Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, November 07, 1893, Image 1

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    Portland Library
IILm'Eii W!l official sivv paper HEPPNER GAZETTE
NOTHING RISKED, . '
NOTHING MADE. l&kS&wk St H)L NO RISK,
i ; - . . , , - -J2 ' tet the cub'
ELEYKNTI1 YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY. OREGON. TUESDAy" nvivewubp t ,m .
; 1 mjLV ' 8E1(1-WEKK1'1'' NO. 177.)
: '" VALUABLlS PKKSENr.
fubmbhid
Tuesdays and Fridays
BY
THE PATTERSON ri'BLISIIING COMPANY.
ALVAH W.PATTERSON Baa. Manager,
OTIS PATTKBBON Editor
Ai 3.S.1 per year, $1.25 fur six months, 7fl cts.
for three mourns.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
Application.
The " E-A-a-XB, " of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, Is published by the same com
pany every Friday morning. Subscription
price, t'-lper year. for advertising rates, address
rilX-T Xj. PATTEESOIT, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek. Oregon, or "Gazette,"
Heppner, uregon.
'plIIH PAPKHiskept on tile at E. C. Dake'B
1. Advertising Agency, tit and 65 Merchants
ttxchuiigs, Wan Francisco, California, where cou-
racte for advertising can be made lor it.
TUB GAZKTTK'U AG iNTS.
vVitgner, B. A. Hunsakcr
Arlington, l'hill Heppner
Lone, Creek, The Laaie
Echo . IJostinuster
Camas l'rairle. Oscar lie Vanl
Nye, Or., H. C. Wright
Hardinau, Or Posimi.sler
Hamilton, Grant Co., Or.t Postmaster
lone T. J. Carl
Prairie City, Or ..R. R. MeHalcy
Canyon City, Or 8. L. I'arrisn
Mini Rock, O. P. Skelton
imvville, Or., J. K. Snow
iolm Way, Or., F. 1. McCnlluin
Athena, Or John Edinglull
Pendleton, Or., Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or Postmaster
Shelby, Or., MIbs Stella Flett
Pox, Grunt 'Co., Or., J. K. Allen
Klidit Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh
Upper Khea Creek, B. F. Hevlaud
Douglas, Or Postmaster
Lone liock, Or R. M. Johnson
Gooseberry J. R. E teb i
Comlon, Oregon Herbert Halstead
Lexiniitoli Jas. Lcaeh
AN AUKNT WANTKD IN EVKKY PRKU1NUT.
Usion Pacfic Railway-Local card.
No.
10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m.
iu, ar. at Arlington 115 a.m.
0, 11 leaves " 8:1)2 p. m.
" U, " ar. at Heppner 8:20 p. m, daily
except Sunday.
Hast bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :2tl a. m.
West " ' "leaves " 1:31 a. in.
Day trains have been discontinued.
OFnCI&L DIEEOTOST.
United States Officials.
Pi.stdeut Grover Cleveland
Vice-l'resldent Ad ai Hleveuson
He.,"etarv ol mate waller w. uresnam
rJecretary of Treasury ..John G. Carlisle
tiecimary of interior riokebmith
beoielary-of War Daniel B. LamonC
becrerary of Navy.... Hilary A. Herbert
Fostmaater-Ueliwrui Wi1mo 8. Uiiwa
Attoriiej-Geueial Richard 8. Olney
Berelary of Agriculture J. Sterling Alorlou
State of Oregon.
Governor S. Pennoyer
Secretary of State W. W.Moliride
Treasurer Phil. Motschan
Hunt. Public Instruction E. B. MoHlroy
i J. H. Mitchell
Henators jj.N.Uolph
Hinger Hermann
iCongressmen . y U- jjuj,
friuter Frank U. Haker
it. A. Moore
W. P. iiord
U. 8. Bean
Seventh Judicial District.
Cuonit judge W. L. B!haw
t'.-,aicui,ug Attorney W.H. Wils n
Morrow County Official.
join rJenator Henry Blnckman
Representative ) N. Hrowu
County Judge Julius lieithly
' C inimisBioiiere Peter Hi euner
J. M. Baker.
Clerk J. W. Morrow
Bherill Geo. Noble.
Treasurer W.J. L ezei
Assessor R. Ij. haw
" ourveyor laa Brown
' School Bup't W.L. Baling
" t 'orouer T.W.Ayers, Jr
BEPPHEU TOWN OPVIOKBS.
jl(li, "... ....J. 'R.Simons
Uouuriliuen O. E. i'arusworth, M
l.ietitenthal, Otia Patterson, Julius Keithly,
W. A. Joiiubtou, J. L. Veager.
Keoonler A. A. Roberta.
Tretiburoi K- (i. Blooum
Marshal J. W. Itaeums.
Precinct Officers.
Justice of the Peace F. J. Hallock
Constable.. .". 0. W. Kychard
United States Land Officers.
THE DALLES, OB.
J. W. Lewis.... Rrgisr
T. 8. Lang i. Receiver
LA OBANDK, OB.
B.P, Wi'Bnn Register
J.H Kobbins Receiver
GECSET SOCIETIES.
Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev
ery Tuesday evening at 7.80 o'clock in
their Castle Hall, National Bank build
ing. Bojonrning brothers cordially in
vited to attend. W. L. HALING, C I .
W. B Potteb. K. uf R. & S. tf
RAWLINS POST, N . 81.
(i. A. It.
uls at Leiiiiguni. Or., the last Saturday of
acl. month. All veterans are invited u join,
' . C Boon,
Adjutant,
ftim. W . Kmith.
tf Commander.
PEOFESSIOMJi.ii.
A.
A. HUBERTS, Ri-bI EHtate, Insur
ance and Collections. Offioe in
oiiucil Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf.
S. P. FLORENCE,
STOCKRAISER!
HEPPNER. OREGON.
Cattle hranded and ear marked as shown above.
Horse V on right shoulder.
Mv cattle range In Morrow and Umatilla conn
lias. 1 wiU pay lluO.OO for the arrest and con
viction of any person stealing my stock.
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREE TO OURREADERS
liy a special arrangement with tbe
publishers we are prepared to furnish
FKEE to each of our readers a year's
subscription to tie popular monthly
agricultural journal, the Amebic an
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
This offer in made to any of our sub
scribers who will pay up all arrearages
on subscription and one year in advance,
and to any new subscribers who will pay
one year in advance. The American
Farmkr enjoys a large national circula
tion, ana ranks among Hue leading
agricultural papers. By this arrange
ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re
ceive the American Farmer or one
year, It will be to your advantage to
oail promptly. Sample copies oan be
seen at our office.
The Orluliinl
Webster's Unabiidsed
DIGTIOHHRY.
V SPECIAi. AllKAMihJItM WITH 1HE
I publishers, e are able to obtain a number
of th above book, and propose to furnish a
cony to each of our subscribers. '
The dictionary is a necessity In every home,
school and business house, it tills a vacanev
and furnishes knowledge which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply, louugana oiu, eaucated and Ignorant,
rich and poor, should have it within reach, and
refer to its conteuis every day in the year.
As some have aBked 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 1b the very work
comnleto on which about forty of the best years
Ot the author's life were so well einnloveo in
writing. It contains the entire vocabulary of
auouL luu.uuu worus, u'.ciiiomg me correct spell'
linr. derivation and iberiiiltir.n of uin tuH i,
thb regular sianaaro: size, contaiiiiug about
;KX),000 square Inches of printed surface, and is
oouua in cioin nan morocco ana SLeeo.
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
tne Tonowing prices, viz:
Full Cloth bound, gilt side and bad
stamps, marbled edges, $i-oo.
Halt Mo-occo, bound, gilt side and bach
stamps, marDiea edges, 3i.so.
run Sheep pound, leather label, marbled
edges, $2.00.
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
age to Heppner.
rsB-As the publishers limit the time and
number of books they will furnish at the low
prices, we adviBe all who desire to avail them
selves of this great opportunity to attend to it
at once.
SILVER'S UIliMFION
EIHE
tocky- - - Mountain News
THE DAILY BY MAIL
Subscription price reduced as follows:
One Year by mail)
Six Months "
Thwe Months "
One Month "
$6 00
3 00
1 50,
50
WE WEEKLY BY MAIL.
One Year (in Advance) ' :
$1 00
The News is the only consistent c.iaivpion of
silver In the West, and should be In every home
in the West, and in the hands of every miner
and business man In Colorado.
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
THE NEWS,
TJonvor, Colo.
L UMBER!
JK HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN
i
dressed Lumber,
16 miles of Heppner, at
a hat is known as the
SCOTT SAWMIXjIj.
PER 1,000 FEET, ROUGH,
" ' " CLEAR.
- 110 00
- 17 50
F DELIVERED IN REPPNER, WILL ADD
.voo per t.nno feet, additional.
I.. HAMILTON, Prop.
I . ,v . ifrttull to ii . Mnn'gr
WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES
(Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME CAItD
Two Through Trains Daily.
19 Jnmlflrnmll,v.MlrinpflnolirJArH.40Hm.V4fipra
1 .' 2.) p ( n i 7 1 "pm 1 1 . v . . .Kt . Hiil...ArW.ftm.,i.0iipra i
IO.;Viftiui4.a'tpni!Lv...Duluth.. .Aril 1. 10" 7.Mpm
1.4opm 7.(iipm i.v . Annisno.. at aikhiii ,.wipm
7.15um lO.uftmiAr... Chicago. Xv'5.00p 11.43"
i I . I I
Tlrkets Hold mid bnwaire cherkefi through to
all pointa in the rutted stAtes and Canada.
Clone connpHinii made in Chicago with all
trains doing Kant and South.
For full information apply to your neareit ,
tieket agent or AH. . FOND.
Gen. Paw. and Tkt Ant. Chicago, III
BSUUSWHHtflHBSHIMaBBBBSVItlSsVsSdBaBlBSiSBS
BILIOUSNESS
Who has not suffered this misery
caused by bile in the stomach
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 Mlm
mons Liver Regulator, which never failed
to relieve me. I speak not of myself,
alone, but my whole family." J. M. Fill
man, Selnm, Ala. .
Jtt-EVERT PACKAOE-H
Has our Z Stamp In red on wrapper.
J. H. ZJM1.IN CO., Philadelphia; Ps.
national eat of Mwi
PENLAND, K.
President.
K BISHOP,
Cashier.
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms.
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
UKxTNEB. tf OREGON
QITIOK TXTVXE1 J
' TO
San Franoisoo
Vnd all points in California, via the Mt. Bhasta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
i ne great highway through California to all
points Kast and South. Grand Scenlo Route
. of tlje Paeifio Coast! Pullman Buffet
: Sleepers. SaonwLeliw o' r
Attachedi.to express trains, affording snpenor
accommodations for second-olass passengers.
For rates, tiokets, sleeping car reservations,
to. .call upon or address
K. KOEHLEK, Manager, E. P. R00ER8, Asst.
en. F. 4 P. Agt.. Portland, Oregon.
Eree
t
Medicine
& Qolden Opportunity for Suffering
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Remedies to the People
do you smrs
will sand von FREE OF CHAKGE a full f!oiirn
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
your cose. We want your recommendation.
We can cure the most aggravated diseases of
both Rexes. Uur treatment lor all diseases and
deformities are modern and scientilic. acquired
by many year's experience, which enables us to
Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair.
N. B. We have the onlv Dosltive cure for En-
ilepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References given.
rermauenuy locaiea. um estaDjisnea.
Dr. Williams Mkdical and Surgical Insti
tute!, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.
ARt 1'OU 'ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES ?
The genius who Invented the "Fifteen" puz
zle, "Pigs In Clover," and many others, has in
vented a brand new one, which 1b 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 as the
young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle
b the property of the New York Press Club, for
whom it was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the
great puzzlelst, to be sold for the benefit of the
movement to erect a great home for newspaper
workers in New York. Generous friends have
given $25,000111 prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTb sent to the "Press Club
Building and Chrrity Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mail.
mi) YOU THY
"PIGS IN CLOVER"
or the "FIFTFEX PUZZLE."
Well, the man who Invented them has just
completed another little playful mystery for
young and old, which is selling for TK N CKNTS
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 generoilB friends of the club have donated
over f:25.OO0 to provide prizes for lucky people,
young or old, who solve the mystery. There is
a lot of entertainment and Instruction In it.
Send a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by
return mail. Address "Press Club Souvenir,"
iemplc Court.New York City.
" ?AkOLS if MAIL" ffiEB
si , ,. FCS 10 1-CEXT STAMPS
. p MVi jn.-:ii. price iv., your af.
ill tf for 1 yenr boldly
fi 1 1 n t U Mil KliinUlIM
hMh, Only Direi tory
u union i em i iruui iuif
lUlier mid nianufac
probably, thousands M
valuable hookti, iihimt
All free aiid Rnch pun e
with one of your printed Rdiirww lnlli
pHKted iherenn.
'j mv is cent aildre In y.
Dlrwiorv l ie rt'cciwo in;
i..tis anil ovi-r ai.oo r
JIh.I. Mv addn-si yo
!!i-ll.
Mfl. I-
llll VI
WORLD'S FAIK DIKECTORY CO.,
No. H" Frankford and Glrard Aves., Philadel
phia, Pa.
yffsr i-zm f
wmmm
ill
BI.Ml iriui alio i,.. ' '
your liiliel adilresws to you; wind
stick on voiir i-nvelopfs, books, ev., t
,H..I. Lulr.u l.u.1 .1 A.H aKV
-ii'-
I 11,;
t . -Li. ' J'l
i- .711 mllrr:
.t-Pt ' '"' 1,11
How to Get Twenty-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing.
The Winner has a clear Cift of a Small
Fortune, and the Losers Have Patents
that may Bring them in Still More.
Would you like to make twenty-five hundred
dollars? If yon would, read carefully what
follows and you may see a way to do it.
The Press Claims Company devotes much
attention to pateuts. It has handled 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 results. Thatencouragementthe Press
Claims Company propose to give.
HOT SO HAKD AS ITKEEHS.
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 be must devote years to delving iu
complicated mechauical proiems aud 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 cieur 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
cheap ones the thiugs that seem so absurdly
trivial that the average citizen would feel
somewhat ashamed of briugiug them to the
attention of the Patent Office.
Kdison says that the profits he has received
Irom tbe patents on all his marvelous inven
tions ave not been sulficlent to pav 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 haud when thrown, made a fortune
out of his scheme. The modern sewing-machine
is a miracle of Ingenuity the product
a hundred and fifty years, but the whole bril
liant result rests upon Ihe simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at tbe point In
stead of at the other eud.
of the toll of hundreds of busy brains through
THE UTTLE THINGS THE HI O.ST
VAl.l aiu.i:.
Comparatively few people regard themselves
as inventors, but almost every body has been
struck, atone time or another, with ideas that
seem calculated to reduce some of the little
frictions of life. Usually such Ideas arc dis
missed without further thought.
"Whydon'tthe 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 thein in such a way."
"What was the man who made the saucepan
thinking of?" grumbles the oook. "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 aman
who is latetfor 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
auu tne various sufferers forgot about their
grievances and began to think of something
else. If they would set down the next con
venient opportunity, put their ideas about car
windows, saucepans and collar buttons Into
practical shape, and then apply for patents
they might find themselves as independently
wealthy as the man who invented the iron
umbrella rinir. or the one whn Tmieniori
he fifteen puzz le.
A TEMPTING OFFEIt.
To induce the people to keen tracklof their
bright ideas and see what thuro In them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
inze.
To the person who submits to it
lie simplest and moat promising
invention, from a commercial
point of view, the company will
give twenty-five hundred dollar
In cash, in addition to refunding
the fees for securing; a patent.
It will also advertise the inven.
lion free of charge.
This offer is subject to the following condi
tions:
Every competitor must obtain a patent for
bis invention through the company. He must
flrstapply for a preliminary search, the cost of
which will be five dollars. Should this
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 and Bureau fees, will be seventy
dollars. For this, whether he secures a prize
or not, the inventor will have a patent that
ought to be a valuable property to him. The
prize will be awarded by a jury consisting ol
three reputable patent attorneys of Washihg
ton. Intended competitors should till out tne
following blank, and forward it with their
application:
I submit the within described invention iu
competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollar
Prize offered by the Press Claim Company."
MO Kt.ANKS IN Till fJO.H PKTIOIV.
This Is a competltiou of rather an Uliusul na
ture. It ts 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 onemerely selling his for the
amouu of the prize. Sut the Press Claims
Company's offer is something entirely differ
ent. Each person Is asked merely to help him
self, andthe one who helps biin 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 fur a
club house on a certain corner Is nut occcpt-
ed has spent his labor ou something of very
ittle use to him. But the person who patents a
simple and useful device in the Press Claims
Company's competition, need not worry If he
fall to secure a prize. He has a substantial
result to show for his work one that wll
commaud Its value in the murket at any
time.
The man who uses anv article In his dollv
work ought to know better now to Improve It
than the mechanical expert who studies ft
only from the theoretical point of view, flpt
rid of the Idea that an improvement can be too
simple to be worth patenting. The simplerlht
better. The person who best snccee Is l'i
combining simplicity and popularity, will get
the Press Claims Company's twenty-flvo liu-i-
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Altun.
Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard.
dred dollars.
, The responsibility of this company may bn
judged from the fact that its stock is held by
about three hundred ofthe leading newspapers
of the United States.
Address the Press Claims Company, Joss
Wodderburn, managing attorney, 61S F street
n. W Washington, 1). C.
ii. A. K. NO II UK.
We take this opportunity of infjrmiag
our subscribers that the new commis
sion or of pensions has been aponinted
He is an old soldier, and we telifive
that soldiers and their heirs will re
oeive justice at his hands. We da not
anticipate that there will be any rudinal
changes id the administration of ponsioi
anairs under tbe new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. 8,
soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take
stops to make application at onoe, if
they have not already done so, in order
to eeoure tbe benefit of the early filing
of their claims in case there should bn
any future pension legislation. Snoh
legislation is seldom retroaotive. lucre
fore it is of great importance that ap
plications be filed in the department af
the earliest possible date.
It the U. S. soldiers, sailors, or their
widows, children or parents desire in
formation iu regard to pension matters,
they Bhoald write to tbe Press Claims
Company, ut Washington, B. C, and
tbey will prepare and send tbe neoessary
application, if they find them entitled
under the numerous laws enacted for
their beneflt. Address
PKK3S CLAIMS COMPANY,
John WeddkhburnI Managing Attor
ney, Washington, D. 0., P. O. Box 385
t- tf.
THE WEaTEUN PEDAGOGUE.
We are in receipt of tbe May number
of our state school paper. It exceed
any of the former numbers ir. value.
The paper this month opntains many
new and valuable features. The illus
trated series on tbe schools ot the stute
is introduced by a paper ou tbe Friends
Polyteoliuic Institute at Salem, Oregon.
These papers cannot fail to be of great
value both to the schools and to the
public
There are also several fine artioles
by our best writ.irs and tbo departments
"Current Eveuts,""Saturdiiy Thoughts,"
"Eduoational News" "The Oracle
Answers, Correspondents," etc, eaob
oontain much valuable reading for
teachers or parentB. The magazine
has about 50 pages of matter, well
printed and arranged. We pronounce
the Western oJ.- cuuea
tionul monthly on the ooasl.
Everyone of our readers should have
the paper if they are at all interested
in education. No teacher school direc
tor or student can gel along well with
out it. We will receive subsoript.ons
at this office. Price only 81. 00 a year.
When desired we will send the Western
Pedagogue uud Uazetle one year to one
address for 83.00. Call and examine
sample copies. Teachers, directors and
parents, now is tbe time to subscribe, tf
Thompson & Binusown tbe buss which
goes to and from tbe Palace hotel, bul
will can tor parties desiring to go to truiu
in any part of the city. Leave' orders
at City hotel. a
Bucklen's Arnica .Salve.
The best salve in the world for cuts
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei
sores, tetter, chapped bauds, chilblaiiu
oorna and all skin et upturns, and posi
tively oures piles, or no pay required. Il
is guaranteed to give perlect satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 25 oents pel
box. For sale by Slooum-Johnson Drug
Company.
poztlH.u ncvt ooo'dia jo miw atfl
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tap.ttou oij y.i K)ii:iium.):iii pnt
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'iikN M1 u! owns AHoid sa.vt ononqo
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ajujnaj lunijoriuii pun iiu.iiiiip imhu m
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-lins 3t(i uinjj Miiira uns otjx 'shjui
:hu hi Niji)utuiT) jiKuil ut s.ii"pnunTOH
i0i.vi litis ati .i.k'.mji-ij t! stt vsii "uuo;)
uniiput ut "siu:i .t.ip.nod orjuimj
;1 JO A'lttllatA .TlH tit KUHU.IUJ ill.L
j;itlllJii.- 1 mi ll"w
The Lady in the Moon.
It is left to our four hundredth cen
tennial to celebrate a charming dis
covery. It seems not to be generally
known that the regal "man in the
moon," who for uges or cons has been
looked upon as the sole ruler of his
planet, shares his throne and divides
his honors with the loveliest semblance
of woman. Would you see her at her
best let it bo on' a cloudless night
as near the full of the moon as
possible. Use a good opera or field
glass. Be patient; some fail to find her
at first. The face is in profile and looks
toward your left as you gaze, "eupying
half the surfaee of the mooi . the hair
dark and coiled rather high; her throat
and neck are radiantly beautiful. Be
yond her profile is seen the dark face of
a man looking straight forward.
Bakin
Powder:
Highest of all in Leavening
Li -j&s&m i
ABSOLlifECT PURE
MAMNG NEW OASES.
The t rench Turning Another Desert IrM
Into a Fertile Keg-loo.
The French arc at work asrain malt.
ing new oases in the Sahara desert, aava
the New York Sun. They believe that
a largo region around El Golea, in the
desert south of the western part of Al
geria, can be restored to fertility. At
oresent nn little nncin ic icnini v
' ., " ..reu u.y
many miles of sand from any other fer
tile area. The place has no commercial
importance, but the French have estab
lished a military post there because
they intend to make El Golea the start
ing point for all their movements in
the directions of Tuat and the other
oases south of 1.1 (Jolea, which are now
in the hands of the murderers Tuaregs
and other desert nomads. The French
purpose to reduce the bandits to sub
mission, and enable merchants to ex
tend commerce to and beyond the re
gions in the Sahara whore caravans can
venture now only at the peril of being
plundered and destroyed. Mr. Kolland
has made a study of the geology and
hydrology of tho El Uolea re
gion. He says there is plenty of
water under the sand, and that it
can be brought easily to the. surface.
His purpose is t tan the subtcrraneun
supplies and lead tho water along the
uneu-up bod of the Wady Seggeur.
From the main i!it:-h side ditches are to
be extended, and i i that way the en
gineers expect to fcr:r:i::c- a number of
thousands of acres of laud. Mr. Rol.
land hays there In no expectation that
the new basin enn be developed to as
great an extent as lh;t of the Wady
Kir, where hu-lw'-. r.l thousands of
date palms arc 11 mH .!.! n?. although the
place hud only d.a-rt sands a few years
ago; but he es-p---, Meet t:: restore
the plain of El (r-'e:t i' , ancient pros
perity, for there i.i n- d.nibt that a large
oasis was there on: c. imd that it has
gradually diminished i i nine owing to
the encroaching de w I . which has been
nushtner fMilv. "-- v' dai
rying the sand toward the Mediterran
ean, destroying all vegetation, and mak
ing a desert, where verd'ire had existed.
The revivified oasis will at least be
largo enougii to nourish a garrison.
France expects tn keep a large force at
El (Jolea, because military operations
against the tribes further southward
will have to be on an important scale.
It will, therefore, bo a great point
gained to obviatu the necessity of bring
ing big supplies of provisions to El
Golea for tho purpose of revietualing
the garrison there.
HEALTH OF ITALIAN CITIES.
The Government Tallin H.lnltiiry Meas
ures Tvihr!il I'evi'r I i Florence.
Naples and liotne owe their evil repu
tation to a state of things which no
longer exists. Until a few years ago
Naples drew all its water from wells,
and typhoid fever was virtually epi
demic in the city. Since the introduc
tion of the Serino water and the closing
of the wells the disease lias almost dis
appeared. In Koine before it became
the capital the drainage was bad and
In spite of the numerous aqueducts a
large number of wells were in use. The
Itulian government has thoroughly
drained the city, and when the cholera
last appeared in Italy the government
closed the wells, which still remain
closexl. The result has been to reduce
the deaths from t yphold fever to less
than three per week in a population of
415,000.
There is another popular superstition
that Kome is unhealthy in summer. As
it happens, the death rate is much
lower in summer than in winter. It is
lowest in Mav and June, when it is
eighteen and nineteen per thousand,
and highest in February and March,
when, owing to the prevalence of dis
eases of tho throat and lunirs. it
reaches thirty and thirty-two per thou
sand. It is higher in July or August
for the reason that the peasants who
are harvesting on the Campagna are
often smitten with fever and are
brought into the hospitals. Hut even
then it is much lower than it is in the
winter mouths. The deaths from
malarial fevers in Kome average a
little more than five per week, anil a
very large proportion of these deaths
are those of peasants and inhabitants
of unhealthy villages who are brought
from the surrounding country to the
Roman hospitals.
The prevalence of typhoid fever in
Florence cannot be denied. It is due to
bad drainage and the use of well water.
The municipality is, however, deter
mined to rectify thissluteof thiugs with
out delay, and if the measures recom
mended by Sir I)ouglas(i:ilton in the re
port he has made to the syndic are
carried out, as there is little doubt that
they will be, Florence will become as
healthy as Home or Nut .Ins.
THE WAVERLEY OAKS.
Ancient True of IV., nlotn Itcauty In the
htnte of Mart .ucliuselts.
The great oalrs nt Waverley, Mass.,
are survivals of nnonk forest that must
have existed In that region, according
to the geologists nnd students of trees,
as far back as the tent h century. They
bear every evidence of great ago, and
an elm tree In tho neighborhood, now rm of imagination but sensitive of car,
almost dismantled, with its great limbs proposed that tho oft-rupcated word
lying on the ground and nearly all of "say" be made the first syllable of tho
its branches decayed, is the most vener- name and that villo be added as the
able object In the line of trees that can second syllable. The idea took, and,
probably be displayed in any part of 8uys the legend, then and there the set
New England. It Is well worth a visit tlement was christened Sayville.
to Waverley just to see this venerablo
elm. It Is Immense in the size of its" The Stndebaker wagon heads them all
trunk, and Its dignity in decav Is verv For sale at Gilliam k liiibee'a. g
Power Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
bwder
impresaive. i lie aiizva oan trees in the
neighborhood are of the sort that at
tain a very great ag-e, and that main
tain their virility unimpaired. .. We
know of only one other oak tree In
New England, says the Boston Herald,
that can be compared with them. That
is located In Ipswich, and Is larger and
more venerable, annarentlv. thnn nr
I r ir-. , .. . . J
" avt-m-v onus, ana tnat ana the
Waverley oaks, we are triad to U
have been inspected by the state park
commissioners nnd are likely to be pre
served. It is worth one's while to see
and study these majestic oaks. They
are seen to great advantage in the win
ter, when their rugged limbs are bare
and their immense strength is revealed,
and in summer, when they are covered
with foliage, they are abjects of won
derful beauty. The state of Massachu
setts has a duty to enfranchise these
trees and make them public property.
They are the glory of the state, and al
most as much an object of interest as
the old state house, or the venerable
st.-ucture called the Old South Meeting
house. SAVED A DOZEN LIVES.
Presence of Mind nnd Coiumendabls
Pluck of a Colorado Mine Owner.
"I have heard of some rare cases of
presence of mind," said a traveler to a
reporter for the St, Louis Ulobe-Demo-crat,
"but I saw a case a few days ago
that struck me as among the rare ones.
We were coming south on the Santa Fe
from Denver a few nights before Christ
mas. At alout two o'clock in the morn
ing, somewhere north of Colorado
Springs, we went over an embankment,
The papers were full of it and I won't
go into details, but nobody knows how
a millionaire saved the lives of a dozen
people that awful morning. As soon as
we came to our senses wo all tried to
get out of the sleeping e;ir. When we
did we found that, the forward end was
afire. J jst ther, Tin --
aire uunC-owner, who has property all
over the state of Colorado, grabbed up
an armful of blankets, and, jumping
across the flames, landed in a deep
snowdrift. He was barefooted and clad
only in his underclothes, but he didn't
Beem to mind that a bit. lie spread out
a blanket, piled it full with snow and
threw it over the flames. This he did
time and time again until he had tho
blaze completely smothered. There
wasn't another man in the car who
would have thought of that hut Yan
kee, and 1 tell you it was a plucky thing
to do. I don't know whether I'd like to
freeze or roust to death. It looked as
though it would have to be one or the
other there for a while, but Yankee's
nerve saved us."
GLADSTONE
AS
A READER.
It la the
rentier's llnhlt Never to
Lose
a Minute's Time.
It is rather discouraging to know that
if one should read more hours a day
than the average American is able to
spend away from business, he would be
able to read only a few of the works
that are really worth reading.
Mr. Gladstone, however, is not to be
discouraged by this knowledge. He
goes upon the principle that the only
way to get any reading done is to read.
In a volume of conversations, recently
translated, Dr. Dullinger said: "I think
it was in the year 1871 that 1 remember
his (Gladstone's) paying me a visit at
six o'clock in the evening. We began
talking on political anil theological sub
jects, and both became so engrossed
with the conversation that It was two
in the morning when I loft the room to
fetch a book from my library bearing
on the matter in bund. I returned with
it in a few minutes and found Mr.
Gladstone deep In a volume he had
drawn out of his pocket, true to his
principle of never losing time during
my momentary absence. And this at
the small hours of the morning."
Ths Andes Mlnklng.
The startling announcement is made
that the whole range of tho Andes is
slowly Binking into the earth's crest.
As proof of this La Gazette Geograph
Ique says that Quito was 9,590 feet above
the level of the sea in the year 1745; iu
1800 it was only 0,570; hi 1831, 9,667,
having sunk 28 feet in the 55 years fol
lowing 1745, and but three feet during
the 31 years which intervened between
1800 and 1831. In 1808 the city's level
had been reduced to 9,520 feet above
the level of the Pacific ocean. To sum
up the total, we find that Ecuador's
capital has sunk 7 feet in 12a years.
Antisana's farm, the highest inhabited
spot on tho Andes (1,000 feet higher
than Quito itself, which is the highest
real city on the globe), is said by tho
same authority to be 218 feet lower than
it was in 1745.
C'hrlsteiilus; m Town.
" According to a local tradition, proba
bly invented, Sayville, L. I., received
its name In a peculiar fashion. The
settlers were gathered in debate upon
the shore trying to agree upon a name
for the place, and one after another
proposed his suggestion with "Say,
now 11 this do?" After many Bugges-
tlons had been rejected, some one, bar-