iver Glacier VOL. !. HOOD RIVKU, OIIKGON, SATURDAY. NOVHMKKR 2fi, 1892. NO. 25. The Hood 3fcod Tivcr (glacier. rillll.l.llltll RVKKT RATOKDAT MORNIKa The Glacier Publishing Company. Ml IIN IIIPTION MUCK. fn y.r , ...W W 1 W 1 lll.U IIHJllllH. , , , "k l i'ijr K' C.nt. THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Propr, faooint Kl., near Ouli, . . Ilund Klvnr, Or Shaving and Huh rutting nratly dune. Nutufut lion (itiamntuod. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE Crce Indians Exterminate (lame in Montana. ROBBED BY A MAN HE BEFRIENDED. !l(Niutlfnl Mack l ire Opals Discovered In Hastern Oregon San l'edro as a Harbor lite. Chinese have been arrested in Tucson for selling cigarette to boys under ago. Lohs A nuc Ion voted to issue $526,iHH ImiiicIn lor water works in the hill dis tricts. The section alxmt Coquillu City, r., In grently excited over the nrnail jkx CHUt-H at Cqlllllu. Tlu asm-sued valuation of Portland (or 1811.' U l"vl6.",732, mora ttinn "jO.OOO less than for iSltl. It is reported tli United States engi neers (iivor San Pedro as a harbor Hxniiist Sunt a Monica. The Indian Commission lias effected tliu purchase of 181,000 acres ol land from the SiU-tz Indians in Oregon. At Santa Barbara, Cal burglars are doing a very good business. There have hocn many daring and nucccshIuI rob lieries the piiHt three months. Attach merits aggregating $80,792 wore filed at Helena, Mont., against Russell It. Harrison's newNpaier, the Helena Journal, by three Montana hanks. Turnkey Howard French of the peni tentiary at Boise, Idaho, was severely bitten by a madman, and there are some apprehensions as to the effect of the bite. It is claimed that the Cree Indians have during the past minimer completely exterminated the g.inie in Big Hole River Valley in Montana, a region which formerly abounded with game of a.l kinds. K. (J. Brown and George W. Brown, newspaper men at Tucson, have been fined and imprisoned for making an at tack n the court anil jury, which had found indictments against them for criminal liliel. The Northern Pacific's steamer Zam besi will probably have to take back to China thirty Chinese who were refused passports at Port Town seed because their certificates did not have photographs attached as required by law. Most of them were liound for Portland. One of the cases that will come up bo foie the present session of the United States Supreme Court Ironi Oregon will be that of the Eastern Oregon Gold Min ing Company, plaintiffs, represented by John Mullen and K. V. Drake, attorneys, vs. 0. S. Miller. This suit involves some of the best mining property in Kastern Oregon, located in the famous Green horn Mountains. Mr. Miller has thus far been victorious. Recently the Oregon Board of Kail road Commissioners heard the case of W. E. Loughmiller A Co., of Silverton vs. thd Southern Pacific Company for overcharge and shortage, and found them entitled to a rebate of $2(1.3). The rail road company was given notice of this, but lias as yet failed to pay complainants the amount found to be due them. Loughmiller & Co. now ask the commis sion to bring suit against the railroad company to recover the over charge. The State Board of Railroad Commis sioners is now engaged in the compila tion of tables showing the average as sessed valuation of all railroads in Ore gon and other States, which will include all personal and real property belonging to said roads. The average assessed val uation of all railroads in Oregon for 1891 is $16,050.84 per mile, Including swamp lands, city and town lots and all per gonal and real property belonging to the roads. There are 1,828.84 miles of rail roads in Oreeon, and the aggregate val uation is $210,30,169. 0. R. Brinkley, a well-known capital ist of Los Angeles, who caused the ar rest of his quondam bosom friend, Claude Hill, has filed a second complaint against Hill charging him with embez zlement of $300 which Brinkley had sent him to pay for some furniture. Hill was picked up some months ago by Brinkley, who took pity on him, as he was poverty-stricken, and has since cared for him. The result was Hill spent all of Brinkley's money tbat he could get hold of, and is accused of being the means of breaking up his home. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. A Number of V:ii;uuirH In the Higher Ollues of the hxeaitive iJepart incuts of ( iuvcrmiietit. The president has appointed Allwrt ii. .Minn poHtinHHter at halt Lake City, 1 1 (ah, vice Irving A. Benton, who re signed to incept the appointment of united Males Marshal. Neither (iiuieral Scholleld. who Is act ing as Secretary of War, nor any other army olllcer at lint department Is aw are ol any contemplated exchange of com mauds between General Howard and lieueral Miles, as rcjtorted from Chicago, Little credence is given to the story. Fifth Auditor Timiiie In his annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury shows the adjustment during the year of accounts aggregating $617,930,507 and representing ex pence incurred In the diplomatic and consular service, internal revenue service, census olllce, Smithson ian iiiHtituUou, etc. There are a numlierof vacancies in the higher ollices of the executive depart ments ol the government, and the prob lem of lllling them has leen consider ably complicated by the results of the recent election. In view of the fact that a general vhangn will be made by the new administration in March, the vacan cies arn not altogether desirable pri.ei. Among them are the First Assistant Potitiiiater-tiennralHliip, Commissioner of the General . ind Olllce, ami a num Iht of diplomatic places, including the Russian, Portugctip, Italian ami Swiss Missions. The resignation of Assist ant Secretary of ths Tre;taury Nettleton and Mr. ('romiHu, who was the Republi can candidate for Governor of Nebraska, will take ell'ect next month. The Presi dent will also have four vacancies on the ImmicIi to (111 between now and March 4. These are life portions and the most al luring prizes remaining within the gift of the administration. The probability of an extra session of Congress immediately following the in auguration of the President-elect is a subject of general conversation in Wash ington. A SHcial session of the Semite is always cal'ed at the Ix'ginning of a new administration, to con (inn mem bers ol the Cabinet and diplomatic rep resentatives of the United States abroad, but the present election, having turned on questions of a domestic policy, it is Maid to be obvious to experienced politi cal leaders of all parties that an extra session of both Houses of Congress is an almost inevitable result. Secretary of the Treasury Foster among others" ad mits this. The country, he says, chal lenged the judgment of the Republicans on the McKiuley bill, and the result must bo accepted as the will of the peo ple that a different policy must be nut into ell'ect. Kx-Secretary Bayard writes to a friend here in like effect, adding the people will expect this to be done with out unncceecary delay. Advices from Samoa are to the effect that the differences lietween the factions on the isiands, headed bv Mataafa, the recognized King, and Malietoa, the claimant io the throne, have reached an acute phase. To fully protect the inter ests of the United States it has been de cided that a vessel be sent there at the earliest practicable moment, liesides this reason, baned on expendiency, it appears that under the terms of the trip artite treaty the United States is under obligation to keep a naval vesael at Samoa. There has been no United States naval vecsel there for many months, the Iroquois being the last to call. The Alliance is now at Honolulu, with the Boston, under orders to Samoa, but these orders wero countermanded, probably because of a critical turn in Hawaiian politics. . It is the present in tention to send in her place the Ringer, recently of Vlie Retiring sea fleet and now at Mare Island, San Francisco. It will require about a month's time to pre pare the vessel for the trip, and another month or six weeks for the passage, so she will not hi able to reach Samoa be fore next year. THE CHICAGO EXPOSITION. The Board of Directors Decides to Clos the I 'air at O'CI itk Each Evening Insurance. The Scotch Home Industries Associa tion proposes to reproduce the cottage of Robert Burns at the World's F'air. Kmilio Castelar, the renowned states man, orator and author of Spain, is the choice of the entire World's Fair man agement for orator on the opening day of tho World's Fair. The insurance written upon the World's Fair buildings now aggregates $1 500,01)0. When the fair opens next spring it is thought the contents of the buildings will reach the value of $100, 000,000 at least. The electricians who propose to have exhibits at the Chicago World's Fair are indignant because of the decision of the Board of Directors to close the fair at 7 o'clock each evening, m it will not per mit of a good display of their products. Chicago has more than fulfilled the promise it made to the country with re gard to the F'air. That city has spent $10,000,000 in providing a home for it, and it has spent them not only with characteristic liberality, but with such good taste, with Buch respect, reverence, even, for art, as to command universal admiration and commendation. The promise Chicago made was to erect the buildings by May 1, 1893. They are al ready erected, and they surpass in their grandeur and beauty all possible ex pectation. The city having done so much, the country should not do less proportionately. First of all, it should cordially and gratefully recognize the magnitude and the value of the great work Chicago has done, and it should then resolve, the preparation for the Fair be ng so adequate, the completion of it should be equally so ; that it should be in deed and fact a complete exposi tion of all the products and productions of the world's arts and sciences, and es pecially of those of this hemisphere. BEYOND THE ROCKIES. Huntington Buys an Iron Mine and Steel Works in Mexico. . THE MILLER RAINY-DAY DRESS. Total Insurance on Milwaukee Properly lately Destroyed by I;lrc Short-Ribs Comer. The Boston Furniture Company has failed. Recent storms damaged lake shipping Mr.o.000. Philadelphia will organize a naval re serve battalion. Quarantine precautions at Boston are to continue during the winter. Heavy shipments of iro ore continue to be the feature in that trade. Navigation above Cincinnati Is practi cally suspended, owing to low water. General Miles says the Cheyennesand Arapahoes are threatened with starva tion. There are onlv fortv-five free natienta at the Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane. A Chicago syndicate has cornered short ribs, of which it controls 70,000,- 000 pounds. The American tin-plate factories turned out nearly 1 1,000,000 pounds of plate last quarter. Negotiations are in progress in St. Dxiis for the consolidation of the four street car factories. Hereafter any ra'lroad in Massachu setts which uses the car stove is liable to a penalty of $500. A fur mail at I hi nrAttalamta rf rr rtiA citizens at Sedalia, Mo., have organized a vigilance committee. The drouth in Maryland compels farm er in many sections to haul water from a distance for their stock. Dun's Review notes more active bisi- nesB conditions than for any previous ante-presidential election. The Supreme Court of Missouri has decided that official notices published in Sunday papers are not legal. There is a severe drouth in some sec tions of New York State. Water Is very scarce in a half dozen counties. The postmaster of a Georgia town has resigned because there was so much blackmail connected with the business A bridge that spans Cattaraugus creek near Springville, Western New York, touches four different towns and two counties. A negro digging on his farm in Liberty county, Ua., recently found an iron pot containing 4,000 in old French and Spanish silver coins. Sang Kee, a Chinese government of-- flcial, has arrived in Ottawa to make an investigation into the character and scope of the Dominion laws regarding the Chinese. Complete statistics of the great fire at St. Johns. N. F., have just been issued. The number of houseB destroyed was 1,874 and the total numbers of persons burned out 10,234. A company has been incorporated in Chicago with $5,000,000 capital to manu facture a new long-distance telephone, which, it is claimed, will be effective on 3,000-mile circuits. Although the total insurance on Mil waukee property lately destroyed by fire was over $2,000,000, only two companies, so far ns reported, will have to bear a loss of over $100,000. During the past rainy spell at Ann Arbjr, Mich., the girls appeared on the street in Jenness Miller's " rainy-day " dress. The skirt reaches half-way from the knee to the ankle. The executors of John Roach, the ship builder, will receive from his as signees, George W. tjuintard and George E. Weed, about $2,000,000, the surplus of his assigned estate. The Plant Improvement Company at Port Tampa, Fla., has commenced the gigantic undertaking of dredging a large basin where twenty large Bhips can be loaded at once from elevated tracks. New York will have to raise by taxa tion for the expenses of the coming year $33,771,008. The various departments asked for a total of $39,062,517, but this was cut down by the Board of Estimate. Whittier's homestead is now owned by a retired merchant of Haverhill, who is willing to sell the estate on condition that it shall be properly and perma nently cared for as a memorial of the poet. The Pennsylvania road will experi ment with lighting its tracks by elec tricity from Philadelphia to Bryn Mawr. If a success, the tracks will be lighted to New York and locomotive headlights dispensed with. The suits for $20,000 each against Gov ernor Francis and others, filed by three of the men arrested at Forsythe, Mo., for participation in the murder of Deputy Sheriff Williams in Taney county, have been dismissed. The United States Supreme Court has advanced to the second Monday in Jan uary the date for hearing the case of Propservs. the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, involving the title to a large tract of water front in the State of Wash ington. The "trust" distilleries of Peoria, 111., have been buying corn in enormous quantities lately, and many of them have largely increased their output. The trust has also started up some of its Cincinnati distilleries which have long been idle. EDUCATIONAL NOTES. The I-arpe Permanent State Sihool I'unJ of Kansas Polit cal Complexion of Harvard fJraduates. The first kindergarten in America was established in St. Ixiuis in 1873. It is slated that 204 of the 365 colleges in the United States are coeducational. Colored students of txHh sexes are to be admitted into the Chicago University. In the University of Michigan there are five Chinese students two girls and time young men. The Ohio school teachers have peti tioned the Board of Education for the prompt payment of their salaries. TliB slow progress of the thirty female students at Yale Is very disc ju raging. They have not learned the yell yet. The applications for admission to the Baltimore Woman's (Jollege are une qualed in the history of that institution. Lincoln University, the colored college at Lincoln, Chester county, Pa., has re opened with 250 students enrolled. The number of sclioolhonses in the United States is 210.330. The estimated value of all public-school property is $323,565,532. Electricity, theoretical and applied, is being taught in the evening classes at several scholastic and Bimilar institu tions in Boston. Returns show that about 40 per cent, of the alumna; of Vassar College, New York, marry, most of the remainder be coming teachers. There are now seventy schools for the deaf and dumb in the United States, and there is also a college for them lo cated at Washington, I). C. Of the 1,171 graduates of Harvard in the classes from 1885 to 1891 inclusive who expressed their political preferences 712 were Republicans and 3(35 Demo crats. The University of Pennsylvania has this year 1,764 students, which makes it fourth in the list of great educational institutions. The three greater are Yale, Harvard and Michigan Universities. Queen Margaret's College is the only college for women in Scotland that fits them for university degrees. It wa founded about fifteen years ago, and has 200 students in art, science and medi cine. Kansas has a permanent State school fund of $5,900,000, which draws interest at an average rate of 6 per cent. The semi-annual dividend from this school fund for the past two years is $1,000, 614.04. The total revenues of the public schools of the United States are : From perma nent endowments, $0,825,127; from taxes, State, $25,177,0(57; local, $88,328, 385 $113,506,412; from other sources, $8,794,431. Total revenue, $135,125,010. The Board of Education of Detroit, Mich., bus decided that hereafter teach ers in its public schools must have re ceived their entire education within the public and high schools of Detroit. Not only this, but their right to teach there is forfeited if they attend a university afterward. Three hundred and fifty-two thousand two hundred and thirty-one teachers are employed in the public schools of the United States. This would give an av erage of nearly thirty-five pupils to each teacher. Deducting for county and city superintendents, say 50,000, would give an average of forty pupils for each teacher. Of these teachers 227,200 are females, and 125,000 are males. The average wages are for males $42.43 ; for females, $34.27 per month. PURELY PERSONAL. The List of Musical Prodigies Includes a Young Cherokee Indian Girl Emanuel Lasker. Radyard Kipling has reconsiderd, and will not settle down in this country. Emanuel Lasker, the chess expert, the other day played five simultaneous games of chess, blindfolded, and won them in an hour and a half. John L. Davenport was appointed su perintendent of elections in New York twenty years ago, Horace Greeley hav ing recommended his appointment. The Scotch E&r of Crawford and Bal carres is visiting New York- incog. He is a tall, stout, fine-looking man, with a brogue nearly as broad as himself. He is coming West to hunt. MoBt men whose name is McLeod pro nounce it " Mac-cloud ;" but the ener getic President of the Reading road, ac cording to the Boston Advertiser, prefers " Mac-leed " for himself. Drs. Rubners .and Vernicke of Ham burg, who have been experimenting to see if cholera germs can be transmitted to tobacco, claim to have demonstrated that tobacco smoke is sure death to the bacilli. Prof. A. D. Hopkins of the West Vir ginia experiment station has arrived from Europe with a bug, which, he thinks, will destroy the pine-tree beetle that has so greatly damaged the West Virginia forests. Adjutant-General Douglas of Mary land has received from Dr. II. Seaman of Philadelphia the map used by Gen eral Stonewall Jackson in the civil war from the time of the battles with Pope to the battle of Fredericksburg. Senator Gorman, who has usually en tertained a good deal at his home on Rhode Island avenue in Washington in the winter time, will not reopen the house this coming season, but occupy apartments in a hotel the Portland. The list of musical prodigies in Boston at present includes a young Cherokee Indian girl, who is said to be remarkably accomplished. She expects to return to the Indian Territory when her educat on is completed as a teacher of her tribe. ! FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS The Number of Enrolled Voters in the Kingdom of Italy. CHOLERA IN A CHINESE PROVINCE. New Tax Upon Bicycles In France Snow In the Mack Forest Region in Germany Etc. There is a serious revival of cholera at Baku. England boasts of an aluminium launch. Archduke Francis of Austria is soon to visit America. Vienna has been declared free from the cholera scourge. Cattle disease has broken out in vari ous districts of Jutland. Hamburg officially reports no case of cholera there since October 26. Cholera in a Chinese province has car ried off 30,000 to 40,000 people. There is said to be an excess of $6, 000,000 of silver in the United Kingdom. To every 1,000 men in the British army only eighteen are over six feet in height. It is now announced that Parliament will be formally prorogued on December 13. The French Cabinet has approved a decree pardonirjg ten convicted Carmaux rioters. A syndicate has been formed to estab lish a permanent industrial exhibition in Stockholm. The German army has a swimming school for troops, where every one must learn to swim. France is to have a new subsidiary coinage, which is to be oi some metal beside copper. An FInglish company is being organ ized for the acclimatization of elephants in South America. Two daughters of General Booth of theSilvation Army have bet;n expelled from Switzerland. According to the London Times, Brit ish harvest was not nearly completed on the first day of October. Russia is said to have 70,000,000 in gold, of which $9,000,000 is on depoeit in London, Paris and Berlin. A metal tower resembling the Eiffel tower is to be erected at Lyons on the heights of Gay de Fourviere. It is reported that 200 white men Belgians and Germans are leading the Dahomeyans against the French. The British government has given $720,000 for the relief of the sufferers by the recent fire at St. Johns, Newfound land. Four feet of snow and a consequent blockade of railway traffic are reported from the Black Forest region in Ger many. American competition in the grain trade has caused many failures in Rus sia, eight firms recently going into bank ruptcy. Three thousand tradesmen of Cologne have recently petitioned the Emperor of Germany to abolish the new Sunday rest law. A woman without arms has been mar ried at Christ Church, New Zealand. The ring was placed upon the fourth toe of her left foot. The Pope is already receiving presents for his Jubilee, which is to take place next year, the first gifts having arrived from America. Dr. Luther TWHn nlmoinion Aa. 1 - - . - a. j'llj UllUU UC scended from Martin Luther, represented the Luther familv at tha wuw vuuwv-i avivu services in Wittenberg. Emmi Nevada is ta hn nnn nf fia atara of Sir. Augustus Harris' opera season in London. She has not sung in the Eng- uku capital ior iour years. The loss of traffic nn nw.nnt nf tha cholera epidemic at Hamburg has caused J5'A . a ueucit oi j.,uw,uuu marts in the reve nues of the Altona railway. It is proposed to connect the Oder and Danube rivers by means of a canal, thus making a complete waterway between the Baltic and the Black Sea. Penny savings banks are connected with nnhlii Rphnnla f Ralli.m A 000 of the 600,000 primary pupils have deposited over 500,000 francs. The new tax upon bicycles in France will be $2. As ther or nhniif ur.-v knn. dred aud twenty-five thousand cyclists ine revenue win De about $450,000. M'ibs Margaret Cozens, the British fe male suffragist, who reeflnt.tv advuata dynamite as a means of securing the franchise, is wealthy, educated and 30 the Empress of Russia's court dress, which is valued at 3,000, has only been woi n on one occasion, viz., at the corona tion of the nresent Rmnnrnr it ia nnn. ered with magnificent embroidery in real silver. The unfortunate claimant, alias "Sir Roger Tichborne," makes his living by aDDearin? at cnnnt.rv mimin holla anA u exhibiting himself nightly for a fixed sum ai. wen-Known puDiic nouses in the suburbs of London. The ahinmpnts nf r - v wu uuuwuu this year have been nearly $12,500,000 greater than the same time in 1891. The agjregate shipments to India, China and the straits were 8,325,098 this year, against 3,899,621 in 1891. Spurgeon's Tabernacle in London is fitted with elep(,rir halla in rina in oil parts of the house. Strangers are kept standing until five minutes before the service, when all the bells are rung si multaneously and a grand rush is made for seats. THE DARKY DUCKED IN TIME. It Wu Trick H lnrnnl During til War, and It Hrrretl Him Well. From where w at on the tavern veranda we could lrk riijht acronn the Misaiiwlppl river, although at the edge of the river on our side tliwre wan a bluff 40 feet high, with a atrong current helow. All along this bluH were comrnona, and we had an unobstructed view. We were talking and smoking when a goat came around the corner of an old abandoned warehouse and began to feed toward us. Five minutes later an old white headed darky, using a cane to help bim along, came out from behind the same ware house and stood almost on the edge of the bluff, and appeared to gaze across the river. "What fat take that goat has got, if ha only knew itl" whimpered one of the party. "What a fool of a nigger to take such a riskl" growled a second. We ought to have warned the old man, who seemed totally unsuspicious of danger, but we didn't Human nature is Just that way. lie had been there twor three min utes when the goat observed him and began to twitch his tail. It was none of bis busi ness that the man was there, and no law com pelled hirn to kick up a fuss, but we all saw that be meant to do it. As he gathered for a run every man rose up to warn the victim, but no warning was uttered. It was human nature to want to see the fun. The goat shot away like a flash, and as he drew near be made a long jump to give full force to the in tended blow. Next instant both bad disap peared, and we ran down expecting to see them struggling in the muddy waters. As we reached the bluffs the old man rose up from a pit dug within two feet of the edge, and grinned and lifted his hat ant said: "Mawnin', gem'len. 'Spected to find me down dar', I reckon." He pointed to the goat, which was swim mind wildly about as the curreut carried ii down, and one of the party replied: ' "Ves, we certainly thought you were a' goner. You dropped in there, eh f You inert have been pretty quick about it." "Wall, sorter, but dat was no trick at alL Doorin' de wah, when de Yankee gunboats lay ober dar' an' frowed shot at de guns up heah, I war one of de eull'd gerjen who haudled de shovel an" de sand bst. Dat's whar I I'arned to duck. Dem Yankees didu't know me, an' dev kept tryin' to kill me, an' I had to duck an' dodge so often dat arter de wah closed I nebber got straightened up agin. Ize bin layin' fur dat poet nio. e'u two weeks, an' now he's dun gom- an won't bodder no body no mo'. I usii to cups dat wab when it was goin', but now 1 gee what a blessin' it was. Wbar' would de ole man be now if de Yankees had not frowed ten tons of cannon balls at him an' I'arned him to duck?'' New York Sun. The Bad Boston Uncle. Among the children of a certain Sunday school is a bright little boy of four years. He has an uncle who takes great pleasure in teaching him nonsensical verses. A few Sundays since his teacher was ' telling the class about the busy bees, and asked if any of the children could tell her anything about them. "Waldo can," spoke up the little fellow. "Well, Waldo, you may stand in front and tell us what you know." And Waldo, rising proudly, steamed away with these lines: "How doth the little busy bee Delight to bark and bite, , To gather honey all the day And eat it up at night I" Trying to suppress a smile the teacher asked: "Did your mother teach you thatr "No, my Uncle Arthur did!" Boston Transcript. He Was Getting It. At one of the towns below Rochester a wo man and her nurse and child got aboard, and it wasn't long before the child, who was a boy of 3, began to act up. The mother paid no attention to him whatever, not even when he began to kick and bite, strike and squall. All the passengers soon agreed that the young autocrat was in sore need of a spanking, but the mother had her nose in a novel and the nurse didnt want to take the responsibility. By aud by an old man, who had been suffer ing with headache, could stand it no longer, and be leaned up and whispered to the nurse: "Why don't you give that young'un a good pounding i" "Kape shtill, yer honor," she replied with a wink. "I've got four pins sticking into his body already, and in a minute or two I'll have thray or four more." Detroit Free Press. Give the Fly Chance. "Good many flies in here," he said to a shoemaker on Champlain street, as be sat down to have a lift put on the heel of his shoe. "Yes." "Never tried to drive 'em out, did your" "No." "Don't want to keep 'em on the outside, I uppos9!" "No." "Wouldn't put up a screen door, then, if any one should give you one?" "No." "You must be the house fly's friend" "My frendt, I vhas sooch a man dot I Ilk eaferypody to get along all right If you pitch on some flies he vhas mad; if you gif him a chance inaype he goes py himself und does vhell und vhas your frendt." Detroit Free Press. Her Preference. We sat upon the topmost step, And talked of this and that; ; . , She asked me if I'd been away. And bow I lilted her bat. We chatted about various things, Of novels and the weather; For hours, on almost every theme, We there conversed together. I asked what paper she preferred; She hesitated some. While through the dark around we heard The gay mosquito's bum. She moved a little closer then. And answered: "Cant you guess? Why, the one of all that suits me moat la The Daily Evening Press." Chicago News. A Stalk of Rhubarb. A stalk of rhubarb grown by Georee Cruiokshanks and exhibited at George H. nanaei's market measured eight inches in circumference and weighed two pounds and four ounces. Fitchburg Sentinel