li i A Ru ho. SS fonte, Pa., Novembr I, 1889. Belle AN OLD PATRIOTIC SONG. A lady sends us the following, which she cut out of an o!d newspaper, with arequest to re- vive ancient patriotic memories by its publi- cation : Messrs Enrrors.—I see in the last Democrat thata couple of my old and eccentric acquaint- ances, Col. Wm. Wilson and Wm. McClelland, had been regaling them selvesat nobody’s ex- pense, and being chuck full of 1812 patriotism discoursed in your sanctum the following song, which was composed by Mr. Samuel Tag- gart, of Centre County, and published in the Center Ranger. It was sent to me when I was twelve years old. I am now seventy-one and sing it often, Hue KILGORE. Callensburg, May 13 1873. September the eleventh day. As we do understand, Our bold mariners on lake Champlain Subdued the British band. Our gallant tars prepared for war, McDonough did command ; Whoon the iake the foe did rake, The scene was truly grand. At nine o'clock the dreadful shock Was felt on lake and land, For two long hours in dreadful showers Dealt death on every hand. The gpardian angel of our rights, Who viewed this bloody scene, Now mingled with the fight, And did our cause maintain. Their Commodore all drenched in blood Pale on the deck was laid; Besides, three score of men and more Within his ship lay dead. Our Commodore, that hero bold, Now gave them the last round. Huzzah! Huzzah! my hearts of gold, Their bloody flag comes down. Four vessels now we took in tow, And brought them safe to shore ; Such dreadful wrecks I do expect Was never seen before. The great Provost, whose mighty host Had fought through France and Spain, Now took to heels and run like deals, From Plattsburg and Champlain. They took their flight in dead of night, Thir wounded left behind. . ¢ Our Yankee lads they were so glad Pursued them to the lines. The grizly monarch, king of beasts, Upon their flag portrayed ; Who came to rob our eagle's nest, That day tull low was laid. Our eagle's claws soon taught him laws Which Europe could not do; She cocked her crest and saved her nest, And then aloft she flew. Come, let us toast our Commodore, Ana his most gallant band, And sing his fame from shore to shore, Throughout our happy land. e——————— « NUMBER ONE HARD.” That was all the name he went by in Skytown. He had never thought it worth while to give his full name, and out there, where eastern titles were considered as delicate subjects and handled accordingly, no one in the community caredto press the matter. He had to be catalogued, however, and Charley Atwood demonstrated his in- genuity by christening the sturdy blacksmith “Number One Hard.” The boys shortened the appellation to suit themselves, but it was ao mat- ter so long as identification was com- plete. No. 1 was of powerful build with a biceps and stature of herculean propor- tions. It has never been my fortune to see another such magnificent physique. He was old and gray, but his majestic shoulders were erect and straight as those of a youth. His temperament was peaceable and retiring and he was never seen in the saloons or at the card tables of Skytown. He minded his own business, put in six full days at his anvil every week and allowed the world to wag as 1t would. He hada fine face, but I,who was broughtinto contact with him more than any of the rest, could trace lines of a deep sorrow among the wrinkles of age. “Some family skeleton,” I thought; “unhappy in the east, he has come to this rough section to bury his sadness and end his life. Poor No. 1.” * ® ££ x wn = Though six years have passed, I re- member as if it had occurred but yester- day the strange event which brought No. 1 conspicuously before the rough denizens of S:ytown and proved a turning point for the better in the old man’s life. The fall of '83 was a particularly disgraceful one for the pioneer commu- mity in which I found myself. Row- dies from the Mouse River country and cowboys from the far Montana boarder conspired to keep alive an element of lawlessness that put civilization to the blush. The scattered farming popula- tion evaded the towu to trade at anoth- er village, even though obliged to go many wiles further. I had opened a general store in Skytown, and this eva- sion by the farmers nearly ruined me. fn company with two or three law abid- wg citizens, equally as interested as myself in the preservance of the peace, I openly expressed my disgust and dis- approval to the Sheriff, but he (being a mere figure-head and too much of a rascal himself to perform his sworn duty) paid little heed to our demands, save to reassure us by stating that “it would only last a few days.” One particularly lawless individual had come down with the Mouse River delegation, who rejoice in the soubri- quet of “Long Haired Pete.” He was an athletic young fellow of 22, or there- abouts, but very quarrelsome either in or out of “his cups,” and no one had the hardihood to cross his will or go agaiost his slightest wish, Ile was lvoked up to and universally: admired by all the Mouse River rowdies. *‘Pete did this, or “Pete did that,” was a rigid demand upon his followers to go and do like likewise. This gentleman reigned supreme in Skytown until the demoralized Montana faction dragged a rival god from beyond the Missouri, crowned him and flaunted his colors malignantly in the faces of Long Hair ed Pete's partisans, I had noticed the trend of affairs from afar and had about concluded to pack my stock in divers wagons and move to a more congenial clime. There would soon be a war of extermination, A AT Fo EAR rR RO EO BR SAE LT I felt positive, and the sooner I moved to less barbarous surroundings the bet- ter—for me. But the climax was reached before I had fairly decided and I was compelled to see the drama throngh. Covert sneers and half-uttered threats had been carried back and forth’ be- tween the two champions until both parties were warm for an encounter. They both sought itand, one afternoon, Pete collected his followers about him and they surged into Splangler’s saloon where Montana Dick was holding forth with his friends. Sundry jeers and derisive laughs were indulged in, but Pete heeded them not. He stalked straight to the bar and then, turning half around, he looked at Montana Dick. “Hev a drink with me?” he asked, smiling blandly. Was Pete backing down? Had he acknowledged a superior ? These were the startled thoughts of his people as | they stood in an agony of doubt behind their hero. Montana Dick seemed surprised, too, and he looked his rival all over and gave a contemptuous sniff, Then he looked about him triumphantly. “] don’t mind, seein’s ye want me to. I'd drink with the meanest feller that walks, ”’ he added when the liquor had been poured. “] wouldn't,” said Pete, suddenly raising his glass and dashing its con- tents full in the other's face. What a bedlam of approbation went up from Pete's friends! For a second Dick, with the liquor streaming from his eyes, was dazed and seemed not to realize what occurred; then, with a yell of rage he jumped backward, drew his revolver and emptied every shell at his enemy. He was too insane with liquor and rage to fire accurately and every bullet went wide of the magk save one, and that passed through Pete’s shirt, but did not touch his body. “If you want to fight,’ cried Pete, when the smoke had cleared away, jist come out-doors an’ fight like a man. We stand too big a chance of hittin’ some one else in here.” Pell-mell they rushed out upon the prairie, and the combatants were soon facing each other with loaded revolvers in their hands. “Wen I drop my hat you fellers fire,” cried “Roxy” of Montanians. But before Roxy could drop his hat, Number One stepped from the crowd of onlookers. He raised his hand im- periously. “Wait.” Something about the man command- ed attention and he was accorded a hearing. “What's the use of this needless, bloodshed ? In this manner both of you are liable to die. I cry out against it.” “Git out o’ the way,” yelled Dick; and the crowd, taking its cue from him, endeavored to frighten the old man off. “We're here to figh,” said Pete, “and fight we will, whether one or both of us go under.” Number One never looked at him. “Let me propose a way of settling the difficulty,” said he drawing two pistols from his pocket, both exactly, alike. “One of these weapons is load- ed with power only; the other with powder and ball. Now, I will lay them on the grass here and you Mon- tana Dick, and you, Long-Iaired Pete, are to approach and take one, each of you. Iwill toss up a dollar, and the one that wins the toss is to put his pistol at the breast of the other and fire. In the event of that pistol being loaded with powder only, then the other shall have his turn. In this way only one of the duelists will be killed, and one life saved at all events. Itisa fair method of settling the dispute. Fate will decide it. What have you to say, gentlemen 2” Not a sound came from the assem- bled men. The awfulness of that bat- tle seemed 10 strike even their hardened hearts with fear. Pete bowed his head and his broad bosom heaved a moment. “I'm ready,” he declared, looking up. There wasa murmur of admiration from the crowd, and I fancied the old blacksmith looked toward the young fellow with sudden pride. But it was only a sudden shadow that crossed his face and it became as passive as be- fore. To be outdone by his enemy would have cost Montana Dick his laurels, and shaking back his shoulders with the air of a braggadocio, he eried : “I'm ready, too.” Number One stepped back. Dick strode over to the pistols and selected hig, and Pete then approached and took the remaining one. They stood facing each other,but the bully had faded entirely out of Montana Dick's bearing. The combatants, both of them, wee white-faced and both filled with foreboding. One of them had the loaded pistol— which was it? The rabble about the two men was as quiet as the men themselves, and even when Number One tossed the coin and Montana Dick won there was only a faint cheer from his supporters. Dick's eye shot a malignant gleam at Pete as he approached and placed the muzzle of the pistol within a foot of his breast. It I should live until the end of eter- mty I could never forget the bravery of Long-Haired Pete at this supreme mo- ment. His face was of an ashy pallor, but, drawing himself to his fuil height, he folded his arms and awaited the de- cree of fate. With a sneering laugh Montana Dick pulled the trigger. There follow- ed a bright flash and load report, but Pete still stood erect before his enemy. The Mouse River men gave a shout of exultation. Realizing that he had se- lected the wrong pistol, Montana Dick fell back in dismay and fear. His enemy had failed! Pete grasped his pistol firmly and rushed towards the cowardly champion of the Mou- | acians, Atthis moment Number One stepped between them. “Stop!” he commanded. Pete looked at hin angrily, with a harsh reply on his lips, but, meeting the steady gaze of Number O..e, he con- tinued looking as by some weird fas- cination. His arms fell beside him and he staggered back. His lips moved, but they uttered no word. “Give me that pistol.” It was mechanically handed to him. “Now, go!” commanded Number One; “leave this town at once.” Pete turned, walked slowly out on the prairie where his horse was graz- ing, saddled and bridled the animal, mounted and rode away. Asin a kind of stupefaction the crowd had observed this strange pro- ceeding. When Pete had disappeared in the purple haze where horizen and prairie met, the men passed silently away, and Number One was the first to go. * * * * * #* After this, although “white-winged peace’’ did not roost in the neighbor- hood of Skytown,the backbone of|dissen- sion was broken and everything settled down to a fairly harmonious channel for a pioneer village. Business picked up so well that I concluded to chance it awhile longer, and I have lived to be glad that I did. The never failing topic of conversa- tion continued to be the strange duel en- gineered by Number One, and for months after that affair the all import- ant question of “what made Long Hair- ed Pete throw up his hands and get out when Number One told him to” re- mained unanswered. For me the mys- tery was cleared away, but I never breathed the secret to a soul in Sky- town. About four weeks after the duel Number One Hard came into the store dressed in his best clothes and carrying a satchel in his hand. I expressed great surprise at his intended depar- ture, and he, drawing me to one side, thrust a letterinto my hand. “Read that, Mr. Barlow.” I obeyed, and, as near as I can re- member, the following was written in the note in a very awkward hand : Mouse River, D. T. Dear Op FATHER: — It’s no use—you’ve found me, and I never wanted to go home so bad in all my life as I do now. I will meet you in Jimtown the 15th of this month. I'm tired of this life and ready for something better. Will you meet me there ? If so, we will go East together and try our for- tunes once more in the little shop at Roxbury. Affectionately, Pere. “Who is Pete ?” pletely nonplussed. “Why, ‘Long-Haired Pete.’ ” “No Cid » “Fact. All I came out west for was to find him. He always was a harum- scarum boy. Nothing bad, mind you, only just wild. Well, he left, and mother and I never knew anything about it till he was gone. He left a note saying that he had become a little restless ; didn’t think blacksmithing was his forte, and all that, and thought he'd try it out west a while. I thought where he'd come,as I had a brother up at Devil's Lake, so I started after him. Brother Joe hadn't seen Pete, however, so I calculated to settle down in Sky- town for a spell and just Lope and hope and meybe I'd find him in some wgy. You see I wasn’t disappointed, for I ran across him just on the point of fighting with that Montana rowdy. Didn’t I fix that up pretty cute?” “Perhaps so, but I think your son stood a poor show—" “Not a bit of it! Why, Mr. Bar- low, neither of those pistols was loaded with bullets. I lied a little, but I sav- ed Pete.” I felicitated the old gentleman on his ingenuity. “If I can only save Pete from that whiskey appetite he has contracted out here, it will make me a happy man.” “Don’t let that worry you. A young fellow that can look into the muzzle of a revolver with as much impunity as he, whether it is loaded, or unloaded, is capable of the highest moral develop- ment.” - “He's brave—nobody ever doubted that. I knew he'd write me! I firmly expected that letter. ‘Will I meet him at Jimtown ? Of course I will, and it will be a happy day for mother when she sees Pete and I come home togeth- er and goto work in the dusty little shop just across the street. Just chink, we've been gonefrom home two years ! My sakes, I feel twenty years younger now that I'm going back with Pete. Here's the stage. (Good-by, Mr. Bar- low; I'm much obliged to you for all your kindness.” I shook his hand heartily. “Good by and good luck to you!” He boarded the stage, waved his hat at me from the window and—that was the last of Number Oue.—[ Detroit Free Press. I queried, com- Don’t Drink New Beer. From the Anti Adulteration Journal. No premature beer is fit for consumyp- tion. A beer under four months old is as injurious as any slow poison ever consumed. No matter how pure the material may be from which the beer is made, it is, however.an impure beer un- til it has had at least four months to punfy itself by eliminating certain yeast germs, carbonic acid gas, and other foreign matters. A well preserved old ale, it seems, would be much better to use than new beer, where malt liquors are needed, or perhaps better yet for the sick, a malt tonic or extract of malt or good grape wine, until good beer is produced. In Bavaria tbe law enforces the aging as well as the purity of beer, and for such laws we are contending here. Frostep Levon Pre—Take two lem- ons. Grate about one third of the peel and squeeze out the juice, removing the seeds. Add eight tablespoonfuls of su- ear and the yelks of four eggs. Stir smoothly and add three-fourths of a cup of rich milk. Huve ready two pie-pans containing under crust. Pour in the custard and bake. Whip the whites of four eggs thoronghly,add a grate of lem- on rind and six tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. When the custard is baked pour the meringue over the pies and return to the oven till of a delicate brown. FARMERS OF PENNSYLVANIA! A Vote for Edmund A. Bigler for State Treasurer is a Vote for Treasury Reform,a Step Towards Equali- zation of Taxation, and His Election will bea Decisive Victory in War against Monopoly and Ring Rule. x | ExTRACT FROM ADDRESS oF Hox GER- i ARD C. BRowN, DELIVERED AT IN-| TER-STATE PIC-NIC EXHIBITION AT WILLIAMS GROVE, Pa., Avaust 25, 1889. The pertinent question now comes home to each one of us : Does the Ameri- can farmer enjoy in full proportion the national prosperity which he has so largely created ? A certain class of au- thorities hold that he does, and would make us believe that ¢all is lovely.’ Farming, which should be, and nat- urally is, the most profitable of all legiti- mate vocations, and which we are so often informed by the aforesaid awut/ori- ties, is the ‘most honorable and inde- pendent,’ in reality returns less profit on the investment, and pays less wages to its votaries, than any other business at the present time. The census specifically informs us that it does not yield three per cent. net in- come. The recent rapid increase in sherifl’s sales in the very finest farming sections of the State shows its precarious condi- tion. The augmentation of tenant farmers and of mortgages on far: property throughout the whole country clearly | demonstrates its dark and critical future ‘We must ascertain the cause of this | depression. We cannot afford to ignore it. It grows yearly and daily worse. It threatens the existence of farming | as an independent, honorable business. For so great and marked a declension as the past twenty years has shown in farming for profit, there must exist ac- tive and powerful causes. conceding all that we have claimed, and ostensibly providing a method of relief and reform through a commission ap- pointed to revise the fevenue laws. del, all classes of laborers are equally interested with those who till the soil . that we shall win this fight, their battle las well as ours, © The men who receive the furmers’ votes [should] be men on whem they | ean rely.’ etracts from address of Hon Jno. H. Brigham, at Williams Grove Grang- ers’ Picnie, 1889. “We realize that as a class we are un- equally burdened by taxation. The as- sessors know little us to the value of a merchants’ goods, but are better inform- ed on the value of the farmers’ stock and tools. Then a farmers’ means are all in sight, you can’t hide an acre of land if it 1s on edge. That we areunjustly tax- "ed I have not the least doubt. We can do better than complain of it. If it is true that we are over taxed, we ought to try and devise some way to make other people pay their share. Iam sure that the farmes, when they act unitedly, will in a great measure right this wrong. No man, no corporation, will ever light- en our burden a feather’s weight until | we compel them to do so, and we can compel them if we will. We cannot by any spasmodic effort right this wrong;it will require long, careful, patient effort. Having in our hands more power than any other class, perhaps more than all others combined, we have done nothing. You hold the reins! Do the driving. You are the party! Select your own public servants.” LEGISLATION, For the purpose of cqualizing taxa- tion and relieving the overtaxed farmer the following bill was introduced at the last session of the Legislature. House Bill No. 10, entitled An Act ! Providing for the assessment and valua- WHERE SHALL WE LOOK FOR THEM, AND WHAT SHALL THE REMEDY BE? The most cursory view will induce the conclusion that the trouble is not of natural growth and is not inherent to our calling, but is rather the outcome of our own inattention and indifference, “ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY.” This covers the case exactly. As it happens, the chief factors in this depres- sion of farming as a paying business have sprung from our neglect and are remediable by our own action. tion of real estate, personal and corpo- rate property for taxation for county, township, borough and municipal pur- )ses. This bill which was introduced on ! January 11, 1889, and pass the House No one cause is so prolific a curse to | us as unfair legislation ; no weapon is so deadly as unjust taxation; no means so potent to win the one and wield the other as combination and organization against our right and well being. MONOPOLY 1S OUR BANE, Trusts are its ripest fruits «nd fullest development. The beneficiaries of the one are open apologists of the other and | do not hesitate to are mere private atiairs with whom a President (or any one else) hasno right to interfere.” They have grown audacious to the point of temerity and insolent as impe- rial dictators. Confident in the brute force of the millions they have extorted from a long suffering people, they no longer disguise their buccaneeri ng pro- jects. UNEQUAL Here is the key-note. TAXATION. 1 think it was Fox, from his seat in Parliament, who | *“%¢ 2 ; | relief to the people of the Common- deciared that ‘‘the right to tar was the power to destroy.” This was the cord on which the hearts of the Revolutionary patriots struck fire and urged them to devote their lives to save the nation’s life. We have allowed ourselves to be ca- joled on one pretext and another to sub- mit to an excessive increase of taxation and what is even worse, to a most in- iquitous distribution of its burdens. We have permitted the revenue laws of the State to be so shaped from time to time, that, as at present, a good one- half ofall the property in the Common- wealth is not assessed. This is the more outrageous, inasmuch as the property thus exempted is the most profitable that exists in our bor- ders. Its holders are millionaires and corporations. All other classes of property, except real estate, when taxed at ail, pays not to exceed the sixth part of that which is levied upon farm property of equal assessed value. I will recall to your attention right here, that there are levied in Pennsyl- vania, for all purposes, about $40,000 000 yearly, of which real estate, mainly farm property, pays »34,000,000,licenses, ete., more than $2,000,000, and the bal- ance, not exceeding $4,000,000, whichis all that is demanded of all that vast cor- porate and personal property, in amount actually exceeding in value and im- mensely over-topping in income all the real estate. Roughly estimated, should real estate pay its own share, and nomore, it would puy about $17,000,0 0 per annum, or just about one-half of what it does pay. Should corporate and income produc- ing personal property be required to pay its just proportion at the same ratio, it would pay $22,000.000, or more than five times what it does now. Is there any sound reason why it should not? We claimitis an act of common justice—nothing more. HOW WILL THAT EFFECT THE STATE. Allowing the situation to be as here stated, what can we do about it? Equalization of tawation, which is not only just and proper, but which we re- gard asa vital necessity, an ab:olate sine qua non, isa great reform move- ment. It must advancein spite of the organized opposition of many of the most powerful interests and influences. THEY WILL FIGHT. For three or more sessions of the Leg- islature has the farmer’s organization beert leading in this effort, in fact, it initiated it. Our bill, defeated at one session by a trick, was 20 powerfully pushed at the last one, that it was only beaten by one vote, after the corporate and moneyed interests, thoroughly alarmed, had been obliged to strain their every nerve to down it. Kven then they were forced to passa resolution acknowledging the injustice of the present system, virtaally declare “that #rusts | finally on the 26th of March, provided as follows: Section 1. Be it enacted &e., that from and after the passage of this act as- sessors of the several tonwships, bor- oughs and cities of the Commonwealth shall annually, as to persenal and cor- porate property, and triennially, as to real estate, assess for county, municipal and other local purposes, all taxable persons, natural and aruficial, owning or holding in trust real estate or personal property, horses, sheep, cattle and swine over four years of age, household prop- erty and tool implements necessary for trades or occupations exceeding four hundred dollars, in value, except only the property authorized to be exempted trom taxation by the first section of arti- cle nine of the Constitution of Pennsyl- vania, the stock of building and loan as- sociations, watches, household furniture and pleasure carriages: Provided, that all classes of property subject to tax for State purposes when assessed for county, munieipal or local purposes shall not be taxed ata rate higher than one-half the mill tax levied on real estate. The practical effect of this bill, had it become a law, would have been the tax- ing of the property of Corporations— now not taxable—for township, bor- ough and eounty purposes. And in oper- ation would very largely increase the total valuation from which the local taxes are to be derived and therchy would decrease the rate and be an actual wealth. After tinal passage in the House, the bill was sent to the Senate forits concur- rence. On May 2nd, 1889, Senator Gerard C. Brown (of York) moved that the Senate F nance Committee (to which the bill had been referred) be discharged from the consideration of House Bill No. 10, for the purpose of giving the Senate an opportunity to consider the measure. This required a two-third vote and upon the yeas and nays being called there were 23 yeas and 13 nays. Lacking one vote of two-thirds the veso- lution,was lost, and bill practically kill ed, it never having been reported from the Comu ittee for action. Of the 23 yeas 13 were Democrats, 10 Republicans. The nays were Messrs. Brown, (Montgoniery) Cooper, Crouse, Delemater, Mehard, Newmeyer, Pen- rose, Reyburn, Smith, Tompson and Upperman,—13 all Republicans. DISCRIMINATION IN FAVOR OF CORPORA- TIONS. Extract from Senator Gerard C. Brown's Address at Williams’ Grove, 1889. But this question (equalization of tax- ation) is rot the only one that we have deep interest in. Weare the victims of atrecious discrimination by the great corporations which controtour transpor- tation, our telegraphic, telephone and express busiress. The great transportation and trans- mission corporations, for instance, have been for years not merely hostile to the interests of the people which they were chartered to subserve, but by using un- scrupulously their iminense resourees to destroy the Constitution as far as it lays down the law affecting them, have come to occupy a position closely hordering on treason to the State. It would indeed be difficult for a die- passionate judge to define wherein it does come short of a {reasonable con- spiracy. At all events, railroad influence has notoriously run Legislature after Legis- lature. Certain valuable considera- tions have been given, accepted and used unblushingly with scarce a mantle of secrecy, and this, too, contrary to a proper personal pride, a decent self-re- spect, and nct merely in violation of the organic law, but of the solemn of- ficial oaths of members of the General Assembly and of State officers as well. It is our highest duty to secure if pos- sible the enforcement of the Constitution as it is, and until that is accomplished we may well treat any proposed amend- ments as of secondary consideration. Even to anticipate this may be consider- ed eutopian by many persons who know something of the immense forces leagu- ed against it. A noted political leader remarked to a speake during a debate on this issue in the Senate two Fears no, i “Oh! no, you will never get there,” but I will trust to the virtue, intelligence We are assailing monopoly in its cita- | and patriotism of the people to confound | his prediction.” WHERE THE FAULT LIES. “Fifth. We hold the Republican party responsible for the failure—a fail- ure wilfully and corruptly incurred—to enforce by ‘appropriate legislation’ the sixteenth and seventeenth articles of the Constitution, designed to protect the lund and labor, the people and indus- tries of this Commonwealth.’ —7The Democratic Platform, 1889. All Sorts of Paragraphs. —A two-legged horse is on exhibition in a New York museum. .—Madison, Ga., claims to have a horse that took part in the Indian wars in 1830. —A pure white English sparrow dwells with a colony of browns in Hart- ford, Conn. — Erastus Wiman has contributad $100 to the fund for a monument to | Horace Greely. Umbrellas are being imported into India in great numbers. Last year 280,- 000 arrived in Calcutta alone. | —John Masgatt, aged 76 years, of West Elisworth, Me., drove 40 miles last week to be initiated a Good Temp- lar. —A Hannibal, Mo., man has killed 910 squirrels since the first of June, but probably he has not done much of any- thing else. —At Pensacola, Fla., a mustang that was abused by its driver rushed into the water and held its head beneath the sur- face until it drowned. —The people of the Northwest say that the houses unuzally high, and that this is a certain sign of & very cold winter. —The wine list on the bills of fare used in dining cars on railroads crossing Towa has this notice at the bottom . “No liquors sold in the State of Towa.” —The Prince of Wales is said to be suffering from Bright's disease. It is re- ported that the extension of his trip to Egypt is recommended by his physi- cians. —A plague of monkeys afflicts Tan- jore, in Southern India. The creatures do so much mischief that an official catcher receives a rupee for each monkey captured. —The grave of a woman buried in Cohoes, N. Y., 18 years age, was opened recently and the body found petrified. The features looked as natural as if the woman had just died. —-The Hon. R. M. McLane, formerly Minister to France, has offered his ser- vices as a stump speaker to the Demo- cratic State Committee of Maryland for this fall’s campaign. —A London cable says that it is esti- mated that C. P. Huntington will have to pay $10,000,000, in dowry and settle- ment of debts, to Prince Hatzfeldt, who is to wed his daughter. —Three boys, attending gymnasia or high schools in Berlin, have shot them- selves within the last few days on ac- count of disappointment in not being promoted into higher classes. —A Litchfield, Mich., couple who have been married 30 years, had a mis- understanding about two years ago, and since then they have never spoken to each other, though living in the same house. —Justice Stephen J. Field looks none the worse for his exciting experience in California. It troubles him, however, and he discourages all allusions to it. His friends understand that he is tqQ speak of it first. —TItis proposed to bring in a bill at the next session of the British Parlia- ment to put a restraint upon improvi- dent marriages, the great proportion of such marriages being made by those un- der 25 years of age. —In Houlton, Me., lives a lady who never wore an article of jewelry, a piece of lace nor a collar, even in the days of courtship, which experience she has pass- ed through more than once, havng married twice. —The Paris beauty show begins to- day with 30 candidates, including 2 En- glish, 1 Irish, 2 South Americans, 2 from the United States, 2 Russians, 2 Hungarians, 2 Italians, 2 Roumanians, 5 French and 4 Orientals. —The monuments of antiquity at Ath- ens are being cleansed from the dirt and rubbish of ages for the approach- ing royal wedding. In doing this sev- eral cntire streets of ths modern town have had to be pulled down. —The fish are getting so numerous around the docks at Port Tampa, Fla., that they jump out of the water and land on the wharves. A king fish weighing 17 pounds was captured by Captain George Warner in that way on Tuesday. : —A Maine girl put a note and her address in a box of toothpicks, request- ing the finder to write to her. A Kansas City man got the box, opened a corres- | pondence, and a few days ago started East to see if the young lady was the sort of woman he wanted for a wife. —On September 22 a man was exe- cuted at Ossuna, in Andalusia, for murder, who up to the last moment was in full expectation of a reprieve from Queen Christiana. Thereprieve was ac- tually signed, and orders were sent to carry it out, but it arrived just after the execution was over. —The Flathead Indians of Montana differ widely from other tribes on this continent. They are not warriors, nor are they lazy and good for nothing. On the contrary, most of them are thrifty farmers, whose industry and skill are attested by big stacks of hay and grain about their dwellings. —Daniel Frederick, of Knox county, Ind., was 100 years old October 16. He was born in Knox county and has al- ways resided there. His life pursuit has been that of a farmer, and his habits, plain, simple and regular. He has nev- er been sick but twice in his long, quiet hfe, and to-day he is a remarkably hale spry and vivacious old man. His hair is still black, with but a few silver threads, and he has no use for spectacles. muskrats are building their -