Newspaper Page Text
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C|t gaming
Monvng News Building. Savannah, Ga.
TUKDAT AVGUST 20. IBS.
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Bubecriotlona ayab ein advance. Remit by
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Letters and tel**rams shoui I tj© addressed
•"Morning News.'* Savannah, ia.
Advertising rates mad- Known on application.
The Morning News is on file at the following
places, where Advertising Hates and other in
formation regarding the paper can be obtained:
NEW YOrtK <TTY—
J. H. Bates, ,'SB Par* Row.
G. }\ Rowei-l St Cos., iu Sr nice s'reet.
W. W. Sharp <fc <v .2: Park Row.
Frank Kiernan O'.. JW Broadway.
Daucht Cos., 27 Pars Place.
J. W. Thomi*"u:;. 3u Park How.
American Newspaper Publishers’Association,
Potter Building.
PHILADELPHIA -
N W. Ayer £ Son, Tim-s Building.
BOSTON-
K. R. Nii.ks, Ssfi Washington street.
Pettexoill & Cos., !0 State street.
CHICAGO—
Lord & Ttiomas, 45 Randolph street.
CINCINNATI-
Edwin Alden Company, 06 West Fourth street.
NLW HAV KN
The 11. P. Hubbard Company 25 Flinstreet.
ST. LoCIt—
Nelson * desman & Cos., 1127 Pine street.
ATLANTA
Morning News Bureau. Whiteliall street
MA(’O v -
Paily Telegraph Office, 507 Mulberry street
INDEX TO NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Meetings—Oglethorpe Lolge Vo. 1, I. O. O.
I8 K P
Special Notices—Lots, Rowian 1 & Myers:
Am to U>st Draft: Oheai Lots. W. K. Wilkinson:
Notice to Passengers and Shippers per Steamer
Katie: Purchasers vV’ante i for a Few More
Rowland <£ Myers: Fresh Shipment of Fine
Candies, J. J. Reily, Importer and Specialist;
Last Ga ne of Ball Between the Hendys and
Kieffers To- lay.
Steamship S hedules Ocean Steamship
Cpmpany; Raltimor' Steamship Company.
Auction Sal '.s—Unclaimed Freight at Sa
vnnnah, Florida and Western Railroad; Sun
dries by I. D. La Hoc he A Sons.
Davis Bros. Piano Cli p No. 1— George Mas
tick the fifty-fifth name.
Notice —J. P. Germaine,
Ptt posALS - For School Supplies, Jno. R. F.
Tattnall, Chairman.
Cheap Column advertisements —fl n
Wanted; E npl vmsnt Wanted; For Rent.; F. r
Sai , For Ra.TI *; i, ; Personal; Miscellaneous.
SAVANNAH OF TO-DAY.
The Morning Aci Annua) Trade Review—
A Few
The Mornino News’ Annual Trade Re-
Yiew, containing a complete and compre
hensive statement of the business of Savan
nah, w ill be issued early iu September.
The year ending Sspt. 1, 1889, will be a
memorable one ii the history of Savannah,
and the Morning) News proposes to give
the widest publicity to what Savannah has
done, is doing, and proposes to do in the
near future. Thero is no better way in
which tho outside world can be informed of
what is going on in a community than
through the columns of its newspapers.
The Mornino News i t its forthcoming
Trade Review will show by facta and
figures that Savannah is one of the most
progressive and healthy cities in the union,
and that her ciiiztns, judgi-g from what
they have done during the last year, are
fully alive to the great ess of her future.
They have proven by the various local im
provements they have made, and by the
active interest they have manifested iu
railroads projected for her benefit, that
they are nut afraid to invest their money
within her limits. They have demonstrated
beyond all doubt that they havo confide ce
iu her great natural advantages, and that
they believe that her deep water harbor
and her great railroad systems will, in a
few years, make her the greatest seaport
city in the south.
The Morning News will, in its Trade
Rovsew, presentto the word "Savannah ol
to-day,” in a resume of what has hereto
fore appeared in its columns. The review
will be in such shape that, at a
glance, it will be seen what has
been accomplished during the vear.
The Trade Review will contain articles
showing the bu iuess of the city during the
year and present indisputable facts which
promise a steadily increasing prosperity.
It will este biidh the fact that there is no
healthier city in the south and none more
pleasant iu which to live aud do business
either in summer or winter. It will
prove by figures that Savannah is
without a rival on the South Atlantic
coast, and that by their acts her citizens
•how that they are satisfied that She is
only at tho beginning of her commercial
greatness.
The Trade Review will be printed in the
usual form, and will be a newspaper which
those who feel a pride in their city will
take pleasure in sending to their friends.
It will afford business men an opportun
ity of sayiug something about their business
and themselves. It is hoped that in size, as
well as in other respects, it will sur ass
every previous edition. That, however,
depends entirely upon the orders it re
ceives from advertisers.
It is desired to distribute 50,000 copies,
and that number will be distributed, if the
response of the business men is as prompt
and liberal as we have roaion to believo it
will be.
Orders for advertising or for copies of
the paper can be handed in at the business
office, or, if desired, they will be called for
by- the canvassers.
Commissioner Tanner says that Secretary
Noble is a very lovable man, but he neg
lects to say that he loves him very much.
The probability is that he doesn’t.
People who have not read enough about
that very young person, Baby McKee, can
get a saiisfying dose iu Sunday’s New
York Herald. Why should any newspaper
print five columns about Baby AlcKeei
The Tare Must be Adjust vd.
The New O leans Cotton Exeha ‘go has
taken the pr >per course to settle the tar e
issue wh ch has grown out of tne introduc
tion of cott >n biggine. It is evident that
it must be settled s toner or lat r, and the
wise thing to d.is tv settle it at one?. Tne
Liverpool exe.iange doss uot se -in lispose 1
to recognize the fact that anew covering
for cotiou has been adopted, aid that be
tween 1,000,000 and 2,000.000 bales will b e
covered wah it this seas m. It acts
as if its action were all-powerful, and w mid
prevent the use of cotton
discover that Liverp >ol will have to tn .e
cotton in the cover! :g in vhich the c itto.i
planters are nlease.l to se id it to market.
The cotton merchants in this country have
found out that the cotto i planters are iu
earnest in their fight with the jute hag'ing
trust, and like wiss men they a e preparing
to adjust their me hods of handling cotton
to the change 1 conditions.
In order to prevent confusion and annoy
ance it is nece-sary that there should lie the
same rules at all th cotton p rts with re
spect to the two kinds of baggi g. At New
Orleans it is prop eed that the tare allow
a ce for cotton covered with jute shad be 5
per cent., as at pres *nt, and for that cov
ered with cotton ll' .j per cent. This seams
to be fair, and w lull oo doubt bo sa'isfac
tory to the cot on planters. If the ex
changes, tbrourh t .-ir representatives, get
together it will not take the n very long to
reaci an ag-eenent that will meet with
general approval.
Tin cotton planters want no more than
w hat is fair. It is manifestly unfair tv re
quire the same tare on cotton covered with
cot on fugging as on teat covered with jute
bagging, because there is a very c insider
able ililfereuco iu the weight of the two
kinds of bagging. The cotton planters are
in a much Ivnt ter position tha i ever before
to demand such treatment as they consider
just from those who purchase th dr cotto i,
and they will nitbesi iw to oxerciso their
power if they feel it necessary to do so. Re
sides being linn cially hotter (iff than at
any tbltS*§fnee tho war they have an organi
zation which is strong in ail tho cotton
growing states, ana which enables them to
act in harmony.
Of course different tares for the two
kinds of bagging will cause factors and ex
porters tr übia, auil i upo e upon the n
move work. They will have to carry these
extra burdens, however, until c >tton bag
ging wholly dis laces juto bagging, if that
is to bo I he outcome of the fight that is now
being made against the jute bagging trust.
No doubt all the other cottvn exchanges
in the cou itry will join with the New Or
lea s exeha ge in trying t > effect a settle
ment of this tare issu >. Indeed, they cannot
very well avoid doing so, eve i if they are
not in sympathy wuh it. There is no rea
son for thinking, however, that thoy ar v
not in svmpathy with i% It is certain that
the Savannah exchange recognizes that a
settlement of it is necessary at tho earliest
possible monte t. The presid nt of the
Sava mah exchange, in a communication
to the president of the Liverp iol exc la ige,
a few days ago, intimated pretty strong y
to that exoha ige that it was not displaying
wisdom by wasting ti ne in pointing out
objections to evtton baggi g, became tha
o 'tto i planters had leterinino 1 to use as
much of that kind of bagging as they could
get, a id that a great deal of cotton would
be covered with it t lis seaso i. He sug
ges.ed, and very properly, ihe a Ivilability
of dropping the discus-ion of cbjec .io is a 1 1
the taking up of tho question of the adjust
ment of tho tare for cotton marke ed iu the
new covering.
The Substitute for Mr. Tuck’s Bill.
In our Atlanta dispatch this morning will
he found the full text of the the bill which
the committee has substitued for Mr. Tuck’s
bill. The substitute, while it differs in
some important respects from the original
bill, is intended to accomplish the purpose
which the framer of the original bill had in
view. It provides that cotton on ship
board damaged by fire wnile within the
waters of the state may be taken possession
of by the owne s or insurers of it, and dis
posed of in such a way ns they may think
will best protect their interests.
The bill appears to be a good one. The
expenses to which c vttvn damaged by fire
while on shipboard are subjected are a
source of a great deal of complaint. The
insurance companies contend that the not
amount realized from it is not anywhere
near as gioat as it ought to be. They are
powerle s, however, to reduce the expenses
under existiug practices and laws, and it is
probable that the pending bill has their
support with the hope that if it becomes a
law it will afford them some relief.
The planters and exporters are as much
interested iu the bill almost as t e insur
ance companies. If the insurance com
panies incur heavy losses they are almost
certain to ucrcnse insurance rates. The
insurance, of courses c vmes out of the
planter in the long run, because the ex
porter, in bidding for cotton, takes into
consideration the cost of insurance. The
export* s, however, are anxious that the
rate* shall be as low as possible, because
the lower they are the better are the
prices which they can offer for cotton.
If there are objections tv tho bill, they
will be heard, doubtless, when the b.ll conies
up for discussion. If there are re isons why
it should uot become a law, they should be
presented to tho legislature without unnec
essary delay.
The newspapers have waged war upon
Cigarettes for some years, aud lately some
of the state legisia.ures have joined them.
New York now has a law prohibiting the
sale of cigarettes to miuors. A similar law
was proposed in the Pennsylvania legisla
ture, but the bill was not passed. The
lower branch of the Michigan legislature
has just passed such a bill, and the Georgia
legislature has given some time to the sub
ject and will give more. It. remains to be
seen whether the cigarette evil can he
checked by legislation, but the experiment
is worth making.
The New York legislature, at its recent
session, passed a bill providing for the ap
pointment of a commission to select another
site for Sing Sing prison. For the last
twenty years the residents of Sing Sing
have agitated, off and on, the question of
changing the name of that town, and since
the passage of the bill mentioned they have
renewed the discussion. It seems somewhat
strange that the name was not changed
long ago. The first t :ing that occurs tn
most people when the tow i of Sing Sing is
mentioned is the penitentiary.
Someone, signing himself "Native
Georgian,” and writing to tho New York
Tribune, (jpfends the action ot Postmaster
Lewis in the Atlanta post nffle > affair iu
such manner as to raise the suspicion that
he is not a native Georgian, or, if he is,
that he is not a true Georgian.
THE MORNING NEWS; TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1889.
Better Roads Needed.
If the road bill that was introduced into
tho legislature a f days ago becomes a
law, aud the law is vigorously enforced, in
a very few years every county iu the state
will have better roads. The provisions of
the bill are mainly those whic i were recom
mended by the road congress rec ently held
In Atlanta. That congress spoke for the
whole btat“. It was called because the peo
ple very genera ly recognized that bad roads
cost them i great deal more than good ones.
Thev had beeo estimating the losses which
bad roads cau-ed them, and the covt at
which they could ha.e good roads, and thoy
reachel (he conclision that tney could
mu -h bettor afford good ria Is than bad
ones, and, b-sides, they roc vg iizad the fact
that they could got sornv satisfaction out of
good r ads—something t iey had never been
able to get out of bad ones.
It may be that the bill needs amen ling in
some respects. VVnether it aoe or not
will be sh isu probably by the discussio l
Widc.i will take place la the committee
whioh has chargi of it, and also in ea-h
house when it is consi lere 1. The friends
of better roads, however, should be careful
not to permit it to be sv a needed as tv ren
der it of dttle or no practical value. There
arc those who object to taxation of any
kind, aud tney may oppose tne bill. Tha
mails cannot Ive improv.vd without money.
Experience has shown that.
Nothing shows more clearly the growth
of a spirit of progress in Ge vrgia than tho
increasing signs of a dotermi iati m to have
better roads. Wnorover tuore are gcod
roads, thero weli-tillel u 1 nr sluctive farms
and thrifty iveople aro always to be found.
It is safe to say t at the counties which
give the most atte ition to improving tho
road- show the greatest progress.
It is gratifying that in this c mntrv the
county commi-siou -rs are not waiting for a
new road law. They recognize tho fact
that every and 'liar th >y expend upon the
roads will benefit the p ople of the cointy
in one way and anot er many ti nes that
amount. Better roa ls a e nee ied in a 1 the
O' unties, an 1 it begi is to look as if the
roads would undergo very great improve
ment in tho near futu e.
The Field- erry Tragedy.
Tho verv general opinion as expressed
through the press seems to be that Deputy
Marshal N lgle was juv i ed in shooting
Judge Terry. The shooting was not done,
of cou se, in self-defense, but there seemi
to be no doubt that Justice Field would
have been killed if tho deputy marshal had
not killed Terry.
The question whether there was any au
thority for detailing a deputy mar-hal to
attend Justice Field in his travels around
his c rcuit, is being raised. Deputy Mar
shal Nagle acted under the orders of his
immediate superior, who had been n .titled
by the Attorie.' General of the United
-States tv sve to it that Justice Field had
ample protection. Tue Attorney Gv iorat
had boon informed of tho threats which
Terry had made against the justi e’ life.
Had the Attorney General any right to pro
vide for Justice Fields protection when
the justice was off the bench?
Several prominent California lawyers are
qu vted iu answer to this question. They
aro unanimous in tho opinion that the
deputy marshal was, in f ct, protecting t le
court. Thev say that Jus ic9 Fn*d was
traveling by the nost direct route from ouo
place in his circuit to anotuer, where he was
to hold court, and that Terry’s assault on
him while pa his way wa. an attack upon
tho court to just tho same extent that
an attack upva him in a court
room during a session of the
court would. have been. If this be
the correct view, the i Deputy Mar dial
Nagle was acting av an officer of the court,
and within its jurisdiction. No doubt this
view will be urged in Deputy Marshal
Nagle’s behalf when he is pi iced on trial.
The tragedy has ope ied up anew ques
tion, apparently, which will ba widely dis
cussed. While it is cle ir that Justic > Field
had nothing to do with the killing of Terry,
and is not in any way responsible for it,
there will be, undoubtedly, a strong eff >rt
to make out a c vnspiracy between him and
Deputy Marshal Nagie. The justice has
many enemies in California, aid they are
beginning to make their i illuence felt t -ere.
However, there is no probability tnat it can
be shown that he was oven remotely re
spousible for Terry’s death.
The New York Tribune praises Gov.
Lowry for his action iu the Sullivan
Kilrain matter. It says: "Tnat official
deserves the highest praise and approval
for the inflexible resolution he has exhibited
in the face of strong hostility and irritating
and calumnious criticism aud i .sinnation.
It has been intimated repeatedly that he
was not in earnest, that ho was merely act
ing for effect, that he had no desire to en
force the law, and so forth. He has shown
clearly that he is determined to maintai l
the iaw, to be faithful to his obligations,
und to vindicate the dignity of his office
and the honor of his sta o.” As the Tribune
was one of the newspapers to ridicle tho
idea that Gov. Lowry would act as he has,
its apology is proper. It didn’t apologize
uutil it was obliged to, however.
Mr. Andrew Price pr vpo os to make a
clea fight iu the Third L vuisia -a district,
lie won’t heap pßrs nal abuse upon his op
ponent. Iu ac 'opting the democratic noini -
nation, he said: "However high-minded
and honorable a republican candidate may
be, his personality ca mot c vneeal from us
the appalling dangers of the forces behind
him. What the republican constitue icy is
all the i itellige ice ot the district well
knows. No good can come to the people of
this district by eudeavoriog again to bring
about that condition of things so happilv
disappeaiing with tho overthrow of repub
lican supremacy in this state.” This is ex
ceedingly well said, and it ought to make
votes for Mr. Price.
One of the Appleto.is said to a New Y rk
Tribune rep vrter the other day, in connec
tion with the differences between Mr.
Jefferson Davis a id his pub ishers: “The
matter hts been submitted to arbitration,
and toe referee is a friend of both parties.
It is not ik serio is affair, or a sectional
affair, or a national affair, and it
will soon be settled.” Mr. Appleton
was right, but he will hardly suc
ceed in convinci ig such newspapers as the
Tribune that the affair is not a serious, a
sectional and a national one. They think
they see in it an opportunity to make party
capital.
Miss Sarah Harvey, of Rhode Island, is
a young lady who is certain to be very
popular with young me i. Her aunt re
cently left her 3,OOt),OOOon easy co -ditions.
She will come into the possession of her
for-uue in throe years, and by that time,
periiaps, she will have c msouted to share it
with some lucky young fellow.
CURSENf^mMENT.
Ho Was Outnumbered.
From the Washington Mtar (Rep.)
SuUivan vra knoe.-d mt for the first time
since he jncanii fam >u-iathe prize rine; bu the
is couso ti by the reflection tuat it too* t welve
men to do it.
How It Can Obtain Knowledge.
From the St. R .oublic
The democratic can iidate for governor of
Virginia is a strong mar. aa l a sTon* tariff re
form-r. If the administration runs
Maaone or a tool of Maiioa • him, it will
learn something.
That Seitled It.
From the Richmond I>.sr>atch <Dem.)
Tho P ilal'-lphia makes a desperate
effort to save t .e bloody shirt over the Vir
ginia democratic platform and our nominees.
That isagood sign. It proves that th-; con
vention could not have 1 n- its work better.
Republicanism in
From the Baltimore Sun ( Dem .)
The Mississippi rep lblicans. acting under in
structions from m i;ue~s of the republican
national com uitte**, have decided to noin iiAte
a full stilt- ticket to \)t voted for at the Kovem
her election. The convention is to
he.d af Jackson Sept. 25. Gen. James
H- Chalmers, who nos been a stand
ing candidate for office since he
entered the republn sn fold, is credited with
a desire to b * uomiaat J f r governor, but it is
sai-J there is much opposition to bi n among
some of ttie colored 1 *aie s. As trie democrats
will carry the state by .it least 50,000 majority, it
is immaterial to them whom the republicans sot
up to be khrveke 1 down. It is believed thosasee*-
ing laces on the reoubiican tick -t simply wish
to gain stan ling win th” reputiican adminis
tration at Wasbiqgf .n.
i >lf .
The Reason —Jcp^‘ii—Why is it that men
marrv wid ws?
Johs-m—They don’t. It is the widows that
marry them.— Bosto i Cou ier.
Not Morally So. Mrs. Pilfer—What leads
you to thi.ik I am so very strong?
Neighbor's Girl—l heard p i say he believed
you i make a shoplifter with a little training.—
Omaha Wor id-Hero Id.
It is seriously stated that it takes a fly a tw >-
millionth part of a second to wink, if a man’s
wiiik wasass lddcn as a liy’s, he,would n ver got
any. Ling but plain sola at th; fountain in a
drugstore.— Morristown Hera and.
.Just the Opposite. —Friend (to returned
vacationist)—Well, my boy, have you been off
for a rest?
Returned Vacationist—No, my boy, I’ve
come hume for one.— boston < Jnuner .
“I would like to ask you a question," said a
gentleman toafello.v who was spreading him
self over f mr seat-, iu a crowded railway car.
‘‘What is it?”
“Wnat brand of nerve food do you use?”—
The Kjioch.
Po -nd to re in the Swim —City Nephew—
\\ hat ii the thunder are you standing iu that
water for, uucle?
Uncle K.’oeh—l’m soakin’ th’ blackin' off my
old cowhides, so as make 'em look like them
ya.ler shoos you city folks wear.— Buc<.
Not Consoling -A countryman had con
sult and a fortune teller as to h.s future.
“You’ll be poor, kind sir. until you’re 30,’’was
the prediction of the Pythoness.
“And toen?”
“Oh, after that you'll get used to it ."—Judge.
‘‘We are all worms.” exclaimed the preacher
in his sermon. Lit:le B bby, wio was foil >w
iho discourse attentively, whispered to this
mother:
“ t hen that’s the reas >n why the* great big
fish swallowed Jona ..isn't it?“— Me )
Press.
“What's your name sis?” asked Cholly, of the
pretty waiter girl.
’Pearl, sir,”
“Ah, you’re the pearl of great price, no
doubt?” *
“No. sir; I':n the pearl before swiue.”— Pitt3-
burg Chronicle.
Visiting Statesman— l tell you men of Ken
tucky, here and now, the race question is the
American problem.
His audience ms one man)—Rizht you are,
colonel, ami the wnj to solve it is to trot out
somethin_r thaL can beat Ten Broeck s time.—
Drake's Magazine.
The DiurDtENCL* -Fatty Spacer—Where is
your family tins summer, Desque?
E i Bosque - They're stopping at a little ham
let down on Lo ig Island.
S, acer—And you?
ix’spie—p.n ot-rdiig at a little ham and
egglet on Park Row. Puck.
E.-You sav you saw everything in Rome in
three (lays? Tuat’s impossible.
1. But you must remember that there were
three of in. My wife took in all the c urches,
I visited all the picture galleries, and my son
w-utfortho restaurants and cafes Then we
met in the evening au 1 swapped experiences.—
Texas Siftings.
Blue Blood.—Loud voices came from the
nurs tv of a iurray Hill residence. Toe last
utterance was; **J toll you he didn’t have a
grandfather.”
Be Peyster turned to his wife and remarked
upon the youthful ap -reciation of blue blood.
“Who were you talking about?” he asked of
Gracie, wh just then entered the room
“Oh, 'bout Adam.” -Judge.
PER SO h AU
The Czar of Russia spends an hour a day
chopping down trees.
Rider llaag aud has agreed to write a book
to appear iu 1891, about Queen Esther, fora
press syndicate of New York.
The Empress of Austria has bean drowning
her great grids iu the study of Greek, in which
she has made admirable progress.
Emperor William of Germany no longer suf
fers tr > n insomnia. It is said that he wears a
night attire ..f a peculiar oriental texture which
produces sleep.
Senator Kenna has received permission to
build .t new hou.e on his Wa-hingt n lot, and
work will tie te ?un at once. The new structure
will cost $15,0 0.
The Hon. Levi P. Morton of New York has
almost entirely disappeared from public life
and from tne notice o. the newspapers siuce he
was made Vice President.
Commissi >ner Tanner wants one Christian
Fxei restored as chief exa inner i:i the pension
'Hi e. So c ose au approach to Christian excel
lence should bo respected.
Henry Fusel, a shining li rht in the town of
Minnes >ta Minn., has skip -d with $2,900
of the public money and a sister of his wife.
The girl is only 1(5 years of age.
The Queen of Italy is an ardent student of
V olapuk. Sue is a subscriber of the Stuvat, the
organ of the new language, printed at Milan
and is said to read it with ease.
While Senator Quay is entertaining his
friends on board his yacht, Mrs. Q ;ay is visiting
u cousin in Cleveland. i* wdl remain there
until the senator returns to Beaver.
Richard Choker, the Tammany chieftain
says that every man concerned ii tiic Flack di
vorce case will be exp lied f oui Taunnany hall
if the char es agaiiiSL them are true.
Col. North, “the nitrate king,” has been in
vited b.- th.: inhabitants of is naive town to
contest the seat now held in parliament by
Herbert Gladstone at the first oupjrtunity. J
Morgan Grace, M. D., brother of ex Mayor
Grace of New York, and member of the Upper
House at W llington. N w Zealand, has be n
nominate! hr the pope Count of the Holy
Roman Empire.
Edward Brown, father of Dr. Brown-Se
quard, the noted physician and physiologist
was a native of Philadelphia. He was name J
for his father and f.r his mother, a lady of
French extraction, named Sequard.
Mm*. Patti sang Rossini’s “Barbiere” at her
farewell concert in Buenos Avres. it is said
that she received thirty-two calls before the
curtain, and that the totai receipts amounted
to 114,(00 francs, of w hich she received one
half.
The Turkish minister was seasick during the
yachting cruise in uhich President Harrison in
dulged at Bar Harbor. So neb <iy remarked to
hun that lie hoped tne internal relations of
Turkey were peaceful, whereupon ho groaned
aloud.
Count Yamaoata, general in the Japanese
army and secretary of th • inter: r in t; e
Japanese government, has arrived in New York
ami is going to “do” the country. He is ah nit
50 years o.d, and has an extensive suite. This
is his second visit to the United S a:es.
Th* Shah of Persia recently tried to climb
the Eiffel tower, but his c mrage gave out when
he was near the top and he returned ignomin
iousiy to tne ground. He refused to take the
elevator, aud the result is that the Persians are
inclined to look upon the Soah as a good deal
of a coward.
Bright eyes, healthy complexion, and a
vigorous system result from using Angos
tura Bitters. iSole manufacturers, Dr. J.
G. B. Siegert & Sons. At all druggists.
MONKEYING A BABOON.
The Bad Man of at. ~oa.s Was Knee ked
emt in One Round.
From the New York Sun.
In the old St. Louis museum we nad, among
other attractions, a baboon cailel Dick. He
was a solid cuunk of a fellow, good-tempered,
and a great favorite. He had one peculiarity,
though, which we had to cater to. He took
short naps twice a day, and if arouse l before
his time he was as ugly as sin all the rest of the
day. We had him dressed uu as a boy,
and when the time came f jr him to take his nap
he crept into an old-fashioned cra lle. and the
fat woman generally rocked him to sleep. That
very thing was Quite a draw', and plenty of peo
ple came in solely to see the baboon racked olf
to slumber.
One day, soon after Dick had closed his eyes,
a half drunsen chap entered the place and
created considerable disturbance. He went by
the name of Awful Pete, and was a hard
siugger. I tried to reason with hi n and get
him out, but he unfortunately caught sight of
tne sleeping baboon and at once demanded tha
the animal be aroused and put through his
tricks. I sought to explaio, but he wouldn’t
have it, saying:
“I paid to see the bab, and I’m going to see
him or bust the b’ildr”'
“But if you wake him un he’ll fight.”
“Then I’ll wring his neck!”
Before I could s op him he dodged under th •
rope aud lifted Dick out of his cradle. The
animal woke up. ani took in the situation in
about a tenth par;, of a second, and t en he
fastened his hands into Pete’s hair, gut a grip
with his teeth on the lugger’s n se. and we
had a museum, menagerie, and circus com
bined for the next five Minutes. Peter roared
and wooped, and pranced around in pain and
terror, and the i’ab pulled handfuls of hair
from his head, and bit and scratched like a
wildcat. When we finally got him off that
slugger was a sight robe a old. and had to be
taken to the o ßpit.il at once Two hours
after be ha l had nis wounds dressed I went in to
*ee him. and as soou as I spoke to him he be
ga > crying and as and:
“Was it a baboon which did this?”
“Yes.”
“Big as a lion?”
“On, no. He weighs about twenty-six pounds.
Why do you weep?”
’‘Hadn’t I oi*ter weep?” he savagel * demand
ed, as the tears cam • afresh. ’Tvc had thir
teen fights and Knocked my man out every
i ime, a id now to be downed by a weazen laced
monkey in one round has broke m * ali up.”
An Astonishing Memorial.
Trenton Letter t>> Ph ladelphia Times.
The story of tne queerest monte to tne dead
on record comes from Lambertville, in Hunt r
don county. Near tow i lives Mrs. Elisha
Pratt, a widow of Deacon Pratt, who was fam
ous as a farmer, a genial soul aud an
ardent Methodist. He was particularly foud of
tickling mi appetite, and was denned consider
able or an epicure. His wife was an excellent
cook, and her dinners were rare exhibitions o:
culinary skill for a rural neighborhood. The
le icon e ijoyed nothing better than a house
full of clergymen around a table Eden with
tempting victuals. And Mr*. Pratt, who doted
on the deacon, was in aereleaieut when prepar
ing such a feast and helping entertain such
goodly guests.
About a year ago a number of ministers were
on their way to tie camp meeting at Orean
Grove. T .ere were jist a dozen of them.
Decon Pratt ha 1 them all stop over night at his
farm-house, and gave them a rousing dinner
early in the evening. If, was a dinner modeled
on tne New England plan, as Pratt came from
Vermont and so did his wife. There was every
thi ig conceivable to eat, and plenty of reason
ably hard ci ler to drink. The deacon was in
the best of humor, and partook ev n more
ne irtily than usual of tue food. His wife, ac
customed as she was to her husband’s large ap
petite, was astonished at the amount he con
sumed, and ma le s menial inventory of the
various articles aud the amount of eacn that he
swallowed.
The n xi afternoon Deacon Elisha Pratt died
oi cholera mo bus. The physician said tue
dinner knocked aim out. Tne funeral was the
largest the neighborhood ever knew. Ei rht of
Die twelve clergymen present at the dinner
acred as pah-bearers, and tue other four offi
ciate l at the church and by the grave.
Tne widow was incousolahle for awhile and
talked about the tribute she proposed having
prepare lir memory of her husband. Every
body supposed she was going to erect a ha id
some nion iment, nd the makers of tonibston s
smt in bids. But they we e ali mistaken .Mrs.
Pratt had iu view t e most remarkable and yet
mi rgestive of memorials, bhe iiai the work
done quietly in Phi adelphia, and it require
some weeks to finish it.
When it arrived at the farm and some of the
widow's intimate friends were invited to call
and s-e the tribute, they were at first astounded
and then shocked, and finally th y felt a dispo
sition to laugh t ar was controlled with diffi
culty. On the table in tho parlor stoo . a lar z
gla>s case. On t p of the case was a small arch,
made of solid silver. Surmounting the arcu
was the figu e in silver of an angel b.owing a
trumpet. Inside the area and suspended from
its center was a tablet of white marble, on
vhich were inscribed tne following words in
deop, black letters:
‘ This Is What the Deacon Died Of.”
But it was underneat a the glass case that the
great surprise awaited the spectators. Tuere
on plates, arranged in the order they were
served, were exact duplicates iu wax, and some
ii glace shape, of tne various articles of food
the aeacou had eaten at t;.e dinner the evening
before he died, aud also exact duplicates in
quantity and size of the amounts he had con
sumed. Tuere was a large plate of soup, a nig
slice of meat, heapiug tdde dishes full of vege
tables, three cucumbers, huge slices of pie, a
quarter of a waterin In, two plates of ice
cream, a small cup of coffee anti three goblets
of cider. Tney were p.-rie£t pieces of wor,; i ,
wax, as well as perfect representations of wh t
*ad passed down tie deacon’s throat at tne
dinner. The whole thing had cost several hun
dr and dollars.
The ne.gubors naturally ridiculed the tribute
at first, but tney all respected the widow, aud
when they found that she was really in earnest
m her grief and in her regard for the wax me
morial, they restrained their mirth and said
litt e about it outside. Many of them i. o ight
that tne sudden loss had unhinged Mrs. Pratt’s
mind somewhat. That is why it is only after
the lapse of a year that the report of the aston
ishing tribute has leaked out.
Twilignt.
The day god seeks his couch of clouds,
And jal'Klless gently .alls;
The Katy did from out tne grass
His twilight signal calls.
A sigh seems stealing through the atr
From nature’s qu > nly breast,
And every twig an t forest leaf,
To tue spirit speaks of rest.
The night wind tells it on the hill,
And whispers in the glen;
'Tis choed in the bullfrog’s note
From out the distant fen.
In such an hour the soul will fly
In memory o’er the past,
And gaze upon Its ruined hoped
And joys tnat could not last.
Its broken vows, and words once said
We fain would now- unsay.
Resolves, that like the prophet’s vine,
Have perished in a day.
And deeds we vainly weep to think
Can never be undone;
O’er these the soul wid brood in gloom
At setting of the sun.
Can memory find a single day
In all t he vanished yeara
Whose thoughts, words, deeds, the heart ap
proves,
In which no guile appears?
But since such thoughts make sick the soul,
We may in fancy view
The future, decsod with brightest fiow'rs,
And robed in rosy hue.
The sun that set in clouds to-night
slav bring a cloudless morn,
And in the cotni g years "i life
A brighter life may dawn.
R. E Jones.
Getting Evan With the courts.
From trie Heir York World.
Policeman Billy Mace was called to tes'ify in
the case of a man he had arrested for stealing a
pair of scales.
"You say. Mr. Officer,” said the court, “that
you a rested the prisoner in the act of steading a
pair of scales, and ne got away?”
"Yes, your honor, that’s it.” said Billy.
“You recaptured him immediately, I sup
pose?” r
‘I didn't have to, your honor; 1 had him.”
"But you sav he got away.”
"That's it. your houor.”
"Then you must have recaptured him, as 3-011
have him here in court.”
"No, your houor; I 1 ad him all the time."
"Th n who did recapture him, sir; w.ll you
answer me that?"
“No one recaptured him, your honor. Noone
had to. Mo one has to recapture any duffer
after I git my hooks onto his collar. I'd ime to
see the bloKe as cou and git loosq”
"But you say he did get loose!” thundered the
court.
“No, your honor. I said he got a weigh—See?
a weigh; a pair of scales. You ge r on? Pr-ttv*
near as good as some of your own jokes, eh v ”
And one judicial humorist was temporarily
crushed.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The length of Nori * A.uenca D n*arlv 5/09
miles, its g breadth about 3,2 w miles and
its oout tce iixih of thelaui sur.-ce of
the globe.
UH..LNLAND, more than 1.-F0 miles long, is
probably the largest island in tue wor.d. Some
-reoTraphers th;nk it is a cluster of islands
frozen together.
Marines for several weeks past have been
talking about a new* island that they have dis
covered off the south coast of Newfoundland,
in latitude 45° north, longitu ie 55- wre:t. No
such island ado ued the maps, and the hydro
graphic authorities therefore suspected that a
island had i isen from the The mystery
has now been dispelled. The captain of the
ark Otto, which arrive i at Philadelphia on
Friday from Hamburg, reported that he sailed
close to the island and discovered that it was an
enormous dead whale. The creature, accord
*U u to Grundson, was about th* largest
whale ever se nin tho Atlantic—loo feet long
and 35 feet broad.
Boulanger, said a r presentative French citi
zen of New York the other day, “has so far
petered out as a hero in Pans that I should noi
be surprised to see him in New York at an earl}
late ou a visit which he would probably con
trive to keep him away from his lielle France
for an indefinite period. Boulanger would
probably spend most of his time in Canada.
He is a life member of the St. Jean Baptiste So
ciety and is very fond of the blue noses. Many
old Frenchmen, espe ially the survivors of the
met n rrgiine, regard Canad t even now as a
second France for them, and expoct yet the
possibility that they may have to emigrate
Q .ebec. which is a gre t Cat o’iz Fr n: 1 city. ”
Just now, when so much is sai: about Canad
*s a probable American province, it se*m>
curious to hear it spoken of as a po;>sibit
*‘i ranee.”
“The duel between‘Pat’Calhoun and J. D.
W iiiiainson,” said a New Yorker who is an au
thority on the code, probably tha first en
gagement on Mhe field of Koflor’ in which ham
merless, self-coc ring pistols were ever used.
As weapons in the naads of men who wanted
to hit iheir adversaries they must l>e vastly in
ferior t > the old hair-trigger dueling pistols.
The effort to cock would necessarily contract
he muscles of ihe hand and to some extent de
flect the aim. Perhaps Calhoun an l William
son didn't intend to sh ot each other anvhow;
It so ms strange that neither of them was hun
at twelve paces if they were so terribly in
earnest. Twelve pace* can't be more than 3C
feet, and is quite likely to be 28 or 30 feet.
Principals who and n’t want to get hit should
alw ys get seconds with very long le 3 r s, so a
to stride away lone‘paces.' History has not
yet recorded the le igt 1 of the 1 gs o£ the sec
onds in the Calhoun-Williamson duel.”
An interesting sale of autograph letters took
place in London some days ago. Among the
Manuscripts was a love letter of Keats to Fatmv
Browne, which sold for £ll. There also
several Autograph letters of Benjamin Franklin.
T e following characteristic letter, written b\
Carlyle to the Rev. W. Maeeall. went for
£ > 10s. : ”If Parker (which I hope will not b * the
casei do after ali reject your .M you are by n
means to be discouraged. En leaver to gath r
from him what it is that he objects to in your
paper. There is light fora wist man in every
such rejection, even in a stupid one, which
Parker's is by no means likely to be. He that
would live in Rome, it will infallibly bi good
that he know what the pop 3 thinks f him,
whatever he may think of tne pope! Did you
ever think of America as a field? A man has
liberty to preac i (1 mean by word of mouth)
much beyond what will be co i tided to him in
this country. I spo.;e with Emerson about you
in that point of view. He did not S9eui to thins
it quite unhopeful.”
A PACK of playing cabds, said to be the only
one of the kind in existence, sold at auction, in
Birmingham, England, the other day, for
Every card is specially engraved, and the pack
comprises an exhaustive pictorial history of the
piinc pal events iu tha rei,-n of Queen Anne
down to 1706. They include the victories of
Mariborou ;h, the sea fights of Admiral Benbow,
all the various changes connected with the
par iamentarv proceedings of the day, and toe
conclusions of the treaties between England
and France and Spain. The Queen of Hearts
is a very well drawn picture of Queen Anne her
self, and the King of Hearts r presents Prince
(ieorge of Denmark, her husband. The Queen
of Diamonds is Anne Sophia. Queen of Den
mark; the Queen of Clubs is the Princess R >yal
of Prussia, and the Queen of Sp elt's is the
i ’in tic css Anne of Russia. The knaves are repre
sented by leadin ; politicians of tho day. This
curious pack was the occasion of much spirited
hiddin : between persons who held commissions
for the purchase. Had the cards gone to one of
these, the London art ga lery would have event
ually received them. As it is, their destination
is Shropshire. 1
Ct-ARA Belle Fellows, who married the In
dian Chaska on the Sioux reservation, has been
imitated by another girl who found her dusky
spouse in New York. Very few people in Wash
ington knew when Miss Stella Cox left this city
some time ago. just where she was going and
why. The news has at last reached there from
the Cattaraugus Indian reservation that on the
evening of July 24 Msis Cox. in compant- with
Nathaniel Patterson, a full-blooded Seneca
Indian, appeared befor • Justice Parker in
his oifice at Versailles, N. Y., and wt*r© mar
ried. It was a quiet wedding, and only a f.*w
friends were pres-nt to witness the simple
ceremony. Tho urooin is well known among
his p *opie and his white neighbors. Tfiny unite
in voting him an upright, honest, sober and in
dustrious Indian. He is a farmer, and owns t o
b *st dapple gray team udoq the reservation
Mr. A. Sim late of tue United Stat -s In
dian bu eau, in writing of the affair remarks*
r Ve ,_. bavft a f© w more youn* to spare ii*
u ashmp:ton should desire to send some more of
her daughters among the dusky braves.” Miss
Cox was employed for som • time by Lansburgh
& Bro., and has an excellent reputation. Her
mother aud sister live in the city at 403 New
Jersey avenue. X. VV.
According to all accounts there will be a
large number of first appearances in New York
this coining season. The advent of Mrs. Blaine,
Jr., has been expected for some time, and her
debut will not be one of the surprises. She has
received much preliminary commendation, so
the critics will expect something letter tuan
usual. The debut of Mrs. Leslie Carter causes
a ripple upon the surface, be ause somewhat
un xpect and under the circumstances. If she
has genius the Chicago ca use cel bre will be
forgotten. The announcement that Nina Van
Zandt, the nihilistic w idow of Spies, the bang and
socialist, is also to appear in New York is
quietly received aud win hardly cause much ex
ejtement. She has never moved in society
circles and society will not worry about her
due last surprise is that "Mrs. Laura Hollis”
w ill make a first appearance, aud ic is explained
that she is fr -m the Pacific coast: that her name
it hter of tho notorious Laura
I>. Fair, who ki.led Lawyer Crittenden in San
r raucisc > when he had tired of her love Mrs
F.u was a handsome woman and her daughter
has inherited ail her beauty. Several vearsa *.
when Gen. D. D. Cotton died in Sail Fraucisc"’
she was con lected with bis death. With Dated
breatn some people said it was another homi
cide. Will her appearance cause a sensation?
Spokane Talls, the ©astern metropolis of
Washington, which was recently devasted by
fire, is the home of two remarkable million
aires, busin rss partners, one a republican and
the other a democrat, both of whom are men
tioned as possible United S ates senators from
the new state, and on >of whom wifi suruiv go to
Washington, the choice between them bein * a
question of which party comes on top in the
h:\st state electi <n The r publican is A M
Cannon. He is a native Illinoisan, bom at Mon
mout i fifty-five years ago. He lived in Chi
cago for a time after arriving at manuood ani
was for a couple of years a memtarof the
Chicago Board of Trade. Then he went lo
Denver and finally landed in Portland
Ore., about ten years ago as the gen:
eral agent of a sewing machine company
Here he met J. J. Browne, who will be a demo-’
craticcan idate for the United S.atesSe ate
from the state of Washington. Cannon was
afflicted with consumption, for which he went
to Sookane, aud induced Browne, who was a
school teacher.io follow shortlv afterward Mr
Cannon had about $2,000 and Browne had next
to nothing. The gentlemen went into partner
she. after the prevailing custom of tnis
country. Men engage in almost any variety
of an undertaking out there, with or
without capital. James N. Glover now
president of the First National Bank of Spo
kane, owned the entire site of t ie city of Spo
kane, and the firm of Browne & Cannon bought
two-thirds of it for $3,0 Hi. Then they took up
homesteads adjoining the city. Is it any won
der t ley are ricn to-day? Browne, the Portl ind
school tune ier. has about $1,500,(J0J, while Can
non, the sewing machine man. is reputed to be
worth at least *8,000.000. Browne was content I
to sit quietly by and allow his real estate to
make him rich, but the thrifty Cannon built
railroads and absorbed a goodly share of the
water power here. Tnese gentlemen to-dav
possess valuable lots without number in Spo
kane, and have all the money they will ever
need. Cannon owns the controlling interest in
three national bangs, and Browne has an insti
tution of the same character a.l to himself. He
was the Washington territory commissioner to
the Washington centennial in this city.
Fob a Disopjjkred Lives try Beech- ,
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It is recommended for purity, health
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I Fuarantml not to produce otr* ■ or io?? cm ■
] er.lnw' dosee; and no iuconvenie® . po :d I'M k|
(tltno. Recommended by phy^*°. o r lo Brom ■
all druwrNt* J. tsucceasor m h
I Pharixiacieo. Pari* 1 ■
mif