1 f d, ft3 The iver Glacier. vol.. i. HOOD KlVKIi, OREGON, SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1802. NO. 15. Hood Sfood livcr Slacier. roti.iMKii Mvinr satubuat mohhihi it The Glacier Publishing Company. i n.cHinio 1'iiiti An ymt ... (J..... hit month , Tliiaa lluihth. ............... .fl 00 ,. 1 tiilil. npj tCwW THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. Saoond lit., nwr Oak. Hood River, Or having ami Jlulr cutting neatly Satisfaction (iiiaiauU.it, iloii. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE Payment of Interest on Railroad Bonds to be Enjoined. THE NATIONAL GUARD OF NEVADA. A Snider Applicable to Aluminium and German Silver Dlf covered by a Mining Engineer. Yuma ia to have an experimental farm. Heavy rains lire falling lu Southern Arizona. Interior counties of Nevada are vnry entliusiahtie for the now railroad to Halt Lake. The Colorado river It falling slowly, but in mill far alxive the average height at thi season of the year. A very large deposit of kaolin bfti I men found in the vicinity of The Dalles on the Oregon aide of the Columbia. The M. F. ChureU (South) proposes to inaugurate at Plni:nix an Arizona ilia triel high school. The buildinga will coil foO.OiK). All the aaloons at Wardner, Idaho, have Im'i'ii closed. Miners have been holding secret meetings of the union in Home of them. The Notional Guard of Nevada baa gone into camp for the first time in its hUtorv at Treadway'a Meadow with nearly 400 in the field. One manufacturing plant at Puyallup, Wash., baa this year made and Bold 10, 000 worth of tree sprayers, all of them having found sale in Oregon and Wash ington. A, Mexican while prospecting in the hills north of Castle Dome in Arizona found a silver bar weighing 104 pounds. There ia considerable speculation as to bow the bar got where It was found. The payment of the Interest on the $200,000 of bonds issued In 1885 by Mar icopa county, A. T., to the Maricopa and PhuMiix railway Is to be enjoined, and tho legality of the bonds issue is to be Up to 0 a.m. on Saturday morning tho Chino (Ban Bernardino county, Cal.) beet-sugar factory bad turned out this year 2,870,059 pounds of Biignr. Of this quantity 510.000 pounds were from the svrnps of 1801, and the halance waB from this year'B beet crop 2,362,060 pounds. W. A. Merralls, a mining engineer of Los Angeles, claims to have discovered a solder for aluminium, a process which has In vain been sought for during the past thirty years. The invention will ihj of great value in dentistry, alumin ium being admittedly far superior to rubber or gold in eucb work. The solder, it is claimed, is also applicable to Ger man silver. Hop picking has commenced in Cali fornia on Bomeof the down-river ranches, and the crop ia aaid to be very satis factory. There is quite an army of buy ers in the market irom San Francisco. A maioritv of the pickers are Chinese, although a number of Nevada Indians have alreadv come to engage in the work. While the redskinB are there for the nnrnose of working, they are not rushing pell mell into the hop fields. A well-known grower savs there is a nrfivailimr ODinion that the Indians and Chinese have this year pooled their issues and are going to put up the price of picking to a point that almost means ruination to the growers. They are now paying 90 cents to $1 per hundred pounds to pickers, and this will prob ably be increased at the rate of 5 cents per hundred. The total assessed valuation of all railroads in Montana, as fixed by the State Board of Equalization, is $9,287, 63-i. representing twenty-nine railroads with an aggregate mileage of 2,662. The Northern Paciflo maia' line has a mile aire of 782.6 and its rolling stock is val nnd at $1,035 per mile for assessment purposes ; its rails at $700 per mile ; the roadbed $5J0 per mile and the roadway iimi ner mile. Its main line and branches have a combined mileage of i 274.70. valued at $4,178,331. The Great Northern and its branches count 1.057 miles, valued at $3,712,701. Rolling etnrk nn the latter road is assessed at $5 0 per mile; rails, $1,700; roadbed, ti ?nn nnd roadwav $100 per mile. There is an increase of the assessable value of the railroads over 1891 of $1, 506 142, due to the construction of the Pacific extension of the Great Northern. PURELY PERSONAL The Alps Cause Mark Twain to Pay Frequent Visits to the Republic of Switzerland. II. W. Webb, Vue-President of the New York Central, occupies Mr, liepew'i chair whiln Hie latter ia away. Webb i tireless, quick and accurate. Hon. McKonr.lo Howell, Milliliter of the Militia, ia at Toronto, en route to the Pacific Coast, on a tour of inspec tion of Canada's defenses. Sued, the faster, Is Insane and now In an am v lu i m ar Pari. Ilia delusion has taken the form of a Imllef that ha ia Cu'sar and Najioleon in one. The only surviving child of Itohtirl Fu lion, the Inventor of the steamboat, ia said to be living in Poiighkcepsie, mother of Rev. Kobcrt Pulton Cray ol that city. Miss Mary E. Wi.kina ia another of New Kngland'a "little women" who, like Ijuisa M. Alcolt, have struggled for fame and attained it. Hie ia only 5 feet tall ami very slender. Prof. Asaph Hall discovered the two moons of Mars. He named them Deimoa and Phoboa after the two Homeric at tendanta of the god of war, from whom the planet takea its name. Mrs. Hannah Harmon, Brockton, Musi., was lorn the day preceding Washington's retirement from office, and has thus lived under the adminis tration of every Pret-l lent of the United States. The adjournment of Congress com pie ea a thirty years' service in the Home of Mr. O'Neill of Pennsylvania. Mr. Holman comes next in length of representation, as he has lu'en for twenty-eight yeara a Congressman. J. K. Minor, Assistant Treasurer for the Confederacy as long as it had a treasury, still retains $500,000 in Confed erate notes, and has no other funds to sneak of. He is said to hav owned 3,OO0,0C0 acies of Western lands at one time. Careers are very prettily mixed in J. C. Macdona, the new Conservative mem ber of Parliament from Kotherhithe, who is olllclally described thus : " Was a clergyman of the Church of England : Is a barrister: rreatuent ol the Kennel Club." Captain Frederick Watklns, the com mander of the atetmship City of Paris, ia a man of prominent features, of kind ly facial ex pression, with keen eyes and lull heart, and is the son ol a British armvotllcor. He waB born in Sussex, England. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher has ar rived at the i ge of 8J years. She is still strong and active, and does much lit erary work. She was born in West Sutton, Mass, Her maioen name was hurice V lute liullard. tour ol her ten bildren are living. The wife of Representative Springer is , writer of verges, a volume of which has been printed. She haa aweet, gentle manners, and ia not' d for her habit of wearing gray g iwns that harmonize with her handsome gray hair and dark eyes. It is a fashion that pleases her artistic friend?. . Mark Twain's name so frequently ap pears on the list oi arrivals at ueneva that it might almost bo supposed the Hartford author had expatriated hlmseii and taken up his residence among the Swiss, His liking for Kurope has grown with great strides during recent yeara, and he Bei7.es every possible occasion to nvnua ilia uratn. "It's ill. A 1 ni thai cross the water, "it's tne Alps mat draw me there," he said to a friend not long ago. " lhey follow me everywhere, and I cannot get away from them." EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Garden and Fruit Cul'ure Taught In the French SchoolsDenominational Sdnols in Kansas. Manitoba Catholics are determined to maintain their separate schools. Two of the graduates this year at the Chicago College of Law were women. Seven of the eight graduates of the State Library School at Albany this year are women. A two vears' course in pedagogy is to be opened at the University of Minne sota this autumn. In France there are 28,000 peasant schools in which are taught garden and fruit culture through State aid. Mrs. Frederick Billings of Woodstock, Vt.. has donated the sura of $2,000 for a high-school building at that place. Missouri has 4,399 more Sundav-school officers and teachers than in 1891, 500 more schools and 30,000 more scholars. There are thirty-five denominational schools in Kansas. Almost every sect on the road to heaven has a training school in that State. Sir Daniel Wilson, President of the Toronto University and probably the most distinguished educator in Canada, is dead at the age of 7b. Yale will have a handsome, new psy chological laboratory. This will be the second laboratory of its kind in this country, the other being at Park Uni versity, Worcester. At Boulder, Col., they have started a State Divinity School, which is to be non-sectarian and without denomina tional bias. A sort of religious mug wump college, so to speak. It is proba bly the boldest attempt educationally that Boulder ever made. Four years ago the senior class at Yale contained Htty-nve tree traders and torty three protectionists. This year's senior class contained forty-two free traders and eighty-three protectionists. At liar vard President Eliot says that " most of our students are Republicans." If "tar iff reform " is making any headway, it certainly is not among our educated youth. Botlon Journal. BEYOND THE ROCKIES Sujxjrior Tea Grown and Cured in South Carolina. CHIEF OF THE CHICKASAWS ELECTED Mr. Blaine's Services as a Speaker In Great Demand New Method, , of Settling Damages. Tho mints coined 456,232 silver dollars week before last. Broom-corn harvest is on In Kansas now. The crop is large and fine. Minnesota paid bounties to the amount of 12,000 lait year for wolf scalps. The Chicago and Krie road ia sinking into a marsh near Valparaiso, Ind. Grasshoppers are doing an immense amount of damage to the cropa in Hu ron, O. The Missouri, Kansas and Texas rail road wants to increase its stock by $13,- 0O0.O.X). Knas City street-car conductors un dertook to form a union, and were dis charged. Boston's tux rate for 1892 will be $12.80 on $1,00 J, an increase of 3 J cents over last year. North Carolinians will erect a monu ment to the memory of the dead Con federates from that State. More building is going on in Chicago than in New York and Brooklyn to gether, says the New York l'uil. The Jacinto silver mine at Aspen, Col., has resumed work after three years' idle ness. The new find is said to be very rich. The river coal miners at Pittsburg are expected to atrike against a proposed re duction of 3 cents per bushel in their wages. Nebraska farmira are preparing for another State-product train to advertise their agricultural resources throughout the East. C. II. Emerson of Whitehall, N. Y., haa Invented a new motor power for air ships, " based on the principle of the boomerang." Wcod villa, Mich.; built over the Stand ard mine, which was flooded and desert ed, i- sinking, and the inhabitants are greatly alarmed. The New York lltrald claims to have secured proofs that a green-goods place hss been running for years within a short distance of a police station. (ilanders haa broken out among the hoi sea in Nashville, Tenn. Stringent measures are being taken by the health department to stamp it out. The pension agency in Topeka is the largest in the country. It pays out an nually $15,000,000 to the veterans of Kansas, Missouri and Colorado. In drilling a gas well for Dr. Pre? ton in Anderson, Ind., recently the drill went through a vein of iron at 375 feet, tin at 450 feet and lead at 500 feet. A syndicate has secured a controlling interest in the Lynn and Boston railroad. The deal represented an outlay of $2, 000,0jO, including the Naumkeag line. Samples of tea grown and cured at Summerville, S. C, have been received in Baltimore, which expert tea dealers have pronounced superior to East India tea. The city liquor agency in Portland. Me., established under the provisions of the prohibitory law, sold last year over $57,000 worth of whisky for medicinal purposes. Judge Anthony of Chicago holds that the title of a Btrip of land along the lake shore of Chicago, dedicated to that city by Elisha Hundley of Virginia, rests with the city. Out of a total of 73,034 paupers in almshouses in the United States in the year covered by the eleventh census 91.15 per cent, were white, and 8.85 per cent, were colored. According to inside information the Pullman Palace Car Company is now earning about 20 per cent, per annum and carrying more to surplus account than it pays out in dividends. Mrs. Frank Leslie-Wilde returned from Europe on the steamer La Bretagne. Willie Wild e remained in London. Mrs Leslie savs this climate does not agree with him, being too stimulating." The windows of the armory of the Eighteenth Regiment at Pittsburg have been broken with stone thrown oy men who made their escape. An attempt to steal the arms had been previously made. The Chinese in Chicago refuse to take out certificates, and a test of the law will be made before the courts. Until the decision on the constitutionality of the law is obtained the Chinese will not register. Jonaa woite, wno nas oeen eiectea ..... . . i i . Governor of the Chickasaw nation, is a full-blooded Indian, and cannot speak English. He is opposed to any legisla tion which will tend to advance his peo ple in civilization. Mr. Blaine'B services as a public BDeaker are in great demand this year, The people of Skowhegan, Me., nave had the nerve to ask him to deliver en oration upon the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the opening of the shoe factory. The Treasury officials state that the department nas a balance ot $oo,ouu,uuu. and the revenues, notwithstanding the loss of $60,000,000 on sugar, are increas ing at the rate of $1,000,000 a month from the customs alone. This rate of increase has been going on since March 1. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. Representative Hermann Secures an Ex tension of the Ma i Service In the State of Oregon. The bureau of American Republics is informed that Senor Don Antonio M. Flores, recently President of Ecuador, haa been appointed and confirmed by Congress as Minister Plenipotentiary of that country to the United States, and will alao be appointed honorary Com- rntssioner-ln-cliiei to the World's Co lumbian Exposition. The discrimination by CoHa Rica against vessels and trade with the United butes arising from the reb.ite allowed heretofore by Costa Rica of a 6 per cent. custom duty in favor of certain foreign vessels having been discontinued by a repeal and the ground for complaint of the government removed, vessels of that country will hereafter be admitted to United States ports without the exaction of discriminating duties. Representative Hermann has secured the extension of the mail service on the llolley-Crawfordsvilie route, to begin at Sweet Home in Linn county, lie has also secured an order from the Postofliee Department inviting proposals for a mail service twice a week Irom Bridgeport by way ol Hereford to unity and back, in Baker county, Or. The department also upon the showing of Mr. Hermann has issued proposals for bids f r a mail serv ice Irom Alsea by Lobiter to Usher in Benton county and back, once a week, from Octoler 15, 1892, to June 30, 1894, until regular letting. A second report on the Indians of the Southwest has been received at the In dian bureau from Dr. Dorchester, Super intendent of Indian Schools, lhe report deals with Indians in Arizona, and gives prominence to the Apaches and avaios. The whole Indian population of the Ter ritory is given as 35,707, and the number of children available for schools as 4,280. This is an increase in the popu lation since 18H0 of 3.276. Of the chil dren about 1,200 attended echool either in Arizona or elsewhere. In 1830 only seventy-three children of Arizona In dians made any pretense of attending school. The school accommodations, though yet small, are said to be increas ing each vear, and for 1893 accommoda tions will be furnished for 1,070 children in the Territory. The Superintendent is not lavorable to removing Indian chil dren to Northern schools. The officers of the Interior Depart ment are considerably worried over the ruling of the First Comptroller, which ill possibly prevent the use of nearly $2 ),000 in surveying lands. The appro priation act provided that ol the iitos 000 appropriated $125,000 should be ex pended within railroad limits, and the Comptroller holds that none of the bal ance can be expended within these lim its. As large portions ot public lands are within railroad grants, especially lands which it is desirable to survey, it is possible that a great many States will be short on funds for surveys. It is thought Oregon would be the sufferer under this ruling, while portions of Washington State would be benefited. Acting Secretary Chandler says that notwithstanding the ruling he intends to expend the money where he thinks it will do the most good, regardless of the fact that it may be expended within the railroad limits. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Snohomish Reservation to Furnish Two Relics of Past Ages of Indian Life to the World's Fair. France intends to show its skill in landscape gardening at the World's Fair. Tho baby clothes made by Mrs. John Adams for her son, John Quincy Adams, will bo exhibited at the World's Fair. It is estimated that the total cost of World's Columbian Exposition will be about $25,000,000, nearly $7,000,000 of which will be paid by holders of conces sions. The German exhibit at the World'B Fair will contain an architectural dia- Elay including drawings illustrating two undred or more notable buildings of the Empire. A New York editor has started a dollar- fare wave in connection with the Chicago Exhibition next year, the rate to be al lowed to all workingmen living within 1,500 miles of the Breezy City. An Indiana stone-auarrv company is having a life-size figure of an elephant chiseled out of a solid block of Btone. It will be 11 feet high and weigh thirty tons. It will be exhibited at the World's Fair. It is estimated by a committee of en gineers that fifty new engines and 600 ..nnnl.no nn.ll'tin 9 IWi tllM Drill Kfl Wk quired by one of the leading Chicago railroads during the world's fair. Rhode Island will present its World's Fair building to Chicago after the expo sition closes. The structure will be very picturesque in appearance, being a re production in part of the famous "Old Stone Mill " at Newport. More than 200 panels of native woods will enter into the interior decoration of the Washington World's Fair building. Some of them will be carved and others decorated with paintings of Washington scenery and groupings ol nowers, Iruits, grains, fish, game, birds, etc. William T. Baker's resignation as President of the World's Columbian Ex position Company has been accepted and H. JS. Higinbotham elected to sue ceed Mr. Baker. Foard W. Peck was promoted from the ranks to the First Vice-Presidency, vacated by Mr. Higin botham. A whaling party is being fitted out at a Massachusetts port with a view of ob taining a live whale for exhibition in the fisheries department at the World's Fair. If captured, the whale will be confined in a tank and towed to Chicago by way of the St. Lawrence river. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS Several New Fortresses Being Built in Alsace. CHOLERA PANIC IN CONSTANTINOPLE New Species of Bear bit covered In Thibet, Asia An Uprising Expected In Bolivia Etc. Of Waterloo veterans France baa eight left. The vintage prospects in Spain are very good. An International Railway Congress is in session at St. Petersburg. Rye is short in Russia, and bay in England is a very poor crop. Live fish have recently aafelv been sent in the mails from India to the Brit ish Museum. Germany's new military bill reduces the term of service, but adds 60,000,000 marks to the budget. lhe British war omce authorities are dispatching to India the first installment of the improved magazine rifle. An uprising in Bolivia is expected at any moment. A very uneasy feeling exists throughout the Republic. The Bosnian provincial government has appointed lady doctors to attend the female population in the principal towns. The Viceroy at Canton reports the ex ecution of 109 criminals within the last year, charged with piracy on the Canton coast. There is a cholera panic in Constanti nople. The Sultan and his Court and State Ministers have fled to Elbruz Mountains. The International Peace Congress at Berne has decided to establish an Inter national Permanent Peace Bureau in Switzerland. The large shipping firm of George Tweedy & Co. at London haa suspend ed. It is believed the stoppage of busi ness is but temporary. The next international exposition in Europe will beheld in Paris in 19 JO, thus appropriately celebrating the dawn of the twentieth century. Mineralogists now exploring Northern Thibet claim to have discovered valuable mines of gold and many varieties of the richest precious stones. The arbitration agreement between the United States and Chile has been ully ratified by the Chilean government and printed in the official gazette. Gladstone before the elections said: " I fear the future of Europe is a very dark one, although with God's help the present peaceful situation may still last for some time." . Owing to the change of government in Great Britain, it has not been possible as yet to agree upon the time and place of holding the proposed International Monetary Conference. A new species of bear was shot by Captain Bower during his late travels in Thibet. The animal was chocolate col ored, with a white collar, and is quite unknown to naturalists. A small observatory is about to be erected soon on the very summit of Monte Rosa, which has an altitude of 15,581 feet, and is, next to Mount Blanc, the highest peak in the Alps. At the meeting of the Oxford Univer sity Extension Society recently it was decided that the time had now come to make a special effort to extend nniver- eity teaching to workingmen. The Duke of Fife, the Prince of Wales' eon-in-law, has made a speech which has attracted much attention from his rec ommendation that large estates should be cut up and sold as a matter of social policy. The Berlin 1 aaeblait in announcing the conclusion of the commercial treaties between Germany and Hayti and Vene zuela rejoices in the assumption that American influence in Spanish America will thus receive a check. During the year 1892. thus far, the as cent of Mount Blanc, once considered among the rarest of achievements, has been successfully accomplished by five Germans, four Americans, three French men and two Englishmen. The London Chronicle says : There is a strong rumor afloat that Gladstone will retire from office in the spring, and also that a Harcourt party and a Rose-bery-Spencer party exists in the ranks of the Liberals a Lords' party versus a Commons' party. An original method of inducing the residents of Alsace-Lorraine to become Germans has been. discovered by the Yolk, the organ of Herr Stoecker. This journal proposes that the State shall give a dowry to every native of Alsace-Lorraine who marries a German. . The total strength of the Chinese army is about 600,000 men of whom more than 200,000 are permanently stationed for the garrison of Peking. The arms of these troops are of the most primitive types, and consist principally of long spears and knives secured to long poles, bows and arrows and clubs. Underneath the ruins of the palace of Saint Cloud, about to be demolished, lie hidden jewels and treasure that be longed to the Empress Eugenie. The State has reserved to itself the owner ship of any precious objects that may be ounu uurmg tne progress oi tne aemo lition. Louis G. Brenan, the inventor of the famous $550,000 torpedo, has been cre ated a Companion of the Bath by Queen Victoria. Mr. Brenan is by birth an Irishman, but spent much of his life in Australia. He waB offered $850,000 for his torpedo by Russia, but preferred to I sell it to England. INTERVIEWED MARY ANDERSON. Bow a KpnrUr fMaytd th. Part of BU Hoy and Scored a Host. Among the well known men about town in Brooklyn ia Frank Cooper, who at one time promised to be Bartley Camp bell's right bower. Mr. Cooper was for merly a Chicago newspaper reporter, and it was while acting in that capacity that ho had a very singular adventure. At the time Mr. Cooper was very young and very ambitious to thine in his pro fession, and when Mary Anderson, who was then the craze of the theatrical world, reached town, be thought he saw bis chance to ascend the first few rungs of the ladder of fame. He would inter view the noted actress. This decision was reached in an instant, but many daya passed before the project was put into execution. Misa Anderson's stepfather, Dr. Hamilton Griffin, was keeping his precious charge far from the interviewer in those days. Mr. Cooper finally decided to apply for the honorable position of bell boy in the hotel at which the Anderson party stopped. His youth ful appearance helped him and be soon donned the appropriate uniform. Then be lay in wait for a ring from Miss Ander son's room. For over twelve hours he dashed about on errands and carried pitchers of ice water and glasses filled with something stronger before Miss Anderson made up her mind that she wanted anything. Then the little flap covering the number of her room dropped with a click. Cooper had his eye on it, and almost before the clerk could cry "Front!"' be was at the desk. "Number So and Sol" 6aid the clerk, "quick." The messenger needed no urging, but flew up the stairs. His magnet wanted a scuttle of coal and down Cooper rushed. The next minute he was knocking at Miss Anderson's door with one hand and hold ing the bucket with the other. Once in side he made for the open grate, but in his nervousness he spiUed most of the coal on the carpet. Then he sat down in the midst of the ruin b wrought and looking up found tiiu actress standing over him. "What do you think of the future of the stage?" burst from his lips. Miss Anderson wa3 impressed with the humorous side of the situation at once and began laughing. This reassured the disguised reporter, and in a few minutes he was carrying on a discussion with the actress on matters pertaining to her art. This lasted for some time, Miss Ander son expressing great surprise at the knowledge displayed by a bell boy, and Cooper got an interview that all the old hands in town had despaired of being able to procure. How he got out of the room, he says, he never knew, but when he reached the office he threw up his job and rushed for his desk in the city de partment of a local paper. The next day his interview and a description of the scene appeared. It was the talk of the hour. It was copied far and wide, and the author was assured that his future would be a bright one. fJThe next day he paid for his temerity. His chief, the late Samuel Medill, a brother of the present owner of the pa per in question, was so tickled at the "beat" he had obtained that he insisted that Cooper should meet Dr. Griffin. So that night he took the youthful imposter down to the hotel, and, sending for Dr. Griffin, formally presented him. For a full minute Dr. Griffin looked the re porter straight in the eye, and then, drawing back his hand, struck him in the face. The blow was a hard one, and Cooper reeled and would have fallen to the floor had not Mr. Medill caught him. Before anything could be done Dr. Grif fin had turned and left the room, and Mr. Cooper never saw him again. New York Times. Tho Weakness of Tall Men. Tall men, as a rule, have bodies out of proportion to their lower Umbs that is, smaller than they ought to be with tha natural result that they are unable to bear fatigue, or to compete in the struggles of life with lesser men more harmoniously proportioned. Army ex perience bears out these observations. In a long and fatiguing march the tall men usually fall out first or succumb to cam paigning, unless, as is very rarely the case, they have well knit and symmetri- cal frames. A soldier between five feet five inches and five feet eight or nine inches is usually the man most capable of bearing the strain of life. New York Telegram. Over C300.000 for Postage Stamps. The most valuable of all private collec tions belongs to M. Philippe de Ferrari, of the Galliera family, who regularly at tends the Paris mart to enrich his album. This family souvenir has already cost more than three hundred thousand dol lars, or a million and a half of francs. The acquisition of stamps seems to be the only object for which M. Ferrari considered his mother's milUons good enough to be spent, for he has been known to pay from $300 to $500 for a collection from which he wanted only a single stamp. Paris Letter. A Sentence Containing the Alphabet. Noticing in one of your recent issues a short paragraph relative to the shortest sentence in the English language con taining all the letters of the alphabet, I would like to submit the following: J. F. Grave, pack with my box six dozen quills. The above sentence contains thirty four letters and ten words only. Cor, New York Evening Sun.