) liEPPNEIl GAZETTE. HonA . : HEPPNER GAZETTE, PAPER OFFICIAL N 3 THING RISKED, INTO RISK, NOTRADE. ooo-ooooo The manlwbo doeat artrcnlfie, doesn't get the cub. X. Tlief charged I iwiy- 5 8H.1 oil! or Hlni NO J HING MADE. 2. Thenian who i.Jcrui.', gi'ts Hi? iu!i Notice it. KLKVKNTii YEAH HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 17, 1893. WEEKLY WO. t58.( SEMI-WEEKLY .NO. U0. KM I WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY riili PATTERSON ITBUSIIIXG COMPANY: .M VAIl vt. PATTERSON Hub. Manager. ,TiS I'ATTKKSON Editor A fort; 2.5 i ner year, tL2'i for six monttiB, 7& (its. It"' UMimllH. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. Die "E-A-O-XiE, " of l,ong Creek, Urant County. Oregon, Is published by the same, com pany every Friday morning. Subscription cric'u, ?'J per vear. Vut advertising rates, address li. PJi.TIBESOiT, Kilitor ami Mannaer, Long Creek, Oregon, or "Uiuefte," Uii'.ier, Oregon. VALUABLE A Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FKEETO OUKREADERS 'I lllti PAPHH is kept oq tile al E.t . Hakes 1 Advertising Agejiuy, til and 115 Merchants Kuliuniu,, Hhu l'miiciooo, California, where uo racte for adverllsing can be made for it. 1'IIK ii 4ZUTI K'S au ;n is. Aktfiwr, H A II u maker Ariinul.ni, Phlll lleuuiier Loiik t.nsek, .Ihefcagle t,j10 I'ostmuBt r Caums 1'ralrie, (KI.IS !'! Nve.Or., ";;- riglit Haniinau, Or os in. ster Hamilton, (irant Co., Or., Postuiattcr 10e J-tf1 I'rulrie City, Or. H. McHaley Cunv.ni City, or a. L. I""'18" i-H.ii Kock, t- l'.okelion iinvville, Or., ;; r ,:'Vl'm John Day, or., N'.l;ha" "!' Athena, or John tdington Pendleton, or Postmaster Mount Vernon, Grant Oo.,Or.,. ... .... Postmasiei Shelby, Or., Miss Stella Melt fox, tirant Co., Or., J. K Allen Kial.t Mile, or., Mrs. Andrew Ay hba.ign UrWrllliea Creek, B. HovluilU UnilglHS, or l ostulnster Lone Kock, Or K. . . JoIiiimj,, Gooseberry , , f ,' .Vfi Condon, Oregon Herbert Ha stead Lexington l-mch AN AUBKT WANTKO IN KVliKy I'KBCINCT. Umon Pacfic Railway-Local card. daily No, 10, mixed leBveaHepininrlOflOa.nl. ;n. " ar. at Arlington Wra.ui. U, ' leaves " iti p. m. " li. " ar. at Heppuer 6:20 p. n. dxcept Uunduy. Kast bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1:21! . in. West " " " leaves " a. ui. Day trains have been discontinued. 3rr,XCX-&-Xj I3IEECT3BT. United Status OUlcials. ., Grover Cleveland Vi. H-l'resldent i ; Ad al Bieveiisnu beo'Vtary ot cilat ', Waiter Q. (iresham fewn-Uirfur rirary-t Johu-U. t uru.t beoieutry of Interior.,;...... Hoke Suiati Secretary of War Daniel 8. Lament Secretary of Navy .... H ilary A. Herheit Postmoster-lieueral. Wilson 8. bissell Attor.iey-Ueueral.... : .Kioliard 8. Oluey Betretary of Agriculture J. BterUug Aloriou State ot Oregon. Governor P'i?yer W,.rlarv ot otate vj. n. .m,uc m" :.. Jfhil Buiil. Public lustruction. ... by a Hpeciitl Hrrniiuemeut with the 1 1 1 1 1 il i j 1 1 e if we are prepured to turuiah KHEE to enuh of onr readers a year's miliHortpliou to the popular monthly HLrriotilhiritl jonrmtl, the American Fakmek, pnblwhed at Hprinefleld and Olevolhtiil. Ohio. Thin nffur in piade to any of onr aub scnbeiH who will puy up all arreiiraKes ill miliwription n:nl ine year in advance, and to any upw subncrtlicrs who will pay one yeai iu advance. The American Faumkii enjuyn a lnre imtitinnl oironla timi, miiT rHtihs amonR the lendint; nurionltnral papers. By this niraane raentit COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the Ameuican FAitMnn for one year, It will lip to your advantage to onil promptly. Hntnple copies can be s en at onr office. Tlie Orlfflnal raters Unabridged DIGTIQNRRY. FT V ?&F iff HX mi'RCIAjU cVKKaNuKlvid NT Ann i n& publiHhers, e are able to obtain a number above book, and propose to furnish 1U school and business house. It tills a vacancy. of tb rnnv t.n nfti'h of our subscrfbers. i henictionary is a necessity m every noine, Beintiprfl.... ... ConKreBHinen., PrinttT 8iH)rme .ludges., MoLHoimu K. ii. iMcu.lioy J. It. MilCllHil J J. N.UoU.b liiiiKf r HuruiHun VV. u. KlliB trunk O. baiter b , A . .Uoure bean ib. A.! A VV. I. ( It. 8. L SuvciilU Judicial Disti iet. CllOU t -iildO Muri'ow Uountj Offluial". ritit tutor W. L. BradnliHW W. H. Wila ti tt,H!WH.tauv i;,V, ,Kit.h.v k u7;;, " oniity J ml ' C miuib8iontrb.. J. AL. baker. 4'larlr..., Hheriif .... IreaBuror .HHeuor " purveyor ' -Hiliuol riup't... ' t orouer Henry Blackmail J. N. iifowii Kt'KlliJ ..Foler Uieuiioi J. W. M(rrow (itso. Noble. , . W. J . L emoi , H. L. haw lutt Urown VV. L.ciuiinii T. W.Ayers, Js mid fiirnifihes knowledtre which no one bun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and ignorant, rich and poor, should have it within reanh, and refer to Its contenls 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 coinolete on which about forty of the best years m the author's life were so well employed 'In writing. It contain rthe entire vocabulary of about 100,000 words, including the correct spell ing, derivation and definition of same, and is the regular standard size, containing abut :l00,O00 square inches of printed surface, aucl Is hound lu ciotn nan morocco ana blobd. Until further notice we will furnish this valuable Dictionary First To any new subscriber, y Second To any renewal subscriber. Third Jo any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the tollowine: prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt de . and bact stamps marbled edges $f-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 ige to neppner. 4gr-A8 the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low n rices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of i.his great opportunity to attend to it at once. .SILVKK'8 OHiMFION :THE: UEfPNKU TOWN OKKICKBS. .. J. It. Simons toini'iiim.'ii'' I""""". O. K. Farnsworth, . Lii-hwnthal, Otis Patterson, J.dius Kclthly. VV.A. I ojlUolOU, J f. leagoi. llt'Coitlel Tr-astiiei .. Harsttiii .... Prccmct Olllif 1 -r. , i,..Q.. P. J. Hall'icK t'oii-talite.... United THE OALLEh, OU. J.W.Lewi. T. 8. Lang r .A. A. Hoberlh. K. U. 8loeiiui ,'....J. W. Itasuius. , W. Hi chard States Land Orhceis. LA OBANDIE, OB. . Kegl'tar rt T7 Tir:'- J.' it', llobbma.'.'.'.' 1"!0',ivBr EEOEET SOCIETIES Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meow ev ery Tuesday evening al 7.J0 o clock t , their Castle Hall, National Hank build, nig. Sojourning broihem cordial v in vited to Hltflld. W. b. SALINQ. 1.. I . W. B POTTEK, K. of li. 0. " KAWL1N8 POST, N ). 81. O. A. R. ets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday ,cl. mouth. All vetoiaun -o,:,i,; tf Coinmauder. I'. C. Hoon, Adjutant, PEOrESSIMTJUi. A A. ROBERTS, Real Estate, Insnr ance and Collections. Offioe i Oounoil Chambers, Heppner.Or. swtf. S. P. FLORENCE, locky-. -Mountain-i-News THE DAILY-BY MAIL Subscription price reduced at follows: One Year (by m til) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Thre Months " 1 50 One Month " : SO (HE WEEKLY BY MAIL One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The Ne's Is the only consistent c iB'vpion of silver in the West, and should be in every home In the West, and in the hands of every miner id business man in Colorado. Send In your subscriptions at once. Address, THE 3XTJ3A7S, ConveTi Colo 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 Kegulator. "I have been a victim to Biliousness for years, and niter trying various remedies lny only success was in the use of Sim mons Liver Regulator, which never failed to relieve me. I speak not of myself, alone, but my whole family." J. M. Fill man, Weluia, Ala. EVEKT PACKAGE-W Has onr Z Stamp In red on wrapper. J. U. ZEIL1N CO., Philadelphia, Pa. QCTIOK TX1VIEI S TO itin Francisco And all points in California, via the Mu Hhasta route of the Southern Pacific Co. rhe great highway through California to all points East and South, tirand Hcenlo Route of the Paoifio Coast. Pullman Buffet Sleepers. Second-olasB Sleepers Attached .to express trains, affording superior accommodations for seoond-ctass passengers. For rates, tickets, sleeping car reservations. to.. call apon or address a. KOEHLEK, Manager, B. P. KOGEES, Asst Sen. F. & P. Agt.. Portland, Orecon. PRIZES ON PATENTS. How to Get Twenty-five Hundred Dollars for Nothing. The Winner has a clear Gift of a Small Fortune, and the Loseri nave Patents that may Bring them in Still More. Would yon like to make twenty-flvo 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 tallcut at large lu this country needing nothing but encouragement to produce practical results. That encouragement the Press Claims Company propose to give. NOT SO II A KB AS IT SEEJIS. A patent strikes most peopie 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 s-rd 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 clear comprehension of the fact that It is not the great, complex, and expensive inventions that bring the best returns to their authors, but the little, simple, and cheap ones the things that seem so absurdly trivial that the average citizen would feel somewhat aBhamed of bringing them to the attention of the Patent Office. Edison says that the profits he has received irom the patents on all his marvelous Inven tions ave uot been sufficient to pay tne cost of his experiments. But the man who con ceived the idea of fastening a bit of rubber cord to a child's ball, so that it would come back to the hand when thrown, made a furtuue 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 restB 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 ItKIKT 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 Slates. Address the Press Claims Company, Job a Wodderburn, managing attorney, 618 P street n. W., Washington, U. C. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report li. A. ft. NO I1CE. national Bank ol lepier. WM. PENLAND, ED. President. B BISHOP, Cashier. rUANSACTS i COLLECTIONS Made on Favorable Terms. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD HEPPNER. tf OREGON Free Medicine ! A Golden Opportunity for Suffering Humanity. Physician)) Give their Hemedles to the People von piirrjun i) Write us atonce. explain inn ourrr.it s i,i,,vnnniii,inud e i trii irtiirir. nF CHAiUJE a full course of specially prepared remedies best suited to your case, we want your recuiuiueiiuuuuu. We can cure the most aggravated diseases oi hnth .., nnr rrpBfmpnr Tor nil diseases ann rnrmitiMflmTniulprn and scientitic. acquired by many year's experience, wnicn enaDies us to Guarantee a Cure, Do not despair. N. B. v have the only positive cure for Ep ilepsy (tits) ana catarrn. neierences given. l ermaueuuy locaieu. v,u m"hbu. n w.i.itims MKmpAi. ano Surgical Insti tute, 719 Market street, tsan rrancisco, uai. We take this opportunity of informing onr subscribers that the new oommiB eioner of pensions has been apnointed He is an old soldier, and we t slier that soldiers and tbeir heirs will re ceive justice at his hands. We do not anticipate that there will be any radios changes in the administration of ponaioa affairs under the new regime. We would advise, however, that U. S. soldiers, sailors and their heirs, take stepi to make applioatiou at once, if they have uot already done so, in order to secure the benefit of the early filing of their claims in case there should bi any future pension legislation. Such legislation is seldom retroaotive. There fore it is of great importauce that ap phoutious be filed iu the department a! the earliest possible date. It the TJ. 8. soldiers, sailors, or their widows, children or parents desire in formation iu regard to pension matters, they should write to the Press Claims Company, at Washington, D. 0., and they will prepare and send the necessary application, if they Cud them entitled uudei the numerous laws enacted for their benefit. Address PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY, John Weddkkuukn, Muuauitig Attor ney, Washington, D. 0., P. O. Box 385 tf. THE WEsTEliN PEilAUOUUK. (Read at the GospelTemperance meet liekl in the u. b.. church, Isouth, on Sunday evening, November oth, 1893, by Mrs. Goilley, of this city. VALUABLE. Comparatively few people regard themselves as inventors, but almost every body has been struck, atone time or another, with Ideas that I is introduced by a paper on the Friends We are in reoeipt of the May number of our Btate school paper. It exceed any of the former numbers it valiu. The paper this mouth coutains many new und valuable features. The illus trated aeries on the schools ot the state LUMBER! IfE HAVE FOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN V dressed Liimher. 16 miles of Heppner, at that Is known as the -SCOTT SA"7C3VIIXjIj. EK LflOO FEET. KOt'UH, ' " " CLEAR, - (10 on - 17 50 f DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD a.-,.(H) per 1,000 feet, additional. Allt YOU ANY GOUD AT PUZZLES ? The genius who Invented the "Fifteen" puz zle, "Pigs lu 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 as the young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle s the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was Invented by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzlelst, to be sold for the beneat of the movement to erect a great home for newspaper workers In New York. Generous friends have given $25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TKN CENTS sent to the "Press Club Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court, New York City, will get you the mystery by return mail. DUJ YOU TRY "PIGS JN CLOVER" or the "FIFTFEN PUZZLE. Weil, the man who invented them has just completed another little playful mystery for young and old, which la selling lor tun ckntx for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for newspaper workers In New York. This puzzle Is the property of the New York Press Club and generous friends of the club have donated over -25,000 to provide prizes for lucky people, vounir 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, j,emple Court.New York City. I. Ai I.. HAMILTON. Prop. Hamllton,Man'8:r STOCKRAISER ! HEPPNEK. OllEGON. Cattle branded and ear marked as shown above. rl urses Y on right shoulder. j Mr cattle ranite it Morrow and Cmatilta conn- ! tim l w 11 TailWO.OOfor the arrest and con tiSion of .nTUnn steaiiag mr stock. WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES (Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.) T, A TEST TIME CARD Two Through Trains Daiy. ... U r. i MinnpAnollsAr 8.40am K.4.rpm T'5'inml7'T:mmLv'...St. Paiil...Arls.0nain.,i.Otlpm I 'i Sl'S Lv...Diiluth...Ar!l!.10" l7.:Spm U n, 70.S Lv . Ashland.. Ara'ml4.iprn 7 loam 1 . 5a nIAr... Chicago.. .Lv S.OOp" 11.45" I R m parcels yf mi i FOR 10 1-.CENT STAMPS dri'fw 'if 'erelvefl' within afl t anSK ' ua 8 W 111 UK IUf I JW wuimj ijiriein. umy iMretrujr: raistonierg : from nub- .j itsDers ana mamnae ir? Iiirari vm II ru nrnhahlv. thniifwndH t i valuable books, npr -j'tn-i. ah free ana eiicu mint with oneofvourprliiieflHdfirorw L.t!! nU'A thereon. KXTBAI We wil klso print awl ttrejmy posume mi your label twHress to you ; v :l-.L- vr.iip uriVflfJDfH. DOokH. f ii a - j cr III CMP 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 sancepan 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 latefor breakfast. "If I were In the business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip out, or break off, or gouge, out the back of my neck - And the various sufl'erers 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 themselveBas independently wealthy as the man who invented the iron umbrella ring, or the oue who patented he fifteen puzz le. A TEMPTING OFI Iilts To induce the people to keep trackjof their bright ideas and see what there lu them, the Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a irize. To the per no it who submits to it Ihe nimpletit and most promising' invention from a commercial point of view, the company will jtlve twenty-five hundred dollar in cae.li, in addition to refunding the fees for securing: a patent. It will also advertise the inven tion free of charge. This offer is subject to the following condi tions: Every competitor muBt obtain a patent for his invention through the company. He must firstapply 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 uke out a patent in the regu lar way. The total expense, Including the Government and Bureau fees, will be seventy lollura. 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 of three reputable patent attorneys of Washing 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 Dollar Prize offered by the Press Claims Company." 30IM,ANKS IN THIS COMPETIOft. I This is a competition of rather an unusul na ture. It is common to offer prizes for the best story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the competitors risking the loss of their labor and the successful one merely selling his for the amoun of the prize. But the Prens Claim Company's offer is something entirely differ ent. Each person i asked merely to help him self, and rhe one who helps him self to the bestadvautagels tobe 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 not occept ed has spent his labor on something of very lttle use to him. But the person who patenu a simple and useful device in the Press Claims Company's competition, need not worry if he fail to secure a prJ,e. He has a substantial remilt to show for nis worn one that wil command Its value in the market at any time. The man who uses any article in his dailv work oughtto know better now to Improve It than the mechanical expert who nludit-8 It only from the theoretical point of view. Ot rid of the Idea tha. an improvement can be too simple to be worth patenting. The slmplerthn better. The person who bent succee ls In eomblning simplicity and popularity, will jet the Press Claims Company's twenty-flvo bun Polytechnic institute at Salem, Oregon. These papers caunot fait to be of great value butb to the schools and to tb ntiblio. There are also several fine articleB by our best writers au 1 the departineuts "Current Eventa,"uSaturday Thoughts "Educational News' "The Oracle Answers, OorreBpondeats," etc., each contain much valuable reading for teachers or parents. Ihe mttgazine has about 50 pages of matter, well printed and arranged. We pronounce the Western Pedagogue the beBt educa tional monthly on the coast. Everyone of our readers should have the paper if they are at all interested in education. No teacher school direo tor or student can tret along well with out it. We will receive subsoript.ons at this office. Price only $1.00 a year. When desired we will send the Western Pedagogue and Gazette one year to one arfdreflH for S3.00. Call and examine sample copies. Teachers, directors and uarents. now is the time tn subscribe, tf l.irf Tirkets sold and bfieeage cheeked I through to ; All points in the I'nited States and Canada. (Mose connection made iu Chicago with all trains rtoing East and South. For full information apply to vor(.5re8t Ueket r Pa, and Tkt'j& Chlca.Hk .Wr.jf;lf prevent itn-ir being lost. J. A. w aci. .F'ftSf KeKWvllle. N. ":. writes : " H.,,. tB:R!jSj niv i cut aditref" In your UkIi. ii.iu and oviT aooo I"ai' ,MV uiliiri.'M"j ytui pi - prttiHib'-rs and ujujiii f..-t Kviij' ll:HV.O!l VHlU'i'i . i. f, r.i! ' aim "I' 1-' W'' WORLD'S FAIK DIRECTORY CO. No. 147 Frankfort and Oirard Aves. Plilladel. phla, Pa. SOLDIERS AT ARMY POSTS. They Oet Terribly Homesick and "Weary of Life. It would bo an incomplete story of life at a post which said nothing of the visits of homesickness, which many strong; men in the west have confessed to me is the worst sickness with which man is cursed. Anil it is an illness which comes at irregular periods to those of the men who know and love the east. It is not, a homesickness for one home or for one person but a case of that madness which seized Private Otheris. only iu a less malignant form and in the oliicers' quarters, says Har per's Weekly. An impotent protest against the immutability of time and space is one of its symptoms si melt disgust of the the blank prairie, blackened by fire though it had been drenched with ink, the bare parade pround, the same faces, the same stories, the same routine and detailed life, which promises no change or end, and with these a longing for streets and rows of houses that seemed commonplace before, of architecture they had dared to criticise and which now seems fairer than the lines of the Parthenon, a craving to get back to place where people, whether you know them or not, are hurrying home from work under the electric lights, to the rush of the passing hansoms and the cries of the "last ed tions," and the glare of the shop win dotvs, to the life of a great city that n as careless of the exile s love for it as the ocean to one who exclaims upon its grandeur from the shore; a soreness of heart which makes men while lasts put familiar photographs out of sight, which makes the young lieuten ants, when the band plays a certain waltz on the parade at sundown, bite their chin straps and stare ahead more fixedly than the regulations require, Some oiiieers will confess this to you and some will not. It is a question which is the happier, lie who has no other scenes for which to care and who is content, or he who eats his heart out for awhile and goes back on leave at last. So eftsv in its set on. harmless nu pffeetnnl in relievina is Simmons Liver KegulHtor. aking owden ABSOfU aking owaer TEEf PURE MOTHERHOOD. A mother's duty, a mother's influence : how shall we use our Godniven trust to best fulfill His will and design, in this most precious relationship, which an wise Father has vouchsafed to oman. these are questions as broad time, as far reaching as eternity. Whocan solve the problem for us? We look within, and with all the romptings of a mother's heart, we can- it find the answer there; for how often do we find ourselves hedged about by rcumstanees, combined in such a man ner as to undo what we had looked upon as our most settled rule. We mav look bout us in the life history of friends nd see where the most careful home raining in two different families lias resulted in success for the one and fa.il- e lor the other. So it is with all the isdom we may gain from personal ex perience and observation, we are yet constrained at times to cry out, what hall 1 do! How shall l manage tins most serious question of mother's work. Here, as in how many other troubled places on life's vaBt sea, comes the blessed thought, as an inspiration to our tired heart and weary brain, Lookup! trembling one, ask wisdom of the All- wise, the hver-faithful, who never fails us in our hour of need. To have our children pure and true, t must be onr first aim to keep them so. It has often been said that if the mother but faithfully perform her duty, this is It that is needtul; and again, 1 lie man is what his mother makes him." Still another has beautifully expressed the sentiment thus: "The hand which rocks the cradle, is the hand that moves the world." Now let us examine these points a little, and see if, at times, there are not nfluences other than the mother's, which have some part in moulding the lives committed to our care. Do not un derstand me as wishing to lessen the esponsibility of the mother nor under value her influence ; neither to transfer to another that which belongs to her. riiis we dare not do in the face of the numbers of good and noble of earth who have arisen to testify that what they were they owed to the early teaching of a pious, devoted mother, JNor can we disregard the Bad wail of that other The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. numbers which comes to us o'er the dark waves which launch them into eternity, "Oh I that I had obeyed my notlier; had I but heeded her counsels, I should not have been what I am to- iav." The spring which rises high up amid the pure, eternal snow, sends down the mountain side, through rockv gulch to our feet in the green and shining valley below, a stream pure and limpid, as free from Btain as the spotless element which gave it birth, liutahlhow long is this to continue, purely the source irom which it sprung is doing the part which God assigned it, in supplying that, which s the charm of its hie, pure, sparkling water. But there are other influences al work which cannot be ignored nor set aside. How of the soil through which the stream may How? Is its bed always overed with clean pebbles, and are its banks alwayB grassy and moss grown? Alas, sometimes there are sad changes in tne picture; the soil becomes im pure, and the otherwise clear stream is discolored by the clay and earth through which it Hows. 1 know these ate sad, pitiful thoughts, but who can gainsay this truth. iStill other influences are at work farther on. Down the stream, it seems but a little way, we may see a decaying carcass w hich has been care lessly thrown in us margin, and how are the waters poisoned by contact with the same. It was, indeed, a careless hand, nay, more, a eruel, wreckless hand which placed the foul stain where it would mar that winch was intended only to beautify the scene in which it was placed, and to give comtort to lite. The first pure influence may ho exerted never so failhfullv and patientlv, but can it fully do away with, or overcome! these adverse influences lor which it is in no wise accountable? Our children are with us the entire time for a few Bliort years only. Nay, may the time not be reckoned by months, so few the years Beem e're they nlin away from our arms to make the journey down the stream of time? Who that is a mother cannot recall with what feelings she kissed her little one gooil bye as it took the school bag proudly in its wee hand and went forth to its first 'lay at school. I have thought, sometimes, if we could see down the years of the future, all that lay before that first step from home and mother, our hearts would cry out "it must not be, 'tis more than I can hear." Well may the mother lift her heart to (iod in most fervent prayer that he would keep her darling "in the hol low of Imb hand." Krorn this time for ward the little one must be subject to influences, from which the mother, with all her love anil best endeavors, can not save her child entirely; and this, too, for the greater part ol its working time. Ah, she must be wise with moie than eUithly wisdom if she impress upon that restlesB little heart Biitlicient truth and purity to oll'set the evil influence which is exerted by the careless and impure with whom her child is thrown. I am aware there are many who think there is no need of anxiety or the little child of tender years, but lie' e lies one of the greatest mistakes of parents. A very ! anxious mother was once talking to the ! husband and father how best to manage ' a thoughtless, lestless little boy of eight years. "Oh," said the father, "he is just a little fellow yet, there is no harm for him, besides be must take his chances along with ether boys." Ah, the fatal mistake of carrying out this idea. Would we turn our children over to the mercy of wild beasts and not ex pect them to be torn and maimed? and what better is human nature left unre strained, and without the touch of the divine hand, transforming and softening the otherwise hard, rebellious heart. The Catholic church (a sect who have studied most carefully this great ques tion of influence, and how Lest obtain ed,) says that it you but give them the full control of your child until seven years old, they would ask nothing fur ther. May we not derive valuable aid from their keynote of success in this great question which concerns us most deeply as mothers, and the world at large, through us' I have in my memory a picture of a bright and beautiful little girl, an only daughter, the pride and joy of a devoted father and mother, who through this blind love for their child, could see no flaw in her life. But sad and bitter the truth to tell, almost before they realized she was ought else than their baby girl, the poisoned drop had been cast into the stream, the tale of flattery, and bright pictures of gay company and fine ap parel, (a picture as false as fair) had turned the scales on the side ot wrong, and the life that promised so much in its early morning, was blackened and ruined e're its noon time. Her confes sion was that her very early years saw the fatal start on the downward road. Oh! mothers let us guard well, and guard w ith care the early, tender years of our children. Let us strive to keep our hearts young for their sake. Show me the son or daughter who makes a confident of the mother and we can almost say their safety is assured. Let us strive to gain that confidence, sym pathizing in their griefs, shaimg their joys, ever trying to remember how life appeared to us when young. Let us guard well this companionship, for I am well aware it is not possible to hold the confidence of all children. They are far from being constituted the same, each having their own individual traits of character, a wide diversity being frequently found in the same family. Every child has his or her ideal whom they aspire to resemble. The other day I heard a bright little girl say, "lam trying very hard to be just like Mary, but I am afraid I will fail." Ah, thought little one what a happv thing for vou that Mary is a pure, thriithful, obedient daughter, striving to walk in the foot steps of the blessed Master. We know not upon whom their likes are to fall, and if their companions be foul in word or deed, their influence must have its impress upon the heart of the trusting one. But there comes a time, all too Boon, when our children go out from our homes to take their places in the busy walks of life. This but speaks more loudly to us, guard well each moment and hour of your child's life while with in your reach, laying as best you can, with bod s help, a foundation sure and strong for the superstructure which future years may see builded. One which, if the life be pure and the aim high and holy, will form the stepping stone to the life beyond, the "life which is hid with Christ in God." Whatevor our aims may be, that which looses sight of this great central truth, is direst failure. Let onr watch word therefore ever be, first "tor God, then Home and Native Land." Sarah I'arhish Godi.f.y. IIieppnkr, Nov. 5th, 1893. Rnokleu'H Arnica S.ilve. The best gslve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, nloers, salt rbeum, fever sores, tetter, chapped bands, chilblains corns and all skin eruptions, and posi tively oil res piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perleot satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Slooum-Johnson Drug Company. THEY HAVE TO WORK. Only by Ktrlct Kcouoiny Can tho Chinese Keep Body und Houf Together. Unquestionably industry is one of the good qualities which may be attributed to all the natives of C'ln.ui alike. No doubt the fact that ninety-niuo out of every hundred Chinamen perpetually live "on the nigged edge of existence" is mainly accountable for this virtue, but it is unquestionably the leading characteristic which strikes a foreigner on landing China. No matter whether his 'jxperience lies in the crowded streets of such cities as Canton or among the village communities on the northern plains, the same ceaseless dil igence is observable. A belated traveler passing through the streets of a town cannot fail to be truck with the sounds of labor which proceed from behind the closed shutters of the workshops; and the London Atheneum says that an early riser in the country will be robbed of all self congratulation by finding that the field laborers have completed a recognizable, portion of thoir day's work before he was astir. The emperor's day begins during a great portion of the year before day light, and in every yamun throughout the land his example is fallowed. Such Indefatigable industry would under favorable circumstances produce a pros perous, well-to-do people, but in China the population is mj dense that it is only by this means and by the exercise of the strictest economy that the natives are able to keep body and soul together. Nothing is wasted by them, and sub stances which it would bo better to throw on the dust heap are not unfre quently converted Into food. i 1 I