Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, August 29, 1893, Image 1

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    gSjti-wjj PAPER.
HEPPNEK GAZETTE.
OFFICIAL
DON'T wvvnrr
An advertisement, sayi Printers' Ink, to
bear fruit in one night. You can't eat
enough in a week to laat you a year, and
you can't advertise on that plan either.
Those who advertise once in three months
forget that most folks cannot remember any
thing longer than seven days.
'He who bji his biz would rise, must
either Imxl or (tttrcrlixr. ,'.-
VIKllKje .. mnwmw
-t 4-f
ELEVENTH YEAH
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1893.
WEEKLY flO. MS.)
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 157. (
IIEITMI! GAZETTE.
SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Al.VAH W. 1'ATTEItSON Bus. Manager.
OTIS PA'ITKKHON Editor
At. f pur year, $1.25 fur six months, 75 ots.
(or three nioiitiiB.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The "XJ.GH.E," of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, is published by the same com
pany every Friday morning. Subscription
price J per year, roradvertislnp: ratoB, addresB
OEI1T X.. PATTEESOIT, Editor and
MautiKer, Long Creek, Oregon, or "liasiette,"
lleppner, Oregon.
THIS PAPKU is kept on rile at K C. Dake's
1 Advertising Agenoy, lit and 65 Merchants
Exchangs, Sail Francisco, California, where cc
racu for advertising oun be uiude for it.
THE GAZETTE'S AUKNTS.
Wagner B. A. IIuuBaker
AYlingtou, 1'hiU Heppner
Long Creek 'I ho Eagle
sh0 . .. Postmaster
Camas Prairie, Oscar De Vaul
Nye, or C. Wright
Hardman, Or Postmaster
Hamilton, Urant Co., Or Postmaster
lone T. J. Carl
Prairie City, Or It. It. Mdlaley
Canyon City, Or., b. L. larrlsh
Pilot. Hock, 0. P. hkoltoll
Itoyville, or ; w
John Day, Or., F. I. Mc alliim
Atl,,.,,,i or John Edington
Pendleton, Or., l'OBtmas er
Mount Vernon, Urant Co., Or Pes master
Shelby, Or Mibb Stella Mott
Fox, lirnnt Co., Or., J. K Allen
Eight Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew Aahbaugh
Upper Khea Creek, B. F. Hovland
Uuiiglus, or I'oBtmaster
l.,nu Um.it. Or K. M. Johnson
uooBcberry J- fcstcb
Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead
Lexington Leach
AN AUKNT WANTKD IN EVKKY CKK01NCT.
UhioN Pacfic Railway-Local card.
No, 111, mixed leaves lleppner 111:00 a. m.
l(), " ar. at Arlington 115 a.m.
II, " leaves " 8:02 p. in.
" li, " ar. at lleppner 6 :20 p. iu, dally
except Sunday.
Kant bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :'-!! a. m.
West leaves " 1 :2ll a. m.
Day trains have been discontinued.
OPnCIAL DISECTOET.
United States OilicialB.
I'l esidnnt H rover Cleveland
Vice-President, Ad.nl HtevenBon
beomlary of Slate Walter Q. Urea tain
Secretary or Treasury John U. Carlisle
Becreiiiry of interior..... ... Hoke Smith
Ijeoie.ary of War Daniel S.l.anjont
Secretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert
KistmaBter-lieueral Wilson 8. liiBsell
Attorney-Ueneral Richard S. Olney
Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
Govornor
Secretary of State
Treasurer
Hupt. Publio Instruction.
Senators
Congressmen
8. Pennoyor
(J. W. MolSride
Phil. Melscliau
li. H. MoKlroy
(J. H.Mitchell
(J.N.Uolph
Dinger Hermann
i W. K. Ellis
Printer , i a ji
( V. A.
W. P.
( It. 8.
Supreme Judges..
. P. Lord
. Dean
Soveuth Judicial District,
Circuit Judge W. L. KradBhaw
I'romouLimr Attorney W. 11. Wilson
Morrow County Officials.
join: Senator Honry lllackman
Iteproaentative J. N-,.H,,.''.W,"
. .......... -e...i..u Julius Kelthly
' CoinmiBBionora Peter Brenner
J. M. Baker.
(rk J. W.Morrow
ui..-irf (ieo, tsohie.
Treasurer W. J. Loezer
AsBBBBor K. li. Shaw
. u.. iBaBrown
School Sup't W. L. Saling
" Coroner T. W. Ayers, J r
HEPfNEB TOWN OFPIOEltS.
jlaym J. K. SlmollB
Couuciimen O. E. Farusworth, M,
Lichtonthal, Otis Patterson, Julius Keithly,
W. A. Johnston, J. L. Yeager.
Keoorder A. A. ltoberts.
Treasurer E. G. Slocnm
Marshal J. W. UasmuB.
Precinct OIHceri".
Justice of the Peace P. J. Hallock
Constable U. W. ltyehard
United States Land Officers.
THE DALLES, OB.
J. W. Lewis ItegiBter
T.B.Lang Heceiver
LA OltANDE, Oil.
B.P, Wilson Register
J.U. llobbins l.eceiver
SCBT SOCIETIES.
Dorio Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev
ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in
their CaBtle Hall, National Bank build
ing. Sojourning brothers cordially in
vited to attend. W. L. Baling, C. C.
W. B Potteb, K. of It. 4 8. tf
KAWLINS POST, NO. 81.
G. A. B.
M nets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of
!BCh month. All veterans are invited to join,
C. C. Boon,
Adjutant, tf
Geo. W. 8mitu.
Commander,
X'zaor'ESSioiT.A.xj.
A A. BOBERTS, Beal Estate, Insur-
ance and Collections. Office in
Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. awtf.
S, P, FLORENCE,
STOCKRAISER
HEPPNEB. OBEGON.
Cattle branded and ear marked aa shown above,
dorses F on right shoulder.
fn Morrow and Umatilla coun.
ties. 1 will pay 100.00 for the arrest and con
fiction of any peraon stealing my stock.
Cure for Colds, Fevers and General Dw
pibty, Small liile Beam!. 26c. per bottle.
VALUABLE
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS
By a special arrangement with the
publishers we are prepared to furnish
I'ltEE to each of our readers a year's
subscription to the popular monthly
agricultural journal, the American
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
ThiB oiler is made to any of our sub
scribers who will pay up all arrearages
on subscription and one year in advanoe,
and to any new subscribers who will pay
one year in advance. The American
Farmer eujoys 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
call promptly. Sample oopies can be
seen at our office.
The Orlclnol
Veto's Unabridg
DIGTIQKQBY.
BY SFKOIAU AKKAINltr.Mll.WT vvnn IrllL
publisherB, ve are able to obtain a number
of tn'- above book, ana propose to lurnisn
,v tn i.,lc h of our suoserluers.
lie dietinnarv Is a necessity In every home.
school and business notise. it nils a vacancy,
iiiwt fnrniHlicH knowleritro which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply. Youugand old, educated and ignorant.
ncll ana poor, biiouiu nave il wiuuii icucu, aim
reler to lis conieuis every uay in tne yeai.
ah Home have asked if this is really the Orig
inal VVehster'B Unabridged Dictionary, we are
able to state wo have learned direct from the
publishers the fact, that this Is the very work
coniDlete on which about forty of the best years
ot the author's life were so well employed in
writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of
Hhnnt. l(H).lHH) words, including the correct spell
ing, derivation and definition of same, and is
the regular standard size, containing about
:1UO,000 square inches of printed Biirface, and is
bound in cioen nan morocco anu Bneeu,
Until further notice wa will furnish this
valuable Dictionary
First To any new subscriber.
Second To any renewal subscriber.
Third To any subscriber now m arrears
who pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, viz:
Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bacl
stamDS. marbled edees, $i-oo.
Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back
stamDS. marbled edges, $1,50.
Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled
edpes, $2.00.
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
age to Heppner.
Jf-As the publishers limit the time and
number of books they will furnish at the low
orlci'H. we advise all who desire to avail them-
selves of this great opportunity to attend to it
at once.
SILVER'S Oil A.MPION
0
iTHE:
THE DAILY-BY MAIL.
Subscription prico reduced as follows:
One Year (by mail) : : $6 00
Six Months " : : 3 00
Three Months " : : ; 1 50
One Month " : . 50
WE WEEKLY BY MAIL.
One Year (in Advance) :
$1 00
The News is the only consistent ciamplon of
silver in the WcBt, and should be in every home
in the WeBt, and in the hands of every miner
and business man in Colorado.
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
THE
Uoiivor, Colo
LUMBER!
T7E HAVE FOR BALE ALL KINDS OK UN
T v dressed Lumoer, id iuiicb 01 neouiiei,
what is known as the
SCOTT SAWMIIjIi
PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH,
- 110 00
" " CLEAR,
- 17 50
rF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD
L J6.00 per 1,000 feet, additional.
L. HAMILTON, Prop.
r. a.
Hamilton, AKvu'UTl
WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES
(Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME GAUD
Two Through Trains Daily.
li l"nm fi 25pm Lv.MinnenpollBArIs.40am!5.4.r,pm
1 -i.m 7 i". Pin l.v. ..St. Paul. ..Ar.ilam .i.0i)piii
h'1: - v...Wnlutli...Ar11.10" 7.:t.pm
l.'i;,pmi7.0-.pm;l.v.. Ashland. . Ar;8. i.n.
7.1.jam!l0.5arnAr... Chicago.. .Lvio.tiop
4. : 1 ii
ll.W
Tickets sold and baitsnce cheeked inrouijr. w
all points ln the United -States and Canada.
Close connection made in Chicago with all
trains doing' East and South.
..... ...u i.,f,.naiinn annlv to your nearest
JAM. C. POND,
ticket agent or
ru, ..... f iu r'
Uen. Pass, and Tkt. Agt. Chicago, 111.
Can be proomed at the drug store of
1. 1 Ayers, Jr.
Next door to City Hotel,
HEPPNEK, : : OREGON.
Equal to lime and sulphur, and much
better for the wool, as it promotes the
rowth rather than damages it,
National Baal et HBDPner.
WM. PENLANI). ED.
President.
K. BISHOP.
Cashier.
T HANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
HEPPNEB. tf OREGON
QUICK TX3MCI3 !
TO
5$ fin Francisco
And all points in California, via tha Mt. bhusta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co
Tha m-nr. hishwav through1 California to all
point East and South. Grand Bcenio lioute
of the Paciho Ooaat. Pullman nunet
Bloopers. Second-class Sleepers
Attachedlto express trains, arfordmg superior
accommodations for second-class passengers.
For rates, tickets, sleeping car reservations,
etc,, call upon or address
R. KOEHLER, Manager, TJ. P. ROGERS, Asst.
Gen. F. !i P. Agt., Portland, Oregon.
Free Medicine !
A Golden Opportunity for bunenng
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Remedies to the People
nn villi OliriTD 9 Wrlteusatonce.expiain-
1JU 1UU uUll'Ln 1 ln
ig your trouoie, aou c
will send you FREE OF CHARGE a full course
of specMy proparcl remedies best su ed to
your case, we warn, yoiu iram,,
We can cure the moBt aggravaieu ;
d'efo'rmitiesare modem and B;'i,e"ti"c'.'f;;'l",i''e,,n
by many year s experience, .... ..
Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair.
N B -We have the only positive cure for Ep
ilepsy ' (llts) and Catarrh. References given.
Permanently located. Old established.
Dr Williams Mkdical and huhoicai. Insti
tute', 710 Market Street, Kan Francisco, Gal.
ARE YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ?
The genius who Invented the "Fifteen" puz
zle, "Pigs in Clover," aim many uu.em,
vented a brand new one, which is going 10 oe
the greatest on record. There Is fun, instruc
tion and entertainment in it. The old and
learned will find as much mystery in it as the
,, nd unsophisticated. This great puzzle
s the property of the New York PresB Club, for
whom it was Invented by Samuel Loyd. the
great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the
movement to erect a great home for newspaper
workers in New York. Generous friends have
given tio.oooln prizes for the successful puzzle
",... ipirm rw.NTH sent to the "PresB Club
uu,i', and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mall.
TlnnrloT OF THIS
journal is limited to aid in the erection
. rot. home for newspaper work-
v... .ito nriA dime to "Press Club
nri Charity Fund," Temple Court,
New York. You will aid a great work and re
ceive by return mall a wonderful puzzle-game
which amuses the young and old, l"e
mathematicians and interests everybody. 1 ublic
spirited merchants have contributed -..,O00
worth of premiums for such as can solve the
mystery. Everything from a no ....
"Stelnway" piano.
DTI) YOU TRY
"PIGS IN CLOVER"
or the "FIFTFEN PUZZLE."
Well the man who invented them has just
completed another little playful mystery for
young and old, which is selling for TEN CENTS
for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for
nwr,aner workers in New York. This puzzle
1. ,v, r.,,nrtv nf the New York Press Club
and generous friends of the club have donated
- .., l,wl.V Ttt.oule.
A..,. I '1 Ml Ul limVK C uiiac i r - .
.,,n. or old. who solve the mystery. There Is
1 ... f .,.,.r,lmn.Mit and instruction in It.
Bend a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by
return mall. Address "Press Club Souvenir,
jemple Court.New York City.
ALL THE
includes the great temperance drink I
Hires BeerJ
lt gives New Life to the Old Folks,
Vk Pleasure to the Parents, h
Health to the Children. W-
aood for AU-Uood All the Time. Jf J
lw A 2 5 cent package makes FiveJ
U.iesureandgfJg
Hijrhest of all in Leavening Power.
Im Powder
ABSOLUTES PURE
IMMIGRANTS.
The Various Employments In
Which They Are Found.
A New Yorker Makes Some yuer Dis
coveries In Joiinieylnff Towards the
faclUc Coast The Vicissi
tude of Fortune.
The men who are of interest in the
west, and of whom most curious stories
mitfht be told, are the eastern men
and the Englishmen who have soupht
it with capital, or who have been driven
there to make their fortunes. Some one
once started a somewhat unprofitable
inquiry as to what became of all the
lost pins. That is not nearly so curi
ous, according to a writer iu Harper's
Weekly, as what becomes of all the liv
ing men who drop suddenly out of our
acquaintanceship or our lives, and whe
are not missed, but wrho are neverthe
less lost. I know now what becomes of
them; they all go west. I met some
men here whom I was sure I had left in
New York, and who told me, on the
contrary, that they had been in the
west for the last two years. They had
once walked Fifth avenue, but they
dropped out of the procession one day
and no one missed them, and they are
out here enjoying varying fortunes.
The brakeman on a freight and passen
ger train in southern Texas was a
lower-class man whom I remembered
at Lehigh university only as an expert
fencer. The conductor on that train
was from the same college town. The
part owner of a ranch, whom I sup
posed I had left looking over papers in
the club, told me he had. not been in
New York for a year, and that his
partner was "Jerry" Black, who, as I
trust no one has forgotten, was one of
Princeton's half backs, and who
should have said, had anyone asked me,
was still in Pennsylvania.
Another man whom I remembered as
a "society" reporter on a New York
paper, turned up in a white apron a
waiter at a hotel m . 1 was some
what embarrassed at first as to whether
or not he would wish me to recognize
him, but he settled my doubts by wink
ing at me over his heavily-loaded tray,
as much as to say it was a very good
joke and that he hoped 1 was appreciat
ing it to its full value. We met later in
the street, and he asked me with the
most faithful interest of those whose
dances and dinners he had once
ported, deprecated a notable scandal
among the people of the four hundred,
which was filling the papers at that
time, and said I could hardly appreciate
the pity of such a thing occurring
among people of his set. Another man
whom I had known very well in New
York turned up in San Antonio with an
entirely new name, wife and fortune,
and verified the tradition which exists
there that it is best before one grows to
know a man too well to ask him what
was his name before he came to Texas.
San Antonio seemed particularly rich in
histories of those who came there to
change their fortunes and who had
changed them most completely. The
English gave the most conspicuous ex
amples of these unfortunates conspic
uous in the sense that their position at
home had been so good and their habits
of life so widely different.
RELICS OF A BY-GONE AGE.
The lied of u firertt Lake Found in a To
ledo 1-JxciivnUou.
The excavations for the foundation of
tile National 1'nion building on Huron
street near Adams, Toledo, bring to
light the relics of a by-gone age, and
furnish plenty of food for study and
contemplation on the part of the geolo
gist. To commence with, this is the
deepest foundation ever put under a
building in the city. The practice here
tofore has been to level the earth off
enough to make a good basement and
then drive piling for the foundation
stones to rest upon. In the case of the
National t'nion building it was deter
mined to have no pile foundation but tx:
dig down into the bowels of the earth
until terra firuia was found. William
Spear received the contract for putting
down the foundation and started a
large force of men at work a few days
ago on the excavation. When the
Bhovelers got down :.b.mt eighteen feet
below the level of the street, or about
nine feet below the Kurfuee of the nat
Uai earth, they slni'. k a vein of sand.
71 i?. f :und necessary to put cribbing
in to keep the win-l from rushing in.
After digging a few inches deeper it
was found that if. was a genuine, lake
of river sand and -ravel. As it was
thrown out and carefully examined, it
contained traces of en age of vegeta
tion, anterior to the daysnf the landing
of Columbus. I.:ii';.'e walnuts, butter,
nuts, hickory r.-.its. :.hel!s and impres
sions of water i peeiesof various kinds
were found in the s.uud, also trees aud
vegetable remains.
Jlundrcdsof people :,uw the strange
and mysterious things hidden for centu
ries a few feet below the Kin-face. The
opinion of all present, according to the
Blade, was that old Lu':c Krie at one
time rolled and tossed in all its gran
deur and fury over the very :;pt whore
an immense temple is about to lu
erected as a mom-.ment of charity to
the widows and orphans. The sand is
purely lake wind and gravel and every
one who has made any study of tin
strata of the eartii claims that a large
river or lake at one time existed over
the very spot where the foundation is
being nut down. The indications ar
Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
mat tue Ixxly of water was not a river,
for the sand is too deep and compact,
and resembles the bottom of the lake
where sand is taken from for building
purposes. Mr. Spear says that he lias
put in many foundations, but never
struck unythin;? like it before, it is
claimed that a similar vein was struck
several years ago while a sewer was
being built in the rear of St. Patrick's
institute, but the sewer diggers knew
nothing about geology ami did not give
the matter a moment's attention. Fol
lowing this location it would show that
all that portion of Toledo along Six
teenth street, extending to the river in
both directions, was at onetime the bed
of Lake Erie or some other equally
large body of water.
TO BRING THE MOON
NEARER,
a Gigantic
A French Savant Proposes
Crystal Mirror.
M. Francois Deloncle, a French
savant, and deputy for the Basses
Alpes, has a marvelous project in hand
which he hopes to see completed in
time to astonish mankind at the Paris
exhibition of 1900. Though the moon
is 240,000 miles distant from the earth,
says the London Daily Chronicle, M.
Dtiloncle thinks he can construct an ap
paratus which will enable us to ex
amine that luminary at very close
quarters.
The idea has been expounded by the
author before a French scientific
society, and M. Deloncle says, in sub
stance, that the only obstacle to a close
observation of celestial bodies is the
relative imperfection of instruments,
and that all that is required is an en
largement and improvement of present
instruments. Astronomers, says M.
Deloncle, have reckoned that the image
of the moon can be brought quite close
to the earth by means of a crystal
mirror eight meters in diameter, but
which, owing to the thickness required,
would weigh about eight tons. He has
consulted various opticians in Paris
amdthcy are prepared to execute the
work before the year 1000.
There remains, however, the ques
tion of the structure which would be
required to hold this gigantic mirror,
and upon this point M. W auriee Loewy,
a distinguished French astronomer,
says that while in principle M. Del
oncle's scheme is possible, there are
enormous difficulties in the way of
its realization, the chief of which,
far as the exhibition is concerned, is
that the apparatus must be erected on
a mountain about two miles in height
m order to secure the proper atmos
pheric conditions. If this and other
difficulties were surmounted, says M.
Loewj', there would be some very re
markable results, for it would be pos
sible to clearly distinguish in the moon
objects about the size of a four-story
house.
MURDEROUS INSANITY.
Illusions . of Tounj and Smell Which
l'rompt the Sifeerer to T.iko Life.
The incipient paranoiac may hear
voices about him and for a time be able
to convince himself of their unreality.
But sooneror laterthesc sounds become
so tangible that they have the full force
and import of actual voices. At first he
hears them only when people are actu
ally speaking, his mind merely misin
terpreting what he hears. This perver
sion is technically termed an illusion.
But at last he hears words and sentences
when no real sound comes to his ears,
Ihe North American Ueview says.
These are true hallucinations. Perver
sions of other senses usually precede or
follow this one. Illusions of touch and
smell arc common. The former lead to
a belief in invisible spirits that touch
the body, and the latter convince the
patient that attempts arc being made to
poison him with noxious gases. When
to this cluster of perverted sensations
hallucinations of sight arc added, the
galaxy is complete, and the victim
moves and has his being in an ideal
world peopled with odors, tastes, sounds,
and sights that are shut out from the
common herd. A patient who had
reached this stageoutlines his own feel
ings as follows: "I have gradually come
to a positive assurance that the thoughts
of my mind are shared by others, and
that they act from that knowledge with
a view of influencing me and directing
my actions; that the appearances of an
imate nature also correspond to my
thoughts in such a way as to check and
direct them; that ordinary speech and
language are so perverted as to have a
double meaning, the secondary sense
relating to my actions or thoughts. All
is so constituted as to form a distinct
and new and strange world in which,
however, most objects remain familiar."
The general merchandise establish.
meut formerly owned by Ootliu & McFar-
iauu, lias lately changed bauds, now be
nig nuder ttio control and management
of Tho McFarland Mercantile C'ompanv,
which continues business at theold stand
with a larger stock than ever. a
CALIFORNIA'S QUEER CAVERN-
A Wonder of the Pacific (:.at Which Hal
Never llevA Explored.
On the north side of Table mountain
and near its top is an opening in the
lava that has since its early days been
known as "the lion's den." It was sc
named from the fact that for years it
was the lair of a band of ferocious Cal
ifornia lions that, when the country
was largely devoted to sheep raising, j
made mighty depredations upon the
ttocks and caused the owners much an-
noyauce and loss. VV hen pursued the
animals would seek refuge in this den
and no hunter would dare to enter it.
The ground about the entrance was
covered with the bones and remnants
of sheep and other animals. With the
increase of population the lions have
gradually disappeared, although as late
as last spring two of the animals were
seen to enter the cave. Oroville Mer
cury says no known niau has ever pen
etrated this cave to its fullest depth.
The mouth is about four or five fee
high and three feet wide and the open
ing descends with a sharp decline foi
about two hundred feet. Further than
this it has never been i-xplored. Now
however, a party of young men haw
made arrangements to explore it, and,
if possible, penetrate to its bottom.
That it is of great depth is certain, for
one can stand at the opening and heav
great stones down the declivity and the
sound will gradually die away in the
distance. T he 3'oung men have pro
cured several hundred feet of ropes,
torches and ladders and will thoroughly
explore the cavern.
What adds a peculiar interest to the
expedition and gives zest to the explor.
ers is the well-known fact that in the
heydey of his career as a bandit Joaquin
Murietta and his band of faithful fol
lowers made the recesses of Table
mountain the base of their operations
in this section. From there they would
swoop down on the miners, and then,
laden with gold dust, retreat to the
mountains. Search as they might, the
officers could not locate the m. It has
been supposed by many this same cave
was where the famous outla w secreted
himself. It may be, too, that deep
down in the bowels of the earth Joa
quin hid the greater portion of his ill-
gotten, but nevertheless just as potent,
wealth.
Backlen's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for outs
bruises, sores, uloers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, ohilblains
oorns and all skin ernptions, and posi
tively ourea piles, or no pay required. It
is guaranteed to Rive perfeot satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 25 oents per
box. For sale by alooam-Johnaon Drug
Company.
THE WESTERN PEDAU0GUK.
We are in receipt of the May number
of our state school paper. It exoeed
any of tha former numbera in value.
The paper this month oontaina many
new and valuable features. The illus
trated series on the schools of the state
is introduced by a paper on the Frienda
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon.
These papers cannot fail to be of great
value both to the schools and to the
publio.
There are also several fine articles
by our best writers and the departments
"Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts,"
"Eduoational Newa" "The Oracle
Answers, Correspondents," etc., eaob
contain much valuable reading for
teachers or parents. The magazine
has about 60 pages of matter, well
printed and arranged. We pronounoe
the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa
tional monthly on the coaet.
Everyone of our readers should have
the paper if they are at all interested
in education. No teacher school direc
tor or student can get aloDg well with
out it. We will receive subscriptions
at this office. Price only $1.00 a year.
When desired we will send the Western
Pedagogue and Gazette one year to one
address for 83.00. Call and examine
sample copies. Teaohors, direotora and
parents, now is the time tn subscribe, tf
PRIZES ON PATENTS.
How to Get Twenty-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing,
The Winner has a clear Gift 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
follows and you may see a way to do It.
Tho Press Claims Company devotes much
attention to patents. It has handled thousands
of applications for inventions, but it would
like to handle thousands more. There Is plenty
of Inventive tallent at lare In this country
needing nothing hut encouragement to produce
practical results. That encouragement the Press
Ulanns company propose to give.
NOT MO IIAKU AS IT KEEITIN.
A patent strikes most people as an appalling
ly formidable thing. The idea is that an in
ventor must he a natural genius, like Edison or
Hell : that he must devote years to delving in
complicated mechanical problems and that he
mtiKt spend a fortune on delicate experiments
before he can get a new device to a patentable
degree of perfection. This delusion the com
pany dcHiros to dispel. It desires to get into
the head 01 the public a Clear comprehension
of the fact that it Is not the great, complex, and
expensive inventions that bring the lieMt returns
to their authors, nut me little, snnplu, and
cheap ones the thing that Heem so absurdly
trivial that the average citizen would feel
somewhat ashamed of l.rlnglug them to the
attention 01 the rntcnl oinco,
Edison savs that the i.rultts he has received
from tho patents 011 all his marvelous Inven
tions have not been sullicient to pay the cost
of his experiments, nut mo man wno con
ceived the idea of fastening a bit of rubber
cord to a chilli s bull, so that It would come
hack to the baud when thruwu, made a forbuue
out of his scheme. Ihe modern sewLug-lua
i-hlneisa miracle of ingenuity the product
of the toll of hundreds of buy brains through
a hundred and fifty years, but tho whole bril
liant result rests upon (he simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at the latlut In
stead of at the other cud.
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard.,
THE I.ITTI.K TIIICiS THE IHOKT
VALUABLE.
Comparatively few people regard themselves
aa Inventors, but almost every body has been
struck, atone time 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.
"Why don't the railroad company make Us car
windows so that they can be slid up and down
without breaking the passengers' back?" ex
claims the traveler. "If I were running the
road I would make them in such a way."
"What was the man who made the saucepan
thinking of?" grumbles the cook. "He 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 a man
who is latelfor breakfast. "If I were in the
business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip
out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my
neck
And the various sufferers forgot about their
grievances and began to think of something
else. If they would set down the next con
venient opportunity, put their ideas about car
windows, saucepans and collar buttons Into
practical shape, and then apply for patents
they might find themselves as independently
wealthy as the man who invented the iron
umbrella ring, or the one who patented
the fifteen puzzle.
A TEOIPTIBIGOI'FER.
To induce the people to keep track of their
bright ideas and see what there in them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
prize.
To tbe person who submits to It
the simplest and most promising
invention, from a commercial
point of view, the company will
Kive twenty-five hundred dollars
in cash, in addition to refunding
the fees for securing; a patent.
It will also advertise the inven
tion free of charge.
This offer is subject to the following condi
tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent Uor
his invention through the company. He must
first apply for a preliminary search, the cost of
which will be live dollars. Should this
seach show his invention to he 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, whether he secures a prize
or not, the inventor will have a patent that
ought to be a valuable property to htm. The
prizo will be awarded by a jury consisting of
three reputable patent attorneys of Washing
ton. Intended competitors should fill out the
following blank, aud forward it with their
applicatisn:
" , , 1893.
"I submit the within described Invention la
competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar
Prize offered by the Press Claims Company."
NO BLANKS IN THIS CO.tlPliTlOJM.
This is a competition of rather an uausal na
ture. It is common to; offer prizes for the best
story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the
competitors risking the loss of their labor and
the successful one merely selling his for tho
amouu of the prize. But the PresB ClaimB
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 to be rewarded by doing (it.
The prize is only a stimulus to do something
that would be well worth doing without it.
The architect whose competitive plan for a
club house on a certain corner is not occept
ed has spent his labor on something of very
ittle use to him. But the person who patents a
simple aud useful device in the Press Claims
Company's competition, need not worry if he
fail to secure a prizo. He has a substantial
result to show for his work one that wll
command its value iu the market at any
time.
The man who uses any article In his dally
work ought to know better how to improve it
than the mechanical expert who studies it
ouly from the theoretical point of view. Get
rid of the idea that au improvement can be too
simple to be worth patenting. The simpler the
better. The person who best succeeds is.
combining simplicity aud popularity, will get
tho Press Claims Compauy'B twenty-five hua
dred dollars.
The responsibility of this company may !
Judged from the fact that Its Btock Is held by
about three hundred of the leading newspapers
of the United States.
Address the Press Claims Company. Joia
Wodderburu, managing attorney, 01H F street
w. w., wasuiugiou, d. c.
G. A. R. NOT1CK.
We take this opportunity of informiig
our subscribers that the new commis
sioner of pensions haa been appointed
lie is an old soldier, and we belifiT
that Holdiers and their heirs will re
ceive justice at his bauds. We do not
anticipate that there will be any raditial
changes in the administration of psnsioa
affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that V. B,
soldiers, Bailors and their heirs, take
steps to make application at onee, if
they have not already done so, in order
to secure the benefit of the early filing;
of their claims in case there should bo
any future pension legislation. Snob
legislation is seldom retroactive. There'
fore it is of great importance that ap
plications be tiled in the department at
the earliest possible date.
If the U. S. soldiers, Bailors, or their
widows, ohildren or parents desire in
formation in regard to pension matters,
they should write to the Press Claims
Company, at Washington, D. C, ami
they will prepare and send the necessary
application, if they find them entitled!
tinder the numerous laws enacted foir
their benefit. Address
PIJEHS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John WuuDmmuHN, Manaj'rng Attur
ney, Washington, 1), C, P. O. liox 3hC
tf.
Baking
Powder.