in Alsace-Lorraine in the
event of war or serious danger was after
much debate referred to the committee.
There is a bill before the French Leg
islature to enlarge the present divorce
law. It proposes to turn "separation
decrees" into obligatory divorces, in
stead of optional divorces, three years
after an application for such conversion.
The Neue Freie Presse of Vienna has
just published an elaborate article on
the subject of Turkish armament, and
declares that the Sultan has succeeded
in raising the effective strength of his
forces to 1,000,000 men, of whom 700,000
could be mobilized.
There are intimations from Berlin that
experiments with tuberculin have been
steadily progressing under the direction
of Dr. Koch and his chosen assistants,
and that in a little while proofs of re
markable successes with refined tuber
culin will be made known.
Since the fire at the Benedictine mon
astery it has been revealed that almost
30 per cent, of all thebenedictine brewed
is consumed in Finland by about 100,000
people. It is the national drink. It is
drunk in tumblers, three or four young
men not thinking anything of consum
ing a couple of bottles.
In a recent interview Baron de Hirsch
spoke of the new Jewish colonies in the
Argentine Republic. He said he had
sent 6,000 Jews there and had negotiated
for the purchase of 7,000,000 acres of
land, but the government would grant
only 5,000,000, as it did not wish too
many aliens to settle in a body. ,
The census of all India shows a popu
lation of 287,200,000. Of these 207,654,
407 are Hindoos, 57,365,204 Mussulmans,
2,284,191 Christians, 1,416,109 Jains,
1,907.836 Sikhs, 7,101,057 Buddhists, 89,
887 Parsees, 17.180 Jews, 9,402,083 forest
tribes (animal worshipers), 289 atheists,
agnostics, etc.
Dr. Dawson Burns, the English physi
cian who annually promulgates a letter
on drink consumption in Great Britain,
says the yearly expenditure per head of
that population, counting children, is 70
shillings, and that figures show a growth
in the drink habit, but at a slower rate
than formerly.
Japanese orders have been conferred
on noted Mexicans as follows: Presi
dent Diaz,grandibbon of the chrysan
themum ; Secretary of State Mariscal,
first:class ribbon of the Imperial Order
of the ..Rising Sun; Maurico Waltheim,
Secretary 'of the Mexican Legation in
Japan, third-class ribbon of the Impe
rial Order of the Sacred Treasury.
HOW ' HUGH MORRIS ESCAPED.
i.
Th Story of a WUh Hard Who Arouxd
tli Ira of tho llujallut.
.There was an influential "Round
head", callr.( Hujrh Morris, a Welsh
hard, w ho ,sa.tig the praises of Crom
well awl the new born common
wealth, whose chair -a stonaone fix
ed in a wajl is still preswve near a
place called V I'andy, in the Valley
of the CeirioL', 'North Wales. The
name of the farmhouse is Errw Ger "
rig. . Morns', bardic talent got so hot
loinetimes that he wouldgo into the
river, close by. to cooi off. II is poetry, '
of which they are two volume ex
int. roused the men and women tf
Wales to a hih pitch of enthusiasm
in favor of Oliver Cromwell. The
KoyaUsts were anxious to discover
Hugh Moms. A company of military
detectives were cormnisMoneu to ap
prehend him. It was no easy task to
find the farmhouse, Errw Gerrig, at
that time. On the Great Western
railway, the original branch of the
system, from Shrewsbury to Chester,
there is a station at Kuabon, from
which a railway branches off through
the Valley of IJangoHen.
From the same place to the (eft, or
southwest, the Ceiiio? valley begins,
along which there is a tramway. The
tramway starts at a point some dis
tance from the railway, and pas
sengers have to walk from Ruabon
or else Chirk station, a good
way. to get to the tram cars.
The tramway ends at Glyn Ceir
iog. where there are several ra
vines leading to various hamlets. By
following the river Ceiriog, three
miles higher up, Pandy is reached,
where two deep ravines converge, and
Nanthir joines the Ceiriog. By cross
ing the Nanthir rivulet and following
the course of the Ceiriog a little dis
tance Krrw Gerrig, the home of Hugh
Morris, is reached, the road is on the
left bunk of the Geiriog.
Errw Gerrig is surrounded by high
mountains. The high nose of the
Nantyr branch of the Berwyn moun
tains, at the foot of t'dcu Errw Ger-
rig lies, is covered with farms on the'
Ceiriog side; the other slope towards
the Nanthir rivulet being still a wil
derness. It is difficult to find the place
even now. It was a hundredfold more
difficult before there were tram cars or
railways, and especially so more than
two centuries ago. And what added
to all the topographical difficulties
was the fact that the inhabitants in
that part of the country at the time
could not speak English, and when
the soldiers managed to make known
tlu.1 they wanted Hugh Morris of
Errw Gerrig the Welsh folk did not
want to understand.
Ultimately, however, the military
detectives came to Errw Gerrig, and
they asked Hugh Morris himself (who
was at the time attending to the cows)
where Hugh Morris was. Morris
pointed to a field on the mountain side,
signifying that Hugh Morris was there.
Thither the detectives proceeded in all
haste, greatly elated that they had
caught their man at last. But he was
not caught. While they wei-e looking
for him Hugh Morris made his escape.
The "unlucky" detectives had to re
turn to those who sent them without
Hugh Morris.
A second company, reputed wiser
than the first, with one of the former
to guide them to the place, made a
second attempt They found the "cow
man" in a field adjoining the house
aud demanded of him where Hugh
Morris was. It had not dawued on the
first company nor on the second that
the apparently ignorant cowman was
the eloquent Hugh Morris. And,
again, the man made signs to show
that Hugh Morris was on the moun
tain top. Thither a portion of the
company of detectives proceeded But
their superior wisdom over the first
lot consisted in their taking the cow
man with them to show where Hugh
Morris was. He led them to the moun
tain top and called out for "Hugh
Morris" at the top of his voice. While
the soldiers were looking round for
him to respond to the cowman's call,
and make himself visible, the cowman
jumped into a ravine covfered with
briei-s and crept into a safe hiding
place. They then understood that that
was Hugh Morris. Several shots were
fired into thicket, but Morris was not
hurt, and his pursuers were obliged to
give up the chase.
Hugh Morris was never captured,
but from that time forward he was
obliged to keep away from home and
live in various hiding places. Chi
cago Tribuno.
The Wild West Show Abroad.
The mention of Buffalo reminds me of
a shocking experience I had in Dresden.'
I had traveled many a weary mile (the
German railways are atrocious!) to see
Raphael's greatest Madonna. Arrived at
the Hotel Victoria now conducted by
the forty thieves of Ali Baba memory
and refreshed by a bountiful supper, I fell
into conversation with the hotel portier,
an imposing individual, splendid in gilt
trappings and side whiskers and meager
English. "You have a beautiful city
here," I suggested, "and I am'told that
it is full of localities and of objects that
delight and instruct alike the student
and the artist To-morrow I shall begin
a careful inspection of these glories, and
as I am a stranger here may I ask you to
suggest what, as an American, I should
first visit?"
"Ach, yah, yah," replied that intelli
gent creature; "I haf der dickets here to
ell already."
"Tickets?" I repeated. "Tickets to
what?"
"To Puffalo Pill's Vild Vest," said he.
Eueene Field in Chicago News.