i1 M'PNKt GAZETTE. HEPPNEK GAZETTE. OFFICIAL PAPER N3TKIMG RISKED, NOTHING MADE. Theman who advertises, gets lhe cash. Nntlce It NO RISK, NOTRADE. o-oo-ooooo The manwho doenn't adverllie, doein'l get the cash. ELEVENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 31, 1893. WEEKLY WO. SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 176. 1 1 1 SHM I WEEKLY GAZETTE. FUBMBHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAII W. PATTKRHON Bub. Manager. OTIS PATTKHSON Editor Ai li t i per yoar, $1.2.1 tor tlx months, 79 eta. fur turee aiomna. Aduertising Rates Made Known on i Application. Tins EA9LE, " of Long Creek, Grant Couity. Oregon, In published by the same coin iniiy every Friday morning. Subscription oriel- f" per year. For advertising rates, address OUIM1 L. PATTEBSOiT, Editor and Manager, bong Creek, Oregon, or "Oazette," Hepimer, Oregon. 'PHIUPAPEKiskept on hie at E. (,. Dake's 1 Advertising Aitenoy, HI and 65 Merchants UoltaiiK, tta" Prancisoo. California, where eo.. raow for advertising oan be made for it. THE GAZETTE'S AO iNTS. (Vaguer, Bl-A;,H,,,"l""ker AVifiittoii Phlll lleppuer L..iiu creek llieiagle fc-t-liJ Postlnast- r Caiims Prairie, VF,H? Jg or H- c- right Hur.'lman, Or Postmaster Hamilton, Grant Oo., Or., Postmaster l0,le . 1. J. Car) Prairie City, Or K. K. Mcllaley ,,,, citv Or 1. L. 1 arrish miritok1:. :'.v...... o.p.skeiiou u)vllle,Or i, '.' - Vm?,"! John Oay, Or., MeCall ll l Athe.,a,Or Johntdi.igton Pendleton, Or., Postmaster Mount Vernon, OrantCo.,Or........ Pos master Shelby, Or., Ml""SM!7 Kox ...rant Co Or., J, r. Allen FiL-iit Mile, or'., MrB. Andrew Ashbaugh SH"r :":::.v:UuW j. Oregon '. '. Herbert llalstead U.xlhKtbn... J"8' AN AUKNT WANTBD IN BVBKY fKBClNCT. Umon Pacfio Railway -Local card. No, ,U, iniieil leaves Hopnner 10:00 a. m. " ar. at Arlington 115 a.m. " leaves " 8 p. m. o, ar. at lleppner 6 :2u p. m. dally exoept Sunday. East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :M a. m. West leaves ls a. m. Day trains have been discontinued. Cj'PIOLA.li riSEOTOBT. Uulted States Officials. . i.,naianlt Pi .-su ent ". A "'""" Vi,-i'reidoiit .Ad ai Blevmisou two-etary of State IMn."?' Treasury, oecroury of Interior. Secieiary of War iwretury of Navy..... ... W alter Q. G rosham John U. tlarlwlu Hoke Smith .... Daniel S. Laniont .Hilary A. Herbert Wili-on 8. Uissell Alior.,ej-lieueral - Itiohanl 8. Oiuey PoHlieuster-ueuerai ai.rytry ol Agriculture . oteruug .state ot Oregon. invnraor 8- Ponnoyer ui Suite. .W . MoBnde Treasfrer Phil. Melaolian 8ut. 'ubUc lustruniou ..E. g. McElroy 8enu(ors ) J Ij.N.LMph t Huiger Hermann uger . u. El 'rank If. .iw. K.I Cougieet'men., Printer ( W. u, Ellis Frank 0. Baker r. A, Moore Supreme Judges.. P. uord S. Uean Seventh .lildlflal Dlatrtnt. ,,iua W. L. ilradnhaw rAuor..i-.. W. H. W,l ., Jliimm ('.mill ttflteial". , ii '-uator.. t .pi ifHiitativHi ...Henry Hlackman J. N. Hrown . .Inline Keithlv .-,i iv.iuug. h .mini'ssiouers.'.'.'.- Peter Bieunei J.il. Baker. l ierk Sheriff treasurer nsessor -jnrveyor chool Bup't... " (ironer ....J. W. Morrow Geo. Noble. W. J. h ezer K. L. haw ,,,, lsa Brown W. li.Saling ...T. W.Ayers, Jr HKPPNKa TOWN OmOBBS. J. R. Simons t'l,o ;ii.ai,-iiinen t , u .i.i.u Lieinenthal, Otis Patterson, Julius rieithly, W. A. loba-ton, J. L. xeager. E. Ej.v-, Pl'I'CMiet OffleerP. United Mtates Land Ottieeia. ' THE DALLES. OH. 1 iu Lewis K"ftis r vlim . :::::::::::: LA OBANDB, OB. B F, Wi s in J II llobbins . . . K"gi-Ur .. Ueceiver 3EOEET SOCIETIES. I'oru Loiwe N,i. ai K. of I' menta ev 1 I'litmlay evening al 1. ill o'clock 1; ii' Castle Hull. National Hank build--i. Sojourning bnuheni .rhalli M -! I., altnd. L --ALINO. ( . 1 . .'. U PoTTEtt. K. of It. 4 3. tf i,wi,ins I'os r, N i.m. G. A. It. ,ii Lexington, Or., the last Salnrday of M. .nth. All veterans are invited to Join. u liKO. vv (iKO. W . BMFTH. Adjutaut. tf ('ummandei. A. UOBER'l'S, B'-al Estate, Insur nuvr und (JnlUctioiiH. Office ii Oouucil Cbnmbers, Heppner.Or. svvtl. S. P. FLORENCE, STOCKRAISKR! 1 HKPPNEK. OHEGON. vKt tie branded and -ar marked as sh..wn abnr . ..rrtm F on rich! ib-mlder. dy cattle range in Morrow and UmaulU , coun iTTwiU wIWW forth. tMd oon. jtioo o( aayptnoD sUalia mjr stock. VALUABLE PKESEN T. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OUR READERS Hy a special arrangement with tbe publishers we are prepared to furnish FREE to each of our readers a year's subscription to tbe popular monthly agricultural journal, the American Faumkk, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Obio. 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 Fakmkr enjoys a lnrge national circula tion, and rungs among tbe leading agricultural papprs. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOD NOTHING! to re ceive the American Farmer tor one year. It will he to your advantage to call promptly. Sample oopies can hf seen at our office. The OrlKinal Webster's Unabridged DICTIONARY. k Ul nrr-i'iAl. AuJia.iub.ul!..i ,lllu lilil kK-hnn. .m am .1.1. . a nl.,. I n a nnmlui. of th' above book, and propose to furniHh a cony to each ol our subscribers. The dictionary Is a necessity In every home, school and business house. It tills a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes ol the choicest books could Bupply. Young and old, educated and ignorant, ricn auu poor, suouiu nave 11. wiiiiin icucu, anu refer to its contents every day in the year. As some have asked if this Is really the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this Is the very work comnlete on which about forty of the best years ot the autnor s llle were so wen empioyeu in urrlttntr. It finiitaiiis the entire vocabulary 5l about lUU.uOO words, including-theorrect spell ing, derivation and definition of same, and u the regular standard size, containing about 3u0,ul)u square inches of printed surface, and is bound in cioin nan morocco auu sueeo. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt sids and bad stamps, marbled edges, $1-00. Half Mo-occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $1.50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00. Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. -A the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the io orices. we adviBe all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to 11 at once. rSlLVKU'S UH.A.MPION :TttE ocky-. - Mountain -N ews THE DAILY BY MAIL. Subscription price reduced as follows: One Vear (by m dl) : : $6 01 Six Mouths " : : 3 00 Throe Months " 1 50 One Month " : J 50 f ,E WEEKLY BY MVk Year (in Advance.) : ft 00 The Sews is the only consistent c lan pinu of stiver in the West, and should be in every home In the West, and in the bauds ol every miner nod business man In Colorado. Hend in your subscriptions at once. Address, TII33 XiTE.'O'CS, Denver, Colo. LUMBER! 1 1 TIT. HAVF. FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN V dressed Lumber. 16 miles of Heppner. at hnt is known as the ' COTT Vlk."WlVi:iXjIj -Kit l.W FKK1. KOI'liH. CLEAR, 110 Ol 17 Sfl I F DEI.IVKUKD IN I ivan per I .Oii feet. HEPPNER, WILL AII Sfhlitioiial i . II Will T". I'm;.. fi),i Ci M K'AI. I IMS, l Northern Pacific R. R Co., Lessee.) LATEST TIME CARD Two Through Tra:ns Dal y. ,0 HOam 4 .Bpml I.v. . nuln h -Ar 11 0 7..pn- 5.nm 7 IB m I.v Ashland . . Ar m 7.15am Ki.oamlAr. .Chicago, .i.v o uup . I I I ! Tickets sold and barest Recked through to all points In the I'lilted states and ( ai.a.ls , C ose connection made In 'Ihlcago with ell - ' trains lining East aim loum. I tI.rk0ertg,eno,r0rml,,0,, J? iVo BILIOUSNESS Who haa not suffered this misery caused by bile in the Btomach which an inactive or sluggish liver failed to carry off. THE PREVENTION AND CURE IS liquid or powder, which gives quick action to the liver and carries off the bile by a mild move ment of the bowels. It is no pur gative or griping medicine, but purely vegetable. Many people take pills more take Simmons Liver Regulator. "I have been a victim to Biliousness for years, and after trying various remedies my only success was in the use of Sim mons Liver Regulator, which never failed to relieve me. I sneak not of m.vself. alone, but my whole family." J. M. Fill man, Helina, Ala. J-EVKRY PACKAGE'S. Has onr Z Stamp In red on wrapper. 4. H. ZKLL1N 4 CO., Philadelphia, Pa. 1 Bank of WH. PENLAND, El). K BISHOP. President. Cashier. fKANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made ou Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD tf EPPNEU. tf OREGON QTJIOK TITVI El I TO Son Francisco Vid all potato in California, via the Mi. Bhaatu route of the Southern Pacific Co. I 'he great, highway through California to all ptiinto Kaat and South. Grand Boenio Route of the Pacific Coast, Pullman Buffet Bleepera, Second-claw Sleepers Attachedjtoexpreea traine, attordmg superior ocommodationB for second-class passengers. Fur rates, tickets, sleeping ear reservations. to. call upon or address H KUEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Awt Jen. F. & P. Agt.. Portland. Oregon. Free Medicine ! Golden Opportunity (or Buffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Hrmedies to the People VI WflPli Write us atonce. explain- IUU Ottrr.n I imrvour trouble, and we will HpnH vnu FRF.R (IF (1HA HtiR a full course of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case. We want your recommendation. We can cure the most aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and deformities are modem and scientitic. acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair. N. B. We have the only positive cure for Ep ilepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References given. renuaueuuy locaieu. utu esiuuiinucu. Da. Williams Mboical and SuaotOAL INSTI TUTE, 719 Market Street, San Franoisco, Cal. ARE VOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ? The genius who invented the "Fifteen" pur. zle, "Pigs 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 aiid learned will And as much mystery In It as the voung and unsophisticated. This great puzzle s the property of the New York Press Club, for whom It was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the great pnzzlcist, to be sold lor the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for newspapet workers in New York. GeneroiiB friends have niven $'i.ri,00u in prizes for the siiccenhful puzzle lolvers. TKN I EN I'h sent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mall. DID YOU THY-' 1'IOS IN CLOVER" or the "FIFTFEN PUZZLE." Well, the man who Invented them has juit completed another little playful mystery for young and old, which Is selling for TKN 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 jorx rress ymu and generous friends ot the club have donated over t 'li.OOO to provide prizes for lucky people, mnnv or ,ild. who solve the mystery. There is a lot of entertainment and Instruction in it. Send a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by return msll. Address "Press Club Souvenir," j,emplc Court.New York City. "3QC0 PARCELS OF MAIL" m .. . rnn m i.rtUT ITiUDf .jriii(r!(fulur price Jjc.) your ad ffli ;!l dress If received wlihln M . .... ill an rnr l vuar noiflit printed on giimruN labeU, Only Mreeiorr guarantee.ng ias,0 customerN; from pui luinen ana luanuiiM. turra you'll rviv probably, thouHauns m valuable hooks. iawr I ...nla. muwiillM with one of your P,fre5?.J,J"iy aise print and preiy posttte on J o stick on your envptopps, boyk, etc., prevent tbt-lr ieinK lost. j. a. libf iteiaviiie, N. t:, writer : ' wj my 25 cent addrsw to your MrIiiiii it Directury i vs iwivhi mi -wUbnh S"d ovfr BWttO ParrrlH 7 nnii. Mv artilri"wfl you H.i.tt-.ii'( rV! -fifeJN ftr'irrKiiiu rt.'l.'v.nn vi-nrti.t jitrv oi i n,...i ..ii ta- WORLD'S FAItt DIRECTORY CO., No. 147 Franklord and Oirard Avos., Philadel phia, Pa, Ti- r V i5A-l! PRIZES ON PATENTS. How to Get Twenty-five Hundred Dollars for Nothing. The Winner has a clear Cift of a Small Fortune, and the Loser 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. The 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 lallent at large In this country needing nothing but encouragement to produce practical results. Thatencouragcmentthe Press Claims Company propose to give. NOT SO I1AIID AS IT SEEMS. A patent strikes most people as an appalling ly formidable thing. The Idea Is that an In ventor must be a natural genius, like Edison or Bell; that he must devote years to delving lu complicated mechanical problems arid that he must spend a fortune oa delicate experiments belore he can get a new device to a patentable degree of perfection. This delusion the com pany 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 In ventions that bring the beBt returns to their authors, but the little, simple, and cheap ones the things that seem so absurdly trivial that the average citizen would feel somewhat ashamed of bringing them to the attention of the Patent Ofliee. Edison says that the profits he has received from the patents on all his marvelous Inven tions ave not been sufficient to pay tne cost of his experiments. But the mau 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 modem sewing-machine Is a miracle of ingenuity the product a hundred and fifty years, but the whole bril liant result rests upon lhe simple device oi putting the eye of the needle at the point In stead of at the other end. of the toil of hundreds of busy brains through THE LITTLE THINGS THE MONT VALUABLE. Comparatively few people regarcHheraselves as Inventors, but almost every body has been struck, atone time or another, with ideas that eem 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 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 thorn 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 late; lor breakfast. "It I were in the business I'd make buttoua that wouldn't slip out, or break 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 venient opportunity, put their Ideas about car windows, saucepanB aud collar buttons into practical shape, aud then apply for patents they might find themselves as Independently wealthy as the man who invented the iron umbrella ring, or the oue who patented he fifteen puzzle. A TEMPTING OFFER. To induce the people to keep trackof their origin Ideas aud see what there In them, the Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a I nze . To the peraon who aubmita to ii liie aimpleat and moat promiaiug iiivciiliou, ' from a commercial point of view, the company will give tweiityfive hundred dollar in cash, In addition to refunding the Ices for eccurlng; a patent. It will alao advertise the inven. lion free of charge. This ofl'er is subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent for his Invention through the company. He must lirstapply for a preliminary search, the cost ol which, will be five dollars. Should thih seach show his invention to be 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 aud Bureau fees, will be seventy lollurs. For this, whether he secures a priz. or not. the inveutor will have a patent Ilia ought to be a valuable property to him. Tin prize will be awarded by a Jury consisting o1 three reputable patent attorneys of Washihs ton. Intended competitors should fill out the following blank, and forward it with their application: "I submit the within described invention in competition for the Twenty-live hundred Dollai Prize offered by the Press Claims Company." tOIII.ANK IN THIN OTII'IOTIOV This is a competition of rather an uuusal na ture. It is common to oflcr prlzeB for the besi story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the competitors risking the loss of their lubor att the successful one merely selling his for th amnun of the prize. Hut the Press Claiim Corapany's offer Is something entirely differ ent. Each person Is asked merely to help him self, andthe one who helps hlin 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 lltlc ifse to him. But the person who patent,, simple and useful device lu the Press Claim. Company's competition, need not worry if lie fall to secure a prise. He has a substantial rcHiilt-to show for his work one that wll command its value in the market at any time. The man who lines any article In his rial!' work .ought to know belter now to improve I 'sill the meclifttilcal expert who studies I rtl-from the tbeorctii'iil point of view, rii . d of the Idea tha. an improvement can be ti, ii pie to be worth piiteutllig. The simpler 1 1 Uer. The persfill who best Miii-cee Is ' nmbiiiing simplicity and popularity, will i: be Press Claims Company's twenty-rivo hu i- nam The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. dred dollars. The responsibility of this company may be judged from the fact that its stock is' held by about three hundred ol the leading newspapers of the United Hiates. Address the Press Claims Company, Joha Wodderburn, managing attorney, t14 V street . W Washington, O. C. i. A. K. NOT1CK. We take tbia opportunity of informing onr subscribers that tbe new oomuiia eioner of pensions baa been apnninted He ia an old soldier, and we lelidre tbat soldiers and tbeir heirs will re ceive justice at bis bands. We do not anticipate that tbere will be any railioaJ changes in the administration of ponaioi affairs under tbe sew regime. We would advise, however, that V. 8 soldiers, sailors and tbeir heirs, take steps to make application at onee, if they have not already done so, in order to secure the benefit of tbe early filing of tbeir olaims in case tbere should be any future pension legislation. Snob legislation is seldom retroactive. Ibere fore it is of ureat iinportaooe that ap plications be filed in tbe department al the earliest possible date. If the TJ. 8. soldiers, Bailors, or tbeii wi.lows, children or parents desire in formation in regard to pension matters, ttiey should write to tbe Press Claims Oopipauy, at Washington, 1). C, and they will prepare and send tbe necessary application, if they fiud tbem entitled nndei the numerous laws enacted fur tbeir benefit. Addreas PHKSS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Weduekbubn, Managing Attor ney, Washiugton, 1). J., P. O. Box 385 tf. TUB WWIlUtN PEOAUOUt'K. We are in receipt of tbe May nnmber of our state school paper. It exceed any ot tbo former numbers ic value. The paper this month contains many new and valuable features. Tbe illus trated series ou the schools of tbe state is introduced by a paper on tbe Friends Polytechnic institute at Salem, Oregon. These papers caunot fail to be of great value both to the sohools and to tbe public. Tbere are also several tine articles by our best writers and the departments "Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts," "Educational News" "Tbe Oracle Answers, Correspondents," etc., eaoh eoutidn much valuable reading fm teachers or patents, lbe magazine has about 50 pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounce the Western Pedagogue the best eduoa- tionul monthly on the ooasl. Everyone of our readers should have the paper it they are at all interested in education. No teacher school direc tor or student can get along well with out it. We will receive Bnbsoript.ons at this office. Price only $1.00 a year. When desired wo will send the Western Pedagogue and Onzetle one year to one address for $3.00. Cull and examine sample oopies. Teachers, directors aud parents, now is the time to subscribe, tl Thompson & Binusown tbe buss which goes to aud from tbe Palace hotel, but will cull for parties desiring to go to train in any part of the city. Leave orders at City hotel. a Uneklea's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for outs bruises, sores, nloers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, i:happed hands, chilblains oorns and all skin eruptions, and posi tively onres piles, nr no pay required. It ia guaranteed to give perlect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 oents per box. For sale by Slooum-Jobnson Drug Company. Old Maryland Churches. An interesting landmark of the past la All Hallows' church at Snow Hill, Worcester county, Md., which has just passed through a perilous process of im provement. The parish is nearly two hundred years old, and the church edi fice was reared in 1734. Tho earliest church was built of logs, but the pres ent building is of briek imported from England and paid for with tobacco raised by a general levy upon the par ish. Sixteen miles from Snow Hill is old St. Martin's church, now disused, a brick structure of nearly the same ago as All Hallows'. St. Martin's parish is older than the church, as tho baptismal service still in use was presented by Queen Anne. Quite as old as either of these church organizations are several Presbyterian churches in the same re gion, fountled by MacKennie, the father of American l'rcsbyterianism, while some of the earliest Methodist congre gations in the United States were founded upon the same peninsula. Iteason for Oratefiilnoss. A little girl but four years old was observed to be very devout in church and to be very eager not to miss attend ing the services. "What do you do when you are there, I'osie?" asked a lady friend. "You cannot read and you must get very tired of such long serv ices." The little one shook her head gravely. "I am never tired," she said; "I have so much to say to Clod." "What do you say? Do tell me," persisted the lady. The child climbed on her knee and whispered, with all her soul in her eyes: "I cannot go to church too often 1 to thank God I was not born a boy." king Powder: Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOLUTELY PURE GfiEAT TRAVELERS. The Chinese in Amerloa Continu ally on the Oo. They Are aa Muck at Home In a ThtrA Class Car aa If Lolling at EaM Under the Wushhouse Table. The Chinese are great travelers. 8c proficient have the celestials become ir the use of our l;iiirua;,'o and the knowl edge of our ways thnt the Southern Pa cific railroad has funnd it no longer nec essary to maintain its old Chinese agency nt Sacramento, and it has Just been abolished. The Chinese are al ways on the go. So it sx-ra.-i, at least, to a writer in the San Francisco Chron icle. What the emiijant trains would do, he writes, for a full ci implement of passengers unless they had a carload or so of Mongolians it would be difficult to sajr. When one goes about on the rail and sees the steady tides of outgo ing and incoming pagan ho wonders how they manage to earn money enough to pay so much railroad fare. Xo one for a moment will question the truth of the assertion that in proportion to their percentage of the population they are much greater travelers than the white people of this country, leaving aside aU consideration of their big journeyn across the Pacific. When the San Francisco Chinatown resident gets money enough together to take a trip to Los Angeles, Omaha, Chi cago or New York he generally begins to think of traveling. It matters not what he may be doing here; if he thinks Kansas City needs a new washhouse he buys a ticket for that town and away he goes. In tho matter of ticket pur chasing he has a groat advantage over white persons. If he is at all shrewd, and he generally is, he can buy an erhV grant ticket at a cut rate of from five to fifteen dollars cheaper than tiny White man can bnv it. This fact, crrfr- pusly enough, is wholly diie to the white man s utter lack of confidence iu him an oath-observer. "We can sell a Chinaman a ticket cheaper than anybody else," says a Cal ifornia ticket agent the other day, "for the reason that there is no danger of anybody in the railroad pool catching us cutting rates. All tes timony as to rate-cutting before the pool commissioner must be by affidavit, and ns Chinamen's affida vit are not admissible as evidence, of course we can always steer clear of a fine when we cut a rate for theni." When John travels he invariably car ries a KtulT.v-looking enrpet suck in his hand and a lot of nondescript bundles over his shoulder, generally tied to gether with a heavy cord or a piece of hayropo. Where they get all the car pet sucks Is a mystery. They are cer tainly not an Asiatic article of luggage, but they cannot be dissociated from the idea of Mongolian travel in this country. Approaching the Oakland ferry, after buying his ticket up-towu, John casts a wary eye about him for the poll-tax gatherer, who i auuts the landing and keeps close watch over all the newcom ers as well us outgoers. lie is a very lucky John if he can manage to run the gantlet of those keen optics. As soon as the attack begins the Mongolian clutches, with mighty grasp the handle of his carpet sack, for he knows that this is the first point of advantage which the seeker for his two dollars will try to gain. I The poll-tax man knows the trick of i loosening the heathen's hold. Having secured the carpet sack he will not let it go until the tax has been paid. No Chinaman was ever known to pay his poll-tax cheerfully, and this John is no exception. He shakes his head, jabbers and raves and tries to convince the tax man that he has not the slightest notion in the; world of what he is after. That dfxlge will not work, however, for it is an old one and the tax gatherer, sitting serenely on the stuffy carpet sack, wins the day, unless John values his two dollars more than he does his cheap luggage and flees for the boat; in which event tho tax man wins a two-bit "jumper," a pair of wornout overalls, some mysterious-looking provender and a pair nt cork-sole d shoes with turned np toes. Onee aboard his train John sits be side a countryman of his, who is sure to turn out either a cousin or a cousin of a friend of his. They make a few remarks about the weather, the state of the labor market and the chances of getting rich in a few weeks at the places whither they are bound. None of these remarks are of a lively nature. In fact, John on the rail is the same stolid, lethargic John that he Is any where else. lie folds his loosely-draped arms and takes little heed of anything, dozing away the long hours on the train as contentedly as if he was lolling at ease under the washhouse table. In fact, a carload of Chinese is as much like a carload of mummies as it U like anything. The nomadic Instinct is so deeply rooted in tho Mongolian that he feels al most as much at home while scurrying around the country as he does under his own roof tree. The intense desire to travel Is without any doubt a Tartar heritage, most of the forces of working Chinese who have come to this country I being gathered from the great plains of ;tho eastern part of the empire, where i the roving Instinct is strong and where manv tribes are almost constantly on the jro. Western Cbinn in more a coun try of homos, und it lias sent us the quii't merchant, the cifrarmaker and the steady-frolng sewing machine oper ator. Even these, however, are great patrons of the railroad. They have "cousins" living at Yreka, Yuba or Yuma that must be visited now and again, and this keeps them on the mova for days at a time. MOTHERS IN FICTION. x Chiefly Conspicuous by Their Absence and Not Always Admirable. A vigorous search has reoontly been made in novels for the admirable mother in fiction, and it gave the searchers a shock that Bhe failed to materialize. Tho father, the brother, sister, cousins, aunts and even grandmother, are often drawn with a loving pencil, but the mother is always a subordinate char actor if Introduced at all. Perhaps because his own mother was so unsatisfactory Dickens never put one in a novel of his that deserves to be mentioned in connection with his be nign fathors. Here is the list: Our Mutual Friend" Mrs. Wilfer (outrageous). "Domboy and Son" Mrs. Skewton (a libel on tho sex). David Copperfleld's mother is an amiablo fool; Mrs. Stoerforth impossible and horrible; Mrs. Ileop a mate for her husband; Mrs. Micawber a caricature. In "Bleak House" Lady Dedlock a mother who abandoned her child; Mrs. Jellyby one who neglected her children for a hobby. in "lhe Tale of Two Cities' the mother dies before the story begins. Then there is Mrs. Coleman (a crim inal). Mrs. Mcrdlo and Mrs. Gowan (worldly), and Mrs. Meagles (nice but weak-minded in "Little Dorrit"). Dick sns' mothers are all objoctionable. ' Thackeray's only concession is Mrs. .Pendennis. Mrs. Edmonds' maternal qualities are not strong. - Who does not love the gentle Vicar of Wakefield and his homely, tender philosophy? His gentleness 13 illus trated by his constant excuses for his nagging wife. George Eliot ignores mothers. Mrs. Poyscr is the most successful, but she jomes of the lower ordor. Mrs. Harleth and her whole family are ruled by Gwendoline. Mrs. Tulllver and Mm. Doano in "The Mill on the Floss" are almost imbecile. Tho wonder is tbat they had such remarkable children. Jane Eyre has two horoughly cruel and offensive, Lady Ingram and Mrs. Reed. Pisistratus' mother in Bulwor Lytton's novel, "The Caxtons," is a ten der and loving woman an exception to the rule. Charles lteade has one re spectable mother, Mrs. Little ("Put Yourself In His Place"), but Wilkle Col lins falls in with the custom very nat urally. Ouida's mothers are nearly all detest able. Robert Elsmero ia the one excep tion. Tho tirosomo hero of that novel would have done well to have been en dowed with his mother's intolleot, chcorf ulnoss and vigor. But interesting as she is, her maternal influence did. not go far. Amelie Rives has a cruel and heartless mother in "The Witness of the Sun," who sacrifices her son's happiness to satisfy her selfish passion. In Mrs. Catherwood's stories the mother is conspicuously absent. And so on and so on indefinitely. WE LOVE MEDICINE. Doctor Says That Americana Arc Nation of Drug-Takers. 1 think Americansshould he described as a nation of medicine takers. The re turns from the sales of patent medicines are astonishing, but no general practi tioner is at all surprised at this, because he has long since learned that hypo chondria exists almost universally, and that medicine taking is the great de light of an enormous percentage of mankind, says a physician in the St Louis Olobe-Democrat- One great object a doctor should have in view is to cure with as few doses as possible, and I believe that ninety-nine out of one hundred medical students commence practicing with this idea be fore them. If their experience is like mine they have somewhat let down in their efforts in this direction, and if they have cnot done so they have cer tainly offended quite a large number of patients. , There seems little to choose between the sexes in the matter of a desire to take medicine regularly, and it is often impossible to persuade an apparently rational-minded patient that a cure has been effected, that no more medicine is needed and that nothing but good diet and careful habits are required to build up the constitution. A number of doctors save themselves from falling from graco by prescribing a harmless tonic after effecting a cure, but those who pride themselves in dis posing of cases by aid of a dozen doses or less seldom attain any great popu- larity. The often quoted and much vaunted Tratli- In f'hinn. nf roivincr & nhvsician whn0 hi patient ia well and stopping hig pay during sickness could never be introduced successfully into this coun try, because so many people whoarj nort.ii nii orn nromired to file affi- daviu that they ar0 dangerously sick, that no doctor under the China reglm would ttbie to eftrn hls board. I r, J I ii :S' :,7 J