OFFICIAL PAPEK CIRCULATION MAKES Tlte Paper. Without it', advertisers get nothing for their money. The Oatette, with one exception, has the largest circula tion of any paper in Eastern Oregon. Therefore it ranks high as an advertising medium. l As. ELEVENTH YEAR IIEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL H, 1893. WEEKLY NO. S2.V I SEMI-WEEKLY KO. 118. i Some Ieople Uny advertising space because rfes are low generally the. circulation in a night h't. Circulation determine the vabte of aticertising ; there is no other standard. Tlte Gazette is willing to abide by it. EM I WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTEHSON Edito"' At $3.00 per year, $1.50 for six months, 1.00 for threo muubfis; II paid lor in advance, 12.50. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The " E-A-GHjIS, " of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, 1b published by the same com pany every Friday morning. Subscription brine. 2 per year. For advertising rates, address bxaiiT X.. PATTBESOIT, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette, Huppuer, Oregon. THIBPAPEBiskopt cnfie at E. C. Dnke s L Advertising Agency, It and 85 Merchants ISichangs, Han IfanciBco, California, where cou recta for advertising can be made for it. THE UAZETTE'S AG'iNTS. ywgner Arlington,. . Long Creek, ..B. A. Ilunsaker ....Thill Heppner The Kugle n,,lt Khw Camas Prairie,. . Oscar De Vaul IttSoi .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'..'.'.'.'.'.'.Allen MeFerrln arU" H r Wright Hurdman, Or., Hamilton, tirant Co., Or., lone, Prairie City, Or Canyon City, Or Pilot Kock, Dayvilte, Or., John Uay, Or., Athena, Or ' . . . . J. A. Woolery ...Mattie A. Kudio T. J.Carl R. R. McHaley S. L. Parrish G. P. Skeltou J. E. rinow F. I. McCallum John Edingtoll renuiewm, uc,, . - Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or Pos master Shelby, Or Miss s.t0'Jft.1', e" wm. G. McurosKey Fox, urant o., ur., v, Eight Mile, Or Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh Upper Khea Creek B. i. Hevland D6uglas,Or Mte Lone Kock, Or K M. Johnson Gooseberry , f. MS Condon, Oregon H?";rt J u e,ttd Lexington W. B. McAUster AN AUENT WANTBD IN KVKBY PRKCINCT. Union Pacfio Railway-Local card. No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 101)0 a. m. " 1(1, " ar. at Arlington 1 '15 a.m. 9, " leaves " SsHi P. m. B. " ar. at Heppner 1:10 p. m. daily except Sunday. Kast bound, main line ar. at Arlington 8:42 p. m. West leaves " H:lu p. m. Night trains are running on same time as before. LONE ROCK STAGE. LeaveB Heppner 7 a. m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, reaching Lone Kock at s p. m. Leaves Lone Kock 7 a. m. Mondays, Wednes days and Fridays, reaching Heppner at up. i" Makes connection with the Lone Kock-Dossll trAgwtB!Vocum'-JohnBton Drug Co., Heppner, United States Officials. 1'ii.iHlent Grover Cleveland V ee-lWdeni::;:::: ...Ad ai Steveus Bee-eiary of State Wa ter Q Ores .am fcecretary of Treasury JohHiUi,. hIkE becietary of Interior ....Hoka Smith H..reiarv of War Daniel S. Laruont ft. .?t Na.V Hilary A. Herbert l-oU.nwter-Ooneral Wilson 8. BibbbII Attorney-Oeneral Kioluird 8. Olnej BetroUiry of Agrioulturo J- Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Bnvnrnor 8- Pennoyer uovornor. ... . .... w v, i,,-,,- Koeretury ol l estate v- Treasurer Bapt. fublio lnBtroctioB . ..run. ffieu,i;uiu ....14. B. McElroj I J. 11. Mitchell Senators jJ.N.Dolph ( Ringer Hermann Congreaemon . Printer ' i W. li. Ellis f rank u. rJaKer (F.A.I ,W.P. ( It. B. 1 . A. Muore Supreme Judges.. V. Lord Bean Seventh Judicial District. t'i.cit Judge wh'wiK J'rnaecuting Attorney W. 11. Wilson Morrow County Ofliciala. jom: Senator Henry Blackman .'SnrjX'6 ":::::::::::"i'ESR '"'''CmYs'sioners.... Peter Brenner niM-Bak"r- J. W. Morrow S ieriff'.'.'.'.'.'.".'.'.'.'." e- fb'e; Treaaorer w i hTZ Aseeaeor K.L.-haw BEPPNEB TOWN OFFICERS. .,v, J. K. Simons LSii.neVl'.-.::'.'. O. E. Fam.worth, M, Hohtenthal, Otis Patteraon, Julius Keithlj, W. A. Johnston, J. L.Veager. K,i,,r,lr Koberta. f! ..... .... .. .... ' -is. sloCQm Precinct 0 Ulcere. ... .... . H T TTolln.lc Justice ot we ree.ee V. iii'u k.h Constable W. Ryohard Cnltd Statei Land Officers. THE DAU.EB, OB. t w t..;. Rpgistor T's.ijin...'" Keoeiyer LA GRANDE, OB. A Cleayer Register AC. McClelland Receiver 3ECEET SOCIETIES. Dorio Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meata ev ery Tuesday evening at i.auocioca in their castle nail, waiionaj can a uuiiu ing. Boiourning brothers oordially in vited to attend. W. L. Saijno, C. (J, W. B Potteb, K. of R. 4 B. tf RAWLINS POST, NO. 81. 0. A. B. Sleets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of ach month. All etern are itmted to join. I . t. Dl, VMM. " . Adintant, tf Commandor. FEOrESSIOlTAi. A A. BOBERT8, Real Estate, Insur- nnce and Collections. Offioe in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. Whertr At Ahrahamsick's. In addition to his lailnrino' business, he has added a fine line of underwear of all kinds, negligee hirts, hosiery, etc. Also has on band kim eleffant Datlerns for soits. A. Abrnhamsiok. May Btreet. Heppner, Or. Coffin A MoFarland have just receiyed a oar load of Mitobell Wagons, Hacks, etc., and have also a large supply or farm. ing implements of all Unas. I. N. BROWN. JAB. D. HAMILTON Attorney at Law, Brown & Hamilton Practice in all courts of the atat. Insurance raal est Us ooUactun and loan agwits. Prom 1 attention C'.rsn to all business entrujt d to tham. Office, Main Stbeet, Befphes, Obioon. VALUABLE PRESENT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Faper GIVEN FREE TO OUR READERS By a special arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FREE to each of onr readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the American Farmer, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Ohio. This oifer is made to any of onr sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advance, and to any new subscribers who will pny one year in advance. The American Farmer enjoys a large national circula tion, and ranks among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the American Farmer for one year, It will be to your advantage to oail promptly. Sample oopies can be s?en at our office. The Orlslnal DICTION fc: :--.! "..-i-Vr' 'rVfc .'fTf. r BY Kr'l-ICIAL AKKANUKMElNT VVl'J'H THE publishers, we are able to obtain a number ot tr- above book, and propose to furuitjh uopy to eat'h of our subscribers. ibst-nbers. Ihe ilicuonary is a uuuestiity he ilicUonary is a nuueetiity in every home, school ami business house. It lilts a vacancy, and furiiiijhoa knowledge which no one hun. dred other uluincs of the choiceat bookB could supply, i oungand old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reach, and reier to lis contenis every day in the year. As some have asked i this is really the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged IMctionary, we are able to state we have learned direct irom the publishers the fact, that this is the very work eoumlete on which about forty of the best years of the author's life were so well employed in writing. It contains tile entire vocabulary of about 100,000 words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and delinitioii of same, and ib tiie regular standard sie, containing about ;iOU,000 square inches of printed surface, and is bound iu cloth hall morocco and sLccd. Until turther notice we will furnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges. $i-oo. Halt Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. hull bheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00 Fifty cents added in all cases tor express- age to Heppner. afiSAs the publishers limit the time and imber of books thev will furnish at the low prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to it at once. SILVER'S UH A.MPION 0 :the tail THE DAILY-BY MAIL Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Three Months " : : : 1 50 One Month " : : 50 THE WEEKLY BY MAIL, One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The Newi is the only conniitent c.iamplon of silver in the West, and ahould be in everj home in the West, and in the handi of every miner and business man In Colorado. Send in your BubBcriptiorn at once. Address, IDonver Colo. L UMBER ! V7E HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF CN M dressed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at what is known as the 8COTT .AXV3VXXXjrj. PKR 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, ' CLEAR, - 10 00 - 17 50 TF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD A 16.00 per l.CiOO feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop. Hamilton, JVIan'iir FBEE TO THE AFFLICTED. All who are suffering from the effeatu of Youthful Errors, Lose of Manhood, Failing Powem, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Strioture, Syphilis and the many troubles which are the effects of these terrible disorders will receive, Fkki of Charoi, full directions how to treat and cure I themselves at home by writing to the California Medical a.vd Sl'roical Is fikmakt, lu29 Market Btreet, Han Francisco, California. 466-ly. FOR SCROFULA scrofulous humor in the blood, ulcers, catarrh, and consumption, use Ayer's Sarsaparilla The most economical, safe, speedy, and effective of all blood-purifiers. Has Cured Others will cure you. a sir r:r -t Cah3al3, Trade-marks, Dasigtt Patents, Copyrights, And all Patent busluess conducted for MODERATE FEES. Information and adrlce given to tnTonton witbo charge. Address PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN WE DOER BURN, Managing Attorney, P. O. llox 463. Washington, D.Q l"Tli!s Company la managed by a combination of the lurfri-KC and most inllnentlal newspapers in tno I'litti-d !',r,iteH, for the express purpose of protect ing their Btihrri!Mra ngalnst nnscrupnlona and incornputt'i't Tiueut AKents, and each paper printing tli sdvertlsrment vouches for the responsi bility and lilh stiiiirtin;; ot tile Press Claims Company. The y etrated French (Jure, fft"o7nr"APHR0DITINE": Is Sold on a POSITIVE GUARANTEE to euro any form of nervous disease, or any disorder of the SHORE generative or- AFTER fans of either sex whether arising from th xcessive use of Stimulants, Tobacco or Opium, or through youthful indiscretion, over iudulg encc, ic, such as Loss of Brain Power, Wakeful ness, Bearing down Pains iu the Back, Seminal Weakness, Hysteria. Nervous Prostration Nocturn al Emission; , Leuoorrhosa, Diislness, Weak Mem. ory, Loss of Power and Impotency, which If ne fleeted often lead to prematureoldageand insau. lty. Price 11.00 a box, boxes for 16.00 Sent by mail ou receipt of price. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE for every td.00 order, to refund the money if a Psrmsasnt cure is not effected. Thousands of testimonials from old and young, of both sexes, permanently tiured by Afhroditinb. Circular free. Address THE APHRO MEDICINE CO. WESTEBE BBANCBV BOX 27 PORTLAND, OR Sold in Heppner by Slocum-Johnston Drug Co. Write for our Mammoth Catalogue, a 000 - mure book, plainly ill nitrat ed, giving Manufactar ers' lowest price with manufacturers' discount on all goods m an u fact nred and imported into me unuen mates. s -2a to 50 cents on every loiiar you soena. we sen only nrst-class goods Groceries, Furn i ture, Clothing, Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots and Bhoes. Notions. Crock ery, Jewelry, Buggies aim iiarnesn. Asrncui' tural Implements; in EI fact anything you want. Saved by buying of ns. Send 25 cents to pay ex- pressage on catalogue, a buyer's guide. We are ihe only concern that sells at manufacturers prices, allowing the buyer the same discount that the manufacturer gives to the wholesale trade. We guarantee all goods to be equal to representations or money refunded. Goods sent by expresn or freight, with privilege of examina tion oeiore paying. A. KARPEN Ar CO., 122 Quiucey Ht., Chicago, 111. national Eank of jieppnei. WM. PENLAND. ED. S BISHOP. President. Cashier. A COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. XECHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON ..am n li- Mi Tv wrfct wa 3?i lhi.: n H h 188 (iM.. a rt luctUn nt 1 M Ibi,. as si 1 fcdj WtUr tbt I would not tab l.00ft and k Mil bak irtMral a. I am bo lb itirprlwd sn4 pn.od ol ttir cnanr. I mwt nvmd voor Uaalmmt to fiH mJI nvrt from ubtaiiw. I will btnrfallv am war all looairtM H uatnp to luelaaad for paplj." PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL Haj mUm, He sMarrlitf. 8mA ir hi tarn pa tor partknalart It . i. w. r. tiTDci, aiie'tit nnui. cucAto. a Balbd pArtlo- mwm uiaxa refftra- I ln Hlna that ! control the iiu itie or cuut-iu, lot BinktnffCrapfl.tnei ouir. Hitl.lM.tit.'VH wtfrrvt n. Karfc-a litvlc Vic y nig (rd. fH' vM eveiythln in tbt Jin. N'W norV ihi wins iti sBioiitT. ieti fcartif tJliM kimI '.-r- tv i 'Jciii frwr, Frnt .ul a Mrani t,0'.i'. 'iV(-j(Ji' I tti.1T lftUO; taw.;r .H:-.a.' ISif i & rYi i bb m me -m mvH or money refuudet. FIE 1 w PROMPT, GOOD WORK. My wife suffered with such Intern irOuM dlt. aoc dsiimu ner c hkj ueu tour hour. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. iCL. IRS ABSQ1UTE (TWianooqa "General, permit me to introduce my wife." juarK was taKen to Mie officer in com mand at Altamont. On the way from the picket line he was informed that the place was occupied by McCook's divi sion. When he reached headquarters he made himself and his mission known, and In a few minutes a cipher telegram was on its way to General Thomas at McMinnville: Bragg at Dunlap ycBterduy with no force except a few cavalry. Cheatham and Withers marching north. The maiu army gone by rail from Chattauooga on vtu'euty-uifflith to Knoiville. Piuvatk Mark Malone. Ten minutes later the spy was sound asleep on a camp cot in a tent belonging to one of the staff. Mark had had no sleep for twenty eight hours, and for much of that time he believed that he would be retaken and hanged. Now he slept a deep sleep. Hour after hour went by, and though bugles called and drums rattled he slumbered on. He dreamed that he was at Chattanooga. He was standing on the scaffold. Soldiers surrounded him. The noose was adjusted about his neck. He heard the sound of the ax as it cut the rope. He awoke with a cry. Laura Faia no, Laura Maynard his wife was standing beside him. She sank down by the cot, and in a moment they were in each other's arms. Neitner spoke. Neither wished to do aught but leave tears tears of an ex quisite happiness to flow on silently. For a time Laura saw in Mark's face only a reflection of her own happiness. He was feasting his eyes upon her, pass ing his fingers through her dark hair or smoothing it back with his hand, while he covered her face with kisses. Suddenly a thought seemed to come between her and him. "What is it darling?" she asked anx iously. "1 was thinking" said Mark. "But no; I will not think of that." "Tell me." "I was wondering Laura, did you love him?' Laura cast down her eyes. "Lover Was it love?" She asked the question of herself. "It was a summer breeze, while this" "This?" "Is a tempest." Drawing her to him, before imprinting a kiss Mark added to her simile: "A 'wild west wind.' " "You are thinking of your Shelley," she said. "I shall love him too, now, since it was he who betrayed you to me." "And I shall love him the more be- ? cause he betrayed me and made me" He did not finish. He was thinking of the morning in the garret when in her imperious way she had claimed that saving his life had made her its owner. She remembered it, too, and smiling fin-; ished for him : "And made yon my slave. But who made me 'your lyre even as the forest is' to the west wind?" Her caresses prevented a reply for a time. When there was a pause Mark exclaimed wonderingly: "Oh, woman, why must you so often deny to the worthy that which you may give in such abundance to one whose only recommendation is an ability to catch your fancy?" RIIEUMATISSJ. Mr. Willa F. Cook, Canajoharie, N. Y , writet: "Awoke one moraine with excruciating pain in my ahoulder. Tried various reliefs lor sudden pains without effect ; went to my office ; the pain became insufterable : went home at n o'clock and used ST, JACOBS OIL; magical, pa:a ceased, arid at i o tiotk went to work; cure permanent." NEUIiALGIA. Little Rmvt, Wis. nettrilfic pains in the face, she tbcurht she dim a , subs oil, ju 11 ms CARL SCHEIBE. mm wdef LY PURE AgftirftHere came into his face the ex pression of a thought which seemed for the moment to carry him away from her. "What is it now?" she queried anx iously. Mark smiled. "You will laugh at me when I tell you." "Then you must be laughed at." "I was wondering if, when I get back to headquarters, the general will want me to go right away on another mis sion." Her arms were about him. She drew a little away and fixed her black eyes upon him. They shone like those ot some savage but beautiful animal about to be bereft of her young, "If you go again," she said fiercely, "into the presence of such a death I will go with you." Mark made no reply, except to throw his arms about her neck and draw her to him again. Her fierceness was with him her chief charm. Then he made an effort to rise. "Stay where yon are," she said in the) same imperious tone in which she had given the order once before when he threatened to leave the garret; "you shall lie there till you promise that you will be a spy no more, "Let me up," cried Mark, smiling at her earnestness. "Lie still!" "Come, sweetheart," he said plead ingly, "let me get up, and I'll say with Hotspur to his Kate, 'When I'm on horseback I'll swear I love thee infin itely.'" Mark was on his back, his arms pin ioned. He was powerless. He was sur prised at Laura's strength. "Promise." "Never!" "Promise." "Why so? I know I shall be dying to go again in a week." "Then yon shall lie there till the war is over." "But I thought you told me once that if you were a man you would be all I have been." "So I would. And you, being a man, might continue to be so were yon the husband of any other woiiinn; but mine, never!" Mark looked into her eyes and knew that his career in the secret service had ended. The savage opposition he saw there to his ever again risking such a death as he had but u few days before barely escaped was too strong for him. Where was his adroitness, his ingenu ity, his readiness in peculiar situations? Vanished under the gaze of his young wife. At last he was subdued by a girl. The arrival of Laura the night before at the farmhouse where her mother had stopped, and awaited her coming anx iously, their resumption of their jour ney the next day, during which Laura confessed all to her mother, their safe arrival within the Union lines, the find ing Mark at headquarters, may be passed over in a few short phrases. Mark's meeting with his mother-in- law was, to say the least, embarrassing, Mrs. Fain received him with the same dignity that had characterized her throughout, but without her former cor diality. As yet she knew nothing about his connections, and she disdained to ask. But Mark had satisfied Laura, and the information she transmitted to her I mother was in a measure mollifying. Thut afternoon the party that had rid den into Anderson the day before rods out of Altamont in the direction of Mc Minnville. To all outward appearance the situation was the same, but really how different! Yesterday Mark was in ! imminent danger, while Laura was in a I Btate of terror. Then they rode with ' scarcely a word. Now language was inadequate to convey all they wished to L exuress. In the evening the party drew up be fore General Thomas' tent at MciiinnJ ville. Mark went inside. "General," he said, "yon received my, telegram'" "I did." "Had you not received the informa tion bef orer "If we had, why should we be here!" , There was a brief pause. 1 "1 have brought something besides h formation, general. May I introduce a party waiting outside?" "Certainly." Mark went ont and brought in Laura and her mother. "General, permit me to Introduce my wife." The general looked at the blushing Laura, then at her mother, then at Mark, in undisguised astonishment. "I thought yon had been on a scout," be said. "I have." "And courted and wed at the same timer" iPS," general." Be seated, ladies. Now explain all this." Hark gave an outline of his adven tures, his listener's eyes opening wider as be proceeded. When the recital was finished the general called out: "Orderly!" In a twinkling a man was standing in the tent waiting an order. 'Send for Chaplain Gadsden. 'Yes, sir." 'I ain a trifle uncertain about that wedding," remarked the general. "I think we'd better have it done according to the regulations. All smiled save Mrs. Fain, who, since she had been informed of all that had oc curred from the time of Mr. Slack's ar rival at her house to Laura's joining her the night before, maintained a rigid and dignified silence. While they were waiting for the chap lain the general wrote a telegram to Mr. Fain, at Nashville, announcing the arrival of his wife and daughter. He did not mention the son-in-law. The chaplain came, and the bride and groom were wed again this time with ample witnesses, for the whole staff had been ordered to "report in person at headquarters to witness marriage cere mony." The general gave the bride away, and after the benediction, offer ing his arm to Mrs. Fain, led the way to another tent where a collation of for aged viands foraged unbeknown to the general, and consisting principally of cold chicken was served. Unfortu nately there was not a glass of wine in camp for the ladies, the only spirits be ing "commissary" whisky and the "Rob inson County" of the country. While the party were refreshing themselves, word was received from Nashville that Mr. Fain was out of dan ger and impatiently awaiting his wife and daughter. After communicating this pleasant bit of information, the general, turning to Mark, said: I shall need you hereafter on my staff. I have learned from your colonel that there is a vacant lieutenancy for you in your regiment, and I will issue an order detailing you for duty with me. But this rank need be only tem porary. The army is about to be divided into army corps, and my troops will con stitute one of them. Under the recent law fixing the stall of corps command ers I shall nominate you for inspector general, with rank of lieutenant colonel, to be appointed by the president." For the first time since Hhe had been apprised of the fact that her daughter was a wife Mrs. Fain looked happy, "General," said Mark, "while I ap preciate the honor you so kindly bestow upon me, I would prefer, were it, not for my wife, to remain in the secret service. She certainly deserves the distinction you offer, and I accept it for her. I re joice at the prospect of being near you, and shall not be averse now, since I have so much to live for, to a service not connected with a constant reminder of hemp rope." At tins juncture an aid-do-cauip en tered and handed the general a tele gram, lie ' ist ins eye over It and said: 'The ball is opened. Nelson is fight ing the advance of Bragg's army at Richmond, Kentucky." THE END. THE CAUSE OK H1LVKK. From the Halt Luke Tribune. It seems in their anxiety to force Con gress to repeal the Sherman act the bankers of the East have called in and tied up about one-sixth of all the gold in the United Slides. It amounts to noh- 02, exoept a notice to the people that those genllemeo are determined to run the tinanoes of the country Iheir owu way, and regardless of what mny come to the psople, they are going to have those finances fixed on a basis that will be good for them. In this oonnectiou it is well to have the opinion of Solicitor- General Aldrich always kept before them, wherein he says: "There is nu requirement that the redemption ot legnl tender (paper) is to be made in gold. As to the policy of using silver, I am not prepared to urge this Bction. It might cause a panic, but it oould undoubtedly be done." There is not the slightest doubt but what it might be done. All old bonds of the oonntry and almost all the obligations of the country are made payable iu coin. If the Secretary of the Treasury and the President of the United States beoome fully sutisfied, ss they can easily if they study the situa lion, that it is the determination of the llothsohilds beyond the sea, anil through them connecting bankers in this country who sneeze when that great financial bouse takes snuff, to make gold the only money of the world, possibly the thought will come after a while that the govern ment of the earth, working iu the interests of the people, have some authority to say what shall and what hall not be legal tender for debt, and some times when these men make ooroers in order to squeeze the last dollar in gold from the Treasury, their demauiis may be met by something just as legal as gold, towit, silver dollars. Mr. Al l rich thinks it might produce a panie. SPowder. The only Pure Cream of Tartsr Powder. No Ammouiu; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years t'ae Standard. There are some things worse than panics. There are times when a nation, fiilled with the cankers of a long pesos, finds it nsoessary to resort to war, to wash with a bath of blood the films from the eyes of the people, to dear the atmosDhera - with powder smoke, and to divert men's minds from petty things and small things and mean things, and oompel them to think of the higher duties which belong to humanity. In the same way a revo lut ion in the finances of our country, while it might make ruin in many places, while with the dead and rotten bouuhs which would be blown down, there might some hardy trees be likewise overthrown, still, the great part of the producing oIhsb, which has been unheeded now for twenty years, would be heard above that storm, and their prayers would be an swered. It is a lasting pity that the president of the United States cannot be made to realize what losses the country is sustaining snd has been for fifteen years, because of one law which was passed through congress by stealth, whioh, so far as the power of our own oonntry is oonoerned, struck out of ex istence one-half of the money of the world. If the president could but be made to see that, and could but realize what is plain and true, that silver is something more than a subsidiary coin, that its prise is a barometer whioh indi cates exactly the pnoe of every other ar tiole; that when that nrtiole is low, it stems that everything is low in the same ratio, and that the masses of the workers of the world are working for nothing! Could that idea be once fixed in the slow brain of Grover Cleveland, ho has the firmness or the stubbornness and the in dependence to adopt the remedy and to carry it out. The trouble is to get to him. The trouble is to make him understand the question. It might be done, perhaps, by first making the faots clear to the seoretary of the treasury, and hence we couut a good deal upon the re sult of the oonferenoe which is to be held here before very long, beoause what that conference er oongress will give out will be the expressions ot at least twenty states, and it ought to have some iullu euoe. We think it was the work of the Denver congress which caused President Harrison to oall for the international monetary conferenoe. We think had be but done that one year sooner, Ihe whole face of this couutry would have been ohanged by this time. We think the ar gument nhioh will iuduoe the presi'Ueut and his secretary of the treasury to study the matter with peculiar inteutuess, will be to reiterate in their miiids the truth, whioh is, that it was not Ihe tariff whioh placed them in power, but thut it was the unrest of the people, made through the derangements of money in the coun try, which cauio through tho demoneti zation of silver, and unless that wrong shall bo righted, the present administra tion will go just as tho last one did, whenever the oonntry bus tho opportuni ty to boat it to death with its votes. (25,000 in Premiums. Offered by Liggett & Mvers Tolinrwn Co., of St. Louis, Mo. The one guessing nearest the number of people attending the World's Fair gets $0,0(1100, the sec ond $1,000,00. etc. Ten Star tobaooo tugs entitle you to a guess. Ask vour dealer for particulars or send for circular. 111)42 DUUNKKNNKrM, or the LIQUOR HAI11T Unrosl at lliilne in Ten Duya liy Adminis tering 1)1'. Humes' (loliien Mpeelllc. It can be given in a glass of beer, a onp of ooffee or tea, or in food, without the knowledge of the patient. It is absolute ly harmless, and will effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate driukeror an alcoholio wreck. It has been given in thousands of cases, and iu every instance a perfect oure has followed. It never fails. The system once impregnated with the specific, it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. Cures guaran teed. 48 page book of particulars free. Address the Goldbm Specific Co., 188 ltace Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. The Stndehsker wagon beads them all. For sale at Gilliam A Biebee's. a Kuhl, the baker. Buy your bread and oakes and save money. Try it. u. 'Hardware" did you say? Why, yes at P. O. Thompson 4 Co.'s stand, and the place for bargains. a The I'alano is the leading hotel in the city. Well furnished rooms with plenty of light are provided for everyone, a M. Liohteuthal & (Jo. have a flue lot of winter wear, including ladies' winter shoes, overshoes, rubber boots, eto. Drop in. a Borg, the jeweler, is the man to fix np your watoh or clock, lie keeps a full stock of everything pertaining to bis business' n The Buehlor beer, 0 oents psr glass, at the Columbia Jtner Hall, Osmers & Hughes, piops., next door to M. Lioh teuthal k Co.'s shoe store. a The M. L. k T. Co., since they hnve roofed all their pint forms, have an im mense storage rapacity. This company now deals in gruin, lumber and wood, a I