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Show I f ' THE SUN. SPANISH FORK, KANSAS REPUBLICANS UTAI1. General Beauregard died on tbe 20tb. The eastern states suffered from a blizzard ihe Supreme Coart Decide that They on tbe 20th. n New York Rufus Hatch, the Hare the Legal Home, died on the 23rd. The K&nao Supreme Court on tbe 25th, Mr. Cleveland has selected Henry T. Tbur-he- r Jhlef Justice Horton rendering the decision, of Detroit for hi private secretary. and Justice lustlce Johnson concurring, M. Jules Ferry ha been elected president LUen, Populist, dissenting, sustained tbe of the French Benate by a majority of 143 Douglass or Kepuhllcau House as the legal and Vote. House of Representatives of Hugh ODonnell, the Homestead labor leader, ha been declared not guilty of murlie Kansas legislature, and Incidentally der a charged. that the act of the Dunsmore or Popu-1The Wyoming legislature adjourned on the House bad no standing In law. The 13th without electing a United Btate senator, was given orally governor Osborne will appoint. pln!on of the chief justice ind occupied an hour and forty minutes in Owing to the failure of tbe Cortes to approve the financial schemes of the ministry lellvery. The decision was of the caae known ss the the Portuguese cabinet ha resigned. The English Liberals won two elections on 3unn habeas corpus case. Tbe Republican the 24th, one of them being a gain. It was Bouse caused Janies C. Gunn to be subpmnaed o a substantial victory for home rule. 0 testify In s contested election case. Gunn Governor Osborne of Wyoming ha apRegnored the summons, claiming that tbe pointed A. 0. Beckwith at United Btate Senator. He will serve until tbe next legispublican House was not the constitutionally lature meet. srgnnlzed House of Representatives. The ReThe South Dakota legislature has passed a publican House ordered It eergoant-at-arm- s lo arrest Gunn and take him before the bar divorce law requiring six month residence where personal serIn all case and one sf tbs House for punishment for contempt vice cannot he bad. year in Sunn Instituted habeas corpus proceedings Princess halulanl sailed from England for the Supreme Court, In Its decision the court New York on the 22ml. 81m is coming to Sealed tbe application for a writ, deciding submit her claims to the Hawaiian throne to that the Republican House was legally and the people of America. A crowd of striking coal miner attacked a constitutionally organized, and that It had n men who had taken their the right and power to enforce Its mandates. party of plact-- i In mines In Washington county, the In Chief Justice Horton, delivering A hundred shots were 2tltb. on the opinion, started In by reviewing the Hied but no one was hurt. facts In connection with the organizaA dispatch from Malta says that Mrs. tion of tbe rival Ilousea, and dcelured that, Lllllc Langtry, having arrived there on her beupon the allegations made, the court had yacht from Marseilles, la being subjected to ten days quarantine, on the ground that fore It e matter to decide judicially. He said tbe evidence showed that the Re- Marseilles Is an infected port. Democratic politicians who have Just republican Uouae was organized by sixty-fou- r for the members holding cert elites of election from turned from Washington are authority W. (Hick statement that the secretary of state; that the Populist of Kansaa will receive the George appointment ol members commissioner of tbe general land olllce. House was organized by bolding certificates, and twelve contesting At the closing session of the convention of members, and that three members took no the Daughters of the Revolution, Mrs. Stevenwas part In tbe organization of either House. son, the wife of the vice president-elect- , The chief justice then went Into a review of elected president. General and Mrs. II. V. vice president. the manner In which legislative bodies are Boynton were A caused was at De Moines on sensation McCray on Elections organized, and cited four men for grave to show that tbe proper persons to organize a the 23rd by the arrest of waa Dr. J. W. Over-toOne of them House were those holding certificates, and lu robbing. dean of Drake University medical defrom partment. The body taken was that of a support of McCray rend passage The Supreme Court of pauper. Cushings Manual. Allan Manvel, president of tbe Atchison, Nebraska, no longer ago than January 17 of died at this year, bad taken that view of tbe question. Topeka A Santa Fe railroad company Death ban Diego, California, on tbe 24lb. In support of thla theory he declared, the was not unexpected, as he bad been atlllcted In Kansae the witnessed capital with Bright's disease and had been fulling icenes lately fully justified such a rule. rapidly for several day. The legislature of North Dakota ha electIn the case now before the court, the chief to tbe United btatea Senate justice continued, no showing had been at- ed s Democrat He la W. N. Roach of Grand Forks. He was tempted that there was fraud or bad faith on elected by Democrats, Independent, end the part of the present State Board of Cannine Republicans. He was s dark bores. . vassers. There bad been presented a reMr. Roach Is a large vised journal of the Dunsmore House, eviGovernor btone of Missouri, In a message dently carefully prepared, and yet that jour- to tbe legislature, urges that a memorial be nal day after day seemed to recognize only sent to congress asking that the power of federal Judges be so limited as to prevent members bolding certificates bad authority to them from Imprisoning local judge for conact. For aeveral days It act forth that tempt as has been done heretofore. members responded to roll call, and The Pittsburg A Fort Wayne train was deothers were counted In as present hut not railed a It passed over the Litttle River voting, In order to make a quorum, tbe other bridge, one mile east of Columbia City, Inmember of the House being characterized a diana, Wednesday. The two rear coaches were turned on their side and rolled down contestants, Thla record waa kept up until the embankment. One mun was killed and the contestants were formally taken In by a twenty persons Injured. vote of the House. Then the journal showed The League of American Wheelmen held that the Dunsmore House accepted the prece- their annual meeting In Philadelphia a few dents laid down In the books as correct days ago. According to the report of the ' Much had been eald about the Reed federal secretary the league now numliers 84,304 of 10.624 members In tbe a House, the court went on, In support of the members, gain last year. Last year there were 619 women practice of counting In members, but the cm and this rear there are 1,163. Reed House had a rule, formally adopted, Lewis Green Stevenson, the only son of The base the to speaker ruling. opon which Vice President-elec- t Stevenson, ha been apDunsmore House bad adopted no euch rule. pointed by his father a hi private secretary More than fifty persons who were counted In and w 111 accompany him to Washington and He by the Dunsmore House bad never recognized at once aume the duly of that position. Is alHiut 27 years of age and U an able and It t such, but were carrying on a House of bright young man. their own. Speaker Reed never counted In The condition of the boomer who are waitanv persona who hud not recognized him as to occupy the Cherokee Strip Is tald to ing speaker. Now there could be no question lie desperate. Congress is not likely to that the Douglass House was organized by ratify the treaty at om-- and the boomers will member who held cer- not he able to oc u py the lands unless they do the votes of sixty-fou- r so in violation of law. They are seriously tificate. the advisability of doing so reIt was claimed, the justice went on, that considering gardless of consequence. there were some Irregularities In tbe organl-zatlo- n A dispatch from Tangier, says: The rebel of the Douglass House, because It did forced an entrance to Wazan on ednesday not receive the roll of member from the sec- - for the puriHise of looting the city. When wall were a the tho had of citizens all closed within of but state, they duplicate retary that roll. Tbe secretary of state's failure U snd gathered and attempted to annihilate forces. Tbe street were scene the lay before the House a roll could not prevent of atlaetlng horrible carnage for hour. Hundreds an organization. were killed. The members of tbe Populist House went j Alexander Russell Webb, tbe American Into caucus Saturday evening to conshlct Mohammedan whom the wealthy Mussvlmans what action to take, In view of the Supreme of India and the East have sent to Introduce Court' decision, upholding the legality of Iht the faith of Islam amor.g the civilized Chrlstlansof the West.has arrived at New York organization of the Republican House. Af- Tbe rich Mohammedans of Bombay have ter much discussion It waa decided to name a guaranteed (130,090 for tho purpose of erecto the wait of three committee upon governot ting a mosque in America. end consult with him at to their future course, Boston and New York sole leather firm and to report to the House Monday. The representing a capital of (13,000,000 bavt general sentiment of the caucus was to abide combined with a view of controlling the out of tho tanneries under their control and by the court' decision, ami to join the Re- put the price of sole leather. T h publican House forthwith. The governor, In consequently head of the combination ia Thomas E. Proo an Interview, took that view of the situation. tor of Boston, It said there are eotm The committee will make a report to that ef- ninety firms In the agreeine nu fect Monday, and the Populist House will E. E. Rarnard, the noted astronomer of tbs then dissolve and Its members will join the Lick observatory, who discovered Juplteri fifth satellite, will not return to California rival organization. I In the East, having been granted Tbe acts of the Populist House having been Barnard six months leave of absence, and the papen declared to be Illegal, all the appreciation say he will probably accept a position with bills will have to be passed over again. The the Cblciigo university, where he will bavi Republican House baa passed many bills, and charge of the big telescope placed there. they will be eeot to the Senate at the first opTbe Jubilee present already received by portunity. The present session of the legis- the Pohs amount to 7,000,000 franca. Tbs Austrian emperor, Austrian archdukes, tbs lature expire by limitation March 8, and II Will be necessary to hold an extra session In Archbishop of Prague and the Archbishop ol each. Th order to transact the necessary business. The Hungary of gave 10,000 franca sent 15.000, th constitution provide that memlters may draw Bishop nobility of Bohemia 300, UUU, Mexican Catho per diem due for onlv thirty days of an exolios, 130,000, South American Catholics 250, tra session, and an etlort w 111 be made to doe 000. up the business within that time. A letter hs been received from New Men s tanksnta, Alaska, known a 'Father Wyoming's New Senator. Mission, giving particular of a fin Governor Osborne ba appointed A. C. there February 7, In which twenty-elghBeckwith of Evanston, as United States senahouses were destroyed In two hour. Tht tor. He 1 the richest man III the territory. people are suffering for want of clothing anc Mr, Beckwith has never held hut two ofshelter. The fire destroyed atniut a quartet fices. One was a membership In the National World's Fair commission, and the other a of the town, eutalllng a loss of (13.000. Request for aid have resulted In (too being submembership In the first town council of Cheyenne. He went to Cheyenne thirty years ago, scribed In Beattie no far; and more will bt working bta passage across the plain with a forthcoming. bull team, lie Idt milled himself with the The Nebraska legislature has passed a re so community by building the first house and lutlon declaring that state In the great In When the railway came terlor basin should unite In building a road opening a grocery. and went on, be went with It, and waa a rich from Galveston to the Dakotas. The restituman before he settled In Evanston, a thrifty tion recites the beuetlts of such a iwllrnad, town near the Utah line. . In that section he which It Is estimated would cost (37, 000, UK), le a big man. He own the local bank, herds and propose to secure fund by levying a tax of cattle and tract of range, coal mines and of 5 cents per acre on the land of the slates. coal and timber lands. Ill hobby Is horses, It call upon the governor to consult with and he breed trotters on the finest farm In the governor of Missouri, the Dakota, Mintbe mountains, lie bring Wilkes stork nesota, Iowa, Texas Arkansas, Kansas and from Kentucky and make money. HI re- Oklahoma, proposing a convention of deleligious denomination U the Methodist. gates to meet at some central point, I On Thursday night the Kansas Benatt Mr. Cleveland V 1r.vat Secretary. a resolution declaring that the adopted T. one of Tburber of the Detroit, Henry Court has no jurisdiction in the House law partner of lion. Don M. Dickinson, has muddle; thst the state constitution provides received a telegram offering him the private that Each House shall tie the judge of In President-elec- t to Cleveland. secretaryship return and qualification of lla own He ha elgnlfled his Intention to accept the election members, and that the court's action In asappointment. to take up the case Is urn The sppolntment came to Mr.Thurber with- suming authority The Republican of the Senate out solicitation on the part of himself or Ida warranted. 11 to prevent the paasagr In their did frlenda, and waa extended In recognition of of the resolution,power but the Populism prevailed his admirable equipment for tbe position. Mr. reason of number. Cleveland had known him for )ears, and byThis action partially confirm tbe general made the selection as a result of thorough acbelief the Populism will Ignore tbe dethat Mr. Thurbcr's with qualities and quaintance of the Supreme Court, should It be adattainment. He ba turn with Mr. Dlekin-io- n cision verse to the Yopullst House. as a law student and partner for eighteen The Midlothian Liberal association lias rears, has accniuuluicd a tmslcst foitunc, and Is Ip receipt of a professional Income of from adopted a resolution declaring that home rule a necessary condition to MU, (it) to (Ih.taai a year. He I a graduate of for Scotland I tbe University of Michigan. (ratitlng home rule to Ireland. . Meeting or Leading Silver Men ington. well-know- j s M. L. SCOTT A CO,, Proprietors. M. L. SCOTT, Editor SUBSCRIPTION ? One Year Six Mont hs , , , RAWS! 13 00 3 00 00 . 02 , ,, Three Months,, Blnglo Copies I ' I I I A i YOUNG st JOURNALIST. Snap and to Get Over the Editor. You cant ihost always tell about Ha Knew How to Work al-- these young men who do newspaper work," remarked a New York editor I had to a party of journaliata. heard that they hadnt very good business ideas, however bright they might be in other respects, and I was a little careless perhaps, Anyway, once when I wanted the services of one to tone up my paper I called for specimen stud, and front one chap in a near by country town I received such excellent work that I invited him to come in and see me. He came and I found him an ideal humorist and as guileless as he was ideal. I wanted a column a week and he agreed to furnish it at $25 a column, with $5 off for each joke that was not copied by some of my illustrious and esteemed contemporaries; or he would do it for $15 straight, I snapped up the $25 proposition for I was sure that out of a dozen tr fifteen jokes and verses and gags a week certainly not more than half could be good enough to oatch on all around. He had an idea that he was a great humorist and I had an idea for business, and also to teach him that humility which doth so become a journalist. I signed a contract for a year on these terms and be went to work. The first week he sent in ten squibs various lengths and they were good, but I calculated not more than of the rounds and I would be even. Within a week thereafter 1 received the Podunk Banner or some such paper with the entire column copied, and of course I whacked up the $25. The next week the Banner copied the whole lot again, and 1 put up my $25 as before, well, to make a long story short, that Podunk Banner, week after week, copied every squib, and at last I wrote to the Banner to find out who its editor was, when, lo and behold! he was the father-in-laof my humorist, and that guileless funny man was having fun with me in a way that I despised. It was too late, however to kick, and as he wrote good stuff I hadn't any occasion to, only I did swear at myself every now and then for not having Accepted his proposition of $15 a week straight and left it to somebody else to teach humility to a great Free American hurnorist.--Detro- it Press. half would v go Easy Methods of Testing Diamond. There are several ready tets for diamonds. That which is generally adopted by jewellers has for its foundfact that the ation the diamond is harder than any other substance, and can consequently not be scratched or marked by anything but another diamond. The second test is that it becomes positively electric by friction, but is not electrified by heat, and this serves to distinguish it from the topas and many other stones. Another of determining whether a diamond is genuine or not is to pierce a hole in a card with a needle, and then look at the hole through the stone. It false you will Bee two holes, but if genuine only a single hole will appear. You may also make the test in another very einv pie way. Put your finger behind the stone and look at it through the diamond as through a magnifying glass, if the stone ia genuine you will be un able to distinguish the grain of the skin, but with a false stone this will be plainly visible. Besides, looking through a real diamond the setting ia never visible, whereat it ia with a false atone. well-know- n Assault and Battery. Counsellor Joe Moss was defending a young man, recently, charged with having stolen several kieses from a pretty Eaet Side maiden, who claimed that the assault was premeditated and uninvited. Mow do you know the assault was premeditated?" asked Mr. Moea. Hed followed ms for two blocka and threatened to kies ms when 1 was enough to turn round and smile. Did you resist when he attemptd to kise you?" Yes How much?" Oh some." Discharged," remarked the courti and as the maiden turned to go aha said: New York I dont cars if ha is. Herald. good-nature- Mercury-Coate- d Ship Bottom. The proposal to sheathe ships with copper coated with mercury ie attracting attention, say the New York Tribune. The idea is that such an arrangement would effectually prevent barnacles front adhering to the bot-oof vessels. In order to keep the lercury on and to preventoxidation, is copper would be constantly charg-witelectricity. This would bring out another interesting possibility, r gold or silver that might be in water would be precipitated on bottom of the vessel, and it could be scraped off when the vessel sd in port, m non-unio- Penn-tylvanl- a, well-kno- 111 ilfty-elg- wheat-grower- fifty-eig- at ht In-r- s e 1 1 Austro-Aungnr- Dun-kan- 1 u Attempt to Kill Maekay. ! I . John W. Maekay, the California million- -, alre, was shot by a man named W. C. Ulppey on tho 24th. He wu hit In the back, and the wound though serious la not necessarily fatal. The man who did the shooting Immediately attempted to kill himself and will probably die. He la 73 year old and I probably In. une. j At one time he lived In Denver and ow tied quite a lot of prnrtv, but It all went In hti stork speculation. Latterly the old man wu almost without mean ami was In a very de-- 1 spoudi nt frame of mind. He knew alnunl all In California. the Authorities Examining Itaklng Powder. Lonl Wash- , League met at Washington The on tbe 22nd. General Warner, the president, In nil of the opening address, stated the aim for of legislation be the to securing league silver. of uullmlted and coinage the free This question, he said, was the most Important One now before the American people, or before tne civilized world. It the tariff question, which In bis opinion wu but a result of the restricted coinage of silver, and It was really at the bottom of tbe Irish of the question. It was also at the bottom labor question and was responsible for the condition of the laboring men. He urged the of league to fight not only against the repeal tbe Bherman act, but to labor until sliver was put on a parity with gold. The two political parties during the campaign denied that tbe liver question was an Issue, but as soon as tbe election was over it was the only Issue bad given serious that the president-elec- t consideration to. At the evening session speeches were delivered by Colonel A. C. Bhlnn of Kansas, Mardon Butler of South Carolina, Representative Bland and Hatch of Missouri, and Chief Justice Huston of Idaho. Mr. A. C. Fisk of Denver and Benator Jones of Nevada delivered tbe principal speeches of tbe convention Thursday. Mr. Fisks address was a very able argument In favor of free coinage. Senator Jones speech was exceedingly able and was conspicuously moderate In tone. There waa also a notable absence of that Intense bitterness w blch characterized tome of the speeches both Thursday and Friday. The senator told of the work of the International conference. Before the conference began he was toe degree opposed to It. He believed that this government should do It own thinking and should also regulate Its own monetary and other affairs, and in addition to this be was not at all sanguine as to the result. But he was thoroughly convinced thst the conference had done a great work for silver. When the session began there was the strongest opposition to the expressed purposes of the conference, especially on the part of Great Britain, but that determined opposition had been In a measure succeeded by a feeling much more favorable to silver. Since the conference adjourned be bad received letters from Mr. Balfour and other prominent leaders in England which showed that the conference had set the nations to thinking upon this subject, and the feeling In favor of silver was surely becoming mors widespread. The senator was much encouraged by the outlook and there Is not the least doubt that his speech was much of a surprise to many of the delegates. They were not prepared to hear from so able and strong a bimetallist as Benator Jnes words of such unqualified Indorsement of tbe International agreement project. His speech was listened to with the closest attention by everyone present He said that 16 per cent of the population of London was living upon charity, and yet the English commissioners asked the United States delegates to agree In their estimation of the value of silver snd adopt the policy that brought about this wretched condition. The proposition now before congress to Issue mors bonds, he said, was a deceptive trick. It meant simply that tbe bank wanted to control the circulating medium of the country. R. E. Kolb, candidate of the lopullsta for governor of Alabama In the recent election, in a short address. Indorsed the alms of the convention. Henry Jones of Atlanta, Georgia, declared had a larger followthat the president-elec- t ing In this congress than he would have In the next. General Field, of Georgia, candidate for Vice president on the People's party ticket, spoke, severely criticising the president-elec- t for trying to defeat tbe election of candidates before the various state legislature who represented the wishes of the people on tbe silver question. Resolutions were adopted denouncing the attempt to repeal the law of 1890, snd the issue of new bonds, and demanding the free and unlimited coinage of silver. At the opening of Fridays session speeches were made by T. H. Tebhlea of Nebraska and Mr. Dean of New York. Representative Lafe Pence of Colorado made a speech. The state of Colorado, be aid, was for free silver at all times, but It waa a mistake to suppose that the mining Interest of tbe stats were more Important than tbe agricultural. The agricultural product of Colorado were more In 1893 than both silver and gold. It was, therefore, apparent that Colorado had no sel6h motive In It advocacy of free silver. He would ask nothing of President-elec- t Cleveland and expected nothing, bat would oppose and dcnounoeblm whenever an opportunity presented Itself. Old party lines were being rspldly wiped out. We did not forget In June, he said, what wu taught ua In May, and we carried It In our memories until November, when tbe ballot created a revolution In American politics. Hsrontraatod General Weaver In his campaign with Fremont, and said that four years hence be would be the Abraham Lincoln of the American people. Hs held that the most encouraging sign for the success of the Populist party wu the selection of Judge Gresham to be Cleveland secretary of state. This gentleman, he uld, eight years ago wu postmaster general and secretary of the treasury under a Republican President. Four years ago he ptaoed In nomination as a candidate for President In the national Republican convention to run against Cleveland.. Only eight months ago he wu supposed to be In sympathy with tbe Omaha convention, and four months ago he voted for Mr. Cleveland. A resolution wu unanimously adopted providing for the appointment of a conunlttco to Invite the attention of every labor and Industrial organization In the United Stntcs, and to Invite such organization to send delegates to the future meeting of the association. General Warner wu president for tbe ensuing year. Tbe time and place for holding the next annual meeting wu left to tbe discretion of the executive committee, Tbe league then adjourned elne die. stock-broke- r, Shine every Saturday morning from the basement of Malcolm & Hughes Block, LEAGUE. THE Telegraphic Brevities. WIN. tin St. Louie At the request of Health Commissioner Hrennan, the city chemist has collected samples of the various bak-- 1 ing powders sold In St. Louis and subjected them to analysis for the purpo.se of obtaining for the public benefit information as to their composition and character, whether wholesome or otherwise. Owing to the fact that alum baking powders are produced at a cost of less than four cents a pound, while in appearance they are hardly distinguishable from a pure cream of tartar powder, costing from eight to ten times ns much to manufacture, there have been many of them put upon the market, and great efforts made to substitute them for the more wholesome cream of tartar compounds. Of course, such powders afford wide margins of profits both to the manufacturers and dealers and it is not unusual to find them for this reason recommended and urged upon customers who would not, knowing their true character, use them under any consid- eration. NEWS OFJTIIE WEST. Colorado. The people of Cripple Creek and lave voted to consolidate the lwo'mr' Wocber Brothers lory at Denver was burned a fcw'dly,! Tho Denver Bar Association iT. r innual banquet on the 23rd. It held WM irate affair. lb B. F. Fowler, w ho waa jelegrams from the Western Unlo!.t'?ln been acquitted of the charge. Another explosion of coal dust , die mines at King on the bird wWk Italian miners were slightly burned Edward Crotty the witness th()' . j robbery cases, who escaped from thaT,?,' " fall, has been caught at Lakin, Kan!, 40 8am Inman, In Denver I was formerly on the police cm.L. " uiclde on the 17th. Debt wasuie 1 The state offices at Denver have u. moved from tho Barclay block to tha v H tble building, on the corner of itrects. Better quarters will beZtl17,'3 (cm money. Denver Market-E- gg. ranch 24 23o; butter, beat creamery hay, upland baled n(a12recond H.5bfS.f3) ; alfalfa (5.50 ; aeked 73c; oats, 1.15, sacked fOc; 1.45; cattle, choice .. potatoes 83.40, cow$1.50w(3.15, native feX, if I (3.20; hogs, choice (8.10; springebi cW V doz; hens. (5 W doz. A fatal head-encollision occurred on Colorado Midland Saturday, resmtinj u deuth of three trainmen and the wrloni ini Jury of six other persona. The point hrni the wreck occurred Is a half mile tui J Bath. The engines and cars were and lay piled high In the air In one lnextrT 1 We mass. The dead arc : Frank McC.mmoJ Joseph McIntyre. Joel Boersock. The i3 Jured are: Julia McMullen, 8. A. Judd. glneer KIswll. conductor and two other m sengers. Tho terrific force with which tii trains met silvered the cars neirest thecni gines. The manner In which the cars te4 scoped piled tho seats up high and lurnrd over the stove, w blch at once set Ire u ih debris. The suddenness with which tht trains struck did not give time to Jumni Those uninjured at once set to work to exirt cate those unable to help themselves, tng nobly did they work. The dead and wdunt ed were laid outfit the side of the track at In tho meantime word was sent to Bath and relief train with physicians and medicine was telegraphed for. Both trains were lut and there was a misunderstanding of orde n -- H-5- J City Chemist Sullivans report shows one pure cream of tartar powder only (the Royal); one cream of tartar powder containing free tartaric acid; one phosphate powder containing sulphate of lime, and that all the other brand are made from alum. The sample! ranged in strength from 13.47 per cenl of leavening (carbonic acid) gas foune in the Royal, to 6.08 per cent found ill an alum powder. The general usefulness of a baking powder depends largely upon tin quantity of leavening gas it gives off. A powder containing thirteen per cent, of gas will go more than twice as far that is, one pound of such powder will raise more than twice as much flour as one that evolves but six per cent. The economy thus shown, however, is sot the greatest consideration. The Wyomtn-jlow strength powders leave a large A portion of the remains of a manh residuum in the food, which, being of found In the hills above Green rlr. alum in its various forms, renders the been are thought to he tlmsc of C. D, Crrcn They food positively unwholesome. a brother of the Colorado millionaire. Hi in this and Upon describing went out prospecting late In the fall and hi point, d . the character of the baking powder found of highest strength, the City A high leavening Chemist says: power is requisite. Pure ingredients in proper combination quicken and increase the production of carlionic acid gas. In this the Royal excels all others. It is the highest in strength, in fabrique a faultless arrangement of agents, pure and wholesome, free from adulteration with lime, ammonia or alum. The result of these tests will be read with interest and will prove of grent benefit to housekeepers by enabling them to distinguish the pure from the numerous impure and unwholesome oowders found in the market. Cleveland Fisherman. William H. Crane, the comedian, Is soir what of a fisherman himself, hut he yields ill saw i I r palm to Grover Cleveland. man, says Mr. Crane, who had the pas-lfor angling and the' patience at It that Civic land has. He doesnt seem to care ahethei he catches any fish or not; be'll sit for lioun under a broiling sun watching h's bob g dancing In the water and never utter a complaint If he doesnt getta--a nibble. I went oil' several times with him t summer Joe Jefferson took us out. Joe Isn't any sort of i fisherman hes a great actor and a great painter and all that kind of thing, Imt he cant fish a little bit. Joe cant bait a book; seems to be afraid of the worms; so Cleveland and I took turns at putting halt on his hook. Joe got restless before we had been out half an hour; he kept wanting to move around was sure that It was belter fishing on the othei Ide of the poml. Perhaps youve been fishing with that sort of a man it worried Cleveland a good deal, and by and by say he; Joe, says he, ahen I was a small boy'l went fishing with my Uncle Elihu, and I rcmembei he told me that one of the secrets of succeM In life was to stick to the place where youd thrown your anchor out. Too many folks. aid Uncle Ellbu, spend all their time pulling up anchors and rowing around; they dont A for me,' says Cleveland, catch the fish. when I start In to fish, says he, 1 sit right fish there and until either the pond runs dry or the horn blows for supper! Won Journal. oi A Great Newspaper's Ae ilevement. Niw Yokk, Feb. 27. The Xteorder, th New York dally which crested a sensation both In this country and Europe by offering 11,000 for a consumption cure, and latei placed twelve patients far advanced In th disease under a new treatment discovered by Dr. W. R. Amlck, announces that the treatment Is In euch one of these cases accomplishing a cure. The erorder devotes several columns y to the publication of bulletins, In almost every case favorable, from physicians who In response to Its invitation are conducting tests of Dr. Amlcks treatment In all parU of the United Btatea It reiterates It Invitation and announces that arrangement have been made with Dr. Amick whereby medicines for a ten day preliminary trial may be obtained free upon application to Am. 1'hytlclans who wish to conduct test caw and sufferers from lung troubles who wish to art as such test are Instructed by the reorder to address Dr. W. R. Amlck, 166 W. Seventh street, Cincinnati, U. Physicians are requested to report result to the eeordrr. Considerable enthula siasm displayed by the hteordrr In to tbe Amlck treatment, and It saya Inregard effect and without government eld It bat discovered something which will In time wipe the dresd disease, out of existence. The Nationalconsumption, Acadeinv ol Medicine of France at Paris and the United Btates Marine Hospital Service, Southern Atlantic District, have followed the Kecorder't example and arc conducting teat of tbe Amlck treatment and report remarkably favorable result. 'Single-hande- d not been beard of since. Governor Osborne has nominated Mr Elsie Landenbcrgcv of Rock tqiringr, to if She la president of tit state librarian. Ladies Democratic Club of Bweetwiij county and did effective work for tbe pir during tbe last campaign, uthe state Worlds Fa r eommlvloa four experts preparing a display of and animals to go w ttb the Chicacor bibit. The fauna of this region wdl hr absolutely cimikte representation. N a 400 bird specimens have already bed p pared The Hart hroihers of Lusk, have decked portable corral to he taken with each b wagon. It Is of canvas with atrel plain by Its use shelter can he provided foe sheep In an hour and a half. Bheep placed within these enclosure every ni, during tbe winter months. Bert Montague, the mail carrier, who of ed to bet poslago stamps on the lenito' contest, bad a hearing before a United Sts' commissioner. The testimony wa to tbe feet that he robbed the l.it'lc Bear postof of (36 In stamps and a small amount of t renev. Montague waa held In default 11,000 ball. A pair of buffalo horns brought to Ssrst-bto a ranchman are said by the finest speclmetit extant. They hsve t polished, and are of a luminous black, dimensions they arc larger than the f pair In the Smithsonian Institution t Inc They measure thirty-livlngton. Inches from tip to across, and slxty-twC. H. Grinnell and William Burgre Sheridan, are the pioneers in extensive velopment of the Inexhaustible eosl meui In the Powder river vicinity. They btw cured title to several hundred sores, contract In the South Dakota and Nebrs1 large P markets, and are placing a tbe Burl Trackage has been supplied bythem Is ton. One coal vein owned hy be the greatest in the world, mesMir seventy feet. The Cheyenne lvler desorilie t decidedly unlquu method of bunting and Frrd Tbow' lows: Pete Berger trip returned yesterday from a huntingsafetM by them on bicycles. Both rode sbout carried rlfies. They traveled scrw being miles, part of the prairie and away from traveled In thirty miles of town they sighted oeet successfully stalked them, Bergerseo two of tbe animal. They bln d Isw to haul tbelr game to town. Thi time on record that deer have bee bun bicycles. mount-bird- 1 tha Flc thi sic' a ( of DO he; Ev tha Flc icit Sli ' e o ' J''. ft- r Illstlngolsti I Visitors. Prince David of Hawaii, n1'!"'"1 the Honorable Paul Neuman, eral, and E. C. Mnefnrlane, finance of the Hawaiian malned over a day in Denver on thfi u Washington to consult with eon regarding the situation of au1( wall. They expressed then!6 w pleased with the city sml the afforded them. They left Dw w on the Burlington lngton cial. train proved famous This count ,,oa novelty to them, In whoseof con railroad Is now In course met a Chicago reporter, who Mr. Neuman said: ''',rt,r iivvr delightful one. W benthe dirts' . this train would cover were u In less than 29 hours, we little Incredulous, but. i on time. This I the foeu-- a trip of th' track tbe mado, and yet smooth and the equipment so p accelerated speed v c,,ri e while the service and tb , respect In every f complete lnltr journey has been one of . No to d lesvii o hr Hlvt-- i Mill! Kor A l&iti JUI U I This Is a deserved complin"' llngum Route whose 1"''' el r0or.. meut has given to the people train service that I unsurpassed the country. It has Itecn decided Hurta llvrr ie have tb at the World's The Fate of w New book. to cost (58.000, (ItUVX) T, bulH 1 An Interesting he literary computation hai tana monument. optico. been made by the Rev. Forest E. Dager o tributed by the mine of y 'n(ll pj Emmanuel Protestant F.plscopal Church monument will he wirtnountj, From his researches he deduces the female form, like tho that of every 1,000 books printed 600 opinion do not the figure of a typical mostf.lidngpM pay the printer, 200 no more than pay and KK Thi will he one of the afford a slight profit. at the Fair. lie claims that of the total number 650 art statuary forgotten before the end of the first year ol "n ,n? r no longer rememlicr- LubJ Bale of a NwpsP clo6 $f thru jenrp, thn 50 ,ur,lve he test of seven Tbe XrjmblU and TeltgrtV V.X o'v fi , ,Ahoun? booki says he, wert Job printing establishment W n VPn,ei'nth century, but to waa sold on the 23rd Springs, no more day than 69 of these are read. Ol w M equal number published In the e Ighleenlb Eddy. It Is understood thst f .ale The about (23,000. 60 hat are iiiTa read only nr book that have been wrlitcnfoi plant and press franchise. a h n5'lr hat not more thin the editor. Mr. 0. W. Tn RnmJr are now In demand.-nih- nf, P tAia Call. loc I a ted with Mr. Eddy for H msoager. will be business The lighthouse keener lead no doubt i connected with Secretary of but ?uVMe,UT I flee as chief clerk- c0Dtln expect, d to i p tbe I dowdy, the former owners, L March kii.innu until rl TTji wa n''r!r i 4 1 ?! |