If PNEII GAZETTE. OFFICIAL HEPPNER GAZETTE. PAPER NOTHING RISKED, NOTHING MADE. NO RISK, NOTRADE. The man who a.lvtfruiM'S, gets the cash. Notice tt. The man ho doen't advertise, doeiu't get the cash. 1 ELEVENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1893. WEEKLY jSO. MS. I SEMI-WEEKLY NO. 178 . . i ; i i mhjadLd ran WEEKLY GAZETTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAH W. PATTER80N Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTERSON Editor Al tllW par year, (1.25 for six months, 75 ots. for three mourns. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The " EALE, " of Long Creek, Grant County, Oregon, 1b published by the Bame com pany every Friday morning. Subscription price, $'2per year. For ad vurtising rates, addreBB OBI1T Ij. PATTEESOIT, Editor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette," lieppucr, Oregon. IHIB PAPEK is kept on tile at E. C. Dake's Advertising Agency, 84 and 65 Merchants Exchangs, Ban raneiueo, California, where cou racts for advertising oan be made for it. THE GAZETTE'S AO SNTS. Wagner, B. A. Hnusaker Arlington, Phill Heppner Loiik Creek, The Eagle Echo Postmaster Camus Prairie Oscar Do Vaul Nye, Ur., H. C. Wright Hardmau, Or., Postmaster Hamilton, Grant Co., Or.,... Postmaster lone, T. J. Carl Prairie City, Or K. R. Mcllalcy Canyon City, Or H. L. Parrisli Pilot Rock G. P. Bkelton llayville, Or., J. E. Snow John Hay, Or., P. I. McCallum Athena, Or John Edington Pendleton, Or., Postmaster Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or PostmaBter Shelby, Or MiBS Stella Plett Fox, Urant Co., Or J. P. Allen Eight Mile, Or Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh Upper Khea Creek B. F. Hevland Douglas, Or Postmaster Lone Koek, Or.: It. M. Johnson Gooseberry J. K. Esteb Condon, Oregon Herbert Halstead Lexington Jas. Leach AN AUKNT WANTED IN KVKRY PRKC1NCT. A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS SICK-HEADACHE Makes life miserable. All other ailments are aa nothing in com parison. Women especially know its suffering, and few escape its torture, THE RELIEF AND CURE IS Umon Pacfic Railway-Local card. N. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m. 1U, . ar. at Arlington inna-m. tt, " loaves ,r 3itt p. m. " 9, " ar. at Heppner 0 :20 p. m, daily except Sunday. EaBt bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :2t) a. m. West leaves " 1:28 a. m. Day trains have been discontinued. United States Officials. Piesulent ; Grover Cleveland Vice-President....- :.Adisi Stevenson iseurufary of Slate Walter Q. Gresham 'Secretary of Treasury. ....... .... John G. Carlisle rjecietjiry of Interior Hoke Smith Sfcirv of .....Daniel 8. Laniont OetteLi..-j - I'OBtulBBter-ueoeim. .. neral.... .... , XXtZ f OI ftgiiuwi"'" - Betretary c State of Oregon. Governor. Secretary ot State Treasurer v Supl. Public Instruction. , Senators S. Pennoyer .G. W. MoBride Phil. MetBr.han ...E. 1). MoElroy ( J. H. Mitchell ) J. N. Uolph Congressmen. Printer S Biuger Hermann 1 W. K. EUis Frank C. Baker ( b A. Moore . j . ,iW.P, Lord Supreme Judges tt.8. Bean c.,il, .Tnillcial District. .. . j, W. L. Bradshaw Circnit Judge.. w g Wilson 1 rOBBCUtlUS o."""v Morrow Comity Officials. iiy a Bpecial arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FREE to each of our readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the Amebican Fakmer, published at Springfield and Clevelund, Ohio. This offer is made to any of bur sub scribers who will pay up ail arrearages on subscription and one year in advanoe, and to any new subscribers who will pay one year m advanoe. The American Farmer enjoys a large national circula tion, ana rankB 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 oail promptly. Sample copies oan be seen at our office. TTtxe Original Unabridffed DICTIONARY . I 0 tit V &t -r.r'- Y SPECIAL AHKANtiEMJfiNT WITH THE publishers, ve are able to obtain a number of th" above book, and propose to furnish a copy to each of 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 of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant. ncn ana poor, snoum nave 11 wunin reacn, ana refer to its contenls every day in the year. As some have asked if this is reallv the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this In-the verv work com Die te on which about forty of the best years of the author's life were bo well employed In writing, n conwuns tne entire vocabulary 01 .about 100.0111V words, including the eoirefc spell- Many people take pills, which gripe and purge, weakening the body. More take Simmons Liver Regulator, liquid or powder, be cause more pleasant to take, does not gripe, and is a mild laxative, that also tones up the system. The relief is quick. It is Nature's own remedy, purely vegetable. ,"I never found anything to do me any pood until I used Hlmmous Liver Regula tor. It lias been three years slnee I first used Hand I have not bad Sick Headache slnee. I sentmy Bister (who had from one to two attacks of Kick Headache every week) one-half of a package, and she has not had it since." U. H. Moitais, Browns ville, W.Va. ty-KVERY Baa our Z Stamp In red on wrapper. at i J. H. ZK1LIN , PACKAGE'S In red on wrani ! CO., Philadelphia, Pa. Ha.ion.ai Bag of Heppner. WM. PENLAND, 0. B BISHOP. President. Cashier. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLECTIONS Made on FBvorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Hnnrv Blackman J.N. Brown ..Julius Keithly Peter Brenner J. W. Morrow ' ' Geo. Noble. ' "....W. J. Leezer 't't't B. Li. -Shaw ...Isa Brown ""....W. L. Baling T. W. AyerB, Jr Joint Senator ttepresentative County Judge..... ' Commissioners.. J. M. Baker. Clerk Sheriff Treasurer Assessor Surveyor ' School Sup't... " Coroner... HEPFNEB TOWN OFFI0EB8. . . J. R. Simons Hayoi .. o"e" Farnsworth, Mi ffi&"o&;-w&. J""-9 Keithly' W. A. Johnston, J. h. Yeager. Kobert8 Keeorder g q, slooom .rroasurer J. VI. Basmus. Marshal Precinct omcerp, .Justice of the Peace Constable United States band Officers, Tfll DALLES. OB. , , Register I.W.Lewis . ....Receiver A. D.Liau(.... I, (1 BANDS, OB. Register B. r , Wi ison Beceiver s.a. 1VUUUIU" Until tUiiner notice we wiHcitfn this valuable Dictionary First To any new suDscnn'. Second To any renewal subscriber. T hird 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 bacl stamps, marbled edges, $i-oo. 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. WAi the publishers limit the time and numuer 01 ."j ., , ; prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to it at once. quick: titml-es '. TO Sfira Franolsoo And all points in California, via the Mt. Shasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. Vfr1:'"10i0Bllway through California to all . toiJ!0at 4iiey came froind Soenio Route 'Wft&w. - .;-L. I1 J&Wa Cog 0sclass passengers. ior rateQ -SeBaait oar reservations, eto oall npoft ot aw..- R. KOEHLKR, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst Gen. F. & P. Agt., Portland, Oregon. Free Medicine SILVER'S CHAMPION -THR V .T Hallock .C, W. Bycbard SBCBBT BOCIEIIES. THE DAILY-BY MAIL Snhserlntion nrice reduced as follows: A Golden Opportunity for Suffering Humanity. Physicians Give their Remedies to the People DO YOU SUFFER ?ptS,3ftivne a vuph nff rHA kfiK a full course of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case, we tuii jum We can cure the most aggravated diseases of both sexes. Our treatment ior all diseases and jf j,.T.mnHni-n nd seifintit c. acquired by many year's experience, which enables us to Ouarantee a uure. iwi uwu- N B -we have the only positive cure for F.p ilep'sy (fits) and Catarrh. References given, Permanently located. Old-established. Dr. Williams Medical and Suboical Inbti tute, 719 Market Street, Sau Francisco, Cal. ARE YOU ANY GOOD AT VUZZLES ? Oorio Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev- ing Sojourning brothers cordially in- LiSj t(nd W. L. 8ALINO, C. U W. B. Potteb. K. of R. 4 8. tf RAWLINS POST, NO. 81. G.A.R. Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of TWn UlM'"e-.(-C-Ktant, tf Commander. One. Year tbv mail) : ol Six Months " d Three Months " : : . 1 One Month " '50 THE WEEKLY-BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) : (1 00 The News 1b the only consistent c.iampion of silver in the West, and should be in every home in the West, and in the handB of every miner and business man in Colorado. Send in your subscriptions at once. Address, Doiivor, Colo. pEOPBSSIOlTAii. ,.n.n nnl r.l.f. TnHnr. A A. l-WJJSJiK-lO, XWJBl bv, . a r,olleotions. Offioe in DUUC luva Oounoil CUamberB, Heppner, Or. LUMBER! n., irrrn bai.it. ALL KINDS OF CN W dressed Lumber, 16 mileB of Heppner, at what is known as tne SCOTT SAWMIIjIj BWtf. S. P. FLORENCE, PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH, m " CLEAR, (10 00 17 60 rF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, L 15.00 per 1,000 feet, additional. WILL ADD The genius who invented the "Fifteen" puz zle "PIl'b in Clover," and many others, has in. vented a brand new one, which is going to be the greatest on record, There is fun, instruc tion and entertainment in it. The old and learned will find as much mystery In it aB tne voune and unsophisticated. This great puzzle s the property of -the New iorK rreBB uiuo, ior whom it waa invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzleist, to be sold for the beneBt of the movement to erect a great nome ior newspapei workers in New York. GenerouB friends nave given $25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN CENTS sent 10 tne -rre muii Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court, ew York City, will get you the mystery Dy return mail. DID 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, wnicn is semuB .."- for the benetlt 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 tne cmo nave uouaieu over S25.000 to provide prizes for lucky people, young or old, who solve the mystery, i nere i it nf entertainment and instruction in it. Send a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by rturn mall. Address "Press chid souvenir, iemple Conrt.New York City. I. A. L. HAMILTON, Prop. Hamilton, Mati'nr WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES (Northern Pacific R, R. Co., Lessee.) T TV,fiT TIME CAItD Two Through Trains Daily, STOCKRAISER HEPPNER. OREGON. Cattle branded and earmarked a. shown above, ua. V on right Bhonlder. M:'iJ"' T)iiluth...Ar U.lU" Ashlano 0.3itBm4.0.".pm!Lv, 1.4rpmi7.0'imiLv, 7.15ara!10.5ttmlAr How to Get Twenty-five Hundred Dollars for Nothing. The Winner has a clear Gift of a Smalt 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. The Press Claims Company devotes much attention to patents. It has haudled thousands 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 produce practical resultB. That encouragementthe Press Claims Company propose to give. NOT SO HARD AH 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 in complicated mechanical problems and that he must spend a fortune on delicate experiments before 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 ctear comprehension of the fact that it Is not the great, complex, aud expensive inventions that bring the best 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 Office. Edison says that the profits he has received trom the patents on ail his marvelous inven tions avenotbeeu 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 modem sewing-machine Is a miracle of ingenuity the product a hundred and fifty 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 toil of hundreds of busy brains through THE LITTLE THINGS THE MOST VALUABLE. Comparatively few people.regard themselves as inventors, but almost every body has been struck, at one 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 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 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;for breakfast. "If I were in the businessi'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out, or break off, or gouge out the back of my else. If they WaliV 'set down the next con venient opportuuity, 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 m'an who invented the iron umbrella ring, or the one who patented he fifteen puzile. . To induce the people to keen trackof their hriirht Ideas and see what there in them, the Press Claims Company has resolved to oiler a jrize. To the person who submits to It I H simplest ana most proiuia.Mii invention, from commercial point ol view, the company win give twenty-five hundred dollur. in cash, in addition to refuiidinif the fees for securing a patent. It will also advertise tne inven. tlon free of charge. This offer is subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor must obtain a patent for his invention through the company. He mut flrstapply for a preliminary search, the cost ol which will be live dollars. Should this seachshow 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 feeB, will be seventy dollars. For this, whether he secures a prize or not, the inventor will have, a patent thai ....lit to he a valuable property to him. The prize will be awarded by a jury consisting ol tb ree reputable patent attorneys of Washihg ton. Intended competitors niu.... fgMii blank, and forward it with their ppllcfation: dred dollars. The responsibility of this company may be judged from the fact that its stock is held bv about three hundred of the leading newspapers of the United States. Address the Press Claims Company, Joka Wodderbum, managing attorney, 61S F street w. W., Washington, O. C. U. A. R. NOTICE. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. We take tbis opportunity of informing our subeoribers tliat the new commis sioner of pensions has been apoointed He is au old soldier, and we leliere that soldiers and their heirs will re ceive justioe at bis hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radioaJ changes in the administration of pensioa aS'airs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that D. 8, soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take steps to make application at onoe, if they have not already done so, in order to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should be any future pension legislation. Suou legislation is seldom retroaotive. There fore it is of great importance that ap plications be filed in the department at the earliest possible date. If the U. S. soldiers, sailors, or their widows, children or parents desire in formation in regard to pension matters, they should write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, D. C, and they will prepare and send the necessary application, if they find them entitled under the numerous laws euaeted for their benefit. Address PBESS CLAIMS COMPANY. John Weddekburn. ManaL'insr Attor ney, Washington, D. O., P. O. Box 380 tf. THE WESTERN PEDAGOGUE. Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE LAUGHING GAS. tnterestlng; Information Given by a Dentist We are in receipt of the May number of our state school paper. It exceed any of the former numbers ir. value. The paper this month contains many new and valuable features. The illus trated serieB on the schools of the Btate is introduced by a paper on the Friends Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon. These papers cannot fail to be of great value both to the sohools and to the public ihere are also several fine articles by our best writers and the departments "Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts," "Eduoational News" "The Oracle Answers, Correspondents," etc., eaoh oontain much valuable reading for teacherB or parents. The maeazine has about 60 pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounoe the Western Pedaeo2ue the best eduoa- the paper if tbey' are at all interested in education. No teacher school direo tor or student can get along well with out it. We will receive subsoript.onB at this office: Price only SI. 00 a year. When desired wo will send the Western Pedagogue aud Uazette one year to one address for $3.00. Call and examine sample oopies. Teaohers, direotors and parents, now is the time to subscribe, tf Thompson & binns own the buss which goes to and from tbe Palace hotel, but will call for parties desiring to go to train in any part of the city. Leave orders at City hotel. B Backlen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped bauds, ohilblains oornB ond all skin eruptions, and posi tively oures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perleot satisfaction or money refunded. Pnoe 25 cents per box. For sale by Slooum-Johnaon Drug Company. TRIED HER LOVER'S PATIENCE. V AtliMreKulur ri '2) your ad- :iit,A dir I iinv.. will in' for 1 vfsar boldly nn ineu ju ""co tUtbelM. Only HireeK.ry VuHranteeliiR 13.000 f customers ; from pub- . Wlishent anu nmmmtc y probably, thoumindH . wimnieH.imurazinuH.ru'. ah fr-e and each mica, with one of your .rl.H! "vrt wil' .,uurj.ri thereon. t.xIKAl ve sir iOM print ami i.reiwy poKUigejjir i u u. tT.piil adrcuwB to you v.hl-l Stick on vnur envelopes, booki-. eii-. , 189H. "I submit the within described Invention in competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar Prize offered by the Press Claims Company." NnKI.ANKS IN Til IS G'OiHI'ETION. This i a competition of rather an unusal 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 ono merely selling his for the anioun of the prize. But the Press Claims Company's offer Is something entirely differ ent. Each person is asseu mere.j u. ...... self, andlhe one who helps him Belt to the bestadvautageistobe rewaroeu uy m.j Theprizels only ft stimulus to do something thi would be well worth doing without it. The architect whose competitive plan Ior a club house on a certain corner is not uucepi ed has spent his labor on something of very lttle use to him. But the person wno patcuu a simple and useful device In the Press Claims Company's competition, neea noi worry u ... fail to secure a prize. He has a substantial result to show for his work-one that wll command its value in the mantel at any time. , . , . , ,, The man wno uses any an.u.o ... ... - i work ought to know better now to Improve It than the mechanical expert who studies il only from the theoretical point of view, t.et rid of the idea that an Improvement can be too simple to be worth patenting. The slmplerlh" better. The person who bet succeeds 1 combining simplicity and popular ity, wl" the Press Claims Compauy'B tweuty-flvo hu- .Chlcago. Ar 8.05am .LVI5.WP trains doing East and South For full lniormauuu fi", - .- tleket agentor m citelgo ,. In.4f.pm j5.00pm (W:ttM- 7.pm uku h3F f? t i v " J .t ha stick Ol! .7J 'J N T. writes: " FHi.i, Lai tent wldriwln yonr J. Khtji; StWti.rv rverer-Plvnl my W a l.ir saisr; Vt KMr yon H-uiv-ru Jifr t :'...; ....r.'n.n..rn and iriHinir;" Hinirx h W.IV UIJIIMI ) " - ........... wnm.n-H FAIK DIKECTORV CO. . 1 .,u,,.-j a,i fiirard Aves., Philailei nearest . no. m t. phia, Fa. He Waited Two Hours, Then Started to Leave in a Itage. The London News gives this interest ing version ol llenrik Ibsen's courtship: When he fell in love with the beautiful daughter of Pastor Thoresen, how to make known the fact to her troubled hira for weeks. At last he resolved to write to her. lie would come aud fetch his answer the same afternoon at five. Did the lady accept him she would be "at home," otherwise not. At five nVlnch- hn nresented himself, and the mairl asked him to go into the best room. IIC was very liopetul ana was glad to have time1 to collect him self before he met the lady. Hut when he had waited half an hour awful doubts began to assail him. After an hour had passed he imagined the letter had not reached the young lady. Some fatal mistake-was making a fool of him. Still he waited on. After two hours he began tof.be ashamed of himsslf. She would learn that he had sat two hours in that ileRc.rted house and would laugh at him. At last he jumped up in a rage and ran to the door, lie was openintf it when a loud peal of laughter ar rl him. He turned and saw the fair head of his adored emerge from under the sofa. Her mouth waB laugh ing but her eyes were filled with tears, "Oh, you dear, good fellow, to wait all this while!" she said. "I wanted to see how many minutes a lover's pa tience lasts. How hard the floor is! Now help me to get out, and then we will talk." In less than a week the marriage was arranged. Re Describes the Process by Which the Queer stun" Is Made Its Remark able Euecta L'pou Somr People. "I inhale about twenty gallons of laughing gas every day," said a surgeon dentist who, according to the New York Mail and Express, makes a business of pulling tevth. "Xo, I don't do it for pleasure, .but for the purpose of show ing patients how to take it. The im portant thing is to inflate the lungs with a few big breaths from the gas bag; then complete unconsciousness supervenes tind no pain whatever is felt. On the contrary, the dreams of persons under the in lluence of nitrous oxide uru usually most agreeable. An Irish ;;irl who came to me tlieother'day to have a tooth extracted exclaimed on awaking: 'Sure, I thought I was at a. wake!' A Herman told me that he dreamed he was in a lager-beer, saloon. A little boy said that he 'thought he I was up in the air, holding on to the tail of a kite.' That enormous bag like a balloon which you saw dragged into the office few minutes ago is rilled with laugh ing gas. It is made of canvas coated with rubber and holds two hundred gallons. The quantity sviflices for only about twenty-live patients, because they waste a good deal from not know ing how to take it. The stuff does not cost much to manufacture, however. It is made from nitrate of ammonia, which is a salt obtained by boiling am monia in nitric acid. We buy it in gran ulated shape, and all that -is necessary in order to get the gas from it is to boil it in water. Iu the laboratory we put five or six pounds of it into a long necked flask, beneath which is a lighted "ffiS nitrSteof af6 .T111!? hot ed in the , alr 1S rapiuiy Bup- gives off by ovapitmnonia salt is nielt- through a tube into a seaieu jar paruy filled with water. Bubbling up through the water it passes through another tube into a second water jar, and so through four jars successively. Being thus missed through water several times it is perfectly purihed. When first generated it contains a good deal Df immiritv, especially oxide of iron, which comes from the iron vessels in ,vhich the ammonia was boiled with nitrate acid. Hut all impurities are re moved n the manner I have described. and the nitrous oxide filially goes i.lmmirh a nine into a great metal tank. The tank is composed of two big cylin ders, one partly rilled with water and the other set upside down inside the first. If you will take a tall tumbler and invert it inside of another tall tumbler that is slightly bigger and which has some water in it, you will have the idea exactly. "The expansive power of the gas is so great that it lifts the inside cylinder steadilv out of the outside one, the water meanwhile keeping the nitrous ixide from escaping. When the tank .s filled the operator knows it by the leiglit to which the cylinder is elevat d. To till one of these huge rubber jags with the gas he simply draws the ras olf from the tank into the bag until :he latter is completely liinateu anu can lold no more. ind the crucifix applied to the lips the ?irl started up, and, after partaking of i cup of water, accompanied her mother iome," A Wonderful PIK. Dr. Hickman, of Ludlow, Shropshire, England, has an alcoholic specimen in his museum in the shape of a pig, the inatomical structure of which is as ex traordinary as it is unaccountable. The minute anatomy is not given, but the external appearances are: One lead, two eyes, four ears, eight legs md two tails. The internal structure is: Ono tongue, one windpipe and one heart, the hitter having two sets of cir mlations, viz.: Two aortae to supply the body and two to supply the lungs; two livers, four kidneys, two bladders, two spleens and two sets of intestineB. IN HER GRAVE. QSPRICES r?eai Baking Powden The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. ALIVE V Vaqui Olrl Falls Into a Trance smil t ltevlved After a- Month. "I noticed a suggestion some time ago ,hat science might yet make it possible 'or a man to go to sleep in the first piarter 01 one itihuij tu.u vu...u .. ... ,he last quarter ol tne next, saiu ioi. Ii.ff McLemore to a (llobe-I)emocrat nan, as he pulled away at a big black sigar in the rotunda of the Laclede. 'The writer probably got his idea from die account given by Sir Claude Wade, who relates that while residing at the iourt of Loodliiuna he saw a fakir re suscitated after being walled up for six .vceks in :i brick vault without the pos jibility of receiving a breath of air. "1 was inclined to doubt Sir Claude's itory until I witnessed a feat fully as remarkable among the Yaqui Indians ;n Mexico a few weeks ago. An ild widowed squaw had a daugh ter, a rather comely girl of four teen, who hud an unpleasant habit if going into trances whenever she iountod her bends, mother and daughter being devout Catholics. The girl would de like one dead until her mother mut tered some cabalistic words over her md applied the crucifix to her lips, when she would revive on the instant, innarently none the worse for the lapse ,11 to a state of coma. "The mother took service in a family mite 11 distance removed and left her laughter with the tribe. The latter ioon passed into a trance, and all efforts to resuscitate her yere unavailing. A ncssenger was posted olf for the moth ir, but returned with the answer that she had accompanied her mistress to Monterey. The girl lay for several lays motionless, and was at last pro aounced dead and consigned to the ?rave. A month later the mother re turned, and, learning what had been lone, nroeeeded to dig her child up. i The body had not changed in the least 1 iince being consigned to the grave, and tbeentmlistic words were reoeated THE INDISPENSABLE NAPKIN. It Was First Used Only by hllttrcn and Seor.-ed by Cltiers. Curiously enough that article now considered almost indispensable, the table napkin, was first used only by children, says the Youth's Companion, and was only adopted by elder members of the family about the middle of the fifteenth century. In etiquette books of an earlier date than this, among other sage pieces of advice for children, are instructions about wiping their lingers and lips with their napkins. It seems that the tablecloth was long enough to reach the floor and served the grown people in place of napkins. When they did begin to use napkins they placed them first on the shoulder, then on the left arm, and finally tied them about the neck. A French writer, who evidently was conservative and did not welcome the napkin kindly, records, with scorn: 'The napkin is placed under the chin and fastened in the back, as if one were going to be shaved. A person told me that he wore his that way that he might not soil his beautiful frills." It was a difficult matter to tie the two corners in the back, and it is said that thence originated our expression for straitened circumstances: "Hard .Wurjake notn r.nrts mpet.".-Tbis custom sooner than in fcrnglanu. ii one nine it was customary at great French din ners to change the napkins at every course, to perfume them with rose water and to have them folded a differ ent way for each guest. About KirtO Pierre David published the "Maistre d'Hostel," "which teaches how to wait on a table proper ly and how to fold all kinds of table napkins in all kinds of shapes." The shapes were: "Square, twisted, folded in bands aud in the forms of a double and twisted shell, single shell, double melon, single melon, cock, hen and chickens, two chickens, pigeon in a basket, partridge, pheasant, two capons in a pie, hare, two rabbits, suck ing pig, dog with a collar, pike, carp, turbot, miter, turkey, tortoise, the holy cross aud the Lorraiue cross." WONDERS OF PHOTOGRAPHY. Soap llubblui Photographed i i tbe Act of J!u rs ting. Electricity has been doing some pret ty work in the photographing of drops of water, and Prof. C. V. lioys in a recent lecture gave illustrations of what had been accomplished, says the Detroit Free Press, lie first showed photographs taken by the electric spark of soap bubbles in the act of bursting, and explained the process by which it is possible to ascertain the respe 'live speed at which different soap bubbles burst. One photograph showed an issue of liquid from a very small pipe, wlii h to the naked eye appeared to be a per fect stream, but which, on an eie-iiM photograph being taken, was resolved into a beautiful and regular series of drops. In connection with this l'rof. Hoys remarked unit, tne science ..i liquids and of the forces involved in the phenomena of the surface of liquids was one of the most interesting branch es of physical science. The effect on a fountain of playing or singing was to change its appearance into one, two or three apparently separate, clear streams of liquid, but a photograph taken as a tuning fork was struck demon itra ted that the water was disposed in di-..pi, in perfect regularity. A picture of a ride bullet, passing through the air nt the rate of two thousand feet a second, was also exhibited, l'rof. lioys, however, showed that if it were wished to inves tigate what was really happening when a rifle bullet was being projected through the air at the maximum possi ble speed, it would be necessary to have recourse to a method of illuniinuti n in finitely more rapid than the ele -trie spark. For this purpose a mirror of steel, about the size of a twenty-live cent, niece, is now used. It is so mount ed as to revolve with ease without get t.inir hot at the enormous speed of one thousand times a second, and the end of the beam of light given oil H'oi.i tins rmr misses across the screen al sucn a rate that it enables photographs tobu taken in about one ten-millionth "fa second. A Wonder Hi r:yes. The eyes of insects are immovable, and many of them seem cut into a multitude of f -ts, like the facets of a diamond. Kadi ct llww fi.c-ts is sup- nose.l lo til. r.i.i'A'TK of U tl'lte eye; l.:-nenlK !: v.-y.vd :l:-l in the cornea of ; !'"; . I'nii i in that of u cumnn.n Iim i-Hy , f them ver a.UOC VtiJ ot aui '"aliBi m, Block.