i Hood River 6 lacier ine VOL. I. HOOD IiiVKR, ORKOON, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1802. NO. 21. Sfcod Iiver (S lacier. rilll.l.HKIl IMIf PATUKHHT MOHHIN T The Glacier Publfslilng Company. SI n( llll'TIO.N 1-ltH'K. On. ynr 11 00 H i.onlli. I Mir., liinhlhl ( , ti. i or , , t nt THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr. S.niind Ml., tinar Oikk. lb d Klvsr, Or Shaving ami lluil ciittiii tivutly lun. natisfaction (inarm Wad. OCCIDENTAL JIHANCli (irouiiil llroken for an Immense Irrigation liuh. SNOW PLOWS USEFUL IN IDAHO. Reduction In the Price of KiUns Dues Nut Increase the Sali-s lh': Condi. Inn df Mttkct. The Ph.enix (A. T.) V. C. T. U. will erect a $10,000 building. Work has commenced at Salt Like to lay the mains through which natural gas will lie supp to the city. Snow plows have alre-idy been found necessary to keep tin railroad I r un Mis soula into the t'o'iir d'Alem a open. A decision in the Oregon Supreme Court, JiiHt rendered upholds th anil quackery net, and physicians must ob tain a license More they cm practice. The liellef in general in Fresno that tlist city has an organized band of mur derers In ita midst. An ell'irl iH Icing made to turret them out. C. K. Thurmond, County Superintend ent l ScIiooIh lit Santa Barbara, has I sen held for trial on a ehae of altering the rmordaof tliu Comity Hoard of Kluca ti't.i. Excellent fruit has been pranced in Murray, Idaho, thia season. 1 he hucccbh which has attended thia initial venture has encouraged many, who will plant orchards In those high altitude i this full. According to recent estimates thede ciduoUB fruit crop of Southern Calitornia for thia year will reach lO.tK'O carloads, valued at $3,000,000, and that the citrus fruit will reach tl.OOO carloads, valued at $;,,500,000. The Secretary of the Sealers Associa tion of British Oolumhia estimates th tt the total Beal catch of the British Co lumbia Kealera will he ahout 45,00.1 skins, which, compared with (he catch of lust year, shows a falling oir of 15 per cent. Referring to the finds of remains of extinct animals, none is more curious than that of finding the antl-rs and Iwnea of an elk IDS feet below tin sur face In a shaft that was being sunk on a ledge near Newbridge, Or., this season. They were found imbedded in a stratum of gravel. The census bureau has maile public the statistics of the maufaetiiriiig and mechanical industries of Los Angeles, which for 18110 are aa follows : Number of industries, 8;$; number of establish ments, 747: capital invested, $(i,K07,0H8; hands employed, 4,115 ); wages paid, $3, 474,018; cost, of materials used. $5,008, 102; value of product, $11,877,905. U... Intnrnqtmir Indian imillllllies are in the possession of Dr. Morrow of Pendleton, vr. iney wem .nm-nnm one year ago on Long Island in the Col umbia river, buried in a mound of sand. One of them la a figure of a full-grown adult, evidently of great, aire. The other la of a young child. Both are perfectly preserved, having hair and teeth intact. oi, anil sf thn vmmtrnr one has been DIViiii v.." J " - - removed, showing the covering of the brain, rue moccasins are yet on uu-in, and are hardly changed. The Delamar Mining Company is threatened witn an apex sum mat my hitit.nrical in the hislorv of min- UDVVI'i" - " ing litigation in Idaho. Inn Regan, ni uin.(ti.linnf the Stod.lard nron- erty, claims that it holds the apex of the Delamar Company's ore bodies. I le has recently been doing some work to prove his theory, and expees aoon to com mence suit for an accounting. A very large amount of money will be ipvolvad. The JJeiamar uorapany recency pm chased the other three-tilths. 1 Ima tiAnn liroken for the inv UIUU"" , , noa .lifi.li (n 1i enimt.riicted tlil'OUl'tl the Columbia delta by the Walla Walla and Columbia Irrigation Company, and by March 1, 1893, tho proposfd reclaim ing of 10,000 acreB of as fine land as can le found in the Pacific Northwest will have been made possible by Bt curinir for that land a supply of water more than sufficient for all purposes of agriculture. The water will be taken from the Walla Walla river at a point about nine miies above Wallula, and at this point the work, was begun. EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Movement Agilird the limployineiit of M. in led Women as le.uheis In the I'uhlk Spools. Harvard gives aw ay $S7,000 Himiully ill aid of its students. Yale freshmen and Cornell freshmen have given up their annual ruuh at their respective college. Lincoln t.'iiiversil.v, the colored e;ll"ge at Lincoln, Chester countv, l'a , hits re opened with 'JM) students enrolled. The l -tr it Hoard of ivliiealion has shut out all teachers from the puhlie k'Iioois who are not uradii'.ilea of the schools. Cooduca ion has attained to such a re markable decree of M)j.iilnril v In Maine that two married con pies have entered Colby I'niversity. Colorado College is overcrowded with students. Its present frecliinan class contains double the number of last year's freshman class, The Chicago University hai mder c ui'iideraiioii a plan whereby classes w II bo f ruied to systematically study World's Fair exhibits. In the " Isiard schools " of Dundee, Scotland, w hich are similar to our pub lie H'liools, instruction in sw immiiig is a part of the eiurieulmo, The I'niversity of Wisconsin has or ganized a university exten-ion depart ment under L;. man 1. l owell, formerly if Johns llopk.ns I Diversity, ('(ilnmbia ('ollei;e a.i-oiinls for the de- crease of iimubers noticeable in the class : iHMt in the Hrts department, by the act that the standard of tcholarship has raited. In the early years of Yale College and until 17(17 the names of the gradualc were arranged not alphabetic illy, but in the order of the social rank of the fami lies to which they Is-loriKed. Throuuhbut all Spanish America no young man is considered thoroughly ed ucated until he can speak at least, two binguiiges U'Side Ins own. In Chili rrencli and (terman are universally earut d, and it is now becoming the fash on to study Knglish. l'hys'cal Director Slangthat's what they call him has decided that the stn- lents iu the Cbicfgo University shall kick football three times a week for ex ercise, at least the young men. The young ladies walk an hour, and take uf- tccn minutes exercise in tliegyninasiuiil. The New York I'oard of I'Mueatioii has taken a caution- steo toward the intro duction of the I-'rocbcl system by mak ing mi appropriation of f'.'ii.OOi) for kind ergarten classes in the primary schools of that c tv. The movement (tgairiHt the employ ment of married women as teacher in the public schools has extended to Chi cago. That city employs 3,0110 teachers, !5 per cent, of w hom are women, and 400 or T) XI of these are married. PURELY PERSONAL. The Clay Model of the Statue of General ( ieorRe H. McClcllan Scrutinized by the Vice-President. The Duke of Kiinbiirgh is composing music to a libretto by Carmen Sylva. 10 x Senator Plait once led the village choir, and was considered a fair Hinger by the church members. Mr. Cleveland's l'nz.ard's Bay resi dence, (irav Cables, is for Bale. It is stated that Mr. Cleveland will again make his summer home at Marion. One of the best portrait painters of Biston Is a woman, Mrs. l'hiebe Picker ing Jenaa, who devotes he'Belf exclu sively to the portraits of women and children. Mrs. Martha A. Hogan, Mrs. Mary A. FasHettand Mrs. Sarah A. Fassett, trip lets, were present at a celebration at Walthain, Mass., the other day. They are (iil years old. Mary A. Dickens, daughter of Charles Dickens, Jr., who was for a time on the stage, is now in literature, and contrib utes to the Journal -that I.er lamer edit and which her illustrious grandfather once carried on. . The clay model of the statue of Gen eral George B. McClellan, which is to be erected in Philadelphia, lias been senv tinized by Vice-President Morton and Major McClellan, brother of "Little .Mac," an 1 they regard the likeneBS ex eelleiit. Boatswain John C. Thompson, U. P, N.. who lias been attached to tho Brook lyn navy yard for the last fifteen years, has been placed on the retired list Boatswain Thompson is a veteran of the Mexican war, and h:is seen fifteen years of active service. The Sultan of Turkey has conferred upon Mrs. Kllic t, daughter of Sir Clare l .1 - It .!.' .1. .-..I. 1 i I flora, i ne oriusn AimwsBiwinr at Vjou Btantinople, the Order of Sne'kakat.sec ond class. This decoration has been crea ed by Sultan Abdul Ilamid, and is bestowed on ladies of distinction. Rome threo or four months ago Baron Ilirsch distributed all his earnings on the turf for the previous year, amount ing to $70,000, among deserving English charities, lie has since accumulated fresh profits from the races won by his horse?, and he intimates that a further sum of $100,000 will be available for charitable purposes at the beginning of 18!K'. The Pone is now in his 83d year, and in Paris Field Marshal Canrobert is 85, and Marshal McMahon, who is still straight as a dart and retaining a mag nificent seat in his saddle, is 83. Kos suth, the Hungarian patriot, has just celebrated his 90th birthday. Prince Camilie Rohau has receutly died at the age of 92, and the same can be said of the late Karl ot i.8Hex. eONI) THE ROCKIES. 'icri-I'icri Arrives at New York on Hoard a Vessel." A NIC0TINELESS CIGAR INVENTED. The Stijiwlor bf the Order of the Sisters of Charity for the United States Appointed. Chicago barred "Ta-ra-ra-lwom-de-ay" from its civic parade. Stamford, Conn., has Just celebrated its L'"t)th anniversary, Severe weather is reported by the in coming Atlantic steamers. The Lake Shore road is being double- tracked between Bull'alo and Chicago. A society has )eeri formed at Phila delphia to promote the eating of horse llesh. The late Gen ral John Pope left sn estate of about J.',OiH) or $.10,(100 to his children. Chicago is fortunate in having discov ered a new supply of natural gaa at this juncture. Kansas commercial travelers have or ganized a State association for mutual benefit purposes. A Pittsburg inventor savs he can make fuel gas from oil that will be cheaper than natural gas. The government has decided that no more contracts with Indian attorneys w ill be approved. A lead and r.inc mining company has lieen organ zed at Last St. Iouis with a capital stock of f 1.000,000. Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, the Philadelphia specialist in nerve disease, has invented a cigar containing no niotioe. Collector of Customs Fannigan of El Paso has been indicted for assisting Chi nese to enter the United States. Toe Mechanical R'.iblier Company, w ith a capital of !5.oOO,000, was incor porated at Irenton, N. J., last week. The Dean typewriter, invented by a Minneapolis man, has passed to the con trol of a New York tniBt company for l.'JOO.IXM). For the first time in the experience of the New York police a Chinaman was arrested there the other day for being drunk in the streetB. A vessel has reached New York with cases of the disease known as lieri-beri in Japan on board. It resembles yellow fever in some respects. Ann O'Delia DisDebar, tho apook priestess, was arrested at Quincy, III., one day last week for stealing $1,000 from a Ine ml at r.lgin, 111. At points north of Reading, Pa., water is eo scarce that the railroads have to guaid their tanks, and mountain tires have broken out in several places. An ollicial of the Big Four says that the manifest svstem now in use on the road is worth 1,500 Ciira to the company, so much more promptly are freights moved. A circular issued by the order of Rail way Telegraphers to operators contains a number of questions which railroad managers object to have their employes answer. Father Haire, who was pastor of the Immaculate Coucep ion Church of Balti more for a little over a year, has been appointed Superior of the Order of the Sisters of Charity for the United States. Vitr fnrniflhlnir medicine tr an IK.venr- old girl at Columbia, S. C, for a crimi nal operation uoionei j. ji. aiorrow, uie well-known horseman, gets Bix years' imprisonment. President Gompers of the American Federation of Labor says he will recom- moml tlm fttiluriatiitn in Ivwnnt t a 1 1 rf fho Carnegie Steel Company's product uirouguoiu uio uniieu oiaies. A railroad with a guage of but twenty four inches is now being built in North Carolina. It is run from Hot Springs near the Tennessee border to Laurel river, a distance of twenty-four miles. Tipperusalem is the name of a town in Oklahoma. Tipperusalem was the happy compromise between ond pro moter who wanted to name the piace Tepperary and another who desired to call it Jerusalem. Wheat at St. Louis is lower than ever known. The market is weighed down, and the flow of wheat from farmers' hands is like a deluge. This is the result of the "hold-your-wheat" circular of last year. Another leper has been discjvered in Philadelphia, and the victim is a woman. The woman will have for her compan ions a Chinaman and a Japanese, who have been at the hospital for some time awaiting death from the dreadful dis ease. Chinamen are now being smuggled into the United States from Windsor, Ont., via a new route. Formerly they were landed in Detroit, but now they are put aboard a steamer and taken down the river and across the lake to Toledo and vicinity. The suit for the ownership of land now occupied by railroads on both Bides of the river on which rests the Interna tional bridge at Buffalo, N. Y., has com menced in the Superior Court at Buffalo. It involves the city's rights and about $2,01)0,000 wortb ot property. Rev. Dr. John Hall and Rev. Robert Russell both have resigned from the Board of Directors of the Union Iheo logical Seminary as a result of the com plications following the seminary's diS' puie Willi uiu l resuyieriHii imurcu. 11 . ... 1 1 i. i : i ri is said the other directors will withdraw. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. Three Boise Banks Agree to Advance Money That Idaho May Make a Creditable bxhibit. A hirge model of Columbus' ship Santa Maria, made by a deaf mute in Madrid, is to li sent to the Worl J'a Fair in Chicago. A big row between the national and local otlicera of the fair regarding the rules for governing the exposition next year is now on. The Prince of Walea is not likely to visit Chicago next year. If the fair is kept open a second season, he may come over and look at it. .-Kilty-seven l'lsquimanx have arrived iu Chicago toexhibitai the World's Fair. They have with them a number of dogs and a variety of native curiosities. The naval authorities at Halifax, N. S., huve received word from the Admi ralty office in London that her Majesty's ship Blake, the largest war ship in the world except one twin ship, will visit New York in April, representing Eng land in the World's Fair naval review there. The Biake is the fhg ship of the North American station. The three local banks of Boise City the Boise National, the First National and the Capital State have agreed to advance $5,000 for the nurpoae of aiding Idaho in making a creditable exhibit at the World's Fair. Commissioner Wells has discovered that many people are willing to guarantee the repayment of the money advanced to the Commission er if the next Legislature fails to grant him a sufficient appropriation to carry on the work. In case tiie Legislature makes the ner-essary appropriation, the $5,000 will be returned from the amount set aside for World's Fair pnrposeB to the banks making the advances. Otherwise the parties who have pledged themaelvee as sureties will have to see that the banks are repaid. The $5,000 will great ly aid the Commissioner in his work. Among the thousand and one attrac tions at the Columbian F'air not the least will be the dairy school, as it will lie in effect. It is the intenti n of Chief Buch anan of the agricultural department of the fair to make the dairy branch an object lesson of the highest value to every farmer who attends the exposition. His plans, which have been long under consideration, have already begun to crystallize, and unless the unforeseen prevents, the dairy school will lie a su preme example of what such an exhibit should be. In the first place he has se cured from the owners of valuable stock the promise to furnish him selected cows representing all the leading breeds, while the general government has agreed to put experts in charge of the tests and analyses, and the directors of the fair will equip the neceseary buildings with all needed appliances. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. Chili's Indemnity Draft for the Balti more's Sailors Sent to Paris for Collection Etc. The new postal card with a paid reply has been placed on sale in all first-class cilices. Secretary Rusk says in regard to the alleged discovery of pleuro-pneumonia by the BntiBh inspectors among Ameri can cattle that the American inspectors assert it was catarrhal pneumonia. (Jeneral Kinder, chief of ordnance, in his annual report calls attention to the inadequacy ol the general appropriation for arming and equipping the militia, which at the last session of Congress was still further reduced. The annual report of Adjutant-Gen eral Williams of the army recommends that the annual appropriations for the National Guard be increased from $400,- 000 to $1,000,000. Referring to the ques tion of the advisability of enlisting In dians, the report states that it has been confirmed by the experience of tne past year. Chili's $75,000 indemnity draft for the Baltimore's sailors has been sentto Paris for collection. Since it was turned over to the State Department it has. passed through the hands of the Secretary of the Navy and Secretary ot tne Treasury, the latter having it forwarded through the regular channel for collection, for, when honored by the Paris bank upon which it is drawn, the amount will be deposited with the United States Treas urer, from whom it will be drawn by the beneficiaries upon checks Bigned by the disbursing officer of the Navy Depart tuent. The plan of making the allot ment is still unsettled, but Secretary Tracy thinks favorably of a proposition for a department board to make the dis tribution after examination into the medical records of the men injured and other reports made by the officers of the Baltimore. s President Harrison has acted upon two applications for pardon, granting them both, for the reason that the pns oners concerned were about to die, and to be effective the pardonB must be is sued at once. In this view the Presi dent was prompted to put in abeyance for a few minutes hia own great personal sorrow. One of the prisoners Dardoned is Lee Sing, convicted of perjury in the United States Court for the Northern District of New York January 26, 18t2, and sentenced to the Albany peniten tiary for one year, lie was charged with being unlawfully in this country, and an investigation proved the charges. His pardon w as urged by the Superintendent and physician or tne prison and tne via trict Attorney. The other is Marshall Wheeler (colored), convicted in the United States District Court of South Carolina of carrying on business as a re tail liquor dealer without having paid the tax. He was sentenced August IS, 1892, to six months' imprisonment in York countv mil. ihe lau physician. Sheriff and District Attorney recom mended the pardon. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS Rich Australian Purchases Lord Tennyson's Birthplace. THE NEGRO POPULATION OF FRANCE. The Cruiser Capltan Prat Will Represent Chill at the Naval Demonstra tion Next Spring. Deaths from cholera in France since last April have footed up 3,184. The Pall Mall (Smeltr. London, baa been sold for jCIOO.OOO, it is said. All the hotels of Switzerland have had a summer of exceptional prosperity. France has gained many important concessions from the Sultan of Morocco. The Q leen is said to be disturbed be cause of the mutiny among the Windsor troops. An American author in Paris named Harris has received the Legion of Honor ribbon. The threatened strike of cotton opera tives in England will affect 13,000,000 spindles. The young King of Spain is recovering from the cold he caught at the Seville Columbus fete. Lord Randolph Churchill, it is atated. has practically abandoned politics for commercial intereats. The French war office has provided for the enrollment of between 6,000 and 7,000 bicycliata in war. The government has decided to pur chase a number of trunk telephone sys tems throughout Ireland. Rev. James Spurgeon has so far recov ered his health aa to be able to resume his paetoral duties in London. Starvation threatens thousands of the poor of London. Many deaths from hunger have already occurred. In London the opinion is widely enter tained that the Queen will appoint Sir Theodore Martin poet laureate. The increase of crime in Glasgow ie said to be due to the "abnormal thirst of the laboring classes for liquor." It is believe 1 that General Booth of the Salvation Army is desirous of aban doning bis '' Darkest England " scheme. A monument to Millet has been un veiled at Cherbourg, France, with great ceremony, and is pronounced a fine work of art. Five villages in Kutsia in Transcau casia have been deetroyed by an earth quake. Many lives are reported to have been lost. Great Britain is to issue a new stamp of the value of 44 pence 9 cents to be available for all postal, telegraphic and revenue purposes. A dispatch received in Brussels from the Congo Free State confirms the re port that the natives had murdered Sub Lieutenaat Biegois. In Paris the authorities are endeavor ing to put a stop to the bogus picture sa es constantly occurring, and at which many are swindled. Children's dances are all the rage in Paris, the most popular of them being one known as the Maska, which has been imported from Russia. The approaching reconsecration of the Luther Memorial Church in Wittenburg, Germany, promises to be a ceremony of extraordinary splendor. It is reported that a valuable discov ery of nitrates has been found near Mount Darwin in the direction of the Hanyani river, South Africa. The official information shows that, while the cholera is decreasing in Ham burg, Germany i in increased danger from an invasion from Russia. The proportionate number of births in Russia is nearly double that of France, while the German population increases faster than that of any other country. Paris with a population of about 2,500, 000 has fewer than 100 negrces within its limits. It is claimed that the colored population of all France is less than 550. The law of Denmark now gives to every Danish subject, male or female, the right to a pension at 60 years of age except in cases of convicted criminals. A golden throne of the value of 20, 000 will be presented to the Pope by the chapters of the various cathedrals in Christendom on the occasion of his ju bilee next year. It is officially announced in Spain that tin new commercial treaty between Spain and the United States covering trade with the Antilles is favorable to Spanish industries. The Ameer of Afghanistan is endeav oring to secure British help in having his illegitimate eon recognized as the successor to the throne, which hia sub jects violently oppose. The institution at Wiemar known as the Goethe-Schiller Archives is about to become a universal German archive to contain the literary remains of all the great German writers. English papers are bubbling over with praise of the graciousness of the Czarina in kissing a hospital nurse who had been in the midst of cholera infection an impulsive, womanly way of showing her admiration for the nurse's bravery and self-sacrifice. Mrs. Pyne has been admitted to the London Society of Compositors, and re ceives the same wages as the male print ers in the establishment in which she is employed. Thia is spoken of as a new thing in London. The printers' unions in this country have long admitted wom en to their ranks. A Hroom Hpealatlon. A 0 foot Yankee, seated upon aloadot brooms, drove his team np befonj tn door of an establishment where he ex pected to find a purchaser. Jumping from his seat he entered the store and the following colloqny took place: Yankee Can't 1 sell you a load of brooms today, mister? Dealer No; don't want any. Yankee Better take 'em eell 'era doj cheap. Dealer Don't want 'era; got enough brooms. Yankee HI tell you what 111 do. If you'll take the lot I'll let 'em go for one dollar a dozen. You know they're wuth double that. The dealer stroked hia chin for a mo ment, as if in deep thought, and then re plied: "Well, I don't want any brooms, as 1 told you, but 1 don't mind making a trade with you." Yankee What sort of a trade? Dealer Well, HI take your whole load at one dollar a dozen and pay you one half cash, you to take the other half in trade. Yankee No you don't mister! You'll charge me such an all fired profit on the other half that I might come out at the little end of the horn. Dealer Oh, no; 1 promise you that you shall have the goods just at what they cost me. Yankee Wall, mister, that's what I call square dealin. It's a bargain. And he commenced to unload the brooms in a pile on the sidewalk. When he got through he walked into the store. "There yon are, mister; fourteen dozen, which 1 calcurlate makes just seven dollars comin to me." Dealer Yes. that's right; there's the money. Now what goods do you want for the other seven dollars? Yankee Wall, I dunno. You see, mister, I hain't much posted in your other truck, so 1 guess I'll take brooms. House Furnishing Review. I'npleaxnnH.v Affectionate. An English traveler in Persia had ar rived at Abadeh. where a European tele graph official, Mr. O , welcomed him hospitably and invited him to remain for tjjie night. He says: An hour later I was comfortably set tled upon the sofa when my rest was suddenly disturbed by a loud bang at, the sitting room door, which, flying open, admitted two enormous animals, which 1 at first took for dogs. Both of them made at once for my sofa, and while the larger one curled comfortably around my feet and com posed itself to sleep, the smaller one. evidently of a more affectionate disposi tion, seated itself on the floor and com menced licking my face and hands, an operation which, had 1 dared, 1 should strongly have resented. But the white, gleamiug teeth and cruel looking green eyes inspired me with respect, to use no stronger term; for I' had by this time discovered that these domestic pets were panthers! To my great relief, Mr. G entered at this juncture. "Making friends with the panthers, I see," he remarked pleasantly. "They are nice, companionable beasts." That may have been true at the time. The fact remains, however, that three months afterward the "affectionate one" half devoured a native child! The neighborhood of Abadeh, Mr. G in formed me, swarms with these animals. Tets of English Itgiments. It may not be generally known that there is a special reason why the Royal Welsh Fusiliers should have a goat. They are a very ancient corps, and at an early period of their existence it was the custom to have a goat with a shield and garland on its horns to march at the head of the drums. Every 1st of March being the anniversary of their tutelary saint, David, the officers used to give an entertainment, and after the cloth was taken away a bumper was filled around to the Prince of Wales, and the goat, richly caparisoned for the occasion, was led thrice around the table in procession by the drum major. In 1884 the then regimental goat of the Welsh Fusiliers died and her maj esty presented the regiment with two of tho finest goats, from a flock the gift of the shah of Persia in Windsor park, and since that date the queen has cou tinued to supply the Welsh Fusiliers with goats as occasion required. The pet of the Second battalion Derbyshire regiment used to be a ram; that of the Eighth King's Royal Irish light dra goons, now hussars, a horse; the Royal Warwickshire had an antelope, the Ros shire Buffs a deer and the Fifteenth lancers a tiger. Pall Mall Gazette. A Bit of Correspondence. A remarkable correspondence has been published, ending in a true Irish fashion. It begins: "Mr. Thompson presents his compliments to Mr. Simpson, and begs to request that he will keep his doggs from trespassing on his grounds." "Mr. Simpson presents his compli ments to Mr. Thompson, and begs to suggest that in future he should not spell 'dogs' with two gees." "Air. Thompsons respecis 10 xur. Simpson, and will feel obliged if he will ; i i ii. l i-i. .-1. 1 1 1, ,i mill i.iih H . m in i.iia iii.nL win if 111 una note just received, so as to represent: Mr. Simpson and lady." ,"Mr. Simpson returns Mr. Thompson's note unopened, the impertinence it con tains being only equaled by its vulgar ity." London Tit-Bits, i - , j "M'''',WWMHnwai"BSssw!i - - vrr o