Many a firm that now says • there is no­ thing in Newspaper Advertising for us.” will find within the next few years that there has lieen much in it for others In the same line. Is not now your opportunity? Manv a firm that, never gave such an ex­ penditure a serious thought a few years ago, now counts its Newspaper Adver­ tising appropriation as one of its most necessary (and most profitable ) outlays. Is there a hint here for you? Circulation Guaranteed Greater Than That of Any Other Paper Published in Yamhill County. -nqs----- M c M innville , O regon , T hursday , april FRANK WRIGHT. Mfiite à ¡Wij Mi!101LD ”'N "IK BETTER ! J. W.COWLS. LEE LAUGHLIN J. L. STRATTON. President. Vice President. Cashier Successor to H. Adams HARNESS SHOP! Paid up Capital. $50.000. ! McMinnville, Oregon. 1 have purchased the Harness Shop of II. Adams and will keep a Complete and Reliable Stock B oard of D irectors . L ee L ouchlin . J. W. C owls , \V m C ampbell , A. J. A iterson , 1!. I! Í.M CI11.IX. ...... I. A. M acrfm . R P E arhart 0.0. HODSON HENRY T. GEERY DESERVES A PLACE BESIDE H. COCOLES. Third mid <’ streets. McMinnville TTns a Fiiiv Assortment of LINES. FLIES. REELS. RODS, ETC. The Brave Deed of a Brave Man**IIe Gave His Life for His Comrades—A Memory of the Great Yellowstone Park. 23, i89i. half hour,” says Governor Hauser, “after he had drawn his last breath, we buried him, as he desired, in his soldier overcoat. Wc had scarcely fin­ ished his burial when the pickets an­ nounced that the Indians were within gunshot, yet there was no firing. “After our last sad duty was finished Jim directed us to pile limbs and brush on the grave and bum them, so as to conceal it from the Indians and pre­ vent them from digging poor Geery up for his scalp and clothes. We then gathered our things together as best we could and, packing up, moved on in a single file out of the gorge, camping, or rather hiding, in the sage-brush some miles away.” The sacrifice was not in vain, The little party made its way back to Ban­ nock City without further loss of life. Is a man ever justified in taking his own life? Ask that question of the few­ brave men who are left of the little band that went out upon the tragic Transacts a General Banking Business, Yellowstone expedition of 1868, and Deposits Received Subject tn (’heck then ask them if blood was ever more Interest allowed on time deposits. nobly shed than when Henry T. Geery Sell aij’ht exchange and telegraphic trans­ placed his pistol to his temple and sent fers on Sew York, San Francisco ami Port­ AA Tstlosr. land. his sou] into eternity that he might -Portland's Most Boautlfnl Suburb- Collections made on all accessible points. buy a chan«1 of safety for his comrades Office hours from 9 a. m. to 4 p m. For the treatment of Nervous Diseases, and friends. espeoially those suffering from nervous ex It was a scene that no man can fit­ haustion and prostration, chronic diseases, ROUGH ON THE OLD MAN. and all those who need quiet and rest, good tingly describe, that no man who wit­ nursing, massage and constant medical nessed it can ever forget. Fifteen brave care. At Mt. Tabor will be ton d pure air, I absolutely free from malarin, good water, A Large Stock of and well-armed men had started out He Loses His Het, But Saves the Countess I beautiful' surroundings and magnificent In the Story. from Bannock City, says the Hartford views. Ample references given if desired. Hardware, Tools, For further particulars, address the physic­ Times, in the early- days of April in ELSIA WRIGHT. ian in charge. Aiiue Millet, the French sculptor and Tinware search for gold, and near the middle of who L 'V' P" I r * Carries the Largest Assortment A- --. of died a few weeks ago, was a hab­ May, with their numbers sadly reduced IO i Third St., Portland, Oregon. j Harness and -addles and also the itue of the Divan Lepelletier, a Bohe­ Repairing and Plumbing by death from the arrows and bullets of LARGEST STOCK IN YAMHILL COUNTY. Done Promptly. Indian foes, they had but one thought mian club in Paris frequented by artists, I Harness of all kinds Made to Order. Re­ —to fight their way back to civiliza­ authors and newspaper men. His best pairing Neatly Done Sample rooms in connection. tion or die as befitted the high code of friend in the club was Paul Duplessis, Robes, Whips and all the Necessaries Roofing, ihiilmiig and Spouting. Etf. chivalry recognized by the pioneers of the novelist, who long edited the feull- are Kept in Stock in Endless o------- o 1 Specialty. eton in the Patrie. The two men had Variety. the west. Is now fitteil up in first class oriler. Sole Agent for They might have made a dash for it a standing engagement to meet at the Call and See Stock. Store on Third Street, and cut their way out by very boldness club every evening shortly before din­ Accommodations as good as ean be McMinnville, Oregon. Garry’s Patent Steel but to have done that would have been ner. One evening when Duplessis was ound in the city. i Roof. to abandon Henry Bell, who was fear­ late Millet strode impatiently up and S. fi. MESSINGER, Manager. fully wounded, but for whom there yet down the reception room, striking his REST IN THE WORLD. remained a hope. So he was placed on hands before and behind him, and Carries the Best Line of Choice Meats in M c M innville the Citv. Game and Fish in Season. Poul­ a horse and the little cavalcade moved eagerly eyeing his watch every' five Garden Seeds in Stock. try, hides, etc., bought for the highest mar­ upon its forlorn way. The Indians minutes. Finally Duplessis arrived, ket price and cash paid for same Your attention is called to the fact that we al­ were all around them waiting for a forty-five minutes late. Millet sprang CARLIN 4 HIGH, Proprietors ways serve the best meats to be found. chance to rush in and give the finish­ to him and caught him by both shoul­ Goods of all descriptions moved and care­ Your patronage is solicited II. M. BOND. ing blow with the least ]>o—ible danger ders. ful handling guaranteed. Collections will “Wha’s the matter?” ejaculated the bo made monthly Hauling of a l kinds to themselves. done cheap Shop With Hewitt Bro’s. They had moved twenty miles since novelist. ?? Charges Reasonable. Give me a call daybreak, slowly picking their way “A question,” answered Millet. My M c M innville . O regon . over the snow upon the mountains. At father reads your serial in the Patrie IJ 8 HIBBS, - - - Proprietor. 4 in the afternoon, weary and cold,they with tremendous care and interest. , Fresh Meats of all kinds constantly on GEO. RAMAGE, halted to give Bell needed rest and to Yesterday you left the Countess in a Watchmaker ¡hand. Highest price paid for Butcher’s stock. prepare supper. Pickets were thrown most critical condition, She had fallen and Jeweler. The painter, paper hanger, kalsominer ami T hird S treet , M c M innville , O r . decorator can be found during the day hard out and tlie other men had begun to into an ambush of those who were in- Dealer in All Kinds of Watches, Jewelry, Plated Ware at work, and will he very willing indeed to unpack, when one, named York, gave tent on getting her out of the way. Clocks and Spectacles. McMINMVILLE. Off. give estimates ami furnish designs lor all Must she really die?” I I classes of work. On .lune 1, a shop will be the alarm that Indians were approach­ JOHN DEKBY, JESSE EDWARDS. “Yes,” answered Duplessis, “she opened opposite the t 'ook house. 15-8t ing. Each man sprang for his gun, when suddenly a shot was fired in their must die. She will be killed with a dagger thrust by the Corsican Aasla- midst. ni.” A glance at (leery told the story. Proprietors of The McMinnville Millet dropped into a chair, struck With a deadly pallor upon his face, but TILE with head erect, he stood leaning upon his fist on the table, and exclaimed: his gun. He said: “Boys, I have fool­ “I have no luck—no luck at all.” TILE “But what has that to do with my ishly ended my life.” In his haste he Situated at tlie Southwest corner of the Everything New had grasped his gun by the muzzle, the Countess?” asked the novelist. Fair Grounds. All sizes of “Everything. My father bet with And Firstclass. hammer had been caught in a blanket First-Class Drain Tile me that the countess would die I took and the ball had struck him in the kept constantly on hand at lowest living Special Accommodations for Commercial Travellers. breast, shattering bis shoulder, and in­ his bet because I thought you would be prices EDWARDS & DERBY, obliged to rescue her from her perilous flicting a mortal wound. 41- McMiinvillc, Oregon Corner Second and E Streets, one block from Cooks hotel. His comrades helped him to a sitting position so as to use her in the rest of posture. He then calmly opened his the story.” “How much did you bet?” shirt and pointing to the’wound told “Ten louis d’or.” them that he could only have a few Practicing Physician and Surgeon, HAVING SEVERED MY CON- short hours to live. “But that is too “The devil you did! That's too House, Nimi, anti Ornamental Painter nection with the City Water Works long for you to remain here,” he added. much.” LAFAYETTE, OREGON- I will give my attention to all kinds “The sun is going down and the In­ ■‘Yes, yes; too much, and I with all Jan, 21, '»it. The Only Sign Writer in the County. my debts,” wailed Millet. ‘Can’t you of Pipe Work. Hot and Cold Water dians will be upon you. It would lie help me?” impossible to defend yourselves in this Homes fittc you must, don’t shoot yourself there. named Wollaston, who was directed to Fourth sad Morrison Sts., PorUaad, Oregon. It will only prolong your agony. Place make a candle box of a part of it. The N ot «.—Home treatment, securely packed, sent by same objection was advanced by this your pistol to your temple.” axpvess to all parts of the Pacific Coast, for those whe Will make the Season of 1891 workman, but being a persistent indi­ cannot possibly call in person. The change was made. Ul WAITED 10 CALL FOB FREE CO ISUITATIOM “God bless you all and take you safe­ vidual, he persisted and finally made the box. When polished it so outshone ly out of this.” Pnnr little fortunes hare been ms de at anything previously made that it very work for us, by Anna rage, Austin, The men turned and walked away; Texas, and Jno. Bonn, Toledo, Ohio. See • -. < >th»is aredolngaawell. Why none of them could fa«1 the final scene. quickly became an object of curiosity, not v<-u? Some earn overfSOO.OO a $10. (Due at the time of Service) Single Service. month. You can do the work and live The finger came down upon the trig­ and the people flocked to see it. at home, u herever you are. Even be­ As a consequence the wood liecaiue ginners are easily earning from S& to ger, the cap exploded, but there was no 15. (Due July 1, 189k) Season, SlOadav. All ages. We show you how quite popular, especially after a portion and start yoti. Can work in spare time 20. (Due when mare is know to be with foal,) shot. Sam T Hauser, afterward gov ­ Insurance. or all the time. Big money tor woik- of the physician’s treasure was em­ ___ e>*; Failure unknown among them. ”* N1 W ami wonderful. Particular« free. ernor of Montana, stepped forward and DESCRIPTION II.Hallett < <»., B<»x »SOPortland,Maine ■ said: “Geery, for God’s sake, desist. ployed in the construction of two bu­ Young Ilambletonian, dapple bay; stands 16.1 hands high and TU IC BADED °'>'«eTinPiiiisS»iphte This is a warning.” To this he merely reaus, one for himself and the other for weighs 1350 pounds; sired by Hambletonian Mantbrino ('>211) now lH!2 rALÉS?iXe.&"n^ráoM¿ made answer: “I don’t know what to the Duchess of Buckingham. These specimens of cabinet work caused the standing at $200; sire of Jane L 2:19|; Fred Ilambletonian. 2:26; Kitty N. Wi AYER û SOH.our authorized axent*- think of it; it never snapped before." CSlekuUr'a F..«ll>b Dlaa..d Brut. Ham, 2:‘26i; Susie S, 2:26.} ; Laddie, double team record 2:3.8; Hamlin, Again cocking the weapon, lie en­ rejected wood to become a prominent double team record at 3 years old 2: 38 and the dam of Lady Beach, gaged a moment in silent prayer, again factor in the construction of luxurious pieces of furniture. Thus Wollaston Original and Oaly Genuine. A 2:261; dam bv Milton son of Royal George, half brother to Old Kate, pressed his finger and the deed was was amply repaid for his perseverance «»Ft, al way» reliable, la oiks ask ^a\ X Druggist for Chichester t Bnglish JmjFV mother of Fantasie; 2d dant by Oregon Pathfinder ( 10981 ). done. Brand in Red aod Quid metalltexajBf in fashioning it into the candle-box, r*x .^'OMboiM, sealod with blue ribbon. Take Young Hambletonian is very stylish, and notwithstanding he has IM The men gathered around his dead and his name, together with that of the 9^ wino ether. Refuse dangerous substitu- V I'/ nf ¡.'ns and imitations. At Druggist«, or »end 4c. and his nautical brother, be­ never been trained, shows much speed. I to» in stamp« for particular«, testimonials and > body. Tears were in the eyes of all, physician came inseparably connected with the \ C* B “Relief for Ladles,” letter, by retarn J. IV. GILÈ. Proprietor. Mall. 10.000 Testimonials. .Turns Paper. : and some could not speak for the sobs history of the introduction ofthis wood v------rCh^heaterChtmkaU» ,MadlMaM«ar% €' bas . \Voo>s. Manager, McMinnville. Sold by all Druggists, Phuada-, P» j that shook them. “Waiting for some into civilized lands. ol Harness anil Horse Furnishings The people of Yamliili county are invited to call look over the stock and get prices. FRANK WlllGHT COTTAGE SANITARIUM ! Argand and Peninsular STOVES Can’t be Beat. The St. Charles Hotel The People’s Market. TRUCK AND DRAY CO., T>. 7L. SMITH, WATCHMAKERS JEWELER. Eurisko Market, WM. HOLL, THE COMMERCIAL STABLE Edwards à Derby, FACTORY ÏH Livery, Feed and Sale ! P. D. GLENN, Plumbing J. B. ROHR, C. R. COOK &, SON. DR. ABORN GROCERIES AND CROCKERY PàHDLl, YOUNG HAMBLETONIAN! At the McMinnville Fair Grounds tehms : ENNYROYAL PILLS I F VOL. III. NO.T1. formalice of this sacred duty he blun- THE BOARDED WINDOW. I J dered now again; did certain things in­ A TALE OF LIFE AND DEATH IN correctly; and others, which he did correctly, were done over and over. OHIO. His occasional failures to accomplish The Fight in the Dark Under Peculiar Circumstances---The Watcher Over His Dead Wife Goes to Sleep and is Suddenly Awakened. In 1845, a few miles back from what is now the great city of Cincinnati, lay an immense and almost unbroken for­ est. The whole region was sparsely settled by people of the frontier—rest­ less souks who had no sooner had hewn fairly comfortable homes out of the wilderness and attained to that de­ gree of prosperity which today we should call indigence than, impelled by some mysterious impulse of their nature, they abandoned all and pushed further westward to encounter new perils and privations in the effort to re­ gain comforts which they had volun­ tarily renounced. Many of them had already forsaken that region for the re­ moter settlements, but among those re­ maining was one who had lieen of those first arriving. He lived alone in a house of logs, surrounded on all sides by the great forests of whose gloom and silence he seemed a part, for no one had ever known him to smile nor speak a needless word. His simple wants were supplied by the sale or barter of skins of wild animals in the river town; for not a thing did he grow upon the land which he might if needful have claim­ ed by right of undisturbed possession; There were evidences of “improvement” —a few acres of ground immediately about the house had once lieen cleared of its trees, the decayed stumps of which were Half concealed by the new growth that had been suffered to repair the ravages wrought by the axe at some distant day. Apparently the man’s zeal for agriculture had burned with a falling flame, expiring in |>enitential ashes. The little log house witli its chimney of sticks, its roof of warping clapboards weighted with traversing poles anil its chincking of clay had a single door and, directly opposite, a window. The latter1 however, was Ixiarded up—no­ body could remember the time when it was not. And none knew why it was so closed; certainly not lieeau.se of the occupant’s dislike of light and air, for on those rare occasions when a hunter had passed that lonely spot, the recluse had commonly been seen sunning him­ self on his doorstep, if Heaven had pro­ vided sunshine for his need. 1 fancy there are few persons living today who ever knew the secret of that window, but I am one, as in due time you shall see. The man’s name was said to be Mur- lock. He was apparently seventy years old, actually about fifty. Something besides years had had a hand is his aging. His hair and long full lieard were white, his gray histories.- eyes sunken, his face singularly seamed with wrinkles, which appeared to be­ long to two intersecting systems. In figure he was tall and spare, with a stoop of the shoulders—a burder-liearcr. I never saw him: these particulars I learned from my father, from whom also I got the story when I was a lad. He had known him when living near by in that early day. One day Mr. Murlock was found in his cabin, dead. It was not a time and place for corners and newspapers, and I suppose tHat it was agreed that he had died front natural causes or I should have been told, and should remember. I only know that with what was prob­ ably a sense of the fitness of things the body was buried near the cabin along­ side the grave of his wife, who had pre­ ceded him by so many years that local tradition had retained hardly a hint of her existence. That closes the final chapter of this true story—excepting, indeed, the circumstance that many years afterward, in company with an equally intrepid spirit, I penetrated to the place and ventured near enough to the ruined cabin to throw a stone against It, and ran away to avoid tlie ghost which every well-informed boy thereabout knew haunted the spot. As this record grows naturally out of my personal relation to what it records, that circumstances, as a part of the re­ lation, has a certain relevency. But there is an earlier chapter—that sup­ plied by my father. When Mr. Murlock built his cabin and began laying sturdily about him with his axe to hew out a farm—the rifle meanwhile his means of support —he was young, strong and full of hope. In that Eastern country whence he came he had married, ns was the the fashion, in juvento mundi, a young woman in all ways worthy of his hon­ est devotion, who shared the dangers and privations of his lot with a willing spirit and light heart. There is no known record of her name; of iter charms of mind and person tradition is silent and the doubter is at liberty to entertain his doubt; but God forbid that I should share it. Of their affec­ tion and happiness there it assurance abundant in every added day of the man's widowed life; for ivhat but the magnetism of a blessed t memory could have chained that venturesome spirit to a lot like that? One day Murlock returned front gun­ ning in a distant part of the forest to find his wife prostrate with fever and delirious. There was no physician within miles, no neighltors; nor was she in a condition to be left to summon help. So he set about the task of nurs­ ing her back to health; but at the end of the third day she passed into a com­ atose state and so died, with never a gleam of returning reason. From what we know of a nature like his we may venture to sketch in some of the details of tlie outline picture drawn by my father. When convinc­ ed that she was dead lie had sense enough to remember that the dead must lie prepaed for burial. In per- THE RESULT OF FICTION. Domestic Vnhappiffiess CauMd by Too 1’romhcuoiH Novel-lirading. some simple and ordinary act filleel The novel of today compared with its hint with astonishment, like that of a predecessor of ever a decade shows what drunken man who wonders at the sus­ great changes have taken place in pension of familiar natural laws. He thought aad practiw, says Helen Jay was surprised, too, that he did not in Harper's Bazar. Greater changes weep—surprised and a little ashamed; still are indicated, the tendency of surely it is unkind not to weep for the which is to develop in woman hitherto dead. “Tomorrow,” he said aloud, “I unknown or unused ¡»ower of mind,but shall have to make the coffin and dig judging from representative fiction, the grave; and then I shall miss her, these new endowments do not increase when she is no longer in sight, but her happiness. The modern heroine now------- She is dead, of course, but may be compared to Joan of Arc. She it is all right—it must be all right, sees visons and dreams and listens to somehow. Things cannot be as bad as strange and sometimes heavenly voices they seem.” and is more successful as leader, saint He stood over the body in the fading and martyr than in the common place light, adjusting the hair and putting avocation of a wife. the finishing touches on the simple As we read, we ask two questions: toilet; doing all meehanieall with soul­ First, does the novel of today fairly rep­ less care. And still through his con­ resent the great nunilier of loyal, happy sciousness ran an unter sense of con­ wives, who “thank lieaven, fasting for viction that all was right—that he a good man's love,” and are not afraid should have her again as before and of wasted affection, realizing that no everything explained. He liad had no one ean attain to anything greater than experience in grief; bis capacity had love? We wonder, too, how much lit­ not been enlarged by use. His heart erature of a certain class is responsible could not contain it all, nor liis imagin­ for the very evils it now, in some in­ ation rightly conceive IL He did not stances, lashes so vigorously? Charles know he was so hard hit; that knowl­ Lamb says that “the next thing to edge would come later, and never so. making a child an infidel is letting Grief is an artist of ¡towers as various him know that there are infidels at as the characters of the instruments all." upon which he plays his dirges for the Is not much domestic unlia|>piness dead, evoking from some the sharpest, the result of suggestion on the part of shillest notes, from others the low, some writers of fiction? The passionate grave chords that throb recurrent like love story; the deification of sudden ro­ the slow beating of a distant drum. mantic attachment« the advocating of Some natures it startles; some it stupe­ unequal, improvident marriages; the fies. To one it comes like the stroke of bringing forward of the hysterical, self­ arrow, stinging all the sensibilities to a ish woman as an attractive type of keener life; to another as the blow of a character; and the insidious Justifica­ bludgeon, which in crushing lienuinlis. tion of the wrong-dixT, be it husband We may conceive Murlock to have or wife—may not these have formed been that way affected, for (and here part of the first cause, the effect of we are ujion surer ground than that of which is the danger which threatens conjecture) no sooner had he finished the home? his pious work than, sinking into a Jules Simon in the Revue de EamiUr chair by the side of the table on which makes a strong ap|xxil to dramatists the body lay, and noting how white anil novelists to assist in promoting the profile showed in the dee|>ening sound and sensible ideas regarding the gloom, then laying bis arms ujxm the I relations of the sexes. He would have table's edge, he dropped his face into them turn from the psychology of the them, tearless yet and unutterably passions to the study of moral obliga­ weary. At that moment eatne in tion through the open window a long wail. An appeal might also be made to Ing sound like the cry of a lost child in women, the readers of the world, to the far deeps of the darken wood! But suffer no book to cross the threshold of the man did not move. Again, and the home which is not clean and w hole- nearer than before, sounded that un­ some in its teaching. earthly cry upon his failing hciims ! THE CZAR'S FUNNY ESCAPE. Perhaps it was a wild beast. Perhaps it was a dream. For Muriis k was asleep. Clever o! Hi« Masquerade Dre«« Sayan Some hours later, as it afterward a;>- the Fmperor’« I-lffr. peared, this unfaithful watcher awoke mid raising his head from his arms in­ Nicholas 1. was very fond of mas­ tently listened—he knew not why. There in the black darkness by the querade balls, and one night ap|x-iired side of his dead, recalling all without at one in tlie character of the devil, a shock, he strained his eyes to see—lie with grinning face, horns and tail, and knew not what. His senses were all appeared to enjoy tlie ciniracter very alert; his breath was suspended; his much. Alxiut 3 o’clock in tlie morning lie bloixl had stilled its tides as if to assist tlie silence. Who—what had waked went out, and throwing over liitu some furs, called a coachman and ordered him, and where was it? Suddenly the table shook liencath him to take him to tlie Quid his arms, and at the same moment he Anglais. As it was very cold, he heard, or fanei«l that he heard, a light, fell asleep, and when lie awoke he soft step—another—sounds as of bare found the man had taken him in the wrong direction, for the Quai Anglais feet upon tlie floor! He was terrified lieyond tlie power to is one of the most elegant portions of cry out or move. Perforee be waited— St. I’etei-sliurg, while before him were waited there in the darkness tlirough only some miserable houses. Nicholas begau to remonstrate, lint centuries of such drend as one niny know yet live to tell. He tried vainly the coachman paid no heed to him, and to speak tlie dead woman’s name, vain- presently, passing through a stone gate­ ty to strctcli forth his hand across tlie way, brought him into a cemetery, and table to learn if she were there. His taking a large knife from Ills girdle, throat was powerless, his arms and said: “Give me your money and your furs hands were like lead. Then occurred something most fright­ or I will kill you.”, “And do you give tn«1 your soul!” ex­ ful. Some heavy body seemed hurled against the table with an impetus tliat claim«! Nicholas as he threw off the pusli«l it against bis breast so sharp!}’ fill’s and disclosed Ills personification as nearly to overthrow him, and at tlie of the devil. The Russians are very superstitious, same instant he heard and felt tlie fall of something upon the floor witli so and the «xiehnian was so terrified lie violent a thump that the whole bouse fell senseless on tlie ground, and the was shaken by the impact. Then en­ Fmperor drove biinself back to his sued a scuflling and confusion of sounds palace. impossible to describe. Murlock has Where Three Rnre« are ICurle<|. risen to his feet and terror by excess had forfeited control of his faculties. He flung his hands upon the table. 'Dig strange phenomenon of one sjsit Nothing was t here ! having served as the burial place for There is a point in which terror may people of three distinct races of the turn to madness—anil madness incites world’s history is met witli on a bluff to action. Witli no definite intent— of tlie Iowa river, some forty miles from from no motive but the wayward im­ its mouth. The tlirice-aaci-«! bluff is pulse of a madman—Murlock sprang known as “Graveyard poinL” to the wall and with a little groping It is stunted in the northeastern cor­ seized his loaded rifle anil without aim ner of Washington county, Iowa and discharged it. By the flash which lit is the southern terminus of a line of up the room with a vivid illumination bluffs extending for several miles along he saw an enormous panther dragging the west bank of tin' Iowa, the sum­ the dead woman toward the window, mits of which are covered witli thous­ its teetli fixed in her throat! Then ands of curious forms of earthworks, there was a darkness blacker than be­ mounds, etc.—relics of a race of whicli fore, and silence; and when he return«! the Indians have no distinct knowl­ to consciousness the sun was high the edge. After serving for ages as a cemetery woods vocal with the songs of birds. The Ixxly lay near the window,where for the mound-builders tlie Indians the beast had left it when frightened took possessien of “Graveyard point,” away by the flash and report of the also using it as a burying pin«1. Back rifle. The clothing was deranged, the in the forties, when white men drove long hair in disorder; the limbs lay the Indians out, they, too, began to anyhow. From the throat, dreadfully bury their dead on the bluff, the same lacerated, had issued a jxxil of blood land thus serving as “God's Acre” for not yet entirely coagulated. The rib­ three different and distinct races in bon with which he had Ixiund the three different stages of the world’» de­ wrists was broken; the hands were velopment.— St. lMuh Republic. tightly clenched. Between the teeth was a fragment of the animal's ear.— Lansdowne w ishes to resign tlie vict- Amftrose Bierce in S. F. Examiner' roysliip of India Perhaps the mar­ Premier Rudini may dissemble his quis finds be can’t live on the pay, love, but he must not kick Minister I which amounts to a bare trifle over Porter down-stairs. 1 $500,000 year.