I . w " i. . - . 4. . . - i A DEMOCRATIC JOURNAL-THE PEOPLE AND TIIEIR INTERESTS. VOL. VII. NO. 51 MAXTON, N. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1893. SI.CO A YKAIJ. Ii EAT PANIC IN CHICAGO! Pork Drops $8.25 per Bbl. In Three Hours. With If, John Cudahy, Worth. $18, 000,000 Goes to ths Wall. Chicago. III. Tuesday was one of tin.- most disastrous ia the history of the l oinlof trade in this city. Wealthy ii dividuals and firms were bowled over lin.; nire pins and the pices of hogs wr-nt turn! -1 ng like an aval niche. Bro kers on the Chicago b.ard are aceus t med to witnessing scenes and kaleido scopic changes ia prices, but the oldest menal ers of the Loud ts-day actually stood aghast at the rapidity with which the pr'cj of rn ss pork went down. A sheer diop of $8.23 per barrel inside of lliree quattera of an hour is enough to take away the breath of old Stentor hinifelf. Therewas a hush near the opening in the moi bing when Secretary Stern appeared on the balcony of the trading room and notified all concerned that those having trades with the well known provision brolteiage firms of Joseph E. Stever & C . ; E. W. Baily & Co. , and A. Ilelthotz & G.i. should proceed to close them out. The s-ileuca lasted for a second and then a mighty roar went up from the pro vision pit. As early as last march it becftme apparent to the trade that mess pork was being "bulled" through these houses, and it soon became noised about iu the provision trade that A. M. Wright w a - behind the deal a year before he started a corner in ribs, and with the a- ip of Julia Cuiahy carried it through to f ucce.s, making a large amount of niciuy. Appa eatly, according to the general opinion of the board, he had ttiirted to run a similar deal in mess fork. Toe collapse has been looked for s metimp, and as the monetary situa tion became mere and more strained, everybody not interested in meat drew en.t, leuvii g the market so dull that there was scarcely enough businec-s to es-;.bl;sh quotation?, and the bubble bur--.. Another and Leivier shock came in announcements by the sccretaiy in quick succession of the failure of the North Ameiican Provision Company, a pack ing concern with a capital of a quirteref a million dollars in which Jack Cudahy w s largely in eresttd; of Wright & Ilaughey, a respectable firm, chiefly en gaged in receiving and shipping of wheat, but who are understood to be ir-tvrestci wi h Cudahy iu his deal in the j revision pi1", and finally of Cudahy him self, the great packer and daring specu la'er in provisions, whose wealth was recently estimated at no 1 ss than $18, 000,000, of which about f 2,000,000 was made in a deal in libs list fall. The stoim broke loose ajain after this in the lard crowd. This commodity had he'il extremely steady throughout the dump in pork, but it iu turn mounted the toboggan' and we -it down as if self 1 brica'ed. The pr'ce for September was fO.oo per tierce in the erly buying. It was 6 within six minutes after Cud ali "s fjilure was annouLced, and Sep te.nber short ribs, which were sold at a $?i i a- ge broke to $5.87. Before the cl se, h .wever, both r.illied, the former to $6 G2; the latter to $0.3). It is sai i Mr. Cudahj's private alfairs are separate from h's paitnei's mitters, and that the con-pnics he controls with Li- bro'her;, Mik: acd Pat, are not af br.t.d. THE SEMIN0LES THREATEN WAR. The Chief's Son Flogged by a Pale Face mid H-p ua' ion Is to ba Demanded. Jupiter. Fla. Th-:re is fear that the S;--nili:olc Indians in south Florida may aguin go on the war pi;k after over forty y ar of peacs. Lktle Tiger, a chief of th it vortioa of the scattered tubes wkuh b .is villages on the edge of the Ever ghides, not far west of B'scaync Bay, is on h:s way to Tallahassee to seek an ofiici.-d interview wi.h Gov. Mitchell Ujon what he and h's t:ibe considers a serious insult to them. Lit le Tiger h;s a young son, whom Mr. Jensen, who owns a lare tract of In d ! ear Cocoanut Grove, on Biy Bis e yne. taught poaching on Thursday i ii 1 ti gged. To war 1 night Little Tiger :i!;d a ha f d zem of his warrio.s appear id iit the vill.tge of Coeoanut Grove and i::'piiied for Je. sn. They were armed Ut ih-i teeth Jensen explained matters, l,u they app p. red unsatisfied. They s'otmed around for an hour or n.crt tnd went back to their camp, where at intervals through the night they k pt up a shriek ng and yelliug, accom pli. icd by the firing of rifles. Men coming from the Lcighborhood of tli - Iiul an villages tay thu the whole t ibj is excited over the t flair and threat (ii to go on the war path if Gov. M tchell does not fix up the matter su'i-f-iclori'y. Killed Whilo After Honey. Wilmington, N. C During a ; ur.der ttorm -John Carter, a colored tii' innn employed at the Navas?a Guano ( ii Tactory, a few miles above the ci'y, 'limbfid a tree ne:r the factory for the pur,iosi of securing honey mad? by a vI;) in of wild he s in a hollow limb. Lightning struck the tree and killed Cartei The South. Can Have China's Trade in Cotton Cloth. C -Es il Edward Bedloe, whose post is the treaty port of Am y, Caina, a city of over 1,000,000 popn'ation, including i's suburb, se .ds to the Department of S ate an interesting report on the trade between h's city and the United States. What Dr. B.dloe siys of the cotton cloth market in China and the possibili ties of American trAde in this line are so much of interest to all our Southern manufacturers that we reproduce the following extracts from his report: "Sifiicient care is not taken by manu fat turcrs at home to" ascertain exactly what the Chinese want. Apparently they have but two views either their Eastern customer is civilized like themselves and wants what they want or else he U un civilized and will take anything that comes along. They seldom realize that the East is a great civilization in itself, with ideas, habits and necessities utterly diverse from tho e of Chiistendom. Cloths stronger, coarser and cheaper, without weighting, with less gloss and finish, like those th? village coolie buys from the hawker, would meet with quick er salts and net larger profits than those with which the markets are now flooded. "There is no rtason why the United States should n ,t have a large portion of this vast trade in cotton fabrics of all sorts. There is especially no reason why tbe South should not have the lion's share and New Orleans be a centre of commerce between that great section and the extreme Orient. "Instead of slrpping goods via New York. Baltimore or San Francisco, a pro ceeding as expensive ss it ii needless, they should be sent from e'.ther New Orleans or Mobile. From New Orleans they could he forwarded by sailing vessel around the cape or by steamer through the Suez canal to the great markets of China. In re tu-n the ships could bring tea, siik and the other exports of that part of the world. It is unnecce?sary to await the rebuilding of the American merchant marine. Present conditions are more than satisfactory. It is an easy matter to arrange with such great houses as Jardke Mathe-on & Co., Butterfield D Swins, the China Mutural S:eamship Co., the G!en, Btn or Shi;e lines of steamers to have direct communi cation between New Or'eans aud the entire China co .st. With a 1 tt'e enter prise, energy i nd se'f-s ciitice it is possib'e to develop an indus.iy in the South to be measured in n-illioiis." This Looks Like Business. Colvkeia, IS. C. Very few people have any idea what a big thing the new Columbia Cotton Mi 1 is to b. It will perhaps be six or eight months before the mill begins operation, but some idea of the capacity and extent of the pro ject might be had from the present work. To begin with, it is located on the upper side of the Canal neir the Gervai street bridge. It is an L shaped structure. The front is 412 feet, the main building is 104 feet wide. The win g nearest the Canal is 129 feet long and that fronting the east 139 feet, which is to be extended to 387 feet. The main building is to be five stories high, and the east wing three atd four stoiies on account of the elope in the ground. The company ckim that the mill when completed will be the largest in the State, and the largest ducking mill in ths world. Work was started on thi 16th of April.and the build ing is now beginning to !ook like some thing. It is the intention of the ovtn.ra of the valuable property to spend at least $750,000, and in the purchase of machinery quality will be the first con sideration. The machinery will be op erated by motor po?. er from the Columbia Cana1, and quite an innovation in the shape of individual electric motors for eveiy piece of machinery will he introduc ed. Heating and ventilating machinery will be used, aad everything will be equipped with the very latest mechanism that can bs had. Ducking and drills will be manufactured, and a specialty will be made of the heavy canvas that i3 used in sail making. The capacity of the mill will be the same as is expressed by abDiit 45,000 cotton spindles. It i3 said that the mill will give em ployment to about 1,400 operatives, which means that about 5,000 people will be brought here by the new mill. It is the intention of the compiny to use as much native labor as .ossible. At the outset only a few experienced work rain will bd brought here, and they will be expected to drill the native labor. The company has started the construc tion of 100 hous:s that are to be U3ed by the operatives. The new town is being built in Lexington County, just across the river. Robbing a Postoffice. Abbeville, N. C.-Thieves broke in to tbe postoffice at Alexander a few nights since and stole therefrom about $212 in money, $28 worth of stamps, about two dozen boxes sardines, four Wrttches and n few other articles of small value. Entrance into the building wa3 effected by prizing off tho window blind and breaking a jane. 'I ho postmaster was at home sick, and his assistant hal been called awy on important business. There is no clue to the perpetrators of the crime. POPULAR SCIENCE. A male adult has half an ounce of lugar in his blood. Insanity in every country is more prevalent among unmarried than among married persons. A man in California has invented a SLevice that will prevent gas escaping when it is blown out. Among all races the weight of the male brain is ten per cent, heavier than that of the female. Aluminum can be hardened by rapid cooling in water, more especially if it be alloyed with a small percentage of titanium or tungsten. The amount of perspiration exuded by a grown man every twenty-four hours weighs twenty-eight ounces. His perspiration is ninety-nine per cent, water and one per cent, saline matter. In the cast-iron water pipe of Paris, which forms a continuous tube jyith only two slight crooks, the lowest whisper at one end may be distinctly heard at the other although the pipe is 3120 feet long. Professor Newton estimates that the average number of meteors that tra verse the atmosphere daily, visible to the eye on a dark night, is 7,500,000, and if to these the telescope meteors be added the number would ba in creased to 400,000,000. Naphthalene, which is a product of coal tar distillation, in appearanee something like paraffin, has been found useful in England for the pre servation of timber. The wood is soaked for two to twelve hours in the melted naphthalene at at temperature of about 200 degrees Fahrenheit. ' ': A four-wheeled wagon whose motive power is supplied by a benzino engine has been satisfactorily tested in Ger many. It is intended to carry passen gers through city streets or country roads, and can be run at the rate of half a cent a mile. The wagon and engine can be made for $500. The speed is as high as fifteen miles an hour. Germs of contagious diseases are capable of multiplying"- themselveE with marvelous rapidity. A single germ when placed in surroundings favorable to its growth, quickly divides into two. Each of these divides itself again, and bo on, the number soon reaching into thousands. It has been estimated that by the end of twenty-four hours a single germ will have multiplied it self into more than 16,500,000 germs. Two cases in which fire was caused by water are reported. In one a flood caused the water to rise high enough to reach a pile of iron filings in a fac tory. The filings oxidized so rapidly as to become so intensely heated as tc set fire to neighboring woodwork, and the factory was burned to the ground, in the other case, during a fire water from the engines found its way to a shed containing quick lime. The heai generated by the lime set fire to the shed and the flames spread to othei buildings. A Long Tramp. Chicago, III. Mrs. Lucille Rodney, accompauied by her husband, G. B. Rodney, and W. W. Holliday, arrived in Chicago from Galveston, Tex., having walked the entire distance. The trip was made for a wager of $5,000 and sundry considerations. Mrs. Rodney wore out eight pairs of shoes and aver aged twenty-three miles a day. he left Galvestoa May lGto, and was dua here August 1st. Peru Ruined by the Fall of Silver. San Francisco, Cal. James Hicks, Ex-American minister to Peru, arrived from Panama. He reports Peru iu bad condition, all trade paralyzed and every -one fearing a bloody revolution, that will surely follow the attempt of Ex-Dictator Pieroli to regain power. "President Bermudas has governed the country wisely," said nicks, ' but no adminis trative ability can make headway against the hard times due to the fall of silver." Unexpected Relief. New YciiK. A new and unexpected element of relief has been injected into the financial situation. United States bonds have reached such a low figure that the national banks see their way clear to make a profit by issuing circu l?tiou against them. It i estimated that $8,000,000, or $10,000,000 will be so added to New York's supply of currency within a short time. A Lineman Killed. Richmond, Ya. Ucrbet Jackson, a colored lineman, while repiiring a of the electric car line, fell from a to the street, a distance of thirty wire pole feet and was almost instantly killed. Mayfield, Ky., is going to save money for road repairs by discharging its one policeman and not bothering with prisoners. Gold Coming- in Big Amount. London The sum of 930,000 was withdrawn from the Bauk of England for shipment to the United States. NAVAL DISASTERS. CATASTROPHES RESULTING IN TERRIBLE LOSS OF LIFE. Great Britain Has Lost Many Vessels and Thousands of Men Few Ships Lost by the Amer ican Navy. HE loss of the British warship Victoria recalls to the New York Times that 'the history of the navies of the world, and particularly those chapters relat ing to the navy of Great Britain, abounds in records of disasters, at tended with great losses of life. As early as 1703 it it recorded that three British men-ofvar were lost. The York, with 70 guns, wenttdown off Harwich and all on board perished save 4 ; the Newcastle, GO guns, went down off Spithead with 193 men, and the Reserve, 60 guns, sank off Yar mouth, November 26, carrying down 173 men. In 1744 the frigate Victory, one ol the finest ships of her day, carrying 100 guns, went down ofrlthe Island oi Alderney and every soul ' perished. Three hundred and ..thirty officers and men went down with)Hi3 Majesty's ship Pembroke, GO guns, near Porto Nuovo, April 13, 1749. Three years later, to a day, the British frigate Prince Geotrge, 80 guns, while on her way to Gibraltar, waa burned and 400 men perished. Thie was the most sensational) marine dis aster of the century. The fate of the Prince George waa still comparatively fresh inlmind when, August 29, 1782, the RoyaP George, a man-of-war carrying 1.08 guns, was lost off Spithead. Six Jiundred per ished. The vessel lay keseled over in order to effect repairs on a pipe, when suddenly a gust of wind washed the sea into her ports andhatches, and in a few minutes she went down. Rear Admiral Kenipenfeldt, (together with the entire crew, many Warines and women, were drowned In May, 1817, the diving bell was employed in a survey of the wreck as it' lay embed ded at the bottom, and twenty years later, under the superintendence of Sir Charles Pasley, portions of the cargo were removed. La Tribune, a French maa-of-war, carrying 3G guns, was lost off Halifax, November 16, 1797, and 300 i men per ished. Two years later, October 9, 1799, His Majesty's Ship Luiine, carrying 32 guns, was wrecked olf Vlieland, on the Holland coast, and only one man was saved. He died before reaching England. The Lutine was a French ship captured by Admiral Duncan of the British fleet. Tho wreck lay im bedded in the sand for fifty-eight years. At the expiration of I that time a Dutch salvage company recovered 99,893. The remainder of the specie, amounting to 1,175,000, was never recovered. November 5 of the same year the British cruiser Sceptre, 64 guns, was wrecked in Table Bay, on the Cape of Good Hope, and 291 members of tha crew perished. The closing years of the Eighteenth Century and the opening years of the Nineteenth appeay to have been disae trous for the ships of tho British ser vice. Besides the losses already men tioned, the Queen Charlotte, a flrst-rata ship of the line, 110 guns, the flag ship of Lord Keith, then commanding the Mediterranean squadron, was burned off Leghorn, March 17, 1800, and 673 persons perished out of a crew of 850. The Ajax, 74 guns, was also lost by fire February 14, 1807, while off the Island of Tenedos. Two hundred and fifty men perished. December 22, 1810, His Majesty's ship Minotaur, 74 guns, was wrecked off tha Diitfih coast and 36Q lives were lost. On the same spot, eleven years be fore, the British ship Nassau, 64 guns, went down with 100 men. On Christmas Eve, 1811, there oc curred one of the worst catastrophes recorded in naval history. The St. George, 98 guns; the Defense, 74 guns, and the Hero, 60 guns, all of the British Navy, were cruising off ths Jutland coast, with Admiral Reynolds in command. A storm arose, and all three vessels stranded. Two thousand officers and men perished, only eight een escaping. Her Majesty's ship Avenger, a steam frigate, was lost on the north coast oJ Africa, and all the officers and crew, numbering 200 perished, Decembei 20, 1847. The loss of the British troopship Birkenhead is still remembered by the okler generation. She wa3 an iron paddlewheeler of 556 horse power, bound from Queenstown to the Cape oi Good Hope, with several detachments of British troops. She left Queenstown January 7, 1852, and on February 26 T she struck the point of a submerged pinnacle rock and tore her bottom out. Out of 638 persons only 184 were saved. Another disaster to one of the fines! of Her Majesty's ships occurred on the night of September 7, 1870, when the iron-clad Captain sank in a squall ofl Finisterre. Her Captain, Hugh Bur goyne, and Captain Cowper Coles, hei designer, together with 472 seamen, composing the "elite of the service," perished. Only eighteen were saved. The United States has been compar atively free from disasters involving great loss of life, the loss of the Huron being the most serious of recent years. The disaster occurred November 24, 1877. The vessel was on her way from Hampton Roads to Cuba to determine the latitude and longitude of the isl and, regarding which some dispute had arisen. WTien about seventy-five miles from Cape Henrj-, and in the neighbor hood of Oregon Inlet, North Carolina, she was struck by a terrific storm and quickly went to pieces. One hundred and four lives were lost. The Huron was a stanch and well-built vessel, but could not withstand the force of that memorable 6torm. March 24, 1878, another British ship was lost, the Eurydice, a training ves sel. She was returning home from the Bermudas when she foundered in a squall off Dunrose Highland, Me ol Wight. Her Captain, O. S. Hare, to gether with Lieutenant Tabor and 300 men, were lost. In the following August the wreck was raised aad takea to Portsmouth. May 31, 1878, the German ehip-of-war Grosser Kurfurst was lost. This vessel was one of a squadron of three ehips bound from Wilhelmshafen to Gibraltar. When midway between Folkestone and Calais the Grofisei Kurfurst ported her helm to avoid s bark. The Konig Wilhelm pulled hard apart at the same instant, and the twe collided. The Kurfurst was struck with the Wilhelm's sharp prow just forward of the mizzenmast and sank immediately in fifteen fathoms. Oui of her complement of 500 men only 23 officers and 160 seamen were rescued. Her Majesty's ship Vanguard, a double screw iron-clad, was struck in a similar manner off the Wicklo coast after colliding with the Iron Duke September 1, 1875. Her Majesty's ship Doterel, six gun3, Captain Evans, was destroyed by an explosion in tha Strait of Magellan April 26, 1881, and out of 150 on board 143 perished. The disaster in the harbor of Apia, Samoa, March 15, 1889, is still fresh in mind. Six war vessels were lost, three of them belonging to the United States Navy and three to the German Navy. The Vandalia, Nipsic, and Trenton were the American ships, and the Eber, Adler, and Olga were the German ships. One hundred and forty-five lives were lost. The British torpedo cruiser Serpent was lost off the coast of Spain Novem ber 11, 1890. The disaster occurred at a point twenty miles north of Cape Finisterrec A violent storm occurred and the vessel went on the rocks. There were 276 persons aboard, of whom only three were saved. The Serpent was one of the best of the British cruisers. She was making her maiden trio when the disaster occurred. The Power of Charming Snakes. In India and, to a certain extent, in other Oriental countries, the profes sion of serpent charming is said to be hereditary, and has been practiced from remotest antiquity. The serpent charmer possesses a power beyond that of other men of knowing when he is within close proximity to a concealed reptile, long practice having, probably, given them a fine sense of smell which enables them to detect the odor emitted by the serpent, even though it be so faint as not to attract the attention of the novice. These wily fakirs usually ascribe their powers to some constitu tional peculiarity, but it has beer noticed that they generally pull the fangs and extract the venom glands oJ the reptiles handled in giving exhibi tions. What power the human voice may have in controlling the actions oi these venemous creatures is uncertain ; however, it-has been noted that ser pent charmers continually talk, sing, whistle or have an attendant play upor some shrill musical instrument during the time exhibitions are being given. That these sounds have their influence there is not the least doubt. The "charmer" also exerts an influence over these creatures with his eye, som reputable travelers declaring that they have seen fakirs control and govera their poisonous pets by merely fixing their eyes steadfastly upon those of the serpents. St. Louis Republic. Assuming the working ago to ba from twenty to sixty years, and count ing only male workera, 440 persons in this country live on the labor of every 3 00 workers PERIODICAL PRESS. INTERESTING FACTS AROLT THE WORLU'3 NEWSPAPERS. The United States Lead the World In Newspapers China Has the Oldest and Borneo the Smallest Paper. " 7T0:RE ttaa oae-third of tho 1 daily newspapers in the -- Y -- world are published in the United States. There are 1759 of them printed in this country, which also has 13,404 weeklies, and 305 that appear periodically at no reg ular dates. New York State, eajs th London Tit-Bits, has more papers than are published in all the continents of the world south of the equator. Canada has ninety-four dallies, 576 weeklies and 132 monthlies. Latin America including under this roo venient term Mexico and Central South America, where Spanish and Portu guese are spoken has over 4500 news papers of all 6orts, 200 of which ara printed in other languages than Spaa sh or Portuguese, almeet every "foreigi tongue being Tepret? en-ted. The newspapers of the British Isles number 2272, London alone sending out 496 of these. The monthly mag" azines and reviews of all kinds pub lished in the British Isles total up an additional 1900. Paris has twelve moro dailies than London, New York, Philadelphia and Boston combined. The Parisian papers; of which there are 141 altogether; aaa generally distinguished by having larger circulations than those of all other cities. The largest circulation in the world is that of the Petit Journal, which is. eues more than a million eopies daily. Germany' occupies the second plaee with regard to tho number of daily papers, having 973, besides 2630 week ly and other papers. The oldest Eu ropean newspaper still published is the Post Zeitung, of Frankfort, which dates from 1616. The oldest newspaper in the world is the Pekin Gazette, which has been regularly published since A. D. 911. It has now threo issues dailv fnol 9 merely editions), with a circulation oi 10,000. 'The contents are simply offi cial information, imperial electees anc? the like, which are communicated tc the publisher by the functionaries ol the imperial palace. The official doc ments are drawn up with great care, and are only published after such care ful revision that they do not appem until two or three days after the pub lisher has received them. However, he has time to publish an unofficial edition, and also issues a manuscript edition, which is the first edition, and appears two or three days before the official. There are six editors, so that there is ample reserve in case of ab sence of any of them for Government reasons. That this is not a needless precaution, in view of the etrict watch kept on the paper, may be understood when it is stated that during the one thousand years or so tha paper has been in existence seventeen of ita edi tors have been beheaded. The Gazette is exactly the same in form to-day ae it was a thousand years ago. It is four inches wide by ten inches long, and each issue consists of aboufc eight een leaves of soft thin paper, with ragged edges, printed on one side in Chinese characters, the whole inclosed in a thin yellow cover aad lightly stitched. But, though China can boast of thie ancient newspaper, it otherwise makes a poor'show in the journalistic world. For all its 400,000,000 inhabitants it has only twenty-four newspapers, ten of which are daily, and fourteen ap pear at longer intervals. Only -levcn are printed in Chinese, one is printed in French, the rest being English. Japan presents a Etfilimg coidraei, having ninety-two dailies and 175 other periodicals. Nearer borne, even the little inland of Iceland, with some 70,000 inhabitants, has the sime num ber of newspapers as the great Empire of China. The newspapers of India are pub lished in many languages, and it is said that those in the native tongues are more widely circulated and read, in proportion to the number of copies printed, than is the case anywhere else in the world. A single copy will servo a whole village and will pasa from hand to hand until it actually falls to pieces. Persia has six newspapers, all in the native language except one in Syriaej. Persian newspapers' aa not Tainted from type. When the reading natter is ready it is passed to a scrib9, who makes a clean eopy. From this s beautifully written fine copy is made by a handwriting expert, and this is finally exactly reproduced by lithog raphy. Borneo has the smallest regularly published newppnpf-r in tin- wcn'M the Sarawak Gazette, printed in English, and t'rst indued in 1S07. The newpfipirH of Autri:i hov n p-reatcr variety in ihiw respect tlmn those of nny other country, iin hi lin in tho li-t Gorman, Tt-ilinn, IVrm-h, Magyar or Hungarian, !r-Hh, I.ntin, r i-Ti, Servinn, SI a vie nwi ITeVrcw. The mof-t remnrkfiMe piipT in Aus tria, find probably in th... world n re gards languages, i th r,.m pnrationis Litcrurum IJiiiu j -nf ,nn. semi-monthly levies' of com jmrut iv litcrnture, whi'li hn.s n-i.trihiitors in every purt of the world, whose in tieh aret 'ill printed in their native tongues. Tho longest iiewj.;i. r tii!eine Istenro is that of a Greenlsnd sheet, which rejoicoR in th euphonious defcifrnfttion of Arrrmen;.;,,! ! Nnlin ginmtvnik SyHaramnias Sivih. Tho mofct northern newspaper is f lie Nordrdap, publiphed at Unnum i .-t'in. The editcr and hi;: biniY nrh in u email, tuif-roofed wooden liou.-e. News oeniics by mail bont v.ul tho Ilfimrnersteincrs jieuiaiVavw of tlei world's events generally eieht dnyi late, and as the paper is a weekly iti news is often a fortnight old. The ninft curious of all e-l.-iss jour nals is Knrely the Beg,c,nr" .Tonrmil Parirt, which in published daily nud gives its eubferilicta aeoinpletH list of baptisms, weddings nnd funemlsi to take pluee (he Rami day. Beg'j.ln'j LfctteT writers are provided for by u special Heetion, wLieh gives 1hi ;ir ivals nnd departures of persons rf known charitable tdoneies. My Lord Buys a Belt. Amon, th'j rfiatinguhoiivd mrivuls nt the Unmet Houai the past v,e--k uu.- ii title.il Ihigl'shni'iu, Lord Til 1 iuui BrookH, With Lady Broolr- nu l valet and nmid necompaniiueiit, the Yn.'j was "doing iiainerieu" in yrcat ot ,vl. He i reputed to bo very wealthy iui l eccentric, and on his way from Wash ington, where Ii-- snwnt soma time, came via th ( ;hes..je:iky and Ohio line. Wbiln en route th bell on the locomotive that drew bin train nt trautud his attention, owin. t tha pe culiar swoetncsH of its tari', and when the train reac1t1 tha central Ktrdiun his vnlet was commanded to gn to the engineer and asot-rtitin t ))) i iou of the bell and buy it. Of Kouiwe the engineer had no voicii in tha imit ter, and so informed the luehey, wh reported to his lordship. Determined to hive the bell, the 4eentri lord visit od the Chesapeake nnd Ohi Hi eialvi, and after quite, u Jot of 1 iokcrin s; the railway men put a good priee on the bell nnd sold it. The evtej,l piece of brass -vf securely pn'ik'Nl ruel sent, to his lodik.ip'n English address. Ciriixrsti. inquirer. H's a Nap You Weed. A room without a couch of eomc. sort is only half furnished. Life y full of ups and elewns, and all fVtfc saves the sanity of the mentally jaled and physically exhausted fortun fisfhtsr is the periodical good cry and momentary loss of sonioirmo-.s on th& upstairs loungs or the old fof i ir tho sirting-room. Thfro nro time! when ho rnmy of the thin is that, dis tract ns could be f:tri ightenod out Rni th? way niide clear it only on- hal a a Ion 7, cornfoi tab's couch on who:- bosom he could throw hbnseH, boot-. and brains, kI retell his v. en ry fruw, unmindful of tidies and tapestry, elo-- his fired eyes, relax the tvmiou of his muscles and give his liarrassed mind a chance. Telt minutes of this aarootic when the head throbs, the soul year.n for endless, dreamless eternal ref-.t, would niake tho vision el:r, n -es steady, tbe heart light and the star oi hope shin again.- Hall'e Journal ol Health. A Gun ot Kerr.arka'3!3 Power. A elistinctive progress :n gun making is recordfed. A jfin has bec-n tested in Franae, which, upon trial, ha,-, given most remarkable results. It is f 6.3 inches calibr and ovr forty fieveu feet long. To this enormous lor.gth the wonderful initial vtloeity f iia projectile i attributed. This velac-ky reached the phenomenal figura of al most 4800 eet a Kexml, fcuvanoiug c previous reeordd. The guu is impaa ticable for use on board ship, uudr present condition?, but it iLir-V.'t necessarily follow that it rciv not bo used with advantage on fchore, espe cially in seacoast defenses, wltre such high initial velocities vouLl be greatly 'le-drable for the purpose of piercing the armor of hostile vessels, r-rondsd, cf courts, that a projetil ecnll be found cf tmeh hardn&s as to pss through th.2 opposing armor. Detroit Free Prer.s. Prinled on Spiders' Web. A newspaper printed on the web the sacred white spider ef C1,:-i i- chronicled. It is a sheet llxli inehes contains two column f matter, in eluding an English story, and is excel lently printed