Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, October 17, 1893, Image 1

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    Sis
!'
Portland Library
vviv PAPER
HEPPNER GAZETTE,
OFFICIAL
ISTO RISK,
NOTHING RISKED,
NO THING MADE.
top
j The man ;ho doesn't ftdvtnlae, doetn't
get the cwh.
Theman who fulvcuittui, gets The etsh.
Notice It.
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUFSDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1893.
WEEKLY WO. ISM. (
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 171.1
KLKVKNTII YEAR
ef
LM I WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY
Al.VAH W. PATTERSON ..Bin. Manager,
OT18 PATTEB80N Editor
A! j-a.Si per year, 1.!5 tor mi months, 75 ots.
(or three mourns.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
TTAn.T.B " ol Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, Is published by the same eoni-
VUU" '' ".T.6 JjHu. mnrililior. Subscription
Sr Moor year. lValverti8Tiigrates,a.ldreBB
OISiiT Xi. IF-A-TXEKSOSST. Honor auu
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or
Ueipner, Oregon.
VALUABLE PREEN L
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS
raet for advertising can be made fur it.
TUB UAZETTE'S Kli fiNTS.
.,..B. A. HunBaker
". PhlU Heppner
The bugle
Postmaster
. Oscar De Vaul
" U. 0. Wright
Pos:ni Bter
. ..Postmaster
T. J. Carl
.K. K. McHale;
vytguer
Arlington,
Long Creek,
Echo.
Camas Prairie,
Nye, Or
Hardmau, Or.,. ...
Hamilton, Urant Co., Or.
lone
Prairie City, Or ,
IMot Hock,. j,(, snow
Unyvlllo, Or., ;;f I. McCallum
Shelby, or... , Fi A1ieu
eKoT :V.V.VMrB:A,idreVugh
tsy a epecinl arrangement- with the
publishers we ere prepared to furnish
FREE to each of our readers a year's
subscription to the populur monthly
agricultural journal, the American
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
This offer 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-
the American Farmer for one
... . .1 L 1 ,
year, It will be to your auvaniingB "
call promptly. Sample oopies can be
seen at our office.
U liner Rhea Creek, r-"f..'.,r
H i. .1 .u 111" l-UHlllt-
Lone Kock.Or..
Uooseberry
Condon, Oregon
AS AUKNT WANTgD Ili KV1CRY PRECINCT,
R. M. JohiiBon
. .. J. K. K teb
Uprhert. HalSteild
jas. i.eaeu
Umoh Pacfic Railway-Local card.
No. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m.
' in " ar. at Arlington 1-lsa.m.
, i d H-tn n. m.
o' " ar. at Heppner 6:20 p. m daily
itxcept Sunday.
Eaat bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :T .
West leaves l
Day trains have been discontinued.
trneiAii biseotoby.
The ( r-I fc 1 1
IT 1
sters Un:
DIGTIQHHBY.
PRIZES ON PATENTS.
Can be proouied at the drag store of
1. W. Ayers, Jr.
Next door to City Hotel,
HEPPNER, : : OREGON.
Equal to lime and sulphur, and much
better for the wool, as it promotes the
growth rather than damages it.
QCIOK TXIVE EJ I
TO
JStin Francisco
ud all points iu California, via the Mt Bhaeta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
The great highway through -California to all
points East and South. (irand Scenic Route
of the Pacific Coast. Pullman Buffet
Sleepers. 8eoond-clas Sleepers
Attached.,to express trainB, altnrding superior
-tccouimodations tor Becond-class passengers. .
For rates, tickets, sleeping oar reservations,
to., call upon or address
K KOEHLEK, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst.
'4n. F & P. Agt.. Portland. Oregon.
How to Get Twenty-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing.
The Winner hat a clear Gift of a Small
Fortune, and the Losers Have Patents
that may Bring them in Still More.
Would joullke to make twenty-five hundred
dollars' If you would, read caremuy wnai
follows and you may ee a way to do It.
The Press Claims Company devotes much
attention to patents. It has nanaiea tnousanus
of applications for Inventions, but it would
like to handle thousands more. There Is plenty
of inventive tallent at large In this country
needing nothing but encouragement to proauce
practical results. Thatencouragementthe Press
Claims Company propose to give.
NOT SO HAKD AS IT SEEMS
A patent Btrlkea most people as an appalling
ly formidable thing. The Idea is that an in
ventor must be a natural genius, me noisou or
Bell; that he must devote years to delving in
(omnlicated mechanical problems and that he
must spend a fortune on delicate experiments
before he can get a new device to a pateniaoie
degree of perfection. This delusion the com
nanv desires to dispel. It desires to get Into
the head of the public a clear comprehension
of the fact that It Is not the great, complex, and
expensive inventions that bring the best returns
to their authors, but the little, simple, and
oheap ones the things that seem so absurdly
trivial that the average cltiien would feel
somewhat ashamed of bringing them to the
attention of the Patent Office.
Edison says that the proflts he has received
Irom the patents on all his marvelous Inven
tions ave not been sufficient to pay tne cost
of his experiments. But the man who con
ceived the idea of fastening a bit of rubber
cord to a child's ball, so that it would come
back to the hand when thrown, made a fortune
out of his scheme. The modern sewing-ma
chine is a miracle of lugenuity-the product
a hundred and Bfty years, but the whole bril
liant result rests upon the simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at the point in
stead of at the other end.
of the toll of hundreds of busy brains through
TUR LITTLE THINGS THE HUNT
combining simplicity and popularity, will get
the Press Claims Company's tweuty-fivo hun
dred dollars.
The responsibility of this company may be
judged from the fact that its stock is held by
about three hundred of the leading newspapers
of the United Htates.
Address the Press Claims Company, JofiB
Wodderburn, managing attorney, 618 E street
w. W., Washington. O. C.
ti. A. K. MOI1CK.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
U PI
of tl
jpici'Ia, AltKANUEMEMT WITH THE
ublisherB, e aro able to obtain a number
above book, ana propoBe to xuruisn
noDV to each ol our subscribers.
necessity in every home,
It nils a vacancy,
United States Officials.
.....Mrtunt Grover Clevelund
vVres'idei t Ad ai Bieveueon
Si inrv of War Daniel B. Laniont
rSarTolfe: &V,C8
PoBimasier-Ueneral W'?a ?. ,u,t
Alt.ir. ey-Ueueria Kichard B Olney
Sh. relar of Agriculture J. Btorlum .Vlur.o,.
suite ot Oregon.
Bupt. Public instruction g. Mcjijuj
Benatore (J. N.Uolph
Congressmen.
Priuter
i Biuger Hermann
I w. tt. 1SU1B
Frank O. Baker
i). A. Jloore
Beau
ilicial llixtl'icl.
. W. L. ilradhaw
' W. H. Wil n
A. Aloo
W. P. "in
It. B. Heat
Surveyor...
school Sup t....
'rouer
Supreme Judges
SuyvuthJu
CmuuI judge
).-nnHiiiuug Atiomey
Morrow County Official".
BouHtor... "nff "'"V)1':1
f::;, v Xi:: : : :: :::::::::::: Keiu
t; iiumwHiuuent 1,B' "
.I.W.Morrow
ireasurer W.J. Li bm
,.r; 'lea Browu
W. L. Baling
...T. W.Ayeio, J i
UKPPJIKB TOWN omOBBS.
J. R.imonB
W.A. Imiubtou, J- L. YnuKor.
.tctnJt-i
frt'tteuiw
ilwBhtil
Fn-cinet Offierp.
S.-.v:r.r::wVd
United states liaud Orhiien.
THE DALLKS, OK,
J. W. Lewis
1'. 8. Lang
LA GRANDE, OB.
tit dictionary Ib
.nhnnl nuit hllHilieHS hOUSC.
c,h fnrnUhH k now ledire which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant,
rich and poor, should have it within reach, and
reier to ICS COUiem evuiy uay iu mo
As some have asked if thia Is really the Orig
inal Webster's Unabridged Oictionary, we are
able to state we have learned direct from the
itllhllHnArH mR IHl i. LIIBb MUB ID U1V VOIJF
.nnx.Utu ml Wlllf.n fLDOIlL lOfLV Ol Lll UCBL VeaiB
ol the author's llle were bo won eiupioyeu iu
writing. It coutams me enure vocaouiary oi
,,hm,t nio nun unniH. including the correct spell
ing derivation and detiiiltion ol same, and is
the regular standard size, containing about
.HW.IHJO square llicnes ui jijiiwu buihis,i.u "
bound in ClOvn uail iuuiuui;u u snot,,,.
Until further notice we will furnish this
valuable Dictionary-
First To any new subscriDer.
Second To any renewal subscriber,
Third To any subscriber now in arrears
who pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, viz:
Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bad
stamps marbled edges, Si-oo.
Half Mo occo, bound, gilt side and back
stamps, marbled edges. $1.50,
Full SheeD bound, leather label, marbled
rtdges, $s.oo.
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
ige to Heppner.
-As the publishers limit the time and
..r;.Tr nf linnka thev will furnish at the low
nrices. we advise all who desire to avail them
selves 01
it once.
i,hls great opportunity to attend to it
SILVEK'ri CHiMWON
SHSTHE
, ,A. A. Kobertb.
... K. G- Btocum
,J, W. ltasuiub.
,...K gie r
...Iteoeiv r
if.
THE DAILY BY MAIL
Subscription price reduced as follows
One Year (by mail)
Six Months "
Thre Months "
ne Month "
B.F, Wi'Bon...
J.U Uubbins..
Beginter
Heoeiver
3EOEET SOC1BTIBS.
Uonc Lodge No. p K. of P. meet ev-
iQ ery Tuenday evening at 7.8 o clock il
1Xa their Caetie Hall, National Hank build-
'i(3. inn. Sojourning brothers oimhallv in-
W R PoTTEB. K. of li.AS. tf
UAWLINS POST, N . 81.
(i. A. K,
,M.i Lexington, Or., the last Saturday
. mouth. All veteru are invited Ui
('. lioon.
Adinlant, tf
join.
Gbo. W. Smith.
Couimuudei
a ' A. ROBERTS, Rt-al Eetate, Insnr
ance and Collecttous. Oflioe i.
mitiotl Chambers, Heppner. Or. swtf.
S. P. FLORENCE,
$6 00
3 00
1 50
50
(HE WEEKLY-BY MAIL
One Year (in Advance) :
$1 00
The News is the only consistent c .a'rplon of
silver in the West, and should be In every home
1 the West, and In the hands of every miner
mid business mall In Colorado.
Send ill your subscriptions at once.
Address,
Denver. Colo
WM. PENLANO, KD. R BISHOP.
President. Cashier.
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
XCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
HEPPNER. tf OREGON
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers that .the new eoiumis-
siouer of pensions has been aponiuted
He is an old soldier, and we believe
that soldiers and their heirs will re
ceive justioe at his bands. We do not
anticipate that there will be any radmal
changes in the administration of ponsioi
affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that tJ. 8
soldiers, sailors 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 claimB iu case there should be
any future pension legislation. Suob
legislation is seldom retroactive. There
fore it is of reat importance that ap-
rilioatioua be filed in tbe department al
the earliest possible date.
If the TJ. S. soldiers. Bailors, or their
widows, ohildren or parents desire in
formation in regard to pension matterB,
they should write to tbe Press Claims
Company, at Washington, D. C, und
they will prepare and send the neoessarj
application, if they find them entitle!
under the numeronB laws enaoted foi
their benefit. Address
PRESS CLAIMB COMPANY,
John W'boderburn, Managing Attor
uey, Washington, D 0., P. O. Box 38;
tf.
THE WESTEllN PEDAU0UIJE.
E9 Mr
I Baking
1 tTh J
romier
ABSOLUTE! PURE
in 1 sv.rocs, ana
of bacon grease
the route goes down along the river into
a narrow valley for twenty miles.
Lower and lower descends the road,
warmer and warmer grows the climate,
higher and higher rise the mighty walls
of sandstone, until we find ourselves
shutout from the busy world and travel
ing down Into what seems a labyrinth,
deep gorges, narrow canyons and little
Free , Medicine !
A Golden Opportnuity for Suffering
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Remedies to the People
nn Villi CllPECB ( Write us at once, explain
)U 1 UU OUffrClt f inr vour trouble, and Wf
...01 nA -..a,. irot,-R fiff cu a KfiK a full course
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
vour case. e hbi iuui iewiuiuouUB..v.
We can cure the most aggravated diseases of
both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and
(r.,miiiftrA modern and scientific, acquired
by many year s experience, which
uuaraniee a .ure. no iiufcucnp,.,.
K B We have the only positive cure for Ep-
Ilcpsv (fits) and Catarrh. References given.
rermaneiitty locaieu. um wmu,..
n w iniMo Uenlro. ANn SURGICAL IH8TI
tute, 719 Market street, San Francisco, Cal.
ARL YOU ANY: GOOD AT PUZZLES?
L U M B E R !
rtt HAVE FOR HALE ALL KINDS OF UN
V dreBsed Lumber, 16 miles of Heppner, at
. hat Is known as the
SOOTT S A"VA7"IV1IIjI-i.
EK I.OI0 FEET. KDI'OH.
CLEAR.
110 00
17 sn
F OKI.IVEKF.D IN HEPPNER, WILL AM!
I ss.nn per 1,000 feet, additional.
The genius who invented the "Fifteen" pnz-
zle. "Pigs iu Clover," and many otners, nas in
vented a brand new one, which Is going to be
the greatest on record. There is fun, instruct
tton and entertainment In It. The old and
learned will And as much mystery In it as the
voungand unsophisticated. This great puzile
s the property of the New York Press Club, for
whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd, tne
great puzzleist, to be sold for the benefit of the
movementto erect a great home for newspaper
workers in New York. Generous friends have
given $25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "press ciud
Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mail.
Exrex-r Reader OF THIS
lournal is invited to aid in the erection
of a great home for 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-gnrac
which amuses the young and old, bailies the
mathematicians and interests everybody. Public
spirited merchants have contributed M,000
worth of premiums for such as can solve the
mystery. Everything from a "Knox" hat to
"8teinway" piano.
Dili YOU THY
"fIGS IN CLOVElt'
or the "FIFTFEN PUZZLE."
Well,' the man who invented them has just
completed another little playful mystery for
voungand old, which Is selling for TUN CENTS
for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for
newspaper workers In New York. This puzzle
Is the property of the New York Press Club
and generous friends of the club have donated
over 25,0O0 to provide prizes for lucky people,
young or old, who solve the mystery. There is
slot of entertainment ana instruction, in it.
Send a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by
return mall. Address "Press Club Souvenir,"
xemple Conrt.New York City.
VALUABLE.
Comparatively few people regard theraselveB
as inventors, but almost every body has oeen
struck, atone time or another, with ideas that
seem calculated to reduce some of the little
frictlous of life. Usually such Ideas are dis
missed without further thought.
"Why don't the railroad company make its 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 art" grumbles the cook. "He never
had to work over a stove, or he wouia nave
known how it ought to have been fixed."
Hang such a collar button!' growlB aman
who is latefor 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
Dractlcal 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
he fifteen puzzle.
A TEMPTING OFFER.
To Induce tbe people to keep track of their
orlght ideas Hod see what there in them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
irize.
To the person who ulimtti to it
I lie , simple! and moat promising
invention, from a commercial
point of view, tbe company will
five twem y-tl ve hundred dollar,
iu cakh, In addition to refunding
the fees for securing a patent.
It will also advertise the inven.
Hon free of charge.
This offer IsBUbJect to the following condi
tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent for
his Invention through the company. He must
first apply for a preliminary search, the cost of
which will be Ave dollars. Should this
seach show his Invention to be unpatentable,
he can withdraw without further expense.
Otherwise he will be expected to complete tiU
application and take out a patent Iu 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 thai
ought to be a valuable property to him. The
prize will be awarded by a jury consisting of
three reputable patent attorneys of Washing
ton. Intended competitors should fill out the
following blank, and forward It with their
application:
We are in receipt of the May number
of our Btate school paper. It eioeed
any of the former numb .rs ir. valu ;.
The paper thia month contains mam
new aud valuable features. Tbe illus
trated series ou the schools of the statt
is introduced by a paper on the Frieud
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon
These papers cannot fail to be of grea
value both to the schools and to tb
public
There are also several fine articli
by ourbttst writers and the department
"Current Eveuts,""Saturdny Thought-i.'
"Educational News" "The Oram
Answers, Correspondents," eto., eao
oontmn much valuable reading
teachers or parents. The magazii.
has about 50 pages of matter, wei
priuted and arranged. We pronouue
the Western Pedagogue the beat eduon
tiooal monthly on tbe coast. '
Everyoue of our readers should bv
tbe paper it lliey are ut all inleresh
in education. No teacher school direc
tor or student can get along well will -out
it. Wo will receive subscript. 011
at this office. Price only 81.00 a yeai
When desired we will send the Wester
Pedagogue and (lazette one year to on.
address for $3.00. Call and examim
ample copies. Teachers, directors am
parents, now ib i tie rime i suoscnue. 1
ana sun-.-neti tr.:v.pu
usually fried in a pinvy
and Hour.
A Thanksfrivin bunt in the valley Of
the little river is worth a trip, if any
thing in that lino can compensate for a
twenty or fifty-mile trip over bare
rocks with the thermometer at one hun
Hrod nnd ton tlpirroo.. There are no
end of turkevs in the vallev. As vou ! sunny valleys that seem toenjoy eternal
walk up the creek great flocks of them, ! summer. These valleys are usually but
both the big black fellows and the a hundred leet wide and rarely extend
smaller bronze turkeys, swarm up the along the river more than a quarter of
banks into the brush like quail. One mile, but the soil is rich and the vege
of them will carry away as much lead tation grows luxuriantly in this semi
as a deer, and there are all sorts of tropical climate."
stories about turkeys getting away The writer says he had never seen be
with one wing and one leg broken, lore such awful walls of rock and such
The artist at the business shoots oft the vistas of beauty as he found in this part
turkey's head. A man who would use of Utah. "Talk of Yellowstone park,
a shotgun under the circumstances talk of Yosemite, talk of the Grand can
would "ground-sluice" quail, if he would yon of the Colorado," he declares, "this
not fish for trout with giant powder. region is more in majesty than all of
Half a dozen birds make a tremen- them. There are leading out of the
dou8 bag, about as much as a pack Grand Wash, a stream tributary to the
mule can carry out of the valley, for Dirty Devil, narrow canyons whose
they grow to a marvelous size. Old- passagewayB are but ten to thirty feet,
timers say that gobblers weighing but whose sides run up perpendicularly
thirty pounds have been taken out ol two thousand feet, and two of these
the Prieto canyon. narrow canyons lead into mighty am
phitheaters framed out of the sand-
THE FALL OF SEBASTOPOL. stone. These vast amphitheaters are
made larger and larger through the
Amid Flames and Fearful Explosion the years as the storms wash down their
liusslans Departed. sides and carry the sand thus washed
I went back to my uneasy couch, away down through the narrow gorge
about two o'clock, but I was speedily into the Dirty Devil, and thence down
aroused by an awful explosion, writes to the Colorado and into the sea." He
William Howard Russell in Scribner's. found spanning one of the canyons a
I hastened to my lookout post again, natural bridge seventy feet wide and
The flames were spreading all over the twelve hundred feet above the bed of a
city. It was an ocean of fire. At 4 a, torrent Echoes in the recesses were
m. the camps, from sea to valley, were multiplied a thousand times, the bark
aroused by an awful shock the de- of a dog seeming to be taken up by a
struction of some great magazine behind multitude of curs. He came across a
the Redan. In quick succession one, family settled upon a tract 01 tweiye
two, three, four explosions followed, acres on the banks of the Dirty Devil,
At 4:45 a. m. the magazines of the Flag-. that lay between walls two thousand
staff Bastion and Garden butteries ex-0 feet high. The climate in that seques
ploded. The very earth trembled at ' tcred spot was mild as June, although
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best aid ve iu the world for cut
ruiaes, sores, uioers, sail rueum, icir
. . . , . , i u: 1 1.1 .. ...
sores, tetter, ('.Happen uauue, uuuuium
corns and all skin ernptions, and poh
lively ourea piles, or no pay required. I
ia guaranteed to give perlect satisfaction
or mone refunded. Price 25 cents pi
box. For sale by Slooum-Johnson Drm
Company.
If you want to buy groceries, anci
bread stuff oheap, go to the EDterprtsi
(inicory. Kirk & Buhl, proprietors, a
O. A
I. HAMILTON. Prop.
Hriiiillton, MAii'ur
STOCK RAISER !
HKPPNKH. llKKGON
Cattle nran.ledand .wrmarked as shown above.
Horses F on light shoulder.
Arhl 10" 7.sspm 1
Arl(Vaml:t0pm
Lvlf00p"i! 45"
I J
. ,c,i 'iinmll.v Mlnnpsoo is a ri.S"m in. mom
I.i'.nm 7 l.'ipm i.v...ni. t ,ii...n, ."""r-p"
10 SOnin't ipm l.v. . jniiinii. .
1 ISpm 7'opnl I V AsniBim.
7.15am lfl.5amr .Chicago
Tickets sold and liairgnire checked through to
all points in the I'liileil States and '" ..
rlosp connerTion n'mie in -.nou n .... ...
trains fining East and South.
! ..... . .r.r.l tn vail rtMrpMl
..H nm.fill. mnll. I ror lllll imui u,u -kkV --A"--
AI-C0UN Ci.MKAI. I. IMS
( Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME CARD
Two Through Trains Daily,
3009 PARCELS 0? MAIL" FUI
ti, ,m FOR 10 1-CENT STAMP!
5T3 MSiitfarrlr if KSsff 'wiVS
days will be for 1 year boldly
prioieo od gummea
labels. Only Iltrectory
guaranteeing 1X3,000
customers; Troru puh
ilshsn and manufac
turers you'll receive
probably, thousands ol
valuable nooks, papers,
sauiiiles,lxuoraztne,etc-
All fi-ea and each Daire,
With one ofyoorprtnled address .lubeii
ppjited Ihereon. KTBAI We wll
also print and prepay postage on M u
ronr label adrlrese to you ; wl.tc!
stlrk on vsir envelop, bo's, en-., n
prevent llielr being lost. J. A. W in.
Imv'i-, peril Mlnressln your l.lghiniii
VBieLM-jM" Dfrertorv I've received my Wind iw
lV''US libels and over 3000 PswfU ,
-Sf Mnll. My MMreiMm "" n'l'T".
$ ?'' .'' a-ni-'i-' i-i-Mii-i-i"- a"0 niit.inf h-i.-: I .'
t If V HH" -i-p n. ''.tf d-i'i". cu vultl-iM r - Pi-
lie'tevW' " ,!" "' !l ' W.iii-.'
fjr- WORLD'S FAIR DIRECTORY CO.,
No. 117 Frankford and Olrard Aves., Philadel
phia, Pa.
jp. .ilk "ji
X WfTJL
i- as. iaT
"I submit the within described invention in
competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar
Prize offered by the Press ClaimB Company
NOHI.AMtS IN THIN COM I'li'l'ION.
This Ib a competition of rather an uuusal na
tare. 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 the
amoun of the prize. But the Press Claim
Company's offer Is something entirely differ
ent. Each person is asked merely to help him
self, and t he one who helps him self to the
best advantage is to be rewarded by doing it.
Theprizeis only a stimulus to do something
that would be well worth doing without it
The architect whose competitive plau fur a
club house on a certain comer is not occept-
ed has spent his labor on something of very
Utle 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 prize. He has a substantial
result to show for his work one that wll
command Us value iu the market at any
time.
The man who uses any article In his dsll
nrk ought to know better now to improve I
an the mechanical expert who studies I
-nlv fnmi the theoretical point of view.
-. -I of the idea tha. an improvement can he loo
mple to be worm patenting, 'me simpiertn
better. Tne person
who best succeeds I
each outburst, but at 5;3u a. m. when
the whole of the huge stone fortresses,
the Quarantine and Alexander, were
hurled into the air almost simultane
ously with appalling roars, and the sky
was all reddened by the incessant
flashes of the bursting shells, the bold-
late In the fall of the year, and the note
of the whippoorwill was often heard at
night by the writer. Turning to the
practical side of things, ho discovered
abundant evidences of coal, sulphur and
gypsum. It was Fremont who gave to
this marvelous nook its name, in dis-
AN
Jnat
ARIZONA TURKEY HUNT.
Before Thanksgiving All the
tiers Unite In the Slaughter.
There are some parts of Arizona that
are full of men who will live for three
hundred and sixty-four days in the year
on bacon and beans and never utter a
complaint. But on the other day it is
different. If the bill of fare is not
changed on Thanksgiving day, there ia
trouble in camp, grumbling and profan-
itv. and a tendency to talk bluely about
the home in "the states," says the San
Francisco Examiner.
Away down in the southeastern sec
tion of the territory there is a creek
called Rio Prieto, and nicknamed the
"Turkey river." It is the only place
within about two hundred miles where
wild turkeys abound, but then there are
enough of them iu the narrow valley to
stock a statu with this greatest of
fowls, wild or tame. Just before
Thanksgiving, prospectors, miners and
ranchers come i:it ) t'.io canyon from as
much as one btimlrctl miles away to
shoot turkeys f'1" dinner on the great
day. For a '..:;. or i- tins slaughter is
trcmen-'-nts, 1.-i v.: 1 -iris do not seem
to beUiiniH.-! '. 1 1 Ly it, for they
arc altn v.t uiii i ..-..! -.! .'.nrln.'f the rest
of the year, 'i I " pi:-: " i;. so fur from
anywlv re. r. i ili i M '1 :i r:)S, that no
body will lrav Ih'.i li:r.Kliip of miles
of desert hills and rooky cliffs except
under the great Inducement of Thanks
giving. Koine of the hunters come so far that
est held their breat h aud gazed in awe- gust because he was obliged to cross the
tortuous stream no less tnan one1 nun
dred and thirteen times on one of his
expeditions.
SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY.
Mixing the Two Led Early Christian In
i Teatlgstora Far Astray.
' The greatest theologians aided in de
veloping the fetichism in which much
of this pseudo-science was grounded,
remarks Dr. Andrew D. White in an
article on the transition from magic tc
modern chemistry, in the Popular Sci
ence Monthly. One question largely
discussed was whether at the redemp
tion it was necessary for God to take
the human form. Thomas Aquinas an
swered that it was necessary, but Wil
liam Occam and Duns Scotus answered
that it was not; that God might have
taken the form of a stone, or of a log,
or of a beast The possibilities opened
to wild substitutes for science by thij
sort of reasoning were infinite.
Men have often wondered how it woj
that the Arabians accomplished so
much in scientific discovery as com
pared with Christian investigation; the
reason is not far to seek; the Arabians
were comparatively free from these
mystic allurements, these theologic
modes of thought which in Christian
Europe flickered in the air on all sides,
luring men into paths which led no
whither.
Strong investigators like Arnold de
Villanova, Itaimond Lully, Basil Valen
tine, Paracelsus, and their compeers,
were thus drawn far out of the only
paths which led to fruitful truths. In a
work generally ascribed to Arnold of
Villanova, the student is told that in
mixing his chemicals he must repeat
the psalm Exsurge Domine, and that on
certain chemical vessels must be placed
the last words of Jesus on the cross.
Vincent de Ileauvais insists that as the
struck wonder.
It was broad day. The Russian fleet
was gone, the last of their men of war
was at the bottom only the steamers
were active, towing boats and moving
from place to place on mysterious er
rands. Thirty-uve magazines In all
were blown up, and through all the I
night of the bth aud the morning of I
September 9 the Russians were march
ing out of the south side. We could see
the bridge covered with them .still. At
6:45 a. m. the last body of infantry
crossed the bridge arid mounted the op- j
posite bank. Yes, the south side was
left to the possession of the allies at j
last! Sebastopul, the city, the docks i
and the arsenal were ours.
In half an hour more the end of the '
bridge itself was floated away by some
invisible agency from the south side,
and in less than t:n h v.ir the several
portions of it were collected at the fur
ther side of the roadste,:'. 1. Meantime
tho fires, fed by :-.r-:ll implosions,
spread till the town cewmntl like one
great furnace vot:tr.ng "t.t columns ol
velvety black smoUe to heaven. Soon
after seven o'clock columns i f smoke
began to ascend front I'ort Paul. Inn
minute or two mom lh 'aos were seen
breaking out iu l'ort Nicholas. The
first exploded: with a alupundous roai
later in the day; the mines under the
latter did not talte lire.
The retreat of Gortschakoff was ef
fected with masterly skill.
he fill Iran
and then t:'.!
:e it in
nu.idf d miles lor ll
the shape of salted
A I'rofessionul tiliost Hunter.
In the dark ages professors of exor
cism were important and highly re
spected persons in the community, bu:
somehow or other they fell into disre
put and were finally abolished as im
posters. It is satisfactory t ) find, how
ever, says the London Telegraph, that
at the present time, when so many peo
nlAppTnnliiin i.hiLt. thpv I'M llnd nothiniz
r C. . , Vtl-1 J 1 V,-.nl. ,)nn .
to do, this time-nonored proiession nae uiuie awwra
been revived, and at least one gentle- hundred years old, had children born to
man finds it sufficiently profitable to him, he must have possessed alchemical
pay for the printing of circulars com- means oi preserving mu; ami uiuc..
mendatory to his business. It is ad- later Dickinson insists that the patri-
dreBscd to "landlords, home agents and archs generally must have owed their
those whom it may concern," and states long lives to such means. It was loudly
that the exorcist "will be pleased to in- declared that the reality of the philoso-
vestigate and report ujmn any reputed pher's Btone was proved by the words of
haunted house, ascertaining the cause St John in the Revelation: "To the
of and putting a stop to all seemingly victor I will give a white stone."
unaccountable shrieks, cries, groans .
Wonderful Mechanical Kittens.
A most wonderful mechanical toy has
been on private exhibition in Paris late
ly and it is understood that efforts are
to be made to secure the curiosity or
curiosities for the Chicago exposition.
This remarkable piece of mechanism
consists of seven life-sized kittens, cov
ered with real skin, but with eyes of
emeralds set in white cnameL Each
and spirit rappings at the shortest
notice." This is hard on ghosts. 1
DIRTY DEVIL REGION OF UTAH.
they have t ) in'tlte "jerky" of the Wlier, veswUtlon Urowa Luxuriantly and
turkey meet. i:i i r to feet i', home. A i Echoes Multiply Thousandfold.
fellow wa-:!s t -j pretty hard when It is st.fe to sav that few people have
fipfljll Baking
U5L Powder
heard of the Dirty Devil region. An
archaeologist who had been exploring
out-of-the-way corners in Utah in the j,,, is provided with some musical
interests oi me worms uir wmiuum instrument, such as a nute, a zitner, a
bp into the country with that shocking Tj0im) a drum, a harp, a cornet, an ac-
name and writing about it he says that cor(iiorJl all perfectly harmonized,
if more generally known, tourists would with these tho kittens play the most
seldom fall to include it in their itin- -liffip.ult Dieccs of music, operas and
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard.
erary. In fact, according to tne incw
York Evening Post he puts the matter
more strongly, saying that the country
contains sights surpassing those of the
Yosemite. The principal settlement
by courtesy known aa the country scat
ia Loa, situated in the Rabbit River
valley. "The Jluckhorn mountains are
divided at this point," he says, "by the
such. The mechanism is similar to tnat
of a common music box, and the whole
apparatus, kittens, etc., is valued at
about twenty thousand francs. The
curiosity Is even reported to be insured
for twelve thousand franca.
Thompson A Biuus own the buss which
goes to and from tbe Palace hotel, but
1 1 . 11 , .. .!.,.::.. in nn Ia train
narrow valley down which the Dirty leave order,
river flows. As we leave Rabbit valley ot)jl ,
4iuaoC uj pews sUslutg snj stock.
11 K