Iood River Glacier. The HOOD RIVKIL OUKOON, SATURDAY. ILTNK 24. 18!).' NO. 4. VOL. 3fccd Iviver Glacier. rt'lll.lMIKIl KVr.lir SATIMIHAT MtlHXIKII til i Tlie Glacier Publishing Company. m iixi itiiTioN rin r- Onr y.r . . . , . iiiiintha . . 1 ltii-i MM'litlil. Ni Ali i uijr .... ... I ... KtnU THE GLACIER Jarbcr Shop Grant Evans, Propr, t .vt., mill Oak. 1 1 ixl Klvnr, Or Shaving mid linn culling nrntly ilulir Sul indict nm I iiiuiuiitrcil. OCCIDENTAL NEWS. Cases Against TrapnM-ii of tht' Columbia River. OKI'.liO.N CONVICTS MAKK HUK'K. Tin Federated Trades ut !. AnircleH Full to Mare Out u Case for Deportation - Ktr. S.ilt Lake has voted 2.",000 ill school iIhIh. NcWI'lll farmers SIC pleased Willi tin niii outlook iii On' Stuli'. Another prospector nt iui Diego .lllll" l.l IlllM- folllld till' I t lllfU 10 1 1 ih miiMc in John Ingram, hihI hi ugc im i;:t. There it lunch sympathy at Spokane fur Mr. Cannon, whose banking house has just failed. The assets will cover all lialnlit ich. Tin- Hi adst rift agency reports eigh teen failures in the I'acilie Coast States u ii 1 IVmiorics fur the past w eek, as ci.ni'iuic willi fourteen fm tin' previous week au'l ten fur tin- corresponding week ..I lH'.i-'. A laige ilraft of stamen fniin tlit-Mar.- Island naval rendezvous will be h,. i.t in Honolulu bv tin- next. steamer'!" tn r.inf.iri v the crews of tlm Fluted Matin ship Adams ami tin' cruiser Hun ton, now re. The Federated Trades at lw Allele failed t ake out u case fur ileKi latum in llie All Yung arrest, owing to tlie fact dial die District Attorney did not show Unit tin- Cliiiiamaii was unregistered. 'I he Tiadcs lite determined thill 11 disc shall he properly tt oiijlit bcloro the courts. Parties w ho crossed the Cascades nt the In ad of II. ;g:ic river recent ly icport the snow Mill Irom nix to i-i'lit leet deep. 'I his w ill iniike Miiiiiuer travel to ('niter Lake very lute thin year. Teams should he running within a month, how ever. Tweiitv-live leading fnntgrow crs of the Mud creek neighborhood, ill die : eastern eml of Umatilla county, have organized company for the heller tlis poul of their products, to he known an the Frnitvale Fruit Co. They have engaged the services of an agent, J. K. llodgcn, who will CHtahlieli an oflice at Spokane. Penitentiary convicts arc now milking nhoiit 10,0(10 "brick a ilay. The Salem Statesman says: "It is a pity they could not make enough for the soldiers' home, the branch asylum anil all other prospective buildings now, before the starting of die proponed jute mill, ho an to keep tin' ''"u convicts employed. They aim to make 3,000,000 thin season, to he lined in public huildinnH and ad dition provided for by the hint l-0(;is-lnltire. The canen iigainnt the trnpnien of the Columbia river have for the second time in two yearn fallen to the irround, and lion. C. W. Fulton and bin brother won two casen recently lor me uciciine, mm ifter the other. The rrosecutinj? At tornev declared be would never nuain i ln-iiin a chaise anmnnt a trapnian or a uill-net lislieiiumi. iiu ueciiueu 11. utteilv ucelenn to try to necuro a eon victioii, mid ntated that it would never be possible for the Statu to win a cuso of the kind when the lawyers no mixed the jury up with tho jurisdiction question tluit thev were unable, to arec on tiny tiiiin'. Mr. Fulton produced certificated held' by both del'endnnts, and argued that, the law h of Congress giving Oregon jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases ti. Washington shore of tho Colum bia onlv applied to the service of pro .lu nml to crimes committed on a lioating loat or other craft and not to anything fixed into the bed of the river I w WHS lllirion nine, i iv v.iiviiuvo m addition that, if a Clatsop county jury ,.,.,.m.i.il iurisdiction over Washing- 4... llltlrnllS. the State of Washington could willi just as much reason levy dues .... ,.n,1 control the Union t'acitic wharves .i.ot ..im out, toward the middle channel from Astoria. Judge Cleveland, being nowerlesH to instruct the juries on the onestion ot aw, was barred Irom in- i rn 1 "ft . , , -,. ... . elllier lurv, Him iiiu i-rnwiim ... ... ...i ii. n i.-..i,A.1u oeured aeouiuai mi nn,v uno ui umi client" Tlie question unfortunately is nearer settlement than ever. T1e fSherili of the county and all his dep uties are denouncing" Fish Commissioner Crawford of Washington for what they claim is flagrant dereliction of duty in fcvor of the trapownerB. FROM WASHINGTON ( I I V. Secretary ( anisic Woithiiictuii lord of chief of llie liini'lul of Treasury I 'i ihii I ineiil . llllH IllOllkl appointed yii, N. V., Mat 1st ICS III the last I llll illg t III ( 'Icvcland aiiiiiiiiiMliutinn Fold nerved as i hlcf of the biin ail of hIuIisIich of the lii'partineiit of Stale. Mr. Ford in worth nearly $1 ,011(1,000, The Star hhvm that I'rcsidi nt Cleve land has told members of CmigrcM that lllidi'l' no ciiciliiistanceN would there be an issue of bondi mill sm especially an thoi i.ed by I oiireMM. The adini nist ra tion, be said, was not respoiiHilile for the present linaiicial situation, and it lays w it h ( oiigri ss mid not the aliiiiiiistra tioii to liii-l a ri iiiedy for it. The experts employed under the di rection of t he Ciingreshiomil I 'oln In 1 1 tee mithoried to ilivesligiiti' the methods of conduct nig business in die executive de partments hiyan work last week. They w ill tlrst take up the hil-.ilicsH methods of the Tn asiii v. It will taku perhapH two years to llliish the work. 'I'he ollii ials of the War 1 ii partiiienl piulcst that the recent ilnn-a-e of the military force at ( lih ao has notliiiig to do with the closing of the Uorlil's l air, but notwithstanding this denial there is leil'iill to believe trouble if mi at tempt is made to construction of the law Tinted Slates Courts. IH lllltCpatC' carry out the given liy thr Plans are being made by Secretary lloke Smith for an extensive summer tour through the West. These plans are not fully developed, mid the time of his departure is therefore unknown, lie will, however, visit points iii Indian lerritorv and then proceed to California, leturiiing bv the route of the Northern I'acilic railroad. Mrs. decided to accompany Smith lias 1 1 in li t in on travels. livery once in awhile the rumor is started that Justice Field contemplates resigning from the Supreme Hench. As often i's this story is started it is denied by the Justice himself, field was not a Cleveland man, because Cleveland re fused to appoint him Chief .lustice. lie was so angry at that time that he might have re-i'lied to spile Cleveland, but he is over i i . h mad an I now think lh.it s e other I icons rat may appoint his siicct s-or. At any rate he is going to try it. If Harrison had been re-elected, he might have retire I, because it would have meant the select ion ol a Hepuhlican us his successor, unless he w aited for an other election. Secretary lireshain has received infor mation from Minister lilount that war rants the conclusion that he is prepared to indorse all that has been done in Ha waii, mid that he is now strongly in clined to n commend at h ast tin' estab lishment of a Cniled Mates protectorate i . iti. 'i-i . w.- over tlie Hawaiian isianus. inr .-n n tary is also in official ignorance of the reported interference of Claim Spreckels all ol tlie restoration ol moiiarciiv mid of his insistence upon the repayment by the provisional government of money advanced by him to the late monarchy. The Secretary is, of course, in receipt of information from lilount that he does not feel justified in publishing, but he feels no hcitation in denying die accu racy of the above report. During the first three months of the present administration ended June 3 the total number of fourth-class postmasters appointed w as (,.r:7, of w hich 4,117- were to till vacancies caused by resignations and death and l,Si5 by removals. Iur iiiir the corresponding period of the pre vious administration the total number appointed was H.H'Jii, or l.HKii more, than were appointed during the last three months. Of these 2.ii.r):i were to fill va cancies caused by resignations and death and .r),.r)ii7 by removals. The number of appointments made on resignations was 2, 0l.r greater during the first quarter of the ailininisl ration than oiiring ino last, and the number made on removals was 11.502 less during Cleveland's first quarter than during Harrison's. cmcAiio Kxrosrnox. The ax (iladstone has been using at llawarden is to he on exhibition at the World's Fair. Florida, somewhat late it would seem, is appropriating $25,000 for State use at the World's Fair on condition that the railroads give a like sum. I'he foreign commissioners at the World's Fair propose to have an inde pendent board of jurors and to issue di plomas on their own account. The World's Fair managers have fig ured expenses down to 20,000 a day, whereas the daily average revenito from admissions and concessions is about ifllO, 000. A inn ioritv of the United States Cir cuit Court has decided tho orid s rair must close Sundays. Judges Wood and .lenkins ordered that an injunction be issued rest raining the officials from open ing the gates of tlie fair grounds. Judge (trosHCiip dissented, recommending that the injunction applied for by tho United States District Attorney be not granted. The decision of Judges Wood and Jen kins, though reaching tho same point in the end, take thisnction on widely diverg ing grounds, and dissenting opinion dif fers radically from both. The court rooms were crowded when tho decision was read. Judge Wood read his own opinion, in which he concluded that .Jackson Park Mas lawfully devoted for exposition purposes, and that the expo sition bad been in fact turned over to the control of the Federal government bv the local corporation, and that its trol was therefore as absolute as its control of the Federal building. He held that the Sunday-closing rule, hav ing once, been passed bv tho local direc tory and approved by tlie National Com mission, former body could not change it. Regarding the case before Judge Stein of the State court lie held it was no bar to the proceedings, because it is inadmissible to say that the government must in comity yield to a State court. MAST KILN MKLAXOK. Total Immigration Diuiii"; Thi Month Kndcd April :0. SOUTH F. UN PACIFIC'S UF.l'OltT. Reduction of Freight Kate From New OrleaiiH to ruci lie Count l'olntu Dock (iood. The church taxHtion bill was defeated in the Michigan Hoimn by a vote of '.VI to The Texas Central is looking over ground for it prossed extension in Mexico. Philadelphia wants a new mint build ing. Tho money is appropriated for a new site. lovernor Flower of New York is worth seveial million dollars, and bo is taxed (or il'i.OOlJ. Thousands of acres of land have been laid wasto in Southern ArkansaH by the recent floods. Joseph Pulitzer of the World has given ? 100,000 to this building fund of tho Co lumbia College. 'I'he Hailroad Tax AsHesmirs of Kansas are being urged by popular clamor to in crease the taxes. Dunn, chief of the weather bureau, promises one of tlie warmest Hummers we have ever experienced. TIk- Hell Telephone Company has se cured mi injunction against the Mclvees port Company at Pittsburg. A company has been chartered in Kansas to print and circulate campaign matter for the People's party. Kansas crops are improved. Wheat is giving better promise, and the corn acre age w ill be larger than usual. Seventy furniture factories at Cincin nati have cloted. This is the answer to the demands o; the workmen for nine hours and other concessions. Tammany is in clover. The Governor of New York did not veto the bill that gives Tammany ) 10,000,000 dock im provements. Since Jay Gould's death die "Gould stocks" heve sullered a shrinkage of more than f,50,000,000, and one-half of this falls upon his estate. lii'V. Dr. Lyman Ablsitt in Plymouth Church, Ihooklvn, Saturday referred to Dr. Itriirgs as a modern prophet, lit to rank with the prophets of the Bible. Michigan health ollicers are accused bv Canadian papers of "working" Do minion railways under threats of inter fering w ith their traffic arrangements. Hundreds of English sparrows have built their nests in the World's Fair buildings, and before the show closes they will have increased to thousands. Kci.rcsentative W. L. Wilson of West Virginia, who is Cleveland's choice for Chairman of the Congressional Ways and Means Committee, favors an income tax. The Kansas millers are buying wheat outside of the State forJulvand Sep tember delivery for fear that the homo crop will not meet their grinding require ments. l.ate renorts from South Dakota and Nebraska state that cholera has wiped out w hole herds of hogs, and that the scarcity will lie creator than it was a vear ano. The St. Luke's Hospital property on Fifth avenue. New York, has been sold for $2,400,000 in cash to an unknown millionaire; one report says to Collis P. Huntington. A call from some of the prominent la dies of Boston for a fund to provide rocking chairs for aged women unable to buy them was responded to ny contriou tio'ns amounting to over $400. General Boynton in a letter in the Washington Post says the demand of the old so diers is that the pension roll snail be made a roll of honor, and a weeding out of tho undeserving is necessary. Tho total immigration to the United States during the ten months ended April 30, lS'.KS, was 334,825, a decline of - .. . - ... . 1 ! - f A i . I lii.i s 5 irom mo imiuiKnuioii oi uio cor responding ten months of tho previous year. Tho annual report of the Southern Pa cilic Company (the entire system) for the vear ending December 3, i802, shows net earnings of $17,M).i,tH, against 10, 28(.204 in 18U2, being a decrease of $1, li02,203. It is reported in Washington that At torney-Gencral Olney and Assistant Sec winrv nf Stftto Ouincv will resmn at an early date, and that there is a chance for a Pacific Coast man getting one ol the positions. Tho F'astern railroads find it difficult to maintain rates during the World's Fair. The latest scheme for getting around the agreed schedule is reporter from Cincinnati, where one railroad dis tributed circulars offering a trip to tho fair and return and a week's board for !flo Dr. Bricgs, who was convicted of her esv bv the last General Assembly, says it is hich time that all broad-nundei! men should organize and work together for their own safety as well as for the honor of Presbyterianism. He calls upon the Presbyterians to resist the encroach ments upon their rights by the General Assembly. The reduction of freight rates from New Orleans to the Pacilic Coast points has civen an impetus to the rice trade Louisiana merchants being able to com nete in prices with China and Japan ant furnish a far superior article. Rougl rice is being utilized for flour purposes at home, anil is cneaper ana more nu tritiye than oata. HI'SINMSS BRKVITIKS. Wood pulp is rapidly becoming one of the most universally used of manufact ured articles. Beggars are so numerous in Paris that they support a newspaper devoted to their interests. Kentucky leads the Southern States in the production of tobacco, with a crop of 22l,Hm),0OO pounds. Reports from the lumber regions of Michigan and Wisconsin indicate that the trade is very brisk. Tim year 18H2 was one of the worst years ever know n in the iron and steel industries of Great Britain. Furope consumes upward of $24,000, 000 worth of gold and silver unntially for plate, jewelry and ornaments. It is stated in the Omaha Bee that 3,000 persons have secured homes through building associations in Nebraska. The largest piece of mica in the world was recently taken out of a North Caro lina quarry. It measures l,'xlfl inches. Tin-producers of maple sugar in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont will get alioiit 70,000 in sugar bounties this year. The total value of the live-stock prod ucts of Kansas in 181)2 was $42,8.r)3,835. Ten years before that tho total was 2i, rr:i,!i;4. The length of the New York State ca nals is 02S miles, and the expenditures upon them for tho year 1891 aggregated :S,;0i,102. The Ohio law making it unlawful to discharge an employe because of his be ing a union man ha been declared con stitutional. The number of sheep in Iowa has in creased 18 tier cent in tho last two years, and the value per head has increased 22 per cent in the same time. And now it is Connecticut that dis covers the necessity of a building-association law that shall restrict the wild- at business done in that State. There are some rich colored men. One Washington is worth $200,000. A light-complected" colored man in that it v is reckoned as a nau-miiiionaire. A w oman's building company has been formed in Toledo. ()., and the names of the director, of whom there are fifteen, are all prefixed by " Mrs." or " Miss." The production of mercury reaches about 55,000 to 00,000 francos per annum. I'he fiascos are enormous bottles of cast ... . . . L. f 1 iron, w incn contain lourarrooesoi aooui twentv-tive pounds each. Large numbers of Italians and Hun garians are tieina uisciiargea irom me int hracite coal ileitis, a ntimoer oi lectric mining machines have been in troduced in Western Philadelphia. There are 50,000 sheep in the mountains of Anache countv. A. 1.. owned by iNew Mexico parties. 1 lie !st. Jotin b ueram tates that these escape taxation in both erritories bv being driven from one to the other. w ichita. Kan., has a factory winch is using up the cottonwood trees of the Ar kansas Valley at a great rate, cutting them into shavings, which are made into mattresses. It can turn out lou mat tresses a day. The white-pine supply of this country stands in the States of Michigan, W is- onsin and Minnesota, the pine forests of Maine. Northern New ork and Penn sylvania having been long since substan Dally swept away. PURELY PERSONAL. Rev. Dr. Moruan Dix has ordered a bell to be placed in the Episcopal Church at Coopcrstown as a memorial oi his la . . ... . thcr, General John A. Uix. Lieutenant Nixon, the designer of the miser New York, is but 34 vears of ase. He was graduated from the 'aval Aoad- Hiiv ahout a dozen years ago Mine. Madeline Letnaire and Mile. Breslau. w ho are serving on the tury of the Salon of the Champs de Mars, are the first women who have held that po sition in anv salon. Prof. Poole, for fortv years connected with the British Museum, latterly being in charge of ancient coins, is about to leave that institution to become a lect urer in University College, Chicago, Detroit is slowly but surely equipping an art museum, wmen win eveniuauy be a. creiit credit to that enterprisinc city. Recent subscriptions include two - r: . a . - of $10.1X10 each from I), al. rerrv and Thomas W . Palmer, John Burns, the London labor leader, hoiTnn bis mimnier series of Sunday lect ures at Battersea Park recently, lie is said to possess an almost old-fashioned courtesv of private intercourse. His great hobby is skating. A son of General iabala, the com mander of tho Nicaragunn insurgents who recently won a victory over the gov ernment troons. is attending school in Boston. He was much elated at his la ther's military success. The first wifo of Brigham Young is in Chicago with her daughter. She is de scribed as a sweet, dignified woman of 72. of medium size, with a gentle lace, kindlv crav eves and gray hair drawn back over either side ot her temples. Henry Jones, "Cavendish" of the Lon don Fie d. the great authority on whist, who is now in this country, is an expert billiard-player as well as a whist cnam pion. lie ciin beat most of the amateurs, and runs the professionals very close TePcv Haves Taylor, a nephew of Bay ard Tavlor, "died recently in Cambridge, Mass. ' He was a graduate of Harvard in the class of '80, and had made a epe- cial study of modern languages in the graduate department ot the university. Eleonora Duse, the Italian actress who disappointed many audiences in this annt.lv. has been doincr the ,;.,;,, innHnn. Sho was to have opened anengagement at the Lyric The- , ooi.-.rn but. did not appear un- til Wednesday night. FOREIGN FLASHES. British Govcrnincnt'H Appropri ation for the Kxposition. FREEMASONRY IS DENOUNCED. India's Wheat Crop Prosper ts The Auitriau Army Bill A Rev- , olution Quelled. The slave trade in Morocco continues to flourish. Cholera cases are reported at Mar seilles, Cette ami Toulouse, France. It is proposed to levy an income tax in Germany to meet the military credits. Bismarck is expected to come in out of the wet and patch up a truce with tho Emperor. Austria and Hungary will introduce their new currency on the 1st of Jan uary, 181)5. The Catholic priests of France have been ordered to denounce Freemasonry from their pulpits. The French Senate has passed a bill to facilitate civil actions against the Pan ama canal swindlers. The Czar has distributed half a million presents in celebration of the tenth an niversary ot his coronation. Th British have proclaimed a protec torate over Uganda, Africa, and still far ther extended her colonial possessions. The Liverpool papers say that the pas senger bookings by most transatlantic lines have enormously increased of late. In the cremation chamber at Milan, Italv, portraits of the dead are attached to the urns in which their ashes are pre served. There is a predominance of females over males in ispain, the numtxirot me former being 8,!)4;J,000 and of the latter 8,)07,OOO. I he British government s appropria tion for the exposition was on I v $.500,000 the government of India allowing $25,- 000 additional. Revolutionists mado a demonstration at Navarre, which the Spanish govern ment soon quelled, killing ten and wounding several. India's wheat-crop prospects are said to be good, although the harvest will be two or three weeks late. The crop should be equal to last year a. In obedience to the order of the French residents the Siamese have withdrawn from Caminon, the principal military K)st of Northern Anam Strong influence is being brought to bear on Gladstone to induce him to visit Ireland this summer. Cork is spoken of as the center of the tour. The Austrian artnv bill has been ac cepted without a murmur by Parliament, though it was 10,000,000 florins more than generally anticipated. The electoral canvass proceeds quietly in trance and without unusual portent and it is therefore a safe conclusion that France will stand by the Republic In addressing the delegates at Vienna Count Kalnoky, Minister of Foreign Af fairs, ridiculed the idea that general dis armament of European powers was pos sible Emperor William says that under no lrcunistances will he countenance pro posals to limit the suffrage for the pur pose of strengthening the government in the Reichstag Through the generosity of American citizens and the kindness of the town Council Edinburgh is to have a monu ment in memory of Scottish Americans who fought in the civil war, Steam carriages, ponderous phaetons with a steam engine and boiler under neath to supply the motive power have become comparatively common on the streets of Paris. They run about ten or twelve miles an hour, In England an income tax is levied on all incomes above $750, but between that ligure and $2,000 $600 is exempt. Ihe rate is sixpence in the pound. A man earning Jiroo pavs . ine total lax amounts to $69,250,000. Reports from several cities of Asiatic Turkey say that cholera has appeared in man districts and was spreading n. ii ii.. t - t:..: rapidly. Along the Lower Tigris and the Sliat-el-Arab river people are dying bv tho thousands. There is reported to be much complaint in Ensrland at the poverty of the clergy. The 5,652 benefices in England and Wales afford a yearly income of less than $1,- 000 to t he incumbents. French naval architects have designed a protected too or steel fortress at mast tops on battle ships that is regarded as a big improvement dv tno iavy Depart ment of this government. The calmest Parisian papers go to the length of saying that the existence of France's whole Indo-Chinese Empire is at stake. There seems a universal de mand in Paris that a big army and fleet shall be forthwith dispatched. Much of the plate that was used m the ceremonies attending the reception of the Czar at the Chudov Monastery, Moscow, was stolen, it is believed with the connivance of some of the priests. The loss is over 2,500,000 rubles. A Be gian named ruller, who was ar rested in Olmutz, has confessed that he helped to steal the jewels of the Count ess of Flanders last February. His con fession implicates a lxmdon aristocrat and several of the Countess' servants. Th prince 0f Wales first announced his son's engagement in an after-dinner speech, in which, alluding to the absence of the .Duke of York, he remarked: "As he has been engaged for only two days to a charming young lady, you can easily understand the cause of his absence. THE HOUSE OF DELMONICO. ttt Program from Mttln CIT Room to m Worlil Fiiinoiiii KnutHiirMiit. Who has not beard of "Delmonico's," New York t No name Is more familiar to epicure than Delmonfco, and yet few peo ple know any thing about die original Del monico's, of wliom there were three broth era John, Irn.o and Pierre. The real founder of the name was John, the young st and nioxt energetic of the three. He was the first who came to New York, and he sent out for the other two. John orig inally legari his career ai a trailer between Havre mid Havana. He uncle a little money and came to New York, dreaming, probably, h.i little of his future success h fid A. T. Stewart when be first landetl from Ireland. John started a little bakery anil did fairly well so well that he thought that with the aid of his brothers he could do better. So lie wrote to UU elder brother to come over tho Atlantic. This was quite a venturesome Journey, especially for two SwiM peasant lails, for such they were. But they had faith in John, in fortune iintl In each other, no over they came by sail hip, of course. The firHtMfclmonlco builiJing was a com bined bakery, bar, coffee room anil restau rant. The bakery was run upon the poa honor plan recently adopted at some lunch counters In New York; that U, no watch was kept on customers, who helped them selves to pies, tarts, tuniOTers and cakes, and their word was taken as to the amount they consumed. The coffee was always good and the meals well cooked and served, and the prices were reasonable. A cup of fresh coffee and gome delicious rolls antl butter could be had for a shilling, and a cutlet only cost a shilling more. A regular dinner, with wine, could be enjoyed, with fine service, for a dollar fully equal to a three dollar Delmooico dinner now. A good Havana cigar cost but four cents such as costs twenty today. The house of Delmonico prospered from the first, and by an by a second generation came on the carpet and took part in the thriving concern. John, the founder of tbe house, took life easily toward the end, doing the marketing only, while his broth ers played dominoes and smoked ciga rettes. None of the Delmonicos, either the brothers, nephews or descendants, have been educated men. The original Del mouicos were decidedly rirl: ured. They spoke, in the latter p..ri of their lives, three languages English, French and Italiao but all three imperfectly. Nor were any of the Delmonicos Rood business ' men, in tho American sense of that term. This may seem strange, considering their success, but it, is a fact. None of tliern were keen or shrewd. Noneof them drove bargains. Thev attended strictly to one line or du ties, treated everybody well, sold good ar ticles and so got rich, and their fame as restaurateurs filled not ouly New York, not only America, but Europe. It is not generally known, but old timers will still remember that the Delmonicos once kept a summer garden in what is now East New York. Attached to tnis garden was a vege table und dairy farm which waa free to tbe guesu a pleasant privilege m warm weather. Th.'re were various attractions, such as a band of music and a tenpin alley. There was also an 0111 space for target shooting and for athletic games these were the happy days before baseball. This Delmonico summer garden was a great resort for all the foreign residents in New York, particularly on Sundays, when all the German, French, Italian and Span ish notables orild be seen here enjoying themselves. Saratoga Cor. Troy Times. Practical t'se of Metals. An lntere-ling fact is noted in connec tion with much of the architectural work of the day, namely, the increasing use of sine and sheet aud plate iron and steel tor ornamentation, largely taking the place of plaster and wood for cornices, window dressings, mansard and other roots, dor mers and finishings, these latter being fixed upon brackets to the walls or other wise secured to the structure. In Austra lia, notably in Sydney, ziuc has for some time past been employed for ornamental ceilings, one of this kind on a somewhat large scale having not long since been used In the construction of a hotel diniug hall in Sydney, and which, for richness of orna mentation and beauty of design, ts said to be unrivaled, the ceiling, as described, be ing divided into fifteen deep and rich.panels. The chief advantages alleged of a zino ceiling are that it can be soon fixed with out dirt, and is a comparatively light ma terial, peculiarly adapted to internal em ployment; tbe metal can be moiueu into panel or coffers and applied in large pieces, and the material decorated or gihkd, ttnd molded zinc cornices cau be fixed "in situ." New York Telegram. The School Girl Speuka. A crowded car; a pretty girl dressed In fresh summer stuff, and this is what she said in tbe hearing of all: "It must have been perfectly lovely; 1 should so like to have gone, and 1 might have went as well as not if 1 had ouly saw Jack." What is the explanation? Is it that the schools do not teach the young to use correct English, or that there is a dark Detroit not reached bv education? To have this smiling young girl open her mouth and crop out such toads and lizards of verbiage is shocking. Detroit Free Preaa. A Trifle Too Alert That Time. At the Pompeiian grounds one night a well knowu gentleman around town took occasion to reach arouud for his opera glass In bis overcoat pocket. By his side sat a suspicious female, who no sooner felt bis hand passing down to her pocketbook, as Ihe thought, than she seized the offending mem ber, satisfied that she had caught a pickpocket with her pocketbook securely In his grasp. Tbe geutleman smilingly ald, "You think I have got your pocket book," accompanying the remark with an upward movement, which disclosed tbe opera glass. Tbe female thief catcher blushed and apologized, the red fire kindly aiding her to cover her discomfiture. Bos ton News. They Came to Terms. "Did you und Dennis Dugan come to terras in your dispute?" asked a business man of his janitor. "Yis, sor; and very uncompliment'ry terms they war, sor." Wa&hinstoa Post.