The Hood River Gr lacier. VOL. I. HOOD UIVICIl. OREGON, SATURDAY. DKCEMIJER 31, 1802. NO. 31. 3fcod Iiver (Stacicr. l-t lll.lallKli KVRHT RATUHIIA V MOKKINu T The Glacier Publishing Company. fct U HIITIO.N I'ltll'K. On ynt , ......tt 00 M in. ii. Ili or 1 hfru inniidn, .... All Siiiilv 1 C.nU THE GLACIER Barber Shop Grant Evans, Pr opr. fimoinl St., iiiur Ouk. HoihI HWrr, Or. Shaving and Hair cutting neatly dune. Sut infill turn (liiaiuiitoed. OCCIDENTAL MELANGE An Attempt to Wreck a Southern l'diific lixjia'S.s Train. THE CROP OUTLOOK IN CALIFORNIA. The Unknown Girl Who Committed Su' ddi: at San )Wgo Troves to be a Gamtilti's Wife. Nevada's Legilature will continue in session bat forty days. Tim outlook (or coming crops in South' cm California w as never better than at present. 'Pin damage to the orange crop by the Bt or in in Central California in leas tlmn 6 per cent. Irrigation woik along the Snake river in Id.tho ha seriously endangered nav igation on Hint stream. Victoria, I!. C., hait done away with vaccination an a necessity Is-fore a ciiiUi can enter ttie public schools. Kid's hum! of renegades am in the Kan CkiIuh Mountains without lxl or shelter, eiiU'.'ring greatly Irom cold and exposure. Columbia river cannera declare that a salmon 1 1 u -t 1h absolutely iiivosaary to wrii' results tliat will prove at ail re inn literati vo. The grand jury at Fresno haa charged tlint tliu builder of the court houne there lnt nut follow tlie planH and made sev eral thotiHiuid dollars by not doinx ho. Ira Bartlett, a miner well known on the Count, killed himself in a mining camp near Tombstone, A. T. Jlewaa itii l to do, tint his health wan failing. Early in May of next year Frank For dyee, a young stock baron of Idalui, will Rtt'Miipt to drive from the center of Idaho to Cyallalu, Neb., a band of 45,00.) sheep. A pu ty of old Indian fighters is being organised in Southern Arizona, who ho'n to capture Kid and his band, as well hh the rewards offered by Governor Murphy. , , F.H'jrts'to 'revive the Journal, Hussell 1 1 hi risou's paper, which recently failed at Helena, Mont., have proved abortive. The total amount due to creditors is said to be $1)25,000. The civic Board of Health at Victoria, B. 0., is engaged on the claims of par ties whose houses were fumigated alter the smallpox epidemic for damage to clothing, furniture, etc. The State Board of Agriculture has formally decided in favor ot holding the Northern Citrus Fair at San Francisco next month in conjunction with the Me chanics' Institute Fair. The unknown girl who committed Btii cide at the Coronado Hotel in Han Diego has been positively identified as Mrs. Kate Morgan. Her home was in Ham burg, la., and her husband is a gambler. A petition is being circulated by some of the ladies of Pasadena asking the Leg'slature to so amend the lawn oi Cal ifornia that the right ot voting will be extended to women upon all questions, both local and national. In the United States Circuit Court af Portland Judge Gilbert has decided the case of tlie United StateB against the Willamette Valley and Cascade Mount ain Wagon Road Company in favor of the de:endants. The controversy in the case was over 000,000 acres of land granted by Congress to the company for building a road. An attempt to wreck the Southern Pa cific north-bound express was made near Grant's Pass, Or. Ua.il had been taken from a trestle, on which had the train run it would have been thrown tnto a deep canyon and the loss to life -would have been terrible. Many home-seekers are looking for ward with gratification to the early opening of tlie Nea Penue reservation In Idaho. The Indian allotments leave 600,(100 acres unclaimed. Of this area fully 500,000 acres is fine agricultural and grazing land. At Snowflake in Apache county, A.T., Charles II. Flake and James M. Fiake nttemptrd to arrest Tom Taylor. Taylor killed Charles Flake, and wounded James, who in turn killed Taylor. The Flakes are merchants and loading Mor mons of that section. Taylor was a des perado, and recently robbed the bauk ut San Marcial. INDUSTRIAL BREVITIES. I.hpior MaJe l ioin Common Mushrooms in Africa Algcrl.-i as a Cork Producing Country. The Krupp works have 5,5 12 furnaces. Indelible Ink Is made from hanariH ju cu. Heading Pa., made 75,000,000 cigirt this year. Georgia taxes every tlgarultv) teller $:.'Oi) a yeur. This country m'nes 2,1,000,000 barrels of salt a year. Mexico exported 43,7.r0,00') piundaof collee last year. In India the government runs the opium business. Consolidation of the lead and oil In terests is contemplated. The annual liquor bill for the United t.ttes is $l,48i,OO0,OO;i. There are several J n-keys at Newinar Net earning $ 15,000 a year. The hog pat k this year will exceed that of la-it by 1,100,000 hoys. The Union Purine railrond Is figured on to have cost III 8,778 per mile. An electric cigar lighter has been in vent) d for the IsMieflt of amokers. There Is more money spent for eggs limn for 11 ur In the United States. The whaling season has tieen a success. the catch being valued at $1,500,000. The movement of the cotton crop for the season to date Is over 1,3)0,000 hales short. Russia produced in the past ten rears. it is mil. I, H78.OSO.400 gallons of pure al cohol. The aggregate of salaries of postmas ters appointed by the President is $5, 31X1,000. Alexandria, Ind.. is to have a $5,000.- OtM glass plant, the largest in the United mates. There are about 130 duly qualified fe male medical p actitionersiu the United Kingdom. The Lincoln paper mill at Lincoln. Neb., has been sold to tlie paper trust tor 11(0,1 (H). The damage to wheat and oats in Michigan by smut this year is estimated at $1,000,' Ml. Glaus in oven doors Is something new. The cook can see what she or he and the lire are doing. The natives of Liiria prepares sin gularly intoxicating beverage from a com mon mushroom. A New Hampshire man has Invented a machine that trims and punches liolts in one operatn n. The production of distiHed spirits of all kinds in tiiis country last year was H7,lHo,in gallons. Dublin claims to have the largest brewery in tlie world: St. 1mis Uie big gest in the United States. Ten million pound of tea were brought into the United States hint year, an increase of nearly a third. It has lieen dieovered that the weight required to crush a square inch of brick varies from 1,200 to 4,500 pounds. The mines of the world produce twenty-five tons of gold every week, and yet tlie precious metal remains as scarce ever. Most heavy tunnel work Is now done by machine drills, driven by comprised air, which also serves to ventilate the works. Algeria Is the greatest cork-pmdiaring country in the world, having 2,500,000 acres of cork forests, of which 300,000' are made to yield regular crops. Electric heating has made great prog ress in Ottawa, Canada, and hotels and p-ivate establishments are rapidly adopting this new convenience. The oyster dealers of Baltimore agree that tlie oyster supply this year will not be sufficient to keep their packing houses running on even half-time. A drying-houee for lumber has been erected at Ottawa, in which electricity is the heating power. This ia the first, establishment of the kind in the world. The shortage of the hop crop in Otsego and Schoharie counties, N. Y., is said to be unprecedented. Twentv-threo cents is offered, but growers are holding their stock for 30 cents. PURELY PERSONAL Mr. Carnegie came to this ijountryj forty-seven years ago, when he was 10 9 vears old, ana has never bad tune to get naturalized. Mascagni, the composer, has received an offer to come to America. Should he decide to come he will conduct some of his operas here. A prince of the Bassa tribe of West Africa is taking a course of i (Unties at Bates College, Me. He goes by the name of Louis P. Clinton. Sam Joseph, who led the ChJ cago Con vention in singing "Grover, Gi rover, four years more ol Grover," it is saiid, wili be made United States Marshal of Phila delphia. James Payn, the noted noHst and editor, is probably the worst -writ in the British kingdom. A letter from him is nothing more than an I ntere-afcuag study in hieroglyphics. General F. J. Lippitt of Washington ia the only survivor of the few who, standing at the grave, witnesued the in terment of Lafayette. He whs them youth, and resided in Paris. A heavy loss to the literary circles off Austria was the death, a lew "weeks "fre, oi Frederick von Hellwald, the geograph ical writer ana Historian. Anton Hauler: von Hellwald, to give his full name, was b-irn in Padua in 1842, at the son of a Field Marshal of the Austrian army.: He himself entered the army of Ausf-ria and took part in the carjorxuvn ai?ai-nBt. Prussia in 1806, but became editor -of, an Austria military journal, tnereafr. BEYOND THE ROCKIES Wonderful Progress Made in the Condition of'Our Navy. A GOVERNMENT BUILDING SINKING. The Trltk of Voting on the Names of Dead Mt n Developt d Into a Scientific Fraud In I'rovldence. New Haven, Conn., is in the throes of a temerance revival. There are nearly 1,000,000 pensioners. During last year 2",'MHi jtensiouers were dropped. Colorado's Legislature proposes to make silver coins lull legal tender in the Centennial State. Excitement has lieen canned by the discovery of rich deposit of nickel ore near Keokuk, Iowa. The government building in Chicago Is sinking so that six hew props have been put in to hold it. Tlie Wells-Fargo Kxp.cru Company, it is reported, has secured control of the Colorado Midland line. Suits Aitainst forty-three companies are to lie brought at St. Joseph, Mo., for violation of the an'i-tnu-t law. Canadian newspapers say the annexa tion que-tion must lie discussed. They are now willing to hear both sides. It is estimated that the value of the honey and wax produced in this country during the past year was fL'O.OOO.OOO. It is thought that George Gould's In clinations will prompt him to own a large racing stable, and that ho will soon be on the turf. The Brooklyn bridge is to have a great pueumatx tube for the transmission oi mail and baggage lietween New York and Brooklyn. Herr Seidl, the New York musician, will get $15,000 for pUying five months at the World's Fair, and his orchestra is paid accordingly. A woman who was elected a Trial Jus tice in Wvouiing commenced her duties by committing her huBband to jail for contempt of court. Jersey City is to have a new city hall, a contract fur th construction of which has been awarded. The cost has been limited to 1237,000. Atlanta is to have a belt road five miles in length, connecting all the roads centering there. It is to be opened as an independent line. j The St. L uis Republic figures it out that the recent rite in coi ton has made the South rich'T by $100,000,000 since the midJle of October. The Wisconsin monolith on the World's Fair grounds is to pierce the air at a height or 115 feet. It will be the high est obelisk in the world. 1 Mine. Diaz, wife of the Mexican Pres ident, is going to send at her own ex pense a woman's band of forty-five musicians to the World's Fair. A combination to form t1 e largest and most complete printing and publishing houne in the world has been formed at Chicago, with $5,000,000 capital. Dr. Preserved Smith, who was found guilty of heresy by the Cincinnati Pres bytery and sentenced to suspension, will appeal his case to the General Synod. Richard Mansfield complains that Boston, instead of criticising his acting, found fault with his legs. He thinks Chicago is intellectually superior to Boston. New York's Board of Aldermen pro pones to pass an ordinance which will render unlawful the driving of steers, bulls or cattle through the streets of the metropolis. If the prohibition bill should paBS the South Carolina Legislature, a Charles ton brewing firm, whose charter lasts seventeen years, will lnvea monopoly of the business in the State. A temporary camp of military in struction for the army and volunteer forces is propose ! by Senator Mitchell to be established at the World's Fa;r, the militia not to exceed 50,000. The upper mill of the Lackawanna Iron and Steel Company at Scranton, Penn., has been shut down on account of lack of orders. This movement throws 000 men out of employment. The Pennsylvania Company will make extensive improvements near Washing ton, D. C, and reduce the running time to New York to four and one-half hours. The assessed valuation of the coal lands of Schuylkill county, Penn , has hoe n definitely settled by the County Commissioners, who place them at $10, 6)4,750. . The trick of votinzon the names of dead men, non-residents, minors and the like appears to have been developed nto an almost scientific fraud in Provi dence. R I., where . over 2,' 00 names of fictitious per6onageb were found on the lint of voters. Secretary Tracy's report on the con dition of the navy buows wonderful pro gress in the past fw years. The esti mates in the -report for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1894, for the navy and marine orpe, including those for public works and the increase of the navy, are 24,471,4U8, being $2,713,141 lees thai those for the last fiscal year. There ia now in Washington a regu larly organized committee consisting of five members sent from the New Orleans Convention to a d in pushing the Nica negna canal bill through Congress. They are all confident that the bill will pass, although they are not so confident that ,it will pass at the short session. FROM WASHINGTON CITY. A Bill Having a Its Object the Perfection of the Quarantine Service of the Country Introduced. In the trial of Commander Johnson of tho Mohican, charged with grounding tils vessel in Alaskan waters, Lieutenant Strong, navigating officer, was submit ted to a long examination, explaining how the Mohican struck on Cherkoff Isl and. He testified in full as to the posi tion of the ship and the sailing maneu vers at the time, and stated that the ship's course had to be laid out the best way possible, as the charts were i n ac cural e. The detail of Captain Boiup of the ordnance department to duty at the World's Columbian Exposition in con nection with the exhibit of the ordnance department is regarded by army officers as a vindication of his conduct while military attaci e of the United States legation at Paris. Captain Borup was recalled at the instance of the French government on account of alleged sale ol plana of the French coast fortifica tions to officers of the German and Ital ian armies. A bill has been introduced In the Sen ate by Senator Chandler, having as its object the perfection of the quarantine service of the country. The bill author izes the President to designate from time to time such p aces on the United States coast for the establishment of quarantines as in his judgment are nec essary to maintain a uniform service in accordance with the laws. It further provides that it shall be lawful for any State or municipal authority to assess any fee for quarantine purposes on any vessel of any national company, or npon any person brought into the United Stales from abroad. Representative Hermann haa intro duced and is pressing before the Com mittee on Public Lands a bill enlarging the powers of the United States Com missioners. The bill provides that per sons having homestead proofs may make them before these Commissioners. At present the homesteader is compelled to make final proof before United States land officers at the local offices or before Clerks of Court at the county seat. Mr. Hermann declares that this new provision would be of great advan tage to many settlers who live a long distance from county seats or from the local land offices. Indian Commissioner Morgan has sent to the Secretary of the Interior a etter stating that a cr sis baa been reached in the work carried on by the Indian oltice in the education ol children. He says the office is helpless to further enforce the regulations 1n accordance with the act of 1800, and he lay a the facts in the case before the Secretary for his information. Gen. Morgan gives the details of several recent cases where the authority of the government aa repre sented by Indian agents has been openly denied. Morgan says he does not believe in using violence, but he cer tainly does think the government should show the Indians that it is in earnest in the matter. He is of the opinion that all that would be neces sary would be to show force. The Com missioner makes no specific recommen dations. Senator Allen has presented an amendment to the naval appropriation bill, making an additional appropriation of $300,000 to continue the contract for a timber dry dock at tne United States naval station at Port Orchard, Kitsap county, Wash. This is under the act approved March 2, 1891, authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to have con structed by contract after public adver tisement for naval and commercial pur poses at a cost not to exceed $700,000 for the beginning of the work, of which sum $200,0C0 was appropriated by this act. The additional appropriation is for erecting an office bui'ding, water closets and sheds, approaches to the dry dock, rent of quarters for the Chief Engineer and inspectors, pay of superintendents, inspectors and draughtsmen, and the necessarv dredging, clearing and clean ing up of the stat'on, including expenses and unforseen exigencies. A number of prominent railroad men, including Mr. Depew, of the New York Central ; President Roberts, of the Penn sylvania; President Ingalls, of the Big Four, and Chairman Walker of the Trunk Lines Association were before the Senate Committee on Interstate Com merce the other day to advocate the pas sage of the amendment to the interstate law. introduced by Senator Cullom, to modify the existing law so as to author ize railroad companies to form pools under the supervision of the Interstate Commerce Commission ; to wipe out the penal clause of punishment prescribed, etc. All the gentlemen named above urged that a great majority of the rail roads of the country were in favor of the proposed arrangement. Mr. Depew in the course of his remarks, said there were eight roads between New York and Chicago, but for all purposes of the pub lic there was but one. If an ironclad rule of equal rates under equal condi tions of time was established, the New York Central and Pennsylvania would do eight-tenths of the business, and the other roads would go into bankruptcy. The law preventing pooling was creating trusts. If the law were continued in force five years longer, Mr. Depew thought there would not be an inde pendent business man in any of the large cities of the United States. This miserable condition of affairs is being brought about by the law intended to prevent trusts. Under the proposed amendment, the roads would be author ized to make contracts upon a business basis and could agree upon rates, which would always be the same to the public. In discussing the existing conditions. Depew said it would soon be impossible tor manufacturers to exist, except at terminal points. Mr. Ingalls spoke to the same effect. If the amendment passed, he said it would not result in increased rates, but in equal rates, and in many cases it would reduce rates. FOREIGN CABLEGRAMS The Imperial Cholera Commission in Germany. FAMINE IN A RUSSIAN PROVINCE. Renewal of Friendly Intercourse Between the Czar and the Drelbund Wolves in Russia. ' Sweden has increased her army con siderably. There will be no performance at Bey rath next year. The Noble-Rothschild corner in Baku naphtha has collapsed. Kaiser Wilhelm has devised a warship with many novel features. South Australia has had forty admin istratii ns in thirty-six years. Physicians have declared that Mrs. Maybrick's life is not in danger. Bismarck says the chrysanthemum is a new flower and not very pretty. A co-operative laundry, to be run by women, is being considered in England. The young Duke of Marlborough is said to have inherited about -.'5,000 a year. Since 1831 Hamburg has been visited by cholera fifteen times and Berlin twelve times. The Russian authorities have forbid den Sarah Bernhardt to play "Fedora" in bt. retersburg. On several of the railroads in Rissia iron telegraph poles are to be substi tuted for wooden ones. The use of the merchant marine as an auxiliary fleet in event of war is being tested practically in France just now. The British admiralty have directed designs to be prepared for a new class o gunboats for service in foreign waters. Mr. Labouchere said the other day in Truth that Europe would shortly have at her disposal at least 20,000,000 trained soldiers. Out of a population of 30,000,000 in Prussia only 2,43 , 858 persons possess an income of over 900 marks a year, which is equal to about $225. The renewal of friendly intercourse between Russia and the Dre bund is due to the Czar's annoyance at the Panama and Carmaux scandals in Paris. There is less danger now of being lost in London than formerly. Electric-bell signals are now used in London while navigating its streets in the fogs. The Governor of the province of Ver onezct. Russia, has made application for 5,000,000 rubles to rel eve the famine stricken peasantry of the province. Some of the English pumping engines perform work equal to the raising of 120,000,000 pounds one foot high by the consumption of 100 we ght of coal. Wolves in Russia destroy annually upward ot 800,000 head of domestic ani mals, valued at 8,000,000 rubles. Their number does not appreciably decrease. The walls of the old Chateau d'lf in the harbor of Marseilles, made famoux by Alexandre Dumas in his "Monte Cristo,' are covered with autographs of visitors. Gibraltar has been nearly brought into i ailway connection with thereat of Spain. The railroad goes now to Al geciras, just on the other side of the Bay of Gibraltar. The Indian Government is going to curtail, possibly abolish, the trial by jury. It has been found unsuitable to Eastern conditions, and has been but little practiced. It is reported in London, says the New York Sun, that another "wealthy Amer ican gentleman ' is to try the publica tion there of a daily newspaper on the American model. The French Academy of Sciences has resolved to open an international sub script'on, with the obj'ct of present ing a testimonial to M. Pasteur on his seventieth birthday. The report in the Levant Herald that the Nestorian patriarch, Mar Shimun, had brought his people into submission to the Church of Rome is contradicted by the patriarch himself. France is going largely upon wheels, and seems to be willing to pay for it. The new tax upon bicycles in France will be $2. As there are about 225,000 cyclists, the revenue will be about $450,000. Great efforts are making in Vienna to build up there a toy making industry to compete with the famous factories of Germany and France. An exhibition of toys is now being held in the Austrian capital. The water-ways of France have a total length of 7,995 miles, of which 2,735 m'les are rivers navigab'e naturally, 2,250 miles rivers which had , been ren dered navigable by dredging and the rest canals. The Imperial Cholera Commission in Germany announces its discovery that wine claret or hock will kill the bacilli of cholera in a few minutes. Tea will kill them in an hour. The Scientific Commission, appointed for the purpose of selecting a site for a new capital for Brazil, includes five civil engineers, two astronomers, a naturalist and an expert in hygiene. It is said that President Ca-not in tends to establish a new military order lot merit, which will D9 conferred on 1 such officers as are debarred from ob taining the Orosi of the Legion of Honor. OUTWITTING THE FACULTY. Various Davlcc of HtndvnU to Pus El- nilnationa Without Study. ' At a recent meeting of a number of col lege men in Hartford convematlon hap pened to drift to the trial and struggled of examination days. It wan led that way by the flrnt atory teller who said that, bar ing been at one examination wbere each student drew a separate slip of question, he met a clawnnate who bad to go in with the next diviitlon. "The thing ia not Ukely to I a chance," he said to his friend, "but n com you should draw the paper I had, I'll tell yon what each question wu." So he did. The fellow looked them op, went In and drew that very paper, and came out triumphant. But that proved a very mild ease when the others came up. It see ma that in one examination at Yale soma years aero in Ijitin, one fellow, who waa very ahaky, put his own inter! ined textbook into bis overcoat pocket, and entered the room. lie was railed to the desk, and the tutor pare him a text book, of coarae not Inter lined. He shoved it into bis other pocket, walked slowly back to bis seat, drew out bin own book from bis pocket, and was all prepared: After reciting, before the tutor could call for the book, he absent mlndedly th not t it buck into his pocket, and turned away. Being aked tot the book be apolo gized, hauled out the other one, and re tired. Once in alumni hall at Yale a shaky sta dent wbo couldn't bear to part with bis clasM discovered in advance a knothole in the floor. He aeenred the desk by that hole. Pretty soon he bad the misfortune to drop bis pencil. - Bending over for it he shoved his examination paper down through the knothole. Fellows in waiting in the cellar ran off with it, filled out pa pers for him, not too well, but well enough to aieve him, for a perfectly correct exam ination was not consistent with his record, and oa returning signaled to him. This time he bad the misfortune to knock a lot of paper off his table and litter the floor. He got down and conscientiously picked everything up, including the relief papers that came up through the knothole. At another time where papers were drawn one fellow drew two by sleight of baud process, passed on one, surrendered it and went out. Then he gave the extra one to a lame friend, who r.t o:;ce "cram med" that paper. Then m went In, drew his paper and calmly substituted the one he knew, passing well on it and carrying away for what might be termed outdoor relief the paper that he drew. This was kept going all day and worked well. Another fellow, illustrating alike the sharpness of the boy and the laziness of the professor, having practically no knowl edge of one heavy subject that had been a study for the term, went to the record and learned by heart the answers to each of the twelve questions asked in each of the previous years, discovering the while that, instead of being thirty-six questions, there was a good deal of repetition. Row ing these questions thoroughly, ancTnot a word outside of them, he went in, and, sure enough, the professor bad drawn suf ficiently on his earlier papers to enab' this fellow to answer more than enough to pass him. As for the rest, his paper wu a blank. Hartford Courant. riajring Cards in Alabama. Burr Mcintosh, the actor and quondam newpaper man, relates a funny anecdote. "About a year ao our company was de layed several hours at a little way station in Alabama near Birmingham. Several of the party, including one of the ladies, sug gested a quiet game of 'hearts' to pass away the time. There were absolutely n signs of civilization about the place except ing an old cow and a pig grazing quietly ear by, but we hadn't been playing five ' minutes when a big, burly fellow came along swinging a club and pompously said, 'You are all under arrest!' We thought he was joking, and paid no atten tion to him until he repeated the remark, when one of the party did consent to say 'Rats!' "But the deputy sheriff, or whatever he was, wouldn't have it. He arrested us all, even the lady, although we protested that the game was for fun and not money, and took us before the 'mayor,' who fined us $1 each and then tacked on costs enough to make it $9. I got even with the sheriff a few days later on our return by throwing a bottle of ink all over him as our train passed the station, but I never again at tempted to play 'hearts' in Alabama." New York World. Unusual Printing. While there are doubtless many printing presses in existence that would fulfill a more useful mission if transformed into road rollers, still it has fallen to the lot of a newspaper in Middles bo rough, England, to make the first adaptation of a steam road roller to printing purposes, and it was with such a unique machine that The Northeastern Daily Gazette printed an edi tion of 64,000 copies. The motive power of The Gazette office ia a gas engine, but on the day in question an accident to the gas works suddenly cut off the supply of gas. A gang of workmen were hastily ob tained from a neighboring establishment, and heavy iron plates were laid in the yard adjoining the printing room, in the walls of which a large opening was made. A fifteen ton steam roller was then pushed into the press room, shored up and belted to the shafting, and an hour after the usual time of going to press the presses were started and the entire edition was run off without a hitch. Newcastle Chronicle. A Character to Pleaaa Thackeray. Thackeray was never so happy in his style as when engaged in describing some odd character. There passed away by the death in London recently of Sir Charles Cox a man whom the great novelist would have delighted to portray. Sir Charles was a man whose unusual stature and excessive thinness would have made him noticeable in any circumstances, and these physical eccentricities were accentu ated by bis singular attire. He wore in variably a dress coat of antique cut, gray trousers, open buff waistcoat, high Glad stonian collar and an immense neckcloth. His hat was of a style of several genera : tions ago. Sir Charles was a constant per ' ambulator of the streets and a noted at tendant at weddings. I - : 9 -