Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, November 24, 1893, Image 1

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Hheppner gazette.
i
NtH'HT
OFFICIAL
PAPER
.N'0 i rilNG RISKED,
RISK,
NOTEADli.
The mallow ho doesn't advertise, doettx't
get the oeih.
NOTHING MADE.
I. .
?
"I The man who ativcnisos get. lit!' ca.li.
t Notice it.
ELEVENTH YEAR
HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1893.
WEEKLY WO. (.'.(
SEMI-WEEKLY NO. Hl'.'.j
1
sUMI '.VEEKLY GAZETTE.
Tuesdays and Fridays
i
BY
riEISHING COMPANY.
AlVAK W. PATTERSON Bna. Manager.
OT1H PATTKKBON Editor
Ai 3.5) per year, $1.25 for six months, 75 ots.
iW llireti moutaB.
Advertising Rates Made Known on
I Application.
' 1 he S -A-Q-XdS, " of Long Creek, Grant
County, Oregon, I. publlsuea uy tne Bame com
Dmiv every xriuny montm. Bit..,,....,..."..
mice S'.!peryear. ForadvertlBlngrateB.address
pii tiy every rriuay
Xi. FATTEBSOIT, Editor and
Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or -uazeiie,
Ik-ppucr, Oregon.
THI8 PAPER is kept nnlB at E. C. Dake'
1 Auvortiai
Kiclmr.gs, San
Advertising Agency, rll and 85 jnerohantB
iu'.iw, San Francisco. California, where oou-
ou for advertising can be made for it.
THE GAZETTE'S AG iNTS.
Winner,
Arlington,
Lona Creek,
Hcho
Criiihs l'ratrie,.. .
..B. A. Hunsaker
. ..I'hlll Heppner
The Eagle
Postmaster
...Oscar De Vaul
.11. C. Wright
HaiWn.'or., Postmaster
-Hamilton, urant uo., ut., Sr , . . i
i0iU, 1. J - ari
Prairie City, Or R. K. McHaley
,Cityy,Or: fVSStfSZ
jaJaDTv.Or. F.I. Medium
At cim Or .. John Kdlngton
Sl ts Or, Postmaster
Mount Vernon, Grant Co., Or
ShelLy, Or Miss Stel a Flet
liniiitco.. Or J. Alleu
Eiiiht Mile, Or.,
II ... HI..,.. 'l..llf
Mrs. Andrew Ashbaugh
B. r. Heviana
Doigla,Or ..E0,fm.M,e'
Lone Rock, Or...
Gooseberry
Condon, Oregon.
I .I'viiiiLiill
R. M. Johnson
J. K. HbUia
.Herbert Halstead
J as. Leach
A.N AtlKNT WANTED IN KVBEY FBBCINCT.
UkiON Pacfic Railway-Local card.
No, 10, mixed leaves Heppner 10:00 a. m.
" :o, " ar. at Arlington 1-16 a.m.
9, " leaves 11 S-fftp.m.
, " ar. at Heppner 6 :20 p. m. dally
except Sunday.
Fast bonnd, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :2" a. m.
West leaves " 1:26 a. m.
Day trains have been discontinued.
OPriCIAIi DIBEOTOBT.
f.. V ulted Btatea Officials.
Piesident Grover Cleveland
Booretary of TreasnYy
Heo.etery of Interior.... ..Hoke Smith
Hnrtrelary of War Darnel h. Lanion !
ESS of Navy. .. Hilary A. Herbert
KStGeneral W.laon 8 Bi.s.11
Attorney-General -Richard 8. Olney
Hm-retarvot Agriculture. J. Sterling Morton
State of Oregon.
Governor f- P"Wr
Secretary of State (i W.MoBride
Treasurer Phil. Metsuhan
Supt. Public Inatraction ..K B. McKlroy
Bfnators 1 J. N.Doluh
j Binger Hermann
Congressmen w. ll. Ellis
pri,,t,.r FrankC. Baker
lr"'t,r (F. A. Moore
Supreme Judge. (S
Seventh Judicial District.
:.rmit Judne W. L. Bradshaw
i'nniii.iiiii Attorney W. H. WUSun
Morrow County Officials.
jcii, Senator Henry Blackman
i,...r,.entative i" f ""iKKmS
, , v,.,tv Judge Julius Keithly
' Commissioners Peter Brenner
J. M.. Baker.
nnrir J. W. Morrow
Geo. Noble.
Iruaanrer W.J. Leeiec
" fin rvBvor"." " '.V. laa Brown
(v::.v::r:::w:
HEPPNBB TOWN OKFIOEBS.
., J. R. Simons
Umnclluivu 0. E. f"..
Lichtenthal, Otis Patterson, Julius Keithly,
in 1 .i.nutn .T I. Vauanr.
"'"l'ru ... .A. A. Roberta.
r,.MH17 p,V " " E- Blooum
Prpcinct Offlcerp.
Justice oi tne reaoe -
CoiwUbla. C. W.ByoUarU
United States Land Officers.
THE DALLES, OR.
. W. Lewis
T.S.Lang.
LA obandb, OB.
B.F, Wilson....
J.H. Kobbins..
Register
Receiver
9ECSET SOCIETIES.
n. I ...Ha N,. 9I H . i ,f V. meet ey.
I-,, .niim at HOo'nloCk ill
i.hmr- 'nstle Hall, National Bank build-
ng. Hoj Miming Dromers oimimi
vited to attend. W. L. Halinq, C. C
W. B Potteb, K. of it. a a.
14AWLIN8 POST, NO. 81.
G. A. R.
ets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of
!. month. All veterans are invited to Join,
. C. Boon,
Adjutant,
(inn. W. Smith,
Commander.
PBOFESSIOHAii.
A. HUBERTS, B-BlEatate, lusnr-
nnce hikI Collectious. Office in
Jouuoil Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtl.
S. P. FLORENCE,
STOCKRAIMXVJJ
JJKPPNEB. OREGON
'ft-
Cattle brsndedand earmarked a. shown
.... ,.,
fioraee F on right shoulder,
My cattle range in Morrow and CnUa coun-
ti. I wul pay $100.00 for the arrest and con-
fiction of any person stsaliag my stock.
A Year's Subscription to a Pop
ular Agricultural Paper
GIVEN FREETO OURREADERS
ty a epeoial arrangement with tlie
publishers we are prepared to furnish
FREE to each of oar readers a year's
subscription to the popular monthly
agricultural journal, the American
Farmer, published at Springfield and
Cleveland, Ohio.
This offer is made to any of our sub
scribers who will puy up all arrearages
on subscription and one year in advanoe,
and to any new subscribers who will pay
one year in auvaoce. The American
Farmer enjoys a large natiounl oiroula
tion, and ranks among the leading
agrioultnr.il papers. By this tirr linea
ment it COSTS YOU NOTFilNO to re-
oeive the American Farmer for one
year, It will be to your advantage to
cuil promptly. Sample copies oan be
seen at our office.
Tlie Orla;inoil
sters
DIGT 10 H fl R Y .
5
publishers, e are able to obtain a number
of tb' above book, and propone to furniBh a
copy to each of our subscribers.
The dictionary is a necessity in every home,
school and business house. It nils a vacancy,
and furnishes knowledge which no one hun
dred other volumes of the choicest books could
supply. Young ana old, educated and ignorant,
rich and poor, should have it within reach, aud
refer to Its contenls every day In the year.
As some have asked if this is really the Orie-
inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are
able to state we have learned direct from the
nuhliHhers the fact, that this is the very work
comDlete on which about forty of the best years
of the author's lite were so weu employed id
writintr.
It contains tne enure vocabulary oi
about UKJ.ftw 3.
4s, including the correct spell-
tiie rntrular standard ', gise.
:ig, derivation auu rionnltlon oi same, na is
300,000 Bquare Inches o,f printed surface, and is
UUUUVllllUg .Willi
Douua In ClObu uaii .xiorocco auu siteeu.
Until further notice n will furnish this
valuable Dictionary
First lo any new suDscriDer.
Second To any renewal subscriber.
Third loany subscriber now in arrears
ho pays up and one year in advance, at
the following prices, viz:
Full Uotri bound, gut side and bacr
stamps, marbled edges, $i-oo.
Halt Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back
stamps, marbled edges, $ i .so.
hull bheep bound, leatner label, marbiea
edges, $2.oo.
Fifty cents added in all cases for express
age to Heppner.
As the publishers limit the time and
number of bookB they will furnish at the low
nrlnes. we advise all who desire to avail them
selves of this great opportunity to attend to It
at once,
SILVER'S OIIA.MPIOK
;THEE
Rocky-. Moitain-.-News
THE DAILY BY MAIL
;8ubcription price reduced as follows:
One Year (by mail)
Six Months "
$6 00
3
1
Three Months " : - :
One Month "
THE WEEKLY BY MAIL
One Year (in Advance) :
$1 00
The News i the only consistent c ian-pion of
silver in the West, and should be In every home
in the West, and in the hands of every miner
and buslncBB man in Colorado.
Send in your subscriptions at once.
Address,
DoJivor, Oolo.
LUMBER!
ittp Bivu. fOR SALE ALL KINDS OF UN
VY dressed Lumber. 16 miles of Heppner, at
vhat is known as the
-j OOTT SAWMIXjIji
HEK 1,0110 FEET. ROUGH,
CLEAR,
110 00
17 60
TF DELIVERED IN HEPPNER, WILL ADD
1 f.00 per 1,000 feet, additional.
L HAMILTON, Prop.
r. A. HamlJton.Man'er
vVlSCONSIN CtNTKAL LINES
( Northern Pacific R. R. Co., Lessee.)
LATEST TIME CARD
Two Through Trains Daily,
12.4spmls.a5pmLv.MlnneapolltAr8.Jfwm
1 or,nmn iinmlLv...Ht. Paul . . .Ar n.unam
5.00pra
7.3-'ipm
4.30pm
lo!Oaml4.ar.pmlLv...Diiluth...Ar 11.10
,4;ipini7.u-'mi.v,. mimim..
16am '10.5am Ar...cnicago...i.viu.iiup
11. 4S"
I
rokets sold and baggage checked through to
o points in tne oniieu v i.i, n
C ose connection made in Chicago with all
trains doing East and Soutn.
information apply to your nearest
t or as. fl POND,
0en Pau- anj jkt Agt. Chicago, III.
rVcb
Unabrif
- J., 'y , Jr"t
i in ii ii
SICK-HEADACHE
Make8 life miserable. All other
ailmenta are as nothing in com
parison. Women especially know
its Buffering, and few escape ita
torture,
THE RELIEF AND CURE IS
Many people take pills, which
srripe and purge, weakening the
body. More take Simmons Liver
Kegulator, liquid or powder, , be
cause more pleasant to take, does
not gripe, and i3 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
good until I used Hinimons Liver Kegula
tor. It has been three years since I first
used It and I have not had 81 ck Headache
since. Isentmy sister (who had from one
to two attacks of Hick Headache every
week) one-half of a package, and Bhe has
not had It since." C. B. Mobkis, Browns
ville, W.Va.
-EVEBT PACKAGE-
Has our Z Stamp In red on wraapar.
J. U. ZJEJMN CO., Philadelphia, Pa.
Qcrxozs: Tiiviia t
TO
San Ijranoisoo
And all points in California, via the Mt. Shasta
route of the
Southern Pacific Co.
The great highway through California to all
points East and South. Grand Scenio Bouts
of the Pacifio Coast. Pullman Buffet
Sleepers. Beoond-olass Sleepers
Attachedlto express trains, affording superior
accommodations for seoond-olaas passengers.
For rates, tickets, sleeping ear reservations,
eto call npon or address
R. KOEHLER, Manager, E. P. ROGERS, Asst.
Gen. F. 6 P. Agt., Portland, Oregon.
of HGDnaer.
W M. PENL AN 1). EDR. BISHOP,
President. . Cashier.
TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
COLLECTIONS
Made on Favorable Terms. -
EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD
EEPPNER. tf OREGON
Free
Medicine
A Golden Opportunity for Suffering
Humanity.
Physicians Give their Remedies to the People
nfl Vfll! Cnri'Ii'li ? Write uBatonce,explain
DU IUU olrfCR f ingyourtrouble, and we
will send you FREE OF CHARGE a full course
of specially prepared remedies best suited to
your case. We want your recommendation.
We can cure the most aggravated diseases of
both sexes. Our treatment tor all diseases and
deformities are modern and scientific, acquired
by many year's experience, which enables us to
Guarantee a Cure. Do not despair.
N. B. We have the only positive cure for Ep
ilepsy (fits) and Catarrh. References given.
Permanently located. Old established.
DB. WlLUAMS MEDICAL AND SUBQICAL INSTI
TUTE, 719 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.
ARE YOU ANY GOOD AT PUZZLES 1
The genius who invented the "Fifteen" puz
zle, "Pigs in Clover," and many others, has in
vented a brand new one, which is going to be
the greatest on record. There is fun, instruc
tion and entertainment in it. The old and
learned will find as much mystory In it as the
young and unsophii ticated. This great puzzle
a the property of the New York PreBs Club, for
whom it was Invented by Samuel Loyd, tne
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 J25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle
solvers. TEN CENTS sent to the "Press Club
Building and Chrrlty Fund," Temple Court,
New York City, will get you the mystery by
return mall.
DID YOU TRY
"PIGS IN CLOVER'
or the "FIFTEEN PUZZLE."
Well, the man who Invented them has just
completed another little playful mystery for
young and old, which is selling for TlsN CENTS
for the benefit of the fund to erect a home for
newspaper workers in New York. This puzzle
is the property of the New York Prest Club
and generous friends of the club have donated
over $25,000 to provide prizes for lucky people,
vounr or old. who solve the mystery. There Is
a lot of entertainment and instruction in 11,
Send a dime and get the souvenir puzzle by
return mail. Address "Press Club Souvenir,'
lemple Court.New York City.
"3009 PARCELS Of MAIL" FEE!
FUR 10 l-CENT STAMPS
(rn.iUr price Sc) your ad
dress If received within M
w I Im. fur 1 vear Boiaiv
printed on gummed
Intel.. Only Directory
guaranteeing ISI9.0O0
customers ; from pub
lishers and manurao-
Ml 5 M hj Drobahlv. thousands 0!
1 u-M-i.i-rk valuable books, papers,
...W (UHlJIIICT.Iiiae11'1!1"'"-
with one of your printed addresjubeli
pasted thereon. EXTRA I We wll.
also print and prepay postage on ,ve 01
your lahel address.- to you; utiicl
-jiii-ik. ail ir.. ana uurcv,
stick on your envelopes, dooks, eir
,1, ..Ir l.liff lost. J. A. Nt
,...(. 1.. 111. n; r . rll-: "J-ron
my cent ajdresi In your I-inhfri'iu
Directi rv I -e rec.-lvifl my.MJi.u.ir.-
labels ainl over SOOO Parcels
7Jln.l1. M.v ttil'lrcssM you shut.
alining piiijllsrn'rs aim uiv.iiuiim
uriMiri-H-liiK (IhI'v. nil viilui.l.li? '-a -l
yjp -v ul uinl. In -riMI ounii "I nit-
WORLD'S FAIR DIRECTORY CO.,
No. 147 Frankford and Olrard A-vea. raiianei
phta, Pa.
! mf'i
1
PRIZES ON PATENTS.
How to Get Twenty-five Hundred
Dollars for Nothing.
The Winner hat a clear Gift of a Small
Fortune, and the Losers Have Patents
that may Bring them in Still More.
Would yon like to make twenty-five hundred
dollars? If you would, read carefully what
follows and you may see a way to do it.
The Press Claims Company devotes much
attention to patents. It has handled thousands
of applications for inventions, but it would
like to handle thousands more. There is plenty
of inventive tallent at large in this country
needing nothing but encouragement to produce
practical results. That encouragement the Press
Claims Company propose to give.
NOT SO HARD AS IT SEEMS.
A patent strikes most people as an appalling
ly formidable thing. The idea Is that an In
ventor must be a natural genius, like Edison or
Bell; ihat he must devote years to delving In
complicated mechanical problems and that he
mUBt 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 ts the
attention of the Patent Office.
Edison says that the profits he has received
trom the patents on all his marvelous Inven
tions ave not been sufficient to pay tne cost
of his experiments. But the man who con
ceived the Idea of fastening a bit of rubber
cord to a child's ball, bo that it would come
back to the hand 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 the simple device of
putting the eye of the needle at the point in
stead of at the other end.
of the toll of hundreds of busy brains through
THE LITTLE THINGS THE MONT
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!" Erowls a man
who is latejfor breakfast. "If I were in the
business I'd make buttons that wouldn't slip
out, c r break off, or gouge out the back of my
niui,. ' j
i 'i'j. J various sufferers forgot about their
t t- 'ev and began to think of something
, t. Tf -iv wntiM oof ilnurn Iha hiitI unn.
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 ring, or the one who patented
he fifteen puzzle.
A TEMPTING OFFER.
To Induce the people to keep trackof their
bright ideas and see what there in them, the
Press Claims Company has resolved to offer a
rrize.
To the persou who submits to it
the simplest and most promising:
invention, from a commercial
point of view, the company will
give twenty-five hundred dollars
In cash, in addition to refunding
the fees for securing" a patent.
It will also advertise the in veil.
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 must
firBtapply for a preliminary search, the cost of
which will be five dollars. Should this
scach show his invention to be unpatentable,
he can withdraw without further expense.
Otherwise ho 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 of
three reputable patent attorneys of Washihg
tou. Intended competitors should fill out the
following blank, and forward it with their
application:
" , , wax
I submit the within described Invention in
competition for the Twenty-five hundred Dollai
Prize offered by the Press Claims Coropauy.
NO RLANKS IN THIS COMPET ION.
This is a competition of rather an uuusal na
ture. It is common to offer prizes for the besl
story, or picture, or architectural plan, all the
competitors risking the loss of their labor and
the successful one merely selling his for the
amoun of the prize. But the Press Claims
Company's offer is something entirely differ
ent. Each person Is asked merely to help him
self, and the one who helps blm self to the
best advantage is to be rewarded by doing It.
The prize is only a stimulus to do something
that would be well worth doing without it
The architect whose competitive plan for a
club house on a certain corner Is not oceept
ed has spent his labor on something of very
lttle 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 wora one that wll
command Its value in the market at any
time.
The man who uses any article in his dallv
work ought to know better now to improve 1'
than the mechanical expert who studies 1'
only from the theoretical point of view. V.f
rl'l of the idea that an Improvement can be to
simple to be worth patenting. The Bimplerlt
better. The person who best siiccee-ls '
combining simplicity and popularity, will ge
0 PR
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum.
Used in Millions of .Homes 40 Years the Standard.
the Press Claims Company's twenty-rlvo hun
dred dollars.
The responsibility of this company may be
judged from the faH that its stock is held by
about three hundred of the leading newspapers
of the United Slates.
Address the Press Claims Company, Joha
Wodderburn, managing attorney, 61 F street
N. W., Washington, D. C.
G. A. R- NOTICE.
We take this opportunity of informing
our subscribers that the Dew comiaia
siouer of pensions has been apooiuted
He is au old Boldier, aud we behove
that soldiers and their beirs will re
ceive justioe at his bands. We do not
anticipate that there will be any radioa)
changes in the administration of pensioi
affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. S,
soldiers, sailors and their beirs, take
steps to make application at oooe, if
they have uot already done so, in order
to eeoure the benefit of the early filing
of their olaims in oase there should be
any future pension legislation. Snob
legislation is seldom retroactive. There
fore it is of great importance that ap
plications be filed in tbe department at
the earliest possible date.
If the U. 8. soldiers, sailors, or their
widows, ohildren or parents desire in
formation iu regard to pension matters,
they should write to the Press Claims
Company, at Washington, 1). 0., and
they will prepare and send the necessary
application, if they find them entitled
under tbe numerous laws enacted for
their benefit. Address
PBESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
John Weddebburn, Managing Attor
ney, Washington, D. 0., P. 0. Box 885
u.
THE WESTERN PEDAUOUUE.
We are in reoeipt of the May number
of our state school paper. It exceed
any of the former numbers in valua.
Tbe paper this month contains many
new and valuable features. Tbe illus
trated series on tbe schools of the state
is introduced by a paper on tbe Friends
Polytechnic Institute at Salem, Oregon
These papers oannot fail to be of great
value both to the schools aud to tbe
nnblio.
There are also several fine articles
by our best writers and the departments
"Current Events,""Saturday Thoughts,
"Educational News" "The Oracle
Answers, Correspondents," etc, each
contain much valuable reading for
teachers or parents. The magazine
has about 60 pages of matter, well
printed and arranged. We pronounoe
the Western Pedagogue the best educa
tional monthly on the coast.
Everyone of our readers should bave
tbe paper if tbey are at all interested
in education. No teaober school 'direo
tor or student can get along well with
out it. We will receive subsoript.ons
at this office. Price only SI. 00 a year,
When desired we will send tbe Western
Pedagogue and Uazette one year to one
address for 83.00. Call and examine
sample copies. Teachers, directors and
parents, now is the time to subsoribe. tf
TONTY VISITED CHICAGO,
If He Had Stayed Tliero He Would Hav s
Avoided a Hot Fight.
"In the year 1085," Tonty says in his
memoir, "I arrived at the fort of Chi
cagou, where M. De la Durantaye com
manded." This was the first fort here
of which we have any account, writes
Edward Gay Mason, in the New England
Magazine for April, and was probably a
stockade structure constructed by Du
rantaye in 1C85. Tonty also marched
from the Illinois with sixteen French
men and two hundred Indians to take
part in this campaign, and according to
one account he came by the way of Chi
cago and mustered some recruits there,
perhaps from the garrison of the fort.
He led his party across the country to
Detroit, where he met Durantaye and
two other famous pioneers, La Foret and
Daniel Groysolon Du Lhut, from whom
the present city of Dul uth takes its name.
They had a large body of French and
Indians from the upper lakes, and the
united force pushed on to Niagara
and joined the governor general's army
at the rendezvous on the southern
shore of Lake Ontario, near the Seneca
country. Two thousand five hundred
men marched through the wilderness
toward the great town of the Senecas,
with Durantaye, Tonty and Lhut and
their couriers de bois in the van. In
the narrow defile the advance, sepa
rated from the main body, came upon
an ambush of three hundred Indian
warriors, who closiul upon their rear
with yells of triumph, thinking this de
tachment to be the whole army. But
better leaders for such a fray there
could not be than these three intrepid
Frenchmen, who hold their wood
rangers 'Steadily to their work, until
suddenly through the forest came the
main body, headed by four companies
of the fighting Cnrifnan regiment, and
the .Senecus suddenly itl:indoned the
field. Their great tow 11 whs taken and
destroyed, und down to our own time
their descendants knew the scene of
their crushing defeat by the French ar
Dyagodiyu, or ''The I'lacc of a llattle."
Baking
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ABSOLUTELY PURE
ELECTRICITY NO EXCEPTION.
Dangers Attend ita I'se Just at In ths
Case tit i.locr Agencies.
Ever since elo. tricity left its experi
mental stage in tho laboratory and be
came a possible source of energy and
power to man in advancing the com
mercial progress of the arts and sci
ences, the questions of the dangers to
life and properly have been brought
prominently bef.ro the public just as
the dangers attending the use of steam,
of rapid luor.mo! ion on railroads, of il
luminating pas and of dynamite were
brought to tho ultention of the world,
when there powerful agencies passed
through their infam y and entered into
the active service f man. In each in
stance there wits always a class who
took the partial or narrow view that if
the new agem-y were dangerous it should
be excluded from tho public, or if ad
mitted, it should lo hampered by such
limitations aud e::e:ut,ions as to render
it almost useless f or practical purposes,
as well u; to retard iis future progress
and advancement. It is said that upon
the introduction of steam in England
laws were pa: sed i; raiting the pressure
to thirty i.rt:U to the square inch.
Passengers were allowed to run at tbe
'high rate 1 sport; of twelve miles per
hour; the rwnei-U-n f thirty miles per
hour was eon: idor . d ridiculous, a jour
nal of that time i;ta Ling that the people
would as soon be shot out of a cannon
as to travel at such a "high rate of ve
locity," it being considered detrimental
to respiration and the vital parts of tbe
body. Great r .-itemcnt occurred
through the daily prei.s when dyna
mite was first introduced not
long ago, stringent laws being
passsed in regard to its storage, and
transportation, a result of attempting
to evade which caused many more risks
and dangers bv carrying and keeping it
in everyday anil unsuspected places.
AU manner of objei lions were brought
against the introduction of gas as an
llluminant, stu b aa explosion, impurity
of air by combustion and suffocation...
Nearly everyone remembers, when the
are lights appeared in New York city,
ot the startling account in the papers of
flames issuing from tbe body of a horse
that had accidentally come in contact
with one of the light wires.
All the old matters, however, have
settled themselves with the laws of uni
versal progress and the diifusion of
knowledge, and we now find fewer acci
dents with steam pressure of one to two
hundred pounds than with thirty then,
and fewer accidents also with sixty to
eighty miles per hour passenger travel
ing, considering the increase in the
number carried, and fewer fires from
gas than from candles or oil. Elec
tricity thinks we may conclude then
that the power or danger of any new
form of energy should not, and will not,
debar it fr n universal adoption, that
being onl u question of time. Intelli
gently managed and controlled, the
most powerful and otherwise dangerous
agency may be turned into man's best
and most eflicient servant. Thus, in
dealing with tho problems concerning
the generation and distribution of the
electric current, it should not be re
stricted by unintelligent legislation,
limiting or fixing certain voltages,
quantities, insulation, etc., but rather
the aim should be to perfect means by
which its full force may. be realized,
fostering ita growth into a higher
range of intensity and usefulness and
thus to increase its efficiency.
A RUDE AWAKENING.
It Generally Came to the Nodders DnranrJ
tho Old-Time Church Service.
In the olden time church services
were so long prayers, hymns and ser
mons that it is no wonder that many
of the hard-worked people in the con
gregations could not keep awake.
Hoth in the old world and in the new
various devices were rest irted to for the
purpose of baiii..himr sleep from the
church. Among these was not the
modern one of making the services
short and interesting. Our English
fathers tried several methods of break
ing up the oiV'ensive practice. One
method was that known as "bobbing,"
a term thus explained by a writer in
Notes und Queries:
"My mother can remember Betty
Finch, a very masculine sort of woman,
being the 'bobber at Holy Trinity
church in the year 1S10. .She walked
very majestically along the aisles dur
ing Divine service, armed with a great
long stick like a fishing rod, which had
a bob fastened to the end of it, and
when she caught any sleeping or talk
ing, they got a 'nudge.' "
Dr. Thirlwall, bishop of St. David's,
gives in one of his "Letters" an amus
ing account of a Kerry custom for
awakening sleepers in church:
"It is by ancient custom a part of the
exton's duty to perambulate the
church during service time with a bell
in his hand, to look carefully into every
pew, and wherever he finds anyone
dozing to ring the bclL
"He discharges this duty, it is Bald,
with great vigilance, intrepidity and
impartiality, and consequently witb
the happiest effect on tho congregation,
for as everybody is certain that if he or
she gives way to drowsiness the fact
will be forthwith made known through
tbe church by a peal which will direct
all eyes to the sleeper, the fear of sucb
a visitation is almost always sufficient
to keep everyone on the alert"
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Powder
A RUSSIAN BELL. ,
Beturnrd to Ita Old Home After s Bs
Uhment. of Three Centuries.
A distinguished Siberian exile snugly
packed in a wooden box and honored
with the regretful farewells of a whole
population has just been returned to
European Russia under an escort of a
committee of citizens glad to receive it
back after its many privations. The
said exile is no other than the famous
bell of rglioh, banished to Tobolsk in
1593 by order of Cznr Boris Godunoff
for having rung tbe signal for the in
surrection in 17glich at the time of
the assassination of Crown Prince
Dimitri. Writing of it in his book Mr.
Kcnnan Rays: "The exiled bell has
been purged of its iniquity, has received
ecclesiastical consecration, and now
calls the orthodox people of Tobolsk to
prayers. The inhabitants of Uglich
have recently been trying to recover
their hell upon the pica that it has
been sufficiently punished by three
centuries of exile for its political un
trustwnrthiness in 131)3, and that it
ought now to be allowed to return to
its home. The mayor of Tobolsk argues
that the bell was exiled for life, and
that consequently its term of banish
ment hns not yet expired. He contends,
furl hero Hire, that even admitting the
original licle of the Uglich people, three
centuries of adverse possession by the
city of Tobolsk have divested the
claimants of all their rights, and that
'.he bed shall be allowed to remain
where it is. The question, it is said,
will be curried into the Russian courts."
The hitc.t news from Tobolsk, besides
shotting that a decision has been
reached in river of I'glieh, illustrates,
says Free. Uussias. the inconsequential
cliar.",'-lcr 1 f Russian justice, which
closes i'.s tribunals to the wrongs of
thousands of sufferers in Liberia and
opens them to a miserable squabble
about a bell.
WHENCE CAME THE FROGS? '
AReeer.t Khmvor lu New Jersey Sug
gentn Home Kcienttflc Speculation.
During a thunderstorm in New Jer
sey the other day it "rained frogs" to
such an extent that, according to the
testimony of multitudinous witnesses,
the streets of Port Morris were alive
with hundreds of these creatures.
Here's a state, of things which the Bos
ton Globe says science can no more ex
plain to-day than it could two thou
sand years ago. It is still said, of
course, that these frogs were sucked up
in marshes and carried into the clouds,
but no human being ever yet saw a frog
thus taken up, and it is odd that noth
ing is ever "raised to eminence" in this
way except the frog, though plenty of
other living things may bit near by all
ready to be sucked up.
A good many observers hold to the
curious and interesting opinion that
under certain very rare electrical con
ditions life seems generated spon
taneously. The frog is a peculiarly
electrical creature, and in fact first
suggested the existence of animal mag
netism as a distinct force to science. If
any animal could be thus suddenly and
strangely called into being it might
well be the frog. Now that the univer
sity extension professors are about set
ting to work teaching the people
science, it would be interesting to hear
them explain mysteries such us the de
went of frogs, which has been the talk
of Port Morris and all the. region round
about.
,H. REPEATED FAREWELLS. 1 ,
Ths Russian Habit of Hugging sod Kiss
. Ing at Parting.
' In Russia a great deal of emotion is
expended over a railway journey. To
nine-tenths of the people a trip of a
hundred miles by rail is a tremendous
event, and they accordingly bid their
friends farewell with a solemnity and
effusion unknown to the "globe trot
ting" American. Rough men and stout
old women hug one another with the
fervor of bears, and half the people are
either kissing or shedding tears.
Not the least amusing part of the
spectacle to the beholder are the ludi
crous mistakes of the uninitiated. Sev
eral warnings are given before the
train leaves, and many persons taks
each warning for the final one.
Thomas Stevens, In his volume en
titled "Through Russia on a Mustang,"
mentions a woman who was saying hei
parting word to her husbund through
an open window of the car. The bell
was rung. The lady leaned out; her
husband's arms were placed about her
neck. They kissed each other with
resonance, once, twice, thrice! She
drew back into the car, und both ex
pected the train to move off. v
It did not stir, however, and an offi
cer told the man that there were still
fifteen minutes to wait, and that
another signal would be given. Instead
of one signal there proved to be two,
and so this loving couple treated the by
standers to their little tableau no less
than three times, twoof which were the
result of false ulurms.
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