Ai IIEI'I'NEIUAUm He who by his biz uvuld rise, must either bust or advertise. Ex ''vriljf mt m hi v OFFICIAL B'v PAI UEITlll GAZLTfE. Eli. OAT EXPECT An advertisement, says Printer.' Ink, to bear (rult In one night. You can't rat enough In a week to last you a year, and you can't advertise on that plau either. Those who advertise once lu three mouths forget that moat folks cannot remember any thing longer than seven days. 1 KLKVKNTIi V HA It lIHJTiNHR, MORROW COUNTY, ORH(JON, FRIDAY. AUGUST, 4 IHi.3. WEEKLY NO. Ml. I -WfchkLY M) IM.j nl, If ded itr. dl ioit. t on ifie t b i on i on wr, Hon left at T Up tided. id. con tf.U ixii. Or.- iartr t ear. itfein i tided ut ear andod ; hip up. u left tionwa alhuer i, UV randed , W on right . V ilder i" cir 4 and quar y. gi A. ttde4 "V i bEMI .VliliKLY .ZI'TI! I uesdtys and Fridays mr HE PATTERSON PLMIIIXG COMim AlVAH W. PATTERSON Biw. Maimer. OT1B PATl'KltBON Editor A -25 j.er year, $1.2.) tor mx inuntlitt, 75 els. for tuft- itioMLiiH. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The 33A.aXiB, M of Long Crerti, Uraiti Cuijuty, uri'Ktiu, in publiBhuil by Lhu name t:uui puiiy evry Friday inoniiiiH. ftiibBcrii-tioii i.nru, $ jkt year, toradverlltiiiiK rates, at Id rend Xj. PaTTEESOIT, Kditov and Miumgur, Long Cruuk, Oregon, or "Udzytte," 'rHIrt I'APKli is kept on nlo ai U. C. Duke'tt I AiivertiBiaK AHuuy, tit and ti& Jieretmnts iv.oiini.nn, ban Kranui;o. California, where cuu- meib tor aUvuriibiiiK urn be made fur it. THIS ti.lZim'K'H Mi -NTS. i.;;tior, B. A. Huiittaker Arlington, 1'iiil) HL-ijntT Luiif; t.'reek, Hie hunk lU'liO rostiiniBL r t.'aina.- I'miriu, Uni-nr lJe anl Nye, (Jr., 11. C. vV rihi ilaioiiiaii, or., J os m Bter H mail to n, Grant Co., Or., rosiiiiupU'r .one, 1. J. Carl PruirieCity.or. R. It. Mulluluy Canyon City, Ur...... . 1.. 1'airihi, Film Kock, U. 1. nkoHoii l-h villi', Or., J. K. mum Jfhu way, Or., '..F. I. MeCnlliuii Aihu'ia, Or John KUiiiKton l eiiitlctoii, Or., . J'uhiuias.er Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or., 1'oHiiiuihiur Shelby, or., Allan atella Mett tox, Omni Co., Or,, J. F. Alien IviKlil Mile, or Mm. Andrew AxlibiuiKh Cppvr Itlieii Creek, B. V. Uuvlaud Ioulai, or PuBt mauler lne liot'k, or K. At. JuIiumiu liUMfeLeirj J, It. li teb K omion, uregoti Herbert HalKleuil LeiiUKton Jab. Leach AH AohJiT WAMJCU IN KVKKY l'KKClCi. LMOh pACfic Railway-Local card. No. 10, mixed loaves lleppimr 10HX)a. m. :u, " ar. at ArbuKton l'Lia.m, 9, ' ieavea " S:-z i. in. " Vt, " ar. at Heppiier ?:lu p. u daily except 8uuday. h um bound, main line ar. at Arlin(tcin 8.12 p. m. Went ' " leuvei " p. m. Night traiiiB are ruuriing ou same time ab before. wFFICIiili DIBECTORT. I' lilted tateHOUU-iulH. I'l.-hiUent Grovr 'le.vland Vl t-t't'MrilUnilt Ad ai HlHVJjHOU hw'ary of 8tut Wuitur Q Urowhain ttfi'it tmy livasury Junn Ki. l ai'iitd-i tH4.IHlUI of liiLuriur M. himiii bMt'jiki of wm' ,..D,u.tl b, ii.iin.'iil oo.Tuiao of Nuvy .,,..iitltiy A. Kerned l'o-t:m.ttLer-Oeuuial Wiou 6. Binecll Ali'ii I'i-OHut'Dil Uieliuru b. Oaiey iS'reiaiy oi Axiinuituru J. btwrUuK .uurton Mhte ot Oregon. (Uivernor .8 Peimnyer Hfci' iaiy ul tilatr li. V . AluHutle 'i ruaburer 1'liii. Jleisniau Hut.i. Public lusLructioa L. 11. Mcniroy )J. Il..nehil J liiiiKr Hermann t ontfieasmen j w u KuitJ . r'fiiiter Frank i . linker it. A. .Uoore W. r. tititd it. 8. liL-im Seyt-iifh Jiidu lal District. t'ti. nit jude V. L. iradfiliaw lYitfViu iik At orney V. H. VViU u Morrow Count) OtlleiaK hi Senator,.. ....Huiiry Hlaekman .a pi.ht-utative J- Ibown iiut.vJude liuiuu Keithiy ( 'Unmirirjiouerti Pelei bteuuur ' VI. tfakar. I, rk J. W. Morrow tJhtii.1 tieo. ublH. Trttaisurur W. J. L ezer AbKeuHor K. L. haw surveyor Iwa Urown iehooi ftup't .VS. L..aling i orouer 1'. W. Ayeir-, Jr HKPPNKlt TOWN OFVICKR8. ,uu J- SimonB t'liuui'iiniHii O. IC. PaniBworih, Mi lichleiitlial, Otih PiiltHraou, Julius Kwilily, W.A. lohiirtou.J. L. Yeger. (iwtorout A. A. Huberts. I'nwuroi K. (i- riiucuiu Hamlial J. W. Haamub. PlVCIIH't OUh erp, Jubtireof the Peace .P. J. Hallock l.onniabie i'. W. Ujehard L'lilifd Matt-a Land Otiicei'H. THK DALLKB, OB. J. W. Lewis . H Kis r 1'. Ei. Lang li.ceiv r LA GllANDE, OB. A CleHVor Rt-iii-ter A.C MtCblUnd Receiver SECRET SOCIETIES. Duni Irffdgc No. 20 K, of P. meeta ev ery Tuesday eveniiiic at 7.8U'chk!K in their Castle Hall, National Rank build inr. Hojourninti hrotliHrs tordialt in vited u aitend. W L. alxno. . ' . W. B Pottku. K.of It.Ab. tf RAW LI IS 8 POST, N-). HI. a. a. R. . utaat lxiiigton. Or., the last HaturdRy of ut-! month. All veterausare invited to join. . C. Hoim, Uko, W. Bnith. Adjnlant, tf Comumutier. A A. HOBERT8, R nl Encute, Insur unce itnd CullectiouR. Offion iu Counoil CbumbetB, Heppiier, Or. bwU. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER! HEFPNKK. OHEQON. Cattle hrandwianrl .-ar marked as shown aboTO, Horses K on riuht abuuliler. Mv CBttl" ranif In Mcirrow and Dmatilla conn, tiw. 1 will i-h lf"."" fr ih nrriMt ana etui fu't'ion f any Dtireun ftHlihg my .lock. Ml IMI.M L1 DDLVLV I ALUnULIj 111 Year's Subscrintion to a Pop ular AsjriL'uIraral Paper GIViiM D i: i: i' mi : t m: i m r I By a Bi'cciiil arruntif uieut ' with the imlilinlierH we uru prepHreil to furuish I'T.ISU tu em li uf our rnnilers b yenr'B xiilisunptinu to the popular tnoutlily ui;ii(!iiliiinil jnui'UHl, the Am Bui can Fakmeb. !)iil)lisliJ ut SSirinifild and Ulevplnnil, Ohio. ThiM offer is made to any of our sub scnbiMB wlm will puy op nil (inenruKi'B ai Hiilmi ription and mie year in advauon, and to nuy new BiiliHcrihern who will pay mie yem in advance. The AMEKfCAN B'Aitsiiiit enjciyn a lure national oiroula Mmu, and riiiikH iiuione the leadiuti aitneiiltnrnl paperfl. By this arrange ment it CilS'liS YOU NOTHING to re ceive the Amuuioan Fahmer (or one year, II will he to our advantage to oail prnnipily. Hnuiplu copies can be s en at our ollire. Tlie Orlifis-icrtl. 'ii-Tiiiim.0 I i oi r. 1 1 i. tviviA.n ruc. i 11 n i H n IJ publlNhers, a e are able to obtain a number ol U above book, and propose to furniah a copy to each ot'our sunHerfbers. i'ne dictionary is a necessity iu every home, school and buHiiiess house. It lilis a vacancy , and t'uriiisiies knowietiKe which no one hun dred other volumes ol the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reach, anu reicr to its con ten In every day in the year As some have asked U this is really the Orig inal Webster's L uabndged Dictionary, we art able to slate we have learned direct from the publishers the lact, that this is the very work couiiilctem which about forty ot the best yearb oi uit; hoi loirs i lie v, ore co i -iu employed m writing. It couuiius the entire vocabulary ol about loo.oou words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and denuilion ol same, and it the regular standard sie, containing about MJ.ouu stjuare inches ol printed surtnee, and is uuuiiu n; ciolu nan morocco anu SLeeD. Until turtner notice we will furnish this valuaDle Dictonary f-irst lo any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber, Third To any suDscnDer now 'n arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the roiiowing prices, viz; Full Cloth uound, gilt side and bad stamps marDied edges $t-oo. Halt Mo occo, Dound, gilt side and back stamps, maroiea edges. $i .50. huii Sheep Dound, leather label, marbiea edges, $2.00 ritty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. jlSAs the publishers limit the time and uuinber ol books they will furnish at the low prices, we ad vine all who desire to avail them selves ol this great opportunity to attend to it at once. rflLVKK'tj UIUML'IUN 0 iocky- - - Mouotaio Xcws THE DAILY BY MAIL Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six MoiitliH " : ; 3 00 Thr e Months " : : : 1 50 Due Month " : : 50 fhE WEEKLY BY MAIL One Year in Advance) ; $1 00 The News is the only consistent c.iampion of silver In the West, mid should be in every home in the West, and in the hands of every miner and business man in Colorado. He nd in your subscriptions at once. Address, THE WEWS, Denver, Colo. L UMJTE U ! yE HAVE KOK eSAI.K ALL KINDS OF CN M ilrcHNcd Liuntier, 16 miles of Uepnuer, at A hat is known as the SCOTT W A-CTTIVIIXjIj. I'KK l.lXKI FEKT. Kllt'liH, - - - 10 00 " " " CLEAR, - 17 60 1 F DELI VKHED IN HEI'f'NER, WILL ADO fo.LKi per lert, ai'ditlonal. HAMILTON. Prop. II. A, Hntnliton, Man'iir AISCONilN ChN'IKAL LINES ( Northern Pacific R R Co., Lessee.) LATKIST TIME CARD Two Through Trains Dai y. One ,mn(l Tlln Tleon evi rv ni"lit f"ra weckatwuwTui'lililivtua- Uc. ou' butue. l'2.45pin!rt 'J.r,piiil.v.MliitienpollsAr'i.40Rms.4!ipra I.Wpni!" .I.'ipinll.v. ..St. 1'aul. ..AriMk amj.MWpm HI.WHimlt a'.pnilLv. . Dnlnth. . .ArU 10" 7.:).ripin l.i:ptn 7.n.'ipin l.v A.hlMtid.. ArjxOfiam 4.40pm 7.1&ain lo..mniAr. .Chicuxu .Lv6U0p" I1.4&" l I I I 1 Irkcti .old and hinrtnine rhecked thnmg-r- to all point, in llle I'nltcd tat,.'h and I'aiiada cIiim uniiiM'tlnu miide lu Lhicairo with all ; triilit. Iloloy btiat and aouth. Fur full lutorniution apply tn yonr nearest i tieket acent or JAS. li. I'llND, Ueu. Pass, and Tkt Agt. Ckioato, 111. Can be prooii.eu at the drugjstore of 1. 1. Aysrs, Jr. Nut door to City Hotel, HEPPNER, : : OREGON. Equal to lime nnd sulplinr. and much hetier for the wool, as it Drumotes the tfrowtb ratlier than dura;iges it. Said the Ht 1 to himself, "If the moon I could ect, i whenever I'm dry my throat I could J; v,et; The moon is a ' quarter with a quar ter I hear; you can purchase five gal lons of Hires9 Root Beer." A Delicious, Temper ance, Thlrst-quenchine, sHoalth-fllua.Ki- n-lL- Qood for any time of year. A 35c. ptckage makes 5 gallons. Be sure and jet Hires', Highest of all in Leavening Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOUJTEBf PURE SONGS FROM SIGHING. Dark was the house and c heerless, And fast fell the rain from without! My heart was chilled by the morning, Acd besieged by many a doubt. And I said: Thero is no ooi in trying. The old year is dying, dyln. Many hearts that were ylftd Are wenry and sad, And the world Is ailed with the sishing." The good man came in whistling. Though the rain fell fast without; Bo cheered my heart with his joy song, And scattered my every doubt. And hesuid: "We'll Just keep on trying. A new year will spring from the dying. Many hearts shall I e glad That now are so and. And songs shall grow out of the sighing." E. 11. Chase in Uomemaker. THE TWO DOCTORS. ree Medi lcine Golden Opportunity for Suffering Hiimani'y. Physic iana Give their I'f meilios tn the People 1)0 Villi SI'FKI'll ? Wrlteimatonr-ccxplain. HU HID aiiri.lii ine yonr trouble, and we will send you FREE OK CM A HUE a l ull course ol specially prepured remedies beKt suited to yonr case. We i"nt vr.nr """.mrmiarion. We can cure the most ajoimvated diseases ol both sexes. Our treatment for all diseases and deformhlesare modern and sc ientilic. acquired by many year's experience, which enables us lo tiiiHi'autee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B. We have the only positive cure for Ep 'jepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References K'ven. 1 erinaneutly located., uld established. Dlt. W I.I.HMS MKDIOAL ANIl SUKC. At. INSTI- tutk, 719 Market street, San Francisco, Cal. QUIOKTXtwlISI TO San Franelseo Ind all poihts iu California, via the Alt, Bhaaui route of the Southern Pacific Co. I'he areat highway through California to all point liast and South. Hrand 8oenio Route of the Pacirio :oat. Pullman Buffet lileepers. Hecond-claas Sleepers Attached to express trains, attordina: superior Mccommodations for secoud-elass passenteera. For rates, tickets, sleeping oar reservations, to. call upon or address ' KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst. ten F P. Agt.. Portland, Oregon. national Bank ol newer. WM. PENLANI). El). K BISHOP. President. Cashier. WAS UCTS A GENERAL HANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Mude on Fvorlile Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLI) rlEPPNER. OREGON ARE YOU AM' liOUD AT ITZZLES ? The genius who Invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "I'Iks In Clover." and many others, has In vented a brand new one, which is going to be the greatest on record. There is fun, Instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old and learned will tindas much mystery in It as the young and uusophiitlcatcd. Thisgreat puzzle s the property ol the New York: Press Club, for whom it was invented by .Samuel Loyd, the great puzzlelst, to be sold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newspaper workers in New York. Ocnerous friends have given $i"),00u In prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TKN ( KN I s sent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. -E-c-oi y RoAdor of this journal is invited to aid in the erection of a great home lor newspaper work ers by sending one dime to "Press Club Building and Charity Fund," Temple Court, New York. You will aid a great work and re ceive by return mail a wonderful puzzle. game which amiiBes the young and old, battles the mathematicians and inte'ests everybody. Public spirited merchants have contributed fouo worth of premiums for such as can solve the mystery. Everything from a "Knox" hat to a "Stelnw ay" plauo. DID YOU IKY 14 PIGS J.V CLOVE H" or the "FIFTFEX PUZZLE:' Well, the man who invented them has juit completed another little playful myitery for young and obj, which it telling forThN rHNT for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for nwtpnper workert in New York. '! hit piixile It the property of the New York Frrii Club and generoui friend! of the club have donati d orer IAOuU to provide prlzet for lucky peop, young or old, who tulvtt the myitery. There it a lot of entertainment and iuttrurtioii iu it, t-endadlme id get the lomentr juz.le b return mull. Addrem "Frets Club lSouveulr,' Temple Court.Ntw York City. They do not do bo now, but in bygone times some of the medical students and young practicing physicians of Detroit were in the habit of stealing bodies for dissection from the cemeteries adjoining the city. In those times there were two young doctors, just out of their teens, who wero partners in a practice which loft them with a greet deal of time on their hands. Both of them were strong of head and of physical makeup, and either 1 of them could drink any other man in j Detroit drunk on cherry whisky and still retain his sea legs and his cool head. And there were not a few sturdy drinkers in Detroit then. 1 Nevertheless, while the young physi cians appeared to be sailing straight for I tha riv.1 rt flwiir ll,Dw J 4 wv w wivf,, nicjr jpuw 111 a ie.ll, deal of time, much of it stolen from the night, advancing themselves in a profes sion to which they were courageously devoted. One of them, it may be men tioned incidentally, advanced in the aft er days to a very high position in the medical department of the United States army, and the other became one of the foremost physicians of the city. One night the .two dtermined upon making a sally upon a certain cemetery, to steal the corpse of a man who had died of a peculiar disease, which was the talk of the little town at the time, and which threw medical circles into sharp and in some instances furious discus sion. When they sauntered from their favorite boozing place, they were pretty well filled with cherry whisky, and the hour was past 1 1 o'clock. Their cronies came away with them, as that was the customary hour for retiring unless it happened to be a holiday occasion, when "We Won"t Go Home Till Morning" was sung, a song, by the way, which imparts a flavor of the wine of the immortals to good average whisky which in its turn cheerfully and heartily reciprocates the compliment, by causing the song to thrill the soul like the war hymn of trium phant archangels. Earlier in the evening they had made arrangements for a horse and a light wagon, spades, pickax, crowbars and ropes. They knew the location of the grave, and they started out. The night favored them with opaque clouds which bid a three-fourths faded summer moon. Arrived at the desired place, outside the cemetery fence, they led the horse into a stnp of woods, crossed the road and entered the cemetery. Before pro ceeding to business they took a hearty pull at the cherry bottle. With the aid of their dark lanterns they found the mark which had been made upon the grave in the daytime. They then pro ceeded to adjust their dark colored sheet ing. The grave was pretty close to the road, but they didn't mind that. The sheeting, hung on sticks pressed into the ground, screened the grave from all points of view, and the dark lantern was hung in such a position that it shone in a narrow circle downward upon the grave. Both seized their 6pades then and went to work with a will at either end of the grave, space being taken at one end to afford room for both to work. In this way the muscular young fellows soon reached the over box. The top of this was taken oil and laid aside. In a little while the cover of the coffin was nn crewed, and in tho haste of the moment it was thrown out of the grave. It struck the width of sheeting next the road and threw it down. The corpse was a very heavy one, and it took the united efforts of both the doc tors to raise it in the narrow space of the grave. They managed to stand it up at the end of the gravo and then concluded that tho best thing to do was to have one of them lift from below and the other from the top. To this end one of them proceeded to climb out of the grave, but just at that moment their blood wag frozen in their veins by a piercing shriek. On the night chosen by the young doc tors for their raid on the cemetery K. William Green, a suburban beau, whose characteristics were of the hue of his name, and whose courage was utterly disproportioned to his tall, gaunt frame, was returning homeward in company with Mary 8 , as beautiful a country girl as ever tripped over the daisies and as bright and intelligent as she was beau tiful. People often wondered then how a beauty of such manifest superiority of character could see anything attractive In a fellow like Bill Green, but from this coign of time the riddlo is easily read beaua were very scarce in the township of II in thoso days, and hence a girl had no chuice. It was said that tiiey were affianced, but this was not true. Something in Mary's conduct had held William Lack from declaring himself. although sue readily allowed ms atten tion and refused tho proffers of escort of a certain newcomer i-.i tho field. That night the couple had been to a party, and tho shortest and indeed the only way to their respective homes was by the cemetery road, unless it miyhtbe across the rough fields, au impracticable way in the dark. As the twain approached the dark hol low of the road, which the bounds of the cemetery touched, Mary naturally drew closer to her tall escort, and the touch of femininity awakened in William tho de termination to take advantage of htr timidity and pop the question. But Wil liam was abit of acowarj, as already in 'iuiated, and the chill hour of midnight. together with the continuity ot the grave yard, was not to his liking. His heart I went pit-a-pat, not for the adored object at his side, but because of cerlain noises which the wind made among the bushes in the cemetery, and he also fancied there were footsteps behind him. His repressed fears controlled his tongue, upon which , a proposal of marriage hung suspended, although Mary pressed closer to his side as they walked rapidly along. As for the thoughts that were passing through the shapely head of Mary at the time, the lady has since said that she knew from William's actions that he wanted to propose, and she frankly ad mits that he would have been accepted on the spot, since she entertained the idea that she would have been aban doned in tho horrible place if she had re fused. On such little things do the piv ots of a lifo sometimes swing. W illiam was long in drawing his cour age to the sticking point. At length he drew in a long breath, nnd tremulously uttering the name that Eyron and Burns loved eo fondly "Mary" was about to declare himself nnd ask for her hand, but at that critical moment the disturbed eyes of both were drawn to the cemetery by tho light of tho dark lantern. They suddenly stopped in a palsy of fear. And such a borriblo sight as they saw! Tho face of a corpse protruding from the grave, every frightful feature ex posed in the light of tho dark lantern I Mary shria.:ei a.;d fell in a dead faint. William's knees smote together, and his hair arose in abject fright. Another in stant nnd his legs, wl. ch were growing too weak to support him, would have fiven way and brought him to the ground, but Mary's shriek, in the total eclipse of his senses sounding like the yelp of a pursuing fiend, galvanized him into tho strength of terror, and he flew down the road like the shadow of a scud ding cloud. Scrambling over the fence, for a cross cut to his home, his coattails were gripped from behind by the stout sliver of a rail, and thinking that the fiend had him ho fainted dead away and hung there for an hour. Recovering his senses later, he staggered to the house and to bed, where he remained a very sick man for two weeks. The shriek paralyzed tho young doc tors for but a moment. They scrambled hastily out of the grave. One of them seized the dark lantern and closed the slide, and then both of them stood silent, drawing quick breaths. Not a sound was heard. It wr.s a place remoto from houses, and they were sail! fied that even such a piercing shriek would convoy no alarm. "It must have come from the road," whispered one to tho other. I "Let us search," was the brief reply. I The body of the girl was found, aniZ the young physicians, regardless of their own Bafety and at no little risk of their lives in case of discovery, set at work to bring tho girl out of her deathlike swoon. It was no easy task to allay her fears. They did everything that men could do to reassure tho frightened girl, and grad ually she became self possessed and begged to bo taken home. She was too I weak to walk. The team was brought around, and she was carefully and ten derly assisted to a seat. Dr. X was be side her, and reaching down tho dark lan tern to his companion, who stood in the road, he said, "Leave it." Tho other under jtood, and without hes itation proceeded to reintcr the corpse and hide the tools in the adjoining woods. Ho said afterward that ho mado a better job at fashioning tho mound than the sexton had. At any rate, it was bever known that the grave had been disturbed. During the drive to Mary's home, as Dr. X subsequently informed his com panion, he told some of tho most in genious lies on record. It was quite by accident that they discovered her in the road as they were driving home after a consultation case, he had gravely in formed her, and ho gave her tho particu lars of the case, shrewdly avoiding any inquiry as to what caused her to be stretched in the middlo of the road in a dead faint alone. He promised to visit her next day, and he kept his promise. And fueling inter ested in the case ho kept o;i coming when she was quite well, until finally one day, on quitting the house, Mary went with him in a carriage after whose rolling wheels a gay wedding party pitched old slippers, amid tho laughter of the young and the benedictions of the old. Detroit News. naustea. xnen seizing me ousxinate pumpkin he threw it down the hill. At the foot it struck a stone and broke into a score of pieces. Startled by this unexpected object, a hare bounded out from a clump of neighboring bushes apparently from among the pieces of pumpkin and scampered away over the fields. "Hi, hi, dar!" shouted the excited Joe. "Come back I Don't yo' know dat I'ze yo' mam my?" New York Tribune. How Loco Acts. " Loco is often called "crazy weed" from its direful effect on cattle or horses when they eat it in any quantity. In the beginning the poison is slow in showing itself. The first symptom is usually a dull, glassy look in the eyes, which grad-! nally dilate and become wild and staring. ' If after this the animal is left to craze on the herb, the symptoms will become more pronounced, the vision becomes impaired, and the victim develops an aptitude for grotesque antics, sometimes rushing madly about. A "locoed" horse will balk, back, rear and often hurl it self backward, and has the greatest ob jection to having its head touched. The last and fatal stage of the disease is a gradual wasting away of the ani mal. Cattle born on the prairies seem instinctively to avoid the loco. High grade beasts most easily fall victims to their partiality for tho weed. Chambers' Journal. Rncklpifa Arnica Salve. The best anlve in the w-irhl f ir en's bruises, aores, nicer", en It rheum, f. ver inres. Utter, "-hepped hnnd", oliilhlmn" enrn ami all akin eruptions, nnd (mm-. ivcly onrpa piles. ir tin piv required. Ji i trimrmitped lo eive perfee satisfiiotinii nr mnn refunded. Pride 25 Bents per box. Fur sale by Slooum-Johnson Druu Company. THE WKSTKKN PKIUUOUUK. We are in receipt uf the May number f nnr stiite cehnol pHper. It exceed any of the former numb rs it value. Tho paper Ibis mi nth contain mmiv new nnd valuable feiilutta. The illus trated series ou (he sehonls of the etnte in introduced by b taper on the Frienda Polytechnic Institute at S ilem. Orpeoii. These papers cannot fail to be uf (jreat value both to the eobuols and to the pnhlio. There are also spverol tine articles by our best writern nnd the depnrtmeuta "Current Eveuts,""SHtiirdny ThnUKhtH,J' 'Eiluoationnl News" "The Oracle Answers, CnrrppprninVnts," etc , eoh oniitnin much valuable reading fm tencheiB or I'liientH. The niHitPZn p h"B about 50 pnges of matter, well printed and nrrnii(ied. We pronounce the Western IVdiitioane the best educa tional monthly on the cmst. Evpryoue of our renders should havr the pHper if they are at all interested in edtiCHtiun. No teacher pchool direo tor or stiidi tit run et ali i g well nith Hit it. We will receive siilisoriptione it this i fliee. Price only $1 00 a year When desired Be will KHid the W rsteri' Pedi Ri'iine hi rt fii zette one year to oi e iidilie-s for $3 00. OH nnd i limine ample OopUs. 'IVhcIipih, direnturB and parents, now is the time to t-ubt-ci i!ie. tl PRIZES 0N PATENTS. How to Get Twenty-five Hundred Dollars for Nothing. The Winner has a clear Cift of a Small Fortune, and the Losers Have Patents that may Bring them in Still More. Would you like to make twenty-five hundred dollars? If you would, read carefully what follnws nnd you may see a way to do It. The Press Claims Company devotes much attention to patents. It has handled thousands of applications for Inventions, but it would like to handle thoiiMuids more. There is plenty of Inventive laili nt at lurpe III this ci.uiiliy nccdiug unfiling huteucouragenieut to produce practical results. That eucourugenieut the Press Claims Company propose to give. not so li. i it I) am it m:i;.iis. A patent strikes most people as an appalling ly formidable thliiK. The idea Is that an in ventor must be a natural ueiiius, like Kdlsou or Bell: that he must ilevnte vers lo didvlnir li, complicated mechanical problems and that he must spend a lorllilic on delicate experiments before he can gel a new device to a patentable deitree of perfection. This delusion the com pany desires to dispel. It desires lo get into the head of the nubile a clear coninrehenslnn of the fact that it is not the great, complex, and expensive ill vent Ions t hat briugliie best returns to their authors, hut the lillle, simple, and cheap ones the tilings Hint seem so absurdly trivial I n ti l tnu average citizen would feel soniewliiit ashamed of lirlnglug them to the attention of the Patent Office. Kdison savs tiiul the nroflts he has received friiin the patents on all his marvelous Inven tions have not been siitlicient to pay the cost of his i xpi Timenls. Hut (lie man who con ct iveil the Idea of fastening a bit of rubber cord lo a child's hall, so Ibut ll w ould come buck to the baud when thrown, made a fortune out of his scheme. The modern sewlov. ma chine Is a miracle of Ingenuity the product 1 Ihc loil of hundreds of busy bruins through 1 " nunilieii and llfiy years, but the whole bril liant result rests upon Hie simple device of pulling theeyc of the needle at the point In stead of at the other end. Thut Hare llelonged tu lllm. Little black Joe hung around his mam my begging for a donkey until iu an impatient tone hi.) maternal relative ex claimed, "Now, Joe, yo' jes go right out dar, set on dat pumpkin and reckin y'U hatch out a little donkey fo' long." Small Jos duly sut until his patience was ex- I Ilk l.l'l'l 'I IIIM.9 tin. itiosT ' VAUAHLK. Comparatively few people regard themselves as inventors, but almost every bony has been struck, alone tune or another, with ideas that seem calculated to reduce some of the little frictions of life. Usually such Ideas are dis missed without further thought. "W hy don't the railroad company make Us car windows so thji they can be slid up and down with jui breaking the passengers' back!" ex claims the traveler. "If 1 were running Ihe road I would make them iu such a way." "What was the man who made the saucepan thinking of?" grumbles the cook, "lie never had to work over a stove, or he would have known how it ought to have been fixed." "Hang such a collar button!" growls aman who is late for breakfast. "If I were 111 the business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out. or breuk off, or gouge out the back of my neck And the various sutterers forgot about their grievances and began to think of something else. If they would set down the next con venienl opportunity, put their ideas about ear windows, saucepans and collar bullous Into i radical shape, and then apply for patents tney might find themselves as independently wealthy as the man who imenied the Iron umbrella ring, or the oue who patented the tlfteeu puzzle. A TKIMPTINGOtH-.lt. To Induce the people to keen track of their bright idens and see what there iu them, the Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a 1 nze. 'lo Hie person who mibmlta to it Hie simplest and most promising invention, from u commercial point of view, I lie company will give I wcniy. live li unit red dollars in ciikh. in addiiio.i lo relundinB Hie teen for securing a puK nt. I will also advertise I lie invcu. Hon free ol charge. This otter Is subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor 'must obtain a potent for his invention through the company, lie must first apply for a preliminary search, the cost of which will be five dollars. Should this sesch show his Invention tube unpatentable, he can withdraw without further expense Otherwise he will be expected to complete his application and take out a patent in the regu lar way. The total expense, Including the Government and Bureau fees, will be seventy dollars. For this, w hether he secures a prize or not. the Inventor will have a patent that ought to be a valuable property to him. The prize will be awarded by a Jury consisting of Ih ree reputable patent attorneys ot Washing ton. Intended competitors should fill out the following blank, aud forward it with their application: "I submit the within described invention In competition for the Twenty-live hundred Dollar Prize offered by the Press Claims Company." XO BLANKS IN THIS COM PETION. This Is a compctltlcii of rnlhcr'an tintml na ture. It Is common to ofter prizes for the best story, or picture, or architectural plan, nil the competitors risking the loss of their labor and the successful one merelv selling his for the omonn or the prize. But the Press Claims Company's offer Is something entirely differ ent. Each person is asked merely to help him self, and the one who helps him self to the best advantage is tn be rewarded by doing It. The prize is only a" stimulus to do snmethln that would be well worth doing without it. The architect whose competitive plan for a club house ou a certain corner is not occept ed has spent his labor on something of very ittle use to hlin. But the person who patent a simple and useful device In the Press Claims Company's competition, need not worry If he fail to secure a prize. Ee has a substantial result to show for his work one that wil command its value iu the market at any time. The man who uses any article In his daily work ought to know better how to Improve It than the mechanical expert who studies it only from the theoretical point of view. Get rid of the Idea tha'. an iinptoveineut can be too simple to be worth patenting. The simpler Hie better. The person who best succeeds In combining simplicity and popularity, will tet the Press Claims Company's tweiity fivo bun dred dollars. The responsibility of this company may be Judged from the fact I hat its stock is held by abiiiit three hundred of the leading newspapers of the United Slates. Address the Press Claims Compunv, John Wodderhiirn. managing alturuey. Gift i" street A. W., Washington, II. C. G. A. K. Not li K. We take this i pporlunity of iuforming mtr subscribers that the new oonimis dinner of pensions him been iipiointed He is au old soldier, nnd we believe tlmt soldiers nnd their heirs will re ceive jiislice at his umda. We do not uiiticipHte that there will he any radical changes in the HilminiHtrntnin of pension nfl'nirs under the new r.'gime, , We would advise, however, that V. S. soldiers, sailors Htid their heirs, take tcps to make application at otioe, if they hsve not already done so, iu order to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims iu ci8e there should be any future pension legislation. Such legialiition is seldom retroactive. There fore it is nf treat inporthioe that Hp plioitiona be filed in the depaitmeut at the earliest possible dule. If the U. S soldiers, sailors, nr their widows, children or parents desire in foiumtiiiu iu regurd to peiiainn ma'tirs, they should write tn the 1'iess Clnnna Compunv, at WHihliigtnii, D. (!.. nnd the) wil' prepnre and send the necessary application, if tiiey find them entitled nniiei the DUmerniiH laws enacted, for their benefit. A Idri'sw PhKSS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Wkuijkiuh k.n, Mmaing Attor ney, Wsshiujjtuu, D. V., P. O. Box 385 tf. Baking Powder: The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum, Used ia Millions of IIomes-4o Years the Standard. V. v.