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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1892)
The Hood River G lacier. HOOD KIVKK, OREGON, SATURDAY. JULY 23, 1892. NO. 8. VOL. i. 3food Iiver (Slacier. riflll.UUKU KVIHT tATUKHAr MORNINe IT The Glacier Publishing Company. mac itir no.v rniCK. Oi mf H M S luuntht , , ., I W llim. iiiuiilh. , t kiiiil. uuujr ICnb THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. 6:ond Si., near Ouk. ' Hood kiver, Or. Shaving ami llulr cutting neatly doua, hut i.f m - tiuii t j not untied. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE Grand Jury Recommends Removal of County Officers. NAVAJO COUNTRY IN NEW MEXICO. General S-ilkc Among the Trainmen on the San Joaquin Division ol the Southern I'atlflc. A Chinese highbinder arrested at Sac ramento win encased in a boiler-pint eont-iit-niail. lie carried two revolvers ami three knives. Nun Bernardino is much existed over the discovery that Its street londs are Illegal. About $100,0 JO of them have been expended ro fur. Thirty-five tnlloJ of the new line built by the Southern Pacific to avoid the flood tllitrivta in the Colorado Kivor Val ley have been completed. I)r. Luts and wife (SlHter Rose tier trude) readied San Fraiids from the Hawaiian leper colony the other day en route for Europe or Japan. AtTucson, Ariz., City Policeman Will Iniu Elliott attempted toarrestadrunken Mexican, and wan stabU'd through the lieart. He shot the Mexican dead, and then expired. The ollicial military commission to in vestigate the KissibUities of metallic wealth in lands on the Navajo reservo- tion in Arizona ami New Mexico !ai re ported the country worthless for mining purposes. There is a general strike among the trn'nmen on the Bin Joaquin division of ttie Southern Pacific Company. They are dissatiailnd with the BHK'rintciidout of the division, J. II. Wliltod, who lias Increased their work and not their wages. A water velocipede has been invented by Will Raymond of Clataop county, Or.. It la made of xina. It has double wheels on each side with a Boat between. It is propelled with a crank like a land velocipede. Mr. Raymond has his model, and has applied for a patent. K. K. Hawes has just completed one of the velocipedes for Mr. Raymond, and it will be tested in Young's Buy in a few days. It is believed a speed of twelve miles an hour can be obtained. It cannot bo up set, and its occupant is absolutely safe on the water. There is much Interest at noise, Idaho, over the prospective building of a line of railroad from Nampa to Silver City, by which that city will be afforded rail connection with the rich mining dis tricts of Owyhee county. Major Wick ershain of Pittsburg has been examining the Bcheme on behalf of capitalists of that city, and it is positively asserted that the line will be constructed if his report is favorable. While he has noth ing to say that would indicate what the tenor ot ins report is to oe, me wea seems to prevail that he will recommend the scheme. If the road is built, the proposed new mills of the Delamar Com pany will be located near that city. The project for building a road eastward through the mining and timber regions of Central Idaho to Butte City is also in a promising shape, a more detailed sur vey having been ordered by the capital ists who have been investigating the matter. Search bv customs officers at San Di ego of the British steam schooner Eliza JSdWftrdS nas iaueu to unearui eviueiicB that she is being used for illicit purposes. There were no Chinese on board nor any cvidenco of opium. Captain Van Bremer threatens that, if his vessel is not re leased aC once, he will apply to the Brit ish Consul for protection. No one is al lowed to visit the schooner nor sailors to come ashore. A suspicious circumstance in the case is the fact that the Captain at first claimed he had chartered the craft for a cruiee to Mexico and Central America, while afterward he told an en tirely different story. He now says that by the advice of hia physicians he pur chased the vessel for a cruise to the Ha waiian Islands for his health. For two years past he has been considering the vovatre. and cleared af Vancouver for San Diego to enable his physician. Dr. Winchester of Santa Barbara, to board without going North. A special dispatch from the latter place to the San Diego Tlnitm sava Winchester's wife says he has irnne East. Ollicials aay they balieve Winchester is interested with Captain Van Bremer in smuggling operatios, CONGRESSIONAL MATTERS. Important Decision on Appeal of Mate ol California I" nun the Action of the l.anj Commissioner. Senator Kyle has introduced a resolu tion providing for an Investigation rela tive to the slums of cities. This was adopted. The conference report on the river and harbor bill bus m-en agreed to, and a concurrent resolution for a final adjourn incut July 20 was altered by Senator A I drlch ami referred to the Committee on Appropriations. General Sclmlluld has received a tele gram General Brooke, in which he states he has turned over the Wolcoit party to the Slate authorities of Wyoming for trial. This puts an end, so far as the military authorities are concerned, to the "rustler" troubles. The Semite bill to increase the pen--ions of thoHe who lost liml in the serv ice of the United Slates, and which will mid f700,0(K to the pension charge, has lice u pnsHi'd by the Senate, while the House bill to pension the survivors of the Indian wars was, after the provisions were considerably extended, recommit ted to the Committee on Pensions. The conference on the naval bill has finally lieen agreed to, the house accept ing the Senate amendments appropriat ing in the aggregate alxiut tot) 000 and the Senate receding from all further amendments except one providing for the construction of one sea-going coat bat tle ship of 0,000 tons, which, with an armored cruiser of 8,000 tons provided for in the House bill, will constitute all the new construction authorized. As no appropriation is made for a battle shin, the bill as it passed the House is only Increased (Otl.tKX). The Senato Committee on Appropria tions has finished its consideration of the sundry civil bill and reported it to the Senate. 1 lie amount ol live appropria tions made by the bill is $:W.7'J7,S10, that being an increase over the bill as it passed the House of $11, o74.HI(l. There is an appropriation of $5,10:1,000 in aid of the World's Fair, and no requirement ss reported to the Senate that the World's Fair shall not be kept open on Sunday. The requirement is that gov ernment exhibits shall not lie kept on exhibition on that day. Secretary Noble has rendered an im portant decision on the apeal of the State of California from the action of the Commissioner of the general land office in respect to certain applications made by the State to select indemnity school lands In lieu of townships made frac tional by the existence of damp and over flowed lands. The Secretary holds that the State has no valid right to select in demnity for school lands, using swamp lands as a basis, for the reason that the swamp sections went to the State under tke swamp-land act. He further holds that the act of February 28, 1801, amend ing Sections 2275 and 2.7(1 of the Revised Statutes does not authorize new or In- ture selections in California on the basiB of Sections 10 and 'M when they are swamp in character, nor did this amend ment give the State any rights it did not previously possess under lot mer statutes, For this reason he aflirms the Commis sionet's decision. About 10,000,000 acres of and are involve,! in the case, which has been pending before the department for several years. EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Yale University Determines to Enlarge the Educational Opportunities for Feminine Students. About $3,000,000 is appropriated each year to the New lork city schools. The total school enrollment for the United States last year was 14,200,000. The teachers and School Superintend ents in this country receive $80,000,000 annually, and the money is well earned Applicants for certificates to teach In the schools of Birmingham, Ala., are re quired to pay an examination fee of $1, which is applied to tne library lunu. A few years ago there were but two or three advanced schools in this country that were open to students of both sexes, There are now Baid to I 204 of the 305 colleges which are coeducational. .Oueen Margaret's College is the only college for women in Scotland that fits them lor university degrees, it was founded about fifteen years ago, and has 200 students in art, science and medi cine. President Angell of Ann Arbor has written that graduates of the Leaven worth High School will be admitted to the Michigan University without further examination, whicn is no mean compli ment. President Oilman conferred degrees upon seventy-four students of tfie grad uating class at Johns Hopkins univer sity week before last. He appeared in a gown and hood, and graduates all wore caps and gowns. There is every reason to believe that the coming season at Chautauqua will lie the greatest in its hiBtory, not only in the number of visitors, but in the extent of its courses of study and the variety and ability of its lecturers. The Women's College of Baltimore m cMved last month a gift of $250,000, of which $100,000 is to pay for one of the new buildings in process of erection, the remainder of the sum to be used to ad vane 3 the general interest of the college The Iowa State University is located at the old " has-been " town of Iowa City, and is not commonly spoken of with Harvard and Yale, but it has 000 students, and its late commencement was the greatestest it ever had. Univer sities can grow west of the Mississippi river. BEYOND THE Ail Estimate of the lYosjiective Wheat Surplus. THE HARVEST SEASON IN MISSOURI. Smallpox. In Chicago Ketlcy Institute Accomplishing Good In Kansas Our Gold Lx ports. The wheat yield throughout Illinois will be very large. Chicago is threatened with another smallpox epidemic. A Garfield monument costing $100,000 is promised in Chicago. Chicago's people drink 6),000 gallons f soda water every hot day. Gas at $1 per 1,000 Is very acceptable to the consumers of Cincinnati. bichloride of gold cure has been de clared a necessity in Seda'ia, Mo. The Rio (irande Western has lieen au thorized to increase its capital $3,U00,- 000. The Board of Health now estimates the iwpulation of New York to be 1,820,- 000. Imislana's Legislature want, United States Senators elected by ballot of the people. Thousands of cattle are being brought from Mexico into Western Kansas for pasturage. A shake-up of ollicials has taken place n the freight department of the Texas and Pacilic. During the past three months this ountry has exported 770.0X) barrels of flour to Cuba. The last census in the State of New York develops the fact that 11 per cent. of the population are aliens. No less than thirty sardine factories in Maine are closed because there is no run of suitable-sized fish to pack. The harvest season in Missouri is ac companied by the usual hailstones, which break through roofs and kill chickens. A movement has been started in Chi cago to secure the pardon of :seete, Schwab and tielden, the liavmarket Anarchists. Secretary Foster hai much hope of the beneficial outcome of tfie international monetary con'erence, which will be held n J ans or Dresden. The Keeley Institute at Henngton has already turned out two graduates. Thus the work ol cheating tfie devil goes bnsklv on in Kansas. The Superintendent of the New ork .nnatic Asylum says that the excitement while engaged in a game of baseball has ured several patients. In all of the New England States the smaller industries are beginning to run full time, and a busy Bumuier seems to be assured on all sides. Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians re fused to accept 500 head of beeves from the government agents, who, they claim, have been robbing them. The troubles along the Rio Grande frontier have no political feature. They are caused by individual acts of despe radoes from both countries. The bodies of President and Mrs. Polk will soon be removed from their present resting place in Folk Place, Nashville, Tenn., t j Mount Olive cemetery. A bill is to be Introduced into the next session of the Pennsylvania Legislature for the creation of forest reservations at the headwaters of principal rivers. Of the $45,000 stolen from the United Kinross Com nan v at Pittsburg on June 21 bv E. J. Ryan the company has r& covered $44,813, Ryan having spent only $187. Three hundred negroes at Haynes, Lee county, Ark., took one of their race named Donnelly trom jau and hanged him. Donnelly assaulted a twelve-year- old colored girl. Electricians are very busy designing new plants for the smaller towns and cities throughout the West, and quite a number of cable and electrical roads are to be built this fall. A lottery agent is suing the town of Ludlow, Ky., for $200, which he paid for a license to keep open his oflice. The Goebel bill, he save, shut him up, and he wants his money back. The net exports of gold for the five months ending with May were $16,902, 790, and the net loss to July 1 will not exceed $34,000,000, as against about fbs 000,000 in the first half of 181)1. Almost $4,000 was realized at an open air performance of "As You Like It " in Senator Farwell's residence grounds at Chicago. Ada Rehan was the Rosalind, The performance was for charity. Huffman & Hohlers of Cincinnati for weeks have been engaged in making stills and other d stilling machinery os tenBibly for gentlemen in Brooklyn, but it is widely gossiped the stills are really for the sugar trust,' which will distill high wines. Rev. J. S. Ives, pastor of the Congre gation Church at Stratford, a suburb of Bridgeport, Conn., was hanged m elhgy the other day. lie was unpopular be cause he had the drug and confectionery stores closed on Sunday and wanted the street cars to stop running on the same day. Bradslreel's estimates that on the basis of the latest government wheat crop this country will 1b able to export 220,000, 000 bushels of wheat in 1892-3 and leave reserves on July 1, 1893, equal to those carried over a year ago. For ten years past the average annual wheat exports nf fha ITnltaft fit.nfaa liava hnnn IaqA than 1 125,000,000 bushels. PURELY PERSONAL Genrral Booth Delegates Another Son to Assist in the Work of the Salva tion Army in America. . Justin McCarthy once Indulged in writing poetry. Ho reformed, however, Je fore entering into politics. Em in Pasha has had more obituary notices written about him than any other traveler. And he loves to read them. Mine. Emma Nevada, the singer, is making a successful tour of Spain, and Is being received everywhere with almost regal honors. Marshall P. Wilder says that one of the strangest things of his entertain ment business in England is the custom re vailing among managers of paying j i in in advance. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria Is deeply interested in ornithology, and devotes much time to the pursuit of that science. He Is a mem tier of tne Ornithological Society of Vienna. The eye cures of the oculist Grand Duke Theodore have attracted crowds of ull'erers to Moran this year. Several hundred patients seek the Grand Duke's assistance every day, and he is aided in his charitable labors by his wile and children. Governor Russell rides in on his horse very morning from his home in Cam bridge to the State House in Boston, a distance of about three miles, and takes his seat at his desk, liooted and spurred, for the transaction of the morning's of ficial business. Padereweki is spending a few days in Paris, having left London over a week ago. lie doesn't intend to return to tne BritiBli capital before October. Mean time he will after a short stay in the rrench capital go to some ot the Euro pean watering places. Horatio Greenough's widow has be queathed to the Boston museum all the xamples of her husband's scniptures that remained in her possession, which were numerous. They had been loaned to the museum more than once. Among them are buts of John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Henry George believes that writers' paralysis or cramp comes from the use of steel pens. " Who ever heard of it n tfie days of the quill pen 7 ' he asks. Mr. George himself, like Mr. Howells and other up-to-date literary men, uses a typewriter to compose with. Bourke Cockran, who made the most eloquent speech ot the Chicago conven tion, is an Irishman, lie is snort and stout, and has a massive head. He is one of the leading lawyers of New , York, but, having married a rich wite. iB now levoting himself to politics, lie is serv ing his second term in Congress. Ballington Booth, Commander of the Salvation Army in the United States, is to have reinforcements, and from the membership of his own family. His brother, Commander Herbert H. Booth, lias been delegated by their father to come to this country before long to as sist in the work of the organization. You may pronounce Mr. Stevenson's given name as Ad-lay, Ad-lye or Ad-lay eye, as you pleaBe, for it is a case where everything goes. The two last-mentioned pronunciations have the sanction ol the etymologists and the first of native Illi- noisans, who consistently pronounce tne syllable "ai" in Adlai as they do in Cairo. Ex-King Milan lives in some style in a fine house on the fashionable avenue du Boia de Bologne in Paris. He is known in his exile as the Count de Ta kova. and though there is not much left of the glitter of royalty about him, he Etill has around him a circle ot friends who show no signs of dropping away while the fallen monarch's money lasts. A young Memphis bride, Mrs. P. B. Coate, recently accomplished the feat of climbing to the very top of Mount Vesu vius and looking down into the crater. She is the second American woman to attempt this hazardous undertaking suc cessfully. Mrs. Coate was born Blanche Steele, and was married only a tew weeks ago after her graduation from St. Mary's School in Memphis. She is but 20 years old", and is said to be a very pretty woman. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Great Britain, France, Germany and Many Other Foreign Nations Asking - for More Space." A Buffalo man proposes to furnish the World's Fair with an attraction in the shape of a collection of snakes. He claims to be able to ehow as many as 2,000 varieties. An agent of the Turkish government is on his way to Chicago to superintend tHe construction of the Ottoman pavilion and a Turkish village for the World's Fair. Accompanying him are native masons, who will buiid the pavilion. The Swiss National Congress has ap propriated 120,000 francs ($24,000) for an exhibit at the World's Fair of the Swiss watch-making industry. It also approved subsidies for exhibits of other industries, including female work in the manufact arirg line. Again the cable has announced that Emperor William of Germany has de cided to visit the World's Fair at Chicago next year. This time the Allgtmnnt Zeilung, a leading paper of Munich, fur nishes the information, and claims that it is authentic. Great Britain, France, Germany and, in fact, many other nations are asking and almost insisting that more space be given for their exhibits at the World's Fair. Sir Henry Wood of the British Commission is reported to have declared that bo great is the interest in England that he believes the' English exhibit would fill half of all the buildings if the space could be secured. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS """"" The Production of Tobacco in the Argentine Republic. RANDOLPH CHURCHILL ELECTED. Tne Chilian Chamber of Deputies Adopts a li .11 Imposing Duties on Ni trates and Iodine. France is to hold a world's fair In 1900. Italy's export trade has begun to show an increase. A revolutionary movement is in prog ress in Bolivia. Randolph Churchill has been elected to the Thirteenth Parliament. The number of cholera cases in the outskirts of Paris is increasing. Londoners talk of charging half-price tor admission to a theater after no clock. The Peruvian Ministry has resigned, being dissatisfied with the administra tion. Scarlet fever is raging in London. There are 2,430 patients in six public hospitals. It is proposed attempting to stamp out tuberculosis In cattle in Denmark by vaccination. Anarchists at St. Denis, France, pro pose to blow up Montbrison prison and rescue Ravachol. It is estimated that two-thirds of the public money held by the London banks do not bear interest. The revenue collected from last year's ascents to the top of the Eiffel tower amounted to $115,000. Colonel L. Nuila heads a revolution in Honduras, and has had successful battle with the government forces. The English railway lines have con tracted for coal at an average of 1 shill ing per ton lees than in 1891. The Austrian government has taken hold of the matter of improving all races ol horses in Austria-Hungary. Zanzibar has just been put in posses sion of a weekly newspaper the first journal started in East Africa. The outbreak of pleuro-pneumonia in Lisburn district, County Antrim, Ire land, has turned out a very Berious mat ter. The trouble between the Shoemakers Federation in Leicester, England, and the manufacturers has been submitted to arbitration. The Russian government is preparing a bill intended to stamp out Mohamme danism bv means ol harsh measures, such as those applied to the Jews. The first International Club for women has been founded. The incorporators are a group of American, French and German women, residents in Nice. The fortune of the late Jules Lebandy the great sugar refiner and speculator of Paris, is estimated at 300,000,000 francs probably the largest fortune in trance The French and a body of Tonquinese pirates have had a battle at llianon The French were successful, but lost six teen men killed and seventeen wounded The production of tobacco in the Ar gentine Republic has increased wonder- lully. lhe price has fallen about one half, and tobacco is now selling at about 28 cents a pound. The City of Chicago, which went on the rocks near Kinsale, Ireland, recently is considered a total loss. Her crew has declared it unsafe to longer remain on the stranded vessel. The Governor of St. Helena reports affairs there as being in a wretched state, Work is scarce, revenue is short of ex penditure, business is declining, and there is great poverty and suffering among the inhabitants. The London biandard' Berlin corre spondent says : A private telegram from Constantinople represents the whole southern shore of the Caspian Sea in fected with cholera. The Spanish government has taken possession of the largest ship-building works in that country for the purpose of entering upon the construction of war vessels on a large scale. A discDverv of great importance to South Africa is a stone capable of being burned into a natural cement ol good quality. The deposit covers 1,01)0 acres and varies in thickness from ten to twenty feet. The new taxes imposed by the Spanish government on various branches of busi ness is bitterly opposed. At Madrid the other day there was a riot. The civil guard was stoned, and it turned and fared into uie crowu, wounuiug many severely The young Grand Duke of Hesse grandson of Queen Victoria, who sue ceeded his lather a lew weeks ago. has commemorated that event by pardoning 19 criminals, who were serving terms in the penitentiaries of Hesse-Darmstadt. Official returns establish the fact that whereas only five passengers were killed on the railways of the United Kingdom put together last year, no fewer than 147 persons met with fatal accidents and 5,784 were injured in the streets of Lon don. The investment of 4,000,000 made by the British government in the Suez ca nal shares will in a year or two accord ing to Mr. Goschen be worth 19,000,000, which proves it to have been an excel lent stroke of business as well as of di plomacy. The Chilian unamber ot liapjiiiei-aas- adopted a bill imposing duties on ni trates and iodine. The rate fixed by the measure is 71d per metric quintal for ni trates and 23d per kilo on iodine. Pay ments wilt" be made aa often as the gov ernment requires. jvyjt- uau t-nui uurvu UJ It PAUPERS BECAUSE OF THE CHURCH. CM Showing- flow Clirltbl. Worn. a Arc Sometime Imposed On. Nancy A , aged 80; can wash, Iron, clean house, sew, cook "almost anything that will earn an honest living," she say. A crippled brother, a blind grandmother, widowed sister who bas the asthma and three children under 8 yean of age. Seven people to be supported by one pair of bands." Tears in her eyes a she says Children partly elothed by "Sunday school of your church, ma'am, and oh, the klndneM of your church Iadiea to me I can never, no, never, forget!" It seem that they give her cart loads off cast off clothe and provisions, alwaysemploy her to wash ishea, etc., at church entertainments, and never let her suffer for anything." Nancy Is recommended to me by one of our Dorcas society as a capable and willing washer woman. Thus runs the original entry. Now I needed a washerwoman as little as I needed a belvedere on the roof of my bouse, but I wanted to help Nancy, and I would be consistent to my principle of not making honest workpeople into paupers. So 1 Invented work for her. I hunted np some dozens of "white things" that were yellowing on my linen shelves and packed them Into a hamper. Nancy could not do them up in my laundry. "There were children at home, and nobody but them three Invaleerls to get their meals and keep y the pore things out of the fire." She looked askance at the hamper when It was offered. The water arrangements In her flat were very "oconvenient." But a lady on the next floor would help her bring np the water If 'twas allowed In tne bllL I readily engaged to allow It. Otherwise thoughtful women are too often inconsid erate in the matter of "water arrange ments" in tenement houses. It Is not as easy to keep clean when every drop of water must be lugged up two nights ol stairs as when you bare only to turn a faucet to get all you want. Nancy next sug gested modestly that the wet clothes would have to be carried np to tne rooi to be dried. But the lady down stairs would help ber with the baskets for twenty-five cents. She didn t like to risk straining ber back. If anything should happen to her what would become of her three ln valeeds and the children 1 "allowed" the additi-'n-l quarter of a dollar. With seven people dependent upon her Nancy's back must be respected. She kept the linen ten days, but it was done up beautifully. I paid her all she asked with cheerful alacrity, and threw in at her (modest) request some flannel to make un dervests for the grandmother. She was unduly grateful, and promised to come to morrow for the next week's supply of work. On the morrow I had, instead, a badly spelled note in pencil, of course. Nancy had "meant to tell me yesterday that she could not do my washing no more, but did not have the heart to disappoint me, seeing was so set upon having her no it, and what with fetching np the water from below and the clothes on to the ruff sech work didn't pay. She was sorry to diao bleege me, for nobody need wanter work for a nicer lady, and would 1 please re member to mention her name to the ladies at the strawberry festival next weekf" I waylaid ber in the lobby of the hall when the festival was over. She had a big basket on each arm full of cake, bread, sugar, etc., bestowed with her supper, over and above $3 in money. She was in a hurry to get home to her "invaleeds," but paused amiably to hearken to my query as to her engagements for the house cleaning season. "You're the fourth person what's asked me that to-night" affable and complacent. "The church 1 idies bas been so good to me that I hate to seem unobligin'. But I really don't see how I'm to leave home all day, or even half a day. There's my three invaleeds, you know." Can you do some plain sewing for mer Would you undertake a weekly job of mending to be done in your own house "I'm afeered to promise, ma'am on ac count of my invaleeds, you know. They takes up all my time." "But your grandmother is not a cripple and your brother is not blind, and your sister has the use of her eyes and limbs. Couldn't they belp one another for a few hours of the day" "Oh, ma'am 1" with a smile of superior pity for my ignorance, "you can't imagine how much waitin' on them poor invaleeds requires. If 't wasn't for the Sunday school and the blessed church ladies we should a' gor to heaven together long ago. The Lord ought to reward 'em." "A worthy creature," remarked the pres ident of our Dorcas, who chanced to pass as Nancy and her load moved on, "and so grateful One of the Lord's poor." In the ten years that have passed since that particular strawberry festival Nancy has not, I think, missed a single church entertainment or failed to stagger home under the weight of the fragments gath ered up by generous hands. In that time I know she has never done a day's work if he could help it. Marion Harland in New York Herald. Jewels of a Woman's Life. There are so many jewels that. may be worn day and night, so many gems that are always and only your own, that you need not grieve for those that show their bright ness only by day. There is the jewel of Consideration, that you may wear just over your heart; there is the moonstone of Hope, that may glitter over your brow, filling your eyes with brightness; there is that brilliant stone of Sympathy the emerald, that makes you put out your right hand of help; and there is the beautiful one of loving Kindness, that makes the left hand help the right. But above all, overshadow ing all, pinning down your tresses, is the diamond of true Love love which en dureth all, suffereth all, hopeth all. . Are not these better than jewels dug out of the earth f For, Indeed, these jewels come from heaven above. Ladies' Horns Journal. The Horrors of Delirium. Dr. Paul Gamier, the eminent alienist, says that there are passages in Guyde Maupassant's story, "The Horla," which Bxcef ftriCCcTiracy and intensity anything a clinical doctor could write in depicting the agony, the terrors and the infatuations of delirious hallucination produced by In toxication. De Maupassant himself la now a hopeless lunatic 4 ft