The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, February 03, 1894, Image 1

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    -5 ...
The
Hood Elver
Glacier.
It's a Cold Day When We Get Left.
VOL. 5. , HOOD RIVER, OREGON, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 3, 1894. NO. 36.
3foediver (alacier.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING BT
'The Glacier PnbMlng Company.
. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE.
On. year . IS 00
Blx months - 1 00
Three months 60
8rucle copjr Cent
THE GLACIER
BarberShop
Grant Evans, Propr.
Second St., near Oak. Hood Rier, Or.
Sliaving and Hair-cutting neatly done.
Satisfaction Guaranteed. 1
LATE NEWS.
Work is booming at Mare Island.
The Chinese at Boise, Idaho, refuse to
register.
The First National Bank of Helena,
Mont., has been authorized to resume
business.
Los Angeles is to canvass the city to
, ascertain the wants of the unemployed
in distress.
The bill to establish a port of delivery
at Bonner's Ferry, Idaho, has passed
the Senate.
Thei pursuit of Chris Evans seems to
have been abandoned by the officers of
, Fresno county.
The San Diego Superior Court has
practically nullified the ordinance creat
ing chainganga. -
Morel is said to be anxious to break
his partnership with Evans, the bandit,
and, lea vethe country.
Cougars are reported plentiful on the
mountains back of The Dalles, having
been driven from the interior wilderness
by the late storms.
The State Controller will include the
new counties in the distribution of the
back taxes of the Southern Pacific Com
pany when they are paid.
$'The faculty of the Oregon State Uni
versity has passed a rule prohibiting
students from entering or frequenting
billiard halls and skating rinks.
It is understood at Mare Island that
Secretary Herbert has ordered all vessels
at the yard repaired without delay, int
eluding the monitor Monadnock. . ,
An estimate that the town sends $300,
000 away annually for pork products
i alone is furnished to help on the Spo
kane home industry movement.
A special election is called at Seattle
for February to decide whether or not
the school district shall bond itself in
the sum of $250,000 to make up out
standing warrants.
Thirteen pages have been torn from
Book H of the probate records at San
Jose. The presumption is that it was
the work of eome one who desired to de
stroy the record in the matter of a par
ticular estate.
Johnny Crow, aged fourteen, rescued
six children who had broken through
the ice on the Carson river. near Empire.
The young fellow was nearly dead when
taken from the water by those who ran
to his assistance.
The Bradstreet Mercantile Agency re
ports thirty-three failures in the Pacific
Coast States and Territories for the past
week, as compared with thirty-one for
the previous week and twenty-four for
the corresponding week of 1893.
The Union Pacific has decided for the
relief of the farmers in Eastern Oregon
and Washington to reduce the rate on
wheat damaged by rain or snow from
points in Walla Walla and Palouse sec
tions to Portland to $3.75 per ton, and
to San Francisco to $5.50.
A report from Yuma pays that General
Ct. Andrade of San Francisco and parties
representing French and Scotch capital
' ists have gone to the mouth of the Col
orado river for the purpose of selecting
a place where they can locate a colony
of French grape growers and winemakers
of a thousand families.
' Judge Clark at Los Angeles has ruled
that Mrs. Lucy C. Goodspeed in her con
test with General Mansfield is in every
way entitled to be the guardian of her
mother's person and estate. The charges
against Mrs. Goodspeed's moral charac
ter, he says, are untrue, and have al
ways been so.
Governor Markham has authorized the
law firm of Estee & Miller of San
Francisco to institute legal proceedings
for the purpose of having the property
of the late" Thomas H. Blythe escheat
to the State government. Markham is
of the opinion that the title to the prop
erty of Blythe has failed for want of
hiers or next of kin, and for that reason
has reverted to the State.
Ex-Receiver George L. Fitzhugh of
ithe Walla Walla Savings Bank has made
his final report. It appears from the
statement that $343,649.68 in notes are
owned by the bank, $134,107.81 is now
in the bank and securities worth $209,-
541.87 have been pledged as collateral to
secure borrowed money aggregating $91,
614.76. An examination of the county
records show that Edmiston on the day
-the bank closed deeded to that institu
tion 4,922.15 acres of land in Walla
Walla county, and it is said he made
' similar transfers in Umatilla and Co
lumbia counties. None of this is in
luded in the statement of the assets of
the bank made by the receiver. ,
THE MIDWINTER EXPOSITION.
California Midwinter Interna- )
tional Exposition. Department
op Publicity and Promotion. J
Weekly Circular Letter No. 10.
It has been definitely decided that the
official ceremonial opening of the Cali
fornia Midwinter International Exposi
tion shall take place on Saturday, Jan.
27. This decision has been reached after
a careful consideration of all the cir
cumstances and there is full assurance
on the part of those who are in charge
of the preparations that everything will
be in readiness at that time. The great
fire at the Columbian Exposition on the
night of Jan. 8 did not damage the ex
hibits intended for transfer to San Fran
cisco, except that a few of the cases ia
which they were packed were pretty
well drenched with water. Luckily,
however, the contents of the cases were
not injured, and, as a matter of fact,
such a very small proportion of the Mid
winter display remained unshipped, at
the time of the fire that the delay will
not be aggravated on its account. Be
fore this letter is read the last carload of
exhibits will have left Chicago for San
Francisco, and before that time also, the
scores of other carloads which are now
on the way to San Francisco will have
been unloaded in the -Sunset City and
placed in position in the different build
ings in which they have been assigned a
location.
These buildings are beginning to at
tract from visitors the praise they justly
merit. Their rapid growth was but one
subject of wonder in the progress of this
great enterprise. The arrangement of
the vast number of exhibits with which
their interiors are to be embellished is,
of course, another wonderful operation,
but meanwhile the development of the
Ideas of the architects and the develop
ment at the same time of the general
schema of color which is being worked
out in all the buildings comprises ' still
another field for wonder and admiration.
Charles Graham, the well known artist,
is director of color at this Midwinter
Exposition, and he is working out in
this connection one of the prettiest pic
tures that the world has ever seen, with
a group of architectural palaces set in a
frame of evergreen foliage and against
the background of dark hills and sunny
California sky. ." Pretty as a picture " is
the first comment that comes from the
lips of visitors. " Wonderful to behold "
will be the inevitable sequel to the orig
inal utterance.
The concessional " features, : having
Blade haste to get ready for Midwinter
ay-making, will all be ready by the
87th, unless there may be a single excep
tion in the case of the great electrio
tower, work on which can scarcely be
completed inside of three or four weeks.
The machinery plant which, of course,
includes the electric lighting arrange
ments, will be all in readiness by the
day set and will be utilized on a general
scale for the first time on that occasion.
The only previous occasion when the
street decorations of San Francisco ap
proached the grandeur which will be at
tained on Jan. 27 was when President
Harrison paid a visit to the Pacific
Coast, but the- arrangements already
made are emphatically in evidence of an
Intention on the part of the citizens of
San Francisco to outdo every effort they
have made in this line. , It is part of the
plan of the Exposition management that
there shall be a grand street parade
through the principal thoroughfares of
the city, and there is already no little
controversy over the line of march. If
the wishes of the citizens were to be ac
ceded to, the procession would have to
move through every street and the Ex
position grounds would never be reached..
A happy compromise will undoubtedly
be effected, however, and public and pri
vate buildings on the route of the pro
cession will be a blaze of bunting and a
sea of color.
Governor Markham will declare the
day a legal holiday. Mayor Ellert will
issue a proclamation closing all munici
pal offices, as far as possible, and calling
upon the business men of the city to
close their stores. The National Guard
will turn out in full force, and every
civic and fraternal society in the oity
will participate in the'parade. There
will be more bands of music than have
ever been seen in a San Francisco street
parade, and if there is not a bigger turn
out of citizens, in the city and at the
Exposition grounds as well, than has
ever been called forth by any demonstra
tion on the Pacific Coast, the expecta-
j) jt . .1 . a I. . .
IIUUH VL M1UUBUI1UB Ol IHOBB WHO IUI.V6
judged the temper of the community
will be grievously disappointed. '
The official opening ceremonies will
take place on the grand stand which is
now being erected for that purpose, and
for utilization afterward in connection
with athletic sports on the Recreation
Grounds. This stand will accommodate
7,000 people and the populace can be ac
commodated on the greensward in front
of it to the number of 100,000.
There will be short addresses by Gov-
erjor Markhaia, Mayor Ellert and Di
rector uenerai de Xoung. Mrs. de
Young will press the button that shall
set the machinery in motion. The ora
tion of the day will be delivered by Gen
eral W. H. L. Barnes, the orator par
excellence or the Pacific Coost, and the
exercises will conclude with a rendition
ef "America," played by the united
bands of the Exposition, in which the
voices of the entire assemblage will jein,
and to which there will be a great gun
accompaniment from the throats of a
battery of artillery stationed upon the
Exposition grounds. These are the sen-
rid plans, for IhjL-O&oial oneniast oacs-
monies. It is expected that the crowd
in attendance on that occasion will more
than equal that which witnessed the
ceremony of breaking grounds, when
fully 75,000 people gathered on the bit
of wilderness where, in four short
months, a veritable oity of palaces has
been created. . -
EASTERN PARAGRAPHS.
Congress is costing the country $8,000
a day, ,
Gambling-houses have been closed by
the Uhicago authorities.
El Paso, Tex., is excited over a rich
strike of gold in the neighborhood.
There is a movement in the Ohio Leg
islature to tax certain classes of street
cars. ; - ..-
A new oil well near Fostoria, O., flows
1,336 barrels a day, and the section is
wild.
The Boston subscription fund for the
relief of the unemployed amounts to
$40,525.
The municipal expenses of Chicago
last year were $422,170 more than the
receipts.
The orjDosltion to tackinor the internal
revenue bill onto the tariff bill is getting
stronger. , . , '
The Chicago papers call the San Fran
cisco Midwinter Exposition a "dainty
little fair."
Five Kansas counties have compro
mised with the Atchison Company on
the tax question.
Many farmers are feeding wheat to
their hogs in Western Texas rather than
sell it at 50 cents a bushel.
The gross receipts of the Illinois Cen
tral for December were $1,702,690, a de
crease of $101,000 from 1892.
The erstwhile World's Fair hotels of
Chicago have been changed into flats,
and 1,600 of them are now occupied.
The total yield of wool in this country
last year amounted to 364, 156,666 pounds,
the largest American clip ever raised.
Philadelphia's School of Industrial
Art is holding an exhibition of laces.
There are 2,000 pieces in the exhibition.
Recent census figures show that the
Eopulation of the city of Washington
as increased 50,000 during the past
year.
Attorney-General Olney has decided
that Chinese laborers may legally go
through this country to any country of
destination.
Among the unemploved are 15.000
men and boys who are waiting for the
Hudson river to freeze over, so that ice-
cutting may begin.
The membership of the Boston Fruit
and Produce Exchange has jumped to
500; new fields of enterprise were
broached the past season.
An attempt by the Carnegie Steel
Company to roll a six-inch beam of alu
minium at Homestead has failed, but
another trial will be made.
Nova Scotia is suffering from a decline
of the wooden shipping industry. The
registry of the province shows a shrink
age in the last year of nearly 50,000
tons.
The difference in ages between the
oldest and the youngest United States
Senator is forty-four years. The oldest
Senator1 is a Republican ; the youngest
is a Democrat.
The Kansas Supreme Court has made
a decision that where the holder of a
mortgage assigns it to a non-resident to
avoid taxation he cannot collect the debt
by legal process. : .
Theodore P. Haughey, President of
the Indianapolis National Bank, who
was indicted on 167 counts on embezzle
ment, forgery and bank-wrecking, is af
flicted with insanity. -, -
A preliminary fund of $200,000 has
been pledged by business, houses in
Atlanta ftja fn tCk " f"V,ttn Slata. onH
International Exposition," which it is
proposed to hold in that city in lssro. -
One dollar from Washington to Balti
more is the promise of the projectors of
the proposed electric road. The Presi
dent of the company states that the
road will be in operation next Septem
ber. The Atlanta Exposition will possibly
be graced by a pipe tower that from
plans made by D. S. Paul, a plumber,
will measure 1,150 feet in height. It is
intended to be , higher than the Eiffel
tower.
It seems incredible, but it is a fact,
that men cannot be hired in Chicago to
work on the drainage canal at wages of
15 cents an hour. The number of the
unemployed is estimated to reach into
the tens of thousands. .
A New York charity this winter is a
coal and food depot, where bread, tea
and coal are sold at cost, it is said J.
Pierpont Morgan furnished $50,000 to
run it. About 4,000 unemployed have
used its advantages thus far.
Countv Clerk O'Connor of Garfield
county, Neb. , was defeated at the Novem
ber election by one vote, and when his
successful opponent attempted to take
possession of the office O'Conner changed
the combination ot the sale lock and re
fuses to open it until his contest for the
office is ended.. ,..
Emnloves of the Santa Fe from La
Junta, Col., have informed Governor
Waite they have received no salary since
last October, and many of the men and
families are on verge of starvation. The
wages for November and December, they
gay, have been promised at different
times, but in every instance the pay
failed to come.
William Henshaw was brutally mur
dered three years ago near the northern
boundary ot Wayne county, ind., and
now Rev. Benjamin Baldwin, a Method
ist minister who formerly occupied a
pulpit there and is now at Troy, v., has
made a confession of the murder. He
was jealous of the attention of Henshaw
to the girl he loved.
THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
Secretary Carlisle, it is said, has an
nounced there is no prospect that the
United States revenue-cutter Corwin
will again be sent to Honolulu with dis
patches for Minister Willis.
Senator White of California has intro
duced a bill appropriating $250,000 to be
expended under the direction of the Sec
retary of Agriculture to investigate and
determine upon the best plan to reclaim
the arid region. J - ;'
.' The statement that extreme suffering
exists among the Indians of Pine Ridge
agency is discredited at the bureau of
India affairs. Officials ridicule the
assertions that the Indians are " dying
off like sheep." -
The bill appropriating $50,000 for the
monument of General John Stark passed
the Senate after some discussion, touch
ing mostly on finances, during which
Morgan said the country could not afford
to borrow money at 5 per cent to build
monuments. . . ., .. J
There is no truth in the report that
the Hawaiian government'has demanded
the recall of Minister Willis. It can be
stated upon authority that nothing of
the sort has been even hinted at in
official communications between the two
governments., , .
Secretary Carlisle has disallowed the
claim of Miss Phoebe Couzens of $6,000
for pav as Secretary of the Board of
Lady Managers at the World's Fair.
Miss Couzens claimed she was wrong
fully deposed from the office, and sub
mitted a claim for the amount.
' Delegate Rawlins of Utah asked unan
imous consent in the House for consid
eration of a bill permitting Salt Lake
Lake City to become indebted, including
the present indebtedness, to the amount
of 6 per cent of its taxable valuation.
Without objection the bin passed.
A member of the Committee on Rules
said he believed the first thing the
House would take up after the tariff
would be the Hawaiian question, and
the bill to coin the seniorage silver in
the treasury vaults would be compelled
to wait until the discussion over the
Hawaiian affair had been exhausted.
It is understood a syndicate of New
York bankers are preparing an offer for
the entire proposed issue of $50,000,000
of bonds at Carlisle's figures. Boston,
Uhicago and Philadelphia bankers want
a show at them, however, and to pre
vent them from overbidding it is likely
they will be admitted to the syndicate.
The national-bank note circulation,
which reached $209,500,000 during the
monev strineencv last summer, has de
clined to $204,500,000 and is daily grow
ing smaller. During December it de
creased $2,422,000, and so far this month
$1,305,000 in lawful money to redeem
the banks' notes when presented have
been deposited in the Treasury. -By
law the reduction of bank-note circula
tion is limited to $3,000,000 a month.
Senator Vilas stated he would protest
against the designs on the award medal
of the World's Columbian Exposition.
He secured the proofs from the Phila
delphia mint and on one side of the
medal it was discovered the design was
that of a stalwart specimen of manhood,
holding in his right hand a lighted torch,
in' the left a shield. Nearly all the
Senators condemn the design, and some
other figure will probably be substi
tuted. Chairman Cummings of the Naval
Committee is preparing a report on Hol
man's resolution calling for an investiga
tion of the system of awarding premi
ums to contractors for building govern
ment ships. The report will be adverse
to proceeding with the investigation on
the ground that there is no testimony
tending to substantiate the general
charges. The resolution charged by im
plication a general collusion between the
contractors and officers of the Navy De
partment. :; .
The House Committee on Labor has
ordered a favorable report upon Mc
Cann's resolution authorizing the Com
missioner of Labor to investigate and
report upon the effect of the use of ma
chinery upon labor and the cost of pro
duction ; the relative productive power
of hand and machinery labor ; the cost
of manufacturing with machine power
and the effect upon wages, and the use
of machinery operated by women and
children. Ten thousand dollars is ap
propriated to enable the Commissioner
to carry out the provisions of the resolu
tion. . : . . ,
The report of the commission ' ap
pointed to make a treaty with the Yank
ton tribe of .Sioux Indians of South
Dakota was laid before the Senate re
cently, accompanied by the draft of a
bill intended to carry the agreement
into effect. Under this agreement the
Indians cede to the United States all
the unallotted lands in the State of
South Dakota, the United States to pay
the tribe $600,000, $100,000 to be dis
tributed at once per capita and the re
mainder to be held in trust for twenty
five years, provided that if the needs of
the Indians require it certain' amounts
shall be paid annually, but in no case
more than $20,000 in any one year. The
sum paid for this land is about $3.62)
per acre, and the price at which the
land shall be opened to settlers is re
commended to be $3.75 per acre. .
. .
The rumor that ex-Queen Liliuokalani
is about to bring suit against the United
States for a large sum of money, basing
her claim for damages upon the Presi
dent's recent Hawaiian message and
Secretarv Gresham's letter, has created
a great deal of interest in official circles.
A suit cannot be brought by an individ
ual against the government, and there
is no method of procedure through the
courts by which the ex-Queen could pre
sent her claim. The only course Liluo
kalani can pursue is to submit her claim
against the United States. This Con
gress would have to approve before ' the
claim could be adjusted bv the Court of
Claims. In fact, the only recourse of
the ex-Queen is to Congress', where in
view of her present unpopularity she
could scarcely expect to meet with satis
faction or success. -
FOREIGN FLASHES.
Cairo is to have a trolley line.
Scotland is to develop its gold. , ;
France had 300 strikes last year. ;
There is now an anti-tobacco crusade
in France. ,
Drought has ruined the maize crop in
argentine.
Serious riots are in progress at Car
rara, itaiy.
A large force of Italian troops have
been sent to 1'alermo.
Cashier May of the Bank . of England
detauited lor 13U,UUU.
Austrian iron producers will limit pror
uuction tor three years.
The Belgium Diet has rejected the mo
tion lor universal and equal suffrage.
- The annual oivil list or salary paid to
s.ing uumDert oi itaiy is about sa.uw,
000. , . !
France will begin this-year the con
struction of thirty-two war ships of all
classes. ,
Diphtheria has killed nearly, every
child in the government of Saratoft,
KUSSia. - ".' ' ', ' :.. !'
A long-distance telephone will soon be
put into operation between Berlin and
Stockholm.
It is estimated that in the whole of
Europe over 600,000 women hold public
appointments.
The amount of gold and silver bullion
in the Bank of France at the present
tune it) 4,iiu,oo,ooi.
The cartoon "Bismarck in Berlin'?
has got its publisher into jail as a libeler
of Chancellor Caprivi. -
The iron masters of Austria and Hun
gary have agreed to renew the iron Ting
for another three years.. ;
Eight cars loaded with human hair ar
rived in Paris recently, consigned to
dealers in that merchandise. - , .
So far as murder and robbery are con
cerned, Sicily and Corsica are the two
worst countries on the globe. .
A commission has been appointed by
the government of Cape Colony to in
quire into the leprosy question.
The new simplon tunnel from Brieg in
Switzerland "to Isella in Italy will be
twelve and one-half miles long.
The London Times apologizes for the
methods of the Bank of England, and
says that they are being improved.
For the coming Paris Exposition the
history of gardening from the most an
cient days is to be illustrated in gardens
at Versailles.
Irish members of Parliament will be
aBked to prevent the transfer of Anglo
American mails from Queenstown to
Southampton. " "
The Russian census returns for 1893
show 124,000,000 population. It is be
lieved that these figures are smaller than
the actual population.
The Sultan has conferred the Grand
Cross of the Imperial Order of the Med
jidie upon Mr. Maxim, the inventor of
the quick-firing guns bearing his name.
A special American building, contain
ing 26,500 square feet of space available
to exhibitors, will be a feature in the
coming Industrial Exposition at Ant
werp. ;
The inhabitants of Rio are heartily
tired of war, and the epidemic raging
there makes a desire for peace all the
stronger on the part of the citizens gen
erally. ;
Excavations in Palestine go to show
that the hot-air blast, which has been
credited to be the invention of Nelson
in 1828, was used 1,400 years , before
Christ. -
In Rome they think four inches of
snow a terrible fall, and telegraph the
incident of the storm all over the world
with the added information that " street
traffic is impeded."
The Kroner Bros., until recently of
the Cotta publishing house, Stuttgart,
have finished printing Bismarck's mem
oirs in six volumes. The memoirs will
be withheld until after the Prince's
death. . . - ..
Emperor William has taken steps to.
have milk produced on his farms at Pots
dam sold in Berlin. Carts bearing his
name may be seen in the streets of the
capital, the drivers of which retail the
fluid to any one. t
The coffee crop in Nicaragua is suffer
ing, and much of it has been lost through
the scarcity of pickers, who have gone
with the troops. For lack of men to do
the work the authorities are pressing
women into service. t
The Cunard Steamship Company has
ordered the laying down of two new
cargo steamers. Each vessel will be of
6,000 tons burden. They will be built
by the London and Glasgow Engineering
and Iron Ship Building Company. 1
The most important point agreed upon
is that France has not only reached the
highest possible point of military devel
opment, but that she cannot much
longer maintain it without sacrificing
the financial superiority which she -now
enjoys.
Mile. Humbolt, a famous court beauty
in the reign of King Louis Phillippe, has
just died in Paris at the age of 87. For
many years she lived in abject wretched
ness in a garret and passed off as a beg
gar, but after her death a valuable col
lection of pictures was discovered in the
garret and some thousands of pounds in
bonds and bank sewed up in her mat
tress. Theodore Runyon, United States Am
bassador to Germany, wishes to contra
dict the newspaper statement that at
the Emperor's New Year's reception he
wore a uniform not authorized by his
government. He wore the uniform of a
United States Major-General, he said, in
accordance with an act passed by Con
gress in 1866, permitting a United States
representative to wear at ceremonies the
uniform of the highest grade that he
held in the army.
SHE SHOCKS THE PRINCESS.
But the Prince I Not Troubled With En
nnl When Countess Warwick Is About.
Many sensational stories have been told
in England and elsewhere of Frances Eve
lyn, the wife of Lord Brooke, who, on the
death of George Guy Greville a few days
ago, inherited the proud title of Earl of
Warwick. It is said that she is the one
woman of Whom the Princess of Wales has
ever condescended to be jealous. It 'is a
jealousy of a twofold character, since the
princess sees in the new French countess
not only a rival in the prince's affections,
THE NEW COUNTESS OP WARWICK,
but also in the leadership of English fash
ion. It is difficult to know which of these
two things affects more strongly the prin-
Then, too, Lady Brooke is a very bril-
liant woman. Her conversation is of the
most sparkling brilliancy, and besides this.,
it is marked by a freedom from conveu- 1
tionality which horrifies the somewhat i
straitlaced princess, who has inherited--1
all the love of etiquette of her mother, old
Queen Louise of Denmark.
The Prince of Wales is most easily bored.
The one thing of which he stands in the
greatest dread is ennui, and if there Is
any one person more than another in Eng
land who is capable of driving dullness
away it is the beautiful end witty Countess
of Warwick. '
The Prince of Wales has, during his mar
ried life of over a quarter of a century, had
many of those flirtations which the French
so appropriately term aventures, and on
one memorable occasion he has even been
brought into court as the corespondent in a
divorce case. Notwithstanding this, and
notwithstanding the flagrancy of his liai
sons both in England and on the conti
nent, the princess has never condescended
to manifest any sigDS of jealousy until the
Countess of Warwick appeared upon the
scene. '
Should the queen die at the present mo-
ment and the prince ascend his mother's
throne there is no doubt that the Countess
of Warwick would become quite as impor
tant and as influential a personage in shap
ing the will of the monarch and the desti
nies of the nation as were the Marchioness
Cunningham in the case of King George
IV and the Duchess of Portsmouth in the
case of King Charles II.
The friendship between the Prince of
Wales and the Countess of Warwick dates .
from the period of her marriage in 1881.
The latter took place in Westminster abbey
and wag the only ceremony of the kind in
which a son of the queen has acted the part
of best man to a commoner, for such the
present Earl of Warwick was at the time.
The prince who officiated in this capacity
was the youngest brother of the Prince of
Wales, the late Duke of Albany, who was
mentioned at one moment prior to her mar
riage as likely to become the Lady Frances
Evelyn's husband.
The Prince of Wales likewise attended
the marriage and was the first of all present
to sign the register. It was a very notable
function, for the bride was at the time the
greatest heiress in London, baflDg inher
ited the whole of the fortune of her enor
mously wealthy father, the Hod. Colonel '
Maynard, whose widow subsequently mar
ried the late Earl of Rosslyn.
Almost immediately after her marriage
the countess or Lady Brooke, as she was
then began to assume a very prominent
place amoDg the leaders of society, and es
pecially of that particular circle of the Lon
don great world which is known as the -
Marlborough House set, the one object of
whose members is to amuse the prince, that
constituting their particular form of loy
alty. ; '
The new countess is far more beautiful
than even the best of her photographs make
her appear. Her friends say that they have .
never yet seen a portrait that did her jus
tice. With her wealth of chestnut brown
hair, her violet blue eyes and her exquisite
complexion, she has always seemed the per
fection of fresh, delicate and hlylike Eng
lish loveliness. In one thing, however, she
Is entirely un-English, and that is in her
taste for dress. There are few women in
London whose toilets are more perfect in
every way and more in harmony with their
wearer than those of the Countess of War
wick. She is one of the best whips in Eng
land and drives a four-in-hand, handling .
the ribbons in a delightful manner.
Good With Fork, Goose, Etc
Sage and onion sauce gives the finishing
touch to goose, and not infrequently it is
liked with pork. Here is a recipe for it:
Fry together for about a quarter of an
hour, or till soft, 2 or 8 chopped onions
and 2 ounces of butter (or less of clari
fied dripping), then season with pepper
and salt and a teaspoonf ul of finely chopped
sage. Add Si ounces white bread crumbs
and nearly a pint of brown gravy or stock.
Let all this boil together for a quarter of
an hour and serve in a sauce tureeen.
A Bit of John Bright' Sarcasm. .
A noble lord once said, on the occasion
of Mr. Bright's illness, that Providence
was punishing him for misuse of talents
by inflicting a disease of the brain. The
following was Mr. Bright's sarcastic re
joinder when he resumed his seat: "It
may be so, but in any case it will be some
consolation to the friends and family of
the noble lord to know that the disease is
one whieh even Providence could not in
flict usoa him." San Francises Araon&ufc.
J
n
A 4