Decatur Democrat, Volume 39, Number 20, Decatur, Adams County, 2 August 1895 — Page 3

f\ ■ X —TO THEDegressive o 1 FARMER p oar 1893. VE wish to say that we have now on hand the New Force Feed, Low Elevator, Champion - Binder ECCENTRIC GEAR, Demonstrated in harvest of 1894, to be the LIGHTEST DRAFT And having the "advantage over all other Binders in handling Rye or down grain, and wnl Forfeit Price of Binder If we cannot demonstrate to any practical farmer that we have advantages over' all other Binders and Mowers. Come and let us show you and be convinced. We are here for the purpose of showing you these facts, and if you fail to see and buy a Binder or Mower of any other make than the Cham- ■ pion, you make The Mistake of Your Life. BINDER TWINE, PLOWS, HARROWS, - And, in fact, the largest stock of H A. H W A. FL E In the city, together with’the lowest prices. Thanking our customers for past favors, and hoping for a con-1 tinuance of same, we remain Truly yours, JOHNS. BOWERS & CO.

A funny incident—and not bo funny, after all—occurred on the Fens the other afternoon. Two cyclists met unexpectedly. The woman did not turn to the right, and the man ran straight into her wheel, upset ting both. They scrambled to their feet, righted their bikes, and glared at each other for half a second. Then the man coolly slapped the woman’s face, and jumping on his rolled away with lightning speed. An eyewitness of the scene was ungallant enough to applaud the act, for, he said, it was deserved. —Boston Herald. V_ ■— i Financial Affairs of France. The financial speech of the | Minister IE Loubet, in thermite, is to be posted, by order of Wfat house, all over France. There are some statements in it worthy of consideration. Thus, the . national debt is set down at £1,200,000.000. It also appears thgt the difficulty of making both ends meet has greatly in- | creased since M. Meline seemed the triumph of his system. Thec<j>urt of audits has discovered 211 irregularities in the < last budgetary account of money paid. By irregularities it means embezzle ments, set down under the head of “vire- J ments. ’ ’ Among them figures the £BOO spent on behalf of a minister for “cabs,” and £O4O a month for little “de jeuners” at Voisin’s, where a minister of justice entertained his friends. The “virements” at the home office are set down at £OSO, those of the war office at £I,BBO, those of the colonial office at £2,090, those of the public works of- | fice at £2,375. When M. de Frcycinet .wgswar minister, Uie “virements” of his department amounted to about £C,000 a year. He, as minister of public works anid war, swelled the national debt more than any one else in power ■ Since Thiers’ retirement. The redeemable loans were an expedient of M. do t Freycinet, to give employment to the I P p bli° works department-

Dantel Schlegel, DEALER IN LIMING HODS, SPOUTING, ROOFING, AND Tinware of all Kinds. StoWOirii oil Monfling ta Io order. Front St., near Jefferson Street. Decatur, - - -Incliana. *’• ’ ' .4 K

THE TOYS. My little son, who look’d from thoughtful eyes And mov’d and .spoke in quiet, grownup wise, Having my law the s< v«mh time disobeyed, I struck him and dismiss’ll With hard words and uliicjss’d, His mother, who was patient, being dead. Then, fearing lest his grief should hinder Bleeg, : I visited his bed, But found him slumbering deep, With darkened eyelids and their lashes yet ; From his late sobbing wet, And I, with moan. Kissing away his tears, left others of my c**m. For on a table drawn beside his head He had put, within his reach, A box of counters and a red vein’d stone, j A piece of.glass abraded by tho beach I And six or seven shells, ». A botjlo with bluebells And two French copper coins, rang’d there with careful art ’ .j To comfort his sad heart. Bo when that night I prayed , To God and Wept and said: “Ah, when at last we lie with tranced breath. Not vexing thee in death. And thou lememberest of what toys ( We make cur joys, How weakly understood Thy great coinmanfiod good, Then, fatherly not less Than I whom thou hast molded from g clay, Thou’lt leave thy.wrath and say, ‘I will bq sorry for their childishness.* —Coventry Patmore in Church Sfc. -d. A COMEDY. —I -< —.. - I J They parted with clasped hands And kisses and burning tears. ( They met in a foreign land After some twenty years— ( Met ns acquaintances meet, , , Smiling, tranquil eyed, j | Not even tlie least little bent I Os the heart upon either side. - 1 i I They chatted of this and that. The nothings that make up life, She in a Gainsborough hat And ho in black for his wife. Ah, what, a comedy this! Neither was hurt, it. appears, Yet once she had leaned to his kiss, And once ho had-known her tears. —Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Catherine the Great never forgot a face or a nama

liiw— -1 —ll — --■( 1 I■■ a—i * 'UH— I - • ••■» •— * TALK AW INK Ilorr-ilarvey Debate on the Money Question at Chicago. BUSINESS DONE ON CREDIT. Mr. Harvey Want. Mor. Money Par Capita — “Thar. Are Other*** — Mr. Horr** Idea of the Mill Stream, and Hi. Opponent*. Kopiy- Graceful BadIng to tha Day’* Contention. Chicago, July 29.—Mr. Horr opened . the silver and gold symposium Saturday with a compariHOu of wages and the cost of produota during the years from 1860 to 1890. With wages and prices in 1860 taken as the index or 100 he showed that in 1890 prices were 92; wages, 159, and the purchasing power of wages 172. Mr. Harvey, in turn, took up the matter of prices of wheat for a series of years in reply to Mr. Horr’s statement of Thursday that the farmer had received as much for his product iq gold as he had received before silver was demonetized. For answer, he quoted the prices from year to year, showing that Mr. Horr’s statement was misleading. Mr. Horr said that Mr. Harvey had only quoted a brief extract of his, and did not give the sense of the article. The correspondence replied to did not want either gold or silver money, but merely paper based ou nothing. It was only another form of the socialistic craze, and Mr. Harvey would come to that in the end. His disease had not yet reached its worst stage. Mr. Horr and the Banks. Mr. Horr then took up the question of banks, which Mr. Harvey on a former occasion had denounced. He admitted that there were corrupt bankers, but the | business of banking, as carried on, was the outgrowth of civilization, and banks were a blessing. They made it possible for a gold dollar to do 20 times as much as it could do otherwise: Mr. Harvey, replying, presented a table of failures, showing the failures in the country for a series of years. He pointed out that during the war, when the circulating medium amounted to $lO per capita, failures had been reduced to I a minimum.t> As the circulating medium [ decreased, failures increased. The nation i owed it to itself to get rid of this great ■ amount of bank credit and substitute I money for it. The interest on SIO,OOO,000 of debts to the bankswas the equivalent of the amount of the annual failures. Mr. Horr said that he would admit that the quantity of gold in the world i had not increased as fast as the business ; of the world, but it was not necessary, i One hundred dollars would now do I more than $2,000 would formerly. Ninety-five per cent of the business was ! done without the use of gold, except as I a standard of measure. He illustrated I the ease by citing a stream ou which ; there was one old-fashioned mill. Let I other modern mills be constructed along this stream, and by using the same water the output would be vastly increased. Mr. Harvey’s Idea of That Stream. Mr. Harvey, replying, made another i application of the comparison of the ; stream to money. Suppose, he said, i that mills had been built along the ; stream and«its machinery adapted to it. , Then suppose that, suddenly one-half ofthe flow of that stream would be cut : off, how would it affect the mills? Sup- ■ pose again that certain persons should i divert the water of this stream in great ' feservoirs and charge the mills a toll for its use. That would be a parallel case to that of the relation of the people and | the banks at present. The question of alien landlordism ; came up for a considerable of the discussion, after which in closing the I debate for the day, Mr. Harvey handed Mr. Horr' a souvenir of a silver dollar of 1799, with the word “unit” upon it. Mr. Harvey said: “Take it, Mr. Horr. Washington may have carried it in his pocket; Jefferson-may at one time have had it in his possession. It may have paid for the paper on which the declaration of war was written in ISI2 against Great Britain, It may have been lonj died by Jackson when writing his mes- ' sage to congress against the national bank. [Applause.] It is a (it. souvenir for any American proud of his country, and of its institutions to e.irrv in hk i pocket all the days of his life. [Api plause. ) i Mr. Horr, smiling: “1 shall keep this dollar and put it to good use. 1 intend to have a hole bored through it and then hang it around the neck of my little grandchild, borii just as we. commenced this discussion. [Applause.] It will do, Brother Harvey, to learn that the people of the United States are still, in spite of tlie gold staudardvAarrying and giving in marriage, and that children are still born to us in spite of the silver dollar.” [Laughter' and applause.] _ SUDDEN DEATH . , Three Boys Killed an<L Frightfully Mangled By An Express Train. Washington, July 29.—0 n the tracks -of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad yes4terday near Riverdale Bark, a suburb of this city, were found the mangled remains of three boys, ranging in age from 10 to 14. They had evidently been down by a train Saturday night and had remained undiscovered until yesterday. The bodies were identified as those of J. Waters Blundon and Guy Brown of this city, and Charlie Lynch of Riverdale. It is believed the boys were struck by the fast western express which passes a local train at this point about the time the accident is supposed to have occurred. The bodies were found huddled together and jnangled almost beyond recognition. Not Authorized By Mexico. El PAsOrsTex., .inly 29.—The Mexican government has removed from office the collector oi customs at opposite Deming, N. M., and appointed Demaso Floe. The new collector has rescinded the order issued by his predecessor for the confiscation of all American cattle found in the Palomos district after Aug. 2. "Tim order was not authorized bv the Mexican government.

HE WON THE DAY. Toung Harmon*. Conflict with a College Faculty Year. Ago. A story about the college life of Judge Judson Harmon was told by a classmate of the attorney-general the other day, says a Columbus correspondent of the Cleveland Leader. Nearly thirty years ago Judge Harmon was a student in Denison university at Granville. At commencement time in those days it was the custom of the senior class to issue a publication called the PasqulTf, which always contained matter of the ■ most vltuperous sort, anil the dltorials were often directed at the most prominent people in the city, as well as the professors of the school. The greatest mystery surrounding the publication and distribution of the sheet and the very secrecy of it insured the contributors from unpleasant results. Judge Harmon was a member of the class of of ’66. In the Pasquln of that year there appeared many bitter denunciations of ..and personal- thrusts at the faculty. Despite the safety which the editors supposed surrounded their pointed thrusts, the faculty demonstrated that they knew the source of the writings. On commencement day all of the students received their parchments excepting young Harmon. He alone was punished for his connection with the Pasquin. It took only a minute for the students to understand the slight to Harmon, and they proved their loyalty to him by holding an indignation meeting in the fraternity hall. Resolutions were adopted In which the students foreswore allegiance to the college unless Harmon’s diploma was forthcoming and he was placed on an equal footing with the others. The board ot trustees demurred and finally agreed to confer honors upon Harmon privately, but the students refused the offer. Next day they hired a band, formed a big procession and marched to the littlechurch where the commencement exercises had been held. The citizens of Granville had learned the facts and they turned out in force to watch developments. The trustees ■were sent for and President Talbot presented Harmon’s diploma with fitting dignity and expressions of praise. The victory of the students was celebrated in true college style, and the present attorney-general of the United States was the lion of the hour. TOOK NEXT TO NOTHING. The Slek Man Had Only Swallowed Every Drug in the Shop. “H'm! Have you been taking anything for your trouble?" Inquired the village doctor of a patient from out beyond S.quantum Corners, who complained of being all run down. "Well, no,’’ was the reply. “I haven’t taken anything worth speaking of durin’ the last three months, except a qouple o’ bottles o’ Tomb’s Tip-Top Tonic and a bottle or two o’ Potter’s Peculiar Pectoral and two or three bottles o’ K, K. K. and a box or two o’ Piebald Pills for Plain People and a few doses o’ Indian Invigorator and two or three kinds o' home-made bitters and some Compound Extract o' Cow, Gin and Quinine and some liver medicine and a few powders o' one kind and another and a bottle o' something that we found in the cellar with the label lost off and a dose o' salts now and then and a little slippery elm tea and some recipes that the neighbors brought in and three or four sample bottles o’ stuff that agents left at the house. Outside o' these I haven’t taken a single thing except.some root and bark tea and some infusion o' red clover blossoms that my wife insists on my taking three times a day. To be sure. I have been wearing a porous plaster and liver pad most o’ the time and soaking my feet regularly , every, night and living on health-food and malted milk. But outside of that I haven’t done a thing, doctor, hot a thing!”—Truth. PAYS FOR HIS PASSES. A Lawyer Buys Seats at tbe Theater by the Month. Newspaper readers have often been told bow vain young men will spend 55 in jollying a showman in order to obtain o pass to the theater worth not to exceed $1 at retail, There is no doubt that the pass habit represents a strange infatuation, says Buffalo Inquirer. There is a lawyer in this city who is not satisfied with beihg the recipient of passes. He likes to isstfe them himself. life considers thaj it adds to his importance to be able .to write for a friend an’order for a couple of-Jheater seats which will be honored at the box office. So he has an arrangement with one of the play houses by which lie may write as many passds as.be r his dwiUsigffatufe. The orders fire taken up at t]?e,offiee and the regular tickets issued in their place. /The gratified recipient gains the imjiression that, the lawyer is a stockholder in-the theater. In reality, he pays for the scats at regular r ites, a bill beirtg. rendered to him monthly. It is a harmless fad, though rather-an expensive one. Spitlers In History. Spiders have played a greater part In history titan most people are aware of. Everybody knows how the perseverance of a spider encouraged .Robert. .Bruce to regain his kingdom of Scotland, but ht>t so many know that according to Jewish tradition a spider saved David’s Saul yas hunting for him. and his soldiers approached a cave where David was hidden. Shortly before, however, a spider had spun her web at the mouth of the cave, and the soldiers, taking it for granted that if he had taken refuge In tlie eave he must have broken the web, departed, forgetting the web might have been spun after 1 as well as before his entrance. A spider saved the life of the grand-uncle of the German-em-peror. Frederick William was king of Prussia, and an attempt was made to poison him In a cup of chocolate. By chance a spider fell into the cup, and for this reason the monarch gave the chocolate to a ddg, who Immediately died. Inquiry was made, with the result that the cook was hanged, and a large spider wrought in gold now dec-, orates one of the chief rooms of the winter palace at Potsdam in memory of the king's "escape. ■ ' ■; - ■: I , Not the Kight Climate. "It IS all very well," said, his Satanta Majesty, “to talk about the -greatness of Socrates and- Plato and Aristotle; but they don’t cut any ice with pie.” y:, ’ ■ . . '

INULINS IN THE IIHLE. Reported Massacre of the Settlers Not Yet Continued. TROOPS RUSHING FORWARD. Anxlood Time* Fur the People of Northweatero Wyoming—lndian* Reported to Have Taken Up a Strong Position In the Wildest Portion of the Settlement—Arm* Telegraphed For. Pocateixo, Ida., July 29.—Companies A, D and Eof the Eighth infantry, U. 8. A., from Fort Russell, commanded by Major Bisbee, arrived in this city last evening and immediately left for Market Lake. There are 275 soldiers in the companies. They do not expect to leave Market Lake until something is from the United States cavalry which left Market Lake Saturday afternoon for Jackson’s Hole. It is hardly probable that the detachment will go further than Market Lake, but will camp there to await the result. News from Market Lake last evening says nothing has been heard from the seat of trouble for five days and that all other reports are false. MOliK TROOPS ORDERED OUT. Additional Companies From tho Seventeenth Infantry field In Readiness. CHEypNNE, Wyo., July 29. —The com* mander at Fort Russell has received orders ffom General Coppinger to put three additional companies of the Seventeenth infantry in readiness to go to Market Lake, Ida., at once. Governor Richards reached home from Rock Springs, Wyo., yesterday. He has been kept posted on the situation at Jackson’s Hole by Adjutant General Stitzer. The rumor of the massacre of 16 families by Indians is reported by Adjutant Stitzer as being utterly false. He says, however, an attack is feared. The settlers lAve taken their families to Marysvale, where they feel confident of warding off any attack. Fred Cunningham left Jackson’s Hole Friday evening and arrived at Market Lake Saturday night. He reports , Indian camp fires burning all along the road around Jackson’s Hole, but that no conflict had occurred up to the time he left. The eighth cavalry - made 46 miles-Sat nrda y and seam ped-<vn tho south side of Snake river. More Indians Going Into the Ilole. Salt Lake, July 29.—Advices from Market Lake last night were to the es, feet that the Indians are pouring into Jackson’s Hole from all directions, though they have not molested settlers. They are located in the wildest part of the valley in a position from which all ’the troops in this department could not drive them out if they choose to remain. The troops camped last night 25 miles west of Rexburg. Ammunition Telegraphed For. Salt Lak::. Utah, July 29. —The Salt Lake Hardware company shipped on the train going north, yesterday afternoon a large consignment of arms and ! ammunition. The order came by tele- I graph from Saint Anthony, and as that is the entrance to the Hole country, it • is evident that the settlers there are expecting Indian trouble. Troops For «Tackson’s Holo. Washington, July 29,—Dispatches* received at army lieadqnarters here yesterday from General Coppinger show that the fbrc&'of cavalry ordered to Jackson’s Hole will probably reach the place by Tuesday night. Other troops have been ordered to Market Lake from Fort Russell, so as to be in readin, s> for active work should their services be required. General Coppinger states the road to j Marysvale oiear Jackson’s Hole , except 10 miles through Tvton pass, is reported as good. Tlie commanding officers of Fort Washa.-tie, Wyo.. and Fort DuehesnO, Utah, report that the Indians on their res.] L'ctive reservations are not involved in the hostile movement. Agent Teter.of the Fort Hall res rva- . tioii is eptodte with the departnient commander to Marysville. War Feeling In St. Pi’.Tt’.itsßUim. July -9. —lt i- <said i that Japan is assiduously raise: : her ■■ army ami navy to a war footing. Two'-cruisers-.-bought in Peru, have already’i, arrived, and crews wnl shortly sent i to Im-., tut to bring.our three it*. :ads, I cavil oi •.’•>,ol>-> tons, winch were it'd there. - A strong and warlike’ feeling prevails in Japan. TiunlstooN Instead of Mushroom**. Red Bld, Ills., July 29.—A.family of movers near Anna made their sup;:-, r of | which they mistook for mushrooms. Three children are a ready . dead and the mother and two o’Eoys ■ are ill and are n >t expected io lie . 1 They are being sheltered in a barn ami ■ are being eared for by the. larmefs m the neighborhood. Too Many Wives. Chicago, July 29.—G. H. Caidwell. a,l board of trade man, was locked up at the Central station yesterday on a charge of bigamy. The complainant is Mrs. Ellen N. Ciildwell of Champaign, Ills. She alleges that Caldwell ran away from her and mafried a Miss Smith at Washington Court House, Will Prevent Filibustering. Havana, July 29. —The captain of. the United States crusier Atlantic was interviewed .by a local paper. He is said to have declared that the Washington government was resolved to do if« utmost to prevent separatist expeditiofta. and that his instructions on this point were very precise. J Noted Artist Dead. Philadelphia, July 29. —Peter Frederick Rotherinel, the artist who painted “The Battle of Gettysburg” now in the itate library in-Harrisburg, died yester»av. agiil 70 veajjs.

Grand Raoids & Indiana Railroad. Too* etteci June 23, 189fi. GOING NORTH. STATIONS. | No. 1 j No. 3 j No. 6 No. 7 Cincinnati..lvel 8 05am 8 30pm Richmond 3 30pm 11 00 . 11 25 Winchester... | 434 .. 12 00.. 12 20am Portland 517 .. 1242 pm 12 51 Decatur 612 .. 145 .. 137 Ft. Wayne...arr 666 .. 2 36.. 210 “ "... Ive 2 55pm 220 .. 8 Glam Kendallville 4 05.. 3 14.. »!•».. Rome City 422 .. 3 2(J .. 920 .. Wolcottville 4 28., 932.. Valentine 4 40 9 44.. LaG range 449 .. 348 .. 952 .. Lima 559 101 4 .. Sturgis ........ 5 16.. 4 06.. 1016. Vicksburg. 614 .. 452 .. 11 16 Kalamazoo, arr ....... 640 .. 515 .. 11 45 **. ..Ive 7 06.. 5 20.. 1156 pm Gr. Rapids. .arr 915 .. 6 50am 130 ** r * ..Ive 700 am 10 45 8 00.. 140 D.,G.H.*M.cr 7 15.. 1100. 8 13.. 153 Howard City... 820 .. 1205 am 239 Big Rapids .... 905 . 12 45 930 .. 313 Reed City 9 40. 125 10 05 .. 340 Cadillac arr 10 45.. 2 30.. 10 56.. 436 ** ....Ive 11 10 . 240 am 11 00 .. 440 Traverse City 1240 pm 720 Kalkaska 135 pm 400 550 Petoskej 340 . 5 50. 1140 .. 7’» Mackinac City 529. 7 20..13 00 GOING SOUTH. ( STATIONS. No. 2 No. 6 j No. 4 No. 8 Mackinac City. 9 00pm 9 30am 3t6pm ... . Petoskey «, — 10 30 .. 10-15 .. I 4 15 Kalkaska 1237 am 5 50 Traverse City 110 35.. 525 Cadillac .. ..arr 210.. | 125 pm 7 10 “ . ..ive 230 .. 135 .. 715 . 7M am Reed City 13 40.. 2 35.. 815 845 Big Rapids..*... |4OB . 323 .. 837 .. 915 Howard City..l 5(Hi .. 405 10,io D..G. H.&M.crl 605 .. 510.. 1000.. 111,, Gr. Rapids .arr; 620 .. 5 25.. 10 15 Ull3’>.. " “ ..Ive; 725 am 600.. 1140 pm 215 pm Kalamazoo.arr: 920 .. 752 .. 13.1 am 4 <*J “ ..Ivel 925 .. ,8 00 405 . Vicksburg I 949 .. 825 4.30 . Sturgis ..10 42 .. | 912 .. ' 5 15 . Lima... .j 1054.. 924 .. ; 5,27 ~ LaGrange... .J 107.. 9 36.. ... 539 Valentine .11 18.. 944.. ....... 546 Wolcottville... 11 30 .. 9 54.. 557 Rome City [1136 .. 959 6 Kendallville...illso .. 1016 .... . 022 Ft. Wayne..arr|l2ss .. 1125 . 7 30. ’* “ ..lvej 115pm;11 45 . 545 am; Decatur :159 .. 12 36 .. 630 .. : Portland I 300 .. I 140 am 730 .. I Winchester.... 344 .. 1225 .. 809 .. Richmond ; 4 45 .. 1320.. 915 pm : Cincinnati..,. | 7 I*s .. 1715 ~ 12 01 . I Trains 2 and 4 run daily between Grand Rapids and Cincinnati. C. L. LOCKWOOD, Gen. Pass. Agent *- JEFF. BRYSON Agent, Decatur Ind Erie Lines/ Schedule tn eflect lune 9. 1895 Truins Leave Decatur as Follows. T KAINS WEST. No. j. Vestibule Limited, daily tor i 2;1:J M Chicago ......7.A.... I No. 3, Pacific Express, daily for r x m Chicago I No. 1. Express, daily except Sun- ( 10:45 A. M da}' tor Chicago...... ' I No. 31. Local, daily, except Siin-1 M , day trains east. , No. 8, Vestibule Liu-ite i, daily for ( p M New York and 805t0n.... f ’ No. 2, Express, dailj except Sun-1 t.xxp M day for New York I No. 12. Express, daily for New i M York i No. 30. Local, daily except Sun- . day. - - ■ [10:45 A. M.. Through coaches and sleeping cars to New York and Boston. Trains 1 and 2 stop at al stations on the C. A- E. division. Tra:n,.N'p. .12 carries through sleeping cars to Columbus. L'irclevill. Chiliieathe Waverly. Portsmouth. Irontor. and Konova, via Columbus Hocking Valley & Toledo and -Norfolk 4 Western Lines. “J. W. DeLonc, Avont, w.’o. MacEdwahds T P.A. Huntirigiou. FROM OTHER LANDS. To call a rnan a: German spy is- in France a sure way of securing his arrest. Dr. Max Nordau has turned frpm theories of "degeneration” t£> lighter literary labors. - _ The Holborn restaurant in Lond’on, announces an Innovation from New York in the shape.of a' lady typewriter to take down letters in shorthand. The 1 Duke of Colburg has invite.! the Hungarian prinri donna. Ilka Pnlmay (the Counfess Kinsky) to Visit London, Qn her way back from Cape Martinto Farnborough the ex-Empress Eugenie stayed for a time in Paris an 1 drove . through tj:e Tuileries gardens According to a statement of M". Gritfen of the board of trade, the annpal expenditure on tea in England represents 10s Id per head of population *and in Ireland Hs'lOd.y ~ \ site for the new u'niversi'y :• il’ s-t---tlenient-in London has been ■ piire.l a’t the corner-’of Tavistock ,pl:r- ••>. m l Little Coram street. M. Passmore E.l-xvai-ds.lias given £IO.OOO toward the e st of the building. ‘ On May 12 John C. JRudk a-rrived at 'Calais sa'.-ii- at iin t"-** ■**:’ having < « .. .. q | n a,cycle boat '*ghe boat is an ordinary, gig. .24 feet tong, tit: >■! w ’-'i. a I-a tent pa.dtl ' . .'de. ami in !: Mr. Ru \ aeCiui'.r "shed the v ■•> .:: I'rAaCTl ■ -’.‘vieb .without mishap. Sneaking ot’ th-- <■: ’*i--« ~-f,fel-low-countrymen in T ■ ii:m ■ M I.m'ss.:i'n. late governor- : : il of t’ ■ h'e 'nch possession In Indo-: '-.n.i, says: ‘T qould mention a subpf i 'ir in th ?. >vln’ce“OfHanoi i( jn w’l.i.-’i seventy-tiv.-- notabb? p**rs : v?*L? v bvlLUd<L?d id Ji single fortnig’it ’■ ■ arse, they were not able er did tn say what direction hid b-.en taken by 'a. band of malefactors who had passed through theic villages,” . DAME FASHION. • ’ ' * Trilby footstools are the newest. They are of tufted-silk or-voltet. The lice'collar, n-'w so fashionable, cannot be. too wide or 100 'loop. Jet and bead bodice fronts are revived this spring in great etegam-e. *; ■ rug’s, from countries never known to manufacture them are on the.market in a-gorgeous array. .White crepe Chinese shawls wi-th a deep silk fringe Will be among fashionable wraps for, sununer evenings. In leather belts fob summer wear * there arb new colors and styles: They , are wider .and have more oriiamenxa-. tion than fast season. White duck suits are to continue in vogue, but not the cheap, domestic duck. The material that comes over, tbe sea will have the preference. -« Neapolitan straw is the material of which some of the most beautiful of the newly imported bonnets are ni\.de. And it is declared they cannot be imitated. The furifiture revivetUhext year for the drawing rdoni will be the rosewood and red velvet of over fifty years ago, , 'when therb was less style, but- more solidity. . _ • , , _ ’ 7" 7 • ' ft ‘ . .... . ..