The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, September 18, 1879, Image 2

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THE BED CLOUD CHEF
e-v-
X. I. TIKI J! AS. rnblUher.
RED'CLOUD,
- NEBRASKA.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
IVi-oiinl nml Literary.
Alexandre He c, mi eminent
French hi.-torical ami portrait painter,
is dead, aged 7'1.
Anna Dickin-wi will make a -eeond
venture as an act re- next month, ap
pearing in San Franei-co, in a play of
her own writing.
Huston has a " Library Delivery Coin
pan ' which, for fie cent.- a volume.
will draw for its patron- book.- from the
Public Library and the Atlicmeum, and
return them to tho-e institution') at tin
proper time.
The Old Tc-tanicnt i- being printed
in Ancityuine-e, tin; language of the
iiio-t southerlv of the New Hcbride-
group, the cxpen-e having been met by
thenative..?. The Rriti-h and Foreign i
Hihle Society is doing the work.
It is Kiid that Charles Readc, the
novelist, keens two -ceretaric- at work
ii:iiltnr fiiiil fliiiiitixr iiinriliH-- noi-oti.
w
jug-, accident.-, robbcrie- and other King Alfon-o ha- been thrown from
uiieo' mournful tale-," which furui-h ' hi-carriage ami had hi-arm broken,
him with the hint or -ub-tance for hi- Prince P.i-inarck- medical advi-er-
storics ami play-. i haie :uii-cd him to pa the autumn in
Fcchter, the actor, was of co-mo- ' an Engli-h watering-place,
politan lineage one grandfather a (er- Veni Sa ulitch, according to a
man, the other an Italian, hi- mother ' Ru iau journal, i- in Ioiidoii :l i-ting
born in Flander-. his father in France, j pi editing a rexolutionarv paper,
jand hchiin-clfin Guidon. Hemadchi-' . The"cx'-Khcdiic. I-inail Pa-ha, i
three -ignal -ucce-es m three Ian- j ,,.,,,., t j,.m. i,,.,.,, , :,fr.,, ,,f poi-on
gmiges. , during the pa-1 few xear- that lie ate
The Pope ha- intrii-ted Cardinal ,,uy of fond prepared hi hi- own
llergcnrother with the reorgani.ation of mother, and conxcxed to him in a bo
the Papal archil e at the Vatican, -o a-, ,,f which -he and he alone kept key-.
to make them more acec-iblc for hi-! u ,.,,,!, ther in- to lie -oine
torieal re-earch. The Caidinal ha- al- , h ., ,Mli ; j. jM Jo
h been authorized to prepare inlere-t- ,ll(.in' j ,1(. Cei-nian univer-itie-.
ing document.- for publication. Tll(. :Mhoritic- at Leipzig haxc made a
It ha-been commonly .-aid that the1 formal prohibition of the-e encounter-,
cold water poem, "The Old Oaken nmLjiroi'dcd for fining innkeeper- who
Hucket," Hih iu-pired by a gla of permit them on their premi-e-.
bramlv. A writer in the lio-ton J braid 'l&L f , ,.: ,:... c , . n ..
.,. .1 . .1 r .i . . i ii - snHe of the victim-of the lilagow
atlirins the trutli of the .-tor, ami tell- ,, , ... . . , ,. i,,
, n . i , Rank -uindle pine ami die. ami the
it a- a iier-oiial recollection. Samuel ' . ' . . ,, .
,., , ' , ,i ,i , paper--oeea-ionallv refer to tho-e who
A oodworth. tin author, wa-a printer. ' . , ,,
, , ,- ' ... . ',. hae "one to an uutimelv gnive. K.
and wa-einploved in an oiliei' in ( ham-i ,, u , ,
, ... ' v; .. , ,. , , ( alluell, of Imcruc , wa-a ear ago
bers Street, .New l ork-Om dav lie ., -...-.. ,. ... ... . i .7
, i , -if ii i l worth :!.iO.(m id. Hi-thirtv -hare-in the
dropped into Mallorv - barroom, in , , , . ., .,-,,.. .. r
r ' ,. .. , , ' , 4 1 i bank made mm pcmule. at 0 vear- of
J-rankhii street, to get .-ome bramh and ,,, ... , ' , ,,. , ... , , , . . .
.... ,. " n . i agi'. anil he w a-lately found h'al in ln-
water. I lie liquor ua- excellent, and . .
AVood worth remarked thatil'wa- .-niie-' " ..... . , .... ,.
nor loam thing he ever ta-tcd. Xo." " ,-,:"1 '"' 'l"- I'I";' Khedive
.-aid a comrade, "there wa- one thing want-to return to hgyjit and r le.and
that ou and I u-ed to think far -ur- I :' V f'r lM-rim-ioij ha- been made
ja.--ed this in the way of drinking." '"' 1,,'-1u'I'a,f, h.v tUi' SI'!,- I-"l"l
"AVhat was that?" a-ketl Wo..dworth. :n.d I-miice hae a word to -ay ahoiit
dubiou-lv. Fre-h -pring water that , ,l,:"- "" " an-wer to the demand will
we ii-cif to drink from the old oaken returned b the prc-enJ Khedive uii
bucket that Immr in the well, after our uUU Coxernm.'iit-have been heard
return fiom the hav field on a -ultrv
r-
day in -iiiiiiin-r." The rhythm of the
phra-c, "The old oaken bucket that
liung in the well,' -truck Wood worth
at once, ami the picture of the well lit
hi- bovhood home came to hi- mind. !
"Within a few hour- he had completed j
the poem.
Science ami linlii-trj.
An oatmeal compam ha- been in- 1
corporated at Mu--atine', Iowa, and a
null will -ooii be in operation. j
The Kngli-h Philological Society j
expect- to complete a new dictionary of i
tlie l-.ngli-li language iy lMii'.
The annual tobacco crop of
.j.j...
the
Tinted States i- about -I-JO.OIM 1,000 ;
joiiiids, two-thirds of which isexportcd. '
California -hipped to New York
la-t vear .Sl'l,lS" gjillons of wine and ,
l(;.tl( i-iIloii- of braiidx-. the iiroiluce of !
the vineyard-.
1 - ' f- - .'7 I
Mr. L. S. Crozier, formerly of Mar-.-eilles,
France, ami the xvcaltlrx cultiva
tor of mulberry trees and .-ilk xvorin- at
Silkville, Kan., jiropo-e-. it is -aid, to
introduce tin; indii-try in We-t Felw-i-aua,
La.
An iron floating dock i-being eon- j
-t meted at Dantzie. of xvhicli the total
AX'eight will be .rj,(HHJ,(XJ0 kilograinine-.
It will hold the large-t ve. els of the
(icrnian Xa, and i-to be completeil
111 til., fflllt'lft .if tn.vt 'i.ti
..-" -I. r.l. . ...... .. j
. One of llie l:irrit viillino-.uiill-I
about Paltiniore ha.-'n'suinod the inaiiu-
faclure of iron rail-. This mill ha- been
cui-cu i"i mice xear.-. u xxiu eiiiiuox
. , . . T
'"V"'TV ' , iiua-.a.ge
.rdes for both ui.u and .-eel rails.
Ix)oking-gla-scs are silvered, as it i-
called, by; the following procos: A-h.-et I
of nnfoil I-, place.1 very .-nioothly on a
table or -tone, ami the foil is then Hood-
cd with inercurx. The irkt-s is laid up-
1 . ..ivi. I .t.k T. t 1
T. 1 1
on it iii Mich a way a- to expel air bub
.. i ..:.. l.-.i. I
bles. and heav xveight- are laid on the
glass. The weight- pre. out the Miper
lluous inercurx. and what remain-forms
an amalgam with the tin. which ad
heres to the back of the gla-s.
Liechten-teiii i-. according to the
principles of international laxx, at war
with Pru ia: but the fact i- genemlly
oxcrlnokcd. po ibh beeau-e Liechten-.-tein
ha- only il,U0O inhabitants and no
army, although -he retains her parlia
ment and has a gox-erning Prince, dohn
11'. In the war of 18(it,, like many other
jietty (Jcrnian States, Leichten-tein -ided
witli Au-tria. At the end of the war.
LiOehten-tein alone wa- neither annexed
nor compelled to ign a treaty of jieace.
so that Prince .lohn II. is noininally the
eneinj of the Pnis-ian King, but he vi-it
Uerlin peaceably.
- The protective tariff that it is pro-;
posed to lew on American lard and ba
con imported into Germany i- cau-ing
much prote-tatiou there, 'f he-e articles
of con-umption hav' been .-old there at
considerably lower prices than the do-
mestie. articles, greatly to the rejoicing,
of the poorer cla-es. of whom many
linilit hard to lixc at all. Kven the
fanners are said to .-ell their pig- alive,
and to buy the. imported product. The
propo-cd duty xvill thus fall directly upon ,
ine poorer eia-ses. ami .-nice lard and
pork form a eoii-iderable part of their
diet, will be more opprc-sivo than a ?im-
ilar duty upon almo-t any other article
of food.
Sclioiil nml CItiit'tli.
.T !' oniie.--e.e University :it Knox-
. -
..,' V",lu ':i""t'i : t-uair
oi uiiiieuca aim gATunasiies. i
" - aiiueu ukh one-ronnn oi-uie
Congregational inun-iers ,,, A erinont I Mwzhl&iMncrictn History for All
ure without pa-toral charge. . a mogniph on AVashington-
I he Jewi-h toniplv in A'iek-burg. " The Traditional and Real AVashing
Miss., has been offered to the Jlanti-t.- ton " in which he ets aside the preten
of that city until they are able to reBYuld sions of Avhieh historians and others
their church, recently destroyed by lire. . have been guilty in claiming for the
- The Chicago Plymouth Congrega- 'filthily of Wellington a great local im
tional Church, of which the Rex-. Cnas. portance,- whether for wealth "r de
A. Everc-t i- pa-tor, hx- paid off its en-1 scent. Mr. Partou thinks AVa-hingtoifs
tilt debt of (10,000. real, fame i- only harmed by attempts to
The Baptist Min-ionary Union has'! make an aristocrat of him.
- appropriated $27o,000 tojimver ex)enscs j For two Jong hours he hardly held
for the year 187D-80. Fifteen mi-aion- lii- eyes off the ponderous machinery,
"aiiesand teachers are supported by the' but at last he was ready to go. Taking
Uniou. ' ! one last look, he walked up to the eng:
k The public schools of Halifax are ,u-'er auul saul : " Say, miter. this 'e're
said"t(i-be in an excellent and efficient ! iujunnms by steam, doesn't it?" "Why.
condition, and the system is croxvned bv t oi eourse," wa the ansxx-er. " AA ell, I
a well equipped and vigorous hi-h thought so more'n half an hour ago,"
-eliool continued the man, but it's iut as
Mr. Holloxvav is actively proceeding wen to oe sure a pout i ne-e inmgs. l nere
alxnit
cost, it is said, will be more than $2,-
oQQjOOO. ' '
The "Rev." Ann Oliver is said to
iv.v. r vv,.-i. .rf. . - ---
exceedimrlv smiceful
ThenaUonal teaching of dnnving
in Paris has now been delinitelv agreed
upon. 1 he city proposes to open lec-
"turejj oix. artr iiid -there'are to be. 152
.cfioaLrfof'bojT, 35 fojgirls, 44 classes
".fofadults, 4 schools for men and 4 for
women.
the erection ofTns proposed col- are so many wmn-muis noxvaciays mat
i nvirnon ; Vn'rl.iiul The. whole ' one can't be certain of nothing." Jlud-
be one of the most attractive pulpit ora- Cla-s in American history stand up.
tors in Brooklyn. She is about 28ycarg Rwtd! " AVen .Torj Uashmgrtm axiiz at
of are talLslmi. darkt not'imjttv, but ' A'ale Fori, hiz traps ur in ned ovfud.
m
A correspondent of the St. Paul
Piomcr-PrcfS has been vl-iting the Ro
man Catholic colonic of Minnesota, and
he reports theTiffiira flourishing condi--tion.
Thcrojpre 40. colonics in the
State, timolol being Rochc-ter, which
w:is e-tahjjhcd a dozen year ago.
- Ir.W. K. Fonder complain.- that
the Engli-h -chool- altovc elementary
,-ehooN, e-pcciallv for girls are in a wad
condition, ami adds that America hat in
many re-pcct- an advantage over Eng
lamf in point of education, nml par
tienlarly with regard to girl-" -chool-.
-Tlii faculty of the State I'liiicr-ity
of Michigan ha"- rc-olved that drinking,
gaining and frequenting hou-c.s of III
fame do not con-tiliitc portion- of a
lniver-ity eourse, and have notified .sev
eral -cholar- who la-t vear devoted
nnicli time to tho-e branchc that they
need not return to their alma mater.
Mrs. Thoma-, of Philadelphia, a
lady more than HJ enn- old, ha- built a
neat -tone church in Kane. Pa., at a co-l
of Si'O.tjOo, ami pre-cnted it to the Pre
liieii:tn congregation there. The old
lady each xenr. -ay- the Titu-ville (Pa.)
lb raid, -ifcnd- a part f her large in-
coine in building a church -oinewhere in
theeountrv.
" tirclKH oM'
irom.
The -tory goe-in Loudon, on what
claim-to be authority, that Mr-. Lang
try, one of the profe ioual bcautie-, derive-
much, if not nio-t. of her peixmal
epen-e- from a larire coinini ion from
the -ale of her photograph-. Some of
her admirer- and friend- ju-tifv tin-.
and her hu-band. who i-delighted at her
-ocial .-lu-ce.-s ami i- poor, doe.- not ob-
Jcc-t-
.,-,. f iMll!in.j. fntm :ln
.umv,.N i,,,,- JVu-ian Mini-ter ami
a- Chancellor of the empire, i only
i:t ,;,imi. The hiiHic-t -alary of a Pin--
' . . r-
-ian Cabinet Mini-ter i- S'.MMXi. Pen-
-ioii- are on the -aine moderate scale.
the pen-ion amounting to a- mam eight-
icth-of the -alar which wa- being re-
ceixed at the time of retirement a- there
Ie been x-ar- .-pent in the -crvicc- of
the State, leu year- are aililed to the
record of -erviee in all ca-e- xxhere mi
conduct ha- not called for cen-ure. Put
xvhere the .-alarx e'eed- ..',000, onl
the half of -uch ece-- i- taken into ac
count. - Next after white drc es riiigham
-nit- are the popular attire at the -uni-
n,,'.r '"'""'""l
I ho-e of "rrav-lilue hi
or plaid-, are ino-t -ecu.
""'!'(-. oai
md are u-uallx trininied with many nif
ties of the gingham, and wit li the coar-e-tigureil
I'ffective xxa-h lac-,s known as
Px.antine, Iu ian, etc. Many of the-e
- , , . , ...1 .,
nave i lie neiieii round wai-t inai na
been re-toreil to fax'or, and the long.
round oxer-kirt that continue- to be
i ......... ft.... .......... .... .....-
it'MII. -I.I-1PII tllll I l.l-'ll. Ilf Illtlltvi
.. i. ..
" ""
111111 llllll .III llll I IMIIII I 11. 1111
i: : i l 'ci...
. , (f . m1 ,,;llk .,,,,,. .,.
:ti,rVery -tvli-h. and are worn both bv
m,,,,.!,..;.,,,.! b,unett.-. Color run- riot
m .M. ,ire-e-. ami the more quaint
,l(. l.OIltl..,M the better oung ladie like
?, n. of ,lt. ,vtiit Miim i- of brown
..i-,i.l .rlmrl,-..,. wuu triiiniiitnr of inL
i : :- """ .' ". . : r . i
bati-te knife-jilaiting- edged xvitli nar-
roxx Mretou edging.
Oild- mill Km-.
The -ea-ide and mountain belt.- of
canvas are from two to four inches wide,
.bulging from the -niell of the aver
age church-goer, patchouli, inu-k, jockey
club, fraiigipanni. etc.. have takan the
place of burnt inceu-e of former times.
Stall urilh Ilcrahl.
' Marriage xx ith a tinge of romance"
i- xx hat they call it in Kansa- when the
old man rides after the couple and -hoot-the
hat off the bridegroom's head xxith a
bullet from an army carbine. Jhiroii
7-V o J'rcss.
Secretary Thonip-on, having learned
how to furl the bob-tavof a man-of-war,
i- going to make the Xavv something to
be proud of, which it ha-n"t been .-mer
thev tore down the tattered ensign of the
old Constitution. Gnipliic.
A lady who lays -onie claim to hav
ing -tudicd human nature in it.- ma-cii-
, line ilevelopmeiit, say- that the man who
i- of a sufficiently Jalcnlating mind to
:l-k his .-xveetheart before niainai! how
,anv vards it takes for a silk dres, xvill
snort terror into her soul after marriage
if he a-ks him for a .-ixpennv calico.
Aiulmr.S lhtzar.
La-t year 10,(.GR.O0O packages of
tomatoe- xx-ere put up in the United
State.-. Their value xvas 'l.G00.00t. Of
i thee Maryland furni-hed G,S40,000
packairc.-: Nexv Jer.-ev. "Jli,Ci00: Dela
xvarel .88 1.000: New York, 1,080,000:
Ma-sachu-ett-. DGO.OOO: Pennsxlxania.
i;(l.O0O: Pacific Uoarf. 1.2U0.00O: AVc-t-
ern and other State
l.:L0,000 pack-
M.r.i-
l-im..
Parton contributes to the
i ' P - -J register.
' "Chevaliers of the pivss! Doxxni
with the despotism of the Dictionary!"
klothiur and liker.
wuz x-ere
, vethur and fit ov them had shuz onthar
, fet. But .Torj Uashingtun's knrj nenir
laid, and at last Kougjess .-ent mm
supliz, and he chact the eneme ovnr to
Xu .Terze and wipfr him at the batel nv
Trentlm., That'll do, loys. Run out,
now and play. Philadelphia Bulletin.
It wuz x-ere kold
The New (irniu Tariff.
A complete exhibit of the new cn?tom- ,
regulation- which paHl th fJerman
Parliament by a majority of 1(0 ha
beeti publi-lied by the Sew Vorlrr Jbin-dfh-Zcituii'j.
Inn-much a.- thi- jint"c-tioni-t'
tariff nui-t. for the iuimeHnie
fnturo, at all event-, xeiy en-ibly affect i
the trade of other coiiutrict xxith (!er-
many, we -hall indicate the capital feature-
of the inca-iirc.
The fir-t jwiint i- the protection afford
ed to the cotton anl woolen manufacturer-
of Germany. The raxv cotton
fiber is admitted free, but cotton wad
ding i- -objected to a tax of :57 1-2 cent
per two humlii'd pound- weight, and
xarn, whether all cotton or mixed with
linen, -ilk. xxool. or other .-taple-, i- bur
dened with an impo-t niiiging fnim ..A
to jKITJiO for the .-aine xt eight. The
amount levied on heaxx cotton cloth-xarie.-fnm
.2." to ."iT.-Vi per hundred
kilogram-, and the dutx on light ginnl-.
like jaconet-, cambric, mu-liii, tulle, and
raue, i- -J0 for the -amc gro xveight.
Turning to xxim1. xxe ag:iin timl the nixv
material entering freo. but the pure yarn
-ubjeet to a dut of .?2 to ." pr hun
dred kilogram-, while xarn mixed xxith
hair (mohair, alpaca, etc.) bear- an im-po-t
ranging from 7."i cent-to jo. Cloth-,
xx het her all xxool or mixed xxith cotton
and linen, an the object- of a dutx cal
culated, it xxoiiM -ccm, in practice, to
prohibit the importation of Lngli-h and
French good-. On the-e pioduct- the
dutie-mug from -?G to 112 per kijo
gram, the higher figure- referring to
-liaxxl -tuffn of the fiiie-t qualitx.
Iiia-much a- tlax i- the object of quite
extended cultixation in (b'tmanv, the
foreign -taple in -objected to a ifuty of
2." cent- per 100 kilograms, jute ami
Manila hemp, on the contrary being
admitted free. The importation of -pun
and xx ox eu tlax encounter- a tax of 7."
cent- to ..". accoiding to qualitx and
-tage of preparation. Linen cloth, ac
coiding to linclie , pa from 'I.2" up
to .12, and in one ca.-e a- high :l- -21.
What i- knoxvu a- dama-k linen, em
ployed for tabb'-eloth- and toxveling. i
taxed 12 per hundred kilogram-.
Touching now the attempt to protect
the -ilk manufacture- of the empire, we
ob-erxe that xxlnle -ocooii-. nixv -ilk,
and -pun -ilk are admitted free, -tuff-,
on the other hand, whether all -ilk or
mixed xxith other material-, are -objected
to a duty of .l.i0 per UK) kilogram-,
or -ax 7." cent- a pound. All of
the regulation- thu- far named xvill be
enforced after .bih 1. LSI, with the ex
ception of that gox-erning 'he importa
tion of raxv cotton and xvool, xx Inch, a
xve haxc -aid, are free from duty.
It i- known that in the cour-c of the '
debate upon thi- inea-uie, it wa- found
expedient to applx the protcctixc prin
ciple to almo-t ex cr -pecie- of indii
try. Let u- -ee, mux. xvliat has been
done for the worker- in metal, includ
ing the manufacturer-of iron, copper,
lead, zinc, and tin. Raxv iron i-taxed at
the Custom-hoti-c only 2o cent- per 10o
kilogram-, but xxith each pmcc-- of.
iiiiproxc incut ami adaptation to
which the metal max haxc been -objected,
the dut.x rapidlx ri-e- to.1..10.
."2..10 and :.7."i, until, in the ca-e of line
ware-, it reache-.12foran equal weight
of material. Coper in it.- raw Mate i.
admittcd free, but hammered, or rolled
in bar-or plates, i- burdened with an
impo-t of .: the Uji) kilogram-. Cop
per xvarc- pax from .l..0to $7.00, cx
ccjit xvhere tin metal enters into com-po-ition,
as in the ca-c of bronze, britau
nia xvarc. etc., where it nui-t pay $12
for the same gro weight. Raxv'zilie.
tin and lead are admitted free, but when
rolled, each i- .-uhjected to an impo-t of
7o cents per 100 kilo-, or if in the -hape
of manufactured article-, to a, dutv xarv
iugfrom $l.."i0 to .C. It i- noteworthy
that potterx of the cheaper -ort- bears
only a uoniinal duty of -j: cents for 200
pounds xveight, while the liner xarieties,
including tho-e porcelain- xvhicli might
compete xxith the products of Saxon and
Pru ian factorie.-, pay from $2.."i0 to .(.
Leather and leather gooil- pay from
1.."0 to $12.;"0, ami in the ca-e of the
liner article-, a- much as $17.;"0 and
even $!'." for 2(H) pounds xveighu Paper
for printing or writing purpo-cs i- -ubjeet
to a dun of .2.." per I no kilo.-,
xx Idle on jiapicr uiache good- from .:5to
$ii are levied. We -hould add that the
impo-t laid on gla ami gla xvarc
ranges from 7." c.uit- to. $7.00, according
to quality of material and amount of 1;
bor applied.
We may noxv glance at the degree of
protection afforded to agricultural inter-e-ts.
All grain- imported are -ubjeet to
a dutx of 2 cent.- per 100 kilo-, except
barley maize and bnckxvheat. xvhicli pav
one-half that amount. The tax levied
on malt i- :i0 cent- for the .-aine xx-eight.
It was originally intended that the'du-tie.-
on the-e Maples .-hould be enforced
on ami after Oct. 1, 1S7'., but toxvardthe
clo-e of the late se ion the date xx-as
.o-t poncd to.dan. I. 1SS0. As regard -the
cattle tntde. imported oxen pav $." a
head: -teer.- and coxvs, $i..i0: vomig
heifer-. $1, and calve- o0 cent.-. lfor-e.-
mule- and a-e- nui-t -ubmit to an ini
poM of $2..")0 per head, ami -wine to (i2
1-2 cent.-. Of agricultural products,
hops pay .$. per i00 kilo-: eggs. 7;-,
cent-: honex the -aine duty: biitteraml
ehee.-e each $.".; fre-h or pre.-erved
meat.-. $."!: con-erve.- ami xvcetineatsof
all kind-, including chocolate, $l.per
Iinj kilo. Tropical fruit-, if fre-h. arc
compelled to pay $:J, and if dried, from
$l to $7.o0 : oil for edible purpo-cs. if
in Ua.-k-, bears a duty of $.". and if in
cask-, of $2 per 100 kilos. Petroleum
and other illuminating oil--, both in their
raw and refined state, are taxed $1.."0
per 100 oumIs.
Let us turn now to the effect of the
nexv tariff on tho-e articles of cou-ump-tion
xvhicli. in nio-t countries, defray a
large portion of the revenue, viz.. afeo
holic beverages, tea, coffee, ami tobac
co. Beer of all kinds pays $1 per 100
kilos. Spirit.- of every .-ort, including
lyignac, arrack, and rum. whether in
glass or wood, are Mibject to a duty of
$12. AVine and cider, and all other ar
tificial drinks, if in casks bear an impost
of $0, and if in lla-ks. of $12 per 100
kilo-. The duty levied on coffee i.- $10
for the .-ame unit of quantity, and on
cocoa in the bean, $8.7;"): xvhile tea pays
the heavy impo-t of $2". Finally to
bacco in the leaf i- taxed $21.2o per 2oo
pounds xx-eight. If manufactured in ci
gars and cigarettes it liuist pay $G7.."0.
and in the form of chewing or -inoking
tobacco or -nuff, $4o. " J
Such, as regard its main features, is a
summary of the me:u-ure xvhicli repre
sents a complete revolution in the eco
nomical policy of the German empire.
The final passage of the law was hailed
by Bismarck and his following in a kind
of patriotic p:van. :is the certain pana
cea for all their country's ills. On the
other hand, two steadfast and earnest
men rose up to protest against a system
which they believed would lead the em-
pire on to rain by greatly augmenting
the evils which it sought to" remedy. Dr.
Lasker looked upon the tariff as the be- '
ginning, not of peace, but of strife, and
Dr. Delbruck, in an impressive speech, '
undertook to demonstrate that it would
grievously injure export industries, and ,
oppressively raise the price of the com-
monest necessaries of life. Xeic York
Sun. "
m m
On the great Dalrymple farms in
Minnesota, comprising a total of 20,000 '
acres of grain, 115 self-binding reapers J
cut 1.500 acres a day. In threshing 20 j
steam threshers are employed. The yield ,
this vear xvill be somewhere letwecn 20 i
and 'Jo bustiels per acre. l-uteen cars
of grain will be slupped per day- when
the reason commences.
The cod-fishing .business of San
Fmucisco employs 13 vessels and 250
men. There has been little elnaige in
the lat 10 -ears.
FASHI05 50TES.
Dotted nmlin drw arc all the
rage.
Short dree- xxUl le V- ri'picur in
the fall.
trijcd brocaded -ilk will by xxoni
next -4a-on.
The annure tiguru- in nexv -ilks are
set in row.-.
Punier jKIonni-c- xx ill lwmtich xxoni
in the early fall.
White satin i- to ! revived for
bride-' wear in the fall.
Silk net gloxe. and mitt-are mora
worn than any other kind.
Almond-colored French bunting is
almo-t a- opulnra- xxhite.
Arniiirc and xelxet-figurcd -ilk- are
among the late-l iuiHirtatiou-.
licit.- are a- jxiptilar a- ever for
inonting, aftenioon. and evening toilet-.
Bodice- xxith long, narroxv -tomach-er.-
an to taki the place of ba-que-.
Plu-h and xelxct tigurs on -ilk Mir-facc-
bitl fair to lMxery fa-hiouabe.
All ball drc e- are loxv in the neck,
back, and fnmt, but high on the -boulders.
Coiffures made up entirely of puff-,
short curl-, and frizettc- are coining in
xogue.
The ino-t fa-hionable corsage- are
deeply pointed back and front, xxith pan-ier.-
attached.
The nn-t elegant pant-ols of the
sea-on are of xxhite -ilk, xxith xxhite Iaeo
Oil the edge-.
The Kngli-h jockey cap i-taking the
place of the .-toxepipe riding hat for lady
cqne-triau-.
Dark blue tlaniiel -uit- are the fa
vorite young ladie-' dre-.-e.- for the beach
and the mountain-.
One of the prcttie-t hat- intended
for early fall xxear i- a xxhite -traw
Gaine-boro, lined xxith red .-atiu and
trimmed xxith the same, and xxith red
poppic-. The bow on top and the-tring-are
held by silxer buckle- -et xxith Rhine
crx-lal-.
For a -lender, tall xx'omau the prcttie-t
kind of a -hort eo-tiiuie ha- the
skirt coinpo-ed entiiely of horioutal
puff-, xxith one deep tlouiice at the !ot
toin. oxer which i- xxoni a panier polo-nai-e
of a diffeient material. The xvai-t-coat
i- formed of pulling- to cone-pond
xxith the -kill.
White drc e-are the faxorite toilette-
thi- -ea-oii at the watering places.
For the morning and afternoon are -hort
co-tuine- of the sheere-l French nan-.-ook,
or el-e India mu-lin,aud there are
al-o nian pique die e- xxith the skirt
neai Ix coxi'ied xvith einbroiderctl rutlle.-.
The mu-liii die c- are accompanied by
large fichu mantle- of the material
trimmed xxith plaiting-of Rreton lace,
ami xx hen the pictuicsquc Dexon-hire
hat i- added, the effect i- xerx charming.
It i- the fancy at pre-ent to u-e xxhite
ribbiii-, belt and ,-a-h xxith thin xxhite
die e-. ami the Leghorn hat i- trimmed
xvith xxhite satin or el-e black xelxct.
The cor-age bouquet i- a huge clu-tcr
of xxhite ro-ebud- not bloxxu, or el-e of
dai-ie-, ami there i- real I not a touch
of color in the whole toilette.
The nexv silk.- to be worn during
the early autumn ami xxintcr are bro
caded -tiipc-of txxo or three contra-t-i.g
color-, and al-o :.mall arinure lig-uie--ct
in picci-e roxx-. Main of the
arinure -ilk- are partly xelxct, xxhile
other- aie plu-h, the figure, being long
rai-cd pile on a -ilk or -atiu ground oi
the same color. This is e-peciallv hand
some in black, prune, gray ami quaint
blue .-hade.-. The striped -ilk.- haxv
arabe-quc figure- in graceful curxe,- of a
dark color on a lighter ground, a- gen
darme blue on old gidd. prime on pale
ro-e or pink, cardinal or cream-color.
The -tripe- are about an inch wide, ami
are -cparatcd bx the niere-t pencil-line
of txxilled -atiu. The-e figured -ilk- are
to -erve a- at pre-ent for part- of co
tunic- that haxc plain -ilk or -atiu for
their foundation. The arabe-quc- or
arnnire xelxct- xvill form the -carf
panier xvhicli i- to drape the hip- of
na-que- ami polouai-e-, and it may
form the entire front breadth of the
skirt, or serve a- txvo lapped panel
down each side, or el-e it max be cut in
from three to six bia- piece- that extend
the entire length of the front of the
skirt. A double box-plait of -ilk xvill be
arranged between the bias Icngthxxi-e
bands.
To brighten up black .-ilk suits for
young ladies a great deal of color has
been u-ed during the -iiinmer, and xvill
re-anpear in xxintcr die .-e-. The gay
est design i- the Scotch plaid trimmings
of velvet in regular clan tartan patterns,
that form paniers, border-, e-t.-. a xvide
belt, cuff-, and collar. The gay Stuart
and Rob Roy plaid- that haxc a great
deal of red ami yclloxv are liked by bru
nettes, xvhile the blue and green mixed
plaids are u-ed by blonds. Drc. es
made for le youthful ladies have the
trimmings of .-oft txxilled silks, brocaded
in Per-ian pattern- of many rich colors
and of nio-t intricate de-igns. A- the-e
silks aie soft, they make graceful
full draperic-, such as -birred
ve-ts, or surplice scarfs, or the nexv
shirred guiinpes that are fn-ertcd like
pla-tron- in square.- or in point.-. The
only o-er.-kirt then con-i-t- of a short
wrinkled apron of the g-.ix -ilk, that is in
full paniers on the -ides, ami i- tied be
hind in a puffed boxv. or else a flat -ash
xvith long end-. If thi- leaves, a long
plain front of the loxver skirt uncovered,
it i- no matter, as all that is required by
stx 1 is a -iniple border flounce, or el-e
a clu-tcr of narroxv frill- ma cd at the
bottom. Kmhroidc red .-atiu trimmings
are perhap- the ino.-t elaborate of all the
garniture for dark silk. They co-t from
$15 to $20 the set of vest and borders,
and are of dark ground xvith a great
deal of red. old gold, and pale blue in
the embroidery.
t
A Remarkable Escape.
One day recently, as Frank Carr of
AVest Hopkinton xvas engaged in saxx--ing
lumber in his mill at that place, he
had occasion to lift a trap in the floor,
ju-t over the flume xvhicli the water
flowed into, and through a spout six feet
long on to an iron wheel, revolving hori
zontally, and xvhicli furni-hed jMjxver to
move the machinery. The water was
about six feet deep in the flume, and the
wheel xx-as enca-ed in a close, circular
box. within which it revolved with great
velocity. Mr. Carr's attention being
called axx-ay, he neglected to close the
trap. I listxx-o little girls, tbeone six
ami the other t hree years old,V.irere play
ing in another part of the mill, but soon
tripped along to the near neighborhood
of the open trap, xvhicli they did not see,
and the youngest accidentally fell into
the flume and xvas carried through the
spout into the revolving wheel. At the
instant the little girl disappeared her
sister exclaimed, "Papa, sissy is killed!"
Mr. Carr looked and took in the situa
tion at the first glance. He sprang and
closed the gate xvhicli shut the upper
water from the finme, then rushed be
loxv and, as soon as he could, removed
the cox-ering to the wheel-box.- It toolc
but a few moments to do that, but in the
meantime the wheel bad revolved one or
txvo hundred times, and all the water
had passed out of the flume. Strange as
it may seem, he found the missing girl
closely packed in the wheel-box, and
uninjured, without a scratch or bruise.
It could not have been less than 10 min
utes that the little girl was in the flume,
spout and -wheel, and her escape from
death seemed almost miraculous. Con
cord Cor. Boston Journal.
Rosa, Bonheur always dresses in a
semi-mascnline co-tume when at her
studio xx-ork. Mile. Bernhardt, howev
er, goes to the extreme, and dons troos
ers when she works with the chisel. '
A TRUE fiirST STORY.
rinding a Lone t.ot CMM Th rllo of
ClmnntlJl r.lMruro.
I From tlw Nw vtV HrraM.
Wii.k-uki:i:. Pa, Mtt:. 1 The
"vpial to ihe nix teriMt d-apwxxrstHv
of a child in thi- city i now l-nnc dc
xc1ojkh, ami the fnrt-. a- they rme to
light, Iran-end in om- particular- iU
-tory of the k- of Charley Rn- It i
another Uht-t ration of the fact that,
while circumstantial exidcitc may In
ox erw helming, innocence luax jet pre
vail. During the term of Major Kenr
nex of WHke-barrv (noxv deceiwd).
-evcrnl yar- ago, n loxelx child, 3 eur
of age. -iraitgeK d-npMored from it-parent-'
home on Rrcxxen. Hill The
mother xx a- di-lnirtcd nml eemel to
-upjiort an acctt-ntioii of the ncighlor
thnt the father, Morgan Tloma. hd
iiiiinlen-1 it in onler to rnl hiiH.lf of
the re-jon-ibi!ity of it- mninteuatMi.
Ml-I.K.XIUNO rilJCt M-TAX-
Mayor Kxnirnex at once --t hmMf
al-tiit ferreting out the matter. Htt ht-fon-e
of detectixe- iijhhi the -ii-Hi'tl
parent- track, ami prix-ntelx ifonu-l
hi- iuumsliate friend- that he xx.x- ctn
xineiil of the guilt of the father, nod
' xxould -oon hang him for a cruel mur
der. He lM-liexed that he had in hi
jm 4 ion -utlicietit exidence to more
than -ub-tantiate the -torx told bx the
iieighlnir- and bx hiiiwlf. that the parent
had murdered hi- child and -m--e (ullv
di-oi-d of the i-orp-.- The father at
fir-t iudignaiitlx repelled the charge
Hi- ctiaracter until thi- time had lit-n
uiitami-hcd. When he di-ecrcl.
hoxxexer. that the xxife of hi- 1h-oui ap
peared to entertain a like -n-picion. he
gaexxa to apparent reinor-e Ixirder
ing on in-anity In the meantime tin
Mayor xx a- actixe. and xxa- formulating
a theory, -u-taiued b an almo-t in
vincible train of exidence tending to
-hoxv the guilt of the rotralc parent.
The .Mayor xxa- truly -inceie in hi- con
xictions. but ere he had completed hi
iuc -ligation- he xxa- -uddeiilx -truck
down by death.
Kor.Mi in .v m:h;iiuoi:im; ooiatv.
Year- haxe pa-'ed by and theeirciiin--tance
ha- long -ince i-ea--d to be a t heme
of xvoiideruient. A few xxeek- -ince a
, peddler, an old acquaintance of the fam
ily to xx Inch the mi ing infant belong,
cd. chanced to be t rax cling in the xicin
ity of Tunkhannock. in the adjoining
county ami di-coxeied the ong-Jo-t
child. He at once coiixeVcd the intelli
gence to the parent- in Wilke-barre and
they repaired to the place named and
fully identified it. but the people haxing
it in charge rcfu-ed to gixe it up. The
I parent- returned to Wilke-barre, and.
, procurring a xxarrant from Alderman
' Donohiie, are mux in que-t of their child.
! Effort- xx ill be made to piiui-h the ab-
! ductor-.
Cuinii-Mcctliur-, Old uml w.
Thi- i- the eanip-iiiecting-ea-on. Itut
the modern camp-iueetiug i-n't at all
like tin ohl-fa-hioned camp-iueeting of
JiOxear- ago. That xxa- a real camp
ground. The pre-cut -tle gixe- no
camp; it- a toxvu or xillage of -iiuimer
cottages. Then, xxe brought our tent-,
teams, xxive-. familie-: -lept on the
ground, cooked out of door-, fixed in
clean -traxv ami hung the tea-kettle on a
green ero- tick to boil. Noxx.xxelixe
in a regular "hard tini-h " dxxclling.
xvith a piano in the parlor, a range in
the kitchen, ami -oiiietime- a mortgage
oxer the x hole hou-e and lot. Thiee
cla e- of people attended the old eamp
iiieeting the ferxent and dexout, the
xxorldlx and carcle xxho came out of
cuiio-ity ami out-ide of all thc-e ami to
pre on all the gambler-. hor-e-jockc -and
-calaxxag- generally The old
camp-meeting wa- noi-y ferxeiit.cuthu--ia-tic.
The pre-ent i- quiet, lelincd.
cultixated. The old one had more xim
and lu-tine . the pre-ent more elegance.
There ha- been a -imilar change in the
preaching. I a-ked a mini-ter the other
day if it xva- not -o.
Certainly" -aid he. Do thex have
the 'power" noxv? No. Then xvhole
roxx- of people xxould be pro-tratcd xvith
it."
"To xx hat do yu attribute the
change?"
Lack of po-itixe belief in Go-pel
truth-. The preaching then xxa- po
itive ami per-onal. It a cited God a
a living poxver in our ntid-t. It dealt
xvith heaven and hell a- material real-itie-.
It took the -inner and -ii-pcmlci,
him oxer the bottomle-- pit until he
cried for mcrc ."
"And noxx ?"
" Noxv half our mini-ter- are on the
fence. They don't preach. They argue.
Analyze much of their preaching coel
ami xou find thex are really airing their
oxvn doubt.- about their oxvn creed. The
old time rcxivali-t had no doubt- a- to
tin nature of hell. He couldn't tell
where it x-a-. He nex-er bothered hiin--elf
to -peculate xvhere it xxa-. ISut he
could tell you what it xva-. It xxa-a fieri
pit full of flame, -iilphur. deiil- ami
eternal mi-cry. Million-on million- xxere
hopele ly booked for it and millioti
uiore xx-ere likely to be."
" Doe-thi-change of belief emanate
from the people or the mini-ter-?"
"Perhap- both. Theinini-ter i-- a part
of the people and is influenced by the
viexxs of the people. The old-fa-hioned
belief in a per-onal God. a vieioii-. per--onal
devil ami a flaming hell, and xi
carious atonement is noxv, more or le ,
sandwiched, modified and weakened by
mental -olutions. -o to -peak, of D.ir-xxiiii-in.
Materiali-in, Spirituali-m, I'ni-vcr-ali-in.
Tni-t-to-thc-goodiie f-a-niereiful-Providencei-'iii.
and a general
"Then the actual faith of the Prote-t-ant
Church of to-day is not that of. -ay.
..( years ago?"
" Xo. It i- not. The peopleknoxvor
think they know too much to hold to the
uncompromi-ing faith of old. The av
erage religion of 187! i- a general twi-t.
squirm and wriggle in the endeavor to
make modern idea- fit the frame- of old
belief. Our religion, so to -peak, i- al
xvays turning and dying its old dre in
iiiiAleni color, and can't -ce that the
out-and-out outsider, unbeliever and
-keptic. who-e vi-ion in thi- rv-jwet i
clean'r than our-, .-ee- the incon-i-teiicy
of the whole thing: and -ee-, tK, that
the modern de-igns in the texture are
-o thin that the old ones -how through
them."
"Then the preaching of to-da ha
not the jHjix-cr of th? old style?"'
" X'o. Preacher- with half Kdief-.
halting ljclief-'. compromi-ing ami tem
porizing beliefs, ami -emi-religious and
philo-opical belief- are .-honi of their
poxx-er to move the ma. es. It".- the
difference betwixt a man shouting
'Fire! at night xxith all his might and
main, and one hesitatingly .-aying 'May
be there's a tire somewhere. "
"ButMoodvand Saukey have great
success as revivali-t-."
" Apparently. Lift the real converts
out of six months standing after their
wave of excitement has pas-ed and you
2nd a small residuum. Moody believes
thoroughly in hi oxvn preaching. That
is one reason of his success- But even
his method is tinctured with the tempo
rizing spirit of the times. He deals
largely with the love and sympathy of
the atonement. He threaten- little.
Even hi are not old-fashioned revival-.
The wrestling, groaning and misery of
sinners under conviction, the power'
and all the wild and stormy scene- of a
revival of fifty years ago'are lacking.
Moody's is as much a show and concert
as a revival. But the conversion scenes,
are comparatively quiet and orderly.
AVith such audiences under the preach
ing of a AVhitfield or a Peter Cartwright
it would have required a dozen n-hers
to cany out the entranced.' Xcur York
Graphic.
i
.SPIKITIM1.ISTIC PH IRJlAfY.
wu rri
.1 MchlrM IjIj DflUm
tK Tain f Hrr ll4
In XJ1 (unirUliil..
1'n-w tk lAKitfvX Ki'Mfc"
Mr- Prcurf C'4.1x-ater xWinI lJ" - ..
jwriiMfll IJK-rl Camttif -m Kri- jc xlrattUr ErrUf l"Hll.
ly -b x htkZ Helw. 3i4
awkeH5 mtirk cufi4x Uy tW to , m. I.orttun nTitr Kt Wj; 44.
trange mantvr in w HH bir ril e"l iJk rU tathw. ( pW -
il t 1 ptT!Mvi I!Artc Wnm- I to. m hM h thc !
l the eondMW.H f t-r tit. ti- w I a ijUUtal t thc tetvrit
dhim b4l h Ihmt hdiwl. fwlm aMl. i i,,, ajkI dnHrlt" K tt lntil
atnl in n nttHl .t iva(ttx of M-ltrte Mj j,, m,t)., u UmIIi Tb. jpr--
Um1 ..J Mtf VW1 Mitt rArrt tm Um. ; j.,. tW rnt4ki tl vtimr !m
MlItH j,m vmU Hl TSN-r4l 1h C"
IK OMir.' tfc.re U a S,' 4d i j., Jj thetiltHHtlli baxr t Ul
keli-i-ui. nrM sHH S4rtetal r-tKlrt thl x bn VtMkJVC it 4.
lt. in regard to tbt- pbnMtNi. and ' tri-itx t tle pfr liit Th jrr--i
at the eiHtfrn-We iiM-i-liig hi KrM , uIam ihwIx ejkit. ! wn!r V
nniiig a tti" wa HKtd U app-jiiit J niAkmg tiw -utl.ti,r il .ihr. Vit
a eoiuiwkt-- of fixe to hold a paxTl ! i WuVitx run W H.le l d Xi
-.noee xxitk Mr- Pr-lor and t t tU- tUmg rm-i;jn4v ainl "wtUtsMji
truth of Wt L-viiu. Pr-lent (.Un- iv'iitt 1 ?) t-m iW I-1 irfd
MTrx e:ertnitH-l tW tiMOi ImiI 4--il : , hWk. ail the teibi mK-Hx
ed thai the n-iHH.'.- -ImhiKI He twH- ' otrtHU't. ! wlrr U fkl att RkW4
mated hx lilt-ehlif. .tdtnrx'. tt Um-mo i'V.. ..K -.Hl-ln. ..f lumllHA' Wi lit
1 x-il oflhre SdritiiaH-t ami ti.
m-ni -!-, miH-i .Kriiiri spi ! nn-m-
Her of tin onmk:tl .bona! be af4Ml-
ed xx b i- c.nvet 1 in am mwtiiIi
the uutMngemeMt or the urtiig Strh
a eomitMitee xx it- .-xpi-tiwu-l nttt after-
xxanl- a'bbil two mn-r t ther hm- j
Thex rej-rti-l tbat ibex Imd a -twttii
with Mr- l'ntr TU" hdx'- hnil
xx n- examutml nml xtI ttHr:lx
drx amltlenM he tKH weMt ! a
tnxnie. :uh! in a moment thetv ajeno-l
in her hainl tn-tween a qttarter nn a
half ten.-ouftit of tlitW. xMm xae
amiiieil ainl prxMHtn4el bx -ine of the
committee io ! oil. tUher- di Mted.
and a- tlo-x cMthl not agree tkex - n-
jM.rtetl It wa- therefore ntlxetl tt ( j-jH.H ,1, jMdgx. -hall read lh- -Um-j t
haxe .-mother ad imtre tlntnHigh tt-t : , j, ,-rtitie to him ami ifU-mt hi- ".
anil at tin- general meet in: n Friday J ,IM i, Thi-NrfHrmeL k -ImH bvk
afteriHMtn another ettmuiMlee ink- , n t, f ,tJb e ami t U kt .lii." -name-
xxill 1m found in tke legnlar rx- lmlnm-u.
jMirt of jtrtK-eetling-) w-a4litel b 'ke -4-ale--hall U- x,4-htl dw kj
the audience, with in-lmctioM- t..cl.H-o ,1,- nH4j tbe ek-rtrir curteHl lU mH h
their time nml place for the L-t and re- Hretilatiou A- th txkxnrtt U..-e4
jtort Itefon- tin- ek.-.- of th eamit-meet- the iulge -hall ottltitgiiUli tli. tfxk. -Iff-
( iii. i lie -ecttiHl ctOHlllKiee iejuMi ((vHlg tllixt lie ttlH- llt Mil tl 1 )MHH
that the tiH-diiitii wa-b.-l ami wijd her f,.
t hand-, -at down in their pre-eme ami Thn-the criminal w til extent I. !n-d-
in a few mom.'Ht-thM-e ap)tearv-l in ker fnj darkm , without a clmoe of ik
hand per-pinitioii ami a uUtaiH-e it -..ft .( -vmpathx x lib-h -.t im Hkci--einblmg
l.u,l. lait harder Mm! a -mull ' the -,it (fold It'wiH h- h -i1.wm mim!
, quautitx wa-prMlit-el. mtt eiHKigh for awtidn- the doom of impikHici xhM
I a cneiiiH-ai auaix-i- ,
! itx pi ex ion-arrangement. Hir rej.irt-.
er nan a -iltmg Willi .Mr- rroetor at
.iImiiiI 1 1 o' link. Sumlax foretHHUi, hi
the pre-em e of another hull He xxa
introduced to n ladx rather Itektxx the
luediuui height, with a -light lait xxell
rounded foini. d.irk aulntrn hair ami
brow u ee-, and a niode-t and pba-iug
addii' . "-lie explained that -he had
been -uhjected to mailX -exele t t-
-im-e her arrixal : ami being -oiuexilmt
lai.gue.i. l.le.e-ult- imglilliot lie Jn-r-
fectlx -ati-factory Mepi.mg ,o
hand-ba-m -he wa-hed andw,,.dhe,
fatigued, the ie-ult- might not l
hand-ami pre-ented them for exiimiiia
lion. Ibex xxeie pet fectlx drx ami omi
She -eale hel-ell The leHiMer pla-ed
'hi- chair in fiout. and a little to tin
, left of the litetiiillll. Xxhere be lld
command a full xiew of her ami her-ui-rouudiug-.
Her l.idi friend took a -imilar
po-itioti at the right baud Theeir-
ele thu- formed, the medium -ooii lc
came aipaieuth uucou-ciou- At no
' time xxa- am attempt made bx the me
dium to com-eal her baud-, and her
arm- xxere alwax- half extended, in
-m-li a liianucrthat hei haiel-could mt
come iu contact xxith her body bib
in thi- po-ition a -light -p.i-in pa ed
oxer her. Lxtcmliug her left baud to
the reporter, palm upward, h ixed
that it wa- -till drx, but almo-t iii-unt-
lx it a limed an oirx appearame, and
there xxa- depo-ed III the centei of the
palm a xxhite -ub-tance. haxiug the ap
pearaiH e of an ointment ami -trough
. -cented xxith origanum. About aquai
ter of a ti-a-poouful of thi- -iib-tanec
xxa- taken from the hand and placed on
a piece of paper. It grea-cd the paper.
; The hand xxa- then wiped clean with a
drx cloth, -till remaining extended, and
iu a moment the phenomenon xxa- re
peated, but not moie than half the
quautiu produced that appeared
the fir-t time. Thi- -ub-tance ha- all the
appearance to the eie of the origanum
ointment made bx druggi-t-, and wa-thu-
named bx the medium. At about
I o'clock Sundax afternoon thi- phe
nomenon xxa- repeated ill pre-ence of
the lepoiter ami eight other per-oii-.
iluriiiga general I'oiiier-alion A -pa-ui
conxul-eil the U for an iu-tatit. her
hand xxa- extended, and the -ame .iib--tauce
xxa- -ecu to appear. We arc in
formed that many different med'n uie
appear on her hand fluid, -cmi-thiid
ami -olid. One peculiarity i- that xxhile
the -cent from thi- ointment remained
on the hand-of other-for hour- it pn ed
from the hand- of the medium in a fexx
moment-, ami they became drx and
-centle .
How the-e -ub-tauee- get tleiei- a
que-tion xi Inch other- max decide. If
it i- legeidelliain it ha- -lleee fullx de
fied the -enitinv of at l"si-t fifty per-on-xxhohaxe
xxitne ed it during the pu-t
xxe-k. The fact that the-e -ub-tauee-do
appear iu the ladx'- hand xxhile op-u
and expo-ei to the xiexv of -peetator- i-imli-putable.
Peril- of .Mountain Railroading.
The railroad accident xxhich in-cnrred
on Meta Mountain Friday, bx which Pat
Mc('ool Io-t hi- life, and which re-ulted
in the demolition of -exeral freight nir
and a calxio-e. xxas n xerx -ingularone
A- -tated in the Tnbun' bx -peeial di
jiateh the folloxxing moniing. the train
xxa- cut at the little -tation at Sangre de
Cri-to Creek, on the we-t -ide of the
angre de t rito Range. leiiig ti
heaxy for the engine to take up the
grade. The fir-t half xxa- -witched on
the -uuiniit and the engine -tnrted to r
tuni for the purjw-e of bringing up the
rear ear-. A- tie engine -tnrted Itnck.
the forward gear eccentric broke, total,
ly di-abling the left -ide. while the -train
n the machinery threw the lifter on the
right -ide out of -hape. thu- putting the
locomotive entirely Ih-xoml the-ontrol
of the engineer. There xx.i- uothi&g to '
control it by. Realizing at once th-im-tiendinir
danger, the engineer told the
fireman and brakeincn to jump off. and
liegan to xvhi-tle off-brake- to the con- J
ductor and brakeman on th- train down
the mountain. The engine wa-then
alx.ut three-quarter- of a mile f nun the
rear part of the train, it- rate of -p.ed
in de-cending inchising every moment,
The men beloxv did not under-tand the
-ignal, and it wa- not till the engine
xxa- within one-quarter of a mile
from the i-ar- that the danger
xva.- ob-erved. The conductor hur-
riwl the pa-enger- out of the cab-o
and let off the brakes? All the p-r-jit-
on the tram got oil except a iinmMii ia-
!orer nam.-l Pat Mi-Cwl. He refu.-d
to move, and there wa no time to tU-o
by f. tree. - the caboo-e and car-, the
brake- being let Ioo-. dart ed down the
mountain, piir-uwl by the flnng engine
Behind the caboose and of crmr. in
front of the tram as it shot dowc the
mountain, were two band-cars. oing
around the carve at Sangre de Crirto
r- .1- --
tank, the grade being 217 feet to thi
mile and the momentum vry rapid, the
hand-ear- left the track and ditchtd the
caboo-e. the freight car- pu-hing li3nl
renini, wnngmg uie cni;o-e around
and pa.mg bv grting into the hti:h 1
yond and on the tther -ide Tfct- left
the cabKe half on the trai-k and only
partly on it- .ib;. The engine came
tearing along at a terrible -peed. and.
til then rofnscd to leave him. Just at
thi-moment the drnnken laborer came j
-taggering out an the. rear platform of j
the cal)OMi and wa.- cruhetl between I
when alxmt forty yanL- from the ca- it ha- thouianU of ear. Chiaujo Jovr-
I, the engineer jumped off. fulowexl , n,a. Kis- not voor girl in a potato-field ;
Tiy the fireman and braKemen. who un- it ha.-invriail-of eve-. Chiennn TrUum- .
. j - -- ""
th rtW al !JSL3;
n.m.tnluK?4l ItjA. TJWt
' ftr ti-r rran whr ih mnrr r
' rwtd4 fcr tj -lBt
Vwrrr 7Vr'
,,ttjl -hall t tin hwtff" 4k a4
Atl Mm-rmH IM It HtHHIW J """
t,K,w -JuM ) an Wh t(Hrv f JmUf,
i, ,r ,-nb .iwd -rl 'Hi f!Ji(C
hoM haxe. in tku-e of !-, a fmnt -
rjHJ sn eWtrir Italim-n a max " -
rto 'n, WUvtj kaU W t-l-4
xxilb the nnH-4-lalr,'aHl -wxnnwl bs a
.MH WmUim ltoiittvtion wfcklW-nk-
I'W tmm' -kail U hVWl."l kx a gi-
UKrh UtrMlHC M the btl--'- 4ttk
The ttnlx imt- atlmiltetl ! tint txt
cttlKtM kxU W the )Hlge, jurx ainl tlr
ortieinl- ct4-riHHl in the eM.h-tnt4
of the xklim 'IImH the iec-.t 4m4 W
lrotht in aMl -entil in the hr, Ut
tUW-h Jw -.hail Ui utaMirlel iMtlHot txhtx
tiim ,nrch iutlkted ou on-u-aid
. --. - -
An American Intention in England.
The late Tie inn- Itlntit haul - inien
tnoi of a machine bo luriongnM -i-W.
wa- henitilx fidicuh-d Hi the IliKkPar
liaiuent xx hen -omc iiwuil r- neoed a
re-ohition br punha-ing a numb, r (
lliclli, on the jftimnd that nwi iH
xxere -urjHl llljf the Kltgtl-h III jfl HtaM
ufactiin One xerx io redukHt- imchi
lH.r ,lmde -., much opi itH.u. deek.Hwx
tjMt ,,e xerx bbntof il.rnb.g a g.m-Un t
, ll,,.I1s . r,,,,,,.,! wa-
uitlnlraun. ami a committee apiMMlinl
! come to thi- lotintrx ami look mtolbe
matter. 'I hex icotcd the fad- to 1m
ii- tlr-t -tiltiil, xxhereiMili the im redo-Ion-
iim-iiiImt ibi'lttnit that the meii-cait-
might haxe got up -omethlog to
xvoik their tf i xximhI-, Itut it xximklnexer
-In ml the te-t of haul xximmI Thi- )C''"'
tlemail xxa- liliallx -ellt oxer to ibn-ide
iqwui the merit-of themaehiiie -eh't-ing
three rough Mock-of the harb-t.
toiltclie-t linilnT he Colllil lllld. he xxelit
to the v-prjnjrj,.ld Armori iueogiuto.
biought hi- -lock- to the -to kiiig-ritoiit.
ami ill'Uilcl of the oier-eer If he Would
giant him the faxor of turning tlnio
X Ifln.llt' lllllLtlltr til., li.li.t flll.tt ,f i.ili aaf
,,. .,,,. ,?oxer r run the -tock-
,1,,,,,,, 5 a (,.w mlH.llMl theuweut
on xxith hi- work a- though nothing on-u-ual
had happened The KtiH-liimiu
exaiuiiied the -tiH-k-. ami found thex
xxeie tinned all the betr for being of
haid xximmI After iiiu-lng u xxhile he
frankh confe ed xxho he xxa. xxhx he
cairn, and hi- thorough louxiction of
the utilitx of the nun bine. It.fore M
left the i ItX hegaxeail onb-r in behalf
of the llriti-h Coxcmiiicut for tin- and
the accompauxing machine-, -ome -i
or eight, which amounted to o.mo
The machine-were built at "hicopce,
-hipped to England, and haxe been in
ii-e theie from that dux to thi-
A Fortune Awaltlmr a Claluiaiit.
There i- an -tat- xxoith ier ?!'.
ikxi awaiting Ro-n Dieti he or Ron Noll,
and the (l.xxego Tam l- authotitx for
the -t.tteoieiit that n rexxnnl of 1 ."" U
offered for information that will loo I to
her di-i'oxeiy bi Mr. Dieti he, xx let i
imikiiig an imlu-trioii- -eai'cli for the
Io-t he'ue . The -tori i tpute roman
tic ami inteie-ting. Alton! leor- ago
the Dietche fainilx from I'mleii. G.-r-tmiiii.
arrixeil iu N"cxv A'ork The fani
ili -cattered, ami tne f the girU. IC-j.
-hortU afterxxard- married Henri Xdl.
iu Miaeu-e After becoming the fatlo-r
of one child. Catharine. Noll de-ertd
hi- wife and xxent tt ( hii-ago from
Weei.tort. xvhere th fainilx then lixetl
Mr- Noll, three year- afterward, rc
turmtl to -r.icu- and fotiml eiuplox
meiit iu the family of Dr. IMam-bnrd
li-gate. Thi- i- a- far a -he ha- lteen
tracetl. U ha- been a-certained that af
ter the -epanitiou lleurx Noli prtH-ete
tt Clih-ngo, ami by hanl l-ilftr and fru
gal habit- iiimi" ed a large fortune. Ten
or txxeuti lear- -ince he wa- taken iek,
and. alter a lingering illiie--. tlletl On
hi- dcath-beil he npeiiteI tf hi-unfaithful
conduct towanl hi- loting jHMi-e.
and xvilhI her hi- va-t e-tate. atiioiuit
ing to ?Mfi). Tlii xvill xxa- admitted
to probate, ami during iht long jwrtl
f time ha- never leeii ehuued bx the
legatee Tin- intert-d aeeniiiig lin--xvelbl
the amount until it ha reached
the hand-une -inn of lfl),("i and ujt
xxard. The gentleman xxho ua- in
-eun h f Mr-. XH i an txxn brother
He -ax- hi- -i-ter i noxv oxt-r tA vnr
n age. and the daughter aged alwtut gl.
Mr-. Xoll"- MT-nal apteararH' i tb
MTilnil ;l- follow- - Tall iu tature. blue
eie-. thirk bnixvn hair, and prejft .
ing apjMrarance. Bnjfnlt, f.. Y.) Ex.
jirc.
Th Eryptlas Lota.
It will ibmbtle 1 of intere-t to-otue
r . ,rtlr roller- to Lmur that th. in
Kgxptian lotn- it al-o a native of IHt-
nof. Indiana. Iowa and Wt-f.n-in. Ha-r-
mg l-.-n -hown -onie of :h- Imontifol
flowers at the Palmer Hon--, I called on
yjr. Outzlo-. flri:. and I-arn-.l fnm
him that it i- the real lotu.. in all re-,
.p.-ct imilar to that of Egvjt. ami a
native of FJirop.-and Amerit-k a well a
f Africa. The plant gnra in n-atr
from four to ten feet in depth, and. while
t,e k n-unil leaf re- upin the -nr-
farv of tne vrr. the t.-ra that lear
the flower ri-e-from on to tlrnt f-t
airtVe ,1 wa,r t j4 ,mwhat rare,
anj -t. foun,i jn 1. ltit never xrith
the war-flr. The nut. which it Uen
a., a Mimnlant in Egypt bv the "W-
.mter-. -omewliat rVvrmbl- an acorn
ia aj,piranctf. and grow in a rl-r-
nvr orncwhat like the watrlilv of the
mjaoL- River, auite a nxaabVr b-intr
fnnd in rmrn. xrhirh is fmm t fei
- - "----.- . .-.-.. .. ... . . ,
to she inches in diameter. The flowr
i- verr beautiful and fragrant, and tfc:
-talk I- filled with a vtrr remarkable
filler of extnumlinarv finen-- and
strength. The lotns will not grow in
fc-r..t;..- ,.x . i,..- rU i :,
u ronz a cnm.nU It u f,mn,i in
pac in Uw. wate of the Calnmt
r. Chwino TrUstnc.
mm m
Tell not votir -ecreb in a crrn-ficld :
In London bread of -nperior qrtality ;
i- -old at 3 cnt per pound, a krV j
pricj than for 10 vears I
i
T1i tk- Tfkk IkktD iM.
IU umkI a 1at. farri rrr4
mt Vi tV f"Vffnw
IVtMHHK. ft4J "I t W -I
n M4 -xf: t. tW Ittwuxw-fufty
TV (MTnMl wMw-.Wy -M T T
H M Wni. a4 8
UinU f
ll arU.4 , tW M-Lt j "-"-f "
W pkr. tkwf Urn wtr- t 4t j
tR f Um iJ-w .4 M "-1
tM j-xmiI rtWMrf rtf. Ut tl
crwwtlt n.-wnk-"
t.n f- It !tf 4W4t4. r3k
arir&t t rf TH W "Mr Ik thm- 4lMBnMl 'I
fr ml n fml mam fmm
U Mtttil A eliftiB-H M W Uiktkr.
W4 lrk4y W4 )mm4
jCut ar MM My W kk...
xatki M, i rkrli ImmI Atx
-4 U Nf Tk traMHM U !
w.4 ifUmt "
kerv.1 tlwx tk K !' ! Wr '
4 Kk m njnywfcwi TW
tf-T itm wkjrk i" t -
kiina4i Ih4 y
nM Ww kM liHika W
iWn-lkr ttM ftm "
mrnd t4 k mm " Thf ,
Uittmii rMltnfnr-4. .
.-l. .m, wm Artmmtfy, ww
wwiw immmrv MtMrdl
r.1 a "Wx TMrK " M'
Ul- Mf tlM- NU Mk
The Prjink Crop.
i f tittw lwAM-)
in tmH miMMf -cKwk f (.
4 W
rfc-.
mtU' tfbt KW a rtet -
!- tl jmnhIi irr mm tmmt
rt-m nt ttw ! Ne Klglrit ''
Ntikrti ifc-i. mh Imt tkk Mm . .
fiu- rvmmm k hmm mmMmmI 1
ymm wi m lt m n
MfcJi tmm. m4 t-r thkt m - .
p4imwkti t - rty 4 9rmm i
matt- ". ktr a MwnWi
xt-i!. wkw fc- ltM rr km
wtkHkrr tkr t-f .4 a Mil -
t aortlwrni t nwtkvm twiHXy,
HtHkn in k ImmI. or M 4r m
-tl all iHvvttt th. fAhnmrf
afM t tfca kriMn tr r 4
Mk kealtki tnm 'IV tktTtMm. -
rrlih tH-rl m4 wipj-f ,!- -t
tvxp ' mt t " rAfwirv f
ike -mh irw rjt la fimk - f
iWin k- Mrk iimnkliirkjic W k.t
t-4d Healln-f UmI Wt HMIker, MmI fie
4mh- Ut m witd. M4hI f..t
ktffer ).rriiN). iictHg Ik if
-koft. no HeitrT wmliikni rmm k
HtMiMi wwim! Ut kj yiaHir ,
IU4i d tk.' jm k lr It la a (k
t HmtHr. H. jtrtkaw wty k rtii
lnH a kxw of MMir.r "H4 w"ff
t ! tr pH k t . lM )mr jtr
ke ! 1 1 tie h al kHMt 4m(-.
the tre,-. aie (twlmttx kMtlMiy mA (
fiU k exretftM ei4ltkMl tkiJ .
mJ of VwiWrt)
Muklntr Adtttte-.
At SHwi(tr.
MrH 4n MI
CliiinrrtM Klxei. I -a lt kk InV .t )
-tietitu Mexk-an loaklntf akla
-on-drietl UrU k w kw k eowthf -
nio-t eutkn-lx tke knkHr MMnui '
the Mi'k-MM rvytM. S MIH "
XX Oik Hie o( theM !f lk- ImV'I i
tnoti the IhimV. wkk kk, iMlw4 a
mud iu the t iwk atl nmmI It '
-tniix and t arrie! Ii m tiarrr !
lex el -pot. wkefe tke 4Ul HMn Wtrk..
He had a uotkl. a UiMnki k ( '
teen IhcIo Ux and eiM inrkw wftt
al the eml lie Ukl ikktoNttbr JfT-MOt '
tilled it with tit NMt4rtaJ kro-yki kot.
u-iiig hi- IimmU a a arHttt d Ux.:..t
it ex en xxith tke l.q o Ike Nt4l tlw
he hfte.l tke DMtkl. kU-f k Mo-k '(
t lax lo If Itmktl kanl in tk mm I e
Mexlran tliitU ki- krk Vxard rrt.
there i- xx liter Ut mi xilk tW -tl II.
ha mtt far to jftt lt WI krtkf gram, if
-traxx b nttt wrilk IStkrar" w te
creek l-itttoii- m tbr maHMMMia
make th- rntt.-r- u kl m4i k ante. n.l
ui them wt a roid of aJkln "!
shoultl he wat a Iwrt w'kMkM tk t
open hltllee. ke RMft ill tit ftao k --beet
of tt.a Ur kk patw- llr -'-hi
lolle bv Mttinr tlrHff
lexer, ami tlf nnblintarr. tk- k
petlfee, J n lldxtHr- -tfnMii-fc
l-h and ImlktM Pntk. .m l't i
. ) C-r. tllmt lUtfld
A txe Tusf'etat.
While Mr Ib-wrx May mm mg
xrltb a partx re-uU. -. !' Ilkk.
ill the laekt ClM-le leer. aiwi tkr 1f !
irx ly UfC aibtir. all d tttika. h
Mt apparent ihi, ln- MmrUmk
frightful -fM"d 'I'k eat, h
xxa- -MHt epiNrl l. htgr tlttih''
ribig tt the aMtfane f lk " ''
tlo aiH-hor Mti iH('n"l 'tm 4 i
fin- A -nai tlkir " mm -"
Hugh!. tft, ljr H- an. kr m krtttj;
litattgi.-d veith'tkat f til- I rk IMrr
The fi-h then xxent 4rijfk " I1"" '!
lex with )th h-tmU. ! a -'
wt.uld get m-or tk katl 'mm it wm-l
"Uy off aguio avi mmk kr ttfen kauri l
Tl'te li-ltbg ml -mm rtt k-. U$ (
I Hele Peter H H erfiel ttr -
I'ttrt Itiplex. nl it wh. aerh Ml hf"
J.fore the diliUk iumlH kt'r. Ik
aneht'r np' vMitarf M A-
j-liiin w)k'h rtHkl mtt k imml
lkere wu mi U nl tk
rnele Petr. t'btrlrtm .VP
A .Mammlntr-HlrtlN t.
i
I'ecfMtly a iMtmnaiity-k"! mm
foioel V) -orne ttr- win mrmm mitt
t-ietil itntHral rwrk-ty tiwnmmw ,
erTtHxioH, anl wkt eiiyOwxl m
tw.t young ImmtHv nml tbm M f
U-V. t hem kotae mhI had vkrm mtmMi
They are Ut h- i iu a mmmmmm
t iKitHra) rwrkt itk" in L
ilon. Tl.e et k kwik tm a auk- r.
anl "-nrrely tke 4w f ktf a Kjrf-k
vjInhI. ltti t al leig mtr t
etl wkk Hub Mt"h" ( fiHto-i mll
nbier-t iHfkb- tofl tfm k
other, and tb k-ki ML m "i
natural i-xmwu-iny m m- D
net I pHnW.-. like a "Jt rmp 4 !-.
and tin iftkl i HhW witfc m whit -"
-tanee. a ry-U ami f: a iewt U.
The Bule !ni- an. -m'th 4m 't
laimb'e 1j.-i. vtj fUy. tn4 dk--
on a Kttle porrfc" kX itii4 th- ii-.
with open bib-. whiV tite obi Ur4 k-
er- over them u f-pl Uhw -RHmmm'
(A. J ) Jmtriutl,
In the jk-e emtl. Ta- fwkfir
jrocjUr. ij -nw-Wng iM- nbmtnmt la r U
a yoHBg xvmaH krotgkt ilm Ih
ctrtwt . A for tkl ftnttlfr. wtkj m a
breath Mke a ttib-ce smA a In Wkr -an
!Piilng-l'itnl- it kt -ewvelj wwr"
while to tl what thf k. Oib hi- tmmmV
perkliral am-ani.ue. ia Ui4Mtrt A"
Iff A. In lHi ?h -a arrMt4 Ute b
nH.raliiie rommittcd on ike jmnhhr
street " Th iriwjnr'! Mtm
(with veh-rn-ft-)- 'ir Hmmme. I
prt-t againt tW waa lvra4Mi i
the tire-i-I- thi- kiMg kore rf tfc--,-ret-
of private Sf! 'farim hmmf.
hi-tler, the artUt wlt kad a -mnnU
difficultv with Uu-kin. hiui k-r t f"
niary dfSenl:r with hi emlfC'- V
pleasant frw-nil. ralBag orw da, mul.
I et.nraloktle roo on Vttir fettaT
well through voor itutjcatt J
. i-. - T. v. . .1:.t:..1...
.. . ' 7 - .. -. . - ..w .-
t-rrlitor-.
Xotmv difnctiMi-' "
nVutl Whtnler. rt.rtiri.hiri"- k- "
lovk ami grinning: "lhir ila8-i-
not mim. drar boy UuAn '"
Iaophin grav i- a mrw haA f j"
lo-cl-h gray that will "j wwre ki iam
1
1
'J
b
I
s
- l'
; uu-immmmr
mBSSBSSt?!
Sfe- KtF?'
'fl-
:&-
-cai-
M
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