it OFFICIAL Sff-V PAPER. WtEKLY GAZETTE LESS THAN 5 CENTS 2.50 4. FE-d-R, IN ADHAHCB When we can get it. A week pays for The Semi-Weekly Gazelle ELEVENTH YEAH HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1893. SEMI-WEEKLY N0.l2SI. ,5 N i I.? SEMI .YliEKLY GAZETTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY iLVAH W. PATTERSON Bui. Manager. OTIS PATTERSON Editor At f 9.8 per- year, $1.25 or six muntha, 75 cts, lor three montaa. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The JL.(3-XiS," of Long Creek, Grant County. Oregon, la published by the lame coin- Sriee, Si per year. For advertiinK rates, address Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette H'jppuer, Oregon. THIS PAPER is kept on tie at E.G. Dake s ' 1 Advertising Agency, M and 65 Merchants K.-r!.HliK, San FranciBco. California, where cou- iMi for advertiaiug can be matte lor n. THE UAZETTB'B AO SNTS. Warner B. A. Hunsaker :::::::::::::::::':hnV!K Lu.iBtreeK, Postmaster r."'. -iL.iU. Oscar De Vaul Ny" or h. c. w ngm Hardman, Or l'ostnister Htltn Brant Co.. Or Postmaster ;;,7,; t. j. uan PrairieCity.Or.;. Wffl Canyon City, Or J ' Pilot Kock f -Pf,1" iho,m &r . John Edington PeXtoa Or! . Poatioasler Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., . . .... p8. mletr ahelbv. Or Miss Stella Hett Fox, Urant Co., Or., n t. Mnt Andrew Ashbauiih UiTuerKhe'a Creek;!'.'. B. S- Hevla.id Douglas, Or rosiniasier LoueKock.Or R. M. Join s J. K. E teb UUUBfUcn y - - r, . , Condon, uregoii iuw LtjiiiiKtoa.. AN AUKMT WANTED IN KVBRY FRKC1NCT. UhioN Pacfic Railway-Local card. No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m. ' iu, " ar. at Arlington MS a.m. " , " leaves " 8 :rr2 p. in. " 9, " ar. at Heppner 1:U) p. m. dully except Hunday. Kast bound, main line ar, at Arlington 8:2 p. m. West " ' "leaves ' 3:4u p.m. Night trains are running on same time as before. LONE ROCK STAGE. Leaves Heppner 7 a. m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, reaemng lioue iue in o v. ... Leaves Lone Kock 7 a. m. holidays, ttednes duv.ui.a Wriilnv. rHAfhiiis heuDlier atop. in. Makes connection with the Lone Kock-lossll trl-weekly route. Agents, ulocuin-Johnston Drug Co., Heppner, DmCIAXi BlHEiSTOST., r United States Officials. fiwuclent Gruver Cleveland Viro-l'reaident Ad ai fcilevenaou Beo-e'ary of tjlate Waller Q Ureshaui bccirtary ol Treasury John G. I Hriiolu Secretary of Interior Hoke Siuuli Secretary of War Daniel B. Laniont tlecreutry of Navy Hilary A. Herbert I'oHluiuster-General Wilson H. Hwell Attor.iey-General Richard 8. Olney Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Jloriou State or Oregon. Governor S- Pennoyer Beorntaryof Btt ..G. W. McHilde Treasurer Phil. Metsolian Bupt. Publio lneti .. -on b. B. Motiroy i J. H. Mitchell Benatora (J.N. Dulph Hinger Hermann Congressmen j W. U. Ellis Printer FrftkP-Sake'' I h. A. Moore Supreme Judge j W'olViJl"d ( ft. B. Bean Seventh Judicial District. Ciicuit Judge W. U Braclehaw Prunecuting Attorney H. WUb n Morrow County Officials, .lolii Senator... ' . ....Henry Blackman Representative ..J. N. Broyrn Uiuuty Judge . Julius Keithly ' OjmmiaBionerB Peter Brenner J. M. Baker. Clerk J. W. Morrow Sheriff Heo, Noble. Treaanrer W. J . L Mer ABeseor i K. U haw " Surveyor lea Brown School Bup't ..W.ii.Saluig ' Coroner T. W. AyerB, J r BIPrXKB TOWN OFHOKBS. . Mayoi J. R.SiulonB Councilrneu O. K. Farneworth, Mi iiichtenthal, Otia Patterson, Julius Keithly, W. A. Tolonaton, J. L. Yeoger. Heourder A. A. Roberts. rreasaret E- O- Mlocum UarsluU J. W. Rasmus. Precinct OffiuerF, J ustice of the Peace F. J. Hallock tkinatable C. W. Bjchard United States Uad Officer. TBI DILXES, OB. J. W. LewU Kpgistcr T. 8. Lang Receiver LA OBAKDC, OR. A Cleaver.... Regi.ter A.C. MoClelland Receiver .gECBZI SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 30 K. of P. meets ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in their Castle Hall, National Bank build, ing. Bojoorning brothers cordially in vited Ui attend. W. L. Halimo, C. (J. W. B Potteb, K. of li. A B. tf KAWUNS POST, NO. 81. . O.A.B. it ets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of act. month.- All veterans are invited to Join. ( '. C. Boon, Gko. W. Smith. Adjutant, tf Commander. PKOrES3I01TA.L. A A. KOBERT8, Besl Estate, Insnr- noe BDd OollectioDg. Offioe in Counoil Cbambers, Heppner. Or. wtf. Whertf At Abrabannick'i. Id gddition to hie tailoring; busineas, be has added a 6ne line of underwear of all kinds, negligee birts, hosiery, etc. Also baa on band some elegant patterns for anita. A. Abrabamsiok, May street, Heppner, Or. Coffin A McFarland have jnst received a oar .oad of Mitobell Wagons, Hacks, tc., ana have also a large supply of farm ing implements) of all kinds. a t. N. BROWN, Attorney at Law. JAB. I). HAMILTON Brown & Hamilton FmotioAio ail oonrU of the state, Insnranc, nal MrtAtM eelWrXi jn ami Inaui airwifa. Promit aueouoti (inn to all boaiiMM entrtut. tdtvUiim. Qrrum, Maui Imn, Eeppveb, Omaoox. MM PRESENT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREET0 OUR READERS By a special arrangement with tbe publishers we are prepared to furniBh FREE to each of oar readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the Ahbbicam Fabmeb, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Ohio. This offer is made to any of our sub scribeie who will pay np all arrearage on subscription and one year in advanoe, and to nny new subscribers who will pay one year in advance. The American Fabmeb enjoys a large nat'onal circula tion, and ranks among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeiva tbe American Farmer for one year, It will be to yonr advantage t call promptly. Sample aopies ottn be s;en at our othce. The Original ii!TiiiiiT.e 1)Y SPECIAL ARRANGKMKNT WITH THK JZ publishers, we are able to obtain a number of tb above book, and propose to furnish a copy w eaon 01 our suusunners. The dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house, it tills a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could uppiy. loungaiia old, educated and ignorant, icn and poor, should have it within reach, and reier w iuj cuiiieiuts every uay in we year, As some have asked if this is reallv the Ofirz inal Webster's LitabriUired Dictionarv. we art- able to state we have learned direct from tht publishers the fact, that this is the very work complete on which about forty of the best yeart ol the author's life were so well employed U. writing, il eoaiaiuri uiu enure voeaomary o about 100,UW words, ineludiuiz the correct tueii injr. driHtion and Urti.itiou of saute, and is uie regular siauaaru size, containing about ;iOU,WXi square inches of printed surface, and it. Douna in cium nan morocco aim sjeeD. Until turtner notice we will furnish thit valuable Dictionary ! h trst -1 o 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 toiiowing prices, viz: hull Uoth bound, gilt side and bacr stamps marbled edges $1-00. Halt Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and bad stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. rull bheep bound, leather label, marblec edges, $2.00 l-itty cents added in all cases tor express age to Heppner. MtfF'A.B the publishers limit tbe time ana number of books tiiey will furnish at the lov prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity te attend to it at once. SILVER'S UliAJVIPioN llocky-. Mountain-:-News THE DAILY BY MAIL. Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year by mail) Six Months " te 00 3 00 1 50 ' 50 Three Month " One Month " THE WEEKLY BY MAIL, One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The News is the only consistent c.ianplon of silver in the West, aud should be in every home In the West, and In the hands of every miner and business man In Colorado. Bend in your subscriptions at once. Address, TUB JXrU"VI7'S, Donvor, Colo. LUMBER! I7E HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF CN tf dressed Lumber. 16 miles of Hennnar. at what is known as the SCOTT BAWMZIjIj. PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, 110 00 17 SO " " CLEAR, F DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD . li.00 per l.uutl feet, additional. L. HAMILTON, Prop. D. A. Hamilton, Mangr WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES ( Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee ) LATEST TIME CARD Two Through Tra;ns Daily. II II 12.4apm fi 2mLv.MInnearmlUAr!S.40am..lfipro pin i l 'pinil-v...M. ram. ..An.U'.n!J.,npm 10 Wami l "'pmiLv,..Dnlnth. . .Arli 10" b.ipm 1.4-ipm j7.(.'pm Lv.. AchlHiid . . Ar:.u'mi.i-ipm I, loaui 'in. rm.ni jar. ..uiumku ..Lv6.uuamil0.to" i I I Tickets sold and baKeage che'ked through to all points in the 1'uited Mates and Canada. Cluse conntH-tinn niafle In ennago wnn an trains ttoing Kusi and nouth. I For full linoriuation apply to yonr nearest j tleket agent or JAi. C. POND, Of n. Pass, and TkU Agt. Chicago, 111. t....--.t ra COPJSTIPATION end other bowel complaints -cured and prevented by the prompt use of Ayer's Cathartic Pills They regulate the liver, ' cleansa the stomach, and greatly assist digestion. T-r, J. C. Ayer & Go. very Dose Fffeciive. Caeatj, Trade-marks, Design Patents, Coprrighla And all Patent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. Information and advice given to In venters wltfcMi barge. Address PRESS CLAIMS CO., JOHN WEDOERBURN, Managing Attorney, I. O. Box 463. Washihotok. D. Q S9"ThlB rnmnanv 1. m.n.a w the largest and most lnlluential newspapers in tbt United SUtM. fni th. .vnnH Kn.K i . -1 . i". mi .mv lnB" helr aubaerlbeni against nnscrnpnlous u Muiui,c.i:ut ruienc Ageats, and each paper Drintlnc thU vflpll,nnant.n,..lu. .1 , " .". .uu.r.oiot WID re.jjQo.1. Mllty and hlRh standing of tbe Press Claims Company. Whether quaffed from a vessel ol tin, glass or gold; There 's nothing so good for, the young or.the.old as RootBeer A delicious, Jiealth giving, - thirst-satis fying . beverage. A' temperance drink for j temperance "people; A 25c. package makes sgaltons. Eoia ahd Ehjoyed Everywhere. Guaranteed to cure Bilious attacks, Sick Hcadaclie antl Constipation. 49 in each .ottle. Price 2iic; For sale by drupRists. Picture "7. 17, 70" and sample-doRe free. J. F. SMITH & CO.; Proprietors, NEW YaiiK. eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee REGULATE THE STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS, Aim PURIFY THE BLOOD. A RELIABLE REMEDY FOR Iadlcttoa BIIUhmcm. Headacb, CoMtl patloa, Dytpapslst Chronla Llrer Trublea. IHMlaeM, Bad Complexion, Vjmtnttrj, Offeulre Breath, and all disorders fUe tmach, Liver and Bwlv RIpMS TatralM eontela nothlnr tnjiiriom to th mort deliwue coDitttutton. rfssiutut t taka. & we. euccDBai. iit iromeouti reiit. Z Sold by dniesrlrtn. a trial bottie tent bf auil 0 CD receipt of la cents. Address THE RIPAN8 CHEMICAL CO. IS 8PEUOE STREET, NEW YORK CITY. CUB3C0HSH?ATI0K To njoy itenlth nn KttftuM Iirto re ulur ;aefiutloti very r.i y tu bonrN. Thts vIIn, locutttl ar byMicfll, roft'ilff tif frtra are many anil oriiw; yvt the enr of tltl -uiuinii IruiiltilfTuff-s) lAve JPfllM have KulTtcfi &fnitul;rt ty niipay SOLD EVEET WE2EJ5. QA7CP AXLE nACii GREASE BEST IX THE WORLD. ItWsxriDqrulitlTW.vranTCTikaed, MtiuTI? (ratlMtlos; two boxti of any other brand. Wo' OMtMibriiMiiroETTUEor.Nti9ji; FOB 8 AH BT DEAXgRS GE1T!BAXXY. jyt Prevent and cure (Vmntipation aod Bl(dk liiMranfeed to cure DiHnm AttAoks 9w3 Cousuptitioii, Small liile iKnus. Plao'i Remedr for Cstsrrh li th Bett, EutfSt to Ts, nnd Cheapest. Uaotd or Dragglsta or sent kr man. M. IT. gsMMIne. Warrem. fa. el Stuail Till Pills Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Purport. ABSOLUTELY PURE COLUMBUS' DEATH. He Sxplred Bobed In the Somber Habit b of a. Vmnelsefto. ' The (Treat world-finder, to whose memory much honor is due and given, was in his time variously known as Christopher Columbus, Cristobal Colon and Christophoro Colombo. Colon Is the one which appears on the inner lid of the small leaden ease which contains all that now is left of the mortal part of the great navigator. He, worn out with age, hard work and bad treatment, died on May 20, TBIC BONES OF COLUMBUS. I 1SCK1, at the age of 70, and was buried at 'Valladolid, in Spain. The feast of the Ascension was the : day of his death; and he died robed in a ' Franciscan habit, as his beloved queen and protector had done. The cold and heartless Ferdinand gave Columbus a grand funeral, think ing tjo do himself honor by it, and seven years afterwards he reared to Columbus : marble tomb, : whose inscription has since become famous, both for itself and the memory of him who lay be neath. His remains were afterwards taken to . Seville and placed with the body of his on Diego in the monastery of Las Coevas. . j Inl53a tVojj wvtr'jyimerl'-.tkoaa of father and son and transported across the Atlantic to the island of San Do mingo, which had been named by Co lumbus nispaniola and was the princi pal settlement of his own discoveries in his-own time. In 1796, after the cession of San Do mingo to the French, they were again dug up and placed in the cathedral of Havana. There they now repose under a peculiar monument. There is a claim that the real remains were not removed. There would be poetio justice in plac ing the tomb of Columbus in San Do mingo, the island with which his great est activity as a discoverer is associated, and the place where with the timbers of his wrecked flagship he built the first European habitation in America. The chains placed on him by Itabadilla dur ing his imprisonment, and which he de clared should be removed by no less au thority than that of his royal master and mistress, he kept in his study after wards as a memorial and ordered that they should be buried with him. The promptness and oertainty of ils oures bare made Glmmherlain's Coneb Remedy fiimons. It is intended espec ially for coughs, colds, croup and wboop ing coughs, and is the most tffeoUiBl remedy knows, for these diseases Mr 0. B. Main, of Union City, Pa., says': "I have a great sale on Chamberlains Cough Kemedy. I warrant every bottle H"r! have never beard of one failing to givr entire satisfaction." 6(1 cent bottles fin sale by Slocnm Johnston Drug Co. GREEN TEA. Interesting; Facts Concerning One v of Our Popular Table Luxuries. PTea. is a plant that grows in China. Japan and other parts of the world. There are two varieties, thea nigra and the viridis black and green tea. Tht same plant produces both kinds. Creen tea is made by one kind of treatment, black tea by another. The shrub, says the Detroit Free Press, is raised from seed like hazel nuts, planted in nurse ries; it is set out when about a foot high, lives for fifteen or twenty years and grows sometimes as tall as six feet. It is picked four times a year. The first pioking is the best when the leave!s are covered with a whitish down. This Is in April, the next in May, the next in July, the last in August. One China man can pick about thirteen pounds oi leaves per day, for which he receives sixty eash, or sis cents. The green leaves are spread out on bamboo frames to dry a little, the yellow and old de fective leaves are picked out, then they take up a handful of the leaves, cast them in a heated pan, get them warmed up and squeeze out the superfluous juice; this juice contains an acid oil, so acid as to irritate the hands of the work men. Then they dry them slightly in the sun; then every separate leaf ia rolled up into a little ball like a shot; then they throw these green tea shot Into a pan slightly heated, stirring them np so as to warm every part alike; then they cool the tea, and the shot if picked out one by one, the best for the first or finest chop. Than it is packed. (nod Looks. Good looks are msre than akin deep depending npon a healthy condition of nil the vital onrann. If tha liver lie in active, yon have b'liona look, if yonr "torosrh he disordered, yon have a dya reptic look and if yonr kidnays be sffeot d yon bsve a pinched look. Heenra food health and you will have food looks. Electrio bittern is the great alter, ative and tonic niiil aowdireotlyon these vital organs. Cures pimples, blotches, boils, and gives u good complexion. Sold nt Slocuiu-Jobiison Drug Co., 60o per bottle. THE FIRST LUCIFER MATCH. An English Member of Parliament Tells of Ills Discovery. It isjiot generally known that it is to Isaac HoWen, M. 1, that we owe the invention of the lucifcr match. This discovery was, ho himself has told a writer in the Pall Mall Budget, the re sult of a happy thought. "In the morn ing I used to get up at 4 o'clock in order to pursue my studies, and I used at that time the flint and the steel, in the use of which I found very great inconven- ' ience. Of course I knew, as other chemists did, the explosive material that was necessary in order to produce Instantaneous light; but ib was very dif- j ncult to obtain a light on wood by that explosive material, tmd the idea oc curred to me to put sulphur under the explosive mixture. I did that, and showed it in my next lecture on chem istry, a course of which I was deliver ing at a large academy. Thorc was," added Mr. lloldcn, "a young man in the room whoso father was a chemist in London, and ho immediately wrote to his father about it, and shortly after ward lucifer matches were issued to the world. I believe that was the first oc casion that we had the present lucifcr match. I was urged to go and take out a patent immecliately, but I thought it was so small a matter and it cost me so little labor that I did not think it proper to go and get a patent; otherwise I have no doubt it would have been very profit able." Buckieii'a Arnica aalve. ibe beet Bi.lve in tbe world for etui iuiae, nores, ulcers, salt rueum, hvt ires, tetter, cliupued bunds, utiilbluun ..ins uud ail skill eruptions, aud lion. ;vly ourea piles, or nu pay required. 1 guaranteed to k'lve perlect BHtlulnotlo money refunded. Pilot1 25 cents pi i.x. For sale by ttloouni-Jotinaun Dm, '.moony. , '3PHEADlNa I ME NfcWS. : Tne XnterprUing- Reporter Who "Wrote Up" Columhiia' Journey. The ubiquitous reporter seems to have been performing" his' function of news spreader in the days of Columbus as now. There was. a bustling reporter at COAT-OF-ABMS OF COLUMBUS. the Spanish court fond of letter-writ ing and having correspondents in dif-1 ferent parts. To him we owe it prob ably that the news of the great discovery spread soon to some notable people. This was Peter Martyn d'Anghiera. He dated a letter the first one at Bar- celona, in the ides of May mentioning 4 the event, which he sent to Joseph lior- j romeo. He derived his information ! from Columbus himself, with whom he often talked. Some of these epistles are still extant. The Pistols of Aaron fJnrr. In Pike county, 111., the identical pis tols used by Aaron Burr upon the duel ing field when he killed Alexander Hamilton have been found, and will be exhibited at the World's Columbian ex position. They will make good com panion pieces for the articles once owned by Blennerhassctt, with whom Burr afterward associated, which are to be placed on exhibition at the world's fair by the Ohio 11 istorical society. Oldest Engraving of Colnmbal. ' The oldest engraved likeness of Columbus appears in a Latin literary work by Paolo Oiovio (Paulus Jovius, in Latin form), dated 1575. This wood cut is thought to have been copied from a picture which Jovius had placed in a gallery of notable people which he had formed In his villa at Lake Como. The collection is now scattered, but the por trait is known to have figured in it. ,. While Mr. T.J. K,oue, .- . was leveling in Kansas he waa tak violently ill with nbolers morons. II oalled at a drug store to get some medi cine and the druggist reoommende. Chamberlain's Colio, Cholera and Dian lifi.u lir.moHv an hiuhlvlhe concluded I try it. Tbe result was immediate relif, and a few doses cured him completely It is made for boel complaint and totli ing else. It never fails. Female b) Slocum Johnston Drug Co. Character In Shoes, ocarpology, or the science of telling the character of a man by the wear of the soles of his boots, has been atten tively studied by a Swiss doctor of the name of (Jalli. npcaking briefly, wear at the back of the heels invariably indi cates conceit, pride and unitv. bole worn toward the toes detniinUrntc de ceit, and even criiiiititslity. while a sole that shows an iu;U uui nint of wear or every part of tiie Riiri.iec ileuotes t frank, uprijiit and feariewi character. NEW THINGS IN THE MOON Photography Reveals Unknown Objects on the Planet Interesting Discoveries Made by Astron omers Through the Use of the Telescope Lunar Craters and Chasms. Astronomical photography has ac complished many wonderful results, but nothing perhaps more surprising than its discoveries upon the moon, says the New York Sun. The moon is so near by and has been so carefully studied with the most powerful tele-, scopes for hundreds of years that the astronomers had come to think that they knew pretty much all about it, or at least about that face of the moon which is turned toward the earth. But it turns out that photography possesses the power to reveal things upon the moon which cannot be seen by the eye even with the aid of the best of tele scopes. A careful study of the nega tives of the moon made with the aid of the great Lick telescope has revealed the existence of many unknown objects there, including great crater mountains and rifts or chasms in the surface of the moon, as well as some of those- myste rious objects which go under the de scriptive name of bright streaks or rays. Near the great crater which we call Copernicus another crater of nearly equal dimensions is shown upon the negatives, although it is absent from the most elaborate maps of the moon, and cannot be seen even with the Lick telescope, except when the magic eye of the camera, .instead f the human retina, is applied to look for it. When it is considered that this mysterious crater represents the remains of a mountain ring more than fifty miles in diameter it appears exceedingly strange that it should escape detection by the telescope when directed to the moon, and yet be visible upon a photograph of the moon. The reason appears to be that the walls of this newly discovered aratcr were long, ago destroyed, being razed by some denuding force nearly to the level of the surrounding surface. It is, consequently, but the remnant of a jTreat crater ring. Even in that condi tion, however, it would he visible to the eye but for the fact that its huge neigh bor, Copernicus, whose walls are still standing to a great height, is surrounded by enormous masses of luminous ma terial, which looks like lava, that must have overflowed the surrounding coun try ages ago, and reflects back the light of the sun to our eyes with overpowering brilliancy. The glare of this broad re flecting surface, covering hundreds of square miles, is so great as to conceal the comparatively low relief of the broken crater ring. " ""In fji-v.) rc lsnot improbable? rfcHat Copernicus is responsible for the disap pearance of the other great crater, which doubt less was the predecessor of Copernicus, and once towered up to an equal height above the surrounding plains. After it had ceased to be an active volcano, and Copernicus had burst forth, the latter probably over whelmed it with torrents of lava, which, filling up the space within its broken walls nearly to the level of their tops, submerged it, so to Speak, beneath the new surface thus formed, so that only the summit of its broken walls remains to be caught by the acute vision of the photographic plate. In other parts of the moon similar events appear to havo taken place, and there are a number of large craters, enormously greater than any volcanic craters upon the earth, which seem to have been buried by the outburst of lava from subsequently-formed vol canoes in their neighborhood, so that only portions of their mountain walls now remain visible. Another discovery, also arising from inspection of the negatives made with the Lfck telescope, relates to the won derful system of bright rays surround ing the most perfect crater in the moon, Tycho. This extinct volcano is sdme fifty-four miles In diameter, and is sur rounded on the outer side of its lofty walls by a comparatively level region, gome twenty-five miles broad, of a much darker hue than that of the crater it self, or of the surrounding country be yond. The hundreds of great streaks which radiate from Tycho like the spoke's of a wheel, varying in width from ten to twenty or thirty miles, and in length from a few miles to' nearly two thousand miles, having al ways appeared, when viewed with a telescope alone, to take their rise from the outer edge of the dark rim sur rounding the crater, but the Lick nega tives show that some of the streaks at least pass through this dark rim and extend clear np to the very walls of the water. The suggestion that these mys terious streaks had their oi igin in the volcanic energy of Tyelm when it was still an active crater is sti'nn;;Uieni!(l by this evidence that the st reaks actually reach to the crater itself. . These discoveries are likely to give renewed interest to the study of the moon's surface, and while it is perhaps to much to epect that a great deal of light will be thrown by astronomical photography upon the question whether evidences of the fresunt or former ex istence of life npon the moon cr.n be de tected from the earth, yet there can be no question that a new method of at tackintr tin- mnv problems thatstil) re Th e only Pure Cream of Tartar Used iu Millions Homes m main to be so.veu concerning tne cnar aeter and condition of our satellite has been placed within the reach of astron of it in my borne. I bSSew "f ,boMa good thing when I get hold of t ! Pm Balm is tbt be! i lintaent r V ever met with. W B 1 hsve WOUK, uV WOMEN, The Speaker, Urge . Woin(n , Opportunities is the Broader Field Before Them. CmoAQo, May lIZTIn the ffiemo art palace on the lake front, this morn ing,. President 0. 0. Bonner, of the world's congress suxiliary of the world's fair, de livered an address, formally opening 'lie great series of gatherings that will continue nntil tbe world's fair j8 8t n end, and will deal with nearly very question of iTUPAmts. general interest to humanity. The first week has been allotted to women, and their work opening tbis morning with an address of welooroe by Mrs. Potter Palmer, president of the woman's brsnoh of tbe auxiliary, and Mrs. Hen rotin, vice-president. Mrs. Palmer re ceived a great ovation, aud ia a olear voice welcomed tbe flint great congress of women known to history. Mrs. Hen rotin, first vice-president, made a grace ful address, in the oourse of wbioli she said women are weary of bearing sons to be shot down and that tbe wars of old will soon give WBy to arbitration and peaoe. Women have a broader field, and greater chances, and know how to improve them. Mrs. Henrotin en umsrated the parts to be played by women in the Coming pongress and exhorted her members to be awake to their opportunities and not shrink from opening possibilities or cling to tbe shadows of the past. Mrs. Msy Wright Sewell, chairman of the oommittee of arrangements, spoke of ihe vast soope of the congress, saying that notable indeed was the fact that on ha Hat of the advisory committee aere the names of representatives of tbe Indians and the negro, (ilad ulso were they to meet repiesentatives of that still older faith, the Jewish, who would tell bow Ibe women of that faith think and feel. At the oc Delusion nf M,. Sewell's speech, Clara Barton, president of Red Cross Society, was invited to the platform. Lady Aberdeen hi tl,n introduced and made a brief felioitious speeob about woman and her work TheH Mrs. Albert Barker, of Efiolan.l.. recited with snleudul elnnnlh.nuru ef fect Edna Dean Prootor's ode to "Colum bia's Emblem." A recess was then taken until even ing at wbiob session addresses were maite by Mrs. Florence Fenwick Miller. of England; Baroness ThorberV nl Sweden; Mrs. Calliboe Psrren, of Greece; Mrs.Josefa Zeemau, of Bohemia; Mrs. Kalberine Soirtnaker, of Germany; Mrs. lohn Harvey, of Canada; Mnie. Isabel Bogelnt, of France, and several others. All the speakers outlined their remarks to the oondition of women in the different countries represented. There was not a quorum at the meet ing of Ibe national cemmission tndav. sud un adjournment was taken nntil tomorrow, when the Sunday clos ing question will be (nken up. Late this ufiernoon there wss informal meet- ingof tbe members f the luesl direc tory sid the nation al Commission . which the qnestion was thoroughly rlm.GtC.it.Da.vift discnKKsd It was announced at tbe notiflimion of the meeting that a reso lution revoking the Sunday opening rule recently adopted by the local tli- r cloty would be submitted for tbe concurrence of the conimivsioners. This nlil be done for the purpose of testing the powers of the commission. Director General Davis said today that the management of the fair was determined to open tbe gates Mnndsy. The people demand it, and the people were all powerfnl. As s result, an attempt was made by the world's fair exeontive oilioiala te exclude United States Roysrnment nfficisls from tbe grounds except on tbe payment of au admission fee.. Baking Powder: Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. 40 Years t'ae Standard ffltfflf, Mitv&i at -i5t'' I