GREATEST BATTLE ; IS FOUGHT AGAIN Veterans of ttia Blue and the j Gray Met at Gettysburg. 40,000 SOLDIERS IN CAMP. Vaaident Wileon Orator tn July 4. General Siokle Only Division Com mandor Present, Doath Having Mus tered Out All Others on Both Side. Gettysburg, Pa Aitnln, sfter fifty years, the men who fought under the stars sod strlpea and those who fol lowed the stars and bars into the din of battle bare met on the battlefield at Gettysburg this time not to fight for the cause that both sides believed to be right, but to celebrate the semicen tennial anniversary of the greatest battle ever fought on American soli and, with one exception, the greatest battle ever fought in the history of the world. About 40.000 veterans met and fought the battle over again tula time, reposing in comfortable chairs and tell ing the younger generation of the trials ana Hardships of fifty years ago. The quiet Uttle Pennsylvania town Stepped back fiftY Tears and looked upon the army of blue and the army of gray meeting again on her doorstep and thereby showed to the world that the scars of battle are not as deep as the feeling of American brotherhood. From the first day of the celebration until the last from early morning until long after the sun had gone down the veterans trooped around the little town which had so peacefully stent smona Its hills since Lee and Meade turned their legions southward and met for the fler. three days' battle so many years ago. When the soldiers arrived In Gettysburg they found the stars and stripes fluttering from every window or every house In the town. The stars and bars were much in evidence. During the celebration train after train arrived In Gettysburg each crowded with old men from all parts of xne country. The average age of the lonrederate civil war veteran today is seventy-two years. The veterans lost no time In leaving their trains and establishing them selves In camp. Five thousand tents. 72; HAS NOT LOST A TOOTH Woman Has Throe Small Fillings, Those as a Precaution. flattie Creek, Mich. A woman sev enty-two years old with all her own teeth and only three tiny fillings Is the uiseovery made at an Institution here. The woman la Miss Helen SIdious, a utnsinjr scnool teacher. A physician made the discovery a few days ago when he was tecturln He took occasion to state that few peo ple over nrty Bad all their own teeth. He then asked all Id the audience who were over fifty and retained all th-ir own teem to raise their right hands. Miss Simons waa tha only on. The Incident waa ao unusual that she was examined by a number of uenusts. I ney pronounced her teeth unusually good. The three small fillings In her teeth were put In more aa a nroventlv than because her teeth were nWa,l Rh says they were slightly discolored and, although there wss no sign of decay. sne took the dentist's advice and had them filled. Miss Simons la the daughter nf in. son Simons, one of the nloneer xttlan of Lansing. She la also a alster of the late B. r Simons of that city. B I .JBI.iB - Photo by American Press Association. TKB BICI A.VD THE OBAI AT GETTT3BCBO. each accommodatinc comfort.ihlv olirht soldiers, had been erected on the scene of this battle. The tents fell westward with the slope of the ground from the Emmlssary road to the point on Semi nary ridge where the charge of Pickett started on the third day of the fli-lit They covered the "Peach Orchard" and the "Wheat Field," where thousands of men were lost, and part of the ground over which Pickett charrreil but they did not reach the "Bloody Angle" or the base of Cemetery ridge, from whose height Meade's artillery cut to pieces the legions of Pickett The formal exercises were held In a tent near the Emmitsburg road, but they lasted but two hours each day. The veterans spent the remainder of the time as they pleased, renewing ac quaintances and greeting comrades whom they had not seen or heard of for ue intervening nrty years. Never in the time of peace had the old town witnessed anvthln? thnr or. celled In grandeur the parades of the feeble veterans that passed along the main street of Gettysburg day after aay. The white haired soldiers, many stooped from old age, marched in line, either with the rebels or the Yankees, each day of the celebration. The arrangements for feeding the old soldiers were excellent Good meals, differing greatly from those that they obtained in the stirring days of 18C3, were served the old soldiers and In true camp fashion. The veterans in the happiest humor waited in line to get their rations. Of the Union leaders only one corps commander was there Genera Dan iel E. Sickles death having mustered out all the other generals Meade, Han cock, IToward, Sloeum. Reynolds, Ilunt and Webb, while on the Confederate side have gone Lee, Longstreet Hill, Ewell, Alexander and Pickett whose name will ever be linked with Gettys burg because of the memorable charge that his division made against the Union center, a charge that will live In history as long as valor is com memorated. On July 4 President Wilson was one of the speakers. Many other men no table throughout the nation attended the celebration and reunion. 8even Children In Fourteen Months. Berlin. The wife of Ilcrr Ottmann. a well to do manufacturer at Schontal. Bavaria, has given birth to seven chil dren within fourteen months. In April. 1912. four girls were born at the same time. She recently gave blrtb to trip lets, all boys. ATTACKED BY SNAKES. Virginia Man Save Self by Rolling Into Fire, Then stream. Tiedmont W. Va.-Whlie trout fish ing in a mountain stream near llmm. talndale George Enser, a well known business man of this cltv. waa attack ed by snakes, and before he could beat them off the reptiles had lutwlned themselves about him, binding his arms, bands and feet The snakes, over a dozen in number, measured from four to six feet In length. Enser had the mveence nf mind a roll down the bill Into a fire that he had built to warm his breakfast Ills clothing caught fire, and the snakes. scorched and slssling, uutwlned from hts body and escaped. Enser. though badly burned, ran tn the trout stream and threw himself Into the wster. extinguishing his burn- lug clothing. His body, arms and face were se verely burned. FLYING BOAT USED IN PRACTICAL WAY Chicago Man Plans to Fly to and From His Office. Chicago. A striklnz indication of the part that aviation is destined to take in practical problems of trans portation is given by a recent tend ency, lust beginning to manifest Itself in America, to use the flying boat in a practical way for ordinary business purposes. For daily travel between Chicago and his home In Lake Forest, a suburb twenty-five miles north of the business center of the city, Harold P. McCormlck Is niannlne to use a Curtiss flying boat This flying boat Is adapted fur use as an aeroplane, but is said to be a stanch and seaworthy boat as well. In ordinary practice It will be run in such a way as to skim he surface of the water or to flv a short distance alove It, thus eliminat ing many of the dangers both of flvinc and of high speed boating. The pro peller is located at the bow of the boat and pulls the machine along Instead of driving it. In this position the nro- peller drives the air blast through the radiator, making It possible to keep the engines cool for hours when the boat Is running at slow speed on the water. The hull differs from that of the standard type In having a V shap ed bottom, a feature designed to make It a smooth riding craft In choppy sens. Seats will be provided In the cockpit for four pasengers. while the front seat will give room for the driver and one passenger, an arrangement similar to that of the four passenger automo bile. As a matter of safety the control Is arranged so that either of the occn- pants of the front seat can handle the machine- Power is supplied bv a Curtiss elirM cylinder motor of the latest type. This motor, which Is designed for oneratlon at moderately high speeds, is rated at rrom iw to 100 horsepower and shows 100 brake horsepower at l.Sno revnln. tlons per minute. The weight of the motor, exclusive of radiator, Is 310 pounds. During recent trials this ma chine was run at the rate of a mlln a minute flying in the air and at the rate of fifty miles an hour when op erated as a hydroaeroplane. CONGRESS TO SIT AN ENTIRE YEAR? Continuous Session Feared Be cause of Currency Bill. HOPE LIES IN PRESIDENT. Belief Eaprooood That CapiUI's Dog Days Will Drivo Wilson Away Cur roney till to Pass Houoo Easily, and Fight Will Corns In Sonata. Washington. Leaders In raumi and the administration fear that tha present sroslon of congress will run Into the late fall and possibly merge with the aeaalon that will begin the first Monday In IVvemher. Ihrre are a few ontliulsts. Ilka Ti.n. reseutatlve Hull of Tvnueawo. who am no reason why congress should not conclude Its labors by the middle of October. Itepresentstive Henry of Trial ex. pressed the opinion that congress prob ably would reiualu In session continu ously until late in the summer of nit year. In the course of the debate In tne nouse of representatives Mann of Illinois, the Itel'tibllcan leader, mailt the remark that this session would con. tlnue until IVcembor. Prophecies as to the duration of the session are based on the theory tlmt congresa will follow the rivoimiiemU uon or I'resiiieut llson and enact a banking and currency reform law. lemocratlc leaders are In a txwltlnn to force the passage of such a measure n tne nouse, put In the senate, where no cloture rule obtalus, there Is not anv way to cut off debate as long as sena tors want to talk. Senators have bro ken long talking records In the iinm currency debates, and fear Is expressed null not even the torrid atmosphere of the dog days or the humldltv of the early rail months will drive them away rrom tne lob. Many representatives and senators have died aa the result of exposure to tue extreme best that attends Wash ington summers. The weather here Is particularly severe on the elderly, and there are many men of advuueed years n ootn tne Douse and the senate. This Is one of the causes of concern on the part of the responsible leaders. I tie curreucy b is Deiidliiu in the house committee. Just how long It will remain In committee "only the Lord knows," to quote Chairman ijinss. Despite the restoration to the bill of tne provisions retiring the present mi uouai Dank note circulation and re funding the 2 per cent bonds, unmi which such circulation is based, there are other questions that are bound to take tune In committee and on the floor of the house. It Is virtually certain that the bill wiu not tie passed by the house until early In August. Troubles uulooked for are likely to arise that may delay the passage of the bill uutll the middle or August, 'llien will come the long grinu lu tne senate. There Is one contingency on which members of congress are hanging their hopes for an adjournment ImuioMlutely arter tlie passage of the tariff bill President Wilson has never spent a summer in Washington. He has beard all about the rigors of the midsummer wentner or the capital, but the mem bers declare that lie will not appro-late it ruiiy uutll be has had actual expert ence. They are hopeful that when the tariff oiu ib passed, probably about Kept 1 the president will consent to adlourn ment and call congress lu special ses sion In October to complete work on the banking anil currency bill before tne regular session begins. It Is altogether likely that at the an. proprlate time such a suggestion will oe made to the president CHOKES ON HIS OWN TONGUE. It Sticks In Youth's Throat, and Ho Dies In Epileptic Fit. Philadelphia. Charles Arioro. twen ty years old. choked to death In bed in his own tongue. Arioro hod been sufferinir from enl. lepsy for some time and was having a lit when his sister, Mrs. Anna Mario, returned home. She summoned a doc tor, but he did not arrive until after Arioro had died. His tongue had stuck In his throat. LIGHT BURNS FOR LOVER. "Mother Frank" Beliavtd Hor 8oldiar Would Return. Amsterdam, N. Y. Although Miss Julia Frank, who wag seventy -two years old, Is dend at her home In West Stony Creek, the light which she kept burning a half century for her soldier sweetheart Is still burning. Hhe ha. queathed the farm where she spent ner life to her spinster sister on con. dltlon that she will always keep the light burning. Her fiance was report ed killed at the battle of Hull Urn. but she never accepted the report as au thentic, for forty years she attended every Memorial day service and dec orated every soldier's grave In the cemetery. She was highly esteemed in the vil lage and was known as "Mother Frank" from the fact that she adopted and reared ten children. Beer Bottle Chokes Pelican. Newport Beach. Cal. A In riro irrn v pelican was picked up here dead with a beer bottle tightly wertoWl In its throat The bird from its manner of flight evidently was ia distress. It was seen to plunge Into the surf, and when it did not rise again It. J. Sharer, a fisherman, waded In and brought the dead bird ashore. Exempts Wedding Gift Kansas City. A wedding gift of fif teen years ago remains inviolable by creditors under a decision given by Judge Ellison of the court of appeals. The wedding gift was a cow. The father of Mrs. Thomas nines of Holt county, Mo., gave It to her when she married. The Hlneses milked the cow until It became too old to milk. Then they sold It Mr. nines kept the money some time, then bought another milk cow with It Felix Gambrel tried to attach the cow for a debt against nines. Mrs. nines protested that It was virtually the cow her father had given her. Gambrel lost. "Studebaker wagons certainly last a long time" "l Have had this wagon twenty-two years, and during that lima it cost me only $6.00 (or repairs, and that was lor setting two tires." j 'iH ',ef ,werity-wo Vrs of daily use in good nd bad weather and over all kinds of roads. Twill put this wagon against any ntui wagon of another make that you can buy today," "Studebaker wagons are built of air-dried lumber nd tested iron and steel. Even the paint and varnish are subjected to a laboratory teat to insure 'wearing qualities. "No wagon i made , la eubiVtod to aa many teats or ia more carefully made than a Studebaker. Yoi can buy thorn ot Stude. baker dealer, everywhere." "Don't listen to the dealer who want, to tell you a cheap wagon, represented to ba 'juat aa good' as a Sludeba.ar." Farm wagons, trucks, dump wagons and carta, delivery wagons, buggie, eurreva, depot wagon.-and h.mae at all kwds of tha asms hi.h standard aa tha Studcbata vehicle. STUDEBAKER ' DeotV or mitt si. South Bend, Ind. aUKMUroUS SALr UKt crrV maiiko J." D. P. Adamson & Co., Druggist! For Drugs, Patent Medicines, Chemicals Lownev's Candies, Ice Cream Soda, Sta tionery and Prescriptions tee D. P. Adamson & Co. DeLAVAL Cream Separators Sold on Easy Terms Pioneer Cream Co. Prineville, Oregon NIGHT TRAIN SERVICE DAILY Through Between Cent'l Oregon! Portland Beginning Sunday, June 22d, 1913 Minify. CENTRAL OREGON LINE Tourist Sleeping Cars and First-CI ass Coaches This service in in lion of the day trains run heretofore. The train will leave Bend at 8:30 p. m.j Deschutes, 8:48 p. rr..j Red mond, 9:10 p. m.; Terrebonne, 9:24 p. m.; Culver, 10:02 p. in.; Metoliug 10:20 p.m.; Madras 10:30 p.m.; Mecca, 11:08 p. m.; Maupin, 12:40 a. m ; Sherar, 1:08 a.m., arrive Portland 8:10 a.m. Leave Portland 7:00 p. m., arrive Shorar 3:03 a. m.; Mau pin, 3:20 a. an.; Mecca, 5:18 a. m.; Madras, 6:00 a. m.; Motolius, 6:13 a. m.; Culver, 6:28 a. m.; Terrebonne, 7:08 a. m.j Redmond, 7:23 a. m.; Deschutes, 7:43 a. m.j Bend, 8:00 a. m. Connections are made in Portland to and from Willamette Valley and Puget Sound points. Fares and schedules and details will be furnished on application or by letter. t W. C. WILKKB, R. H. CROZIER, ' Asst. Gen. F. & P. ARent. Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent. II. BAUKOL, Agent, Redmond, Ore. 6-19 tf r "RECEPTION' Champ Smith, Propr Imported and Domestic Cigars Famous Whiskies Old Crow; I iermitage; Red Top Rye; Yellow Stone; Canadian Clul; Cream Rye; James E, Pepper, Moore's Malt Porter, Ale and Olvmpia Draft Beer on tap. 1 Imported Wines and Liquors. L i i The Brosius Bar Fineit Brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars. LACER BEER ON DRAUGHT F. E. BROSIUS, Proprietor I'nli'Hn make ifiMhl, ran mnl Imiilil, We miuht In fa back In the wirn.li Kor I hi. frilnw ), nave, In thru ininliTn ilavn.J la thn man who tlclivera Ilia KmhU. m We ar lie ami are ilelivnrliiK IliK uixxl". ami ll you wixli to In) howii ((.me in urn rraily lu allow you that ws ilu koo. work. Portrmta, (,'oiv(tiK ami Kiilariciiig. AIiki Amalucr Kliiinliliiit. Lafler's Studio We Hlrlvc tn pli'MHo Fruit Trees! Central Oregon Crown The only kind you enn nffunl to plnnt. ILLUSTRATED ..TALOGUE FREE. .Write for one, 1'rlctn low piioukIi to surprlHe yon. Lafollette Nursery Co. Prineville, . 6 0 Oregon The Oregon Bar At tha Old Stand G. W.Wiley & Co., Prps All kinds of Choice Liquors Wines and Cigars. Famous Ranier Beer in Pottles and on Draft. Call for Warrants. Notice in linrnliv ul iron Hiuf nil 1 general fund warrant!, all nnalp bounty ......,, ,,,, ,IIK Hcnoo, warrants will be paid on presentation at my of. flee. Intercut stops May 21), 11)13. , , R- I.. JORnAN, County troasuror, Crook county, Ore. Wood for Sale. rin hi fi.i0 Hlltl (!) g OOril at the yard; (iOc extra per cord de livered. P. I,, & W. Co. Ma